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MDCCCXCII.

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PREFACE .
., I ~<· .

THE Proprietors in submitting the Tenth Edition of the Directory of the


Counties of_ CAMBRIDGE, NORFOLK AND SuFFOLK, trust it may be found equal
in accuracy to the previous editions.

The contents are Rimilar to those in previous editions a general account


is given of each County, with the Hundreds ·and Poor Law Unions ; I~ists of
Magistrates are included, and a sketch of the Geological Features of each
County, by Mr. W. J. Harrison, is added : then follow, alphabetically ar-
ranged, the Places in each County, with their Inhabitants, both Private
Residents and Commercial; it is stated under each Parish the Division of the
County, as formed under the provisions of the "Rec:listribution of Seats
.Act, 1885," and in what Hundred, Union, and County Court District it is
situated, as also the Diocese, Archdeaconry, and Rural Deanery ; and the
College and University of every Beneficed Clergyman have been given, as
far as they can be ascertained ; the names of the Parish Clerks are shown
under each Parish; lists of Farm Bailiffs of Gentlemen farming their own
land are included.

The populations from the Census of 1891 not having yet been issued
in full by the Government, the publishers are unable to give the figures for
every place, but wherever possible they have been obtained.

The County Councils are included with the names and addresses of the
members.

~laps, specially prepared for this edition, are given.


The Proprietors have again to return their thanks to those Clergymen,


Magistrates' Clerks, Registrars, and other Gentlemen who have assisted the
Agents while collecting the information.

• • • The Letters 8.0. and R.S.O. at the end of addresses in various parts of the book are
abbreviations adopted by H.M. Post Office to represent Sub-Office and Railway Sub-Office; and
if these Initials, with the name of the County, are added to these addresses of letters in lieu of
the usual name of Post Town, the delivery of such letters will be accelerated.

sr, GRBAT QuREN STRICBT, LINCOLN'S INN FrKLDS, •


LoNDON, W.C•
.A. ugust, 1892.
C. N. & S. a2
INDEX TO J(ELL Y'S

NORFOLK DIRECTORY.
... •

PAGE' PAGE PAGK PAGE


Abbey,see West Dereham 368 Beck Hythe, see Over- Brampton ............•....... 323 Bush Green, see Pulham
Acle ........................... 289 strand ..................... .567 Brancaster .................. 323 St. Mary Magdalen .•• 574
Acre Castle ............... 289 Beckham-East & West 309 Brancaster Staith, see Bushy Common, see East
Acre South & West ...... 290 Hedingham .................. 310 Brancaster ............... 323 Dcreham .................. 363
AI borough (or Ald- Beechamwell. ............... 310 Brand Creek, see Little Butt Lands, see Wells-
borough) .................. 291 Beeston (or Beeston-next- Ouse ........................ ,566 next-the-Sea ............ 674
Alburgh ...... _............. 291 Mileham) ................. 310 Brandiston ................. 324 Buxton ........................ 338
Alby ........................... 292 Beeston Regis ............... 311 Brandon-Parva ......... 324 Huxton-Lamas,see Buxtn 338
Aldeby ....................... 292 lleeston St. Andrew....... 3II Breckles ..................... 325 Bylaugh ..................... 339
• Alderford ..................... 292 Beeston St. Lawrence .... 3II Bressingham(or Brissing- Cais1er-next-Yarmouth .. 339
Alderford Bridge, see Beetley ........................ 3 II ham) ..................... 325 Caister-West, see Cais-
Swanington ............ 627 Beighton ..................... 312 Brettenham .................. 325 ter-next-Yarmouth ... 339
Alethorpe .................. 292 Belaugh ...................... 312 Bridgham .................. 325 Caistor St. Edmund ...... 340
Alpington .................. 292 Bengate, see Worstead ... 689 Briggate, see Worstead ... 689 Caldecote ..................... 340
Anmer ........................ 293 Berney, see Barney ........ 305 Hriningham ............... 326 Callow Green, see Blofield 319
Antingham .... .............. 293 llessingham ................. 312 Hrinton ..................... 326 Calthorpe ...... ............... 340
Appleton, see Flitcham ... 396 Besthorpe .................... 313 Brisley ........................ 327 Camping Hill,see Stiffkey 615
Arminghall ... ............... 293 Bexwell ....................... 313 Bri.ston ... ..................... 327 Cantley ..................... 341
Ashby-cum-Oby (near Bickerston (or Bixton), Broads (The), see Hick- Carbrooke .................. 341
Yarmouth) ............... 294 see Barnham Broom ... 305 ling ........................ 428 Carleton Rode ............... 341
Asbby (near Norwich) ... 293 Billingford (near Diss) ... 314 Ormesby .................. 565 Carleton St.. Peter ......... 342
Ash ill ........................ 294 Billingford (near East Rollesby .................. 583 Carlton-East ............... 342
Ashmanhaugh .............. 294 Derebam) ................. 313 Brockdish .................. 327 Carlton Forehoe ............ 342
Ashwelltborpe., ............. 295 Billockby ..................... 314 Brockley, see Worstead ... 689 Carrow, see Norwich ...... so6
Ashwicken ................... 295 Bilney-East & West ..... 314 Brome, see Broome ...... 329 Carr'sCorner,seeAylsham 301
Aslacton ...................... 295 Binham (or Binham Bromehill, see Weeting ... 672 Castle Acre .................. 289
Attleborough ................ 298 Abbey) .................... 315 Bromholm, see Bacton .•• 302 Castle Hill, see Thetford 635
Attlebridge .................. 298 Bintree ........................ 315 Brooke ........................ 328 Castle Meadow, see Nor-
Aylmerton ................... 296 Bircham-Great ........... 316 Broom Close,see Elmham 387 wich ........................ 507
Aylsham ..................... 298 Bircham Newton ........... 316 Broome ..................... 329 Castle Rising ............... 343
Babinglcy.................... 301 Hircham Tofts .............. 316 Broomstborpe, see East Caston ........................ 343
Baconsthorpe ............... 302 Bishop's Bridge, see Rudham .................. 585 Catfield ..................... 344
Bacton ........................ 302 N"orwich ................... 501 Brumstead(orBrunstead) 329 Catton ........................ 344
Bacton Green, see Bacton 302 Bittering-Magna (or Rrnndall ..................... 329 Catton-:-New,seeNorwich 505
Badley Moor,sce Yaxbam 732 Great Bittering) ......... 316 Buckenham Ferry ......... 330 Cawston ..................... 345
Bagthorpe ................... 302 Bittering- P.arva (or Buckenham-New ......... 330 Cess, see Martham ......... 485
Bale ........................... 303 Little llittering) ......... 316 Buckenham-Old ......... 331 Chapelfield, see Norwich soB
Banbam ...................... 303 Bittering Street, see Buckenbam Tufts (or Chedgrave .................. 346
Banningham ................ 304 Bittering-Magna ...... 316 Huckenham-Parva) ... 332 Cboseley ..................... 346
Barford ....................... 304 Bixley......................... 317 Bunn's Bank, see Old Church End, see Walpole
Barmer ....................... 304 Black Horse Drove, see Buckenham ............... 331 St. Peter .................. 658
Barney (or Berney) ....... 305 Little Ouse ............... 566 Bunwell ..................... 332 Church End, see West
Barnham Broom ........... 305 Blackborough, see Mid- Burgh (or Burgh-next- Walton ..................... 667
Earning ham-Little, or dleton ..................... 491 Aylsham) .................. 332 Churches-Ruined ....... 270
Parva & Barningham Blakeney ..................... 317 Burgh-Apton (or Bergh- Claxton ..................... 346
Norwood, or Barning- Blickling..................... 318 Apton) ..................... 333 Clenchwarton ............... 346
ham North ............... 305 Blofield ....................... 318 Burgh-Prava,seeMelton Cley-next-the-Sea ......... 347
Earning ham Town ......... go6 Blo'norton ................... 320 Constable ............... 487 Clippesby ..................... 347
Barningbam Winter, see Bloodfields, see East Burgh St. Margaret & St. Cobholm Island, see Yar-
Barningham Town ..... 306 Bilney ..................... 314 Mary ..................... 333 mouth ..................... 70~
Barret Ringstead .......... 581 Blood gate, see South Burgh St. Peter ............ 334 Cockley Cley ............... 34
Barroway Drove, see Creake ..................... 353 Burlingham-North (or Cockthorpe .................. 348
Stow Bardolph .......... 617 Bloodsdale, see Drayton .. 382 Burlingham St. An- Colby ........................ 348
Barsham-East, North & Blue Bell Common, see drew) ..................... 334 Cold Harbour Drove, see
West ....................... 306 North Walsham ......... 659 Burlingham St.Peter ...... 334 Little Ouse.: ............. 566
Barton Bendish. ............ 307 Bluestone, see Hey don ... 428 Burlingham-South (or Colegate End, see Pul-
BartonBroads,seeCatfield 344 Bodham ...................... 320 Burlinghm.St.Edmnd) 335 ham St.MaryMagdalen 573
Barton Turf................. 307 Bodney ................ _...... 320 Burn ham Deepdale ...... 335 Coles Common, see Pul-
Barwick-in-the-Brake ..... 308 Booton ........................ 321 Burnham Market (or ham St..M:ary Magdalen 573
Bassingham, see Bes- Boughton .................... 321 Burnham,St.Mary de), Colkirk........................ 348
singham ................... 312 BowthorJ>e ................... 321 Westgate ..•............... 335 Colney ......................... 349
Bastwick, see Repps- Bracon Ash .................. 321 Burnham Norton ......... 336 Coltishall .................... 349
cum-Bastwick ........... 580 Bracondale, see Norwich 521 Burnham Overy ............ 337 Colton ........................ 350
Bawburgh ................... 308 Bradenham-East&West 322 Hurnham Overy Staith, Colveston ..................... 350
Bawdpswell .................. goB Bradeston(orBradistone), see Burnham Overy ... 337 Congham ..................... 350
Bawsey ....................... 309 see Brundall .............. 330 Burnham Sutton & Ulpb 337 Corpusty ..................... 351
Baxter's Plain, see Lynn 466 Bradfield ..................... 323 Burnham Thorpe ......... 33~ Costessey (or Cossey) ...... 351
.Bayfield . ..................... 3og.Bramerton ................... 323 1 Burston ..................... 33 Coston ........................... 352.
INDEX TO KELLY ' S NORFOLK DIRECTORY.

lX
FAGE' PAGE PAGE PAGE
Cowholm, see Homing ... 440 Eaton, see Sedgeford ... 597 Goodluck's Close, see Helboughton ............... 423
Crabbe's Castle, see Wigh- Eccles .. .••• ... . .. ... .•..... .• 384 Swaffham •.....•••.••••• 622 Hellesdon, see Norwich... 508
ton ........................ 68I E("cles-by-the-Sea ••.•••..• 384 Gorleston, see Yarmouth 698 Hellesdon (or Hellesden) 423
Cranwich ...•••........••••... 352 Edgefield ...•...............•• 384 Great Bircham ....••...••• 316 Hellington ..•..•..•........• 423
Cranworth (or Cran- Edingthorpe .........••.... 385 Great llittering .........••• 316 Hemblington •.•..••........ 423
worth-cum-Letton) ... 352 Egmere .........•..........• 385 Great Cressingham ....•. 354 Hempnall ...•••..•....••... 424
Creake North ............ 352 Ellingham .................. 385 Great Dunham ............ 382 Hempstead .................. 424
Creake South ............ 353 Ellingham - Great & Great Ellingham ......... 386 Hempstead-by-Holt ...... 425
Cressingham-Great & Little .••.....•............ 386 Great Fransham •••...••• 400 Hempton ....•..............•• 425
Little ..................... 354 Elmerdale, see Irming- Great Hautbois ............ 420 Hemsby (or Heme8by) ... 425
Crimplesham ••••••.••.....• 354 land .......•................ 450 Great Hockham ......••.•. 433 Herring by, see Stokes by 616
Cringleford ..•............•.• 354 Elmham (or North Elm- Great Massing ham ...... 486 Hethel •...•................... 426
Cromer ..................... 354 ham) ....••....••..••••... 386 Great Melton ...•.•......... 488 Hethersett .....•...........• 426
Cromwell's Oak, see Hey- Elsing .••..•.•...........•.... 387 Great Moult on, see Moul- Hevingham .•.......•••...••• 427
don ... . . . ... ... . .. . .. ... . . . 428 i Etnneth ..................... 388 ton St. Michael ......... 493 Hey don ..................... 427
Cross Keys, see Walpole Erpingham .................. 388 Great Ormesby, see Hickling ..................... 428
St. Andrew ............... 657 Etling Green, see East Ormesby St. Margaret 564 Hickling Broad .....•...••• 428
Crostwick .................. 359 Dereham .................. 363 Great Palgrave,see Sporle 610 High Shoresham, see
Crostwight .................. 359 Fair Green, see Diss ...... 373 Great Plumstead ......... 571 Shotesham All Saints 602
Crown Point,see Norwich sor & see Middleton ......... 491 Great Poring land ......... 572 High field corner,seeGreat
CI'ownthorpe ...........•... 359 Fairland, see Wymond- Great Ringstead .......•.... 581 Ryburgh .................. 589
Croxton ....••..........•...• 359 ham .••....•.......•...•.... 695 Great Ryburgh .••..••....• 589 Highgate, see Gay wood 405
Croxton,see Fulmodeston 402 Fa ken ham (or Fakenham Great Snarehill •.•......... 6os & Lynn .................. 466
Daffy Green,see Scarning 595 Lancaster) ............... 389 Great Snoring .....•.....•... 607 Hilborough(or Hilburgh) 428
Damgate, see Martham.. 485 Fclbrigg ..................... 392 Great Walsingham ...... 664 Hilgay ........................ 429
Den BeckWood,see Sand- Felmingham ..........••... 392 Great Witcbingbam •..... 684 Hillington ••................ 430
ringham ..•...........•... 593 Felthorpe .................. 393 Great Yarmouth ........ 6g8 llindolveston (or Hilder-
Denes, see Yarmouth ... 698 Feltwell ..................... 393 Green-South, see East ston) ........................ 430
Denton •.•••....•••........•.•• 360 Felt well Anchor, see Lit- Dereham ...........•••••.. 363 Hind ring ham ............... 431
Denver ......................... g6o tie Ouse .................. 566 Gresham ...................... 408 Hingham ............ ~ ......... 43I
Deopham .••...•..........•..• 361 Fen, see Methwold ...... 490 Gressenhall .......••......•.• 408 Hockering ...•.............. 433
Dereham-East ............ 362 Fen, see Terrington St. Grimes Graves, see Weet- Hockham-Great & Little 433
Dereham-West ...•••...•.• 368 Clement .•..••••..••...... 632 ing ........................ 672 Hockwold-cnm-Wilton ... 433
Dersingham ... .. . ... . . . ... 369 Fen End, see Terrington Grim stone ... .. . •.• . . . ... . .. 409 Hoe (or Boo) ............... 434
Dcvil's Dyke, see Beech- St. John ••....•••........• 633 Griston ..................... 410 Holgate, see North Wal-
amwell... ..• .•• . .. ... ...... 310 Fen End, see Tilney St. Guest wick .......••......... 410 sham ..................... 66I
Dickleburgh •.............. 369 Lawrence ....•.........• 647 Guist ........................ 410 Holkham ••................... 434
Didlington .................. 370 Fen End, seeWjl-StWalton 667 Gunthorpe ...........•.•... 4II Holkham Park, seeBurn-
Dilham ..................... 370 Fersfield ..................... 394 Gun ton .................... 4II ham Market ............ 335
Dillington, see East Dere- Field Dalling ............... 394 Hackiord ..............••.. 4II Holly Hill, see Docking 375
ham ........................ 563 Filby ........................ 395 Hackford- next-Reepham, Holme Hale .................• 435
Diss ........................... 371 Finch am ... . .. .. . . ..... .•. . .• 395 see "Reepham ...... .•••.. 578 Holme-next.Runcton ...... 435
Diss Heywood, ~ee Diss ..• 371 Fisbley ........................ 396 Haddiscoe ..............•... 4I2 Holme-next-the-Rea ••.... 436
Ditching ham •••....•......• 37 5 Flegg Burgh, see Burgh Haggard Street, see Hor- Holt ........................... 436
Dixon's End, see West St.Margaret& St.Mary 331 stead- cum- Stanning- Holverston .................. 439
Walton ..................... 667 .Flitcham-with-Appleton 396 ball ........................ 442 Homersfield, see Alburgh 29I
Docking ....................• 375 Flordon ..................... 397 Hales ......•••.........••... 412 Honing ..........••......... 439
Doughton, see Dun ton ... 383 Fordham ..................... 397 Hall Green-North, see Honing ham ............... 439
Downham, see Wymond· Forncett End, see Forn· East Derebam ............ 363 Homing ..................... 440
ham ..•.•....•••....•.....•• 693 cett St. Peter .••......... 398 Halvergate .••...•........•.. 412 Horningtoft .•.....••......... 440
Downham (or Downham Forncett St. Mary ......... 397 Hanworth ...•..........•... 413 Horsey-next-the-Sea .••... 440
Market) ...•••...•••....•• 377 Forncett St. Peter ...•••... 397 Happisburgb ............•.. 4I3 Horsford ....•.....•..•....... 441
Drayton .............••.....• 381 Foulden (or Fouldon) ... 398 Hapton ..................... 413 Horsham St. Faith's ...... 441
Dumpling Green, see Foulmere, see West Hardingham ......•........ 414 Horstead- cum-Stanning-
East Dereham ..•....•• 363 Wretham ....••..•.....• 6gx Hardley ••....•.........••... 414 hall .......•.•.............• 442
Dunham - Great (or Fouls ham .................. 398 Hard wick .......•.......... 415 Honghton ( Houghton-in-
Magna) & Little ..•..• 382 Foxley .........•.............• 399 Hard wick, see North the-Dale, or Hough ton
Dunkirk, see Aylsham ... 300 Framingbam Earl ......... 400 Runcton .................. 586 St. Giles) .................. 443
Dunston .......•..........••• 383 l''ramingham Pigot .•.•.. 400 Hargham ..................... 415 Houghton-on-the-Hill ... 443
Dunton-cum-Doughton ... 383 Fransham - Great & Harleston ..•....•.......•.. 415 Houghton - New (or
Earlham, seeNorwich ... 508 Little •...............•.... 400 Harling-East ............ 4I8 Hough ton - in - the-
Ears ham ..•....•............ 383 Freethorpe .•................ 401 Harling-LittleorMiddle, Brake, or Hougbton-
East Barsham ............ 300 .Frenze ..•................•.•.. 401 - see West Harling ...... 419 next-Harpley) .....•...... 443
East Beckham .•..•....•.. 309 Frettenham ..........•.... 401 Harling-West .......••..• 419 Iloveton St. John ......••• -4-43
East Bilney .................. 314 I<'ring (or Fringe) ......... 402 Harpley ..................... 420 Hoveton St. Peter ......... 444
East Bradenham ......... 320 Fritton ........................ 402 Hassingham ............... 420 Howe ..................... ,.. 444
East Carlton ............... 342 Frost row, see Hingham 432 Hautbois-Great ...•••... 420 Hungate, see Emneth ..• 389
East Dcreham ...........• 362 Fulmodeswn ..............• 402 Hautbois - Little, see _ Hungry Hill, see Beetley 312
East End, seeWells-nex~ Fundenhall .................. 403 Lammas .................. 455 Hunstanton .................. 444
the-Sea ....••..••••..•.•. 674 Garboldisham ............ 403 Haverland, or Havering- Hunstanton-Oid .••.....• 444
East Harling ............... 418 Garvestone .... ; ............. 403 land .....•.................. 421 Hunworth .......•...•...... 447
East Lex ham ............... 458 Gasthorpe .................. 404 Hay Green,see Terrington Hythe, see Methwold •.• 490
East Poringland ..........•• 572 Gateley ................•.... 404 St. Clement .............•• 632 Ickborough(or Ickburgh) 447
East Raynham ............ 577 Gatesend, see Tattersett 630 Haynford (or Hainford) 42I Illington ....•.•••.•.........• 448
East Rudham ......... ...... 585 Gayton ..................... 404 Heacham ..................... 421 Ingham ..................... 448
East Runton ...•••......... 587 Gayton Thorpe .......••. 405 Heath (The), see Fak.en-
u Ingoldisthorpe ............ 449
East Ruston ............... 589 GaywoOO. ..................... 405 ham ... ..................... 389 Ingworth .................... 449
East Somerton ..• .. . . .. ... 6o7 Geiste, see Guist ...•....• 410 Heckingham ............... 422 Intwood ....................• 449
East Tnddenham .. : ...... 652 Geldeston .................. 400 Hedenham .................. 422 Irmingland .................. 450
East Walton ............... 666 Gildencroft, see Norwich 500 Heggatt Street, see Hor- Irstead ........................ 450
East Winch .................. 682 Gillingham All Saints- stead - cnm- Stanning- Islington •.•.•...•.•........•• 450
East Wretbam ............ 6gr cum-St. Mary ..•.••..• 400 hall ..............•......... 442 Itteringham ............... 450
Ea.sthaugb, see Lyng ... 464 Gimingham ............... 400 Heigham, see Norwich ... soo Kelling ........................ 451
Eastmoor, see Barton Gissing ..................... 407 lleigham-North,seeNor- Kempston .................. 451
Ben dish ..••..........•..• 307 Gland ford .................. 407 wich ........................ 5o8 Ken Hill, see Snettisham 6o6
Easton ........................ 384 God wick, see rittleshall.. 648 Heigham-South,seeNor- Keningham, see Mulbar-
Eaton, see Norwich ...... 509 Gooderstone •...••.•.....•• 407 wich ............ ······-·· .•• 505 ton •••...••.•••••...•.•...• 494
X '
INDEX TO KELLY S NORFOLK DIRECTORY.

. PAGE PAGE PAGE pAGE


Kenninghall .............. 451 Low Shotesham, see New Lakenham, see Nor- Pool-North, see Swaff-
Kerdiston, see Reepham 578 Shotesham St. :Mary ... 602 wich .........................~09 ham ........................ 622
Keswick ·..................... 452 Lower Gresham, see New Walsingbam ......... 662 Poppylot, see Methwold 490
Ketteringbam ............... 45.2 G-resham .................. 408 New Walsoken, see Wal- Poringland-Gt. & Littla 572
Kettlestone .................. 453 Lower Hellesdon, see so ken ..................... 665 Postwick ..................... 572
Kett's Oak, see Ryston ... 590 Hellesdon .................. 423 Newton-by-Castle-Acre ... 497 Pott Row, see Grimstone 409
K~lverstone .................. 453 Lower Sheringham ...... 599 Newton J<'lotman ... : ..... 498 Potter-Heigham ............ 573
K~rnbRrley .................. 453 Lower Weasenham, see Newton St. Faith's, sec Pudding Norton ............ 573
K~ng's Lynn, see Lynn ... 464 Weasenham St. Peter 67r Horsham St. Faith's ... 448 Pulham Market, see Pul-
Kuby Bedon ............... 454 Ludham ..................... 463 Newton-West ............ 49 hatn St.Mary Magdalen 573
Kirby.Bedorl St. Andrew Lynfnrd ..................... 463 Nordelph(orNorthdelph), PulhamSt.MaryMagdalen 573
& Ktr?y BedonSt.Mary, Lyng ........................ 463 see Upwell ............... 655 Pulham St. Mary The
.see Ktrby Bedon ...... 454 LyngEasthaugh,seeLyng 464 North Barningham, see Virgin ..................... 574
K~rby Cane ........ : ......... 454 Lyngate, see Worstead ... 689 Barningham Norwood 305 Pyrleston, see Billingford
Ktrs.tea_d (or Ktrstead- L):ngwhite, see Hingham 432 North Bars.ham ............ 306 (near Diss) ... :........... 314
Wtth Langhale) ......... 454 L)nn ........................ 464 1NorthBurhngham ......... 334 Quarles .................... 575
Knapton ..................... 455 Lynn-North & West ... 482 North Creake ............... 353 Quays (The), see Yarmth 698
Lakenham &Lakenham- Lynn Regis, see Lynn ... 464 North Denes, see Yarmth 701 Quidenham .................. 575
New, see Norwich ...... 509 Lynn-Soutb, see Lynn 466 North Elmbam ............ 386 Rackheath .................. 576
Lake's End, see Upwell ... 655 Maddermarket, see Nor- North End, see Lynn ... 465 Ranworth .................. 576
Lammas ..................... 455 wich .............. , ........ 503 North G-reen,see Pulham Raveningham ............... 576
Langford ..................... 455 Mannington ............... 483 St. Mary the Virgin ... 575 Raynham-East(orRayn-
Langbale, see Kirstead ... 454 Marham ..................... 483 North Hall Green, see ham St. Mary) ......... 577
Langham (or Langham Market Harling, see East East Dcreham ......... 363 Raynham Park, see Bel-
Bishops) .................. 456 Harlin~ .................. 4r8 North . Heigham, see houghton .................. 423
Langley ..................... 456 MarketH1ll,see Swaffham 622 1 Norwtch ......... ~ ....... 5o8 Raynham-South (or
Langmere, see Dickle- Market Street, see NorthLopham,seeLophm 46r Haynham St. Martin) 577
burgh ..................... 369 Wymondbam ............ 693 North Lynn .............. 482 R.aynham - West (or
Larling (or Larlingford) 456 Markshall .................. 483 North Pickenham ......... 570 HaynhamSt.Margaret) 577
Lenwade, see Great Marlingford ............... 484 NorthPool, see Swaffham 622 Redenhall -with-Harlestn 415
Witchingbam ............ 684 Marsh, see Terrington j North Quay, see Yarmth 698 Redmore, see Little Ouse 566
Lessin~hm.(orLasingbm) 457 St. Clement ............ 63r North Runction ............ 586 Reedham ..................... 577
Letbermgsett ............... 457 Marsham ..................... 484 1North Tuddenham ...... 652 Reepham ..................... 578
Letton ........................ 457 1\Iartham ..................... 484INorth Walsham ............ 658 Reffiy Spring, see Gay-
1
Lexham- East & West ... 458 Massingham-Great.. .... 486 North Wotton ............ 688 wood ........................ 405
Leziate ........................ 458 Massingham-Little ...... 4861Northrepps .................. 498 Repps-cum-Bastwick ...... 58o
Lighthouse Hills, see Matl~~oske ..................... 486 Northwold ... : .............. 499 Reymerston ............... 580
Cromer .................. 355 Mattishall .................. 486 N orton Streel, see H urn- Riddlesworth ............... 580
Limpenhoe .................. 458 Mattishall Burgh ......... 487 ham Norton ............... 336 Ridlington .................. 58r
Lingwood .................. 459 Mattisha\l Heath, ~e Norton Subcourse ......... 500 Hingland ..................... 58r
Litcham ..................... 459 Mark shall ............... 483 Norwich ..................... soo Ringstead-Great ........ sBr
Little Barningham ...... 305 Mautby .................... 487 Nowhere, see Acle ......... 289 Ringstead- Parva, see
Little Bittering ............ 316 Meeting House Hill, see Oby, see Ash by (near Barret Ringstead ...... 58r
Little Cressingham ...... 354 Worstead .................. 689 i Yarmouth) ............... 294 Riston, see Ryston ......... 590
Little Dunham ............ 382 Melton Constable ......... 487 Old Buckenham ............ 331 Rockland All Saints &
Little Ellingham ......... 386 Melton-Great & Little 488: Old or Great Walsingham 664 Rockland St. Andrew's 582
Little Fransham ............ 400 Mendham, see Harleston 415 Old Hunstanton ............ 444 Rockland- Little, see
Little Harling, see West Merton ........................ 489: Ormesby St.Margaret (or Rockland St. Mary ...... 582
Harling .................. 419 Methwold .................. 489 Ormesby-Great) ...... 564 Rockland St. Mary ......... 582
Little Hautbois, see Lam- Meth wold Hythe, see Ormesby St. Michael (or Rockland St. Peter ......... 583
mas ........................ 455 Methwold ................ 490 Ormesby-Little) ...... 565 Rollesby ..................... 583
1
LittleHockham,see Great Metton ........................ 490 Osmondeston, see Scale 595 Roman Bank, see Walpole
Hockham ............... 433 Middle Harling, see West Oulton ........................ 565 St. Peter .................. 658
Little London, see Harling .................. 419 Ouse Bank, see Downbam 379 Roman Camp, see Ayl-
Southery .................. 6og Middleton .................. 490 Ouse-Little ............... s66
I merton ..................... 298
Little London, see Tilney Mileham ..................... 491 Outwell ..................... 566 Roudham .................. 583
All Saints .................. 647 Mill gate, see Aylsham ... 299 Overstrand .................. 567 Rougham .................. 584
1
Little Massingham ...... 486 Mintlyn ..................... 492 Overy t)taith (or Overy Roughton .................. 584
Little Melton ............... 488 Morley St. Botolph ...... 492 Town), see Burnham Roxham ..................... 584
Little Onnesby, see Morley St. Peter ......... 492 Overy ..................... 337 Roydon (near Diss) ...... 585
Ormesby St. Michael. .. 565 Morningthorpe ............ 492 Ovington ..................... 567 Roydon (near Lynn) ...... 585
Little Ouse .................. 566 Morston ..................... 493 0wby, see Ashby (near
1
Rudham-East ............ 585
Little Palgrave,see 8porle 6ro Morton-on-the-Hill ...... 493 Yarmouth) ..·............. 294 Rudham-West ............ 586
Little Plumstead ......... 572 Moulton ..................... 493 Oxborough .................. 568 Ruined Churches ......... 270
, Little Poringland ......... 572 Moulton St. Michael (or Oxnead ..................... 568 Runcton-North & South 586
Little Rockland,see Rock- ~Ioulton-Great) ...... 493 Oxwick ........................ 568 Run hall ..................... 587
land St. Mary ............ 58~ Mousehold Heath, see Oyster Sea, see Old Hun- Run ham ..................... 587
Little Ryburgh ............ 590 Norwich .................. 507 stanton .................. 445 Runham- Vauxhall, see
Little Snare hill ............ 6oS Mulbarton·with-Kening- Palgrave-Great & Little, Yarmouth .............. ., 70r
Little Snoring ............ 607 ham ........................ 494 see Spode ............... 6xo Runton-East & West ... 587
Little Walsingham, see Mundesley(or Mundsley) 494 Palling ........................ 569 Rushall ..................... 588
New Walsingham ...... 662 Mundford .................. 4951 Panxwortb .................. 569 Rushford ..................... 588
Little Waxham, see Mundham .................. 495 Paston ........................ 569 Ruston-East ............... 589
Horsey-next-the-Sea ... 441 Narborough (or Nar- Pattesley (or Pa.sley), see Ruston-South ............ 589
Little Witchingham ...... 685 burgh) ..................... 495 Oxwick.. ................... 568 Ryburgh - Great (or
Little Yarmouth, see Narford ..................... 496 Peddars' (or Pedlars' Magna.) .................. 589
Yarmouth ............... 702 Neatishead .................. 496 Way), see Fring ......... 402 Rybnrgh-Little ......... 590
Loddon ..................... 400 Necton ... ..................... 497 Pensthorpe ................•. 570 Rl'Ston ... ..................... 590
London - Little, see Needham ..................... 497 Pentney ..................... 570 Saddlebow, see Wiggen-
Soutbery .................. 6o9 New Buckenham ......... 330 Peyke's Cross, see Ter- hallSt.'MarytheVirgin 68o
Lor,don-Little,seeTilney New Catton, see Norwich 505 rington St. John ......... 632 Sabam Toney ............... 590
All Saints ............... 647 New Common Marsh, see Pickenham-North ...... 570 St. Cha.dd's Well, see
Long Stratton ............ 619 Terrington St.Clement 631 Pickenham-South ...... 57I Rushford .................. 58B
Longham ..................... 461 New Cut, see West Lynn 4B2\Plumstead (b:r Holt) ...... 571 St. Edmund's Point, see
Longlands, see Holkham 435 New Holkham, see Hulk- Plumstead-Great ......... 571 Old Hunstanton ......... 445
Lop ham-North k South 461 ham ........................ 435 Plumstead-Little ......... 572 St. Faith's, see Horsham ,
. LowCommon,seeDeophm 36r New Hough ton ............ 443 11Pockthorpe, see Norwich 507 St. Faith's ............... 44l


INDEX TO KELLY'S NORFOLK DIRECTORY • XI
PAGE PAGE PAGE PAGE
St. Geurge's Park, see South Creake ............... 353 Taverham .................. 630 Wabournc .................... 656
Yarmouth ............... 699 South Denes, see Yar- Telegraph Hill, see Wacton ...................... 656
St. Lawrence, see South mouth ..................... 701 Wabourne ............... 656 Walcot G:reen, see Diss .., ·371
Walsham ................. 662 South Green, see East Ten Mile Bank, see H1lgay 429 Walrott ................. ~ ... 657
St. Margaret's Well, see Dereham .................. 363 Terrington St. Clement ... 631 Wallington. witlhTh.orp-
Wereham ............... 676 SouthHmghm.seeNorweh 505 Terrington St. John ...... 632 land ......................... 657
St. Martin's Plain, see SouthLopham,seeLopham 461 Testerton ..................... 633 Walpole Highway, see
Norwich .................. 502 South Lynn: see Lynn ... 466 Tharston ..................... 633 Walpole St. Peter.~ .... 658
St. Mary, ·see Gillingham South Piekenham ......... 571 Thelveton (or Thelton) .•• 634 Walpole St__Andr.ew ~. .... 657
All Saints ... : ........... 4o6 SouthQuay,seeYarmouth ~8 Thcmelthorpe ..... ~ ....... 634 Walpole St. Peter ......... 657
St. Mary's, see South South Raynharn ............ 577 Thetiord ..................... 634 Walsham-+-N ortfi.. -._.r.... 658
Walsham .................. 662 South Huncton ............ 586 Thirne, see Thurne ...... 644 Walsham-South ......... 662
St. Miles' Bridge, see South Ruston (or Sco- Thompson .................. 640 Walsingham ~ New or
Norwich .; ................ 508 Ruston) .................. 589 Thornage ... "·· ............... 640 Little ............ -L ........ 662
St. Peter's Plain, see South Walsham ............ 662 Thornham ................. 64o Walsingham - Old (or
Yarmouth ............... 709 South Wootton ............ 688 Thoroughfare, see Har- Great) ..................... 664
St. Thomas a Becket's Southbergh .................. 6oS leston ..................... 416 Walsoken & Walsoken-
Well, see Wymondham 693 Southery ..................... 6o8 Thorpe, see Burnham .Xew ........................ 665
Salhouse (Salehouse or Southgate,see Snettisham 6o6 Thorpe ..................... 33 7 Walton-West & East ... 666
Sallowes) .................. 591 Southrepps .................. 609 Thorpe (next Haddiscoe) 641 Warborough Hill, see
Sall ........................... 591 Southtown,see Yarmouth 698 Thorpe-next-Norwich (or Stiffkey .................. 6r5
Salter's Lode, see Down· Southwood .................. 609 Thorpe St. Andrew) ... 64r Warham All Saints ...... 667
ham ........................ 379 Spa Common, see North Thorpe Abbotts ............ 642 Warham St. Mary ......... 667
Salter's Lode, see Wim- Walsham .................. 659 Thorpe Market ............ 642 Warren, see Methwold ... 490
botsham .................. 682 Sparham ..................... 6ro ThorpeHarnlet,seeNorwch sot Waterden .................. 668
Salthouse ..................... 592 Spixworth .................. 6ro ThorpA Parva, see Scale 595 Watlington .................. 668
Sams _Cut, see Methwold 490 Spooner Row, see Thorpland,seeWallington 657 Wattlefield, seeWymond-
Sandrmgham ............... 592 Wymondham ............ 694 Three Holes, see Up well 655 ham ........................ 693
Santon ...... ~ ................ 593 Sporle-with-Palgrave ... 6ro Threxton ..................... 643 Watton ..................... 668
Saxlingham ............... 593 Spouts Common, see Holt 436 Tbrigby ..................... 643 Waxham ..................... 671
Saxlingham-Nethergate.. 593 Sprowston ................. 6r 1 Thurgarton .................. 643 Wax ham - Little, see
Saxlingham-Thorpe ...... 594 Stalharn ..................... 6u Thurlton ..................... 643 Horsey-next-the-Sea ... 441
Saxth?rpe .................. 594 Stalland, see Deopham ... 36r Thurne ........................ 644 Wayland (or Wailing)
Scarmng ..................... 59-1- Stanfield ..................... 6r3 Thurning ..................... 644 Wood, see Watton ...... 669
Sco-Ruston, see South Stanford ..................... 6r3 Thursford .................. 644 Weasenharn All Saint.'!
Ruston ..................... 589 Stanhoe ..................... 6r3 Thurton ..................... 645 (or Upper Weasenham) 671
Scole ........................ 595 Stanninghall,seeHorstead 442 Thuxton (orThurston) ... 64-5 Weasenham St. Peter (or
Scottow ..................... 595 Starston ..................... 6r3 Thwaite, see Alby ......... 292 Lower Weasenham) ... 671
Scoulton ..................... 596 Stibbard ..................... 6r4 Thwaite All Saints ......... 645 Weeting-with-Bromehill. 672
Scratby, see Ormesby St. Stiffkey ..................... 6r4 Thwaite St. Mary ........ 646 Welborne ..................... 672
Margaret .................. 564 Stockton ..................... 615 Thwaites' Tree, see Welling ham ............... 672
Sculthorpe .................. 596 Stody ........................ 615 Tivetshall St. Margaret 648 Wells-next-the-Sea ...... 672
Sedgeford .................. 596 StokeFerry .................. 6r5 Tibenham .................. 646 Wendling ...... ~ .............. 675
Seeche, see Lynn ......... 466 Stoke Holy Cross ......... 6r6 Tilney All Saints ......... 646 Wereham ................... 676
Seething ..................... 597 Stokesby-with-Herringby 6r6 Tilney-cum-Islington, see Wermigey,see Wormegay 689
Setch (or~etcheyMagna) 597 Stone Bridge, see East Islington .................. 450 West Acre .................. 290
SetchBridge,seeWormegy 689 Wretham .................. 691 Tilney St. Lawrence ...... 647 West Barsham ............ 3o6
Seven Sisters, see Lynn 465 Stow Bardolph ............ 6r7 Timberhill, see Norwich 504 West Beck ham ............ 301)
Shad well, see Rushford ... 588 Stow lledon .................. 6r8 Titchwell. .................... 647 West Bilney .................. 314
Sharrington ................. 597 Stow Bridge, see Stow Tittleshall-cum-Godwick 648 West Bradenham ......... 320
Shelf anger .................. 598 Bardolph .................. 6r7 Tivetshall St. Margaret 648 West Caistcr, see Caister-
Shelton ..................... 598 Stradsett ..................... 6r8 Tivetshall St. Mary ...... 649 next-Yarmouth ......... 339
Shereford(orSheringford) 598 Stratton-Lopg ............ 6r8 Toft Monks .................. 649 West Dereharn ............ 368
Sheringham ............... 599 8tratton St. :\'lary, see Toftrees ..................... 650 West Harling ............... 419
Sheringham- Upper & Long Stratton ............ 6r8 Tofts-West ............... 649 West Lexham ............... 458
Lower,see Sberingham 599 Stratton St. Michael, see Toftwood, see East Dere- West Lynn .................. 48a
Shernborne (or Sharn- Long Stratton ............ 618 ham ....................... 363 West of Nene, see West
buurne) .................. 6oo Stratton Strawless ......... 62o Tompson, see Thompson 640 Walton ..................... 666
Shimpling .................. 6or Strumpshaw ............... 62o TopL:roft ..................... 65o West Newton ............... 498
Shingham .................. 6or Stubbs Green,see Loddon 461 Tottenhill .................. 65o West Poringland ......... 572
Shipdham .................. 6or Sturston ..................... 620 Tottington .................. 651 West Raynham ............ 572
Shirehall Plain, see Holt 437 Suffield ..................... 621 Tower End,see Middleton 491 West H.udham ............ 586
Shotesham All Saints (or SummerHill,seeFakenhm 390 Town Green, see Wy- West Runton ............... 587
High Shotesham) ...... 6o2 Summerfield, see Docking 376 mondham ............... 693 West Somerton ............ 6o8
Shotesham St. Mary (or Surlingham .................. 621 Trimingharn ............... 651 West Tufts .................. 649
Low Shotesham) ...... 6o2 Sustead ..................... 621 Trowse, see Norwich ...... 500 West Town,seeYarmouth. 702
Shouldham .................. 602 Suton, see Wymondharn 693 Trowse Millgate, see Nor- West Walton ............... 666
Shouldham Thorpe ...... 6o3 Sutton ........................ 621 wich ..................... 5ro West Winch ............... 683
Shropham .................. 6o3 Swaffham .................. 622 Trowse Newton ............ 651 West Wretham ........... ~~
Sidestrand (or Syder- Swafield ..................... 626 Trunch ..................... 652 Westbriggs,see Tottenhill 6so
strand) ..................... 6o3 Swainsthorpe ............... 626 Tuddenham - East & WestbrookGreen,see Diss 371
Siltield, see Wymondham 693 Swanington .................. 627 North ..................... 652 Westfield .................. 676
Sizeland (or Sisland) ...... 6o4 Swanton Abbot ............ 627 Tunstall ..................... 653 Weston Longville ......... 676
Skeyton ..................... 6o4 Swanton Great Wood, see Tunstead .................. 653 Westwick .................. 677
Sloley ........................ 6o4 Melton Constable ...... 488 Tuttington .................. 653 Weybourne,seeWabourne 656
Smallburgh .................. 6o4 Swanton Morley ............ 628 Twyford ..................... 654 WheatacreAll Saints ...... 677
Smeeth, see Walsoken, SwantonNovers ............ 628 Tybenham,see Tibenham 646 Wheatacre Burgh, see
665; & West Walton ... 56? Swardeston .................. 629 Ulph,see BurnhamSutton 337 Burgh St. Peter ......... 334
Snarehill-Great & Little 6o5 Syderstone .................. 629 Upper Hellesdon,see Hel- Whin burgh (or Whin-
Snetterton .................. 6os Syderstrand, see Side- lesdon ..................... 423 bergh) ..................... 677
Snettlsham .................. 6o6 strand ..................... 6o3 UpperSheringham ......... 599 Whissonsett ............... 678
Snitterley, see Blakeney 315 Tacolneston .................. 629 Upper Weasenham, see White Horse Common,
Snoring-Great & Little 6o? Tarn House Corner, see Weasenham All Saints 671 set North Walsham ... 659
Somerton-East ........... 6o7 Beetley ..................... 310 Upton ........................ 654 Whitlingham ............... 678
Somer::•m-West ......... 6o8 Tasburgh ..................... 630 Upwell ..................... 654 Whittington ............... 678
South Acre .................. 290 Tatterford .................. 630 ValeofNar,see Middleton 491 Whitwell, see Reepham ... 57B
South Hurlingham ......... 335 Tattersett .................. 63o Vauxhall, see Yarmouth 70g Wickhampton ............... 678
•• 7
Xll INDEX TO KELLY S NORFOLK DIRECTORY • •

. PAGE) . . . PAGE r· T PAGE PAGE:


WICklewood .................. 679 Wmdall, see Glllingham "1tton (near North Wal- Wormegay .................. 68g
Wickmere .................. 679 All Saints ............... 406 sham) ..................... 685 Worstead ..................... 68 9
Wiggenhall St. Germans 679 Winfarthing ............... 683 Wiveton (or Wiverton) ... 685 Worthing .................. 690
Wiggenhall St. Mary Winston, see Gillingham Wolferton .................. 686 Wortwell ..................... 690
Magdalen ............... 68o All Saints ............... 4o6 Wolterton .................. 686 Wramplingham ......... 6go
Wiggenhall St. Mary the Winterton .................. 684 Wood Bastwick ...•••.••... 686 Wreningham ............... ~~
Virgin ..................... 68o Winterton Ness, see Win- Wood Dalling ............... 687 Wretham-East ............ ~~
Wiggenhall St. Peter ..• 68r terton ..................... 684 Wood Green, see Long Wretham-West ..•....•• t><}I
Wighton ..................... 68r Wishing Wells, see New Stratton .................. 619 Wretton ..................... 6g 2
'\\rilby •....................... 682 Walsingham ............ 663 Wood N orton ..............• 687 Wroxbam .................• 6g2
Wilton, .see Hockwold ... 433 Witchingham-Great •.• 684 Woodrising .................. 687 Wymondham ............... ~ 3
Wimbotsham ............... 682 Witchingham-Little ... 685 Woodton ..................... 688 Yarmouth(orGt.Yarmth) 698
W~nch-East ............... 6821 ";~thergate, .see Wo~stead 689 ";ootton-North ......... 688 Yaxham ..................... 732
Wmch-West ............... 683 "1tton(nearNorw1Cb) ... 68s"ootton-South ......... 688 Yelverton .................. 73 2
LIST OF THE

With Reference to the Places under which they will be found in this Volume. '
PAGE PAGE
Aid borough New hall, James Gay esq. J,P,see Alborough 291 Burlingham house, Major Robert Herbert Heath Jary
Alpington hall, William .B. Young esq. see Alpington ... 293 J.P. see North Burlingham ................................. 334
An mer hall, Mrs. Cold ham, see Anmer ... .. • ... ... ..• . . • . .. 293 Burnham ball, Mrs. Overman, see Burnham Market ... 335
Ashwellthorpe hall, Major-Gen. Philip Story, see Ash- Hurnley hall, Samuel Nightingale esq.see East Somerton 6o7
we!lthorpe ..........•...........•.....•.......••.••..•....••..•.•. 295 Bylaugh park, Rev. Henry Evans-Lombe B.A., J.P. see
Ashwicken hall, John Groom esq. see Ashwicken ......... 295 BJrlangh ..........••.....•......................••..•........• ·· 339
Aylmer hall, William Baldock Parsons esq. J.P. see Caistor hall, Mrs. Green, see Caistor St. Edmund ...... 340
Tilney St. Lawrence ......................................... 647 Cantley Manor house, Major Herbt. Henry Gilbert ;I.P.
Baconstborpe Manor house, Thomas Osborn Springfield see Cantley ...........•.................••••.....•.....••••.....• 341
e.;;q. J.P. see Baconsthorpe .................................... 302 Carrow house, Jeremiah James Colman esq. M.P., J.P.,
Barningham hall, John llradley Firth esq. see llarning- • D. L. see Norwich................................................ 523
ham 'fown .............................................•........... 300 Catfield hall, Mrs. Lubbock, see Catfield .................. 344
Barwick house, Mrs. Seymour,see llarwick-in-the-Brake 308 Catton hall, Samuel Gurney Buxton esq. J.P., D.L. see
Bawburgh hall, Hon. Charles Claude Bertie, see Baw- Ca tton ........................................................... -.... 344
burgh ..•..•.••..........••.......•..••••...•.•...........•....• ". 308 Catton house, Col. Edward B. Manse) J.P. see Catton 344
Bawdeswell ball, By. Geo. Lindesay esq. see llawdeswell 308 Catton Manor house, Colonel Algernon Cecil Dawson
Hayfield hall,Sir Alfred Jodrell bart.n.L.,J.P.see Hayfield 309 J.P. see Cattc>n~·················································· 345
Beecbamwell hall, Joshua Fielden esq. J.P., D.L. see Cavick house, William Cann esq. J.P. see Wymondham 693
Beechamwell ..............................•••.................• 310 Chedgrave Manor house, Reginald Northall-Laurie esq.
Beeston hall, Thomas Wyndham Cremer esq. B.A., J.P. see Chedgra ve . . • .•. . . . .•• . . . ••• . . •..• . .• . . . . . •. . . . ••.••. ••••. •.• 346
see Bees ton Regis . . . . . . . ... . . . ... . •. .•. . . . ... ••• . •• . . . . .• . . . . . • 3 I r Clermont lodge, Joseph Trueman Mills esq. .J.P., D.L.
Beeston hall, Arthur Boulderson esq. see Beeston St. see Little Cressingham ........................ I.............. 354
Lawrence ......................................................... -. . . . 3 r 1 Cley ball, Clement William Hardy Cozens-Hardy esq.
Berry hall, Major John Edmund Groom J.P. see Old J. P. see Cley-next-the-Sea. •• . . . •• •. •••••. .• •• • . . . .• . . .••••. •• 347
W alsing ham............... . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .. . . . . . . . . . . .. 66 5 Cley hall, Richard Buckworth esq. see Cockley Cley ... 348
Bessingham Manor house, Daniel Spurrell esq. see Cliff house, Samuel Hoare esq. M.P., M.A., J.P. see
Bessingham .................................... ~··· ....... I.... I.... 3I 2 Cromer . .• . . . . . . . . . ... . . . ••. . . . . .. . . . . .. . . . ..• . . . . .• . . . . . . . . . . .. .. • 356
Besthorpe hall, Richard Bryant esq. see Besthorpe ...... 313 Clippesby house, WalpoleEdwinEyreesq~ seeClippesby 348
Billingford hall, Lady Parry, see Billingford ............... 313 Colne cottage, Sir Thomas Fowell Buxton bart. M.A.,
Bixley lodge, George Chamberlin esq. see Bixley ......... 317 D. L., l.P. see Cromer .•...•..............•.........•....•.•.••• 356
Blickling ball, Constance, Marchioness of Lothian, see Colne house, Dowager Lady Buxton, see Cromer ...... 356
Blickling .......................... ·-········~·················· ... 3I8 Colney hall, Hugh Gurney Barclay esq. J.P. see Colney 349
Blofield ball, George Hustler Tuck esq. J.P. see Blofield 319 Coltisball ball, Richard Rogers esq. M.A., J.P. see
Blofield house, Edward Gilbert esq.·J.P. see Blofield ... 319 Coltishall ...... I ................................................... 349
Blo'Norton hall, Philip George Harrison Bennet esq. see Congham ball, John Wm. Davey esq. J.P. see Congham 350
Blo'Y orton ....................................................... 320 Cnngham house, Col. Seymonr Corkran, see Congham 350
Bodney ball, Mrs. Waiter Wortley Flatt, see Bodney ... 321 Costessey hali, Lord Stafford, see Costessey ............... 351
Bol wick hall, Charles Louis Buxton esq . .J. P.see Mars ham 48-1- Cottage (The), Cyril Flower esq. M.P. see Overstrand ... 567
Booton grove, Henry Jackson Butler esq. see Booton ... 321 Cranmer hall, Sir Lawrence John Jones bart. M.A., J.P.
Booton hall, Edward Gayford esq. see Booton ............ 321 see Sculthorpe ..• . .. . . . . •• . . . . ••. . •. •• . . . .•. . .. . . • . . . .•• . . . .•• . . • 596
Boyland hall, Mrs. Irby, see Morningthorpe ............... 492 Crimplesham hall, Sir Alfred Thomas Bagge bart.
Bracon Ash hall, Rev. Thos. Berney M. A. see Bracon Ash 321 commander R.N., J.P., D.L. see Crimplesham ......... 354
Bradenbam ball, William Meybohm Rider Haggard esq. Cromer hall, Mrs. Benjamin Bond-Cabbell, see Cromer 356
LL.M., D.L., J.P. see West Bradenbam .................. 322 Denton house, Waiter Hamilton Pemberton esq. J.P.
Bradfield hall, George Ives esq. see Bradfield ............ 323 see Denron ........................................................ 36o
Bramerton grange, Ernest England esq. see Bramerton 323 Denton lodge, Mrs. Carthew, see Denton .................. 360
Bramerton ball, Henry Blake esq. see Bramerton ...... 323 Dersingham hall, Mrs. Clarkson, see Dersingham ...... 369
Bramerton lodge, Major John Penrice D.L., J.P. see D1dlington hall, William Amhurst Tyssen Amherst esq.
Bramerton .....................................................• 323 F.s.A., D.L., J.P. see Didlington ......................••..• 370
. Brancaster hall, Simms Reeve esq. J.P. see Brancaster 324 Ditchingham hall, Wm. Carr esq. J.P. see Ditchingham 375
llrandiston hall, Arthur E. Pedder esq. see Brandiston 324 Ditchingham house, Henry Rider Haggard esq. J.P. see
Braydeston ball, Thomas Slipper esq . .r.P. see Bradeston 330 Dit<!hingham ..• . . . .. . .•• . .. . ... . . . .••... .•• . .. .•• ... ... . . •.•• . ... 375
Bressingham ball, Albert H. Tuck esq. see Bressingham 325 Ditchingham lodge, Artbur Henry Jenney esq. J.P. see
Brinton hall, Rev. John Mortlock Roberts M.A. see Direhingham ..................................................... 375
Brinton ..•.......................•... "'"'" .••.................•....•• 326 Dove house, Rev. James Watson Stote Donnison M. A.,
Brooke hall, George John Holmes esq. J.P. see Brooke .. 328 J.P. see Harl~t<lr1 ............................................... 416
Brooke house, Viscount Canterbury D.L., J.P. see Brooke 328 Dudwick house, Mrs. Hastings Parker, see Buxton ...... 338
Brooke lodge, Miss Knight, see Brooke ..................... 328 Dunham lodge, Mrs. Copeman, see Little Dunham ...... 382
Broome Place, Edmond Tyrel de Poix esq. J. P. see Dunston ball, Lieut.-Col. Sir Edmund Broughton
Broome ..........................•..... ~ .................•......... 329 Knowles Lacon J.P. see Dunston ........................... 383
Bm·field hall, Major-General Henry Beville o.B. see Earlham hall, Rev. Canon William N ottidge Ripley M.A.
Wymondham •..........•.....•....••..........••............... 6g3 see Earlham. •• .• •••••••. ••••• •••••• .•• •.• . •• •. •. . ••.. ••• ••• ••• ••• 5C>9
Burgh hall, James H. Steadman esq. see Burgh ......... 333 Earlham lodge, Major Henry Archibald Cubitt J.P. see
Burgh house, Rev. Charles John Lucas M.A. see Burgh Earl ham .•• .•••••. ••... .•• ••• . . •••. . •• .. . ••• . . . .•• . . . . •••••. ••••• 509
St. Margaret & St. Mary .................................... 333 Earsham hall, Capt. John Percy Meade D.L., J.P. see
Burgh-Apton Manor house, Mrs. Denny, see Burgh- Earsham ........................................................... 383
Apron .••....•......•....••......................••.......•....... 333 East hall, Mrs. Edward Sparke & Henry Morris Upcher
Burlingham hall, Henry Randal Burronghes esq. J.P. esq. l.P., F.Z.B. see Feltwell ........................ - •..••••• 394
see Hurlingham St. Peter ················M··················· 334 East Bilney hall, Harry Jas. Sparks esq. see East Bilney 314

XlV LIST OF THE PHI~CIPAL SEATS IN NORFOLK.

PAGE PAGE
East Carlton Manor house, John Steward esq. see East Hey don hall, Brig. -Gen. W illiam Earle Gascoyne Lyt ton
CarltcJn ........................................................... . Bulwer J.P., D.L. see Heydon .............................. 427
East Ruston hall, Ash Rudrl esq. J.P. see East Ruston Hill house,Arthur Temple Cockell esq. see Attleborongb 296
East Winch hall, Edmund Kent esq. see East Winch .. . Hill house, Mrs. Hume, see Winterton ..................... 684
Easton, Col. Frederick W. Garnetr., see Easton ........ . Hill (The), Sir Henry Jacob Preston bart. B.A., I.P. see
Eccles ball, Hon. Arthur Edward Cassamajor Cole J.P. Morningtborpe .................................................. 499
see Eccles ............................................................, . . 384 Hill boro hall, Frederick Wm. Waters esq. see Stokesby .. 616
Ellingham hall,Henry Smith esq. J .P.,D. L. see Ellingbam 385 Hillington hall, Sir William Hm·ell Browne ffolkes bart.
Ellingham ball, George Samuel Hancbett esq. see Little D.L., J.P. see Hillington .......................................... 430
Ellingham . . ... .. . ... .. . ...... ...... ... ... ....... .. ... ... .. ... ... 386 Hingham hall,Rawdon Hunter-Muskett esq. D.L.,J.P.see
Elmbam ball, John B. Akro:yd esq. see Elmbam ....••..• 387 H ingham .............................................................. 43 I
Elms (The), Thomas Carter esq. see Catton... ••• . .. •.. . . . 344 Hockbam hall, Henry Thomas Partridge esq. J.P. see
Elms (The), Francis Edmond O'Gorman esq. see Great Hock ham ...................................................... 433
Earsharn ................................................................ 383 Hoe hall, Grigson Hey hoe Wigg esq. see Hoe ............. 432
Elms (The), Love well make esq. J .P. see Ormesby St. Holkham ball, Earl of Leicester K.G. (Lord Lieut.), see
Margaret ... . .. . . . . . . ... . . .. . . . . .. . . . . . . . . . . .. . . . . .. . . . . .. . . . ... . ... 564 Holk ham.......................................................... 435
Elsing hall, John Robin Gray esq. see Elsing •••...••.... 387 Holly Hill lodge, Thomas M.Bakeresq. see Ditcbingham 375
Felbrigg hall, Robert William Ketton esq. J.P. see Holly lodge, Hon. Mrs. Burroughes, see Tborpe-next-
Felbrigg .. . . .. . ... ... .. . .... .. ...... ... ... . ..... ... ... ... ...... ... 392 Norwich .... ~ ..... ll············ ···~······························· 641
Feltborpe ball, M1·s. James Bourchier, see Felthorpe •.• 393 Holme Hale ball, Captain Hmry Smith Adlington J.P.
Feltwell hall, Mrs. Newcome, see Feltwell .•.••...•..•.••.•• 394 see Holme Hale .................. , ................................. 435
Feltwelllodge, Col. Edward George Hibbert, see Felt well 394 Ho!L hall, John Rogers esq. M. A., J.P. see Holt ... ._ ....... 436
Filby house, Charles Belgrave Lucas J.P. see Fil~y •...•• 395 Honing ball, Edward George Cubitt esq. J.P. see Honing 439
Fincbam hall, John Boughen Aylmer esq. see Fincham 396 Honingham ball, Capt. the Hon.Ailwyn Edward Fellowes
Flaxmoor, Angnstus Noel Camp bell Hemsworth esq. M.P., J.p-, see Honingham ·······························~···· 439
J. P. see Cas ton ... ... . . . . . . . .. .. . . .. .. . . . . . .. ... . . . . .. . . . . .. . . . 344 Honingham Thorpe, Clare Sewell Read esq. J.P. see
:Framingbam hall, Major WiUiam Robert Fitzgerald, Honingham ...... ........ ··~· ..................................... 440
see }.,rami11g ham Pigot .. . ...... ...... ... ... . ... .. ...... ... ... 400 HorningtoftManor house,GuyDavey esq.seeHorningtoft 440
Framingham Manor house, James Christie esq. see ~rsey hall, Captain Charles C. Rising R.N. see Horsey-
Framingham Pigot... .. . ... .. . .. . . . . . . . . . . .. . . .. . . . ...... ... . . . 400 next-the-Sea ...................................................... 441
Framingbam Earl hall, George Nix Latbam esq. see Horsford manor, Thomas Barrett Lennard esq. J.P. see
Framing ham Earl ... ...... ... ... ...... ... ... ....... .. ... ... . .. 400 Horsford ............................... ····~· ..................... 44 I
Fring hall, Richard Dm:gate Dusgate esq. see }<'ring ..• 402 Horstead ball, ~ir Edward Birkbeck bart. D.L., J.P.
Furze moor, AJgernon Edward Perkins esq. see Great soo Hort:Jtead ... ..................... ·~········ ....... ...... ...... 442
Hock ham .......................................................... 433 Horstead house, Michael Falcon esq. see Horstead __. ...• 442
Garboldisham hall,Mrs. Temple Frere,see Garboldisbam 403 Houghton hall, Marquess of Cbolmondcley D.L. see New
Garboldisham manor, George John Cookson esq. see Hough ton ..... . .. ... . . . ... . .. ... .. . ... .... ... . .. ..... ... .. . .... ...... 443
Garboldisham ............................................................. 403 Hoveton hall, James William Malcolm esq. see Hoveton
Gawdy ball, John Sancroft Holmes esq. M.A., J.P., D.L. St. Pet.er.. .. . . .. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . ... . . . .. . . . . . . . . . . . 444
see Harleston ...................................................... 416 Hoveton house, Worshipful Thomas Calthorpe Blofeld
Gayton hall, Earl Romney D.L., J.P. see Gayton .•••••... 404 M.A., J.P. see Hoveton St. John ........................... 443
Gaywood hall, Thomas Edward Bagge esq. :M.A., D.L., Hunstanton ball, Hamon le'Strange D.L., .l.P. see Old
.T.P. ~e Gay wood .............................................. 405
Hunsta.nton ~·················································--·· 445
Gillingham hall, John George Kenyan esq. see Gilling- Ingham hall, John Borrett esq. see Ingham .. , .••..• , •.•... 443
ham All Saint.s ................................. ··~ ... ... ... .. . 4o6 Ingletborpe hall, Fredcric Morchouse Metcalfe esq. D.L.,
Gissing hall, Cecil1'homas Molyneux-Montgomerie esq. J.P. see Emneth ........ ................................................. 388
D.L,, l.P. see Gissing ........................................... 407' Ingoldisthorpe Manor house, Rev. James Bellamy D.D.
Glostborpe. Manor house, Rev_ William Alexander see lngoldisthorpe ... ...................................................... 44-9
Os borne B.A. see Ash wick en ••.... -··........................ 295 Intwood hall, Lt.-Col. Clement William J oseph Unthank
Gorgate hall, GeOTge Bagnall esq. see Hoe ... ·~········· 434 D.L., J.P.. see Intwood ............................................ 450
Gressenhall hall, John Reginald Hargreaves,see Gressen- Islington ball, Thomas Edward Bagge esq. M.A., D.L.,
hall ····················~·············~···························· 408 Islington lodge, Wm. Derisley Harding esq. see Islington 450
J.P. see Islington ......................... , .................. ,.,,. 450
Gunthorpe hall, Edward BowyerSparkeesq. lll.A., D.L.,
J.P. see Gunthorpe ........-..................................... 411 Ken hill, Sir Edward Green hart. J. P. see Snettisham ... 6o6
Gunton park, Lord Suffield K.C.B., P.C., D.L., J.P. see Keswick hall, John Henry Gurney esq. J.P. see Kes-
Gun ton .......... I ••••••••••••••••••••• ,........................... 411 wick ................. .............................................. 452
Guton hall, Mrs. Russwurm, see Brandiston ............... 324 Keswick Old ball, Henry Birkbeck, jun. esq.see Keswick 452
Hackford hall, Mrs. Collyer, see Hackford •••.••.•....•.•... 578 Ketteringham park, Sir Francis George Manningham
Haddiscoe hall, Ambrose John Read Palmer esq. J.P. Boileau bart. B. A., F.S.A., D. L., J.P. see Ketteringham 452
see H OO.discoe ..•••.•••.•..••••..•••...•••••...•• I... ... .. . .... .. 412 Kih·erstone hall, Josiah Vavasonr esq. see Kilvcrstone ..• 453
Haddiscoe Manor house, Mrs. Carman, see Haddiscoe 412 Kimberley house, Right Hon.Earl of Kimberley K.G.,P. c.,
Hall farm, Richard Charles Browne esq. J.P. see Elsing 388 D.L., J.P. see Kimberley ....................................... ,. 453
Halvergate hall, Robert Gillett esq. see Halvergate ..... 413 Kirby Cane hall, Charles Gurdon Kemball esq. see
Hamond lodge, David Ward esq. see Terrington St. Kirby Cane ............................................................ 454
Clement .................. ··-········ ........................... 63 I Knapton house, Henry Matthew Cooper Robinson M.A.,
Hanworth hall,Frederick llowe Lindsay BaconWindbam l.P. see Knapt<>n ............. _ .......•......................... 455
esq. see Hanworth .............................................. 413 Lakenham Old hall, Mrs. Gurney, see Norwich._. .... _.. 525
Hardingham grove, Sir William Foster bart. D.L.,J.P.see Langham ball, The Misses Rippingall, see Langham .•.• 456
Hardingbam ............................................ _ ......... 414 Langley ball, Sir Reginald William Proctor-Beauchamp
Hardingham hall, Henry William Bartholomew Ed wards bart. D. L.~ J. P. & Lady Violet, see Langley ..•.•.•..•••• 456
esq. D.L.,J.P. see Hardingham .............................. 414 Letheringsett hall, William Hardy Cozens-Hardy esq. J. P.
• Hargham hall, Samuel John Bell esq. see Hargbam .•• 415 see Let.heringsett ...... .......................................... 457
Haverland hall, Lord De Ramsey D.L., J.P. see Letton hall, Robert Thornhaugb Gurdon esq_. M. A., D.L.
Haverland ......................... ········--···················•···-- 421 J.F.sooLetton ................................................. 451
Haynford hall, Rear-Admiral Edwin John Pollard, see Lexham hall, A. W. Ridley esq. see East Lexham·-··· 458
Haynford ...................................................... _ ......... 421 Limes (The), Commander Henry Almarus Digby R.N.
Heacbam hall, Hugh Rose esq. see Heacham _.. ......... 421 ;J.P. see North Runcton ......................... ............... sB6
Hedenham hall, Mrs. Raikes, see Hedenham m . . . .._...... 422 Lynford hall, Mrs. Lyne-Stephens, see Lynford .••.•••• _. 463
Heggatt hall, Mrs. Buckworth, see Horstead _ .......... 442 Mangreen hall, Rev. Wm.FeUowes M.A. see Swardeston 629
Hellesdon house, Sir Harry Bullard D. L.. see Hel- Mannington ball, Earl of Orford M.A., D.L., J.P. see
]esdon ......................................... ····-··· ............ 423 Manningt,<ln .... . . . .. . .. . .. . . . . ... . ................. .. . . . . . .. . .. . .. 48 3
Hemsby hall, TholllllS De la Garde Grissell esq. see Manor cottage, Florance Thomas Stephen Rippingall
• Hemsby -.n ................... "r~ . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 425 esq.. J.J;J. se.e Langham .... ···········~· ......................... 456
Hethersett ball, Mr11. Henry Back, see Hethersett_. ··- 426 Marbam house. Col. Hugh Smitll Baillie & Viscountes8
Hetherse.t\ Old hall, J . .Alfred Back esq. see Hetbersett 426 Glentwortb, see Mar ham ............................... _.... 483
Heydon grange, Lt.-Gen . .Sir Ed ward Earle Ga!!C.Oigne Marlingford hall, Ben jam in Edgington Fletcber esq. see
Bnlwe-r K.C.B. see Heydon ......•.•.•.................•••.. -. 428 Marlingford .,, ... , ................. ···············-···. . ········· 484

LIST OF THE PRIXCIP.AL SE..!TS IN NORFOLK. XV
PAGE PAGB
Melton hall, Rev.HenryEvans-Lombe H.A.,J.P.see Great Rollesby hall, Ernest M. Connop esq. see Rollesby ...... 583
Melton ...... ....................................................... 488 Rookery {The), Henry Morse Taylor e~q. J.P. see Dilbam 370
Melton Constable, Rt. Hon. Lord Hastings .l.P. see Rookery (The), Robert Howard Gillett esq. M.A., .l.P.
Melton Constable ................................................ 488 , see Halvergate ... ................................................ 413
Mergate, Sir Kenneth Hagar Kemp hart. see Bracon .Ash 320 Rookery (The), Major George .Augustus Marsham D.L.,
Merton hall, Lord \Valsmgham M.A.,D.L.,J.P.,F.R.s., see J.P. see Thetford .................................................... 635
Merton ............................................................... 489 Rougham ball, Charles North esq. lii.A., D.L., J.P. see
Middleton hall, The Hon. Misses Milles, see Middleton ... 491 Rclugl1am ......• "... .. .. . . .. . .. . ... .. ... ... ... ... .•• ... ...... ... ... 584
Mileham hall, Albcrt Collison esq . .l.P. see Mileham ...... 491 Roydon hall, Miss FrQI'e & John Tudor I<'rere esq. B.A.,
Moorgate house, Lieut.-Col. Henry El win Hyde M. A., ~.P. see Roydon ................................................ sBs
l. P. see East Dereham................................... . ... 365 Roydon lodge, Raoul Charles Finch Elsden Everard
Morley hall, Capt. F. R. Thackeray,see Morlcy St.Peter 492 esq. J.P. see Roydon (near Lynn) ........ -............... 585
Morley Manor house, Waiter John Bailey esq. see Runcton hall, Somerville Arthur Gurney esq. J.P. see
1\ior ley St. Botol ph .. . . . . . . . . . . .. . . . . .. . . . . . . . . .. . . . ... . . . . ..... 492 North Runcton ............................................. -···· 586
Morningthorpe manor, Commander Thomas Holmes Ryston hall, Edward Roger Murray Pratt esq. B.A., J.P.
R.N., J.P. see Morningthorpe .......................... ; ..... 493 see R j'Stc:Jn • . . • • . • •• •• • • •• • • • • . • • • . . •• • • • • •• . • . • • • •• • • • • • • • . • • • • . 590
Morton hall, Mrs. Berney, see Morton-on-the-Hill. ...... 493 Saint Mary's hall, Gnstavu.'! Helsham esq. .l.P. see 'Vig-
Mount Amelia, Misses Davy, see Ingoldisthorpe .......... 449 genhall St. Mary the Virgin ................................. 681
Musticott housP-, William Ludla.m Ollard esq . .l.P. see Salhouse hall, Edwd. Foote Ward esq. M.A. see Salhouse 591
Wa1soken ...... .........................................•.......... 665 Sandringham house, Field Marshal H.R.H. the Prince
Narborough hall, Joseph Critchlcy Martin esq. J.P. see of Wales K.G., K.T., K.P., P.C. see Sandringham _. ••.. 592
Narbo-rough ........................... ............................ 496 Scole lodge, Frederick Crawshay esq. see Scole ......... 595
Narford ball, Algernon Charles Fountaine esq. D.L. ,J.P. Scottow halllt Lady Dnrrant, see Scottow .................. 595
see N arford............... .. . . . . . . . . .. . . . . . . . . .. . .. . . . . .. . . . ... . . . 4g6 Scratby hall, Rubert Arthur Watling esq. see Ormesby
Necton hall, Robert Harvey Mason esq. J.P., D.L. see St. :1\largaret ................................................ , . . 564
N ecton... . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .. . . . . .. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .. . . . 497 Sedgeford hall, Walter F. Hunt esq. M.A., .l.P. see
New Buckenham grange, Charles Rose Packer csq. see Sedgeford ............................ A ....................... ··-... 597
New Rucker1ham ...... ............................................ . 33° Sennowe hall,BernardLeNe,·eFoster esq.J.P.seeStibbard 6r4
New Haven court, Frederick Locker-Lampson esq. see - Shad well court, Miss Buxton, see Shad well ............... 588
Cromer ............................................................. . Sheringham hall, Mrs. Upcher, see Sheringham ········~ 599
Normans, John Hotblack esq. .l.P. see Rockland St. Shotesham park, Robert Fellowes esq. D.L., .l,P, see
1\iary ............................................................... 582 Sbotesham S\. Mary . . . . . . ... . .. . .. . . . . . . . .. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 602
Northrepps hall, Richard Hanbury Joseph Gurney esq. Shropham hall, Chas. Truston Master esq. see Shropham 6o3
J.P. see Northrepps ............................................. 498 Shrubbery, William C. Curteis csq. u •. D., .J.P. see Scole 595
Northwold lodge, Hugh Paston :Mack esq. J.P. see Sloley honse, James Sewell Neville B.A., J.P. see Sloley ... 604
Northwold ........•.. o·····•o•·••o·~· ············•o•···· .... o.. 500 Snarehill house, George Evans esq. see Snarehill ......... 6o5
Norwich palace, The Hon. & Rigl1t Rev. John Thomas Somerton hall, Bernard James Cuddon-Fletcher esq.
Pelham D.D. (Lord Bishop of Norwich), see Norwich 529 J. P. see West Somerton........................ . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 6o8
Oak lodge, TbeobaldCozens-Hardy esq.J. P.seeSprowston 6II Spixworth hall,Robt. Bacon Longe esq.J.P.see Spixworth 6ro
Oaks (The), John Wilkinsonesq. see North Walsham ... 659 Sprowston hall, Mrs. Gurney, see Sprowston ............ 611
Old Buckenham grange, Major William George Keppel Sprowston lodge, Gilbert Hardinge Stracey esq. J.P.,
J.P. see Old Buckenham ....................................... 331 D.L. see Sprowston .............................................. 6rJ
Old Drayton lodge, Fredk. Wm. Magnay esq.see Drayton 382 Stanfield hall, William Gilmour Cuthbertson esq. see
Ollands (The), John Anthony Kendrew esq. see Hack- Wymondham ................ ............... 'P........ ............ 693
ford, Iteepham .. oo••·· . .......•.....•.......•. .•••. o•••.•....... 578 Stanhoe hall, Edward Jn. I<'cllowesesq. J.P. see Stanhoe 6r3
Orchard house, Major-Gen. Henry Hichard Legge New- Starston Place, AlFred Taylor esq . .l.P. see Starston ... 614
digate J.P., C. B. see Aylsham ............................. 299 Stoke hall, Henry Birkbeck esq. J. P. see Stoke Holy Cross 616
Ormesby house, Henry Sidney Hammet Lacon esq. J.P. Stow hall, Thos.Leigh Hare esq.D.L.,M.P. StowBardolph 617
see Orrnesby St. Margaret •.• .•. . .. .... .. ...... .... .. .... .. 564 Stradsett hall, John Barff Charlesworth esq. see Strad-
Ormesby house, Frederic Kidman esq. see Ormesby St. sett .................................................................. 6r8
· Michael ............................................................ s5S · Stratton Manor honse, Alfred Douglas-Hamilton esq. see
Ormesby lodge, George Morris Heck esq. J.P. see Long Stratton ................................................... 619
Ormesby St. Margaret ....................................... 564 Stratton Strawless hall, Lieut.-Col. Edward George
Ormcsby Old hall, John Christmas csq. see Ormesby Keppel.l.P. see Stratton Strawless .................... ,_, 620
St. 1\fargaret .................................................... 564 Strumpshaw hall, William James Owen Holmes esq.
Oulton hall, Waiter Henry Bolton esq . .l.P. see Oulton 56.5 F.R.s., J.P. see Strumpshaw ...................••............ 620
Oxborough hall, Sir Henry George Paston-Hedingfeld Sunny hill, Geoffrey Fowell Buxton esq. J.P. seeThorpe
hart. D.L., J.P.-see Oxborough .............................. s68 next Norwich ................................................... 641
Oxnead hall, Robert Charles Rising esq. see Oxnead .. . 568 Swanington lawn, John Francis Rogers esq. see Swan-
Paston hall, John Mack esq. see Paston ..................... 570 ingWn . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 627
Pickenham hall, Col. Charles Mundy Applewhaite J.P. Swanton hall, Mrs. Jex-Blake, see Swanton Abbot .••... 627
see South Pickenham ......................................... 571 S wanton house, Charles Atkinson esq. see Swanton N avers 628
Pinkncy hall, Joseph Stonehewer Scott-Chad esq. M.A., Tacolneston hall, James Stephen Edward La Fontaine
J~P. se.e 'fatterford ............................................. 630 esq. J.P. see Tacolneston ................ o ••••••••••••••••••••••• 629
Plumstead hall, Rev. Charles Smyth Johnston H.A. see Tacolneston Old hall, Rev. John Warren Corbould-
Little Plumstead ................................................. 572 Warren LL.M., .l.P. see Tacolneston ........................ 629
Priory (The), George William Danby Palmer-Kerrison Tasburgh hall, Philip Berney I<'icklin esq. see Tasburgb 630
esq. J. Po see Ran worth ....................................... 576 'faverham hall, William Waring esq. J.P. see Taverham 631
Pulham hall, George Leggett esq. see Pulham St. Tharston hall, William Goring esq. see Tharston .... _.... 633
Mary Magdalen ................................................ 573 Thelveton hall, Edward Mann esq. see Thelveton ......... 634
Quebec house, Brigadier-General William Earle Gas- Thickthorn hall, Mrs. Hay Gurney, see Hetbersett ...... 426
coyne Lytton Bulwer J.P., D.L. see East Dercham ..• 363 Tbornham cottage, Mrs. Ames Lyde, see Thornham ... 641
Quidenham hall, Right Hon. Viscount Bnry M.P., D.L. Thornham hall, George Heading esq. see Thornham ... 640
see Quidcn ham . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .. ... . . . 576 Thorpe Abbotts, Right Hon. Sir Edward Kay kt. P.C.
Rackheath park, Manrice Lindsay Coates esq. see .J.P. (Lord Justice of .Appeal), see Brockdish ............ 328
.Rackhea th . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .. . . . . 576 Thorpe hall, Major Frank .Astley Cnbitt J.P. see Thorpe
Rainthorpe ball, Major Sir Charles IIaney hart. J.P. next Norwich . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .. . . . . . . . . . . .. . . . 64 I
see Fiord on ........... o •••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••• 397 Thorpe High honse, William Birkbeck esq.J.P. see Thorpe
Ranworth hall, Miss J. Kerrison, see Ranworth ......... 576 next Norwich .................................................. 641 o

Raveningham hall, Nicholas Henry Bacon esq. J.P. see Thorpe lodge, Mrs. Dalrymple, see Thorpe next Norwich 641
Raveningham ...................................................... 576 Thorpland hall, Capt. Robert Nicholas Ha.mond R.N. see
Raynham hall, Marquess Townshend J.P. see F..ast Fakenham ... ...................................................... 39'>
'Raynha.m . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 577 Threxton house, Thomas Allday Barton,esq.seeThrexton 643
Reedham hall, Gordon Barratt esq. see Reedham ...... 578 'fhrigby hall, Thomas William Daniel esq. M.A., .l.P. see
Reedham Old hall, John William Rose esq. see Reedham 578 Thrigby ........................................................... 643
Riddlesworth hall, Frank Penn esq. see Riddlesworth .•• 581 Tburgarton hall, Richard James Spurrell esq. see
Rippon ball, Mrs. H. P. Marsham, see Hevingham ...... 427 Thurg-.t.rton ....................................................... 643



xn LIST OF THE PRINCIPAL SEATS IN NORFOLK.

PAGB' PAGE
Thurning hall, James Gayesq. B.A., J.P. see Thurning ... 644 West Bilney hall, Robert Henry Household esq. see West
Thursford hall, Joseph Stonehewer Scott-Chad esq. M. A., Bilney ............................................................ 3r5
J.P. see Thursford ............................................. 645 West Harling hall, Sir Edmund Charles Nugent hart.
Toft Monks house, Caleb Colman esq. see Toft Monks ... 649 I D.L., J.P. see West Harling ................................. 420
Trent cottage, Hy. Broadhnrst esq. J.P., see Overstrand 567 Weston house, Col. Sir Hambleton Francis Custance .
Twyford hall,Charles.AnnesleyHamondesq.seeTwyford 654 K.C.n., D.L., J.P. see Weston Longville ..................... 676
Uphall, Alexander Weston Jarvis esq. see Hillington ...... 430 Westwiek house, Mrs. Petre, see Westwick ............... 677
Waborne hall, Rnbert Horace Walpole esq. see Waborne 656 Whit well hall, Robert Boult esq. see Whit well ............ 57!)
Wacton house, Major Henry Tuke ~olmes J.P. see Wiggenhall hall, Mrs. Barker, see Wiggenhall St.
Wacton ... . . . .... . . . .. . ... . . . . . . . . . . . . .. . . .. . . . . . . . . . . . . .. . .. . .. . . .. 6 56 Germans . . . . .. . . . . . . . . . . .. . . . . . . . . . .. . . . . ... . . . . . . . . . .. . . . . . . . ... 68o
Wallington hall, Harry Wayman esq. see Wallington ... 657 Witton park, Lord Wodehouse J.P. see Witton (near
Walsingham abbey, Henry Lee-Warner esq. J.P. see North Walsham) ................................................ 685
Walsingham ...................................................... 663 Wiveton hall, William Henry Gifford Buck esq. see
Walsoken house, Arthur William Engli_sh esq. J.P. see Wiveton ............................................................ 685
Walsoken ............................ ~ ............................ 665 Wolferton Manor house, George Howe Browne ffolkes
Washingford Manor house, Hnmphrey Hubert Gilbert esq. J.P. see Wolferton ....................................... 686
esq. see Burgh-Apton .......................................... 333 Woodhall, :Major Michael Stocks D.L., J.P. see Hilgay ... 429
Wattlefield hall, Edward William Routh Clarke esq. see Wood hill, Mathew Robert Stedman esq. J.P. see Gres·
Wattlefield ......................................................... 694 senball ............................................................ 408
Weasenham hall, Henry Hmnphrey esq. see Weasenham Woodbastwick hall, Albemarle Cator esq. B. A., D.L., J.P.
All Saints ......................................................... 671 see Woodbastwick ............................................. 686
Weeting hall, William Angerstein esq. n.L., J.P. see Worstead house, Col. William John Rouse, see
, Weeting ..................................................~ ........ 672 "\Vorstead ...................... ,. ........................•.......... 68g
Wereham hall, Oldman Carter esq. see Wereham ...... 676 . Wretham hall, Sydney Morris esq. J.P. see West
Wereham Manor house, George Read esq . .J.P. see Wretham ..............................·........................... 691
Wereham ......................................................... 676 Wroxham hall, Edward Southwell Trafiord esq. J.P. see
\Vest Acre abbey, Anthony IIamond el!q. D.L., J.P. see Wroxham ......................................................... 692
West Acre ........................................................ 290 Wroxham house, Peter Edward Hansell esq. see
West Acre High house, Charles Edward Gooch esq. see Wroxham ......................................................... 692
West Acre......................................................... 290

-
ICELLY'.S NORFOLK DIRECTORY.
-'. '

I NEAR •
I

PORT, WHISKY,

SHERRY, BRANDY,
®

HOCKS, GIN,

CHAMPAGNE, RUM,

CLABETS. HOLLANDS.
PHOTOGRAPH OF SPIRIT STORE AT LINGWOOD.

THE l'TOTED

Pronounced to be a Soft and Meliow Spirit, thoroughly matured, with a captivating Aroma and
Bland Taste ; simply Milk with a flavour.
Sold in Half Dozen Cases, 22/-; One Dozen Cases, 44/-; Bottles, Jars and Casks, 22/- per gallon.
THE F AlV.[OUS

A blend of the Best Irish Whiskies, and free from every impurity.
Sold in Half Dozen Cases, 21/-; One Dozen Cases, 42/-; Bottles, Jars and1Casks, 21/- per gallon.
SPENCER RIX is the Sole Proprietor for the above-mentioned Whiskies,
which can only be obtained from the Lingwood Store.
ALL ORDERS PROMPTLY .EXECUTED FOR EVERY CLASS OF WINES AND SPIRITS OF THE BEST QUALITIES .
CARRIACE PAID TO ANY RAILWAY STATION IN ENCLAND.

POSTAL ADDRESS1
'

NORFOLK is a seacoast county, in the East of England, on the border of Norfolk ; Lynn, {)0 the Great Ouse and the
the shores of the North Sea, close to the Great Wash: it navigable Nar, close to the Wash, is t.he great port of the
took its name from the East English settlers, who called western parts of the county and of all the neighbouring fen
\heir people in these parts the "North folk, " now Norfolk, lands. The northern shore has no rivers, and the cliffs are
and in the southern parts of their kingdom "South folk," bluff ; but there are landing and shipping places at Hun-
now Suffolk. The county is Of an .egg shape, the ends stanton, Bumham, Wells, Blakeney, Cromer, Brancaster
lying east and west; the northern half being bounded by Staith, Mundesley, and some other places for the local
the Wash and the North Sea, and the southern half abut- supply, and th~ shore is thickly set with fishing stations;
ting on the county of Suffolk, with .a small part to the the interor of the county is intersected by spreading
west joining Cambridgeshire. The boundary between Nor- streams, which water a wide. district and flow to the sea at
folk and Suffolk is the river Waveney, from it.!! mouth at Yarmouth, where in fo.rmer times was a great estuary,
Yarmouth, south-westerly, to near its spring, and then by now filled up. These rivers are the Bure. the An~ the
the Thet, or Little Ouse, flowing north-westerly. From Wensum, passing Norwich, the Yare and the Waveney,;
Cambridgeshire, Norfolk is divided by the Nene. The near the sea tht'y expand into large pools, called broads or
greatest length is 67 miles and the greatest breadth 43· meres, forming excellent preserves for fishing and being a
The area. is r,356, 173 ttcres, making it the fourth shire in peculiar characteristic of this county. In the south-west
size, 'I' orkshire, Lincolnshire and Devonshire. being larger. the county is watered by the Thet, the Little Ouse and
The population was in rBot, 273,479; in rBII, 291,947; in the Wissey, feeders of the Great Ouse. About a mile eas~
1821, 344.368; in 1831, 390,654 j in 1841, 412,664 j in 1851 of Sou-~h Lopham, in the fen or low lands, is Lopham
442,714; in 1861, 434,798; in r871, 438,656; in r88r, Gate, where there are two springs, from which flow the
444,749, of which the males were 215,266, females, 229,483. Little Ouse and Waveney ; the former takes a course through
The number of housP~ were,inhabited,roo,372 ; uninhabited, Thetford. Brandon and Lynn, and the latter flows to Yar-
6,o85; building, 462. The population in x891 was, 456,475 mouth, and both divide tlfe counties of Norfolk and Suffolk.
and the number of inhabited houses 103,257-
The names of the Norfolk rivers-the Ouse, the N ene, the
Norfolk seems to have been first occupied by an Iberian Na.r, the Thet, the Glaven, the Thum, the Bure, the Yare
race, afterwards by Britons, and then by Belgi; in Cresar"s the Waveney, the Wensum, the Exe, the Ant- are mostly
time it was held by the powerful tribe of the Iceni, who weru Euskardian or Iberian, while those of the towns and hamlets
finally subdued by the Romans ; afterwards it was settled are English, except in the east, where they are generally
by several commonwealths of the East English, who seemed Danish, the population being largely mixed with the latter
to have been of the same clans or tribes as those who settled race, and their dialect differing from that of the other
in Middlesex and Surrey. English by the frequent ado_ption of Danish words, accents
and pronunciation.
The duchy of Norfolk has for a. long time been held by the
powerful house of Howard, who descend from the l!leveral The Great Ouse, Nene, Wissey, Little Ouse and Nar are
ancient princes who have inherited the earldom and duchy. navigable, as are also the Yare, Bure, Ant, 'fhurn, Wensum
The Duke of Norfolk still exercises a peculiar and perma!lent and Waveney. There are no canal works of importance,
jurisdiction over his large domains in this county, and except the dykes in the fens. There are havens at Wisbech,
appoints two coroners for his liberties. Lynn and Yarmouth; the two latter are much frequented
by ve.ssel..'l of various tonnage, which take out agricultural
The county is very level, containing no prominent eleva- produce and bring in foreign goods. Yarmouth is one of
tions, while the coast only raises into cliffs of any height the chief towns in England for the herring and other fisher-
at Hunstanton and Cromer. Chalk forms the foundation ies, which are carried on all along the Norfolk coast. Yar-
of nearly the whole county, but except in the west it is mouth is also ther port of the manufacturing district of
covered by beds of clay and sand so that it can only be Norwich and a popular bathing place. Lowestoft is another
reached in deep wells and borings. harbour and fishing- and bathing town on the Suffolk border.
Hun.stanton, Burnbam, Blakeney, Cley, Cromer and Wells
On the west, the Cambridgeshire border is very low, and are small ports, fishing towns, or bathing places.
much of the land is fen. belonging to the Bedford Level.
This part is watered by the Great Ouse, the Nene, and In the North Sea the flood tide wave enters from the At-
drained by many fen dykes. In the parish of Hilgay, ]antic Ocean bet.ween the coast of Norway and the British
near Downham, is a pumping station and dam, constructed Isles, and passing through various channels enters the Pent-
near Jlunt's sluice for the Felt well and Methwold drainage land Firth, on quitting which. it divides into two branches,
commissior.ers, and opened in x884: from these works about of which the western swells along the Scottish and English
xoo tons of water per minute ean be pumped into the river coasts 0 making high water in all their rivers and harbours
Ouse. At Ten Mile Bank is an engine erected in 1842 for successively until it arrives in the Thames. Near the Nor-
the Littleport and Downha.m drainage commissioners, folk and Suffolk coasts the streams of tide run nearly
working in connection with one nine miles distant, in the parallel to the shore; off Wells J;he flood runs to the east-
Isle of Ely: these together drain 3o,ooo acres ; the wheel w~rd till 9 o'clock, or three hours after high water' on the
is 43ft. Sin. in diameter, and contains so ladles, with an shore: 4 miles off Cromer, and tne same distance off Has-
average dip of 4ft. emptying the water into the River Ouse borough, the flood stream runs alongshore to the southward
at the rate of about 130 tons a minute; and at Denver is a till mh. 15m. ~ xb. 45m. b~ore high water at Harwich, and
sluice, in connection with. the Hundred Feet river, to carry the ebb in a con\rary direction. At 2t miles off Lowestoft
off the flood waters from Boo,ooo acres of land; t;his sluice the flood stream rontinues to rnn to the S.S.W. till xh. 3om.
is under the joint control of the South Level commissioners , \>afore high water a.t Harwich, and at Orfordness till abon~
I
and the Denver Sluice (.X)mmissioners. Wisbech, the portQn high water at Harwich; the flood setting W.S. W. and tlte
the extreme west, on the Nene, is in Cambridgeshire, but on ebb E.N.E.
{'. N. & S. 18
270 NORFOLK. [KELLY S
1

Time of High Water at Full and Change Days at the prin- 1 Lowestoft through Bungay and Beccles, starts from Tivets-
cipal places on the Coast of Norfolk, arranged according hall on the Eastern Union line, which is now connected with
to tbe apparent progress of the Tide Wave, with the rise Wymondham on the main line via Forncett and Ashwell-
of th!l tide at Neaps and Springs.* thorpe; from Norwich is a line to Yarmouth and also a
branch to North Walsham and Cromer, and from Wroxham,
High Water
- Rise. on this line, another to Aylsham, thence to Reepham and
Place. Full & Change. -----,----- North Elm ham. From Ely is a line through Downham with
Springs. Neaps. branch to Lynn, with branches from Denver to Stoke Ferry
and one from Magdalen road to Wisbech, from which place
h. m. i,ft. ft. is a steam tramway line to Upwell; from Lynn the line
Lynn Deep. Long Sand ... 6 0 -23 16! extends to Hunstanton and Wells, where it joins that from
, Lynn Road ... -:: 23! Wymondham, which passes through Dereham and Faken-
Lynn ... ... 22§ ham. The Lynn and East Dereham railway connects those
"
Wells Bar ... ... . .. ••• . 6 20 , 18 towns, passing through Swaffham on its route; from Swaff-
Wells . . . . . . . . . . .. ... 7 0 ham is th~ line to W at ton, which there meets the branch
Blakeney Bar... .. . .. . ... 6 3o from Thetford, from which latter town is a line to Bury St.
Blakeney ... ... . .. ...
Clay .. . . . . . . . . .. ...
Cromer . . . . . . . . . . .. ... 7
1
0 11
Edmuncls, in Suffolk. (Jommunication with the midlan1
counties and the north is effected by the Midland, Great
Northern and London and North Western Railway Com-
Leman Shoal... .. . .. . ... 6 0 panies, via March and Peterborough .
Ower , , ... I I • ...
• •• 6 30
Hammond Knoll ... .. . ... 7 40 The Eastern and Midlands railway has its terminus at the
Winterton Ness ... .. . ... 8 25 7! Beach station, Yarmouth: this railway company has been
Yarmouth Roads... .. . ••• 9 15 6 formed by the amalgamation of the Lynn and Fakenham,
, Haven, Brush ... si Yarmouth and North Norfolk, Midland and Eastern 1 Peter•
, Bridge ... ... 5 ' borough, Wisbech and Sutton and Yarmouth Union Corn·
* By the rise of the tide is meant its vertical rise abo¥~ the panies, the lines crossing the northern part of the county
mean low-water level of spring tides. from east to west, and by this tneans a direct communication
is afforded to London and the Midland and Northern coun.
The climate of Norfolk is on the average decidedly dry. ties, via Fakenham, Lynn, Sutton Bridge and Peterborough.
Observations of the amount of rainfall are take:n at over 50 The company also brings the towns and districts of North
stations in the county, many of which belong to the Rev. J. Walsham, .Aylsham, Melton Constable -and Fakenbam in
M. Du Port. The average rainfall may be taken at 23! direct communication with Yarmouth, and provides an
inches yearly, i.ll. 2,350 tons of rain-water fall on every alternative route to Norwich and Lynn. The company have
acre in the county in the cout'Se of an ordinary year. The opened a branch line from Melton Constable through Holt
average rainfall for the whole of England is about j6 inches to Cromer. The celebrated Norfolk Broads are easily
yearly. In 1878, however, the rainfall at NorwlCh was 31! accessible by this rail way.
inches, t)r 35 per cent. above the average. The cold, dry • r .... r '
easterly 'winds which blow in winter and spring form a Norfolk is in the South Eastern circuit~ the county anJ
marked feature in the meterology of Norfolk. They owe assize town. is Norwich~ quarter sessions are holden a,t Nor.
their nature to the great extl'nt of land-the plains of North wich, and by adjournment also at Swaffbaru. Norwich,
Germany and Russia-which these winds have passed over Yarmouth and Lynn have separate courts of quarter
before coming to this country, their brief passage over the sessions, and the county is divided into ¥!-5 petty Sc.'>sional
North Sea not having been sufficient to mitigate their pierc- divisions. • ·
ing character. There can be no doubt but that the ~xtensive ·. Norfolk ' includes the county of the' city of Norwich, and
planting of trees, which has been a marked feature in the contains 736 parishes and parts of 9 others, and is in the
cultivation of Norfolk during the last decade, will exercise province of Canterbury, diocese of Norwich, divided into the
a favourable influence on the climate, both in increasing the archdeaconries of Norfolk and Norwich, Norfolk arch-
rainfall and diminishing the evil effects r,>f coid winds. deaconry is sub-divided into the rural deaneries of Brooke
(Eastern and Western divisions), Burnhani,Cranwich (~orth
The soil of Norfolk is of a very var1cd character~ t~t ~f and South divisions), Depwade, Fincham, Hi.tcham or
the north and west may be said to be sandy, while loams Heacham, Hingham (l"orehoe and Mitford divisions), Hum-
and clays predominate in the centre and east. If left in bleyard, Redenhall, Repps, Rockland and Waxham (Hopping
a natural condition, much of the ground would be poot and and 'feinstead divisions). Norwich archdeaconry is sub-
light ; but the Norfolk farmers have long been famous for divided into the rural deaneries of Blofield, Hreccles, North
their skill in agriculture, and by mixing the soils, by digging Brislcy and Toftrees, South Brislcy, Flegg, Holt, Ingworth,
clays and marls, and adding these to the sandy soils, together Lynn (Norfolk), Lynn (Marshland), Norwich, Sparham,
with a liberal nse of manure, they have rendered this county Taverham, Thetford and Walsingham.
among the most fertile and fruitful in England. The Nor-
folk system of husbandry is the four-course, i.e. wheat, then This county is remarkable for the number ()f churches
root crop, then barley, then clover or mixed seed ley : on that ban entirely disappeared ot are in more or less
the heavy land the crop of barley every eighth year is fol- ruinous condition ; of these we herewith give a list of 69 1
lowed by beans or peas, then wheat, and so on, so that the and particulars will be found under each place :-Alpring-
hay crap comes once in eight years. 1 - • ton, Antingham, Ashby near Yal'Ill{)uth, Attleborough,
I
Babingley, Harwick, Barton Bendish, Bawsey, Hayfield,
The produce of Norfolk consists of 1:halk, building chalk, East Beckham, Beeston St. Andrew, Billockby, Bowthorpe,
lime, cement, stone, bricks, marl, sand for glass making, Buckenham Tofts, Burgh near Yarmouth, Burnham Sutwn,
peat; wheat and other cereals, fruit and cider, turnips, Caldecote, East Carleton, Cley-next-Sea, Colveston, Little
mangold-wnrtzel, flax, seeds ; hot"Ses, oxen, sheep, pigs, Cressingham, Eccles-by-Sea, Egmere, Fiitcham, Poulden,
rabbits, turkeys, game and butter. The fisheries are of Garboldisharu, Gasthorpe, Gillingham, Glandford, Hack-
vast importance: mackerel, cod, soles, turbot, lobsters and ford -next - Reepham, Hargham, Hautbois, Holveswne,
crabs are caught, but the herring fishery is that for which lnningland, Keswick, Letton, Leziate, Lynford, Lynn
this county is famous, Yarmouth being the head-quarters, (North), Mannington, Marksha.H, Mintlyn, Oby near Yar-
having a large fleet of smacks engaged, and the produce is mouth, Ormesby, Overstrand, Pattesley, Pensthorpe,
about one-fifth of the entire take in the kingdom, the num- Pudding Norton, Quarles, Raynham West, Rirtgstead Parva,
bers being reckoned by ''lasts," each ••lasli ,, comprising Rockland St. Margaret, Rondham, Hoxham, 1 Ryburgh
13,000 herrings, the season for which is from September to (Little), Saxlingham Thorpe, Shotesham, 8-otnerton East,
end of November; many persons are employed on shore in Stiffkey, Sturston, Testert.on, Thorpe Parva, Tunstall,
the curing of this fish for the supply of distant markets. Wallington, Waxham, Weeting, Whitlingham, Wolterton,
The manufactures are bombazine, silk crape, silk, woollen Wretham West.
and linen fabrics, gloves, boots and shoes (principally at
Norwich), coarse pottery and tobacco pipes. The exports The municipal and parliamentary boroughs are •--
of most of these are large. There is also some shipbuilding. Pop. 1891.
Norwich City ........................ 10o,g64
The railway communication in this county is chiefly by Great Yarmouth..................... 49,318
the Great Easwrn. system. The main line 9 through Cam- King's Lynn .... .... ~ ................. . 18,265
bridge and Ely, ental'S the county a little north of Brandon, Municipal borough only is:~
passing through Thetford, Attleborongh and Wymondham, Thetford ........................... · ... . . . 4, 247
to Norwich, thence to Yarmouth and Lowe.Stoft. There is Other towns are Aylsham, pop. 2,674 (r88r); Derebam,
also another route frnm London to Norwich, Yarmouthland 5,524; Diss, 3,763; Downham, 2,537; Fakenham, 2,900;
Lowestoft by the Eastern Union line, via Colchester .and Swaffham, 3,636; North Walsham, 3,612; Wells-next-Sea,
Ipswich; the Waveney Valley railway to Yarmouth and 2,556; Wymondbam, 4,764.
DIRECTORY.] NORFOLK. ~71

The reg-i_st_r_a_ti_o_n_d_i_s_tr_i_ct_s_a_r_e_:_-
___________ ! ~~f~:~1t. Mary Magdalen Tacolnestone
Tasbmgh
Pulham St. Mary the Virgin Tharston
1 No. Name. Acres. Pop. 189r. Redenhall with Harleston Thelveton
I
1--- _ _ _ _ I Rushall Thorpe Abbots
Scole, or Osmondiston Thorpe Parva
1 2I9 Yarmouth .............. . r,5ro 36,982 · ~helton Tibenham
220 Flegg ....... , ........... . 29,087 g,9ro Shimpling Tivetshall St. Margaret
221 Small burgh ........... . 66,8 59 r7, 56s Stars ton Tivetshall St. Mary
222 Erpingham .......... . 64,926 18,772 Stratton Long St. Mary Wacton
223 Ay Ish am .............. . 68,123 17,452 Stratton St. Michael Wortwell
224 St. Faith's ....... , ...... . 48,304 12 1 183
225 DocKING UNION.
Norwich .................. . 7.~72 100,970
226 Forehoe ................. . 37,834 II,g88 Anmer Great Bircham
227 Ilenstead ............... . 43.358 10,834 Bagthorpe Great Ringstead
228 Hlofield ................. . 44.178 12,025 Bar mer Heacham
229 Loddon ................. . 59·401 13,204 Bar wick Holme-next-the-Sea
230 Depwado .............. . 72 1 68 I 23,293 l~ircham ~ewton Hunstanton with Barrctt
231 Gui Itcross .............. . 44.585 10,228 Bircham Tufts Ringstead
232 Wa;y·land .............. . 51,063 lo,sos Bran caster Ingoldisthorpe
2 33 Mitford ................. . 105,233 26,311 Broomsthorpe New Hough ton
234 Walsingham ........... . 90,677 19,902 Burnham Deepdale North Creake
235 Docking .... ., .............. . 101 1 136 17, 2 55 Burn ham N orton Sedgeford
236 Free bridge Lynn .... .. 78·492 12 1 25 I Burnham Overy Shernborne
I 2 37 King's Lynn ........... . 6,oos 19,D53 Burnham Sutton-cum-Burn- Snettisham
I
238 Downha.rn ··-····•······ 83,687 r8,377 ham Ulph South Creake
!!
239 Swaffham ..•...•........ 81,200 12,393 Burnham Thorpe
Burnham-Westgate
Stanhoe
Syderstone
240 Thetford ...... ........... . 120,733 17·253
Choseley Thorn ham
Dersingham Titchwell
The following is a list of the unions, with the places con- Docking Waterden
tained in each : - , East Rudham West Rudham
! '
' L

. AYLSHAM UNION. Fring


Albv• Itteringham DOWNIIAM UNION,
Aylsham Kerdiston Barton Bendish Stoke Ferry
Banning ham Lammas with Little Hautbois Bexwell Stow Bardolph
Barningham Little Mannington Boughton Stradsett
Relaugh Mars ham Crimplesham 'fottenhill
Blickling Oulton Denver Wallington-cum-Thorpland
Brampton Oxnead Downham Market Watlington
Burgh Reepham Fincham Welney (Norfolk & Cambs)
Buxton Sal! Fordham \Vereham
Calthorpe Saxthorpe IIilgay West Dereham
Cawston Scottow Holme next Huncton Wiggenhall St. Germans
Col by Skeyton Mar ham Wiggenhall St. Mary Magdalen
Coltishall Stratton Strawless Roxham Wiggenhal!St.Mary the Virgin
Corpusty Swanton Abbott Ryston Wiggenhall St. Peter
Erpingham Themelthorpe Should ham Wimbotsham
Foulsham Thurning Slwuldham Thorpe '\Vormegay
Guestwick · - Thwaite All Saints South Runcton Wretton
Hackford- by-Reepham Tuttington Southery
Hautbois-Great Whit well ERPINGHAM UNWN.
Hevingham Wickmere
Aid borough Knapton
Hey don Wolterton
Antingham Letheringsett
Hindol vestone Wood Dalling
Aylmerton Matlask
Ingworth Wood Norton
Baconsthorpe Metton
Irmingland
Barningham Nor wood Mundesley
BLOFIELD UNION. Barningbam Winter Northrepps
Ade Little Plumstead Beeston Regis Overstrand
Beighton Moulton St. Mary Bessingham Plumstead
Blofield Post wick Hod ham Hough ton
Brundall-cum-Bradeston Ranworth with Panxworh Briston Run ton
Buckenham Ferry , Reed ham Cley-next-the-Sea Saltbouse
Burlingham St. Andrew South Walsham St. l\1ary Cromer Sherringham
Rurlingham St. Edmund -South Walsham St. Lawrence East Beckham Sidestrands
Burlingham St. Peter South wood Edgefield Southrepps
Cantley Strumpshaw Fellbrigg Stody
Fishley Thorpe St. Andrew, or Thorpe Gimingham Suftield
Freethorpe next Norwich Glandford with Hayfield Sustead
Great Plumstead 'Tuns tall Gresham Thornage
Halvergate Upton Gun ton Thorpe Market
Hasingham Wickhampton Ran worth Thurgarton
Hemblingdon Witton Hempstead Trimingbam
Limpenhoe Wood bastwick Holt Trunch
Lingwood Hun worth West Beckham
Kelling Weybourne
DEPWADE UNION.
A! burgh Forncett St. Mary FLEGG (EAST & WEST) INCORPORATION.
Ash wellthorpe Forncett St. Peter Ashby with Oby Ormesby St. Margaret with
Aslacton Frenze Billockbv

Seratby
Billingford, or Pirleston Fritton Burgh St. Margaret & St. Ormes by St. Michael
Brockdish Fundenhall Mary Repps with Bastwick
Bun well Gissing Caister next Yarmouth Rollesby
Burston Great Moulton Clippesby Runham
Carleton Rode Hapton East Somerton Stokesby with Herringby
Den ton Hard wick Filby Thrine
Dickleburgh with Longmere Hempnall Hem-by fhrigby
Diss Morningthorpe Mart ham West Somerton
Ears ham Moulton St . .Michael Mautby Winterton

c. '!". & s. 18*


NORFOLK, [KEI.I.y• 8
FOREHOii: INCORPORATION. Thwaite St. Mary Wheatacre-All Saint&
Barford Hackford Toft-Monks Wood ton
Barnham Broom Hingbam Topcroft Yelverton
(
Bawburgh Kimberley
Bowthorpe Ma.rlingford MITFORD & LAUNDITCH UNION.
Brandon Parva Morley St. Botolph Bawdeswell Longham
Carleton Forehoe Morley St. Peter Beeston All SainU! ..... Lyng
Col ton Run hall Beetley · · · Mattishall ·
Cossey, or Costessey Welborne Billingford Mattishall Burgt(
Cos ton Wick lewood Bin tree · · Mileham
Crownthorpe Wramplingham Brisley .... North Elmham
Deopham Wymondham Bylaugh · · · North Tuddenham

Easton Colkerk · Oxwick,- with Pattesle;r
FREEBRIDGE LYNN UNION. Cranworth · · · Reymerston
Leziate East Bilney · .. Rougbam
Ash wick en East Dereham Seaming-
Rabingley Little Massingham
Middleton East Lexham 1 . · Shipdham 1
Bawsey East Tuddenham · · South Burgh '
Castle Acre Mintlyn
El sing · ·· Sparham
Castle Rising North Runcton
Foxley · · · Stanfield'
Congham North W ootton · · .. Swanton Morley
.1
Garvestone
East Walton Pentney Gateley · · · · Thn·xton
East Winch Roydon Great Dunham . · ... Tittleshall, with Godwick
Flitcham cum Appleton Sandringham Grca t FransM .. · · Twyford
Gayton Setchey Gressenhall , · .. Weaseuham All 1Saints
Ga yton-Thorpe South Wootton Guist · .. W oosenha.m St. Feter's
Gaywood West Acre with Custhorpe Hardingham · Wellingham
Great Massingham West Bilney Hockering · · · Wendling
Grimstone West Newton Hoe West Lexham
Ha.rpley West Winch Horningtoft Westfield
Hillington Wolverton or Wolferton Kempston Whinhergh _
Letton Whissonsett
GUILTCROSS UNION. Litcham Wood Rising
Banham North Lopham Little Bittering Worthing
Blo' Norton Old Buckenham Little Dunham Yaxham
Bressingham Quiddenham Little Fransham
Bridgham Riddlesworth
East Harling Roydon NORWICH INCORPORATION.
Eceles Shelfanger All Saints St. Lawrence
Fersfield South Lopbam Earlham St. Mary St. Margaret
Garboldisham West Harling Eaton St. Andrew St. Martin-at-Oak
Gasthorpe Wilby Heigham St. Martin-at-Palace
Kenningball Win farthing Hellesdon (part of) St. Mary-at-Coslany
New Buckenham La ken ham St. Mary-in-the-Marsh
HENSTE.A,D UNION.
Pockthorpe St. Michael-at-Coslany
St. Andrew St. Michael-at-Plea
Arminghall Little Melton St. Augustine St. Michael-at-Thorn
Bixley Markshall, or Mattisball Ileath St. Benedict St. Paul
Hracon Ash Mulbarton . St. Ciement St. Peter Hungate
Bramerton Newton Flotman . St. Edmund St. Peter Ma.ncroft
Caister St. Edmunds Poringland Great (or East) St. Etheldred St. Peter-per-Mountergate
Colney with Poringland Litttle (or St. George Colegate St. Peter Southgate
Cringleford West) St. George Tombland St. Saviour
Dunston Rockland St. Mary St. Giles St. Simon & St. Jude
East Carlton Saxlingham Nethergate St. Gregory St. Stephen
Fiord on Saxlingham Thorpe St. Helen St. Swithin
Framingham Earl Shotesham All ~aints St. James Thorpe
Framingham Pigot Shotesham St, Mary & · St. St. John Maddermarket Town Close
Great Melton Martin St. John Sepulchre Trowse Milgate, Carrow &
Hethel Stoke Holy Cross St. John Timber hill Bracondale
Hethersett Surlingham St. Julian
Holverstone Swainsthorpe
Intwood Swardeston ST. FAITH'S UNION.
Keswick Trowse, or Trowse Newton Alderford Horsham St( Faith's & Ne"lf·
Ketteringham Whitlmgham Attlebridge ton St. Faith's
Kirby Bedon Wreningham Beeston St. Andrew Horstea<L With Stainingball
Boo ton Little Witchinghl'm or S~
Brandistone l''aith
KING'S LYNN UNION.
Cat ton Mm·ton-on-the- Hill
South Lynn , St. Edmund, North Lynn Crostwick Ra.ckheath
King's Lynn, St. Margaret St. Peter, West Lynn Drayton Ring land
Felthorpa Sal house
LonDON & CLAVERING UNION. Frettenham Spixworth
Great Witchingham Sprowston
Aldeby Hardley Haveringland Swannington
Alpington Heckingham
Haynford Taverham
Ash by Hedenham
Hellesdon (part of) Weston Longville
Bedingham Hillington, or Hellington Honingham Wroxham
Brooke Howe- ·· • Horsford
Broome Kirby-Cane
Burgh-Apton Kirstead SMALL:SOOGH UNION.
Burgh St. Peter Langley . r
Carleton St. I.Peter Loddon Ashmanhaugh Edingthorpe
Chedgrave Mundham . Bacton Felmingham
Claxton ~ orton-Subcourse Barton Turf Happisburgh, or Hasbrd
Ditchingham Ravening ham Bee9ton St. Lawrence Hempstead, witJt Eccl!l-S
Ellingham Seething Brad field Hickling ·
Geldestone Sisland Brumstead Honing
Gillingham All Saints Stock ton Catfield Horning
Gillingham St. Mary Thorpe-next-Haddiscoe Crostwight Horsey-next-the-Sea
Haddiscoe Thurlton Dilham Hoveton St. John
Hales Thurtun East Ruston Hoveton St. Peter
DIRECI'ORY.J NORFOLK. 273
Iugham Sloley Griston Rockland St. Peter
lrstead Smallbnrgh Hargham Roudham
Lessingham Stalham Hock ham Seoul ton
Ludham Sutton Illiugton Shropham
Neatishead Swafield Larling Snetterton
North W a !.sham Tnnstead Little Ellingham Stow-Bedon
Falling-near-the-Sea Walcott Merton Thomson
faston Waxham Ovington Tottington
Potter Heigham Westwick Rock land All Saints Watton
Ridlingt;Qn Witton Rockland St. Andrew
Sco-Ruston, <>r South Huston Worstead •
YARMOUTH (GREAT) BOROUGH.
Sw AFFHAM UNION. The following is a list '()f the hundreds, with the place!
.As hill Langford contained in each.
.Beechamwell Little Cressingham Hundred of Blofield :-Hlofield, Bradeston, Brundall,
.Bodney Narburgh Buckenham, Burlingham St. Andrew, Burlingham St.
.Buckenbam near Tofts, or Narford Edmund, Burlingham St. Peter, Cantley, Freethorpe, Great
Buckenbam Parva Neclon Plumstea.d, Hasingham, Limpenhoe, Lingwood, Little
Caldecote N ewton-by-Castleacre Plumstead, Postwick, Southwood, Strumpshaw, Tborpe St.
Cockley-Clay North Pickenham Andrew (Thorpe-next-N orwich), Wit ton.
Colveston Ox borough
Didlington Sabam Toney Hundred of Brothercross :-Burnham Deepdale, Burnham
East Bradenbam Sbingbam Norton, Burnham Overy, Burnham Sutton-cum-Bnrnbam
Foul den Soutbacre Glph, Rurnham Thorpe, Burnham Westgate, North Creake,
Gooderstone South Pickenbam South Creake, W aterden.
Great Cressingham Sporle-with-Palgrave Hundred of Clackclose :-Barton Bendish, Beechamweli.
Hilborough Stanford Bexwell, Boughton, Crimplesham, Denver, Downham
Holme Hale Swaffbam Market, Fincham, Fordham, Hilgay, Holme-next-Runcton,
Houghton-on-tbe-Hill Threxton Marham, Outwell, Redmore, Ro:xham, Ryston, Shingham,
Igborough, or Igburgh West Bradenbam Shouldham, Shouldham Thorpe, South Runcton, Southery,
Stoke Ferry, Stow Bardolph, Stra.dsett, Tottenhill, Upwell,
THETFORD UNION. Wallington-cum-Thorpland, Watlington, Welney, Were ham,
'West Dereham, ·wimbotsham, Wormegay, Wretton.
Earnham (Suffolk) Lynford
Harningbam (Suffolk) Market Weston (Suffolk) Hundred of Clavering :-Aldeby, Brooke, Burgh Apton,
Brandon (Norfolk&: Suffolk) Methwold Burgh St. Peter, Ellingham, Geldeston, Gillingham All
Hrettenha.m Mundford Saints & Gillingham St. Mary, Haddiscoe, Bales, Reeking-
Coney Weston (Suffolk) Northwold ham, Howe, Kirby Cane, Norton Subcourse, Raveningham,
Cranwich Rushford (Norfolk & Suffolk) Stock ton, Tborpe-next-Haddiscoe, Thurlton, Toft Monks,
Croxton Santon, or Santon House Wheatacre All Saints.
/ East Wretham Santon Downham (Suffolk) Hundred of Depwade :-Ashwelltborpe, As'acton, Bun-
Enston (Suffolk) Sapiston (Suffolk) well, Carleton Rode, Forncett St. Mary, Forncett St. Peter,
Fakenham Magna (Suffolk) Sturston I<'ritton, Fundenhall, Great Moulton, Hapton, Hardwick,
Feltwell-Anchor Thelnetham (Suffolk) Hempnal, Morningthorpe, Shelton, Stratton St. Mary,
Feltwelll''en Farms Thetford St. Cuthbert (Nor- Stratton St. Michael, Tacolnestone, Tasburgh, TP.arston,
Felt well St. Mary & St. folk & Suffolk) Tibenham, Wacton.
Nicholas Thetford St. Mary (Norfolk &
Great & Little Snarehill Suffolk) Hundred of Diss :-Bressingham, Burston, Dickleburgh,
Hepworth (Suffolk) Thetford St. Peter Diss, I<'ersfield, Fren1.e, Gissing, Roydon, Scale, Shelfanger,
Hockwold -cum-Wilton W eeting All Saints, ~ with Shimpling, Thelveton (or Thelton), Thorpe Parva., Tivets-
Honington (Suffolk) Broomhill hall St. Margaret, Tivetsha1l St. Mary, Winfarthing.
Hopton (tiuffolk) · West Tofts Hundred of Earsham :-Alburgh, Billingford, Brockdish,
Kilverstone West Wretham Den ton, Earsham, N eedham, Pulham St. Mary Magdalen
Knettishall (Suffolk) (or Pulham Market), Pulha.m St. Mary-the-Virgin, Reden-
hall with Harleston, Rushall, Starston, Thorpe Abbotts,
WALSINGHAM UNION. Wortwe!L
Alethorpe Melton-Constable-with-Burgh Hundred of North Erpingham :-Aldborough,.Antingbam,
Bale, or Hathley Parva Aylmerton, Barningham Norwood, Barningham Town (or
Barney Morston Barningham Winter), Beeston Regis, Bessingham, Cromer,
Binham North Barsham East Beckham, l!'ellbrigg, Gimingham, Gresham, Gunton,
Hlakeney Penstborpe Hanworth, Knapton, Matlask, Metton, Mundesley, North
Hriningham '
Pudding N orton Repps, Overstrand, Plumstead, Roughton, Runton, Sher-
Brinton Quarles
ingham, Sidestrand, South Repps, Suffield, Sustead, Thorpe
Cockthorpe Saxlingham Market, Thurgton, Trimingbam, Truncb.
Dunton-cum-Donghton Sculthorpe
East Barsham Sharrington Hundred of South Erpingham :-Alby, Aylsham, Bacons-
East Rainbam, or Rainham Sbereford thorpe, Banningham, Banningham Parva, Belaugh, Blick-
St. Mary South Rainham, or Rainbarn ling, Bouton, Hrampton, Burgh, Buxton, Calthorpe, Caws-
Egmere St. Martin ton, Colby, Coltishall, Curpusty, Erpingham, Hautbois
Fakenbam Stibbard Magna, Hevingham, Heydon, Ingworth, lrmingland, Itter-
Field Dalling St1ffkey ingham, Lammas with Little Hautbois, Mannington, Mars-
Fulmodeston-cum-Croxton Swanton-N overs ham, Oulton, Oxnead, Saxt.horpe, Scottow, Skeyton, Strat-
Great Ryburgh Tatterford ton Strawless, Swanton Abbott, Thwaite, Tuttington, West
Great Snoring Tattersett Beckham, Wickmere, Wolterton.
Great Walsingham Tester ton
Gunthorpe Thursford Hundred of Eynsford :-Alderford, Ba.wdeswell, Billing-
Helhoughton Toftrees ford, Bintree, Brandistone, Bylaugh, Elsing, Foulsham,
Hemp ton Warham All Saints Foxley, Great Witchingham, Guestwick, Guist, Hackford-
Hindringha.m Warham St. Mary by-Reepham, Haveringland, Hindolveston, Kerdiston, Little
Holkham W ells-ne:xt-the-Sea Witchingham, Lyng, Morton-on-the-Hill, Reepbam, Ring-
Hough ton-in-the-Bole West Barsham land, Sall, Sparham,Swannington, Themelthorpe, Thurning,
Ketdestone West Rainham, or Rainham Twyford, Weston Longville, Whitwell, Word Dalling 1 Wood
Langham St. Margaret. Norton.
Little Rybnrgh Wighton Hundred of East Flegg :-Caister-next-Yarmonth, Filby,
Little Snoring Wiveton Mautby, Ormesby St. Margaret, Ormesby St. Michael,
Little Walsingham Runham, Scratby, Stokesby-with-Herringby, Thrigby.
WAYLA.ND UNION. Hundred of West Flegg :-Asbby, Billockby, Burgh St.
Attleborough Carbrooke Margaret, Burgh St. Mary, Clippesby, East Somerton,
&sthorpe Caston Hemsby, Martha.m, Oby, Repps-with-Bastwick, Rollesby,
.BillCkles Great Ellingham Thnrne, West Somerton, Winterton.
7

.1\0RFOLK. l (KELLY ,J

Hundred• of Foreboe l-Rarford, Barnbam Broom, Raw• senball, Hoe, Horningtoft, Kempston, Litcham, Little Bit-
burgh, Bowthorpe,Brandon Pan·a, Carleton Foreboe,Coltob, tering, Little Dunham, Little Fransham, Longham, Mile-
Cossey (or Costessey ); • Coston, Crowntborpe, Deopham, ham, North Elrnham, Oxwick, Pattesley, Rougham, Seam-
Easton, Hackford, Hingham, Honingham, Kimberley, Mar.- ing, Stanfield, Swanton Morley, Tittleshall, Weasenham All
lingford, Morley St. Botolph, Morley St. Peter, Runhall, Saints, Weasenham St. Peter, Wellingham, Wendlingt We.st
Welborne, Wicklewood, Wramplingham, Wymondham. Lexham, Whissonsett, Worthing. 11

Hundred of Freebridge Lynn :-Anmer, Ashwicken, Hundred of Loddon :-Alpington, Ashby, Bedingham.
Babingley, Bawsey, Castle Acre, Castle Rising, Congham, Broome, Carleton St. Peter, Chedgrave, Claxton, Ditching-
Dersingham, East Walton, East Winch, Flitcham-cum- ham, Hardley, Hedenham, Billington, Kirstead, Langle~·.
Appleton, Gayton, Gayton Thorpe, Gaywood, Great Mass- Loddon, Mundham, Seething, Sisland 1 'l'urton, Thwaite St..
ingham, Grimstone, Harpley, Hillington, Leziate, fLittle Mary, Topcroft, Woodton.
.Massingham, Middleton, Mintlyn, North Runcton, N ortb
Wootton, Pentney, Roydon, Sandringham, Setchley, South Hundred of Mitford :-Cranworth, East Dereham (part
Wootton, West Bilney, West Newton, 'West Winch, 'West of), East Tuddenham, Garveswne, Hardingham, Hockering,
Acre, Wolverton (or Wolferton). Le1ton, Mattishall, Mattishall Burgh, North Tuddenham.
Reymerston, Shipdham, South Burgh, Thuxton, Westfield,
Hundred of Freebridge Marsh Land :-Clencbwarton, Whinberg, Wood Rising, Yaxham.
Ernneth, Islington, St. Edmund ~North Lynn)y- St. Peter Hundred of Shropham :-Attleborough, 13esthorpe, Bret-
{West Lynn), Terrington St. Clement, Terrington St. John, tenham,Bridgbarn, East Wretham, Eccles, Great Ellingham,
Tilney All Saints, Tilney St. Lawrence, Walpole St. Peter, Hargham, Hockham, Illington, Kilverstone, Larling, New
Walsoken, West Walton, Wiggenhall St. Germans, Wiggen- Rnckenham, Old Buckenham, Rockland All Saints,Rocklancl
baU St. Mary Magdalen, Wiggenhall St. Mary-the-Virgin, St . .Andrew, Rondham, Shropham, Snetterton, '\yes~ Wret-
Wiggenball St. Peter. ham, Wilby.

Hundred of Gallow :-Bagthorpe, Harmer, Brooms- · Hundred of Smithdon ~Barwick, Bircham Newto11,
thorpe, Dunton-cum-Dou&'hton, East Barsham, East Rain- Bircham Tofts, Brancaster, Docking, Fring, Great Bircham,
barn (or Rainham St. Mary), East Rudham, Fakenham (or Great Ringstead, Heaeharn, Holme-next-the-Sea, Hunstan-
Fakenbam Lancaster), Fulmodeston-curn·Croxton, Great ton, Ingoldsthorpe, Sedgeford, Shernborne, Snettisbam~
Ryburgh, Helboughton, Hempton, KPttlestone, Little Stanhoe, Thornham, Titchwell. •
Ryburgh, Little Snoring, :ri ew Hough ton, North Barsham, •
Pensthorpe, Pudding Norton, Sculthorpe, Shereford, South Hundred of Taverham :-Attlebridge, Beeston St. Andrew.
Rainham (or Rainbam St. Martin), Stibbard, Syderstone, Catton, Crostwick, Drayton, Felthorpe, Frettenham, Rain-
Tatterford, Tattersett, Testerton, Toftrees, West Barsham, ford, Hellesdon (part of), Horsford, Horsbarn St. Faith's,
West Rainham (or Rainham St. Margaret), West Rudham. Horstead-with-Stanninghall, Newton St. Faith's1 Rackheath.
Salhouse, Spixwortb, Sprowston, Taverbam, Vl'roxham.
Hundred of North Greenhoe :-Barney, Binham, Cock:
thorpe, Egmere, Field Dalling, Great Snoring, Great Wal- Hundred of Tunstead :-Ashm~nhaugh, Bacton 1 Barton
singham, Hind ring ham, Holkham, Hough ton-in- the-Dale, Turf, Beeston St. Lawrence, Bradfield, Crostwight, Dilham,
Little Walsingham 1 Stiffkey. Thursford, Warharn All Saints, Edingthorpe. Felmingham, Honing, Horning, Hoveton St.
Warbam St. Mary, Wells-next-the-Sea, Wighton. .John Hoveton St. Peter, Irstead, Ludham, N eatishead,
North Walsham, Paston, Ridlington, Sco-Ruston (or South
Hundred of South Greenhoe:-Bodney,Caldecot,Cockley- Huston ), Rlolr.y, Small burgh, Swafield, Tunstead, 'festwickr
.Ciey, Diddington, East Bradenham, J<'oulden, Gooderstone, Witton, Worstead.
I
Great Cressingham, Hilborough, Holme Hale, lloughton-
(>n-the-Hill, Lam~ford, Little Cressingharn, Narburgb, N ar· Hundred Of. Walsham ~~Acle, Beighton, Fishley, Halver-
ford, Necton, Newton-by-Castleacre, North Pickenham, gate, Hemblington, Monlton, Ranwortb-with-Panxwortb~
Oxhorough, South l'ickenham, Soutbacre, Sporle-with- Reedham, South Walsham St, Lawrence, South Walsham
Palgrave, Swaffham, West Eradenham ... St •.M.ary, Tt~nstall, Upton, Wickhampton, Woodbastwiclr..
/

Hundred of Grimshoe !-Buckenham near ToffS' (or Hundred .of Wayland '
:-.Ashill,Breckles,Ca.rbrooke,Cftston,
Buckenbam Parva), Colveston, Cranwick, Croxton, Felt- Griston. Little Ellingham. Merton, Ovington, Rwkland St.
well St. Mary and St. Nicholas, Hockwould-cum-Wilton, Peter, Saham To.ney 1 Scoulton, Stow-Bedon, Th~pson,
Igborough, Lynford, Methwold~ Mundford. Northwold, Threxton, Tottington, Wattpn, '
'
San ton (or San ton House), Stanford, ~turston, Weeting Norwich City and County' bf the City :-All Saints, Earl-
.All Saints, West Toft6. ham St. Martin, Eaton St. Andrew, Heigham, Hellesdon
I
(part of), Lakenham, Pockthorpe, St.Andrew, St. Augustine.
Hundred of Guiltcross :-Banbam, Elo' Norton, East. St. Henedict, St. Clement., St. Edmund, St. Etheldred, St.
Harling, Garholdisham, Gasthorpe, Kenninghall, North George Colegate,. St. George 'fornbland, St. Giles, St.
Lopham, Quiddenham, Riddleswortb, South Lopham, Gregory, St. Helen, St. J'ames, St. John Maddermarket, St..
West Harling. John Sepulchre, St. John Timberhill, St. Julian, S~. Law-
1 '
rence, St. Margaret, St. Martin-at-Oak, St. Martin-ll.t
Hundred of Harnbleyard ~-'-Bracon .Ash, Colney, Cringle- Palace, St. Mary-at-Coslany, St. Mary-in-the-Marsh; St..
ford, Drmston, East Carlton, Flordon, Hethel, Hethersett, Michael-at-Coslany,_ St. Michael-at-Plea, St. Michael-at
Intwood, Keswickj Ketteringbam, Markshall,.Melton Magna, Thorn, St. Paul, St. Peter Hungate, St. Peter Mancroft, St.
Melton .Parva, Mulbarton, Newton Ftotman 1 Swaiusthorpe, Peter-per-Mountergate; St. -Peter Southgate, St, Saviour,
Swardeston, Wreningham. , , St. Simon and St. Jude, St. Stephen~ St. Swithin, Thorpe,
Hnndred of !lapping :-Brumsread, <Altfield 1 East Rus- Town Close, Trowse .Milgata, Carrow and Braoondale.
ton, Ha.ppisburgh (or Hasbro'), Hempstead, Hickling, Borough of King'~ Lrnn :-All Saints', 'South Lynn,
Hornsey-next-tbe-Sea( Inghall'l, Lessingham, .Palling-near- King's Lynn St. Margaret. ·
the-Sea, Potter Heigham, Stalhilrn, Sutton~ Walcott, ' . ~
·Waxham. Borough of Thetford :-Thetford St. Cuthbert, Thetford
• I
tlt. Mary, Thetford St. Pete~
Hundred of Henstead ::-Arminghal1, Bixley, Bremerton, Borough of Gteat Yarmouth ~-<1reat Yarmouth,
Caister St.. · Edmunds, Framingham Earl, Framingham
Pigot, Holverstone, Kirhy Bedon, Poringland Great (6r
East)... Poringland Little (or West), Rockland St. Mary, The Norfolk County Lunatic AE"ylum i11 at Thorpe, near
Saxlingharn Nethergate, Saxlingham Thorpe, Shotesbam Norwich, and was erected in X8r4; it. consists of two principal
All Saints, Shotesharn St. Mary and St. Martin, Stok(j Holy ranges of buildings, the old or main asylum on the 110uth
Cross, Surlingham, Trowse ~or Trowse Newton), Whitling- side of the road and the new or auxiliary asylum oo. the
ham, Yeh•erton,. ' • other side; the maiu asylum in white bnck hM undergone
• - , • "' -· I extensive st1uctural alterations to adapt it for modern re-
Hundred of Bolt ;~Bale (oP Bathley), Bayfiera, 8lakeney, quirements ; itt contains about 15 wards fo'w- the reception
Bodham, Briningham, Brint(ln, Briston,' Cley-ne:rt:-the-Sea, and 'reatrnent-o( the varions forms of mental disease, ,520
Edgefield, GJanford, Gunthorpe, Hempstead, Holt; ilttn~ beds in all : tbe anxiliary·Rsylum, in red brick, was opened
worth, Kelling, Langham, Letheringsett, Melton Constable in r88o, and contains 4 large wards with :~So beds, chiefly
with-Burgh Parva, Morston,. .Salthouse, Saxlingham, Sba.r- for chronic cases ; there ate thus Boo beds in the whole
ringtQQ, ~ody, Swa.ntol). Novers, Shornage, Weypournfl, asylum : the asylum being a county establishment is managed
Wiveton. · by the asylum committee of the Nm;folk County Council, of

which Louis Huxton esq. is the chairman and Peter HanseU
Hundred. m Lannditch :.....Beeston All Saints, Beetley; esq. the clerk ; tho- eommittee meets at the asylum on tbe
I ' '

. Brisley~ Colki.r)l-, East Bilney, East Derebam (part. qf), Ea.tlt first thursday in each month. The asylum staff consists of
Lexham, Gateley, Great Dunbarn, Great J<'ransham 1 Gres- the medical superintendent, David George Tbomson X.D.,

DIRECTORY.) NORFOLJ(.. 276
c.M.; senior assistant medical officer, John Spence Law The Buxton Reformatory is in the parish of Marsham, but
x.B., C. M. ; junior assistant medical officer, Richard Patrick adjoining the parish of Buxton: it was founded in 1853 by
Ryan L.R.C.P.Irel. ; chaplain, Rev. Edward Rain; steward, John Wright esq. Sir Edward North Buxton hart. M.P. and
Mr. John B. Pounterey; matron, Miss Mary Hamer; head George Kett and John Henry Gurney esqrs. for the volun-
attendant, James Hulse. tary reformation of boy8 or young men who had been con-
fined in Norwich Castle: it was taken over by Govern-
The Naval Lunatic Asylum at Great Yanmouth it~ situated ment and certified for criminals in 1855: the building is of
at the southern extremity of the town ; the inmates consist red brick, and includes apartments for the governor and
of 55 officers and 14.') seamen a.nd marines ; Thomas Browne schoolmaster aud rooms for the officers ; attached is a. large
JLD., R,N. fleet surgeon irL charge; James W. 0. Underhill courtyard and in the centre is a large playground, besides
lii.B., R.N. surgeon; Rev. Hugh Bellamy M.A. chaplain; which there is also a covered-in playground: the boys are
Charles William Horne, clerk. taught shoe-making, tailoring, farming and agricultural
duties, so acres being for this purpose under cultivation by
The Norfolk, and Norwich Hospital, Norwich, founded in spade: the institution is arranged to bold 55 to 6o boys:
1770, was rebuilt in part on thP. old site in 1882, the first Thomas Babington, governor; Mrs. Elizabeth Annie Babing-
stone being laid by H.R.H. the Prince oi Wales, 17 June, ton, matron.
1879; the building is of red brick with white stone dressings,
in a modified form of the Queen Anne style, from designs by
Messrs E. Boardman and T. H. \Vyatt, architects, of Nor- Parliamentacy Representation of Norfolk.
wich and London, and was erected at a total cost, including
furnishing, of about £57, n6 : it is on the pavilion system, Norfolk formerly returned six members in three divi-
the pbn following the form of the letter H, the administra- sions, but under the provisions of the " Redistribution of
tive block being in the centre; facing St. Stephen's road : Seats Act, x885," it now sends six members in six divisions.
the out-patients' department is entirely distinct, and has
been formed in the old north-east wing, whic:h has been X o. r, the North ·western Division, eonsists of the sessional
further adapted for the purposes of the anatomical museum division of Freebriclge Lynn, Freebridge Marshland,
and nurses' dormitories: in the rear is a chapel in the Gothic Gallow & Smithdon & Brothercross & the municipal
style: the building was opened by T.R.H. the Duke and borough of King's Lynn
Duchess of Connaught, 20 Aug. 1883: Sir Peter Eade M.D.
consulting physician; Frederic Bateman M.D. Samuel J. No. 2, the South Western Division, comprises the sessional
Barton M.D., M. eh. and Fred W. Burton-Fanning M.B. physi- divisions uf Clackclose, Grimshoe, South Greenhoe &
cians; William Cadge F.R.c.s.Eng. & Thomas William Crosse Wayland & so much of the municipal borough of Thetford
F.R.c.s.Eng. consulting surgeons; Charles Williams F.R.c.s. as is situate in the county of Norfolk
Edin. Michael Beverley M.D. and Haynes Sparrow Robinson, No. 3, the Northern Division, comprises the sessional divi-
surgeons; S. H. Burton M.B. and Donald D. Day :M:.B., B.s. sions of Eynsford, Holt, North Erpingham, North Green-
assistant surgeons; Reginald Edward Orosse B.A., M.R.c.s. hoe & South Erpingham, except so much as is comprised
Eng. and L.R.C.P.wnd. house surgeon; Richard Wentworth in Division No. 4
White M. ~.c.s. and t.D.S.Eng. dental surgeon: Rev. Precentor
G. W. Barrett M.A. chaplain; Howard J. Collins, sec. ; W. No. 4, the Eastern Division, comprises the sessional divisions
G. Crook, dispenser and analyst. of Blofield & Walsham, East & West Flegg, Taverham &
Tunstead & Rapping, so much of the municipal borougt
The West Norfolk and Lynn Hospital, near tbe London of Great Yarmouth as is in the county of Norfolk, and tbe
road, Lynn, first established in Dec. 1834, now occupies a parishes of Belaugh, Coltishall, Great Hautbois, Lammas
spacious building of white brick, and erected at a cost of with Little Hautbois, Scotton & Swanton Abbot in 8onth
more than £3,000, and in 1847 two wings were added, and Erpingham sessional division
a separate ward for contagious cases was erected in 1877 as
a memorial of the late Rev. John Freeman, the biographer No. 5, the Mid Division, compri!'les the sessional divisions of
of Kirby the entomologist. The hospital will now hold 52 Forehoe, Guiltcross & Shropham & Milford & Lauuditch
patients, and is supported by voluntary contributions. The
Marquess of Cholmondeley, president; G. F. A. Cresswell No. 6, the Southern Division, comprises the sessional
esq. treasurer; S. M. W. Wilson and Charles Bagge Plowright divisions of Depwade, Diss, Earsham, Loddon & Clavering
L.R.C.P.Edin. consulting surgeons; Henry Calthrop Allinson, . & Swainsthorpe
sen. surgeon ; Frederick Arthnr Field M.B., B.sc. house Under the provisions of the above-mentioned Act King's
surgeon and t~ecretary; Rev. Henry Harkness Streeten B. A.
Lynn lost one member & Yarmoutb. was created a borough
chaplain ; Miss R. Ashbee, matron.
to return one member. •

Her Majesty's Prison, Mou.sehold Heath, .N orwicb, was •

erected in 1887, when the prisoners were transferred from


MEMBERS OF PARLIAMENT FOR THE COUNTY, ELECTED 18~2,
Norwich Castle. Arthur Edwin Clare Dent, governor; Rev.
Henry l\forton Tbomson IlL~.. chaplain ; Haynes Sparrow Eastern Division; Robert John Price esq. 104 Sloane street
Robinson, surgeon ; W. E. Burkinsbaw, steward ; Miss s w & 2 Harcourt buildings, Temple, London
Whyte, matroo. ; Robert Broom, chief warder.
Mid Division 1 Clement Higgins esq. Q.o. 5 Trebovir road,
The Norfolk County School, Elmham, a quarter of a mile Earl's Court s w & 5 Paper buildings, Temple, London
from the County School station on the Great Eastern railway,
stands on the summit of a hill near the river W ensum, Northern Division: Herbert Hardy Cozens-Hardy esq. Q.c.
surrounded by 57 acres in Elmham and Bintry parishes. so Ladbroke grove w & Reform club, London s w
The foundation stone was laid .on Easter Monday, 1873, by
H.R.H. the Prince of Wales, and the school was opened in North Western Division: Joseph Arch esq. Barford, War-
1874: the buildings are in the Domestic Gothic style, and wickshire
consist of a central hall, school room, dining hall, library,
class room and dormitories, together with a head master's Southern Division : Francis Tay lor esq. J". P. Diss, Norfolk ;
residence. H.R.H. the Prince of Wales has presented a sum & 107 Victoria street & Reform club, London s w
of £250 fur annual scholarships : a scholarship of [, xo yearly
value has also been founded as a memorial to the late Mr. South Western Division: Thomas Leigh Hare esq. D.L.,
J.P. Stow hall, Downham Market & Guards', Carlton &
Robert Overman, of Egmere, and in 1887 an additional
endowment of £soo was contributed by gentlemen of the Marlboro' clubs, London
· county as a memorial to the lateR. England esq. J.P. ; there
are al<lO seventeen other scholarships and numerous prizes. Military,
The chapel, erected in 1883, and consecrated by the Bishop
of ~orwich, Wednesday, 16 October, in that year, is an edific-e Norwich is the dep<)t of the Regimental district No. g,
of flint with buttresses of red brick and dressings of Bath which is composed of the 11lt k 2nd battalions of the Norfolk
stone in the Early English style: the pulpit of Stoke stone, Regiment ( gth foot) k the 3rd battalion (1st Norfolk Mili-
with columns of granite and serpentine, is a memorial to B. tia) & 4th battalion (2nd Norfolk Militia). For full particu-
Watson esq. : there is a lectern of oak. The chapel seats lars see page 513.
250 boys. The school is the property of a limited liability
association, with a capital of [,rs,ooo, and is conducted on GARRISON ARTILLERY.-EASTERN DIVISION.
the public school system. H.R.H. the Prince of Wales,
patron: the Earl of Leicester K.G. president; William Sub-Depi>t Battery (No. 1), 1st BrigaM; head quarters,
Edward Humphreys H.A.. head master; Rev. E. Birtwistle South Denes, Yarmouth; Lient-Col. W. V. Gregory, com-
Pollard E.A. chaplain; A. Il Rackham L.R.C.P.Edin. medical manding; A. J. Dunnage, major; Capt. C. H. A. Hervey,
officer. adjutant
276 NORFOL~
Prince of Wales Own Norfolk Artillery Militia. (2nd .()adet Corpe, N orlolk County School, North Elm ham, Hon.
,Brigade) ; head quartera, South ,Pen.es, Yarmouth ; Hon. Capt. J, Dumas ·
Colonel Lord Sutfield x:.c.B., +.D. c. commanding; Lieut.
E. H. Evans-Lombe, instructor of musketry i. Capt. C, H. 4th Volunteer Battalion Norfolk Regiment, Lieut.-Col. C.
.A. Hervey R.A. adjutant.; Hon. Cal)t. H~ ;RW!Sell B.. A. quar- W. J. Unthank, commanding; H. T. S. Patteson, major:
termaster ·) Lieut. R. G. Hunter-Muskett, instructor of musketry;
, r 1 Cap~ .0. Mayne, adjutant ; E. J. Broughton, quarter-
VOLUNTEERS. master~ Surgn.-Capt. C.A.O. Owens M.D. medical officer;
VOLUNTEER MEDICAL STAFF CoRPS. ReY. J. Cholmeley M. A. & Ref'. A. F. Smith LL.D. hon.
chaplains; Ven . .Archdeacon T. T. Perowne "B.D. acting
Eastern District, Norwich Company. chaplain. Head quarters, Silver road, Norwich. Com-
Old Militia barracks, Upper Surrey street. panies :-A, Hon. Major Thomas Edwd. Bond, Harleston;
Surgeon-Capt. T. W. Ricbardson (in command) & Surgeon- B, Capt. Francis Taylor M.P. Crown hotel, Crown street,
Capt. W. S. Warlters, company officers; Hon. Capt. F. Diss; C, Capt. John E. Cooke, Blofield; E, Capt. Charles
Mills, quartermaster; Rev. J. Wilson M.A. acting chapln E. Simpson, Attleborough; F, Capt. Waiter C. Crawshay,
Drill hall, Town green, Wymondham & Hingham; G,
Norfolk (1st) Eastern Division Royal Artillery (comprising Capt. James Fergnsson, Guildhall, Thetford
3 batteries & 7 companies).-Staff :-Earl of Stradbroke, •

]ieut.-col. commandant ; T. B. Steward, Iieut. -col. ; T. Chamber of Agriculture.
Wilson & Hon. Lieut.-Col. S Smyth, majors ; Capt. W.
J. Napier R.A. a.djutnt.; Hon.Ca:pt. W. E. English, quartr.- Norfolk, Hon. Ailwyn E. Fell owes M.P. president; Clare
master. Head quarters, Drill hall, Nelson road, Yar- Sewell Read esq. vice-president; James Brown Forrester,
mouth.-Batteries :-No. I, Capt. A. F. Clowes; Surgeon- sec. 1 Upper King street, Norwich
Lieut.-Col. T. H. Moxon, medical officer; J{ev. J. S.
Moore M. A. acting chaplain; Yarmouth : No. 2, Capt. P. Fairs & Markets.
E. Back & No. 3, Capt. J. A. Poock; Surgeon-Capt. T.
J. Compton M. D. medical officer; Rev. T. J. A. C. Slipper Aldborough, fairs for stock, June 21 & 22, unless the 2rst
li.A. acting chaplain; Theatre street, Norwich.-Com- falls on saturday, in which event it is held on the following
panies :-No. 4• Capt. E. B. · Orpen ; Surgeon-Lieut. R. monday and tuesday
Wrigley, medical officer, Yarmouth; No. 10, Lieut. J. Attleborough, fairs occasionally ; market day, thursday
Everson, Rev. H. S. Oriel M.A. acting chaplain, Harleston
Aylsham, lairs, March 23, last tuesday in September
Under the Home Defence Mobilisation Scheme the following Binham, fair, July 26
four battalions form ihe Norfolk Brigade:- Briston, fair, May 26 & a wake on the day after OldMichael·
mas day ..
Head quarters, East Derebam. New Buckenham, fairs, last thursday in May & November
Place of assembly, Thetford. 22, for cattle
Commanding Brigade, Brig.-Gen. W. G. E. Lytton Bulwer Burnham Market, fairs for pleasure, monday & tuesday in.
Brigade Major, Hon. Lieut.-Col. E. G. Keppel Easter week &August 1 & 2; market day, every alternate
monday
Supply & Transport Officer, Capt. S. G. Hill, 1st Vol. Bat.
Norfolk Regiment Castle Acre, fairs, May I & August 15, for toys
Cawston, fairs, February 1 & last wednesday in April &
Brigade-Surgeon-Lieut.-Col. S. M. Hopson, 3rd Vol. Bat. August., the latter a large sheep fair
Norfolk Regiment
Brigade Clerk, Sergt.-Instructor Berry Coltishall, fair on Whit monday

IS~Volunteer Battalion, Norfolk Regiment.-Staff :-Hon. Cromer, a pleasure fair on ·whit monday
Col. Algernon Cecil Dawson, comma.nding ; Geoffrey East Dereham, fairs, thursday before July 6, k September
Fowell lluxton, major; Capt. H. J. W. Mackenzie Ken- 29 ; market day, friday
nedy, adjutant; Hon. Capt. A. Mottram, quartermaster;
Very Rev. William Lefroy n.n. hon. chaplain. Head Di~ market days, friday & on tuesday, for fish
quarters, Drill half, Chapelfield road, Norwich.-Com- Down ham Market, fairs, March 3 & for three following days,
panies :-A, Capt. Thos. Peters Raven; B, Capt. Samuel for horses & cattle, first friday in May & the second fnday
G. Hill; C. Capt. Edwd.Morgan Hansell; D, Capt. Alfred in November & for hiring servants, on the Saturday fort-
J. Clark ; E, Capt. H. Carter ; F, Capt. Leathes Prior; night before & the saturday after Old Michaelmas day;
Sergt.-Major ·Herbert Collins, drill instrucwr market day, friday
r

2nd Volunteer Battalion Nocfolk Regiment (A, B, C~ D, E, Fakenham, fairs, Whit tuesday, first week in September &
F, G, H & I companies).-Staff :-Lieut.-Col. E. H. H. November 22, principally for cattle ; market day for corn'
Combe, commanding; Hon. Lieut.-Col. H. Hartcup & W. & cattle, thursday
Diver, majors; Capt. A. R. Hume, adjutant; James B. Feltwell, fair, November 20 ·
Cooper, quartermaster. Head quarters, Drill hall, York
road, Yarmouth.-Companies :-A, Capt. H. W. Youell; Foulsham, fair for cattle & pleasure, first tnesday in May
B, Capt. John Taylor; C. Capt. Waiter Diver; D, Capt. Hackford, fair for stock & horses, June 29; market day,
C. J. Wiltshire; D~ Lieut. J. C. Miles; Drill hall, York wednesday 1 for cattle
road, Yar·mouth; E, Lieut. P. G. Gilmour; Surgeon- •
Capt. W. M. Vores M.ll. medical offieer; V en. Archdeacon East 1Iarling, fairs, May 4, first tuesday after September 12,
William Donne l'tJ-4· acting chaplain, Gorleston & October 24 & sheep sales first thursday in July, prin-
cipally for lambs; market day, tuesday
3rd Volunteer Battalion Norfolk Regiment.-Staff :-Brig.- Heacham, fair, June 20
61!nl, W. E. G. Lytton Bulwer, commanding; Hon. Lt.-
Col. E. G. Keppel & Hon. Lieut.-Col. H. E. Hyde, majors; Hempton, Ta1rs .. Whit tuesday & November 22. for cattle &
Lieut. M. R. Stedmau, instructor of musketry; Capt. R. L. the first wednesday in September, principally for sheep
Payne D.s.o. adjutant; Thos. Cranmer, quartermaster; Hilgay, fair, May 1
Head quarters, Quebec street,J)ereha.m. Companies:- I
Hingham, fairs for cattle & pleasure~ March 7 & October a;
A,Capt. G. F. Archdall; B,Lient. H. R. Morgan; armoury, market day, tuesday '
Baker lane, Lynn; C, Hon.Major B. B. Sa.pwell, Aylsham ;
D, Capt. Sir Lawrence Jolu1 Jones ban. Fakenham ; E, Hockwold, fair, July 5
Capt. D' Arcy B. Collyer, Reepham t F, Hon. Major C. B.
Holt, fairs, chiefly for stock, April 25, November 25 & the
LeG. Norgate; Hrigade-Surgeon-Lieut ..COl. S. M.Hopson, following days; & a statute fait at Michaelmas; market
medical officer; Rev. Henry James Lawes Arnold 111.4..
day for corn, Wednesday ·
acting chaplain, Quebec street, East Derebam; G, Capt. ' .

A. C. Fonntaine, Annoury, Corn hall, Swaffbam; H, Ingham, fair for cattle & stock on Trinity Monday
Capt. William Pattrick; Surg.-Capt. C. R. Whitty v.n.
medical officer, Heacha.m; J, Lieut. R. Fanner, Town Kenninghall, fairs for sheep & cattle, July 18 & September
hall, Cromer; K, Hon. Major Edward Stephena Copeman, 30 ; market for cattle every monday
Downham; L,; Lieut AugustUB Charles Morton, North Loddon. fairs for stock on Easter monday & the first
Walsham monday after Sovember 22; market day, tues. for corD
DIRECTORY.] NORFOLK. 2i7
Lynn, a p'easure fair commencing on St. Valentine's day & Stow Ba.rdolph, fair for cattle on the sat. after Whitsuntide
lasting for a fortnight & cattle fairs on the second monday Swaffham, fairs, second wednesday in May, third wednesday
in April & November, the former principally for sheep; in July & the first wednesday in November for caLtle &
market day, tuesday & Saturday sheep; market day, saturday
Methwold, fair for cattle, April 23 ; market for cattle & Thetford, market day, saturday
corn, monday
I\' orth wold, fair, X ovember 30 & following day Upwell, fairs, June 29 & 30

Xorwich, fairs for horses & cattle on the day before Good Xorth Walsbam, market day, thursday, chiefly for corn
friday & for pleasure at Easter & Christmas ; market Walsingham, fairs, second monday after Whit monday &
days wednesday & saturday, the latter for corn & cattle; statute fairs on the friday before & after Micbaelmas day
also a. skin market on Wednesday
Watton, market day, Wednesday
Oxborough, a pleasure fair on Easter tuesday Wells-next-the-Sea, fair on Shrove tuesday
Shouldham, fairs for cattle held September 19 & October II
~rorstead, fairs for cattle on May r2 & 13
Snettisham, fair for hiring servants, October rz
Southrepps, cattle fair, on the tuesday fortnight after Whit Wymondham, fairs, February q, May r7, for cattle &
sunday October 12, for pleasure; market day, friday
Stoke l<'erry, fairs for horses & cattle, December 6, & for Yarmouth, fairs on Shrove monday & tuesday & friday &
hiring servants on the thur~day before Old ~lichaelmas day saturday after Easter; market days, wednesday & sat
27t5
NORFOL!G
'

NORFOLK: COUNTY! tOUNCIL.


' •
Local Government Act 1888, 51 & ,52 Vict, c. 41. •

'
Under the above Act, Norfolk, after the 1st April, 188g, The coroners' for the county wit! in future be
.elected
'
by
for 'the purposes i)f the Act, except certain boroughs, the County Council, and the clerk bf the pABce ..s~al} be
for which see below (a)', became a separa~ and distinct appointed by such joint committee, and may be removed
administrative county (sec. 46-xb), governed by a County by them {!lee. 8 3-2 }. ·r 1
Council, consisting of chairman, aldermen and oouncillors The clerk nf the peace for the .county shall also be the
(the number of councillors being determined by the clerk of the County Council (sec. 83-1).
Local Government Board), to be elected in manner pre- The administrative business of the county (which would, if
scribed by the Act (sec. 2). this Act had not been passed, have been transacted by the
The chairman shall, by virtue of his office, be a justice of the justices) shall be ti-c~.nsacted by the County CounciL
peace for the county, without qualification (sec. 46 ). (a) The following large boroughs shall for the purposes of
. The police for the county to be under the control of a this Act be administrative counties in themselves, to be
standing joint committee of the Quarter Sessions and called County boroughs (see. 30), of which the municipal
the County Council, to be appointed as therein mentioned authority shall have the power of a County Council (sec.
(sec. g). 31)-Norwich & Yarmouth.
Meet at Norwich, 1st Saturday in Jan. April, July & Oct.
CHAIRMAN.-Robert Thornhaugh Gurdon, Letton hall.
VICE·CHA.IRMAN.-Sir William H. B. Ffolkes hart. Hillington hall.

ALD}<;RMEN.
Retire in 1895. Retire in 1898.
Applegate James, Aylsham
Boileau Sir Francis George Manningham bart. Kettering Brooks Henry, Lingwood
Park Brown Thomas, Exton's road, King's Lynn
Cozens-Hardy Theobald, Sprowston Bugden John Henry, Suffield, Aylsham
Ellis John Bolding, West Barsham Cozens-Hardy Clement William Hardy, Cley-next-the-Sea
Hyde Henry Elwin, East Oereham Gilbert Ed ward, Blofield
Le Strange Hamon, Hunstanton hall, King's Lynn Mason Robert Harvey, Necton hall, Necton
Parsons William Baldock, Tilney St. Lawrence Montgomerie Cecil Thomas Crisp Tomlinson Molyneux, Gis-
Read Clare Sewell, Honingham Thorpe sing hall, Diss
Sewell Philip Edward, New Catton, Norwich Morton John, West Rudham
Taylor Garrett, Trowse, Norwich Winfield Frederick Charles, Stoke Ferry

CoUNCILWRS.
Electoral Division. Na;nes & Addresses. Electoral Division. Names & Addresses.
Acle .................. Hy.Jas. Waters, Langley Abbey, Loddon Holt .................. Robins Cooke, Glandford
Attleborough ...... Frederick Riches, Great Hock ham Humbleyard ...... Georg-e Henry Mutimer, Swainsthorpe
Aylsham ............ Benjamin Beckham Sapwell, Aylsham Hunstanton ......... Jn.Wm.Beeton,St. Edmund's,Hunstantn
Blofield ............... Robert King, Great Plumstead King's Lynn : -
Bunwell ............ James Step hen Edward La Fontaine, Middle Ward .•• William Samuel Valentine Miles, Little-
Tacolnestone hall port street, King's Lynn ·
Burnham ............ Hubert Valentine, Sheringham, South North Ward •.. Edward Milligen Beloe, Paradise lane,
Creake King's Lynn
Buxton ............... Charles Louis Buxton, Bolwick hall, South Ward ... Alfd.Jermyn,Goodwin's rd. King'sLynn
Marsham • Litcham ............ Geo. Neville, Red House farm, Rongham
Cromer ............ Robert Wm.Ketton,Felbrigg hall,Cromer Loddon ............ Samuel Newton Delf,Longwood, Topcroft
Dereham ............ Charles Norton Elvin, Eckling Grange, Mattishall ......... George Rix, Swanton Morley
East Dereham Melt<:>n ...•••.....• Edward Bowyer Sparke, Gunthorpe hall
Diss .................. Francis Taylor M. P. Hall hills, Diss Mundford ......... William Angerstein, Weeting hall
Ditchingham ...... Henry Smith, Ellingham hall Roopham ... ........ . Benjamin Wyand, Kerd1stone
Ducking ... ......... Henry Calthrop Holloway-Calthrop, Sa ham Toney .. . Brighten Hardy, Saham Toney
Stanhoe hall St. Faith's : -
Downbam ......... Harry Wayman, Wallington Eastern ......... Gilbert Hardinge Stracey, Sprowston
Elmham ............ Thos. Blornfield Fulcher, North Elmham lodge
Fakenham ......... Sir Lawrence John Jones bart. Cranmer Western ......... John Howard, Attlebridge
hall Shipdham ......... Robert Thornhaugh Gurdon,Letton hall
Feltwell ............ Stephen Oldman, jun. Fern house, Earl's North Small burgh Francis Clowes, ::5utton
street, Thetford South Smallburgh Robert Harvey, Hiclding
Fincham ............ Thomas Leigh Hare M. P. Stow Bardolph Southrepps ......... Robert Wortley, Suffield
East l''legg ... •. .. .. George Morris Beck, Ormesby St. Swaffham ......... Warner Henry Lee, Swaffham
Margaret Terrington ......... David Ward, Terrington St. Clement
West Flegg ... . .. ... Sherwood William Page, Oby Thetford .... . .... . .. Corn ell Henry Fi.son, Ford pl. Tbetford
Free bridge Lynn : - Upwell ............... Nathan Booth, Nordelph, Downham
North ............ Sir William Hovell Browne Ffolkes bart. Market
Hillin!:,Tton hall North Walsham .•. Lord Wodehouse, Witton park, North
South ............ Anthony Hamond, Westacre High house Walsham
East Guiltcross ... William George Keppel, The Grange, Walsingham ...... Florance Thomas Stephen Rippingall,
Old Buckenham La~ ham
West Guiltcross ••• William Bailey, East Harling Walsoken ............ The Rev. John Young, Walsoken
Harleston ......... John Sancroft Holmes, Gawdy hall, Har- Watton ••••••.••..• Daniel Dunnett., Watton
leston Wells ............... Edward Bunting Loynes, Warham All
Henstead ............ Ernest England, The Grange, Bramerton Saints
Hilgay ............... Edwd. Roger Murray Pratt, Royston hall Wymondham ...... Earl of Kimberley, Kimberley house,
Eingham ............ George William Thompson, Marlingford Wymondham
l>I](ECTORY, J ,iVORFOLK.
LIST OF THB MEMBERS OF THE CoUNTY CoUNCIL, ARRANGED ALPHABETICALLY, AND THE ELECTORAL DIVISIONS
FOR WHICH THBY RESPBC'riV).':tY SIT.

Name. Electoral Division. 1 Name. Electoral Division.


Angerstein W ................. , M undford King R ................ ~~·... ... . .. . . . Blofield
Bailey W . .. . . . •.. . .. . . . . .• .. . . . •. . . West Guiltcross La J<'ontaine J. S. E .....•..•... Run well
Beck G. M ... . . . .. . . .. . .. . . . ... ... EMt Jf.,legg l.JOO W. H ........................... Swaffham
Bee ton J. W ••• .. . .•• .. . •.. •• . ..• H unstanton Loynes E. B........................ Wells
Beloe E. M ........................ King's Lynn (North Ward) Miles W. S. V ..................... King's Lynn (:Middle Ward)
Booth N . .. .. . ... .. . ... .. . .. .•••..• Upwell Mutimer G. H •.. ... . . . ... ... ... Humbleyard
Buxton C. L ..................... Buxton Neville G ........................... Litcham
Clowes F ........................... North Smallburgh Old man S. jun .....•...........• Felt well
C<x>ke R •••.•.•...•.........•.....• Holt Page s. w .. I..I......... II....... "'rest Flegg
Delf S. N . . . ... . . . . . . . . . .. . . . . .. . . . . Wddon Pipe J , ............................. Stratton
Dunnett D ........................ Watton Pratt E. R. M ..................... Hi !gay
Elvin C. N ···-···• ............... Dereham Riches F ... . . . .... .. ... . .. ... . .. . . . Attleborough
England E ... . . . . . . . .. ... . . ... . . . . Henstead Rippingall F. T. S ............... Walsingham
Ffolkes Sir W. :S:. B ............ Free bridge Lynn (North) Rix G .............................. ~rattishall
Fison C. ll .. . . .. .... .. . .. . . . . . . . .. Thetford Sapwell B. B .................... Aylsham
Fulcher T. B . ...... ..... ... .. . ... Elm ham Sheringham H. V ............... Burn ham
Gurdon R. T •.•.. , ............... Shipdham Smith H ........................... Ditching ham
Hamond A ................ , ......• Freebridge Lynn (South) Sparke E. B.-..................... Melton
Hardy B ....................... , ... Sa ham Toney Stracey G. H ..................... St. Faith's (Eastern)
Hare T. L. M. P • .. • • •• • • • ••• •• • • •• Fincham Taylor F ............................... Diss
Harvey R ........................... South Smallburgh Thompson G. W .................. Hingham
Holloway-Calthrop H. C •...• , Docking Ward D ........................... Terrington
llolmes J. S ........................ Ilarleston WatersH.J ........................... Acle
Howard J ........................... St. Faith's (Western) Way man H ........................ Downbam
Jermyn A ........................ King's Lynn (South Ward) Wodehouse Lord ........ , ...... North Walsham
Jones Sir L. J ..................... J<'akenham Wortley R ..................... ,., Southreppll
Keppel W. G ..................... East Guiltcross Wyand B ........................... Reepham
Ketton R. W .......••....... ~.... Cromer Young Rev. J ..................... Walsoken
Kimberley Earl of ............... Wymondham
County Officials. •

Clerk to the County Council, Chas. Foster, Shire ball,Norwch Norfolk's Liberty, Henry Edwin Garrod, Mount street,
Deputy Clerk, G. -c. Davies, The Shirehouse, Norwich Diss ; deputy, John William Sparrow, 1:2 Rampant Horse
County Treasurer, G. F. Buxton, The Bank, Norwich street, Norwich; the Liberty of Thomas Leigh Hare esq.
County Accountant, H. C. Bolingbroke, The Shirehouse, comprising the whole of the RliDdred of Clackclose, &
Norwich also Coroner for the Liberty of Charles Watson Townley
County Analyst, Fras. Sutton F.c.s., F. I. C. London st.Norwch esq. comprising the whole of the Half Hundred of Clack-
County Surveyor, Thomas Hind Blumer He slop A. M. mst.c.E. close, Thomas Lancelot Reed, Bridge street, Downham ;
Upper King street, Norwich · deputy, Harry Wayman, Bridge street, Downham
Coroners for the County.-N orwich district, Henry Read High Constables.-West Flegg, Robert Kidman esq. Repps,
Culley, Bank street, Norwich; deputy, Charles Hlackwell Norwich; Ea.st Flegg, Knights Francis Daniel esq.
Foster, Bank place, Norwich; West Norfolk district, Stokesby, Norwich.
Robert Alfred Wilkin, King street, Lynn; deputy, William Inspectors of Weights & Measures.-C.-enttal NorfoTh:, John
Seppings, King street, Lynn ; the Liberty of the Duchy of Ryley, East Dereham; East Norfolk, H. J. Pilgrim,
Lancaster, Waiter May Barton, Guildhall, Dereham ; IIA, Theatre street, ~orwich; \Vest Norfolk, H. William-
deputies, Benjamin Herbert Vores, South green, Dereham son, King's Lynn
& Robert Alfred Wilkin, King street, Lynn ; the Duke of


2BO .N'dRFOLK. {ltEtty•s
• • •
THE GEOLOGY OF NORFOLK.
. . , I

NATURAL HISTORY AND Scno:NTIFIC 80CIRT:txs. xs 7 x. Prestwich, Pror.. J.-On·"the .. Crag. jotl.rn Oeot
1
Norfolk and Norwich Naturalists 1 Society; Norwich. Soc., -vol. xxvh. pp. ns, 325~· 452. .... ...l b
1.'rallilactions. .. .. .. .. · .. · .. .. ·.. I • l 1B..,x. Wood, S. V.,' and Harmer;· F. W·.:..:.:...Outl ne or' \h
Norfolk Microscoprcal Society: · · .. .. .... ... 1 l Geology of ~he Upper Tertiaries· of Eas.t Anglia.
Norwich Geological Society. · · .. .. .. .. Palreontographical Society's vol. 1871:
Norwich Science Gossip Club.· .. 1877. Wood, S. V., and Harmer, F. ·W.:........La · Tertiary
MCSEUMS;.. .. .. · .. · .. Geology
... of East Anglia. · · Jonrrr. Gool. Soc., vol.
King's Lynn Museum, · · ·· ' . XXXlll. p. 7 4· " ' '.. ' '" ' ' '
The Norfolk and 'N ur wich Museum; Ni>rwtch. · · 1877. Reid, C.-Modern :Penudation in Norfolk. Geol.
PUBLICATIONS OF THE GEOLOGICAL SURVEY. Mag., vol. xi.r. p. 136. · · ... ... ... .. .... · ·
Books.-Geology of the Feriland, by Skertehly, 400.; 1877. Belt, Thos.-First Stages of the Glaciaf Period in
Manufacture of Gun-flints (at "Brandon &c:}, by Skertchly, Norfolk a nil Suffolk ... Oeot; Mag-:; vot. xiv. p. 156.
178. 6d. Geology of the Country Round Norwich, by H. B. 1877. Norton, H.-The Forest Bed of East Norfolk. Geol.
Woodward. · · · · · · · · · · .. Mag., TOI. xiv. pp. 320, '335 (Rev. J. Gunn), and
432 (B. S. Breese ). .. ... · ·.. ·
IMPORTANT WoRKS OR PAPERS ON LOCAL GEOLOGY. 1877 . Reid, C.-Beds between tne Chalk and Lower Boulder
:1824. Ta.ylor, R. C.-On the Or3g Strata, at BrameFton, Clay, at Cromer. Geol. Mag., vol. xiv. p. 300.
uear Norwich. Trans. GeoL Soc., 2nd series, vol. 187 8. Harmer, F. W.~Testimany of the Rocks in Norfolk.
i. p. 371. · .. · .. .. · Hamilton, A dams and Co. · ..
1824. Taylor, R. C.-On the Alluvial Strata and Chalk of 1879. Newton, E. T.-Fossil Tortoise ·from Mundesley.
Norfolk and Suffolk. Trans. Gool. Soc., 2nd series, Geol. Mag., vol. xvi. p. 304. ·
vol. i. p. 374· 188o. Fisher, Rev. o.~On the Oromer Cliffs. Geol. Mag.,
1826. Taylor,R. C.-Notice of Fossil Timber, on the Norfolk >ol. xvii. p. 14]. · .. · · ·
coast. Trans. Geol. Soc., 2nd series, vol. ii. p. 327. 188o. Reid, C.-The Glacial Deposits of· Oromer. GeoL
:1829. Woodward, S. P . ....__On some remarkable Fossil Re- Mag., vol. xvii. p. SS· · · · ..
mains found near Crumer-. Proc. Geol Soc., vol. 188o. Woodward, H. B.-Addres!! totheNorwichGeolog!cal
i. p. 93· .. .. Society. Geol. Mag.; vol. xvii. p: 72.
1833· Woodward, Samuel.~Outline of the Geology of x88o. Reid, C.-Classification of Pliocene and Pleistocene
Norfolk. Beds. 1 Geol. Mag., p. 548: · .. · '
1834· Taylor, Jno.-Strata in a Well at Diss. Trans. Geol. _Fossils of Norfolk. See the publications of the Paloo·
Soc., series 2, vol. v. p, 137; Proc. Geol. Soc., \"ol. ontographical Society, including the Crag Mollusca,
ii. p. 93• by Searles V. Wood, esq. (sen.); Cretaceous Corals,
x836. Fitch, R.-Mastodon Tooth in the Crag at Thorpe. bv Prof. Duncan ; Echinoderms, ,by Prof. Forbes
Proc. Gaol, Soc., vol. ii. p. 417.· · and Dr. Wright; Foraminifer~~ by Prof. Rupert
1837. Clarke, Rev. W. B.-Physical Relations of Suffolk Jones and Mr. Brady. . r
with. Norfolk and Essex. Trans. GeoL Soc., 2nd The strata of Norfolk have long been the subject of tlili-
series, vol. v .. p. 359; Proc. Geol. Soc., vol. ii p. gent investigation by local worker!! • .J :Mr. Samuel Woodward
528. puqlished an excellent "Outline of the G~logy pf ;Norfolk,"
1838. Mitch6ll, Dr. J . .....-()n the Drift. Proc. Geol. Soc., in 1833, and before his time Mr. R.. C. Taylor had done
vol. iii. p. 3· · good work at the Crag and Cliff sections. In the Journal of
1839. Gunn, Rev. J.-On Paramoudras, and on the Drift. the Geological Society we have since had excellent papers
Proc. Geol. Sue. ,vol. iii. p. 170. on the Red (/balk of Hunstanton by the Rev, 'f. WiltsQire,
:t839· Lyell, Sir C.-On the Relative Ages of the Crag on the Crag by Professors Prestwich, Boyd Dawkins and
Peposits. · Proc. Geol. Soc., vol. iii. p. 126. Messrs. Whitaker, (iunn, the Rev. 0. Fisher &o. Mr.
1840. Lyell, Sir C.+-On the Drift and Associated l''reshwater Searles V. Wood's account of the Crag Mollusca, published
Deposits Comprising the Mud Cliffs of Eastern , by the Palreontographical Society, in, which ~~ry species ts
Norfolk. Proc. Gaol. Soc., vol. iii. p. 171. figured, was a. grand contribption, whilstr for the samb
1840. Trimmer, J.-On the Drift between Lynn and Wel~s. Society Professor Duncan has described the Corals, Professor
Proc. Geol. Soc., vol. iii. p. 185. Forbes the Echinoderms, Professor Busk the Polyzoa, and
1841. Lyell, Sir C.-Fossil Fishes of Mundesley. Proc. Rupert Jones and Brady the Foraminifera. Mr. S. V.
Geol. Soc., vol. iii. p. 362. Wood, jun. assisted by Mr. Harmer, has described the
1844. Trimmer, J.-On the Drift between Weybourne and Glacial Depol-'its with a skill and care which !We worthy of
Happisburgh. Journ. Geol. Soc., vol. i. p. 218. the highest praise, and among other workers we may
1844. Trimmer, J.-On Pipes in the Chalk. Journ. Geol. mention Messrs. Trimmer, Rose, John Evans, Flower,
Soc., vol. i. p. 300. Norton and BreesEl.
18,~5- Munford, Rev. G.~ubmerged Forest at Hunstanton. In the Norwich Museum there is a splendtd collection of
Gentleman's Magazine. local fossils, and t.he Norwich Geological and Natural Histvry
1851. Trimmer, J.-Generalizations respecting the Erratic Societies and the Norwich &ience Gossip Club have d;me
Tertiaries of Norfolk. Journ. Geol. Soc., vol. vii. a11d are doing good work.
p. 19. It is, however, to the Government Geological Survey that
1856. Bunbury, C. J.-Draining a Mere, near Wretham we look for a full and decisive account of the rocks of any
Hall. Journ. Geol. Soc., vol. xii. p. 355· part of England. The officers of the Survey, howerer,
1858. Trimmer, J.-On the Boulder Clays of Gorleston began their work some forty years ago in the south-west of
Cliffs. Journ. Geol. Soc., vol. xiv. p. 171. England end in Wales, and have ever since been advancing
:186o. Prestwich, Prof. J.-London Clay in a Well-boring at eastwards, until quite lately they have begun to examine
Yarmouth. Journ. Geol. Soc., vol. xvi. p. 44.9· the counties which border on the North Sea, the geologiral
1864. Gunn, Rev. J -Sketch of the Geology of Norfolk. map of Norfolk, on the scale of one inch to one mile, which
:1864. Seeley, Prnf. H.-On the Hunstanton Red Rock. they will prepare, together with the memoirs published w
J oum. Gaol. Soc., vol. xx. p. 327. describe the coun.try, will, doubtless, set at rest many
:1866. Fisher, Rev. 0.-Relation of theN orwich Crag to the vexed question~ and form a noble contribution to the science
Chillesford Clay. Journ. Geol. Soc., vol. xxii. p. of Geology. Already Mr. S. B. J. Skertcbly has written an
19, and vol. xxiii. p. 175· excellent account of the "Fenland," together with a most
1867. Harmer, F. W.-A Third .Boulder Clay in Norfolk. interesting memoir on the gun-flint manufacture at Bran·
Joum. Geol. Soc., vol. xxiii. p. 87. don, whilst valuable notes have been issued by Messrs. W.
1868. Dawkins, W. Boyd -New Deer from Norwich Crag. Whitaker, C'lement Reid, Horace B. Woodward, W. H.
Journ. Gaol. Soc., vol. xxiv. p. 516. Penning and J. H. Blake.
186<}. Grantbam, R. B.-The Broads of East Norfolk. As a resident of a county, two-thirds of whose outline is
Journ. Geol. Soc., vol. xxv. p. 258. encompassed by the sea, the geologist dwelling in Norfolk
x86<}. Flower, J.W.-Flint Implements in the Drift. Journ. enjoys a great ad,•antage; indeed, but for the fine sections
Geol. Soc., vol. xxv. pp. 272, 449· of the glacial deposits exposed in the cliffs it is ahnost
186<}. Wood, S. V., and Harmer, F. W.-Intraglacial Ero- certain that these puzzling beds could never have been
sion, near Norwich. Journ. Geol. Soc., vol. x.xv. satisfactorily examined or understood. The coast line un-
pp. 259, 445· dulates both m height and outline: King's Lynn (St. John's
xB&}. Wiltshire, Rev. T.-On the Red Chalk of Hunstanton. church) is 16 feet above the sea, Holkham (church) 94 feet,
Journ. Geol. Soc., vol. xxv. p. 185. Cromer Lighthouse 248 feet, Cromer Church 68 feet,
1870. Gnnn, Rev. J.-Position of the Forest Bed and Mundesley (church) II5 feet, Trimingham (chnrch) 195
Chillesford Clay. Journ. Gaol. Soc., vol. xxvi. p. feet, Has borough (church) 70 feet and Winterton Lighthouse
.5.5 r. 6x feet.
piiU:CTOBY.] NORFOLK.
The surface ()f the county s flat and slightly undulating : I burnt inro red bricks.; the change is brought about by the
along a line across the centre from west to east the Ord- simple addition of oxygen.
nance Survey levelling gave the following heights :-Wal- It is possible that the upper portion of the Red Chalk may
soken (church) 1~ feet, West Bilney 54 feet, Swaffham represent the Upper Grten.JJand of the southern counties,
{church) 238 feet, East Dereham (church) 165 feet, Hock- and this is a point to which the attention of local geologists
ering (church) x63 feet, Norwich Castle rn feet, St. Mary's may well be directed, as its proof or disproof must res1i
Church x8 feet, and Great YarmoutQ. (St. Peter's Church) mainly on extensive collections of fossils made with great
23 feet. care and with special reference to the position in the bed in
Taking a general view we find, on the extreme west, a which they occur. In the Holkham boring, after passing
~mall portion, just the edge, of the Fen district, extending through 20 feet of gravel and 635 of chalk, the Red Chalk
from Welney and Hilgay fen to the Wash; then comes a was found to be 8 feet thick, and to rest on xo feet of" Blue
gently rising slope leading np to a line of low chalk bills, Gault," so that here the red bed would seem tq represent
which run from Hunstanton and Burnham Westgate south- the upper part of the Gault only.
wanls by Swaffbam to Thetford: east of this line the chalk At Norwich the boring showed 12 feet of alluvium, then
stretches right across to the sea, but is so covered over by x,04:l feet of chalk, 6 feet of "Upper Grecnsand" and 36
later deposits as to be rarely visible at the smface, except in feet of Gault, in whh.:h the boring sropped : the stratum
the valleys of the principal rivers. The watershed of the termed "Upper Greensand" may only have been an upper
~unty lies nearly in the centre, along a line passing from sandy division of the Gault.
Brancaster through Liteham, Dereham, Hingbam and At- THE CHALK.-This rock is seen on an ordinary geological
tleborongh to Lopham Ford, where the Waveney and Little map to form a larger proportion of Norfolk than of any
Ouse rise within a. few yards of each other and then flow in other English county; yet the portion of which it is the
diametrically opposite directions. actual surface is comparatively small: this arises from the
The rocks of Norfolk fall naturally into two divisions: the fact that in such maps the Drift-as the glacial deposits are
first includes those of great age, which form what we may termed-is not shown, and the Drift lies thic\dy upon the
c:>Jl the solid geology of the county ; these have a general chalk in this county. Every person is familiar with the
easterly dip, so that the oldest rocks crop out on the west appearance of ordinary white chalk ~it is a soft white earthy
side of the county: the second division comprises all those limestone nearly pure carbonate of lime in fact, which the
surface accumulations, whether of glacial, alluvial or marine microscope shews to oe largely composed of the minuw
origin, which lie npon the older beds (from which they are shells of foraminifera : these are minute animals, occupying
separated by an immense interval of time) in an unconform• a very low place in the scale of creation-mere specks of
able and irregular manner. jelly to look at-which construct for themselves a calcareous
THE OoLITIC FoRMATION.-On the east side of king's covering or shell: they seem to live chiefly near the surface
Lynn and running northwards along the Wash nearly to and at a considerable distance from land. Many soundings
Hunstanton and southwards past Watlington to near Down- of late years have shown that the bed of the North At.Jantic
ham Market we have a narrow strip of Kimmeridge f!lay ; and other portions of the ocean floor is composed of a whitish
thiB is the Oaktree Clay of William Smith, who noticed that ooze formed of the shells of forams which have sunk to the
oaks grew remarkably well upon it~ it is a tenacious dark- bottom after the death of the inhabitant: in this manner the
coloured clay, but exposures are scanty in this neighbourhood: chalk was probably fotmed, and the period required for the
dipping eastwardly it passes under the chal.ot &c. and was accumulation of this deposit, having a thickness in Norfolk
probably reached at a depth of 743 feet in a deep well-boring of about x,ooo feet, must have been of immense duration.
at Holkham; but before we reach the east coast it is absent, Three divisions can be made in the chalk of this district.
having thinned out or been denuded, as the deep boring at The Chalk Marl.-In the Hunstanton Cliff Section about
Harwich showed no trace of it. The Purbeck and Portland fDur feet of a greyish white limestone is seen to rest on the
beds, which rest upon the Kimmeridge Clay in the south of red band ; this white bed is the chalk marl : it is only about
England, are here absent. four feet in thickness, and in the lower part we find the
THE NEoCOMIAN FoRMATION.-The Wealden strata being same branching sponge which occurs in the Red Chalk; the
also absent, the Lower Greensand reposes directly on the upper portion is full of the fragments of a shell called Ino-
Kimmeridge Clay; it is locally termed Carstone, a word ceramus; some large ammonites also occur in it.
which may be derived from "Quernstone," as some beds The Lower or Ilard Chalk.-This forms the upper portion
were formerly used to make the querns or stone hand-mills of Hunstanton Cliff. Passing inland, we can follow it by
in which our ancestors ground their corn. This Lower means of quarries through Snettisham, Gayton, Marham.
Greensand consists of alternating beds of red and white sand N arborough, Whi ttin~ton and Stoke Ferry to Feltwell and
and sandstone about 70 feet in thickness: it forms the lower Hockwold-cum-Wilton: it is much used in western Norfolk,
portion of Hunstanton Cliff, where it is of a yellow tint above together with carstone, for the construction of cottages and
and dark-brown below, loose and sandy and full of small farm buildings ; many carvings and monuments for the
pebbles: near the base is a line of nodules containing Am- interior of churches have also been executed in it. No flints
monites Deshayseii, Perna mulleti ~c. From this point the occur in this Lower Chalk : its thickness in the deep boring
sandstone can be traced southward by Snettisham and executed by Mather and Platt for Messrs. Colman, at .Nor-
Castle Rising to Downham Market. The hard beds are wich, was found to be 102 feet, and in the Holkham boring
used for building purposes, and the white sands in the 116 feet. Of fossils it has yielded bones of a large saurian
manufacture of glass. At one place there is a seam of ful- -lchthyosaurus campylodon-and two ammonites-Am-
lers' earth. , . monites peramplus and A. austenii~large species about two
THE GAULT (AND REo CHALK).-One of the most at- feet in diameter.
tractive geological sections on the coast of England is ex- The Upper Chalk or Chalk with Flints.- This division
hibited in Hunstanton Cliff: its base formed of Ca.rstone- comes on to the eastward of that last described and forms
we have just described: upon the yellow sands which con- the great bulk of the formation: in the Norwich boring it
stitute the top of this division there rests a band of bright wa..s found to attain the great thickness of 940 feet, and at
"Red Chalk," four feet thick, above which, forming the Holkham (where the upper portion has been denuded) 519
top of the cliff, comes the White Chalk 40 feet thick : the feet; it yields a. large supply of good but hard water. The
extreme height of the section is only 6o feet, but as all the dip of the Chalk is to the eastwards, about 48 feet per mile,
beds slope or dip to the north and east at an angle of about or half a degree. The lower part of this division is exposed
two degrees, a much greater thickness of strata is visible at Brancaster, Docking, Lexbam, Litcham, Swaffham and
than if they were all horizontal. The bed of Red Chalk, as Thetford ; the texture of it more compact, and the flints
it has been named, has attracted much attention: it is full fewer than in higher beds. As we pass eastwards we find
of fossils-Belemnites minimus, Spongia (or Siphonia),para- numerous chalk-pits at Wells, Bolt, Coltishall, Horstead,
do:rica, Te:rebratula biplicata, Ammonites auritus, and about Whittingham, Postwick, Trimingham, Trowse, &c. The
50 other species, of which two-Bourgueticrinus rugosus flints mark the stratification well, and are usually arranged
and Terebratula capillata-are in England confined to this in horizontal layers about fi,•e feet apart. On the origin of
deposit. This red bed can be readily tmced for 8 miles flint, Mr. S. Woodward makes some acute remarks in the
southwards to Sandringham; a little further south, at Geology of Norfolk~ which, as we have already mentioned,
I<1itcham, a. red clay was found to underlie the white chalk, he published in 1833. He writes :~"The fact of the regular
and further south still a ~tiff blue clay-the well-known parallelism and stratification of the flinty noduleS is, we con-
Gault-had taken the place of this red clay. Thus the ceive, a sufficient refutation of their animal origin; added
Gault and the Red Chalk would seem to be of the same age, to which there is not a greater number of organic remains
and this impression is confirmed by a study of the fossils, to be found in the flinty stratum than is seen distributed in
which are to a large extent common to both formations: the adjoining bed of Chalk. . . . . In accounting for
the colour is no objection, but rather ·tends to confirm this the different appearance of the Chalk formation in its upper
opinion: analyses by Mr. David Forbes showed that ordinary and lower beds, we venture to advance it as our opinion,
Gault contained nearly 6 per cent. of protoxide of iron, while that, the whole being deposited iu one homogeneous mass,
the Red Chalk contained almost exactly the same amount in which about 12 per cent. of silex: was equally distributed,
of peroxide of iron : now the former salt of iron readily the lower part . r- • , began to consolidate ere any
changes into the latter, as we see when the Gault Clay is arrangement of the siliceous particles could take place,
NORFOLK.
whilst in the nppet part tlie.'!e partic~es, by chemical attrac- ate IB extinct species i from tbe Chitlesford Beds 87 species
tion, congregated themselves into tlie nodular and tubulat' have been obtained, 14 of which a.re not knawn as living.
forms-under whfcli they appear.• In several quarri~ near 1
All the above beds were _probaply deposited in a shallow
Norwicti, as tha-t famous one at Hol"Stead, figured and deJ 8ea, the coast line of whicil lay some few miles west of
scribed by Sl·r CharleS LyeH, and at Trowse,- immense pear- Norwich, and near or in the estuary of a large river. The
shaped !flints, from two to five feet in length and half as shells show a. gradual change of climate, the Mediterranea~
much In breadth, are fdund, several often occurting bne forms met with in the lower strata gradually disappeari,ng,
above the other: for t.hese Dr. Bnckland imported the name and those of colder seas taking their place.
. Pa:tamuudra, a.n Irish word for similar masses occurring in QuATERNARY PERw:p..--The PLEISTOCENB FoRMATION in•
the 1chalk near Belfa8t: ther are often hollow, and seem to ~udes all the deposiw connected with the last glacial period ;
have boon formed by "the accumulation of flint l"ound.decay- of these Norfolk presents a series more complete than is to
ing gigantic Sponges. Of shells, the commonest' specie~, be met with in any other part of the British Isles. In a few
near Norwich, are Terebratula t:arnea and Rfi.ynchunella places on the coast we see the PRE-GLACIAL BJIDS exposed,
plicatilis. At Biilhop's Bridge fine specimens of a great
as at Cromer, .Runton and Weybourne: these include tha
reptile-thft Mosasau1"1.U.._have beeil met with, but these Forest Bed, which can be traced from Runton by Cromer
are usually so decayed that only the teeth can be extracted. and Hasbro to Kessingland in Suffolkj a distance of abou•
•• Remains of JJiodO'll. anceps, a Lacertilian reptile allied to 40 miles. At low water, or after heavy storms, the stnmp8
Mosasaurus, have been obtained 9Y Mr. T. G. Hayfield, at of trees may be seen embedded in laminated clays and iands 1
Lollard's. Pit, Norwich. But the very highest beds of chalk cones of Scotch fir and spruce are common, with bones of
known in Norfolk are those which occur at Trimingham, such. large mammals as l!.,'lepha.~ antiquus, Hippopotamus,
· and which contain fossil sponges in the flints, only found Rhino~eros, many species of deer &c. : it is now generally
elsewhere in the coarse flint-gri\Vel 'Which caps Mousehold GOnsidered that. these bones were washed out of ~tome older
Heath. "-(Woodward. J' \. 1 t
deposit, and it is even doubtful whether the trees grew on
In many sections the npper 5 t() 20 feet of the chalk the spot where we now see them. The Weybourn~ Sand'
appears to be re-arranged, mixed up with clay and sand, and Bure Valley Beds are of th~ same age as the Forest
and containing broken fiint!r with pebbles of quartzite, &c. ; Bed~ -hey contain Tl:llinq_ balthica, a. characteristic glacial
the beds beneath, too, are often tilted and disturbed : these shell j they lie unconformably on .the Chillesford Beds.
appearances are due to the passage of glaciers ovet the sur• Fossilized remains of large mammals bave been obtained in
face, as will be described further on. large numbers by the fishermen who with their nets sweep
TERTIARY PERIOD.-An interval of time, whose duratfon the shallow floor of the German Ocean : of these tb.e late
must have been great indeed, elapsed after the formation Rev., J"ames. Layton formed a magnificent collection, which
of the chalk before any fresh deposits were laid down in is-now in the British Museum~ it is stated tha~ be bad at
this area : the best proof of this great interregnum is fonnd one time as many as 6oo grinders of the elephant in his pos--
in the entire change of lite which took place in this interval. session. Fine collections have also been made by the late
In the strata we are now about to describe not one fossil is Miss Gurney, of Norta Repps, the Rev. John Gunn and
identically the same as those w~ich occur in the older beds; Messrs. C. B. Rose, Owles, Steward and ,.Nash, Many fine
this point then iB selected by geologists as a great line of tusks of the mammoth, measuring from six; to nine feBt
demarcation ; the chalk is assigned to the Secondary Period, along the curve,. have been dredged up from the Kno~e
and the beds which rest upon it to the Tertiary. Sand, off Hasborough. Miss Gurney's collection is now in
EocENE FoHMATION.-The presence of beds o( this age the Norwich Museum, •
in Norfolk was not suspected until the cores brought up -
LowER GLACIAL BRns.-Next in the L010er Bmxlde7 Clay
from a. deep well~boring at Great Yarmouth in r84o {for S1r or Cromf!'l" Till we have a series, about 200 feet thick, shmf• ·
E, Lacon & Co.) were examined many years later" by Pro- ing an undoubted glacial origin :' it is a greyish clay, con•
fessor Pres~wich together with the Rev. John Gunn ar1d ,Mr. taining rounded and scratched stones, such as chalk, flint,
Rose ; the ,boring passed first through 50 feet of blown sand. blne basalt, pink granite, &c. : then we have the C()ntarted
then through 120 {eet of recent flstuarine deposits ~ at a IJrift, a yellowish, loamy and gravelly deposit, remarkable
depth of 170 feet a light-brown clay with numerous con- for the way in which it ill seen to be bent ,., contorted !J by
cretions was found, and proyed to be 310 feet thick; this, some force acting after its deposition: it contains enormom
though no fossils were brought up, Professor Prestwich masses of chalk, som~ of which measure hundreds of fert
states is undoubted ].(mdO'll. Clay ; beneath it came 46 ieet in length : the conwrtions and included chalk masses are
of Woolwich a.nd Reading .Beds : the chalk was found at a believed to' be due to the grounding of great icebergs float·
depth of 526 feet and pierced to a depth of 57 faet. These ing slowly southwards. A few marine shells occur, among
Eocene beds are nowhere exposed at the surface in Norfolk, which Tellina Balthica is recognizable. These Lower Glacial
and they probably occur only along the coast, covered over Beds stretch inland and cover the surface of a considerable
and eon.cealed py newer deposits. area in the north-east of Norfolk, as far south as the course
PLIOCENE FoRMA.TTON.~Tn the neighbourhood of Nor- of the Yare and Wensum,
wich, and along a narrow strip on the north side of the river MIDDLE GLACIAL BEDS.-These are sands which appear
Waveney, near Bungay, we see resting on the chalk some to mark a comparatively warm or •• inter-glacial" period :
beds of sand, clay and shingle, not more than 30 feet in they are from 15 to 70 feet thick, and occupy large areas,
thickness, and often containing seams or banks of shells : cropping out from beneath the chalky boulder clay. Shells
these beds "lire termed the Norwich Crag (crag is derived have been found at Billockby, 8 miles north-west of
from the Celtic creggan, a shell, the beds being often so shelly Yarmouth, in a thin shelly seam, about 4 or 5 feet below
as to be used for improving land) : they were first well the top of the sand: great interest attaches to these beds;
described :by Mr. E. Charlesworth in 1835, and the names for, nE)ar Brandon, brick-earths of this period have yielded
Mammal~ferous Crag and Fluviomarine Crag have also flint implements-the undoubted work of man.
been applied to them. In Suffolk and Essex beds called Red UPPER GLACIAL BEnS.-The well-known Great Chalkg
Crag and £oralline "Crag also occur, which were deposited Boulder Clay spreads over the centre, south, and south-
(the latter at all events) before the time of the Norwich Crag, west"of this country: its extreme thickness h~re is above
although the Norfolk series' may pethaps be coeval with the 100 feet: it is a stiff bluish clay, quite unstratified and
npper part 'l'lf the Red Crag of Suffolk : in the large chalk- containing fragments of chalk of all sizes, together with
pits near Norwich, as at Trowse, Whitlingham, Thorpe a heterogeneous collection of rocks and fossils, derived from
Limekiln, Horstead, Coltishall, a:nd at Bramerton anil Post- almost every formation~ it appears to have been formed
wick Grove, the Norwich C1·t1g is well exposed ! here, 'rest- beneath, or pushed before, a great glacier, advancing from
ing on the chalk, Cll.n be seen the "swne-bed," showing the north. The broads and meres, so distinctive of this
an eroded surface of chalk, bored by Pholas, on which lie county, are small sheets of water which probably occupy -
large flints, upon and between which are many bones of large basins scooped out by ice-action.
mammals, as Mastodon arve1'1!enses, Elephas meriaiO'll.alis, Hill, Plateau or Flood Gravels.-These are coarse
the Horse, Stag, Ox, Beaver, &c.~ above comes the Norwich gravels, which seem td pave been formed by floods result-
crag proper-laminated clay, sand and shingle, wit4 here ing from the melting of great glaciers: the " cannon-shot"
and there patches of shells; the eommonest species are gravel of Mousehold Heath is a good example : this is
Tellina obliqua, Mactra O?Jalis, Purpura lapillus, &c. Rest- mainly composed of large much-battered flints, with quart~
ing on the Norwich Crag, of which they may be "\"ega.rded and quartzite pebbles. -
as a sub-division, we find the Chille.iford Beds Sands and POST-GLACIAL DEPOSITS : - .
clays about 5 or "rd feet thick, containing such Bhells as Valley Gravels.-Numerous beds, of very ilifferent ages,
Astarte borealis, TelliruJ lata, &c. A fine section of the are included nnder this term : some belong to a system of
Chillesford Beds is exposed in a brick pit near Aldeby and rivers, which flowed nearly at right angles to those of the
about fonr miles from Beccles : this pit has been carefully present day! these beds have yielded many flint imple-
searched by Messrs. Dowson and Ctowfoot, whd have ob- ments.
tained more than 70 species of mollusks from it. Altogether In the Cliffs at Mundesley there is an old filled-up river
rn species have been obtained from the Norwich Crag bed, which has lately yielded remains of a torwise (Emys
proper, 24 of which are land or fresh water forms, and there lutaria). ·
DffiECTORY.] NORFOLK~ 283-
Bh)!()n Sand-forms the "Marram Hills," between the damage done by the storm of January 3oth, 1877 : "I
Wmterton and Hasborough : these form a natural barrier have examined the coast from Hasborough to beyond Sher-
ag-.Jinst the sea, and are kept up with great care _, ringham, and the damage done is marvellous. Probably
The Fen-Bed.~.-'the gravelly beds b6ltween Brandon and the loss of land along the whole line of coast mentioned
Huckwul•l-cum-Wilton, and the Nar Valley clays, which may be estimated at a. yard. At the life-boat gap a.t Bacton
extend from Wat1ington to Xarford, seem to be the oldest the amount that has gone is 15 yards, and a strip of about
of the Fen deposits : the peat of Hilgay Fen comes next; that width is missing as far as the Walcot gap (three fur•
and, as we follow this north wards, we fnd it becomes longs). . • . . The most serious loss is at Lower Sher•
interstratified with a marine deposit of silt, which forms ringham, there Mr. Cpscher has lost two acres; nearly all
the land betwecl) Downham Market and Walsoken north- the sea-wall has been swept away; none of the gangways
\"l"ards to the Wash. ·This Fen district is the "Marshland ' are left; a cottage and 11 ~hetl h!tve fallen into the sea, the
of Norfolk ; anli, ;nit!'! tlt~.-t surface, its l'emarkable drainage inn on the cliff11 has hii~ the windows broken, and is in a
svstem, buried forests &c. has many points of interest all very unsafe ~:ondition, !lnd !:ihould another- gale occu'l" now
its own. Of the form:)r condition of this region, Mr. much of the village will go. Mr. Ppscher informs lne that
Skertchly has given us~ ~trikKJ.g picture.-" Great meres he reckons his loss of land dming the past sixty ~·ears to be
existed which received the surplus water~~ and, surrounded thirt-y acres at the very least."
\"l"itb reed-brakes, suc-h as even now the -country produces PREHISTORIC 'MAN.-Of the COOlflM'atively -rough flint
with surpassing beauty, afforded shelter to myriads of wild implements which belo11g to the oldeP or PaliPohthia divi-
birds, which found abundant food in the waters. Dank sion of the Stone .Age, many specimens have been found
morasses, covered with sedgo and rush and flags, abounded in the old river-gravels along the valley of the Little Ouse,
on the peat lauds, anJ the cushion-clumps of sedge ( Care:JJ at Lopham Ford, ~hrub Hill near Feltwell, White Hill ami
paniculata) afforded a hazardous. foothold to the nimble Red Hill near Thetford, Bromehill near Weeting &c. : these
wayfarer. 0~ tt1ese rnorasses, and rm tbe. .firmer, or rather were chipped into shape but never JH!lished ; they are either
drier soil, grass attamed a rank luxuriance ; and here the pointed or 'lval in form, and the average size is from s to 7
cattle grazed, and throye wondrously_ But in winter, inches long and 1a to 4 broad. Of the later or Neolith ic
nearly all the peat-larid was drowned, or as the olri fen-men Stone .Age numerous specimens of celts (axe-heads), arrow-
say, "snrrounded,'l and ther~ the hardy inhabitants went heads, flakes &c. have been found on or near the surface,
from islaild to island in small boats, or travelled quickly or in barrows a.t Attleborough, Aylsham, Cromer, N rcton,

J
Front \'iew of Core, with Flakes replaced, showing the points of percussion. The central mallS of flint, from which no more
flakes can be struck, is called the core.

over the smooth ice.. The border-land was clothed with North ·walsham, Pentney, Sporle n~ar Swaffham, Norw1ch
furest growth; and, seaw<J.rds of the timber-trees, clumps &c. In the meres at Wretham, 5 miles north of Thetford,
of willow and sallow gave shelter to the wild-boar and the traces of undoubted lake-dwellings were met with; these.
wolf. On the silt-l;mds the lower portions were surrounded have bP..en described by Professor A. Newton and Sil' C.
in winter, and often far into the summer; and East and Bunbury. The Neolithic tools are of delicate and varied
West Fens (and especially the former)., almost always pre- shapes, and often hear marks of •ubbing or polishing. The
sented a lake-like appearance. The soil was fertire; the flints, of which these tools are almost invariably composed,
waters, the woods, and the air were tenanted with game. · were of course obtained from the chalk, and at a p1ace~alled
Famine ceuld never be known, for the land literally over- I' " Grimes' Graves" in the parish of W eeting, about 3 hliles
flowed with food, and, as a. consequence 1 the people degene- , north-east of Brandon, it seems probable that we have pits
rated into a thriftless race, whose only strong passion was ; sunk by these old Neolithic workers for the 'PTITPO£e of
a love of freedom." : obtaining this material. One of the pits here was explored
Now all this is changed ; the great wor-ks wl:!ich ba.ve . by Canon Green well in t87o: be found some of -the old
been carried on, almos~ without intermission from the ' tools-picks formed of deer horn.-which in one place had
time of Charles I. to the present day, have so' <lrained the been buried underneath a falling of the chalk. •• The' clay's
land, that in dry years (as 1874) there is a positive lack of , work over, the men had laid down each his tool, ready for
water. the next day's work; meanwhile the roof had fallen in, and
Demuktion of the Coast.-The coast of Norfolk, especially . the picks had never been recovered. . . . . It was a
where it rises into cliffs of any height, has suffered greatly 1

most impressive s;ght, and one never to be forgotten, to


from the action of the sea, combined with that of land- look, after a lapse. it !Bay be of 3,000 years, upon a -piece
springs: tile sea, by dashing against the base of the cli~s, of work unfinished, with the tools of the workmen still lying
using as missiles the fallen stones, rapidly undermines them, where they had been placed so many centuries before."
when the upper part falls in and i.s swept away by the I These picks still retaine<l under their chalky mcrust2.1Jon,
waves: the springs flowing along the junction of previous . the impressions of the workmen's fingers.
beds (sa.nds)with impervious ones (clays) loosen the adhesion There is no passage from the Palreolithic to the Neoltthic
of the beds and the upper part slides down on to the beach: period~ the two stand distinctly apart with no links bet·O\·een
in this way the whole coast is receding at the rate of perhaps them: this great gap is now accounted for by Dr. Geikie,
one yard per annum. "Since the Conquest the villages of Mr. Skertchly and other eminent geologists, by the supposi-
Shipden, Keswick., Clare, Wimpwell, Eccles, and Ness, or tion that the Glacial Period intervened and drove man out
the greater part of them, h.we been washed away. The of this country to wanner climes: -the men who made and
remains of Eccles Church :\re st1ll to be seen, buried -as it used the Palreolithic implements were Pre-glaCial, the Neo-
ll'cre within the Mar ram Hills." (S. Taylor. ~ A letter by liths were Post-glacial..
Mr. C. R~id in the "Geological Magazine," thus describes W. J. H.
284 NORFOLK. (KEL'LY'&

The following Table shows the acreage under each kind of crop, and the number of horses, cattle, sheep and pigs In
· the County of Norfolk, as taken from the .Agricultural returns, 1891 : -
. )

. '
• •
l • '

- -

r - .
. •
• CRoPS. " ACRES. LIVE STOCK. NUKllKR
. . .
. ' ' - ., I l• .

<J<>rn and cereals -······-·············•······--··•·•• 428,672 Horses for agriculture, brood mares and un-
Roots, artificial grasses, cabbage and rape ........ I95,2I5 broken horses ..•..•........•... - .................... 66,593
Clover and grasses .................................... 164,797 Cows in milk or calf ........ -·· ...•....•.•........•. 34t488
Permanent J>aSture •••....••... ······················- 288,5II .,_ ··~ .........
Other cattle .............................. 90.747
Bare fallow ··········--·········~······················· II,SOO Sheep, 1 year old .•..............•...~····-········· 351,853
Orchards •••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••• 2,2_52 Ditto, under 1 year ••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••• 256,228
Market gardens ....................................... 1,725 Pigs ········•········································-··· u8,477
Nu-rsery grounds .....................................•. 129
Woods and plantations ••••••••••••••••••••••••••• w•• 53,020 .

Norfolk contained in xBgi, inhabited houses .......................................... .


~arisltes ·····················~·~·········•························································
In 1874, o:wners of land below I acre ~ ......................................... 16,552
Owners of land of I acre and upwards ....................................... 1o,og6
• jJ
26,64-B
Tot.P.l a.crea..ge of ratM. lands ................................................................. . 1,234,883
~~ble lral11e •••••••••..••.•.••..•.•••••.•••.•.••.•••••..••••.•••••.••.••••••••.•••••..•.••••• £2,254·359
G>mmon or waste land, acres .............................................................. . 12,869
Total acreage of the county ....._, .••.....•.... ·········-·--······························ 1,356,173

COUNTY POLICE.
HEAD QUARTERS, NORWICH.
Chief Constable, Paynton Pigott esq. n. L.
Deputy Chief Constable, John Ward.
Chief Clerk, Lewis H. Amis.
Detective Inspector, Henry Rix.
Clerk, James W. Lockett.
ACLE DIVISION.-William Basham, superintendent, .Acle. NORTH WALSHAM DIVISION.-Henry Woolnough, superin-
Stations.-Acle, Blofield, Burgh, *Caister, Cantley, Hal- tendent, North Walsham. Charles Willmott, inspector,
vergate, Martha.m, Ormesby, Plumstead, Reedham, Run- Stalham. Stations.-Bacton (Inspector Frederick W.
ham, Strumpshaw, Walsham South . Lovick) Cromer, East Ruston, Hickling, Ludham, NeatiB-
AYLSHAM DrvrsiON.-Mark Grimes, superintendent, .Ayls- head, Rough ton, Stalham, South Repps, Trunch, Walsham
ham. Philip Palmer, inspector, Reepham. Stations.- North, & Worstead
Aylsham, Bawdeswell, Buxton, Cawston, Colby, Corpusty,
Fou.Lsham, Hevingham, Hindolveston, Itteringham, NORWICH DIVISION.-Paynton Pigott esq. chief constab~
· Reepham, Ringland, Swanton Abbott, & Witchingham County police station, Norwich; Thomas Chambers, in-
DEREHAM DIVLSION.-Edward Symonds, superintendent, !lpector, Norwich. Stations.-Bawburgh, Catton, Cos-
East Dereham ; John Clarke, inspector, Litcham. tessey, Cringleford, Drayton, Lakenham, Norwich, St.
Stations.-East Derebam, Elmham, Fransham (Little), Faith's, Sprowston, Thorpe, *Trowse & Wroxham
Garvestone, Gressenhall, Hardingham, Litcham, Mattis- PuLHAM DrvrsiON.-William Tuddenham, 'superintendent,
hall, Shipdham, Swanton Morley, Weasenham, & Pulham Market. Stations.-Albnrgh, Bressingham,
Whissonsett Brockdish, Bunwell, Dicklebur-gh, *Diss, Earsham, Forn-
DocKING DIVISION. John Ward, superintendent & D.C.C.
Docking ; William Baldwin, inspector, Grimston. cett St. Peter, Gissing, *Harleston, Hempnall, Long
Stations.-Bircham Magna, Brancaster. Castleacre, Castle Stratton, Pulham & Tasburgh
Rising, Dersingham, Docking, Flitcham, Gayton, Grim- Sw.A.FFHAM ,DrviSION.-Robert Short, superintendent,
stone, Heacham, *Hunstanton, Massingham Great, , Swaffham. Stations.-Bradenham, Cressingham Great,
Newton West, Snettisham, & Winch East Feltwell, Gooderstone, Hockwold, Methwold, Mundford,
DOWNHAM DIVISION.-Henry Mash, superintendent, Down- Narborough, Northwold, Sporle, Swaffham, Weeting .t
ham Market. Stations.-Dereham West, Downham, West Tofts '
Fincham, Hilgay,N ordelph,Outwell,Shouldham, Southery, .. . .
Stoke Ferry, Stow Bridge, Upwell, Watlington, & Welney TEBRINGTON DIVISION.-Charles Parr, superintendent,
HARLING DrvrsiON.-Charles Wright, superintendent, East Terrington, near Lynn. Station.s.-Emneth, Gaywood
Harling; Henry Stimpson, inspector, Thetford; & John (near Lynn), Lyon West, Maglialen, Terrington St.
Knights, Watton, inspector. Stations.-Attleborough, Clement's, Terrington St. John, Walpole St. Andrew,
Banham, Buckenham New, Carbrooke, Caston 1 Croxton, Walpole St. Peter, *Walsoken, Walton Smeeth, Wiggen·
Garboldisham, Harling East, Hockham, Kenninghall, hall St. German, & Winch West.
I
North Lopham, Rockland, Saham Toney, Thetford, & Walsingham Division, Thomas Murrell, superintendent,
Watton · Walsingham. Stations. ~ Binham, Burnham Market,
HoLT DIVISION.-John Clarke, inspector, Holt. Stations.,:: Creak~ South, *Fakenham, Raynham West, Rudham
Aldborough, Baconsthorpe, Blakeney, Briston, Gresham,- East, Ryburgh Great, Thursford, Walsingham & *Wells
Holt, Sherringham & Thornage · ;-- 1· • , , r r r .
LonDON DrvrsroN.-Edgar Eagling,snperintendent,toddon. Wymondllam J?ivision, Lawson Lubbock, superintendent,
Stations.-Brooke, Checlgrave, Ditchingham, Gillingham, · Wymonqham. Stations.-Ashwellthorpe, Barford,Burn-
Haddiscoe, Loddon, Norton Subcourse, Poringland, Rock.'1 ham Broom, ;Hetbersett, Hingham, Honingham, Mulbar·
land, Shottesham, Saxlingham Nethergate, & Woodtou ton, Wicklewood & Wymondham
~Sergeants' Stations.
DIRECTORY.] :NORFOLK. 285

F ' •
LORD LIEUTENANT AND CUSTOS ROTULORUM,
RIGHT IIOXOURAELE THE EARL OF LEICESTER K.G. Holkham Hall, Wells.

CHAIRMEN OF QUARTER SESSIONS.


ROHERT THORXHAUGH GURDON EsQ. Letton Hall, Thetford.
JAl\IES EENJ. REDFOORD EULWER EsQ. Q.c., M.A., 2 Temple gardens, London E c.
WILLIAM M. RIDER HAGGARD EsQ. LL.M., Eradenham Hal!J Watton S.O.
RIGHT HON. LORD WALSINGIIAM, Merton Hall, Thetford.
SIR WILLIAM IIOVELL BROWNE ffuLKES Bart. Hillington Hall, Lynn.

:Marked thus • are Deputy Lieutenants.

Adair Sir Hugh Edward bart. Flixton hall, Bungay; & 63 *Buxton Sir Thomas Fowell bart. ~r.A."\Varlies park, Waltham
'i

Portland place, London w Abbey, Essex; Colne cottage, Cromer; & 14 Grosvenor
Adlington Capt. Henry Smith, Holme Hale hall, Tbetford crescent, London s w
Albemarle Earl of P.c., K.C liLG. 65 Prince's gate, London s w Buxton Charles Louis esq. Eolwick hall, Mars ham, Norwich
Amherst vVilliam Amhurst Tyssen esq. F.S.A. Didlington Buxton Geoffrey Fowell esq. Sunny hill, Tl10rpe St.
hall, J~randou; & 8 Grosvenor square, London w Andrews, Norwich
Angerstein John Richard J. esq. Weeting hall, Brandon Euxton Henry Edmund esq. Flixton, Great Yarmouth
Angerstein "'illiarn esq. Weet.ing ball, Brandon *Euxton Samuel Gurney esq. Catton hall, Norwich
.Applewhaitc Col. Chas. Mundy, Pickcnham hall, Swaffham Cadogan Earl of K.n., P.C. Culford hall, Bury St. Edmunds;
.Ashburton Lord, The Grange, Alresford, IIants & Chelsea house, Cadogan place, London ti w
Bacon Nicholas Henry esq. Raveningham hall, Norwich; & Cann William esq. Cavick house, Wymondham
42 Half Moon street, Piccadilly, London w *Canterbury Viscount, Brouke house, Norwich
*Bagge Sir Alfred Thos. bart. Crimplesham hall, Downham Carr "William csq. Ditchingham hall, Bungay; & 218
*Bagge Thomas Edward esq. ~LA. Gaywood hall, Lynn Cromwell road, London s w
Barclay Hugh Gurney esq. Colney hall, Norwich *Cator Albemarle esq. B. A. Woodbastwick hall, Xorwich; &
Barker George esf]_ 83 Eaton square, London s w
llateman Str Fredcric llf.D. Upper St. Gilcs street, Norwich Cator John esq. B.A. Woodbastwick hall, Xorwich
Beauchamp Hev. Robert William lll.A. Hec:tory, Wickrnere, Coke Viscount, IIolkham hall; & 13 Cadogan sq. London w
X orwich Cole Hon. Arth. Edwd. Cassamayor, Eccles hall, Attleboro'
Beck Georgc Morris esf]_. Ormesby lodge, Great Yarmouth Collison Albert esq. Mileham hall, Swaffham
Bellairs Edmund Hooke Wilson esq. Army & Navy club, 36 Collison William Thomas esq. Albemarle house, Yarmouth
to 39 Pall mall, London s w *Colman Jeremiah James esq. lll.P. Carrow house, Xorwich;
*Bignold Chas.Arthur Bathurst esq. Rcymerston lclg. Norwich The Clyffe, Corton, Lowestoft ; & Belgraye mansions,
*Bignold Lient.-Col. Charlr~<>Edward, Harford lodge, Norwich Grosvenor gardens, London s w
Bircham Samuel esq. Moor house, Reepham, Norwich Cooke His Honor Judge William Henry Q.c., !>LA., F.S.A. 42
*Birkbeck Sir Edwarcl hart. The Hall, Horstead, Norwich; Wimpole street, London w
& ro Charles street, Berkeley square, London w Corbett Admiral Sir John K.c.n
Birkbeck Henry esq. Stoke hall, t:ltoke Holy Cross, Norwich Corbould-Warren Rev. John \Yarren LL.M. Tacolnestone
Birkbeck William esq. Thorpe High house, Norwich Old hall, Wymondham
Blnfeld Rev. Robert Singleton 1\I.A. Vicarage, Ormesby St. Cozens-Hardy Clement William Hardy esq. Cley hall, Cley-
lllargaret, Great Yarmouth next-the-Sea S.O
Blofeld Worshipful Thomas Calthorpe :-.r.A. IIm-eton house, Cozens-Hardy Theobald esq. Oak lodge, Sprowston, Xorwich
Xorwich Cozens-Hardy Wm. Hardy esq.Letheringsett hall, Holt R.S. 0
Blundell Major .Arthur Crawshay Charles esq. St. Andrew's ho. !ling ham, ~Htleboro'
*Boileau Sir Fra.ncis George l\lanningham bart. B.A., F.S.A. I Crawshay B.ichard "\Vood esq. Scale lodge, Diss
Ketteringham park, Norwich Cremer Thomas Wymlharn esq. B.A. Beeston hall, Norwich
*Boileau Col. Geo. WilsonF.R.G.s., F.R.z.s. Catton, Norwich Crisford Rev. Alexander Thomas M.A. Rectory, 0\'ington,
*Bmleau Maurice Colborne esq. Ketteringham hall, Wy- Thetford
mondham Crossley Sir Savile Brinton bart. Somerleyton hall,
Bolton Walter llenry esq. Oulton hall, Aylsham Lowestoft; & 12 Carlton House terrace, London s w
llrandreth Rev. Henry M.A. B.ectory, Dickleburgh, Scole Cubitt Edward George esq. Honing hall, Norwich
Broadhurst llenry esq. Trent cottage, Cromer Cubitt Major Frank Astley, 'fhorpe hall, Norwich
Browne Richard Chas. esq. Hall farm, Elsing, East Dereham Cubitt l\Iajor Hy. Archibald, The Lodge, Earlham, Norwich
Ilrowne W. John Utten esq. lleigham grove, ~orwich Cuduon-Fletcher Bernard James esq. Somerton hall, Great
BulwerJas.Benj.Redfoord esq.Q.C.2Temple grdns.London E c Yarmouth
Bulwer WilliamDeringEarle esq.Quebec house,EastDereham Curteis William Calverly esq. n.c.L. The Shrubbery, Scale
Bulwer Hrig.-General \YilliamEarleGascoyne Lytton,Quebec Custance Lieut.-Col. Frederic Hambleton, \Yeston house,
house, East Dereham; & Heydon hall, Reepham R.S.O Norwich; & 12 John street llerkeley square, London w
Burroughes Henry Randall esq. Eurlingham hall, Norwich *Custanee Col. Sir llambleton Francis K.C.B. \Veston house,
*Bury Viscount M.P. Quidenham park, Thetford Norwich
C X. & .S. 19
286 NORFOLK. [KELLY's

Daniel Thomas William esq. M.A. Thrigby hall, Gt. Yarmouth Hotblack John esq. Normans, Rockland St. Mary, Norwich
Dashwood Robert esq. Geldeston, Beccles & St. Faith's house, N orwicb ·
Davey John George Ellis esq. Longlands, Holkham, Wells HouchenRev. BirchamM. A.Rectory ,SouthPickenham, Swffhm
Davies Rev. Frederick lii.A. Vicarage, Wiggenhall St. Mary Howard Thomas esq. Wretton, Brandon
Magdalen, King's Lynn Hunt Waiter Freeman esq. M. A. Sedgeford hall, King's Lynn
Davy John William esq. Congham hall, King's Lynn *Hunter-Mnskett Rawdon esq. Hingham hall, Attleborough
Dawson Col. Algernon Cecil, Manor house, Catton, Norwich Hutt Rev. William Wayman M.A. Rectory, Hockwold-cum-
De Chair Rev. Canon Frederick Blackett M.A. Rectory, Wilton, Brandon
Morley, Wymondham Hyde Lieut.-Col. Hy. El win M.A. Moorgate ho. East Dereham
de Puix Edmond Albert Joseph Edouard Marie Tyrel esq. Inglehy Holcombe esq. Home mead, Heacham, Lynn
Broome Place, Bungay Ives Robert esq. Calthorpe, .Norwich
Digby Commander Hy. Almarus H. N. North Runcton, Lynn Jarvis Alexander Weston esq. Uphall,Hillington,King's Lynn
Donnison Rev~ J11mes W;1tson Stote M. A. Mendham, Norfolk Jary Major Robt. Herbert Heath, Hurlingham hu. Norwich
*F:dwards Henry William Bartbolomew esq. Hardingham *.I odrell Sir Alfred bart. Hayfield hall, East Dereham
hall, Attleborough Johnson Rev. Henry Robert Arthnr M.A. Rectory, Scoulton,
Elsden-Everard Raoul Charles Finch esq. Roydonlodge,Lynn Watton 8.0
*Elwes Lt. Arthur Henry Stuart R.N. Congham house, Lynn Jones Major Champion
Elwin Hastings esq. Walsoken house, Wisbech Jones Sir Lawrence John bart.M.A. Cranmerhall,Fakenharn
English Arthur William esq Kay Right Hon. Lord Justice Sir Edward P.c. Thorpe
Ensor Charles Peploe Smith esq Abbotts, Scole; & 37 Hyde Park gardens, London w
:Feildcn Col. HcnryWemyss F.G.s., F.z.s. West house, Wells Kemp Sir Kenneth Hagar bart. B.A. Murgate hall, Norwich
Fellowes Rev. Charles B.A. Rectory, Shotesham All Saints, Keppel Lt.-Col. Edward George, The Hall, Stratton Straw-
Norwich less, Norwich
Fellowes Capt. the Hon. Ailwyn Edward JILP. Honingham Keppel Major Wm_ Geo. Old Buckenham grange, Attleboro'
hall, Norwich; & 3 Belgrave square, London w Ketton Robert William esq. Felbrigg hall, Cromer
Fellowes Edward John esq. Stanhoe hall, Lynn *Kimberley Rt. Hon. Earl of K.G., P.C. Kimberley house,
*Fell owes Robert esq. Shotesham park, Norwich Wymondham ; & 35 Lowndes square, London s w
Fellows Rev. Spencer M.A. Rectory, Pulham St. Mary Lacon Lt.-Col. Sir Edmund Broughton Knowles hart. Dun-
Magdalen, Harleston stun hall, Norwich
Ferguson-Davie Rev. Charles Robert M.A. Rectory, Yelver- Lacon Hy. Sidney Hammet esq.OrmP-'!by hall,Gt. Yarmouth
ton, Norwich La Fontaine James Stephen Edward esq. Tacolnestone hall,
ffolkes George Howe Browne esq. Manor house, Wolferton, Wymondham; & n2 Cromwell road, London s w
King's Lynn Latter Rev. Arthur Simon M. A. Rectory, Outwell, Wisbech
*ffolkes Sir William Hovell Browne bart. Hillington hall, Lee-Warner Henry esq. M.A. Walsingham abbey, Wal-
Lynn ; & 19 Cork street, Bond street, London w singham R.S.O.; & The Paddocks, Swaffham
*Fielden Joshua esq. Beechamwell hall, Swaffham Leicester Earl of K.G. [Lord Lieutenant], Holkham hall, Wells
Fison Cornell Henry esq. Ford Place, Thetford Le Neve Foster Bernard esq.Sennowe hall,Stibbard,Dereham
*Foster Sir Wm. bart. The Grove, Hardingham, Attleboro' Lennard Thomas Barrett- esq. Horsford manor, Norwich
*Fountaine Algernon Charles esq. N arlord hall, Swaffham *le Strange Hamon esq. Hunstanton hall, Hunstanton
France Rev. George M.A. Rectory, Brockdish, Scale S.O. ; & I Eaton place, London s w
Frere J obn Tudor esq. B.A. Roydon hall, Diss le Strange Roland esq. Hunstanton hall, Lynn
Gay James esq. Alborough New hall, Norwich *Lombe Edward Hy. Evans esq. Melton hall, Norwich
Gay James esq. B.A. Thurning hall, East Dereham Lombe Rev. Henry Evans- B. A. Bylaugh park, East Dereham
Gilbert Edward esq. Blofield house, Norwich Longe Robert Bacon esq. Spixworth park, Norwich
Gilbert Major Herbert Henry, Cantley manor, Norwich Lucas Charles Belgrave esq. Filby house, Great Yarmouth
Gillett Robert Howard esq. M. A. The Rookery, Halvergate, ~lack Hugh Paston esq. Northwold lodge, Brandon
Norwich Mack Thomas esq. Furbough, eo. Galway
Gorell Robert Atkinson esq. The Old hall, Coltishali,Norwich :Mackenzie Edward Phillipo esq. Downham hall, Brandon
Green Sir Edward hart. Ken hill, Snettisham, King's Lynn Mann Edward esq. Thelveton hall, Scole
Groom Major Jn. Edmd. Berry hall, Gt.Walsingham R.S.O Manning Rev. Charles Robertson M.A., F.s.A. Rectory, Diss
*Gurdon Robert Thornhaugh esq. M.A. Letton hall, Thet- Manse! Col. Edward Berkeley, Catton house, near Norwich
ford; & 5 Portman square, London w Marcon John esq
Gurney John Henry esq. Keswick hall, Norwich *Marsham Major George Augustus, The Rookery, Thetford
Gurney Richard Hanbury Joseph esq. N orthrepps hall, *Marsbam MajorHy.Savill,Rippon hall,Hevingham,Norwich
Cromer, Norwich Marsham Rev. Thomas John Gordon M.A. Beech Hurst,
Gurney SomervilleArthr. esq.Nth.Runcton hall,King's Lynn East Dereham
Haggard Henry Rider esq. Ditchingham house, Bungay Martin Joseph Critchley esq. Narborough hall, Swaffham
Haggard William Henry Doveton esq *Mason Robert Harvey esq. Necton hall, Swaffham
-ii-Haggard William Meybohm Rider esq. LL.M. Bradenham Meade Capt. John Percy, Earsham hall, Bungay
hall, Watton S.O Metcalfe Frederic Morehouse esq. Inglethorpe hall, WiBbech
*Hamond Anthony esq. West Acre abbey, Swaffham Middleton Edmund Plane esq. High street, Wells
Hamond Charles Annesley esq. Twyford hall, East Dereham Mills Joseph Trueman esq. Clermont lodge, nr. Watton S.O
Hamond Richard Horace (Commander R.N. ), Manor house, *Montgomerie Cecil Thomas Molyneux- esq.Gissing hall,Diss
Swaffham MorriceFredk.LancelotHamilton esq.Redenham pk.Andover
Harbord the Hon.Harbord,Heathfieldho.Ipswich rd.Norwch Morris Sidney esq. Wretham hall, Thetford
Hardcastle Joseph Alfred esq. M.A Matt John Stanley esq
Hare Major Humphrey John Neville James Sewell esq. B. A. Sloley house, Norwich
.*Hare Thomas Leigh esq. M.P. Stow hall, Downham Market; Newcome Edward Cyril esq. Feltwell hall, Brandon
& Guards', Carlton & Marlborough clubs, London s w Newcome l<'rancis D'Arcy William Cloughesq. B.A. Feltwell
Harvey Major Sir Cha.s. hart. Rainthorpe hall, Long Stratton hall, Brandon
Haney Rev. Edward Douglas Lennox M.A. The Rectory, Newdigate Major-Gen. Henry Richard Legge c.B. Orchard
Downbarn Market · house, Aylsham
_Hastings Lord, Melton hall, Melton Constable S.O. ; & 22 Noel Capt. Gerard Henry Uctred R.N. 8 The Parade, West
Bruton street, London w Worthing, Sussex
Helsham Gustavus esq. St. Mary's hall, Wiggenhall St. Norris William Edward esq. Wood Norton, East Dereham
Mary-the-Virgin, King's Lynn *North Charles esq. M.A. Rougham l;lall, Swaifham
l!emsworth August us Noel Camp bell esq. Flaxmoor, Caston, *Nugent Sir Edmund Chas. hart. West Harling hall,'l'betford
Attleborough Nugent George Colborne esq. West Harling ball, Thetfurd
Henniker Lord F.S.A. Thornham hall, Eye, Suffolk; & 6 Ollard Wm. Ludlam esq.Musticott house, Walsoken,WiBbech
Gmfton street, Bond street, London w *Orford Earl of M.A. Mannington hall, Norwich; & 6 Caven·
Hicks Rev. William Henry LL.B dish square, London w
Hoare Samuel esq. M.P., M.A. Cliff house, Cromer; & 7 Pal mer Am brose J n. Read esq. Haddiscoe hall, Loddon, Nrwich
Hereford gardens, Park lane, London w Palmer-Kerrison George Willia.m Danby esq. The Priory,
Hollway-Calthrop Henry Calthrop esq. Stanhoe ball, Lynn Ran worth, Norwich
Holmes George John esq. Brooke hall, Norwich Parsons William Haldock esq. Aylmer hall, Tilney St. Law-
.Holmes Gervas esq. St. Margaret's, Harleston rence, Lynn
Holmes Major Henry Tuke, Wacton house, Long Stratton Partridge Hy. Thos. esq. The Hall, Great Hockham,Thetford
Holmes John esq. Brooke hall, Norwich *Paston-Bedingfeld Sir Henry George b:ut. Oxborough,
Holmes John Sancroft esq. M. A. Gawdy hall, Harleston hall, St-oke Ferry S.O. ; & 45 Cromwell houses, London s vr
Holmes Commander Thomas R.N. Morningthorpe manor, Pearse Rev. Henry Thorn ton M.A. 76 Seymour st. London Vf
Long Stratton Pemberton Waiter Hamilton esq. Denton house, Harleston
Holmes Wm.Jas. Owen esq.F.L.s.Strumpshaw hall,Norwich *Penrice Major John, The Lodge, Bramerton, Norwich
J)I,Rf;CTOB.Y. J ·NORFOLK.
• •
287
Pigot Rev. Hugh *Suffield Lord K.C.B., P.C. Gunton park, Norwich; & 4
Pontifex Arthur esq Manchester square, London w
Pratt Edward Roger Murray esq. B. A. Ryston hall, Down- Tacon Rev. Richard John M. A. Rectory, Rollesby, Yarmouth
ham Market 'raylor Alfred esq. Starston Place, Harleston
Preston Sir Hy.Jacob bart.B.A. The Hill,Northrepps,X orwich Taylor Chauncy Arthur esq
*Proctor-Beauchamp Sir Reginald William hart. Langley Taylor Francis esq. M.P. Diss ; & 54 Victoria st. London s W
park, Norwich . Taylor Henry Morse esq. The Rookery, Dilham, Norwich
Read Clare Sewell esq. Honingham Thorpe, Norwich . Thornhill Sir Thomas bart. Pakenham lodge, Bury St.
ReadGeorge esq. The Manor bo. Wereham, Stoke l<'erry S,O Edmunds; & 55 Eaton square, London s w
Reeve Simms esq. Brancaster hall, Lynn Thursby Rev. William Ford B.c.L. Rectory, Bergh Aptoa,
Rippingall Florance Thomas Stephen esq. Manor cottage, Norwich
Langham, Dereham Towaley Charles Watson esq. M. A. Fulbourn manor, Cam b
*Ra.ynham Viscount, Brooks's club, St. James', London s w Towashend Marquess, Raynham hall, Swaffham; & Brooksr-
Robinson Henry Matthew Cooper esq. M.A. Kna.pton house, club, London s w
North Walsham Trafford Edward Southwell esq. Wroxham hall, Norwich;
Rogers John esq. :M.A. Holt hall, Dereham & 19 Prince's gate, London s w .
Rogers Richard esq. M.A. The !!all, Coltishall, Norwich Trafford Edward William esq
Romney Earl of, Gayton hall, King's Lynn; & 4 Upper *Trafford William Henry esq. Wroxham ha11, Norwich
Belgrave street, London w Tuck GtJorge Hustler esq. Blofield hall, Norwich
Rudd Ash esq. East Ruston hall, Stalham S.O Tyrwhitt Sir IIenry Thomas hart. Stanley hall, Astley
Say Richard Hall- esq. Reform club, London s w Abbotts, Bridgnorth, Salop
Scott-Chad Joseph Stonehewer esq. M.A. Pinkney hall, *UnthankLieut.-Col.ClementWm.Jsph.Intwood hall,Norwch.
Swaffham; & Thursford hall, Der~ham Upcher Henry Morris esq. F.z.s. East hall,Feltwell,Brandon
SeccombeJohn Thomaslii.D., ,v.R.A.s.Terrington lodge,Lynn Vincent Sir William bart. lii.A. D'Abernon Chase, .Ashtead,
Seymour Charles Derick esq. Barwick house, King's Lynn Epsom, Surrey
Shepheard John esq. B.A. Cromer road, North Walsham Walpole Robert Horace B. N. Wayborne hall, Holt R.S.O
Shepheard Philip Candler esq *Walsingham Lord M.A., F.R.s. Merton hall, Thetford; &
Slipper Thomas esq. Braydestone hall. Norwich · 66A, Eaton square, London s w
*Smith Henry esq. The Hall, Ellingham, Bungay Waring William esq. Taverham hall, Norwich; 43 Harring•
*Sondes Earl ton gardens, London s w
*Sparke_Edward Bowyer esq. M.A. Gunthorpe hall, Dere- Waters William George esq. M.A. 7 Mansfield street, Port·
ham ; & 66 Eaton square, London s w land place, London
Stedman Mathew Robert esq. Wood Hill, Gressenhall, Wilford Rev. Edward Russel M.A. Rectory, Welney, Wisbecl1
Dereham Wilson Rev. William Greive M.A. Rectory, Forncett St.
Stocks Major Michael, Woodhall, Hilgay, Downham Market; Peter, Long Stratton
& 26 Rutland gate, London s w Wodehouse Lord, Witton park, North Walsham
*Stracey Gilbert Hardinge esq. Sprowston lodge, Norwich *Wyrley-Birch Wyrley esq. Cromer; & A.rmy & Navy club,
Stracey-Clitherow Col. Edward Jn. Boston ho.New Brentford London s w
Clerk of the Peace, Charles Foster B.A. Shire hall, Norwich

The following are Deputy Lieutenants only.


Bentinck Henry Aldenburgh esq. Terrington St. Clement's Goodson James esq. 32 Kensington Gardens sq. 'London w
Bulla.rd Sir Harry, Hellesdon house, Norwich Palmer Charles John esq. F.S.A. Great Yarmouth
Huller C. W. esq. 'roft Monks Palmer Fred. Danby esq. Great Yarmouth
Cholmondeley Marquess of, Houghton hall, Rougham, Patteson Henry Staniforth esq. Cringleford, Norwich
Swaffham Pigott Paynton esq. Framingham Pigot, Norwich
Dowson Benjamin esq. Great Yarmouth
Clerk to the Lieutenancy, Samuel Shellabear, East Dereham.

C. N. & S. 19*
288 NORFOLK. (KELt.Y'S

Commiasioner:i of Sewers.
For the hundreds of Blofield, Clavering, North Erpingham, South Erpingham, East Flegg, West Flegg. H1q1ping
Henstead, Loddon, Taverham, Tunstead and Walsham, in the county of Norfolk;-
The Lord Bishop of Norwich Francis Astley Cubitt esq Charles Belgrave Lucas esq
The Earl of Kimberley P.C James Cuddon esq . William Lucas esq
The Earl of Orford llernard James Cuddon-Fletcher esq Robert Harvey Mason esq
The Earl of Winterton Thomas William Daniels esq Henry Sharnborne Nathanicl Mickle·
Lord Calthorpe Charles Ensor esq thwaite esq
Lord Suffield · Robert Fellowcs esq James Sewell Neville esq
Sir Reginald Proctor Beauchamp hart John Gedge esq Ambrose John Read Palmer esq
Sir Henry Jacob Preston bart Major Herbcrt Henry Gilbert GeorgeWm.DanbyPalmer-Kerrisonesq
George Hudson Barber esq John Wilson Gilbert esq John Penrice esq
George Morris Beck esq Ho bert Gillett esq Clare Se well Read esq '
Henry Birkbeck esq Robert Howard Gillett esq Capt. Charles Compton Rising R.N
William Morris Bird es Thomas Fraser Grove esq Robert Arthur Rising esq
William Birkbeck esq Robert ThornhaghGurdon esq. M.P John William Rose esq
Henry Blake esq William Henry Heath esq Thomas Slipper esq
Thomas Calthorpe Blofeld esq George Ives esq Henry Smith esq
Henry Randall Burroughes e sq Hobert Ives esq Edward John Stracey-Clitheroe esq
Albemarle Cator esq Robert Herbert Heath Jary esq William Henry Trafford esq
John Cator esq Frederic Kidman esq George Hustler Tuck esq
William Stamp Chapman esq James Larkman esq Rev. Henry Evans-Lombe B.A
Thomas Wyndham Cremer esq Lt.-Col. Hill Mussenden Leathcs Rev. Charles John Lucas M.A
The Rev. Arthur Adam Taylor Crosse Edward Henry Evans Lombe esq Rev. Henry Joseph Muskett M, A
Edwa.rd George Cubitt esq
Clerks to the Commissioners, Messrs. Fosters & Co. Norwich
Treasurers, Messrs. Gurneys & Birkbecks, Norwich

Commissioners of Sewers.
Appointed by letters patent under the Great Seal 26th February, 1870, for carrying out the provisions of the
Act entitled The Land Drainage Act r86r and the Act 23 Henry VIII. cap. 5·
Duke of Portland Raoul Chas. Finch Elsden-Everard esq Edward Roger Murray Pratt esq
Marquess of Cholmondeley Arthur English esq George Gold Sadler esq ,
Earl of Leicester K.G George Howe Browne ffolkes esq John Thomas Seccombe esq
Earl of Romney Algernon C. Fountaine esq J a111es Seppings esq
The Rt. Rev. Lord Bishop of Norwich John Groom esq William Seppings esq
Lord Willoughby de Eresby Francis Hay Gurney esq Charles Watson Townley esq
Lord Hastings 6omerville Arthur Gurney esq Edward Sigismund Trafford esq
Sir William Hovel! Browne ffolkes bart An thony Hamond esq Henry Morris Upcher esq
Sir Alfred T. Bagge bart Thomas A. H. Hamond esq Charles Lee Warner esq
The Mayor of King's Lynn William D. Harding esq Rev. Edward John AlYis M.A
The Recorder of King's Lynn Thomas Lee Hare esq Rev James Bellamy D.D
The Mayor of Thetford Gustavus Helsham esq Rev. Edward Everard lllencowe B. A
"Thomas Allen esq Hobert Henry Household esq Rev. Demetrius P. Calliphronas M.A
George Archdale esq Petter lluddlestone esq Rev. Frederick Davies B. A
Capt. Charles William Arch dale George Huddlestone esq Rev. George Eller M.A
Thomas Edward Bagge esq Edward Ilugh Jackson esq Rev. HenryEdward Browne ffolkesM.A
Col. Hugh S. Ba.illee William Goddard J ackson esq Rev. John Fowler M. A
Henry A. Bentinck esq Edmund Kent esq Rev. Arthur John Groom B.A
Wyrley Birch, jun. esq. Roland Le Strange esq Rev. William Hay Gurney lii.A .
Nathan Booth esq John Lewis Marriott esq Rev. Ed w. Fras.Ed wardsHankinson M.A
Richard Buckworth esq Freleric Morehouse Metcalfe esq Rev. Frederick Jackson M.A
John James Coulton esq Francis De Arcy N ewcome esq Rev. Alfred Legge M.A
John Willia.m Davy esq William llaldock Parsons esq Rev. Charles Robertson Manning M.A.
Arthur Elwes esq Frederick Ilenry Partridge esq Rev. Charles Francis Townley M.A
Robert Henry Elwes esq Alexander Peckover esq
Clerk to the Commissioners, David Ward, King's Lynn
DIRECTORY.] NORFOLK. CASTLE ACRE. 28!}
ACLE is a parish and small town, with a station on the ket was formerly held here, but it has long been obMlete.
~orwich and Yarmouth !tection of the Great Eastern rail- The fairs have also been abolished. Weekly cattle sales are
way, and is 8l miles west from Yarmouth by a. road cut held here on Thursdays. Here are remains of Weybridge
through the marshes in 1833 (which. shortened the distance Priory, founded by Roger Bigod, sth Earl of Norfolk of that
by 3} miles), 126 from London and II east from Norwich, name, in the time of Edward I. for canons of the Augus-
in the Eastern division of the crmnty, Blofield and Walsham tinian order, and dedicated to St. Margaret. Lord Calthorpe,
petty sessional division, Walsham hundred, Blofield union, who is lord of the manor, and the Dean and Chapter of Nor-
Norwich county court district, rural deanery of Blofield and wich are the principal landowners. The soil is good mixed ;
archdeaconry and diocese of Norwich ; the navigable river subsoil, sand, clay and brick earth. The chief crop3 are
Hure flows on the east of the parish and is here crossed by a wheat, oats and barley. The area is 3,40:9 act:es, a large
bridge. Richard II. granted the town exemption from all portion of which is marsh land; rateable value, £6,6s8 ;
tolls and suits of shire and hundred, with other immunities, the population iiJ 189r was 933·
but these privileges have now_ ceased to be of any value. NowHERE, formerly extra-parochial, is now annexed to
The church of St. Edmund, cl).iefly erected in the qth this parish, under the provisions of the Assessment Act of
century, is an edifice of flint and stone, consisting of chancel, 1862.
nave, north and south porches and a circular embattled Parish Clerk, John Holmes.
western tower, with octagonal belfry stage, containing 5 PosT, M. 0., T. & Express Letter 0., S. B. & Annuity & In-
bells: the stained east window is a memorial to William surance Office.- William Laight, postmaster. Letters
Roberts Last esq. rl. 1867, and there is a mural monument arrive from Norwich, per mail cart, at 5·45 a. m. & 5 p. m.
to Benjamin Heath Baker, d. 1872, erected by his family: by train; dispatched at 12 noon & 4.50 & 7.2o- p.m. (box
the font, which dates from 1410, must originally have been closes 7. ro)
very handsome : there remains also an ancient screen : the WALL LETTER Box, cleared at 4.25 p.m.; no sunday
church affords 320 sittings. The register dates from the collection
year 1664. The living is a rectory, average tithe rent- County Police Station, William Basham, superintendent; 2
charge [546, net yearly value [204, including n acres of sergeants & I I constables
glebe, with residence, in the gift of Lord Calthorpe, and National School (mixed), for about 200 children~ average
held since 1858 by the Rev. Robert Winter Kennion u.A. of attendance, 150; Tallis Avis, master
St. John's College, Cambridge. The rertory house is Railway Station, Alfred Allen, station master
pleasantly situated on a slight elevation facing the Norwich Omnibus from Queen's hotel meets all trains & conveys
road, and close to the church. The parish room is a neat passengers to the adjacent villages & fishing grounds
building ot brick erected in 188o at a cost of about [300. CARRIER TO NoRWICH.-Thomas Lambert. to York tavern,
There is a small charity for the benefit of the poor. A mar- tnon. wed. & sat. at 7 a.m. returning same day
PRIVATE RESIDENTS. Capon Harry Thomas, relieving & vac- Hunn James, Hermitage P.H
Barry Rev. David Thomas B.A. [vicar cination officer for Eastern district & J eary George, butcher
of Fishley] registrar of births & deaths for the Laight William, grocer &c. Post office
Bessey J ames G South Walsham sub-district Leeder Richard, hair dresser ..
Betts Rev. Robert[Primitive Methodist] Church Thos. & Sons, boot & shoe mkrs Lilly lsaac, market gardener
Bunn Mrs Church Daniel, pork butcher Mainprice John, farmer
Cufaude Frank Church Joseph, tailor Miller Elizh. (Mrs.), baker & confectioner
Davie Miss Church Mary (Mrs.), ladies' school Pearce IIarriet (Mrs.), Queen's Head
Coman Wm. plumber"painter,glazier &c hotel, commercial & posting house ~
Dunt Mrs
Cufaude Frank L.R.~P;~din. surgeon, good accommodation for visitors ;
Evans Mrs
Gales Henry & district medical officer & public apartments to let
vaccinator for Eastern district, Rix Geo. Henry Richard,grocer & draper
Grapes William
Blofield union Rix William, saddler & harness maker
Huuting Daniel .
Kennion Rev, Robt. Winter M. A. Rectory D!J.niels George, farmer Rose Edward, Angel & Bridge House
Daniels George, jun. shopkeeper P. H. coal merchant & boat proprietor~
Main price John
Ellis Henry, butcher sailing, rowing & fishing boats for hire
Mickleburgh Samuel
Ell is J oseph, thatcher Rudd Emest, boat propr. Bure house
Oswald William, The Cottage Smithdale Thomas & Son, engineers,
Ripp Richard Thomas Fowler Benjamin, carpenter
Fowler William, butcher millwrights & iron & brass founders,
Rudd Ernest Robert, Bure house The Iron works. See advJrtisement
Smithdale Arthur E. White Thorns Furrence Thomas, bricklayer
Gales Henry, artist Squire John, jun. corn, coke, coal,
Smithdale Thomas tiour & seed merchant, general corn~
Gallant George,farm steward to Samuel
Squire Albert
Wright esq mission agent & agent for the Com-
Squire John mercial Union I<'ire &Lifeinsnrance Co
Squire John, jnn. Salisbury house George Wm. (Mrs.), wheelwrigh t&crpntr
Greenacre Simon, farmer & landowner Tills Frederick (Mrs.), grocer &c
Squire Robert Tungate Mary Ann (Mrs.), shopkeeper
Squire William Grimson George, farmer
Gurneys, Birkbeck, Barclay, Buxton & Utting Waiter, stone mason & shopkpr
Willett Charles W. The Elms
Winfield James Orde, bankers (sub-branch) (Wm. Varley James, blacksmith
T. Lindsey, manager), open th ursda y, Walker Edwd.Frank,auctioneer&valuer
Wytch Rev. Charles Gaudert [curate]
from 2 to 4.30 p.m.; draw on Bar- Wators James, farmer
COMMERCIAL. clay, Bevan & Co. London E c Wilkerson John, blacksmith
Hall Hy. beer retailr. &boot & shoe makr Withers Emily (Miss), lodging house
BarberBenj.King's Head inn,& cattle dlr Harrison Daniel, farmer White Henry, general dealer
Barnes Sidney R. horse trainer Harrison Edmund, coal merchant Woolverton James (of Yarmouth), auc-
Benus James, coal merchant Holmes Charles, market gardener, nur- tioneer & estate agent
Brown Robert, wheelwright seryman & florist
CASTLE ACRE is a village and parish, on the river charities are of [,2 ros. yearly valu'3. Fairs are held on the
Nar, 4~ mile!t north. from Swaffham station, in the North I~t of May and the sth of August, for toys. Here a.re exten-
Western division of the county, hundred, petty sessional sive remains of early British and Roman earth works, besides
division and union of Free bridge Lynn, county court district the ruins of a castle, supposed to be of Saxon or Norman
of Swaffham, rural deanery of Lynn Freebridge, and arch- date. In the autumn of r8g1 some excavations of an ancient
deaconry and diocese of Norwich. The Nar abounds with cemetery, on the farm of Mr. Hudson, at the western limit
trout, but is not navigable at this point. The church of St. of this parish, were carried out at the expense of Henry
James is a structure of flint, in the Early English and Per- Willett esq. of Brighton, under the direction of the Rev. Dr.
pendicular styles, consisting of chancel, clerestoried nave of Jessopp F.S.A. rector of Scarning, and resulted in the finding
five bays, aisles, transept, north porch and an embattled of nearly xoo urns, more or less perfect, in an area of about
western tower with pinnacles, containing a clock and five half an acre : the urns were very rude in pattern and of
bells: of the oak rood screen, the panelling, painted with extremely coarse pottery, and contained charred human
tracery and figures of saints, still remains : the hexagonal bones with fragments of iron, brass and bone ornaments:
pulpit is also panelled and painted like the screen : the the extent of ground in which these urns were found, and
church was restored in 187.5, and has 550 sittings. The the large number deposited, indicated that the cemetery
register dates from about rsg8, but is very imperfect till must have been used by a community which. occupied this
the year 1783. The living is a vicarage, annexed to that of district for a considerable time, probably several genera-
Newton by Castle Acre, average tithe rent-charge £2or, tions, and the latest date that can be reasonably assigned to
joint net yearly value [,26o, with 6~ acres of glebe and resi- these crematory burials is the 7th century of the present
dence, in the gift of the Earl of Leicester K.G. who has two era. Here was formerly a Cluniac priory, founded in 108.5
turns, and the Bishop of Norwich, who has one turn, and by William de Warrenne, Earl of Surrey, as a cell to the
held since 1890 by the Rev. John Thomas Pow~>ll. There priory of Lewes, but made independent 47 Edw. III.( 1373-4):
are Baptist, Wesleyan and Primitive }lethodist chapels. The the Late Norman west front is in good preservation aud has
-
2SO CASTLE ACRE. NORFOLK. (KELLY'S
a. recessed doorway and arcaded walls on either side the PosT, M. 0. & T. 0., S. B. & Annuity & Insurance Offioe... t
frame of a Perpendicular window: on the south-west is a Mrs. Elizabeth Nicholds, receiver. Letters through Swaff-
Transitional Norman tower, and there are remains of the ham arrive at 5.30 a.m. & 3.30 p.m. & are dispatched at
Norman chapter house and of a staircase leading to the 8.30 a.m. & 7·45 p.m
dormitory, and on the west side of the garth is a Per- National School, built in 1873 (for the four pamhes of
pendicular chapel and cellarage with rooms over: at its Castle Acre, South Acre, West Lexham & Newton), for
dissolution there were zo canons and revenues estimated at 349 children; average attendance, 270; Robert Leaman.
£296. The Earl of Leicester K.G., L.L. is lord of the manor, mast.er; Miss Clara Courtney, infants' mistress
lay impropriator and chief landowner. The soil is light CARRIERS:-
sandy loam ; the subsoil is chalk. The chief crops are wheat, David Nichols, to Swaffham, daily
barley and turnips. The area is 3,ou acres; rateable Israel Turner, to Swaffham, daily
value, £4,742; the population in z8gr was 1,232. Herbert Mason, to Lynn, tues. & sat
Parish Clerk, Robert Addison. James Eagle, to Lynn, tues. & sat. & Svraffham1 daily
Banner Thomas Evrington William Devas, farmer & Porter George Cardwell L.R.C.P.rref.
Bloom Mrs. The Grove commissnr. of income tax, Lodge farm physician & surgeon, medicai officer
Hudson Miss, The Lower house Fisher Christopher, blacksmith 2nd South-Eastern district Free-
Hudson Thomas Moore, Manor house Flatman James, brick maker bridge Lynn union
Leeds Robert Beverley Gage John, farmer. Potter Emily (Mrs.), shopkeeper
Porter George Card well Gostling Edward, butcher Potter Sarah (Miss), dress maker
Powell Rev. John Thus. [vicar ],Vicarage Greef William, watch maker Roper George, carpenter & undertaker
Young The Misses Greeves George, saddler Rose Thomas, saddler
Grimes Walter, butcher Shilling Thomas, Red Lion P.H
COMMERCIAL. Head Goorge, coal dealer SimmonsElizh.(Mrs.), earthenware dlr
Archer Henry, baker High Alfred, builder Simms Benjamin, boot & shoe maker
Atmore J ames, farmer Howard James, shoe maker Spencer James, blacksmith
l3aker Amos, grocer & pork butcher Hudson Thos.Moore,farmer, Ma nor frm Taylor George, baker & collector of taxes
Baker William, baker & pork butcher Jennings Thomas, Albert Victor P.H 1 Taylor George, Ship P.H
Barnes Robert, baker Leeds Robt.Bevrly.farmer,Wicken farm Taylor Henry, grocer & baker
Barrett Augustus, grocer & draper Lowe Edward Thomas, shopkeeper Taylor Mary (Mrs.), farmer
Barrett Wm. earthenware dlr. & grocer Maclean Joseph, machinist Taylor Robert, shopkeeper
Belcham Michael, beer retailer Mason Frederick, pig dealer Taylor William, beer retailer
Cann Catherine (Mrs.), basket maker Mason Herbert, carrier Tipple George, chimney sweeper
Cbeeseman Uriah, wheelwright Moy Frederick, baker Turner Israel, coal dealer & carrier
Chivers Robert, RisingSun P.H Moy Richard, baker Ward Eva (MrsJ, dress maker
Colson John Daisley, Ostrich P.H Neave John, horse breaker Ward William, grocer & draper
Dias Sophia (Miss), dress maker Nicholds Elizh. (Mrs.), stationr. Post off Watling Fanny (Miss), dressmaker
Elvin Henry, agricultural engineer & Nichols David, carrier ' Whiskerd Eliza (Mrs.), shopkeeper
steam thrashing machine proprietor, Oldman J obn, draper Whiskerd Lucy (Mrs.), shopkeeper
East Green iron works Potter Charles, higgler Whiskerd Samuel, bricklayer
SOUTH ACRE is a parish in a pleasant valley watered taine esq. and his wife, and held since 1888 by the Rev-
by the river Nar, 4 miles north from Swaffham station on Edward Henry Newenham M.A. of Trinity College, Dublin·
the Great Eastern railway, in the South Western division This manor originally belonged to the Harsick family: in
of the county, South Greenhoe hundred and petty sessional tbe latter part of the z6th century it was sold by Sil"'
division, Swaffham union and county court district, rural Edmund Bell, descended on the female side from Sir Rogel"'
deanery of Cranwich, north division, archdeaconry of Nor- Harsick to Edward Barkham esq. father of Sir Edward Bark-
folk and diocese of Norwich. The church of St. George is ham, lord mayor of London 1621, and afterwards belonged
an ancient edifice of flint and stone in the Early English to the Richardson family, of Honingham, Barons Cramond
style, consisting of chancel, clerestoried nave of three bays, in Scotland, through the marriage of Henry, 3rd baron,
north aisle, north porch and an embattled western tower with Frances (Napier), relict of Sir Edward Barkham kt. ~
containing 3 bells : the windows in the north aisle have been Elizabeth, only sister and heir of Willia.m (Richardson), 4th
restored by A. C. Fountaine esq. : in the church are brasses Baron Cramond, married in August, 1735, William Jermy,
to Sir John and Lady Harsick, dated 1584, and to Thomas of Bayfield Hall esq. and afterwards sold Southacre Hall,
Leman, 1534: thBre are also undat.ed monuments to Sir the last remaining portion of the great Cramond property
Edward Barkham kt. lord mayor of London,in 1621 1 to his inN orfolk, to Sir An drew Fountaine kt. of Salle, warden of
relict Frances (Napier), afterwards the wife of Henry the Mint. Algernon Charles I<'ountaine esq. J.P., D.I,, of
(Richardson) 2nd Baron Cramond, buried here 19 Nov. Narfor<:~ Hall, is lord of the manor and chief landowner.
1700, and to Sir Eudo Harsicke, dating from about 1248: The soil is sand and clay ; subsoil, clay and gravel. The
t-he chancel retains a piscina with shelf, and there is a large chief crops are wheat, barley, turnips and rye. The area is.
stone font with a raised oak cover: the communion plate 2,491 acres; rateable value, £ r,554; the population in
was presented by Lady Jane Barkham in 1642: therA are 1891 was 78.
130 sittings, n8 being free. Tbe register date-'l from the Letters through Swaffham arrive at 7 a. m. Castle Acre is
year 1565. The living is a rectory, average tithe rent-
charge £ 337 , net yearly value £ 4 o:J, including 44 ~ acres of the nearest money order & telegraph office ,
glebe, with residence, in the gift of Algernon Charles Foun- The children of this place attend the school at Castle Acre
NewenhamRev.EdwardHy.M.A.Rectory I SkippelJn.frm.blff.toA.C.Fountaine esq I Wellingham Herbert L. frmr. Hall frm
WEST ACRE is a parish and village lying in a deep Toni, for canons of the Augustinian order, as a cell to the
valley on the north side of the river Nar, 3 miles north-east abbey of Lewes: at its dissolution there were 17 canons
from Narborough station on the Lynn and Dereham section and revenues estimated at {,26o. West Acre High House,
of the Great Eastern railway and 5 north-west from Swaff- the property of Anthony Hamond esq. D.L., J.P. lord of
ham, in the North Western division of the county, Free- the manor and principal landowner, but now occupied by
bridge Lynn hundred, petty sessional division and union, Charles Ed. Gooch esq. is a mansion of stone in the Italian
and Swaffham county court district. The church of All style, on an eminence in an extensive park, and command-
Saints -is a. building of stone in the Perpendicular style, con- ing fine views of the surrounding country. The soil is.
sisting of chancel, nave, transept, north porch and em- sandy and clay; subsoil, clay. The chief crops are wheat,
battled western tower containing one bell : the communion barley, turnips and oats. The area is 3,433 acres ; rateable
plate was presented by a member of the Earkham family, value, {,2,567; the population in 1891 was 416.
then residing at South Acre, in 1762: there are 176 sittings, Parish Clerk, John Reynolds.
168 being free. The register dates from the year 1668. The
living is a donative, yearly value £ 31 , in the gift of Anthony L~tt.ers through Swaffham arrive at 8 a. m. tETTER Box:
Hamond esq: impropriator, has been vacant since I88s, but cleared at 6.10 p.m.; on sunday at 12 noon. Castle Acre
service is conducted by the Rev. Edward Henry Newenham is tbe nearest money order & telegraJ?h otfice
_M.A. of Trinity College, Dublin, rector of South Acre. Here National School (mixed & infants), built in 1876, for 104
is a Primitive Methodist chapel, built in 1887. Near the children; average attendance, mixed 63, infants 35;
church are the ruins of the priory of St. l\Iary and .All Jacob Ethelwald Brown, master; Mrs. Marion Brown,
Saints, founded in the reign of William I. by Ralph de mistress
Gooch Chas.Ed wd. '\YestAcreHigh house Ladle James,flour dealer & pork butchr Tallent Herbert, farmer, Warren farm
Hamond Anthony D.L., J.P. West Acre Lewis Edward, miller (water) Thomas James, farmer, lime & coal
abbey Palmer Frank, farmer merchant & beer retailer
Floyd Henry, shopkeeper Softly Robert & John, blacksmiths '\Vellin g ham Chas. Ho race, farmr. Soignie
Fryer Thomas, farmer & estate agent

DffiECTORY.J ALBURGH. 291
ALBOROUGH (or ALDBOROUGH) is a parish and con- Methodist chapel. The Temperance Hall, erected & \B8"~,
siderable village, around an extensive green, 5 ·miles north is a structure of brick, and will seat 300 persons. A stock
from Aylsham stations on the Great Eastern and Eastern fair is held here on the 21st and 22nd of June, unless the 21st
and Midlands railways, and 7 south-west from Cromer, in falls on Saturday or Sunday, in which event it is held on the
the Northern division of the county, North Erpingharn following Monday and Tuesday. Aid borough New Hall, the
hundred and petty sessional division, Erpingham union, seat of James Gay esq. J.P. the principal landowner, is a
Holt county court district, rural deanery of Repps, arch- modern building standing in its own grounds. Aldborough
deaconry of Norfolk and diocese of Norwich. The river is principally in the manor of Hanworth, of which Lord
Bure, which is navigable, runs near the parish. The church Sutfield K.C.B., P.c. is lord. Messrs. Herbert Cook, of
of St. Mary is an ancient building of flint, with stone dress- Thwaite, George Gunton, of Aylsham, and James Bone are
ings, in the Early Perpendicular style, consisting of chancel, also landowners. The soil is mixed; subsoil, principally
nave, north aisle, south porch and has one bell, bung ex- brick earth, though some of it is gravel ; it is farmed on
ternally at the west end: it was restored in 1849 at a cost the four-course, or Norfolk system. The area is 788 acres;
of £750 ~ the stained east window is a memorial to the rateable value, £1,886; the population in 1891 was 323.
Rev. J. G. Nelson, late rect<Jr, who died in 1882, and was PosT, M. 0. & T. 0., S. B. & Annuity & Insurance Office.-
erected by his friends at a cost of £ xoo : there are several Walter Chestney, receiver. Letters are received througl1
tablets to the Gay family, dating from 1792, and brasses to Norwich; arrive at 7.15 a. m. & s. xo p.m. ; dispatched at
Clement Herward esq. 1427, and Anne, wife of Clement 5-45 a.m. & 3·45 p.m
Herward, 1485, and to Richard Ricards esq. 1443. The
register dates from the year 1558. The living is a rectory, Church of England School (mixed), for 140 children ; aver-
average tithe rent-charge £152, gross yearly value £202, age attendance, g6 ; Joseph Millington Hulls, master
with residence and 25 acres of glebe, in the gift of Lord CoNVEYANCE.-A van leaves the " Black Boys" for X orwich
Suffi.eld, and held since 1889 by the Rev. John William every wed. & sat. returning same days; propri~tor,
Nesbit M.A. of Hatfield Hall, Durham. Here is a Primitive William T1ce

Bone J ames, Manor house Bur wick Jas. basket maker & stationer 1 Perkins Charles, watch maker & jeweller
Chapman Mrs Chapman Alfred, baker Pitcher Chas. painter,plumber & glazier
1

Culley Mrs Chapman Arthur, currier Pull Henry, pig dealer


1

Gay James J.P. Aldborough New hall Chapman Stephen, timber dealer i Robins Joseph William, butcher
Higginson John Wigmore Cooke William, miller (water & steam) · Suffiing John, Black Boy P.H. & attend-
Miller Mrs Dunham \Villiam, farmer ance officer for Gresham · school
Nesbit Rev. John William M. A. Rectory Durrant William, tinman & ironmonger I board district, Felmingham school
Sistern Miss Gotts Alfred, tailor board & No. 2 dist. Erpingham union
COMMERCIAL. Higginson John Wigmore L.R.C.P.LOnd., Spurgeon William, butcher
Alborough Temperance Hall & Coffee surgeon, medical officer & public Wilkm Joseph, Red Lion P.H.; every
Room Co. Limited (Henry C. Cooke, vaccinator 2nd district Ay I sham union accommodation; ponies&traps for hire
sec.; John llotwright, manager) & Alborongh dist.of Erpingham union Wilkin Thomas, shoe maker
Bacon Robert, carpenter Hudson George Bradford, ironmonger Williamsnn Henry Crowe, fellmonger
1

Bone & Co. grocers & drapers Leeder Daniel, horse breaker ; Winearls Waiter, grocer
Bone James, farmer & landowner Miller John Nurse, harness maker Witham Frederick, blacksmith & agri-
!'

Bone John, grocer & draper Pain John, brick maker cultural implement repairer

ALBURGH is a parish and straggling but pleasant village I of .Alburgb and Wortwell, and is distributed in coals : there
seated on a height, I mile north from the Homersfield station i is also a town estate, producing £150 yearly, originally be-
on the Waveney Valley section of the Great Eastern railway, 1queathed to keep the t<Jwn armour in repair, but now
which is in this parish, 104 miles from London, 3~ north- 1apphed towards the payment of the poor rate. The area
east from Harleston and 5 west from Bungay and the navi- comprises 1,515 acres of rich loamy land, the property of
gable Waveney, in the Southern division of the county, several freeholders, the largest owners being the trustees of
Earsham hundred and petty sessional division, Depwade the late Osborn Spring-field esq. Mrs. llurst, Sir Frederic
union, Harleston county court district, rural deanery of Bateman M.D., J.P. of Upper St. Giles street, Norwich, and
Redenhall, archdeaconry of Norfolk and diocese of Norwich. part belonging to some charities in Norwich. The parish lies
Tbe church of All Saints is a structure of flint and stone, in four manors, viz. :-Holbrook Hall, of which John Sancroft
mainly in the Perpendicular style, though portions are Holmes esq. M. A., J.P. of Gawdy Hall, Harleston, is lord;
Early English: it consists of chancel, nave, south porch and Topcroft with Denton, of which Henry Edwin Garrod esq.
an embattled We8tern tower with four light pinnacles con- of Diss, is lord ; the Rectory Manor and Deuton Rect<Jry
taining 8 bells; in the chancel are two small stained win- Manor. The chief crops are wheat, barley and turnips ;
dows to Malcolm George Lohr, d. 31 Dec. 1872; and to rateable value, £1,931; the population in 1891 was 556.
Barnabas Bond, d. 28 Dec. 1872: the church was thoroughly Parish Clerk, George Prime.
restored in 1876 at a cost of £1,340, from plans by R. M. PosT 0FFICE.-Robert Taylor, receiver. Letters are re-
Phipson esq. F.S.A. and affords 200 sittings. The register ceived by foot post through Harleston at 7.20 a. m. ; dis-
dates from the year 1540. The living is a rectory, tithe patched at 6 p.m. Deuton is the nearest money order
rent-charge £456; average £342, net yearly value £300, office ; the telegraph office is at Harleston
including 5 acres of glebe and residence, in the gift of St. WALL LETTER Box at Homersfield Railway station, cleared
John's College, Cambridge, and held since 1871 by the Rev. at 6.15 p.m. week days only
Charles William Lohr B.A. of Corpus Christi college, Cam-
bridge, presented by the Bishop of Norwich, by reason of National School (mixed), erected in 1847 & enlarged in 1872,
lapse. The Congregationalists have a small meeting room for roo children; average attendance, 76; ~Iiss Isabe!lol
here. The charities include one of £52, derived from the Howe, mistress
rent of allotment land, consisting of 13A. IR. zoP. awarded Homersfield Railway Station, Marcus Richard Hunting,
under the Enclosure Act of 18o1 (41 Geo. III.) to the poor station master

Blofield William Watling Cox William,coach builder, wheelwright j Miles Christnpher George, farmer &
Debcnham Miss & farmer butcher, Abbey farm
Lohr Rev. Charles William B.A.. [rec- Denny William, rat catcher l\Iiles Sarah Hnsannah (Mrs.), farmer &
t<Jr J, Rectory Dunn Charles, farmer landowner, White house
Se well John William, The Limes Edwards William & Co. corn, coal, Millett Arthur, shopkeeper & coal dealr
Vince Mrs. Holbrook hill coke & manure merchants &c.; dep(Jt., l\lillett James, coal dealer & thatcher
Homersfield railway station Mills Thamas Edward, King's Head F. H
COMMERCIAL. Fair head Michael, shoe maker J\lobbs John, bricklayer
BardwelL."darthaElizh. (Miss )Jadies' scbl Flatman Hannah Maria (Mrs.), beer Moore John, bricklayer & farmer
B.uker '\\'illiam Thomas, farmer, Bur- retailer & shopkeeper l\Iurrell Thomas, grocer & baker
lingham Lodge farm Flaxman James Forder, farmer, Red ho Otway William, farmer
Borrett John, beer retailer Flegg Alfred, farm bailiff to John Prime George, parish clerk
Brock Samuel Youngs & Son, wheel- William Sewell esq j Reynolds Richard Claxton, farmer
wrights, builders, contractors & black- Foulger Horace, farmer, Boys' Hos- Se well John William,farmer, The Limes
smiths &c pital farm Sheldrake Benjamin, farmer & dealer,
Brock Jarnes, fariner Grimmer J oseph, shoe maker Church farm
Hrooks John, blacksmith Howe Isabella (Miss), schoolmistress Spelman Clement Wales, farm bailiff to
Butcher John, shoe maker Hunting Marcus Richard, station Messrs. W. & J. Garrod, Becc\es
OJx Hannah (Mrs.), farmer & miller master, Homersfield railway station Taylor Ellen (Mrs.), dress maker
(wind), Alburgh mill Lo\"e Charles, farmer Youngs Caroline (Miss), farmer
Cox John, farmer & rate collector Mathews William, blacksmith
292 .ALBY. NORFOLK. (KET.LY's
ALBY (with THWAITE) is a parish and scattered village, yearly value £152, including 14 acres of glebe with resi-
5 miles north-east from Aylsham and the navigable Bure, 6 dence, in the gift of the Earl of Orford, and held since 1868
south from Cromer, 7 north-west from North Walsham by the Rev. Edwin Puckle B.A. of Hertford College, Oxford.
station and 4 north-east from Gunton station, both on the The Earl of Orford is lord of the manor; the trustees of the
Norwich and Cromer section of the Great Eastern railway, late Mr. William Wickes, Frederick Howe Lindsay Bacon
in the Northern division of the county, North Erpingham Windham esq. of Hanworth Hall, Herbert Cook esq. of
petty sessional division, South Erpingham hundred, Ayls- Thwaite, and Messrs. Jonas Walpole and Son, of Erpingham,
ham union and county court district, rural deanery of Ing. are the chief landowners. The soil is light ; subsoil, gravel
worth and archdeaconry and diocese of Norwich. This The chief crops are wheat, turnips, barley and grass. The
parish was united to the parish of Thwaite All Saints, area is 8I:C acres ; rateable value, £2,325; the population in
March 25th, r884. for civil purposes, but for ecclesiastical 18gr was 261.
purposes remains a separate parish. The church of St. Parish Clerk, Dennis Blyth.
Ethelbert is an edifice of cut flint and stone in the Early
English style, and consists of chancel, nave, south porch and Letters through Norwich, via Hanworth, which is the
a western tower containing a clock and one bell ; the church nearest money order&; telegraph office, arrive at 7 a.m.;
was repaired and partly reseated in 188g, and now affords dispatched at 4· 20 p. m
16o sittings. The register dates from the year 1558. The
living is a rectory, average tithe rent-charge £152, net The children of this place attend the school at Thwaite
Broughton William I Culley Benjamin, farmer I Peart Robert, bricklayer
Cartter Thomas James Curson Elijah, farmer Temple Isaac, farmer
Puckle Rev. Edwin B.A. Rectory Mack Nelson, farmer, Park farm TrivettThomasJames, HorseShoesP.H.
Bloom George, horse trainer Pearson Charles, head gardener to F. (good stabling)
Blyth Dennis, carpenter H. L. B. Windham esq
ALDEBY is a considerable village and parish in the vale de Rye, for monks of the Benedictine order and dedicated to
of the Waveney and on the borders of Suffolk, with a station St. Mary: the remains now form part of the Priory Farm
~~miles north from the village on the Beccles and Yarmouth premises. The trustee.'! of Ampton School, Suffolk, who are
section of the Great Eastern railway and 4 miles north-east lords of the manor, the Ecclesiastical Commissioners, who
from Beccles, in the Southern d1vision of the county, Claver- are lords of the Priory manor, King's College, Cambridge,
ing hundred, Loddon and Clavering petty sessional division Mr. John Maplestonc, Miss Dunbar, William Blyth, Mrs. M.
and union, Beccles county court district, rural deanery of A. Wright and the trustees of Allington Carman esq. are the
Erookc (eastern division), archdeaconry of Norfolk and chief landowners .. The soil is loam and sand; subsoil, sand
diocese of Norwich. The church of St. Mary is a structure and clay and in some parts chalk. The chief crops are
<>f flint with stone dressings, in the Early English style, wheat, barley, beans, hay and! roots. The area is 3,050
consisting of chancel with aisle, nave, north transept and an acres; rateable value, £3,561 ; the population in I8gr was
embattled central tower containing 4 bells: the west door- 6oo.
way is a fine specimen of Norman work and there is an Pal'ish Clerk, James Futter.
early font in good preservation, a piscina and two scdilia : PosT OFFICE.-Alfred William. Muttitt, receiver. Letters
the old windows were renewed and the church reseated in arrive by foot post from Beccles at 7.25 & II.I5 a.m.;
188o at a cost of about £7oo, and it now affords 200 sittings. dispatched at 12 _25 & 5 _35 p.m. Toft is the nearest
The register dates from the year ISBI. The living is a money order & Beccles the nearest telegraph office.
vicarage, net yearly value £2go, including IS acres of glebe, Postal orders are issued here, but not paid
with residence, in the gift of the Dean and Chapter of Nor-
wich, and held since I8 75 by the Rev. Jcsse Gillett, of St. This parilih is a contributory to the Wheatacre United Dis-
Bees. The Ecclesiastical Commissioners are impropriators trict School Board, sendmg 2 members
of the rectoriaL tithes, commuted for £ 735 yearly. The National School (mixed), built in 1840, for 100 children;
poor's land of 24 acres is let on an average for £so a year, average attendance, 75; Miss Moore, mistress
which is distributed in coals. A small priory was founded Railway Station, George Valentine Wright, station master &
here in the reign of Henry I. by Agnes, the wife of Robert goods agent
·Gillett Rev. Jesse [vicar], Vicarage Collison Elizabeth (Mrs.), butcher Mickelburgh William Blandon, farmer,
Day John, market gardener Aldeby house
COMMERCIAL. Denning Charles, farm bailiff to Col. R. Mickelburgh Pascoe William; farmer,
Aldred James, farm bailiff to William G. Freeland King's College farm
myth esq J<'laxman Robert, farmer Mills Frederick, grocer
Alger Alfred, farmer Gowing William, shopkeeper Muttitt Alfd. Wm.carpenter, Post office
Baily Alfred, farmer Grimmer Robert, market gardener Newson Emma (Mrs.), wheelwright &
Baily John, farmer Jex Robert, farmer, Aldcby hall blacksmith
Beare James, assistant overseer Knights William, Three Tuns P.H Thurston John, farmer
Belt William, farmer Maplestone John, farmer & lando-ww-nner, Turner William, Dun Cow P.H
Blyth William, farmer & landowner, The Grove Wright Aaron, bricklayer
Priory farm Meen George, farmer, Church farm Wright Austin, farmer
Capon Edwin, farmer & landowner Meen William, miller (wind) & builder
AI.DERFORD is a parish and village 8 miles north- bridge annexed, average tithe rent-charge £159, joint net
west from Norwich, 3 south from Reepham station and I~ yearly value £I6o, with 13~ acres of glebe and residence, in
east from Lenwade station, both on the Easter!l and Mid- the gift of the Dean and Chapter of Norwich, and. held since
lands railway and ~ south-west from Aylsbam, in the r873 by the Rev. William Louis Buckley B.A. of Trinity
Northern division of the county, hundred and petty sessional College, Dublin. Viscount Canterbury is the chief land-
division of Eynsford, St. Faith's union, Aylsham county owner and lord of the manor. The soil is mixed; subsoil,
court district, rural deanery of Sparham and archdeaconry sand and gravel. The chief crops are wheat, roots, barley
and diocese of Norwich. The church of St. John the Baptist and hay. The area. is 432 acres; rateablo value, £540; the
is a small but ancient building of flint, in the Early English population in 1891 was 43·
style, consisting of chancel, nave and south porch and an The PosT OFFICE for this place is at the adjoining village of
embattled western tower, with pinnacles, containing one Swannington, which see
bell : there are 6o sittings. The register dates from the year
1713. The living is a rectory, with the vicarage of Attle- The children of this place attend the school at Attlebridge
I
Buckley Rev. Wm. Louis B.A. Rectory Ampleford Isaac, Bell P.H. & farmer
Ampleford George, farmer
I
Stimpson Benjamin, farmer

ALETHORPE,formerlyextra-parochial,isnowaparish, of Cranmer Hall, is lord of the manor and sole landowner.


consisting of one farm, It miles north-east from Fakenbam, The land is cultivated on the usual four-course shift. The
in theN orth Western division of the county, Gallow hundred soil is various ; subsoil, chiefly loam. The area is 239 acres;
and petty sessional division, Walsingham union and Little rateable value, £287; the population in 1891 was 9·
Walsingham county court district. The living is annexed Letters from Fakenham, the nearest money order & tele-
to that of Fakenham. Sir Lawrence John Jones hart. J.P. graph office
Chapman Edmund Crowe, farmer & cattle dealer
AI.PINGTON is a village and parish 6 miles south-east I Norwich county court district, rural deanery of Brooke
from Norwich and 4~ south-eastfrom Trowse station on the (western division), archdeaconry of Norfolk and diocese or
Wymondham and Norwich section of the Great East€rn rail- Norwich. The church disappeared centuries ago. The
way, in the Southern division of the county, Loddon hundred, register dates from the year 1559. The living is a rectory,
Loddon and Clavering petty sessional division and union, consolidated with that of Yelverton from an early period,
DIRECTORY.] NORFOLK. ASHBY. 293
average tHh~ rent-charge £243, joint gross yearly value Parish Clerk, Thomas Wynne.
£334, including 16 acres of glebe, in the gift of the Lord
Chancellor, and held since 1865 by the Rev. Charles Robert Letters through Norwich, via Bergh Apton, arrive at 8 a. m.
Ferguson-Davie M.A. of Trinity Hall, Cambridge, rural dean Brooke is the nearest money order office, & telegraph
of Brooke (western division), who resides at Yelverton rec- station is at Trowse Newton
tory. The fuel allotment consists of 9A. 3R. Edward William A School Board of 5 members was formed compulsorily June
Trafford esq. of Brundall House, is lord of the manor and 4, 1888, for Yelverton & Alpington united district; A.
principal landowner. The soil is sand and loamy; subsoil, S. Copeman, Loddon, clerk to the boatd
wrious. The chief crops are wheat, oats, barley and turnips.
The area is 523 acres; rateable value, £739; the population Board School, for 50 children; average attendance, 40; Miss
in 1891 was 177. · Leorina Buck, mistress
Young William B. Alpington hall Dodman Jas. thrashing machine owner Whitmore Jacob, market gardener
Brown JamP.s, farmer Freestone James, farmer Whitwood Sarah (Mrs.), Wheel of
Cobon Charles, farm bailiff to W. B. Tills Joseph, shopkeeper Fortune P.ll
Young esq WhitmoreEphraim,frmr.&mrkt.grdnr Wright John, market gardener

ANMER is a parish and village 4i miles east from Der- Coldham esq. and held since 1891 by the Rev. Reginald
singham station on the Lynn and Hunstanton section of the Hewes Allott Quinet, who resides at Harpley. The trustees
Great Eastern railway, and I I north-east from Lynn, in t.he of the late H. J. Coldham are lords of the manor and sole
North Western divisioR of the county, Freebridge Lynn landowners. Anmer Hall, an ancient mansion in a. park of
hundred and petty sessional division, Docking union, Lynn about 300 acres, is the seat of Mrs. Coldham. 'llle soil is
county court district, rural deanery of Lynn and arch- light; subsoil, chalk. The crops are on the four-course
deaconry and diocese of Norwich. The church of St. Mary, system. The area. is 1,420 acres; rateable value, £8o4;
which stands in the park, is an ancient building of flint and the population in IBgi was 168.
stone in the Perpendicular style, consisting of chancel, nave, Parish Clerk, Philip Curson.
south chapel, porch and an embattled western tower con- Letters through Lynn, via Flitcham, arrive at 7 a. m. The
taining 2 bells: the whole building was restored in 1880 nearest money order & telegraph office is at Hillington
under the direction of Mr. W. 0. Milne, architect, of London,
and affords 1oo sittings. The register dates from the year PILLAR LETTER Box cleared at 5.40 p.m. ; no collection on
1674· The living is a rectory, tithe rent-charge £225, sundays
average £152, net yearly value about £2oo, including 69 National School (mixed), erected in 1873, for 45 children;
acres of glebe, in the gift of trustees of the late Henry J ames average attendance, 33 ; Mrs. Mary Ann Riches, mistress
Coldham Mrs. Anmer hall
Barrett John, blacksmith
I
Steel Elizabeth (Mrs.), shopkeeper
Stanham Mindham, gamekeeper
I Walker John, farm bailiff to Messrs.
I William & Edward Marshall
ANTINGHAM is a parish ami village 2~miles north- Mary is a rectory, with the vicarage of Thorpe Market an-
west from North Walsham, 7 from Aylsham, 7 south from nexed, tithe rent-charge £395• average £359, net yearly
Cromer, 15 from Norwich and 1 mile south-west from Gun- value £330, including 42 acres of glebe and residence, in the
ton station on the Cromer branch of the Great Eastern rail- gift of and held since 1889 by the Rev. Arthur Charles Davies
way, in the Northern division [lf the county, North Erping- B.A. of St. John's College, Cambridge. The value of three
ham hundred and petty sessional division, Erpingham union, coombs of wheat is aistributed annually amongst the poor
North Walsham county court district, rural deanery of Repps, of the parish in the month of October. Lord Suffield P.C. is
arehdea.conryof Norfolk and diocese of Norwich. The source lord of the manor and sole landowner. The soil is light
of the river Ant and the terminus of the Dilham and North sand; subsoil, gravel. The chief crops are wheat, oats,
Walsham canal are both in this parish. · There were formerly barley and beans. The area is 1,509 acres ; rateable value,
two ehurchesin the same churchyard, dedicated respectively £2,n6; the population in 1891 was 238.
to St. Mary and St. Margaret and said to have been built Parish Clerk, Henry Whitwood.
by two sisters, after whom they were named: the latter has LETTER Box cleared at. 4.30 p.m. Letters throngh North
long been in ruins, the tower and part of the nave, now Walsham, which is the nearest money order & telegraph
overgrown with ivy, alone remaining. The rectory of St. office, arrive at 9 a.m
Margaret has been annexed to the vicarage of North Wal- A School Board of 7 members waS' formed October 2, 1875,
sham. St. Mary's church is an ancient structure of flint, for tha united district of Antingham & South Repps, which
in the Decorated style, consisting of chancel, nave, south comprises in addition the parishes of Bradfield, Gunton &
porch and an embattled western tower containing one bell : Thorpe Market; J. S. Plumbly, South Repps, clerk to the
there is a memorial window to Mrs. Dolphin, erected in 1868 board; Henry Hewitt, South Repps, attendance officer
by he1" relatives, and another erected in 1891 to the Rev. Hoard School, erected in 1875, near to Gunton station, for
·John Dolphin B. A. rector 1830-89 : the church was entirely the united district, for 260 children; average attendance,
restored and reseated with oak in r865 and has 174 sittings. 180 ; William Elliot Amies, master ; Miss Eleanor Soanes,
The register dates from the year 1676. The living of St. mistress '
DaviesRev.Arthur Charles B.A.[rector], I Gaze iierbert Edwin, farmer I Hammond George, Barge P.ll. & farmr
Rectory GreenEdwd.Harry, frmr. Tavistock frm Thayne Robert, blacksmith
Horsfield Mrs. Antingham hall Horsfield Charlotte (Mrs. ),farmer,bone Watson Mary (Mrs.), farmer
Bacon Thomas, carpenter crusher & artificial manure manufr.
Empson George, farmer Antingham &Nth. Walsham bone mls
APPLETON is a decayed parish adjoining Flitcham, which see.
ARMING HALL is a parish 2~ miles south-by-east 1487." A small chapel formerly stood at BeJbawe, but it
from Norwich, 2 miles from Trowse station on the has long since been demolished. The poor have a rent-
Wymondham and Norwich section of the Great Eastern charge of £2 from F. llerue and also an allotment of 2A.
railway, in the Southern division of the county, H~mstead IR. 25P. of land, awarded at the inclosure. The Hall, the
hundred and union, Norwich county court district, petty property of Mrs. lliscoe, but now converted into cottages,
sessional division of Swainsthorpe, rural deanery of Brooke, has a curious sculptured porch, said to have been built by
western division, arch deaconry of Norfolk and diocese of Nicholas Herne. The Dean and Chapter of Norwich, who
Norwich. The church of St. Mary the Virgin is a building are lords of the manor and impropriators of the tithes, and
of flint and stone, chiefly in the Early English style, and Mrs. Biscoe are the principal landowners. The soil is
consists of chancel, nave, south porch and an embattled mixed; subsoil, clay. The chief crops are wheat, beans and
westorn tower containing one bell: it was restored in 1876 at barley. The area of the parish is 638 acres, exclusive of 22
a cost of £920, and affords 100 sittings. The register dates acres of wood and plantation: rateable nlne, £1,452; the
from the year 1570. The living is a vicarage, net yearly population in 1891 was 145.
value {,Iso, in the gift of the Dean and Chapter of Norwich,
and held since 18go by the Rev. Rowland Vectis Barker M. A. Letters through Norwich arrive at lr a. m. Trowse Newton
of Christ Church, Oxford, who is also vicar of and resides at is the nearest money order & telegraph office
Lakenham. An old house near the church has the following This pluce is included in the United School Board flistrict
inscription:-" Pray for the soul or Master William Ely, of Poring land, formed June 16, 1874; the school is at
who caused this to be made into an hospital in the year Framingham Earl
Harmer William, market gardener 1 Stimpson Arthur, blacksmith & farmer I
ASHBY (near Norwich) is a village and parish, 3 miles west from Loddon, in the Southern division of the county,
south-west from Buckenham station on the Norwich and Loddon hundred, Loddon and Clavering petty sessional
Lowestoft section of the Great Eastern railway and the division and union, county court district of Norwich, rural
navigable Yare, 7~ south-east from Norwich and 3 north- deanery of Brooke, westerndivision,archdeaconry of Norfolk
294 ASffBY. NORFOLK. [ KELLY'S
and diocese of Norwich. The church of St. Mary is an of the manor. The principal landowners are the Rev.
ancient structure of flint in the Early English style, consist- George Gilbert M.A. of Claxton Grange,lt. T. E. Gilbert esq.
ing of chancel, nave, south porch and an embattled western Mr. Jamcs Starling and Rev. Edward Henry Perowne n.n.
tower containing 3 bells: the south porch is a fine specimen master of Corpus Christi college, Cambridge. The soil is
of Norman work: the church was restored in r849, and has light sandy i subsoil, sand and brick earth. The chief crops
120 sittings. The register dates from the year r62o. The are wheat and barley, The area is 487 acres; rateable
living is a consolidlrted rectory, annexed to that of Carleton, value, £775; the population in r88r was 200.
average tithe rent-charge £26o, joint net yearly value £234, Parish Clerk, William Hurry.
including 33 acres of glebe, with residence, erected in r858, LETTER Box cleared at 3·45 p.m. Letters through Norwich,
in the alternate gift of Sir Reginald William Proctor- via Thurton, arrive at 7.30 a.m. The nearest money
Beauchamp bart. and S1r C. 1H. S. Rich bart. and held order officee is at Burgh Apton & telegraph office is at.
since r88o bv the Rev. Robert Thomas Whitmarsh. Sir Loddon
Charles Henry Stuart Rich hart. of Claxton Abbey, is lord The children of this parish attend the school at Thurton
Cotton Mrs Daines Sarah Ann (Mrs.), farmer Shreeve Benjamin, farmer
Revans Miss, Ashby lodge Durrant John, farmer Smith John Freeman, shopkeeper
Whitmarsh Rev. Robert Thos. Rectqry Forder Thomas, boot maker Smith William, cowkeeper
Hawkins Ambrose, market gardener Starling James, farmer & landowner
COMMERCIAL. Hewitt William, market gardener Whiles Benjamin, market gardener
Basey-Fisher Geo. farmer & landowner Hurry William, boot maker Whiles Samuel, market gardener
Burroughs Daniel, miller (wind) Mayes John, market gardener Worts Thomas farmer, The Hall
Carver William, market gardener Os borne William, shopkeeper
ASHBY-CUM-OBY (near YARliOUTH) form a united station on the Eastern and Midlands railway and 4 north-
parish, 2 miles south-south-west from Potter Heigham north-east from Acle station on the Norwich and Yarmouth
station on the Eastern and Midlands railway, 10 miles north- section of the Great Eastern railway. The church has all
west from Yarmouth, rs north-east from Norwich, in the but disappeared, but in 1882, on making an excavation in
:Eastern division of the county, incorporated hundreds of the churchyard, the Rev. W. C. Davie M.A. then rector,
East and West Flegg, petty sessional division of Flegg, Great came upon the foundations of the old church and the
Yarmouth county court district, rural deanery of Flegg and remains of an encaustic tiled floor; the inhabitants attend
archdeaconry and diocese of Norwich. The ancient church the church at Thurne. The rent of 2A. 2R. 30P. of land,
of St. Mary has long gone to decay. The living is consoli- amounting to £6 yearly, is distributed ; two-thirds being
dated with those of Thune and Oby, joint average yearly assigned to the poor and. one-third to the church. Roger
value from tithe rent-charge £533, with 22 acres of glebe, Bigot, Earl of Norfolk (r234-7o), was lord of this manor.
in the gift of the Bishop of Norwich, and held since 1890 by John Wiseman, who is lord of the manor of Thurne, with
the Rev. William Francis Dixon B.A. of St. John's College, Ashby and Oby, and T. Wyndham Cremer (lord of the
Cambridge, who resides at Oby. The town lands of 2A. 2R. manor of Oby with Thurne), the trustees of the late C. W.
produce f.:6 yearly for fuel. The land of Ash by is occupied J\.Iillard, the Harmer family, John Christmas, the Hev. II. J.
in one farm by Mr. John Wiseman. The soil is mixed; Muskett and James Littlewood esq. are the principal land-
subsoil, clay. The chief crops are wheat, oats and barley. owners.
Tl1e area is r,4o8 acres; rateable value, £2,278, inclusive of Letters through Yarmouth arrive at 8.30 a. m. :Martham &
Oby; the population in r8gr was 20, and of Oby 70. Acle are the nearest money order & telegraph offices
Oby (or OWBY) is 3 miles south-west from Martham · The children of this parish attend the school at Thurne
Dixon Rev. Wm. Francis B.A. [rector] Littlewood James, jun. farmer Wiseman Alfred, farmer, Manor house
Davey William, carpenter Page Sherwood William c. c. farmer, Wiseman John, farmer, & commissioner
Greenacre Charles, farmer Boundary house of income & land taxes
Harrison James B. farmer
ASHILL is a parish and village, on the road from Swaff- coals; and the church land, 3A. roP. let for £2. The Earl
ham to Watton, 3 miles north-west from Watton station of Leicester K.G. is lord of the manor of Panworth Hall, a.nd
and 2} south from Holme Hale station, both on the Swaff- William A.mhurst Tyssen Amherst esq. D.L., J.P. of
ham and Thetford section of the Great Eastern railway, and Didlington Hall, of the manor of Uphall. The principal
6 south-east from Swaffham, in the South Western division landowners are the Earl of Leicester, Edward Archer Apple-
of the county, hundred and petty sessional division of Way- whaite esq. of South Pickenham, Mrs. Oldfield, Mrs. Hors-
land, Swaffham union and county court district, rural ley, Mr. R. Miller, Mr. Henry Oldfi.eld and the trustees of
deanery of Breccles and archdeaconry and diocese of Nor- Mrs. Catling. The soil is a light loam and clay, with sub~
wich. The church of St. Nicholas is a building of flint in soil of clay and chalk. The chief crops are wheat, barley,
the Gothic style, consisting of chancel, nave with clerestory, oats, turnips, with some land in pasture. The area is 2,990
south aisle, south porch and a low western tower containing acres; rateable value, £4,299; the population in 1891 was
6 bells : an organ was erected in r867: the nave and 6oo.
chancel are divided by a carved oak screen: the church was Parish Clerk, Josiah Binks.
partially restored, the aisle roof renewed, and that of the
nave repaired in z867, at the sole cost of the Rev. Bartholo- PosT & M. 0. 0., S. B. & Annuity & Insurance Office.-
mew Edward M.A. late rector: there are 310 sittings. The Edward Dyball White, sub-postmaster. Letters received
register dates from the year 153 9 . The living is a rectory, through Watton S.O. arrive at 7-55 a.m.; dispatched at
tithes commuted at £ 9 85 , average £ 729 , gross yearly 5-45 p.m.; sundays, 10.30 a.m. Watton is the nearest
value £741 1 including 47 acres of glebe and residence, in the telegraph office
gift of C. Foster and II. W. B. Edwards esqrs. and held ScHOOLS : -
since 1889 by the Rev. Charles William Neville Custance National (mixed), erected in 1848, for roo children; aver-
M.A. of Corpus Christi college, Cambridge. There are Wes- age attendance, 86; William l)artmouth Sykes, master
leyan and Primitive Methodist chapels. The poor have 43 Infants', erected in r876, for 6o children; average attend·
acres as common land, and 29 acres, let at £ ro yearly, for ance, 46 ; Mrs. W. D. Sykes, mistress
Blower Mrs 1 Boughen George, farmer Odd Fellows' Lodge, Crown inn
Custance Rev. Charles William Neville Cator James,farmer Oldfield Henry, farmer, lime burner,
M..A. Rectory Chapman John, baker brick maker & landowner
Horsley Mrs. The Moat Coker Emma (Mrs.), farmer Rose John, shoe maker
Love Rev. Edward HoughB.A. [curate] Crow John, farmer, Asbilllodge Saunders James, farmer
Oldfi.eld Mrs Dennis Joshua, beer retailer · Scott James, thrashing machine owner
COMMERCIAL. Franklin James,manager of brick yard & farmer
Allcock Thomas, wheelwright Garner John, carp;mter & wheelwright Seed Edward, farmer
Amys Charles, jun. blacksmith Lockwood Robert, farmer Sykes Wm. Dartmouth, assist. overseer
Betts Charles, farmer, Panworth hall Lockwood William, baker Twaites John, shopkeeper
Binks Josiah, blacksmith Loveday William, farmer Ward Rubert, shoe maker
Blomfield Frederick John, Crown inn, Miller James, farmer, Uphall White Edward Dyball, grocer & draper,
& pork butcher Nelson Ueo. White Hart P.H. & butcher Post office
ASH.MANHA UG H is a parish, 2miles north from division, arch deaconry of Norfolk and diocese of Norwich.
Wroxham station on the East Norfolk section of the Great The church of St. Swithin is an ancient building of flint and
Eastern railway, 7 south-east from North Walsham and ro stone, consisting of chancel, nave, south porch and a round
north-east from Norwich, in the Ea.<;tern division of the western tower containing one bell: the tower was rebuilt
county, Tunstead and Happing petty sessional division, and the fabric repaired in 1849, and again restored in r867 :_
Tunstead hundred, Smallburgh union, North Walsham there are 90 sittings. The register dates from the year
county court district, rural deanery of Waxham, Tunstead 1563. The living is a \"icarage, consolidated with the rec-
Dl:ltECTORY.J NORFOLK. .ASLACTOX. 295-
tory of the adjoining parish of Bceswn St. Lawrence, aver- The area is 654 acres; rateable value, £794; the population
age tithe rent-charge £106, joint net yearly value £2r4, in 1891 was 133.
including 84 acres of glebe and residence, erected in x86s, Parish Clerk, John Bird.
in the gift of Sir H. J. Preston bart. .J.P. and held since r884 LETTER Box cleared at 3-45 p.m. Letters through Norwich,
by the Rev. Richardson. George Wilson Tucker. The chari- via Neatishcad, arrive at 7.30 a.m. The nearest money
ties amount to £10 ms. yearly. Sir Henry Jacob Preston order & telegraph offiee is at Wroxham
bart. J.P. of Hill House, Nortbrepps, is lord of the manor School (mixed), erected in r868, for so children; average
and chief landowner. The soil is mixed ; subsoil, sand and attendance, 3S; is supported by Sir Henry Jacob Preston
gravel. The chief crops are wheat, oats, barley and beans. bart. ; Miss Thirza Rogers, mistress
Tucker Rev. Richardson George Wilson, j Cooper William, farmer
Rectory :Farrow George, blacksmith & farmer
I Mason William, farmer, Hall farm
Youngs Shadraek, farmer
ASHWELLTHORPE is a village and parish, with a average tithe rent-charge (ARhwellthorpe) £275, joint gross
station ri miles east on the Wymondham and Forncett yearly value £621, including 8S acres of glebe, in the gift of
branch of the Great Eastern railway and 3! south-east the Baroness Berners, and held since 1853 by the Rev.
from Wymondham, in the Southern division of the county, Arthur Wilson Upcher M.A. of Trinity College, Cllombridge.
Depwade hundred, petty sessional division and union, who resides at Wreningham; the Rev. Frederick William
Wymondham county court district, rural deanery of Skinner B.A.. of Cambridge University, has been resident
Depwade, archdeaconry of Norfolk and diocese of Norwich. curate since 1886. Ashwellthorpe Hall, the property of the
The church of All Saints is an ancient building of flint in Baroness Berners, is a handsome Elizabethan mansion, now
the Early English style, consisting of chancel with side occupied by Major-General Philip Story. The Baroness
chapel, nave, 8outh porch with parvise, and an embattled Bcrners, who is lady of the manor, Mr. Charles Browne and
western tower, containing 5 bells: there are piscin<£ in the Mr. Reginald Steward are the principal landowner'!. The
chancel, nave and chapel, and the porch retains a holy water chief crops are wheat and barley, hay and roots. The soil
stoup: in the church is a tomb with recumbent etli.gies to is various; subsoil, clay. Th~ area is 979 acres; rateable
Sir Edmund de Thorpe kt. and Joan his wife; he was envoy value, [1,407; the population in 1891 was 379·
from Henry V. to the Duke of Burgundy, and was slain at Parish Clark, James Locke.
the siege of Lover's Castle, in Normandy, but was buried Letters through Wyutondham arrive at 8 a. m. ; the nearest
here : in the north chapel are five stained windows, with money order office is at Wreningham & telegraph office at
the arms of the Thorpe. Bourchier, Knyvet, Wilson and the station. WALL LETTER Box cleared 7 p.m. week days-
Berners families, and a brass to Jane (Bourchier), daughter only
of John, 2nd baron Berncrs, and wife of Edmund Knyvet
esq. of Ashwellth(lrpe, who died February 17, IS6r : there School (mixed), established in 1841, for 8o children; aver-
are tablets to Knyvet Wilson, died 1796, and to Mary his age attendance, 59 ; Miss Annie Whittaker, mistress
wife, who died 1772 , and some modern memorials to the Railway Station, James Hoare, station master
Berners family: the font, given by Lady Knyvet about CARRIERS TO NoRWICH.-Williams, from Forncett, passes
166o, is octagonal, with carved shields bearing the arms of through, mon. wed. & sat. ; James Breeze, from Bunwell,
the Knyvet family. The register dates from the year xs58. wed. & sat. & George Filby, of New Buckenham, on wed.
The living is a rectory, with that of Wreningham annexed, & llat
Skinner Rev. Fredk. Wm. :H.A. [curate] Bothway Wm. Edwin, farmr. Canal ho Hoare James, station master
Story Major-Genl. Philip, Ashwell- Brown John, woodman & farmer King Emma (Miss), shopkeeper
thorpe hall Browne Charles, farmer & landowner Locke J ames, parish clerk
Brownc Thomas, King's Head P. H Moore Wm. Carr, farmer, Church frm
cm.rMERCIAL. Bunn John, carpenter & wheelwright Marshal! Saml. coal mer. Railway stato
Allcock Jolm, White Horse P.H Clarke James, farmer, Wood farm Mayes William, carpenter, wheelwright.
Atkins Robert, butter & egg dealer Coe George, gamekeeper tD Maj.-Gen. & blacksmith
Bateman George, baker, beer retailer P. Story Rix George, bricklayer & farmer
& shopkeeper Dawson John, boot maker Rush more J ames, market gardener
Bilham James, blacksmith Day Robert, saddler Shearing Jas. farmer & market gardenr
BoltonJohn, boot & shoe maker Hall Herbert L. farmer, Yew Tree frm Whitehand Jas. tailor, Shrubland viHa.
Bothway Henry, farmer, The Hall frm Hart Frederick, police constable
ASHWICKEN is a parish, 5 miles east from Lynn and Hall is the seat of John Groom esq. who owns the greater
I! north from East Winch station on the Lynn and Dereham part of the parish. Glosthorpe Manor House, in this parish.
section of the Great Eastern railway, in the North Western the property of Major John Edmund Groom, is now the resi-
div1sion of the county, hundred, petty sessional division and dcnce of the Rev. William Alexander Osborne JJ.A. The soil
union of Free bridge Lynn, county court district of Lynn, is mixed and the subsoil carr stone and clay, and is very
rural deanery of Lynn Freebridge, and archdeaconry and much improved by cultivation. The chief crops are wheat,
diocese of Norwich. The church of All Saints is a small but barley and roots. The area is 1,283 acres; rateable value~
ancient structure of flint and stone, eonsoisting of chancel, £ x,2o8 ; the population in 1891 was rn.
nave, south porch and a western tower containing one bell: Parish Clerk, Giles Palmer. •
a stained window was erected by subscription in 1879, in
memory of the Rev. J olm Freeman, late rector : there are Letters through Lynn, via East Winch, arrive at 8.go a.m.
150 sittings. The register, which is very imperfect, dates WALL L"E'ITER Box, cleared at 4.50 p.m. week days only.
from about 1700. The living is a rectory, consolidated with The nearest money order & telegraph offices are at Gayton
that of Leziate, average tithe rent-charge £3g6, joint gross & East Winch
yearly value £438, including 13 acres of glebe with resi- National School (mixed), erected in 1885, for 6o children
dence, in the gift of and held since 1877 by the Rev. Arthur belonging to the parishes of Ashwicken & Leziate; aver-
John Groom B. A. of Trinity College, Cambridge, Ashwicken age attendance, 43; Miss Florence Mary Powell, mistress
Baxter Capt. John Cordy R.E. Swiss cot Osborne Rev. William Alexander B. A. Bannell Michael, farm batliff ro Major
Groom Rev. Arthur John B. A. Rectory Glosthorpe Manor house J. E. Groom, Glosthorpe Manor farm
Groom John, Ashwicken hall
ASLACTON is a village and parish 2 miles north-west dence, in the gift of the trustees of the late Rev. Thomas Gale
from Tivetshall station and 2 south-west from Forncett Curtler M.A. of Knoll, Worcester, and held since r888 by the
station on the Ipswich and ]Norwich section of the Great Rev. Albert Palmer Jollye L.Th. of Durham University.
Eastern railway, 8 north-west from Harleston and 8 south Mrs. G. R. Gillman is impropriatress of the tithes, com-
from Wymondham, in the Southern .division of the county, muted in 1839 for £340 yearly. Here is a Wesleyanchapel.
Depwade hundred, petty sessional division and union, built in r884, and a. Baptist chapel erected in t8go. Le N eve's
Wymondbam county court district, rural deanery of Dep- charity, of {.1 yearly, is for bread; and there is an allot-
wade, arch deaconry of Norfolk and diocese of Norwich. The ment of 17~ acres, let at [25 ros. yearly, and given to the
church of St. Michaelis an ancient edifice of stone and flint, poor in coal. There are three manors in this parish ; Miss
principally Norman, and consists of chancel, nave, south Buxton, of Shad well Court, owns Aslacton Park manor;
aisle, south porch and a round embattled western tower of W. H. Cole esq. is lord of Le Neve's manor; and Sir l<'rancis
Saxon date containing 5 bells: in the chancel is a stained George Manning ham Boileau bart., J. P., D. L. is lord of the
window erected in 1867, and on the north side a memorial other: Mrs. Copeman is the principal landowner. The soil
window to Agnes Utting Copeman, d. 1869: the tower and is clay; subsoil, clay. The chief crops are wheat, barley
walls are supposed to date from about 88o: the roofs of the and beans. The area is I 0 164acres; rateablevalue, £1,343;
nave and aisle and the windows were restored, and the bells the population in 1891 was 367.
repaired and re-bung in r88~J-g<>, at a cost of over £4oo:
the church affords 130 sittings. The register dates from the Parish Clerk, John Coleman.
year I5S8. The living is a vicarage, tithe rllnt-charge .£"IS, net PosT 0FFICR. John Coleman, sub-postmaster. Lettei"S
yearly value £r6, including 30 acres of glebe, wit.h resi- arrive from Long Stratum at 7.40 a.m. & dispatched at
1
296 ~SLACTO~. NORFOLK. (KELLY S
5.40 p.m. Forncett St. Peter is the nearest money order St. Stcphen's chamber3, Norwich, clerk to the board·
& telegraph office at Long Stratton William Smith, Forncett St. Peter's, attendance officer '
A School Board of 5 members was formed June IB, 1875 1 Board (formerly National) School, built in r8so, for go chi!.
with Bunwell contributory with 2 members; J. Forness, dren; average attendance, 65 i Miss Chapman, mistress
Jollye Rev. Albert Palmar L.Th. [vicar], Coleman John, bricklayer & builder Moore Ellen (Miss), dress maker
Vicarage Coleman John, shopkeeper & parish Moo re Geo. frmr. & survyr. of highways
Lawrence George clerk, Post office Moore William, farmer ·
Long Miss, Lime Tree house Finch Christmas, farmer Smith Charles, farmer
COMMERCIAL. Fish John, farmer Smith James, farmer & cattle dealer,
Aldridge Edward, carpenter Hart Charles, farmer, Aslacton grange Bridge farm
Banham Moses, farmer, Rookery & Howlett Hubert, farmer Smith Matthias, shopkeeper
Street farms King James, farmer & cattle dealer Sutton Samuel, farmer, Eagle farm
Burroughes Barnabas, miller (wind & Lloyd William, blacksmi~h Ward Francis, Bell P.H
steam)
ATTLEBOROUG H is a small market town, parish, · money order, savings bank, insurance & annuity business,
on the road from Thetford to Wymondham, with a station & issue of inland revenue licences (except on Sunday,
on the Thetford and Norwich section of the Great Eastern Good Friday & Christmas Day & other occasional days,
railway, head of a county court district, 93 miles by road respecting which special notice is given), week days, ga.m.
and ro6! by rail from London, IS south-west from Norwich, to 6 p.m. ; saturdays, 9 a.m. to 8 p.m. For the sale of
.si south-west from Wymondham and I4 north-east from postal orders, week days, 7 a.m. to 9 p.m. For the pay-
Thetford, in the Mid division of the county, Guiltcross and ment of postal orders, week days, 9 a. m. to 9 p.m. For
Sbropham petty sessional division, Wayland union, hundred telegraph business, week days, 8 a. m. to 8 p.m.; sundays,
of Shropham, rural deanery of Rockland, archdeaconry of 8 to ro a. m. · Savings bank, deposits, 9 a. m. to 9 p.m. ;
Norfolk and diocese of Norwich. The water supply is de- withdrawals, 9 a.m. to 6 p.m
rived from private wells, and gas is supplied by a private DISPATCH OF LETTER MAILS.
company. The church of St. Mary, a noble building of For *London, Cambridge & all parts, II.Ioa.m. (registered
stone, in the Norman and Early English styles, was once until II.O a. m.) ; *Norwich & all parts, 12.0 noon (regis-
cruciform, with a central tower and spire ; the spire, how- tered until n.5o a. m.); *Old Buckenham, New Bncken-
ever, fell, destroying the chancel, which has never been re- ham & Banham, 12.50 p.m. (registered until 12.40 p.m.);
built; and the church now consists of clerestoried nave of *Eccles, Hingham & Hardingham, 2. 25 p.m. (registered
five bays, aisles, two chapels, north porch and an embattled until2. IS p.m.); *Norwich & towns in Suffolk &; Essex,
• tower at the east end of the nave, with a parapet of red 5.25 p.m. (registered until5.15 p.m.); London, Norwich
brick, and containing a clock and 6 bells : the interior was & all parts, 10.0 p.m. (registered until9.0 p.m)
repaired and newly seated in 1844: there is one stained pARCEL MAILS.
window ; and in the church are several handsome monu- For *London, Cambridge and all parts, I I. Io a. m. (regis-
ments and tablets of the rsth cent. to the Radcliffe family, tered until I 1.0 a. m.) ; London, Norwich & all parts,
others of the IJth cent. to the Mortimers, to ths Chanticlers 12.0 noon ; Old Buckenham,t New Buckenham & Ban-
of the 14th cent. and to the Dudley Ryder family, 1708: Sir ham, I2.50 p.m. ; Eccles, Hingham & Hardingham, 2.25
William de Mortimer was the founder in the 13th cent. of p.m. ; Norwich & towns in Norfolk, Suffolk & Essex, also
the chapel on the south side of the tower, that on the north north of England and Scotland, 5.20 p. m.; London, Nor·
side being erected by Thomas Chaunticler in the following wich & all parts, g.o p.m
century:. the western screen, now in a dilapidated con- *These mails are not made up on sundays
dition, was formerly placed before the three arches opening ARRIVAL OF MAILS.
from the nava into Mortimer's and Chaunticler's chapels; Delivery by Delivery to
it is of large size and elaborate workmanship, and was re- postman callers
moved to the west end of the church in r845: there are 6oo LETTER li!AILS. begins at begins at
sittings. The register dates from the year rs52. The
living is a rectory, average income from tithe rent-charge From-All parts..................... 1· o a. m. 7· o a. m.
[,I, I4S, with I7 acres of glebe and residence, in the gift of Banham & Old Bucken-
Sir William Bowyer-Smijth hart. and held since r866 by the ham ........................ . I. o p.m. 11.40 a.m.
Rev. William Chartres Safford M.A. and late scholar of Norwich & towns ln
Corpus Christi college, Cambridge. Here are Wesleyan, Suffolk ................. . I. o p.m. 12.15 p.m.
Primitive Methodist and Baptist chapels, and a Friends' London & all parts ..•... I. o p.m. 1. 0 p.m.
meeting-house. The Wesleyan chapel, in the Station road, Norwich & towns in Nor-
erected :in I872 at a cost of about £,I,ooo, i& of red brick folk & Suffolk ........ , 6.30 p.m. S·45 p.m.
with stone dressings, and will seat about 400 persons. A London & all parts .••... 6.30 p.m. 6.30 p.m.
Cemetery of 7~ acres with a mortuary chapel was formed in PARCEL MAILS.
I885, at a cost of about /,I,2oo, and is under the control of F1·om-All parts..................... 1· o a.m. 7· o a. m.
a Burial Board of 9 members. The charities consist of Banham & Old Bucken-
• Nerford's, for educating six poor children, value about £2o, ham........................ r. o p.m. 11.40 a.m.
now given as prizes at the Board School, and £,2 r2S. a year All parts.,................... r. o p.m.. I. o p.m.
given to six poor widows in bread every Sunday; Sir F. All parts..................... 6.30 p.m. 6.30 p.m.
Bickley's, the proceeds of six acres of land, and Andrew On sunday there is only one de1ivery by postman, at 7 a.m
Reeder's, the proceeds of 2A. 3R. 23P. both given to the poor PUBLIC EsTABLISHMENTS:-
of the parish;. and the rent of the fuel allotment, corn- Cemetery, M. W. H. L. Brooke, clerk & registrar to the
prising 57A. 2R. which is given in money; the rent of burial board
IIA. 3R. I4P. of land has also been left for beautifying the Corn Market, Hall & Reading Rooms, James Bacon, sec
church, and the rent of IA. 2R. 32P. for ringing the morn- County Police Station, George Harvey, sergeant
ing and evening bells. The corn market with hall and Attleborough & Watton County Court, His Honor Edwin
reading room, erected by a limited liability company, at a Plumer Price Q.c. judge; George Martin Hall, registrar &
cost of £I,ooo, and opened in August, I863, is a structure high bailiff; Waiter John Amis, chief clerk. Bankruptcy
of white brick, and there is a. library of about 300 volumes Official Receiver, P. H. Gould, Upper King street, Norwich.
in connection with the reading room. The market is on The County Court is held each alternate month at Attle-
Thursday; and fairs are also occasionally held here. There borough & Watton; the district comprises the following
is a banking agency. Hill House is the residence of Arthur places :-Attleborough, Hanham, Besthorpe, BreccliJS,
Temple Cockell esq. The principal landowners are Sir Bridgham, Buckenham (New), Buckenham (Old), Car-
William Bowyer-Smijth hart. who is lord of the manor, Sir brook, Caston, Eccles, Ellingham (Great), Ellingha.m
Hugh Reeve Beevor hart. M. B. Arthm Temple Cockell esq. (Little), Griston, Hargham, Harling (East), Harling
Thomas William Daniel esq. M. A., J.P. of Thrigby Hall, and (West), Hockham, Hockham (Little), Illington, Kenning-
George Shepherd esq. The soil is clay; subsoil, clay and hall, Larling, Merton, Ovington, Quidenham, RocklandAll
gravel. The chief crops are barley and wheat. The area is Saints, Rockland Saint An drew, Rockland Saint Peter,
5,26o acres; rateable value, £.r2,56<;; the population in Roudham, Scoulton, Shropham, Snetterton, Stow Bedon,
1891 was 2,332. Thompson, Totting-ton, Watton & Wilby
Parish Clerk, William Barnard Page. Certified Bailiffs appointed under the "Law of Distress
PosT, M. 0. & T. 0., S. B. & Annuity & Insurance Office; Amendment Act," Walter John Amis, Attleborough;
William Barnard Page, postmaster P. H. Gould, Upper King street, Norwich
Hours of Business.-For sale of stamps, post cards, news- Stamp Office, Alfred Muskett, distributor
paper wrappers, stamped & registered letter envelopes & VoLUNTEERS:-
for registration of letters & delivery of letters to callers & 4th Volunteer Battalion, Norfolk Regiment (E Co.), Capt.
for the receipt of inland, colonial & foreign parcels, week Charles Simpson, commandant; James Weir, sergeant-
days, 7 a. m. to 9 p.m,; sundays, 7 a. m. to ro a.m. For instructor
DIRECTORY.] NORFOLK. ATTLEBOROUGH. 297
PUBLIC OFFICERS : - Primitive Methodist, Rev. George Dowson, of Rockland;
Collector of Rates, William Barnard Page, Post office IT a. m. 2.30 & 6.30 p.m
Medical Officer, Attleborough District, Wayland Union, Wesleyan, Rev. John Dixon; 10.45 a.m. &6.3op.m.; wed.
Carteret George Ellis L.R.C.P. Edin 7 p.m
Medical Officer of Health, Guiltcross, Swaffham & Wayland
Rural Sanitary Districts, Henry George Foster ScHOOL:-
Registrar of Births, Deaths & Marriages & Helieving Officer A School Board of 5 members was formed March 7 1
for the Attleborough District of the Wayland "Cnion, 1871; Melancthon William Henry Lombe Brooke, clerk
William Shepherd, Rockland · to the board; Charles Sparrow, attendance officer
Stamp Distributor, Alfred Muskett Board, erected in r84o, for 120 boys, 104 girls & r 14 infants ;
Town Crier, John Wright average attendance, II2 boys, rox girls & Bo infants;
PLACES OF WoRSHIP, with times of services : - George Welton, master; Miss Kate Bray, mistress ; Miss
St. Mary's Church, Rev. William Chartres Safford M.A. L. Chapman, infants' mistress
rector; 10.45 a.m. 3 p.m. & 6.30 p.m Railway Station, James John Nibloe, station master
Society of Friends' Meeting House, xx a.m. & wed, I I a.m
Baptist, Rev. John Henry Moore; 10.45 a. m. 2.45 & 6.30 CARRIERS TO NoRWICH.-John Capes, sat.; Robert Whant,
p.m. ; wed. 7 p.m wed. & sat

PRIVATE RESIDENTS. Hateman William, London tavern Grecnacre George, miller & corn mer-
Andrews Arthur, Claremont house Hayes Joseph, builder chant, & at Besthorpe
Ashley William, Bowden villas, Con- Beales Henry, thrashing machine owner Greenacre Henry, saddler -
naught road Beckett John, grocer & draper Gurneys, Birkbecks, Barclay & Buxton,
Bacon Frank Mace, The Beeches BettsHerbrt.Chas.miller(wind & steam) bankers (Alfred Muskett, a!!ent) ;
Bacon Horace Henry Bone Robert, grocer & draper open ro till 4 p.m. thursday 6 p. m.
Bacon James Bourne George E. Oddfellows P.H saturday 2 p.m. ; draw on Barclay,
Bacon Percy Herbert Bradley Seth, White Swan P.H Bevan & Co. London E c
Brooke Melancthon Wm. Henry Lombe Bridges William, White Lodge P.H Hall George Martin, solicitor, com-
Brown Mrs. London road Brighton William, flour & meal_dealer missioner to administer oaths & regis-
Clarence Mrs. Norwich road Brooke Melancthon William Henry trar & high bailiff of the Watton &
Cockell Arthur Temple, Hill house Lombe, solicitor & commissioner to Attleborough county court
Cowles John, Connaught road administer oaths & clerk to school & Hammond Philip & Williarn
Dixon Rev. John [Wes.J, Station road burial boards Walden, butchers & farmers
Ellis Carteret George Capes John, Crown P.H. & carrier & Hanton Henry, farmer
Everett Mrs. Fair view, London road farmer Harbour John, RCJyal Oak P.H
l''oggon Rev. John [Prim. Meth.], Con- Carlton John, farmer & horse dealer Harrison John, Angel P.H. & builder
naught road Carter Jonathan, White Horse P.H Harwood Thornas, farmer
Foster Henry George, College Hill ho Carter Robert W. baker & confectioner Haylock Fredcrick Henry Percival,
Foulsham Frederick Cemetery (M. W. H. Brooke, clCTk & watch maker
Francklin The Misses, Ivy lodge registrar to the burial board) Hearn James, boot maker
Gayford Thos. J. The Firs; Norwich rd Childerhouse Frederick, Griffin Hewitt Edward, corn & flour dealer
Ball George .Martin, Connaught road commercial hotel & dealer in horses Hook .Ephraim, farmer, West Car farm
Hemans Mrs · Childerhouse Frederick, jun. butcher Howes John, farmer, Crows liall farm
Bewitt James Childerhouse Robert, boot & shoe maker Howlett George, farmer
Bouchen Mrs. Station road & farmer Hubbard Charles, farmer
Hutchinson Mrs. The Ferns, London rd Coleman Abraham,pharmaceutical Humphrey Theopbilus John, draper &
Jary Thomas Henry, Swangay farm chemist & manufacturer of " Cole- grocer & wine dealer
Jones Edward man's " Hampshire pig powders & Jary Thomas Henry, farmer, Swangey
Ketteringham George, Station road anti-smut for the prevention of smut & Ling farms
Ketteringham Mrs ir;. wheat Jessup Joseph John, farmer, Ash farm
Ketteringham Robert, Connaught road Coller R. & Sons, corn, coal, cake & Jessup Robert, farmer, Borough farm
Le Grice Samuel seed merchants; & at Lynn,Aylsham, J ohnson Ho race Cornelius, ironmonger
Long Charles, Claremont ho. Station rd Wa tton, H Lixton, Derringham, Diss, Johnson James, fishmonger
Long Mrs. Connaught road Docking, Hardingham, Melton, Recp- Ketteringham Geo. builder, Station rd
Lovett Mrs. Tenby villa, Station ro~d ham, Thetford, 'Volferton, Wood- Ketteringham Robert, builder &. brick
Moore Rev. John Henry [Baptist], bridge & Wymondham; office, St. manufacturer, Connaught road
Connaught road Stephen's gates; depots, Victoria & Lawrence Jesse, boot maker
Muskett Alfred Trowse stations, Norwich Leeder John, pig dealer & farmer
Muskett William Jarnes, Dale villas Cook Arthur, mill wright & hard ware dlr Le Grice Charles, grocer & draper, &
Nicholls Williarn Miles, Cyprus house Cooperson James, watch & clock maker agent for W. & A. Gilbey, wine &
Playford Frederick W Cork William, grape cultivator & spirit merchants
Rat;kham l\lrs. Connaught road grower, The Vineyards LittleproudFrances( ::\Irs. ), grocr. &dra pr
Rayson ~Iiss, Connaught road Corn Hall & Reading Room Co. Lim. Long Zedekiah & Son, maltsters,
Safford Rev. William Chartres M.A. (James Bacon, sec) corn crushers, dealers in beer, corn,
[rector & surrogate], The Rectory County Court (George Martin Hall, coal, malt, hops, seeds, linseed & rape
Salter William Hcrbcrt, The Hall registrar) cakes, offals &c. Station&atKing'sLynn
Shepherd George, !<'en farm Cross James, butcher Long Charles, maltster, see Long Zede-
Simpson John Daniel Gushing Stephen, baker k~ah & Son
Sparrow Jonathan, BelleVue, London rd Dawes Foster M. watch maker Loveday Nathan, agricultural imple-
Starke Robert, Connaught road Dixon Samuel, farmer, Hill farm . ment maker
Taylor Charles, London road Downes Thomas, boot & shoe maker MannJ oseph,farm bailiff to- Daniel esq
Turner Mrs. The Shrublands, Station rd Dye Charles, shopkeeper, Station road Manning J ames Howes, organist &
Tyrrell Rice Baly, Station road Edwards Geo. saddler & harness maker teacher of music
Venu Richard William Henry Edwards Thomas, farmer Meadows Wm. insur.agent,ro Queens rd
Watson Waiter George, Kent house Ellis Carteret George L.R.C.P. Edin. Middlcton Wm. farmer, Grange farm
West Robert, Norwich road surgeon & medical officer, Attic- Muskett Alfred, stamp distributor &
borough district, Wayland union tl.gent for Gurneys' & Co.'s Bank
COMMERCIAL. Forkes Fredk. shoeing & general smith Nibloe James John, station master
.Adams Frederick, farmer, Dairy farm Foster Henry George, surgeon & medi- Nicholls William Miles, farmer, grocer
.Alien George, horse breaker cal officer of health, Guiltcross, Swaff- &draper
Alien Henry, horse clipper ham & Wayland rural sanitary dis- Nurse \Yilliam, farmer
Alien ·william, tailor tricts, College Hill home Page William Barnard, postmaster &
.Amis Wa.lter John, accountant & bailiff Foulsham Charles, Cock inn, & coal & rate collector
appointed for distresses under the corn dealer Pearl William Wade, White Hart P.H
.Agricultural Holdings ..Act Fox Charles, painter & plumber Petley Charles, farmer & cattle dealer
.Aywn James, horse slaughterer Fox Is.1ac, hair dresser • Pinnock Harry, boot & shoe maker
Bacon James & Sons, aucti0neers Francis Walter,greengrocer & seedsmn Poll James, boot maker
~aeon James (firm, Bacon James & Frost Arthnr S. baker & confectioner Potter Emily (Mrs.), miller (wind &
Sons), auctioneer & sec. to Norfolk l''rostJn. .New H.ailwaytavrn. titation rd steam), corn, coal & coke merchant,
Agricultural Association Gas Works (Chas. Fredk. Parker,propr) Station mill
Baldry William, blacksmith Girling Waiter Harry, tailor Riches Charles, farmer
Barnard George, hurdle maker Grant Charles, farmer Robinson James & Co. chemists
Batcman Colin, "builder & upholsterer Green William, Grove inn Salter Wm.Herbt. farmer, The Hall frm
298 .ATTLEBOROUGH. NORFOLK.
Salter, Simpson & Sons, auctioneers, Steff Wi1Imm1 land surveyor, London Weir James, ser ant-instrnct.M E Co
valuers & land & estate agents :road 4th Volunteer Battalion, Norfolk:
Salter WiUiam Webh, farm manager Stubbings Maria (Mrs.), draper Regiment, & recraiting agent for
to J. Cronshey esq. Wood farm Stubbins Albert, horse clipper district, Connaught road
Self Robert, Old Railway tavern Tillott Mary (Mrs.), Ro~al hotel Wells Waiter, painter & plumber
Sewell George, boot & shoe maker Upston Geo. greengrocer & nurserymn Whb.nt Robert, jun. stationer
ShepberdGeo.landownr.&frmr.Fen frm Venn Richard Williarn Henry, solicitor Whant Robert, carrier
ShO!"ten Wm. Bear P.H. & nurseryman & agent for Edinburgh Life & Atlas Wick John Park & Son, coal, corn, ca'ke,
Simpson William T. auctioneer &c. see Fire Assurance Cos salt & beer mer<lhants & tnanureagt.a
• Salter, Bimpson & Son!! Volunteer Battalion (4th) Norfolk Regi- Wigby I<'rederick Charles, farmer
Skoyles Henry, beer retailer ment (E Co.) (Capt.Charles Sirnpson, Winch Robert Jn. printer & newsagent
Smith Robert,The Grapes P.n.&builder commandant; Jas. Weir, sergt.-instr) Wingfield Edward James, shopkeepllr
Snelling Robert, King's Head P.H. & Wales George, baker & confectioner Woor David, 'Wheelwright
carpenter Warren Saml, blacksmith, Hargham rd Wordingham Misses, ladies' boarding
Sparrow Charles, beer retailer Warren Samuel William, draper school, Connaught road
.Sparrow Charles, corn dealer & school Warren William, shopkeeper Wright Charles, shopkeeper
attendance officer Watling George, farmer Wright John, painter & bill poster
Sparrow Wm.Fredk.plumber & painter Webster George, coach builder Wright William, farmer
Spencer Matthew, market gardener Webster Joseph, hair dresser Yeomans Samuel, market gardener
Stebbings WilJiam, ironmonger Webster Wm.bair,dresser & shopkeeper Youngs George, monumental mason
ATTLEBRIDGE is a parish and village, on the river William Louis Buckley B.A. of Trinity College, Dublin, who
Wensum, over which there is a bridge of one arch, with a resides at Alderford. Commander Henry Sharnborne
station orr the Melton Constable and Norwich section of the Nathanie:l Micklethwait, of Taverham 1Iall, is chief land-
Eastern and Midlands railway, II8 miles from London, 8 owner and lord of the manor; trustees of the late George
north-west from Norwich and 4 south-east from Reepham, Duckett .Hcrney csq. are also landowners. The soil is a light
in the Eastern division of the county, Taverham hundred lo~n; subsoil, sand and gravel. The chief crops are wheat,
and petty sessional division, St. Faith's union, county court roots, barley and hay. The area is 11 242A. 3R. 2or. ; rate-
district of Norwich, rural deanery of Taverham and arch- able value, .£1,002 ; the population in 1891 was 78.
deaconry and diocese of Norwich. The church of St . .An drew Parish Clerk, J obn Rayner.
is a small building of flint in the Perpendicular style, con- Letters arrive from Norwich by the Reepham mail cart at
sisting of chancel, nave, north aisle, south porch, with an s.so a.m. & are delivered about 8 a.m.; dispatchedats.xo
embattled western tower, partly covered with ivy, and con- p.m. Lenwade is the nearest money order & telegraph
taining one bell: the interior was restored in 1864, and office. The post office for this place is in the adjoining
affords ISO sittings. The register dates from the year 1712. village of Morton-on-the-Hill
The living is a vicarage, consolidated with the rectory of National School (mixed), which serves also for Morton-on-
.Alderford ; average tithe rent-charge £159, joint net yearly the-Hill, erected in 1872, for 50 children ; average a.ttend-
value £I6o, with 13~ acres of glebe, in the gift of the Dean ance, 30; Ellcn Jane Iremonger, mistress
and Chapter of Norwich, and held since I873 by the Rev. Railway Station, station master
Blyth Edward, blacksmith
Gray Henry, farmer
I Harrison Matthew, farmer, Church frm Howard John, farmer
.
AYLMERTON is a parish, on the road from Halt to hills separating this parish from Runton, in the parish of
Cromer, about 2! miles west-south-west from Cromer .Aylmerton, is a piece of ground commonly known as "the
station and 10 from North Walsham, in the Northern Roman Camp," and close to this spot are hollows called
division of the county, North Erpingham hundred and petty "the shrieking pits." Upon the cross roads in this parish,
sessional division, Erpingham union, Holt county court about three quarters of a mile from the church, stand the
district, rural deanery of Repps, archdeaconry of Norfolk base and shaft of an ancient stone cross, restored by the
and diocese of Norwich. The church of St. John the Baptist present rector about 1877, and supposed to have been a
is a. building of flint in the Perpendicular style, consisting of station for pilgrims between the abbeys of Walsingham and
chancel, nave, south porch and an embattled round tower Beeston. Robert William Ketton esq. J.P. of Felbrigg Hall,
of the 13th century, containing one bell : the old oak rood- is lord of the manor and chief landowner. The soil is a light
screen and chancel rail with poppy heads remain, as well as loam; subsoil, brick earth. The chief crops are wheat,
sedilia and a piscina : the building was partially restored in turnips, barley and grass. The area is 1,679 acres; rateable
I86S, and fully restored by the present rector in I876: there value, £r,467; the population in I891 was 298.
are three memorial windows : over the porch is a parvise, Sexton, Benjamin Cable.
still in excellent preservation, and on the north side are the
ruins of a chantry chapel: the church affords ISO sittings. PosT 0FFICE.-John Firmage, receiver. Letters are re-
The register dates from the year 16 96. The living is a dis- ceived through Norwich, via Roughton, arrive at 8 a.m.:
charged rectory, with that of Runton annexed, average tithe dispatched at 2.4s p.m. Cromer is the nearest money
rent-charge £363, joint gross yearly value £ 3 82, with order & telegraph office
residence (rebuilt and enlarged in 1879) and 62 acres of .A School Board of S members was formed in IB74 for the
.glebe, viz. 42 in .Aylmerton and 20 in Run ton, in the gift of united district of Aylmerton, Felbrigg, Metton & Sustead;
R. W. Ketton esq. and held since 1872 by the Rev. William Rev. Williarn Woodward Mills M.A. chairman & hon. clerk
Woodward Mills M. A. of Wadham College, Oxford, and rural to the board; James Kernp, Runton, attendance officer
dean. Here is a Free Methodist chapel, built in 1887. The Board School (mixed), built in 187S, at a cost of {,I,275, for
views of the ocean from the high grounds are exceedingly 108 children; average attendance, 88; Samuel Thomas
fine, and the surrounding scenery is picturesque. On the ' Groom, master
Mills Rev. William Woodward lll.A. Covell Herbert, sawyer Fuller Charles, farmer
[rector & rural dean], Rectory Edwards George, secretary to the Nor- Hall Robert, beer retailer
COMMERCIAL. folk & Norwich Amalgamated Labour Jeckels Robert, smith
Bird George, farmer Union (Cromer district) Jolly Arthur Hy. farmer, Church farm
Covell George, farmer .r Emery Charles, blacksmith Moy James, farmer
Covell Henry, farmer, & furnished Firmage John, shopkeeper, Post office Smith William, farmer, & furnished
apartments Fuller Benjamin, farmer apartments, Beacon farm
AYLSHAM, mentioned in Domesday as "Elesham," is a enriched with has-reliefs of the emblems of the four Evangel-
market and union town, head of a. county court district and ists, the instruments of the Passion, a.nd the arms of the
f>arish, on the banks of the river Bnre, which is navigable Duke of Lancaster, with other armorial insignia: the screens
hence to Yarmouth, having a station on the Great Eastern were painted with saints, martyrs and confessors, in 1507,
railway and another on the Eastern and Midlands railway, principally at the cost of Thomas Wymer, worsted weaver,
I25~ miles from London, 12 north from Norwich and 7 west whose tomb with brass effigy in shroud, and the date IS07,
from North Walsham, in the Northern division of the is in the church : here is also a brass with effigies as skeletons
county, South Erpingham hundred and petty sessional divi- in shrouds, to Richard Howard, citizen and sheriff of Nor-
sion, rural deanery of Ingworth and archdeaconry and wich, who, in 1488, built the church porch, and died 1499•
diocese of Norwich. The town is lighted with gas supplied and to Cecilia, his wife; there are other brasses to Thomas
by the Aylsham Gas Co.; there is no water supply except Tylson B. A. rector, c. 1490, with effigy in almuce and scrolls;
from wellii. The church of St. Michael is a building of flint and to Robert Farman and Katherine, his wife, c. 14901 and
in the Early English and Perpendicular styles, and was there are effigies of a man and his wife much worn: the
erected by John of Gaunt, Duke of Lancaster, the court of east window, the tracery of which has been restored, is
whose duchy was once held in this town ; it consists of chancel, decorated with stained glass, representing apostles, with
nave, aisles, south porch and a.n embattled western tower various devices, and the armorial bearings of the Hobarts,
with small spire containing a clock and 10 bells: the font i! Earls of Buckinghamshire, and those of the See of Norwich,
DIREOTORY.J NORFOLK. AYLSHAM. 209
impaling Stanley; there is another stained window to eight PUBLIC EsTABLISHMENTs:-
former vicars, and one containing some beautiful specimens Cemetery, Henry James Gidney, clerk to the burial board
of old glass, inserted at the expense of the late Rev. E. T. County Court, held at the Town halL bi-monthly, H1s
Ya.tes, a former vicar, together with the armorial bearings Honor Edwin Plumer Price- Q.C. judge; Henry JamPll
of his family, and of S. Pitman esq. then lay impropriator Gidney, registrar & high bailiff. The district comprises
of tbe parish, and the Dowager Lady Suflield: in a recess in the following parishes :-Alby-with-Thwaite, Aylsham,
the churchyard is the grave of Humphrcy Repton, the cele- Alderford, Banningham, Barningham Parva, Belaugh,
brated landscape gardener, who dierl 24 March, 1818: there Blickling, Brampton, Booton, .Burgh, Bra.ndi.ston, Buxton,
are 850 sittings. The register dates from the year 1653. Calthorpe, Cawston, Colby, Coltishall, Corpusty, Erping-
The living is a vicarage, tithe rent-charge £659, average ham, Foulsham, Guestwick, Haekford, Hautbois Magna,
[501, gross yearly value £540, net £218, including 5 acres Haveringland, Hevingham, Heydon, Hindolvcston, Ing-
of glebe, with residence, in the gift of the Dean and Chapter worth, Irmingland, Itteringham, Lammas-with-Hautbois
of Canterbury, and held since 1888 by the Rev. John Gurney Parva, Mannington, .Marsham, Oulton, Oxnead, H.eepham-
Hoare M.A. of Trinity College, Cambridge, rural dean of with-Kerdistone, Sail, Saxthorpe, Scottow, Skeyton,
Ingworth and surrogate. The Ecclesiastical Commissioners Stratton Strawless, Swanton Abbott, Swanington, Them-
hold the larger portion of the great tithes. A mission room elthorpe, Thurning, Tuttington, \V'hitwell, Wickmere,
was built in 1Bgo, on ground adjoining the churchyard, at a Witchingham (Great), Witchingham (Little), Wood
cost of £400, by Mr. B. Cook, who receives a nominal rent Dalling, Wood Xorton & Wolterton
for ita use as a parish room. The Baptist chapel is in White Certified Bailiffs appointed nnder "The Law of Distress
Hart street, Primitive Methodist on the Cawston road, Amendment Act," William Plane Lemon, Red Lion street,
Wesleyan in White Hart street, Reformed Wesleyan in Mill- Aylsham & Samuel Maidstone, Town hall, Aylsham
gate, and the Gospel hall on the Cawston road; at Abbots County Police Station, Blickling road, Mark Grimes,
Hall is a Catholic chapel, in which services are held occasion- superintendent & 14 constables
ally. The Cemetery of two acres was formed in 1855 at a Inland Revenue Office, Black Boys hotel, Market place,
cost of £6oo, and is under the control of a Burial Board of Frederick William Schneider, officer
nine members. The Town Hall, m the Market place, is a Stamp Office, Market place, Charles Clements, distributor
structure of red brick, and has a reading room and literary Town Hall, Market place, Waiter Mileham, clerk & sec.;
institute attached. Fairs are held yearly on March 23rd and George N ea le, keeper
last Tuesday in September. A Savings Bank was established VoLUNTEERS:-
in 1818; here is also a Literary Institution. Cressey's 3rd Volunteer Battalion Norfolk Regiment (C Co.), Hon.
charity of £34 yearly is for clothing. Abbots Hall, erected Major Benjamin Beckham Sapwell, commanding; H. J.
in r6ro by a member of the Wood family, and now the pro- Gidney, lieutenant
perty of Philip Candler Shepheard esq. stands on the site of AYLSH.A.M UNION.
the ancient moated residence, and is occupied as a farm- Board days, tuesday, fortnightly, at th Union workhouse at
house. There are four manors, Aylsham Lancaster manor, Aylsbam.
belonging to Constance, Marchioness of Lothian; the The Union includes the following parishes :-Alby-with-
Vicarage manor, belonging to the vicar; Sexton's manor, Thwaite, Aylsham, Banningham, Barningham Parva,
commonly called "Aylsham Wood," the property of Thomas Belaugh, Blickling, Brampton, Burgh, Buxton, Calthorpe,
Copeman esq.; and Bolwick manor, belonging toW. S. Cawston, Colby, Coltishall, Corpusty, Erpingham, Foul~-
Calvert esq. but now (1892) occupied by Charles Louis ham, Guestwick, Hackford- by- Reepham, Hautbois
Huxton esq. J.P. Orchard House is the residence of Major- Magna, Hevingham, Heydon, Hindolveston, Ingworth,
Gen. Henry Richard Legge Newdigate C. H., J.P. The prin- Irmingland, Itteringham, Lammas-with-Little Hautbois,
cipal landowners are Constance, Marchioness of Lothian, Mannington, Marsham, Oulton, Oxnead, Reepham-with-
Robert John Woods Purdy esq. Charles Louis Buxton esq. Kerdistone, Sail, Saxthorpe, Scottow, Skeyton, Stratton
J.P. of Marsham, Col. Edward John Stracey-Clitherow, of Strawless, Swanton Abbott, Themelthorpe, 'fhurning,
Brentford, James Redfoord Bulwer esq. Q.C. Pbilip Tuttington, Whitwell, Wickmere, Woltarton, Wood
Candler Shepheard esq. J.P. Major Benjamin Beckham, and Dalling & Wood Norton. The population of the union in
1\lrs. Sapwell, the Rev. Robert Alfred Rackham M.A. of 1891 was 17,452; area, 68,123 acres; rateable value,
Whatfield Rectory, the trustees of the late Thomas Henry £105,152
Case esq. and a few smaller owners. The area is 4,308 acres; Clerk to the Guardians & Assessment Committee, Henry
rateable value, £"n,457; in r88r the population of the James Gidney, Aylsham
parish was 2,674 1 including 134 officers and inmates in the, Treasurer, Hy.Birkbeck, jun. Gurney &Co.'s Bank,Norwich
workhouse. Guardians' School Attendance Officer, Edward John Bird,
Parish Clerk and Sexton of Cemetery, George Neale, Aylsham .
Town hall. Henry Parnell cemetery keeper Relieving & VaccinatiOn Officers, Buxton district, Frederic
' ' · W. C. Roe, Cawston road, Aylsham; Eynsford district,
PosT, M. 0. & T. 0., S. B. & Annuity & Insurance Office. Alfred William Seely, Reepham
-Charles Clements, postmaster. Letters through Nor-: Collector of Poor Rates, Robert Proudfoot, Red Lion street
wich are delivered at 7.30 (& 10 a.m. for callers only) & : Medical Officers & Public Vaccinators, xst district, Edward
3 p.m.; dispatched at 8.45 a. m. 12.15, 5 & 7 45 p.rn.; Verdon Perry, Reepham; 2nd district, William Gratwicke
sundays, delivery 7.30 a.m.; dispatched at 4·45 p.m Heaaman L.R.C.P.LOnd. Alborough; 3rd district, Clement
WALL LETTER BoxEs.-Millgate, cleared n. 30 a.m. 4 . 50 & P~ge Scott Wayman, ~o~lsha~; 4th district, Frederie
7.40 p.m. week days only; Cawston road, cleared 12 noon, Little_, Aylshat? ; 5th district, Edmund Reeve, RecJ?ha~;
4·45 & 7.25 p.m 6th district, RIChard John Morton, Aylsham; 7th district,
Hugh Taylor, Coltishall
COUNTY MAGISTRATES FOR SOUTH ERPINGHAM PETTY Superintendent Registrar, Henry James Girlney, Aylsham
SESSIONAL DIVISION. Deputy Superintendent Registrar, Edmund Dennis Browne,
Beauchamp Rev. Robert William, Rectory, Wickmere, Aylsham
Hanworth, Norwich, chairman Registrars of Births & Deaths, Eynsford sub-district, Alfred
Bolton Waiter Henry esq. Oulton hall, Aylsham W. Seely, Reepham; deputy, Austin HeP.1y, Reepham;
Buxton Charles Louis esq. Bolwick, Marsham, Norwich Buxton sub-district, F. W. C. Roe, AyLsham ; deputy,
Gorell Robert Atkinson esq. The Old hall, Coltishall, Norwich Charles Clements, AyLsham
Ives Robert esq. Calthorpe, Norwich Registrar of Marriages for the whole union, Rober~ Proud-
Marsham Major Henry Savill n.L. Rippon hall, Hevingham, foot, Market place, Aylsham; deputy, Uharles Clements,
Norwich AyLsham
Newdigate Major-General Henry Richard Legge c.H. The workhouse, erected in 1849, is a structure of red brick
Orchard house, Aylsham in the Elizabethan style, erected to hold 619 inmates, but
Rogers Richard esq. M.A. The Hall, Coltishall, Norwich there are now (1892) only 101; Rev. Thomas Barnes,
Shepheard Philip Candler esq. Aylsham chaplain ; Richard John Morton, medical officer ; Richard
Bushell, master; Mrs. Heleua Bushel!, matron; John W.
Clerk to the Magistrates, William Forster
Wesson, schoolmaster; A. C. Pumphery, porter & labour
Petty Sessions are held at the Town hall every 1st & 3rd master
tuesday at 12. The following places are included in the RURAL SANITARY AuTHORITY.
petty sessional division :-Alby-with-Thwaite, Aylsham, Meets at the Union, on tuesdays alternately, at 10.30 a.m.
Banningham, Barningham Parva, Belaugh, Blickling, Clerk, Henry James Gidney, Aylsham
Booton, Brampton, Burgh-next-Aylsham, Buxton, Cal- Treasurer, Hy.Birkbeck,jun.Gurney & Co.'s Bank, Norwich
thorpe, Cawston, Colby, Coltishall, Corpusty, Erpingham, Medical Officer of Health, Sir Frederic Bateman M.D. Upper
Hautbois Magna., Hevingham, Heydon, Ingworth, lrming- St. Giles street, N or·wich
land, Itteringham, Lammas-with-Hautbois Parva, l\Ian- Sanitary Inspector, Edward John Bird, Bank st. Aylsham
. nington, Marsham, Oulton, Oxnead, Sa.xthorpe, Scottnw, ScHOOL ATTRNIJANCK CoMMITTEE.
Skeyton, Stratton Strawless, Swanton Abbott, Tuttington, Clerk, Henry James Gidney, Aylsham
Wickmere & Wolterton Attendance Officer, E~ward John Bird
300 AYLSHAM. :KORFOLK. (KELLY's

PUBLIC OFFICERS:- Wesleyan Reformers, Millgate street, Rev. Edward Sibcy.


Clerk to the Hevingham & Felmingham U. D. School 2.30 & 6.30 p.m. k no morning service '
Boards, Henry J ames Gidney ScHOOLS : -
Clerk to the Commissioners of Income & Land Taxes,
Robert Howlett A free school was founded here in 1517 by Robert Jannp,
Clerk to the Navigation Commissioners, Hy. G. Wright mayor of Norwich in that year, & endowed with /;Io
Collector & Assessor of Taxes, Walter Mileham, Millgate from the funds of King Edward VI.'s hospital at Norwich,
Inspector for the Contagious Diseases (Animals) Act, but it is now merged in the National school
Thomas Sidney Barker M.B.c.v.s National, erected in 1848, for 150 boys & rso girls ; average
Inspector of Petroleum & of Weights & Measures, Mark attendance, 135 boys & 117 girls ; Thomas Hill, master;
Grimes, Blickling road Mrs. Mary Ann Hill, mistress
Town Crier, Samuel Maidstone, Town hall Nationa_l (infai;tts), for 15~ children; average attendance,
PLACES OF WoRSHIP, with times of services:- 87 i MISs Emily Tuck, mistress
St. Michael's Church, Rev. John Gurney Hoare M.A. vicar; RAILWAY STATIONS:-
1

Rev • .rohn Matthew Glubb M.A. curate; 8 & 10.45 a..m. & Aylsham (Great Eastern), George T. Solomon
3 & 6.3o p.m . ll h h bb Avlsham Town (Eastern & Midlands), Frank Rice, master
Catholic, mass occas10na y at t e c ape1 at A ots hall · •
Baptist, White Hart street, Rev. John Henry Carter; CONVEYANCE TO:-
10.45 a.m. & 6.30 p.m.; mon. 8 p.m NoRWICH-Stapleton's omnibus from Black Boys hot!ll,
Gospel hall, Cawston road, 10.30 a.m. & 6.30 p.m mon. wed. fri. & sat. at 9 a.m. returning from" Dukfl'$
Primitive Methodist, Cawston road, Rev. James Davison; Palace," Norwich, at 5 p.m.; extra omnibuses & vans on
I I a.m. & 2.30 & 6.30 p.m. ; thurs. 7.30 p.m saturdays, same hours, when required
Wesleyan, White Hart street, 10.45 a.m. & 6.30 p.m.; YARMOUTH-Bullock, Shreeve & Cook, each run wherrill$
wed. 7.30 p.m to & from, daily

PRIVATE RESIDENTS. Rix Richard, Cawston road Bruce & Son, auctioneers & general
Roy Alfred, Gothic house, Hungate st agents, agents for Bagshaw'a
Aldons Albert Frederick,Commercial rd Sapwell Major Benjamin Beckham, manures, half inch & dust bones,
Back The Misses, Church terrace Sankence, Cawston road nitrate of soda, fish & other salts k
Bansall Walter Henry M.B.. Heydon rd Sapwell Benjamin Beckham, jun. B.A., Heydon lime; valuations made for
Barker :Mrs. The Beeches, Blickling rd LL.B. Sankence, Cawston road probate, farm covenants &c.; special
Blades Arthur, White Hart street Shepheard Philip Candler J .P attention given to mill valuatiuns &
Bruce William, Blickling road Shuckburgh Miss, Beech gro. Pound rd machinery, Bank street
Bullock Stanley, Mill gate Sibcy Rev. Edward [Wesleyan Refor- i Bullock Stanley,miller ( water),Millgate
Calver William, Cawston road mers], Commercial road I Eushell Richard, master at workhouse
Carr Miss, Market place Slaymaker Rev. William [Baptist], ' Burton Edwd. blacksmith, Red Lion st
Carter Rev. John Henry [Baptist]. Bux:ton road Case&Goulder,agts. for Lawes' manures
White Hart street Smith Mrs. Blickling road Case James Lee, farmer, Valley farm
Case J a mea Lee, Valley farm Smith Mrs. Frederick, Market pbce Cemetery (Henry James Gidney, clerk
Clark James Blyth, Commercial toad Smith Mrs . .John, White Hart street to the burial board)
Clark Mrs. Commercial road SoameMiss, Cromer road Clarke Alfred Fuller, baker, Church hill
Cook Benjamin~ Hill house, Heydon rd Starling Frederick Wm. Cedar house. Clarke George Probert, ironmonger,
Cook Miss, Church terrace . Sutton Miss, Commercial road l\iarket place
Cooper Rev. Emest Simmons M. A. Tuck Mrs. Peterson's road Clarke George Wm. draper, RedLionst
[curate of Blickling], Market place Tuddenham Alexander R. Burgh rd Clarke John, manager to the gas wo~ks,
Copeman Miss, Blickling road Tuddenham John Henry, White Hart st Millgate
Copeman Thomas, Blickling road 'fuddenham Robert, Burgh road Clements Charles, printer, bookseller,
Cross Henry Ernest, The . Beeches, Wickes Mrs. The Belt stationer, news agent, fancy reposi-
Cawston road Williams Mrs. 'fhe Grange tory, & stamp distributor & deputy
Cnlley Frederick, Denmark place registrar of marriages & postmaster,
Da:vison Hev. James [Primitive Method- COMMERCIAL. Market place; & North Walsham
ist], Red Lion street Abbott Alfred, baker, White Hart street Caller R. & Sons, corn & coal merchants,
Dent Robert, Cromer road & Market place Great Eastern station; & at Attle-
· Dewhirst Charles Roger, Bank house Allen Thomas Pearson, leather dresser, borough ; Diss ; Thetford Sj; Norwich
Dixon Mrs. Ca wston road Dunkirk Connold Anna Elizabeth & Ernma
Dnnham Mrs. Church terrace App legate Hy.chimny .sweep,Cawstn. rd (Misses), ladies' school, Woodbine
Frostick John, Peterson's road Applegate James, refreshment house, villa, Cromer road
Gidney Henry James, Old Bank hotiSe Red Lion street Cook Benjamin, miller (steam), Dun-
Gilbert Mrs. Clement, Cromer road Aylsham Gas Co. Limited (Walter kirk; & Itteringham (water)
Gillman Mrs. Cawston road Mileham, sec.; Jn, Clarke, manager) Cooke William,beer retailer, Hungatest
Glubb Rev.John Matthew M.A.[cnrate], Aylsham Town Hall Co. Limited CorderOctavius,phar.cheru.ist,Markt.pl,
-The Limes (Waiter Mileham, sec) County Court; (Henry James Gidney
Gordon Christr. Jn. Elgin ho.Burgh rd Baldrey George, shopkeeper, Millgate registrar & high bailiff), Town
Goulder John, Cromer road BansaU Waiter Henry Ili.B. ·surgeon, hall
Goulder Mrs. Church hill . Heydon road Crave John, beer retailer, Dunkirk
Gun ton George, White Hart street Barker Thomas Sidney M.R.c.v.s, Culley Frederick, builder, contractol',
Hewitt George B. St. Michael's villas, veterinary surgeon, & inspector for stone mason & timber merchant,
Ca wston road the Contagious Diseases (Animals) Cawston road. See advertisement
Hoare Rev. John Gurney M.A. [vicar] Act, White Hart street Dale Deborah (Mrs.), hair dresser; &
Horstead John, Hungate street Bartrarn · Robert, builder & con- fancy repository, Red Lion street
Horstead Miss, Hungate street tractor & stone & marble mason, Davison Jas. miller (wind), Cawston rd
Howlett Robert, Market place Millgate si:reet Uewhirst Charles Roger, bank
Ingate Lewis, jun. Oak cot. Cromer rd Beck Mark, smith, machinist manager, insurance agent, & parillh
Ireland Mrs. Anthony, Sankence lodge, & agricultural implement churchwarden, Bank ]louse
Cawston road maker & agent; mowers & reapers Ducker Samuel, wheelwrig11t & beer
Jodrell Miss, Commercial road sold & repaired; all kinds of imple- retailer, White Hart street
Larner Miss, The Lodge, White Hart st ments .repaired, Burgh road Ducker Wil4am, saddler, Red Lion st
Le Neve ~frs. Hungate street Bellward Henry, shopkeeper, Millgate Durrell George, cowkeeper, Pound road
Little Frederick, Manor ho. Norwich rd street Edwards Johu (Mrs.), china dealer,.
Mileham Waiter, Victoria pl. Millgate Bexfield Richard, grocer, Red Lion st Market place
Miller Thomas, The Limes Bird Edward John, guardians' school Field Uriah, stone mason, Burgh road
Miller Watts, White Hart street attendance officer & sanitary in- Forster William, solicitor, & commis-
~Iorwn Mrs. Rushey place spector, Rank street 'I sioner tor oath.s & perpetual commis-
Morton Richard John, Market place Bird George, beer retailer, White .Ha.rt.st sioner & ~lerk to the magistrates,
N ewdigate Major-Gen. Henry Richard Bhwkburn Matilda (Mrs.), farmer, Market place · .
Legge J.P., C.B. Orchard house Burgh road. l<'ox Jol:m, poultry ,dealer, :Oral;>blegate
Page Alfred, Pinfold street BlackstoneWm. hair dresser ,Norwich rd I<'ol: Thus. wa t~h & clock m a. Red Lion st
Page Henry, Hungate house B)ofield William, butcher, Red Lion st I<'ox William Ernest, fancy repository,
Palmer Edgar G. Drabblegate house Brady & Pert, plumbers, Church hill White Hout stre~t .
Purdy Robert .John Woods, Woodgate Breese James, tailor, Market place I<'rankland. Hichard, ironmonger &
house, Cawston road Browne Edmund Dennis, deputy earthenware dealer, Hungate street
Ray John Norman, Paradise superintendent registrar, Red Lion st Frostick J obn, farmer, Buxton l'Oad
DIRECTORY.] NORFOLK. 4.YLSHAM..,. 301
Gidney Ilenry J ames, solicitor, & clerk Mileham Walter, correspondent to the Shreeve Edward, milliner & fancy
to the burial board, guardians & "Eastern Daily Press," "Norfolk draper, :Red Lion street
1uperintendent registrar, clerk to News," "Norwich Mercury," & Shreeve Thomas,farmer,miller(water),
assessment & school attendance com- "Lynn Advertiser," & collector & coal & manure merchant,Millgate; &
mittees, rural sanitary authority & to assessor of taxes, Millgate at Buxton Lammas & Cawston
Hevingham & Felrningham U.D. Miller Thomas, shoe maker, Market pl Smith Richard, horse dealer, Burgh rd
school boards, Old Bank house MortonRichard John,surgeon,&medical Soame Emily (Miss), young ladies~
Goodwin Rt. pork btchr. White Hart st officer, 6th district, & workhouse, school, Cromer road
Goulder John, farmer, Bulwer's & Mill- Aylsham union, Market place Soame James, farmer, The Spa
gate farms Moy Geo. boot & shoe ma. Carr's corner Soame John, farmer, Sprat's Ureen frm
Grimes Jas. butcher & farmer, Millgate Moy John, hawker, Carr's corner Spink Wm. fishmonger, Red Lion st
Grimes Mark, supt. of police, inspector Neale Arthur, bricklayer, Cawston road Spinks William Waiter, basket maker,
of petroleum & of weights &measures, Needham Waiter, umbrella repairer, Upper Hungate street
Blickling road White Hart street Stapleton Christmas, Black Boys com-
Gurneys, Birkbecks, Barclay & N ewton Thomas, boot & shoe maker, mercial hotel & posting house, &
Buxton, bankers (Charles Roger Market place mland revenue office, Market place.
Dewhirst, manager), Market place ; Nicholls Sushannah (Mrs.),White Horse See advertisement.
draw on Barclay, Bevan & Co. Lon- P.H. & butcher, Millgate Starling William 1 furnishing &
don E c Nuthall & Mason, pharmaceutical general ironmonger, oil & color man,
Hall Fredk.farmer, The Spa, Norwich rd chemists, Red Lion street Red Lion street
Hammond William Herbert, Stone- Orton George, farmer, Stonegate Stevens Samuel, thrashing machine
masons Arms P.H. Millgate Overton John, shopkpr. White Hart st proprietor, Commercial road
Horner Fredk. blacksmith, Cawston rd Overed Walter, vet. surgeon, School la Sutton ~usanna (Mrs.), outfitter, Red
Jolorstead .John Maystone, Pag-e Henry, grocer & draper, Market Lion street
• builder & contractor, Hungate place & Red Lion street Taylor Jn. Cross Keys P.H. Red Lion st
street ; & brick maker, Ban• Partridge Daniel, butcher, Red Lion st Thoday & Son, corn, cake, coal,
ningham Pa!ihley William, Dog Commercial hotel, seed & manure merchants
Howe Thomas, baker & beer retailer, cider merchant &c. posting house & Tight James, The Anchor P.H. & fish
Hungate street railway refreshment rms. Norwich rd curer, Millgate street
Howlett .Robert, clerk to the commis- Payne Robt. Thos. fruiterer,Red Lion st Tuddenham R. & Sons, builders, con-
sioners of income & land taxes & clerk Payne WJlliam, boot & shoe dealer, tractors,bricklayers,plasterers,under-
to the Wickmere School board, Mar· Red Lion street takers & cabinet makers,llurgh road.
ket place · PQll Henry, farmer, Cawston road See advertisement
Hubbard Stephen, plumber, glazier, Poll William, Bull inn, Red Lion street Tuddenham Fanny (Mrs.), butcher,
painter & paperhanger, Red Lion st . •Postle J. & Son, builders, Cawston rd Cawston road
lngate Lewis & Son, coach builder!!, Postle John,baker&shopkpr.Cawston rd Vincent Henry, tailor, White Hart st
Cromer road . Proudfoot Robert, shopkeeper, assistant VinceJames,manure merchant,Dunkirk
Inland Revenue Office, Black Boys overseer & registrar of marriages & Volunteer Battalion (3rd) Norfolk
hotel, Market place poor rate collector, Market place Regiment (C Co.) (Hon. Major B. B.
Jarvis James, boot maker, Hungate st Pryke James Barnett, grocer & general Sapwell, commanding; H.J.Gedney,
Jarvis Robert, boot maker, White Hart st draper, hatter, clothier & hosier, The lieut)
Jex George, shopkeeper, llungate st Millga.te stores Wade Charles Frederick, watch maker
Kemp William, New inn, Red Lion st Purdy Robert John Woods,landowner & & gunsmith, Hungate street
Lake James, farmer, Stonegate farmer, Woodgate house, Cawston rd Wade Waiter & Harry, carpenters
Laxen Albt.Richd.saddler &c. Market pl Reading Room & Library (C. R. Dew- &builders, braziers, gastitters & bell-
Laxen Horace, baker & confectioner, hirst, president ; Albert Frederick hangers, bicycle dealers & repairers,
Red Lion street Aldous, hon. sec.), Market place Penrold street
A.emon William Plane, auctioneer Reeves William, watch ma. Hungate st Ward C. H. &. Son, family
& farmer, Stonegate & Red Lion st Roe Frederic W. C. registrar of births grocers, provision merchants
Literary Institution (C. R. Dewhirst, & deaths for Buxton sub-district, & &. drapers, agents for W. & A.
president ; Albert Frederick Aldous, relieving & vaccination officer for Gilbey, wine & spirit merchants, &
bon. sec.), Market place Buxton district & Aylsbam union, ale & stout merchants, Market place
Little Frederick,surgeon,& medical offi- Cawston road Ward Ed.waid, jobbing gardener, Hun-
cer & public vaccinator, 4th district, Rought William, seedsman & florist, gate street
Aylsham union, Manor house, Nor- Cawston road Warne Elizh. (Mrs.), farmer, The Spa
wich road Roy Julia (:\iiss), private school (girls'), Warne George, beer retailer & shop-
Lomax Samuel, butcher, Red Lion st Gothic House school keeper, Cawston road
&.ove Frederick, furniture dealer, Sandell George, steward toP. C. Shep- Whiley Walter,Unicorn P.H.Hungate st
furnishing & general ironmonger & heard esq. J.P. Abbots hall White William Frankland, saddler &
implement agent, oil & calor mer- Sands Mary Ann (Miss), dress maker, harness maker, Red Lion street; &
chant, Market place Burgh road Cawston&Buxton. See advertisement
Maidstone Samuel, bailiff of county Sapwell Major HenjaminBeckham,land- Whittaker Last, watch & clock maker,
court, bill poster, town crier &c. back owner & farmer, Sankence,Ca wston rd Market place
of Town hall Sapwellllenjamin Beckham, jun. B.A., Williamson Fras. fishmonger,Market pl
March John, grocer, draper & provision LL.B. barrister at law, Sankence, Williamson Hy. shopkeeper,RedLion st
dealer, Cromer road Cawston road; & I Garden court, Winterborn Geo,millwright,Cawston rd
Martin Walter John, blacksmith,Staithe Temple E c Winterborn Jas.millwright,Cawston rd
& Burgh Savings Bank (H. G. Wright, sec.; Wmterborn Wm. shopkpr. Cawston rd
}laude Major, chemist, Norwich road open monday 1:2 to I), Market place Woodhouse Edward, Red Lion family
Medlar Cubitt, butcher, Hungate st SchneidcrFk. Wm.inland revenue officer & commercial hotel, Red Lion street
Middleton John (Mrs.), shopkeeper, Seymour Berney, photographer, Corn- Wright Elijah, boat builder, Millgate st
Commercial road mercial road Wright James, steward to Major B. B.
Miller Henry, shoe maker, Red Lion st Shepheard Philip Candler J.P. surgeon I Sapwell

DABINGLEY is a parish on the Eabingley river, 5~ they are missing between 1773 and r8r2. The living is a
miles north-north-east from Lynn, and 2 miles east from rectory, annexed to that of Sandringham and West Newton
Wolferton station on the Lynn and Hunstanton section of and the vicarage of Appleton, average tithe rent-charge
the Great Eastern railway, in the North Western division £,271, joint gross yearly value £363, with ;:;8 acres of glebe,
()f the county, Freebridge Lynn hundred, petty sessional in the gift of H.R.H. the Prince of Wales, and held since
division and union, county court distric11· of Lynn, rural 1878 by the Rev. Frederick Alrred John Hervey M.A. of
deanery of Lynn Free bridge and archdeaconry and diocese Trinity College, Cambridge, domestic chaplain and chaplain-
of Norwich. The church of St. Felix: is an ancient building in-ordinary to H.R.H. the Prince of Wales and hon. canon
()f stone in the Norman style, consistingofl)ave, small south of Norwich, who resides at Sandringham. H.R.H. the
aisle, south porch and an embattled western tower, contain- Prince of Wales owns the whole of the land and is lord of the
.ing one bell: the chancel, which is in ruins, retams the manor. The soil is partly sand; the parts under cultiva-
remains of a Norman sedile, and the walls, now covered tion are some light and peaty and some alluvial; subsoil,
with ivy, are supposed to occupy the site where the first clay. The land is partly in pasture and partly cropped
Christian church was erected in East Anglia, by St. Felix, upon the four-course system. The area is 850 acres; rate~
the Burgundian, on his landing here about A. D. 6oo: there able value, [,780; the population in rBgr was 8g.
are 6o sittings. The registers date from the year 1662, but Letters rec~ived through Lynn, via Castle Rising, arrive ati
C. N. & S. 20
302 · B.ABINGLEY. NORFOLK. (KELLY's
5.3o- a. m.; dispatched at 7 p.m. Dersingham is the The children Clf this place attend the school at West Newton
nearest money order & telegraph office about. 2 miles distant . ' · ' '
Betts Edward William, farmer, Babingley hall
:BACONSTHORPE is 11 parish, about 3 miles east- in the chorch by Mrs. Upcher, wife of the present rector, as
t~outh-east from Holt station on the Melton and Cromer a memorial to her parents, the Rev. N. Simons, vicar of
section of the Eastern and Midland9 railway and 7 south· Bramfield, Suffolk, and his wife: there ara 275 sittings.
west from Cromer, in the Northern division of the county, The register dates from the year 1692, the old rectory house
South Erpingham hundred, North Erpingham petty ses- and earlier regi!!ters having been burn~ just before that
sibnal division, Erpingham union, Holt county court district, date. The living is a rectory, average tithe rent-oharge
rural deanery of Ingworth and archdeaconry and diocese of £265, net yearly value of livmg £242, including 30 acres of
Norwich. The church of St. Mary is an edifice chiefly in glebe, with residence, in the gift of the trustees of the late
the Perpendicular style, consisting of chancel, nave and Henry Ramsey Upcher esq. and held since 1886 by the
aisles and an embattled west€rn tower with pinnacles con- Rev.Arthur Hamilton Upcher M.A. of 'frinityCollege,Cam-
taining a clock and one bell :it was partly destroyed by the bridge. Here is a Wesleyan chapel, built in 1844. A sum
fall of the steeple in 1729, but repaired in 1779, and again of £5, bequeathed by Thomas Newman in r6g8, is distributed
thoroughly restored at a cost of ,£"1,3oo, under ~he superin- among the poor yp_arly on Easter Monday, John Stanley Mott
dcnce of the late rector, in the year 186g: in the church is esq. who is lord of the manor, John Henry Gurney esq. J.P.
an interesting monument to Sir Christopher Hey don and of Keswick Hall, and Constance MarchionPSS of Lothian are
his wife, dated 1593, and other memorials to Annc and Lady the principal landowners. The soil is chiefly light; subsoil,
Temperance, wives of Sir Christopher Heydun, who died marl and sand. The chief crops are wheat, turnips, barley
respectively in 1561 and 1579 : there is also a tomb with and grass. The area is 1,360 acres; rateable value, £1,703;
effigy and shield of arms to Dame Ann, daughter of John the population in 1891 wa~ 296.
Dodg esq. and wife of Sir Christopher Heydon, ob. 1642; PosT 0FFIC&..-l''rederio :Merton Webb, receiver. Letters
brasse!t to Alice Heydon (r495) and Henry Heydon (1479), arrive from Dereham by messenger from Holt R.S.O. at
and a· monument to the Rev. Joseph Clark, 40 years rector B.rs a. m. 1 dispatched at 4~15 p.m. No post on sundays.
of this parish, and his wife, d. 1700: opening through the • Holt is the nearest money order & telegraph office.
wall into the present vestry is an Easter sepulchre, with Postal orders are issued here, but not paid
folding doors: the stained east window is a memorial to National School (mixed), erected in 1816 for this parish &
John Partndge M.A. 21 years rector of Baconsthorpe and the adjoining parish of Hempstead ; th() school will hold
Bodham, d. 1861, and was erected by his children: there I~o children; average attendance, 53; Miss Florence
are several others: a new lectern has been recently placed Eleanor Price, mistress
Garwood Miss, Poplar cottage Dew John, farm bailiff to exors. of :Mrs. Neale John William, builder, carpenter
Springfield Thos. Osborn J.P. Manor ho Girling & wheelwright
rpcher Rev. Arthur llamilton M. A. Fisher Robert, farmer Pigott George, farmer
Rectory Gray John, blacksmith Rivett William John, hawker
. COMMERCIAL. Harrison James, farmer Seaman George William, farmer
llaconsthorpe Coffee & Reading Rooms Harrison Noah, farmer ·· Silence AlfredJa.mes,'bui!der,carpenter,
(John William N eale, hon. sec) Harrison Samuel, farmer ' wheelwright, undertaker, draper,
BurtonFrances(Mrs.),JollyFarmersP.R King Richard, farmer ironmonger & general de>aler
Cla~ton Maria (Mrs.), shopkeeper Mack Richard, farmer, Old Ball farm Smith George, farmer
Cletheroe St.ephen, farmer Mann John, shoe maker Webb I<'redcrjc • Merton, shopkeeper,
1
Fisher Pbilip, shoe maker Neale Robert, farmer, Manor farm Post office .r
"\

BACT ON is a large parish on the sea eoast, comprising Norman; chapter house, the east end of the Early English r&o
the hamlets of BACTON GREEN and BROMROLM, 5 miles fectory, the common house, late 15th century, and the gate
north-east from North ''Valsham station on the Great house, which is Transition Norman, with Pe-rpendicular
Eastern and Eastern and Midlands rail ways and I I south~ additions. Shrimps, herrings and {)ther fish are caught off
east from Cromer, in the Eastern division of the county,· this coast. The Earl of Kimberley is lord of the manor and
Tunstead and Happing petty sessional division, Tunstead impropriator of the great tithes. The principal landowners
hundred, union of Smallburgh, North Walsharn county are the Earl of Kimberley, William Cubitt esq. Miss Cubitt,
court distl'ict, rural deanery of Waxham, Tnnstea.d division, :Maris John Collings and William Forster esq. of Blickling.
archdeaconry of Norfolk and diocese of Norwich. The The soil is a good mix-ed loam. The chief crops are wheat,
church of St. Andrew, standing on an eminence, is a build- eats and barley. The. area is I, 134= acres, and 170 of water
ing of flint, consisting of chancel, nave, south porch and an and foreshore l rateable value, £2,340. The population in
embattled 'western tower containing 5 bells t the church was 1891 was 394· By the Divided Parishes Act a detached
thoroughly restored in 1847, at an expense of about £8oo: part of this parish was amalgama.ted with Edingthorp6
there are 250 sittings. The register dates from the year in 1885. " .,
1558. The living is a vicarage, avemge yearly value from BROMIIOLM is a mile south-east. '
tithe reht-charge £ r66, with 29 acres of glebB, in the gift of Parish Clerk, William Banyer.
the Earl of Kimberley, and held since 1873 by the Rev. t
Thomas Warner Moeran B. A. Trinity College, Dublin. Here PosT, M. 0. & T. 0., S. B. & Annuity & Insurance Office.-
is a Baptist chapel, erected in 1 322 . In 1 s36 and 1 a45 the Robert Haggith, receiver. LetteJS are rec.eived through
sea made considerable encroachments on this coast. Near North Walsham; delivered at 8.30 a.m.; dispatched at
Keswick are the ruins of Bromholm Priory, founded in III3 4 p.m. No sunday post
by W. Glanville for monks of the Cluniac ordC'l', and dedi· Coastguarq Station, James O'Neil, chief officer, & 4 men
cated to the Holy Sepulchre and SS. Mary and Andrew; it National School (mixed), erected in ~86o, (Ol"' wo chil~ren;
was at first a cell of Castleacre, but was made independent . attendance, 70; :Miss Elizabeth Grix, mistress
in 1298 ; the church was I94 feet in length and had a famous CARRIERS . .-James Abigail, every fri. to Norwich; & Mrs.
rood; the remains include the north transept, Transition . Blogg, to North Walsham, wed. & sat ,
J PRIVATE RESIDENTS. Wilier William • Marshall James, thatcher
Armstrong Richard Wrench Mrs , Money Cbarles, grocer & farmer
Cannon Edward COMMERCIAL. O'N eil James, coastguard officer
Cubitt Arnold, The Grange .Abigail James, carrier Pilgrim George, grocer, par:\.{ butcher,
Cubitt Miss Banyer John, Ship inn farmer & landowner
Cubitt Mrs. The Grange Clarke John William, farmer Proudfoot Richard Francis, Duke of
Cubitt WilliamPartridge, Abbey Collings Maris Jn. farri'Jer & landowner' Edinburgh hotel,·/iood accdmmoda-
Darnell Phillip, Barrington house Cubitt William Partridge, farmer, tiou for commercials, families &
G1rling John Calk Racton abbey gentlemen; horses & traps 'on hire~
Rarocy Mrs Gotts Marshall, bricklayer . & family but.cher •11. ' 1111 '
Martin Mrs Haggith Robt.grocer & drpr.Post office Smith George, grocer' •I 1 1
::Moeran Rev. Thos. Warner n.A. [vicar] Harmer William, farmel"' SpinksGeo.fatm 'bi!ilifHoWm.Fosteresq
Read J. H. F Larter ltichard, blacksmith Story James RoMr,t', p1umber J •
Sayer Williarn. 1 Red house , Larter Robert, wheelwright Tuck Williatn, carpenter'.1' ' '" • ••

Sh~pheard Miss Long' Robert; King's Arms P.R. boot & I Willer' Richard, farm 'Steward to Lord
Smith M~. Bacton house .shoe ttlaker & grocer ' 1 • Wodehonse, B~cton Wood farm
f j I' '

:BAGTHORPE is a parish and village, 9 miles west-by-! county, Gallow hundred and petty S'essional division, Dock•
north from Fakenham, 8 south-west from Burnham Market, ing union, Little Walsinghatn county court district, rural
4 south-east from Docking station on the Lynn and Wells deanery or Burnham, archdeaconry of Norfolk and diocel!8
section of the Great Eastern railway and r6 north-east-by- or Nor~ich. The church of St. Mary, rebuilt about 1856,
north from Lynn, in the North Western division of the is a small structure of flint, with stone dressings, in the
DIREafORY.] NORFOLK
• 0 BA~HAM. 303
Pointed style, consisting of chancel, nave, small north porch, red brick mansion, standing in well-wooded grounds, and
vestry, and a turret over the chancel arch containing 2 bells: enlarged and restored in r875, is now (1892) occupied by
the east window is stained, and there is a very large and Mr. Liouel Roc:lwell, farmer. The trustees of H. J. D.
ancient font : the church affords 70 sittings. The register Dugmore esq. are lords of the manor and chief landowners.
dates from the year r_562. l'he living is a rectory, average The soil is light and sandy; subsoil, principally gravel. The
tithe rent-charge, £ ro6, net annual income £100, with xo crops are on the four-course system. The area is 763 acres ;
acres of glebe; in the gift of the trustees of the late H. J. rateable value, fAI7 ; the population in r8gr was go.
Dennis Dugmore esq. and held since r875 by the Rev. Parish Clerk, James Benton.
Edward Martin Pitt M.A. of Wadham College, Oxford, who
resides at Hunstanton; the Rev. James Tarbuck has been LETTER Box cleared at 5 p.m. Letters are received through
curate in charge since r8n and resides at Stanhoe. There Lynn, via Great Bircham; arrive at 9 a. m. The nearest
is a charity of £roo invested in £ 2i per cent. Consols, the money order office is at Docking. No collection on sundays
interest of which is given in money. Bagthorpe Hall, a fine The children of this place attend the school at Gt. Bircham
Rodwell Lionel, farmer, Bagthorpe hall
BALE is a parish about 8 miles north-east from Faken- Rev. Herbert Methuen Wells B.A. of University College, Ox-
ham,. ~ north-east from Thursford station on the King's ford. The rectory is a handsome brick building, erected in
Lyon

and Melton Constable section of the Eastern and Mid- 1872. Here was formerly a. chapel ded1cated to St. Botolph.
lands railway and 5 west from Bolt, in the Northern Charities amounting to £7 annually, are distributed to the-
division of the county, Holt hundred and petty sessional divi- poor of the parish in. blankets. Sir Lawrence John Jones
sion~ Walsingham union and county court district, rural bart. J.P. of Cranmer Hall, lord of the manor, and Edward
deanery of Ilolt and archdeaconry and diocese of Norwich. Bowyer Sparke esq. M.A., D.L., J.P. of Gunthorpe Hall, ar~.
The church of All Saints is an edifice of flint, with stone the principal landowners. The soil is mixed; subsoil, chiefly
dressings, in the Later English an(i Decorated styles, con- clar. Tbe chief crops are wheat and turnips. The area.
sisting of chancel, nave, north transept, south porch and an is r,o51 l)ocres; rateable value, £ r,38o; the population in
embattled western tower containing 5 bells : the windows on r8g1 was 239.
the south side of the chancel are filled with ancient stained Parish Clerk, William Haines. •
glass and in the chancel is a piscina: the church was re.
paired and repewed ~n r863-4, and has 150 sittings, 50 PosT 0FFICE.-Georgo Johnson, sub-postmaster. Letter.E!
being free. The register dates from the year 1538. The through Briningham S.O. arrive about 8.ro a.m. ; dis-<
living is a discharged rectory, annexed to that of Gunthorpe, patched at 4.25 p.m. The nearest money order & tele--rJ
average tithe rent-charge £soB, joint gross yearly value office is at Melton Constable ·
£570, with 65 acres of glebe and residence, in the gift of The children of this place attend the schools at Gunthorpe
Edward Bowyer Sparke esq. and held since 1890 by the & Field Dalling
Wells Rev. HerbertMethuen B. A. Rectory I Hammond J olm, sen. M. R.C. v. s. veteri- I J ohnson George, shopkeeper, Post office
Farrow George,farm bailiff to Mr. John nary surgeon, inspector under the I Lake Richard, Bale Oak P.H
Hammond, Clip Street farm Contagious Diseases (Animals) Act, Long Henry Thomas, farmer & owner
HammondJohn, jun. M.R.C.v.s. assist- & farmer, Manor farm Long Robert, blacksmith
ant veterinary
. .
surgeon I-Iaines Mary Ann (Miss), shopkeeper Sands William, farmer
BANHAM is a picturesque village and parish on the ~ largely manufactured here by Messrs. Gaymer and Son,
road from Attleborough to Diss, 6 miles north-west from whose establishment is of nearly two centuries' standing.
Diss station on the Ipswich and Norwich section, 3~ east- Messrs. Richard Rout and Son are also large cider manufac-
by-south from Eccles Road station on the Thetford and turers. Charities.-The" town lands," consisting- of about
Norwich section of the Great Eastern railway, and 6 south 3 acres in Banham Heath, produce £6 yearly, and the fuel.
from .Attleborough, in the Mid division of the county, Guilt- allotment about /,r6 12s. yearly; there is also an estate in
cross and Shropharn petty sessional di\·ision, Guiltcross Kenninghall Park common containing 90 acres, with farm
hundred and union, Attleborough county court district, buildings, producing £92 ros. yearly; a piece of land called
rura~ deanery of Rockland, archdeaconry of Norfolk and "Bid well's gift," producing ros. yearly; and £r yearly,
diocese of Norwich. The church of St. .Mary the Virgin being a charge on another piece of land called "Gawdy's
i~ a beautiful structure of flint in the Perpendicular style, donation;" the above amounts are given yearly tu the poor
consisting of chancel, clerestoried nave of five bays, aisles, of the parish in coals and calieo : the church lands produ(.Y"
south porch and a western tower with spire containing 6 £44 ros. yearly for the repair of the church. A. Taylor esq.
bells : there are two stained windows, erected in 18 77 to the of !'inebanks Tower, Thorpe, who is lord of the mano-r, Lord
wire and son of the present rector: the pulpit is of carved Egerton of Tattun, John Bird esq. of Banham, Edmund
oak: in the chancel is an ancient wooden effigy of S1r Hugh Barker, Thomas Leonard Palmer and John Henry Palmer
Bardolph, the reputed founder of this church, and on the esq. Mrs. Bailey and Jeremiah James Colman esq. M.P. of
floor of the naye a small brass to Dame Elizabeth Wastneys: Carrow House, Norwich, are the principal landowners. The
the interior was restored in 1865 and reseated with open land is of mixed soil ; subsoil, gravel, clay and marl. The
benches at the cost of the rector, and now affords soo sit- chief crops arc wheat, barley and oats. The area is 3,963
tings, half of which are free. The register dates from the acres; rateable value, £s,ogr; the population in 188r was
year 1558, and is in e-x:cellent preservation. The living is r,142, in r8gr was r,059·
a recto:y, av~rage tithe rent-charge £859_, net y~rly val~e POsT, M. 0. & T. 0., S. B. & Annuity & Insurance Office.-
£330• mcludmg 36 acres of glebe an~ residence, m the gift Alfred Charles Sa.unders,sub-postmaster. Letters received
of the Lord Chancellor, and held_ s!nce r856 b~ the _Rev. from Attleborough at 7 _15 a.m.; dispatched at 9 . 20 a.m.
John George Fa~dell M.A.. of Chnst s ~ollege, Uambndge. & _10 p.m .. sundays dispatched at l 0 . 20 a.m
About half a m1le west of the town 1s a cemetery of r~ 7 '
acres of land, given by the rector as an addition to the WALL LETTER llox cleared p,t 9-25 a. xn. & 7· 15 p.m. i BUll•
churchyard, and containing a mortuary chapel. Here are days 10.35 a.m
Wesleyan and Primitive Methodist chapels. About three- A School Board of 5 member& was formed compulsorily May
quarters of a mile west of the town are manufactories of 20, r875; Jn. Roper, clerk to the board & attendance officer
bricks, tiles and chimney pots, the clay obtained in this Board School, built in 1878, for r83 children ; average attend-
locality being eminently adapted for the purpose. Cider is ance, 150 ; Leonard William Leader, master
Cole William Bird;Jn.farmer & landowner, The Grove FisherJosiah,farmr.beam,scale,rnachine
Fardell Rev.John George M. A. [rector], Black burn Robt.farmer & miller (wind) & weight niB-k.er & weight adjuster
Rectory Bowen Thomas, wheelwright Frost James, farmer
Hartigan Rev. Alien Stewart [curate] Brown Thomas, Crown P.H. & farmer Gayrner Williarn & Son, cider
Huggins Robert .Bullock Francis, beer retailer manufacturers, 868 advertisement
Roper Miss Calton Esther (Mrs.), clothier Gaymer Edward Thomas, farmer
Chapman George, blacksmith Gaymer Wm. farmer & cider merchant
COMMERCIAL. Cole William, grammar school (F. G. Gibson Thomas,Brickmakers' .Arms P.H

Allam Robert, Horse .Shoes P.H Cole, second master; G. Newall M.A. Hardy Peregrine 1 farmer
Armes Josepq, farmer & miller (wind) senior classical z;naster); candidates Holder Henry, farmer
Barker William, miller (wind) are prepared for the UniversitiB~;~, Ilmnphrey Elizabeth(Mrs. ),shopkeeper
Barnard Albm;t, taiiQr . Cambridge local,Civil Servicf\College HuntJacobJas.coaoh bldr.& wheelwrght
Beales William, farmer, ,Old IIall farm ; of Preceptors & other examinations Hunt James, farmer
& at Old Buck11nham CracknellElizh.(Miss),plumber&farmer aunt Jol:m.Birkbeck,brick & tile maker
Bethell John Edgar Ward, saddler & Cracknell J emima (Mrs. ).corn chandler &. farmer '
harness maker Cracknell John William, farmer Hurrell William, blacksmith &c
Betney Henry, farmer Filbey .;fohn, farmer Jex-Blake-Charles,farmer, Church farm.
C. N. & S. 20*
304 BANHAM. NORFOLK.

. [KELLY's
Kemp Robert, shopkeeper Robinson David, farmer &. white & red Smith John, King's Head P.H
Kettle Alfred, Greyhound P.H.& plumbr facing & moulding bricks, tiles & Smith Jn. Ancterbury, draper & grocer
Kingham James, farmer drain pipe manufacturer Spurling Jarnes, wheelwright
Lambert Henry C. pork butcher Ropcr John, farmer & assistant overseer Stantial Step hen, farmer
Lo.mbert James, fanner & pig dealer & clerk to school board Stone Jarnes, farmer
Lane Henry Bower, farmer Rout. Richard & Son, cider manufac- Stone James Ernest, farmer
Lighton Alfred, shoe maker turers. See advertisement Taylor Henry (exors. of), wheelwrights
Ludkin William & Son, builders Rout George Laban, market gardener & carpenters
Morley Daniel, baker & cider dealer Taylor Herbert, bricklayer
Osborn John, farmer RoutRichd.butcher,farmer &cider mer Turvey James, farmer
Palmer JohnHenry,farmer & landowner Ryder James, boot & shoe maker Turvey John, lime burner
Patrick Jacob, coal dealer Saunders Alfred Chas. draper & grocer, Wake George, farmer
Pitchers William, Red Lion P.H Post office Wells 1\'Iary Ann (Miss), ladies' school
Ribbons Charles, greengrocer Saunders James, farmer, Rectory farm 1 Willgrass John, farmer

BANNING HAM is a parish and scattered village, 2~ the gift of G. Willis esq. and held since r884 by the Rev.
miles north-east from Aylsham station on the East Norfolk l{ichard Cleary B.A. of Trinity College, Toronto. The poor
branch of the Great Eastern railway and 2 miles uortb.- have £5 yearly from land left by the Rev. S. Wanlev, and 3
east from Aylsham Town station on the Eastern and Mid- roods called ''the Labourers' pightle." Here is a brick and
lands railway and 5 west from North Walsham, in the tile manufactory. The trustees of the Late W. Wyndham
Northern division of the county, South Erpingham hundred esq. are the lords of the manor. The principal landowners
and petty sessional division, Aylsham union and county are George Copeman esq. of Little Dunham, Mrs. Cubitt,
court district, rural deanery of Ingworth and archdeaconry Robert Elden Palmer esq. and Benjamin Cook esq. The
and diocese of Norwich. The church of St. Botolph is an soil is mixed; subsoil, clay. The chief crops are wheat,
ancient building of tlint in the Perpendicular style, consist- oats and barley. The area is 910 acres 25 perches; rate-
ing of chancel, nave, north porch and an embattled western able value, £r,593; the population in 1881 was I39·
tower, which now contains only one bell, the other two Parish Clerk, William Barnes.
having been sold in r8o8 t.o defray the expense of re-leading PosT OFFrc-.;:.-Robert Crane, postmaster. Letters through
the nave: the church has been reseated at the expense of Aylsham, the nearest money order & telegraph office,
Ueorge Copeman esq. of Little Dunham Lodge: the win- arrive at 8. ro a.m. ; dispatched from PILLAR LETTER
dows contain remains of ancient stained glass : there are Box at 4.15 p.m. on week days only
200 sittings. The register dates from the year 1709. The This place is included in the Felmingham United School
living is a rectory, average tithe rent-charge £293, gross Board district, formed in r875; the children attend the
yearly value £309, with 17 acres of glebe and residence, in Coleby school
Balls Mrs. Manor house DoughtyWalt.Bridge inn,& pork butchr ' Horstead John Maystone, brick & tile
Cleary Rev. Richd. B. A. [rector J, Rectory Dyke James, farmer maker ; & at Aylsham
Eastoe John Robert, farmer 'Burst Sarah Ann (Mrs.), Crown inn,&
COMMERCI.A.L. Eastoe William, farmer, & cattle d~aler / grocer &c
Amies Henry, farmer Eldcn Philip, farmer, Church farm Laskey Mary (Mrs.), shopkeeper
1

Atkins Elizabeth (Mrs.), farmer Frostick George, farmer / Palmer Robert Elden, farmer
CraneRobert,blacksmith&wheelwright, Griffin William Edward, farmer, Ban- Roofe Thomas, farmer
Post office ningham hall Sharpin Thomas, farmer
Cutting Robert, farmer Helsdon Jeremiah, cattle dealer Sutton Herbert, farmer

DARFORD is a village and parish, bounded on the distributed as follows :-ros. for bread, 10s. for books, Ios.
north and north-east by the river Yare, 5 miles north-by- to the minister for preaching a commemoration sermon, and
west from Wymondham station on the Thetford and Nor- 2s. 6d. to the clerk. Mrs. Clarke, who is lady of the manor
wich section of the Great Eastern railway, and 8 west-by- of Barford Hall, Lord Stafford, lord of the manor of Cos-
south from Norwich, in the Mid division of the county, tessey, and the trustee& of the late Ferdinand Ives esq. are
Forehoe hundred, petty sessional division and union, Nor- t.he principal landowners. The soil is various ; subsoil,
wich county court district, rural deanery of Hingham, sandy. The chief crops are wheat, barley, peas and turnips.
Forehoe division, archdeaconry of Norfolk and diocese of The area is r,o83 acres; rateable value, £1,692; the popu·
Norwich. The church of St. Botolph is a. small edifice of lation in 1891 was 363.
flint and rubble, originally Early English, but afterwards re- Parish Clerk, William Thrower.
paired in the Perpendicular and o\her styles, and consists of
.chancel, nave, south porch and a plain western tower con- PosT 0FFICE.-Thomas Stubbings, receiver. Letters from
-taining 3 bells: there is an aumbry and a piscina behind the Wymondham arrive about 9 a.m. ; dispatched at 6 p.m.
reredos ; at the east end of the nave are two altars, that on Barnham Broom is the nearest money order office & the
the north side being St. Nicholas's and that on the south side telegraph office is at Wymondham
.St. Mary's: in 1891 the pulpit and altar were raised and the A School Board of 5 members was formed compulsorily May
church generally refitted : it now affords 120 sittings. The 28, 1875, R. Grigson, Upper King street, Norwich, clerk
register dates from the year 1700. The living is a rectory, to the board ; Alfred Barnard, Barnham Broom, attend.
gross yearly value £288, including go acres of glebe, in the ance officer
.gift of and held since r8g1 by the Rev. Charles Elrington
Browne cam. scho. Line. Here is a Primitive Methodist Board School (mixed), erected in 1877 at a cost of about
chapel. Charities amounting to about £2o yearly are given £Boo, for 56 children ; average attendance.43; Miss Fanny
to the poor in coals. The Rev. Jeremiah Revan's charity is Mabel Allan, mistress
Erowne kev. Chas. Elrington [rector] Claxton Charles, farmer, Hill house Self Charles W. farmer
_Elborough Harry Douglas, The Old hall Davey John, farmer, Mud wall farm Stubbings Thomas, grocer, baker,
Lee Ro~rt Doubleday John, shoe maker farmer & saddler, Post office
Tire Thomas Hipperson Fredk. Jn. farmer & builder Thirtle John, market gardener
COMMERCIAL. Hipperson Thomas, builder Thrower Gcorgc, cooper & basket maker
_Andrews Abraham, farmer, Edith farm Hollis George, wheelwright & carpenter Thrower William, cooper, basket maker
Andrews William, bricklayer Hubbard Augusta (Mrs.), shopkeeper & parish clerk
Baker William, butcher . Mace Wm.King'sHead P.H.& blacksmth Tice Thomas, jun. farmer, Manor farm
EenncllHobert George,baker & shopkpr Pratt Alfred, market gardener Vincent John K Cock inn
Br-<1nd William, market gardener Pratt Joseph, farmer

HARMER is a parish, 8 miles north-west-by-west from net yearly value from tithe rent-charge £18o, in the gift of
Fakenham, 4 south-east from Docking station on the King's the Rev. Edward Kerslake Kerslake B.A. rector of Burnham
Lynn and Wells section of the Great Easwrn railway, in Deepda.le, and held since 1885 by the Rev.James David Home,
the North-Western division of the county, Gallow hundred who resides at East Rudham. The Rev. E. K. KerslakeB.A .
..and petty sessional division, Docking union, Little Walsing- is lord of the manor and chief landowner. The soil is light;
ham county court district, rural deanery of Burnham, subsoil, gravel and chalk. The chief crops are wheat, bar-
.archdeaconry of Norfolk and diocese of Norwich. The ley, oats and roots. The area is 8go acres; rateable value,
clmrch of All Saints is a small building in the Early English £773 ; the population in 1891 was 64.
style, cons1sting of chancel, nave, north aisle, and a round Letters through Lynn. Docking is the nearest money order
tower containi11g one bell ; there are 120 sittings. The & telegraph office
register dates from the year 1734. The living is a vicarage, The children of this place attend the Syderstone school
Martin Mrs. Barmer hall I Martin Thomas Eagle, farmer
DIRECTORY .J NORFOLK. BAR..~INGHAM NORWOOD. 306
BARNEY (or BERNEY) is a parish and village, three found here is very superior. The rents of one cottage and
quarters of a mile from Thursford station on the King's one acre of land are applied in relief of the poor rates, and
Lynn and Fakenham section of the Eastern and Midlands rail- the rent of 4 acres, allotted at the enclosure in r8n, to the
way, and 6 miles north-east from Fakenham, in the Northern relief of the highway rates. Lord Hastings is lord of the
division of the county, North Greenhoe hundred and petty manor, the tenure of which is by "smockhold;" he also is
sessional division, Walsingham union and county court dis- the principal landowner: the other landowners are Mr. John
trict, rural deanery of Walsingham and archdeaconry and William Butler, of Barney Lodge, Joseph Stonehewer Scott-
diocese of Norwich. The church of St. Mary is an ancient Chadd esq. M.A., J.P. of Thursford Hall, and Mr. John Butler
building of flint, consisting of chancel, nave, south porch, Elgar. The soil is mixed, with a subsoil chiefly of brick-
transept and an embattled western tower containing 1 be11: earth and clay. The crops are wheat, oats and barley. The
in the transept aro monuments to Mary Reeve, d. x83o; area is 1,389 acres; rateable value, £1,879 ; the population
Ann, wife of the Rev. John Lloyd,late vicar of HindolvesLon, in r8gr was 284.
d. 1805 ; and w George Phillippo and Margaret, his wife, d. Sexton, William C. Olley.
1846: in r89o the church was restored at a cost of £390, PosT 0FFICE.-Robert Thomas Dodman, receiver. Letters
and now affords 120 sittings. The register dates from the through Dereham arrive at 8 a. m.; dispatched at 5 p.m.
year 1538. The living is a vicarage, commuted tithe rent- The nearest money order &; telegraph office is at Melton
charge £ro8, average £82, net yearly value about£ ru, in- Constable
cluding 40 acres of glebe, with residence, rebuilt in 1848, in
the gift of Lord Hastings, vrho is the lay impropriator, and A School Board of 5 members was formed October 30, 18741
held since r881 by the Rev. Dash wood Pratt H.A. of Em- for the United District of Barney & Fulmodeston-cum-
manuel College, Cambridge. Here is a Wesleyan chapel Croxton; S. Aberdein, Hindolveston, clerk to the board &
erected in 1844. Bricks, ,tiles and pots are made in this attendance officer
neighbourhood ; the quality of the material for this purpose The school is at Fulmodeston
Pratt Rev. Dashwood B.A. [vicar], ChapmanMaryAnn(Miss),dressmaker ParkerNicholas,engineer&blacksmith;
Vicarage Christmas Robert Winn, coffee rooms res. Crawfish, Thursford
COMMERCIAL. Craske James, farmer & coal dealer Peck John, Plough P.H. & farmer
Barrat John Louis, farmer Dodman Robt. Thos. builder, Post office Perowne Benjamin Cubitt, brick maker,
Brasnett. Archibald Rowing, grocer & Elgar John Butler, farmer & landowner, potter & fanner; res. Great Snoring
draper & general provision merchant, Wood farm Russell Edward, shoe maker
dealer in flour, malt & hops Hill James, farmer Russell Frederick, farmer, Holly farm
Butler John Wm. farmer & landowner & Page William, Bell P.H. & butcher Scppings William, butcher
agricultural valuer, Barney lodge
BARNHAM BROOM is a village and parish (which residence, in the gift of the Earl of Kimberley K.G., and
P.C.
includes BrCKERSTON), 2~ miles north from Kimberley sta- held since r887 by the Rev. John Edward Parker Bartlett,
tion and 3 east-by-north from Hardingham station, both on of St. Bees. The fuel allotment of 19 acres is let at £ro,
the Wells, Dereham and Wymondham section of the Great which sum is given to the poor in coals. The Earl of Kim-
Eastern railway, and 5 north-west from Wymondham, in berley K.G., P.c. who is lord of the manor, and the Norwich
the Mid division of the county, Forehoe hundred, petty ses- Charity Trustees are the chief landowners. The soil is of a
sional division and union, Wymondham county court dis- mixed nature; subsoil, brick-earth. The chief crops are
trict, rural deanery of Hingham, Forehoe division, archdea- wheat, barley, turnips and bay. The area is 1,788 acres ;
conry of Norfolk and diocese of Norwich. The church of rateable value, £2,852; the population in 1891 was 412.
SS. Peter and Paul is an edifice of flint and stone in the Per- Parish Clerk, William Pegnell.
pendicular style, consistmg of chancel, nave, south porch BICKERSTON or BrxTON is a decayed parish, now con-
and an embattled western tower with pinnacles, containing sidered a. part of Barnham Broom.
5 bells: it was thoroughly repaired and re-seated in r851, PosT, M. 0. & S. B. & Annuity & Insurance Office.-James
chiefly at the expense of the late Rev. Edward Gurdon: an Child, postmaster. Letters are received through Wy-
organ was afterwards presented by Mrs. Anne Wodehouse mondham by foot post; arrive at 8. ro a. m. & dispatched
and the late Mrs. Frederica Gurdon ; there are 28o sittings, at 6 p.m. The nearest telegraph office is at Mattishall
120 being free. The register dates frr5m the year r63o. The National School (mixed), erected in r84r, for roo children;
living is a rectory, with the rectory of Bixton and the vicar- average attendance, 56 ; Miss Louisa Giles, mistress
age of Kimberley annexed, average tithe rent-charge £425, CARRIERS TO NoRWICH.-John Norton, wed. & sat.; Alfred
joint net yearly value £579 1 including 92 acr~s of glebe and Brown, wed. & sat
Bartlett Rev. John Edward Parker Cunningham Caleb, Bell inn, & assist- Kerridge Richard, farmer
lrector_l, Rectory ant overseer Knights Geo. carpenter & wheelwright
-Gayford Charles Davey John, farmer, Manor farm Mace Henry Thomas, grocer & draper
COMMERCIAL. Foyster David, collar & harness maker Myhill William, blacksmith
Arthurton James, shopkeeper Gapp Henry, farmer, Grove farm Norton William, boot maker
Barnard Alfred, vaccination & school Greenwood John, farmer Pitcher Barney, farmer, Rectory farm
attendance & relieving officer, Hing- Goward John, farmer, Bickerston Richmond Fredk.farmer, Watson's farm
ham district, Forehoe union, & regis- [letters through Norwich vra ColtonJ Spinks William, farmer & dealer
trar of pirths & deaths for Costessey Harrison Edward, farmer & thatcher Vassar Dalton, farmer
sub-dist. of the Forchoe incorporation Hepperson James, farmer Wrigglesworth John, farmer & miller
Bennett Henry, Three Horseshoes P.H Hepperson Walter, bricklayer (water), Mill farm
Child Thomas, blacksmith I Howard Horace, farmer, Bickerston
LITTLE BARNINGHAM (orBARNINGHAM PARVA) yearly value £ r6x, in the gift of the Earl of Orford. Ilere
is a parish and village 7 miles north-west from Aylsham, 6 is a Free Methodist chapel, built in 86o. The Earl of
I
south-south-east from IIolt and 3 from Corpusty station on Orford, who is lord of the manor, John Stanley Mott esq.
the Norwich and Cromer section of the Eastern and Mid- and Miss Page are chief landowners. The soil is light ; sub-
lands railway, in the Northern division of the county, soil, chiefly sand. The chief crops are wheat, turnips,. barley
North Erpingham petty sessional division, South Erpingham and grass. The area is 1,224 acres; rateable value, £r, u6;
hundred, Aylsham union and county court district, rural the population in r881 was 203.
deanery of Ingworth and arch deaconry and diocese of Nor-
wich. The church of t::lt. Andrew is a building of flint in Letters through Norwich, by messenger, from Hanworth,
the Early English style, consisting of chancel, nave, south arrive about 11.30 a.m. & return at 2.20 p.m.; no post
porch and an embattled western tower containing one bell : on sundays. Aldborough is the nearest money order &
the chancel was thoroughly restored in 1878-9, and the telegraph office
ruined vestry rebuilt on a larger scale. The church affords
140 sittings. The register dates from th~ year 1558. The This parish is under the Bamingham United District School
living is a rectory, average tithe rent-charge £197, net Board ; the school house is in Matlaske parish
Cubitt Mrs. B
Cubitt Mrs. Ellen :Ma.ry
I Cubitt Algernon James, farmer I
Lee Wm. George, farmer, Green farm
, Hardy Shadrach, farmer & landowner Moore John, shopkeeper
BARNINGHAM NOR WOOD (or NoRTH EARNING- style, consisting of chancel, nave, north aisle, south porch
HAM) is a parish about 5 miles east-by-south from Holt and an embattled western tower containing one bell : there
station on the Eastern and Midlands railway, in the Northern are three monuments to Sir Austin Palgrave knt. d. 1720,
division of the county, North Erpingharn hundred and petty and members of his family. The register dates from the
sessional division, Erpingham union, Holt county court dis- year 1538. The living is a rectory, average tithe rent-charge
trict, rural deanery of Repps, archdeaconry of Norfolk and £122 1 gross yearly value £125, including 14 acres of glebe,
diocese of Norwich. Th~>. church of St. Peter is an ancient with residence, in the gift of the t.rustees of the late W. H.
building of flint, with stone dressings, in the Early English l Windham csq. but p1·o hil.c vice the Bishop of Norwich by
S06 BARXINGH..\M NORWOOD • NORFOLK.
. lapse, and held since 1891 by the Rev. John Riley Mea M.A. Letters through Norwich, by messenger, from Hanworth,
of Christ's College, Cambriuge, who is also rectnr of, and arrive about 9 a. m. PrLT~AR LETTER Box cleared at 2.45
resides at Barningham Town. The soil is chiefly light; p.m. week days only. The nearest money order & tele-
subsoil, gravel. The chief crops are wheat, turnips, barley graph offices are at Aldborough & Hanworth
and grass. The area is 833 acres; rateable value, £942; the The parish is under the Gresham United District School
population in 1891 was 40. Board: the school house is in Gresham parish

to F. H. L. B. Windham e.sq
I
Burton George, farmer, & gamekeeper Bird George, farmer, Hall farm .
Pigott James Henry, farmer, Hill farm
J Stibbons James, farmer

BARNINGHAM TOWN (or BARNINGHAM WIN- the Elizabethan style. In the reign of Edward III. t.he lord-
TEa) is a parish about 4! miles east-south-east from Holt ship of this parish was held by the Winters, hence its name
station on the Eastern and Midlands railway, 7 south-south- of " Barningham Winter: " in the latter part of the reign of
west from Cromer and 8 north-north-west from Aylsham, Elizabeth it was possessed by the Pastons, and the older
in the Northern division of the county, North Erpingham house, which stood on the lower site, being pulled down, Sir
hundred and petty sessional division, Erpingham union, Edward Paston knt. in 1612 1 built the present mansion: about
Halt county court district, rural deanery of Repps, arch- 1756 Thomas Paston, fifth in descent from the above Sir
deaconry of Norfolk and diocese of Norwich. The church Edward Paston, sold the property to William Russell 1 a
of St. Peter, which stands in the park, is a building of flint London merchant, from whom it passed into the hands of
li1 mixed styles, consisting of chancel, which has been Thomas Lane esq. and he, in 1775, sold it to Thomas Vertue
restored, south porch and tower, but the two latter are now Mott esq. great-grandfather of the present owner. John
in ruins and covered with ivy: there are 130 sittings. The Stanley Matt esq. is lord of the manor and principal land-
register dates from the year 1702. The living is a rectory, owner. The soil is light; subsoil, gravel. The chief crops
average tithe rent-charge £103, net yearly value £105, are wheat, turnips, barley and grass. The area is 833
with residence and 40 acres of glebe, in the gift of John acres; rateable value, £1,032; the population in 1891 was
Stanley Mott esq. and held since 1884 by the Rev. John Riley 105. By the Divided Par1shes Act a detached part of
Mee M.A. of Christ's College, Cambridge, who is also rector Bessingham was amalgamated with this parish in 1884.
of Barningham Norwoorl. Barningham Hall, the property Parish Clerk, Robert Painter.
of John Stanley Mott esq. and occupied by John Bradley
Firth esq. is a spacious mansion in the Tudor style, standing Letters through Norwich, via Hanworth, except those for
in an extensive park and with fine woods and plantations the Rectory, which are through East Dereham, vu\ Halt.
llxtending into Matlaske parish: the house was enlarged, Aldborough is the nearest money order & telegraph office
and the south or garden front altered, in 18o7, under the A Schoollloard was formed compulsorily July 16, II74, for
direction of Mr. Humphrey Repton, architect, but the west the united district of Earning ham Winter, Little Earning-
or entrance front, a fine example of the time of James I. in ham, Marsham and Plumstead-by-Holt; J. B. Newstead,
which the double dormer is a peculiar feature, remains in Plumstead, clerk & attendance officer. The school is in
its original state: the drawing room is a good specimen of Matlaske parish
Firth John Bradley, Barningham ball i Cbapman William, farmer Howes George,farmel"
Mee Rev. John Riley M.A. [rector], Howlctt Bcnjamin, farm bailiff to J. S. 'Vard Robert, farmer
Rectory [letters through Derebam] Mutt esq
EAST BARSHAM is a parish on the south-west bank incredulus." .Anno 1637. "Da tua dum tua sunt post
of the river Stiffkey, about 3~ miles north from Fakenham mortem tunc tua non sunt :" these cottages having
stations on the Great Eastern and Eastern and Midlands become ruinous were pulled down, the site Aold and
railways, in the North West.ern division of the county, the proceeds devoted to charitable purposes ; the plate is
hundred and petty sessional division of Gallow, Walsingham still pre~erved by Mr. George Curtis, one of the trustees of
union and county court district, rural deanery of Burnham, the charity. East Barsham Hall, erected in the latter part
archdeaconry of Norfolk and diocese of Norwich. The of the reign of Henry VII. and formerly the seat of
church of All Saints is a small building of flint, in the the Calthorpe family, is a fine example of a brick mansion
Gothic style, consisting of chancel and nave, south porch of the Tudor period, and its towers and turrets are in a good
and a turret containing one bell : of the old tower only the state of preservation : it is now occupied as a farm house.
base now remains and serves as a porch : in the church is a Lord Hastinglil is lord of the manor and principal landowner.
monument erected by James Calthorpe esq. to Mary, his Tbe soil is various; subsoil, chalk and gravel. The crops
wife, daughter of Robert Brooke, alderman of London, ob. are wheat, barley, roots and gras11. The area is 1,168 acres;
12 May, 164o, and to four of their children, ob. 1627-37: rateable value, £r,531; the population in 189r was 196.
there are 150 sittings. The register dates fl·om the year Parish Clerk, Robert Gilder.
IS49· The living is a vicarage, with the rectory of Little Letters through Walsingham arrive at 7 _30 . LETTER Box
Snoring annexed, a'f'erage tithe rent-charge £5o6, JOint gross cleared at 5 . 15 p.m. week days; sundays 8 a. m. The
yearly value £630, including six acres of glebe here and 6o nearest money order office is at Walsingham (railway
at Snoring, with residence, in the gift of Lord Hastings, and sub-office)
held since 1882 by the Rev. William Martin B.A. of Trinity
College, Cambride:e, and rural dean of Walsingham. ffere A School Board of 7 members was formed compulsorily
is a Primitive Methodist chapel. In 1 6 36 two cottages were December 31, 1873, for the United District of East, North &
left by the Calthorpe family for the poor of the parish, in West Harshams & Houghton-in-the-Dale; R. Cowburn,
one of which was " bras9 plate, inscribed: " Boni si quid Walsingham, clerk to the Board
habeo a Deo sumpsi non a me prresumpsi, nee in eo quod Board School (mixed), erected in 1876, for 100 children;
jam donavit ingratus nee in eo quod ad hue non donavit average attendance, 85; Joseph Nicholson, master
Martin Rev. William B. A. [vicar & rural Ell is John Balding, farmer, East llar- Gilder Robert, parish clerk
1

dean], Vicarage sham ball; res. West Barsham I Nicholson Joseph, schoolmaster
Curtis Geo. farmer, Lime Kiln farm Falconbridge Robert, White Horse P.H j
NORTH BARSHAM is a parish, consisting of two in the gift of the Earl of Orford and held since 1889 by the
farms and the rectory house, about 4 miles north from Rev_ RobertJackson CuppageM.A. of Trinity College,Dublin;
Fakenham and 1! from Walsingham station on the Wells 6! acres of the glebe he in the parish of Houghton-in-the
and Dereham section of the Great Eastern railway, in the Dale. Mr. John Herring, formerly of East Barsham, who
North Western division of the county, Gallow hundred and died 26 Dec. 1885, at Esher, Surrey, bequeathed the sum of
petty sessional division, Wal'lingham union and county court £1oo to the poor of the parish of East Barsham, to be dis-
district, rural deanery of Bnrnbam, arch deaconry of Norfolk tributed yearly by the rector and churchwardens. The Earl
and diocese of ~orwich. The church of All Samts is a build- of Orford is lord of the manor and the principal landowner.
ing of stone in the Gothic style, consisting of chancel, nave I The soil is various ; subsoil, clay. The crops are wheat,
and a westera bell-cote containing one bell: in the church turnips, barley and grass. The area is 1,oos acres; rateable
1

is a monument to Philip Russell esq. dated 1617: the value, £I,508; the population in 1891 was 98.
chancel was restored in 1865 by the Rev. J. C. Flatten M.A. Parish Clerk, William Bright.
late rector, and the windows filled with stained glass: in the. Letters through Walsingham R.S.O. which is the nearest
church is a stone coffin, dug up in a field in this parish : I money order & telegraph office, arrive at 8.30 a. m
there are 70 sittings, 30 being free. The register dates from l This place is included in the Barsham United School Board
the year 1558. The living is a rectory, tithe rent-charge district, formed in 1873; the children attend the board
£334; average £273, with residence and 20 acres of glebe, school at East Barsham
Cuppage Rev. Robert Jackson M.A., Leeds Charles Stephen, farmer
[rectcr], Rectory
I
Leeds Stephen, farmer

WEST BARSHAl'ri is a parish in a valley, about 3~ singham



station on the Wells and Dereham section of the
miles north-by-west from Fakenham, 2l; south from 'Val- Great Eastern railway, in the North Western division of thCl
DIBEOIORY.J BARTON TURF. 307
county, hundred and petty sessional di'dsion of Gallow, and held since i:8gr (by dispensation from the Arch ..
Walsingham union and county court district, rural deanery bishop) by the Rev. Williarn, Martin B.A. of Trinity Col-
of Burnham, archdeaconry of Norfolk and diocese of Nor- lege, Cambridge, rural dean of Wa1singham, rector of
wich. The church (name unknown) is a building of stone Little Snoring and alw vicar of East Barsham, where he
in the Gothic style, with some portions of Saxon and Nor- resides. Lady Katherine Anne Balders is the lady of the manor
man date, and consisting of chancel, nave, south porch and and the principal landowner. The soil is various; subsoil,
a western bell-cote containing one bell : the tower has long clayey. The crops are wheat, turnips, barley and grass.
since disappeared: a memorial window was placed in the The area is I,571 acres; rateable value, £1,336; the popu-
chancel, by his parents, in 1868, to William Henry Balders, lation in r8gi was 104.
lieut. 18th Hussars and second son of Lieut.. Gen. C. W. LETTER Box cleared at 5 p.m. week-days only. Letters
Morley Balders C.B. (d. 1875) and Lady Katherine Anne through Walsingham R.S.O. which is the nearest money
(Hare), his wife : there are 70 sittings. The register dates order & telegraph office
from the year 1554. The living is a vicarage, average tithe This parish is included in Barsham United School Board
rent-charge £127, gross yearly value£ I 57, including 8 acres district, formed in I873 ; the children attend the board
of glebe, in the gift of Lady Katherine A. Balders, school at East Barsham
Ellis John Boiding, farmer I Green Henry, farmer I
:BAR TON BENDISH is a parish and village, 8 miles senting St. Catherine, and on the splay of the south doorway
east from Downham Market and 4 north from Stoke Ferry is a crowned head of the 15th century: in the south wall of
station, which is a terminal station of a branch of the Great the chancel is a priest's doorway, with an exterior canopy:
Eastern railway, in the South \'~' estern division of the on the north side of the chancel is a flat stone, believed to
county, Clackclose hundred and petty sessional division, have originally covered the remains of Waiter Baldwin,
Downham union and county court district, rural deanery of rector of this church A.D. 1349: there are Ioo sittings, 6o
Fincham, archdeaconry of Nor folk and diocese of Norwich. being free. The register date.'! from the year 1726. A little
The church of St. Andrew is a finely-proportioned structure to the south-west of St. Andrew's church formerly stood the
of flint and freestone, mainly in the Decorated style, and church of All Saints, described in Blomefield's History of
con.siSts of chancel, nave, south porch and an em battled Norfolk as a venerable pile: this church was pulled down in
western tower with pinnar:les, containing a clock and 5 the summer of I787, and part of its materials nsed for the
bells! tho front of the porch is adorned with shields and repair of St. Mary's, but the greater part of the material
crosses of St. Anrlrew wrought in stone, and has a nicbe was taken to make a new road: its three large and ancient
with a mutilated effigy of the saint : the doorway is a fine bells were sold at the same time. Here is a Wesleyan
specimen of Late Norman work: the nave roof was renewed chapel, erected in I875· The poor's allotment lands now let
in plain open timber work and raised to tho original pitch for £r9 and 1:3 respectively. This place was anciently a
in 1868: two Norman windows in the north side of the seat of the Berney family, who became possessors of the
nave, and one other of late date, were repaired by a former manor by purchase from the Hare family, afterwards Earls
rector and filled with stained glass: the staircase to the of Listowel, in the reign of Charles II. : the prt>~~ent Hall
rood-loft is perfect, and a niche is partially visible behind incorporates part of the old mansion, and was restored in
the pulpit : an oak screen separates the tower from the nave I 856 and some new work added in the Elizabethan style ;
and the east wall of the chancel below tho window is lined it is now occupied by Mr. Henry Smith, farmer. ,Sir Henry
with oak panelling: some of the open benches date from Hanson Berney bart. LL.B. of Holly walk, Leamington, is
1623: in the external south wall of the chancel are traces of lord of the manor and principal landowner. In tbe hamlet
a lepers' window: a few relics of the ancient pavement of of EASTMOOH there was anciently a chapel, dedicated to St.
the church remain within the sacrarium: there are 150 John the Baptist, the patronage of which was vested in the
sittings, 100 being free. The register dates from the year Abbot of Dereham, but at the dissolution of monastic houses
x6g5. The living is a rectory, annexed in 1885 to those of it was converted into a farmhouse, and scarcely a vestige
St. Mary and All Saints, previously consolidated in I785, now remains. The soil is chalk; subsoil, clay. The chief
joint net yearly value £330, including 6ro acres of glebe, crops are wheat, barley, roots and seeds. The area is 4,390
with residence, rebuilt in r866, in the gift of the Lord acres; ;·ateable value, £3,389; the population in 1891 was
Chancellor and Sir Henry Hanson Berney bart. LL. B. alter- 399, of which 100 are in Eastmoor.
nately, and held since 1885 (St. Mary and All Saiutg since Parish Clerk, David Jackson.
1865) by the Rev. Stephen Gooch Read M.A. of Corpus PosT OFFICE.-Mrs. Rebecca Horn, receiver. Letters
Christi college, Cambridge. The church of St. Mary, dat- throngh Stoke Ferry S.O. arrive at 9 a.m.; dispatched
ing from about the same period as that of St. Andrew, con- at 4 p.m. (no dispatch on Sundays). The nearest money
sists of chancel, nave, vestry and a stone belfry ereeted in order office is at Beechamwell & telegraph office at
1871 in memory of Sir Hanson and Lady Berney and con- Stoke Ferry
taining 1 bell: in the modern westerngableis a fine Norman WALL Box cleared at4.10 p.m. (week days only)
arch, once forming the north doorway to All Saints church Church of England School (mixed), erected in 1875, for 8o
in this parish, and above it is a stained window, erected in children; average att£ndanc~, 30 ; Miss Amy Mary
1858 in memory of M. A. Read: on the south wall of the Beeden, mistress
nave are the remains of a medi<Eval painting, perhaps repre- CARRIER TO LYNN.-George Rum ball, tues
Dye James Robert niaxter George, farmer, Eastmoor Preston Henry, Spread Eagle P.H
Read Rev. Stephen Gooch M.A. St. Blomtield William, farmer, Eastmoor Rumball George, carrier
Mary's rectory Crome James Neave, farmer Rumball William, plumber & glazier
Smith Henry, Bartc.n Bendish hall Crome Mary (Mrs.), farmer SmithHy. farmer, Barton Bendish hall
English Robert, boot maker • Stratton John, farmer
COMMERCIAL. Hewitt Chas. Young, farmer, Hill farm Vince Charles Swanton, farmer, Abbe;r
Adderson James, farm bailiff to Sir Horn Robt. blacksmith & wheelwright & Glebe farms
Henry Hanson Berney bart. LL.B Hudson Jphn (exors. of), shopkeepers
lJARTON TURF is a parish and village, 4 miles north- John Idewyne, a former vicar, ob. 1497, and to Andree
east from Wroxham station on the North Walsham branch Emmeson, dated 1488, and a fine mural tablet to Anthony
of the Great Eastern railway, 7 south-east from 'North Nnrris, of this place, an industrious antiquary, who made
Walsham and u north-east from :Norwich, in the Eastern valuable MS. collections, in 28 volumes, relating to Nor-
division of the county, Tunstead and Rapping petty sessional folk, now in the possession of the Frere family; be died
division, 1'unstead hundred, Rmallburgh manor, North 13 Aug. 1785: there are 250 sittings. The register dates
Walsham county court district, rural deanery of Waxham, from the year 1558. The living is a. vicarage, average tithe
Happing division, archdeaconry of Norfolk and diocese of rent-charge£ 145, net yearly value 1:170, including 34 acres
Norwich. The navigable river Ant opens out in this parish, of glebe and residence, built in I 885, in the gift of the
into a'' broad" or wide expanse of water. The church of St. Bishop of Norwich, and held since 1883 by the Rev. John
1\lichael is a fine bmlding of flint and stone, in the Perpen- Gough Poole Theo. Assoc. of King's College, London. Here
dicular style, consisting of chancel, nave, north porch and a are 30 acres of allotment land, from which the poor cnt
lofty embattled western tower, with pinnacles and contain- fuel. In 1877 John Franeis, of Slough, .Bucks, a native of
ing 3 bells: the church was restored internally in 1890 at a Barton Turf, bequeathed to the vicar and churchwardens
cost of £700: the lower panels of the rood screen are em- and overseer for the time being the sum of £r,roo in Con•
bellished with very fine and well-presP-rved paintings of St. sols, the interest to be devoted partly to the repair of the
Appolonia, St. Citha, St. Barbara and the Heavenly Hier- graves of his family, £r3 for coals, a like !mount for
archy, and another screen in the south aisle bears represen- clothing and the remainder in bread for the poor; and by a
tations of Henry VI. St. Ecbvard, St. Edmund and St. Olave: second bequest of £750 he gave to the vicar an annual SUIJ.l
the stained west window was inser1ed in 1889 by John of £1 for preaching a sermon on each 15th Sunday after
Francis esq. as a memorial to members of his family : in St. Trinity and a like amount to the clerk; the remainmg in-
Thomas' chapel are two brasses recording its erection by tercst is applied to educational purposes. Sir Henry Jacob
Thomas Amys in 1445 or 1495; there are other brasses to I Preston bart. J.P. of Hill House, Northrepps, Cromer, i.s
308 RARTO.N TURF. NORFOLK. (KELL"Y'S

• lord of the manor and the prmcipallandowner. The Cor- The nearest money •
order oflice is at Neatishead & tele-
poration of Norwich have a small estate or manor here graph office at Stalbam

call "Berry Hall." The soil is mixed ; subsoil, sand,
gravel and clay. The chief crops are wheat., oats and School (mixed), erected in 1855 by the late Sir J. H.
barley. The area is I,599 acres, nearly 2I6 of which are Preston bart. & the Misses Preston, for 6o children;
wood and water; rateable value, £2,096; the population in average attendance, 55; Albert Brett, master
I891 was 386. CARRIER, NoRWICH.-Leonard Lubbock to u Waggon &
LETTER Box cleared at 4 p. m. Letters are received from Horses" Tom bland, at 8 a.m. on mon. wed. & sat. retum-
Norwich by mail cart, via Xeatishead, arrive at 8 a. m. ing same days aL 4.30 p.m
Foole Rev. John Gough Theo,A.Ssoc. Gales William, market gardener Walpole Phcebe (Mrs.), farmer
K.C.L. Vicarage Gilding Eleanor (Mrs.), farmer Watts Henry, shopkeeper & carpenter
Preston The Misses, The Hall Goulder Hy. Christmas, miller (wind) Watts John, blacksmith
COMMERCIAL. Hall Thomas, shopkeeper vVoodrow Robert, farmer, wheelwrigb•
Alien Georgc, keeper of Broads Haylett Jas. basket maker & marshman & dealer in carriages &c
Coman James, plumber & glazier Hewitt Williarn, marsbman Wright William, farmer, overseer &
Cox Jacob ~almon, boat builder; boats Jones George, shopkeeper surveyor for Harton Turf & tax col-
of all descriptions for let or hire Lubbock Leonard, earner lector for Ashmanhaugh, Barton
Cox Sarah (Mrs.), farmer & coal dealer Mack John (exors. of), farmers Turf & Beeston St. Lawrence
Drake David, farmer, Berry hall Starling Humphrey, thatcher Yaxley .Ja . beer retailer, The Staithe
Drury Isaac, farmer Utting John, farmer, Hall farm
,
BARWICK-IN-THE-BRAKE is a parish 5 miles with residence, in the gift of Mrs. Seymour, and held since
west-south-west from Burn ham Market, and 2 east from I884 by the Rev. Henry Earle Bulwer M.A. of PembrokE}
Docking station on the West Norfolk section of the Great College, Cambridge, who resides at Stanhoe. Barwick
Eastern railway, in the North Western division of the House is the seat of Mrs. Seymour. The principal land-
connty, Smithdon hundred, Smithdon and Brothercross owners are Mrs. Seymour and the trustees of the late John
petty sessional division, Docking union, Little Walsingham Savory esq. The soil is of a good mixed character; sub-
county court district, rural deanery of Heacham, arch- soil, chiefly clay. The chief crops are wheat, barley, roots
deaconry of Norfolk and diocese of Norwich. The church and seeds. 'l'he area is 1,278 acres ; rateable value,£ I,x&];
formerly.stood in the grounds of Barwick House, and the and the population in 1891 was 63.
foundations may still be traced. The parishioners attend LETTER Box cleared at 4.30 p.m. Letters through Lynn
Stanhoe church. The living is a discharged vicarage, united arrive at 6.30 a.m. Docking is the nearest money order
to the rectory of Stanhoe, average tithe rent-charge £383, & telegraph office
joint net yearly value £303, including 21 acres of glebe, The children of this place attend the school at Stanhoe
Seymour Chas. Derick J.P. Barwick bo I Seymour Mrs. Barwick house I Savory Edmund (exors. of), farmers
BAWBURGH is a small parish and village, on the river j of the church, on the Rectory farm, is St. Wulstan's weB,
Yare, 4 miles west from Hethersett station on the Thetford · supposed to possess extraordinary healing virtues, and
and Norwich section of the Great Eastern railway, and 5 large numbers of persons used at one time to visit it in the
west from Norwich, in the Mid division oi the county, Fore- course of the year for the cure of scrofulous diseases. Baw-
hoe hundred, petty sessional division and union, county burgh Hall is the residence of the Hon. Charles Claude-
court district of N orwic..:h, rural deanery of Hingham, Bertie. Lord Stafford, who is lord of the manor, the Dean
Forehoe division, arch deaconry of Norfolk and diocese of and Chapter of Norwich and Lieut. -Col. Clement William
Norwich. The church of St. Mary and St. Wulstan is a Joseph Unthank J.P. of Intwood Hall, are the chief land-
small but ancient building of stone, chiefly in the Perpendi- owners. The soil is very various, but mostly light; sub-
cular st~ le, and consisting of chancel, nave, south porch and soil the same. The chief crops are wheat, barley, turnips.
a round western tower of Norman date containing one bell; and hay. The area is 1,440 acres; rateable value, £I,893;
the upper part of the tower was long ago demolished and the population in I8gr was 408.
replaced by a low comcal roof, covered with red tiles: there Parish Clerk, J obn Os born.
are several ancient brasses, one of whieh bears the date Po.SI' 0!<'FICE.-David William Child, receiver. Letters
I483: the chancel retains sedilia and a piscina, and there is through Norwich, arrive at 8. 40 a.m.; dispatched at 5·5
some ancient glass and a fine earved screen: the chancel p.m. week days only. Hethersett is the nearest mone.y
and porch were restored in I 879 : there are I30 sittings. order & telegraph office
The register dates from the year I555· The living is a
vicarage, average tithe rent-charge £ 204 , gross yearly value A School Board of 5 members was formed May 29th, IB74;
£230, net £r6 7 , with I acre of glebe and residence, in the David William Child, clerk to the board
gift of the Dean and Chapter of Norwich, and held since Board School (mixed), built in J:876,at a cost of [,r,ooo, f()l"
1892 by the Rev. Gabriel Young, of St. Aidan's. The Primi- 76 children; average attendance, 70; Miss Lucy Varley,
tive Methodist chapel was erected in I866. To the north mistress
Bertie Hon. Chas. Clan 1e,Ba wburgb ball Chenery George, blacksmith Moore James, farm bailiff to Messrs.
Furness Ed ward Davey George Hobert, bricklayer Cunnington Brothers
Young Rev. Gabriel [vicar], Vicarage DysonMary Ann(Mrs. ),farmer,Lodge fm Pollington George, shoe maker
COMMEHCIAL. Harmer Benjamin, farm bailiff to Lt.- Sparrow J ames, farmer & thrashing
Bell John, Cock P.R Col. Clement William J. Unthank machine proprietor, Bawburgh villa
Child David William, baker, collector Harvey Francis, butcher & cow keeper Tann Samuel. wheelwright
of rates & taxes & clerk to the school Howes Hem-y William, King's Head P.H Waiter J. II. & Co. paper manufactrs
board, Post otlice Mortimer Susannah (Mrs.), grocer

BAWDESWELL is a village and parish, on the road is a. mansion of red brick, in the Elizabethan style, and now
from Aylsham to LJnn, 3 miles south-east from Foulsham occupied by Henry George Lindesay esq. The Rev. llenry
station on -:,be East Norfolk branch of the Great Eastern Evans-Lombe B.A., l.P. of Bylaugh Park, who is lord of the
railway and 7 north-east from East Dereham, in the manor, Clarke Ilallett Lloyd Stoughton esq. J.P. and tlm
Northern division of the county, Evnsford hundred and Earl of Leicester K.G. are the principal landowners. Th&
petty sessional division, Mitford 'and Launditch union, East soil is mixed ; subsoil, sand and gravel. The chief crops
Derebam county court district, rural deanery of Sparham are wheat, roots, barley and hay. The area is I 1 196 acres~
and arcbdeaconry and diocese of Norwich. The church of rateable value, [2,074; and the population in I891 was 410.
All Saints is a small aRd plain edifice of flint, rebuilt in 1845,
PosT & M. 0. 0., S. B. & Annuity & Insurance Office.-Mrs.
snd consists of chanc·el, nave and aisles, south porch and a Sarah Cation, receiver. Letters received from East
belfry containing one bell : there are 300 sittings. The
Dereh~m at 8 a. m. ; dispatched at 5.20 p.m. week days
register dates from the year I557· The living is a rectory, only. The nearest telegraph otn.ce is at Foulsham
--average yearly value, arising from tithe rent-charge, f.~5I,
tithes commuted at £330 I4S. 4d. with residence and one The National School, erected in I875 for Bawdeswell,Bylangb
acre of glebe, in the gitt of the Rev. Henry Evans-Lombe & Foxley, at the sole expense of the late Rev. Henry
·.B.A. and lield since I85I by the Rev. Ferdinand Alfred Lombe, of Bylaugh Park, is a building of red brick, with
Pynsent. There are Wesleyan and Primitive Methodist the crest of the founder in front & the motto, " Propositi
chapels. A small charity of £1 yearly, is distributed in bread tena.x; " the school is suppOJ'ted in part by an endow-
twice a year; and two charities, amounting unitedly to ment consisting of about I6 acres of land & a cottage in
£24 3s. 4d. yearly, are distributed in coals; there is al~oan the parish of Foxley & will hold ISO children; a.verag6
'flducational charity of £1oo, producing- £2 Igs. 4d. yearly. attendance, 90; vVilliam Reeves, master; Mrs. Keeves,
Ea"deswell Hall, the property of Clarke H. L.l::itoughton esq. girls' mistress; Miss Gertrude Ralph, infants' mistre.<~S
DIRECTORY. J NORFOLK. WE3T BECKHAM. 309
Lindesay Henry Geo. Bawdeswell hall Fenn Louisa (Miss), beer retailer Pumfrey Brothers, farmers, Hall farm
Pynsent Rev.Ferdinand Alfred, Rectory Guymer George, builder, contractor, Purdy John, farmer
COMMERCIAL. painter & wheelwright. See advert Rowing John, farmer, Park farm
Allison Sarah(Mrs.), Ram P.H Heyhoe Josiah, farmer Seeker Charles F. landowner & farmer
Austin Thomas, butcher J arvis Christopher Ed wd. Bell Inn corn- Springall William, builder &c
Breese Thomas, farmer mercial hotel & posting ho. & farmer Street Edward, grocer & draper, & re-
Brown Francis, shoe maker Jarvis Edward, farmer gistrar of births & deaths for sub-
Bush Plesancc (Mrs.), farmer J ohnson Elijah, farmer district of Bawdeswell
Catton Sarah (Mrs.), grocer, draper & Joice James, farmer Whitesides Robert, baker & shopkeeper
dress maker, Post office Mann Robert, farmer Whitesides Wm. saddler & harness rna
Elsden John, blacksmith Meal Heber, farmer Woodbouse John, timber merchant,
Elsden Mary (Mrs.), shopkeeper Meal Da.vid,earthenware dlr .& tobccnst builder & contractor
Elsden Thomas, farmer Neale Robins, baker
BAWSEY is a parish 2i miles east-by-north from Lynn, I held since 1885 by the Rev. Hetherington Edgar Smallwood
with a station, called Gayton Road, on the King's Lynn and B.A. of Queen's College, Oxfocd, who resides at 13 Thorpe
1
Cromer section of the Eastern and Midlands railway, in the j Hamlet terrace, Norwich. Anthony Hamond esq. D.L., 1. P.
~orth Western division of the county, hundred, petty ses- of West Acre High House, is lord of the manor and chief
sional division and union of Freebridge Lynn, Lynn county I landowner. The soil is clay and sand ; subsoil, clay. The
court district, rural deanery of Lynn Frcebridge and arch- : chief crops are wheat, oat~, barley and turnips. The area
deaconry and diocese of Norwich. A small stream called is 663 acres, and only 6 houses; rateable value, {,730; the
~he "Gaywood," which flows on the north of the parish, population in 1891 was 56.
supplies the Lynn water works. The church of St. James Letters through Lynn, which is the nearest money order &
has long been in ruins. The register begins in 1540, and is telegraph office, arrive at 8 a.m
continued down to 1773, when it ceases. The living is a
sinecure rectory, average yearly value £68, arising from The children of this place altend the school at Ashwicken
tithe rent-charge, in the gift of Anthony Hamond esq. and Railway Station, Gayton road, W. W. Birkett, station mast
Bradfield Emmiline E. (Miss) & Ernest lllardell Brothers, brick makers
John, farmers, Church farm Callaby Youngman, Sandboy P.H
l
Overton Richard, gamekeeper to
Anthony Hamond esq
HAYFIELD is a parish, on the river Glaven, about 2~ charge since Apnl, 1875. Bayfield Hall, the seat of Sir Alfred
miles north-west from Holt station on the Eastern and Jodrell bart. D.L., J.P. who is lord of the manor and owns
Midlands railway and 3 south from Blakeney harbour, in nearly the whole parish, is a plain brick mansion, pleasantly
the Northern division of the county, Halt hundred, petty situated and commands extensive views of the country and
-sessional division and county court district, Erpingham also of the river Glaven, which is here widened and form:i a
union, rural deanery of Holt and archdeaconry and diocese large piece of water. The soil is light ; subsoil, gravel.
1

of Norwich. The church, dedicated to St. Margaret and This parish, which is in a deep and well-wooded vale of the
adjoining the Hall, is now ruinous and covered with ivy ; the Glaven, comprises 799 acres, chiefly arable : the surface is
nearest church IS at Letheringsett. The living is a rectory, undulating and the views from the high grounds are very
average tithe rent-charge £127, net yearly value £rn, in fine. The parish is united with Glandford for the support
the gift of Sir Alfred Jodrell bart. and held since 1884 by' of the poor; rateable value, with Glandford, £ ; in 1891
the Rev. Thomas Firminger Tbiselton-Dyer :P.LA. of Pem- the population was 30.
broke College, Oxford, who is non-resident. The Rev. Letters through Dereham. Cley is the nearest money
Everett Bishop B.A. rector of Cley, has acted as curate in I order & telegraph office
Jodrell Sir Alfred bart. n.L., J.P. Bay-~ Sands William, farmer & cttttle sales-~ Jodrell Mrs. Hayfield hall
field hall; & Boodle's club, London s w man, Lodge farm
EAST BECKHAM is a parish, about 4~ miles west-by- value £171, including 10 acres of glebe, in the gift of the
south from Cromer station on the Eastern and Midlands Dean and Chapter of Norwicll, and held since 1888 by the
railway, and about 2~ miles south from Sheringham station Rev. Edward Catmur Jervis M.A. of Peterhouse, Cambridge,
• on the same line and 5 east from Holt, in the Northern who resides at We'!t Beckham. Here is an iron mission
division of the county, North Erpingham hundred and petty church. The poor's land produces £2 yearly. Frederick
sessional division, Erpingbam union, Holt county court dis- Howe Lindsay Hacun Wyndham esq. of Hanworth Hall, is
trict, rural deanery of Ingworth {north division) and arch- lord of the manor and chief landowner. •rhe chief crops
deaconry and diocese of Norwich. By an Order in Council, are wheat, turnips, barley and grass. The area is 782
dated May 3rd, x888, this parish was united to West Beck, acres, nearly all arable land; rateable value, £658; the
ham for ecclesiastical purposes. The church of St. Helen, population in 1881 was 55·
which had been for nearly 200 years in a ruinous condition, Letters through Norwich arrive at 10 a. m. Gresham is the
was pulled down in 1890 and its materials used in the nearest money & telegraph office
erection of the new church at West Beckham, which the This place is included in the Gresham United School Board •
inhabitants now attend. The living is a perpetual cnracy district, formed in 1873 ; the children attend the Board
annexed to the vicarage of West Beckham, joint net yearly school at Gresham
Barney Benjamin, farmer I Bird Geo. farmer, East Beckbam hall [letters received through Dereham]
WEST BECKHAM is a parish, about 3~ miles east Rev. Edward Catmur Jervis M. A. of Peterhouse, Cambridge.
from Holt and 12 north-west from North Walsham, about The town lands produce £2 ws. yearly, which sum is dis-
5 west from Cromer station on the Great Eastern railway, tributed in coals; George Thacker esq. solicitor, of Essex
about 2 miles south from Sheringham station on the Eastern street, Strand, London w.c. is lord of the manor, and
and Midlands railway, in theN orthern division of the county, Frederick Howe Lindsay Bacon Windham esq. of Hanworth
North Erpingham petty sessional divisron, South Erpingham Hall, is the principal landowner. The soil is mixed ; subsoil,
hundred, Erpingham union (north division), Holt county mixed. The chief crops are wheat, turnips, barley and
court district, rural deanery of Ing worth and archdeaconry grass. The area is 785 acres; rateable value, £t,154; the
and diocese of Norwich. The parishes of West and East population in r881 was 300, including 82 officers and in-
Beckham were united for ecclesiastical purposes by Order in mates in Erpingham Union workhouse.
Council dated May 3rd, 1888. The old church of All Saints, Parish Clerk, Robert Doughty.
a building of the Early English period, was pulled down in L:J<:TTER Box cleared at 3· 30 p. m. Letters through Ilolt
x8go, and its materials, as well as those of the rumed church arrive at 9.30 a.m. Holt is the nearest money order &
of East Beckham, used in the erection of the new church of telegraph office
St. Helen and .All Saints, consecrated Oct. 1891; it is chiefty Here is the Erpingham union house, a building of flint &
of flint and stone, and occupies a site on the high road be- brick, erected in 185r, but partly destroyed on Easter
tween the two parishes, presented by the late Rev. John Gun- day, 1888. The chapel of the Holy Trinity is a neat
ton: the church, built on the ground plan of the old church building of red & white brick with stone dressings, was
of EMt Beckham, is in the Early Decorated style, and consists erected in 1868, & consists of apsidal chancel, nave k
of chancel, nave, south porch and a western bell-cot contain- western bell-cot: there are 120 sittings. Rev. Artbur
ing one bell: the chancel arch and south porch formed part Dewing Spurgin B.A. of Gresham, chaplain; Robert
of East Beckham church, and seven of the windows (re- Turner Bales M. D. of Holt, medical officer; Waiter Emery,
glazed) and the bell belonged to the former church of master ; Mrs. Mary Emery, matron ; the children at the
West Beckham ; the cost, amounting to £1,214, was raised union house attend the school at Gresham
by subscription : there are 124 sittings. The register dates A School Board of 5 members was formed compulsorily
from the year 168g. The living is a vicarage with the April 17, 1875, for the united district of West lleckham
perpetual curacy of East Beck ham annexed, joint net yearly & Dodham; J. Kemp, Runton Mell, Cromer, clerk to the
value £171, including 10 acres of glebe, in the gift of the Hoard. The children of this parish attend the school at;
Dean and Chapter of Norwich, and held since 1888 by the Bodham
310 W.J<~S:r BEOKHAM. NORFOLK. (KELLY's
Jervis Rev. Edwd, CatmurM.A. [vicar] Breese James, wheelwri?ht Gray Arthur, blacksmith
Ransom Henry Pegg I
Bnmfrey Elzh. (Miss),FightingCocks P.H Mack John William, farmer
Bird Samuel Wells, farmer Colman Stephen, farmer Wright James, farmer
Breese Be.ssie (Miss), dress maker Doughty Robert, carpenter
BEDINGHAM is a parish, 5 miles north-west from net yearly value £128, with 21 acres of glebe and residence,
Bungay, I I south from Norwich, and 4 miles north-west from in the gift of Col. C. W. J. Unthank, on the nomination of
Earsham station, on the 'Va vcney Valley branch of the Great the Bishop of Norwich, and held since 1871 by the Rev.
Eastem railway, in tbe Southern division of the county, Frederick Charles Toole Hobbins Theo. Assoc. of King's
Loddon hundred, Loddon and Clavering petty sesswnal College, London. The poor have about £ro rent yearly from
division and union, Bun gay and Beccles county court district, land, left by W. Purser, and rss. left by Thomas Stone;
rural deanery of Brouke (eastern division), archdeaconry of Gooch's charity of £3 3s. yearly is distributed in bread and
Norfolk and diocese of Norwich. 'fhe church of St. Andrew money on Christmas day. The town lands consist of 23A. 3R.
is a large and ancient building of rubble in the Perpendicular let for £2 s, which sum is a pp lied to the service of the
style, consisting of chance!, with north and south chapels church. Colonel Clement William Joseph Unthank, of
(formerly used by the hamlets of Woodton and Topcroft), Intwood Hali, is lorq of the manor and princtpallandowner.
aisle.<~, south porch and an embattled western tower with The soil is mixed ; subsoil, clay and gravel. The chief
circular base and octagonal upper story, containing 5 bells : c:rops are wheat, barley, peas, beans and turnips. The area is
there are mural tablets to Maria. (Mynus), wife of Henry 11 32-f.A:. JR. BP. ; rateable value, £1,448 ; the population in
Stone, !1675, and to other members of this family: and also r8gr was 288. •
to Thomas Cowper, a former vicar,. 1725; in the church is a Sexton, Robert Baldwin.
stone under which is said to be buried the heart of one of
tb 6 family of Brews or llruce, who, dying beyond sea, desired Posr OFFICE. Letters through Bungay arrive at 8 a. m.
it to be brought and interred here, whe_re also i,n 1505 , were LETTER Box cleared at 4.40 p.m. week days only. Hemp-
buried Robert Bruce and John his son: the chancel is nall is the nearest money order, & BuDgay the Dearest
divided from the nave by a screen ; there are two piscinre, telegraph office
and an ancient font; the organ was erected in r883; there Parochial School (mixed), erected in r863 by public sub·
are x6o sittings. The register dates from the year 1555. scription, for about so children; average attendance, 44;
The living is a. vicarage, average tithe rent-charge L, 127, Miss Susan Baker, mistress
I{obbins Rev. Fredetick Charles Tooie Burgess Benj. farmer, Rookery farm Poll Robert Selim, farmer & overseer,
Th,A.C.K.L, Vicarage Button John, shopkeeper Lodge farm
Cannell John, farmer, Willow farm Skinner William, farmer
COMMERCIAL. Chen!'y Frederick, farmer Snowling William 1 miller (wind)
Baldwin Robert, sexton Legood George, blacksmith Whistlecraft John, farm bailiff to -
Banham Robert, farmer Matthews William, farm bailiff to Col. I<'oster esq
Hloomfield Jsph. TriplePlea P.H.&:farmer C. W. J. Unthank, Priory farm Wright William, farmer
.
BEECHAMWELL (variously spelt in old documents, I next presentation. A few charities are distributed annually
"Bilchamwell," "Bychamwell" and "Beechamwell ")is a among the poor. John Motteux esq. left in 1791 £roo £3
parish and village, 5 r,niles south-west from Swaffham station, per Cents. the interest to be expended by the rector and
5 south from Narborough station, both on the Lynn and churchwarden on the first Sunday in February every year.
Dereham section of the Great Eastern rail way, and r ro~ A sum of £ wo, being the purchase money of 2 acres of land,
from London, in the South Western division of the county, formerly belonging to the poor of this parish, has been
South Greenhoe petty sessional division, Clackclose hundred, invested by the Charity Commissioners in the £3 per Cent.
Swaffham union and county court district, rural deanery of Consols for the benefit of the poor. In this parish, on the
Fincham, archdeaconry of Norfolk and diocese of Norwich. western side, is a remarkable earthwork, called the "Deril's
The churches of All Saints and St. John in this parish are Dyke,'' extending from Narborough to Caldecott, a distance
now picturesque ruins. The church of St. Mary is a small of about 9 miles. Roman coins, pottery and human remains
building of fiint and stone, in the Early English style, con- have been discovered on the glebe land. lleechamwell Hall,
sisting of chancel, nave with thatched roof, south aisle, the seat of Joshua Fielden esq. D.L., J.P. is a plain building,
north porch and an ancient round western tower containing enlarged by John Motteux esq. at the end of the last century.
a clock and 2 bells; in the chancel are brasses of two rectors Joshua Fielden esq. D.L., J.P. is lord of the manor and owns
of the rsth century, one being to Jabes Hamilton, ob. 1430; all the land in lhe parish. The soil is light 11nd sandy, and
the other inscription is missing: the communion plate the subsoil is chalk and gravel. The chief crops are wheat,
includes an ancient paten and a chalice dated 1569 : there barley and turnips. The area is 3,723 acres ; rateable value,
are rBo sittings. The register <l.ates from the year rs6r. £2,201 ; the population in JBgr was 363.
The living is a rectory, with those of Beechamwell St. John, Parish Clerk Robert Watts.
Beechamwell All Saints and Shingham annexed, average '
tithe rent-charge £309, joint gross yearly value £ 34 s, Posr & M. 0. 0., S. B. & Annuity & Insurance Office.-Henry
including u6 acres of glebe with residence, and held since Rix, sub-postmaster. Letters received through Swaffha.m
x888 by the Rev. Charles Somes Saxton li.A. of Magdalene arrive at 8 a. m. ; dispatched at 4·45 p.m.; & on sundays
College, Cambridge. The livings were united by Order in at 10 a.m. Swaffham is the nearest telegraph office
Council, December 3oth, r878, and have been since that National School (mixed), built in r835, & enlarged in 1875,
date in the alternate gift of the Lord Chancellor and Joshua at a cost of £231, for 79 children ; averas;-e attendance, 58;
Fielden esq. J.P., D.L. the former having the right of the ,Albt, Wm. .Bartram, mast.; Mrs. CarolineBartram, mist
Crook :M:rs Crane William, Coopers' Arms P.lt. & 'Norman Hugh, gamekeeper to J.
Field en Joshua D.L., J.P. Beecharnwell blacksmith, wheelwright, agricultural Fielden esq
hall implement maker & machinist Ox bury John, farm bailiff to J. l''ielden
Mason Claxton B Mason Claxton B. farmer & land agent, esq. Malthouse farm
Saxton Rev. Chas. Somes M.A. Rectory St. John's farm; & at Hard wick, Rix Henry, shopkeeper, Post office
Barkham William, baker King's Lynn
I
BEESTON (or BEESTON-NEXT-MII.EHAM) is a large and with residence, in the gift of and held since 1865 by the Rev.
pleasant village situated OQ high ground, 2 miles north-east John Swatficld Orton rh. A.. of King's College, Lon~on. The
from· the Fransham station on the Lynn branch of the Great rectory house, formerly surrounded by a moat, which has
Eastem railway and 7 west from East Dcrcham, in the Mid been filled in on one side, was burnt down in the reign of
division of the county, Launditch hundred, Mitford and James I. and rebuilt on the same site. Here is a Wesleyan
Launditch petty sessional division and union, Dereham Reform chapel. The charities include the church land of 8
. county court distrit.:t, rural deanery of South Brisley and acres IS perches, let for £.12; the rector's dole of £I ;
archdeaconry and diocese of Norwich; it is purely agricul- Huke's charity, £5 for the poor and to the rector £r for
tural, with the houses very much scattered. For civil preaching a Good Friday sermon ; Halcott's charity of
purposes it is united with BITTERING PARVA, which is £2 8s. for bread, to be distributed every Sunday ; Alee's
ecclesiastically a separate parish. The church of St. Mary charity of £r I2S. given away in bread : Gooch's charity
is a building of flint with stone dressings, in the Early (1634) 1 ranging from £2 r6s. to £4 Ss. given to the poor in
Decorated style, consisting of chancel with chapel, clere- money; and a fuel allotment of 20 acres, rented at £45·
storied nave of four bays, aisles, north porch, and an embat- J. J. Winter esq. of Norwich is lord of the manor. Wilham
tled western tower with spire, containing one bell : the Thomas Collison esq. of Bilney Hall and Yarmouth, Robert
tower was struck by lightning and burnt down in May r872, Harvey Mason esq. of Necton Hall, Miss Haste, the tru,tees
and rebuilt in 1873: in the church is a finely carved screen; of the late C. Wallis esq. and Mathew Robert Stedman J.P.
there are 200 sittings. The register dates from the year of Gressenhall, are the principal landowners. The soil is
1538, The living is a rectory, average tithe rent-charge light loam and clay; ~ubsoil, gravel and cla~·· The chief
1:4r8, gross yearly \'alue £468, including 30 acres of glebe crop,s are wheat., barley and turnips. The area. is ,2,073
DIRECTORY.] NORr"'OLK. BEE;'{LEY. 311
acres; rateable value, £3,232 ; the population in x89r was A School Board of five members was formed compulsorily
469· July 14, x875, for Beeston All Saints & little Bittering; J.
Parish Clerk, Jamcs Head. Lovett; Little Fransham, clerk to the board; James Fitt,
!'osT 0JfFICE RKCEIVING HousE.-Mrs. Eliza Preston, re- Litcham, attendance officer
ceiver. Letters arrive through Swaffham at 8.15 a. m.; .Board School (mixed), built in 1879 at a cost of £8so, for 96
dispatched at 9.30 a. m. & 5 p.m. Litcham is the nearest children; average attendance, 6o; .Albert Victor Jordalj.,
money order & telegraph office · ;mas~r
Dowling Edward Cooper Hy. wheelwright & blacksmith Parke Frederick, farmer
Orton Rev. John Swaffield Tb.A.K.C.L. Culley John, farmer Reeve Waiter William, farmer
Rectory Cullyer William, farmsr . Rivett Henry, farmer & cattle dealer'
Preston James Dunster Lewis Henry, farmer Rush John, farmer
COMMERCIAL. Gooderson Williarn, hoot maker Rush John, jun. farmer
Bell Edward, farmer · Gunton Robert, Holkham Arms P.n Starling James, fa.rmer [postal address,
Bell William, farmer, New farm Holman Robert Palmer, farmer Litcham]
Bolton William Jennings ( exors. of}, Jackson Charles Wm. grocer & dmper Stimpson Frederick, shopkeeper
farmers, Manor farm [postal address, Milk Matthew, farmer, Crossway farm Turner William, farmer
Litcham] [postal address, Milebam] Wheales John, Bell P.H
Buscall Charles & Henry, farmers Mitchell William Saunders, farmer Wheales Peter, farmer & cattle dealer
Claxton Harry, cattle dealr. & castrator Moore James John, carpenter Wyett Barnabas, farmer
Claxton Robert, farmer Naylor James, farmer, Bell hall Wyett Henry, Ploughshare P.n
Claxton William, farmer Or ton John, farmer
BEESTON REGIS is a parish on the seashore, about 3 I picturesque dale in this parish are the remains of Beeston
miles west-north-west from Cromer station, and 12 from Priory, founded in the reign of King John by Lady Isabella.
North Walsham, in the Northern division of the county, Cressey for canons of the Augustinian order, and dedicated to
North Erpingham hundred and petty sessional division, St. Mary in the Mead: the west end of the church, with a.
Erpingham union, Bolt county court district, rural small tower and part of the chapter house, are the only
deanery of Repps, archdeaconry of Norfolk and diocese of portions now remaining: the church when perfect was
Norwich. The church of All Saints is a building of flint cruciform and 141 feet in length, but had no aisles. Beeston
with stone dressings, chiefly in the Decorated style, and con- Hall is the seat of Thomas Wyndham Cremer esq. B. A., J.P.
sists of chancel, nave, aisles, north anrl south porches (the who is lord of the manor of Owby and Tbirne. The trustees
north porch forming a 'vestry) and a western tower contain- of the late Benjamin Bond Bond-Cab bell esq. D. t.., J. P. are
ing one bell: the church has a fine roof, and there are some lords of the manor of Beeston. T. W. Cremer esq. and
remains of a painted screen behind the communion table: Samuel Hoare esq.liLP.,M.A.,J.P.are the principallandowne:r;'$.
the church was thoroughly restored in x867, and a new The soil is principally sand and heath. The crops are the
pulpit, reading desk and font presented by Thomas Wynd- usual cereals. The area is 822 acres of land; rateable value,
ham Cremer esq. B.A., J.P. of Beeston Hall; it was also £'757; the population in 188x was 193.
reseated in the same year, by Gurney Hoare esq. and the Parish Clerk, Frank Mortimer.
chancel is now (1892) being refilled with oaken benches. The Letters through Cromer arrive at s. 3o a..m. ; dispatched at
regiswr dates from the year I743· The living is a rectory, 4 p.m. Lower Sheringham is the nearest money order&;
tithe rent-charge £106, gross income £x26, including x6 telegraph office
acres of glebe with residence, in the gift of the Duchy of . . .
Lancaster, and held since 1 86 7 by the Rev. William Bos- Scho~l (mfants) for the :par1shes of Bee.<~ton & ShErmghal!l,
worth Th.A. of King's College, London. The rectory house bu.Ilt m 1875, fo~ 90 children; average attendance, 89; M1ss
was erected in 1869 on a site near the church. The poor Ahce Parnell, mistress
have £22 from Hooke's and other charities for fuel. In a The elder children attend the school at Sheringham,
1

Cremer Thomas Wyndham B.A. 1 J.P. Bosworth Rev. Wm. Th.A.K.C.L. Rectory Fuller Samuel, farmer, Abbey farm
Beeston hall· Eden Henry Hamilton Forbes, Eden ldg Funnell Mary (Mrs.), shopkeeper
BEESTON ST. ANDREW is a village and parish, esq. and held since 1885 by theRm·. William Clifford Aston
• 3! miles north-east from Norwich and 2~ west from Sal- M. A. of Christ Church, Oxford, who resides at Merrivale
house 8tation on the Norwich and Cromer section of the villas, Ross. Sir Thomas Barr~:>tt-Lennard bart. M.A.,
Great Eastern railway, in the Eastern division of the county, D.L., J.P. of Belhus Park, Essex, is lord of the manor. 'l.'he
Taverham hundred and petty sessional division, St. Faith's chief part of the land belongs to F. Micklethwait esq. and
union and Norwich county court district, rural deanery of Barnes trustees. The soil is light and mixed; subsoil, sand.
Taverham and archdeaconry and diocese of Norwich. There The chief crops are wheat, barley and turnips. The area is
is no church; a thorn bush is planted where the foundations 623 acres; rateable value, [r,o5o; tht} population in ;r88x
remain, and service used to be held on the spot once in the was 56.
year. Mission services are held on Sundays in a building Letters through Norwich arrive at 6 a. m. Old Cat ton is the
attached to Red Hall farm. The living is a rectory, average nearest money order & telegraph office
tithe rent-charge £r46, net yearly value £90, with x acre
of glebe, in the gift of the trustees of the late John Gurney The children of this parish attend the school at Crostwick .

Brown John, farm bailiff to R. G. Howlett Henry, farmer
Bagshaw esq Kett Peter Mellish, butcher & farmer
l Money John, carpenter .

BEESTON ST. LAWRENCE is a parish, 3 miles Boulderson esq. is a mansion in the Domestic Gothic stylh,
north from Wroxham station on the East Norfolk section of standing in an extensive park, which possesses all the natural
the Great Eastern railway, 6 south-east from North Wals- advantages of wood and water: it was until recently the
ham and ro north-east from Norwich, in the Eastern divi- residence of the ancient family of Preston, who originally
sion of the county, Tunstead and Rapping petty sessional came from a village of that name in the county of Suffolkr:
division, Tunstead hundred, Small burgh union, North Wals- the family distinguished themselves as royalists in the civil
ham county court district, rural deanery of Waxham, Tnn- war, and Jacob Preston esq. of Beeston, one of the four gen.,
etmd. division, archdeaconry of Norfolk and diocese of Nor- tlemen appointed to wait upon Charles I. during his im.,..
wich. The church of· St. Lawrence is a small but ancient prisonment, was the favourite servant of his illustrious
building of flint and stone, consisting of chancel, nave, south master, who, as a last tribute of affection, presented him,
porch and a round western tower containing one bell: in the when upon the scaffold, witb an emerald ring. Sir Henry
church are many handsome monuments uf the Preston Jacob Preston bart. J.P. and trustees of the late John Sea..
family, and the communion plate of silver gilt belonging to man Postle esq. of Smallburgh Hall, are the principal land-
the church is remarkably handsome : there are 120 sittings. owners. The soil is various; subsoil, sand o.nd clay. The
The register dates from February, 1558. The living is a chief crops are wheat, oats and barley. The area is 519
rectory, with the vicarage of Ashmanhaughannexed, average acres; rateable value, [751; the population in x8gr was 47•
tithe rent-charge £w6, joint net yearly value £214, includ- Parish Clerk, John Bird.
ing 84 acres of glebe and residence, in the gift of Sir H. J.
Preston bart. and held by the Rev. Ri{;hardson George Wilson Letters through Norwich via Neatishead arrive at 7 a. m.
Tucker, who resides at Ashmanbaugh. Beeston Hall, the The latter is the nearest money order office
property of Sir H. J. Preston bart. and residence of Arthur The children of this place atwnd school at Ashmanhaugh
Bouldcrson Arthur, Bees ton hall \ Francis John, steward to Sir H. J. j' Shrceve James, farm bailiff to Peter
Preston bart Powell esq . .
:BEETLEY is a parish, about 3 miles north-by-west from Mitford and Launditch petty sessional division and union\
East Dereham and 3 south-west from North Elm ham station East Dereham county court district., rural deanery of South
on the Wells and Dereham section of the Great Eastern rail- Brisley and arcndeaC01ll'Y and diocese of Norwich. Tbe
way~ in the Mid division of the county, Launditch hundred, church of St. iY~ry Magdalene is a small andplain, QJ.I~lding
• •
312 BEETLEY. NORFOLK.
of flint, with stone dressings, in the Early English style, con- Coker are the chief landowners. The soil is mixed, por-
sisting of chancel, nave, south porch and a massive western tions inclining to heavy ; subsoil, gravel and clay. The
tower containing 5 bells : the chancel retains s beautifully chief crops are wheat, barley and turnips. The area ia
carved but much mutilated piscina of white stone ; the chan- 1 1770 acres; rateable value, £2,330; the population in 1Bg 1
cel was restored, and repairs effected in the nave, in 1875: was 366.
there are Ioo sittings. The register dates from the year PosT OFFICE.- Samuel Blyth, sub-postmaster. Cleared
I547· The living is a rectory, annexed to that of East Bil- 6.30 p.m. ; dispatched at 6.3Q p.m. Letters throngh
ney, tithe rent-charge (Beetley) £5oo, joint net yearly value Dereham arrive at 6.35 a. m. Gressenhall is the nearest
£533, with 26 acres of glebe, in the gift of Albert Collison money order & telegraph office. Postal orders are issued
esq. J.P. of Mileham Hall, and held since 1882 by the Rev. here, but not paid
Henry Collison M.A. of Pembroke College, Cambridge, who
resides at East Bilney. Here is a Primitive Methodist WALL LETTER Box, Tarn House corner, cleared 7.20 p.m
chapel. The decayed parish of Bittering Magna was divided A School 11oard of 5 members, now increased to 7, wa.s
many years ago between this parish and Grassenhall. There formed July 15, 1874, for the United District of Beetley &
is a. fuel allotment of 20 acres, on to which the poor turn asses East Bilney,Rev. H. Collison chairman & hon. clerk to the
and geese and from which they cut turf. £2 3s. 4d. yearly, board
given by an unknown donor, is expended in distributing 20 Board School for both parishes, Hungry Hill, for 140 child-
loaves of bread every month to the poor. The Rev. Henry ren ; average attendance, no; Francis Barkham Gale,
Evans-Lombe B. A. of Bylaugh Park, who is lord of the master; Mrs. Louisa Gale, mistress; Miss LaviniaCannell,
manor, Earl Sondes, of Elmham Hall, and .Mr. James 1 infants' mistress .
Anderson Alfred, Punch Bowl P.H. & Davison John, farm bailiff to Mr. Nelson Richard Walker, farmer, Old
shoe maker Frederick Nicholls Hall & Vale farm
Atthow Jennison, jun.farmer & coal dlr Fcnncll Samuel, New inn,& horse breakr I Reynolds Chas. farmer, Peacock farm
Blyth Sl.shopkpr.& blacksmith,Post off Goward George, farmer Rohinson George, farmer, Bog farm
Coker James, farmer & landowner, Harman Robert, farmer Smith Grantley GrixLon, baker
Beetley hall; &Field house, Hind ring- Hewitt George, baker Wiedmann Dr. Heinrich, farmer, Tarn
ham & Brisley Melton Richard, jun. farmer & rate & House farm
Farrow John, farmer, High House farm tax collector, Lodge farm Willimott Robt. beer ret. & bricklayer
:BEIG HTON is a parish and village IQ miles west from tithe-rent charge £42Q, average £319, net yearly ralue,
Yarmouth, II east from Norwich, and 2 south-west. from Acle! £239, including IQ acres of glebe, with residence, built by
station on the Norwich and Yarmouth branch of the Great : the Rev. T. L. Fellowes, in the gift of Robert Fellowes esq.
Eastern railway, in the Eastern division of the county, and held since 1886 by the Rev. Alfred Lyon Fellowes M.A.
Blofield and Walsham petty sessional division, Walsham Trinity College, Cambridge. There is a Primitive Methodist
hundred, Blofield union, Norwich county court district, chapel, erected in 1862. The poor's allotment of 9 acres
rural deanery of Blofield and archdeaconry and diocese of , produces about £2o yearly. Robert Fellowes esq. D.L., J.P.
Norwich. The church of All Saints is a handsome edifice · of t-lhotesham Park, is lord of the manor. The principal
of flint in the Decorated style, consisting of chancel, clere- landowners are Thomas HenryBurroughes esq. the trustees
storied nave of four bays, aisles, south porch, and an em- of the late Henry N. Burroughes, Magdalen College, Oxford,
battled western tower with pinnacles, containing one bell: it and Mr. Hubert Gillett. The soil is mixed ; subsoil, clay.
was restored in 1847, at a cost of about £2,000, by tile Rev. The chief crops are wheat, oats and barley. The area is
T. L. Fellowes, then rector, fitted with open seats, and 1,or6 acres; rateable value, £1,781; the population in 1891
the chancel windows filled with stained glass : there are was 266.
memorial windows to Cyrus Gillett, d. 1848, and Sarah his Parish Clerk Waiter Leave.
1

wife, d. 1876, and to Maria Gillett, their daughter, d. 1853 : '


the font is Norman, and there is an ancient oaken chest: PosT 0FFJCE.-James Hubbard, receiver. Letters through
in 1a90 the upper storey of the tower was raised and the .Norwich, via Acle, arrive at 8 a.m. dispatched 3.25 p.m.
pinnacles surmounted by stone figures of the Evangelists; The nearest money order & telegraph uilice is at Acle
and since x881 various other restorations have been made, ;National School (mixed), erected in 1857, by the Re\'. T. L.
at a cost of {,662: there are 334 sittings, all free. The Fellowes, for 76 children ; average attendance about 56~
register dates from the year .I509· The living is a rectory, I Miss Ellen Hume, mistress
Fellowes Rev. Alfred Lyon M. A. Rectory . Chapman Albert Graham, farmer, Cox- I Myhill John, shopkeeper
Miles Mrs hill farm Read John, farmer
Barker Matthew, shoeing smith, black- Gil!ett Hubert Cyrus H. farmer Wright John, builder
smith, carpenter & wheelwright Hovells Mattbew,Nelson ta\•.& shopkpr Youngs James, shopkeeper & farmer
Fowler Wm. Squire,landowner & farmr I Lake Ephraim, farmer
BELAUG H is a parish and compact village occupying tithe rent-charge £125, with residence, in the gift of the
an elevated position on the summit and sides of an acclivity, Bishop of Norwich, and held since 1881 by the Re¥, George
rising from the left bank of the river Eure, and is 8~ miles Peter Buck. The Rectory house was repaired and enlarged
north-east from ,.Norwich and I mile west from Wroxham in x881. A sum of money, left in 18o8, for the repairs of
Junction station on the Norwich and Crorner section of the the church and invested in the funds produee £24 yearly.
Great Eastern railway, in the Eastern division of the county, The Trafford family are lords of the manor and chief land-
South Erpingham hundred and petty sessional division, owners. The soil is sand and gravel ; subsoil, marl. The
.Aylsham union and county court district, rural deanery of chief crops arc wheat, barley and turnips. The area is 854
Ingworth and archdeaconry and diocese of Norwich. The acres; rateable value, .£1,073; the population in 1881 was
church of Ht. Peter, situated on the summit of a hill, is a 139.
building of ftint, in the Gothic style, consisting of chancel; LETTER Box cleared at 11.45 a. m. & 4· 15 p.m. Letters
nave, north aisle, south porch and a western tower with four received from Norwich, via Hoveton, arrive at 7 a.m. &
pinnacles containing 3 bells: the church retains a handsome 4· r5 p.rn. The nearest money order & telegraph office is
acreen and an ancient font: the organ was erected in ~886: at Wroxham , ·
there are 8o sittings. The register dates from the year National School (mixed), fur 30 children; average attend-
1538. The living is a rectory, net yearly value arising from I ancc, 25; Miss Minnie Hannaut, mistress
Buck Rev. George Peter, Rectory Chapman Joseph,farm bailiff to William Ives Charles, farmer
Cooke Samuel Benjamin · Frederick Green esq Maidstone Leonard, farmer
'Cooke Samuel Benjamin, saw mills Hannent Elizabeth (Mrs.), farmer Sutton John, farmer
BESSINGHAM (or EAsSINGHAM) is a parish 8 miles dates from the year 1536. The living is a discharged
north from Aylsham, 6 south-west from Cromer, 6 north- rectory, average yearly value from tithe rent-charge i,to6,
.west from Gunton station on the Norwich and Cromer sec- with 33 acres of glebe, in the gift of trustees, and held since
tion of the Great Eastern railway, 6 east-south-e!Jst from x886 by the Rev. Charles Holt Ensell B.A. of Trinity College,
Bolt station on the Eastern and Midlands railway and 9 Dublin, who is also vicar of and resides at Sustead. Daniel
• from North Walsham,in theN orthern division of the county, Spurrell esq. is lord of the manor and principal landowner,
union of Erpingham, hundred and petty sessional division The Manor House, the residence of Daniel Spurrell esq. is
of North Erpingham, county court district of Holt, rural a mansion of red brick, in the Tudor style, erected in x87o,
deanery of Repps, archdeaconry of Norfolk and diocese of and situated in a park of about 70 acres; a ~mall stream
Norwich. The church of St, Andrew, after having been for meanders throtlg'h the park, and attached to the house is a.
many years in a very dilapidated condition, was restored in conservatory; there are also exttmsive shrubberies and plea-
x869, and is an edifice of stone, in the Perpendicular style, sure and kitchen gardens, the latter containing a. picturesque
consisting of chancel, nave, south porch and a round em- summer-house OYer looking the road, with a spired turret and
battled western tower containing 2 bells : the communion stained windows. In the north-west part of the parish, on
plate includes a silver chalice dated 1567. The register land belonging to Daniel Spurrell esq. is a mound sur-
IJIRECTORY.] NORFOLK. BILLL.~GFORD. 313
rounded by a moat and called "The Castle ;" it was pro- f Parishes Act a detached part of this parish was amalgamated
bably a Roman encampment, a quantity of Roman pottery 1 with Barningham Winter in 1884.
having been dug up on the site in 1870: the whole now LETTER Box cleared at 3.30 p.m. Letters through Norwich
forms a considerable plantation. The soil is various, but arrive at 8.30 a.m. The nearest money order offices are
ch1efly brick earth and marl: the surface is undulating and at Hanworth & Aldborough & telegraph office at Aid-
picturesque, being much wooded. The chief crops are I borough
wheat, turnips, barley and grass. The area is 514 acres, of 1 This place is included in the Gresham United School Board

which 330 are arable and the rest pasture; rateable value, district formed in 1873; the children attend the Board
{,852; the population in 1891 was 124. By the Divided school at Gresham

Spurrell Daniel, Manor house Crane Elijah, farmer White Stephen Leeds, Horse Shoes P.H.
Spurrell Edmund Denham, Manor ho Emery Robert, shoe maker & painter & farmer
Bishop Charles, blacksmith Thompson Jane (:~Iiss), shopkeeper Woods Philip, farmer
Cooper William, farmer
BESTHORPE is a parish and scattered village, 1 mile perLy of the Earl of Winterton, by purchase from William,
north-east from Attleborough station on the Thetford and 5th Lord Byron, and Elizabeth his wife, in whose possession
Wyrnondham section of the Great Eastern railway, in the it remained until 1879 ; it is now the property and residence
Mid division of the county, Guiltcross and Sbropham petty of Richard Bryant esq. : the house underwent considerable
sessional division, Wayland union, Shropham hundred, alterations in 188r : the inclosing walls of an old tilting
Attleborough county court district, rural deanery of Rock- ground here are still standing. There is a fuel allotment of
land, arch deaconry of Norfolk and diocese of Norwich. The rs acre.~, let at £s yearly. The land is generally freehold, in
church of All Saints is a cruciform building of flint, in the the occupation of the owners. Richard Bryant esq. is the
Decorated style, and consists of chancel, nave, transepts, principal landowner. The soil is clay ; subsoil, clay. The
south porch and a lofty western tower containing 5 bells: chief crops are wheat and barley. The area is 2,164 acres;
there is a fine white marble monument to members of the rateable value, £4,438 ; the population in 1891 was 487.
Drury family and one stained window: the church was
partly restored in 1876 and the work completed in 1883, and Sexton, William Pinnock.
has 200 sittings. The register dates from the year 1558. SuB PosT OFFICE.-William Nelson, receiver. For receipt
The living is a vicarage, gross yearly value £250, with 33 & dispatch of letters on week days only from 7 a.m. to 8
acres of glebe, in the gift of and held since 188o by the Rev. p.m. Letters through Attleborough, which is the nearest
Edward Utten Browne. Bestborpe Hall, a mansion of red money order & telegraph office
brick, erected in 1590, was originally the seat of Sir William
Drury, whose crest, together with that of Viscount Kilmorey, National School (mixed), for go children; average attend·
appears over the east front; before 1771 it became the pro- ance, 72 ; Thomas William Williamson, ma-ster
Browne Rev. Edward Utten, Vicarage Edwards Sl. Compasses P.H. & carpntr Johnson James, jun. farmer
Bryant Richard, Besthorpe ball Everitt Robert, farmer Nursey William, farmer
COMMERCIAL. Gilham Robert Edward, farmer Palmer Robert, farmer
Ayton Charles, farmer Greenacre George, miller (steam & Pooley John Josepb, grocer & draper
Ayton Noah, farmer, Stubley farm wind)&merchant & farmer,Bestb.orpe Postel Raglan, farmer
Bird Edward, beer retailer mills; & at The Stores, Attleborough Potter Daniel, farmer, Walnut farm
Clarke Charles, farmer Hill William, farm bailiff to Carr Quantrill William, farmer
Clarke James, farmer Moore esq. Postal farm Redit Joseph, blacksmith
Disdle Thomas, farmer Larkman James & Sons, iron & brass Smith Charles, baker & blacksmith
Drake Edward, farmer founders & agricultural implement Warren John Joseph Edwin, farmer
Dunnett Saml.farmer & assist. overseer makers & gEJneral agents Warren Samuel William, shopkeeper
:BEXWELL is a parish on the road from Downham to same time placed at the cost of the Rev. James Henchman
Swaffham and Brandon, 1} miles east from Downham Clubbe, late rector, 1874-90: there are 70 sittings. Tha
Market station on the Ely and Lynn section of the Great register dates from the year 1558 and is in excellent preser-
Eastern railway, in the South Western division of the county, vation. The lh·ing is a discharged rectory, average tithe
Clackclose hundred and petty sessional division, Downham rent-charge £262, net yearly value £275, with 40 acres of
union and county court district, rural deanery of Fincham, glebe and residence, in the gift of the Bishop of Norwich,
archdeaconry of Norfolk and diocese of Norwich. The and held since 1890 by tho Rev. Robert Rogers M.A.. of
church of St. Mary is a building of rag-stone, in the Norman Trinity College, Dublin. Edward Roger Murray Pratt esq.
and Early English styles, and consists of chancel, nave, J.P. of Rystou Hall, who is lord of the manor, and John
south porch and a round tower surmounted by an octagonal Grant Morris esq. are the principal landowners. The soil is
belfry of the Perpendicular period, containing one bell : the good loam ; subsoil, clay and sand. The chief crops are
pulpit, designed and executed by W. Lawrie, of Downham wheat and barley, on the four-course system. The area is
Market, is of Caen stone, in the Early English style, and 1,177 acres; rateable value, £1,491; the population in 1891
adorned with a figure in Italian alabaster of our Lord bearing was 63.
His cross: there are memorials to Gregory Bexwell, 1641 ; Parish Clerk, George Sawyer.
Gregory Bexwell, jun. 1649 ; Henry Bexwell, 1654; Francis
Batchcroft, 1658 ; and to the Rev. F. H. Daubney, a former Letters through Downham, the nearest money order & tela-
rector, d. 1829: in 1878 a memorial window was erected in graph office, arrive at 7 a.m. & I p.m
the east end to the Rev. Edward John Howman, rector from The children of this place attend the schools at Downham
1831, at the cost of the family, a new reredos being at the Market, Crimplesham & Denver
Rogers Rev. Robert JII.A. Rectory Proctor "\Villiam Sexton, farmer, Bex- Wilkinson Margaret (Mrs.), farmer,
Engledow William, farmer well ball Win Drove farm
BILLINGFORD (near East Dereham) is a village and 1 Primitive Methodist chapel. The fuel allotment of so acres
parish occupying the east side of the vale of the Wensum, is let for £40 yearly. High House is built on the site of a
I~ miles east from ~orth Elmham station on the Dereham barrow, in which a Roman urn was found. Beck Hall was
and Wells section of the Great Eastern railway, and 6 anciently an hospital for poor travellers, founded by William
miles north from East Dereham, in the Northern division of de Bee in the time of Henry Ill. and dedicated to St.
the county, Eynsford hundred and petty sessional division, Thomas, of Canterbury. Billingford Hall is the residence
Mitford and Launditch union, East Dereham county court of Lady Parry. The Earl of Leicester K.G. is lord of the
district, rural deanery of Sparham and archdeaconry and manor and principal landowner. The soil is loam and clay;
diocese of Norwich. The church of St. Peter is a building subsoil, gravel and clay. The chief crops are wheat, barley
of flint, in the Early English style, consisting of chancel, and roots. The area is 1,820 acres; rateable value, £1,939;
clerestoried nave of four bays, aisles, south porch and an the population in 18gr was 315.
octagonal embattled western tower containing one bell: Parish Clerk James Woods.
there is a piscina in the chancel and one in the north aisle, '
and ai the south doorway is a mutilated holy-water stoup ; PosT 0FFICE.-Mrs. Jem1ma Ulph, receiver. Letters
the church affords 200 sittings. The register dates from through East Dereham, arrive at 7-15 a. m. ; dispatched
the year 1813. The living is a rectory, average tithe rent- at 5·55 p.m. The nearest money order & telegraph office
charge £275, net yearly value £241, including 18 acres of is at Elmham
glebe, with residence, in the gift of the Earl of Leicester K.G. Parish School (mixed), erected in 1875 at a cost of about
and held since 18,30 by the Rev. Charles John Dash wood M.A. £200, for 65 children; average attendance, 57; Robert
of Corpus Christi college, Cambridge. There is a small William English, master; Mrs. Elizabeth English,mistress

Gill Miss, Manor house


I
Dashwood Rev. Chas. Jn. M.A. Rectory Hankinson Rev. Edward Francis Ed-~ Hudson John Peter, The Lodge
wards M.A. Billingford ball Hudson Robert, Beck hall


314 BJLLINGP'OBD. NOHFOLK. (KELLY"s
Parry Lady, Billingford ball Earl James, higgler Jex Robert, fishmonger
Watson Mrs. East End house Francis Edward, baker Jordan George, Three Tuns P.H
COJ\OIE:RCIAL. Girling William Jameg Piercy, Bell inn Mayes John, farmr. Hillingford,High ho
Bone James, farmer Howard Amelia (Mrs.); slwpkeeper Parfitt Walter,market gardener & farmr
Bone John, butcher Howard James, shoe maker Roberts Charles, wheelwright
Clark Richard, farmer Hudson Robert, jun. & John Peter, far- Ulph Jemima (Mr~.).shopkpl'.Post office
Dack Thomas, blacksmith mers, Beck hall Watson Charles, farmer
'

lHLLINGFORD, otherwise PYBLESTON {near Diss), Wilson esq. and held since I878 by the Rev. Robert White
is a parish and straggling village, on the north side of the n.A. of the University of London. There is a charity of [2
Waveney, on the borders of Suffolk, 3 miles east from Diss yearly value for bread. George Holt 'Vilsrm esq. :o.L., J.P.
station, in the Southern division of the county, Ears ham of Red grave, Suffolk, whO iiS lord vf the manor, and Edmund
hundred and petty sessional division, Depwade union, Hollond esq. of Benhall are the principallaridowuers, The
Harleston county court district, rural deanery of Redenhall, soil is light and heavy l~tnd, mixed ; subsoil, clay and
archdeaconry of Norfolk and diocese of Norwich. The gravel. The chief crops are wheat, barley and roots, in
church of St. Leonard is an ancient building of flint in the usual proportions. The area is 1,820 acres; rateable value,
Early English style, consisting of chancel, nave, south porch £I, 146; the population in I89I was 183.
and a low western tower containing one bell: 'the whole Sexton, George Bloomfield.
fabric was thoroughly restored in '1:88I and has I20 sittings. PosT 0FFICE.-Miss Sarah Cooper, receiveri. Letters
The register dates from the yeai' I64o. The living is a rec- through Scale, which is the nearest money order &
tory, with that of Little Thorpe annexed, tithe rent-rharge telegraph office. Arrive 6.2oa.m.; dispatched7.I5p.m.;
£322; average .£244 ; joint net )'early value [200, includ- sundays 6.20 a. m; dispatch n. 15 a.m
ing 30 acres of glebe and residence, in the gift of George Bolt The children of this place attend the school at Scale
. '
White Rev. Robert B. A. Rectory Ellis Elijah 1 farmer Goddard Henry, farmer
Bartram Barnabas, hurdle maker Flowerdew Arthur John Blomfield, King Joseph, shoe makel'
Bolton John, farmer farmer & thrashin~ machine proprtr Nunn John, shoe maker
Cross John, miller (wind) Gardner William Amos, blacksmith Peake Robert, Horse~hoes P.H

lHLLOCKBY is a parish 2~ miles from Aele station on rent-charge [147, gross yearly value £I 5o, in the gift of
the Norwich and Yarmouth section of the Great Eastern and held since I862 by the Rev. Charles John Luca& lU,
railway, 3~ south-west from Martham station and 6 west of Magdalene. College, Cambridge, who is also rector ot
from Ormesby station, both on the Eastern and Midlands Burgh St. Margaret, where he resides, The poor'& allotment
railway, 14 north-east from Norwich and 8~ north-west of 4 acresproduee$ about £r2 yearly, which is distrbuted in
from Yarmouth, in tll,e Eastern division of the county, the coals. Daniel Spurrell esq. of Bessingham, is lord .of the
incorporated hundreds, petty sessional division and incor- manor and the principal landowner. The soil is mixed;
poration of :East and West Flegg, Great Yarmouth county subsoil, sand and clay. The chief "Crops are the usual cereals.
court district, rural deanery of Flegg and archdeaconry and The area il'i 389 acres; rateable value £703 ;·the population
diocese of Norwich!. The church of All Saints, struck by in I89I was 71.
lightning and burnt down many years ago, is now for the Parish Clerk, J ohathan Pulford. 1 .
most part in a ruinous condition and overgrown with ivy, Letters through Yarmouth arrive all 7.30 a.m. Filbyisthe
with the exception of the chancel, which was restored about nearest moneY. order & Acle the nearest telegrapb office
1872; there is one bell and about 50 sittings. The register The ehildren of this place attend the school at Burgh St.
dates from the year 156o, 'fhe living is a rectory, tithe Ma.rgarets
Culley Charles, farmer, The Hall 1 I Gowen Rohert, farmer I Manship George, farmer
' '
EAST BILNEY is a village and parish, 5 miles north- of an engagement during the Civil War: spurs,~word hiltS,
west from East Dereham and 3 west from North Elm ham and other articles have been found here. Thomas Bilney, a.
station on the Great Eastern rail way, in the Mid division of the native of this parish, educated at Cambridge and subse.
county, Launditch hundred, Mitford and Launditch petty qucntly a clerk in holy orders, was burnt at Norwich as a
ses13ional division and union, East Dereham county court heretic, 19 August, 153I, and his ashes, brought by the
district, rural deanery ot South Brislev and archdeaconry parishioners and. buried in an urn in the churchyard, were
and diocese of Norwich. The church of St. Mary is a small so found by the present clerk in digging a graYe ; the cottage
building of flint With stone dressings', in the Early' English in which he lived still exists, and possesses a curiously
style, consisting of chancel, nave, south porch and a low wrought ceiling of black wood. East Bilney Hall, the pro.
western tower, the original upper stage naving been thrown pcrty of Willianl Thot:naS Collison esq. J.P. but occupied by
dowrt during Ket'g rebellion 'in 1549; it" corttaihs one bell ; Harry J ames Sparks esq. is a spacious mansion of white
over the llorch is a parvise, in which a library was formerly brick, and was erected by the present owner im867 ; there is
kept ; the remains of a building on the south side, .supposed some ornamet1tal water on the north side, inclosed by planta-
to have been a chapel, weril rebuilt in r886 and converted tions, within which considerable remains of foundations have
into an organ clmmher; i'n IS83 a new chancel was built in been discove'red, constructed of bricks of a peculiar shape and
memory of the Rev. Henry Collison, rector from r833, by his make; the site was formerly inclosed by a moat, now filled
widow, and a stained window placed at the east end by his up. The trustees of the late John David Hay-Hill esq. are
surviving daughters; in l88S ~ memorial. window was lords of the manor. The principal landowners are William
erected to the Rev. 'l'homas Bilney, and there are several Thomas Collison esq. of' Yarmouth and Lady Hartwell, or
others; the church affords 8o sittings. The register dates Bridgwater, Somerset, only daughter of the late Sir Henry
from the year I547· The living is a rectory, with that of Dymoke bart. The soil in some part..'l is of a light nature,
:Beet.Jey annexed, tithe rent-charge (Bilney)£ I I8 1 awarded in and in others large quantities of excellent brick-earth are
I838 ; joint net yearly value £533f with 26 acres of glebe, found, Some of <the finest malting barley is grown here.
and residence, in the gift of Albert Collison esq. J.P. of The area is 544 acres, of which about 40 acres are plantation;
Mileham Hall, and held since L~82 by the Rev. Henry rateal_Jle value £760; tl1e population in I89r was 142_.
Collison M.A. of Pembroke College, Cambridge. The ':rec- Parish Clerk, John Constable.
tory house was built in 184o by the Rev. Henry Co1lison,
late rector. In 1 83 8 Rebecca Pearce built almshouses for Pos'l' OFFICE.~William Muffitt, sub-postmaster. Letters
three poor aged couples of the hundred of Launditch, and W. are received at 7 a.m. from East Dereham; dispatched at
Pearce esq. endowed these with a rent-charge of £6o a year, 6. ro p.m. The nearest money order & telegraph office is
charged on land at St. Paul's, Shadwell, London ; the land at Gressenhall
has been sold, and the purchase money invested in the The place is included in the United School Board District of
funds. Close by the church is a piece of land, named in the , Beetley & East Bilney, formed in I874; the school for the
parish map .. Bloodfields," and said to hav-e been the scene two parishes is on Hungry Hill
Collison Rev. Henry M. A. Rectory BayfieldGeo. Horseshoes P.H.& blc\l~mth Lewell Isaac, farm bailiff to J a.mes
Sparks Harry Jarnes, East Bilney hall Constable John, wheelwright Coker esq. Bee~ farm
COMMERCIAL. · Creed AHred, farmer Muffitt William, sub-postmaster
BaxterRt.f,..rmm.bailifftoMr.JeiSeRiches GoffinFrederic, Swan P.H. & butcher Muffitt William, jun. wheelwright
Black Henry, farm bailiff to Rev. Henry Grix James, farmer 1 Vincent Elijab, chimney aweep6r
Collison M.A · · ,, t .- • 1 Melton John, farmer _ Wigby Art4ur, farp1er & deal~
WEST BILNEY is a village and parish: I~ miles ea~t deaconry and diocese of Norwich.' The church of St. Cecilia
of East Winch station on the Lynn aml Norwich line of the is a small but ancient structure pf flint and stone, in the
Grec'l.t Eastern railway, 7 east-south-east from Lynn, in the Perpendicular style, consisting of nave and an embattled
North Western division of the t:annty, Freebridge Lytm western tower containing one bell: there are 100 sittings.
hundred, petty sessional division and union, Lynn county The register dates from the :yeai' 1562. -The living is a vicar--
co.urt district, :rural deanery of Lynn Freebridge and arch- age, gnJss yearly value £57 1 including I3 acres of glebe, in
DIRECTORY. J NORFOLK. BINTREE. 315.
the gift of Edward Rowing Bras nett esq. and held since 'r8go 2,367 acres; rateable value, D~. 168 i the population in 188x
by the Rev, James George, of St. Bees, who is also vicar of was 223.
and resides at Pentney. West Bilney Hall, the seat of Robert Parish Clerk, Henry Curl. r •
Henry Household esq. is 8 handsome mansion in 8 well~ LE"ITERS through Lynn arrive at 8..30 a.m. The nearest
timbered park, surrounded by extensive plantations and . money order office & telegraph station is at East Winch
drives. Edward RowingBrasnettesq. is lord of the manor. WALL LETTER Box cleared at 10 a. m. & 5·5 p.m
Robert Henry Household esq. whose estate extends into Xational School (mixed) for West Bilney & Pentney, about
Pentneyand Wormegay, EdwardRowing Brasnett and John midway between the churches; erected fqr ws
children;
Brasnett esqrs, are the principal landowners. The soil is averil._ge attendance, go; Martin Luther Martin, master;
sand, loam and a little clay; subsoil, gravel and sand. The Miss Susan Duncombe, mistress
chief crops are wheat, oats, turnips and hay. The area is CARRIER.-Dye to Lynn, monday & thursday. 1 '
Household Robt. Hy. West Bilney hall Brasnett Horace, farmer, The Beech~ Dye William, farmer & carrier '
Brasnett Edward Rowing, farmer & Brasnett John, sen. farmer & land- Hammond Rd. general smith & grocer
landowner, Manor farm owner, Ivy lodge Hurn Amos, farmer, Dcnton'i farm
. I '
BINHAM (or BrNHAM ABBEY) is a parish and large rent free. In the vale, through which runs the Stiffkey
villag@, 5 miles north-east from Walsingham station and 5 rivulet, are the ruins of the once famous Benedictine ;priory ,
south-east-by-east from Wells, in the Northern division of of St. Mary, a cell to the abbey of St . .A.lbans be{ore 1093,
the county, North Greenhoe hundred and petty sessional but re-founded in no4 by Peter de Valoines, a nephew of
division, Walsingham union and county court district, rural William the Conqueror, and finished in the reign of Henry l.
deanery of Walsingham and archdeaconry and diocese of by his son Roger de Valoines, for a prior and not less than
Norwich. The church of St. Mary, formerly that of the eight monks, and at one time subject to the abbey of St.
priory, was originally a stately. cruciform edifice with a Peter's of Clugni 1 in France : thEf refectory, chapter-house
massive towel"~ it now consists of choir, nave of six bays, and the jail gate, which stands at the west end of the pre-
with triforium and clerestory and a small western bell cot cinct, are Early English: the east end of the conventual
containing r bell : ·the Perpendicular font, an ancient and church, chapter-house and dormitories contain portion~ of
much mutilated work, is ornarnented on the exterior with the Decorated style, and in the ~orth aisle of the conventual
carved representati<ms of the Seven Sacraments, the Catholic . church and elsewhere are traces of Perpendi.cular work : in
Church and the Trinity, figures of saints in niches occupying the second year of King- John, the patronage was claimed by
the lower panels ~there are also remains of an ancient and Robert Lord Fitzwalter, who besieged it in order to reinstate
richly illuminateu screen, with figures of saints: the nave Thomas the prior, who had been depOI'led by the Prior of St.
appears to have always been, and still is, appropriated as Albans, but the siege was successfully raised by for~;es sent
the parish church, its three eastern bays being Early by King Johu for its def~ce : on its dissal.ution iri 31 Henry
Norman and the three western Early English with square VIII. (r539-4o) there were 7 monks, and revenue11 valued at
piers: the west front is of the 13th century: the eastern £I4o: soon after it was granted to Thomas Paston esq. fifth
arm, including the transepts, formed the conventual church, son of Sir William Paston knight, and is rlbw the property
but these portions, with other anrl considerable remains, of William Capel Clarke-Thornhill esq, of Rushden, :North-
are gradually disappearing: the transepts and part of the ampton~ lord of the manor and principal landowner~. the
south wall of the church are spkndid examples of Norman tenure in th~ manor is by "smockhold." that ~s, the wife
w~rk (log3-uo6)~ the churc~ affords 200 sittings. The possesses an equal claim in the copyhold with per husban~
register dates from the year 1559. The living is a vicarage, and retains her claim in the event pf his (lying intestate,
average tith~ rent-charge £78, gross yearly value £x3r, Tb.e soil is light; subsoil, marl. The chi.ef CJ;"Ops are wb.eat,
including so! acres of glebe, in the gift of William Capel barley and oats. The area. is 2,24a acres; rateable value,
Cl11.rke-Thornhill esq, of Rushden, Northampton, and held !,"~,982 ; the population in 189~ was 466.
since r865 by the R~v. Robert Corry Cavell. A Primitive
Methodist chapel was erected in 1868. Henry I. gava this Parish Clerk, John Papes.
place a charter for:). market and a fair; the former is ob11o- PosT & M. o. OFFICE & s. .B.~Jabez William Jia.rrner;
lete but the lat.ter is stiU held on the 26th of July. Part of recei-rer. Letters arij received through Wighton RJ. s. o•.
the ancient market cross still remains. The annual rents ltt 8 _30 a. m. & are forwa'l'ded at . .9 p.m• The neares~
4 4
of a public house and 27A, 3R. a31i'· of land are devoted to telegraph office is &t Walsingham
apprenticing the children of the poor, the distribution of
coals and coats, and also of money to poor widows; there National School (mixed), erected .in 1878, for 70 children;,
are also two cottages for the occupation of deserving people, average attendance, 54; Mrs. Carolina Winfield, mistress
• • •

Bryant Miss, The Cottage Fox Maria (Miss), grocer & draper Howell .Arthur, pork butcher
Cavell Rev. Robert Corry [vicarl Fox Samuel, accountant & road surveybt Jnl"'Vis Step hen & Sons, blacksmilhs.'-
England Richard Golding- John, farmer, Westgate farm. Lake Henry, farmer
COMMERCIAL. Gotts George, ChequBrS F.H Middleton Hugh Plane, farmer
Bunnett James, farmer Grange Charles Thos. King's .ArmsP.H Nelson John, baker
Clarke John, thrashing machine propr Grccnacre Francis, gamekeeper to Overton Richard Kirby, grocer & drapl'!
Copeman Wm. Richd.farmer & butcher William Capel Clarke-Thornhill esq Papes George &Son, builders
Dent George, farm bailiff to .Richard Harmer Jabe2J Wm. shopkpr. Post office Purdy John Surgeon, butcher
England esq Harris Ernest Fountain, farmer Ramm James, boot maker
England Richard, farmer, Manor farm ; Hoo]j;.e Thomas, tailor Smith Hobert, beer retailer
& at Hindringham Howard Mary Ann (Mrs.), farmer Wyer Thomas, blacksmith
BINTREE is a parish on the river W ensum, 2 miles east rst, The Church Trust, for the repair of the chur\ili and
from the County School station on the Dereham branch of the things concerning the same ; ~nd, The Fuel Trust, ~ be
Great East-ern railway, and 8 south-east from Fakenham, in given in coals to the settled inhabitants holding less than l5
the Northern division of the county, Eynsford hundred and yearly; 3rd, The Poor Houses Trust: this trust at present i~
petty sessional division, Mitford and Launditch union, East in abeyance, some of its land having been lost or having
Dereham county court district, rural deanery of Sparham become incapable of identification, but the houses are still
and archdeaconry and diocese of Norwich. The churcb. of occupied by three indigent families. The Earl of Leicester
St, Swithin is an ancient structure of flint in the Perpen- K.G. who is lord of the manor of Hastings and Bintres, pur~
dicular style of the rsth century, consisting of chancel, nave, chased by Lord Chief Justice G;oke in 16o8, in consideration
aisle, south porch, south transept and a western tower con- of £625; Lord Hastings and Thomas Stone esq. are the chief
taining 3 bells : the stained east window is a memorial to landowners. There is also another manor in this parish
Eli7.abeth (Wallis), wife first of Lord James Nugent. Boyle styled Eintny, belonging t~ Ghril"'t's College, Cambridge.
Bernardo Towruhend, 1 capt. R.N. 1 K.C.H. who died 28th The r;10il is :q1ixed, light and sandy • ~ul>so~l, sandy anq clay.
June, 1842, and afterwards of Capt. W. H. Henderson !i.N., Ttle ol,lief crops are wheat, barley, turnips fill-d hay, The
C.B. who died in r855 ~ this lady died xs July, 1873 ~ the area. i$ 1,45-5 acres ; rateable valuet £2,u6 ; am~ the popula-
chancel was .rebuilt in x8o6, and the whole church repaved tion in I8gr Wa$ 378. . 1 1
and reseated in 1865: there are 200 sittings. The register Parish Clerk, Charles Dack. 1
dates from the yea11 x6o9- The living I!l a rectory, consoli- PosT 0FFJCE,-William Chapman, receiveri Letters
dated with ihat of Tremelthorpe, average tithe rent-charge· through East DerehaiJl arri'l(e at '1 a. m, & 5·55 P·ll\· ; dis-
£421 joint net yearly value £358, with ro acres of glebe and patched at 5•5Q p.m.; sunday~ a~ 19,. ro a. m. The near-
~iden<:e, in ther gift of Lord Hastings, and held. since 1871 · est mQney order & telegraph offici) is at Foulsham, ~os tal
by the Rev:. Robert Reeve Rackham B. A. of Corpu:; !Christi j orders are issued here, 'Qut not paid
college, Cambridge, and surrogate. Tb.ere is a Primitive1 School (mixed). bnilt .iQ l879• at 3 ((OSt of. £4oo, for 70
Methodist chapel. In the parish are three charitable trusts:- children; average attendance, 53 ; Richard Cornall, mast
Rackham Rev. Robert Reeve B,A, [rec-, Hall John, Manor house L · COMMERCIAL. .
tor & surrogate], Rectory Stone Thomas, Yarrow house. J Cha pmanW m.grocr .& drapr. Post offi~
316 BIN TREE. NORFOLK. [ KELLY S
7

Burrell Henry William, miller (water) Joyce William, shoe maker Smith John Baker, grocer & draper
& farmer, Hintry mill Monument William, Half Moon P.H Stone Thomas, farmer. Yarrow house;
Dack Charles, farmer & parish clerk Prior William, bricklayer & at N" orth Elm ham
Edge William, farm bailiff to Washing- Sayer William, shopkeeper & baker SymondsCatherine(Mrs. ),frmr &carter
ton Hamond esq Shaw Sarah (Mrs.), The Royal Oak P.H Wailer James, shoe maker
Hall John, farmer Smith George Ezra, farmer Wllkinson J<'rederick, blacksmith
GREAT BIRCHAM is a village and parish, 14 miles been curate in charge since x887. Here is a Primitive
north-east from Lynn, xo wes.t from J<'akenham, 8 south-west Methodist chapel, built in 187I. George, 2nd Marquess of
from Burnham Market and 3 south from Docking station, Cholmondcley, in 1869, erected almshouse.!i here, for four
on the Lyon and Wells section of the Great Eastern railway, old women. The M3.rquess of Cholrnondeley is lord of the
in the North Western division of the county, Smithdon manor and principal landowner, The soil is of a fair, light,
hundred, Smithdon.and Hrothercross petty sessional division, mixed character ; subsoil, clay and chalk. Bricks are made
Docking union, Little Walsingham county court district, in the parish. The crops are on the four-course system.
rural deanery of Heacham, archdeaconry of Norfolk and The area is 3,6o6 acres; rateable value, £~,014; the popula-
diocese uf Norwich. The church of St. Mary is a building tion in 1891 was 392.
of stone in the Perpendicular style, consisting of chancel, Parish Clerk, Charles Lown.
nave, aisles, north porch and a noble western tower contain- PosT OFFICE. _ Mrs. Jemima Bales, sub-postmistress.
ing 5 bells: the chancel was restored in 1850 and a window Letters arrive through King's Lynn at 6. 40 a.m. ; box
in the Perpendicular style inserted, the communion rails k d d
. bl d c1oses, wee ays, at 5·55 p. m. ; sun ays, 3·5 p.m.
renewe d an d an organ erected : t h e commumon ta e ates Docking is the nearest money order & telegraph office.
from 1640 ; there are 400 sittings. The register dates from Postal orders are issued here, but not paid
the year x657. The living is a rectory, tithe rent-charge ·.
£585, average £ 437 , net yearly value £ 56 4 , including 73 School, erected in 184z, for 164 boys, girls & infants, for the
acres of glebe, with residence, in the gift of and held since three parishes of Great Bircham, Bircham Newton &
r8 74 by the Rev. John Broomfield Winckworth B. A. of St. Hircham Tofts; average attendance, xso; John Layland,
Edmund Hall, Oxford, who is non-resident; the Rev. Charles master ; Mrs. Harriet Lay land, mistress
Frederick Hildyard B.A. of Worcester College, Oxford, has CARRIERS TO & FROM LYNN pass through frequently
Hildyard Rev. Charles Frederick B. .A.. Eales Mary Agnes (Miss), farmer, see· Iioward Thomas, miller(wind) & baker
[curate in charge] Hammond & Eales LawsonGeo.&Son,saddlers&harnessmas
Gooderson Frederick, King's Head inn Lown Chas. shoe maker & parish clerk
COMMERCIAL. Groom George, blacksmith Mace Thomas, blacksmith
Beeston John Dunn, grocer & draper Hammond & Eales (Mesdames), farmers Royce Elijah, shoe maker
Bradfield Joseph, wheelwright Hopkings William Clement, farmer,· Sheldrake John, shoe maker
Cholmondeley Marquis of, brick maker auctioneer& valuer & insurance agent, Wbarton Herbert Edgar, farmer
Cutter John, farmer, Heath house Moorfarm ~
::SIRCHAM NEWTON is a small village and parish, value £228, including 82 acres of glebe, with residence, in
f

I mile north from Great Bircham, 7~ miles south-west from · the gift of the Marquess of Cholmondeley, and held since
Burnham Market, 2 south from Docking station, on the Lynn r883 by the Rev. Thomas Edward Hankinson Cox M.A. of
and Wells section of the Great Eastern railway, and 15 Corpus Christi coll,..ge, Cambridge. The Marquess of Chol-
north-east from Lynn, in the North Western division of the mondeley is lord of the manor and sole landowner. The
county, Smithdon hundred, Smithdon and Brothercross soil is of a mixed character; subsoil, clay and chalk. The
petty sessional division, Docking union, Little Walsingham chief crops are on the four-course shift. The area is x, 128
county court district, rural deanery of Heacham, arch- acres ; rateable value, £737 ; the population in x8g1 was 85,
deaconry of Norfolk and diocese of Norwich. The church of Parish Clerk, Edward Jacob Osborne.
St. Mary is a small but ancient building of flint, in the Letters are received through Lyon, via Great Bircham,
Perpendicular style, consisting of chancel, nave and an em- at 6-4o a.m. Docking is the nearest telegraph office,
battled western tower containing I bell, and affords 6o Great Bircham nearest money order office. Box closes
sittings. The register dates from the year 1744. The 5·55 p. m.; sundays, 3 p. m
living is a rectory, with that of Bircham Tofts annexed, The children of this place attend the school at Great
tithe rent-charge £434• average £330, joint net yearly Bircham

M.A. Rectory
I & at The Grange, Stanhoe ·
I
Cox Rev. Thomas Edward Hankinson Matthews Robert, farmer, The Hall; Matthews Frederick, farmer
Roye Stcphen, shopkeeper & carrier
l3IRCHAM TOFTS is a village and parish, 7} miles Corpus Christi college, Cambridge, who resides at Bircham
south-west from Hurnham Market and 3 south from Dock- Newton. The Marquess of Cholmondeley is lord of the
ing station, in the North Western division of the county, manor and sole landowner. Two almshouses were erected
Smithdon hundred, Smithdon and Brothercross petty ses- here in x86g by George, 2nd Marquess, for two old women.
sional division, Docking union, Little Walsingham county The soil is of a light mixed character; subsoil, clay and
court district, rural deanery of Heacham, archdeaconry of chalk. The chief crops are generally on the fourcourse
Norfolk and diocese of Norwich. The church of St. Andrew system. The area is 1,431; rateable value, £7,119; the
is a small but ancient edifice of stone, in the Perpendicular population in 1891 was 159.
style, consisting of nave and a low western tower containing Parish Clerk, Edward Jacob Osborne.
I bell: there are xoo sittings. The register dates from the
year 1715 . The living is a rectory, united to that of Letters are received through Lynn. The nearest money
Bircham Newton, tithe rent-charge £ 434 , average £ 330 , order & telegraph office is at Docking. Box closes 5-45
joint net yearly value £228, including 82 acres of glebe, in p.m.; no collection on sun days
the gift of the Marquess of Cholmondeley, and held since The children of this place attend the school at Great
x883 by the Rev. Thomas Edward Hankinson Cox M.A. of Rircham
I
Taylor Robert, farmer & basket maker Wharton Arthur Phillip, farmer, Pond
Wadlow Samuel, farmer House & Nurses farms
I
and adJOining the latter village are strll some cottages, the
I
'BITTERING MAGNA (or GREAT BI'ITERING) was I the locality of which still bears the name of Brl"r.&RING
former~y. a parish lying ~etween Bee~ley and Gressenhall, ~~R~ET-the parish ~aving been divided between those ad-
Jommg, Beetley and Gressenhall.
:BITTERING P ARVA (or LITTLE BirrEBING) is a vil- • there are xoo sittings. The register dates from the year
lage and parish 3 miles north from the Wendling station on 1733. The living is a rectory, tithe rent-charge £79•
the Lynn branch of the Great Eastern railway and 5 north- average £6o, net yearly value £8o, including 45 acres of
west from Dereham, in the Mid division of the county, glebe, in the gift of Philip and Arthur Leamon esqrs. and
Launditch hundred, Mitford and Launditch petty sessional held since 1879 by the Rev. Walter Girling M.A. of Caius
division and union, East Derebam county court district, rural College, Cambridge, who resides at The Heath, Dereham.
deanery of South Brisley and archdeaconry and diocese of The site of the old Manor house, a little distance west of the
Norwich. For civil purposes Little Bittering is united with church, is surrounded by a moat. Philip Leamon esq. and
the adjoining parish of Beeston, but they are ecclesiastically Arthur Leamon esq. are lords of the manor and sole land-
separate parishes. The church of St. Peter is a small build- owners. The soil is loam and clay. The chief crops are
ing of flint and rubble in the Early English style, consisting wheat, barley and roots. The area is 398 acres of land, in
of chancel, nave, north porch and a western bell-turret con- one farm; rateable value, included in that of Beeston; the
taining I bell; the reading desk and manorial pew have population in 1891 was 47·
Jacobean panelling: the chancel retains a piscina and Parish Clerk, Peter Brown.
sedilia; the font is Norman and of circular form: against
the wall are two coped coffin stones, each about 6! feet long: Letters received frtlm East "Dereham arri\•e at 8 a. m.
.VmECTORY.J .XORFOLK. BLAKESEY 317
Gressenhall is the nearest post & money order office, The place is included in the Beeston & Little Bittering
savings bank & telegraph office School Board district
Kendrick John, The Hall I Stannard Thomas, farm bailiff to John Kendrick esq
:BIXLEY is a parish and pretty village standing on an including 46 acres of glebe, in the gift of Mrs. C. Turner,
eminence, on the high road from Norwich to Bungay, about and held since 1887 by the Rev. Alfred Edward Alston, who
3 miles south-east from Norwich, in the Southern division resides at Framing-ham Earl. Bixley Hall, the property of
of the county, Swainthorpe petty sessional division, hundred Mrs. H. S. T. Biscot, is now (1892) unoccupied; Bixley
and union of Henstead, Norwich county court district, rural Lodge, the property of Jeremiah James Colman esq. III.P. is
deanery of Brooke, Western division, archdeaconry of Nor- the residence of Gcorge Chamberlin esq. The Earl of Rose-
folk and diocese of Norwich. The church of St. Wandrege- bery P.c. is lord of the manor. Mrs. Henry Stafford Tyndale
silus, erected in 1868 on the site of the ancient church of Biscoe, of Holton Cottage, Oxford, and J. J. Colman esq.
the same name, built in 1272, is a small edifice of flint with M.P. of Carrow House, Norwich, are the principal land-
stone facings in the Gothic style, consisting of chancel, nave, owners. The soil is mixed ; subsoil, gravel. The chief
south porch, a vestry on the north side ~nd an ancient em- crops are wheat, barley and beans. The area is 64o acres :
battled western tower containing one bell : there are various rateable value, [.1,364; the population in x8BI was 16o, and
mural monuments to the family of Ward, from 1530 to 1762, in 1891 was 133.
and to the Rosebery family, 1771: the stained east window Parish Clerk, George Rix.
was t.he gift, in 1877, of the Misses Martin, and there is a Letters through Xorwich arrive at 7 a.m. The nearest
memorial window to Jane Hicks, d. 1857, and a fine rood money order & telegraph office is at Trowse
screen of oak : the church affords roo sittings. The register Bixley is a contributory district to Trowse Newton School
dates from the :year xs6x. The living is a rectory, with Board, sending 2 members
that of Framing ham Earl annexed, average tithe rent-charge The children of this place attend the schools at Trowse
£32, modus [.26o, joint gross yearly value £38o, net [.298, Newton & Framing ham Earl
Chamberlin George, The Lodge
Seago Mrs
IFarrow Thomas Wm. market gardener ISavage Robert, farmer
Moggs James, farmer t:;troyan Robert, farmer
BLAKENEY (anciently called SNITTERLEY) is a small Cambridge. There are We8leyan Methodist and Primitive
coast town and parish, 5~ miles north-north-west from Halt Methodist chapels here. Charities formerly producing f.g
station on the Eastern and Midlands railway, 8 east from yearly, but now considerably depreciated, are distributed in
Wells, 26 north-north-west from Norwich and 124 from fuel and clothing. There is a reading toom supplied with
London, in the Northern division of the county, Halt hun- papers and periodicals. Blakeney harbour is well situated for
dred, petty sessional division and county court district, sheltering small vessels, and was improved under an Act of
Walsingham union, rural deanery of Halt and archdeaconry Parliament obtained in r8r7, so that vessels of 150 tons
and diocese of Norwich. The church of St. Nicholas, stand- burden can approach the quay; spring tides rise between 9
ing on an eminence a little to the south of the town, about and ro feet. This was formerly a port called Blakeney and
II5 feet above the level of tho sea, is a handsome and Cley, the jurisdiction of which extended 30 miles along the
spacious edifice of flint and stone in the Early and Later coast from Morston on the west to Bacton Coal Gap on the
English styles, consisting of chancel, clorcstoricd nave of six east ; but in 188o it was made a part of the port of Lynn,
bays, aisles, north porch and a lofty embattled we;,tern tower, where also is the custom house. 'l'he trade is ch1efly in coal,
about 104 feet in height, forming a conspicuous landmark, timber and deals, oil-cake and manure, of which the impor-
with bold angle buttresses and pinnacles and containing tation is considerable; the exports are mostly corn. .A few
one bell; and there is also a small beacon tower or turret vessels are employed in the oyster fishery, but the coasting
at the north-east angle of the chancel, which is generally trade, once considerable, has rapidly declined. Henry IlL
believed to have been used for displaying a light or beacon fur granted a market, and in the 3 rst of Ed ward IlL a statute
the guidance of mariners : the chancel, a work of beautiful was passed regulating the fish trade, which was then carried
proportions and delicate workmanship, is all that now remains on to a considerable extent, and attracted a great number of
of the Early English chureh; the roof is exquisitely grained Dutch merchants, several of whom fixed their residence in
in iltone, with moulded ribs and carved bosse&; the east win- the town. Here are some remains, consisting principally of
dow is Early Decorated and on the north side are three stone several fine arches, of an ancient monastery of Carmelites,
sedilia: the chancel also retains an Easter sepulchre,founder's or White Friars, founded by John Stormer in 12go, in which
tomb and anrn bries : the rood screen remains in situ, with John de Baconthorpe, a learned divine and acute m eta-
the rood door on the north side: the nave, with its aisles and physician, became a friar and ultimately Provincial of the
the tower were re-erected in the 15th century and are worthy English Carmelites; he was born here, and died in London
examples of the Perpendicular style: the oak roof of the in 1340. Lord Calthorpe, who is lord of the manor, and
nave is a fine el(ample of hammer-beam construction with Charles Johnson Temple Lynes esq. are the chieflandowners.
curved braces, and spandrels filled in with beautiful and The soil is mixed, chiefly of a sandy nature. The area is
intricate fret-work tracery: the north and south buttresses r ,630 acres of land and 235 of water; rateable yalue, [.2,205;
of the tower bear the ;urns of the sees of Thetford and Nor- the population in r8gr was 8o6.
wieh, and in a panel on the western buttress of the south PosT, M. O. & T. 0.-William Baker, sub-postmaster.
aisle are the emblems of the Passion: the church, with the Letters through Dereham arrive at 7 , a. m. & dispatched
exception of the chancel, was entirely restored in 1883-7, 5
under the superintendence of Mr. Herbert J.Green, architect, at 4·5° p. m. Wall Box, High street, cleared at 4· 3° p.m
PUBLIO ESTA.BLISHMESTS : - '
at a cost of over [,6,ooo, given mainly by Lord Calthorpe Harbour Co. C. J. T~mple Lynes, clerk
and the parishioners, the tower and outer walls being refaced Odd Fellows' Hall, Manchester Unity, William Baker, sec
and the interior refurnished with elaborately carved oak Police Station, Daniel Chapman, constable
~:~~~~: T~~pl:l~~C::, ::~~~~;~edc:;ri~!i::tl~:~n~~ Reading Room, C. J. Temple Lynes, manager
1886: the lectern and reading desk were the gift of the Tillard PUBLIC OFFICERS : -
family: the ancient font has been raised on a new octagonal .Assistant Oversee,. & Lloyd's Sub-Agent, William Baker
stone base: there are 500 sittings. The register dates from Harbour Master, Thomas Dew
the year 1 5 38. The living is a rectory, united to those of National School (mixed), built in 1825, ·for 192 children;
Little Langham, Glandford and Cockthorpe, joint gross average attendance, r76 ; Frederick Hodges, certificated
yearly value £4oo, including xoo acres of glebe, with resi- master i Mrs. F. Hodges, mistress
dence, in the gift of Lord Calthorpe, and held since 1858 by CARRIER TO NORWICH-Arthur Walker, mon. & thurs.
the Rev. Richard Henry Tillard M.A. of St. John's College, returning following days
PRIVATE RESIDENTS. COM11IERCIAL. Eensley William, ship owner
Bullock Richard Alcock Alfred, carpenter Blakeney Harbour Co. (C. J. Temple-
Daniels Samuel .Alcock George, carpenter Lynes, clerk)
Hudson George, Manor farm All en Herbert Hercules, engineer & iron Blakeney Reading Room (C. J. Temple-
Hum James & brass founder, agricultural machin- Lynes, manager)
Nurse Mrs ist, manufacturers' agent, blacksmith Bond William Ezra, Ship inn
Page Martin Fountain & King's .Arms P.H Bowles William, master mariner
Stearman .Albert John Baines Edward, fisherman Bullen Thomas Jonathan, plumber
Temple-Lynes Charles Johnson Baker IIannah (Mrs.), fancy repository Butters Robert John, master mariner
Thomas Mrs Baker William, auctioneer, Lloyd's sub- Cobon Thomas, mariner
TillardRev.Rd.Hy.M.A.[rector],Rectory agent & a~sistant overseer Coffin Henry, shoe maker
Tnrner Ed ward Clifford, Sunnyside Bald wm Robert, ship carpenter Cooke Robins, corn & coal merchant; &
Wells John Barnes Louisa Ann (Miss), shopkeeper at Glandford
C. N. & S. 21
318 BLAKENEY. NORFOLK. [ KELLY'.S
Cozens Thomas, Calthorpe Arms P.H Mov William, tailor Simpson Job, pork butcher
Dew Thos. sail maker & harbour master
-
Nicholls William, farmer Stanford Arthur, draper
Digman Alfred, master mariner Overman John, beer retailer Starling Bodham, farmer
Eggleton Robert, fish dealer Page & Turner, corn, coal, cake, seed & Starling Richard, shipwright
Forsdick John, White Horse P.H manure merchants & ship owners ; & Temple-Lynes Charles J ohnson, farmer,
Graveling William, shoe maker Cley-next-the-Sea & Bolt landowner & clerk to the Blakeney
Hawkins James, grocer & draper Parker Joshua Cook, grocer & draper Harbour Co
Hill Arthur, hair dresser Parker Henry Nichols, butcher Thompson George Henry, baker
Hill Augustus, brewer & timber mercht Pinchin James, beer retailer Thompson Lodes, master mariner
Hudson George, farmer, Manor farm Pond Arthur, grocer & drape1: Vince Robert, seedsman
Lee James, fisherman & pilot Russell Robert, baker Walker Arthur, carrier & shopkeeper
Mallett John Massingham, butcher; & Rust James, carpenter Wells John, retired master mariner
at Stiffkey & Wells Savage William. miller (wind) W oodhouse Ed ward J arvis, shopkeeper
MitchellJsph.mstr.mariner& ship owner Shorting Emmerson, jobbing bricklayer
BLICKLING is a parish and village 2 miles north-west " Blickling two Monarchs and two Queens have seen,
from Aylsham station on the Great Eastern railway, and One King fetched thence, another brought a Queen."
the same distance west from Aylsham Town station on the Sir John Hobart, 5th baronet, was created Baron Hobart
Eastern and Midlands railway, in the Northern division of of Blickling, 28th May, 1728, and advanced_ to the Earldom
the county, South Erpingham hundred and petty sessional of Buckinghamshire, 5th September, 1746: Harriet, or
division, Aylsham union and county court district, rural Henrietta, daughter of John, 2nd Earl of Buckinghamshire,
deanery of Ingworth and arch deaconry and diocese of Nor- married in 1793, William, 6th Marquess of Lothian.
wich. The church of St. Andrew, which stands on an
eminence near the Hall, is an ancient building of stone in Blickling Hall, the seat of Constance, Marchioness of
the Perpendicular style, and consists of chancel, nave, aisles, Lothian, is quadrangular in plan with two open court' in
south porch and an embattled western tower: in the church the centre and a square turret surmounted by a vane at
are inscriptions to former lords of the manor, together w1th each angle of the building : the clock tower over the en-
numerous brasses, the earliest being a bust of a civilian, c. trance is modern : the entrance from the court in front,
1360 : there is a very large brass with marginal incription formed by the offices and stables, is by a. bridge of two
to Sir Nicholas Dagworth, lord of the manor, 1401 ; and one arches crossing a moat, and on each side of the bridge, upon
to Roger Felthorp, 1454, and Cecilie his wife, with figures of a pedestal, is the figure of a bull, the Hobart crest, support-
16 children standing before their parents : other brasses ing a shield of the arms of the family : the general aspect
commemorate Cecilie, sister to Geoffry Boleyn, lord of the of the Hall, with its turrets, curiously formed gables, bridge
manor, 1458 ; Anna, daughter of William Boleyn esq. 1479; and moat, conveys an admirable idea of the domestic build-
Isabella (Boleyn), wife of William Cheyne, of the Isle of ings of the Jacobean age : the library contains over r2,ooo
Sheppey, 1485; and Anne (a Wodo), 2nd wife of Thomas volumes, including some rare books and manuscripts ; and
.Asteley esq. of Melton Constable, 1512 1 with twins: there in the house are numerouS' family portraits and various
.are brass inscriptions only to Agnes (Appleyerd), wife of ancient and modern pictures of considerable value, includ·
Robert Phileppes, and to Wjlliam Rayna.ld, 1484; John ing two of Gainsborough's works, and statues in oak of
Cok, 1503; John Catys, John Barker and Geoffry Apple- Queen Anne Boleyn and Queen Elizabeth : some magnificent
yard, and a monument, to John William Robert, 7th Mar- specimens of ancient tapestry adorn the walls of the various
-quess of Lothian, who died at Blickling Hall, 14 Nov. rooms, one of which, representing Peter the Great of Russia
1841: in the chancel is a memorial window to Caroline Ann, on horseback, was presented to John, 2nd Earl of Buck-
Dowager Lady Suffield, d. 27 Oct. xBso ; and in r878 a inghamshire, by the Empress Catherine of Russia, upon
monument, executed by G. F. ·watts R.A. was erected by the occasion of his mission as ambassador to the Russian
Constance, Marchioness of Lothian, to her husband, William Court: the park and gardens, surrounding three sides of the
Schomberg Robert, 8th Marquess. d. 4 July, 187o, to whom a Hall, comprise about 6oo acres : the park is well stocked
memorial window was also erected by the parishioners : the with deer, and is nearly divided by a wood of old forest
·church was restored in 1878, under the direction of the late trees, consisting of about 180 acres: the conduit and statues,
G. E. Street esq. R.A. at the sole cost of the Marchioness of which formerly adorned the platform of the gardens at
Lothian, when the porch ~~ond tower were erected: there are Oxnead Hall, are preserved here ; and there is also a
I8o sittings. The register dates from the year 1559. The pyramidal mausoleum with a base 45 feet square, in which
living is a rectory, consolidated with Erpingham, tithe rent- are the remains of John, Earl of Buckinghamshire, and his
charge £882, average £671 1 joint gross yearly value £6o7, two wives, Mary Anne (Drury) and Carolina (Conolly); in
net £283, including 32 acres of glebe, with residence, in the the park is a fine piece of water, in the form of a crescent,
gift of Constance, Marchioness of Lothian, and held since extending about a mile in length and 400 yards at its
1868 by the Rev. Frederick Meyrick M.A. late fellow and greatest breadth: the pleasure gardens, about a mile in
tutor of Trinity College, Oxford, and non-residentiary canon circumference, have on three sides a terrace commanding a
of Lincoln Cathedral. The manor was one of those belonging pleasing though confined landscape, in which the adjacent
to King Harold II. and had great privileges; part of it was town of Aylsham forms a principal feature. In the park is
attached to the see of Norwich, whose bishops had a palace kept a small herd of an old Lancashire breed of domesticated
here: in the latter end of the 15th century this manor cattle, white with black ears. Constance, Marchioness of
belonged to Sir William Boleyn, whose son, Sir Thomas Lothian, is lady of the manor and sole landowner. The
Boleyn, was in 1526 advanced to the title of Viscount Roch- soil is sand and gravel ; subsoil, gravel. The chief crops
ford and in 1529 created Earl of Wiltshire, honours to which are wheat, roots, barley and hay. The area is 2,o84A. 2B.
he had certain hereditary pretensions, but which were thus ISP. ; rateable value, £2,553 ; the population in 1881 was
rapidly conferred by reason of Henry VIII. 's courtship of his 3II.
daughter Anne Boleyn, afterwards queen: subsequently the Parish Clerk, Harry Butler.
estate was purchased by Sir Henry Hobart kt. and bart.
Lord Chief Justice of the Court of Common Pleas ( 1613-25), LETTER Box cleared at 4· 30
whose son, in 1619, built the present stately mansion. Sir Letters through Norwich. Aylsham is the nearest money
John Hobart, 3rd baronet, was knight of the shire for Norfolk order telegraph office
in the last three Parliaments called by King Charles II. and
had the honour of a visit from the king, together with his National School (mixed), built, with teacher's house, in
queen, at his seat in 1671, when his majesty knighted Henry 1868, at the cost of the late William, 8th Marquess of
Hobart, the eldest son. In some ancient poetry the follow- Lothian, for 70 children; average attendance, so; Waiter
ing distich is extant : - J. Simmonds, master
Lothian Constance Marchioness of, HawkinsGeorge,BuckinghamshireArms Poll Edmund, estate carpenter
Blicking hall P.H. & farmer Randall George, farm bailiff to the
Meyrick Rev Canon Fredk. M.A.Rectory Horner Frank, gamekeeper to the Marchioness of Lothian
Forster William, The Lodge Marchioness of Lothian Smith Esther (Mrs.), farmer
Wright Henry G Horner J ames, blacksmith Wright Henry G. farmer,& agent to the
Fenwick Frederick, carpenter Kiddle Henry, farmer, Lodge farm Marchioness of Lothian; office,
Fow!erWm. house steward,Blickling hall Oclee Herbert, head gardener The Hall
BLOFIELD is a parish on the road (rom Norwich to wich. The church of St. Andrew is a fine building of
Yarmouth, the head of 8 union, I! miles from Brundall sta- flint, With stone dressings, in the Gothic style of the lsth
tion on the Norwich and Yarmouth section of the Great century, consistmg of chancel, nave, aisles, north porch and
Eastern railway, 7 miles east from Norwich and 119! from a lofty embattled western tower, with four statues as
London, in the Blofield and Walsham petty sessional divi- pinnacles, and containing 6 bells : there are several monu-
sion, Blofield hundred, Norwich county court district, rural ments, including one of marble, with small kneeling figures,
deanery of Blofield and archdeaconry and diocese of Nor· to a member of the Paston family, attached to the Court of
DIRECTORY.] .NORFOLK. BLOFIELD. 319
Henry VIII.: the octagonal stone font, a work apparently PUBLid OFFICER~ : -
of great antiquity, is adorned with sculptures, representing Surveyor of the Highways, Cornelius Waters
the Life of Our Saviour, but is much defaced ~ the
I!Ceile5 in Inspector under the Contagious Diseases (Animals) Act &
church was restored in r878, and has 400 sittings, 300 being under the Dairies & Cow Sheds Order, 1885, John Davy
free. The register dates from the year 1545. The living is Overed M.R.o.v.s. & F.V.M.A.L
a rectory, average tithe rent-charge£ 768, net yearly value SCHOOLS :-,.
£614, including 59 acres of glebe, with residence, in the There is· a School Board consisting of 5 members,.
gift of Caius College, Cambridge, and held since 188o by formed compulsorily, June 3, I 875, for the united districts
the Rev. James Percy Garrick M.A. late senior fellow and of l3lofield & Hemblington; H. H. Cole, 67 Londorl street.
tutor of that college. Here is a Baptist cha pal and a Mis- Norwich, clerk to the board; James Rayner, attendance
sion Hall, and at the Heath is a Primitive Methodist chapeL otiicer 1
The Rev. Mr. Reeve, a fot·mcr rector of this parish, gave a Board (mixed & infants), erected in 1877, for 171 children;
house, situated near the church, and £10 a year, to be paid average attendance, 125 ; George Mower, master; Miss
to & schoolmaster~ he all!o gave three different benefactions, Martha Mower, infants' mistress
amounting to £6 7B. to be paid yearly in bread and clothing Board (mixed & infants), Hemblington, erected in 1877 &
to poor widows belonging to this parish. These charities enlarged in 1889 to hold r2o children ; average attendance,
are now administered under a new scheme framed by the r~o; Arthur E. Deeks, mast. ; Mrs. Sarah Jane Deeks, mist
Charity Commissioners. Tbe charities for distribution CARRIER'> from Acle, South Walsham & Martham pass
amount to £4o yearly, and there is also a fuel allotment of through to Norwich m on. wed. & sat
37 acres let at about £56• · Blofield House is the residence t ,r
BLOFIELD UNION.
of Edward Giibert esq. J.P. Henry Randal Burroughes
esq. of Burlingham St. Peter, who is lord of the manor, Board day, alternate tuesdays, at ro a. m. in the
George Hnstler l'uck esq. Blofield Hall, Major Robert Her- Board Room at ,Lingwood.
bert Heath Jary J.P. of Burlingham House, John Edward The union comprises the following places :-Acle; ~eighton,
Cooke esq. Thomas Slipper esq. and Mr. W. Edrich are the Blofield, Brundall & Bradestone, Buckenham, Burlingham
principal landowners. The soil is good mixed ; subsoil, brick St. Andrew, Burlingham ~t. Edmund, Burlingham St.
earth, clay and sand, The chief crops are the usual cereals Peter, Gantley, Freethorpe, Halvergate, Hassingham,
and roots. 'I' be area is 2,299 acres ; rateable value, £4,933; Hemblington, Limpenhoe, Lingwood, Moulton, Plum-
and the population in rBgr was r,rsr. · stead Great, Plumstead Little, Postwick, Ranworth-with.
Posr, PARCEL, M. 0. & T. 0., S. B. & Annuity & Insurance Panxworth, Reed ham, South wood, Strrunpshaw r Thorpe
Oltice.-John Wright, sub-postmaster. Letters received St. Andrew or Thorpe-next-Norwicb, Tunstall, Upton-
from Norwich at5 a.m. & 2.45 p.m.; dispatched at 12.50 with-Fishley, Walsham South St. Mary, Wal.sham South
a.m. & 5.30 p.m St. Lawrence, Wickhampton, Witton & Woodbastwick.
Sus-PosT & PARCEL OFFICE at Mill road.-William Rogers, · The population of the union in I8gr was n,844;. ll.l'ea.
receiver. Letters through Norwich, vift. Blofield, arrive 44,178 acres ; rateable value, £83,125
at 6.30 a. m. ; dispatched at 4.20 p. m Clerk to the Guardians & Assessment Committee, H. H. Cole,
WALL LETTER Box, near Church, cleared at 5 p.m. ; no 67 London street, Norwich
sunday collection Treasurer, Henry Birk beck, Norwich
WALL LETTER Box, Callow green, cleared at 4·45 p.m.; no Relieving & Vaccination Officers, Eastern district, Harry
sunday collection · · Thomas Capon, Acle; Western district, Albert Royal,
COUNTY MAGISTRATES FOR BLOFIELD & W ALSHAM PETTY Blofield
SESSIONAL DIVISION. Collectors of Poor Rates, John Wright, Blofield ; Geo. Turner
Gilbert Edward esq. Blofield house (chairman) ,. Upton & Henry Kett, Thorpe St. Andrew
Birkbeck William esq. Thorpe High house, near Norwich Medical Officers & Public Vaccinators, Acle district, Frank
BurroughesHen ry Randal esq. Burlingham hall, near Norwich Cufaude L.R.C.P.Edin. Acle; Blofield district, George
Buxton Geoffrey Fowell esq. Sunny Htll, Thorpe St.Andrew, Henry Torrance L. R. c. P. uel. Blofield ; Thorpe district,
Norwich William Guy 11r.n. Norwich
Ca.tor Albemarle esq. B.A., D.L. Woodbastwick hall, near Superintendent Registrar, H.· H. Cole, 67 London street,
Norwich Norwich; deputy, John Wright; Blofield
Ca.tor John esq. B. A. Wood bastwick hall, near Norwich Registrars of Births & Deaths, Blofield sub-district, Albert
Gilbert Major Herbert Henry B.A. Cantley Royal, Blofield ; deputy, J. D. Overed, Blofield ; South
Gillett Robert Howard esq. M.A. The Rookery, IIalvergate, Walsham sub-district, llarry Thomas Capon, Acle;
near Norwich deputy, Dr. F. Cufaude
Holmes William James Owen esq. The Hall, Strumpshaw, Registrar of Marriages, Albert Royal, Blofield; deputy,
near ~orwich John Davy Overed, Blofield
Jary Major Robert Herbert Heath, Burlingham house, Workhouse, Lingwood, a building of prick, erected in 1837,
near Norwich to hold 248 inmates, Samuel S. Bagshaw, master ; Mrs.
Palmer-Kerrison George William Danby esq. The Priory, Annie Bagshaw, matron; Rev. Augustus Frederick Bell-
Ran worth man M.A. chaplain; George Henry Torrance L.B.C.P.rrel.
Slipper Thomas esq. Braydeston hall, near Norwich medical officer ; the children attend the National school,
Tuck George Hustler esq. The Hall, Blofield Lingwood
Clerk to the Magistrates,William Simon Rackham,Norwich RuRAL SANITARY AuTHORITY.
The following parishes are included in the Petty Sessional Meets at Board Room, Lingwood, monthly.
division ;-Acle, Beighton, Blofield, Brundall, Buckenham, Clerk, Hcrbcrt Henchman Cole, 67 London street, Norwich
Burlingham St. Andrew, Burlingham St. Edmund, Bur- Treasurer, Henry Birkbeck, Norwich
lingham St. Peter, Cantley, Freethorpe, Halvergate, Has- Medical Officer of Health, Herbert Hatfield Back M.B.Lond.
singbam, Hemblington, Limpenhoe, Lingwood, Moulton, Reepham
Plumstead Great, Plumstead Little, Postwick, Ranworth- Inspector of Nuisances, John Davy Overed, Blofield
with-Panxworth, Reedham, Southwood, Strumpshaw,
Thorpe St. Andrew, Tunstall, Upton-with-Fishley, Wals- ScHoOL AT'l'ENDANCE CoMMITTEE.
ham South St. Mary, Walsham South St. Lawrence, Meets at Board Room, Lingwood, monthly,
Wickha.mpton, Witton, Woodbastwick Clerk, H. H. Cole, 67 London street, Norwich
Petty Sessions are held at the Globe inn every alternate Attendance Officers, Eastern division, Harry T. Capon
monday at 10 a.m. Acle ; Western division, Albert Royal, Blofield
Bailey John, boot & shoe maker
PRIVATE RESIDENTS.
Allcock Mrs. Ebury cottage . Rackham Hanworth Edmund Burr,
Ferniehurst Banton Elizabeth (Mrs. ), Swan inn
Bacon Charle11 William, Rose villa Rayner J ames Benns Thomas, pork butcher
Bane Miss Smallwood Rev. Edgar Hetherington Benns Waiter, carpenter & wheelwrigh
llrittain Harry, The Cedars B.A. [rector of Bawsey], The Laurels Birt Henry1 eowkeeper
Cameron Miss Steward Philip, The Elms Buck William, market gardener
Chapman George Stockings The Misses Bulley John Robert, market gardener
Coleman Mrs Torrance George Henry Chapman William, saddler
Cooke John Edward, Manor house Tuck George Hustler J.P. The Hall Cooke William Larke & Son, wine, spirit;
Edge Samuel George B.A., M.B Walker Davidson, White house & hop merchants •
Garrick Rev. James Percy M. A. Rectory Whaites Mrs. The Laurels Dew James, beer retailer
Gilbert Edward .J. P. Blofield house Wyand Samuel, The Lodge Earl John, chimney sweeper
Gilbert Mrs. J. Hacault cottage COMMERCIAL. Easter George, blacksmith
Gill William Brooke, Turret house Bacon James, shopkeeper Edge Samuel George B.A., M.B. (firm,
Preston Arthur Waters, The Rookery Bagshaw Geo. Robt.farmer,Manor farm Torrance & Edge), surgeon
C, N. & El. 21.•
320 BLOFIELD. .NORFOLK. [KELLYS
Edrich RatTy, farmer Morris William, beer retailer school attendance officer, Western
Edrich William Skipp, farmer Newby Daniel, tailor tlis trict, & registral' of births k
Ellis Edward, bricklayer OveredJohnDavy M.R.c.v.!!.&F.V.M.A.L. deaths, Blofield sub-district & mar-
· Farman Thomas Ben stead, King's Head veterinary surgeon,&deputy registrar riages for Blofield union
P.H. & saddler of births & deaths for Blofield sub-dis- Sadler Alfred, grocer & tailor
Fayers Herbert 'Villiam (la~ Fisher), trict & of marriages for Blotield union, Salmon Robert, shoe maker
grocer, tea & provision dealer & draper & inspector of nuisances for Blotield Sayer Elijah, rat catcher ,
Felgate John, Bird-in-Hand P.H rural sanitary authority & inspector Setchell Thomas William,grocer & baker
Fenn Jonathan, market gardener under the Contagious Diseases (Ani- Sewell Brothers, tailors
I<'erra John, lamp & oil dealer & draper mals) Act & under the Dairies & Smith John, market gardener
Forder Waiter, castrator Cow Sheds Order (1885) Sutton Edward, farmer
Gedge John, bricklayer Prentice Elizabeth (Mrs.), fruit grower, TotTance & Edge, surgeons
Gilbert Janet (Mrs.), young ladies' Garden farm Torrance George Henry L.R.C.P,Irel.
school, Hacault cottage Preston Arthur Waters, solicitor, The (finn, TotTance & Edge), surgeon, &
Gostling James Henry, beer retailer Rookery; & at Norwich medical officer & public vaccinator,
Gostling Thomas, market gardener Read Horace Postle, market gardener & Hlotield district & medical officer to
Gostling Thomas, sen. cowkeepcr florist; speciality, cucumbers & the workhouse
Gowen Charles, pork butcher tomatoes Volun~er Battalion (4th) Norfolk Regi-
Go wen John, flour dealer Read Robert, boot maker ment (C Co.) (Capt. John Edward
Harper Daniel, plumber &c Reader Robert, farm bailiff to Thomas Cooke, commanding)
Harper George, boot & shoe maker Slipper esq , Waters Cornelius, farmer, market gar-
Hazell Charles Chapman, pork butcher Redgment Wright, butcher & farmer dener, carter & surveyor of highways
Howard Hammond Lilly, fishmonger Reynolds Joshua, farmer, Malletts farm Waters James, farmer, Heath farm
Key Elijah, carpenter & wheelwright Rix Robert, shopkeeper White George, watch & clock maker
Larke Lewis, mole catcher Rogers Benjamin, plumber, glazier, Winter James, carter
Long Richard, dairyman painter, paperhanger &c; cart& car~ Withers John, bricklayer
Lynes James Day, commercial traveller riage painter ; greenhouses & con- Woodcock James, plumber &c
· Makens. J ames, farm bailiff to Ed ward servatories built to any design, Mill rd Woodcock John, shopkeeper
Gilbert esq Rogers William, miller (wind & steam) Woodrow John, blacksmith & farmer
Martins Charles, Globe inn & shopkeeper, Post office, Mill road Wright John, grocer, & collector of poor
Merrison Arthur John, carpenter, Royal Albert, relieving & vaccination & rates & dep. supt. registrar, Post office
builder & undertaker
BLO'NORTON, originally called "Belleau," from its was anciently another church, dedicated to St. Margaret_
proximity to the little river Ouse, is a village and parish, There are Congregational and Primitive Methodist chapels.
near the border!~ of Suffolk, 6 miles south-east from Bar ling The fuel allotment of 25 acres is cut by the poor. There
Road station on the Thetford and Wymondham section of are 12 acres of town land, the rent of which is applied ro
the Great Eastern railway and 8 west from Diss, in the the repair of the church &c. Blo'Norton Hall is the resi-
Mid division of the county, petty sessional division of deuce of Philip George Harrison Bennet esq. Charles
Guiltcross and Shropham, union and hundred of Guiltcross, Browne Goldson esq. M. A. who is lord of the manor, Major-
county court district of Diss, rural deanery of Rockland, General Sir W. G. Davies K.c.s.I. of 6 Barkston gardens,
archdeaconry of Norfolk and diocese of Norwich. The London s w and Mrs. Houchen, of Attleboro', are the princi-
church of St. Andrew is a plain building of flint, with stone pal landowners. The land is of mixed soil ; subsoil, chiefly
dressings, in the Early English style, consisting of chancel, clay and gravel, and about 28 acres of fen land. The chief
nave, aisle, north porch and an embattled western tower crops are wheat, barley and oats. The area is I, 132 acres;
containing 5 bells : in I 879 it was repaired and repewed dnd rateable value, £I, 548 ; the population in I 891 was 262.
a stained east window inserted by the Goldson family: Parish Clerk, Henry Ea vis.
there are 150 sittings. The register dates from the year Letters through Thetford arrive at 8 a,m_ The nearest.
I562. The living is a rectory, average yearly value from money order oflice is at Hopton, in Suffolk, & telegraph
tithe rent-charge £257, with 20 acres of glebe and residence, office at Garboldisham. LETTER Box cleared at 5.20
in the gift of Charles Browne Goldson esq. M.A. and held p.m. Sundays ro.4o a.m
·since 1878 by the Rev. George Norris B.A. of Trinity College, Village School for 6o children; average attendance, 48;
Dublin. A new rectory house was built in 1~8g. Here Mi~s Eva Worsley, mi~tress
BennetPhilipGeo. Harrisn.Blo'nortn.ball Bowell George, farmer 1 Holden Mary Ann (Mrs.), beer retailer
Blizzard Charles Bowel! Joseph, farmer Notley .Susannah (Mrs.), Crown ~
· Martyn Charles Harrison, Blo'norton ho Cook James, farmer Anchor P.H
· Norris Rev.George B.A.[rector],Rectory Crowe George, farmer Rivett James, farmer
COMMERCIAL. · Fordham Waiter, farmer, Clay hall Sturgeon Thomas, bricklayer
Amos !''rank, farmer Hern James Benjamin, farmer Vincent Alphonso Nevile, farmer
Bennet & Martyn, farmers
f
BODHAM is a parish, 3 miles east from Holt station on George John Bidewell, of St. Bees. There is a Free Metho-
the Eastern and Midlands railway, and 7 west from Cromer, dist chapel here. The heath was inclosed in 1808. John
in the Northern division of the county, Holt hundred. petty Stanley Mott esq. J.P. of Barningbam Hall, is lord of the
sessional division and county court district, Erpingham manor and principal landowner. The soil is mixed ; sub-
union, rural deanery of Holt and archdeaconry and diocese soil, gravel and clay. The chief crops are wheat, turnips,
of Norwich. The river Glaven has its source in this parish. barley and grass. The area is x,688 acres; rateable value,
The church of All Saints is an edifice in the Later English £1,914; the population in 1891 was 258.
style, consisting of chancel, nave, south porch and an em- Parish Clerk, George Pantney.
battled western tower containing one bell:. there are mural PosT 0FFICE.-Robert Gamble Payne, receiver. Letters
monuments to the Rev_ Robert NoYTis M. A. d. 1832; Rose, from Holt R.S.O. arrive at a. m. i dispatched at 3.40
9
his wife, d. x8o5, and Rachel Ann, his daughter, d. x8o7, p.m. week days only. Holt is the near~st money order~
and a memorial to Susannah, wife of Admiral Charles S. J. ~legraph office
Hawtayne and daughter of Rev. R. Norris, d. 1858: the
east window is a memorial to the wife of the Rev. L. A. The West Bcckham United District School Board of 5 mem-
Partridge, late rector, and was presented by parishioners bers was formed compulsorily April 17, 1875, for the
' and friends in r8sg: there are 200 sittings, 230 being free. parishes of West Hcckham & Bodha.m; James Kemp,
The register dates from the year 17 o8. The living is a Renton mills, clerk to the board & attendance officer
.discharged rectory, gTOSS yearly value £287, arising from Board School for both parishes (mixed), built in 1877 at a
tithe rent charge, with 12 acres of glebe, in the gift of John cost of £I, 158, for 70 children; average attendance, 50;
Stanley Mott esq. J.P. and held since 1861 by the Rev. Miss Mary Brett Sadler, mistress
Bidewell Rev. George John [rector] Everitt Sarah (Mrs.), farmer Payne George, farmer
GirlingRichard(Mrs.) (exors. of), farmers Reynolds JamP~'l, farmer, Rookery farm
• COMMERCIAl.. Keeler John, farmer & carter Riseborough John & Son, machinists
Beavers William, farmer Lamer William Helsden, farmer Riseborough Alfred, farmer
Cletheroe William, Red Hart commer- MackThomas(Mrs. ),farmr.Manor farm Rise borough f!erbert Barnes, machinisS
cial hotel, builder, wheelwright, agri- ~ichols Starling, farmer Sadler Joshua, farmer
cultural implement maker & farmer Payne Robert Gamble, shopkeeper, Thirtle Dennis, farmer
Collen John, farmer farmer & builder, Post office

.BODNEY is a parish 7 miles south from Swaffbam and 91 section of the Great Eastern railway, in the South
west from Watton station on the Lynn and Thetford Western division of the county, Swaffham union and
D~RECTORY.j BRACON .ASH.. 321
county court district, hundred and petty sessional division Cressinghanl. Here is a Primitive Methodist chapel erected
of South Greenhoe, rural deanery of Cranwich, ~orth in I8Bs. Bodney Hall, at the time of the French Revolu-
division, a.rchdeaconry of Norfolk and diocese of Nor- tion in 1792, was lent by the Tasburgh family, its then
wich. The church of St. Mary is a. small but ancient owners, to a community of French nuns, several of whom
fabric of flint and pebbles, in the Early English style, con- are buried in the churchyard on the north side. William
sisting of chancel, nave, and a turret containing I bell: Amhurst Tyssen Amherst esq. D.L., J.P. of Didlington
some remains of the Saxon period are visible in the buttress Hall, is lord of the manor and sole landowner. The soil is
at the north-east angle ; the church was thoroughly restored sandy; subsoil, chalk and gravel. The chief crops are
in 1882-3 by W. Amburst Tyssen Amherst esq. under wheat, barley, oats, turnips and pasture_ The area is
the d1rection of Mr. Chester Cheston, archit-ect, of London ; 2,62r acres ; rateable value, £868 j the population in 18gr
an ancient consecration cross, a piscina and sedilia, and the was 82.
staircase to the rood loft were discovered during the pro- Parish Clerk, George Sayer.
gress of the work. The church affords roo sittings. The
register dates from the year I 754 . The living is a dis- Letters through Hilborough R.S.O. arrive at 7 a.m. The
charged rectory, annexed to that of Great Cressingham, aver- nearest money order & telegraph office is at Mundford, 4
age tithe rent-charge (Bodney) £14 8, joint net yearly value miles distant .
£36r, with 53 acres of glebe, in the gift of the Lord Chan- Small Danes school here entirely supported by Willia.m
cellor and held since r89o by t.he Rev. Ernest Heseltine M.A. Amhurst Tyssen Amherst esq. ; Mrs. Elizabe~h Gamble,
of Corput~ Christi College, Cambridge, who resides at Great mistress
:Flatt Mrs. Walter Wortley, Bodney hall
:BOOT ON is a village and parish, I I miles north-west mansion of red brick. ThE' Grove, the property and resi-
from Norwich, 6 south-west from Aylsham and I south- dence of Henry Jackson Butler esq. is pleasantly seated in
east from Reepham station on the East Norfolk branch of grounds containing a small piece of water with a wooded
the Great Eastern railway, in the Northern division of the island in the centre. The Rev. Whit well El win B.A. is lord
county, South Erpingham hundred and petty sessional of the manor and chief landowner. Henry Jackson Butler
division, St. Faith's union, Aylsham county court district, esq. Miss I<'ox and Charles Holmes esq. are a.lso landowners
rural deanery of Ingworth and archdeaconry and diocese of in this parish. The soil is sand and loam; subsoil, sand
N{)rwich. The church of St. :Vlichael and All Angels is a and clay. The chief crops are wheat, roots, barley and
building of flint with stone dressings, in the Geometrical hay. The area is I,o2I acres; rateable value, [I,509 ; the
style, consisting of chancel, nave, north porch and a western I population in I8gr was 251.
~ower, now (189~) being rebuilt ; all the windo_ws are stained; Parish Clerk John Parker.
m the chancel IS a monument to Peter Elwm esq. grand- '
father of the present rector, who died in 1798: the church PosT 0FFICE.-Charles John F1atman, postmaster. Letters
has been gradually rebuilt since r875 and now affords 230 sit- received through Norwich at 6 a. m. ; dispatched at 4.40
tings: the church is a building which serves as a vestry and p.m. The nearest money order & telegraph office is at
Sunday school. The register dates from the year 156o. The Reepham.
living is a rectory, average tithe rent-charge £223, gross WALL LETTER Box near the church cleared at 4 p.m
yearly value £265, including 23 acres of glebe and residence,
in the gift of and held since 1849 by the Rev. Whitwell This parish is contributory to Reepham & Kerdiston School
Elwin B.A. of Cams College, Cambridge. Booton Hall, the Board, formed in I876, & sends I member. The chil-
residence of Edward Gayford esq. is a large and plain dren attend the Board School at Reepham
Butler Henry Jackson, The Grove Barrett Erlward, farmer Riches William, shopkeeper
Elwin Rev, Whitwell B.A. Rectory Barrett Samuel, farmer, The Oaks Stackwood Charles Edward, miller
Gayford Edward, Booton hall Cletheroe George, King's Head P.H (wind)
Holle::t Miss, Green Lane hou~e Howard Horacc, farmer, Town farrn
. \
BOUG HTON is a village and parish mile north from held since I 853 by the Rev. Smith Churchill B.A. of Pembroke
I
Stoke Ferry terminal station of a branch of the Great College, Cambridge. The Wesleyan chapel, erected in 1871,
Eastern railway and 7 miles P~st from Downham Market, is a building in the Gothic style. In the centre of the village
in the South Western division of the county, Clackclose is a large pool of clear water. Sir Henry George Paston-
hundred and petty sessional division, Downham union and Bedingfeld bart. D.L., J.P. of OxboroughHall, who is lord of
county court district, rural deanery of Fincham, arch- the manor, and Hichard Harwin esq. are the principal land-
deaconry of Norfolk and diocese of Norwich. The church owners. The .soil is of a vaned description, one half being
of All Saints, rebuilt, with the exception of the tower, in strong clay land; eubsoil, clay. The chief crops are wheat.
1872, at a. cost of about £1 ,ooo, is an edifice of stone, in barley and turnips. The area is r,323 acres; rateable value,
the Early English and Decorated styles, consisting of chancel, £ r,581 ; the population in 189I was 2II.
nave, south porch and an embattled western tower with Letters through Rrandon. wALL Ll!:TTER Box cleared at
pinnacles and containing 3 bells; there are I50 sittings. 5 . 15 p.m. week days only. Stoke Ferry is the nearest
The register dates from the year 1729. The living is a dis~ money order & telegraph office
~barged rectory, average tithe rent-charge £3I2 1 net yearly
value £3rr, including 29 acres of glebe, in the gift of Sir Village School (mixed), erected in 1879, for 55 children:
Williall). Hovell Browne ffolkes bart. of Hillington Hall, and average attendance, 49; Mrs. Sarah Walkom, mistress
Churchill Rev. Smith n.A. [rector] Failes Stephen, farmer, Kippers Harwin Richard, yeoman, The Poplal'S
Clarke Mrs · Green Cornelius, farmer Lambert George Green, beer retailer
Walker Miss Grainger J ames, farm bailiff to Oldman Savage J ames, shoe maker •
Carte" Oldman, farrr.er & landowner 1 Carter esq Smith Charles, beer retailer
BOWTHORPE is a parish on the river Yare, about ·3~ Earlham. Frederick . ' '
Bacon Frank esq. D.L.,J.P. of Campsall
miles west from Norwich, in the Mid division of the county, Park, Yorks, is lord of the manQr and principal landowner.
Forehoe hundred, petty sessional division and union, Nor- The soil is light and sandy; subsoil, mixed. The chief crops
wich county court district, rural deanery of Hingham, Fore- are of the usual kind. The area is 645 acres ; rateable
hoe division, archdeaconry of Norfolk and diocese of Norwich. value, £530; the population in I89I was 58.
()l the church of St. Michael t.he ruined walls only remain: Letters through Norwich, which is the nearest money order
the churchyard has been walled in to prevent desecration. & telegraph office
The living is a donative, consolidated with the vicarage of The children of this place attend the school at Earlbam
Rinder Robert, farmer, Bowthorpe hall I Taylor Alfred, market gardener
BRACON ASH is a village and parish miles north-
2 1855 by the Rev. Thomas Berney M.-4,. of St. John's College~
west from Flordon station on the Ipswich and Norwich Cambridge. There is a Church Sunday school, the pro-
8ection of the Great Eastern railway and 6 sout.h-west from perty of the Berney family, but under the control of the rec-
Norwich, iu the Southern division of the county, Swains- tor. Edward, first Baron Thurlow and lord chanC"elior in
thorpe petty sessional division, Humbleyard hundred, Hen- 1778, was born here in 1732. Bracon Ash Park, 264 acres
8tead union, county court district of Norwich, rural deanery in extent, is one of the most ancient in Norfolk, and pays to
of Humbleyard, archdeaconry of Norfolk and diocese of the rector a modus of £s, the commuted value of a buck
Norwich. The church of St. Nichol.&s is a small building of and doe, in lieu of all tithes: Bracon Ash Hall, standing in
flint, swne and brick, consisting of chancel, nave, south the park, is a modern mansion of brick, on the site of a
aisle, north porch and a bell-cote containing one bell: the much older building, where Queen Elizabeth is said to ba\'6
ehancel is Decorated and the nave and a1sle Perpendicular: visited ; it is the seat of the Rev. Thomas Berney !ILA. wh~
there are 200 sittings. The register dates frnrn the year r563. is lord of the manor, which includes Hethel Jernynghams,
The living is a rectory, gross yearly value from tith!' rent- lying contiguous to it, in the parish of Hethel. The family
charge £245, average _£188, in the gift of and held since of Berney, one of great antiquity and of Norman extraction.
322 BR.ACON .A!!H. NORFOLK. L. [KELL'f's
settled in this county prior fu the Conquest, and gave their PosT 0FFICE-Robert Funnell, receiver. Letters through
name both to the manor and parish of Berney, in West Norwich, received about 8. r5 a. m. & dispatched at 4.50
Norfolk. Mergate, the residence of Sir Kenneth Hagar p.m. ; sundays, dispatched at 10 a. m. :Mulbarton is the
Kemp ba.rt. is an ancient residence, approached by a fine nearest money order & Wymondham the nearest telegraph
avenue of oaks, and held by him of the manor of Bracon office
Ash by the payment of a fee rent : the manors of Flordon A School Board of five members was formed compulsorily
and Gissing came into the Kemp family in 1372 by the July 1, 1875, for the united districts of llracon Ash &
marriage of a member of that family with Isabel Hastings. Hethel; G. Plum stead, Wymondham, clerk to the board;
The Re\"'. Thomas Berney M.A. and Sir Kenneth Hagar Kemp George Cheney, Swardeston, attendance officer
bart. n.A. are chief landowners. The soil is various from
clay to sand; subsoil clay. The chief crops are wheat, Board St:hool (mixed), erected in 1877, for the two parishes,
barley and roots. The market gardens and forcing houses to bold 8o children ; average attendance, 6o ; Miss Ellen
of Joseph Watts Church are on an extensive scale, and Burrage, mistress ; l\'Iis.s Emma My hill, assistant mistress
form a conspicuous object in the village. The area is 794 CARRIERS TO NoRWICH.-James Breeze, from Bunwell.
acres; rateable value, £1,770; the population in r8gr was passes through wed. & sat. ; George Williams, from
300- Forncctt, man. wed. & sat. ; George Filby, from New
Parish Clerk, William Dye. Bnckenham, on wed. & sat
Berney Rev. Thomas M.A. [rector], Cushing Charles, farm bailiff to Mr. King Jeffries, farmer & overseer & col-
Bracon Ash hall Arthur Stimpson, l\'Ierg-ate farm lector of rates, Hall farm
Church James, BPech house Dye William, parish clerk Middleton Arthur, market gardener
Church Joseph Watts, The Vineyards Funnell Robert, carpenter, builder & Middleton William, boot & shoe maker
Corbonld-Warren Edwd. Bracon lodge grocer, Post office Myhill Frederick Charles, saddle &
Jeffryes Henry Wyman, The Woodlands Hardingham William Henry, farm harness maker& farmer & collector of
Kemp SirKenneth Hagar bart.Mergate steward to Sir Kenneth H. Kemp taxes & at Hethel
Church Joseph Watts, farmer. land- bart. l\'Iergate Home farm Rice Robert, blacksmith
owner & fruit grower,The Vineyards
EAST BR.ADENHAM is a village and parish, 31 of Corpus Christi college, Cambridge. Here is a Primitive
miles south from Wendling station on the Lynn and Dere- Methodist chapel. The poor have£ 14 yearly in fuel, rent
ham section of the Great Eastern rail way and 7 south-west of four cottages. William Cape! Clarke-Thornhill esq. D.L.,
from Dereham, in the South Western division of the county, J.F. of Rushton Hall, Northants, who is lord of the manor,
8outh Greenhoe hundred and petty sessional division, Henry Smith Adlingtoi;J. esq. J.P. of Holme Hale Hall, George
Swaffham union and county court district, rural deanery Cordy esq. of Shipdham, and Cornell Henry Fison esq. of
of Cran wich, North dil"ision, 'archdeaconry of Norfolk and Thetfor<i, are the chief landowners. The soil is loam and
diocese of Norwich. The church of St. l\'Iary is a large clay ; subsoil, clay. The chief crops are wheat, barley and
structure of flint in various styles, consisting of chancel, turnips. The area is 2,330 acres; rateable value, [,2;r:p'];
nave, aisles, north porch and an embattled western tower in 1891 the population was 314.
with pinnacles, containing a clock and one bell: the stained Parish Clerk, Robert Chapman.
east l'l·indow was erected in 1849 at the expense of the patron : Letters are received through Thetford; arrive at 7 a. m.
there are 300 sittings 200 being free. The register dates from WALL LETTER Box cleared 6.20 p.m.; sunday. 10.35 a. m.
the year 1695. The living is a rectory, tithe rent-charge West Bradenham is the nearest money order office, &
commuted at £353, average £268, net ye3rly value J.;2r1, telegraph otlice at Stdpdham
with residence, in the gift of Henry Smith Adlington esq. I National School (mixed), built in 186I, for 70 children;
and held since 1891 by the Rev. William Ray Ea ton B.A. average attendance, so; Miss Ellen Duffield Forster, misi
Eaton Rev. William Ray B.A. Rectory Goring- Walt. farmer, Huntingfield hall Thacker John, cattle dealer
COMMERCIAL. Hart Hy. Lord Nelson P.H. & farmer Wheales Charles, farmer & seed mer
:Basbam Samuel, farmer Nicholls Robert, shopkeeper Wheales John, jun. as.sistant overseer
Elgar & Stebbing, farmers Read William, farmer Wheals John, beer retailer & farmer
~ulcher William, farm bailiff to Messrs. Reeve George, blacksmith Wheals Robert, carpenter & builder
Fulcher & Betts Rogers William. miller (wind) & baker Wilson Richard Bullock, farmer, Brick
Gagan John, farmer Stringer Robert, shopkeeper Kiln farm
WEST BRAD EN HAM is a village and parish 3 miles 1 granted at the inclosure of the common, which money i&
south from Wendling station on the Lyon and Dereham :listributed in coal to the poor according to the discretion
section of the Great Eastern railway, 7 from Swaffham and of the trustees. Bradenham Hall, the seat of William Mey-
6 south-west from East Dereham, in the South Western I bohm Pider Haggard esq. LL.M.,D.L.,J.P. and built in 1772,
division of the county, South Greenhoe hundred and petty I is a mansion of red brick, well situated and standmg on one
se>'sional division, Swaffham union and county court district, I of the highest spots in the county, surrounded by extensive
rural deanery of Cranwich, North division, archdeaeonry of! plantations of old growth. Bradenham Wood, close by it,
Norfolk and diocese of Norwich, The church of St. Andrew is a well-known meet of the Norfolk foxhounds. William M.
is an ancient edifice of flint, in the Perpendicular and Early Rider Haggard esq. D.L., J.P. chairman to the quarter
English styles, consisting of chancel, nave, aillles, south sessions of the Western division of Norfolk, who is lord or
porch and an embattled western tower with pinnacles, con- the manor of West Bradenharn; the Girling famil)l, who are
taining clock and 2 bells: there are three stained windllws lords of Bokenham manor ; and Henry Smith Adlingwn
at the west end of the nave~ and one in the chancel to esq, .of Holme Hale Hall, are the chief landowners. The
members of thf'l Haggard family : in the chancel is an in- soil is loam and clay ; subsoil, clay and gravel. The chief
scribed stone to Thomas Cayley, rector here temp. Edw, to crops are wheat, barley and turnips. The area is r,68~
whose ancestors the manor was granted at the Conquest by acres; rateable value, £2,663; the population in 1891 was
William Earl de Warrenne of Castle Acre: an organ was 279·
given by the late Col. Mason, of Necton Hall: the church Parish Clerk, Richard Shearing. ,
was restored in 1857 and the chancel has been repaired by
the Ecclesiastical Commi~ioners : there are 200 s1ttings, PosT & M. 0. 0., S. B. & Annuity & Insurance Office.-
154 being free. The register dates from the yP.ar 1520. Daniel Mendham, receiver. Letters received through
The living is a vicarage, average tithe rent-charge£ 124, net Watton S.O. arrive at 7 a.m. & dispatched at S-45 p.m.;
yearly value£ 194, including 72 acres of glebe, with residence, . sun days, dispatched at 10.30 11.. m. Telegraph office at.
in the gift of the Bishop of Norwich, and held since 1882 by Shipham
the Rev. Henry Iletherington Theo. Assoc. of King's College, Natlomil School (mixed), erected with teacher's house in
London. The great tithes belong to the Ecclesiastical Corn· r853, at a cost of £1,350, on a site presented by William
missioners. There are two trusts, which together produce an Haggard esq. for 70 children ; average attendance, 34;
income of about £35 a year, arising from cottages and land, Mrs. Letitia Cooper, mistress
HaggardWilliam MeybohmRider LL.M.., Ashman Hough ton, farm bailiff to Meachen John, farmer
D.L., .t.P. Bradenham hall ; & Oxford Exors. of James Coker esq Mendham Daniel, farmer, Post o!lic6
& Cambridge club, London s w Atthow Fk. farmer & dlr. Manor fm-m Nelson Francis, farmer
Heth.erington Rev. Henry Th.~. K. c. L. Atthow Geo. farmer & dealr. High frm Pooley Thomas, farmer, TheWood frm
Vicarage Brown George, Star P.H Rump John, shoe maker
Can ham Basett, brick la ye~ & f<1rmer Shearing John, by;icklayer '
COMMERCIAL. Oanham William, bricklayer S~earmg Richard, parish clerk k
.Ar1cock James, farmer, Hall farm Chaplin Chas. wheelwright & carpenter assessor of taxes
Adcock John, King's Head P.H Drake Mary (Mrs.), farmer Thacker John, baker
Adcock Sa.mnel, farmer & estate bailiff Freestone Herbert, corn & flour factor Walker George, farmer
to W. M. R .. Haggard esq. Grove frm Green l\Iary (Mrs.), shopkeeper Wheals John, farmer, West end
BRADESTON, see BRUNDALL.

DIRECTORY.] NORFOLK. BRAN CASTER. 323
BRADFIELD is a parish r! miles south-by-east from Hugh Owen. The Congregational chapel, said to have been
Gunton station on the Cromer branch of the Great Eastern originally built about I65o, was rebuilt in x872. The North
railway, 2! north-west from North Walsham, 5 south-east Walsham and Dilham canal runs througb. this parish to
from Cromer and I7 from Norwich, in the Eastern division Antingham. Bradfield Hall is the residence of George Ive!'!
of the county, Tunstead and Rapping petty sessional division, esq. Lord Suffield K.C.B., P.c. is lord of the manor and
Tun stead hundred, Small burgh union, Norwich county court principal landowner. The soil is mixed light sand ; subsoil,
district, rural deanery of Waxham, Tunstead division, arch- gravel. The chief crops are wheat, oats, barley and beans.
deaconry of Norfolk and diocese of Norwich. The church of The area is 757 acres; rateable value, £1,074; the popula-
St. Giles is an ancient building of flint, in the Norman style, tion in 1891 was 197.
consisting of chancel, nave, south porch and a western Pari!>h Clerk, John Suffolk.
tower containing I bell: it was newly roofed and restored LETTER Box cleared at 4·45 p.m. Letters through North
in x864, and affords 230 sittings. The register dates from Wal.sham, which is the nearest money order & telegraph
the year 1725. The living is a "rectory, gross yearly value office, arrive at 8 a.m. There is no sunday post
£215, including 2~ acres of glebe, with residence, in the gift This parish is contributory to Antingham & South Repps
of Lord Suffield K.C.B., P.c. and held since x866 by the Rev. School Board. The school is at the former place
Ives George, Bradfield hall Cork John, wheelwright Knight Susan (Mrs.), shopkeeper
Owen Rev. Hugh, Rectory Ives George, farmer, The Hall farm LarnerJames (Mrs.), blacksmith
Barber Robert, farmer
BRAMERTON is a parish in a beautiful position on the Corys from about 1400 to about 176o, and now occupied by
river Yare, 4! miles south-east from Norwich and 3~ south- Henry Blake esq. is a mansion of brick partly rebuilt by the
east from Trowse station on theW ymondham and Yarmouth late Johu Blake esq. about 1824, and completed in I87o by
section of the Great Eastern railway, in the Southern divi- J. J. Blake esq. the late owner. Bramerton Grange, the
sion of the county, Swainstborpe petty sessional division, property and residence of Ernest England esq. is an ancient
Henstead hundred and union, Norwich county court district, building of brick and stone in the Elizabethan style beauti-
rural deanery of Brooke, western division, archdeaconry of fully situated in a small park facing an avenue of naks, and
Norfolk and diocese of Norwich. The church of St. Peter, has a very fine old oak staircase. Hill House, the property
rebuilt in 1:462, is an ancient structure of tlint and stone, in of Henry Maudslay esq. is now unoccup1ed. There are no
the Early English style, consisting of chancel, nave, transept, manorial rights. The principal landowners are Miss Blake,
south porch, a large vestry and a western tower with pin- Ernest England esq. Henry Blake esq. George England esq.
nacles containing 1 bell : there are several memorial windows of Freethorpe and John Newman Waite esq. The soil is
to the Blake family: the church was restored, reseated and mixed; subsoil, clay. The chief crops are wheat, barley,
new roofed in x866 at a cost of about £4oo and now affords turnips &c. The area is 728 acres of rich land ; rateable.
J8o sittings. The register dates from the year 1560. The value, £1,777; the population in x8g1 was 253. c

living is a rectory, average tithe rent-char~e £195, gross Sexton, William Cooke.
yearly value £270, including 25 acres of glebe, with resi-
dence, m the gift of Robert Fellowes esq. n.L., J.P. of PosT OFFICE.-William Cooke, sub-postmaster. Letters
Shotesham Park, Norwich, and held since 1 ss 3 by the B.ev. arrive from Norwich by foot post, via Trowse, at 7·45
Williarn Henry Dix M.A. of Sidney Sussex College, Cam· a.m.; dispatched- at 4·45 p.m. Trowse is the nearest
bridge. The commons were inclosed in 1852, when two acres money order & telegraph office
were allotted to the poor, divided into eight garden plots, for A School Board of 5 members was formed compulsorily July
which the tenants pay a small sum ; two acres of ground also 12, 1875, for the United School Board district of Bramerton
were allotted for recreation ground. The parish has £5 & Kirby Bedun; W. Cheney, clerk to the board & attend·
every third year for apprentice fees, and £I yearly for the ance officer, Swardeston. The children of this parish
poor, from Cock's charity. Bramerton Hall, the seat of the attend the Board school at Kirby Bedon
Blake Henry, Bramerton hall Penrice Major John D.L.,J.P.The Lodge Larkman Henry Emanuel, insur. agent
Blake Miss, Bramerton hall Barnard Edward, farm bailiff to Ernest Parker Robert George, blacksmith
Church Worthington England esq Reeve Daniel, market gardener
Dix Rev. William Henry M. A. Rectory Cooke Wm. market gardener, & post off Salter Alfred Wm. farmer, Hall farm
England Ernest, Bramerton grange :Flaxman Henry \Villiam,WoodsEnd inn Waite JohnNewrnan,farmr.& landownr
Miller Francis , 1 Harvey Alfred, boot maker Whall Fdk.market gardenr.&bricklayer
BRAMPTON is a village and parish on the navigable There is a Primitive Methodist chapel here. Roman coins
river Bure, 2~ miles south-east from Aylsham station and and urns have been found here at diffenmt times. Brampton
one mile from Buxton Lammas station, both on the East Hall, an ancient building now converted into a farmhouse,
Norfolk branch of the Great Eastern railway, in the Northern belongs to Philip Edward Sewell esq. of New Catton, who is
division of the county, South Erpingham hundred and petty lord of the manor and chief landowner. The soil is mixed;
sessional division, Aylsham union and county court district, subsoil, gravel and clay. The chief crops are wheat, roots,
rural deanery of Ingworth and archdeaconry and diocese of barley and bay. The area is 521 acres, of which I6 are
Norwich. The church of St. Peter, situated on tising common; rateable value, £944; the population in 1891 was
ground, is an ancient building of stone, in the Early English 182. ,
style, consisting of chancel, nave, aisles, south porch, vestry Parish Clerk, Waiter Bircham.
and a small tower, round at the base, with an octagonal em- PosT 0FFICE.-George Bin.:ham, receiver. Letters through
battled belfry stage containing I bell: there are 110 sittings. Norwich 7.25 a. m. & 3 p.m.; dispatched 12 noon & 4.10
The register dates from the year 1731. The living is a rec- p.m. The nearest money order & telegraph office is at-
tory, average tithe rent-charge £n7, net ·yearly value £125, Buxton Lammas
includmg ro acres of glebe, with residenre, in the gift of School (infants), in connection with the Buxton Voluntary
Mrs. Mars ham, of Rippon Hall, and held since 1892 by the Board, f0r 30 children; average attendance, 22 ; Miss Ella
Rev. John Ireland Jones M.A. of Trinity College, Dublin. Woods, mistress
Jones Rev. John Ireland M. A. Rectory Sayers Emrna (Mrs.), farmer, Bramp- Seaman John, carpenter & well sinker
1

Bircham George, shopkeeper & lime ' ton ball Smith Thomas, flour dealer
burneT, Post office ' Seaman James, cooper Thirkettle Charles, blaeksmith
Goulty Charles, wheelwright Seaman Sarah Ann (Mrs.), Maid's Watts George, blacksmith
Ives John, shopkeeper, farmer & stew- Head f.H Wright Henry, farmer
ard to Mrs. Sayers
BRANCASTER is a parish and considerable village on 1868 by the Rev. Charles George Robert Birch LL.M. of
the bay of its name and on a creek of the German Ocean, 5 Trinity Hall, Cambridge. Here is a Primitive Methodist
miles west-north-west from Burnham Market station on the chapel, built in r864, and another at Brancaster Staith. A
Lynn and Wells section of the Great Eastern railway, 7 east golf club, styled the Royal West Norfolk Golf Club, under
from Hunstanton and 22 north-east from Lynn, in theNorth the patronage of H.R.H. Prince of Wales has been recently
WC<~ tern division oft he county, Smithdon hundred, Smithdon formed and a links established on the common near
and Brothercross petty sessional division, Docking union, Brancaster Beach, which is sai~ to form a favourable ground
Fakenham county court district, rural deanery of Heacham, for the purpose. There are almshouses here for four poor
archdeaconry of Norfolk and diocese of Norwich. The church women, founded about 1593 by Robert Smith and his sister.
of St. Mary is a building of flint in the Perpendicular style, Here was the Roman station Branodunwm, garrisoned by the
consisting of chancel, nave with clerestory, aisles, south Dalmatian cavalry under a general designated Count of the
porch and a fine embattled and ivy-clad western tower, with Saxon shore: the castle and entrenchments occupied about
pinnacles, containing I bell : there are 400 sittings. The six acres of ground above the marsh, where part of the ditch
register dates from the year 1538. The living is a rectory, and a small fragment of wall are still visible on the north
average tithe rent-charge £626, net yearly value £550. with side. A Roman road, called" the Jews'-way," passed rrom
residence and 7 acres of glebe, in the gift of and held since Brancaster along the coast t<> the Roman station at Caister-
324 BHANCASTER. NORFOLK. [KELLY's.

next-Yarmonth. Many objects of antiquity have been found PosT, M. 0. & T 0., S. B. & Annuity & Insurance Office.-
at different periods. Simms Reeve esq. of Brancaster Hall, George Bennell, sub-postmaster. Letters through Lynn,
who is lord of the manor, and the trustees of Mr. George by mail cart, arrive at 7.25 a.m. ; dispatched at 4·35 p.m
Philcox are the principal landowners. The soil is mixed, PosT & M. 0. 0., S. B. & Annuity & Insurance Office, Bran-
but generally light ; subsoil, mar! and gravel. The chief caster Staith.-Alexander McCreedy, sub-postmaster.
crops are wheat, barley, oats and roots. The area is 3,672 Letters through Lynn, by mail cart, arrive at 7·35 a.. m. ;
acres of land, including about 1,300 acres of salt marsh and dispatched 4.25 p.m
common; rateable value, £3.953; the population, including Coast Guard Station, George Dench, chief officer
Brancaster Staith, in 1891 was 782. SCHOOLS:-
Brancaster Staith is a straggling village in this There is a Free school for boys, founded by Robert Smith &
parish, and is about 1 mile east from the church. Here is a his sister, about the year 1593, & now under the manage-
harbour for ships of soo tons and a coastguard station. ment of trustees; William Wilkins, master
Parish Clerk, George Bennell. School (girls & infants), erected in 186o; Miss Card, mist
Brancaster. Petchey Edward Fox, wheelwright Billing Frank, White Horse P.H. &
Birch Rev.Chas.Geo.Rbt.LL.M.Rectory Petchey James, farmer painter, plumber & glazier
Reeve Simms J.P. Brancaster hall Pitcher Eliaabeth (Mrs.), farmer Billing Robert, carter
Sharpe Miss Powell Charles & Sons, engineers & Billing Susannah (Mrs.), milliner
Southerland Elijah general smiths, iron & brass founders, Black burn Charles, farmer
Young Charles Valentine manufacturers of all kinds of pumps Dawson Arthur Codman,JollySailorP.H
& agricultural implements Dix James, fisherman
COMMERCIAL. Porter George, miller (wind) & baker Everitt James, fisherman
Bennell Geo. boot & shoe ma.Post office Royal West Norfolk Golf Club Lane Thomas, fisherman
Black burn Benj. farmer, Manor farm Skipper Caroline (Mrs.), shopkeeper Lane Thomas, jun. fisherman
Brancaster Cricket Club (John F1dda- Smith Robert Alfred, grocer & beer ret Lewis Thomas, fisherman & beer retlr
man, hon. sec) Southerland Elijah, landowner McCreedy Alex. grocr,&. drapr.Post offi.
Fiddaman Frank, farmer WaldenThomas,farm steward to Simms Master John, farmer, Valley farm
Fiddaman John Beatley, grocer, baker, Reeve esq.Field ho.&Brancaster(twn) Mnssatt Henry, coal merchant
draper, clothier & ironmonger Wilkins George, farmer, The~Iarsh farm Mussatt John, fisherman
Fiddaman Matthew, farmer Wordingham Frdk.ShipP.H.&fisherman Reeve William Hawkins Simms,farmer,
Fiddaman William, butcher Young Charles Valentine, farmer & Staith house
Goshawk Jane (Mrs.), shopkeeper & cattle dealer Powditch Thomas, tailor
beer retailer Southerland George, farmer
Large Charles, carter Brancaster Staith. Stroulger Elizabeth (Mrs.), shopkeeper
Neale Alfred, Lifeboat inn Reeve Wm. Hawkins Simms, Staith ho ThompsonRichd.carpentr.&wheelwrght
Oake James, shopkeeper Ulph Mrs Tuck Robt.buildr.shopkpr.& beer retlr
Palmer Samuel, maltster & merchant ; Wasey Robert, blacksmith
& at Burnham Overy Staith & Burn- COMMERCIAL. Winterbone Wm jnn. coal merchant
ham Sutton . Bennett James, blacksmith Winterborne Isaac, fisherman
BRANDISTON is a village and parish ro miles north- I four charity cottages, is applied in giving pecuniary dona·
west from Norwich, 6 south-west from Aylsham and 2 south tions and relief in sickness or need to each family. Brandis-
from Cawston station on the Aylsham branch of the Great ton Hall, the property of William Atthill esq. now in the
.Eastern railway, in the Northern division of the C•mnty, occupation of Arthur E. Pedder esq. is a mansion of red brick
Eynsford hundred and petty sessional division, St. Faith's in the Jacobean style, erected in r647 and considerably
nnion, Aylsham county court district, rural deanery of enlarged in r875, and containing a good deal of ancient
;Sparham, and archdeaconry and diocese of Norwich. The carved oak. Guton Hall is the residence of Mrs. Russwurm.
·church of St. Nicholas, is a small building of flint in the Per- The :Master and fellow!! of Magdalen College, Oxford, are
pendicular style, consisting of chancel, nave, north porch, lords of the ;nanor. William Atthill esq. Lord de Ramsey,
vestry and a low round western tower, rebuilt together with the Rev. Henry Evans-Lombe J.P. of By laugh Hall, Henry
a new vestry in 1890, at a cost of £ r8o ; in the tower is 1 Jackson Butler esq. of Boston and Hastings El win esq. J.P.
bell : the windows contain some ancient stained glass : the of Gorleston, are the chief landowners. The soil is loamy
church was restored by a former incumbent in 185o, and and mixed; subsoil, clay and sand. The chief crops are
affords Bo sittings. The registers date from the year 1610, wheat, roots, barley and bay. The area is 764 acres; rate-
but are not complete. The living is a rectory, yearly value able value, £1,220; the population in 1891 was 153.
from tithe rent-charge £243, with 10 acres of glebe and LETTER Box cleared at 3.30 p.m. Letters received through
residence,-in the gift of Lord de Ramsey, and held since 1892 Norwich, by foot post, arrive at 8 a. m. The nearest
by the Rev. Hugh Cairns Alexander Back M.A. of Trinity money order offices are at Cawston & Reepham, 2 & 3
College, Cambridge, who is also vicar of and resides at miles distant; telegraph office at. Cawston station
Haveringland. Gurney's charity of £33 Ios. yearly, with The children of the parish attend the school at Haverland
..Brown Mrs
Pedder Arthur E. Brandiston hall
I Russwurm Mrs. Guton hall
Butler Hy.Jackson,landowner & farmr
r- Hickling John Shepheard, farmer

.J3RANDON parish is partly in this county, but principally in Suffolk. Particulars are given in Kelly's Directory
of Suffolk. .
:BRAND ON P ARV A is a parish, situated on the river Mrs. Gwyn, and held since 1862 by the Rev. Phil!ip Preston
Yare, with a scattered population, 2! miles north from Gwyn M.A. of St. John's College, Cambridge. Warner's
1Iardingham station on the Dereham and Wymondham charity of £10 yearly, left in 1702, is for distribution: the
section of the Great Eastern railway, and St north-west fuel allotment of 10 acres produces £ ro ros. which is given
from Wymondham, in the Mid division of the county, to the poor in money: Abigail Costwel in 1692 left a sum of
Forehoe hundred and petty sessional division and union, £1, the yearly rent-charge on Hill House farm, for educat-
Wymondham county court district. rural deanery of Hing- ing poor children. John Dring and John William Sutton
ham, Forehoe division, archdeaconry of Norfolk and diocese esqrs. are chief landowners, and the latter is lord of the
of Norwich. The church of All Saints is an edifice of flint, manor. The soil is various; !:ubsoil, briek earth. The
in the Perpendicular style, consisting of chancel, nave, chief crops are wheat, barley, turnips and hay. The area is
sonth porch and an embattled western tower containing one 1,005 acres; rateable value, £r,4o5; the population in 1891
bell : the chancel retains a piscina, and there are tablets, was 170.
with arms, to John Warner gent. 1702, and John Tidd gent. Parish Clerk, James Pallant.
1758, and an ancient brass; the church was repaired in Letters through Wymondham. Barnbam Broom is the
x86o, when it was new roofed, the porch rebuilt and two nearest money order office & Mattishall the nearest tela-
new windows placed in the south wall of the nave, at a cost graph office. LETTER Box, near the Manor house, cleared
of about £3co: it was further restored and re-seated in at 5·35 p.m. week days only; near the National school,
1867, and now affords 150 sittings. The register dates from cleared at 5.30 p.m. week days only
t.he year 1694- The living is a rectory, average tithe-rent National School (mixed), built in 1883, at a cost of £3o5, for
charge £254, gross yearly value £274, including 14 acres of I so children; average attendance 35; Miss Grace Fyfe,
glebe, with residence, in the gift of the trustees of the late mistress
Coleman John, Manor honse Carr George,farm bailiff to S.G. Atkins Cursons John, farm bailiff to trustees
Gwyn Rev.Philip Prest{)n M.A. [rector], esq. Hill House farm of the late J oseph Kiddle esq
Rectory Dring John, farmer & landowner, Norton John, carrier & farmer
Holland Mrs. Glebe farm Dairy house farm ; & at W elborne & Pallant James, parish clerk
Sntton John William, Monk's hall Gedney DroveEnd,near Long Sutton, Pegnall Plaisanc-e (Mrs.), laundress
Atkins Sydney George, farmer, Hill Lincolnshire Sutton John William, farmer & land-
House farm ; & at the Hall, Coston Howard Robert, farmer owner, l\Ionk's hall
DmECTORY.J NORFOLK. ijRIDGH!M.t 325
BRECKLES is a village and parish 5 miles south-east Ursula (Webb), wife of Sir William Hewyt kt. who was, by
from Watton, about It south from Stow Bedon station on her own desire, buried in an upright position ob. r658 ~ ad-
the Swaffha.m and Thetford section of the Great Eastern joining is a slab of black marble, with arms and crest, to Sir
railway, in the South Western division of the county, William Hewyt kt. ob. 1667. The register dates from the
Wayland hundred and petty sessional division and union, year 1538. The living is a vicarage, gross yearly val~e £46,
Watton and Attleborough county court district, rural including 21~ acres of glebe, in the gift of Lady Ba.teman,
deanery of Breccles and archdeaconry and diocese of Nor- and held since 1850 by the Rev. William Smytb Thorpe B. A.
wich. The church of St . .M:argaret is a building of flint, in of Wa.dham College, Oxford, who is also incumbent of Tamp-
the Early English style, consisting of chancel, nave, south son and resides at Shropham Villa, Shropham, Thetford.
porch and a round western tower, with octagonal belfry Lady Batcman, of Shobden Court, Herefordshire, i~ lady of
stage, containing 2 bells, and was restored in 1862: the fine the manor and sole landowner. Breckles Hall, a mansion
Norman font is ornamented on one side with figures of the of the r6th century, is now a farm house and in the occupa- 1
four Evangelists, and there is also !1 good Norman arch; the tion of Mr. Robert Oldfield. The soil is sand and gravel ;
chancel retains a piscina, and the doorway and steps to the subsoil, gravel and clay. The chief crops are wheat, barley,
· rood loft are in good preservation: the chancel and nave are oats and turnips. The area is I,86o acres; rateable value,
divided by a handsome carved oak screen, with an hour glass: £745; the population in r8gi was 121.
the pulpit is of carved oak and the open oak benches have Parish Clerk, John Ayres. ·

carved poppy heads; in the chancel is a memorial slab of Letters through Attleborough arrive at 9- 'l'he nearest
black marble, with the arms of Webb impaling Richardson, money order & telegraph office is at Great Hockham
to John Webb esq. ob. 1658, and Mary, his wife, daughter of
Sir Thomas Richardson kt. of Honingham ob. 1656: there The parish is a contributing district, sending two members
is also fastened, as it were, to this slab by a strap and buckle, to the Hockham School Board
cut in the stone, a small oval of black marble with the School (mixed), maintained by Lady Bateman, for 20 chil-
words "Stat ut Vixit Erecta," which covers the grave of dren; average attendance, 7; Mrs. Martha Banham, mist
AyresJohn, carpenter & wheelwright 1 Edwards Frank, farm bailiff to Mr. Oldfield Robert, farmer, Hall farm
Bailey James, carpenter & wheelwright Welling ham Prewer Aaron, farmer
Banham Jacob, bricklayer & plasterer Goddard Jsmes, farmer Prewer Susan (Mrs.), farmer
Clark William, farmer Goddard Robert, farmer
BRESSINGHAM (or BRISSINGIUM) is a parish and charity of £r2 yearly is distributed equally between the·
long straggling village on the borders of Suffolk, and on children of the Sunday and Board schools. Wellham's
the river Waveney, 3 miles north-west from Diss station, charity of £2 yearly is for bread, and the poor have an allot-
in the Southern division of the county, Diss hundred, petty ment of 24 acres. Bressingham Hall, pleasantly seatt:d a
sessional division and county court district, Guiltcross short distance from the church, and ~he property of Arthur
union, rural deanery of Redenhall, archdeaconry of Norfolk Pontifex esq. is now occupied by Albert H. Tuck esq. The
and diocese of Norwich, The church of St. John the Baptist, rector is lord of the rectorial manor. The Duke of Norfolk
rebuilt in 1527, is an edifice of flint and stone, in t.he Per- K.G. Harrison Allen esq. Arthur Pontifex esq. Mrs. Pitcher,
pendicular style, consisting of chancel, clerestoried nave, Mr. J. H. Muskett and Mr. Robert Newson Bunn are the
aisles, south porch and a lofty embattled western tower with principal landowners. The land is of a mixed soil; subsoil,
pinnacles and containin!J 5 bells: the roof, pulpit, reading- clay and gravel. The chief crops are wheat and barley, ·
desk and pews are of oak, elaborately carved; the east win- The area is 2,354 acres; rateable value, £3,288; and the
dow is stained, and there are several marble monuments to population in 1891 was 553·
the family of Thomas Martin, the antiquary, and author of Parish Clerk, Frederick Crick.
a" History of the Town of Thetford:" in the north aisle is I PosT OFFICE.-Mrs. EmilyNoble, receiver. Letters through
a memorial window, inserted at the expense of Mr. R. N. Diss, the nearest money order & telegraph office, arrive
Bunn, to his father, who resided in this parish upwards of 7·45 a.m.; dispatched 6 p.m. Postal orders are issued
40 years : another stained window has been erected by Mrs. here, but not paid
Hu8on: there are 18o sittings. The register dates from the PILLAR LETTER Box, Bressingharn Common, cleared 6.15;
year 1559. The living is a rectory, average tithe rent- sundays, nil
charge £466, net yearly value £350, including 26 acres of A School Board of 5 members was formed compulsorily
glebe, with residence, in the gift of Mrs. T. H. Nock and May 31, 1875 ; F. Fowell Hopton, clerk to the board
held since 1889 by the Rev. Wilham Collins Badger M.A. of Board School (mixed), built in 1878 1 at a cost of £85o, for,
Queen's College, Cambridge. There are Primitive Metho- 100 children; average attendance, 72; Samuel Skerrey,,
dist and Baptist chapels here. Mrs. Elizabeth Barker's master
Bad~er William Collins M.A. [rector], Eaton Peter, grocer N obleEmily(Mrs. ),sbopkeepr. Post office
The Rectory Elwood Robert, farmer Noble James, working cutler
Huson Mrs. Ivy cottage Elwood Rubert, jun. farmer, Common Noble Robert, farmer
Tuck Albert H. Bressingham hall Fairweather James, blacksmith Orford George, farmer
Woodcock Mrs. The Oaks Goodchild Alfred, farmer, Boyland hall Page Joseph, farmer
• cOMMERCIAL. Goodchild Edward, farmer, Hill farm Pearce George, farmer, Wood farm
Bailey James, shoe maker Hall George, farmer, Common Porcher J osiah, carpenter, Common
Barker Elizabeth (Miss), farmer Hawes Charles, farmer Self Jabez, farmer' •
Bolton Henry, Chequers P.H Holden & Kent, shopkeepers, Common Shepherd Charles, farmer
Branch JohnCussey,farmer, Valley farm Holden James, farmer Smith Charles, farmer, Folly farm
BunnRobt.Newson,farmer & landowner Jolly James, farmer, Common Smith Robert, farmer, Common
Butroughes Herbt.miller( wind & steam) Jolly William, beer retailer Styles Thomas, farmer & butcher
Crick Arthur, farmer, High street Leeder Frederick, blacksmith Tuck AlbertH.farmer,Bressingham hall
Crick Frederick, farmer, High street Loveless William, farrier Woodcock Horace (exors. of), farmers
Denny Charles, farmer Murton Charles, farmer, Common Wright John, farmer
BRETTENHAM is a parish and village, connected with by Order in Council with the adjoining benefice of Rushford,
Rushford by a bridge over the river Thet,> 4 miles east from average tithe rent-charge£ I 55. joint net yearly value £236,
Thetford station on the Great Eastern railway, in the Mid including 20 acres of glebe, in the gift of Miss B~xton, and
division of the county, Guiltcross and Sbropham petty held since 1885 by the Rev. Thomas Robinson B. A. of Wad-
Mssional division, Thetford union and county court district, ham College, Oxford, who resides at Rushford. Miss Buxton, .
Shropham .hundred, rural deanery of Rockland, arch- of Shad well Court, is lady of the manor and sole landowner.
deaconry of Norfolk and diocese of Norwich. The original The soil is clay and sand; subsoil, clay_ The chief crops
church, together with the rect.ory house, were destroyed by are wheat and barley. The population in r89x was ro3,
fire, about the latter part of the 17th century. The present comprising a few cottages and one farm of r,g8r acres;
church of St. Andrew, built in 1852 at the expense of the rateable value, £748 7s. 6d. ,
Dowager Lady Buxton, is a small and beautiful edifice of Parish Clerk, Philip Stearne.
Btone, in the Decorated style, consisting of chancel, nave, LETTER Box cleared at 7 p.m
transepts, vestry, south porch and a western tower contain- Letters received from Thetford, the nearest money order &
lng 5 bells, and affords r8o sittings. The register dates telegraph office, about 8 a.m
from the year 1777. The living is a rectory, coru;olidated The children of this place attend Rushford school

agent, Brettenham manor Lister Chas.bailiff to JohnFergusson esq


I
Fergusson John, jun. farmer & estate f Fergusson John, farillilr & estate agent Precious George, carpenter to Miss
Buxton, of Shadwell court l
BRIDGHAM is a parish and village in the vale of the Shropham petty sessional division, Shropham hundred,
river Thet, 2 miles south-west from Harling Road station on Guiltcross union, Att.leborough county court district, rural
the Great Eastern railway, and 6 east-by-north from Thet- deanery of Rockland, archdeaconry of Norfolk and diocese
ford, in the ,Mid division of the ~ounty, Guiltcross and of Norwich. The church of St. Mary is a large and well· .l.
326· BIUDGHAM. NORFOLK. [ KELLYJ~

built edifice of brick and stone in the Early English style, l tained 294 inhabitants, chiefly employed in husbandry, and
consisting of chancel, nave and a. fine Norman south porch I comprises 2,652A. OR. and roP. of fertile land ; rateable
and a belfry containing one bell: the church was new roofed value, £2,170. 'There are large heaths for rabbit warrens.
h:t1_877, and re-s~ted in 1886 at a cost of £so, and h~ ~20 Parish Clerk John Livock.
Sittmgs. The regtster dates from the year ISS8. The hvmg '
is a rectory, average tithe rent-charge £ 3 2r; gross yearly PosT OFFICE.-John Cutter, postmaster. Letters from
value about £300, net £x8g, including xs acres of glebe with Thetford, via East Harling, arrive at 7 a. m; dispatched at
residence, in the gift of the Lord Chancellor, and held since 6.15 p.m.; sundays, dispatched at 12.5 p.m. The nearest
1884 by the Rev. Henry Wilfrid Blunt M.A. of Pembroke money order office is at East Harling. Money orders are
College, Cambridge, who is also vicar of Roudham. There issued here, but not paid
is a small Wesleyan chapel: Risley's and Gawdy's charities A School Board of 7 members was formed in 1876 for the
of about £9 yearly are distributed in coals. Miss Bnxton, united district of Bridgham, Larling & Roudham; Albion
of Shadwell Court who is lady of the manor, Lionel Creasy Williams, of Kenninghall, clerk to the board & attend-
esq. of Colchester, and .Arthur Temple Cockell esq. of Hill anceofficer
House, Attleborough, are the principal landowners. The
soil is sandy; subsoil, chalk and clay: the chief crops are Board School, built for 6o children ; average attendance 58;
wheat, barley, rye and turnips. In x8gr the parish con- Miss Elizabeth Benson, mistress
Blunt Rev. Hy. Wilfrid :M:.A. [rector] Cutter John, blacksmith & postmaster Marsh John, cutler,The Cottage
Flatt Thomas, Bridgham hall Flatt Thomas, farmer, Bridgham hall Ready Nathaniel, farmer, Manor hoUB8
Read Mrs. The Cottage Jillings LouisJ ohn, farmr. TheGrovefrm Stammers Henry, beer retailer & farmer
Ready Nathaniel, Manor house Levock Elizabeth (Mrs.), shopkeeper Tuck George, shopkeeper & general
COMMERCIAL. Levock John, butcher & shopkeeper; dealer; charges moderate
ColeWilliam,farm bailiff toN. Ready esq families waited upon daily; charges Whitrod Reuben, boot maker
Coperrl.an William, wheelwright most moderate Wilton Bennett, blacksmith
l3 R.INING HAM is a. parish 9 miles north-east from views. Constance, Mar.chioness of Lothian, and Lord Hast-
Fakenham, I north from Melton Constable station on the ings, who hold the manors, and Shovell Henry Brereton esq.
Eastern and Midlands railway, 4 south-west from Bolt and B. A. have estates in the parish. The soil is mixed loa.m;
14 south-west from Cromer, in the JS'orthern division of the subsoil, partly shingle. The chief crops are wheat, turnips,
county, Bolt hundred and petty sessional diYision, Walsing- barley and grass. The area. is r,2o1 acres; rateable value,
ham union and county court district, rural deanery of Holt, £r,671 ; the population in 1891 was 237.
and in the archdeaconry and diocese of Norwich. The Parish clerk, Thomas Moore.
church of St. Maurice is an edifice in the Decorated and PosT OFFICE-James Woolway, receiver. Morning mail
Perpendicular styles, consisting of chancel, nave and a through Dereham arrives 5·45 a. m.; evening mail through
tower at the south-west angle of the nave containing one Melton Constable arrives 6 p.m. delivery to callers only;
bell: the lower stage of the tower forms a. porch and there dispatched at 6. ro p. m. The nearest money order and
are 150 sittings. The register dates from the year 1709· telegraph office is at Melton Constable; no sunday post;
Tbe living is a vicarage, average tithe l'ent-charge £4o, net postal orders issued here, but not paid.
yearly value about £88, with residence and one acre of glebe, The Briningham United District School Board, comprising
in the gift of the trustees of the Rev. S. Brereton, and held the parishes of Briningham, Brinton, Sharrington and
since 1883 by the Rev. Theodore Budd, of St. Bees. On the Thornage, was established in .August, I87S : the school
south side of the parish is a fine tower, called "Belle Vue," house is at Brinton ; James Simmons, clerk; Charles
belongiiJg to Lord Hastings, and commanding extensive Green, attendance offiCP-r
Brereton Shovell Henry B.A. Oliver Richard, White Horse P.H. & I Preston Albert, farm bailiff to S. H.
Budd Rev. Theodore, Vicarage grocer & draper Brereton esq. B.A
Dack Harriett (Mr5. ), shopkeeper Pointen Christopher, farmer Sharpin William, farmer
Groom Jesse Colman, w~~otch & clock Pointen George, farmer, Burgh Stubbs Southgate Charles, farmer
repairer & grocer
BRINTON is a pleasant village and parish, 2 miles from in memory of his father, when the church was generally
Melton Constable junction station on the Eastern and Mid- repaired, the clearing of the walls disclosing various Scrip-
lands railway, 3t west-south-westJ from Holt, 9 north-east ture texts written up in obedience to the canons of l6o4:
f:r:om Fakenham and 13 west from Cromer, in the Northern there is a capacious water stoup and the head of a Transi·
division of the county, Holt hundred, petty sessional division tion Norman pedestal piscina, at one time divided and used
and county court district, Walsingham union, rural deanery for quoining a buttress, and a carved oak chest, the gift of
of Bolt and archdeaconry and diocese of Norwich. The Mrs. Brereton : there are 150 sittings. The register dates
church of St. Andrew consists of chancel, nave, north aisle, from the year 1547. The living is a discharged rectory an-
transept, south porch and a western tower containing one nexed to that of Thornage, average tithe rent-charge (Brin·
bell: the edifice dates from the Saxon period, when it was ton) £134-. joint gross yearly value, £458, with s6 acres of
a small building with walls only 7 feet high ; in the Norman glebe in the two parishes, and residence, in the gift of Lord
period, the walls were heightened about 3 feet, and a semi- Hastings, and held since 1863 by the Rev. Charles John
circular headed doorway projecting into this newly added Brereton B.A. of St. John's College, Cambridge, who resides
portion but now built up, can be faintly traced: in the Early at Thornage. The Free Methodist Chapel here was built in
English period the walls were again raised by 4 feet 3 mches, 1858. £3 ws. is distributed yearly from Roger's charity: a
the building extended 21 feet westward, the junction being portion of the shaft of a cross, once standing on the plain
masked by the east wall of the present south porch : a north west of the church, now protects the angle of a building
aisle and porch (now removed) and a transept were added, hard by. Brinton Hall is the seat of the Rev. John Mortlock
probably with wooden arcading separating this aisle from Roberts M.A. Oxon. Lord Hastings and Clement Palmer
the nave : a window and two Early English buttresses still esq. who are lords of the manor, Shovell Uenry Brereton
remain, and from the faint indications of a beaten clay esq. of Briningham House, and Edward Bowyer Sparke esq.
floor it is inferred that a circular tower wa11 then added; J.P. are the principal landowners. The soil is light; subsoil,
but if so, it was replaced by the present square tower in the mixed. The chief crops are wheat and barley. The area is
transition period from Decorated to Perpendicular: again 625 acres~ rateable value, £859; and the population in
the walls were elevated by~ feet and the present stone 1891 was n6.
arcading built between nave and aisle and tran..qept, Perpen- Parish Clerk, P8illip Palmer.
dicular windows inserted, and a little Early English image of PosT 0FFICE.-William Rayner, sub-postmaster. Letters
St. Andrew, cross in hand, placed over the transept window, received through Dereham ; arrive about 6. 20 a. m. &
where it still remains, having been plastered up for the sake dispatched at 5.30 p.m.; on sundays at 10 a.m; Melton
of preservation during the troublous times of the 17th Constable is the nearest money order & telegraph office
century: the church was restored soon after the Reforma- The Briningham United District School Board, comprising
tion, under the direction of John Skye, then rector, when the parishes of Briningham, Brinton, Sharrington &
the present simple but handsome roof and poppy-head Thornage, was established compulsorily .Angus\ 13th,
benches were added; a portion of the chancel '\vas probably 1875; J. Simmons, Letheringsett, clerk to the board
at this time reduced, the shortening being indicated (as at Board School (mixed), built in 1876, at a cost of £ r,'JOO,
Binham and Bessingham) by a square-headed east window, for 148 children; average attendance, 130; Samuel Wm.
filled with stained ,Munich glass in 1873 by Henry Page esq. Tb.waites, master; Mrs. E. Thwaites, mistress
Brereton Rev Randle Bar wick M . .A. Cannell Palmer Frederick, horse trainer. Page Frederiek, wholesale grocer, soap
r

Brinton cottage & farmer, The Laurels boiler & tallow chandler
Jarvis Miss Es,.,uate .Arthur, Thatched House P.H Rice Henry Kiddell, farmer
Roberts Rev. John Mortlock :M:.A. Brin- Hawes Henry, gasfittcr for the Eastern Thwaites Samuel W. master of Board
'ton hall & Midlands railway school & a.ssessor & collector of
Palmer .Alfred Ernest Rayner Thomas, shoe maker Queen's taxes, School house
.
DIRECTORY.] NORFOLK. BROCKDISH. 327
:BRISLEY is a parish, 3 miles west from North Elmham of Christ's College, Cambridge, and held since 1891 by the
station on the Wells and Dereham section of the Great Rev. William Henry Lowe M.A. of Christ's College, Cam-
Eastern railway and 6 north-by-west from Dereham, in the bridge, Earl Sondes, who is lord of the manor, George
Mid division of the county, Launditch hundred, Mitford Butler Butler esq. and George Mann Nicholson esq. are
and Launditch petty sessional division and union, East the principal landowners. The soil is light loam; subsoil,
Dereham county court district, rural deanery of North gravel and clay. The chief crops are wheat, barley and
Brisley an.d archdeaconry and diocese of Norwich. The turnips. The area is 1,201 acres, including common, roads
church of St. Bartholomew is a building of flint witg stone &c. in which are r8r acres; rateable value, £r,731 : the
dressings in the Gothic style, consisting of chancel, clere- population in r89r was 317.
storied nave of five bays, aisles, north porch and a lofty Parish Clerk, John Prior.
embattled western tower with pinnacles, containing 4 bells: PosT OFFICE- Robert Warner, receiver. Letters through
the stained east window was erected in 1855 by the Rev. John Dereham, arrive at 7 a. m. ; dispatched at 6. 15 p.m. & on
Smith 'B.D. late rector, in memory of his first wife: in the sundays at _20 a.m. Elmham is the nearest money
9
chancel are two brasses dated 1531 1 ami also a piscina and order & telegraph office. Postal orders are issued here,
sedilia, all in good preservation : the rood screen bears but not paid
traces of colour, and some remains of paintings have been
exposed on the south wall: there are 305 sittings. The National School (mixed & infants), erected in r844, for 8o
register dates from the year 16 98. The Jiving is a rectory, children, average attendance, 55; Miss Alice Foystcr,
with the vicarage of Gateley annexed, average tithe rent- mistress
charge Brisley £220, Gateley £wg, joint net yearly value CARRIER.-Smith passes through to East Dereham &
£300, including 30 acres of glebe, with residence, in the gift Norwich every tues. at 5 p.m. returning thurs
Butler George Butler 1 Church house Butler Geo- Butler, farmer & landowner Mendham John, cattle dealer
Lowe Rev. William Henry M. A. Rectory Candler James, blacksmith Nicholson Wilham, farmer, Brisley hall
Lyne Mrs Claxton John, beer retailer Palmer William & Sons, blacksmiths
Nicholson George Mann, Brisley ball Coker James, farmer & landowner; & Phillippo Henry, fellmonger & farmer
Smith Mrs. Rose cottage at Beetley hall Rye William John, tailor
COMMERCIAL. Creed John, cowkeeper Tuck John, farmer
~aker Arth. farm bailiff to J as.Coker esq Englebright John, carpenter Warner George, well sinker
Bensley John, Bell P.H. & farmer Fox John, farmer WarnerRobert,grocer&drapr.Post office
Betts Edmund, farmer King James, Lion P.H Wilmerson James, farmer
:BRISTON is a small town and parish, 1 mile east from Copeman esq. J.P. of Aylesham, is lord of the manors pf
the Melton Constable station on the Eastern and Midlands Briston Hall, Melliors and Chossells, Col. William Earle
railway and 4i south-by-west from Holt, situated near one Gascoyne Lytton Bulwer J.P. of Heydon Hall, lord of the
of the sources of the river Bure, in the Northern division of manor of Rriston Mautbois, James Holly esq. lord of the
the county, Holt hundred, petty sessional division and county manor of Mikelhall and Loundall and Lord Hastings is lord
court district, Erpingham union, rural deanery of Holt and of the manor of Thornage-ex-parte-Briston. The chief
archdeaconry and diocese of Norwich. The church of All landed proprietors are Lord· Hastings, James Holly and
Sain~s is a building in the Decorated and Perpendicular Thomas Copeman esqrs. and Mrs. JodrelL The soil is
styles, consisting of chancel, nave, vestry and a western light; subsoil, gravel. The chief crops are wheat, turnips,
turret containing one bell :there was formerly a round tower, barley and grass. The area is 2,7 51 acres ; rateable value,
but in 1785, under a faculty obtained for altering and re- £3,942; the population in 1891 was x,uo. By the Divided
storing the church, it was demolished, having decayed and Parishes Act two detached parts of Stody were amalgamated
become unsafe : the chancel is divided from the nave by a with this parish in 1884. .
screen presented by the present vicar in 1875 in memory of Parish Clerk, William Blomfield.
his father: a new oak pulpit has been erected, and the church PosT & M. 0. D., S. B. & Annuity & Insurance Office.-
reseated with open oak benches affording 250 sittings. The Thomas Woodcock, sub-postmaster. Letters arrive from .
register dates from the year 1689. The living is a vicarage, l.\'Ielton Constable s. 0. about 7 . 15 a. m. ; dispatched at 5.
average yearly value from tithe rent-charge £268, including p.m. No post on sundays. The nearest telegraph office
5
30 acres of glebe, with residence, in the gift of Lord H'lStings, is at Melton Constable
and held since 1855 by the Rev. Charles Norris B.A. of Caius
College, Cambridge, who is also rector of Melton Constable. Police Station, Robert Dunn, constable
Here is a Congregational chapel, erected in 1775, and seat- National School (mixed), erected in 1848 & several times
ing 100 persons ; Free Methodist chapel, built in x866, with enlarged, for the children of the parishes of Briston,
I:W sittings; Wesleyun chapel, in zBu, seating 300; and. a · Melton Constable & Thurning: the school will hold 2oif
Primitive Methodist .chapel, erected in 1832 and enlarged children; average attendance, 170; Waiter Hellary Stone,
in x8g1, to hold 300 persons. The Salvation army have a master; Miss Laura Isabella. Syme!l, mistress; Miss
place of worship. ,A fair is held on the 26th May, also a · Emily Smith, infants' mistress .
large cattle sale on the last Thursday in May, and a wake An omnibus runs to Melton Constable l"ailway station -on
0¥ the day after Old Michaelmas day. George Rickard wed. & sat r
Balls Rev. Wm. [Primitive Methodist] Farrow Jn. painter &plumber,Olneypl Scott James & Samuet,"bntchers
NorrisRev.CharlesB.A.[ vicar], Vicarage Farrow Margaret E. (Mrs.), shopkeepr Shingler & Chinary, .nurserymen
Norris Rev. I<'rederick Montgomery Fowl &l.muel, blacksmith
I Stone Waiter Hellary, master of
[curate], Vicarage • Garrett Henry, farmer National school
Perry Mrs Gay Robcrt, farmer Tann Arthur, farmer
• COMMERCIAl. Hammond Burrell, farmer Tann Edmund, farmer
Arnold Thomas William, farmer Harrison Samuel, farmer Waller Wm. wawh makel.'\o& music dlr
Bambridge Henry Gabriel, bricklayer Ives Joseph, miller (wind) Ward Henry, boot maker
Barstcd Horatio 1 farmer Jackson Jacob, butcher & grocer WestAlice (Mrs.), farmer & landowner,
Blnmfield William, glover & farmer Jackson John, sheep dresser The Lawn
lllyth John, tailor Jeckell William, shoe maker Whittred William, carpenter, wheel-
Brigham Richard, baker Kelly Hellingham, Chequers inn wright & glazier
Bribton Reading Rooms (Thomas Legrys John, carpenter Wllittred William (Mrs.), dress maker
Roberts, hon. sec) Margeson Edward, farmer Williams Alfd.beerretailer&wheelwght
Brown Sarah (Mrs.), shopkeeper PeaseAbraham David,baker,flour dealer Williamson Herbert, farmer& cattle dlr
Cletheroe Frederick, carpenter & farmer Williamson John, farmel' & pig dealer
Cletheroe George, shopkeeper Pegg William, hair dresser & butcher Woodcock Joseph & Thomas, grocers &
Cletheroe Henry, carpenter Pegg William, miller (water) drapers, seed merchants, farmers, &
Cletheroe James, lodging house Perry Elizabeth (Mrs.), baker: post office
CletheroeJonathan,builder,Reepham rd Perry William, Horse Shoes P.H Woodcock Joseph J. G. (firm, J. & T.
Cletheroe Thomas Jsaac, corn & coal Pointer Thomas, blacksmith Woodcock),wine & spirit merchant &
merchant, furniture remover, farmer Reynolds Samuel, shopkeeper agent forMackinder's celebrated lamb
& machine owner Rivett Edwd. grocer,outfitter &milliner food ,
Cletheroe William, wheelwright Roberts Althea (Mrs.), teacher of music Woods Arthur, farmer &omnibus ownr
Craske Stephen, farrier Roberts Thomas, assistant overseer & Woods Bartholomew, castrator
Daniel Robert., coach builder sec. of Reading room Woods Richard, carpenter
Eke James, boot maker Rudd Henry, saddler Wright William, farmer
Empson J<.;zra, beer retailer Rudd Robert, castrator Yull Jobn, nursery & seeds man I
Everitt Mark, Hall Moon P.H
I
l3ROCKDISH is a. parish and pretty village on the west from Harleston station and 4 south from Pulham St.
banks of the Waveney, 6 miles ca.Bt from Diss and 4 &outh- Mary station, both on the Waveney Valley section o~ tho

328 BROCKDISH, NORFOLK,
Great Eastern railway, in the Southern division of the by John Bacon, are let to George Girling for [14. Sher-
county, Earsham hundred and petty sessional diyision, wood's charity of 6s. 8(1. yearly, out of land at Hoxne, is
Depwade union, county court district of Harleston, rural given to the poor. Here is a Free Methodist chapel, erected
deanery of Redenhall, archdeaconery of Norfolk and diocese in 186o, The Right Hon. Sir Edward Kay kt. P.c., J.P.
of Norwich. A bridge over the Wavency connects this Lord Justice of Appeal, is owner of "Thorpe Abbotts," a
place with Syleham, in Suffolk. The church of SS. Peter handsome mansion with extensive grounds. The Grove, an
and Paul is an ancient structure of flint with stone dress- ancient house, erected in 1672 by Richard Wythe, contains
ings, in the Early English style, consisting of chancel, nave, a fine oak staircase, and is the property of Thomas Alfred
south aisle, south porch and an embattled western tower Walne ~sq. There are two manors, Brockdish Hall and
containing 6 bells: the tower was rebuilt in 1865 in place of Brockdish Earl, but no, copyholders. The soil is mixed;
the earlier tower, a structure of Norman date : the whole of subsoil, clay and gravel. The chief crops are wheat, barley,
the windows are stained, the east window being a memorial peas and beans. The area is 1,069 acres ; rateable value,
~ Hannah Kay, d. 186g: there are piscinre in the chancel £1 1 588; the population in 1891 was 377· By the Divided
and south aisle: the benches have handsomely carved poppy Parishes Act a detached part of this parish was amalgamated
heads, and part of the ancient painted rood screen remains: with Thorpe Abbotts in r885.
traces of calor were also discovered on the roof and walls Parish Clerk, Waiter Wilham King.
during the restoration: there are tablets to the Rev.
Waiter Worth, late rector of this parish and of Thorpe PosT & M. 0. 0., S. B. & Annuity & Insurance Office.-
Abbotts, d. 29 March, 1755 ; to Thomas Cotton, d. 30 Dec. Waiter Heart Robinson, receiver. Letters are received
177 s ~ <J.nd to the Rev. Robert Lawrence, a former rector, from Scole at 7.20 a. m.; dispatched at 6.20 p.m. week
d.- 30 Dec. 1739 : the whole church has been completely days; sundays, 9·55 a. m. Harleston is the nearest
restored, and has 16o sittings. The register dates from the telegraph ollice
year 1562. The living is a rectory, average tithe rent-charge Police Station, Robert Sizeland, constable
£266, net yearly value [84, including 25 acres of glebe National School (mixed); the building, formerly the
anaresidence, erected in 1844, in the gift of and held since village workhouse, was bought by subscription & adapted
1842 by the Rev. George France M.A. of Exeter College, to its present use in 1843; it will hold So children;
Oxford, J.P. The chnrch lands of 7A. lii.. 24P. left in 1433 average attendance, 6o; Miss Victoria Coleby, mistress
Coulson Charles B Chilvers Ellen (Mrs.), butcher Pollard John Charles, King's Head P.H.
Fnnce Rev. George M. A.., .r .P. Rectory Chih·ers Wait. carpenter &wheelwright & builder
Kay Right Hon. Lord Justice Sir Crisp Frederick, farmer, Hall farm Reeve Thomas, poultry &c. dealer
Edward P.C., J.P. Thorpe Abbotts Cull am Hy. Westhorpe, grocer & drapr Robinson Waiter Beart, grocer, draper,
Martiott Mrs Etheridge John, shoe maker stationer & news agent,' agent for-
Mayhew David, Sunnyside villa Gill man Wm. thrashing machine owner the Fire Insurance Association Lim.
Sharman Mrs ' Girlmg George, farmer & coal dealer & the Employers' Liability Assurance
Smith Rev. Frederick Robert M.A. Gooch John, shoe maker Corporation Limited, Post office
J,
[ cul'Ste Red house Hines N athaniel, thatcher Sandy Daniel, mill foreman
Walne Misses, The Grange Johnson Alfred J. managCl" to Mr. Smart William, tailor
COMMERCIAL. · Henry W. Cullum, grocer &c Strange Fredk. wheelwright, Crowhall
Bacon Edward, butcher Kemp Charles, builder Walker John, blacksmith
Bacon Hannah (Mrs.), dress maker Kemp Nathan, builder- & contractor Walne Eleanor Mary & Anna Maria.
Bark way Betsey (Mrs.), beer retailer Knights Robert, shoe maker (Misses), farmers & landowners, The
Barkway Fredk. fellmonger & glove ma LeGrys Wait. Jn. farmer,Highgate frm Grange
Barkway Henry, fish dealer Manning William, farm bailiff to Sir W alne Thomas Alfred, farmer & land-
Beaumont Wm. farmer, Valley farm Edward Kay J.P owner, The Grove
Brnndle Barnabas,farmer, Westeria frm Marjoram George, chimney sweeper White Carolina (Mrs.), baker ·
Bullingham John, Greyhound P.H Miles William, thatcher
BROOKE is a parish and pleasant village, 6 miles south- pleasantly situated in the midst of a beautiful park, thickly
by-east from Trowse station on the Norwich and Yarmouth studded with oak and other tree~, and containing a fine
section of the Great Eastern railway, 7 south ,from~ orwich piece of water. Brooke House, a plain square mansion of
and 7 north from Bungay, in the Southern division of the brick, and the seat of Viscount Canterbury, stands in a
county, Clavering hundred, Loddon and Clavering petty large, well-wooded park. Brooke Lodge, an Elizabethan
sessional division and union, Norwich county court district, mansion; is the residence of Miss Knight. George John
rural deanery of Brooke western division, archdeaconry of Holmes esq. is lord of the manor and impropriator of the
Norfolk and diocese of Norwich. The church of St. Peter great tithes and the principal landowner. This manor was
is an ancient building of flint with stone dressings, in the given by William the Norman to the Abbey of Bury St.
Early English style, consisting of chancel, nave, north aisle, Edmunds, and the abbots obtained for it a market and fair,
south porch and a round western tower containing 6 bells : now obsolete. The soil is mixed ; subsoil, gravel and clay.
it was thoroughly restored in 1849, and has 350 sittings. The chief crops are wheat, oats and barley. The area is
The earliest register dates from the year 1558. The living 2,o8r acres;. rateable value £2,735; the population in x88x
is a vicarage, average tithe rent-charge £182, net yearly was 700.
value £152, including 4 acres of glebe and residence, in the Parish Clerk, Richard Fryer Yallop.
gift of. ~he Lord Chancellor, and held since 1888 by the Rev, PosT & M. 0. 0., S. B. & Annuity & Insurance Office.-
Robert Twiddy Batchelor; the Rev. George Edwin Watkins Richard .l"ryer Yallop, postmaster. Letters ar:rive from
has been curate in charge since 18gx. There is a Baptist Norwich by mail cart at 5 a.m. & dispatched at 5.25 p.m.
chapel, built in 1839. The town lands comprise 43A. 311.. in Telegraph office at Loddon .
u~e p~rish, leJ; for £49, and Pevers Farm, in Kirstead, of Parochial School (mixed), erected in 1838, for 130 children;
53A. 2R. let for £75 yearly, which surn.s are applied in lieu average attendance, 100; William Henry Emmett, mas-
of charch rates and in the maintenance of sch90ls. The ter ; Mrs. Frances Emily Emmett, mistress : the school
fuel allotment is 5 acres, let for £15, which is distributed is supported from funds arising from the town lands
in coals amongst the poor, who have also some small allow- charity, & i~ managed by trustees in accordance with a
ances left by J. Kerrison, J. Fowle and W . .Hrereton. The scheme approved by the Court of Chancery; George John
custom of holding a Harvest Festival or Thanksg-iving, now Holmes esq. J.P. one of the trustees, is acting clerk
universally adopted, was originated in this parish in 1853· CARRIERS z-
Brook~ ,I;Iall, the .seat of George John Holmes esq. J.P. is a Gardiner, to Bungay, daily; Meen, to Norwich & Ipswich,
large mansion in the Italian style, standing near the site of tues. thurs. & sat.; John Drake, to Norwich, wed. & sat.;
the old hall, and was built in 1830 by its late owner; it is Whylde, to Harleston, wed. &; sat
' PRIVATE RESIDENTS. COMMERCIAL. Copling Richard, painter & plumber
Batchelqr Rev.Robert Twiddy, Vicarage Beckett Samuel, farm bailiff to George Cossey Charles, estate carpenter to G.
Hrigharil. John John Holmes esq J. Holmes esq
Brigham Miss Brewster George, gamekeeper to G. J. Cullingford Ellen (Mrs.), dress maker
Canterbury Viscount D.L., J."£>. Brooke Holmes esq Dickerson Frederick, thatcher
house; & 12 Queensbury place & Brinn John, head gardener to G. J. Earl Charles, tinman
Brooks', Marlborou:;h & St. James' Holmes esq Ellis Charles, market gardener
clubs, London s w Brooke Village Club (W. H. Emmett, Everett George, harness maker
Gillett George, The Hollies hon. sec) Forder James, shoe maket & beer retlr
Gillett George Edward, TheHollies Brown William, watch maker GillettGeorge,surgcon,& medical officer
Holmes George John J.P. Brooke hall Rullen Robert, boot maker & public vaceinator, No. 3 dist. Lad-
Holmes John J.P. Brooke hall Calthorpe John, farmer don & ClaYering union, The Hollies
Knight Miss, Brooke lodge ChittockJabez, frm. bailiff to MissKnight Gillett Geo. Ed wd. surgeon, The Hollies
Osborne John Cleveland Harry, veterinary surgeon Haggith Charles, tailor
DIRF!CTORY.) BilUNDALL.. 329
Haggith Robert, tailor & rnral post Middlewn George, earpenter Utti~g Charles, wheelw~igbt f 1

messenger Minns Mary (Mrs.), shopkeeper Uttirtg John, butcher
Harber William, shoe maker Neary Charles, head gardener to Wasey George, farmer & miller (wind)
Hupton Henry, builder Viscount Canterbury Wasey Robt. William,King's Head hotel
Leeder Palmer, farmer Parfitt Robert '£homas, butcher Whitwell George, plumber & painter
Leeder Thomas, ·cattle dealer Potter Samuel, tailor Williams Sarah & Annie RowlaQd
Lord Henry John, police constable Rix Wm. grocer,draper,baker& farmer (Misse!l ), ladies' school ' ' "
Marston Ellen(Mrs. ),frmr.&harness ma Ruddock John, shopkeeper Yallop Richard Fryer, farmcr,bverseer.
Middleton Frederick, blacksmith Tibbenham Richard, farmer parish clerk & postmaster
MiddletonFrederick( Mrs.), dress maker Trower John. farmer
BROOME (formerly BROME) is a parish and widely ment of £3 3s. a year to a clerk, be divided as follows:-
scattered village, the church of which is about 1:f miles One;fourth for the repairs of the bridge and other parochial
north-west from Ellingham station and about .1i miles objects; one-fourth for the repair and other uses of the
north-east from Ditchingham station {)ll the Waveney parish church; one-fourth towards education ; and one-
Valley branch of the Great Eastern railway, 2 miles north- fourth for the general purposes of the poor: the trustees
east from Bnngay and 14 south from Norwich, in the are the rectClr; Richard Day French esq . .J.'P. :Edmond
Southern division of the county, Loddon hundred, Loddon Tyrel de Poix esq. J.P. Joseph Oliver Brock and the church-
and Clavering petty sessional division and union, Bungay wardens for the time being; Austin Cook Smith, secretary_
and Beccles county court district, rural deanery of Brooke Broome Place, a. handsome mansion, standing on a slight
eastern division, archdeaconry of Norfolk and diocese of eminence, in grounds of considerable extent, with a good
Norwich. The church of St. l\'Iichael is an ancient building prospect, is the property and residence of Edmond Tyre!
of flint and rubble, in the Early Gothic style, consisting of de Poix esq. J'.P. Lord De Saumarez, of Shrubland Park,
chancel, nave, south porch and an embattled western tower Suffolk, is lord of the manor_ 'fhe principal landowners are
containing 5 bells : it was thoroughly repaired, re-seated Lord De Saumarez, the Duke of Norfolk K.G. Edmond A. J.
in 1866 and r867, and in 1891 the former thatched roof E. M. 'fyrel de Poix esq. J.P- Richard Day French esq. J.P.
was replaced by tiles: in the nave are seven funeral batch- Henry Smith esq. D.L., J.P. and Frederirk Cross esq. The
ments, five of these, of the 17th century, being to the Fowle soil is light and gravelly; subsoil, gravel. The chief crops
family: the chancel retains fine sedilia and piscina, and are barley, wheat and turnips. The area is I,418A.. 3R. r3P.;
has a beautifully carved oak reredos, the gift of Mrs. de rateable value, £1,948; the population in 1.891 was 491.
Poix in 1891. The register dates from the year 1538. The Parish Clerk, Isaac Folkard.
living is a. rectory, average yearly value from tithe rent- Letters by foot-post through Bungay, which is the nearest
charge ,£216, with 28 acres of glebe and residence, in the money order & telegraph office, arrive at 8 a. m
gift of LQrd De Saumarez, and held since r892 by the Rev.
Achilles Daunt B.A. of Merton College, Oxford. The Town WALL LETTER Box, near the Artichoke inn, cleared at 5·5
Lands and Fuel Allotment charities consist of 19A. 3R. of p.m. we~k days only
land, which is let for £56 yearly; £701 os. 7d. £r~. 15s. per WALL LETTER Box, Ivy farm, cleared at 3.30 p.m. week
cent. Consols and £120 12s. sd, derived from the sale of days only ,
one acre of allotment ground to the Great Eastern Railway A School Board of 5 members was formed compulsorily
Company and invested in £2 15s. per cent. Consols, the.. Fe!:). u, r874; E. Cadge, Loddon, clerk to the. board &
whole producing about £94 2s. 8d. yearly : by an order of attendance officer
the Charity Commissioners, dated 21st June, l878, it was Board School (mixed & infants), erected in r873, at a cost
.ordered that. the cbar(ties be vested in trustees and here- of about £'1,100, & infants' room enlarged in 1891, for 103
after mentioned as one charity, under the designation of children; average attendance, 89; Joseph Herbert VVilson~
the "Brome Parochial Trust," and the income after pay- master ; Mrs. Louisa Wilson, infants' mistress
Bull Mrs. Isaac Crickmore Waiter, beer retailer Ramus George, boot& shoe maker
Chandler George Owles, Beech house Crowfoot Wm. Chas. farmer, Heath ho Robson Jonathan, wheelwri!!'ht
Climpson Edward, The Laurels Elden James, builder & contractor Sargent Thomas, cowkeeper
Crowfoot Wm. Charles, Heath house Fair head Elizabeth (Mrs.), grocer Smith Edward Norman, Artichok~ ~n
Daunt Rev. Achilles H.A. [rector], Farrow Henry, market gardener Smith Jeremiah, carpenter
Rectory Folkard Isaac, carpenter & parish clerk Smith Jeremiah, jun. shopkeeper
• de Poix Edmond Tyrel J.P. Broome Harrod Edward, fish curer . Tubby William, shopkeeper
Place Kent Charles, builder Vaughan Thomas, farm bailiff to John
Synge Mrs. Broome lodge Mann R. & W. maltsters, & agents for Young, Gamble's farm
Wenn Miss, Broome cottage Barclay, Perkins & Co.'s stout. Wain- Walker WilliamDavid & Artbur Ernest.
ford maltings maltsters ·
COMMERCIAL.
• Moore Thomas, farmer Wharton William, farmer · ·
Berry E:enry, farmer, Ivy farm Payne Thomas, farm steward to Wisken Thomas, corn & coal merchant
Brighton George, Tuns P.H Edmond T. de Poix esq. J.P & assistant overseer
Bull Lewis, brick & tile maker Punchard William, farmer, Broome bo
BRUMSTEAD (or BRUNSTEAD) is a parish, I mile register dates from the year 1562. The living is a dis-
north from Stalham station on the Eastern and Midlands charged rectory, average titbe rent-charge [176, net yearly
' railway, 5 miles north-east from Norwich and 7 south-east value £qo, including 22 acres of glebe and residence, in the
from North Walsham, in the Eastern division of the county, gift of Robert Ives esq. and held since r887 by the Rev.
Tunstead and flapping petty sessional division, Small burgh Mauric'S Charles Hilum Bird M.A. of Trinity Hall, Cambridge.
union, Happincr hundred, North Walsham county court Robert Ives esq. J.P. of Calthorpe, is the lord of the manor
district, rural deanery of Waxham, Rapping division, arch- and the principal landowner. The soil is strong, 'stiff land;
deaconry of Norfolk and diocese of Norwich. The church subsoil, clay, sand and gravel. The chief crops are wheat,
of St. Peter is a small building of flint and stone, consisting oats and barley. • The area is 789 acres ; rateable value,
of chancel, nave, south porch, and an embattled western £r,2o5; the population in 18gr was 101.
tower containing one bell: it was re-seated and thoroughly Parish Clerk, James Dexter.
resrored in 1866, and in 1875 the chancel was restored by Letters through Stalham S.O. which is the nearest money
the Rev. Horatio N. W. Comyn B. A. rector 1841-87, at a cost order & telegraph office
of £500, and a stained east window presented by George
Durrant esq. of Norwich, at a cost of £no : in the chancel This parish is contriburory w the Stalharn School .ijoard
are mural tablets to various memberS of the Comyn and The children of this place attend the Board School at Stal-
Durrant families : the church affords roo sittings. The barn '
Durrant Miss, The Hall Ducker James, farmer [ LadbrookeArmine, farmer& landowner
Durrant Mrs. The Hall FaulkeHannah(Mrs.),landowner&farmr Powell Peter, farmer
BRUNDALL is a village and parish standing on a con- The church of St. Lawrence is a small building of stone in
siderable eminence north of the river Yare, with a station on the Early First and Second Pointed styles, consisting of nave,
the Norwich and Yarmouth line of the Great Eastern rail- with an interesting western turret containing one bell: the
way, II9f miles from London, 6~ east from Norwich and 14 font, a curious structure covered with lead, is supposed to
from Yarmouth, in the Eastern division of the county, B!o- date from the 13th century: there are tablets to the Routh
field and Walsham petty sessional division, Blofield hundred and Cnbitt families: the church affords 50 sittings. The
and union, Norwich county court district, rural deanery of earliest register dates from 1563. The living is a rectory,
Blofield and archdeaconry and diocese of Norwich. By an consolidated with that of Witton, average tithe rent-charge
order of the Local Government Board, dated r4th Dec. 1883, £292, joint net yearly value £314, including 21~ acres of
this parish is now amalgamated with Bradeston for all civil glebe, in the gift of and held since 1854 by the Rev. James
purposes, but remains ecclesiastically united to Witton. Spurgeon Green M.A. of Christ's College, Cambridge, who
330
\ •
DRt'NDA4L. NORFOLK. [~tELLY S
1

resides at Witton, Here is a Primitive Methodist Mission taining one bell : the south wall of the chancel retains nn-
hall, at which sel'vices are held on Sundays at 2.30 & 6.30 doubted traces of Saxon work, and in the chancel is a brass
p.m. William James Owen Holmes esq. F.L.s. of Strump~ to Osbert, llOn of John Berney, of Reedham, who was
shaw Hall, is lord of the manor: the chief landowners are wounded at the siege of Caistor Castle in l469: <the north
T)lomas Slipper esq. l.P. of Braydeston Hall, Edward Gilbert wall of the tower retains a curious fireplace, and there are
esq. of Blofield House, George L. C()leman esq. of Norwich, tablets to the Drake and Frost families : the interior was
Charles Waters esq. of Postwick Grange, and Dr. Michael reseated with oak benches in I874 by 1\j:rs. T. W. Hilbert,
.Beverley, of Norwich. The soil is mixed ; subsoil, sand. late of Bradeston Hall.., in memory of her husband, and
The chief crops are wheat, barley, turnips and hay. The various repairs were effected at the same time, at a cost of
area is 997 acres; rateable value, £2,781 ; the population in about £4<><>; there ar~ l20 sittings. The register dates
189I was 228. · from the year I57I. The living is a rectory, consolidated
. Parish Clerk, Henry Harper. with Strumpshaw, average tithe rent-charge £3g6, joint
Postal, see Bradeston for information . gross yearly valne £4gd, including 6o acres of glebe, in the
This place is included in the United School Board district of gift of Waiter M. Harton esq. and held since 1891 by the
Strumpshaw, formed May 19, 1873. The school is at Rev. Alfred John Barton B.A. of St. Peter's College, Cam-
Strwnpshaw bridge, who resides at Strumpshaw. Thomas Slipper esq.
Railway Station, John Coker, station master l.P. is lord of the manor and principal landowner. The
Bra.deston (or HRADISTONE), formerly a parish and soil is mixed; subsoil, sand and brick earth. 'l'he chief
village, is 6 miles east from N Ol"Wich, in the Eastern division crops are wheat, barley and oats; the population in I8St
of the county, Blofield and Walsham petty sessional division, was x6s.' ·
Blofield hundred and union, Norwich county court district, BRUNDALL PosT & T. 0. Bradeston,-Benjamin Merdson,
rural deanery of Hlofield and archdeaconry and diocese of b L h h N · h ·
Norwich. The Brundall station on the Norwich and Yar- su -postmaster. etters t roug orwlc • arnve at
b . . h Th 7.30 a.m. & 2 p.m.; dispatched at I.3o ~ 4·45 p.m. No
mou th h
ranc o f th E 1
e G reat astern ra1 way IS ere. e d ll · Bl 0 fi Id · h t d
chnrch of St. Michael, which stands half a mile north-east of sun ay co ectwn. e lS t e neares money or er
office. WALL LETTER Box, near Bradeston villa, cleared
the .village, is a building iu a plain style, consisting~£ chan- at 1 _20 & _40 p.m. week days only
eel, nave, north porch and a western tower of f:hnt con- ' 4 ·
Brundall. Fawcett James Henry, Yare hotel • Mason Philip Henry · '
Culley Frederick Samuel, Belle vue Glasspole John, jobbing gardener Roberson Miss, Bradeston villa
Easter Fred, Field house Read Henry, market gardener Slipper Thomas J.P. Braydeston hall
Maiden John, Belle vue Whitbread William Josselyn, solicitor, Slipper Armine Hugh, Braydeston hall
Murrell Henry, The Lodge The Cottage Spelman Wm.Waters,IBradeston house
Palmer William Loyal, Oaklands . Dingle George, White Horse inn
Simpson William Isaac Bra.deston. Gowen Robert, blacksmith
Thurgar WilliamAugustus,Kenmare ho Burt Miss, Dilkusha E:utchings George, shopkeeper .
Whitbread Mrs. Tile Cottage Cole Herbert Henchman, Hill house Merrison Benjamin, farmer & cattle
Whitbread Wm. Josselyn, The Cottage Coleman William, Illawarta · dealer, Post office '
Broom Charles,Ram inn,& wheelwrght Carder Octavius Mollett George, boat builder
Brundall Staithe Coal Depot (William Daynes John Wm. Crook", River view Price A.rthur Frank, shopkeeper
Roper, manager) Gunton Henry, Bradeston cottage, . _
1 ..
:BUCKENHAM FERRY is a parish and village, and Regina.ld William P:roctor-Beauchamp bart. and held since
station on the Norwich and Yarmouth section of the Great r87I by the Rev. George El win B.A. of Corpus Christi col-
Eastern railway, 8 miles east from Norwich, 12 west from lege, Oxford. Buckenham common is let for about £8 a
Yarmouth and I 12~ from London, in the Eastern division of year, which is distributed among the poorer householders.
the county, in the Blofield and Walsham petty sessional The knightly family of Godsalve were lords of the manor
division, Blofield hundred and union, Norwich county court till after the reign of Henry VIII. and their arms may still
district, rural deanery of Blofield, archdeaconry of Norwich be seen in the carved wainscot of the old Hall, which is now
and diocese of Norwich. There is a ferry from this place a farm house. Sir Reginald William Proctor-Beauchamp
over the river Yare to Carleton St. Peter. The chur<;h of bart. is lord of the manor and sole landowner. The soil is
St. Nicholas is an ancient structure of flint with stone mixed; subsoil, gravel. The chief crops are wheat, barley
dressings, in the Norman style, consisting of chancel and and oats; the marshes are used for grazing, and constitute ,
nave, and an octagonal embattled western tower containing about one-half of the parish. The area is 931 acres; rateable
one bell: the font exhibits various emblematical figures: value, £1,518; the population in 1891 was 95·
the east window is stained ! the. church was extensively Parish Clerk, William Patterson. ·
repaired at different periods at the expense of the Rev. LETTER Box at Railway station cleared at 7.50 a.m. & 7.40
Thomas W. H. Beauchamp, rector here I8I4-54: there are p.m. Letters through Norwich arrive at 8.15 a.m. & 3.30
126 sittings. The register dates from the year I714. The p.m. The nearest money order office is at Burlingham &
living is a rectory, with that of Hassingham St. :Mary telegraph office at Blofield
annexed, tithe rent-charge commuted at £237,average £ I86, National School (mixed), erected in I873, for 55 children;
joint net yearly value {,200, including 27 acres of glebe here average attendance, 40; Miss Mary Ann Stanley, mistress
and 7 at Hassingham, with residence, in the gift of Sir Railway Station, Thomas Harding, station master
El win Rev. Geo. :B. A. [rector], Rectory I GunnsJeremiah(exors. of), fmrs. Old hall I W right Ed ward, frmr. White House frm
NEW BUCKENHAM is a parish and small town, 8 Here are almshouses, founded about r68 I by William Barber,
miles north-west from Diss, 15 south-west from Norwich rebuilt at the expense of the late Messrs. H. and J. J. Turner
and 5 south-east from Attleborough station on the Thetford in r86r. They are occupied by four old women, each of
and Norwich section of the Great Eastern railway, in the whom has an allowance of coals and wood and receives a
Mid division of the county, Guiltcross and Shropham petty stipend of 2s. 6d. per .week. The Grange is the residence
sessional division, Shropham hundred, Guiltcross union, of Charles Rose Packer esq. Arthur Tallent Clowes esq. is
county court district of Attleborough, rural deanery of Rock- lord of the manor!l of Buckenham Burgh and Buckenham
land, archdeaconry of Norfolk and diocese of Norwich. The Leet: the manor of Buckenham Priory was granted by John
town consists of several small but compactly arranged Eldred in the years 1617 and I627 to trustees upon trusts to
streets. The church of St. Martin is a noble structure of pay the income to the minister of the parish. for the time
flint with stone dressings, in the Late Perpendicu"lar style, being during his good behaviour, and the present trustees
consisting of chancel, clerestoried nave of five bays, aisles, are the lords of that manor. The trustees of the late Edward
south porch and an embattled western tower, with four pin- Fi~her Boud esq. are the principal landowners. The soH is
nacles, containing a clock and 6 bells: the nave was restored mixed and very fertile ; subsoil, clay. 'l'he chief crops are
at the sole expense of the late John Gall esq. l.P. and the wheat and barley. The area is 324 acres, of which 79 are
church ·reseated with open benches in I879: there are 428 common; rateable value, £1,2S5; the population in I89I
sittings. The register dates from the year 1538. The living was 525. ·
is a vicarage, net yearlyvalue about £I15,in the gift of the Parish Clerk, vacant,
parishioners, and held since :1888 by the Rev. Thomas PosT, M. 0. & T. 0., S. B. & Annuity & Insurance Office,
William Hutchinson B.A. of St. John's College, Cambridge, Market place.-Edwin Le Good, postmaster. Letters re-
who is non-resident; the Rev. Robert Litson Johnson M.A. ceived by messenger from Attleborough at 7.50 a. m. & 3
of Durham University, has been curate in charge since I892. p.m. & dispatched at 6.40 p.m.; sunday 10 a.m
The Wesleyan Methodist chapel was rebuilt in I884 and a GUILTCROSS UNION.
school room added, and there is also a Primitive Methodist Board day, every alternate monday at IC.30 at the Work-
chapel. A Burial Board of 7 members was formed in house, Kenninghall.
January, I8gr; a new burial ground has been provided, The union comprises the following places :-Banham, Blo'
consisting of half an acre, at a cost of £2oo. Fairs are held Norton, Bressingham, llridgham, East Harling, Eccles,
the last Thursday in May, and November 22nd for cattle. Fersfield, Garboldisham, Gasthorpe 1 Kenninghall, Ne-w
n:umCTOJY. J NQEJ!'"OLK.
• OLD BT,JC~E~ HAM.. 33~
Buckenbam~ North Lopham, Old 5uckenham, Quiden~ Buckenham; Kenninghall sub-district, Wflliam Henry
ham, Riddlesworth, Roydon, Shelfhanger, South Lop ham, Berry, Kenninghall; deputy. Joseph Long, Kenninghall
West Harling, Wilby & Winfarthing. The area of the The Workhouse, Kenninghall, is a structure of brick, erected
union is 44,585 acres; the population in x8gr was 10,228; in 1837 & will hold :.8a inmates; Jamas Cole, master; Rev.
rateable value in I8g2, £55,912 William Edward Deane M,A. chaplain; Joseph Henry
Clerk to the Guardians & Assessment Committee, Arthur Wilson, medical officer; Mrs • .An,ni,e Cole 1 matron; Harry
Tal!ent Clowes, New Buckenham I. Vertigen, schoolmaster 1
Treasurer, Josiah Humphries, London & Provincial Bank, RuRAL SANITARY AUTHORITY.
Diss Meets at same times as Guardians, at the Workhouse,
Relieving Officer for the Union & Collector for the Guar· Kenninghall •
diaos, William Henry Berry • Kenninghall Clerk, Arthur Tallent Clowes, New Buckenham
Vaccinat.ion Officers, Isaac Vertigen, New Buckenham & Treasurer, Josiah Humphries, London & PI'ovincia.l Bank,
William Henry Berry, Kenninghall Diss •
Collectors of Pours Rates : John Roper, Banham; Richard Medical Officer of Health, Henry Gem'ge Foster, AttlebDrough
Bowles, Old Buckenham; Henry A. Linstead, jun. Gar- Inspector of Nuisances, Chas. Wm. Sharman, Winfarthing
boldisham; Frederick Seakens, East Harling; Joseph
Long, Kenninghall; G. W. Newson, North Lopham; SCHOOL ATTENDANCE COMMITI'EE.
Edward Witton, South Lopham Clerk, Arthur Tallent Clowes, New Buckenham
Medical Officers & Public Vaccinators, No. I district, Wil- School Attendance Officer, William Hy. Berry, Kenninghall
fred H'Jward L.R.c.P.Edin. New Buckenham; Xo. 2 dis- School ~nquiry Officer, William Henry Berry; Kenninghall
trict, Joseph Henry Wilson, Kenninghall; Nos. 3 & 4 A School Board of 5 members was form~d August I3 1 1875;
districts, William Edward Soffe L.F.P.s.olas. East Harling; .Arthur Tallent Clowes, clerk to the Board; Edwin Le
No. 5 district, Charles Draper Fenn, Diss Good, attendance officer
Superintendent Registrar, .Arthur Tallent Clowes, New Board School, built in 1849 as a National School by the Rev.
Buckenbam; deputy, Wilfred Howard L.R.O.P,Edin. New F. S. Bevan M.A. late rector of Carlton Rode; it will hold
Buckenham , IOO children; average attendance, 94 ; George Taylor
Registrar of Marriages, William Henry Berry, Kenninghall; Holl, master ,
deputy, Joseph Long, Kenninghall CARRIFJRS TO : -
Registrars of Births & Deaths, Banham sub-district, Isaac Drss-William Levett, friday .
Vertigen, New Buckenham ;- deputy, Arthur Holl, New NoRWICH-John Olley, wed & sat. & Wm. Vont, tues. &fri
• I

Clowes Arthur Tallent Cunningham Rt. watch & clock maker Mclntyre Mary .Ann (Miss), ladies' schl
Davy William Davy Daniel, grocer & basket maker Maggs Walt.collar, saddler& harness ma.
Everett Fred, The Grange Davy Daniel .Egbert, printer Olley John, farmer &i carrier
Howard Wilfred Davy Thomas, tailor , Palmer John, pork butcher
Johnson Rev. Robert Litson M.A. The Dennis Charles, farmer Palmer William, groce:r & draper
Vicarage Drane Robert, wine & spirit merchant; Perfitt Ephraim Jsph. watch & clock ma.
Kemp Miss , & at Eccles Pitchers John, King's Head P.H
Packer Charles Rose, The Grange Gaymer William, grocer Powell Robert H, butcher
Robertt! William Arthur Ormsby Gillingwater James, George hotel Rash Ann (Mrs.), dress maker
Turner Miss Holl Arthur M.R.o.v.s. veterinary surg. Ribbons Sarah (Mrs.), fruiterer
Wallis Mrs & deputy registrar of births& deaths Ribbons James, furniture dealer
COMMERCIAL. Roll Lanham, baker & corn factor Roberts Wm . .Arthur Ormsby, surgeon
Aldis Charles, carpenter How William, farmer, The Rookery Robins James, grocer & draper
Austin Edward, harness maker Howard Wilfred L.R.~.P.Edin. surgeon, Simpson Robt.manager to Robt, Drane
Cemetery (Arthur 'l'allent Clowes,clerk & medical officer& public vaccinator, Smith James, builder
to the burial board) No. I district, Guiltcross union&No.3 Vertigen Isaac, registrar of births &
Clowe.s Arthur 'fallcnt, solicitor, clerk Depwadc union &deputy supt.registr deaths & vaocination officer & clerk
to the magistrates of Guiltcruss & Humphrey William, carpenter to Fersfield school board
Shropham division, clerk to guar- Jackson Henry Chas. insurance agent Wake J ames, chimney sweeper
dians, school attendance & assess- Lansdell Edward, butcher WallisArthurJn.ironmngr.&blacksmith
ment committees, rural sanitary Lawrence Benjamin, cattle dealer Websdale William, cooper
authority & superintendent registrar LeGood Edwin,fancy stationer & school Williams John Llewellyn, chemist &
of Gniltcross union & clerk to the attendance officer, & post office photographer, & agent for W. & A.
burial & school boards Levett Elizabeth(Mrs. ), White HorseP.R Giibey, wine & spiri.t merchants
Cocking Thomas, boot & shoe maker Lighton Ed ward, tailor Wilson Mary (Mrs.), shopkeeper
Culham Sarab (Mrs.), earthenware dlr Loveday William B. baker

OLD BUCKENHAM is a village and parish, pleasantly Conqueror, received a grant of the lordship of Bokenqam, to
situated on the road from Attleborough to Diss, 3 miles be holden by the service of being butler {pincerna) to the
north-east from Eccles Road station and 3 south-by-east kings of England on the day of their coron,ation, and here he
from .Attleborough station, both on the Thetford and Nor- built a castle, of which SOille ruins remain. William de Albini
wich section of the Great Eastern railway, in the Mid the younger, earl of Arundel and Sussex, founded a priory
division of the county, Guiltcross and Shropham petty here in II46 for Augustine canons, and dedicated it to SS.
sessional division, Shropham hundred, Guiltcross union, Mary and James; on its dissolution there were n canons,
Attleborough county court district, rural deanery of Rock- and revenues estimated at £108. The Lodge, at present
land, arch deaconry of Norfolk and diocese of Norwich. The unoccupied, is a modern building with a lawn and gardens
church of All Saints is a plain but ancient thatched !!tructun plea.'lantly laid out and well kept ; the park is small, but has
of flint, with stone dressings, in the Early English style, and fine plantations. The Grange is the residence of Major
consists of chancel, nave of four bays, north aisle, south William George KeppeLr. P. · Francis 'faylor esq. M. P. of Diss,
porch and an octagonal western tower containing 6 bells : is lord of the manor. The principal landowners are Sir
the east window is stained and a window in the nave retains William Bowyer-Smijth bart. Messrs. Richard and William
fragments of stained glass bearing the arms of William de Bird, the trustees of Francis John Gurney esq. Messrs. R.
Albini; there are also several memorial windows, including Coller and Sons, coal merchants, of Norwich and Messrs.
one placed in Dec. I8gr, to the Rev. Thomas Fulcher B.A. J. and J. Colman, mustard manufacturers, of Norwich. The
vicar IB5o-88, and his wife: there are 25osittings, 82 being soil is strong loam; subsoil, clay and gravel. The chief
free. The register dates from the year I56o. The living is crops are wheat and barley. The area is 4,986 acres; rate-
a vicarage, average tithe rent-charge£ 12, net yearly value able value, £7,042; the population in I88I was t,r46; I8gr,
£92, including 25 acres of glebe, with residence, in the gift 11063. •
,
of trustees, and held since r888 by the Rev. Thomas Sand- Parish Clerk, Henry Kemp.
bach Dean, The Baptist chapel was rebuilt and enlarged in PosT & M. 0. 0., S. B. & Annuity & Insurance Office.-
r857, and further improved in r883; there is also a Primitive William Allington, sub-postmaster. Letters from Attle-
Methodist chapel. The late Robert Cocks esq. founded, in borough are received at 6.45 a. m. & 2.30 p.m. & dispatched
I86o, ten almshonses for married and single poor born in this at 10.5 a.m. & 7.30 p.m.; sunday l.I a. m. The nearest
parish; each tenant receives 3s. weekly and one ton of coal telegraph office is at New Buckenham.
yearly. There are charities of £76 yearly, for clothing and PILLAR LETTER· Box, Attleborough road, cleared at 7.40
coal, and a fuel allotment of 70 acres, producing £3o a year. p.m ; sunday 10.55 a.m
A common, or green of about 4o.acres forms the centre of National School (mixed & infants), with an endowment of
this village, which is owned by twenty-four proprietors. .A £25, built in 1865 by the late Robert Cocks esq. & sup-
line of earth-works, commonly called "Bunn's Bank," aud ported by private contributions; the schools will hold 200
evidently a Roman work, has been discovered running children; average attendance, I43; John Curtis Trinder,
through a farm here. William de .Albini, a follower of the master; Mrs. Eliza Jermy, infants' mistress
3'32 .OLD BUCSENHAM. NORFOLI(. (KELLY's
"Bird Richard · : Clarke J obn, farmer· Leeder Robt. Lane, fal'mer, Hill house
;Burroughs Jo!eph Robert, Snnnyside Colman Samuel, farmer · Linstead Waiter, miller (wind)
Davidson Rev. Alrred Knight {Baptist] Dade Lewis, Sun inn, & blacksmith LoYeday Elisha, iron & brass founder&
Dean Rev. Thomas Sandbach,Vicarage Dunnett George, shopkeeper machinist
Keppel Majbr Wm. Geo . .t. P.'TheGrange Edwards John, carpenter & farmer Loveday Harry, baker.confctnr.& grocr
Platten M,.s. Sunnyside west · Ellis I<'rederick & Edward, farmers Loveday Horatio, farmer & steam
Simpson William Thomas Ellis Herbert, farmer thrashing machine proprietor
Tingey Charles, Dingley deU Eyre George, draper & grocer Loveday John, farmer
COHMBR9IAL. Fisk Eliza (Mrs.), shopkeeper Parish J ames, farmer
Aldous Charles, tailor & shopkeeper Fitt Edmund Charles, plumber PetleyWm.cattle dlr.&farmr. TbeAbbey
Allington William, stationer,. Post office Foster George, bricklayer Petley William John, veterinary eurgn
,Bacon James, farmer Frost Charles, farmer Phillips Abraham, builder
Barker Henry, farmer Frost John, baker, confectioner & grocr Punt Edward,blacksmith & wheelwrght
.Beales Horace, Crown P.H I Fyson Robert P. farmer, Park farm Randall David, farmer
Beales William. miller (wind & steam), Gedge John, market gardener
I Randall Eba, farmer
farmer, corn &coal merchant,& agent' Gibbs George S. farm bailiff for the Rayner RobPrt, farmer
for W. COlchester's & R. Brown & I exors. of Anthony William Ireland Saunders William, farmer
& Co's. chemical Manures, Mill farm; Greenacre Henry, saddler
1
bcales William, farmer
& at Banham I Hewitt Samuel, farmer Shardelow James, farmer
Betts Edward Wiseman,farmer &cattle I Holl Alice (Mrs.), White Horse P.H SimpsonWm. Thomas,frmr.&landowner
; dealer, St. Andrew Hall farm i Howell William, farmer Smith Elisha, shoe maker
Bird Edward,frmr.& landownr.Old hall I Jessup George, farmer Tucker Hy. district county road surveyr
Black burn John, farmer & landowner 1 Jessup Gcorge, jun. farmer Turner J ames, shoe maker
;Boaty William, farmer : Johnson GeorgePage,farmer,Bury's hall W estgate Albert, farmer & cattle dl'aler,
Bowles Richd. farmer& assist. overseer Jolly Robert, Jolly Sportsman P.H Castle farm
Catlyn James, farmer i Lancaster Frederick, bricklayer Working Men's Club & Reading Rooms
Chapman Frances (Mrs.), farmer ' Layton William, beer ret. & cattle dlr (James Kirkham, sec)
Chapman Wm. blacksmith& wheelwrght ·

.BUCKENHAM TOFTS (or BucKENHAH PARVA) is a picturesque park, through which flows the river Wissey.
small parish on the river Wissey, 6 miles north-east from William Amhurst Tyssen Amberst esq. J.P. of Didling-
Brandon railway station, in the South-Western division of ton Hall, is lord of the manor and sole landowner. The
the county, Grimshoe hundred and petty sessional division, soil is light loam; the subsoil is chalk and gravel. The
Swaffham union, Swaffham county court district, rural chief crops are wheat, barley and turnips. The area is 654
deanery of Cranwich south division, archdeaconry of Nor- acres; rateable value, £440; the population in 189l was 49·
folk and diocese of Norwich. The eh urch of St. Andrew has WALL LETTER Box cleared at 7 p.m. Letters arrive 7.30
·long since disappeared ; the inhabitants attend the churches a. m. & 7 p.m. through Mundford Railway Sub-Office,
of West Tofts, lckborough and Langford. Buckenham which is the nearest money order & telegraph office;
Tofts Hall, formerly known as Buckenham House, and now letters should have R.S.O. Norfolk added
(1892) unoccupied, .is a large mansion, standing in a The children of this place attend the school at Ickborough
Dixon David, farm bailiff to W. A. Tys-~ Invam William, head gardener to W.
sen Amherst esq . A. Tyssen Amherst esq

BUNWELL is a parish and irregularly built village, on tributed in fuel. Miss Huxton, of Shad well Court, is lady of
the road from Norwich to Bury St. Edmunds, 4 miles west the manor and principal landowner, and there is a small
from Forncett station on the Ipswich and Norwich line and manor called Beauchamp-in-Bunwell belonging to the Rev.
5 south-east from Attleborough, in the Southern division of J ames Stoughton. 'fhe soil is various; subsoil, clay. The
the county, Depwade hundred and union, petty sessional chief crops are wheat, barley and beans. The area is 2,447
division of l...ong Stratton, Wymondham county court acres; rateable value, £2,836; the population in 1891 was
district, rural deanery of Depwade, archdeaconry of Norfolk 807.
and diocese of Norwich. The church of St. Michael is a Parish Clerk, Jacob Hinchley.
structure of flint and stone in the Early Perpendicular style, PosT 0FFICE.-J onathan Corston, postmaster. Letters are
consisting of chancel, nave, south porch and an embattled received through At.tleborough, arrive at 7 a.m. & dis-
western tower containing 6 bells: the church was restored patched at 7 _15 p.m. LETTER Box cleared at 7.5 p.m.
and reseated in r8go at a cost of about £r,ooo, and a new New Buckenham is the nearest money order & telegraph
stained window has been placed by the rector: there are 250 office. Postal orders are issued here, but not paid
sittings. The register dates from the year rssx. The
living is a rectory, average tithe rent-charge £s66, with 52 A School Board of 5 members was formed compulsorily July
acres of glebe and residence, in the gift of Miss Buxton, and 2, 1875; J. Furness, St. Stephen's chambers, Norwich,
held since 1891 by the Rev. John Adolphus Liddell Fellowes, clerk to the Board
of Exeter College, Oxford. There is a small Primitive Board School (mixed), built in 1879, for 134 children; aver-
Methodist chapel of red brick, built in 187 6. The poor age attendance, 1q; Waiter Riches, master
have an allotment of 17 acres, the rents of which are dis- CARRIER TO NoRwrcH.-Herbert Breeze, wed. & sat
13arnard John Chattcn Waiter William, wheelwright Jacobs Jacob, farmer
"Brooks Edward Chubbock Waiter, Queen's Head P.H Johnson Lambert, wheelwright&carpntr
Fellowes Rev. John ~dolphus Lidde!l, Clethero George, farmer Kett Albertina (Mrs.), farmer
Rectory Corston J onn. grocer&dra per, Post office King Robt. (.Mrs.), carpenter &shopkpr
COMMERCIAL. Dayncs William, boot maker Knights Jas. thrashing machine propr
Abon Elizabeth (Mrs.), shopkeeper Downes Robert, farmer Long John, shoe maker
Ayton Isaac, farmer Durrant Chas.Jn.farmer,Banyard's hall Mears Horace, farmer
Barker Fredk. wheelwright & blacksmth Ellis Thomas, farmer Moss George, shopkeeper
Blyth Edward, farmer Finch Christmas, farmer Mutimer Samuel, farmer
BreezeEmily(Mrs.),Crown&.Anchor P.H Fish John, farmer Newman Jn. shopkpr. & assist. overseer
Briggs Robcrt, farmer Foster John, boot maker Palmer John, farmer
Brooks Edward, farmer, Villa farm Francis Chas. thrashing machine propr Runacres William, grocer & draper
Brown Edward Bryant, farmer l''rancis John, farmer Saunders Robert, farmer
Brown Frederick, Farriers' Arms P.H Grant William, farmer Self Frank, farmer
Brown James, farmer Halcs William (Mrs.), Prince of Wales Sheldrakeisaac,thrashingmachineownr
Brown John, farmer P.H. & builder ' Smith Eldon Jas. farmer & brick maker
_Brown Sarah (Mrs.), farmer Hardiman Charles, farmer Smith Robert, farmer
.Brown Waiter William, farmer Hardiman Edward, farmer Smith Robert Isaac, farmer
Bush Thomas, road surveyor & farmer Hardiman James, seedsman Spurgeon William, boot maker
Caisey Lambert, tailor · Howlett Thomas, shopkeeper Sutton Samuel, farmer
Chandler Arthur C. bricklayer Humphreys George, beer retailer Suttou Thos. Wm. farmer, Green farm
Chandler John, bricklayer 1
Humphreys William, butter dealer Waites John & Waiter, farmers
Chapman Stephen, farmer ' Jackson Edward, farmer • Whyatt James, farmer
Chapman Thomas, farmer
'BURGH {or BURGIJ-NEX1'-AYLSHAM) is a village and from Norwich, in the Northern division of the county,
parish on the navigable Bure, over which there is a bridge South Erpingham lumdred and petty sessional division,
of one arch, 2 miles south-east from Ay !sham station {)U the Aylsham union and county court district, rural deanery of
East Norfolk branch of the Great Eastern Railway, 11 north Ingworth and archdeaconry and diocese of Norwich. The
DIRECTORY.] NORFOLK.-. l BURGH ST. MARGARET
t AND ST. MARY.
t 333
~hurch of St. Mary is an edifice of flint and stone, in the Thomas Barnes. There is a Primitive Methodist chapel'"
Early English style, consisting of chancel, with north erected in 1868. From the various urns and coins which
chapel, modern nave and north porch (much out of repair), have been found in this vicinity, it is supposed to have been
and a Perpendicular western tower containing I bell: the a Roman station. Burgh Hall, the property of the trustees
chancel, restored in 1878, is one of peculiar beauty and . of the late Rev. Edmund Telfer Yates M.A. is a modern
interest, the upper stage having a continuous range of building of red brick with stone dressings and is now occu-
beautifullancets, arcaded on the inside, and the lower stage pied by James H. Stedman esq. Mr. Lawrence Burr, who is
a continuous arcading above a stone seat: on the north wall lord of the manor, and the trustees of the late Rev. E. T.
similar arcading occurs, together with a very fine Early Yates are the principal landowners. The soil is sand anl
English archway, opening into a north chapP.l: the8e were loam; sub8oil, chalky. The chief crops are wheat, roots,
pronounced by Sir Gilbert Scott as of the finest character, barley and hay. Tho area is 789 acres, rateable value
and probably of the same date with the work of St. Hugh, £1,421 ; the population in 1881 was 219 .
.at Lincoln, circa 1200 ; the whole was carefully restored in Parish Clerk Robert Spink
1878, chiefly through the liberality of the Rev. Edmund ' · .
•relfer Yates M. A. the last incumbent: there are 100 sittings, Letters through Aylsham are delivered at about 9 a. m .
.and in r888 the nave Wa8 partially restored and a new PILLAR LETTER .Box cleared at 4.30 p.m. on week days
chancel arch erected. The register dates from the year 156 3 . on~y. Aylsham IS the nearest money order & telegraph
The living is a rectory, average tithe rent-charge £198, othce
net yearly value £roo, including 12 acres of glebe witb National School (mixed), for 6o children; average attend-
residence, in the gift of and held since 1879 by the Rev. ance, 35; .Mrs. Jane Faircloth, certificated mistress
Barnes Rev. Thomas, Rectory Case William, farmer, Burgh Hall farm Learner Ed win Thos. farmer .Manor frm
Jowlings Mrs Grix: Charles, jobbing gardener Martin Waiter John, blacksmith
Stedman James H. Burgh hall Helsdon James, coal merchant Saunders William, shopkeeper
Browne William & Son, millers (water) Ives James, shopkeeper WattsHy.Fighting CocksP.H.&tinsmith
:BURGH-APTON (or BRRGH-APTDN) is a parish and eluding 43 acres of glebe, with residence, in the gift of and
WJdely scattered village, 5 miles south-by-west from Buck- held since x864 by the Rev. William Ford Thursby LL.n. of
enham Ferry station on the Norwich and Low08toft section ErnmanuelCollE~ge,Cambridge,rural dean of Westbrooke and
cf the Great Eastern railway, 7~ south-cast from Norwich, J.P. Norfolk. The ancient church of St. Martin, formerly
:and 3~ north-west from Loddon, in the Southern division of existing here, was removed in 1834. The poor's land consists
the county, Clavering hundred, Loddon and Clavering petty of 22 acres, let for £17, which sum is distnbuted annually in
!le.ssional division and union, Norwich county court <hs- coals. Washingford Manor House, the residence of H umphrey
trict, rural deanery of Brooke Western division, archdea- Hubert Gilbert esq. is surrounded by a lawn, thickly studded
conry of Norfolk and diocese of Norwich. The parish is with oak and othel"trees. Burgh-with-AptonManor House,
bounded on the south by the river Chet. The church of a handsome modern edifice of white brick, is the residence
SS. Peter and Paul i8 an ancient cruciform structure of of Mrs. Dermy. The parish contains two manors, the
flint and stone, in the Early English style, consisting of trustees of the late Rev. R. C. Denny M.A. rector here 1879-
chancel, nave, transepts, north porch, now serving as 82, who are lords of the manor of Burgh-with-Apton : T.
a vestry, wnth porch, and a lofty embattled western tower H. Cooke esq. of Framingham, who is lord of the manor of
containing a clock and 6 bells: the clock was presented Washingford. Viseount Canterbury and George John
try Lady Amelia Pelham in 1838: the chancel was re-seated Holmes esq. J.P. of Brooke Hall,are the principal landowners.
in 1865 at the expense of the rector; the east window is The soil is light mixed ; subsoil, sand and gravel, with some
t~tained, and there are some memorial windows including clay. The chief crops are wheat, oats and barley. The
cne placed in 1867 in memory of Clara Thursby and others area is 1,936 acres, rated at [2,546; the population in 1881
erected in x885; in the church are several monuments to was 464.
the Cooke family from 1766 to 1843, and tablets to the Rev. Parish Clerk, William Loyd.
Neville Waiter, a former rector, who d. I8o2, and to his PosT & M. 0. O.,S. B. & Annuity InsuranC'e Office.-William
wife, d. 1812; besides other monuments to Robert Conoid, Weddnp, sub-postmaster. Letters arrive from Norwich
47 years rector, d. 1715, and to Richard French, 45 years at 5.20 a.m.; dispatched at 5 p.m. The nearest telegraph
rector, d. 1764, and a brass to Violet Georgina, daughter of office is at Loddon. WALL LETTER Box at Mr. Kent's
Grabam Manners-Sntton esq. d. 1874: the church was farm cleared at . 10
restored and reseated in 188r, when a handsome oak pulpit 4
and reading-desk wero introduced at the expense of the National School (mixed), erected in 1839· for I25 children;
rector and hi8 friends; there are 36o sittings, 250 being average attendance, 6o; Harry Flint, master
free. The register dates from the year 1556. The living CARRIERS TO NoRwrcH.-George Wells (from Loddon)
is a rectory, with that of Holverston annexed, tithe rent- passes through, wed. & sat
charge commuted at £598, joint net yearly value £228, in- Ship from Loddon, mon. wed. fri. & sat
Crowe James Brown Robert, farmer, Gravel Pit farm Preston James, beer retailer
Denny Mrs. Manor house Calthorpe Henry, farmer, Mere farm Redgrave Maurice, bricklayer
Gilbert HumphreyHubert,Washingford Ellis Thomas, farmer Rope Aaron, market gardener
house Gilbert Humpbrey Hubert, farmer Rope Aaron, jun. farmer
Lloyd Rev. Thomas Fraser [curate J Grapes Simon, farmer, Street farm Smith Thomas,carpenter & wheelwright
Thursby Rev.WilliamFord B.C.L.[rector Keeler William, market gardener Strowger Samuel James, farmer
& rural dean], Rectory Kent Edward, fa1mer Whall Thomas, market gardener
Youngs John, jun. Holly lodge Leeder Edmund Albert, farmer Wilson Henry, farmer
COMMERCIAL. Leeder Ilerhert Henry, farmer Wright William, farmer
Annis Samuel, market gardener Lovewell David, shopkpr. & blacksmith Wyld William, shopkeeper
BakerGeo.Rt.(M1·s.),farmr.Church frm Norman Henry. farmer
BURGH ST. MARGARET and ST. MARY in that year. The living is a consolidated rectory, average
(commonly calledFLEGG BURGH),formerly distinct parishes, tithe rent-charge £338, joint gross yearly value £392, in-
form one parish, 2 miles south-west from Martham station eluding 22! acres of glebe, with residence, in the gift of and
and 3 miles west from Ormesby station on the Eastern and held since 1862 by the Rev. Charles John Lncas M.A. of
Midlands railway, 15 mil08 north-east from Norwich and 7! Magdalene College, Cambridge, who is also rector of Bil-
north-west from Yarmouth, in the Eastern division of the lockby, and resides at Burgh house, a mansion of brick,
county, incorporated hundreds, petty sessional division and standing in well-wooded grounds. There is a Wesleyan
incorporation of East and West Flegg, county court district chapel built in 1841, and a Primitive Methodist chapel built
of Great Yarmouth, rural deanery of Flegg and archdeaconry in 18 53· The charities include lands allotted to the poor at
and diocese of Norwich. The old church of St. Mary, with the enclosure in x8o4, and comprising 146A. 3&. 4P. of
the exception of a small portion of the tower, which is still which 40A. IR. 2oP. are let for about [70 yearly, and the
standing in the centre of a field, has disappeared. The remamder being left for the cutting of fuel and reeds, but
church of St. Margaret, erected about the middle of the 14th the cottagers are also allowed to turn stock upon it: the
century, is a structure of flint chiefly in the Decorated and rent of this land is distributed in coal. Wymer's charity of
Perpendicular styles, consisting of chancel, nave, and an 11 acres produces £3o yearly. The Rev. Charles Lucas B.A.
embattled western tower containing 3 bells; but the fabric of Filby House, and the Rev. Charles John Lucas M.A. are
also incorporates an enriched Late Norman doorway: in 1876 lords of the manor of Burgh St. Mary, or Burgh Vaux
the church was thoroughly restored and reseated chiefly at manor, and the Rev. Charles John Lucas M.A. of Burgh St.
the expense of the rector, and will now seat 250 persons. Margaret. The principal landowners are the Rev. C. J. Lucas
The registers date only from 1754, the earlier books ha r-ing M. A. and the trustees of the late Mr. Robert Moore. The
been destroyei in the fire which occurred at the parsonage soil is mixed; subsoil, clay. The chief crops are whJat,
C N. & S. 22
~BURGH ST. MARGA.RET l 'NORFOLK. (KELLY'~
334 l ,A.ND ST. MARY, i
barley and oats. The area is 1,655 acres; rateable value, delivery commences at 7 a. m. ; dispatched at 12.r:z5 & 6.25
£3,326 ;-the population in I8gi WM 557· p.m. The nearest telegraph office is at l\lartham,
Parish Clerk, William Green.
National School (mixed), erected in r866, for 150 children;
PosT & M. 0. OFFICE & S. B.-Robert Tooke, sub-post- average attendance, I2o; & support~d by the rector;
master. Letters arrive from Yarmouth at 6.15 a.m., Walter Light, master
Lucas Rev. Charles John M.A. [rector], Gidney Robert, farmer Playford Daniel, farmer
Burgh house Green George, marsh farmer Reed James, market gardener
Waller John Turpin, Rroad house Green William, blacksmith & wheel- Reynolds Geo. wheelwright & carpentr
COMMERCIAL. wright & assistant overseer & collector Skinner Arthur, farmer, Manor farm
Barwood James, farmer of rates & taxes Thurtell William, farmer
Bond William, farmer, Grange farm Green Henry William, farmer Trett John Nudd, painter
Church John, market gardener Hales William, market gardener Turner Emily {Mrs.), market gardener
Crane George, boot & shoe maker Hall William, market gardener Wailer John Turpin, surgeon, superin-
Crane George, shopkeeper Harbord Paul, blacksmith tendent reg-istrar of- births & deaths
Curtis John, market gardener Howes Charles, market gardener for East & West Flegg Incorporatioo,
Curtis William, market gardener Jeary William, bricklayer poor law medical officer for the
Dack Robert, market gardener & fruit Lack John Robert, King's Arms P.H Burgh district & medical officer of
grower & merchant Mayhew Edward, miller (wind & steam) health for the Tural sanitary au-
Debbage Aaron, farmer & grocer · thority, Broad house
Debbage John, marsh farmer N arburgh Elijah, farmer Ward l3enjamin, market gardener
Drake Frederick, market gardener Newman John Robert, farmer Whall John William, beer retailer
Durrant George, farmer Nichols Jacob 1 farmer Wright William, boot & shoe maker
Durrant Waterloo, farmer Nickerson James, market gardener Youngs Jam~s, farmer
Eves Ed ward, shopkeeper Parker John, market ~ardenar
BURGH ST. PETER (or WHEA.TACRE BuRGH) is a is 11.small Primitive Methodist chapel; an<}_ a Wesleyaa
village and parish on the river Waveney, and on the borders chapel, enlarged in 1835, and seating about 200. The fuel
of Suffolk, 6! miles north-east from Beccles, 2~ east-south- allotment of 13 acres is let on an average for £u yearly,
east from Aldeby station, 2~ north-east from Carlton Col- which is distributed in coals among the poor. Near the
ville station by ferry on the Wavi!ney Valley section of the church are the ruins of the priory of St. John. The trustee8
Great Eastern railway, and 12 south-west from Yarmouth, of the lateR. H. Gurney esq. Captain C. C. Boycott and
in the Southern division of the county, Cla>ering hundred, tbe trustees of the late Samuel Grimmer esq. are the
Loddon and Clavering petty sessional division and union, principal landowners and there are also other smaller pro-
Bungay and Beccles county court district, rural deanery of prietors. The soil is mixed, part being strong and the
Brooke, eastern division, archdeaconry of Norfolk and diocese other part light land ; subsoil, clay and light sar.d. Tha
of Norwich. The church of St. Mary is an ancient edifice of chief crops are wheat, barley, roots and hay. The area is
flint, with stone dressings, in the Early English style, con- r,ggo acres, about r, 100 acres being marsh land; the rate-
sisting of chancel, nave, south porch and a western tower of able value is .£2,308; the population in r89r was 339·
brick containing one bell: the church was thoroughly res- Sexton, Edward Bailey.
tared, new windows inserted, and the interior re-seated in PosT OFFICE.~Thomas Hammond Morris, receiver. Letters
x88o; and now affords II3 sittings. Tl;le register dates from by foot post arrive from Beccles at 8. IS & 11.55 a. m. and
the yea.r 1538. The living is a rectory, average tithe rent- are dispatched at 12&4.55 p.m. Toft isthenearestmoney
charge £:<~.85, net yearly value £290, including il5 acres of order office & Beccles the nearest telegraph office. Postal
glebe and residence, in the gift of the trustees of the late orders are issued here, but not paid.
Rev. William Boycott B.A. and held since 1889 by the Rev. This parish is included in Wheatacre United District School
William Douglass Boycott B. A. of Selwyn College, Cam- &ard, formed compulsorily March 6th, 1875; the children
bridge : £3 is paid yearly to the rector of Toft ~Ionks. Here attend the Board School there.
Boycott Rev. William Douglass B.A. Gowing Jas. farmer, The Shrublands Nicker John, carpenter
Lrector]1 Rectory Jeffries & Clarke,millers(wind & steam) Parker John, farmer ' J
'
COMMERCIAL. Lewis John, Waveney inn Rackham Charles, farmer
Boggis Joseph, farmer Morris Alfd. carpenter & wheelwright Sayer John, farmer
Cooper George, marshman Morris Thomas Hammond, grocer & Tripp Daniel & Benjamin, tish dealers
Flaxman Charles, shoe maker draper, Post office Tripp William, shoe maker
Flint William, blacksmith Mills William, shoe maker Westrupp Samuel, farmer
Friston George, King's Head P.H Nash Frank Samuel, farmer
NORTH BURLINGHAM (or BuRLlNGIIAM ST. The living is a rectory, with that of Burlingham St. Peter
ANDREW) is a parish and scattered village on the rnad from annexed, average tithe rent-charge £364, joint net yearly
Norwich to Yarmouth,8 miles cast from Norwich and 1! miles value £285, including 20 acres of glebe, with 1·esidence, in the
north from Lingwood station on the Great Eastern branch gift of Henry Randal Rurroughes esq. and held since 188o by
to Yarmouth via Acle, in the Eastern division of the county, the Rev. Charles Chapman McArthur, Hon. Association sec.
Rlofield and Walsham petty sessional division, Blotield hun- retary to the Church Missionary Society of Norfolk. Bur-
dred and union, Norwich county court district., rural deanery lingharn House is the seat of Major Robert Herbert Heath
of Blofield and arcbdeaconry and diocese of Norwich. The Jary J'.P. Henry Randal Burroughes esq. of the Hall, Bur-
church of St. Andrew is a structure of flint in the Gothic ling ham St. Peter, who is lord of the manor and Major Robert
style of the 15th century, consisting of a chancel, nave, Herhert Heath Jary J.P. are the chief landowners_ The soil
south porch, north aisle and a fine embattled western tower is good mixed; subsoil, chalk, stone and clay. The chief
containing 3 bells: the nave has a good carved roof and crops are wheat and barley. The area is 8oo acres; rateable
there are remains of a handsome carved oak rood screen, value, £1,529; the population in I89I was I75·
with paintings of SS. Thomas of Canterbury and Ed ward Parish Clerk, Rohert Hammond.
the Confessor, Benedict, Withburga, John the Baptist and Posr & M. 0. 0., S. B. & Annuity & Insurance Office.-
others: there was formerly in the church a he.x&gonal Charles William Farman, receiver. Letters from Nor-
wooden stand, curiously ornamented with paintings of the 'Wich arrive at 5.30 a.m. & 4.50 p.m.; dispatched at 5.20
early :15th century; the church wa..~ restored in 1876: and & 6.55 p.m. The nearest telegraph office is a~ Blofield
affords 150 sittings. The register dates from the year 1538. The children of this parish attend the school at Lingwqod
Jary Major Robcr1; Herbert Heath J. P. 1 Bloom John, farm bailiff to H. R. Farman Charles William, coach wheel-
Burlingham house; & Bitteswell ball, 1Burroughes esq. Green farm wright & gig & cart builder& painter,
Leicestershire Bond George, farmer, Poplar farm Post office ·
.Jary Misses, Burlingham house Curtis Benjamin, vermin de~troyer Thrower John, blacksmith
McArthur Rev.Chas.Chapman,Rectory , ,
::BURLINGHAM ST. PETER is a parish on the circular lower story and an octagonal balfry iind containing
road from Norwich to Yarmouth, gmiles east from Norwich a clock and 3 bells: the church was restore<)_ _at the sole ex-
and I~ north-east from Lingwood station on the Great Eas- pense of the late Mrs. Burroughes, of B1irlingham Ha.ll, and
tern branch to Yarmouth via Acle, in th~ Eastern divisjon re-opened in Sept. I874: there are -1:30 s~ttings. The register
Qf the county, Elofield and Walsham petty .sessionaL division, dates from the year 1560. The living is a rectory, annexed
Blofield hundred and union, Norwich county court district, to tO.at of North_ Burlingh~, avl)rage tithe rent-charge
rural deanery of Blofield and archdeaconry and diocese of [364, joint pet ~-early value £285, iacluding 20 acres of
Norwich. The church of .St. Peter i.s a buil\ling of flint with glebe, in the gift of H. R. Burroughes esq. and held since
stone dressings, in the Gothic style of the ISth century, 188o by the Rev. Charles Chapman McArthur, who resides
consisting of chancel, nave, south porch and a. tower with at l'lorth Burlingham. Burlingham lla.II, within a. well-
DIRECTORY.] NORFOLK. BURNHAM MARKET. 335
wooded park, is the seat of Henry Randal Burroughes esq. Letters through Norwich, arrive at 7 a. m.; North Hurling-
~.P. lord of the manor and chief landowner. The soil is ham is the nearest money order office, from which place
good mixed; subsoil, clay. The chief crops are wheat, letters are dispatched at s.20 & 6.ss p.m. Blofield is the
barley and oats. The area is 399 acres; rateable value£8o6 ; nearest telegraph office
the population in r891 was 62.
Parish Clerk, Robert Hammond. The children of this place attend Lingwood school
Burroughes Henry Randal J.P. Bur- Barratt 'Vm. Percy, farmer,Lodge frm X eve James, head gamekeeper to H. R.
lingham hall Chapman Henry Frederick, farmer llurroughes esq
SOUTH BURLINGHAM (or BuRLINGHAM ST. in 1887, largely at the cost of the trustees of the late H. N.
EDMUND) is a parish 9 miles east of Norwich and adjoins Burroughes esq. and has 100 sittiugs, so being unappro-
the Ling wood station on the line from Norwich to Yarmouth priated. The register dates from the year 1566. Tlw Jiving
via Acle, in the Eastern division of the county, Blofield and is a rectory, with the perpetual curacy of Lingwood annexed,
Walsham petty sessional division, Blofield hundred and ayerage tithe rent-charge £222, net yearly value £286, in-
union, Norwich county court district, rural deanery of eluding 31 acres of glebe, in the gift of Henry Randal Bur-
Blofield and archdeaconry and diocese of Norwich. The roughes esq. J.P. and held since 1889 by the Rev. Frederick
church of St. Edmund is a small but ancient building of Taylor, who resides at Lingwood. Henry Randal Burroughes
flint, with stone dressings and a thatched roof, in a plain esq. J.P. of The Hall, Hurlingham St. Peter, is lord of the
Norman style, consisting of chancel, nave, south porch and manor and sole hmdowner. The soil is good mixed ; sub-
an embattled western tower containing 3 bells: the ancient soil, sand. The chief crops are wheat and barley. The
15th century pulpit is panelled and enriched with painted area is 647 acres ; rateable value, £x,ou. The population
stars and flowers, tracery and a cresting: it also retains an in 1891 was 87.
hour-glass stand: there are a few interesting frescoes, in- Sexton, William Scott.
eluding one of late 14th century date, on the south wall of
the chancel, portraying the murder of Thomas a Beck et : Letters through Norwich, via North Burling ham (which is
the rood screen, of the I5th century, has powdered panels, the nearest money order office), arrive at 7 a.m. WALL
tracery and cresting: under the communion table is a vault, LETTER Box at the Union gates, Lingwood, cleared at
the stone covering of which is inscribed to William Smith 4· 15 p.m. .A.cle & Blofiold are the nearest telegraph
Clerke; it also bears a representation of the chalice and offices
wafer, and has a Latin inscription: the church was restored The children of this place attend the schools at Lingwood
Barcham Thomas Morris, farmer \ Turner William, farmer Wright Hy. Albert, farmer, Hall farm
Draper John, farmer, Church farm
BURN HAM DEEPDALE is a parish and small £190, with residence and 33 acres of glebe, in the gift of the
village near the German Ocean, sheltered on the south trustees of the late Henry Blyth esq. and held since 1862 by
by a range of well-wooded hills, 2~ miles north-west from the Rev. Edward Kerslake Kerslake B.A. of St, John's Col-
Burnham Market railway station, in the ~orth Western lege, Cambridge. The trustees of the late Henry Blyth esq.
division of the county, Brothcrcross hundred, Smithdon and are lords of the manor and own the whole of the land. The
Brothercross petty sessional division, Docking union, Little soil is generally light; subsoil, chalk and graV"el. The chief
Walsingham county court district, rural deanery of Burn- crops are wheat, barley, turnips and grasses. The area is
ham, archdeaconry of ~ orfolk and diocese of Norwich. The 1,024 acres, of which about 250 acres are marsh, inclosed
church of St. l\lary is an ancient structure of flint, in the from the sea; rateable value £x,I22; the population in 1891
~orman style, consisting of chancel, nave, north aisle and was 94·
round western tower containing one bell; there are three Parish Clerk, William Smith.
memorial windows and a font of Saxon date, with carved LETTER Box clearerl at 4· 15 p. m. Letters receiverl through
figures on the outside, representing the twelve months of the King's Lynn. Hrancaster is the nearest money order
'ear: the church was restored in 1855· and has 225 sittings. office & telegraph office
The register dates from the year 1539. The liYing is a School (mixed), erected in 1874, for 6o children; ayerage
rectory, average tithe-rent charge £190, net yearly value attendance, 51 ; Miss Christina Lane, mistress
Kerslake Rev. Edward Kerslake B. A. Archbould Steel Girdlestone, farmer Riches Robert, Plough coffee house
Rectory
BURNHAM MARKET (or BuRNHAM (St. Mary de) tive Methodist chapel, with 170 sittings, and a preaching-
WESTGATE) is a parish and small town with a station on the room for the Brethren. The charit,ies, left chiefly for
West Norfolk Junction (Great Eastern) railway, 2~ miles educational and church purposes, are now in the hands of
south-by-west from the harbour and the fine and extensive the Charity Trustees. The Literary Institute, established
sea-sands of llurnham Overy Staith, 123~ miles from Lon- in r88I, contains a library of soo volumes, and is supplied
don by rail, 24~ north-east-by-north from Lynn by rail, with daily and weekly papers and periodicals; there are 6o
10 north-west from Fakenham, 7 west from Wells-by-the- members. The Ocldfellows hold their meetings at the
Sea, 36 north-west from Norwich by road, in the North Haste Arms hotel. A market is held every alternate Man-
Western division of the county, Brothercross hundred, day in the" Lord Nelson" yard and is well attended. Fairs
Smithdon and Brothercross petty sessional division, Docking for pleasure are held on the Monday and Tuesday in Easter
union, Little Walsingham county court district, rural week, and on the rst and 2nd of August. Quantities of
deanery of Burnham, archdeaconry of N orf<Jlk and diocese malt are manufactured in the neighbourhood, chiefly for
of Norwich. The town is very pleasantly seated in a valley the supply of the London breweries. There is an iron
sheltered from the sea, in a rich agricultural district, on foundry and agricultural implement works belonging to
the old road from Lynn to Wells-by-the-Sea: a rivulet Mr. F. Mote and also wind and steam corn mills. The
running between it and Burnham Overy falls into the principal hotel is the Hoste Arms. In the neighbourhood
harbour. The church of St. Mary the Virgin is a building are Holkham Park, the ruins of Creake Abbey and Korton
of flint with stone dressings, in the Early English and Priory, and Burnham Thorpe, the birthplace of Lord
Decorated styles, consisting of chancel, clerestor1ed nave, Nelson. Burnham Hall, formerly the seat of the late Sir
aisle~, south porch and an embat.tled western tower con- Roger Martin bart. and now the residence of Mrs. Overman,
taining a clock and 4 bells: the battlements of the tower is a square mansion of brick, standing in a park with attached
are ornamented with the cipher M, indicating the dedication pleasure grounds : the neighbouring woods add much to the
of the church, and figures representing the events of the beauty of the scl.'nery, and from the surrounding hills ex-
New Testament narrative, from the "Salutation" to the tensive -views of the German Ocean and Holkham Park are
"Crucifixion;'' several of the windows have been filled obtained. Henry Calthrop Hollway-Calthrop esq. J. P. of
with stained glass as memorials: the interior was restored Stanhue Park, the trustees of the late Mr. Blyth, and the
in 188o and affords 350 sittings. The register dates from owners of the Hall estate are the chief landowners. The
the year 1538. The living is a rectory, consisting of a hills on the north of the valley are chiefly of chalk, while
mediety of the rectory of Burnham Westgate, with mcdieties those to the south have strata of marl and gravel, and the
of the rectories of Burnham Norton and Burnham Ulph valley is a mass of flint-stone gravel, in which water is easily
annexed, average yearly value from tithe rent-charge, [389, obtained: a stream of water occasionally issues from under
with Io6 acres of glebe and residence, in the gift of Christ's the chalk formation, and flows from the park through the
College, Cambridge, and held since 1878 by the Rev. James town for many months at a time. Crops of turnips, mangold
Henry Lamb M. A. late fellow of that College: the other wurtzel, barley and wheat are raised, and large supplies of
mediety of Burnham Westgate, together with 19 acres of fat cattle and sheep are sent to London. The area is 3,047
land in that parish, belongs to the College. Here is a Con- acres; rateable vain~, £5,074 ; the population of the parish
gregational chapel, built in I Boo, with 300 sittings; a Primi- in 1891 was 977·
C. N. & S.
336 BURNHAM MARKET. NORFOLK.
Parish Clerk, William Ofield. Town Crier, Henry Joseph Alien
PosT, M. 0. & .'f. 0., S. B. & Annuity & Insurance Office. PLACES OF WORSHIP, with times of Services : -
-John Cable, postmaster. Letters through Lynn arrive St. Mary the Virgin, Rev. James Henry Lamb M.A. rector,
at 6.so a.m. & 1.27 p.m. ; dispatched week-days 10.20 n a.m.; 3 & 7 p.m
a.m. & 4·45 p.m. & sundays 2 p.m Congregational, 10.30 a. m. ; 6.30 p.m.; wed. evenings,7.30
WALL LETTER BoXEs at the railway station cleared at 9-54 Primitive Methodist, 10.30 a.m.; 2.30 & 6.30 p.m
a.m. & 4.30 p.m. & at Barrow cottages cleared at 4.20 A School Board of 9 members was formed November 6,
p.m 1871 for the United District of Burnham Westgate, Burn-
PuBLIC EsTABLISHMENT.-Fire Engine Station,Back street ; ham N orton & Burn ham Sutton-cum-Bnrnham Ulph;
key at Mr. George Hudson's Gcorge Hudson, clerk to the board; John Platte~
PUBLIC OFFICERS : - attendance officer •
Admiralty ~urgeon & Agent, Burnham District, Samuel Burnham Westgate Board Schools, erected, with teachers'
M. Harnill R.A., M.D., M.ch residences, in 1837: the schools will hold 340 children;
Assistant Overseer, George Hudson average attendance, I ro boys, 8o girls & 62 infant8;
Registrar of Births & Deaths & Vaccination Officer for the Randall May, master ; Miss Helen Bell, mistress; Miss
Burnham Sub-District & Relieving Officer Eastern Dis- Sarah Jane Grand, infants' mistress
trict Docking Union, Wm. Smith; deputy, Geo. Hudson Railway Station (G. E. R.), William Thomas Smith, station
Medical Officer & Public Vaccinator, Burnham District master ; authorized carrier to the G. E. railway, Stephen
Docking Union, Samuel M. Hamill B.A., M.n., M.ch Geagen
PRIVATE RESIDENTS. Cable Samuel, plumber,paintcr, glazier, Melton Edward, Victoria P.H
Bates Mra. Westga.te house sign writer & pump maker Neale Richard, Lord Nelson inn &
Billing Thomas Catleugh Robert, draper & outfitter posting house, three minutes from
Cable Mrs Chilvers Thos. farmer, Friars Thorne station,first class accommodation for
Chilvers Miss ClaxtonEphraim,whitcsmith&machinst commercials; choice wines, spirit8 &;
Claxton Miss Claxton Robert, farmer cigars ; & at Burnham Suttou
Cook Henry, Sussex farm [letters to be Claxton Thomas William, tailor Norman Frederick, builder
addressed Sussex farm, Brancaster Codman Jarnes, wheelwright Palmer Samuel, maltster & merchant
Staith, King's Lynn] Coe Robert, farmer; & at Wells Patker Philip Luke, baker & confectnr
Dennis Miss Cook Henry, farmer, Sussex farm Pa trick J ames, shopkeeper
Dewing Misses [letters to be addressed Sussex farm, Phillippo Zacbarias James, watch makr
Green Rev. William [Congregational] Brancaster Staith, King's Lynn] Pitcher Robert., builder
Habberton Miss Crisp Robert, coal merchant Platten M. & E. (Misses), dressmakers
Hamill Samuel M. B.A., M.D. Burn- Dalby Alfred Edward M.R.c.v.s.Lond. Platten John, tailor, & school board
ham house veterinary surgeon ; & at Docking attendance officer for the united dis·
Howard Henry Dew Margaret E. (Mrs.), confectioner trict of Burnham Westgate, Norton,
Hudson Mrs. Eastgate house Dowdy John, master mariner Sutton & L'lph
Lamb Rev. James Henry M.A. [rector] Drake Josiah, pork butcher, provision Playford Alfred John, baker
Nurse Mrs merchant, bacon & ham curer; hon. Porritt Wi1liam Love, farmer & miller,
Overman Mrs. Burnham hall secretary to the library, reading & maltster & merchant; at Burnham
Oxley Mrs. Bolton house lecture rooms Sutton & Burnham Overy ; office,
Reeve Miss, Cobham house Geagen Stephen, farmer, coal & coke Burnham Overy
Scholey William merchant & carrier to G. E. Railway Riches Charles Walter, baker
Taylor Col. James Best, Dunellen station, Crow Hall farm Rivett George, Hoste Arms family &
Tweedy William Geagen William Henry, coal merchant commercial hotel & posting house ;
Witton Mrs Gent John, Rose & Crown P.JI first class accommodation for families
COMMERCIAL. Gurneys, Birbecks, Barclay & Buxton, & commercials at moderate charges
Allen Henry Joseph, boot &shoe manu- bankers (T. Read win, agent), attends Roy & Sons,fruit growers, builders,horti·
facturer & leather seller; a large from Wells, mondays & fridays, 3 to cultural buiiders & heating apparatus
assortment always in stock, orders 6 p.m. ; draw on llarclay, Bev-an & & hot water fitters ; estimates given
punctually attended to, the trade Co. London E c for all kinds of horticultural buildings
supplied ; & town crier Habberton Benjamin Henry, Wild Roy Ann (Mrs.), fancy repository
.Allen Grice, joiner & cabinet maker Horse P.R. & saddler & harness mkr Roy George William, grocer & draper
Audus Sarah (Miss), fancy repository, Hamill Samuel M. B.A., M.D., M.ch. Roy IIenry, marine store dealer
circulating library & servants' regis- physician & surgeon, medical officer Roy Philip, farmer
try office & public vaccinator, Burnham dis- Sa tchell Frederick, ironmonger & wine
Barker Waiter Frederick, family trict, Docking union, & Admiralty & spirit merchant
butcher ; families waited upon surgeon & agent, Burnham house Savory John, farmer
for orders Hamtlton Robert, grocer & draper Scholey John, chemist & druggist
Beaver Alfred & Son, monumental Hendry James, tinman & brazier Sharman Robert William, butcher &
masons & carvers m stone, marble & Hendry William, chimney sweeper farmer
granite, also builders; cement paris- Hudson George, saddler & harness Smith William, relieving officer,Eastern
plaster, plasterers' laths, roofing tiles, maker,& assistant overseer & clerk to district & registrar of births & deaths
fire bricks &c. ; chimney pieces of all Burnham Westgate united district & relieving & vaccination officer, No. I
classes, work executed at any dis- & Burnham Overy school boards & Burnham sub-district, Docking union
tance, terms on application deputy registrar of births & deaths Snelling Elizabeth (Mrs.), laundress
Beaver Alfred S. engraver on all kinds Kendall Angustus, blacksmith SpencerWm.Hy.pharmaceuticalchemst
of metals, brass coffin plates & shields Knights Ed ward Charles, grocer, tea Tillyard Ellen (Miss), stationer
on the shortest notice; ornamental dealer & provision merchant, family Tweedy William, teacher of languages,
writer & gilder, terms on application draper, dress maker & milliner, boot mathematics, shorthand, drawing &c.
Belding Matilda (Miss), tailoress & shoe warehouse, tailor, hatter & & district reporter
Bennett Rebecca (Mrs.), baker general outfitter; agent for King's West Robert Barton, draper & grocer
Bonghton Arthur, hair dresser & glover Lynn steam dye works Wilkinson William, draper
Bower Robert, draper & grocer, & agent Lane William, carpenter, "J)ainter &c Williams
. Robert, boot repairer & letter
for W. & A.Gilbey, wine & spirit mers MartinArthurJn.farmer,CradleHall fm earner
JJurnham Market Reading & Lecture Matsell John Edward, furniture dealer W ittonHobert, wheelwright, blacksmith
Rooms (Josiah Drake, hon. sec) Matsell William, china & glass dealer & machinist, wagon builder & general
Burnham Society for Promoting Chris- Mote Fordham, iron & brass founder, farm implement repairer & maker
tian Knowledge (Wm. Lane, agent) agricultural machinist, patentee & Wood gett George, beer retailer
Cable John, farmer, dealer in works of manufacturer of Royal Prize & other Woodgett Thos. Poucher,watch repairer
art & postmaster prize horse hoes ; & depot at Lynn
l3URNHAM NOR TON is a parish comprising a western tower of very ancient date containing one bell: on
village, called NoRTON STREET, half a mile from the church, the pulpit, which has been carefully restored, are painted
It miles north-by-east from Burnham Market, in the North the four Doctors of the Church-Saints Augustine, Ambrose,
Western division of the county, Brothercross hundred, Gregory and Jerome together with the portraits of John
Smithdon and Brothercross petty sessional division, Docking Goldale and Katharine his wife, who gave it: there is also
union, Little Walsingham county court district, rural an ancient screen with figures now nearly obliterated: on
deanery of Burnham, archdeaconry of Norfolk and diocese the floor of the south aisle are memorials of the family of
of Norwich. The church of St. Margaret, conspicuously the late Lord Cbance11or Thurlow: in r8go the churcb. was
placed on a hill fronting the sea, is a fine structure of flint reseated at a cost of £130, and now affords 200 sittings.
with stone dressings, in the Perpendicular style, consisting The register dates from the year I559· The rectory con-
of chancel, nave, aisles, north porch and a lofty round sists of two medieties, one annexed to the rectory of Bnrn-
DIRECTORY.] NORFOLK. BUIU~H.AM THORPE. 337
ham Westgate and the other to that of Burnham Sutton, The arable land is of a superior quality, and produces
held respectively since 1878 by the Rev. James Henry Lamb excellent crops of wheat, barley, oats, turnips, mangold
X.A. late fellow of Christ's College, Cambridge, rector of wurtzel, grass and seeds : the substratum is chalk. The
Burnham Westgare, and since 1883 by the Rev. Samuel area is 3,226 acres of land and 67o water ; rateable value,
Edward Blomefield B.A. of Christ's College, Cambridge, £1,799; the population in 1891 was 131.
·rector of Burnham Sutton. Divine service is performed by Parish Clerk, Mr. Haines.
the rectors alternarely. There are 32 acres of glebe, and the Letters through Lynn, via Burnham Market. Burnham
commutation rent-charge is £262. Four acres of land have Market is the nearest money order & telegraph office.
been set apart for the repairs of the church. There are WALL LETTER Box cleared 9·35 a.m. & 3.2o p. m. week
some remains here of a Carmelite friary, founded in 1241 days; no collection on sundays
by Sir R. de Hemenhale, and the gateway has been restored. This place is included in the Burnham Westgate United
The Earl of Orford is lord of the manor and the owner of School Board district, formed in I8]I. The children
the whole parish, except a few cottages and grass marshes. attend the Board schools there
Francis John Philip, N orton Hall farm Barnes J oseph, bricklayer FrancisJn. Philip,farmr .NortonHall frm
Southgate Robert Claxton Robert, farmer & dealer Kirk John, boor retailer
Applegate John, farmer
BURNHAM OVERY is a parish and small seaport, are wheat, barley and roots. The area is 2,298 acres of
including the pleasant village of OvERY STAITH, 1 mile east- land and 250 warer; rateable value, £3,243; the population
by-north from Burnham Market, 6 miles west from Wells, in 1891 was 552.
23 from Lynn and r2o from London, in the North Western Burnham Overy Staith is a pleasant village, about
division of the county, Brothercross hundred, Smithdon and a mile from the parish church ; the fiarbour is navigable for
Brothercross petty sessional division, Docking union, Little vessels of 8o tons up to the staith. Here is a Congregational
Walsingham county court district, rural deanery of Burn- meeting room. The Primitive Methodist chapel is a small
ham, archdeaconry of Norfolk and diocese of Norwich. structure of flint and brick, erected in 186o. The trade
Overy Town (as it is called) and the parish church are on carried on is in malt (of which large quantities are manu-
the road from Lynn to Wells and near a small rivulet, which factured principally to supply the London brewers), coals,
rises at South Creake and falls into the sea at Burnham corn, oil-cake and oysters. There is a coastguard station.
Overy Staith. The church of St. Clement, situated on an The sands are extensive, and are firm and safe, and the
eminence, is an edifice in the .Norman style, consisting of sand hilts abound in rabbits.
chancel (restored by the late Earl of Orford, as lay impro- Parish Clerk, John Skippon.
priator, in 1835), nave, large south porch and an embattled Letters received through Lynn, via Burnham Market.
central tower, with turret, and containing one bell: there are WALL LETTER Box near the Hero inn, Overy Staith,
250 sittings. The register dates from the year 1653· The cleared at 9.20 a.m. & 3.40 p.m. on week days & a WALL
living is a vicarage, annexed with medieties of the rectories Box at Overy Town, cleared at 9.40 a. m. & 4 p.m. on week
of Burnham Ulph and Burnham Norton, to the rectory of days. Burnham Market is the nearest money order &
Burnham Sutton, tithe rent-charge £157, wi,th 18 acres of relegraph office
glebe, in the gift of the Lord Chancellor, and held since · A School Board of 5 members was formed compulsorily,
1883 by the Rev. Samuel Edward Blomefield B. A. of Christ's March 30, 1874; George Hudson, Burnham Market. clerk
College, Cambridge, who resides at Burnham Sutton : the to the board; William Daniel Easter, attendance officer
Earl of Orford is the lay impropriator. Near the church Board School (mixed), built in r875, at a cost of £8oo, for
are the remains of an ancient cross. Extensive meadows in 70 children ; average attendance, 43; Mrs. Elizabeth
this and the adjoining parishes of Holkham and N orton have Lovell, mistress
been reclaimed from the sea by embankments. The Earl of Fifty of the children of Burnham Overy are permitted to
Orford, who is lord of the manor, and the Earl of Leicester attend the Burnham Board schools
X. G., L.L. are the principal landowners. The soil1s of a fair Coast Guard Station, Daniel Southard, chief boatman in
·mixed character; subsoil, chiefly chalk. The chief crops charge
Savory John miller . (wind, water & Bell Sarah (Mrs.), beer retailer
Burnham Overy. steam), corn mer. maltster & farmer Bell Thomas, coal dealer
Calver Philip Seaman Richard, beer retailer • Girdlestone Francis, fisherman & pilot
Doggett Miss Skippon Herbert, cowkeeper Howell Henry, master mariner
Porritt William Love Smith John Joseph, shopkeeper Johnson Mary (Mrs.), Jolly Sailors P.H
Savory John J ohnson Thomas, Ship inn
Browne Mary Ann (Mrs.), dress maker Burnham Overy Staith. Palmer Samuel, maltster & merchant ;
Coe Robert, farmer; & at Wells Bush Mrs & at Burnham Market & Brancasrer
Groves Henry H. grocer Kersey Joseph Staith
Kendall Mary Ann (Mrs.), blacksmith Palmer Freuerick Samuel, Staith lodge Parr William, harbour master & fisher-
Mills Henry, chimney sweeper Palmer Samuel, The Quay man & oyst~r merchant
Porritt William Love, farmer, miller Smith Mrs Riches Mary Ann (Mrs.), baker
(wind & water),maltster&merchant; Wiseman Miss Shackcloth Annie (Miss), grocer
& at Burnham Sutton COMMERCIAL. Smith Edward, farmer
Rushbrooke Alban, Ostrich inn Baker George Ellis, farmer, :Marsh farm
BURNHAM SUTTON and ULPH is a parish, and yearly value £369, with 47 acres of glebe and residence, in
consists of a small village, contiguous to the town of Burn- the gift of the Lord Chancellor, and held since 1883 by the
ham Market, in the North Western division of the county, Rev. Samuel Edward Blomefield B.A. of Christ's College,
Brothercross hundred, Smithdon and Brothercross petty Cambridge. The Wesleyan chapel, erected in 1828, is a
sessional division, Docking union, Little Walsingham county plain structure of brick. The Earl of Orford, who is lord of
court district, rural deanery of Burnham, archdeaconry of the manor, and the Earl of Leicesrer K.G. are chief land-
Norfolk and diocese of Norwich. The church of St. Albert owners. 'fhe soil is generally light and well cultivated ;
has long been in ruins, and is covered with i\:,, but the subsoil, chalk. The crops are wheat, barley, grass, turnips
parishioners are entitled to sittings in the church of Burn- and mangold wurtzel. The area is 1,456 acres; rateable
ham Ulph, of which the rector of Burnham Sutton is joint value, £r,864; the population in r8g1 was 333·
rector. Tl.le church of All Saints, Burnham Ulph, is an Parish Clerk, William Lane.
ancient structure in the Perpendicular style, consisting of LETTER Box, Burnham Market station, cleared at 9·45 a.m.
chancel (restored in 1879), nave, south porch and a western & 4.30 p.m. Letters received through Lynn, via Burn-
turret containing one bell: there are 200 sittings. The ham Market, arrive at 6.50 a. m. Burnham Market is the
register dates from the year 1653. The living is a rectory, nearest money order & telegraph office
with medieties of the rectories of Burnham Ulph and This place is included in the Burnham Westgate United
Burn ham N orton, together with the vicarage of Burnham School Board district & the children attend the Board
Overy annexed, joint average tithe rent-charge £533, net schools there
Appleton Rev. Jamcs Alien B.A.[curatc] Burnham Market Co-operative Stores Mann John, plumber &c
Blomefield Rev. Samuel Edward B. A. (Mrs. Sarah Sands, manageress) Moodie Hannah (Mrs.), lodging house
Rectory Claxton Ephraim,whitesmith&machinst Neale Richard, Lord Nelson inn & post-
Chambers William J. Malt house Coe Robert, farmer, Muckleton farm ing house; & at Burnham Market
Overman John Robert l<'orster Wilson, carpenter & bill poster Overman John Robert, farmer
COMMERCIAL. Harvey Charles, jobbing tailor Porritt William Love, farmer, miller,
Artur Horace, pork butcher Hillen Henry Foster, blacksmith maltster & mer.; &atBurnhamOvery
BURNHAM THORPE is a village and partsh, a mile Brothercross petty sessional division, Docking union, Little
east-by-south from Burnham Market station, 5 miles west Walsingham county court distrie;t, rural deanery of Burn-
from Wells and 8"! from l<'akenham, in the North Western ham, archdeaconry of Norfolk and diocese of Xorwich. The
divisioa of the COWlty, llrothercross hundred, Smithdon and church of St. Peter is an edifice in the Perpendicular style,
.338 BURNHAM THORPE. NORFOLK •
consisting of chancel, nave, north aisle and an embattled 1 residence, in the ~ift of the Earl of Orford, and held since
western tower containing one bell : the oak lectern, placed 1888 by the Rev. John Lister Knight M.A. of St. Catharine's
in the church in 1886 as a memorial to Lord Nelson, was College, Cambridge. The Primitive Methodist chapel here
constructed from a portion of H.M.S. "\7ictory," presented was erected in 1864, and seats 120 persons. Burnham
by the Lords of the Admiralty in r88r: the inscribed plates Thorpe is celebrated as having been the birthplace, 29th
also formed part of the famous ship, and were given with Sept. 1758, of the distinguished hero, Admiral Viscount
the wood : in the church are several marble tablets inscribed Nelson, Duke of Bronte, whose father was at this time rec-
to the Rev. Edmund Nelson A.M. 46 years rector of Burn- tor of this place and of Burnham Sutton. In 1891 a Hall
ham Thorpe and father of Lord Nelson, d. 26 April,r8o2; to was erected as a memorial of Lord Nelson, built of red
Edmund his son, d. 12 Dec. :1789, besides others to members brick and flint with a copper bell-turret. The Earl of
of the families of the late and present rectors : there is also Or ford is lord of the manor and chief landowner. The soil
a memorial to Philip Cornwaleys, ob. 30 Dec. 168o ; and to is of a mixed light character; subsoil, chalk and gravel.
William West Everard A. M. son of the Rev. Daniel Everard, The chief crops are wheat, barley, oats and roots. The area
rector, d. 8 Nov. 1847 : jn the chancel is a brass with effigy is 2,328 acres; rateable value,£3,013; population in 18gr 1 353·
in armour wearing a collar of SS to Sir William Calthorpe Parish Clerk, Artbur Eyres.
kt. lord of the manor and patron of the church, ob. 1420, Letters received through Lynn, via Bumham Market, by
above the figure is a canopy with shields and figures of birds foot post, arrive 8.30 a. m. & 3 p.m. WALL LETTER Box
holding scrolls, the whole surrounded by marginal inscrip- in the village, cleared wet~k days at 4.10 p. m. Burnham
tion somewhat mutilated: the church was repaired in 1842, Market is the nearest money order & telegraph office
and has 250 sittings. The register dates from the year School (mixed), erected in 1872, for 8o children; average
I559· The living is a rectory, average tithe rent-charge attendance, 6o; endowed with £44 yearly, with house for
£533, net yearly vain~ £445, including 25 acres of glebe and the master; Thomas Day, master
Benstead Ephraim Culley John, estate bailiff to the Earl Mack William, farmer
Burton Mrs of Orford Mnrton Herbert, farmer, Ivy farm
;Knight Rev. John Lister M.A. Rectory Curry John, carpenter & wheelwright Parr Thomas, Lord Nelson P.H
Press William, The Lodge 1 Mack Thomas, jun. farmer Smith Edward, farmer, Leith house
HugginsEdwd.blacksmith&wheelwrght 1 Mack Thos. Turtle, farmer, Manor farm Stimpson Benj. pork butcher & farmer
BURSTON is a village and parish and station on tbe Thomas Mann esq. of Thelveton Hall, Thomas Button
Ipswich and Norwich section of the Great Eastern railway, Madgett esq. of Diss, Doughty's Hospital, Norwich, and the
3 miles north-by-east from Diss and g8~ from London, in Ecclesiastical Commissioners are the principal landowners.
the Southern division of the county, Diss hundred, petty The soil is heavy; subsoil, clay. The chief crops are wheat,
sessional division and county court district, Depwade union, barley, beans, turnips and mangold wurtzel. The area is
rural deanery of Redenhall, archdeaconry of Norfolk and 1,414 acres ; rateable value, £1,939 ; the population in 1891
dioceie of Norwich. The church of St. Mary the Virgin is was 375.
a small building of flint, in the Perpendicular style, consist- Parish Clerk, William Boulton.
ing of chancel, nave, south porch and a western turret con-
taining one bell : the tower fell in 1753: the porch was re- PosT OFFICE.-Eldred Burrows, receiver. Letters arrive
built in 1879 : the c·burcb, which is about to be restored, from Diss at. 7.20 a.m.; dispatched at 6 p.m. Diss is ~be
affords 140 sittings. The register dates from the year 1653. nearest money order office; the telegraph office is at the
The living is a rectory, average tithe rent-charge £375, net railway station for collection of telegrams & Diss for
yearly value £4oo, including 70 acres of glebe and residence, delivery. Postal orders are issued here, but not paid.
in the gift of the Lord Chancellor, and held since r8gr by WALL LETTER Box at railway station cleared 5·15 p.m
Rev. William Noble M.A. of St. Alban Hall, Oxford. There
is a Primitive Methodist chapel here erected in 1888. There A School Board of 5 members was formed December, 30,
are charities of £2 yearly for the poor. In the parish is the r874, for the united district of Burston & Shimpling; R.
manor of Winfarthing, belonging to the Earl of Albemarle; Borrett, Pulham Market, clerk to the board; Thomas W.
Heywood Hall manor, belonging to the trustees of th11 late Garrood, of Tasburgh, attendance officer
Charles Layton esq. ; and Brockdish Hall and Mildenhall Board School (mixed), built in 187 5, at a cost, with master's
m,anor, the property of Jerom Murch esq. D.L., Jo.P. of Cran- house, of £85o, for 90 children; average attendance, 56;
wells, near Bat.h. John Joshua Jebb esq. of Boston, Lin- William Thomas Sutton, master
colnshire, Sir Kenneth Hagar Kemp bart. of Mergate Hall, Railway Station, George Nathamel Flude, station master
Gill Rev. Fredcrick Garner M. A Cooper Caroline (Mrs.), shopkeeper Long Robert, farmer
Noble Rev. William M.A. Rectory Cross John, miller (wind & steam) Middleton John, carpenter & beer retailr
COMMERCIAL. ·Fisher Charles, farmer Miller George, farmer
Abon Frederick, farmer Ford Arthur, wheelwright Mullinger Robert, farmer
Betts Frederick, farmer Ford Robert, farmer Porcber John Thomas, carpenter
Boulton William, shopkeeper & farmer Hammond George, farmer Prentice Richard, cowkeeper
Burrows Eldred, shoe maker, Post office Hern Edward, farmer Robins on Hros. corn mars. Railway statn
Carter William Eaton, farmer Johnson Alfred, farmer, Manor house Sandy John, bricklayer
Colman Octavius Oliver 1 Crown P.li. & Ling Jabez, farmer Self Laura (Mrs.), farmer
farmer ,Ling Zephaniah, blacksmith Smith William & Son, coal merchants
:BUXTON is a parish and pleasant village on the navi- Picto's, which is partly invesU!d in land, producing about
gable river Bure with a station, called Buxton-Lamas on the £90 yearly, distributed in coal and blankets; a sum of £6o
East Norfolk branch of the Great Eastern railway, 4 miles yearly was left in r693 by Thomas Bulwer, then of Buxton,
south-east from Alysbam and 8 north from Norwich, in the for the vicar of Buxton if resident, and if not, then for the
Northern division of the county, South Erpingham hundred benefit of the poor; there are several acres of land, upon
and petty sessional division, Aylsham union and county which there is a yearly charge of £13 r3s. 4d. for the bene-
court district, rural deanery of Ingworth and archdeaconry fit of 20 of the oldest poor ; and also the yearly inU!rest of
and diocese of Norwich. 'l'he church of St. Andrew is an £uo for ten widows, left by the late Mr. Pearce: these
ancient structure of flint, in the Early English style, con- charities are now administered under the provisions of s
sisting of chancel, nave, aisles, north and south porches and new scheme framed by the Charity Commissioners. Dud-
an embattled western tower containing a clock and 5 bells: wick House, situated in a pleasant lawn, partly surrounded
the tower and other parts of the church were rebuilt from by trees and shrubs, is the property of Pbilip Edward Sewell
the ground in r881-2, and thereareseveralstained windows: esq. of New Catton, and now occupied by Mrs. Hastings
the communion plate includes an ancient chalice and paten Parker. The Hall, now converted into a farmhouse, is the
.and a new service presented to the church in r858: the property of Mr. John Lane. There are two manors. Sir
church affords about 350 sittings. The register dates from Edward Paul et Stracey bart. of Rackbeath Park, who is lord
the year 1640. The living is a vicarage, consolidated with of the manor of Buxton Levisbaw, and P. E. Sewell esq.
the rectory of Oxnead, average tithe rent-charge (Buxton) who is lord of the manor of Buxton-with-tbe-Members, are
£g8, ( Oxnead )£ r8o, joint net yearly value£ 314, including 93 the chief landowners. The soil is mixed ; .subsoil, gravel
acres of glebe, with residence, in the gift of Sir Edward and clay. The chwf crops are wheat, roots, barley and bay.
Paulet Straceybart. and held since 1890 by the Rev. Alured The area is 1,274 acres; rateable value, £2,793; the popu·
Elliot Black r.r.A. of Trinity College, Cambridge. The corn- lation in :I88I was 556.
mutation value of the great tithE!s is £246. Three church ~exton, James Digby.
trustees, under the Church Rate Abolition Act, have been PosT, M. 0. & T. 0., S. B. & Annuity & Insurance Office.
appointed and hold £735 £4 per cent. stock for the main- -Waiter Woods, receiver. Letters from Norwich arrive
tenance of the church, churchyard and the services. There at 6.45 a.m. & at 2.10 p.m.; dispatched at 12.30, 4·45
are Baptist and Wesleyan chapels. Buxton Reformatory, & 8.5 p.m
originated by the late John Wright esq. is situated in and WALL LETTER Box near the mill, cleared at 4.15 p.m. week
described under Marsham. The charities include Sir John days only
DIRECTORY.] NORFOLK. CAISTER-NEXT-YARMOUTH. 339
British School for the four parishes of Buxton,Lamas,Oxnead master & mistress are paid in part from the proceeds of
& Brampt.Dn, originally founded by the late John Wright the inve>Jted funds; there are about r8o children, 20 girls
esq. who left £ r,ooo £3 per Cent. Consols for the support being educated free; Fred Garwood, master; Mrs. Gar-
of a school in Buxton for the children of the poor, & in wood, mistress; Miss Woodrow, assistant mistress
1833 the trustees of the charity erected a schoolroom, to National (infants), erected in 1855; average attendance,
which two class-rooms & outbuildings have since been so; Miss Lucy Clark, mistress
added: the school is now under one management & is Railway Station (Buxton Lamas),Wm.Wilby, station master
partly supported by a voluntary rate; the salaries of the CARRIER TO NoRWICH.-William Gostling, mon. wed. & sat
Black Rev. Alured Elliot M. A. [vicar Coller R. &Sons, corn & coal merchants; Gould William, carpenter
of lluxton & rector of Onxead], The & at Lynn; Attleborough; Aylsham ; Lane William, shoe maker
Vicarage Watton; Dersingham; Diss; Dock- Laws John, farmer
:Martin Francis, Mill house ing; llardingham; Melton; Reep- Passon Alice (Mrs.), farmer
Parker Mrs. Hastings, Dud wick house ham; Thetford; Wolferton; Wood- Passon John, farmer
Powelll\lisses bridge & Wymondham ; offices, St. Hayson Charles, grocer & draper
Ray5on Mrs Stephengates; depots, Victoria & Richardson Ed ward, horse dealer
Russell James Trowse stations, Norwich Seely Elizabeth (Mrs.}, grocer &c
Smith Miss Daniels James, farmer Shreeve Thomas, miller & corn mer-
WrJght The :Misses Dixon Ezra, Crown P.H chant; & at Aylsham
Dunning James, blacksmith Sutton James Merrison, farmer, Dud-
COMMERCIAL. Dye George, farmer wick farm
Andrews William, machinist &c Everett James, flour & corn dealer Todd Charles Jacob, Black Lion P.H
llarton Philip, shoe maker Fisher Arthur, farmer, & bailiff to Watts Thomas, builder & farmer
Boon Sarah (Miss), dress maker Thomas Allen e.~q White William Frankland, saddler &
llurton Edward, builder Gooch Frederick, cattle dealer harness maker ; & at Aylsham. See
Burton Thomas, mole catcher Gooch James, farmer & cattle dealer advertisement
Child John Henry, butcher Gould Charles, carpenter WoodsWalter,grocer & butcher, Post off
:BY LAUGH is a picturesque parish on the north bank of rector of and resides at Foxley. By laugh Park is the seat
the river Wensum, 5 miles north-east from Dereham and 3~ of the Rev. Henry Evans-Lombe B.A., J.P. who is lord of the
south-east from North Elmham station on the Wells and manor and owner of the chief part of the parish ; the man-
Dereham section of tho Great Eastern railway, in the sion is a handsome building, designed by the late Sir Charles
Northern division of the county, Eynsford hundred and Barry, standing in a park of about x,ooo acres, and was
petty sessional division, Mitford and Launditch union, East erected in accordance with the will of the late Sir John
Dereham county court district, rural deanery of Sparham, Lombe hart. The soil is light loam and clay; subsoil, clay
archdeaconry and diocese of Norwich. The church of St. and gravel. The chief crops are wheat, barley and turnips.
"Mary the Virgin, enlarged and thoroughly repaired in r81o, The area is 1,546 acres; rateable value, £979; the popu-
by the late Sir John Lombe bart. is a small edifice of flint lation in r891 was II5.
with stone dressings, in the Perpendicular style, consisting Parish Clerk, Robert Symonds.
<Jf chancel, nave, transepts and a western tower with circular Letters received through East Dereham, which is the nearest
base and hexagonal belfry containing one bell : there are 8o telegraph office, arrive at 8 a.m. Swanton Morley is the
sittings. 'fhe living is a vicarage, gross yearly value £75, nearest money order office. PILLAR LETTER Box cleared
net £7o, in the gift of the Rev. Henry Evans-Lombe B.A., at 5 p.m.; sundays, at 8.30 a. m
.J.P. of By laugh Park, and held since 1836 by the Rev. Louis The children of this place attend the school at llawdeswell,
Augustus Norgate B.A. of Corpus Christi colle~e, Cam- erected by the late Rev. Henry Lombe for the parishes of
briuge, hon. canon of Norwich and surrogate, who is also llawdeswell, Foxley & Bylaugh
Lombe Rev. Henry Evans- n.A., J.P. Bylaugh park
Fenn Albert, head gardener to the Rev. H. Evans-Lombe
I Limmer Edwanl, farm steward to the Rev. H. Evans-Loml:;e
Sayer John James, farmer
CAISTER-next-YARMOUTH is a large and widely the capture of the Duke of Alenr;on at Verneuil: after his
scattered parish on the sea coast, with a station on the return to Caister he performed many acts of charity, founded
Eastern and Midlands railway, 2~ miles north from Yar- several religious houses and was a great benefactor to the
mouth, in the Eastern division of the county, incorporated poor. The castle was twice besieged, and the only portions
hundreds, petty sessional division and incorporation of East now standing are a lofty round tower and part of the north
and West Flegg, county court district of Great Yarmouth, and west walls: it appears to have been of great extent, and
rural deanery of Flegg, archdeaconry and diocese of Norwich. was entered by a drawbridge crossing a moat, supposed to
There were anciently two churches here, but of the church have extended to the sea by means of a creek. Near the
<Jf St. Edmund only part of the tower is now standing. The castle are the remains of the college of St. Margaret, founded
church of the Holy Trimty is an ancient building of stone by Sir John Fast.Dlff in 1459, for seven priests and seven
in the Early English and Perpendicular styles, consisting of poor folk, on the previous foundation of a free chapel at-
chancel, nave, south aisle, south porch and a lofty embattled tached to the manor house, in the reign of Edw. I. and
western tower containing one bell: there are about 400 dedicated to the Holy Trinity and St. John the Baptist. The
sittings. The register dates from about the year 1563. manor and castle afterwards came into the possession of the
The living is a rectory, average tithe rent-charge £715, net Paston family, of Oxnead, best known from their published
yearly value £526, including 3 acres of glebe and residence, correspondence of the 15th century, called "The Paston
in the gift of and held since 1878 by the Rev. Edward Gibbs Letters," re-edited by Mr. James Gairdner in 1872-5. Mrs.
Howes Murrell, of St. Aidans. At West Caister is a chapel Clowes is lady of the manor, but the land is the property of
Qf ease. The Wesleyan chapel was erected in r886, and a number of frecholders. The soil is loamy; subsod, red
there is also a Primitive Methodist chapel. A cemetery of sand. Tile chief crops are wheat, oats and barley. The
I acre was formed in 1879, and is under the control of a parish comprises 2,832 acres of land and 215 of water; rate-
.Burial Board of nine members. Several charities have been able value, £7,319; the population in 1891 was 1,488.
left for the benefit of the poor, who have also the poor's allot- Parish Clerk, John Miller.
mentor r7 acres, 1producing about [,wo yearly for fuel. PosT&M.O.O.,S.B.&Annuity&lnsnranceOffice.-Samuel
Here is a coastguard station, with an officer and' six men, Spate het lllyth, sub-postmaster. Letters arrive from
and also a company of 40 beachmen, or salvagers, who have Yarmouth at 5.20 a.m.; delivery commences at 7 a.m. &
charge of the lifeboats belonging to the Royal National In- 2 p.m. to callers & are dispatched at 1.45 & 7 p.m. The
~titution. Caister is supposed to be more ancient than telegraph office is at the railway station
Yarmouth, and takes its name from a Roman station, once '\V" ALL LRTTF.R Box, \\'est Caister, cleared at 6 p. m. No
existing here, all traces of which have, however, been nearly collection on sundays
Qb]iterated by the plough. About I mile from the town are Coast Guard Station, John Ciceley, chief officer
the ruins of Caister Castle, originally inelosing a space of 6 A School Hoard of 5 members was formed November 6,
acres, and built by Sir Juhn Fastolff K.O. who was born 1871; T. A. Rising, Great Yarmouth, clerk to the board;
here, and who, during the English regency in France, sig- Ed ward Kerrisnn, Caister, attendance officer
nalized himself by acts of bravery during a lengthened cam- Board School, built in 1876, for about 300 children; average
paign, especially at Harfieur (22 Sept. 1415), Agincourt (24 attendance,230; Cubitt Heury Beevor, master; Miss Lucy
Oct. 1415), and Verneuil (28 Aug. 1424): he received the I Collings, infants' mistress
Garter for his share in taking Granville, and participated in Ra1lway Station, Samuel Bishop, statinn master
PHIVATE RESIDENTS. Hewitt Edward, sen Murrell Rev. Edward Gibbs Howes
Balls John Kittle George [rector], Rectory
Catchpole John Larkman Robert, Victoria house Purdy Jonathan, l\Iazagon house
Durrant ~rs Morton Misses, Caister house Heal Richard
Greenacre Mrs }Iurrell Rev. Charles Gibbs M.A. Cais- Stuart Frederick, Denmark house
Harvey James, Caister West ter West Tichney David, Beaci roJ.d
340 CAISTER-NEX'l'-Y .ARMOUTH. NORFOLK. ( KEJ.I.Y'S

COMMERCIAL. lj:dmonds Sl.market gardener,West end Major William, shopkeeper


Balls Sl. market gardenr. West Caister Edwards Geo. saddler & harness maker Miller John, boot maker
Bargewell Edward, pork butcher Frosdick George, pork butcher Parker George Frederick, boo~ maker
Blyth Benjannn Morgan, boot maker Frosdick Joseph, grocer Plummer Robert Leech, boat owner
Blyth John, boot maker Gedge Alice (Mrs.), shopkeeper Riches Thos. Wm.farmr.N ova Scotia frm
lllyth SamL Spatehet, boot m a. Post off George Susannah (:\lrs. ), beer retailer Rivett John N ewark, basket maker
Blyth Timothy, tailor George Aaron, jun. master mariner Russell James Ruthen,market gardener
. Blyth ·william, boot maker George Joseph Honney, beer retailer Shalders Henry, Greengate P.H
Bond Jn.Maycs,frmr.Caister Castle frm Georgc William, family butcher Shalders Waiter Alfred, King's Arms
Brown Soloman, boat owner Gravers James, farmer P.H. & horse dealer
Brown Thomas, boot maker Harbord John Tennant, bricklayer Shingles George, market gardener
Brown William, boat owner Haylett George. boat owner Sicely John, coast guard officer
Bullock Benjamin, market gardener Haylett James, boat owner Smith William&Son,farmrs.Manor frm
Catchpole John, farmer, West end Haylett Waiter, boat owner Smith Caroline (Mrs.), farmer
Chase Robert Frederick, builder &c Hewitt Edward, jun. market gardener Smith Robt. hay & corn mercht.& land
Chubbock John, farmer Horth Walter, dairyman owner, Beach house; & at Yarmou~h
Chubbock Sl.market gardener, West end Humphrey Charles Hurton, blacksmith Squires James, farmer
Crane Samuel, market gardener Humphrey Thomas, carpenter Tubby Elizh. (Mrs.), market gardener,
_Duffield Rober~, shopkeeper &c Jay John, hay dealer &c West end
Durrant Frederick, miller (wind) Kaee Henry Lucas, carpenter Tubby John,market gardener, West end
Durrant Harriet (.Mrs.), coach maker KerridgeWm.Enghsh,farmer,West end Tubby Robert, farmer
Durrant James, carter Kerridge William English, jun. farmer, Vincent George Wm. grocer & draper
Durrant Samuel Kittle, wheelwright White House farm Vincent James Breeze, saddler
Dyball Humphrey, shopkeeper Kerrison Edward, market gardener Watlow John, dealer
Edmonds Sarah (Mr~.), market gar- King Hannah (Mrs.), boat owner Webster Jarnes, market gardener
dener, West end Kittle George English, jun. farmer Webster Richard, farmer &c
Edmonds Thomas Crane, market gar- Kittle James, market gardener Wigg Mayes, farmer & landowner
dener, & sanitary inspector for East Kittle Waiter, market gardener Wigger William, baker
& West Flegg district, West end Knights Henry, boat owner Wright Jabez, market gardener &r!
CAISTOR ST. EDMUND is a small and scattered to the poor at Christmas ; there is also a fuel allotment of
village and parish, on the river Tas, 2 miles north from 24 acres, the rent of which, £26, is distributed in coals.
Swainsthorpe station on the Ipswich and Norwich line and Caistor is supposed to have been the capital of the Iceni, a
3 south from Norwich, in the Southern division of the Belgic tribe, and was by the Romans called Venta Icenorum.
county, Swainsthorpe petty sessional division, Henstead It was long a Roman camp or station ( Castra), whence the
hundred and union, Norwich county court distriet, rural East English, on their conquest of tue eountry, called it
deanery of Brooke, western division, archdeaconry of Nor- Caistor. Many Roman antiquities and coins of various em-
folk ar;C. diocese of Norwich. The church of St. Edmund is perors, from Nero to the time of the Lower Empire, but
a small building of flint with stone dressings, in the Early principally of Constantine (A. D. 306), have been found here;
English and Decorated styles, consisting of chancel, nave, about 1838 the bronze figure of a satyr, and another figur6
north porch and an embattled western tower containing 3 shaped like a foot, were met with and are preserved at.
bells: the font, a rich speeimen of Perpendicular work, is Norwich. A coin of pure gold, bearing a fine impression of
in a fine state of preservation : there are 120 sittings. The Nero (A.D. 54), was picked up in a turnip field in the parish
register dates from the year 1565. The living is a rectory, of Markshall in r844. The camp is an open encampment

with Mark shall annexed, average tithe rent-charge £350, containing 32 acres; large portions of the ancient Roman
joint net yearly value £327, including I I acres of glebe and flint walls remain in a good state of preservation. Caistor
~esidence, in the gift of and held sinee r88 r by the Rev. Hall, the seat of .Mrs. Green, lady of the manor and the
Anthony South Morse B.A. of Corpus Christi college, Cam- principal landowner, is a plain mansion of white brick. The
, bridge. Charities :-Mrs. Harriet Dashwood left by will, soil is mixed ; subsoil, gravel. The chief crops are wheat,
I88o, the sum of £ I,ooo in Consols, the interest of which, barley and turnips. The area is r,o44 acres ; rateable value,
amounting to about £27, 1s given away every Christmas £1,421 ; the population in r8gr was 137.
to the poor in clothing ; Harriet Louisa Warren left by Parish Clerk, John Cog-man.
her will, proved in 1854, £zoo in Consols, the interest to be PosT 0FFICE.-Richard~Evinson, receiyer. Letters arrive
distributed by the rector every Christmas in clothing to poor from Norwich at 5.30 a.m. ; dispatched at 6.25 p.m.
widows belonging to the consolidated parishes of Caistor Trowse is the nearest money order & telegraph office
and .Mark shall; Thomas N ea!, 1597, left 3~. 4d. to be dis- This place is included in the United School Board district of
tributed at Christmas; Thomas Pettus, in r6r8, left£s ros. Poringland, formed compulsorily June 16, 1874. The
to be given away in bread to six poor people of this place; central school is at Framingham Earl & the nearest a.t
and William Middleton, in 1647, left 3s. 4d. to be distributed Stoke Holy Cross
Birkbeck Edward Lewis, Old hall Green Mrs. Caistor hall Dowe Robert,carpenter & wheelwright
Green Harry, Caistor hall Cogman John, blacksmith Sutton William, farm bailiff to Harry
Morse Rev. Anthony South B.A. Culling ""'alter, farmer, & assessor & Green esq
I rector], Rectory collector of taxes, French farm
CALDECOTE is a parish, 5 miles south from Nar- Drown M.A. formerly fellow of Caius College, Cambridgep
borough station on the Lynn and Dereham section of the who is also rectO!' of Oxburgh-with-Foulden and resides at
Great Eastern railway and 6 south-west from Swaffham, in Oxburgh. Sir Henry George Paston-Bedingfeld hart. D.L.,
the South Western division of the county, South Greenhoe J.P. of Oxborough Hall, is lord of the manorandsoleownel'
hundred and petty sessional division, Swaffham union and and occupier of the land. The soil is light; subsoil, chalk.
county court district, rural deanery of Cranwich, south The chief crops are wheat, barley and turnips. The area. is
division, archdeaconry of Norfolk and diocese of Norwich. 678 acres; rateable value, £385; the population in 1891
There was formerly a church here dedicated to the Virgin was 36.
Mary, and the site, surrounded by some very fine elms, can
still be traced. The living is a sinecure rectory, yearly value Letters through Stoke Ferry ; the nearest money order
£6 13s. 4d. (modus), in the gift of Sir H. G. Paston-Beding- office is at Reechamwell & telegraph oflice at Stoke Ferry
fcld bart. and held since 1885 by the Rev. William Henry The children of this place attend the school at Oxburgh
Bedingfeld Henry E I Lincoln Geo. farm bailiff to Sir H. G. Paston-Bedingfeld 'bar\
CALTHORPE is a village and parish 4miles north from acres, given by unknown donors, for the payment of the
Aylliham station on the East Norfolk section of the Great war tax in former times ; the rent is now invested, and
Eastern railway, in the Northern division of the county, applied at the discretion of the vicar and churchwardtMls.
South Erpingham hundred and petty sessional division, 'l'he Earl of Orford is lord of the manor and chief landowner;
Aylsham union and county court district, rural deanery of he also owns the great tithes. The soil is loam; subsoil,
Ingworth and archdeaconry and diocese of .Norwich. The varwus. The chief crops are wheat, turnips, barley and
church of St. Margaret is a plain but ancient edifice of hay. The area is r,o48 acres; rateable value, l,r,556; in
J>tone, consisting of chancel, nave and a western tower con- 1881 the population was 204.
taining one bell : there are 130 sittings. The register dates Parish Clerk, Waiter Daverson.
from tbe year 1544. The living is a vicarage, average tithe
rent-charge £n7, gross yearly value £134, inducting 24 Nearest Letter Box is at Erpingham. Letters through Nor-
acres of glebe, w1th residence, in the gift of the Norwich wich, via Hanworth, delivered about 8.30 a.m. Aylsham
Charity Trustees, and held since 1848 by the Rev. Samuel & Hanworth are the nearest money order offices & Aid-
ltiarsh Shepheard RA. of Corpus Christi college, Cambridge, borough is the nearest telegraph office
who resides at Erpir.gham. The tuwn lands consist of 14 The children of this place attend the school at Wolterton
DIRECTORY.] NORFOLK. CARLBTON RODE. ~41
Ives Robert .T.P • Brown John, farmer N ewstead IIenry, carrier & farmer
LemanJohn Cooper William & John, wheelwrights Porrett George Rose, Saracen's Head
Burgess James, iron founder & agricul- Dunham John, cattle dealer &c P.H. & farmer
tural implement manufaeturer
'
CANTLEY is a parish on the navigable river Yare, dence of Major Herbert Henry Gilbert B. A., J.P. is an ancient
across which is a ferry, with a station on the Norwich and mansion of red brick, pleasantly situated. The trustees of
Yarmouth railway, ro miles east from Norwich, ro west the late William Alexander Gilbert esq. are lords of the
from Yarmouth and 5 north frnm Loddon, in the Eastern manor and chief landowners. The soil is light mind ; sub-
division of the county, Blofield and Walsham petty sessional soil, sand and clay. The chief crops are wheat, oats and
division, Blofield hundred a.nd union, Norwich county court barley. The area is r,Bso acres; rated at £3,215; the
district, rural deanery of Blofield and archdeaconry and population in r891 was 257.
diocese of Norwich. The church of St. Margaret is a build- Parish Clerk, William Claxton.
ing of flint in the Norman and Perpendicular styles, con- PosT OFFICE.-John Harper, receiver. Letters through
sisting of chancel, nave and a fine embattled western tower Norwich arrive at 8.45 a. m. & 2.30 p.m. ; dispatched at.
containing one bell: there are 171 sittings. The regis'ter r & 5.30 p.m. Reedham is the nearest money order office;.
dates from the year I559· The living is a rectory, average the telegraph office is at the Railway station for collection
tithe rent-charge £240, gross yearly value £312, including & Reedham for delivery of telegrams
«acres of glebe, with residence, in the gift of the trustees WALL LETTER Box cleared on week days at 5.30 p.m. ; &
of late W. A. Gilbert esq. and held since r86o by the Rev. on sundays, 9.40 a. m
John Bellarny Gilbert M. A. of Emmanuel College, Cam- National School (mixed), erected in r87r, for so children~
bridge. The charities are derived from IBA. 2R. 30P. of land, average attendance, 45; Miss Martha Emily Lea, mistress
which is let yearly by tender. The Manor House, the resi- Railway Station, Waiter Collins, station master
PRIVATE RESIDE:s"TS. CO:\IMERCIAL. England Wm.(Mrs. ),shopkpr.& buteher
Croker Mrs. The Grange All en Thomas, farmer Maddison Frederick, farmer, The Oaks
Gilbert Major Herbert Henry B.A., J.P. Barney William, Cantley Cock P.H Sales Thomas, blacksmith
Manor house Bloom Robert, farmer Watts William, carpenter
Gilbert Rev.John Bellamy M. A.[ rector], Burred Elizabeth (Mrs.), farmer Wilson James, Red House P.H
Rectory ' Curtis Lambert Rd. farmer & cattle dlr Wright Henry, farmer
Maddison Frederick, The Oaks Curtis Samuel Wm. farmer & overseer
CARBROOKE (in Domesday "Kereboke ") is a village a commandery or preceptory of Knights Templars, founded
and parish, 9 miles north-west from Attleborough and 2 here by Roger, Earl of Clare, who died in II73; it after-
north-east from Watton station on the Thetford and Swaff- wards belonged to the Knights llospitallers of St. John of
ham section of the Great Eastern railway, in the South Jerusalem and was sometimes called the Priory of St. John
Western division of the county, \Vayland hundred, petty of Jerusalem, but commonly the Commandery of Ker-
sessional division and union, Attleborough and Watton brooke: it was endowed with numerous farms and vassals,
county court district, rural deanery of Breccles and arch- and at the Dissolution, when there were r6 knights, its
deaconry and diocese of NorwiCh. The church of SS. Peter revenues were valued at £"65 2s. gd. The poor have £2
and Paul is a very fine edifice of flint, in the Perpendicular yearly and the rent of 56 acres, amounting to £54 IOS.
style, consisting of chancel, nave of five bays, with cleres- yearly, for coals. The church lands are let for about £25
tory, aisles, north and south porches and an embattled a year, which sum is appropriated t<>wards the repairs of
western tower containing 5 bells: the nave is separated the church. Sir William Robert Clayton. bart. who is
from the chancel by a beautiful screen of carved oak; the lord of the manor, and Edward May Dewing esq. J.f. of
door to the rood-loft remains, and the chancel retains Bury St. Edmunds, ar~ the chief landowners. The soil is
sed ilia : the north and south windows were reglazcd in r87r, part heavy and part light clay ; subsoil, gravel and clay.
at a cost of £100: the roof hammer beam, of carved oak, is The chief crops are roots, wheat. and barley. The area is
a fine example of its kind: the pulpit is of modern carved 3,033 acres ; rateable value, £4,164; the population in 1891
oak, and there are open oak benches with carved poppy was 534·
heads: over the north porch is a. parvise in which are Parish Clerk, Matthew Murrell.
several pieces of armour: in the chancel are the tombs of PosT OFFICE.-Samuel Skipper, receiver. Letters are re-
Roger de Clare, the founder of the church, and his mother: ceived through Watton S.O.; arrive at 7 a.m.; dis-
there are 6oo sittings. The register dates from the year patched at 5 . 20 p.m. on week days & 10. 50 a.m. on
1543· The living is a discharged vicarage, average tithe rent- sundays. Watton is the nearest money ordei" & telegraph
charge £g6, net yearly value £1g8, including 14 acres of office
glebe and residence, in the gift of the Rev. John Fraser
'faylor M.A. of West Brighton, and held since I8gr by the PILLAR LETTER Box, Caston road, cleared, week days a~
Rev. John Kinnersly Taylor M.A. of Pembroke College, Ox- 4·35 p.m. ; sundays at 9 a. m
ford. Here are Congregational and Primitive Methodist National Schoor (mixed), erected in r846 & enlarged in
chapels. There was anciently another church here, in an 1873, for roo children; average attendance, 64; Mrs_
exempt jurisdiction, called Carbrooke Parva, belonging to William Playle, mistress
Annett Alfred George, Carbrooke villa Coleman William, blacksmith Murrell Robert, White Hart P.H
Bnrrell Mrs. White hall Eagling Perry, farmer Play le Henry, blacksmith, wheel-uw,.,.right
Clarke Mrs llaylock James, butcher & farmer
Rich Rev. Henry, Carbrooke hall Hayluck John, hawker Richardson William, grocer & draper
Sayer Henry Haylock Elizabeth (Mrs.), shopkeeper Saunders John Thompson, farmer,
Taylor Rev.Jn.Kinnersly M.A. Vicarage Hunton Henry, farmer & smith Broadmoor
Johnson James, flour dealer Sayer James, shoe maker
COMMERCIAL. Knights Charles, beer retailer Skipper Saml. grocer & draper, Post off
Anthony William, farmer Leggett George, beer retailer Wace Leonard, farmer
Bird John F. farmer, Low farm Leveridge Robert, Crown inn Ward James, farmer
Buck Henry, shoe maker Lock ·wm.(exors. of),farmers,Hall farm Welcher William Robert, farmer
Bullen Daniel, miller (steam & wind) & Middleton Alfred, farmer, Grape farm White John, farmer
farmer Minns Herbert Jeremiah, miller (wind Wright John, farmer, Brakehilllodge.
Caddy Charles, farmer & steam) Wright Robert, farmer, Manor farm
Caddy George, carpenter Minns James, butcher, baker & farmer Wyer Isaac, fish & poultry dealer
Caddy William, farmer & assistant Murrell Matthew, carpenter & builder, Wyer John, fish dealer
overseer, Broad moor & estate carpenter to E. M. Dewing esq
CARLETON RODE is an extensive parish and scattered wife, who died in r848: the church was reseated and re-
village 4 miles north-west from Tivetshallstation on the Ips- stored between the years r877 and :::883, at a cost of about
wich and :Norwich line, and 5 south-east from Attleborongh, £ I,ooo, and affords 370 sittings. The register dates from
in the Southern division of the county, Depwade hundred, the year rs6o. The living is a rectory, average tithe rent-
petty sessional division and union, county court district of charge £701, net yearly value £530, including 49 acres of
Wymondham, rural deanery of Depwade, archdeaconry of glebe, with residence, in the gift of Miss Buxton, and held
Norfolk and diocese of Norwich Thechnrch of All Saints is a since 1859 by the kev. John Chulrneley M.A. of St. CathRrine's
structure of flint in the Perpendicular style, and consists of College, Cambridge. Here is a Baptist chapel. In r&,g a
chancel, clerestoried nave of four bays, aisles, south porch collection of British implements was found here. The parish
and an embattled western tower with pinnacles containing lands are :-Fuel land, 42 acres, producing £sr yearly;
one bell: there is a piseina in each aisle and a double piscina town land, 13 acres, producing £20 yearly; church land,
and 8 consecration crosses in the chancel, which also con- r_s acres, producing £22 15s. 6d. ; surveyors' land, 20 acres,
tains a mural monument, erected by the Rev. Frederick producing £23 48· Mis..'l Huxton is lady and some others
Stephen Bevan, rector from 1822, to the memory of his are lords of the manorl!. The principal landowners are
CARLETO.Y RODE. NORFOLK. [ KELLY"S

Miss _auxton, of Shad well Court, and Richard Bryant esq. LETTER Box cleared at 6.50 p.m. Letters through Attle-
of Besthorpe Hall. The soil is clayey loam; subsoil, clay. borough arrive at 7.30 a. m. The nearest money order &
The chief crops are w!J.eat, barley and beans. The area is telegraph office is at New Buckenham
2,570 acres; rateable value, £3,246; the population in 1891 National School, erected in 1821 & enlarged by the present
was 677. rector in 1872, for 150 children; average attendance, 6o;
Miss A. L. Sydes, mistress
Parish Clerk, R. F. Cholmeley; assistant, John Spurgin. CARRIERS TO NoRWICH.-James Breeze, wed. &sat
Cholmeley Rev. John M.A. [rector] 1 Coleman Arthur, farmer ! Palmer John, farmer
Rectory Coleman John, farmer Palmer Robert, farmer
Fell Misses, Rectory cottage Coleman Samuel, farmer, Old hall Peacock George, blacksmith
Horn Rev. Richard Bryant [Baptist] Colman Wm. Bowles, farmer, Kendallo Pegnall Henry, farmer
.Johnson Mrs. William Day Margaret (Mrs.), farmer Reeve George, blacksmith
COMMERCIAL. Edwards Perry, farmer & asst. overseer Reynolds James, farmer
Boyce Richard, farmer Frost Thoma.~, baker & confectioner Rush John, farmer,
J,Jridges Zachariah, bricklayer Glover George, farmer Saunders George, farmer
Briggs Jacob, farmer Glover Ma.ry Ann(Miss),ba.ker&shopkpr Scott Joseph, farmer
Brown Charles (Mrs.), farmer Goodrum William, carpenter Scott Uriah, farmer
Brown Frederick, jun. farmer Hales William, farmer Scarff Waiter, farmer
Brown Horace, farmer Hall George, farmer Seadon Saml.lel, farmer
Brown John, farmer Johnson James (exors. of), farmers, Self John (exors. of), farmers
Burroughes Mary Ann (Mrs.), miller Pullyns planting Smith James, butcher
(wind & steam) . Lansdell William, Farriers' Arms P.H Smith John, farmer
Bryant Richard, farmer & landowner Large Henry, farmer Smith Robt.frmr.&miller(wind&stearn)
Carleton Rode Coffee House Company Lawrence Frederick, farmer Springall Maria(Mrs. ),Adam & Eve P.U:
Limited(CharlesLockwood,manager) Levell George, farmer & cattle dealer Stevenson Isaac, farmer
Chapman Samuel, farmer Lockwood Charles, baker Thurlow Nathaniel H. farmer
Chatten James, farmer Matthews Sarah Ann (Mrs.), shoe ma. Tricker Frederick Wm. grocer & draper
Chatten John, Plough P.H Muskett Robert, travelling draper Turner Thomas, farmer ·
CARLETON ST. PETER is a parish and village, 2! that of Ashby, average tithe rent-charge £"260, joint net
miles south from Buckcnham station on the Norwich and yearly value [234, including 33 acres of glebe, in the gift of
Lo~estoft railway, and 8 south-east from Norwich, in the Sir Reginald William Proctor-Beauchamp bart. and held
Southern division of the county, Loddon hundred and Lod- since 188o by the Rev. Robert Thomas Whitmarsh, who
.don and Clavering petty sessional division and union, Nor- resides at Asbby St. Mary, near Norwich. Sir Reginald
wich county court district, rural deanery of Brooke, western Y\-'illiam Proctor-Beauchamp bart. D.L., J.P. of Langley
division, archdeaconry of Norfolk and diocese of Norwich. Park, is lord of the manor and principal landowner. The
Here is a ferry across the river Yare, conveniently near to soil is light sandy; subsoil, sand beds. The chief crops are
the Buckenham station. The church of St. Peter is an wheat, oats and barley. The area is 765 acres, rated at
ancient structure of flint in the Early English style, consist- £745 ; the population in 1891 was 77-
ing of chancel, nave, south porch and an embattled western Parish Clerk, William Hurry.
tower containing 4 bells : the church was thoroughly restored Letters received through Norwich arrive at 9. 30. Loddon
in I 849, and affords 120 sitt.ings. The register dates from is the nearest money order & telegraph office
the yoar I544· The living is a rectory, consolidated with The children of this place attend the school at Thurton

Parker Edward, market gardener


I
Garrett John,FerryHouse P.H.& farmr Preston William, market gardener Wright William, farmer

EAST CARLTON is a parish and scattered village 2 of the con8olidated rectories of St. Peter and St. Ma.ry, gross
miles south-by-east from Hethersett and 2 west from yearly value £268 1 including 41! acres of glebe, with resi-
1

Swainsthorpe stations, and 5 south-west-by-south from llor- dence, erected in x88o, at a cnst of [1;440, in the gift
wich, in the Southern division of the county, Swainsthorpe of the Lord Chancellor, and held since 186o by the Rev. James
petty sessional division, Humbleyard hundred, Henstead John Cumming M.A. of Caius College, Cambridge. John
union, Norwich county court district, rural deanery of · Steward esq. is the lord of the manor of Carlton-late-Towns-
1

Humbleyard, archdeaconry of Norfolk and diocese of Nor- hends and the Norwich Charity Trustees are the lords of the
wich. Eas~ Carlton anciently formed two parishe!! and had manor of East Carlton-with-Hethel. John Steward esq. Sir
two churches, but the church of St. Peter fell into decay in Francis George Manning ham Boileau bart. D.L., J.P. of
the x6th century: that of St. Mary is a small building of Ketteringham Park, and the Rt. Hon. Sir Nathaniel Lindley
flint and rubble, consisting of small chancel, nave, north P.c. Lord Justice of the Court of Appeal, are the principal
aisle and a low embattled western tower, with a wooden spire, landowners. The Manor House, the property and residence
containing one bell: the aisle appears to have been added to of John Steward esq. is a plain modern building, pleasantly
the. original structure, access thereto being obtained by seated in park-like grounds of about 8o acres. The soil is
making three rough arches in the thick wall of the nave; loam and clay; subsoil, clay and graveL The chief crops
at the restoration in x88x this wall was removed and) are wheat, barley, turnips and hay. The area is x,195
replaced by three arches on piers, and the roof raised to its l acres; rateable value, [1,992; the population in 1891 was
original height, the interior reseated with open benches and f281.
a new east window inserted: in the chancel is a tablet t.Q 1
Parish Clerk, John Thrower.
Peter Coppin, 48 years rector, who died in 1728, and on the Letters through Norwich arrive about 9.30 a. m. WALL
south wall of nave is a tablet with armorials to Acourt Dod LETTER Box cleared at 4.40 p.m. The nearest money
esq. d. 1783, and to Elizabeth, his wife, d. 1773: the chan- order office is at Mulbarton & telegraph office at Hethersett
eel retains a piscina and !ledilia: the church was thoroughly National School (mixed), erected in 1886, at a cost of £200,
restored in 1881 at a cost of [700, and affords rso sittings. for 6o children ; average attendance, 28; Miss Emma
The register dates from the year 1559. The living consists Chapman, mistress
Cumming Rev. Jas. John M.A. Rectory Baldwin John, market gardener King Eli7.a (Mrs.), farmer
George George, Lodge Farm cottage Blyth John, shopkeeper & bricklayer King Randall, farmer,Curzon Hall farm
Lindley Rt. Hon. Lord Justice Sir Bussey Joshua, farmer, Wood farm Pitts John, farmer, White House farm
Nathaniel P.c.; & 19 Craven Hill Carman Mark, market gardener Rowland Robert, market gardener
gardens, London w Edwards John, farmer Smithson John, blacksmith
Steward Arth ur, Old Manor Farm house Emms William, market gardener Thrower Isaac, boot & shoe m a. & farmer
Steward John, Manor house Fairma.n James, farmer, Lodge farm Thrower John, boot maker & parish clrk
Todd William, Curzon hall Fairman Samuel, farmer & pork butcher Waller James, market gardener
COMMERCIAL. Gillingwater James, farmer Wilkinson Wm. Thos.Rolfe, wheelwright
:Bailey John, butcher Hurn John, estate carpenter
CARLTON FOREHOE is a village and parish 2 miles 1 and Margaret his wife, and was presented by their children
east from Kimberley station on the Wymondham and Dere- at Easter, 1885: the church was repaired and repewed in
ham railway and 3 miles north-west from Wymondham, in 1839, when an organ and gallery were erected: in 1876 the
the Mid division of the county, Forehoe hundred, petty church was again reseated, and has now 1.50 sittings. The
sessional division and union, county court district of register dates from the year 1699. The living is a rectory,
Wymondham, rural deanery of Hingham Forchoe division, with Crownthorpe annexed, average tithe rent-charge £r2g,
~rchdeaconry of Norfolk and diocese of Norwich. The church gross yearly value £320, with 146 acre!! of glebe and resi-
of St. Mary is a small edifice of stone, in the Perpendicular dence, in the gift of the Earl of Kimberley K.G., P.c. an~
style, consisting of chancel, nave, south porch and a western held since x887 by the Rev. John Thomson M. A. of Pembroke
tower, with pinnacles, containing one bell : the stained east College, Cambridge. .£ 5, the produce of fen land, is given
window is a memorial to the Rev. Philip George Bartlett to the poor in coal. The Earl of Kimberley K.G., P.c. ill
DIRECTORY. J ;NORFOLK. CASTO~.

lord of the manor and chief landowner. The soil is various ; days; sundays 10. 45 a. m. Barnham Broom is the nearest
subsoil, gravel. The chief crops are wheat, harley, turnips money ordar office. The nearest telegraph office is Wy·
and hay. The area is 734 acres ; rateable value, £ r,oso; mondham
1
r
the population in r8gx was 130. Parochial School (mixed), erected with mistress's residence
Sexton, George Hidewell. in 183o, for so children; average attendance, 37; & is
Letters through Wymondham arrive at 8 a.. m. WALL supported by the Earl of Kimberley; Mrs. Mary Ann
LETTER Box, near the school, cleared at 6-45 p.m. week yeomans, mistress
Thomson Rev. John M. A. Rectory
Bowles Waiter, farmer
I
Laskey Samuel, shopkeeper
Rolfe John, farmer, Church farm
· I
Tubbey Elisha, estate carpenter ·
Yoomans Fredk.Arthr.jobbing gardenr
CASTLE ACRE, see AcRE.
CASTLE RISING is a parish on the Habingley river, Earl of Northampton, in r6r4, for a governess and 12 poor
and the road from King's Lynn to Hunstanton, 4~ miles spinsters or widows of Castle Riding, North Wootton and
north-north-east from Lynn and 2 east from North Wootton Roydon: the income exceeds £320 yearly, and each in-
station on the Lynn and Wells railway, and about 2 north- mate receives 6s. per week, besides clothing, coals and
east from Grinston Road station on the Eastern and Mid- medical attendance : the rectors of Castle Rising and North
lands railway, in the North Western division of the county, Wootton; Raoul Charles Finch Elsden Everatd esq. J.P. of
Lynn Freebridge hundred, petty sessional division and Roydon Lodge, Roydon; Hamnn le Strange esq. D.L., J,P. of
union, Lynn county court district, rural deanery of Lynn Hunstanton Hall, and the lords of the manor are the
Free bridge and archdeaconry and diocese of Norwich: this trustees: the charter, which is preserved, has the Great Seal
parish was anciently a seaport and town of considerable of England affixed. The Earl of Northampton also founded
importance, returning two members to Parliament, and its another charity, by which two poor inhabitants receive a
mayor took precedence of all other mayors in the county; pension of £26 yearly. Castle Rising Hall, is a mansion of
but having long since been deserted by the sea, the town fell brick and the property- of the trustees of the late Hon.
into decay, the market and fair became obsolete, the Greville Theophilus Howard, is now rented as a shooting·
borough was disfranchised by the Heform Act of 1832 (2 box by the Duke of Fife K.T., P.c. Horace Brand Towns-
and 3 Will. IV. c. 45), and the corporation abolished by the end-Farquhar esq. J.P. of 4 Berkeley street, London, and
Municipal Reform Act of 1835 (5 and 6 Will. IV. c. 76). Loril Calthorpe. The Castle, part of the keep of which
The church of St. Lawrence is a cruciform structure in the remains, was built by William de Albini, Earl of Arundel,
Norman and Early English styles, consisting of chancel, in r 176: the remains of a Sax on church have been found
nave, south transept, south porch and a central tower with within the earthworks and traces of Roman and British
saddle-back roof containing one bell: the-church was restored occupation have also been met with on the same site.
in 1844, and the chancel further renovated in 1857: in 1883 Isabella, daughter of Philip the Fair, king of France, and
additional repairs were effected, the transept enlarged, the queen of Edward II. was imprisoned here from the end of
porch rebuilt and a new organ erected, at a total cost of Nov. 1330, during her widowhood, and died in the castle
£3,000: in the same year a memorial window was inserted 22nd August, 1358. An ancient cross, in good preservation,
in the south transept by Lady Audley J ane Charlotte (Towns- stands on the site of the market place. The trustees of the
1
bend) Buller in memory of her first husband, the Hon. late Hon. Grcville Theophilus Howard are lords of the
Greville Theophilus Howard, 2nd son of Charles John, Earl manor and the principal landowners. The soil is chiefly
of Suffolk and Berkshire, who died 28 June, r88o: the cen- sand and loam; subsoil, gravel. The chief crops are wheat,
tral tower, which at the beginning of the century was square barley and turnips. The area is 2,021 acres ; rateable value,
and embattled, has been twice altered, but retains some fine £1,831; the population in 1891 was 317. •
triforium arches with a gallery: there are no windows on Parish Clerk, John Edward Smith.
the north side of the church; the font is Norman: there are PosT OFFICE.-Mrs. Annie Moore Greene, sub-postmistress.
267 sittings : at the entrance to the churchyard is a band- London & ot.her letters are received through Lynn by
110me lych gate, erected in 1879 to the memory of the Hon. mail cart; arrive at 4.30 a.m. & dispatched at 7.10 p.m.
Mary Charlotte Henrietta Greville Howard,d. 7th May, 1872. Hillington is the nearest money order & telegraph office.
The register dates from the year 1573, and there is a list of Postal orders are issued here, but n:Jt paid
rectors from 1302. The living is a rectory, with that of National School (mixed), erected in 1815, for 200 children:
Roydon annexed, average tithe rent-charge £38o, joint net average attendance, 48 ; Arthur William Howse, master;
yearly value £250, including 21 acres of glebe and residence, Samuel Ernest Howse, assistant master; Miss Laura.
in the gift of the trustees of the late Hon. Greville Theophilus Howse, mistress ; Miss Mary Hawse, sewing mistress
Howard, and held since 1891 by the Rev. Herbert Edward CARRIERS TO & FROM LYNN pass through the parish tues.
Thursby.. 'frinity Ho~pital was founded by Henry Eoward, thurs. fri. & sat '
Beck Mrs. Mill house Ewer Rosemary (Miss), shopkeeper Smith Alfred Wm. plumber & glazier
Thursby Rev.Herbert Edward [rector], Failes William Christopher, farmer Smith Edward, farmer
Rectory Fenn Thomas, blacksmith Smith Edward, jun. assistant overseer
Valentine Frederick c.E Greene Annie Moore (Mrs.), Black Smith John Edward,carpenter&buildel'
Horse inn & Post office & parish clerk
COMMERCIAL. Bammond Robert, cowkeeper Trinity Hospital (Arthur William
Beck Arthur C. agent to Sir William Hammond Thompson, cow keeper Howse, clerk; Mrs. Sarah Harding,
Hovel! Browne ffolkes bart. D. I .. , J.P Knight Fernley, farmer & miller matron)
Bennington Abel, corn factor (water), Lodge Turnbull Nathan, sub-agent to the
Bridges Reuben, head gamekeeper to Nurse Charles, carter Howard Trustees
the Duke of Fife Plowright Elizabeth (Mrs.), cowkeeper
.
CASTON is a village and parish 3~ miles south-east from of glebe, With residence, in the gift of and held since r886
Watton, 1~ north-east from Stow Bedon !ltation on the by the Rev. Waiter Henry Partridge B.A. of Christ's
King's Lynn and Thetford railway, and 6~ from Attle- College, Cambridge. Here is a Primitive Methodist chapely
borough, in the South Western division of the county, erected in r878. Dover's charity of £28 xgs. Bd. yearly~
Wayland hundred, petty sessional division and union, Attle- founded in 1855, is derived from [1,000 Consols, bequeathed
borough and Watton county court district, rural deanery of " to the Rector of Caston for the time being," in trust for
Breccles and archdeaconry a.nd diocese of Norwich. The the parish school. The church farmhouse was formerly a
church of the Holy Cross is a large and noble building of Refectory house for pilgrims going from Thetford to the
flint in the Decorated and Perpendicular styles, consisting of Augustinian monastery at Walsingham, where there WR.'l a
chancel, nave, north porch and a western tower containing famous shrine of the Virgin. Sir William Bowyer-Smijth
a clock and 6 bells : the pulpit is Jacobean: the benches are hart. who is lord of the manor, Lord Walsingham and
of carved oak with poppy heads, and the base of the rood George Barker esq. J.P. are the principal landowners. The
screen is still preserved : m the chancel are two miserere soil in mixed; subsoil, clay. The chief crops are wheat,
stalls, and in the south wall of the nave and chancel are barley, seeds and roots. The area. is r,535 acres; ratea.bl6
piscinre : the chancel retains a handsome brass candelabrum, value, £2,366; the population in 1891 was 502.
originally presented by one of the Stuart kings to Waltham
Abbey, Essex. In the north wall of the nave is the casing Parish Clerk, Wilham .Murton Murfet.
-of a tomb, probably of Sir John de Caston, founder of the Sexton, \Villiam Banham.
church : over the north porch is a parvise: the whole struc-
ture was restored from 1852 to r854, and tho chancel was Posr 0FFICE.-John Murrell, sub-postmaster. Letters from
restored and filled with stained glass windows in 1853 by AtUeborongh arrive at 8-45 a. m.; dispatched at 5· SS p. m.
the late Rev. Waiter John Partridge M.A. rector, 1Bso-86: week days, sundays at 9·55 a.m. Rockland All Saints is
there are 200 sittings, roo being free. The register dates the nearest money order office, & Watton is the nearest
from the year 1539. The livin~ is a rectory, average tithe telegraph office. Postal orders are issued here, but not
rent-charge £392 1 net yearly value £4Io 1 including so acres pa1d
344 CASTON. NORFOLK.
School National (mixedJ, erected in 1839 for 120 children; CARRIER TO NoRwrcH.-William Knott, wed. & sat. re-
. average attendance, 8 I ; Miss .Alice Fanny Leng, mistress ; turning same day
Miss Ellen Louisa Houchen, assistant mistress
Hems worth Augustus Noel Camp bell Cooke Mary Anne (Mrs.), Red Lion P.H Greenwood John, farmer
J. P. Flaxmoor Cooper Fredk. thrashing machine ownr Houchen Jas.Duke'sHeadP.H.& shoe ma
Partridge Rev. Walt. Hy. B.A. Rectory Davey Walter John, bricklayer Kenny James, farmer
COMMERCIAL. Drake George, farmer & dealer, Knights William, carpenter & builder
Bambridge James, bricklayer & builder Bridge farm Knott William, farmer & carrier
Banham Hagar (Mrs.), frmr. Chase fm Drake Isaac, tailor & farmer Layt Robert, pork butcher
Banham Wm. & Alfd. carriage buildrs Drake James, farmer & cattle dealer Littleproud James, baker
Barber Arthur Samuel, baker Garrett Maria (Mrs.), shopkeeper Littleproud Thos. farmer, Waterloo fm
.Barnard William, farmer Goddard George, butcher Murfet Wm. Morton, farmr.Caston hall
Basham Robert, farm bailiff to G. E. Gooch Edward, shoe maker Osbom & Son, saddlers
. Hoare esq. Church farm Gooch George, beer retailer Taylor Matilda (Mrs.), beer retailer
Bilham John, shopkeeper Green Thomas Lindsey, farm bailiff to Webster James, wheelwright
Bullen Daniel, farmer & miller (wind) the Rev. W. H. Partridge B.A. The Wyer Edward, miller (wind) & farmer
Chapman Arthur, blacksmith Rectory cottage Yeomans Elijah, builder & contractor
CATFIELD is a parish and village near the navigable PrimitiYe Methodist chapel, built in 1838. Catfield Hall, a
Ant, with a station on the Eastern and Midlands railway, I4 modern house surrounded by trees, is the seat of Mrs.
miles north-east from Norwich, and 12 south-east from Lubbock, who is lady of the manor. The principal land-
North Walsham, in the Eastern division of the county, owners are Mrs. Lubbock, William Barber esq. the trustees
Tunstead and Rapping petty sessional division, Happing of William Salmon esq. and Miss Rudd. The heath land is
hundred, Smallbnrgh union, North Walsham county court let and tlw proceeds are applied for the benefit of the poor.
district, rural deanery of Waxham Rapping division, arch- The soil is good mixed; subsoil, sand, gravel and clay. The
deaconry of Norfolk and diocese of Norwich; the parish, chief crops are wheat, oats, barley and turnips. The area is
which includes parts of HrcKLING and BARTON BROADS, is 2,375 acres; rateable value, £3,157; the population in r8gx
1

large and the houses are much scattered. The church of All was 590.
Saints is an ancient structure of flint and stone in the Parish Clerk, Augustus Myhill.
Decorated style, consisting of chancel, nave, aisles, south PosT & M. 0. 0., S. B. & Insurance & Annuity Office.-
porch and an embattled western tower containing 5 bells: a John Watson Huson, sub-postmaster. Letters arrive
carved oak screen separates the chancel and nave ; the seats from Stalham S.O. by mail-cart at 7.30 a.m.; dispatched
were re-arranged in 1852, and the nave was new roofed in at 2.45 p.m. & 5 p.m. Telegraph office at the st?.tion
x864: there are 395 sittings, of which 200 are free. The of collection & Stalham for delivery of telegrams. PILLAR
register dates from the year 1559. The living is a rectory, LETTER Box, at the Staithe, cleared at 2.40 & 5.30 p.m
average tithe rent-charge £456, net yearly value £4I2, in-
cluding r8 acres of glebe and residence, in the gift of the National School (mixed), erected in 1853 for roB children;
Bishop of Norwich and :Mrs. Lubbock, of Catfield Hall, average attendance, 72; Mrs. Eagle, mistress
alternately, and held since 1872 by the Rev. Arthur Brown Railway Station (Eastern & Midland), Richard Flaxman,
B.A. of St. John's College, Cambridge. Here is a small station master
Brown Rev. Arthur B.A. [rector Dawson Robert Greensmith, farmer Osborne William, White Horse inn
Lubbock Mrs. Catfield hall Emmerson Richard, shoe maker Page John, carpenter
McGuire Hev. William Hichard Bir- l''laxman Richard, station master Pigg Anna (Mrs.), farmer
mingham M. A Gibbs Sarah (Mrs.), shopkeeper Pollard George, market gardener
Schall Christian Frederick, Bleak house Hacon Edgar Henry, grocer & draper Riches John Ueo. corn mer. & farmer
Hammond Mary Ann (Mrs. ),Crown P.H Rudd Edna Maria (Miss), farmer,
COMMERCIAL. Huson John Watson, family grocer & Heath farm
Addy Edward, farmer tea dealer, draper, & general supply Salmon William ( exors. of), farmers
Baldwin John, bricklayer stores, Post office & landowners
Baldwin John, jun. bricklayer Leach Leonard, farm l9ailiff to Mrs. Slipper William, farmer
Barber William, farmer, landowner, Lubbock Spink Robert Henry, baker, corn, flour
merchant & brick & tile maker " Mace John, farmer & pollard merchant
Bean Jobn, farmer, Sharp street McJannet Hy. Fernie, travelling draper Strike John, market gardener
Beck John, farmer Myhill Augustus, carpenter Thompson Rebecca (Miss), shopkeeper,
Bensley Robert, butcher Myhill James, farmer, The Heath Wood street
Brooks Ern est, shoe maker N eve Edward, cattle salesman Thurgate Waiter, blacksmith
Bugg John, coal dealer Neve Jacob, farmer ·ward Wm. Fredk. farmer, Wood st
Burton Obadiab, horse trainer Newman James, coal dealer Watson Robert, farmer, Longmore
Chambers .Arthur, insurance agent Nickerson Benjamin, farm bailiff to Worts Augustine Jn. farmer, Sharp st
Christmas William, tailor J. Batchelor esq. Wood farm Wright Henry, farmer, Yew Side farm
Dawson George, farmer & landowner Orris Alfred, farmer
CATTON is a picturesque village and parish about 2 Hall, the seat of Samuel Gurney Buxton esq. D.L., J.P. is a
miles nortlL from Norwich, in the Eastern division of the modern mansion, standing in a picturesque and well-wooded
county, Taverham hundred and petty sessional division, St. park, containing a small herd of deer. Catton House, th6
Faith's union, ~orwich county court district, rural deanery seat of Col. Edwa.rd Berkeley Manse! J.P. is a mansion of
of Taverham and archdeaconry and diocese of Norwich : brick plastered, in the Italian style, pleasantly seated on a
this place forms a suburb to Norwich, and many merchants hill surrounded by a park of 36 acres, containing good
of that city have residences here. The church of St. Mar- flower gardens and some fine trees. The Elms, the seat of
garet is a structure of flint and stone, in the Early English Thomas Carter esq. is a modern residence standing in
style, consisting of chancel, nave, transepts, south aisle, grounds of six acres, with north and south lodges. Th6
south porch and an ancient . embattled western tower with Dean and Chapter of Norwich are lords of the manor.
o. circular base and octagonal belfry story, containing one Samuel Gurney Buxton esq. and George Gowing esq. of
bell : there are memorial windows to Augusta Hart, who Hill House, Lower Hellesdon, are the principal landowners.
died in I 847 ; Richard Hart, 39 years vicar of this parish, William (Richardson), 4th and last Baron Crarnund, of
1836-75, d. 1881; C. H. Chamberlin, d. 1873 ; Emma Honingham, died here 28 July, 1735, and was buried at
Rosetta Chamberlin; Gilbert J. Hart, d. 1854, and Charles East Walton. Elizabeth, his only sister and heiress, married
C. Hart, d. 1851, and a memorial window and mural tablet in Aug. 1735, William Jermy esq. and died in London
to various members of the Bignold family: in the transept I Aug. 1751. The soil is light and sandy; subsoil, gravel,
is a large marble monument to Hussy Greene, d. I719, and clay and limestone. The chief crops are of the usual kind.
Mary his wife, d. 1739 ; and there is also a fine monument The area is 9o6 acres ; rateable value, £4,243 ; the popula-
in the Gothic style, exhibited at the Crystal Palace in Hyde tion in 1891 was 1,og8.
Park in r851, to T. G. Adams esq. his wife and son: the Parish Clerk, John Eastoe.
church was enlarged and restored in r85o-2 at a cost of
nearly £1,000, and has 300 sittings: at the entrance to the PosT, PARCEL, M. 0. & T. 0., S. B. & Annuity & In-
churchyard is a handsome Iych gate. The register dates surance Office. -Henry Harrowven, sub-postmaster.
from the year r688. The living is a vicarage, gross tithe Letters arrive by mail cart from Norwich at 4-30 a.m. .11;
rent-charge £ 16o, average £120, with 17 acres of glebe, in 3 p.m. & are dispatched at 1.15, 6 & 7.30 p.m.; sundsy,
the gift of the Dean and Chapter of Norwich, and held since 6 p.m
1890 by the Rev. Arthur Tayler Hodgson B.A. of Queens' WALL LETTER BOXES : -
College, Cambridge. There are several bequests for the Near Catton Grove villas, cleared at q.15 a. m.& 12. 15, 3.25,
poor. The-charities amount to£ m 13s. 8d. yearly. Catton 6.15 & 8 p.m
DIRECTORY.] NORFOLK. CAWSTO~. 345
Church street, cleared at s.rs & 7 p.m
School, with reading-room, erected in 1874, at the sole

l
expense of S. Gurney Buxton esq. for 130 children;
average attendance, 102; Miss A. Poll, mistress
1 Manse! Col. Edward Berkeley J.P. Cat- Da vis on Rt. farm bailiff toG. Gowing esq
PRIV.A.TB RESIDENTS. ton house DayAlfd Fras.pork btchr.Rackham's fld
Bames Samuel, 6 Catton Grove villas Marsh William, White house Dennington William, market gardener
Bavin Benjamin, The Cottage Martin Harry Edwd.3 Catton Gro. viis Dixon Owen, farrner
Bebee Edwin, 14 Catton Grove villas Millard Miss Fish J ames Henry, shoe maker
Bell Ambrose Winter Overbury Waiter, The Firs Hannent Joseph Wm. market gardener
Boileau Col. George Wilson D.L., J.P., Rackham Thos.Jn.CarterM.D.TheGrove Harrowven Hy. blacksmith, Post office
F.R.G.S., F.R.Z.S Read William, The Oaks Howeld Henry, boot & shoe maker
Boyce John, The Grange Sidney Alfred Thompson,Beech cottage Lee James, baker
Bullard Fred Smith Frederick John, Belle Vue house Lowe Robert, Maid's Head P.H
Burrows Miss, 7 Catton Grove villas Stevens Mrs. 10 Catton Grove villas McEwen Samuel, travelling draper, I I
Buxton Samuel Gurney D.L., J.P. Steward Donald Catton Grove villas
Catton hall Waiter John Henry, Seven oaks .Mason John, brick maker
Carter Thomas, The Elms Walton William, 9 Cattun Grove villas ~ichols James, baker & grocer
Cooke Mrs. The Beeches Watling Henry, 2 Catton Grove villas Orris Alfred, farmer
Crowe Benjamin, Grove cot.Grove lane Wells Henry, Rose lodge Orsborn Ann a Maria (Mrs.), bricklayer
DawsonCol.AlgernonCecil J.P.Manor ho Wood George Inkerman, The Oaklands Orsborn Geo. Woodman P.H.& bricklayr
Gar.e Wm. Hy.Fernlee, CattonGrove rd COM~fRRCIAJ•. Os born Jas. fm. bailiff toS. G. Buxton esq
Guymer Mrs Attoe Geo. Wm. lime burner & farmer Pearson Geo. Robt. commercl. traveller
Halls Waiter William,Park Field villas, Attoe Hy.cowkeeper&assistant overseer Pearson Mary (Mrs.}, boot warehouse
Catton Grove road Attoe William, hme burner & carter Plowman Herbert,saddler & harness ma
Harper Mrs. Sunnyside Aus tin Ca tharine (Mrs.), laundry, Pont William, shoe maker
Harrison William, 4 Catton Grove vils Rackham's fields Rackham Mary (Mrs.), mrkt. gardener
Hart Mrs Badcock William Edward, blacksmith Rackham Thomas John Carter M.D.
Hines Charles John Edward, 16 Catton Betts Charles Os born, market gardener private lunatic asylum, The Grove
Grove villas Hid well Wm. farm bailiff to Col.Mansel Richardson J. E. coach builder
Hodgson Rev.ArthurTayler B.A.[vicar] Burdett Fk.firewood dlr.Rackham's flds Sewter Frederick, wheelwright
Hook Samuel John, I Catton Grove vis Burton Frederick, carpenter & shopkpr Tallowin William Frederick, farmer
Jackson Rev. Michael Satterthwaite, Clarke George, market gardener Welsh Charles, laundry
St. Paul's vicarage CunnellCharles, manufacturer of bricks Witham George, shopkeeper
Lake William, 15 Catton Grove villas tiles (Hoffmap's patent) & lime ; Woodhouse Eli, shopkeeper
Lubbock Misses postal address, 8 Newmarket road, Wrench GeorgeEmery,brick merchant,
Mackenzie-KennedyCapt. Herbert John, Norwich; works,Old Catton& Upper Lodge lane
Whiteside Hellesdon
CAWSTON is a parish and large village, with a station swords, 2r Aug. x6g8, with Mr. Oliver Le Neve, who fought
on the East Norfolk branch of the Great Eastern railway, with his left hand; Sir Henry, who was buried at Blickling,
and Bluestone station, on the Eastern and Midlands railway, the family seat, was the father of Sir John Hobart hart. first
is at the northern boundary of the parish, 2 miles north-by- Earl of Buckinghamshire. Three fairs are held-viz. on the
east from the village; it is 12 miles north-by-west from 1st of February and last Wednesday in April and August,
Norwich, 4 south-west from Aylsham and 127 from London, the latter of which is a large sheep fair. Col. William Earle_
in the Northern division of the county, South Erpingham Gascoyne Lytton Bulwer J.P. of Quebec House, East Dere..
hnndred and petty sessional division, Aylsham union and ham, and Heydon Hall, is lord of tbe manor and chief land-
county court district, rural deanery of Ingworth and arch- owner. The soil is mixed; subsoil, gravel and clay. The
deaconry and diocese of Norwich. The church of St. Agnes chief crops are wheat, roots, barley and hay. The area is
is a noble building of stone in the Perpendicular style, con- 4,296 acres; rateable value, £, 5, 159; the population in 18gx
sisting of chancel, nave, aisles, north and south porches, a was r,o68.
chapel for daily service and a massive western tower, con- PosT & M. 0. 0., S. B. & Annuity & Insurance Office.-
taining 6 bells : a very handsome rood screen divides the William Wakeford, receiver. Letters are received through
nave and chancel, and in the latter is some stained glass : Norwich at 6. xo a. m.; dispatched at 4.10 & 7-45 p.m.
the nave has a good hammer beam roof, but in need of The telegraph office is at the railway station for collection,
repair: there are 400 sittings. The register dates from the Reepham for delivery of telegrams
year 1558. The living is a rectory, average income from National School (mixed) : the school house was built at the
tithe rent-charge£792, with 12 acres of glebe and residence, expense of the late W. E. Lytton Bulwer esq. D.L., J.P. in
in the gift of Pembroke College, Cambridge, and held since 1874 & will hold r8o children ; average attendance, 140 ;
1855 by the Rev. Theodore Henry Marsh M. A. of that college. Herbert Plough, master ; Mrs. Plough, mistress ; Miss
There are Wesleyan and Primitive Methodist chapels. The Ellen Moore, infants' mistress
poor have u6 acres of land for fuel, on which the Aylsham Police Station, Arthur Alien, constable
volunteers have their range. On the bowling green at the
Woodrow inn, are two trees regarded as great curiosities, RAILWAY STATIONS:-
since not only every branch but every twig of these boars Cawston (G. E. Ry.), Rdgar Abraham Machen, station
leaves of three different kinds of trees-namely, oak, beech master
and hombeam. Near the same inn, on the Norwich road, Bluestone (E. & M.), Joseph Meal, station agent
stands a small stone pillar, erected on the spot where Sir CARRIERS TO & FROM NoRWICH.-Kybird, mon. wed. &
Henry Hobart bart. and M.P. for Norfolk, fell in a duel with sat. puts up at "Duke's Head,' Norwich
Blundertield Mrs Easton Isaac, farmer, Eastgate Jayler Robert, tailor
Gaff Henry Easton James, farmer, Wood farm Keeler Robert, mole catcher
George Mrs Easton Joseph, farmer, Eastgate Kiddell Jas. Jn. farmr. Beer House frm
Handcock William Raston Robert, farmer, Eastgate Laxton Susan (Mrs.), Woodrow P.H
Marsh Rev. Theodore Hy.M.A. Rectory Easton Thomas, cattle dealer, Eastgate Manthorpe Robert, Ship P.H
Raven Williarn Beverly Ellis George, White Horse P.H Massingham William,cooper & assistant
COMMERCIAL. Fuller Jn.Herbt. harness ma.Market pl overseer & tax collector
Allen Wm. shoe maker, Market hill Gaff Richard, shopkeeper, Eastgate Mears Amelia (Miss), dress maker
Applegate Chas.steward to Maj. Sapwell Galley Wm. Rat Catcher P. H. Eastgate Mears William, blacksmith
Austin James, farmer Gaskins John, King's Head P.H Newman William, florist & seedsman
Austin Sarah ('~\'Iiss), Lamb P.H Green Samuel K. butcher & farmer; & Newstead Edmund, shopkeeper
Austin William, butcher & farmer at Swaffham Ottway Arthur, blacksmith
Blyth Henry, farmer, Eastgate Grix George, farmer, Eastgate Ottway Thomas, blacksmith
Brett Harry Waite, shopkeeper Groom Samuel, farmer Phillipo Edwd.jun.frmr.BotanyBay fm
Carpenter Joseph, Prince of Wales P.H. Hall John, Bell P.H Phillipo Waiter, farmer, Woodrow frm
& shopkeeper Hall William, coal dealer Pye James, farmer & baker •
Clements James, farmer, Southgate Hardingham Elizabeth(Miss),dress ma Pye Mary Ann (Mrs.), baker
Corner James, shoe maker Hickling John Shepheard, auctioneer, Russell George, watch maker
Davison Herbert Keeler, wheelwright & estate agent&farmer; & at Haver land Russell Mary (Miss), baker
beer retailer Howard Christopher, farmer, White ho Russell Thomas, butcher & farmer
Dewing Charles, farmer Howard Edward, draper Sapwel!Benj. Beckham,fmr.Doeking fm
Dewing John, carpenter Howard Fdk. Charles, grocer & draper Seely James Leman, farmer
Dnnn Major, painter & plumber Howard William Arthur, builder Shreeve Thomas, corn&; coal merchant
Dunn Waiter, fishmonger Hunt Philip, watch maker SmithFrederick, farmer, Church farm
346 CAWSTOY. :KORFOLK. (RELLY S
1

Spencer .'Tames, farmer, Eastgate Wakeford William, draper, & agent for Wells Alex. miller(wiud) &c. Southgaw
Townsend Robert, farmer, Eastgate W. & A. Gilbey, wine & spirit mer- White William Frankland, saddler; &
Tuck Benjamin, blacksmith chants, Post office at Aylsham. See advertisement
Tuddenham John, farmer, Eastgate Watts William, grocer & hardware dlr Woods Samuel, farmer
CHEDGRAVE is a parish and village on the north bank yearly value £2o6, with 4 acres of glebe and residence, in
of the river Chet or Ket, adjoining Loddon, 9 miles south- the gift of Sir R. W. Proctor-Beauchamp hart. and held since
east from Norwich, 5 miles south-east from Buckenham 1853 by the Rev. Henry Alfred Barrett H.A.. of St. John's
station on the Norwich and Yarmouth railway, in the College, Cambridge, and of Worcester College, Oxford, who
Southern division of the county, Loddon hundred and Lad- is also vicar of Langley and rural dean of Brooke, eastern
don and Clavering petty sessional division and union, county division. Sir Reginald William Proctor-Beauchamp bart.
court district of Beccles and Bungay, rural deanery of who is lord of the manor, the Master of St. Peter's College,
Brooke, eastern division, archdeaconry of Norfolk and diocese Cambridge, for the time being and J. Wilson Gilbert esq.
of Norwich. The church of All Saints is a smll.ll but ancient are the chief landowners. 'fhe Manor House is occupied by
structure in the Norman style, consisting of chancel, nave, Reginald Northall-Laurie esq. The soil is mixed; subsoil,
north aisle and an eastern tower covered with thatch and sand, gravel and clay. The chief crops are wheat, oats and
containing one bell: its windows display some rich stained barley. The area is 1,432 acres ; rateable value, £1,743 ;
glass, brought by a· former Lady Proctor Beauchamp from the population in 1881 was 368.
Rouen Cathedral, after the French Revolution in 1797, and Parish Clerk, Henry Balls.
the arches of the doorways are fine specimens of Nor man ·
work~ restorations were effected in the chancel in 1872 , at Letters received through Norwich, arrive at 8 a.m. LETTER
a cost of £140; a porch has been erected to the late Gen. Box cleared 11~ 3.30 p.m. Loddon is the nearest money
John Barrett, of H. M. Indian army, and the church order & telegraph office
reseated with oak benches: there are now 150 sittings, roo National School (mixed), erected, with teacher's residence,
being free. The register dates from the year rsor. The in 1856, for 70 children; average attendance, 48; & snp-
liYing is a rectory, average tithe rent-charge £r68, gross ported in part by Lady Proctor-Beauchamp
Barrett Rev. Henry Alfd. M. A. Rectory Tibbenham Edward Hoddy Jamcs,carpcnter, wheelwright &
Hoddy Edgar .Armsby Clement, well sinker blacksmith
Kidgell Rev. Francis B.A. [curate in 1 Carver James, farmer B.upton Fredcrick, bricklayer
charge of Hardley] r.risp Charles & John, bricklayers Snelling Samuel, boot & shoe maker
Northall-Laurie Reginald,Manor house Garrood Chas.Jn. grocer & linen drapr Tills .Albert, market gardener '
Packer RobertWaldegrave, The Cottage Gaff Johnson, shopkeeper Turner George, White Horse P.H
CHOSELEY is a parish, formerly extra-parochial, 3 the rector of that place has an acre of land here. The land
miles north-by-west from Docking station on the L:rnn and here, consisting of about 67oacres, occupied by Mrs. Merrick
Wells railway, and 5 west from Burnham Market, in the Bircham-Bircham, is the property of Eustace Neville Rolfe
North Western division of tbe county, Docking union, esq. J .P. of Ileacham flail. The soil is chalky; subsoil, chiefly
Smithdon and Brothercross petty sessional division and chalk; rateable value, £463 ; the population in 1891 was ro.
county court district of Little Walsingham. The inhabitants Letters are received through Lynn, via Docking, which is
have the privilege of attending Titchwell church, for which the nearest money order & telegraph office
Bircham Merrick Bircham (Mrs.), farmer, Choseley farm
CLAXTON is a village and parish, 7 miles east from Here is a Baptist chapel, with ll.burial ground of old stand-
Norwich and 2 south from Buckenham station on the Nor- ing. The poor's land consists of 6A. 3R. the glebe of 3A. 2R.
wich and Lowestoft railway, in the Southern division of the and there 1s a town estate of 5 acres for the repairs of the
county, Loddon hundred, Loddon and Clavering petty church. A market and fair were anciently held here. The
sessional division and union, Norwich county court district, manor house is now occupied as a farmhouse by Mr. N. H.
rural deanery of Brooke, western division, grchdeaconry of Hayward. Near the manor house are the ruins. of an earlier
Norfolk and diocese of Norwich. The church of St. Andrew castellated mansion. Sir Charles Henry Stuart Rich bart.
is an edifice of flint in a debased style, consisting of chancel, who is lord of the manor, the Rev. C. Chapman and the
nave, south porch and a western tower containing 3 bells; rector, are the chief landowners. The soil is a mixed loam;
the chancel, rebuilt in 1867, by the trustees of Sir Charles subsoil, gravel, with marshes adjoining the river Yare.
H. Stuart Rich hart.. (then a minor), contains an interesting The chief erops are wheat, barley and roots. The area is
tomb with inscription, to the Gawdy family, dated l620, 981 acres; rateable value, £973; the population in r88r
and a tablet to the Rev. Stephen Webster, a former rector, was 204. ·
wl1o died in 1837 : there ar~ roo sittings, So being free. The Parish Clerk, Mark Fuller.
early registers have long been lost; the earliest now existing Letters thr<mgh Norwich & Thurton arrive at 8.30 a.m.
dates from the year 1747. The living is a limited rectory, Loddon is the nearest money order & telegraph office.
tithe rent-charge £47• average £43, gross yearly value £so, WALL LETTER Box cleared at 3.30 p.m ·
including 10 acres of land lying in Bracon ~sh, in the gift National School (mixed), erected in 1848, for 28 children;
of Sir C. H. Stuart Rich hart. and held since 1862 by the average attendance, 28 ; a teacher's residence was added
Rev. George Gilbert M.A. of Emmanuel College, Cambridge. in 1857; Miss Mary Swann, mistress
Gilbert Rev. George M.A. [vicar], Clax- Chapman Frederick George, miller Fuller Jane (Mrs.), shopkeeper
ton grange (wind & steam) & corn merchant Goddard Sarah Ann (Mrs.), farmer
Hayward Nolson Hylton, Manor house Durrant John, farmer · HaywardNelsonHylton,frmr.Manorho
Ellis William, blacksmith Hunter William, shopkeeper
COMMERCIAL. Farr'lw John, market gardener Long Robert (Mrs.), market gardener
Allum John, shopkeeper Fish .Jane (Mrs.), market gardener Parsons Rebecca (Mrs.), Claxton Folly
CLENCHWARTON is a village and parish. wit.h a purchased in 1850 by the preient owner, W. D. Harding
station on the Lynn and Sutton Bridge branch of the Mid psq. of Islington, in this county, from the Eau Brink Corn·
land and Great Northern joint railway, 2 miles west from missioners. Thomas Edward Bagge esq. D.L., J.P. of Gay-
Lynn by ferry and 3 by road, in the North Western divi- wood Hall, Lynn, J. B. Monck esq. the Duke of Portland P.C.
sion of the county, hundred and petty sessional division of Miss Esther Tipple, Thomas Samuel Stevenson esq. William
Freebridge Marshland, union of Wisbech, county court dis- Mountain esq. William Looker esq. and the trustees of the
trict of Lynn, rural deanery of Lynn Marshland, and arch- late John Wellingham esq. are the principal landowners.
deaconry and diocese of Norwich. The church of St. Mar- The soil is strong clay; subsoil) loamy. The chief crops are
garet is an ancient building of stone in the Perpendicular wheat, oats, beans, peas &c. and some land in pasture..
style, consisting of chancel, nave, south porch and an em- The area is 2,854 acres; rateable value, £,s,oro; the popu-
battled western tower contaimng 5 bells: there are two lation in 1891 was 6o8. By the Divided Parishes Act parts
stained windows and the church affords 140 sittings, II.') of this parish were amalgamated with North Lynn and West
being free. The register dates from the year 1720. The Lynn.
living is a rectory, average tithe rent-charge £374; gross Parish Clerk, George Griggs.
yearly value £442, including 28 acres of glebe, with resi- PosT OFFICE,~Mrs . .Ann Sutton, receiver. Letters arrive
dence, in the gift of Mrs. E. S. Harris, of Bury St. Edmunds, from Lynn at 7 a. m. & 12.50 p.m. ; dispatched at ro. 15
and held since 1888 by the Rev. Charles Upwood Manning a. m. & 6.40 p.m. The nearest money order office is at
M.A. of Trinity College, Cambridge. Thete are Methodist West Lynn &; telegraph office at Lynn, Postal orders are
New Connexion and Primitive Methodist chapels; the latter, issued here, but not paid
erected in r88r, has xoo sittings. The charities amount to National School (mixed), built in 1846, for II7 children;
£5 yearly. The salt marshes of this parish extend to the average attendance, 84; George William Rowlands,
Wash, between Terrington and North Lynn. The Islington master; Mrs . .Agnes Row lands, mistress
Lodge estate, which extends into this parish, was reclaimed Railway Station, Zachariah Goodale, !'ltation master
from land formerly part of the bed of the river Ouse, and CARRIER TO LYNN-Minns, tues. & thurs
DIRECTORY.] NORFOLK. CLIPPESBY. 347
Looker William, Bankland hall Cain Ann (Mrs.), farmer · Jackson Rubt. beer retlr. & blacksmith
Manning Rev. Charles Upwood M.A. Collison Charles, farmer Looker William, farmer, landowner &
[rector], Rectory Collison Edmund, farmer seed grower, Bankland hall
Shepherd Joseph, Elm house Collison Wm. farmer,Ea.stAnglian farm Marshall Sml.Nicholas(exors.of),farmer
Stevenson Thos. Saml. Wildfield home Deans William, Black .Horse P. H · Mountain William, farmer & landownr
'fipple Miss, The Poplars Emmcrson Robert, farm bailiff to the Overton Hcnjamin, William & George.
COMMll:RCIAL. exors. of the late John Wellingham farmers, Church farm
Barnes John, wholesale potato dealer esq. Margaretta farm Rush Thomas, market gardener
Benmngton James, Shetland Pony P.H Fox Abraham, farmer Sheriff Arthur, shoe maker
Bartle Franeis, farmer l''ox Edwd. farmer & .surveyor of roads Tipple Esther (Miss), farmer & land-
Boon Samuel, beer retailer & blacksmth Fox Robert, farmer, White house owner, The Poplars & Waterloo frms
Bowden Thomas, farmer & grocer Goodale Zachariah, station ma:;ter Tipple Frederick, shopkeeper
Buokingham John, Victory P.H Griggs George, parish clerk Tipple Thos. butcher&horse slaughterer
Butter John, farmer Goss John, farmer Young Charles Valentine, farmer
'
CLEY-NEXT-THE-SEA is a coast town and parish and held since x884 by the Rev. Everett Bishop B.A. of
on the river Glaven, 1 mile east from Blakeney, ro miles Christ's College, Cambridge. The Free Methodist chapel
east from Wells, 12 west from Cromer and 4 north-north- was built in 1839, the Primitive Methodist chapel (formerly
west from Holt station on the Eastern and Midlands railway, a cottage) was converted to its present purpose about x837.
in the Northern division of the county, Holt hundred, petty Here was formerly a market held on Sa:turday. In qo6
sessional division and county court district, Erpingham James, son of Robert Bruce, King of Rcotland, being on a.
union, rural deanery of Holt and archdeaconry and diocese vdyage to France, was driven by stress of weather on to this
of Norwich. The town is lighted with oil by a committee. coast, and detained by tM mariners of Cley, who sent him
The harbour here is both narrow and shallow, and forms in prisoner to London. The chief trade carried on in this
its course to the sea a junction with the Rlakeney channel : place is in coal, oilcake, malt and manure. William Hardy
the custom house for this and the neighbouring ports is now Cozens-Hardy esq. J. P. of Letheringsett, is lord of the
rem()ved to Lynn. The church of St. Margaret is a noble manor anQ chief landowner, and is owner of Cley Hallp
structure of flint with stone dressings in the Decorated style, which is occupied by his eldest son, Clement William Hardy
consisting of chancel, clerestoried nave, aisles, north and Cozens-Hardy esq . .T.P. The soil is light;, subsoil, clJ,alk.
south porches and nn embattled tflwer, supposed to have The chief crops are on the four-course system. The area
been built in the reign of Henry VI. and containing r bell : is 2,198 acres of laud and x65 of water ; rateable value,
the transept and west porch are in ruins: in the church are £3,380; the population in x8gx was 712.
, several old tombs aQd brasses, among which, in the north Sexton, George Clark. r
aisle, is a brass with effigy of a priest to John Yslington, ob. PosT, M. 0. & T. 0., S. B. & Annuity & Insurance Office.-
1429: and in the south aisle is a. fine brass with effigies in Ed ward Hudson, postmaster. Letters received through
shrouds and seven out of nine scrolls inscribed" nalll tltus:" Dereham at 7·5 a. m. & dispatched at 5·5 p.m. The box
to John Symonds, merchant, ob. r5o8, and Agnes his wife, closes at 4·55 p.m q
ob. 1512, with eight children : there al'e also brasses with PlJBLIC ESTADLISIDIENTS : -
effigie~ to a civilian, ~- r4f)o, his wife and six sons ; Henricus Cley Lighting Committee, Edwar'd Hudson, clerk
Barn • • • priest; Robert Taylor, ob. 1578; and Thomas Clcy Reading Room, Benjamin Moor house, hon. sec
Greve, ob. 1613 : in the churchyard is the altar tomb of Cley Volunteer Life Saving Apparatus Company (25 m!ln), ,
Captain John Grieve, who assisted Sir Cloudcsley Shovel in Samuel Elliott, commission boatman '
burning the· ships in the port of Tripoli, in Barbary, in r676; A School Board of 5 members was formed here, January gr,
the font is a curious and beautifully sculptured work of the 1874, Edward Hudson, clerk & attendance officer to the
13th century, representing the seven saeraments of the board .
Catholic church; the finely carved oak pulpit dates from Board School (mixed), bui1t in Y86o, at a cost of £7oo, as a.
r6n: in the sacrarium under the preseut·communion table British school & opened 1875 as a Board, for t6o chil-
is an ancient stone altai" slab, bearing on it the usual five dren; average attendance, 120; Hcnjamin Moorhousc,
consecration crosses : iu the chancel are six old oak seats master ; Miss Harbara S. N ewman, mistress
with carved Pliscrercs: the church affords 200 sittings. CARRIERS 'l'O : - •
The register dates from the year 1538. The living is a WELLS, Edward Dawes, wed. & sat J

rectory, average titho rent-charge £316, net yearly value NoRWICH, Walker, of Blakeney, mon. & thurs.; returning
£307, with 20 acres of glebe and residence, in the gift of tues. & sat
Bishop Rev. Everett B. A. Rectory Clcy Tea & Coffee Rooms (Herbert . Page & Turner, corn, coal, cake, seed &.
Bishop Rev. George William [United Starling, hon. sec) · 1 manure mers.~ & at Blakeney& IIolt
Methodist Free Church], Randalls Cley Reading Room Society (Benjamin i PashleyHy.Nash,painter&bird preservr
buildings Moorhouse, hon. sec) Pinchen Charles, butcher
Cozens-Hardy Clemeht William Hardy Coe John, basket maker Pitcher William, baker
J.P. Cley hall Dawes Edward, carrier Proudfoot Jane (Mrs.), earthenware
M:itchell Mrs Eke Anthouy, builder dealer, & apartments
Porritt James William Fox James, master mariner Randall Laurence,George &Dragon htl
Porter Mrs Frost John, farmhailiff to Clement Wm. Randall William, master mariner
Sands Mrs Hardy Cozens-Hardy esq. Hall farm Reeve William, baker
Stangroom Frederick Harvey James, beer retailer Sands James Leonard, master mariner
Starling Stephen Hudson Edward, stationer, & fancy Stangroom Frederick, grocer, draper,"
Sumpter Walter M.P repository, Post office chemist &druggist,clothier,stationer,
Wordingham Thomas Jarvis Samuel, carpenter · ironmonger & wine merchant
COMMERCIAL. Kerrison Francis, Fishmongers' Arms Stangroom James, earthenware dealer;
Alien Ephraim, farm bailiff to William hotel. See advertisement ' tailor & photographer
J. J. Holding esq Lee George, jun. farmer Starhng Stephen, grocer, draper, wine
Alien Robert, farmer, Newgate farm Lee George, sen. blacksmith merchant & registrar of marriages
Anderson John, King's Head P.H Leeder Robert John, butcher Sumpter Walter M. D. surgeon,&; modi-
Bastard John, painter Lewis Robert William, master mariner, cal ofticer,Cley-next-the-Sea district,
.Hiyth Elizabeth (Mrs.), pork butcher Hill house Erpingham union,& surgeon & agent
Burroughes Stephen Barnaba.s, miller Lown William, farmer to the Admiralty ·
(wind), baker & coal & corn mer- Mann William, lodging house Taylor Esther (Miss),farmr.Swanlodge
chant; & at Halt & Langham . Massingham Francis, Swallows P.H Temple Henry, blacksmith
Brett Howard,carpenter & wheelwright Matthews Arthur, master mariner West Alfred, gamekeeper to Clement
Brown Thomas, hawker Moy Frederick, master matiner William Hardy Cozcns-Hardyesq.J.P
Clarke Thomas, boot maker N overre Elizabeth & Louisa (Misses), West Isaac, gamekpr. to WilliamHardy
Cley Lighting Committee (Edwa.rd ladies' school Cozens-Hardy esq.l.P.ofLetheringsctt
Hudson, clerk .- Parker Henry Nichols~ butcher 1 Winn Samuel, farmer & lime turner
CLIPPESBY is 11. parish 3 miles south-west from the stone in the Norman and Early English styles, consisting of
Martham station on the Eastern and Midlands ra.ilw&y and chancel, aave, $outh porch and an embattled western tawer
3! miles east-by-n,ortl~ from Acle station on the Norwich and with an octagonal belfry stage, containing one bell: in the
Yarmouth section o.f the Great Eastern railway, extending church are two ancient brasses, one of which, to a. member
to the river Bure, ·15 north-east from Norwieh, 9 north-west of the Qlippesby family, is dated r594; the other, to the
from Yarmouth, in the Eastern division of the county, in cor- Palliuga family, is dated 1_508 : two good Norman doorways
porated hundred, petty sessional division and incorporation s\ill eldst 1 in 1875 the church was restored, and the tower
of East and West Flegg, CO].Inty court district of Yarmouth, raised 6o feet; and in 1891 the chancel was exquisitely
rural deanery of Flegg and archdeaconry and diocese of Nor- painted and dCCQrated at the expense of John Parkin son Hall
wich. The church of St_ Peter is an ancient building of esq. of Yarmouth: there are zoo sittings. The register
348 CLIFPESBY.. NORFOLK. (KELt.Y's
dates from the year 1732. The living is a rectory, tithe crops are wheat, oats and barley. The area is about 86t
rent-charge £246, gross yearly value£ 25b, including 3 acres acres; rateable value, £1,494: the population in 1891 was
of glebe, in the gift of and held since r86o by the Rev. 133·
!Ulnry Joseph Muskett M.A. of St. Peter's College, Cam- LETTER Box cleared at 5.30 p.m. Letters through Yar.
bridge, who is lord of the manor and principal landowner, mouth arrive at 8 a. m. Martbam & Acle are the nearest
and owns Clippesby House, a mansion of white brick, stand- money order & telegraph offices
ing on rising ground, with commanding prospects over a
large extent of country, andnowoccupied byWalpoleEdwin The children of this place attend the school at Burgh St.
Eyre esq. The soil is light loam; subsoil, clay. The chief Margarets
.Eyre Waiter Edwin, Clippesby house Dawson James, collar maker Harmer John, cowkeeper
Muskett Rev. Henry J oseph M. A. Dawson Elizabeth (Mrs.), shopkeeper Thurtle John, farmer
Lrector], The Rectory
COCKLEY CLEY is a parish 4 miles south-west from Yorker's, Bagge's dole and some others; amounting in all to
Swaffham station, in the South Western division of the about £4r yearly, principally for fuel. Cley Hall, the seat
county, ~outh Greenhoe hundred and petty sessional divi- of Richard Buckworth esq. lord of the manor and principal
sion, Swaffham union and county court district, rural dean- landowner, and erected in 187o-1, is a large mansion of red
ery of Cranwich, north division,arcbdeaconry of Norfolk and brick with stone facings in the It..alian style, standing in a
diocese of Norwich. The village consists of a few detached well-wooded park, in which there is a fine lake. The soil is
houses. The church of .All Saints is an ancient edifice of sandy; subsoil, loam. The chief crops are wheat, barley~
flint and stone in the Early English style, consisting of chan- turnips and pasture. The area is 3,939 acres, one-third
eel, nave, aisles, south porch and a round embattled west- of which is heath; rateable value, £,1,466; and the popula·
ern tower containing one bell: there are 250 sittings. tion in 1891 was 22r.
The register dates from the year 173I. The living is a Sexton, James Fuller.
rectory, average tithe rent-charge l, 137, net yearly value PosT 0FFICE.-Miss Mary Ann Wegg, receiver. Letters
£171, including 7 acres of glebe, with residence, in the gift of arrive from Swaffham at 6.50 a. m. & dispatched at 6
the trustees of the late T. R. Buck worth esq. and held since p.m. ; sundays at 10.45 a. m. Beachamwell is the near-
1879 by the Rev. John William Dolignon B.A. of Balliol Col- est money order & Swaffham the nearest telegraph offica
lege, Oxford. The ancient chapel of St. Mary has been National School (mixed), for so children; average attend-
desecrated, and is now a cottage. The charities include ance, 30 ; Miss Ellen Knox, mistress
Buckworth Richard, Cley hall Francis George, gardener to R. Buck- Osborne William, farmer
Dolignon Rev. John Wm. B.A. Rectory worth esq Rushbrooke Frank, farm bailiff to H. ,
BeartWm.gamekpr.to R.Buckworthesq Jones Arthur, blacksmith Buckworth esq
Denny Isaac, Cock P.H. Needham Frederick, farm bailiff toR. Wegg Mary .Ann (Miss), shopkeeper,
Freestone Samuel, farmer,Rowley farm Buckworth esq Post office
COCKTHORPE is a village and parish about 5 miles by the Rev. Richard Henry Tillard M.A. of St. John's Col-
east-south-east from Wells and 5 north-east from Walsing- lege, Cambridge, who resides at Blakeney. Cockthorpe Wall
ham stations, in the Northern division of the county, North the birthplace of three distinguished admirals of the 17th
Greenhoe hundred and petty sessional division, Walsingham century, viz. Sir Cloudesley Shovel, in 1650, Sir John Nar-
union and county court district, rural deanery of Walsing- borough and Sir Christopher .Minus. Here are some re-
ham and archdeaconry·and diocese of Norwich. The church mains of a once magnificent residence, last occupied by John
()f All Saints, which is chiefly in the Early English style, Calthorpe esq. an ancestor of the present Lord Calthorpe,
consists of a long chancel, nave, south aisle, south porch and who is lord of the manor and chief landowner. The soil
a tower containing one bell: in the south aisle are ancient is mixed ; subsoil, marl and clay. The chief crops are
monuments and brasses to Sir John Calthrope, knight, wheat and turnips. The area is 514 acres ; rateable value,
ob. 1615, and Dame Barbara, his wife, ob. 1639 : the seats are £639; in 1891 the population was 67.
carved with the date 1642 : the churct was repaired in Parish Clerk, Elijah Bates.
I 839, and has So sittings. The register dates from the year
xs6o. The living is a rectory, annexed with the perpetual LETTER nox cleared at 3.20 p.m. Letters through Wells,
curacy of Glandford to the rectory of Blakeney, joint gross which is the nearest money order & telegraph office
yearly value £500, including 100 acres of glebe, with resi- The children of this place attend the schools at Stiffkey &
deuce, in the gift of Lord Calthorpe, and held since 1858 Binham
I
Case James, farmer, Seaview & Manor ColmanWm.faxm bailiff to Jas. Case esq
House farmB ; & at the Hall, Stiffkey
COLBY is a parish and village 3~ miles north-east from the gift of Lord Suffield K.C.B., P.C. and held since r889 by
.Aylsham station on the East Norfolk branch of the Great the Rev. Andrew Douglas JohnstoneRobinson B.A. of Trinity
Eastern railway and 3 miles from Aylsham Town station on College, Dublin. Richard Snelling of Colby, yeoman, left
the Eastern and Midlands railway, in the Northern division £1 to be distributed among the aged poor, every Christmas
()f the county, South Erpingham hundred and petty sessional day, and£ 1 ws. every Eas~er day to clothe four poor child-
division, Aylsham union and county court district, rural ren of the parish, and charged two closes of his land in the
deanery of Ingworth and archdeaconry and diocese of Nor- north field of Colby to secure the payment of the legacies.
wich. The church of St. Giles is a structure of flint in the Lord Suffield K.C.B., P.C. is lord of the manor and prmcipal
Perpendicular style, consisting of chancel, nave, south porch landowner. The soil is mixed ; subsoil, gravel and clay.
and a western tower with pinnacles containing one bell: the The chief crops are wheat, oats and barley. The area is
east window is filled with ancient stained glass, selected by 1, roiA. 3R. 35P. ; rateable value, £1,798 ; the population in
the Rev. George Coleby, rector from x8o2, who also pre- x88r was 241.
sented the altar piece, representing Moses and Aaron: the Parish Clerk, Benjamin Harmer.
font is beautifully carved with figures of the Evangeli~ts: LETTER Box cleared at 3 . ~ 5 p.m. Letters through Nor-
there are memorial marble tablets to the Colby and Roper wich, via Aylsham, which is the nearest money order &
families : in r8go the chancel was redecorated, the commu- telegraph office, arrive at . 45
nion table raised and enlarged and a memorial tablet of 7
marble erected to the Rev. Edward Maynard Goslett, late The parish is contributory to the Felmingham United School
rector (1870-89), who died 1 June, 1889: the church affords Board district, sending one member
200 sittings. The register dates from the year 1552. The Board School (mixed), erected in x83o, for r64 children;
living is a rectory, average tithe rent-charge £274, gross average attendance, 140; Henry Colegate, master; Mrs.
yearly value £279, with 7 acres of glebe and residence, in Anna Colegate, mistress
Robinson Rev. Andrew Douglas John- Corner Isaac, farmer Neave James, farmer
stone B. A. [rector], Rectory Gaze George, farmer Pratt Richard, farmer
Dunning Wm. farmer & horse dealer, Harmer Benjamin, shopkeeper Slaughter John, shopkeeper
Manor farm Neave Francis, carpenter & farmer Wortley Robert, farmer
COLKIRK is a parish and village seated on a height, chancel, nave, north aisle, south porch and an embattled
and commands a fine prospect, about 2 miles south from western tower containing 5 bells: in the church are
Fakenham station on the Wells and Dereham railway, in memorials to Nicholas Timperley, ob. 1664; William
the Mid division of :the county, Launditch hundred, union Timperley, ob. 166o ; Ann Barker, ob. 1662; Thomas Martin
and petty sessional division of Mitford and Launditch, county M. A. 46 years rector of this parish, who died November
court district of East Dereham, rural deanery of North 28th, x8x5, and to Catherine, his wife, who died March
Brisley and Toftrees and archdeaconry and diocese of 19th, 1793: there are several stained windows, and the
Norwich. The church of St. Mary the Virgin ia a small church affords 25~ sittings. The register dates from the
and plain building of tlint, in the Gothic style, consisting of year 1538. The living is a rectory, consolidated in 1883
I
DIRECTORY.] NORFOLK. COL TISHALL. 349
'With Oxwick, commuted joint tithe rent-charge £704 ; Parish Clerk, William Smith.
average £536, joint net yearly value £529, including 81
acres of glebe, with residence, in the gift of and held since PosT OFFICE. -Mrs. Ann Sparrow, receiver. Letters
1868 by tbe Rev. Walter Marsham Hoare M.A. of Exeter through Fakenham arrive at 6.30 a.m. & 6 p.m. ; dis-
O!llege, Oxford, rural dean of North Brisley with Toftrees. patched at S-I5 p.m. week days only. Fakenham is the
There is a Primitive Methodist chapel here. The charities nearest money order & telegraph office. Postal orders
amount to £45 yearly, principally for fuel. The Marquess are issued here, but not paid
Townshend is lord of the manor and principal landowner.
The soil is mixed; subsoil, clay. The chief crops are wheat, National School (mixed), erected in 1847 for 114 children;
turnips and barley. The area is 1,466 acres; rateable average attendance, 106; William Ely, master
value, £1,980; the population in I891 was 438. •

Chambers Miss, Colkirk hall Colkirk Co-operative Society Limited Howe Elizabeth (Mrs.), Crown P.H
1

Chambers Mrs. The Cottage (Henry High, sec) Nelson Alfred, shopkeeper
Hoare H.ev. Walter l\Iarsham M.A. Dunn William, boot & shoe maker Nelson James, builder & contractor
[rector], Rectory GoS!gs Thomas Richard, farmer; res. RavenEiizh.&Mary Arm(Misses),farmrs
Pope Stephen Ratcliffe, Colkirk house Fakenham Spinks Charles, baker
Green Jaines, farmer Woods ''Villiam Henry,

fanner
COMMERCIAL. Harper George, basket maker WrightMatthew, beer retlr.&blacksmith
Antingham James, farmer High Henry, wheelwright
COLNEY is a parish, pleasantly seated on a height near Rev. William N ottidge Riplcy M.A. of Caius College, Cam-
the river Yare, on the road.from Norwich to Watton, 3 miles bridge, who is also vicar of and resides at E'l.rlham. A
west from Norwich, in the Southern division of the county, Parish Room has been erected here. Colney Hall, a man-
Swainsthorpe petty sessional division, hundred of Humble- sion standing on the summit of a hill, commands an
yard, union of Henstead, county court district of Norwich, extensive view, embracing some magnificent scenery, and
rural deanery of Humbleyard, archdeaconry of Norfolk and is now the property of J. Nigel Gurne~· esq. of Sprowston
diocese of Norwich. The church of St. Andrew is a small Hall (who is lord of the manor and principal landowner)
and plain building of flint, in the Perpendicular style, con· but is occupied by Hugh Gurney Barclay esq. J. P. The
sisting of chancel, nave, south porch and a round western soil is light and sandy; subsoil, marl, clay and gravel. The
tower containing 2 bells: there are two memorial windows, chief crops are wheat, oats, barley and turnips. The area is
erected in 1875, to Joseph Scott esq. n.L.: the church was 894 acres, in three farms; rateable value, [1,397; the
restored in 1886, at an expense of £I,ooo, and the chancel population in 1891 was Il7.
refitted under the direction of Mr. H. J. Green, architect, Parish Clerk, John Burcham.
of Norwich, as o. memorial to the Rev. John Hervey Payne PosT OFFICE.-John Russell Bowman, receiver. Letters are
JU.. late rector (1849-84), who died in 1885: there are 120 delivered from ~orwich at 7·I5 a.m.; dispatched at 5·35
sittings. The register dates from the year 174I. The living p.m. (excepting sunday). Eaton is the nearest money
is a rectory, average tithe rent-charge [170, gross yearly order & telegraph office
value £r8s, including 39 acres of glebe, with residence, in The children of this parish attend the Board school at Little
the gift of J. Nigel Gurney esq. and held since 1885 by the Melton
Barclay Hugh Gurney J.P. Colney hall Chapman William, farm bailiff to I MakensWilliam, farmer & cattle dealer
Bowman John Russell, blacksmith & Messrs. R. Makens & Sons WilsonJohnStrange,farmr. TheOld hall
wheelwright, Post office
COLTISHALL is a parish and small town on the high inhabitants. Coltisha.ll Hall, the seat of Richard Rogers
road between Norwich and North Walsham, and on the left esq. M.A., J.P. is a handsome mansion, near the centre of
bank of the river Bure, with a station on the branch of the the village, and commands a fine view of the surrounding
East Norfolk Western Extension railway from Wroxham to country, including the river Bure. The Master and Fellows
Aylsham, 7 miles north from Norwich, in the Eastern of King's College, Cambridge, who are lords of the manor,
division of the county, South Erpingha.m hundred and petty George William Danby Palmer-Kerrison e.sq. J. P. of the
sessional division, Aylsham union and county court district, Priory, Ran worth, and Mrs. Burroughes are the chief land-
rural deanery of Ingworth and archdeaconry and diocese of owners. The soil is sand and gravel: subsoil, chalk. The
Norwich. The church of St. John the Baptist is a building chief crops are wheat, barley and turnips. The area is
of flint, in the Early English style, consisting of chancel, I,I8o acres ; rateable value, £3,639; the population in
nave, south ai,sle, north porch, and a.n embattled western 1891 was 9o6.
tower, nearly 70 feet high, containing a clock, presented in Parish Clerk, Frederick John Starling.
1877, by R. A. Gorrell esq. and 6 bells: the west doorway PosT, M. 0. & T. 0., S. B. & Annuity & Insurance Office.-
a.nd battlements of the tower are curiously enriched with Jarnes Alderton, postmaster. Letters through Norwich
rude figures: the church was restored in 1865 by sub- arrive at 5 a. m. & 2.15 p.m. & are dispatched thereto at
scription, at a cost of {;900, the cost of repairing the chancel 12.30 a.rn. & 5· 10 & 8. IS p.m
being defrayed by the H.ev. Joseph Thackeray M. A. late PunLIC EsTABLISHMENTS:-
rector (1846-Bo): a vestry was added in 1877, at the joint Aylsham Navigation Co. Elijah Bircham, collector of
expense of R. A. Gorrell esq. and the rector : there are 400 tonnage dues
sittings, 100 being free. The register dates from the year Cottage Hospital, Miss Kate O'Brien, nurse
1558. The living is a rectory, consolidated in 188o with Reading & Mutual Improvement Society, Sir Edward Birk-
that of Great Hautbois, average tithe rent-charge £165, beck bart. M.P. president; Major Archdale, hon. sec
joint net yearly value £400, with I2 a~res of glebe in the Fire Brigade, Robcrt H. Starling, superintendent,& 16 men
gift of and held since I858 by the Rev. John Colk Girling A School Board of 5 members was formed June 24, 1872,
II.A. of Caius College, Cambridge, who resides at Great · for the united district of Coltishall & Great Hautbois;
Hautbois. There are Wesleyan and Free Methodist H. H. Cole, London street, Norwich, clerk to the Board;
chapels. The only charitable bequest is one by John J. W. Harmer, Coltishall, attendance officer
Chapman, merchant, in I718, of £w yearly {or the educa- Board (formerly National) School, erected by subscription
tion of 10 poor boys, augmented by a further donation of in 1845, assisted by a parliamentary grant & enlarged in
about {,10 z6s. a year, left in IBIS by Dr. Charles Grape, 1878, to hold 237 children; average attendance, 200;
formerly rector of Coltishall: these charities are now at tb.e William Harper, master ; Mrs. Elizabeth J. Harper,
disposal of the School Board. There are several extensive mistress
matting houses, and a considerable trade is carried on in Railway Station, William Francis Storey, station master
malt, corn, coals and other articles. Excellent fishing and CARRIERS TO X ORWICH.-William Thurston, to the " George
yachting can be obtained in the neighbourhood. A fair is & Dragon," Haymarket, m on. wed. fri. & sat. returns
held here on Whit-Monday. Henry Ill. in 1231 granted same days; Willia.m Edwards, to the" York tavern," Castle
a charter to the town, conferring several privileges on the, hill, mon. wed. & sat. 9 a. m. returns same days
PRIVATE RESIDENTS. Gorell Robert Atkinson, The Old hall Taylor Hugh
Amies Robert Sharpe Hackblock William Henry,Manor house Thirst Thomas
Archdale Major Charles Wells Harper William Henry Wright Bernard Duncan Zorapore
Banfather Rev. Edward Henry B.A. Mills Jacob Arthur Wright Isa.ac
[rector of Felmingham J Palrner Mrs COMMERCIAL.
Barber John 'I Palmer Thomas Joseph Mills AldertonJamcs,grocer & drpr.Post office
Coman Mrs Rogers Richard M. A., J.P. Coltishall h3ll Alien John, boat builder
Coman Thomas Lancaster Runaclcs .M:rs. Grove b.ouse Allen John, jun. furnished apartments
Cubitt Capt. Charles Percy Spink.s Mrs Allen Robert, grocer & draper
Fuller Edward Sykes Rev. Geor~e Henry B.A. [curate] Bilby William & Frederick, butchers
C. N. & S. 23
350 COLTlSHALL. NOHFOLK. (KELLy's

Bond George, coal merchant Gandar Henry, White Horse hotel Richards John.. shopkeeper
· Child Emma (Miss),beer retailer &baker Grout James, Red Lion P.H Rudling Lucy (Miss), lodging hollS6
Church William, landscape gardener Harmer Jacob, boot maker ,, Sargent Georg(}. King's Head PH
Coltishall Cottage Hospital (Miss Kate Harmer John & Son, tailors & outfitters Starling John D. sanitary plum~,
O'Brien, nurse) Harmer J. W. school attendance officer glazier, decorative painter, coach
Collyer D'Arcy Bedingfeld B.A., s.c.L. Hood Charles, farmer ~ land steward painter & general deal~r in oils
solicitor to G. W. Danby-Palmer-Kerrison esq Taylor & Wright. surgeons
Coman Emma ()frs. ), grocer Howes John, farmer, ,Hall farm Taylor Hugh L.R.C.P.xdin. surgeon, &
Coman Thomas William,sanitary plum- Miles Samuel George, watch maker medical officer & public vaccinator,
ber & general decorator Mills Jacob Mealing, maltster Frettenham district, St. Faith's union
Crowe William, butcher Newhouse Robert, stone mason Thrower Robert, blacksmit.h
Earl Jeremiah, tinman Norgate Edward, builder Thurston Williaq1, carrier
Earl Uriah, blacksmith Palmer Thomas Joseph Mills, solicitor Vout George, builder, contractor &
Edrich Robert, boot maker Payne Fred John, builder, wheelwright wheelwright
Edwards William, carrier & malt shovel manufacturer Wilde Charles, shoe maker
Feek George, Anchor P.H. ; parties pro- Pitcher James 1 New inn; picnic Wright Bernar<l Duncan Zorapore, sur-
vided for ; excellent fishing & boating parties & other parties catered for at geon,L.R.C.P.LOnd. seeTaylor&Wright
Foulger James, blacksmith moderate charges, & private apart- Wright Elizabeth (Miss), shopkeeper
Fuller Edward, baker ments ; good stabling I Wright William, beer retailer •
COLTON is a village and parish bounded on the south by i there are 150 sittings. The register dates from the year
the river Yare, 6~ miles north-west from Wymondham, 4 1543. The living is a rectory. average tithe rent-charge
north-east from Kimberley station and on the Dereham and L,"232, net yearly value £202, including so acres of glebe,
Wymondham line, 8 west from Norwich, in the ~lid dtvision with residence, in the gift of the Lord Chancellor, and held.
of the county, Forehoe hundred, petty sessional division since 1892 by the Rev. Herbert Sydenham Clarke M. A. ol
and union, Norwich county court district, rural deanery of Trinity College, Cambridge: the rectory house was built in
Hingham, Forehoe division, archdeaconry of Norfolk and 1875, at a cost of £r,ooo. The late John Daveney esq. left
diocese of Norwich. The church uf St. Andrew is a small £sso in £3 per Cents. the interest of which should be
building of flint, in the Early English style, consisting of applied in aid of a salary to the organist. The fuel allot-
chancel, nave, north porch and an embattled western tower ment of 10 acres produces£ 19 yearly, which is given to the
containing 3 bells • the chancel and nave are divided by a poor in coals. This place is in the manor of Costessy, of
screen, neatly carved, and the se3ts have handsomely carved which Lord Stafford is lord. Ilenry Blake esq. of Thorpe,_
poppy heads: inside the south door is a holy water stoup : B. S. }'']etcher esq. of Marlingford Hall, and t.be trust.ees o[
the pulpit was presented in 1877 by C. Sugden esq. the the late Major-General Daveney, are the chief landowners.
brass lectern was giveu and the chancel reseated by the The soil is mi:1;:ed ; subsoil, chiefly clay. The chief crops
Rev. Henry Whitelock Turner M.A. late rector (1877-92): are wheat, barley, hay, turnips and mangold. The area is
in the chancel are tablets to Rev. Henry Rix A.M. d. July 24, g2o acres; rateable value, £1,269; in ~891 the population
1728; and to Emily Georgina, wife of Maxwell Julms Blacker was 239. ,
A.M. and her four children, who were all buried in one Parish Clerk, John Minus. •
grave at Brompton, Middlesex, June 24th and July 2nd, PosT OF~'ICE.--Gcurge Grand, receiver. Letters received
1858 : at the north end of th& nave is a monument with .from Norwich at 5-44 a.m.; dispatched at 5·5 p.m. The
.arms to Philip Pooley gent. 1715 ; and there are tablets to nearest money order office is at Honingh11rn & telegraph
Mrs. Elizabeth Browne (d. 1741); Henry Daveney (d. 1771) office at Mattishall
and Snsannah his wife; Henry Dawmey, Mayor of Thetford
in r6Jg and in 15 47 (d. 166 2) and Dorothy his wife, and to School (mixed), built in rBss, at a cost of [25o, for 50
.Jerem1a· h I ves J. P., M.A., F .R. s. (d . I 829 ) !lrl d Anne h"lS w1·re: children ·, average attendance, 39 & partly supported by
the interior of the church was thoroughly repaired in 1852 £5 from the Rev. ,Henry Rix's charity; Miss Maud
and the windows filled with stained glass,. and in 1855 the Outhwaite, mistress
gallery was enlarged and a new organ· erected at a cost of CARRIERS TO N on.wrca.-Elijah Johnson, on wed, & sat.;
£250, defrayed by the late Juhn Daveney esq. : in 1890 the Henry Blyth, from East Tuddenham, passes through on
tower was new-floored, panelled and converted into a vestry: wed. & sat
Clarke Rev. Herbert Sydenham M,A. Dunnell John Henry, agricultural ma- Johnson Elijah, carvier
Rectory chinist, beer retailer & shopkeeper Luck Thomas; l'lhoe maker
COMMERCIAL. Goward John, farmer Miles Harvey, farmer, Manor farm
Barwick Henry, fishmonger Grand George, boot maker, Poi'lt office Moore George, farmer, Malthouse fe.rm
ComerMargaretta(Mrs. ),farmr. High ho GrandMinnieSophia (Miss),dress maker Os wick Jo!!hua, farmer
Dann John, carpenter Howard Charles, farm bailiff to B. E. Read John Stephen, Negro's Head P.H
Dunnell Henry, blacksmith & farmer Fletcher esq .
COLVESTON is a parish 6 miles north from Brandon the Rev. Henry Chichele Hart B.A. of Corpus Christi college,
~tation on the Ely and Tbetford section of the Great Eastern Cambridge, who is also rector of and resides at Gran-
railway, and ro south-by-west from Swaffham, in the South wich. William Amhurst Tyssen Amherst esq. n.t., J.P. of
Western division of the county, hundred and petty sessional Didlington Hall, is lord of the manor and sole landowner
division of Grimshoe, union and county court district of and farms the land; the manor formerlr. belonged to Lord
Swaffham, rural deanery of Cranwicb, South division, arch- Berners. The soil is light sandy: subsoil, chalk and !land.
deaconry of Norfolk and diocese of Norwich. The church of The chief crops are rye, barley and turnips. The area is
the Virgin Mary has been for years in a dilapidated condi- 86r acres; rateable value, £345; the population in I88r
tion, and little more than the foundation is now visible. was 44 and in 1891 was 53·
The living is a rectory, consolidated with the vicarage of Letters through Mundford Railway Sub-Office by foot post
Didlington, av£>rage tithe rent-charge £154, net yearly at 7·45 a.m. & 6 p.m. Mundford is the nearest money
value £120, including 114 acres of glebe, in the gift of order & telegraph office
W. Amhurst Tyssen Amherst esq. and held since x8gr by The children of this place attend the school at Didlington
Palmer Elijah,overseer & ~mrveyor, Colveston Farm holll!e 1
CONGHAM is a village and parish 7 miles east-north- of Worcester College, Oxford and Mus.n. of Magdalen Hall,
east from Lynn, 1 east-by-north from Grimston Road mil- Oxford. The poor have the interest of £ro left by John
way station and rf south from Hillington station on the Bailey in 1712. Sir Henry Spelman, the famous antiquary,
Eastern and Midlands railway, in the North Western divi· was born here in 1562-. Congham Hall, the property of
sion of the county, Freebridge Lynn hundred, petty sessional Raoul Charles Finch Elsden-Everard esq. J'.P. is the resi-
division and union, Lynn county court district, rural deuce of John William Davy esq. J.P. Congham House is
deanery of Lynn Freebridge, archdeaconry of Norfolk and the residence of Colonel Seymour Corkran. Lieut. Arthur
diocese of Norwich. The church of St. Andrew is an Henry Stuart Elwes R.N. who is lord of the manor, R. C.
ancient building of stone and flint, in the Early English F. Elsden-Everard esq . .J.P. and Sir Williarri Hovel! Browne
style, consisting of chancel, nave, north transept, and an ffolkes hart. M,A, D.L., J.P. of Hillington Hall are the
embattled western tower containing one bell: in the nave is principal landowners. 'fhe soil is light sand; subsoil,
a mural monument to Jacob Lubbock (d. 1787), and the chalk. The chief crops are wheat, barley, turnips, man-
chancel retains an Early English piscina; the stained east gold wurtzel and grass. The area is 2,8oo acres; rateable
window is a memorial to four members of the Elwes family, value, £2,536; the population in 1891 was 316.
r878·82. The register of baptisms and burials dates from Parish Clerk, Robert Henry Smith.
1580; marriages, 1581. The Iliving is a consolidated rec- PosT OFFICE.-Mrs. Susan James, receiver. Letters through
tory, average yearly value, from tithe rent-charge £446, Lynn, via Hillington, arrive at 6.20 a. m. & 1.20 p.m.;
with 35 acres of glebe and residence, in the gift of Mrs. dispatched at Ir.so a. m. & 6 p.m.; sundays at r p.m.
Kersley, and held since 1882 by the Rev. Richard Raking, Hillington & Grimston are the nearest money order &
DIRECTORY. J NORFOLK. COSTESSEY. 351
telegraph offices. Postal orders are issued here, but not National School (rnixecl), erected in 1844, for 86 children~
paid. WAt.L LETTER Box at Little Congharn cleared at -average attendance, 50; Miss Elizabeth Grant, mistress
6.5p.m.; sundaysat I p.m 1
Chapman Godfrey, Congham lodge Davy John William J.P. The Hall Goodship William, head gamekeeper to
Corkran Col.Seymour,Congh!l.m hou11•; Haking Rev. Richard Mus. Doe. [rector] Col. Seymour Corkran
& 2 Chesham street, London s w & Basham Charles, farm bailiff to Messrs. James Sus an (Mrs.), tailoress,Post office
Guards', Marlboroogh & Tr!l.vellers' W. & E. Marshall, of North Lynn Martin Frederick J.farmer,Manor farm
club!!, London Hullen James, farmer RennettThos.Samuel,beer ret.&butcher
Elwes Lieut. Arthur Henry Stuart R.N., Driver William, carpenter Rudd Thomas, farmer
D.L., J".P. Little Congham Grimes Joseph, shoe maker Smith Robert Henry, parish clerk
CORPUSTY is a village and parish with a station on latter being owner of the rectorial tithes. The soil is light
the Eastern and Midlands railway from Yarmouth to Lynn, and sandy ; subsoil, sand and gravel. The chief crops are
6 miles north-west from Aylsham, 15 north-west from Nor· wheat, barley,. hay and roots. The area is r,or8 acres, 49
wich, in the Northern division of the county, South Erping· of which nre common; rateable value, £r,5J4; the popula~
ham hundred and petty sessional division, Aylsham union tion in 188I was 379·
and county court district, rural deanery of Ingworth and Parish Clerk, HenryS. Platten.
archdeaconry and diocese of Norwich. The church of St. Letters through Norwich. Saxthorpe is the nearest money
Peter is a small building of flint in the Perpendicular style, order & telegraph office at the railway s ta ti on. W ALI,
consi8ting of chancel, nave, south porch and an embattled LETTER Box cleared at 2-45 p.m. week days only
western tower containing one bell : there are 200 sittings.
The register dates from the year r656. The living is a A School Board of 7 members was formed compulsorily
vicarage, net yearly value £so, in the gift of Maj.-Gen. June 2t, 1875 1 for the united district of Corpusty, Irming-
Ives, and held since 1892 by the Rev. John William Walker land & Saxtlwrpe; Rev. John \V. \Yalker M. A. chairman;
M.A. of Pembroke College, Cambridge, who is also vicar of William Brucc, of .Aylsharn, clerk to the board & atten-
and resides at Saxthorpe. There is a Primitive Methodist dance officer
chapel here, erected in 1859· Brig.-Gen. William Earle Board School, built in x88r at a cost of £I,roo, for II9
Gascoyne· Lytton-Bulwer J. P. of Heydon Hall, who is. lord chilclren; average attendance, xoo; William Wallis,
<Jf the manor, and l\Iajor-General Cecil Hobert St. John master ; Mrs. Ell en Wall is, mistress
Ives J. P. of Moyn's Park, are the principal landowners, the Railway Station, William Henry Havis, station mast&
Carver Mrs Flogdell Henry, grocer & draper Pinchen James, baking powder & min ..
COWilERCIAL. Fowell William, farmer eral water manufacturer & farmer
.Arthurton George,farmer & blackllmith Frior Robert, tailor Printer Leonard, brazier
Eateman Elizh. (Mrs.), Horseshoes P.H Goldsmith Henry, draper Rudd Henry, farm bailiff tn Maj.-Genl.
Bunting Herbert, Dqke's Hefld P.H GoldsmithSamuel,miller(wind & water) Cecil Ives J.P. Holley farm
BurtooGeorge, Wheatsheaf P.II.&farmer Goldsmith Thomas, seedsman Skerrett .Ann (1\Irs. ), baker
Burwn Joseph,carpenter & wheelwright Ling William Henry, far:mer,Manor ho Thornton James, shoe maker
Bussens James, butcher Page Henry, grocer & draper Utting Edward, farmer, butcher &;a
Bussens James, jun. farmer Pinchen John, baker • Westney William, bricklayer
Carr Thomas, farmer •
COSTESSEY (corrupted into CossEY) is a parish and! chapel in the centre of the village, and the 'Wesleyans have
village pleasantly seated on the river Wensum, and eonsists ·a room in which £lervice is held every Sunday. The only
principally of one street, extending nearly 2 miles, with I charit.y is one of £2 2s. yearly value. At the eastern
houses of irregnlar form, r mile south-west from Drayton extremity of the village is a large flour mill, worked by the
1

station on the Eastern and Midlands railway, and 4~ miles river Wensum. Costessey Hall, the seat of Lord Stafford,
1

north-west from Norwich, in the Mid division of the county, who is lord of the manor and chief landowner, stands in an
Forchoe hundred and petty sessional division and union, extensive park, close to the river Wensum; the new Hall,
Norwich county court district, rural deanery of Hingham, which adjoins the old mansion, is a structure of red brick,
Forehoe division, archdeaconry of Norfolk and diocese of in the Tudor style, erected from the designs of Mr. John
1

Norwich. The church of St. Edmund is a large building of : Chester Buckler, architect, of Oxford, and has a tower and
flint, chiefly in the Gothic style of the 13th century, con- richly ornamented chimneys and pinnacles, and attached is
!

sisting of chancel, nave, !!Outh porch, and an embattled a large domestic chapel, dedicated to St. Augustine of
I

western tower, with low wooden spire, containing 5 bells: , England; the Hall, which has a noble appearance, i!l sur-
the south doorway is Norman : in the church is a very i rounded by plantations and over 900 acres of park, contain-
handsome Florid Gothic screen, which has been renovated ing some tine timber and an ornamental lake; the honse is
1

at the cost of J. S. Corbett esq. : there are monuments to enriched with a choice collection of antiquities, and has
the Waldegrave family, 1658; and to that of Jerningham some fine paintings by old masters. The soil is chiefly sand
from 1730 to 1773 : the church was completely restored in and light loam ; subsoil, various. The chief crops are wheat,
1890 at a cost of £x,soo, the nave being refitted and oats, barley and turnips. The area is 2,770 acres, exclusive
furnished with a fine Jacobean pulpit by the Rev. Whitwell of a common of 270 acres, which has been enclosed; rate-
Elwin B.A. rector of Booton; the chancel was restored by able value, £::3.926; the population in 1891 was 881.
the trustees of the Great Hospital, Norwich, at a cost of Parish Clerk William Paul
about £350 and two uew south doors were given by E. K. ' , · .
Harvey esq. : there are 250 sittings. The register dates rosT_ & M. 0. 0., _S. B. & Annlllty ~Insurance O~ce.~
from the year 1 538. The living is a vicarage, gross yearly Cams Spaul, rece1ver. Letters arnve from Norw1ch at
value,£ 175, in the gift of the trustees of the Great Hospital 4·45 a. m. & 4.30 p.m. ; d1spa~ch~d at I I a. m. &_ 5-45
at Norwich, and held since 184-5 by the Rev. James Williams p •.m: The nearest telegraph office 1s at Drayton railway
Evans M.A. of Trinity College, Oxford. The Catholic statwn
church of St. Walstan, now disused, is a structure of brick Catholic School, erected in. 1871, for x8o children: average
and has some stained windows; Divine service is at present attendance, 160, & supported by Lord Stafford ; the
held in the private chapel at the Hall. There is a Baptist Sisters of Charity of St. Paul are the teachers
Back Mrs. Sunny side Cannell William, butcher & farmer Gun ton Charlotte (Mrs.}, beer retail et'"
Brett Daniel Carr George, farmer Gunton Frederick, builder
Coverdale Henry, Costessey park Churchyard & Sons, drapers, grocers, Harri.s Joseph, farmer
Coverdale Joseph, Costessey park outfitters & wine & spirit mers. &c. ; Harvey Charles, shoe maker
Culley Albert John, Wensum cottage & at Cromer & Lower Sherringham Hostler James, chimney sweeper
Culley Misses, Wensum cottage Cole Frank William, assistant overseer Ireson John, firewood dealer
DaviesVery Rev.Monsignor George M. A. for Taverham King Harriet (Miss), shopkeeper
[Catholic] Cook Robins,.farmer, Lodge farm Lyons John, Falcon inn
Evans Rev. J ames Williams M.A. [vicar] Coverdale Henry, land steward to Lord Pollard William John, manager for
:Macfarlane Donald Horne, Costessey pk · Stafford, Costessey park Messra.Culley Bros. millers, River view
COMMERCIAL. Culley Brothers, millers (water), Cos- Pratt John, baker & grocer & collector
.Addison Geo. Wm. pig dlr. TheCommon tessey mills of taxes
Andcrson Robert, Hush P.H Culley John, farmer, Church farm RoseWm.BlackSwan P.H.&ti.rewood dlr
Banham Horace, coal dealer Doggett William, shoe maker Savage George Joseph, saddler
BanhamJ ames, well sinker& lime burner Gooderson William Robert, wheelwright Simmons Philip, shoe maker
Banham James, jun. White Hart P.H & blacksmith · Spaul Caius, tailor, & registrar of mlrl"-
Barley William, boot maker Gunton Brothers, brick makers riages for Forehoe district, Post office
C. N. & !1. 23*
352 COSTESSEY,. NORFOLK.
Spau] Maria (Mrs.), shopkeeper Watcham Priscilla(~Irs. ),poultry dealer White William, assistant overseer
Sidney Robert, market gardener Whall Frederick, farmer, The Common Wright James Henry, farmer
Thrower \\'illiJ~m, farmer
COSTON is a parish on the river Yare, I mile north-east glebe and residence, in the alternate gift of the Bishop of
from Hardingham station on the Wymondham and Wells Norwich and the Earl of K1mberley, and held since 1890 by
line, and 5 miles west from Wymondham, in the Mid the Rev. Charles George Lynn-Fryer, of St. Bees. The
division of the county, Furehoe hundred, petty sessional Rectory house was built in 185o at a cost of £6oo, on a site
division and union, county court district of Wymondham, where formerly stood the residence of the Catholic arch-
rural deanery of Hingham, Fore hoe division, archdeacon ry deacons of Norfolk, and was considerably enlarged and
of Norfolk and diocese of Norwich. The church of St. restored by the Rev. A. T. Hodgson, late rector, in 1886, at a
Michael is an ancient edifice of stone in the Early English cost of £soo. The Earl of Kimberley K.G., P.C. is lord of the
style, consisting of chaneel, nave, south porch, and an manor and principal landowner. The soil is various;. sub-
embattled western tower containing one bell : there are soil, brick-earth. The chief crops are wheat, barley,
remains of tho steps leading to the rood loft, a good example turnips and hay. The area is 355 acres; rateable value,
of a lepers' window, now bricked up, and an ancient piscina: £498; the population in 189I was SS·
the organ was erected as a memorial to C. C. Atkins esq. by Parish Clerk, Jonathan Neve.
his children, at a cost of £go; the church was repaired and LETTER Box at the Hall cleared at 6 p.m. Letters through
re-seated in I85o, and has about 120 sittings. 'fhe register Wymondham arrive at 8.15 a. m. Bamham Broom i~
dates from the year 1694. The living is a rectory, with the nearest money order office; telegraph offices at Wy-
tho vicarage of Runhall annexed, tithe rent-charge £140, mondham & Hingham
average £7o, joint net yearly value £IOo, with 6 acres of The children of this place attend the school at Runhall
Lynn-FryerRev.CharlesGeorge[rector], Norfolk Auctioneers' & Valuers' Assu- Coston & Runhall Cricket Club (Arthur
Rectory ciation, The Hall; & at Hill House llanham, hon. sec)
Atkins Sydney George, farmer & estate farm, Brandon Parva 8mith Richard, pork butcher
agent & valuer, & hon. sec. to the Bridges Wilbam, Coach & Horses P.H
CRANWICH is a parish in a valley on the south side of dates from the year I732. The living is a rectory, average
the river Wissey, 6 miles north from Brandon station and 3 yearly value from tithe rent-charge £I39, with 19 acres of
east of Methwold, in the South Western division of the glebe and residence, in the gift of William Amhurst Tyssen
county, Grimshoe hundred and petty sessional division, Amherst esq. M.P. and held since 1891 by the Rev. Henry
Thetford union and county court district, Cranwich Chichele Hart B.A. of Corpus Christi college, Cambridge,
rural deanery south division, Norfolk archdeaconry and who is also vicar of Didlington-cum-Colveston. Mrs. Lyne-
Norwich diocese. The church of St. Mary the Virgin is a Step hens, Lynford Hall, is lady of the manor and chief
small but ancient building of flint, in the Early English and landowner. There is a charit.y producing £I ss. yearly.
later styles, consisting of chancel, nave, south porch, and a The soil is mostly sand, with a chalky subsoil. The chief
round embattled western tower of very early date, contain- crops are wheat, barley and turnips. The area is r, r84
ing a clock and one bell: the nave is Decorated and Perpen- acres ; rateable value, £8o4; the population in r88r was 69-
dicular, and the chancel Early English ; communion rails Parish Clerk, John Aspen.
of carved oak and oaken benches for the school children Letters through Mundford Railway Sub-office, arrive at 7
were presented in 1885 by the Rev. H. Ray B.A. rector a. m. Mundforrl is the nearest money order & telegraph off
1876-91 : there are 120 sittings, So being free. The register I The children of this place attend Mundford school
Hart Rev. Henry Chichele B.A. Rectory I Read William, agent to Mrs. Lync-Stephens, Manor farm
CRANWORTH (or CRANWORTH-cmr-LETTON) is a vil- acres of glebe with residence, in the gift of R. T. Gurdon
lage and parish 4 miles west from Hardingham station on esq. M. P. and held since 1874 by the Rev. Thomas Parry
the Dereham and Wymondham section of the Great Eastern Garnier H.A. and formerly fellow of All Souls College.
railway, 7 north-east from Watton, and 6~ south from Dere- Oxford, rural dean of the Mitford division of the rural
ham, in the Mid division of the county, Mitford and Laun- deanery of Hingham, and hon. canon of Norwich. Here is a
ditch petty sessional division, }[itford hundred and union, Primitive Methodist chapel. On the church green still
East Dereham county court district, rural deanery of Hing- stand the village " stocks," and in good preservation. The
ham, Mitford division, arch deaconry of Norfolk and diocese poor have £12 yearly for fuel, derived from land. Dr.
of Norwich. The church of St. .Mary the Virgin, erected Christopher Sutton, the celehrated author of" Disce Vivere"
about the middle of the 13th century, is a small building of and" Disce Mori," and sometimeincuml5ent of Woodrising,
flint and stone in the Early Engli.;h style, consisting of was rector here in 1623. Robert Mousey Rolfe, son of the
chancel, nave, aisles, north porch and an embattled western Rev. Edmund Rolfe, some time curate of Cranworth and
tower, with spire, containing 3 bells : in the church are rector of Cockley-Cley, was born in the rectory house here,
several handseme monuments to various members of the December r8th, 1790; being afterwards appointed (December
Gurdon family, of Letton Hall, including Brampton Gurdon 28th, x852) Lord High Chancellor of England, he was
esq. M.P. for Sudbury, who commanded the Suffolk Horse raised to the peerage by the title of Baron Cranworth, after
at Naseby, June 14, I645, and died in I669, and to Mary the name of his birthplace, but dying without issue, July
(Polsted) his wife, d. I679; and Thomhagh Gurdon, 26th, 1868, the title became extinct. Robert Thornhaugb
receiver-general of the county of Norfolk, d. I733• and Gurdon esq. of Letton Hall, is tlfe lord of the manor
Elizabeth {Cooke) his wife, d. I745; there is also a fine and principal landowner. The soil is mixed; subsoil,
monument to Sir William Cooke, hart. M.P. (Norf.) d. at gravel. The chief crops are wheat, barley and oats. The
Let ton in 1708 ; in the churchyard are buried Brampton area is I, I26 acres; rateable value, £ I 1 504 ; in I891 the
Gurdon esq. M.P. (W. Norf.) d. I88 r, and Henrietta Susanna, population was 237. -
his wife, daughter of Lord Colborne, d. r88o: and also the Sexton, Joseph Thurston.
Rev. Philip Gurdon, rector {I832-74): the chancel retains
a. piscina and sedilia; there is a good oak screen and choir LETTER Box cleared at 6.30 p.m. Letters through That-
stalls of oak handsomely carved: the church was restored ford, via Shipdham, which is the nearest money order &
in x852 and affords 250 sittings. The register dates from telegraph office, arrive at 8.30 a.m
the year x653. The living is a rectory, with the rectories National School (miied), for I2o children; average attend-
of Letton and Southhorough annexed, average tithe rent- ance, Bo; Miss L. L. Cooper, mistress ; Miss S. Hoy,
charge £54I 1 joint net yP.arly value, £307, including 38 assistant mistress
Gamier Rev. Thomas Parry M.A. [rector, Clarke Elizabeth (Mrs.), beer retailer Lambert Matilda (Mrs.), farmer
hon. canon & rural dean], Rectory Crafer Charles, farmer Lincoln George, farmer
COMMERCIAL. CushingGeorge,shopkeeper & carpenter Littleproud Alfred, miller (wind)
Bacon Benjamin, blacksmith Dendy Daniel, farmer, High house M1lk George, farmer, Church farm
Bowen Charles, farmer Edwards William, higgler Milk Martha (Miss), shopkeeper
Bush Robert, farmer Hagan William, hawker W ebster Ed ward, farmer
Clark Matthew, hawker Hall John, laundry
NORTH CREAKE is a parish and village on the The church of St. Mary the Virgin, near the south end of
. :Fakenham road, 3 miles south-by-east from Burnham the village, is a spacious and handsome building of stone
Market station on the Lynn and Wells railway, 7 north-east and fiiut, in the Decorated and Perpendicular styles, con-
from Fakenham and 21 from Lynn, in the North Western sisting of chancel,with chantry and vestry, clerestoried nave,
,..division of the county, Brothercross hundred, Smithdon and north aisle, south porch and an embattled western tower,
Brothercross petty sessional division, Docking union, Little bearing a sundial and containing 6 bells: in the chancel,
Walsingham county court district, rural deanery of Burn- which dates from I30I 1 is an Easter sepulchre, and its
ham, archdeaconry of Norfolk and diocese of Norwich; a east window contains remnants of stained glass: there is a
small rivulet rising at South Creake passes through the mural monument to the Vcn. Henry Bathurst (eldest son
parish and falls iiJtO the sea at Burn ham Overy Staith. of Henry Bathurst, Bishop of Norwich), rector of this parish
DIRECTORY .J NORFOLK. SOUTH CREAKE. 353
18og-44 and archdeacon of ~orwich, d. 1844: nearly in 1 who transferred them to Christ's College, Cambridgey
the centre of the chancel floor is a fine brass, circa. rsoo, founded by her in 1505: several of the arches and piers of
with effigy, under a triple canopy, of the second founder, the choir arcades are still entire. Many ancient coins, Roman
Sir W. Calthorpe, in academical dress, and holding a model and English, have been found at various periods in the
of the church on his right arm : the hammer-beam roofs vicinity. Earl Spencer K.G., P.C. and the Master and fellows
were erected in the 15th century, when the nave was of Christ's College, Cambridge, who are lords of the manors
enlarged and the clerestory added: these are richly orna- and Mrs. Henry Seymour, are the principal landowners~
mented, especially that of the chancel, which has figures of The soil is of a light nature, rich and productive; the sub-
winged angels and apostles, the l;~.tter bearing on scrolls the soil is chiefly chalk. The chief crops are wheat, barley,
articles of the Apostles' Creed in Latin : there are 360 sit- turnips, mangold-wurtzel and seeds. The area is 3,601
tings, 250 being free. The register dates from the year acres; rateable value, £3,686; the population in 1891
1538. The living is a rectory, average tithe rent-charge was 555.
£6cx), net yearly value £812, with residence and I8o acres Parish Clerk, William Rix.
of glebe, in the alternate gift of the Bishop of Norwich and PosT & M. 0. 0., S. ll. & Annuity & Insurance Office.-
Earl Spencer K.G., P.C. and held since 1868 by the Rev. Miss Susan Walker, receiver. Letters throughFakenham
Jobn~assau Simpkinson M.A. of Trinity College, Cambridge. by"mail cart received at 8 a. m.; dispatched at 4 . 15 p.m.
Here are Wesleyan and Primitive :\Iethodist chapels. Burnham Market is the nearest telegraph office
There are four almshouses, founded by Richard Mansuer,
in 1592, and endowed with £4 3s. a year, out of land, now ScrrooLS : -
the property of Earl Spencer. At the northern extremity National School (buys, girls & infants), erected in r849,
of the parish are the ruins of the abbey founded about 1226 & rebuilt in 1883, at a cost of £2so, & chiefly supported_
by Sir Robert de Nereford and Alice his wife for canons of by Earl Spencer & the rector; the schools jointly hold
the Augustinian order, in place of a hospital of St. Bartholo- r8o children; average attendance, 147; John Able
mew, and dissolved by IIenry VII. and the estates granted Arnett, master ; Miss Elizabeth Fryer, mistress
to his mother, the Lady Margaret, Countess of Richmond, CARRIER TO FAKENHAM-James Seaman, tues. thur. & sat
D'Angibau Rev. George M.A. [curate] Goshawk John, baker & shopkeeper Parker Robert, farmer, Hall farm
Emerson Robert, Creake abbey Graves Frederick, Jolly Farmers inn Rix William, assistant overseer
l:veritt Thomas, Shammer farm Hendry Edward, baker & farmer Sands James, bricklayer
Simpkinson Rev. John Nassau M.A. High Edward, wheelwright Smalls John, basket maker
[rector], The Rectory Howell, blacksmith, wheelwright, car- Smalls Joseph, basket maker
Wright William, Sly's farm penter, light trap builder &c.; & at 'faylor Frederick William, baker, con-
South Creake fectioner & offal merchant
COMMERCIAL. Hudson William, farmer; & at Quarles Walker Susan(Miss),mercer & postmist
Ad cock Martha (Mrs.), shoe maker Keeler Robert, farm bailiff to Mr. Walker Zachariah, outfitter, & agent for
Adcock William, Earl of Leicester inn Williarn Hudson, Wringate farm Norfolk to the National Agricultural
Alegood James, Victoria Arms P.H Leeder Edward, grocer Laborers' Union
Bambridge Joshua, blacksmith Mallett John William, grocer & draper Wasey Isaac, farmer
Bygott Robert, farmer National Agricultural Laborers' Union Wright William, farmer, Sly's farm &
Ebdale James, boot & shoe maker (Zachariah Walker,sole agt.forNorfik) agent for Earl Spencer
Emerson Robert, farmer, Creake abbey OvertonGeorge W illiam, grocer & draper
SOUTH CREAKE is a parish and village on the Faken- of age, and widows : Mrs. Elizabeth Pell, daughter of the
ham road, 4 miles south from Burnham Market railway aforesaid, left £100 for the purchase of land, the rent of
station, 7 miles south-west from Wells and 21 from Lynn, which was to be expended in like manner :this land now lets
in the North Western division of the county, llrothercross for £15 a year: Mrs. Dorothy Woodhom;e, by will, dated
hundred, Smith don and Brothercross petty sessional division, 164o, left 2os. to the minister in consideration of his preach-
Docking union, Little Walsmgham county court district, ing two sermons yearly, and 3os. to the poor of the parish,
!fural deanery of Burnham, archdeaCDnry of Norfolk and the half to be paid the same days the sermons are preached;
diocese of Norwich. A small rivulet rising here, falls into the present yearly value of this gift is about 20 guineas, of
the sea at Burnham Overy Staitb. The church of St. Mary which 5os. is still paid for the two sermons and the dole of
the Virgin, situated on a slight eminence, is a large and bread, and the remainder given to the ~ational school fund:
&ncient structure of flint with stone dressings, in the Per- the town land charity of 12 acres lets for 1.:12 a year, which is
pendicular style, and consists of a chancel, nave with cleres- given to the National school: there is also a fuel allotment
1.ory1 aisles, vestry, south porch and a western tower con- of 23 acres of land, the rent of which, £27 yearly, is ex-
taining 5 bells : a few of the windows in the aisles and pended in coals and distributed to the poor of the parish at
~lerestory are partially filled with ancient stained glass: Christmas: the present annual value of the charities is
there is an oak rood screen, and a large and massive iron- £126. About half a mile south-west from the church is a
bound oak chest, lined with cedar and having 5 locks: the remarkable Saxon fortification, the road to which is called
iont is octagonal and exhibits some good carving, though "Bloodgate," from a tradition that a great slaughter took
much disfigured: the church is seated with open benches, place here in a battle between the Saxons and Danes. The
affording soo sittings. The register dates from the year Marquess Townshend, who is lord of the manor and impro-
1538, and is in a good state of preservation. The living is priator, the Earl of Leicester K.G. and Davy Turner Belding
a discharged vicarage, average tithe rent-charge £335, net esq. are the principal landowners. The soil is mixed,
yearly value £283, with 3 roods of glebe and residence, in productive and well cultivated; subsoil, chalk and graveL
the gift of the Marquess Townshend, and held since x888 by The chief crops are wheat, barley, turnips, mangold wurtzel
the Rev. Spencer James Compton M.A. of Caius College, and seeds. The area is 4.075 acres; rateable value, £4,701;
Cambridge. The Congregational chapel is a plain brick the population in 1891 was 882.
'buildmg, erected in 1783, with a small burial ground and a Parish Clerk, Samuel Crisp.
residence for the minister adjoining; the Primitive Methodist PosT & M. 0. 0., S. B. & Annuity & Insurance Offi.ce.-
ehapel, opened in r883, is of red and white brick, with stone Thomas Heyhoe Oliver, postmaster. Letters received
dressings. The Odd Fellows' Hall was built in 1889. through Fakenha.m at 8 a.m. & dispatched at 4·45 p.m.
Charities :-Isaac Lane, in 1675, left£ 100 for the purchase week days only. The telegraph office is at Burnham
~f land, the rent to be expended in the distribution of coals Market
during the wiuter and 16 penny loaves every Lord's day; National School (boys, girls & infants), for r8o children ;
the present value is £4o yearly and the Sunday dole of average attendance, 165; Alban Harris, master; Mrs.
bread is still continued; [15 a year is paid to the National Louisa Harris, mistress
school and the remainder is expended in coals and other CARRIER.-James Seaman, tues. thurs. & sat. from Nofth
necessaries for such of the poor of the parish as are 6o years I Creake to Fakenham
Belding Davy Turner Hastings Alfred, Chequers P.H OliverHannh.Maria(Mrs.),brwr.&mltstr
ComptonRev.SpencerJas. M.A.Vicarage Hastings Edward, tailor Plane Dawson, baker, grocer & draper
Griggs James, Leicester Square farm Hastings Frederick, butcher H.eadwin Wm. Hy.saddler & harness ma
Sheringham Hubert Valentine Hastings Frederick, tailor Sheringham Edwin, shopkpr. & beer ret
COMMERCIAL. Howell, blacksmith, wheelwright & Sheringham Hubert Valentine, farmer
Bone Horatio, shopkeeper carpenter, light trap builder &c. ; & Smalls Alfred, carpenter & builder
Cartwright Llewellyn, grocer & draper at North Creake Strangleman George, farmer .
Chasney l<~rederick, shoe maker Keable William, beer retailer WaseyCharles,builder,carpenter & joinr
Clements John, fa.Irner, Morley's farm Lakey William, Black Swan P.H Wasey Frederick, shopkeeper & builder
Cook Geo. Ringer, farmer, Manor farm Langley Frank, Fleece inn WaseyMatthew)boot & shoe ma..& baker
Creamer William, Rising Sun P.H Odd Fellows' Hall Wasey Thomas, baker
Cri!=p Rnbert, Ostrich P.H Oliver Thomas Heyhoe, farmer, grocer Watts William, beer retailer
Griggs Jas.farmer,LeicesterSquare frm & draper, Post office Whisker George, blacksmith

354 GREAT CRESSINGHAM. NORFOLK. (KELLY's

GREAT CRESSINGHAM is a parish and village on' Rev. Ernest Heseltine M.A. of Corpus Christi college, Cam-
the river Wissey, 6 miles south from Swaffham, 5 west bridge. The advowson formerly belonged to the Bishop of
from Watton station and 4~ south-west from Holme Hale Norwich, but since the time of Henry VIII. it has been in the
station, both on the Lynn and Thetford line, in the South gift of the Lord Chancellor. A large fair was formerly held
"\Vestern division of the county, South Greenhoe hundred annually in the glebe lands, from which the rector received
and petty sessional division, Swaffham union and county dues, but it was done away witb by the Rev. Charles
court district, Cranwich rural deanery, North division, Taylor, the then rector. The fuel allotment of 33 acres is
archdeaconry of Norfolk and diocese of Norwich. The let for £6o yearly, which is applied in the purchase of coals:
church of St. l\Iicbael is a noble building of stone in the there are also eight acres o~ land let at £ I2 yearly, one half
Gothic style, consisting of chancel, nave with clerestory, of which is allowed to the clerk and the remainder applied
aisles, south poreh and a western tower containing a clock to the repairs of the church. An ancient building here, of
and 3 bells : there is a memorial window to the wives of the the ISth century, formerly belonging to the Jenney family,
Rev. Charles Taylor B. D. late rector (x836-8I), to whom whose crest is on the south front, is now a farmhouse in the
there is also a memorial window : the tracery of the windows occupation of Mr. William Robert Goulder. Colonel Charles
in the north aisle is also filled with stained glass: the chancel Applewaite J. P. of South Pickenham Hall, who is lord of the
and south aisle retain piscime, and in the porch is a holy -water manor, and Joseph Trueman Mills esq. J. P. of Little Cress-
stoup : the roof is of oak with richly carved heads : there ingham, are the principal landowners. The soil is light
is a carved oak screen, and the font has an oaken canopy: and sandy, and the subsoil is chalk and gravel. The chief
the walls bear tablets to Sarah Lobb, I748 ; Thomas Lobb, crops are wheat, barley and roots. The area is 2,424 acres;
1749; the Rev. Edward Chamberlayne )f.A. 1773, and his rateable value, £r,g25; the population in x8gr was 479·
wife Elizabeth (Grey), I75I, and there are brasses to William Parish Clerk, George Bilverstone.
Smith, ob. 1596, and Dorothy, his wife, ob. 1629, and to PosT 0FFICE.-Arthur Eastiek, sub-postmaster. Letters
Richard Kytle: the church was restored in r864 and the received from Watton S.O. at 8.5 a.m. & dispatched at
tower in x883; the inter:or was partially renovated in I88s, 5.30 p.m. & xo a.m. on sundays. Watton is the nearest.
and affords 300 sittings. The register dates from the year money order & telegraph office. Postal orders are issued
I557· The living is a rectory, with that of Bodney annexed, here, but not paid
average tithe rent-charge (Cressingham) £395, joint net National School (boys, girls & infants), erected in r84o, for
yearly value £ 36I, with 53 acres of glebe and residence, in 120 children ; average attendance, 89; Robert Edward
the gift of the Lord Chancellor, and held since I8go by the Melbourne, master ; Miss Ada Larkins, mistress
Goulder William Robert, The Priory Garrod John, machinist & farmer Nclthorpe Horatio,wheelwrt. &shopkpr
Heseltine Rev. Ernest M.A. Rectory GoulderWm.Robert,farmer,The Priory Newton Frederick, higgler
• COMMERCIAI,. Gregory John, blacksmith Overton Jamcs, wheelwright & farmer
Archer George, coal dealer & farmer Mack Tertius, Robin Hood P.H. & farmr Powley Jo~iah, Fox & Hounds P.H. &
Bacon Bidden, farmer Matthcws William, farm bailiff to Mr. shoe maker
Cockerill Martha (Mrs.), shopkeeper . w. R. Goulrler . Button David, '\Vindmill P.H
Couzens Emma (Miss), baker Moore Lorenzo & Mark, farmers Sutton Samuel, higgler
Curtis Williarn, tailor :\Ioore ;\1ark, grocer &; draper Tolrnan J ames, farmer, Water End frrn
Eastick Arthur, baker, Post office
LITTI.E CRESSINGHAM is a \'illage and parish, 71 The li~·ing is a discharged rectory, average tithe rent-charge
miles south-by-east from Swaffham and :1~ west from Watton £243, net yearly value £2oo, with 20 acres of glebe and
station, in the South Western division of the county, Swafi- residence, in the g1ft of J. T. Mills esq. and held since I871
ham union and county court district, South Grcenboe i by the Rev. John William Bencst n.A. of Trinity College,
hundred and petty sessional division, Cranwich rural Dublin. There is a We..-:leyan chapel here. Tbe fuel allot-
deanery, North division, Norfolk archdeaconry and Nor·wich ment for the poor is 23 acres in extent. Clcrmont Lodge,
diocese, The church of St. Andrew was formerly a fine a fine modern mamion, standing in a park of about 6o acres,
building of flint in the Gothrc style, consisting of chancel, is the scat of Joscph Trueman Mills esq. D.L., J.P. lord of
nave, aisles and a western tower, buL the lead-covered roof the manor and sole landowner. The soil is light loam;
having fallen in and demolished the interior, a faculty was subsoil, chalk. The chief crops are wheat, barley and
granted in 1781 to rebuild one half only of the structure, turnips. The area is 1,8o2 acres; rateable value, £I,757;
and it now consists of chancel, nave with clerestory, aisles the population in I8gi was 2ro.
and a turret containing I bell: the ruins of the remaining Parish Clerk, Robert Mason.
portion are still standing: in the north wall of the chancel PosT 0FFICE.-Robert Daines, receiver. Letters received
is a piscina, and the doorway and steps to the rood loft are through Watton 8.0. at 7.25 a.. m.; dispatched at 6.5 p.m.
well preserved : the windows in the south wall of the & on sundays at 10.3_~ a.m. Watton is the nearest m<lney
chancel are stained : the church is seated with open oak order & telegraph office
benches, those in the chancel having carved poppy heads : National Endowed School (mixed), founded & erected by
the font is of Caen stone: in the south aisle is a monument William Farrar in Ifll 6, for 70 children, and 1mpported
to William Henry (Fortescue ), xst and only Earl of Clermont, principally by J. 'I'. Mills esq. D. L., J. P. biJ.t has an endow-'
a former owner of this place, died 30 Sept. r8o6 : there ment of about £8 yearly; average attendance, 44; Miss
are 200 sittings. The register dates from the year 161! I. Mary Ann French, mistress
Bcnest Rev. John William B.A. Rectory 1Daines Rober-t, farmer, Post office I Partridge Benjamin, farmer
Mills Joseph Trueman D.L., J.P. Cler- DoweJn.farmer&miller(wind&water) Smith Waiter, gardener tdJ.T.Millsesq
mont lodge Hardy Brighten Bavin, farmer Tolmarl Waiter William, White Horse
Bugdale Turnent, estate carpenter Jennings Henry, farm bailiff to J. T, P.H. blacksmith & farmer
Butters Jas. gamekeeper to J. T. Mills esq Mills esq
I

CRIMPLESHAM is a village and parish at the junction Hall, a structure of white brick, erected in 188 r from
,,f the roads from Swaffham and Brandon to Downham, 2~ designs by A. Waterhouse esq. R.A. is the seat of Sir
milEs east from Downham station on the Lynn and Ely line, Alfred Thomas Bagge hart. commander H.N., D.L., J.P.
in the South Western division of the count'-''• in Clackclose esq. who is lord of the manor. The principal landowners
hundred and petty sessional division, Downham union and are Sir A. T. Bagge bal't. and John Grant Morris esq. The
county court district, rural deanery of Fincbarn, archdea- soil is zp.ostly strong clay of excellent quality; subsoil, clay
conry of Nor folk and diocese of Norwich. The church of St. and gravel. The chief crops are wheat, barley, beans and
:VIary the Virgin is an edifice of. fiint and stone in the Decor- oats. The area is I,62o acres;. rateable value, £2,3I7; tha
ated style, consrsting of chancel, nave and embattled western population in r8gr was 277.
tower, containing 5 bells : there arc 300 sittings. The Paritih Clerk, Hobert Oakes.
register dates from the year r 56o. The living is a vicar- PosT 0FFICE.~Mrs . .l\Iaria Mason, receiver. Letters from
age, with that of Stradsett, annexed. in I878, average tithe l.lownham arrive at 6.45 a. m. & dispatched at 6.45 p.m.
rent-charge £2I8, joint gross ·yearly value £272, in- & on sundays at r I a.m. Downham is the nearest money
eluding 25 acres of glebe with resulence, in the gift of order & telegraph office
the Bishop of Norwich, and held since x8gi by the Rev. Parochial School (mixed), erected in x885, by the late Sir
An drew Pryde, of St. Bees. To the poor are allotted William Bagge, bart D. L., J.l'., M:. P. & enlarged by Sir A.
12 acres of land, producing an average rental of £7 a T. Bagge, bart. for Ioo children: average attendance, 70;
year, which is distributed yearly in coals. Crimplesham Arthur Orviss, master
Bagge Sir Alfred Thos. hart. (Comman- I Coe John, farmer [McLelland Anthony Williij.m, steward
der R.N.),n.L., J.P. Crimplesham hall[ Durrant Edwin, farmer to Sir Alfred Thomas Bagge bart
Morphew ~rs Hall Thomas, farmer R.awling Waiter, Red Hart P.H. & farmr
Pryde Rev. Andrew [vicar of Crimple- Humphrey John, farmer Sayers George, Xag's Head P.H
sharn & Stradsett], Vicarage
CRING LE FORD is a village and parish on the road. from j is a stone bridge of two arches, built in I78o, and connecting
Norwich to Newmarket, and the river Yare, over which this place with Eaton, and is about 3 miles south-west from

DIRECTORY.] NORFOLK. CROMER. 355
Victoria station, Norwich, which is the nearest railway St. Helen's Hospital, Norwich, who are lords of the manor,
station; it is in the Southern division of the county, Swains- William Henry Trafford esq. J.P. of Wroxham, the trll!!tees
thorpe petty sessional division, Humbleyard hundred, Hen- of R. H. Gurney, Doughty's Hospital, Norwich, Thomas
stead union, Norwich county court district, rural deanery of Chaplin esq. and Henry S. Pattersou esq. are the principal
Humbleyard, archdeaconry of Norfolk and diocese of Nor- landowners. The soil is of a light sandy nature; subsoil,
wich. The church of St. Peter is a building of flint in the I sandy. The crops are mostly barley and roots. The area is
Perpendicular style, consisting of chancel, nave, north! g8o acres ; rateable value, £2,018 ; the population in r8gr
porch and an embattled western tower containing 3 bells : was 229.
there are 150 sittings, about so being free. The register Parish Clerk, John Cunningham.
dates from the year 156o. The living is a vicarage, gross
yearl:v value £xso, in the gift of the trustees of St. Helen's WALL LETTER Box near the church cleared at 12.30 p.m. &
Hospital, Norwich, and held since 1 8gr by thP. Rev. Arthnr 5-45 p.m. Letters through Norwich via Eaton arrive at
Garry Copeman n.A. of Selwyn College, Cambridge. On the 7· 30 a.m. Ea ton is the nearest money order & telegraph
river Yare is a large corn-mill, dating from the time of office
Henry the Eighth, and rebuilt about 1780. This place was National School (boys & girls), erected in 1858, for 120
totally consumed by fire in Queen Elizabeth's reign, and an I children; average attendance, 64; Harry Freeman,
Act was passed for its rebuilding in r 58 r. The trustees of1
master
Barlee Rev. William lii.A. [curate in I Harmer Fredk. Wm. J.P. The Oaklands l C;:>lliver Harry, farmer, Newfound
charge of Intwood], Cringleford hall Patteson Henry Staniforth D.L., J.P Girling Thomas Watson, farmer
{)airns James, Hill grove Candler Horace Robert, miller & corn Heynolds Robert Edwa.rd, farmer &
Copeman Rev.ArthurGarryB.A.[vicar] merchant (steam & water) market gardener
Gilbert John Wilson Cannell Abraham, farmer TaylorEdward'fhrower, wheelwright &c
CROMER is a seaside resort and bathing place on the dist chapel in Prince of Wales' road was built in 1890 and
northern coast of the shire, and a town and parish, with a ter- ' will seat 264, both are of red brick and cut flint, with stone
minal station of a branch of the Great Eastern railway from i dressings. The cemetery, on the Holt road, about a quar-
Norwich and another terminal station near the beach on the tcr of a mile west of the town, and opened in 186o, contains
Eastern and Midlands railway, about 10 miles e.<tst-north- one mortuary chapel, and is under the control of a Burial
east from Halt, 9 north-north-west from North Walsham, Board of 9 members. The Town Hall in Princo of Wales'
rr north-by-east from Aylsham, 22 north from Norwich and road, erec1 ed in 1890 by a Limited Company, from designs
1

130 from London, in the Northern division of the county, by Mr. G. R. Skipper F.R.r.B.A. of Norwich, at a cost,
North Erpingham hundred and petty se.'isiunal division, including site, of £2,000, is a structure of red brick, the
Erpingham union~ Holt county court district, rural deanery fronts being relieved by ornamental brick work and a band
of Repps, archdeaconry of Norfolk and diocese of Norwich. of panels, containing shields of arms of persons of distinc-
The town is picturesquely seated on the cliffs, which rise to tion and families connected with the locality. The building
a considerable height above the beach, and is sheltered on contains a public hall, 77 by 43ft. 6in. cap,c1-ble of holding
three sides by an amphitheatre of hills, partly covered with goo persons ; at one enrl is a platform or stage with retiring
wood ; it has at different times suffered from the incursions rooms and a separate entrance, and at the other end is a
of the sea, which in the time of Henry IV. (r399-1413) gallery; in the vestibule are doak rooms, and on the first
swallowed up the town of Shipden, in which parish Cromer floor are reading and recreation rooms; at the rear end of the
was then situated: in r825 and 1832 large portions of the block is the fire engine station. The Lecture Hall, Cross
cliff fell into the sea so as to endanger the lighthouse, and in street, erected in r8gr by public subscription, at a total cost,
184-5 the jetty was washed away and other damage done, including site, building and fittings, of [667 13s. for the use
but in the same year an Act of Parliament (8 and 9 Vict. c. of the Cromer Band of Hope, and vested in trustees, is an
20) was obtained for the purpose of raising money to build editice of red brick, and comprises a large hall 50 by 29ft.
a new jetty and breakwaters, and also to erect a sea wall ex- and seating from 250 to 300 persons; at the rear are corn-
tending along the whole front of the west end of the town, mittee and cloak rooms and lavatories: over the entrance
with an esplanade for the use of visitors ; and these works were porch is a room for an optical lantern, from which pictnres
eventually completed at an expense of about [7,000. The may be thrown on to a screen of Parian cement on the wall
town was once incorporated, but this privilege has long been behind the platform. The Royal Cromer ( iolr Club was in-
lost, and it is now governed by a Local Board of 9 members, stituted in 1887, and numbers nearly 300 members. H.R.H.
established in 1885. Water of an excellent quality is the Prince of \\'ales K.G. who is patron, has presented a
obtained by l>orings in the chalk ; additional works are now handsome silver challenge cup, which is competed for
(1892) on the point of completion, and include a duplicate annually by the members. The Links are situated on the
well and headings with pumps and machinery, the whole Lighthouse hills, half a mile to the east of the town,
being the property of the Cromer Water Company Limited, in the parish of Overstrand, and are bounded by lofty
formed in 1875. It is lighted with gas from works near to the cliffs affording magnificent views, both of the sea and of
Great Ea~tern Railway station, the property of the Cromer the well-wooded and hilly country inland; the course, which
Gas and Coke Company Limited, formed in 1874. The is now being extended, is considered one of the finest
11ewerage system of the town has been extended and corn- in the kingdom; the greens are composed of excellent
pleted under the advice of Mr. J. C. 1\'Iellis C.E. of London. turf and are very firm, and the play is very varied. A
Land has been and is now (1892) being laid out in building club house has been erected in a picturesque gorge near
sites by the owners of the Cromer Hall and other estates, and the first" tee." The land is the property of the Right Hon.
owing to the number of new erections and the opening of Lord Suffield K.C.B., P.C. who is president of the club.
fresh thoroughfares the town has both increased in size and The Workmen & F1shermen's Reading Room in Chapel
improved in appearance, and now contains some fine busi- street (formerly a chapel), was opened for its present purpose
ness premises, and many well-built dwelling houses. The in r8g1, the building having been acquired by public sub-
church of SS. Peter and Paul is a fine building of cut flint scriptions and vested in trustees for the benefit of the town;
with 3tone dressings, in the Perpendicular style, and consists connected with it is a library of 200 volumes ; the vicar is
of chancel, clerestoried nave of five bays, aisles, north and President. Cromer has several comfortable and well-
south porches and a noble embattled western tower, 150 appointed hotel~, including The Grand Hotel, recently erected
feet in height, with crockcted pinnacle~ and containing a clock. on the "Vest cliff, and the property of a Company, ancl there
and 6 bells; the whole edifice was originally ornamented with are many lodging houses ; the beach has a fine fim1 sand
sculptured work, the western entrance being particu- and a level surface, and thus affords a delightful promrnade
larly fine: the north porch, now used as a vestry, was several miles in leiigth: bathing machines are available on
restored in 1868; the font is a copy of a beautiful one in the beach and warm baths can be had in the town. A
Yaxham church, in this county; the stained west window is . pleasure fair is held on Whit Monday. The population are
a memorial to Charles Buxton esq. lk'.P. who died August chietiy employed in the crab, herring, cod, whiting and
3oth, 1875 ; in 1886 the tower was restored at a cost of lobster fisheries. Ships are continually seen passing on the
£1,300, and in 1887-9 the chancel, which had long been North Sea, but the coast being extremely dangerous, there
in a ruinous condition, was re-built on the original founda- are five lights between this and Yarmouth. In r868 a life-
tions at a cost of about £6,Boo, the work being carried out boat, with a boat house and slipway, wa..<> presented to the
under the direction of Sir Arthur W. Blomfield M.A., A.R.A. ; town by the late Benja.min Bond-Cabbell esq. at a co!1t of
the stained east window was presented by the Herring upwards of £2,000. A short distance from the tow-11, in the
family, and a handsome btass eagle lectern by an unknown parish of Overstrand, is a lighthouse, 52 feet in height and
donor. The register dates from the year r689. The living 250 above the level of the sea, crowned with a lantern con-
is a vicarage, tithe rent-charge £133,?ross yearly value [2oo, taining 30 Argand lamps, in finely-plated reflectors, which
including 25 acres of glebe, in the parish of Soutbrepps, with revolve upon an upright axis once in 3 minutes, giving 3
I
residence, in the gift of. the Bishop of Norwich, and held bright flashes during each revolution i.e. one flash every
since r852 hy the R1w. Frederic Fitch M.A. of Christ's Col- minute. The Cromer Cotta~e Hospital, London lane, es-
lege, Cambridge, and surrogate. The Vi-eslcyan chapel in tablished in 1867, was removed in r888 to the present build-
Hall road, erected in r88 1 1 has 260 sittings; the Free Metlm- ing, the gift of Mr. G. W. Collison, a native of Cromer; the
356 CROMER. NORFOLK. [KELLY S
7

hospital, designed for the relief of the poor of Cromer and LOCAL BOARD.
neighbourhood, is under the management of a committee Offices, Church street.
of 18 ladies with the vicar as chairman, treasurer and visi- Board day, first monday in each month.
tor; it is supported by voluntary contributions, small George Breese (chairman).
weekly payments being made by the patients; the number Bower J ames I Lovelace J ames
of in-patients admitted during the year ending Sept. 3oth, Curtis James I Newman John
x8g1, was 65; there are no out-patients; medical officers, J<'enner Robert N. M.R.C.S. I Riches George, jun
H. McClure M. D. and R. Fenner M.R.c.s.,L.R.C.P. ; hon. sec. J arvis Ernest F I Sandford William George
Miss Cooper ; minute sec. Miss Fitch ; matron, Miss Sarah Meetings take place on the first monday in the month at 3
Lambert. The Fletcher Convalescent, Home of the Norfolk p.m. at the offices, Church street
& Norwich Hospital, a fine building of red brick occupying Clerk, Peter Ed ward Hansell, Church street
a commanding site on the Norwich road, is now (1892) on Treasurer, S. Gurney Buxton, Norwich
the point of complPtion, from designs by Messrs. Boardman Medical Officer of Health, Shephard Thomas Taylor M.B.
& Son, architeds. The town lands, of 13 acres, produce Chingford lodge, Essex
£24 1os. yearly, which is distributed to poor widows. Surveyor & Inspector of Nuisances, Augustus Frederick
Cromer Hall, the residence of Mrs. B. Bond-Cahhell, is a fine Scott, Church street
mansion of stone, in the Gothic style, erected by the late Collector, Alfred Burton, Prince of Wales' road
George Thomas Wyndham esq. : it consists of a central PuBLic EsTABLISHMENTS:-
block, with tower and two wings, and was begun in 1827, Cemetery, Halt road, Alfred Collison Savin, Church street,
but was partially burnt down before it was finished in 18zg. clerk to the Burial Hoard; Miss Louisa Catberine Thurs-
Colne House is the seat of the Dowager Lady Huxton; Cliff by, L"pper Sheringham, registrar of births & deaths
House that of Samuel Hoare esq. M. P., I>LA., J.P. New Cottage Hospital, London lane, Robert Fenner M.R.C.S.Eng.,
Haven Court, a mansion of brick on an elevated site on the L.R.C.P.Edin. & Henry McClure M.D., M.ch. surgeons
outskirts of the town, is the residence of Frederiek Locker- Fire Brigade, W. G. Sandford, brigade captain; Engine
Lampson esq. Colne Cottage is the residence of Sir Thomas house, back of Town hall; keys kept at the Police Station
Fowell Buxton bart. M.A., D.L., J.P. The trustees of the & at -:\'Ir. Grimbles, Church street
late B. B. Bond-Cabbell esq. D.L., J.P. are lords of the Lighthouse, Charles Aveston, principal keeper
manor and the principal landowners. The area is BST acres Police Station, Frederick Woodbouse Lovick, inspector
of land ; rateable value £ rz, 86r ; the population in 1 88r was Royal National Lifeboat Institution, Cromer station, W.
r,s68 and in 18gx was 2,193. G. Sandford, hon. sec
Parii'h Clerk, John A. Clarke. Shipwrecked Fishermen & Mariners' Benevolent Society,
PosT, l\1. 0. & T. 0., S. B. & Annuity & Insurance Offic!l.- W. G. Sandford, bon. sec. Church street
Mrs. Harriet Fox, postmistress, Church street. Mails Town Hall, Prince of Wales road; J. K. Frost, sec
arrive at 6.45 & 10.30 a.m. ; 3 (to callers) & 6 p.m.; 3rd Volunteer Battalion, Norfolk Regiment, I Company,
sunday delivery, 7.30 a. m. Mails dispatched to :-London Town hall; Robert Fenner, lieutenant
&; all parts, 7.30 & 11.30 a.m.; Ipswich & London, 1.30 PUBLIC OFFICERS : -
p.m. ; Norwich, 3.30 p.m. ; N orwi.ch & Ipswich, 5 p. m. ; Admiralty Surgeon, Robert Fenner M.R.C.S.ENG., L.R.C.P.
London & all parts, 7.15 p.m. ; sunday dispatch, 7 p.m. Edin. Norwich road
Hours of attendance at post office on sundays from 8 till Clerk to Cromer Protection Commissioners & to the Com-
10 a.m missioners of Taxes, Peter Edward Hansell, Church st
WALL BoXEs cleared at:- Medical Officer, Cromer District, Erpingham Union,
G. E. R. station, I I a.m. & 6.30 p.m Henry McClure M. D., M. eh. Waveney house
Station road, II. I5 a.m. & 5 & 6.45 p. m Registrar of Marriages for North Erpingham Sub-District,
Bolt road, II.I5 a.m. & 5 & 6.45 p.m Ambrose Horatio Fox, West street
West cliff, n.15 a.m. & 5 & 6.45 p.m Station Officer of the Coastguard & Life Saving Apparatus
Overstrand road, 10-45 & 6.40 p.m & Lloyds Signal Station, William George Smith
COUNTY MAGISTRATES FOR NORTH ERPIKGHAM PETTY Town Crier, John Mack, Garden street
SESSIONAL DIVISION. PLACES OF WORSHIP, with times of services:-
Cremer Thomas Wyndham esq. B.A. Beeston hall, Beeston SS. Peter & Paul Church, Rev. Frederic Fitch M.A. vicar;
Regis, Cromer, chairman Rev. Jose ph J<'r,~derick Cholmondeley J ames B.A. curate;
Suffield Lord, K.C.B., P.C.,D.L. Gunton park, Norwich 10.30 a.m. 3 & 6.30 p.m.; thurs. 7.30 p.m
Harbord Hon. Harbord, Heathfield house, Norwich United Methodist Free Church, 10.30 a. m. & 6.30 p.m.;
Buxton Sir Thomas Fowell bart. D.L. Colne house, Cromer tues. 7 p.m
Broadhurst Henry esq. Trent cottage, Overstrand, Cromcr Wesleyan, 10.30 a. m. & 6.30 p.m
Gurney Richard Hanbury Joseph esq. Northrepps ball, ScHOOLS:-
Norwich Sir Bartholomew Read, a native of Cromer, & Lord
Hoare Samuel esq. M.P., M.A. Cliff house, Cromer Mayor of London in r_so2, founded a Free school here in
Kctton Robert Williarn esq. Felbrigge ball, Norwich 1505 & endowerl it with £ ro ; the Goldsmiths' Company
Mott John Stanley esq. Earning ham hall,Hanworth,Norwich of London, who are the trustees, rebuilt the school in
Robinson Henry Matthew Cooper esq. M.A. Knapton hall, 1821 & it is entirely supported by the Company, by
North Walsham whom, also it has been re-endowed from time to time;
Clerk to the Magistrates, Peter Edward Hansell, Church it will hold r2o children; average attendance, Bo; John
street, Cromer B. Hudson, mast.; Alfred E.Salter M.C. P. assistant master
Petty Sessions are held at the Police station the first man- Church of England, Church street, for 300 girls & infants;
day in every month at I I a.m. The places in the petty average attendance, g8 girls & 94 infants; Miss Emma
sessional division are :-Aldborougb, Antingbam, ~yl­ Hill, girls' mistress ; Miss Thirza Mulcock, infants' mist
merton, Baconsthorpe, Barningham Norwood, Earning- RAILWAY STATIONS:-
ham Winter, Beckbam East, Beckham West, Beeston Cromer Beach, Eastern & Midlands, John Blackbourne,
Regis, Bessingham, Cromer, Felbrigg, Gimingham, station master
_ Gresham, Gunton. Hanworth, Knapton, Matlaske, Met- Great Eastern, Francis Benns, station master
, ton, Mundesley, North Repps, Overstrand, Plumstead, CARRIERS TO NORWICH : -
Ronghton, Run ton, Sheringham, Sidestrand,South Repps, Robert Foulger, from North Repps, mon. & thurs. to the
Suffield, Sustead, Thorpe Market, Thurgarton, Triming- "White Horse," Haymarket
ham, Trunch Omnibuses from the principal hotels to meet every train

Buxton Sir Thomas Fowell bart. M.A., Hansell Miss, 4 Brunswick terrace
PRIVATE RESIDENTS. D.L., J.P. Colne cottage HarbordEdwd.Ralph,4St.Margaret's ter
Barclay John Gurney, The Warren & Bnxton Thomas Fowell J.P. Upton ho Heal Ambrose, Lawn cottage, Hall rd
Herne close Cooper Mrs. St. Mary's Herring Miss, Bracondale
Ballman Mrs. 5 Victoria ter. Vicarage rd Cooper William Charles Payne, Bank Hill Miss, Vicarage road
Birkbeck Henry, The Grove house, Tucker street Hoare Francis, The Weylands
Rirkbeck William, Cliff Lane cottage Crane Miss, High street Hoare Richard J".P. North lodge
Bond-Cabbell Mrs. Benjmn.Cromcr hall Dent Surgeon-Captain Herbert Crow- HoareSamuelM.P., M.A.,J.P. Cliffho.;
Rond-Cabbell Mrs. J. Cromer hall ley, Norwich road & 5 Hereford gardens, Park lane w;
Bowles Roger, Bank house, Church Dent Wm.Richd.Redbourne,Norwich rd & Athenamm, Carlton, & Oxford &:
street & Prospeet villa, Hall road Fearn Georg11, 2 Suffield park Cambridge clubs, London s w
Bux:ton Dowager Lady, Colne house Fenner Robert, Norwich road Holroyd Misses, St. Rhadegund's
BuxtonSydney Charles M.P.Shipbourne, Fitch Rev. Frederic M.~. Vicarage Howard Mrs. Church street
Vicarage road; & rs Eaton place & Fluder Mrs. 2 Hill side, Vicarage road Hudson John B. Goldsmiths' school
Reform & National Liberal clubs, Govett Mrs. Vicarage road ~ James Rev. Joseph Frederick Cholmon·
London s w Hansell Edward Morgan, Norwich road deley B.A. [curate], Vicarage road
DTRF:CTORY .l
.... NORFOLK. CROMER• 357
Jarvis Ernest I<' . .Albert house Breese George, baker, confectioner Cotton Robert, lodging house, Ip!!wich
King Miss, 1: St. Margaret's terrace & biscuit manufacturer ; first-class house, Bond street
Lambert Mrs. Chapel street refreshment rooms with every re- Crisp A.rthur, White Horse inn, West st
Lewis Mrs. Crescent & Beach house quisite accommodation, lodging house Cromer Amateur String Band (R.
Locker-Lampson Fredk. New Haven et proprietor, Higb. street & Brooke st. Bowles,condctr.; A.E.Salter,hon.sec)
Long Miss, 5 Victoria ter. Vicarage rd See advertisement Cromer Band of llope (Mrs. J. G.
Luson Thomas M.D. Carlton terrace Brooks Elizh. ( :vlrs. ),lodg. ho.Church st Barclay, president ; Rev. F. Fitch
McClure Henry M. D., M.ch. Waveney ho Brown & Cook, solicitors, Church st M.A. & E. Randell esq. vice-presi-
McKelvie Robert M.D. Holly cottage Brown Waiter William, solicitor & com- dents; A.. E. Salter esq. M.C. P. hon.
Newman John, Lothian ho. Vicarage rd missioner fur oaths, see Brown & Cook sec. & treasurer), Lecture hall
Pearson Charles Fellows, 6 Vicarage rd Bullcn Arthur Herbert, pianoforto & Cromer Brickworks, brick & tile manu-
Riches George, Holmwood, Church st umsic warehouse, Bond street facturers (John Youngs, proprietor)
Rounl'eMiss, I Chesterfield villas,Holt rd Bultitude Gilbert Mayes, saddler & Cromer Church Restoration Committee
Rust George, Bexley ho. Vicarage road boot maker, Hamilton road (Alfred Burton, sec)
Sandford George Wcbb, Church street Bultituue J ane (Mrs.), fishmonger, Cromer Conservative Association (F.
Sandford William George, Colne lodge Surrey street W. Rogers, sec.), Marlborough house
Savory Rev. Ernest Lloyd, Dunrobin, Burn Williarn John, fruiterer,green- Cromer Protect.ionCom missioners( Peter
Vicarage road grocer & seedsman& florist; the best Ed ward Hansell, clerk), Norwich rd
.Sheppard Miss, 5 The Crescent fruit & vegetables supplied at moder- Cromer Town Hall Co. Limited (J. K.
Smith Vernon, Norwich road ate charges; cut tlowers, bouquets, Frost, sec)
Spence Leona rd, Gordon house wreaths & crosses to order ; fur- Cromer & North Walsham Post (office,
Swail Miss, The Rest, Cabbell road nished apartments, Church street & Munday's Library) ( P. Sornau &Sons,
Sykes Thomas Woodcock, New street Brooke street proprietors & publishers ; published
Wilson Rev. Daniel Frederic M.A. Burton William Howes & Sons, iron- friday ), Church street ; & at North
Brunswick terrace mongera, West street & shoeing Walsham. See advertisement
Winter H. Gordon M. A. carobs. Suffield smiths, Garden street Cubitt& Walker,coal & tiour merchants,
Park school Burton .Alfred, secretary to the Cromer Eastern & Midlands Station yard
Wyrley-Birch Wyrley D.L., J.P Church Restoration Committee & the Curtis James, greengrocer, ale & stout
Young James, 5 Brunswick terrace Royal Cromer Golf Club & collector merchant, & lodging house, High
to the Cromer Water Works Uo. the street ; Jetty st!'ee!> & Tucker street
COMMERCIAL. Cromer Gas Co. the Local board & CurtisRobt. tailor,Hanover lo.Church sq
.Abb!! S. H. & V. pianoforte warehouse, Protection commissioners & assessor& Curtis Susannah (Mrs.), milliner &
Jetty street collector of taxes & assistant overseer, dress maker,&lodging house, Hanover
Abbs Hammoml Thomas, lodging house, Hamilton road lodge, Church square
Jetty street Burton Frederick Waiter, dining rooms, Danaher John, lodging house, Chester-
Abel Mary Ann (Mrs.), toydlr. Highst Church street & Victoria restaurant, field villas, West street
Allen Robert, boat builder, & lodging Cross street Davies James, lodg-ing house, Garden st
house, Tucker !!treet Burton Isaac Howes, boot & shoe ware- Davies James, jun. proprietor of
Alien Benj.&Son,fishmongers,Church st house, Church street bathing machines, Chapel street
Amis S. & J. posting masters, Bond Burton L. G. (Mrs.), furnished apart- Davis John, chief boatman to the coast
street & West street ments,Dunedin house, Garden street guard, Beach row
_Amis Charles, lodging house, Welling- Burton Lewis Gilbert, tailor & Davison Daniel, chemist, Jetty street
ton house, New street draper ; branch office of the "Eastern DeaconSarah(Mrs. ),lodging ho.xHans pl
Amis Henry, fishmonger, West street Daily Press &Norfolk News," Garden Dent Adelaide Edith (Mrs.), dress
.Amis Wm. Wellington P.H. Garden st street &. Hamilton road maker, 8 The Meadow
Amis William Walpole, beer retailer, & Burton Sarah Ellen (Miss), lodging DentHerbertCrowley,surgn.Norwich rd
lodging house, Garden street house, Victoria house Dulley David, chemist, Church street
Anderson Mary Sophia (Miss), lodging Burton William H. butcher, West st Edwards Emma. (Mrs.), lodging hou8B~
hou~e, Edinburgh house, East cliff Carter Jane Margaret (Mrs.), lodging Garden street
Bacon George, farm bailiff tu Mrs. B. houses, Prince of Wales road Farmers' Federation (J. T. Willis, sec.) ;
Hond-Cabbell, Home farm Catton Jas. lodging ho. Chesterfield lo registered office, 3 Church street
Baker Williarn Porter, Ship inn, Cemetery (Alfred Collison Savin, clerk Farrow C. M. (Mrs.), lodging house,
wine &.spirit merchant, steam laundry to burial board), Holt road Cliff brow, West cliff
& private apartments, Church square Churchyard & Sons, grocers, drapers, Farrow MatthewThos. dairy,Ga.rden s~
.Bald win Geo.lodging ho. The Meadow outfitters, provision, wine & spirit l<'enner Robert M.R.C.s.Eng., L.B.C.P .
Balls John (Mrs.), lodging ho. New st merchants, china, glass & earthen ware Edin. surgeon, admiralty surgeon &
Balls Richard, fisherman, & lodging depot, West End supply stores, West medical officer for Northrepps district
house, West cliff street & Prince of Wales road; & at & public vaccinator for Cromer dis-
.BeasyCharles ,jobmaster&carter,High st Sheringham & Costessey trict of Erpingham union, & surgeon
Beck Philip Daniel, louging house, 5 Clarke .John A. hair dresser, tobacco- to the Cromer Cottage hospital, Nor-
Sufficld park nist & lodging house keeper & parish wich road
Beck William, wholesale & retail green- clerk, Church street Fisher Robert Isaacks, draper & hatter,
grocer, Garden st. & lodging house, Clarke Richard Algar, family High street
Salisbury how;e, Prince of Wales rd butcher, farmer & purveyor of meat, Fm:: Ambrose Horatio, builder & cabinet
.Benns Francis, station master, G. E. poulterer & dealer in game, Church maker & registrar of marriages for
Railway station st. ; & well furnished & well venti- N orthErpingham sub-district, West st
Billham Robert, basket ma. Church st lated apartments on reasonable terms, Fox Harriet (Mrs.), jet & amber orna-
Billham Rohert, jun. basket maker, & Algar house & Algar cottage (opposite ment manufacturer,stationer & fancy
posting establishment, Hamilton road the church) repository, Post office, Church street
Black.bourne John, station master, Cumben Marina (Miss), private lodging Fox Thomas, coal dealer, 9'fhe Meadow
E. & M. Railway, Cromer beach houses & apartments, facing the sea, Francis J ames, ironmonger, Church st
BloggThos. butcher, &lodg. ho. Garden st West cliff Franc is Jas. ju u.lodging house, West st
Blyth William, lodging house, Hall rd Comben William Richard, hatter, out- FrancisSa.muelFulcher, rope ma. West st
HlytheJohn, pork butcher, Garden st fitter, tobacconist, hau dresser, & Francis Samuel George, bird fancier,
Blythe John Henry, jobmaster, Tucker apartments, Brooke street West street
st. & E. & M. station ; posting in all Cook Charles, lodging house, Holt rd Fry Thomas, lodging house, 4 St.
branches; omnibuses & cabs meet all Cook J. Ha~ld (firm, Brown & Cook), Margaret's terrace
trains; telegrams," Blythe, Cromer" solicitor, Church street ; &: at GallebawkJn.Jas.shopkeeper,Church st
Bone Robert, H.ed Lion hotel, Brooke st Shoringham & Holt Gas & CokeCo.Limited (Peter Edwa.rd
Bower James, baker & confectioner; Cook Sarah (Mrs. ),lodging house, Ship- Hansell, sec)
first class refreshment rooms with den, Vicarage road Grand Hotel Co. (William Dudley Dance,
every accommodation for visitors, CopelandJn.Hy. King'sHeadP.H. High st manager), West cliff
Steam bakery & restaurant, Church Copley Caroline (Mrs. ),ldg.ho. TheCroft Gray William, dining rooms, Church st
st. ; branch, Garden st. ; furnished Cooper William Charles Payne, mangr. Green E. B. (Miss), private lodging
private apartments with home com- of Gurney's Bank, Bank ho. Tucker st house & apartments, facing the sea,
forts, Fern house Cottage Hospital(RobertFennenr.R.c.s. Cannon house, W e..'lt cliff
'Bowles Roger, manager of Lacons, Eng., L.R.C.P.Edin. & Henry McClure Grimble Eliza (Mrs.), shoe ma.Church st
Youell&Co. 'sRank,Bank ho. Church st M.D. surgeons ; Miss Cooper, hon. Gurneys, Birkbecks, Barclay & Buxton,
Bradfield Charles Fredk. coach builder, sec. ; Miss Fitch, minute sec. ; Miss bankers (branch) (William Charles
The Mount; & lodging ho. Chapel st Sarah Lambert, matron), Lo:udon la Payne Cooper, agent), High street;
BreeseE. E(Miss),private lodging houses Cotten Hannah (Miss), louging house, draw on Barclay, Bevan, Tritton &
& apartments,facing the sea, West cliff Vicarage road Co. London E c
~58 .CROMER. NORFOLK. (KELLY's

Hales John Basely Tooke, solicitor & Mace August us, fancy reposit<Jry,&com- Randall Robert Laurence, 'watch &
commissioner for oaths & notary mission agent, Garden street clock maker, silversmith, jeweller &
public (firm, Hansells & Hales) Mace Herbert, photographer, Church st engraver, & furnished apartments,
Hansells & Bales, solicitors, Church Mack Gilbert, paperhanger, bill poster, Bond street
street; & at Cathedral ciosP.., Norwich & furnished apartments, Brunswick st RandellFr-ederick&Horace,ironmongers,
Hansell Edward Morgan, solicitor (firm Mack J n. shoe m a. &wwn crier, Garden st High street; & at Norwich & North
llansells & llales); & at Cathedral Mack Mary (Miss), fancy repository, Walsham
close, Norwich Church street Reeve James Henry, cake, seed, corn
Hansell Peter Edward (firm, Hansells Mack Tom, watch & clock maker, & coal merchant, G. E. Raiiway statn
& Hales), solicitor, commissioner for jeweller,manufacturer of amber orna- Riches George, builder & contrac-
oaths, perpetual commissioner & clerk ments&fancy & general dealer,Church tor, manufaeturing joiner & 11tone
to the magistrates, to the commis- street & photographer, Hamilton rd mason, Church street ; & brick & tile
sioners of taxes & the local board & Mallom "\Villiam, gamekeeper to Mrs. manufacturer, Overstrand
protection commissioners, Church Benjamin Hond-Cabbell, Hall road Riches George, jun. lodging hou~,
street; & at Cathedral close, Norwich Mayes Williarn, fisherman, Church st Glencoe, Norwich road
Hansell Walter Edward, solicitor (firm, Maynard Sml.Tucker'sHotel tap,Jetty st Robson T. Barton (Mrs.), first class
Hansells & Bales) ; & at Cathedral Middleton Wm. apartments, Garden st furnished apartments overlooking
close, Norwich Miller Harry Ed ward, stone & marble the sea, Cambridge house
Harmer .Amelia (Mrs.), lodg ho. Jetty st mason, Cemetery road & furnished Rogers Ellis, c11.rpenter & joiner, & fur ..
Harmer Joseph Henry, lodging house, apartments, Jetty street & proprietor nished apartments, Flint house,
2 St. Margaret's terrace of bathing machines Church street
Harris Geo.plumber & glazier,Churchst Miller John Samuel, saddler & harness Rogers Frederick Wi lllam,painter,
Harrison Ann (Mrs.), refreshment maker; requisites supplied for golf, plumber, glazier & gas, hot water &
rooms, Jetty street , cricket, lawn tennis & hockey, electric bell fitter, Marlborough house
llarrison Gertrude (Mrs.), berlin wool Church street RogersJsph. (Mrs. ),lodging ho.4Hans pl
repository & bible depot; furnished Miller J. S. (Mrs.), first class furnished Rogers Matthew, lodging ho. Tucker st
apartments with good accommoda- apartments, Cliff Ford, Norwich road Rogers Waiter, coach builder, & lodg-
tion for visitors, Church street Moore .Annie (Mrs.), lodging house, 3 ing house, Prospect house
Hart Francis, lodging house, Tucker st St. Margaret's terrace Roper Emily (Miss), lodging honse, 6
Hastings Herbt. hair dresser,I5 West st M unday Charles, bookseller, sta- St. Margarct's terrace
Hoare William Parker, chemist & drug- tioner & news agent, & office of the Roper Jarnes Richard, dairy, & pork
gist, Church street "Crorncr & North Walsharn butcher, Church street
Howman Mary (Mrs.), lodging house, Post/' & furnished apartments (26 Rounce M. E. (Mrs.), lodging house,
West cliff years with W. H. Smith & Son, I, 2 & 3 Chesterfield vilias
Hunt Fredk. Wm. boot rnaker,Chapel st Strand, London), Church street Royal Cromer Golf Club (Alfred
Hunter· Frederick Samuel, furnished .M unday Margaret (Mrs.), boot & shoe Burton, sec)
apartments, Bowdon house & coach maker, High street Rust George, furnished apartments,
painter, Church street Mutin1er Sidney, grocer & draper & Bexley house, Vicarage road
Hunter SamL posting master, Church st outfitter, & lodging house, Garden st Rust H. &. H. grocers & tea dealers,
Jarrold & Sons, fancy reposit<Jry & li- Nea.ve .Hebecca (~liss), lodging house, provision & wine & spirit merchants
brary, Church street Garden street & drapers & milliners, High street
Jarvis Henry Soame (exors. of late), N ockels Elizh. (Mrs.), lodging ho.~ ew st Salmon Joseph, lodging house, 6 Vic-
Hotel de Paris family hotel, East Nockels Henry, lodging house, Mount st toria terrace, Vicarage road
cliff .& Tucker's hotel, Tucker N ockels Hillary, lodging house, West st Salter .Alfred Edward, suites of apart-
st. & wine & spirit merchants, High st Nockels Martha (Mrs.), lodg. ho.New st ments within three minutes of the
Jarvi& Jane (Mrs.), butcher, Church Nockels Robert Matthew, fish- sea, I Hill side, Vicarage road
.gtreet & lodging house, High street monger, poulterer & licensed dealer Sandford William George, auctioneer,
Jarvis SI. plumber & glazier, Church st in game, fruiterer & greengrocer (a house agent & valuer, Church street
Jeary Arthur Thomas, coal merchant, private oyster room), New street. Savin Alfred Collison, clerk to the
· E. & M. station & Chapel street ~ee advertisement burial board, Church street
Jillings Jarnes, builder &contractor N ockels Sarah (Mrs.), lodging house, Savin David William & Son, watch
& iurnished apartments & proprietor Church street makers & jewellers, Church street
of bathing machines, .Austria house, Norfolk & Norwich .Amalgamated Scott Augustus Frederick, architect &
Garden street Labour Union {Cram er district) surveyor, & surveyor & inspector of
Keith, Blake & Co. llolrs. ; & at Norwich (George Edwards, sec.), Aylmerton nuisances to the local board,Chnrch st
Kettle Henjamin, cab proprietor, West st Ogden Leslie, private tut<Jr,Ivy cottages Scales Esther (Mrs), lodging house,
Kettle George, livery stable' keeper, Palm er Rt. Walpole, jobmaster, Brooke st Prince of Wales road
Chesterfield cottages & Brnnswick st PalmerWm.Rd.lodging house, Church st Self Thomas (Mrs.), superior furnished
Kettle John, chimney sweeper & cab Payne Sarah Ann (Mrs.), earthenware apartments overlooking the sea;
- proprietor, Church street dealer. New street a warded sanitary certificate,Blantyre,
Lacons, Youell & Co. bankers (branch) Payne Wm. lodging house, The Meadow Church street
(Roger Bowles, manager), Church Payne William l<'rederick, grocer, & Shingles S. A. (Mrs.), lodging house,
street; draw on Glynn, ~!ills & Co. lodging house, Prince of Wales road Shamrock villa, Hall road
Lombard street, London E G Perfect llenry, wine & spirit merchant, Shipwrecked Fishermen & Mariners'
Lake J ames, lodging house, Tucker st & G. E. R. parcels receiving ()ttice, Benevolent Society ( W. G. Sandford,
LakeM.ary (Miss),-l.odgingho. Chapelst High street · hon. sec)
Lee Georgina (Miss), lodging house, Plumly George, boot & shoe maker, Sidle Elizabeth (Miss), lodging hou'Se,
The. Meadow Chapel street · I Carlton terrace
Leggett ChasJlodging house, The Mount Poock John .Alfred, surgeon-dentist Sill wood John, plasterer, The Meadow
LeNeve Robert-Sutton, dairy, Church st {attendance 2nd, 3rd & last friday in Smith Caroline (Mrs.), girls' day school,
Ling James Wm. boot maker, Cab bell rd each month), Church street Avon house, West street
Lewis Elizabeth (Mrs.), lodging h(mse, Press Brothers, millers (steam), malt- Rmith Robert H. draper & grocer,
Crescent & Beach house · sters, cake, corn, coal, seed & man• Garden. street
Loades Martha M. (Miss),lodging house, ure merchants Smith Snsannab (Miss), lodging house,
5 St. Margaret's terrace · Press & N able, lodgin5 house, Dunkeld, Garden street
Lockwood ll. G. (Mrs.), furnished Vicarage road Springall Elizabeth (Mrs.), lodging
apartments, Garden street Primrose Bessy Neal (Mrs.), Bath hotel, house, Carlton terrace
Long Jane Helen (Mrs.), milliner, High Esplanade Stimpson George, lodging house, Ches-
street & apartments, Garden street Pugh Edward, .Albion family & corn- terfield villas
Lovelal·e James, Belle Vue hot1ll, High ' mercial hotel, wine & spirit & cigar Swann Mary Ann (Mrs.), pork butcher,
street & WtJst. Cliff family hotel & merchant, Church street Church street
boarding house Puxley Charlotte (Mrs.), lodging house, Thompson Annie Hannah (Mrs.), lodg-
Lovick Frederick W oodhouse, inspector 2 Hans placo ing house, 3 Hans place
of police, Police station Puxley Thomas, family grocer & draper, Turner Albert Walt. plumber & glazier,
Luson ThomasM.D., c.M., F.R.c.s.Edin. & agent for W. & A. Gilbey, wine & Church street
physician & surgeon, Carlton terrace spirit merchants, Church street Vinter J. O.coal mer.(Thomas Fox,agt.),
McClure & Luson,physicians & surgeons Pye .Aiice Susannah (Mrs.), fishmonger, Eastern & Midlands Station yard
McCiure Henry M.n., M.ch. physician Brooke street Volunteer Battalion ( 3rd) ,Norfolk Regi-
& surgeon, medical officer for the Pye John, lodging house, Chapel street ment (I Co.) (commander, vacant;
Cromer district of Erpingham union PyeSarah(:.\Irs. ),lodging house,Chapel st Robert Fenner, Iieut.), Town hall
& surgeon to l'romer Cottage hospital, Hamm Hannah (Mrs.), boot & shoe Wanstall Thomas, lodging house, Kent
Waveney house dealer, Church street house, The Meadow
J>IRECTORY .J NOHFOLK: CROXTOYJ 359
Water Works Co. Limited (Peter Wilkins George William, baker & con- : & deputY. clerk to the Erpingham
Edward Bansell, sec) fectioner, Jetty street 1 union, 3 Church street
Watts George, lodging house, East cliff Willis A. M. (Mrs.), furnished apart- , Wintel' H. Gm·don M. A. cambs. prepar·
Webster Nathan Bell, surgeon-dentist, ments overlooking the sea; awarded 1 atory school ~or the Public schools,
attendance tuesdays, Church street sanitary certificate, Sea View house,. Suttield Park school
White Edward t:lackett, grocer, boot & Church street Workmen's&Fishermen'sReadingRoom
shoe warehouse, fancy repository, Willis John Tourle, accountant, house I (Rev. Frederic Fiteh M.A. president),
news agent, & lodging house, West agent & land surveyor, secretary to Chapel street
street & Hamilton road the Farmers' Federation Limited, Wright Ellen (Mrs.), confectioner &
Whitfield Mary Ann (Mrs.), lodging clerk to the Nortbrepps school board lodging house, West street
house, Fernleigh, Norwich road I •
CROSTWICK is a parish and village about 4t miles north- in the gift of the Bishop of Norwich, and held since I89r by
by-east from Norwich, 3~ south-west from Salhouse station the Rev. Thomas Miller Dickson M.A. of Clare College, Cam.
on th6 Norwich and Cromer line and within 2 miles of the bridge. The town land of I aere produces [,x ss. yearly for
navigable ri,-er Ant, in the Eastern division of the county, fuel. Robert Bacon Longe esq J.P. of Spixworth hall,
Taverham hundred and petty sessional division, St. Faith's Wm. Henry Trafford esq. of Wroxham Hall, and Col.
union, Norwich county court district, rural deanery of Edward John Stracey-Clitherow, of Boston house, New Brent-
Taverham and archdeaconry and dioee..~e of Norwieh. The ford, Middlesex, are the lords of the manor and the principal
houses are for the most part situated round a picturesque landowners. The soil is sand and gravel ; subsoil, sand.
common of 30 acres. The church of St. Peter is a building The C"hief crops are wheat, barley, turnips and hay. The
of rubble in the Perpendicular style, consisting of chancel, area is 6go acres: rateable value, {,788; the population in
nave, north porch and an embattled wP..stern tower with I881 was 159 and in 1891 was 147.
pinnacles containing I bell : there are two stained windows, Parish Clerk, Alfred Gardner Crowe.
one to Eustace Arkwright and the other to the Rev. Robert
Ficklin B. A. a former rector of the parish in I 8o 4 : on the south PosT OFFICE-( in the parish of Horstead-cum-Sta.nninghall)
wall is an ancient fresco of St. Christopber and there are Jo~n Spanton, receive_r. Letters received from Norwich
some remains of the rood loft stairease: the church affords arnve at 4·35 a. m. ; dlspatc~ed. at 5·45 P:m. The nearest
~ 20 !)ittings. The register dates from the year 1s6o. The money order & telegraph office 1s at Coltlshail .
living is a rectory, average tithe-rent charge £r46, net I National School (mixed), for 43 children; average attend·
yearly value£ 12s, including 6 aeres of glebe, wit.h residence, ance, 41 ; Mrs. Frances Snelling, mistress
Dickson Rev. Thos. Miller lf.A. Rectory Crowe Alfred Gardner, rate collector Ri~eborough James, wheelwright
Filby John William, farm bailiff toR. Hargraves Arthur Charles, farmer, Snelling Edward, White Horse P.H
Bagsha w esq North farm
CROSTWIGHT is a parish 14 miles north-east from the year x6o4. The living is a rectory, average tithe-rent
Norwich, 3! east from North Walsham and 2 north from ·charge {,r14: net yearly value {,8g, including I3t acres of
Honing station on the Eastern and Midlands railway, in the glebe, with residence, in the gift of Mrs. Shepheard, and held
Eastern division of the county, Tunstead and Happing petty since rBss. by the Rev. John Bartholomew Val6 M.A. of Em·
sessional division, Tunstead hundred, Smallburgh union, manuel College, Cambridge, who also holds the sinecure
North Walsham county court district, rural deanery of rectory of Wisteston, Herefordshire. £x xos. derived from
Waxham, Tunstead division, archdeaconry of .Norfolk and town lands is for brea.d. There are two manors in this
diocese of Norwich. The church of All Saints is a building parish,one being held by Mrs. Shepheard, of North Walsham 1
of stone, in the Early English style, consisting of chancel, and the other by Edward George Cubitt esq. J.P. of Honing
nave, south porch and a. lofty western tower containing x Ball, who are also the principal landowners. The soil is YicQ
bell: a screen of carved oak separates the chancel from the mixed; subsoil, sand, gravel and clay. The chief crops are
nave: and there is an ancient octagonal stone font of the wheat, oats and barley. The area is 777 acres; rateable
Norman period, supported on a massive central shaft, en- value, {,762: the population in 1891 was 103.
circled by eight smaller ones : the memorials include two Sexton, Charles Burton.
marble tablets to Ja.mes Shepheard, d. x8w, and to Martin Letter~ through Norwich, via Smallburgh, arrive at 8.45
Shepheard, d. r841, and a brass dated 1447: in the south a.m.; North Walsham is the nearest money order office
porch is a stoup: the church is seated with carved oak The children of this place attend the schools at Honing &
benches, and affords 250 sittings. The register dates from East Ruston

Vale Rev. J n.Bartholomew M.A. Rectory I Gaze Charles,farmer,Honing Hall farm I Gibbs Frederick Gaze, farmer, The Hall
CROWNTHORPE is a v1llsge and parish, 2 miles charge, /,129, with 146 acres of glebe, in the girt of the Ea~l
north-west from Wymondham and I east from Kimberley of Kimberley K.G.,P.C. and held since x887 by the Ecv. John
station on the \Vymondham and Wells section of the Great Thomson M.A, who resides at Carlton Forehoe. Hendry's
Eastern railway, irt the Mid division of the county, Fore hoe charity of 10s. yearly is given to the poor in coals. The Earl
hundred, petty sessional division and union, Wymondham of Kimberley K.G., P.c. is lord of the manor and principal
county court district, rural deanery of Hingham Forehoe landowner. The soil is clay; S]lbsoil, brifi!k earth. The
dh·ision, archdeaconry of Norfolk and diocese of Norwich. chief crops are wheat, barley, turnips and hay. The area. is
The church of St Jamcs is a small edifice of stone and flint, 1I4 acres; rateable value, £r,o9s; the popula,tion in xBgi
in the Early Engli~h style, consisting of chancel, nave, south was 82.
porch and a western tower containing I bell: the pulpit is Parish Clerk Edward 'fhompson.
of oak with three richly carved panels and there are me- '
monal tablets to Williarn Buckley, d. ~ 7 6 2 , and Hannah, his PosT 0FFrcE--8amuel Breeze, Teceiver. Letters arrive
wife, d. r 786, and to Thomas Coningesby \Vatson, d. 1g 13 : through Wymondham at7 a.m.; dispatched at7.15 p.m.
in 184~ the church was new roofed and fitted with open seats The nearest money order & telegraph office is at Wymond·
ancLin r88o was again re-sP..ated and the interior thoroughly ham
restored and it now affords 8o sittings. The register dates This place is included in the United School Board District of
from about the year qoo. The living is a rectory, annexed Wicklewood, formed in 1875; & the children attend the
to Carlton Forchoe, average yearly value from tithe rent- Board School there
Babbage Sergeant-Major ThomasChris- Learner Alfred John, farmer & proprie- Fox John, !l.gent to the Prudential In-
topher, drill instructor tor of Learner's patent foot-rot corn- surance Co. Crownthorpe villa
Breeze Samuel, post office position Wade Ann (Mrs.), farmer
Chenery Frederick, blacksmith '
CROXTON i$ a village and parish in a small vale, on the is a vicarage, average tithe rent-charge £ss. gross yearly
road from Thetford to Watton, 2 miles north from Thetford value £go, including 28 acres of glebe, with residence, in the
station on the Great Eastern railway, in the South Western gift of the Master and Fellows of Christ's College, Cambridge.
division of the county, Thetford union and county court dis· and held since 1892 by the Rev. George Frederick Archer
trict, Grimshoe hundred and pe:.ty sessional division, rural M.A. of that college. Here are Wesleyan and Primitive
deanery of Cranwioh south division, archdeaconry of Norfolk Methodist chapels. The poor's allotment of 26 acres produces
and diocese of Norwich. The church of All Saints, standing £10 yearly, which is distributed in coals to the poor. The
on the side of a hill, is an ancient edifice of flint, in the Decn- Master and l<'eUows of Christ's College and William Dalziel
rated and .Perpendicular styles, consisting of chancel, nave, Mackenzie esq. M. A., J.P. of Fawley court, Henley -on-Thames,
south aisle and a wester!). tower of tlint, round at the base, who are lords of the manor, and John William Da.vy esq.
with an octagonal belfry, surmounted by a spire and con- J. P. are the chief landowners. The soil is sandy; subsoil,
taining a clock and I bell: tb.e chanc-el was rebuilt in 1883 chalk and clay. The chief cropsare oats, barley and wheat.
and an organ was erected in r892. The church affords 200 The area is 4oS33 acres; rateable value, £"3,339 xos.; ihe
sittings. The register dates from the year xss8. The living population in 1891 was 328.
360 CROXTOX. NORFOLK. [KELLY'S

Sexton, George Mortimer. Thetford is the nearest money order & telegraph office.
Postal orders are issued here, but not paid
PosT OFFICE-Richard Smith, receiver. Letters from Tbet- National School (mixed), enlarged in 1887, for 8o children;
ford received at 3.30 a.m. ; dispatched at 9.30 p.m. average attendance, 6S; Miss Mary Garland, rmstress
.Archer Rev. George Frederick M.A.. Johnson John Sydney, estate agent to Mole Robert, steward to John Sydney
Vicarage W. D. Mackenzie esq. & insurance Johnson esq
Johnson John Sydney, Chapel & Hall agent, Chapel & Hall farms Rayner Sarah (Mrs.), Bell P.H
farms Kybird James, wheelwright & shop- clayer Walton John, farmer
Bloomfield James, farmer; charges are keeper, carpenter & undertaker; es- Wait Jn.commercial traveller,Hill fann
most moderate, Hill farm timates given for general repairs &c Wharton William, farmer
Howlett Elizabeth (Mrs.), beer retailer Mortimer George, farmer
DENT ON is a pleasant but scattered village and parish on since 1891 by the Rev. John Richard Turner Ea ton
1 M.A.
the Suffolk border of the county, 4~ miles north-ea..'lt from late fellow of Merton College and hon. canon of Worcester:
Harleston, 4 south-west from Bungay and I~ north-east the rectory house and grounds adjoin the church and there
from Homersfield station on the Waveney Valley railway, are 5~ acres of churP.h land. There is a Congregational
in the Southern division of the county, Earsham hundred chapel, rebuilt in r821 and endowed with £so yearly and a
and petty sessional division, Depwade union, Harleston residence for the minister. Charities :-John Warner's, r;f
county district, rural deanery of Redenhall, archdeaconry 2os. yearly, derived from land held by the Boys' Hospital,
of Norfolk and diocese of Norwich. The church of St. Nol'wich, is given to eight deserving poor widows on the
Mary the Virgin is a building of flint, with stone dres- first Lord's day in November, each receiving 2s. 6d.: the
sings, chiefly in the Becorated style, consisting of spacious RP.v. John Porter left I~ acres of land, now (r892) let
chancel, nave, aisles, north porch and a low embattled for £4 6s. 2d. which is given to the poor in money: Mrs.
western tower containing a clock and 3 bells: the clock, Button left £so, invested in a" going" on Rungay common,
which strikes the hours and chimes the quarters, was now let for 32s. yearly, which sum is given away in bread
erected in I884 by the Rev. C. Arundell St. John }lildmay, on Good Friday: Sarah Bedbank, in I692, left 8s. yearly
late rector, as a memorial to the late Ven. William Arundell out of a meadow, now in the occupation of Mr. C. Huggs,
Bouverie, formerly rector of Denton and archdeacon of farmer, for the purchase of two Bibles. Denton House
Norfolk, d. 23 Aug. 1877, and to the Hon. Frances (Sncyd), is the seat of Waiter Hamilton Pemberton esq. l.P.;
his wife, d. 5 March, 1884: the north porch has a stone Den ton Lodge that of Mrs. Carthew. There are several
groined roof, and there are piscinre in the chancel and both manors in thrs parish. The principal landowners are
aisles ~ there are memorial windows to the Sandby and Primrose Bouverie esq. Waiter Hamilton Pemberton esq.
Umphelby families and tablets to Hobert Rogcrson M.A. ob. Mrs. Bowyer, of Leamington, Warwick, and the trustees of
1684; Matthew Postlethwayte, archdeacon of Norfolk and the late William Martin Hazard esq.: there are also some
rector of the parish, d. 27 June, 1745; George Sandby, smaller owners. The soil is strong loam; subsoil, clay.
chancellor of the diocese of Norwich and s6 years rector The land near the church and rectory is sandy. The chief
here, d. 24 March, 1807, and to Catherine Day, d. 1789 : crops are wheat, beans, turnips, beet and barley. The area.
there are brasses in the chancel to Margaret Gedge, ob. r6I9, is 2,437 acres ; rateable value, {,2,776; the population in
;fohn Gedge, ob. r62r, and to Ann, wife of William Goode, I891 was 4SI.
a former rector, ob. 1645: a lych ga~e of solid oak was Parish Clerk, Charles Revel!.
erected by the late Archdeacon Bouvcrre at the entrance to
the ehurC'byard: in 1868 the nave and aisles were re-fi<Jored PosT & M. 0. 0., S. B. & Annuity & Insurance Office.-)irs.
and reseated throughout with open oak benches, the chancel Ann Aldred, sub-postmistress. Letters arrive from Bar-
having been restored previously, and in 1874 the aisles were lest on at 8. I5 a.. m. ; dispatched at s. ro p.m. No post on
roofed in oak C'overed with lead : the church now affords sundays. Bung-.1y & Harleston are the nearest telegraph
350 sittings, r5o being free. The register dates from the offices
year 1559 and there is a book of ~hurchwardens' accounts Church of England School (mixed), endowrd with 7! acres
dating from the reign of Henry the VII. The living is a of land, left for its support by Robert Rogerson, a former
rectory, average tithe rent-charge £578, net yearly value rector, which is let in small allotments to the poor, & pro-
£463, including 93 acres of glebe and residence, in the gift duces about [14 yearly ; the school was erected in r84o,
of the Archbishop of Canterbury (who must confer it on a for 90 children; average attendance, 6o; Herbert
fellow or former fellow of Merton College, Oxford), and held Hitchcox, master; Mrs. Herbert Hitchcox, asstnt. mistrss
Basden Rev. Frederick Sherrard [Con- Devereux Edward, tailor Minns James, farmer
gregational], The Manse Drake John, farmer Pearce William(Mrs. ),fa.rmer,Grove frm
Carthew Mrs. Deuton lodge Dunn Charles, farmer Revell Charles, shoe mkr.&parish clerk
Ea.ton Rev. Canon John Richard: Gower Robert, shopkeeper Revell Charlotte (Mrs.), beer retailer
Turner M.A. [rector], Rectory Ha.dingham Henry, farmer Revell James, farmer
Pemberton Waiter Hamilton J.P. Den- Hipperson Arthur, farmer Riches James, farmer
ton house Hunting Hollie Noel, butcher Skinner John, farmer
Johnson David, farmer & landowner, Todd Charlotte (Mrs.), farmer
COMMERCIAL. Upper Hill farm Ward Charles Henry, King's Head P.H.
Aldred Ann (Mrs.), grocer & draper, , Johnson Henry Frederick, farmer & blacksmith
Post office King William, farm bailiff to Mr. Watson Edward, blacksmith
Buggs Charles Henry, farmer Alfred Massey Whitehead Herbert, farmer
Burgess Benjamin, farmer, Lodge farm Martin Benjamin, farmer W ooltorton Charles, farmer
.Button Alfred, miller (wind) & farmer Mayhew George, shoe maker Wooltorton William, shopkeeper
Button William Rod well, farmer .Middle ton Charles, farmer W orman John, farmer
Cannell Esau, fanner Mills William, shoe maker

DENVER is a parish and village, on the navigable river the chancel retains a double piscina of the Decorated period
Ouse and the road from Downham to Ely, with a station on and three sedilia : the church was restored in 1870, at a
the Lynn and Ely and Downham and Stoke Ferry railways, cost of about £r,6oo, when the north aisle was added, the
which here form a junction, 86~ miles from London, r mile building new roofed with oak, and reseated at a cost of
south from Downham Market, in the South Western divi- .(,roo, defrayed by Mr. John Palmer, of Lynn: there are
sion of the county, Clackclose hundred and petty sessional 300 sittW.gs. The register dates from the year r653. The
division, Downham union and county court district, rural living is a rectory, average tithe rent-charge £6gr, net
deanery of Fincham, archdeaconry of Norfolk and diocese yearly value £627, including 92 acres of glebe, with resi-
of Norwich. The chlll'ch of St. Mary is an edifice consisting dence, in the gift of Caius College, Cambridge, and held
of chancel, nave, north aisle, south porch and a western since r884 by the Rev. James Mourant Du Port M.A. of
tower, in the Early English style, with spire and containing Caius College, Cambridge, hon. canon of Norwich and rural
a clock placed in 1870 and 5 bells : in the chancel is a dean of l<'mcbam, ea5itern division. Here is a We..'ileyan
black marble slab, to Dr. Robert Brady, a native of this chapel, erected in 1864. Captain George William Manby
parish, physician to Charles II. and James II. keeper of the F.It.s. the inventor of the rocket and other apparatus for
public records r67o, regius professor of physic at Cambridge, saving life at sea and also the author of various topo-
and for 40 years (166o-r7oo) master of Gonvillc and Caius graphical works, is said to have been born here 28 Nov.
College, to which he bequeathed all his estate in Denver ; 1765, but Hilgay is also mentioned as his birth place;
he was also M.P. for Cambridge in the parliaments of r68r he died at Southtown, near Great Yarmouth, 18 Nov.
and r685, and wrote a history of England and other works 1854. There are 4S acres of land, producing an average
.and died 19 Aug. 1700: here also is a memorial window rental of £65 a. year, half of which is applied to the repairs
.and a brass tablet, erected by parishioners and friends, to of the church and the remainder distributed to the poor,
the Rev. William Haughton Stokes M. A.. 32 years rector, d. and 3 acres belonging to the church let for £8 yearly.
24 May, x884: the carved stone font was placed in r87o: Edward Roger Murray Pratt esq. J.P. of Ryston Hall, who is
DlRECTOBY.J NORFOLK. DEOPHAM .. 361
lord of the manor, Col. William Earle Gascoyne Lytton- 'of the water bein!; controlled by two paira of leafed doors of
Bulwer J.P. of Quebec House, East Dereham and Heydon immense size. In addition to the drainage doors there is
Hall. and Cains College, Cambridge, are the chief land- on the east side of the river a. huge pen sluice 14 feet long,o
owners. The soil is strong and light clay, and fen land; 18 feet wide and about 24 feet in depth~ worked also by 4
subsoil, lower greensand and gravel. The chief crops are paij:s of huge timber leafed doors ~ there are also on tha
wheat, barley, peas, beans and roots. The area is 3,149 se:a side of tl)e sluice 4 pairs of doors capable of holding a
acres; rateable value, £4,78:.;; the population in 1891 was 24 feet rise of tidal water. This Sluice is under dual control,
8o3. the South Level Commissioner'S being responsible for the ebb.
Parish Clerk, William Dnngay. doors (those pointing up stream), whilst the flood doors
DENVER SLUICE.~In ~650 The Adventurers made their (those pointing down stream) and the structure of thelSluice
famous cut, or Hundred Feet river, running for 2I miles itself are under the charge of the DenveP Sluice Commis-
from Earith to Denver, and placed a sluice across the old sioners. Some idea of the immense capacity of this sluice
channel (now the Old West river at Earith) to prevent the for discharging water may be realized when it is borne in
upper parts of the South Level being inundated by the water mind that in t1mes of high flood the flood waters of 8oo,ooo
coming from the counties of Bedford and Huntingdon. acres of land are poured through its openings.
The effect of these works was to throw the full force of the PosT OFFICE.-Ollett William Ambrose, receiver. Letters
flood waters into and almost completely submerge the lower arrive from Downham at 6 _20 a. m. & I p.m. & are dis-
parts of the South Level at Denver. To remedy this evil patched at 11 a.m. & 7 p.m. ; & on sunday dispatched at
the first Denver sluice was erected in 1652, across the Old Ir. o a.m. The nearest money order & telegraph office is
3
Ouse just above its junction with the bottom of the Hundred , at Downham. Postal orders are issued here, but not paid
Feet river; the result, owing to the silting up of the river
both above and below the sluice and the treacherous nature WALL LETTER Box, Denver Sluice, cleared 9.30 a. m. week
of the subsoil, was only partially successful, and Denvor days ; no collection on Sundays
sluice had to be again rebuilt when it had stood barely a This parish is contributory to Downham Market School
century, and the second sluice also failed in 1828 ; in board, sending one member
1 s32 the present structure was most carefully and ela- Church of England School (mixed), erected by the Rev. W.
borately built from the designs and under the direction of H. Stokes M. A. late rector, & opened May, I876; it wi!I
the famous engineer Sir John Rennie, to the eastward of hold I37 children; average attendance, 109; Benjamin
the old sluice, the old drainage eyes of which may still be Bray, master
seen, though now completely blocked up. The present sluice Railway (Denver Junction) Station, William Bloxam, sta-
consists of three drainage eyes, each being I8 feet wide and tion master
carrying a depth of 13 feet 6 in. on the cills of each eye, OARRIERS.-James & Benjamin Sharpe, to & from Lynn,
with ordinary navigation head of water; the ebb and flow on tues. thurs. & sat
Du-Port Rev. James Mourant M . • A Curson Simon, beer retailer Robinson William, boot maker
[rector,hon.canon&rural deau],Rctry Curtis Jn. Lewin,farmer. Uenver sluice Rodwell Robert, farmer
Everett Abraham . Day Edward, farmer, Denver sluice Russell Elias, farmer
Gleaves John Dungay William, whaelwright Sayer Thomas, general dealer
Melior Wilfred Arnold Dunnett John, beer retailer Scarboro James, boot maker
Reed Thomas Lancelot, Crow hall Garner Matthew, beer ret. Salter's lode Sharpe James & Benjamin, carriers &
Turner Henry William Gleaves James, miller (wind & steam) farmers, Denver common
Wayman Waiter, Ha.rdwick house Green George, farmer, Middle drove SheringhamFrdk.Gay,farmer,Rookery
Woottfln Joseph Harnwell Charles,farmer,Denver sluice Shingles John, beer retailer,Salter's lode
COMMEadiAL. Horn James, blacksmith, ironmonger & Sutleff John Thurlow, farmer
Ambrose Ollett William,assistant over- agricultural machinist Thorpe John, farmer, Silt fen
seer & postmaster Isgate Joseph, chimney sweeper Towler Eliza (Mrs.), cowkeeper
Barber llenjamin, wheelwright Jacques Frederick, farmer Trundle Henry, cowkeeper
Barley Thomas, beer retailer Johnson Henry, farmer Tuck Frederick Jas.farmer, Denver fen
Beart Thomas, farmer Johnson John, shopkeeper Turner Henry William, farmer
Beazley Jas.sluice keeper, Denver sluice Kent William. grocer Upcraft Robert, farmer
Bishop Henry, beer retailer Lambert Mary Anne (Mrs. j, Bell P.H Vine Robert, farmer
llloxam William, station master, Monk George, grocer & draper Watts Jamcs William, navigation toll
Denver junction Paul Henry, cowkeeper collector, Salter's lode
llrundle Edward, beer retailer Reid William, Jenyn's Arms l'.H.& wine Wa~an Waiter, farmer, Denver ~:~luice
Buteher John, farmer, Denver fen & spirit merchant; first class ac- West Samuel, farmer, Denver sluice
Chatten Robert, shopkeeper commodation for anglers, Denver Wing Isa.ac, boat builder, Denver sluice
Collins Robert, farmer, Salter's lode sluice, near Denver railway station Wootton Joseph, farmer,College farm;
Cork Reuben, beer retailer Robinson Edward, boot maker & at Downham
Cowley Edward, vermin destroyer
DEOPHAM is a parish ~ miles south from Kimberley 1837, and the other at Low Common. The Rev. Henry
station, 4 north from Attleborough station on the Thetford Rix, who died in 1728, left £6o to be invested in land,
and Norwich railway, and 4 south-west from Wymondham, which produces a rental of £9 yearly, now appropriated for
comprising the small village of DEOPHAM GHEEN, a mile teaching four poor children and for an annual sermon, the
south-east from the church. The parish is in the Mid minister receiving 10s. the clerk IS. and each child 8s. the
division of the county, l<'orehoe hundred, petty sessional remainder being given in bread to the poor. A sum of about
division and union, Wymondham county court district, £12, arising from I4 acres of land, awarded at the inclosure
rural deanery of Hingharn, Forehoe division, archdeaconry in I8 14 in lieu of common rights, is distributed among the
of Norfolk and diocese of Norwich. The church of St. poor in coal annually. The Earl of Kimberley, the Satton
Andrew is a building of flint and stone in the Perpendicular family and the Ecclesiastical Commissioners are lords of the
style, consisting of chancel, lofty nave, aisles, north porch manor. The principal landowners are the Earl of Kimber-
and an embattled western tower, with octagonal turrets and ley K.G., P.c. the trustees of the late J. B. Graver Browne
pinnacles, and containing 5 bells: m 1864 the chancel was esq. and the Crown. The soil is marl; subsoil, clay. The
entirely restored and new roofed, and in 1867 the south chief crops are wheat, barley, turnips and hay. The area
aisle was restored at a cost of £240: the nave was thoroughly is 1,66I acres; rateable value, £2,631 ; the population in
restored and new roofed and new windows inserted in I884 1Bgr was 395.
at a cost of over £2,000, and the porch has also since been Parish Clerk, Charles Hurrell. ·
restored: the estimated cost for the restoration of the tower PosT 0FFfCE.-Robert Phmnix, receiver. Letters through
is £750: there are 28o sittings. The register dates from Wymondham arrive at 8.30 a. m. & are dispatched at
the year 156o. 'The living is a vicarage, average tithe rent- s.so p.m. The nearest money order & telegraph office is
charge £I35, net yearly value £75, with 23 acres of glebe at Hingham. Postal orders are issued here, but not paid
in Shipdham and 6 acres in this parish and residence, in the PILLAR LETTER Box, Low Common, cleared at s-~0 p.m.
gift of the Dean and Chapter of Canterbury, and held since week days
r86I by the Rev. Hibbert Wanklyn L.Th. of Unversity National School (mixed), erected in r85r, for 84 children,;
College, Durham. The Ecclesiastical Commissioners are average attendance, 62; Mrs. Georgina Penlington, mist
impropriators of the rectorial tithes. There are two Primi- CARRIERS.-John Raynor, from Rockland, &-Knott, from
tive Methodist chapels, one at Deopham Green, erected in Rockland, pass through to Norwich on wed. and sat
Peacot'k Mrs. South End cottage Alien Wm.farmer&cattle dlr.Hall farm Clarke Hannah(Mrs.),farmer,Mill farm
PorterRev.Jacb.:u.A.[rectorofHackford] Baldwin Frederick, farmer, South hill Clarh James William, farmer
Rowing Miss, The Green Bateson John, Ha.lfmoon P.H. & black- Clarke Thomas Leeder,farmer,Stalland
Wanklyn Rev.Hibbert [vicarJ,Vicarage smith, The Green Clements James Blackwell, carpenter&
COMMERCIAL. Bowman Waiter, farmer, High elm wheelwright, The Green
AJlen Herbert, farmer, Old farm Bush Jn.farmer &shopkeeper, TheGreen Dack Robert, farmer 1'
362 DEOPHAM. NORFOLK. • {KELLY'S
Gathergood William, beer retailer & Mordey Alfred, miller (wind) I Riches John, farm bailiff toMrs.Hannab
farmer, Low common Morter John, farmer, Red barn Clarke
Hart John Wm. frmr. Glass Bottle frm Nicholls Alfred, flrmer, Low common Shaw Henry, farmer & landowner,
Harwood George.Jabez, farmer ,Stalland P11ge William, shopkeeper Hingham road ·
Howling Robert, farmer ' Patrick William, farmer, South hill Smith Fras. Robt. farmer,Churcb farm
Hurrell Charles, farmer, High Elm Phrenix Robert, jun.thrashing machine Smith George, shoe maker, The Green
farm & Hingham road owner, Stalland Smith Isaac, tailor, The Green
Jude Charles, farmer & drill owner, Phcenix Samuel, farmer, Low common Smith John, shoe maker, The Green
Hingham road · Phrenix Waiter C. farmer, The Green Stone George, thatcher
Lake GP..orge, farmer, Low common Phrenix-StoneMarthaAnn(Miss),farmer Turner William, draper & grocer
Lord Robert, bricklayer Pitts Jane (Mrs.), farmer Ward William, farmer
Lyngcoln William, fat mr. Pattengill frm Potter Alfred, carpenter, Stalland Watling Henry, farmer
Martin James, farmer, Stalland Read John, beer retailer, The Green Webster James, 'farmer ·
Minns Reuben, farmer Ringer Urban, farmer Whitehand Charles, farmer, 'The Greeri
i

DEREHAlVI.
EAST DEREHAM is a thriving market town and parish, and residence. in the gift of the Lord Chancellor, and held since
the head of a county court district, with a station on the x888 by the Rev. Henry James Lawes Arnold M:. A. of Pem-
Great Easteru railway, which is also the junction of a l,Jranch broke College, Cambridge.
from Lynn, 127 miles from "London by rail and xoo by road, The mission church, in the Upper Norwich road, erected
16 west-by-north from Norwich, 12! east-by-north from in x88o, is a building of stone, consisting of nave, sonth
Swaffham, I I north-west from Wymondham and 26£ east porch and a belfry containing :t bell, and will seat about 150
from Lynn, in the Mid division of the county, in the hundred persons.
of Mitford, petty sessional division and union of Mitford and The ' 1 Cowper" Congregational chbrch in the Market
Launditch, rural deanery of Hingham, Mitford division, place, erected in 1874 at a cost of £3,500, is an edifice of
srchdearortry of Norfolk and diocese of Norwich. · Kentish rag with Bath stone dressings, in the Gothic style,
The town is governed by a Local Board of 12 members, from designs by Mr. 'Edward Boat'dman, architect, of
first elected on the constitution of the district in 1877, and is
Norwichi and occupies the site of the house whm-e the poet
well drained by sewerage works, and lighted with gas from Cowper spent his last days, the woodwork of the bedroom in
works in the Yaxham road. .
which he died being preserved and fitted 'in the vestry: it
Waterworks were erected in r88x, the supply being derived consists of nave with apse and aisles : the windows of the
from deep wells sunk in varioru parts of the town, at a cost of apse are stained and there is a stained wind{)W at the west
£4,000. end: in front of the church is the following memorial in-
Dereham (A. S. IJfXJr, a wild animal, Eng. deer) is a very scription, written by the late Dean Stanloy :~"This manu-
ancient place and is supposed to have been made a parish by mentis erected on the site of the house whBTe -the beloved
Anna, King ·of the East Angles from 642 to 654. In the· poet of Olney, William Cowper, spent the last years of his
reign of Queen Elizabeth July 1, rs8r, the whole town was life, under the care of faithful friends. He lies buried in the
destroyed by fire and a second fire occurred July 3, x67o, parish church, having here given up his soul to God, April,
during the reign of Charles II. by which 170 houses \~ere 25th 1 r8oo." Then follow a few lines from "The TllSk."
burnt, and property destroyed to the value of £x9,500. There are soo sittings. In r892 a parsonage was presented
The church of St. Nicholas is an ancient building of stone by H. C. Wigg esq. of Melbourne and formerly of this town.
in the Early English, Decorated and Perpendicular styles, The Baptist chapel, High street, was builli in 1793 and has
erected on the site of the conventual chapel, and consists of 400 sittings. ·
chancel, clerestoried nave of eight bays with triforium and The Primitive Methodist chapel, Commercial road, bnilt
clerestory, aisles, transepts with eastern chapels (dedicated in x863, has 28o sittings.
to St. Thomas of Canterbury and St. With burgh), south or The Trinity Wesleyan church, in Theatre street, erected in
Eoton's porch, dating from the reign of Henry VII, with a r88o on the site of a previous chapel, is of Kentish rag with
mutilated holy-water stoup on each side, and a central Bath stone dressings, in the Gothic style, from designs by
lantern tower : the detached bell-tower which stands to the Mr; Ed ward Boardman, architect, of Norwich, and was built
south of the church was begun about 1508 and contains 8 i at a cost, including schools and minister's house, of [3,500:
bells : the chancel arch retains two twisted shafts of the I it has 400 sittings.
Norman period on the west side; the chancel itself is Early I The Cemetery, of about 5 acres, opened in x8~, contains
English, and was erected about 1250, the tracery of the east , two mortuary chapels, and is under the control of a. Burial
window being of much later date; the chancel retains three : Board of nine members.
sedilia and a double piscina: the west doorway, with an ogee- The charities for distribution amount to about £400
headed niche on each side, the great window over it, and the . yearly, and there are;84 acres of fuel allotment.
whole of the north ais!e, e~cept the doorway, are Decorated; The Corn Hall, in the Market place, erected in r856., at a
the la~ter!l tower, which IS supported on four fine arches, cost of more than £ 3, 000, is a structure of red brick with
the triformm arcade and clerestory, the transepts, eas~ern stone facings, and is a great convenience to merchants and
chapels, the ~rcades of the n~ve and ~he westernmo~t piCrs, farmers transacting business here.
are Perpend1~ular, t~e remamde~ be1':lg ~arly Enghsh: the The Assembly Rooms 1 built in 1756, on the site of the old
font, erected m 1468, IS adorned w~th carvmgs of stone of ~he market cross, form a spacious edifice of brick ; here the
seven sacraments of the Cat~obc church, tog:ether w1th magistrates hold petty sessions for the hundred ~very
figures o~ the Apostles =. there IS a carved mumment chest Friday and there is a Reading Room and Institute in the
of Flemish work, datmg from I5° 1• and ~ brass eagle same building. The Headboroughs are the trustees of the
lectern ; there .were for~er~y several brasses m the church, assembly rooms and other property, and after paying certain
two only of :WhiCh remam m. a perfe.ct sta:te =. Cowper, the outgoings, the balance, about £wo, is paid over to the Local
poet, who died here 25th Apnl, x8oo, IS buned m the church board in reduction of the rates
and there are monuments to· him and his relatives, Mrs. ·
Unwin and Miss Perowne: the east and other windows are · There are Conservative and Liberal associations, a cricket
stained and a reredos of carved stone, beautifully illumi- club and a dramatic company.
nated, has been erected : the pulpit was made from ancient The fire brigade, formed in I879, is stationed in Church
oak, taken from the old vicarage house at Besthorpe :in xBHs street; it has a steam fire engine purchased in 1892, and two
the church was thoroughly repaired at a cost of £ 2.300 : in manual engines, with all necessary apparatus.
the churchyard is the spring, said to issue from the spot The position of the town, in the centre of a fertile and
where the bones of St. Withburga were first deposited, and highly cultivated district, and its distance from any other
the ancient arch, from which the water issues, is supposed market of any consequence, cause Dereham to rank among
to be a portion of her tomb, but the probability is that this the best markets of the county. The market is held on Fri·
structure was in early tJmcs a baptistery : a sum of about day, and is well supplied with corn, live stock and provisions
£x,ooo was expended on the chancel by the Ecclesiastical of every description. Fairs are held in the Market place on
Commissioners, on the reversion to them of the great tithes, the Thursday before July 6th and September 29. There are
at the decease of the last sinecure rector: there are about four branch banks. East Dereham is the head quarters of
:~,400 sittings, 400 being free. The register dates from the the 3rd Volunteer Battalion Norfolk Regiment; the F cam-
year 153£. The living is a vicarage, with the vicarage of pany was embodied in this town in r86o. The manufactures
Hoe annexed, average tithe rent-charge East Dereham £424, are principally connected with agriculture: there are manu-
, joint net yearly value .£3o6, including 6o acres of glebe with factories of agricultural steam engines and threshing and
DlijECTORY.] NORFOLK .. EAST DEREHAM .. 363
other machines and iron foundries, coach works, saw mills, Quebec House, the S'ea.t of Brigadier-General William Earle
a brewery, maltings, and a leather factory. • Gascoyne Lytton Bulwer D.L., J.P. a mile north-west from
The nunnery of SS. Nicholas and Withburga was founded the town, is a mansion in the G-othic style, and derives its
by King Anna in 650 or by his daughter Withburga in 66o, name from having boon built at the time of the capture of
but the first hous~ was destroyed by the Danes in 974· The Quebec in 1759 ; it stands in an extensive lawn, which is well
Saxon Chronicle records tbat fifty-five years after the death timbered, and partly surrounded by plantations.
of Withburga her body was found all whole and uncorrupted I
as on the day of her interment, and was removed into the The area of the parish of East Derenam is 5,222 acres i
church: subsequent writers add that from her burial-place rateable value, £25,273 ; the population of the parish in 1871
in the churchyard issued forth a spring of the purest water, WaS 5,107 j 1881, 5,640 j and in 1891 5,524. .
gifted with many healing virtues: the tomb of Withburga DILLINGTON is a hamlet in this parish, r mile north-west.
having become of great repute for the cure of diseases, the
Abbot of Ely became very desirous of getting possession of DuMPLING GREEN, 2 miles south-east; ETLING GREEN, 1i
her body, in order to translate it to Ely, and concerted a miles north-east j NORTH HALL GREEN, I mile north; SOUTH
scheme for stealing it, which he carried inw effect the night GREEN, hal£ a mile, and TO.F'fWOOD, 1 mile south, are other
after a feast which, as lord of the town, he gave at his court- hamlets.
leet: this exploit, described as "a soul-saving robbery;'' was
carried out on the Sth of July 1 974· Sexton, Benjamin Cooper.

Official Establishments, Local Institutions &c.
PosT, M. 0. & T. a., s. B. & Anmuty & lnsurance Office-r- ·ARRIVAL OF MAlLS.
John W. Tearc., postmaster. · Town Deliveries -combined Letters & Parcels-
Deliveries commence in Dereham f\S under :-Letters from commence at : -
Lo~don & all parts of Englanq. &c. 7 & 10.40 jl.m. 2.20 & 1
London & Eastern Counties night mails-all parts of United
7·35 p.m . . Kingdom, Colonial & Foreign, by town postman & to callers,
DISPATCH OF MAILS. 7 a.m. ; rst London Day Mail-all parts of England &
F k nham Walsin barn Wells & Wi hton 3 a. m .• reni:s- Scotland, Colonial&Foreign, byto~np~stman &to calle~s,
a e '. g '. • g ' . ' o;• 10.-4-5 a. m. ; 2nd London Day Mail-Kmg's Lynn, MattiS-
tered until 8.go p. m (w1th exLra fee of 4d. unt1l 8 30 p.m. b ll v · h & d b t t & t 11
·
previous evenmg · ) ; parce1s receive · d a t t b e coun te r up to a ...., orwicEl h1re an 1 , y own bpost man
& Foulsh t o ea &ers,
t
B.so p.m. previous evening 2.~f p.m.; m am d L /m,Dy o;l\po;. ~anh o
Dereham District Mail Carts-...BawdesweU, Blakeney, Bod-
barn, Briningham, Cley, Elmham, Foulsham, Guist, Bin-
~ l~rsK. 7·t
0 •
0 I!. m. ;Jr . ~n Roybn
mg s ynn, orwiC •
ah a-&
urg
& l l a b~n t am,
e S, • own
dolveston Holt Melton Constable Stibbard Thornage pos:man & to callers, 1-40 ~.m. ; Dereham Rur.al Posts-
' ' - d' · ' ( · h' Elsmg, Great Fransham, Gressenhall, Hockermg, Long-
Weyborne &c. 4 a..lm.; regJstere ·duntil 8.30 · p.m.
) w1t h am, M a tt"Is b a ll , Scarmng,· S wan to n M or1ey, T u dd en h am,
ext.ra f ee of 4 d . un t 1 8.!:JO p.I'n. prev1 us evemng ; parce1s W en dl"mg, W e-lb Or.,,., y h" & b t t & t
· d
receive a:t t h e coun t er up. to 8 .30 p.m. prevwus· ·
evenmg m::,
D
ea11 ers, 7.4op.m.; ere am IS ne
hax ""m c. y own pos man
D. t · t M · C rts B d
a11 a - aw es-
o
Dereha.m Rur~l Posts-Elsmg, G~at Fransb~m, Gresscn- well, Briningham, Blakeney, Cley, Elmham, Guist, Bolt
hall, Hockermg, Longham, Jl;~attishall, Scarmng, Swanton &c. by town postman & to callers, 7 a.. m. rtext morning.
Morley, 'l,'uddc~ham, Wer:dlmg, Welborn~, Yaxbam &c. On Sundays, Christmaf; Day, Good Friday & Bank Holi-
5-55 a.~.; reg1stered ~nL1l 8.3a_p.m. (w1th extra. fee of days there is only one deliver~ by town postman, which
4d. until 8.go p.m. prevwus evemng); parcels rece.Ived at , commences at 7 a.m. No parcels are delivered on sun-
the counter up to 8.30 p.m. previous evening days
Dereham rst Town Delivery-Bushy Common., Etling Green PosT OFFICE, receiving house, T6ftwood, Rob-ert ~dwards,
& Hoe, 6.55 a. m. ; registered until 8.30 p.m. (with extra receiver, dispatch, ~.30 a.m. & 6.40 p.m.; letters left for
fee of 4d. until 8.30 p.m. previous evening); parcels re- callers, 2.45 p.m ,]',
ceived at the counter up to 8.3o·p.m, previous evening CoUNTY MAGISTRATES FOR PETTY SESSIONAL DIVISION OF
xst London Day Mail--'-King's Lynn, all parts of England, MITFORD ANn LAUNDITCH.
Scotland & Ireland, Colomal & Foreign, 8.50 a. m. ; ;regis- Gurdon Robert Thornhaugh esq. M.A., D. L. Let ton hall.
tered unt,il 8. 20 a.'m. (with extra fee of 4d. until 8. so a. m. chairman ·
previous evening) Foster Sir William hart., D.L. 'fhe Grdve, Hardingham
2nd London Day Mail-Briningham, Fakenham, Bolt, Mel- Browne Richard Charles esq. Elsing hall
ton Constable, Norwich, Walsingham, Wells, Wighton, Hulwer Brigadier-General William ,Earle G-asco:rne Lyttonf
Norfolk, Essex & Suffolk generally, 10.30 a. m. ; registered Quebec house
until 10 a.m. (with extra fee of 4d. until 10.30 a.m.); Bulwer William D. E. esq. Quebec house
parcels received at the counter up to 10.30 a.m Collison Albert esq. Mileham hall
Dereham 2nd Town Delivery, 10.40 a. m, ; registered until Ed wards William Henry Bartholomew eS'q. Hardingham
m.xo a. m. (with extra fee of 4d. until 10.40 a. m.); par! Hyde Lieut.-Col. Henry Elwin, Moorgate house
eels received at the counter up to 10.40 a.m Keppel Lieut.-Col. Edward George, Reymerston haU
3rd London Day Mail-Cambridge, Cromer, Gt. Yarmouth, Marsham Rev. Thomas John Gordon M.A. Beechhurst
Fakenham, Lowestoft, Norwich, Wells, 'Principal Towns North Charles esq. D.L. The Hall, Rougham
in Cambridgeshire, Essex, Norfolk & Suffolk, South of Stedman Mathew Robert esq. Wood hill, Gressenhall
England, Colonial & Foreign, 1.20 p.m.; registered until Clerk to the Magistrates, Waiter May Harton, Guildhall
12.50 p.m. (with extra fee of 4d. until1.20 p.m.); parcels Meetings at the Assembly Rooms, East Dereham, every
received at the counter up to 1.20 p.m friday at r2, & Brewster sessions are held at the BnU inn
Mattishall & Yaxham, 2.10 p.m. ; registered until 1.40 p.m. at Litcham about Au~ust in each year
(with extra fee of 4d. until 2. xo p. m.) ; parcels received The parishes in the Mitford & Launditch petty sessional
at the counter up to 2. xo p. m division are: -Cranworth, East Dereham, Garvestone,
Dereham 3rd Town Delivery, 2.10 p.m. ; registered until Hardingbam, Hockermg, Letton, Mattishal1, Mattishall
1.40 p.m. {with extra fee of 4d. until2.10 p.m.); parcels Burgh, Reymerstone, Shipdham, Soutbbergh, Thuxton,
received at the counter up to 2.10 p.m Tuddenham East, Tuddenham North, Westfield, Whin-
4th London Day Mail, South, South East of England, Cola- burgh, Woodrising, Yaxham, Beeston, Beetley, East
nial & Foreign, in connection with midnight mails from Bilney, Brisley, Colkirk, Great Dunham, Little Dunham,
London North Elmham, Great Fransham, Little Fransham,
North Mail-Midlands & West of England, Ireland, Scotland Gateley, Gresscnhall, Hoe, Horningtoit, Kempstone,
& Wales, Elmham, Fakenham, Foulsham, Guist, King's East Lexham, West Lexham, Litcharn, Longham, Mile-
Lyon, Norwich & Swaffham, 4 p.m.; registered until ham, Oxwick, .Rougham, Scarning, Stanfield, Swanton
3.30 p.m. (with extra fee of 4d. until 4 p.m.) ;· parcels Morley, Tittleshall, Weasenham All Saints, Weasenham
received at the counter up to 4 p.m St. Peter, Wellingham, Wendling, Whissonsett & Worth-
Bury .St. Edmund's, Cambridge, Chelmsford, Colchester, ing
Ipswich, Norwich, Essex & Suffolk generally, 6.30 p.m.; LOCAL BoARD.
registered until 6 p.m. (with extra fee of 4d. until 1'7.30 Offices, Theatre street. Board day, rst wednesday each
p.m.); parcels received at the counter up to 6.30 p.m month, at half-past ro.
Dereham 4th· Town Delivery, 7·35 p.m. ; registered until JI;!EM!ll!RS.
7-5 p.m. (with extra fee ot 4d. until 7·35 p.m.); parcels Wm. Thos. Gidney chairman Thomas Cranmer
received at the counter up to 7-35 p.m Thomas William Bales Henry Samuel Kingston
London & Eastern Counties, United Kingdom generally, George Barton John Wesley Merry
Colonial & Foreign, 8 p.m. (inland letters with ~- & Benjamin Brett Chas. Norton Elvin
foreign k colonial letters with Id. stamp extra until 8.30 William Caird William Vincent
p.m.); registered until 7· 30 p. m. (with extra fee of 4d. George Halcott Cooper Charles George Wood
1

until8 p.m.); parcels received at the counter up to 8 p.m Clerk, Benjamin Herbert Vores, Guildhall
NO'I"H.-The Letter Box is always open Treasurer, Henry Birkbeck, Gurney & Co
364 EAST DEREHAM.: NORFOLK. ~ . [KELLY•S

Medical Officer of Health, Henry Bird Vincent, Beech house, Clerk to the Guardians & Assessment Committee, Waiter
High street May Barton, Guildhall, East Dereham
Surveyor & Inspector of Nuisances, ·wm. W. Lake, Quebec rd Assistant Clerk,Richd.Watson,Commercial rd.East Derebam
Inspector of Markets, William W. Lake, Quebec road Treasurer, Henry Birkbeck, Norwich
Manager of Water Works, Willi:rm W. Lake, Quebec road Collectors t() the Guardians & Relieving Officers :-Elmbam
Manager of Gas Works,.Arthur Drage,Gas works,Yaxham rd district, Robert Ostler, North Elmham ; Litcbam district,
Collector to Local Board. George Fredk. Brown, Norwich st Joseph Horne, Longham ; Mitford district, William Frow
Town Crier, Charles Steward, London road Wray, Church street, East Dereham

PUBLIC ESTABLISHMENTS:- Collector of Poor Rates, William Frow Wray, Church street,
Assembly Rooms, Market place, East Derebam Atbenreum, Derebam ·
lessees · Vaccination Officers, John Carey, Reymerstone: Josepb
Cemetery, Theatre street, Waiter :May Barton, clerk to the Horne, tm'lgbam ; Ro bert Ostler, North Elm ham ;
Burial Board Thomas William Freeman, East Derebam; Henry Purdy,
Corn Exchange, Market place, William T. Gidney, sec Foxley
County Court; office, Quebec road, His Honor Edwin Medical Officers & Public Vaccinators-Colkirk distnct,
Plumer Price Q.c. judge; George Halcott Cooper, regis- Francis Coomber L.R.C.P.Lond. Fakenham; East Dere-
trar & high bailiff; C. B. Le Grys Norgate, deputy regis- ham district, Horace Crofts Hastings, East Dereham ;
trar; 1<-:dward James Coleby,' clerk; George Anderson & Gressenhall district, Stepben Moultoll. Hops on, East Dere-
Charles Steward, bailiffs. The County Court is held in ham; Fransham district, Mordaunt George Dundas,
the .Assembly Rooms once a month. The following places Litcham; Hardingham district, Hobert Heald, Hingham;
are within its jurisdiction :~Bawdeswell, l:leestop, Beetley, Litcham district, Henry Raven F.B.c.s.Eng. Litcham;
Billingford, Bittering "Magna & Parva, Bilney East, Bintry, Mattishall district, William Henry Gritntb-Williams
Brisley, Bylaugh, Colkirk, Cranworth, Dereham East, L.R.C.P.Edin. Mattishall; North Elmbam district, Arthur
Elmham North, Elsing, I<'oxley, Fransham Great, }'rans- Richard Rackham L.H.C.P.Edin. Elmham; Shipdham dis-
. ham Little, Garvestone, Gately, Gressenhall, Guist, trict, James Milner L.R.C.P.Edin. Shipdham
Hockering, Hoe, Horningtoft,Kempston, Letton, Litcham, Superintendent Registrar, Waiter M.Barton, East Dereham;
Longham, Lyng, Mattishall, Mattishall Burgh, Mileham, Deputy, Herbert E. Tarry, East Dereham
Oxwick, Re:\·merstone, Seaming, Shipdham, Southburgh, Registrars of Births & Deaths :-Bawdeswell sub-district,
Sparham, Stanfield, Swanwn Morley, Thuxton, Tittles- Edward Street, Bawdeswell ; Deputy, H. Purdy, Fo:x:ley;
hall, Tuddenham East, Tuddenham North, Twyford, East Dereham sub-district, Richard Watson, Commercial
Weasenham All Saints, Weasenham St. Peter's, Welling- road, East Dereham; Deputy, William Smith, Market
ham, Wendling, Westfield, Whinburgh, Whissonsett, place, East Dereham ; North Elmham sub-district, John
Worthing & Yaxham •
Chaplin, North Elmham; Deputy, Miss Chapling, North
Certified Bailiff appointed under the "Law of Distress Elmbam ; Litcham sub-district,N. Polkingborne,Litcham;
Amendment Act," James Howlet\ Cooper, High street, Deputy,Frederick Laws,Litcham; Mattishall sub-district,
East Dereham W. H. Griffith-Williams, Mattishall; Shipdham sub-
, County Police Station, Commercial road, Edward Symonds, district, William Henry Tench, Shipdha.m
superintendent & 17 constables Registrar of Marriages, Richard Watson, East Derebam;
Local Board Fire Engine Station, Church street, W. H. Deputy, William Smith, Market place, East Dereham
Harris, superintendent, & 12 men Workhouse, Gressenhall, a building of brick, to hold 500
)nland Revenue Office, Commercial road, J. G. Nops, inmates; Philip John Reynolds, master; Rev. T. W.

superv1sor Bartlett, chaplain; Henry Bird Vincent, medical officer;
Property & Income Tax. Office, Church street, W. F. Wray, Mrs. Betsy Reynolds, matron; Miss Carolina Butler.
assessor & collector schoolmistress
Reading Rooms & Athe'nreum, Market place, George RURAL SANITARY AUTHORITY.
Quadling, secretary & librarian Meets at the Union on monday fortnightly at 10.30 a.m
Stamp Office, Market place, J obn W. Teare, distributor Clerk, Waiter May Barton, Guildhall, East Dereham
VoLUNTEERS. . Treasurer, Henry Birkbeck, Norwich
Norfolk Volunteer Infantry Brigade, comprising the xst, 2nd, Medical "Officer of Health, Sir Frederic Bateman M.D.
3rd & 4th Volunteer Battalions, Norfolk Regiment. Norwich
Head quarters, East Dereham. Inspector of Nuisances, William Edgar Clarke, Neatherd
Place of assembly, Thetford. road, East Dercham
Commandmg Brigade, Brig.-Gen. W. G. E. Lytton Bulwer SCHOOL ATTENDANCE CoMMITTEE.
Brigade Major, Col. E. G.. Keppel Meets at Union on monday monthly at 10a.m
Supply & Transport Officer, Capt. S. G. Hill.- xst Vol. Bat.
Norfolk Regiment Clerk, W. May Barton
Brigade-Surgeon-Lieut.:Col. S. M. Hopson Attendance Olllcer, William Edgar Clarke, Neatherd road
Brigade Clerk, Sergeant-In~trucwr Berry PUBLIC OFFICERS : -
3rd Volunteer Battalion, Norfolk Regiment (comprising A, Certifying .Io'actory Surgeon, Henry Bird Vincent, Beech
B, C, D, E, I<', G, H, l, K & L Companies); head quarters house, High street
of battalion & F Co. & Orderly room, Quebec street ; Clerk to Headborough Trusts, C. B. L. Norgate, Quebecrd
Brigadier-Genl. W. E. G. Lytton Bulwer, commanding; Clerk to School Board, C. B. L. Norgate, Quebec road
CoL E. G. Keppel & Hon. Lieut.-Col. H. E. Hyde, majors; Clerk to Commissioners of Land & Assessed Taxes for the
Lieut. M. R.Stedman, instructor of musketry ; Capt. R. L. Hundreds of Mitford & Launditch & to the Guardians &
Payne n.s.o. adjutant; Thomas Cranmer, quarter-mas- Assessment Committee of Mitford & Launditch Union,
ter; Bngade-Surgeon-Lieut.-Col. S. M. Hopson & Surg.- ·· Waiter May Barton, Guildhall
Capt. C. E. Whitty B,A., M.D. medical officers ; Rev. Henry Coroner for the Liberty of the Duchy of Lancaster in Nor·
James Lawes Arnold M.A. acting chaplain ; F Co. Hon. folk, Waiter M. Barton, Guildhall; Deputy, Benjamin
Major C. B. Le G. Norgate, commanding; M. R. Sted- Herbert Vores, South green
man & Edward Ernest Ransom, lieuts.; Sergeant-Instruc- Inspecwr of Corn Returns, John Yelland, South place
tor Berry. Cadet Corps, Norfolk County School, Hon. Police Superintendent, Edward Symonds, Commercial road
Capt. J. Dumas Tax Collector, W. F. Wray, Church street
Weights & Measures Otlice,John Ryley,inspector, Cowper rd
MITFORD & LAUNDITCH UNION. PLACES OF WoRSHIP, with times of Services:-
Board day, alternate m onda ys, at the Work house,Gressenhall St. Nicholas Church, Rev. Henry James Lawes Arnold M.A.
The union comprises the following parishes :-Bawdeswell, vicar i Rev. Alfred Peskett M.A. Rev. W. H. Ainger B.A.
Beeston, Beetley, Billingford, Bilney (East), Bin tree, & Rev. George Broke M.A. curates; B & I I a.m. 3 & 7
Brisley, Bylaugh, Colkirk, Cranworth, Dereham (East), p.m. ; daily 6 p. m. ; wed. & fri. 11 a. m. ; seat 1,400
Dunham (Great}, Dunham (Little), Elmham (North), persons
Elsing, Foxley, Fransham (Great), Fransham (Little), Toftwood :\'Iission Rooms, Rev. H. J. L. Arnold M.A. vicar;
Garvestone, Gateley, Gressenhall, Guist, Hardingham, sunday 3 p.m. ; seat xso persons
Hockering, Hoe, Horningtoft, Kempstone, Letton, Lex- St. Withburga Mission Church, Upper Norwich road; 7
ham (East), Lexham (West), Litcham, Longham, Lyng, p.m. ; wed. 7.30 p.m.; seat 150 persons
Mattishall, Mattishall Burgh, Mileham, Oxwick with Baptist, High street, Rev. Robert Layzell, minister; ro.3o
Pattersley, Reymerstone, Rougharu, Seaming, Shipdham, a. m. & 6.30 p.xn.; wed. 7-45 p.m. ; seat 400 persons
South bergh, Sparham, Stanfield, Swanton Morley, Thurs- Cowper Congregational, Market place, Rev. Edward Lovell;
ton, Tittleshall, Tuddenham (East), Tuddenham (North), · 10.45 a. m. & 6.30 p. m.; tues. 7· 30 p.m.; seat 500 persoM
Twyford, \Veasenham All Saints, Weasenham St. Peter's, ·Primitive Methodist, Commercial road, Rev. William H.
Wellingbam, Wendling, Westfield, Whinberg, Whisson- Hammond & Joseph Closs Mantripp; 10.45 a.m. 2.30 &
sett, Woodrising, Worthing, Yaxham. The population 6.30 p.m. 1 mon. 7.30 p.m. ; seat 280 persons
in 1891 was 26,311; area of the union is 105,233 acres; Wesleyan, Theatre street, Rev. Arthur Holland; 10.45
rateable value, £x62,683 a.m. & 6.30 p.m.; wed. 8 p.m. ; seat 400 persons
DIRECTORY, J NORFOLK. ~AST PEREH.AM. 365
'The Christadelphians' Assembly Romm; SundaY' I I a. m, 250; Henry Barnaby, master; Mrs. Ellen Barnaby, mis·
& 6.30 p.m tress; Mrs. H. E. Tarry, assistant mistress ; Miss M. M.
ScHooLs :- Adamson, infants' mistress
A School Hoard of '7 members was formed in 1872, Railway Station, Charles Samuel Eastaugh, station master.
Shipdham being rontributory with 2 members ; C. B. L. Omnibuses from the King's Arms hotel, Market place &
Norgate, Quebec road, clerk to the board; Arthur Mas- King's Head hotel, Norwich street, attend the arrival &
singham, treas. & sec. to managers; George Anderson, departure of all trains •
Elvin road, East Dereham, attendance officer
Board (formerly British), London road, erected in 1873, for CARRIERS TO:-
200 boys, 200 girls & 170 infants; average attendance, 150 BINTRY~llutters, 'Lord Nelson,' fri
boys, 156 girls & I6o infants; Edward George Harrison, ELMHAM-Nicholls, from the 'Oxford,' mon. wed. & fri
master; Miss A. E. Chapman, mistress ELSING Burton, from the 'Fleece,' fri. & Nailor, from the
Board, Toftwood common (mixed), built in 1875, for 126 'Cock inn,' mon. & fri
children; average attendance, 99; Miss Margaret Star- FAKENHAM-Mail cart, daily
ling, mistress LITCHAM-Robert Barnes, from & to, on fri. & Carlton,
Board, Etling green (mixed), built in 1875. for So children; fri. & sat
average attendance, 75 ; Miss E. Denevilla1 mistress MATTISHALL-Smith, from 'Green Man,' fri
'The Schools at Toftwood common & Etling green were MrLEHAM-Smith, 'Lord Nelson,' fri
erected at a cost of £"r,3oo NoRWICH-John Martin, wed. & sat. from Church street,
National School, Theatre street, erected with residence for returning same day
a master, in I841, at a cost of about£ I,ooo, & is endowed RUDHAM-Smith, from 'Green Man' fri
with 10 acres of land, awarded at the inclosure in IBIS, & SHIPDHAM-Rump, from the 'Bull,' fri
£66o £3 per cent. Consols, raised by subscription in I84I; W ATTON-Hutters, from the' Lord Nelson,' High st. on fri
the school will hold 320 children; average attendance, WnroNDHAM-Mail cart, daily
PRIVATE RESIDENTS. :Fiske Mrs. Theatre street Martin John Upchurch, Norwich street
AingerRev.WalterHemy B.A.[curate], :Forby Misses, Norwich road
The Dale Fox Miss, Church street
I Massingham Arthur, Market place
Mayhew Robert, Elvin road
Aldis William, Theatre street Gidney William Thomas, Quebec road Merry John Wesley, Maltings
Arnold Rev. Henry James Lawes M.A. Giles Mrs. Morton cottage, London rd Moore Miss, Park road
[vicar], Vicarage Girling Rev. Barry M. A. The Heath Mori Arthur Lawrence, Commercial rd
Bale Mrs. Quebec road Girling Rev. Walter M. A. The Heath Nankivell Mrs. Norwich road
Barton Lewis, Commercial road Girling Christopher Neame Miss, Wellington road
Barton Waiter May, Guildhall Girling Nathaniel, Heath field Norgate Charles Bladwell Le Grys,
Baynard !<'!etcher, Upper Norwich road Gott Benjamin, South green Quebec street
Beer Alfred, Theatre street Grant Grigson, Elvin road Page Henry, Theatre street
Bell Miss, 9 Elvin terrace Grant William, London road Page Misses, Elvin road
Belcham Miss, Commercial road Gray Robert, jun. Norwich street Parker Miss, Norwich street
Berry 1homas, Elvin road Hammond Rev. William A. [Primitive Peskett Rev. Alfred M.A. [curate]
Blick Miss, MountainAsh vil.London rd Methodist], Park road Pettingill William Cecil, Elvin road
Blomfield Mrs. Park road Hammonrl James, Commercial road Potter Mrs. Quebec road
Broke Rev. Geo. M.A.[curate],The Dale Hardy Mrs. Quebec road Precious Henry Thomas, Elvin terrace
Brown Mrs. Thomas, Gordon villas, Harrison Edward George, Elvin road Precious Mrs. I6 Elvin terrace
Theatre street Harriss Mrs. Quebec road Prior William, Norwich street
Brunton Mrs. Cowper road Hart WilliamAilen,Snmmerfield house, Ransom Edward Ernest, The Avenue
BulwerBrigadier-General WilliamEarle Norwich road Ray Miss, South green
Gascoyne Lytton J.P. Quebec house Hastings Horace Crofts, Market place Rivett The Misses, London road
Bulwer William Dering Earle J.P. Hill John Wormoll, Millfield house, Rix Mrs. Charles, Norwich street
Quebec house Quebec road Rix Mrs. William, Quebec road
Caird William, Theatre street Hopson Stephen Moulton, St. Nicholas' Roberts William Charles, Quebec road
Carter Mrs. James, Park road house, Norwich street Samuels:Frederick William,South green
Carter Matthew, Theatre street Howard Joseph Charles, Cowper road Shellabear Samuel, Quebec road
Carter William James, Park road Howard Mrs. r Alexander ter. Park rd Skerritt George, Theatre street
Clark Miss, Elvin road Howes William Page, Elvin road Skinner John Henry, Glenfern lodge,
Clarke Mrs. Quebec road Hubhard Williarn, Hill house Norwich street
Clements Richard, Quebec street Hubbard Wilham, Quebec road Stebbings William, Norwich street
Coker Mrs. Upper Norwich road Hyde Lieut.-Col. Hy. Elwin M. A., J.P. Studd Mrs. Commercial road
Cooper George Halcott, Quebec road Moorgate house Tann Mrs. Quebec road
Cooper William, Commercial road Jarred Mrs. Toftwood Tyler Hamilton Richard, 6 Elvin road
Cory Charles, Market place Keeler Mrs. Elm villa, Quebec road Vincent Hy. Bird, Beech house, High st
Cowtan Edwyn Wm. Mawer, Church st Kingston GeorgeRoadley,Orwell house, Vincent Mrs. Point house, London road
Cox Joseph, Quebec road Norwich road Vincent William, Church street
Gran mer Thomas, Quebec street Layzell Rev. Robert[Baptist J, Norwich rd Vores Benjamin Herbert, South green
Cranmer William Jas. Wick Park road Leech Henry, High street Walker William, Quebec road
D:.wey Mrs. St. Withburga cottage Leeds The Misses, Swaffham road Warner Mrs. Commercial road
Digings Jennis, Baxter road Lovell Rev. Edward [Congregational], Wells William, Norwich street
Dunn Miss, Theatre street Parsonage, Rt. Withburga lane Warner Mrs. Norwich road
Edwards Mrs. Swan ton road Lyth Edwin Jackson, York house, Nor- Whiting Mrs. Commercial road
Elvin Charles Norton M.A., LL.D. Eck- wich road Whytock Mrs. Londen road
ling grange l\'Iantripp Rev. Joseph Class [Primitive Wilson Mrs. Elvin terrace
Elvin Mrs. J ames, Commercial road Methodist J, Theatre street Wilson Mrs. Quebec road
Empson Louis A. Providence terrace Marsham Rev. Thomas John Gordon Wright John Franklin, Norwich street
Farrer John, Io Elvin terrace J.P. Beech llurst, Commercial road

A~sembly Rooms (Alired Pease, keeper}, Market place


COMMERCIAL, Bailey Edward, hair dresser, Market place
Abbs lsaac, farmer, Dumpling green Baker Henry, farmer, Badley moor
Adcock Elizabeth (Mrs.), watch maker & jeweller, Market pl Baker Thomas Walter, pastrycook, High street
Adcock Herbert, Jolly Farmers P.H. Yaxham road Baker William, musical instrument seller, High street
Aleock Emily (Mrs.), saddler, Market place Baldwin Barnard, beer retailer, Etling green
Aldis Harriett (Mrs.), registry office for servants, Quebec st Dales Thomas, veterinary surgeon, London road
Alexander Cook Wright, linen & woollen draper. tailor, mil- Bambridge James Williams, chemist & druggist, Church st
liner & hat.ter; dress making by first-class hands ; funerals Bambridge Patience (Mr8.), baker. Norwich street
economically conducted & mourning coach with open Barker Charles, Royal Oak P.H. Swaffham road
hearse, High street Barker Wilbam, boot & shoe maker, Cowper road ,
Allcock Samuel, tobacconist, High street Barkway Benjamin, nurseryman k seedsman, Quebec road
Amos Anna & Ha.rriett (Misses), linen drapers & milliners, Barnaby Henry, organist to the parish church, Theatre st
High street Barnes James, shopkeeper, Wellington road
Anderson George, school attendance officer, Elvin road Barton & Vores, solicitors, Guildhall
Askew Frederick Robert, allotment rent collector, High stj Bartun George, King's A.rms commercial & family hotel &
Askew John William, plumber, Norwich street posting house ; open hearse & mourning coaches, Market pl
C. N. & S. 24
366 EAST DEREHAM. NORFOLK. [KELLY's

Barton Waiter MaJ' (firm, Barton & Vores), solicitor, coroner Dowson Richard E. agent to Whitbread & Co. Limited,
for the liberty of the Duchy of Lancaster in Norfolk,clerk maltsters, Commercial road
to the magistrates & guardians, to rural l'anitary au- Dr~ge Arthur, manager to gas works, Yaxham road
thority, clerk to the burial board & to the school attend- Dye Jame~, poulterer, Norwich street
ance & assessment committee & superintendent registrar, Ea.st Dereham Conservative Association (Thomas Cranmer,
Guildhall ·i hon. sec.), Quebec street
Bates Thomas William, tailor, Wellington road East Dereham Cricket Club (Rev. W. H. Ainger B. A. presi-
Hayfield William, bnkher& farmer, Norwich street dent), The Dell
Beckham John, boot maker, London road East Dereham Dramatic Co. (E. J. Coleby, src,), Theatre at
Beer Alfred, commercial school for bovs,

Theatre street East Dereham Liberal Association (C. Crick, hon. sec.).
Bell Marr Ann (Mrs.), dress maker, Quebec street Quebec street
Bell Robert, beer retailer, Toftwood East Dereham Trade Protection Society (William Smith,
Bennett James, confectioner, Norwich street SJC.), Market place
Berry Jane & Lizzey (Misses), fancy repository, Church st Eastaug-h Charles Samuel, station ma'lter
Bidwell T. S. & Sutton, brewers, 5 Quebec street Eastoe George, farmer, Etling green
BlomfieldMaria Sarah (Mrs.), mineral water manufacturer, Easu e William, Oxford P.H. High street
Wellington road Edwards Robert, grocer & prov. dlr. & post office, Toftwood
Blomfield Thomas Howes, bay dealer, Wellington road Elvin Thomas Willoughby, coach builder Norwich street
Bloy Howes, currier, High street Emerson William, wa1 eh maker, ~ orwich street
Bloy Samuel, pork butcher, Swaffham road Emms Hannah (Mrs.), fancy repository, High street
Blyth Samuel, blacksmith, Wellington road Empson Hora-tio Geo. grocer & provision mer. Market pl
Bone W1lliam, bricklayer, South end Fairweather Henry, pig dealer, 'foftwood
Bowles George, Greyhound inn, & horse breaker, High st Fanthorpe Henry John, Swan inn, London road
Bvwles Richard, Bell Y.H. Etling green · Fanthorpe Robimwn, cbina & glass dealer, High street
Bradley John Page, ironmonger & iron & wire fence manu- Farrer George, wheelwright, ::3outh end
facturer, Market place Farrow Ed ward, watch maker, \Vellington road
Brett Benjamin, furniture broker, Quebec street Fendick William, miller (wind), Norwich road
Bridges Rachel (Mrs.), shopkeeper, Cowper road Fenn Charles, Fleece hotel, Norwich street
Brown Charles, hair dresser, High street Fire Brigade (Local Board), Church street
Brown Geo. Fredk. collector to the local board, Norwich st Fish Etlwanl Thomas, lluke's Head. P.H. Quebec street
Brown George Frederick, boot & shoe maker, Norwich st Fison James & Sons, maltskrs & general mcrs. Wellington
Brown John, farmer, Mattishall farm road ; & at Lynn, Thetford & Whittington, Stoke Ferry
Brunton George, chimney sweeper, Swaffham road Flat.t Harry, shopkeeper, High street
Brunton Henry, butcher, High street Foster Wm. linen & woollen draper, High st. & Market pl
Bullard James, painter, London road Fox John, White Lion P.H. Church street
Bulmer Thomas, hRir dresser & fancy repository, Norwich st Freeman Thomas John, pianoforte tuner &c. Norwich street
Bunting George, Crown P.H. Church street Freeman Thomas William, vaccination officer, Wellington rd
Burroughs Charles, pork butcher, Norwich street FrostEd ward, pork butcher, High street
Burton Pbilip, furniture broker, Baxter row Frost George, shopkeeper, Norwich street
Buscall George, commercial traveller, Norwich road Fuller Joseph, higgler & pig dealer, Heccles gate
Bush Uenjamin, Three Horse Shoes P.H. 'foftwood Gas Works (Arthur Drage, manager), Yaxham road
Caird William, draper, Theatre street Gaskin Charles, seedsman, High street
Capes George, debt collector & collector to the guardians, Gathcrcole Henry, poulterer, Baxter row
Norwich street Genllond Thomas Don aid, refreshment rooms, Railway statn
Carter Elizabeth Meria (Mrs.), King's Head posting & com- Gidney William Thomas, St. Nicholas iron works & agricul-
mercial hotel, N orwicb street tural implement manfr. coal & coke merchnt. Cowper rd
Cemetery (Waiter May Barton, clerk to burial board), Girling & Hansom, solicitors, Quebec street
Theatre street Girling Xathaniel, solicitor & commissioner for oaths, see
Chapling Mark, Chequers P.H. Swaffham road Girling & Ransom
Clarke Wm.Edgar, sanitary inspector & school attendance Goshawk Robert, hair dresser, Cowper road
officer of the Mitford & Lannditch union, N eatherd road Grant James, farmer, North Hall green
Clements & Go. general & furnishing ironmongers, Market pi Grant John, farmer, North Hall green
Clements Richard, hay & straw dealer, Quebec street Gray Robert, corn, coal, cake, manure, salt & seed & ale &
Codman Robert, furniture dealer, High street porter merchant, nr. Railway station, Norwich street
Cog hill Lydia (Mrs.), servants' registry office, Norwich st Greaves George, basket maker, Wellington road
Coleby David B. painter &c. Theatre street Green George, tailor, Commercial road
Corner Isaac, farmer, Norwich road Green John, nursery & seeds man & florist, Nor folk nurseries
Corner William, corn, seed & coal merchant, Norwich street Green John, private commercial hotel, Market place
Cook Benjamin, shopkeeper, Toftwood Green Richard William, corn merchant, Norwich road
Cooper & Norgate, solicitors, Quebec road Gurneys, Hirkbecks, Barclay & Buxton (branch), bankers
Cooper Charles, butcher, High street (Arthnr Massingham, agent), Market place; draw on
Cooper George Benjamin, watch maker, High street Barclay, Bevan & Co. London E c
Cooper George Halcott (firm, Cooper & Nurgate), solicitor, Hall William, farmer, Wood farm, Toftwood
registrar of the county court, perpetual commissioner & Harris Wm. By. watch & clock maker & jeweller, Marketpl
commissioner to administer oaths, Quebec road Harwood Frederick, boot maker, London road
Cooper Henry, baker, Haxter row Hastings Horace Crofts, surgeon, & medical officer & public
Cooper Mrs. baker & confectioner, Norwich street vaccinat.or, East Dereharn district, Mitford & Launditch
Cooper-Brown & Co. brewers & wine spirit merchants, union, .Market place
Norwich street Hearn Henry, tinman, Quebec street
Corn Exchange (William T. Gidney, !WC.), Market place Hendry Cornelius, Lord Nelson P.H. High street
Cory Charles, manager London & Provincial Bank Limited, Hodgkinson William, butcher, Market place
High street Holman Charles, shopkeeper, Norwich road
Cotterill James, farmer, Park farm Hopson Stephen Moulton, surgeon, & medical officer & publia
Count Frederick William, printer, bookseller, stationer & \'accinator to Gressenhall district, Mitford & Launditcb
news agent, Market place union & brigade-surgeon to Norfolk vol. infantry brigade,
County Court (His Honor Edwin Plumer Price Q c. judge; St. Nicholas house, Norwich street
G. H. Cooper, registrar); office, Quebec road Horne Robert Arthur, draper &c. Orwell villas, Norwich rd
Cowell Thomas, boot & shoe maker, Norwich road Howard Joseph & Co. manufacturers & importers of ·fret-
Cranmer Thomas, auctionr:er & valuer, Quebec street & work materials, lawn bowl & fancy hardwood turners,
farmer, Mid-Norfolk dairy, North Tuddenbam r makers of 3-ply fret wood & picture frame mas. Cowper rd
Curry William, baker, Bax:ter row Howes Robert William, photograper, High street
Davidson Samuel, The Tunn P.H. Toftwood Howlett Robert, miller (wind), Quebec road
Dearham Edwin, Red Lion P.H. Red Lion street Hnbbard Robt. Jn. general & furnishingironmngr. High st
Dereham & Fakenham Times (F. W. Count, publisher), Hub bard William, builder & contractor & dealer in all kinds
Market place; published friday of builders' stock 1 Hill House works, :Market place
Dent William, builder, 1 Hartington terrace Hubbard William Damer, builder & contractor, 20 Elvin rd
Diver Osborn, farmer, Dillington Inland Revenue Office (J. G. N ops, supervisor; John Vel-
Diver William Henry, grocer, & agent for W. & A. Gilbey, land, officer) J.
wine & spirit merchants, High street , Isbell John 1 greengrocer, Quebec street
Downs Arthur Robert & Co. musical instrument maken & Jacobs Isaac, Royal Standard P.H. Haxter row
sewing machine liepbt, High street James Elizabeth (Miss), ladies' school, Quebec road
Downs Robert, butcher, High street Jarred Robert, butcher, Market place
DIRECTORY.] NORFOLK. EAST DEREHAM. 367
Jarvis Matthew, brick maker Munn William, general draper, Norwich street
Jarvis Susannah (Mrs.), &hopkeeper, Church street Oakes Harry J. tailor & woollen draper, Norwich street
Jex William, genP.ral dealer, Wellington road Olley George, farmer, The Yews, Toftwood
Johnson Albert, watch maker, Norwich street Oldfield George, greengrocer, High street
Johnson Henry, saddler & harness maker, Market place Ottaway Harry George, corn chandler, Norwich street
Jones William, Millwrights' Arms P.H. Toftwood Ottaway John William, grocer, Baxter row
Keeler John, beer retailer, South green Pamment Alfred, tailor, Church ~treet .
Kellas James, travelling draper, Norwich road Parry William H. watch maker, Quebec street
Kemp Eli7.abeth (Mrs.), china & glass dealer, Norwich st Patterson William, Cock P.H. Norwich street
Kerrison Richard Winter, butcher & farmer, Church street Peacock Hy. William, Eagle P.H. & bill poster, Market pl
Kingston Henry Samuel, grocer, High street & Norwich st Pearce Louisa (Miss), boot & shoe maker, Swaffham road
Lacon (Sir Edmund II. K. bart. ), Lacons, Youell & Co. Pearce Samuel, builder, Cemetery road
bankers (.John Franklin Wright, manager), Norwich Pease Frederick, hair dresser, Quebec street
street ; draw on Glyn, Mills, Currie & Co. London E c Peck Edward, wholesale & retail chemist & dealer in photo-
Lake William Waiter, surveyor & inspector of nuisances to graphic appliances, High street
the local board, & inspector of markets & manager of Pells George William, Earl uf Leieester P.H. Cowper road
waterworks, Quebec road Perry Leo Millatt, refreshment rooms, Market place
Lambert Henry, cabinet maker, Norwich street Pleasants James, boot maker, High stree~
Lambert James, horse dealer, The Kennels Pleasants Joshua, boot & shoe maker, Baxter row
Large Charlotte Ann Pfrs.), London tavern, Baxter row Police Station (County) (Edward Symonds, supt.), Corn-
Lamer George, Fox & Hounds P.H. London road mercial road
Larner Richard, Rambler's Rest P.H. Toftwood Potter Charles, farmer, Quebec farm
La.rner Samuel, farmer, Neatherd moor Potter Robert, commission agent, Commercial road
Lamer William James, builder, Commercial road & brick & Primrose League (East Dereharn Habitation, 2,109) (H. J.
tile maker, Cr•wn point Sparks esq. ruling councillor; Mrs. ltansom, sec.),
Laws James, tailor, Wellington road Quebec street
Lines Philip, grocer & provision merchant, Baxter row Printer Edward, horse dealer, Quebec road
Leech Henry, tailor, clothier & outfitter, High street Property & Income Tax Office (W. F. Wray, assessor &
Leggett Charles, blacksmith, Theatre street collector), Church street ·
Lincoln Richard, horse dealer, Norwich road Pursey Obadiah, merchant tailor, clothier, hattr.r, boot &
London & Provincial Bank Limited (branch) (Charles Cory, shoe factor, rs High street
manager), High street; draw on head otlice, 7 Rank Quadling George, ironmonger, High street
buildings & Glyn, Mills, Currie & Co. London E c Queen's Temperance l<'amily & Commercial hotel (George
Long Clement, Half Moon P.H. Quebec street Kmg Wake, proprietor), near Railway station
Luck John, florist, Elvin road Ransom Edward Ernest (firm, Girling & Ransom), solicitor,
Lurk Thomas, florist, London road & secretary to Mid-N orfolk Conservative Association,
Lyth Ed win .r ackson, english timber merchant & dealer in Quebec street
every kind of foreign & bent timber & dressed spokes, Raven William, Duke of 'Wellington P.H. Wellington road
lime & cement merchant, & agent for the Northern Reading Rooms & Athen~um (George Quadling, sec. &
Assurance Co. ; office & saw mills, Station road librarian), Market place
Mack Horace, Green Man P.H. & builder, London road Reeder James, bacon curer, Commercial road
Maiden Henry, grocer, High street Reeder Robert, boot maker, Commercial road
Mallett Henry, farmer, Watering farm Ricketts Alfred, currier, leather seller & boot ma. Norwich st
Mallett James, farmer, Dumpling green Ricketts Mary Ann (Miss), haberdasher, Quebec street
Manning Jamcs, chimney sweeper, Cowper road Ringwood James, farmer, Perseverance farm
Marr Richard J. wine, spirit, seed & wool mer. Market pl Rili: Ada (Miss), ladies' private school, Commercial road
Marriott John & Robert, coal·& corn merchants, Railway Rix Charles, engineer & machinist, Norwich street
station & at Lynn Rix Charlotte (Mrs.), shopkeeper, Theatre street
Martin Fredcrick, upholsterer, High street Hix Harriett (Mrs.), baker, Quebec street
Martin John, carrier, Norwich road · Rix Henry, beer retailer, Theatre street
Martin John Upchurch, professor of music, Norwich street Rix Soames E. coal merchant, London road
MassinghamArthur,agent of Gurneys'&Co. 'sBank,Market pl Rogers Alfred, shoe maker, Commercial road
Mayes John, plumber &c. Wellington road Hoots John, engineer, South green
Mayes Richard, builder & contractor, Garfield building Roy Elijah, beer retailer, Upper Norwich road
works, Norwich road Rumble William, Light Horse P.H. & smith, Baxter row
Merry John Wesley, agent to Fison & Sons, maltsters, Well- Russell John, dining rooms, Yfarket place
ington road Huston Arthur, farmer, Rookery, Etling green
Mid Norfolk & East Dereham Horse Show & Shire Horse Ryley John, inspector of weights & measures, Cowper road
Society (Thomas Cranmer, hon. sec.), Quebec street Seeker Jane (Mrs.), basket maker, High street
Middleton Josepb, farmer, Swanton road Self Edward, George inn, Market pliice
Middleton Waiter, saddler, Wellington road Shearmg John (Mrs.), fishmonger, Cowper road
Miles William, glove & !egging rnanufactorer, Norwich st Short Robert, baker, High street
Milk George, farmer, North Hall green Short William, shopkeeper, South end
Mitchell John, bakel', Market place Skerry Sarah (Mrs.), dining rooms, Church street
Mitford & Launditch Agricultural Association (William Skinner J. H. & Co. manufacturers of photographic appar-
Vincent, hon. sec.), Church street atus, fretwork materials & importers of foreign fancy
Monument James, Cattle Market inn, Market place goods & tools; factory & office, opposite Railway station
Monument John, carpenter, High street Skinner J. H. & Co. english timber & mahogany merchants~
Mori Arthur Lawrence, dentist, Commercial road all kinds of furniture & cabinet wor,ds in log, plank or
Munford James, carpenter, Theatre street veneer; sawing & planing mills, opposite Railway station
Murrell Alfred, fishmonger, Theatre street Skipper & Ratchffe, leather dressers; works, near Railway
Nailor Richard, smith &c. Theatre street station
Nankivell Herbert, assistant surveyor to East Dereham local Skipper Robert, boot manufr. & leather currier, Norwich st
board, Theatre street Smith Frederick & George Limited, maltsters & merchants,
National Provincial Bank of England Lim. (E. W.M. Cowtan, Railway station; & at Great Ryburgh & Wells
manager), :Market pl.; draw on chief office, London E c Smith Elizabeth (Mrs.), wardrobe dealer, Theatre street
Neale Rebecca (Mrs.), shopkeeper, Wellington road 1 Smith George Richard, miller (steam & wind), merchant &
Nelson John, shopkeeper, Cowper road 1

farmer, 'foftwood
Newell William & Co. statuary masons, Norwich street Smith Mark, farmer, North Hall green
Newel! Alfred, furnishin;; & general ironmonger, color mer- , Smith William, chemist & druggist,, & deputy registrar of
chant, iron & tinplate worker, Market place births, deaths & marriages, East Dereham sub-district,
Newell Thomas, stone & marble mason, Theatre street l\larket place
Nops J. G. inland revenue officer, Commercial road Society for the Promotion of Christian Knowledge De'26t
Norgate Charles Bladwell Le Grys (firm, Cooper & Norgate), (F. W. Count, agent), Market place
solicitor, deputy rP.gistrar of the county court & commis- Springall J. & Son, brick & tile makers, Norwich road
sioner to administer oaths & clerk & solicitor to the Dere- Stamp Office (John W. Teare, distributor)', Market place
ham Mchool board & clerk to Head borough trusts,Quebec rd I Stead & Simpson Limited, boot & shoe makers, Market pl
Norwich & Norfolk Bank (branch) (Gurney & Co.) (Arthur : Stebbings William, valuer & arbitrator, Norwich street
Massingham, agent), Market place; draw on Barclay, Steward Charles, town crier, London road
I

Bevan & Co. London E o I Steward William, fancy repository, South end

C. N. & S. 24•
.EAST DEREHAM:. NORFOLK. [ KELLY'I!

Stimpson Thomas, butcher, Norwich street Ward Edward, farmer, North Hall green
Stoakley Elmer, farmer, London road Ward John, engineer & machinist, Commercial road
Studd George, temperance hotel, Norwich street Warnes Jabez William, shopkeeper, 62 Upper Norwich road
Sutton Joseph, dining rooms, High street ·warren Joseph & Son, general drapers, Market place
Symonds Edward, supt. of county police, CommerciaL road Warren Charles (Mrs.), farmer, Etling green
Tarry Herbert E. deputy supt. registrar, Guildhall ·warren T. H. auctioneer & estate agent & valuer, Market
Taylor Fredcrick, Bull P.H. High street place; & at Castleacre street, Swaffham
Tuylor James, china & glass dealer, High street Water Works (William W. Lake, manager), Quebec road
Taylor Thomas, plumber, painter & paperhanger, High st Watson Richard, assistant clerk to the Mitford & Launditch
Teare Joseph W. postmaster, Post office, Market place union, registrar of births & deaths for East Dereham
Thackray John, grocer, Market place _ sub-district & registrar of marriages for Mitford & Laun·
Theatre Royal (H. T. 1\ifalden, proprietor), High street ditch union, Commercial road
Thorp John, beer retailer, North Hall green Weights & MeasuresOffice (John Ryley,inspector),Cowperrd
Took George, plumber & glazier, Church street Wells Alfred George, boot maker, Norwich street
C.

Tooley Rachel (Miss), dress maker, Quebec street Wells Hase, coach builder, Commercial road
Towler George Henry, smith, Tofiwood Wells James, farmer & cattle dealer, Neatherd
Tuck Mahershalalbasbbaz, CheiTy Tree P.H. Theatre street Wells William, coach builder, Norwich street
Tuck Thomas, beer retailer, Norwich street Wells W111iam, Rose P.H. Baxter row
Tuttle J ames, dining rooms, Quebec street \Vharton William Gaze, watch & clock maker, Market place
Utting James William, beer & wine retailer, London road Whidby Ann (Mrs.), lodging house, 5 Hartington terrace
Vincent & Beck, auctioneers, valuers, land & estate agents ; Whitbread & Co. Limited, maltsters (Richard E. Dawson,
stock sales, saturday at Norwich; fridays, Dereham; agent), Commercial road
thursda.ys, Fakenham, Church street & at Mileham Whiting John, building & land surveyor, Commercial road
Vincent Bros. printers, booksellers & stationers, Market pl Wier James William, greengrocer, Norwich street
Vincent Frederick, grocer & general factor, Swaffham road Wigg Charles H. farmer, Etling green
Vincent Henry Bird, surgeon, & medical officer of health for Wigg Jermyn, farmer, Badley moor
East Dereham urban sanitary authority, medical officer to Wilkin Alfred, sergeant of police, Commercial J;Oad
the Mitford & Launditch union house & certifying factory Williarnson William, saddler, High street
surgeon, Beech house, High street Wilson G. D. (Mrs.), ladies' boarding & day school, Fair·
Volunteer Battalion (3rd)Norfolk Regiment (Brigadier-Gen. field house
W. E. G. LyttonBulwer, commanding; Capt. R. L.Payne Wilson Thomas, Crown inn, Norwich road
n.s.o. adjutant; Hon. Major C. B. Le G. Norgate, Wood Charles George, farmer, Dillinghall farm
commanding F Co.) ; head quarters of battalion & F Co. & Wray William Frow, assistant overseer & collector of poor
orderly room, Quebec street rates & relieving officer, Church street
V ores Benjamin Herbert (firm, Barton & Vores), solicitor & Wrigbt John, boot & shoe maker, Quebec street
deputy coroner & clerk to the local board, Guildhall Wright Joseph, bicycle manufacturer, Commercial road
Wake George King M.R.c.v.s. veterinary surgeon & shoeing Wright Thomas, boot & shoe maker & outfitter, High street
forge & inspector for the Contagious Diseases (Animals) Yelland John, inspector of corn returns, South place
Act & inspector of markets; horses & traps for hire, & Young Charles, coal merchant, Railway station
proprietor of Queen's temperance, family & commercial Yull Albert, baker & confectioner, Church street
hotel, Railway station Yull Robert, baker, High street
WEST DEREHAM is a village, parish, with a station, the National school, and the remainder is distributed to the
called "Abbey," on the Downham and Stoke Ferry branch poor in coals and blankets. In 1873 a valuable bed of
of the Great Eastern railway and 4 miles south-east from coprolites was found in this parish, but is not now worked.
Downham, in the South ·western division of the county, Here was formerly an abbey of the Premonstratensian
Clackclose hundred and petty sessional division, Downham order, founded A.D. n88 by Hubert Waiter, then Dean
union and county court district, rural deanery of Fincham, of York and afterwards Archbishop of Canterbury, who
arch deaconry of Norfolk and diocese of Norwich. There was a native of West Dereham ; this monastic house was
were formerly two churches here, dedicated respectively to colonized from the abbey of Welbeck, in Notts; but very
St. Andrew and St. Peter ; the latter has long since dis- few traces of the original structure are now visible: its
appeared, though its foundations may still be traced in the revenues at the time of the Dissolution were estimated at
western part of the churchyard. The church of St. £252 12s. II~d. In the first year of King John, II99, a.
Andrew is an edifice chiefly in the Perpendicular style, charter was granted to the abbot and convent of West
consisting of chancel, nave, south porch, vestry and a Dereham for a weekly market on Wednesday, and an
massive round western tower of ragstone, surmounted by an annual fair for four days, viz. 21st September and three
octagonal turret of brick and containing 5 bells : the south following days. About 1564 the :1bbey farm was held for a
doorway is of Early English character, and has a well- time by Thomas Tusser, author of the "Five Hundred
preserved holy water stoup on the east. side: two wmdows Points of Good Husbandry ; " and Francis Dereham, the
contain ancient stained glass, some of which is said to have kmsman and early lover of Queen Katherine lloward, who
been removed here from the abbey: in the church are two suffered death on her account in 1542, was a member of
monuments to the Dereham family; one of them an the ancient family who took their name from this place,
elaborate piece of work in various colored marbles, erected and obtained a grant of the abbey and its surrounding
at the beginning of the r8th century: there is also a life- lands: the lands are tithe free: the farm is now the
sized marble statue of Colonel Soame, of West Dereham property of and is occupied by Hugh Aylmer esq. the well-
Grange, d. 1700; and a slab, with arms, to Gregory Lovell known breeder of shorthorns, who res1des at the Abbey, a
esq. d. 1693, leaving £soo to the poor of the parish ; there modern mansion. Thomas Lancelot Reed esq. of Crow
are also marble tablets to members of the Stebbing family, Ilall, Denver, and Edward Roger Murray Pratt esq.
I85::l-7; the Raper family, 184o-44, and to the Catton J.P. of Ryston Hall, who are lords of the manor, Sir Alfred
family, from 1792 to 1824: the church plate includes a Thomas Bagge hart. J.P., D.L. of Crimplesham Hall, Hugh
silver flagon given in 1700 by Mrs. Mary Green of the Aylmer esq. of Dereham Abbey, and Caius College, Cam-
Grange, who also gave money to inclose the communion bridge, are the principal landowners. The soil is of a
table with rails: the church was re-seated about 185o, and mixed character; subsoil, ragstone, sand and clay. The
has 200 sittings. The register dates from the year chief crops are wheat and barley. The area is 3,440 acres;
1558. The living is a vicarage, endowed with £43 yearly, rateable value, £3,613; the population in 1891 was 554·
paid by the lessee of the rectorial tithes, net yearly value Parish Clerk, William Adams.
£99, including 25 acres of glebe with residence, in the gift PosT 0FFICE.-Edward E. Barrow, receiver. Letters arrive
of the Rev. Leonard Blomefield (late Jenyns) M.A. of rg from Stoke Ferry S.O. at 8 a.m.; dispatched at 5 p.m.;
Belmont, Bath, and held since 1888 by the Rev. John sundays, arrive at 8 a.m.; dispatched at 10 a.m. The
Tommis, of St. Aidan's College. The vicarage house, which nearest money order & telegraph office is at Stoke Ferry
is near the church, was erected in 1874· There are National School (mixed), erectedin 186o& enlargedinx886,
Wesleyan and Primitive Methodist chapels. The charities for 120 children; average attendance, 64; Mrs. Mary
amount to about £170 yearly, of which £25 is applied by Rickard, mistress
order in Chancery, 28th April, 1857, towards the support of Railway Station (called Abbey), Wm. Barker, station master
.Aylmer Hugh, The Abbey I Bai"Tles Charles Harding, beer retailer Fretwell Albert John, farmer
Goodwyn George James, Manor house Barrow Edwd.Ebenezr.shopkpr.Post offi Fretwell Robert, farmer
Robinson Robert Bateman John, farmer Goodwyn GeorgeJames, agentta Hugh
Steward Frederick, The Hollies Bennett Henry, farmer Aylmer esq. Manor house
Tommis Rev. John [vicar], Vicarage Cha.pman William, farmer Horn John, farmer, College farm
COMMERCIAL. Crane Martin, farm bailiff to Hugh Johnson William, shoe maker
Avlmer Hugh, farmer, landowner & Aylmer esq King James, farmer, White Hall farm
coproliw proprietor, The Abbey Firth & Son, grocers Manning Henry, coal dealer & farmer
DIRECTORY.] NORFOLK. DICKLEBURGH. 369
Newby Abraham, fanner Porter Robert, beer retailer & butcher Sharman Amelia (Mrs.), Bell P.R
Nurse Valentine, farmer Riches Rt. Chequers P.R. & blacksmith Steward Henry,farmer, Bazil fa.rm
Payne William, farmer Rickard Bradford, farmer Thorrold Edward George, farmer
DERSINGHAM is a village ancl parish on the Lynn I left by Mrs. Pell, ami £5 from land at Snettisham, left by a
and Hunstanton road, half a mile from the station on the ll\lr. Bummer in 1732; these amounts are expended in
Lynn and Hunstanton section of the Great Eastern railway, coals, which are distributed to the poor of the parish.
8~ miles north-north-east from Lynn and 107 from London, Dersingham Old Hall, in the centre of the village, is a large
in the North Western division of the county, Freebridge and plain building of carr stone, stuccoed, and now the
Lynn hundred and petty sessional division, Docking union, residence of Mrs. Clarkson. The parish comprises five
Lyon county court district, rural deanery of Lynn Free- :manors, viz. Hunstanton-w1th-Mustrels, Ringstead-with-
bridge and archdeaconry and diocese of Norwich. The Holme and Northall, Holme-next-the-Sea, and Hoods-in-
church of St. Nicholas is a large and ancient structure of Holme, of which H.ll.H. the Prince of Wales and the Rev.
flint and stone, in the Perpendicular l>tyle, consisting of James Bellamy D. D. are lords aml the principal landowners.
chancel, nave w1th clerestory, aisles, south porch and an The soil is light mixed; subsoil, principally chalk and carr
embattled western tower, with four carved angels in place stone. The crops are generally on the four-course system.
of pinnacles, and containing 6 bells: the chancel is Jigbted The are3. is 8,472 acres; rateable Yalue, £5,317; the
by fine windows of the Decorated period, and is divided from population in r 891 was r, r 86.
the nave by a carv~u oak screen, some of the trac~ry of Parish Clerk, James March Batterby.
:Which has be,~n restored_; in the south aisl~ is ~ curious PosT, M. 0. & T. 0. & S. B. & Annuity & Insurance Office.
altar-tomb ~ Ith_ a brass ,to John Fell esq. anu rlargaret -Enoch Bcckett, postmaster. London & otlwr letters
(0\~erend) h1s w~f,e, ob. 5 Feb. r6~7: there ~;e also SC\'C~al are received through Lynn by mail cart; arrive at 5.30
cunous marble slabs, and an ancient font tnth carved o<~k a. m. ; delivered at 7 a. m. & 10. 15 p.m. to callers & are
cm·er: the church was thoroughly restored between r877 dispatched at 2 & 6. 20 p.m. ; sunday delivery 7 a. m.;
and 1879 at a co~t ?f nearly £6,ooo; the cost of the restora- dispatched 6. 20 p.m. There is also a \V ALL Box near the
t10n of the nave bemg defrayed by th~ patron, Dr. Bel_lamy, Feathers hotel, cleared at 6. 5 p.m. on week days only; &
and that of the chancel by the Ecclesms_tic~l CommiS..'!~oners a WAI.L Box at the Station cleared at 5 -4 5 on week days
and by ~ sum of £500 ra1sed by subscnpt10n :. the bmldmg only
was entirely reseated w1th open pews of wamscot, and a , . .
new pulpit and brass lectern erected, and now affords 6oo Church of En~land Scho?ls (rmxeu), enlarged m r875.
sittings. The register dates from the year 17 w. The H.!{· ~I. the. 1 nnce of Wales gave the s1te, the cost of the
living is a vicarage, average tithe rent-charge £ 1 6 3, net bu~ld~ng bemg defrayed by Dr. Bellatlly ; m r8gr the
yearly value £ 247 , includmg r6 5 acres of glebe, with bmldmg was further en~a~gerl at ~ cost of £z4:o,
residence, in the gift of the Rev. James Bellamy D. D. defrayed by H.R H. the 1_ rmce of "al~s & the cluef
president of St. John's College, Oxford, and held sinee r8 75 landowners; the schools Will hold 250 ch1lclren ;_ aver~ge
by the Rev. Edward Williarn Penny M.A. of St. John's attend_ance, ?S _; Alfred F~rth, schoulmaster; )hss He.en
College, Oxford. The rectory house, erected in 1877, is of ~ond, I~fa~ts m1stress .
carr stone and red brick, and stands on a pleasant elevation. Rmlway Statwn, John Hall, statwn master
Here are two Wesleyan chapels, built respectively in 185I, CARRIERS TO LYNN.-William Flegg- & George 1\Iitclwll
and 1891, and a Primitive Methodist chapel built in 1878 tnes. thurs. & sat. returning same day; John Smith
At the in closure of the common 7 5 acres of land were passes through the village to L) nn every tues. thurs. &
reserved for the benefit of the poor. There is a charity of sat. & to Hunstanton & Old Hunstanton every mon. wed.
about £2I annllal value, arising from nine acres of lancl & friday
PRIVATF. RF.STDENTS. Cook J arre~, butcher Parker John William & Son, drapers &
Clarkson 1\Irs. Dcrsingham hall Cross Arthur Henry, professor of music grocers & boot & shoe warehouse
Coe Mrs. Rose cottage Daniel .James, fisherman Potter W !lliam, smith
Cross Arthur Henry, Cantelupe house Daw Robert, jobbing gardener R,tinbow Joseph George, upholsterer
Cnlyer Robert Dodman William, blacksmith Ralph Frederiek, usher, Victoria cottage
Dodd Mrs. Wellswill house \Earl Robert, horse dealer, l'ark house Eeynolds Daniel, shopkpr. & coal dealer
Penny Rrw. Erh1anl Wm. lii.A.Vicarage El worthy Harry Fuller, grocer & draper Riches George, builder
Ringe Miss ' Ewer Wm. Jn. music seller & stationer Senter Hannah l~lrs. ), milliner
Rix Mrs. "\Vellswill house Fitt Matthew James, baker Senter :Vlartin, shopkeeper
Rix-Wells George, Wellswill house Flegg \Villiam, broker & carrier Simoncls Charles, Alexandra hotel ;
Stanton Hid1ard, Ling house Gooclings Ilarriet (l\Irs. ), lodging house wild fowl shooters, seaside visitors
Thwaites ~arnuGl Hardy Alfred, Coach & Horses commer- can h::J.ve good accommodation
Tingey Edward, :Manor house cial inn; every accommodation for Smith John, Dun Cow P.H
visitors; good stabling Smith Wm. Hy. farmer, Hilliiouse farm
cmmERCIAL. Hudson William, builder Stanton Hichard, farmer, Ling house
Asker John, broker Jackson James, farmer Tansley W illiam, butcher
llalding Robert, farmer i Jannoch Theodor, lily nurseryman; Taylor Enoch, Feathers family & com-
Bird Frederick J. butcher ! lily of the valley grower by special mercial hotel & posting house ; good
Boothby Alfred, farmer, coal merchant warrant to H.R H. the Prince of stabling for hunters & first class ac-
& assistant overseer \Vales; choice bouquets, wreaths, commodation for visitors in the neic:h-
Bnnn James, farmer crosses &c. The largest grower of bourhood. "\Yaggonettes to Sandring-
llusscy Maria (:\liss), farmer lilies of the valley in England. See ham every wed. Cl: fri. See advert
Chambers George, builder, contractor advertisement Terrington Frederick, butcher
&c. ; estimates given for new build- J arvi>:l J ames 'Villiam, baker Tenington Henry, shoe 1naker
ings or repairs; gravel contractor to Kiddle George, White Horse P.H Terrington John, boot maker
the Norfolk connty council Linnell John, farmer, The Oaks · Tingey Edward, farmer
Chambers James Ward William James, 1\lann Henry, farmer I Wahlen W!lliam, bmlder
temperance hotel Mann \Villiam Henry, postmaster at 'Vhitrml John, miller (wind)
Coller R. & Sons, corn & coal merchants Sandringham house 1
Wright Caroline (Mrs.), beer retailer
(James Bunn, agent); & at Attle- Mitehell George, carrier '''yer John, shopkeeper & baker
borough & Norwich Playford Herbert, baker
DICKLEBURGH with LANGMERE is a parish George Lee esq. Captain Starkie, Lieut.-Gen. Turner, and
and large village, situated on an acclivity, on the road from one to Captain Henry Turner, his son, who died in the
Ipswieh to Norwich, 5 miles north-east from Diss, 2 east Crimea, erected by h1s brother officer:; : the church affords
from the Burston station on the Ipswieh and Xorwich sec- 400 sittings. The register dates from the year 1540. The
tion of the Great Eastern railway, in the Southern division living is a rectory, average tithe-rent charge £592, net
of the county, Diss hundred and petty sessional di,·ision, yearly value £728, including 109 aeres of glehe, with resi-
Depwade union, Harleston county court district, rural deuce, in the gift of Trinity College, Cambridge, and held
deanery of Heclenhall, archdeaconry of Norfolk and diocese since I 7 r by the Rev. Henry Bramlreth M. A. late fellow of
of Norwich. The church of All Saints is a buildiug of tlint that college, and J.P. for Norfolk. There is aBapti~t chapel
in the Perpendicular style, consisting of chancel, nll.ve with here, erected in 1882, ancl in the parish are two orphanages
clerestory, aisles, south porch and an embattled western for 45 girls under the care of :\lrs. Brandreth. The town
Ulwer containing a clock and 5 bells: in 1867 the old pews lands produce an income of about [70, of which three-
were removed allfl the interior reseated with open oak tenths are expended in the purchase of coal and for seho-
benchcs: and in 1870 an organ was presented, the chancel lastic purposes, the remainder being applied by the church-
walls repaired and a new roof erected, at the cost of the wardens to the support of the church. The mterest of a sum
Rev. W. C. Mathison, late rector: the stained east window of [,I.ooo, left by the late Mrs. ~Iatbison, is also spent on
was given by his widow: on the wall of the chancel is a charities. The rector for the time ceing is lord of the
marble tablet to the Lady Platers, and there are others to rectorial manor of Dickleburgh ; the remaining land be-
370 DICKLEBUBGH. NORFOLK. (KELLY'S

lung!§ to 91 different owners. The soil is partly heavy and 7 a.m. ; dispatched II.45 a.m. Scrile is the nearest tele-.
partly light : subsoil, clay and gravel. The chief crops are graph office
wheat and barley and some beans. The area of Dickle- PILLAR LETTER Box cleared 6.40 p.m. ; sundays, u.15 a.m
burgh with Langmere is 2,282 acres ; rateable value, School (mixed), erected at a cost of £100, being part of a
£2,930; and the population in 18gr was 825. sum of £soo left by Henry Kett for that purpose; the
remainder was invested in Consols & has since been con-
LANGMERE is a hamlet or township annexed to Dickle· siderably increased : in 1842 a new wing wa.'! added & the
burgh, but locally in Earsham hundred. There is no
school was again enlarged in 1871 & 1881; the schools are
village, but several farmhouses. under the control of trustees, & will hold 200 ehildren;
Parish Clerk, Waiter Saunders. average attendance, 160; Georgo Parker Hart, master;
PosT & M. 0. 0., S. B. & Annuity & Insurance Office.- Mrs. Annie Hart, mistress
John Elliott, sub-postmaster. Letters arrive from Scole CARRIERs TO NoRwrcn.-Trudgill, from Eye, sat. ; Chenery',
at 7 a.m. & 2.15 p.m. ; dispatched at 6. so p.m. ; sundays, from Diss, wed. & sat '

Dickleburgh. Garland Artbur, cattle dealer Saunders Waiter, photographer &


Gibson Edward, farmer parish t:lerk &!sexton
Allfery Sidney Reginald Gobbett Alfred, baker Smith William & Son, millers (steam)
Brandreth Rev. By. M.A., J.P. Rectory Gowing John, farmer, Seamere green & seed, corn & coal mers. & farmers
Ransome Miss Hammond J ames, boot maker flutton Emanuel, farmer
Smith Samuel Hardy Esau, farmer Vyse Jabez, farmer
Taylor John Howard Robert, scripture reader Wells William, stone & marble mason
COMMERCIAL. Kerridge J ames, butcher Wilbey Thomas, butcher
Bartram Jas. thrashing machine proptr King Robert, shopkeeper Wilton Edmund, tailor
Brown George, Crown P.H Laws James, pig dealer W omack Ed ward Reeve, farmer
Catchpole James, dealer Le Grys Frederick, farmer
Chenery Thomas, shopkeeper Le Grys Robert, farmer Langmere.
Chilvers David, builder & well sinker Limmer William, builder, well& pump Hrown Robert, farmer
Clarke Thomas, King's Head P. H maker, wheelwright & painter & Crane Ezekiel, farmer
Cook James, blacksmith decorator Green George, farmer
Dent Robert, builder & carpenter Macro J ane (Mrs.), farmer Hammond James, farmer
Drane James, farmer Mickleburgh George, farmer Lines Thoma.s, farmer
Draper Alfred George, baker More Wm.farmr. Dickleburgh Hall farm Murrell William Robert, dealer
Dye John, farmer Pegg Stepben, baker & shopkeeper Pymar Robt. Thos.farmer & wood mer
Elliott John, grocr.&drapr.Sub-Postoffi Randle George, blacksmith Scolding James, farmer
Evans Henry, harnessmaker Simpson Fredk. miller (wind & steam) Webb James, farmer
DIDLINGTON is a parish about 7 miles north from I and resides at Cranwich. There is a charity of £5 yearly
Brandon station on the Ely and Thetford branch and 5 east for bread to the poor. Didlington Hall, the seat of William
from Stoke Ferry terminal station of the Great Eastern Amhurst Tyssen Amherst esq. D.L., · J.P. (lord of the
railway, in the South Western division of the county, petty manor and chief landowner), is a mansion in the Italiai\
sessional division and hundred of South Greenhoe, union style, situated in a finely-timbered park of about 1,500 acres,
and county court district of Swaffham, rural deanery of with a beautiful sheet of water of nearly so acres in extent,
Cranwich, archdeaconry of Norfolk and diocese of Norwich. dotted with many small islands: the mansion contains ~
The church is a building of stone in the Early English and number of good pict'.!res,a valuable library comprising many
later styles, consisting of chancel, nave, south porch and an rare books and manuscripts and some valuable tapestry
embattled western tower containing 4 bells : the tower is and articles of vertu. The soil is light sandy loam; subsoil,
Perpendicular, the chancel bemg Early English: the chancel chalk and sand. The chief crops are wheat, barley and
steps and rails are of white marble and the floor of colored turnips. The area is 1,854 acres; rateable value, £1,143 i
marble, and there are several stained windows: the church in 188r the population was 95; and in 189r was 125.
was repaired and reseated at different periods from 1855 to Parish Clerk (deputy), Henry Cater.
1873 by the Amherst family, and affords sittings. 'l'he
register dates from the year 1717. The living is a vicarage, LETTER Box cleared at 5· 45 p. m. Letters from Brandon.
consolidated with the rectory of Colveston, average tithe through Northwold, by foot post, arrive at 8.30 a.m.
rent-charge £154, net yearly value £120, with II4 acres Northwold is the nearest money order & telegraph office
of glebe, in the gift of W. A. Tyssen Amherst esq. J.P. Sebool, erected by W. A. Tyssen .Amherst esq. in 1857 for
and held since 1891 by the Rev. Henry Chichele Hart B • .A. 100 children; average attendance, 20; Mrs. E. Jacobs,
of Corpus Christi college, Cambridge, who is also rector of mistress
Amherst William Amhurst Tyssen D.L., Atbenreum, Carlton & Travellers' Ford William, estate agent to W. A. T.
J. P., F.S.A. Didlington hall ; 8 Gros- clubs, London s w Amherst esq
venor square. w ; & Mar! borough, Stebbing John, farm bailiff, Home farm Stocking William, bead gardener
DILHAM is a large and picturesque village and parish John Alfred Laurence R.A. of Emmanuel College, Cambridge.
on the navigable river Ant, with which is connected the "The Islands," the prCJperty of Henry Morsc Taylor esq.
Dilham and North Walsham canal, and is 2! miles east from J.P. form an ornamental pleasure ground, laid out some
Worstead station on the Norwich and Cromer G.E. railway, years ago by the grandfather of tho present owner, chiefly
one south from Honing station on the Eastern and Midlands from bog land : the whole consists of about 25 acres, divided
rail way, 13 north-east from Norwich and 5 south-cast from into six islands surrounded by water, connected by orna-
North Walsham, in the Ea.'ltern division of the county, mental bridges; pine trees and rhododendrons flourish here
Tunstead and Happing petty sessional division, Tunstead in great perfection. Frederick Howe Lindsay Bacon Wind-
hundred, Smallburgh union, North Walsham county court ham esq. of llanworth Hall, who is lord of the manor, Henry
district, rural deanery of Waxham, Tunstead division, arch- Morse Taylor esq. J.P. of the Rookery, and the Messrs.
deaconry of Nor folk and diocese of Norwich. The eh urch of Borrett are the principal landowners. The soil is mixed ;
St. Nicholas is an edifice of red brick and flint, consisting of subsoil, sand and gravel. The chief f!rops are wheat,
nave, south porch and a circular embattled tower of flint oats and barley. The area is 1,540 acres; rateable value,
containing one bell: the nave was rebuilt in 1775 and the £2,510; the population in 1891 was 378.
old tower pulled down and rebuilt about 1839: there are Parish Clerk, Ueorge Plummer.
about 300 sittings, 240 being free. The register dates from LETTER Box cleared at 3.30 p. m. Letters through Norwich
the year IS68. The living is a vicarage, with that of arrive at about 7 a. m.; Worstead is the nearest money
Honing annexed, average tithe rent-charge [23r, joint net order & telegraph office
yearly value £220, with 21 acres of glebe and residence, in the Xational Schools (mixed), erected in 1876, for 68 children;
gift of the Bishop of Norwich, and held since 1872 by the Rev. average attendance, 54; Miss Thirza !bell, mistress
Anderson Major John Albert (late 18th Curtis George, market gardener Learner Edwin, farmer, The Hall
Hussars), Dilham house Curtis John, carpenter Knights Samuel & James, thrashing
Boulton Robert Deyns William, farmer machine owners
Heseltine Leigb, The Grange Doughty George, miller (wind) Neave Robert, farmer
Laurence Rev.J ohn Alfred B . .A. Vicarage Faulke William, farmer Page John, farmer & butcher
Taylor Henry Morse J.P. The Rookery Grimes Benjamin, shoe maker StackwoodWilliam,millr.(water&steaml
COMMERCIAL. Harmer Robert William,Cross Keys P.H Watkinson George, nurseryman
Bloom James, blacksmith Hardingbam John, grocer & draper VViseman Thomas, shoe maker


DIRECTORY. J NORFOLK. DIS~. ~7\

DISS.
Drss is a parish and well-built market town and head of a The town estate of 97 acres, at Framlingham, in Suffolk,
county court district, with a station on the Great Eastern formerly produced £347 gross rental, bu~ now hardly
railway, which passes through the parish about a. mile east realizes the sum payable to the chnrchwardons ~ the aet
from the town, 26-i miles north from Ipswich, 24 east from income is applied under a scheme settled by the Charity
.Bury St. Edmunds, 19 south-west from Norwich and 94~ Commissioners in 1873, as follows: £go to the church-
north-east from London, in the southern division of the wardens of Dis.'l for repairs to. the church and their general
county, Diss hundred and petty sessional division, Depwade expenses, and the residue to the Local Board of Health, for
union, ruml deanery of Redenhall, archdeaconry of Norfolk the use and benefit of the inhabitants. Charities uf .£55
and diocese of Norwich. The town, which is separated from yearly value are distributed, principally in fuel.
Suffolk by the river Waveney, stands principally on an ac- An alms house, pleasantly situated on the Common, at the
clivity, encompassing a large sheet of water, or mere, of the entrance to the town, with pleasure ground and garden at-
extent of nearly 6 acres, the hanks of which, laid' ont in tached, has rooms for thirteen aged couples or widows:
.gardens at the rear of the houses, have a pleasant effect at one end of the building is a large room for the transaction
when viewed from the low~r part of the town ~ the mere of pans· h b usiness.
receives all the rain water from the town, and the overflow
discharges itself into the Waveney. The Corn Exchange, in Crown street, wa~; erected in l854,
The parish was constituted a Local Government District, at the sole cost of Thomas Lombe Taylor esq. of Diss, and
3 Dec. r85o, under the Public Health Act, 1 s4 s (xr & 12 is a structure of brick with a lofty stone portico in the Ionic
Vict. c. 63), and is governed by a local board of nine style, designed and executed by Mr. George Atkins, of thi's
members. town : the hall is 77 by 42 feet, lighted from above by a.u
The town is lighted with gas from works on Victoria road, iron and glass roof, and contains an organ, presented by
by the Diss Gas Light and Coke Company Limited, incor- Miss Taylor, for the use of the Diss Sacred Harmonic Society:
porated in May, 1s6 4 . adjoining the hall is a petty sessions room and a public library
The church of :-it. Mary the Virgin is a large structure of and reading room; the library comprises between2,ooo and
cut flints, in the Perpendicular style, consisting of chancel, 3,ooo volumes, and is supplied with daily and weekly papers
na\'f! with clerestory, aisles, north and south porches and a and periodicals. ·
fine embattled western tower containing a clock and 8 bells: The Diss Book Club, supported by the leading gentry of
the reredos, presented by the rector in r869, is of Caen the town and neighbourhood, has also a library, and there is
.stone, inlaid with coloured marbles and ornamented with a free lending library at the National School.
bosses of spar and gold and the emblems of the four Evangel- The Montgomerie Lodge of Freemasons, established here
ists in alabaster, and has a black marble and gold mosaic 1 in 1878, meets at the "King's Head."
cross in the centre ~ the chancel walls within the sacrarium J Several sick and benefit clubs and temperance societies
are panelled in oak, with diap11red devices in gold and 1 have also been established in the town.
colours : the stained east window is a memorial to the Rev. A weekly market is held on Fridays for corn, cattle, sheep
William Manning, 46 years rector; another was erected in · and pigs, toll free: the corn market is well attended by mer-
t86+ to Mrs. Manning and there are several more, all . chants and farmers ; important stock sales are also held
being memorials: the stone font with its oak cover, and · weekly alternately at the Crown Hotel yard and the '' Sara-
the oaken pulpit, reading desk and lectern, all executed in cen's Head" yard, and are well attended. A fish market
the town, were erected in 1858: there are several monu- is held on Tuesday.
ments, and a full-length portrait of the late rector, presented There are two branch banks, that of Messrs. Gurneys and
by the inhabitants, is placed in the vestry: the nave and Co. and the London and Provincial. Here is a brewery,
aisles underwent considerable rep<tir in r85o, at a cost of supplied with water from a well bored through the chalk to
{.1,700; the chancel was restored and enlarged to its original a depth of 615 feet. The brush, mat, and cocoanut matting
length in 1857, the work being carried out under the direction manufactories of Messrs. Aldrich Brothers give employment
of Mr. Augustus E. Browne, architect, of London, and a to a large number of hands of both sexes ; malting is also
native of Diss: in 1877, the interior of the chancel was fitted carried on to some extent.
with oak choir stalls, and the floor repaved and the walls Francis Taylor esq. M.P., J.P. is lord of th9 manor. The
decorated with painting, a new organ erected in the north principal landowners are Sir Kenneth Hagar Kemp bart ..
chapel and the western gallery removed, at a total cost of J.P. of Mergate Hall, Hugh Robert Rump esq. of Wells,
about £8oo: there are 750 sittings. The register dates Edward Mann esq. Francis Taylor esq. M.P., J.P. Mount
from the year IS SI. The living is a rectory, average tithe street, Diss, Mr. Charles Farrow and Mr. Charles Chase.
rent-charge £645, net yearly value £371, including I I acres The area is 3,628 acres; rateable value, £n,303; the
of glebe and house, in the gift of and held since 1857 by the population in 1891 was 3,763.
Rev. Charles Robertson Manning 1>LA. of Corpus Christi WES1'BROOK GREEN, rt miles north, and WALCOT GREEN,
college, Cambridge, F.S.A. rural dean of Redenhall, J.P. for three quarters of a mile north-by-east, are hamlets.
Norfolk and surrogate.
Here are \Vesleyan, Congregational, Baptist, Unitarian, At Diss HEYWOOD, 2~ miles north, is a chapel-school,
Primitive Methodist and Free Methodist chapels, and the erected in r865, at a cost of about £Boo, and licensed for
Society of Friends have a meeting house. divine service: the fittings are so arranged that the whole
The Cemetery, on the Heywood road, formed at a cost can be used on Hundays for service ; and during the rest of
of nearly [3,000, comprises 5 acres and has two mortuary the week a portion is screened off for school purposes.
.chapels in the Early Perpendicular style, connected by a Viscount Bury is lord of the manor of Diss Heywood •
lodge; it is under the control of a Burial Board of 9 members. Parish Clerk, George Ford.
Official Establishments, Local Institutions &c.
PosT, M. 0. & T. 0., S. B. & Annuity & Insurance Otfice.- There is a PILLAR Box in l\'lere street, which is cleared at
F. Mendharn, postmaster. Letters delivered at 7 a.m. 9·45 & xr.25 a.m. & 2.30 & 8.25 p.m. on week days only.
1 p.m. & 6.30 p.m A WALL Box in Denmark street cleared at 9·55 & II.35
Box closes at a.m. & 2.20 & 8 p. m. ; sundays, nil. A WALL Box at
First day mail to London & Ipswich ........... . 10.20 a.m Walcot Green cleared at 6.40 p.m. week days only. A
, , , , Norwich & Yarmouth .....• 11.55 a..m box at the station cleared at 9.30 & II.lo a.m. & 2.15 &
Second day mail for or throug\J. London •.•... 3 p.m 8.10 p.m.; sundays, nil
Letters &c. for Norwich ....•..................•..• 5-30 p.m Sun-PosT&; M. 0. 0., S. B. & An:tuity & Insurance Office,
Letters for Dereham, Thetford, Peterborough, Victoria road.-Emma Macro, receiver.-Box closes at
Cambridge & the North, .•...•....•.....•......... 9 p.m g.2o & 10.55 a.m. & 2 & 8 p.m.; sundays, nil
Letters for Scale, Bungay, Harleston, LocAL BoARD, 9 members.
Ipswich, Chelmsford, Colchester, Man- Board day, 1st monday in the month at 7.30 p.m.
ningtree, Witham, Harwich, Bmintree &c. 9 p.m Offices, "King's Head."
Night mail to London, Norwich, North & Clerk, Henry Ormiston Lyus, Market place
South of England, Scotland, Wales, Ire· Treasurer, Josiah Humphries, London & Provincial Bank
land &c .................................... ·-· ........ . 9 p.m MedicalOfficerof Health,l<'redk.Edmd.HubbardL.R.C.P.r..ond
Letters for Eye, Bungay, Harleston, Scole, Surveyor, Inspector of Nuisances & Collector, James Alger,
Botesdale & rural posts ........ ·-· .....•.......... xo p.m Victoria road
On sunday letters are del.lvered at 7 a.m. k CoUNTY MAGISTRATES FOR DISS PE'l"l"J: SESSIONAL
dispatched at ... ...... ...... ...... ...... ...... ...... 9 p.m DIVISION. ·
Money orders are granted & paid from 9 a. m. to 6 p.m. Manning Rev. Charles Robertson M. A., P.S. A. Rectory, Diss,
sunday excepted. Telegmph office open from 8 a. m to chairman
8 p.m.; sundays, 8 to 10 ll·m Bmndreth Rev. Henry Y:.A. Rectory, Dicklebnrgb. Scole
.

372 f>ISS. NORFOLK. [KELLY's

Crawshay Richard Wood esq. Scole lodge, Scole 11eat


Curteis William C. esq. D.C.L. The Shrubbery, Scole Baptist, Denmark street, Rev. James Easter'; I0.3o
Frere John Tudor esq. B.A. Roydon hall, Diss a.m. & 6.30 p.m. ; mon. 7.30 p.m ......................... 6so
Montgomerie CecilThos. Molyneux- esq.n. L.Gissing hall,Diss Congregational, Mere street, Rev. lt. E. Monsun; Io.3o
Pontifex Arthur esq. Hawkfield, Parkstone, Dorset a.rn. & 6.30 p.m.; wed. 7.30 p.m .................. , ... _, 250
Taylor Francis esq. M.P. Mount street, Diss Friends' Meeting House, Church st. I I a. m. ; wed. 7
Clerk to the Magistrates, Henry Edwin Garrod, Mount st p.m . .............................................................. .
Petty Sessions are held at the Corn hall every second & Primitive Methodist, Mount street, Rev. George Hull;
fourth wednesday at 10 a.m. The following places are 2.30 & 6.30 p.m. ; tburs. 7.30 p.m ......................... xso
included in the Petty Sessi(;mal division :-Bressingham, Unitarian, Park fields, Rev. Alexander Macdougall;
Burston, Diss, Dickleburgh, Fersfield, Gissing, Roydon, 11 a.m. & 6.30 p.n1 ............ r~ •••••••••••.••••••••••••••••••• 300
Scale, Shelfanger, Shimpling, Thelveton, Tivetshall St. United Free Methodist, Park corner, Rev. Edwin
Mary, Tivetshall St. Margaret, Winfarthing, Frenze & Askew; 10.30 a.m. & 6.I5 p.m.; mon. & wed. 7.30
Thorpe Parva p.m . ............................ , ...................... - .......... 450
ruuLic EsTABLISHMENTS:- Wesleyan, Victoria road, Rev. George Gibson ~ 10.30
Cemetery, Heywood road, Henry Ormiston Lyus, clerk to a. m. & 6. IS p.m. ; mon. 7 & wed. 7.30 p. m ............ , 420
the burial board, Market place SCHOOLS. •
Corn Exchange, St. Nicholas street A School Board of 7 members was formed March 14, 1872;
County Court, llis Honor llugh Eardley-Wilmot, judge; Step hen N ewson, St. Marie's terrace, clel'k to the boaro;
Edward Muskett, South Lopham, high bailiff ; Donald Joshua Caton, attendance officer ; the board meet at the.
Charles Warnes, Eye, registrar. The county court is schools every 3rd monday in the month at 7· 30 p.m
held every other month in the Corn hall : the following Board, erected in I874, for 380 children ; average attend-
places are in the district of the con rt :-Rlo' N orton, ance, 360 ; Thomas M. Pullen, master ; Miss Eliza Hall,
Bressingham, Burston, Eye, Fersfield, Frenze, Garboldis- mistress; Miss ~h1pp, infants' mistress
ham, Gissing, North & South Lopham, Roydon, Scale, Diss Heywood (mixed), for so children; average attend-
· Shelfhanger, Shimpling, Thelverton & Winfarthing ance, 24; Mrs. Sandy, mistress
Certified Bailiffs appointed under the "Law of Distress National (mixed), for 220, aver.attend.217 ~ Wm.Balls,ma&
Amendment Act" :-William K Chapyln, Diss & George CARRIERS TO : -
. W. Newson, North Lopham BLO' NoRTON & GARBOLDISHAM-Taylor. from 'Two.
Inland Revenue Office,Church st.Wm.Albert Smith, officer Brewers,' fri
County Police Station, Sergeant Fredk.Rix & one constable BoTESDALE-Stebbings, from 'Saracen's Head,' fri. a.t l
Stamp Office, Mount street, Fredk. Mendham, distributor p.m.; Andrews, from 'Cherry Tree,' fri. at 4 p.m. &.
VOLUNTEERS:- King, from • Saracen's Head,' daily between 12 &. 1 noon
4th Volunteer Battalion (Norfolk Regiment) (B Co. ), Capt. .CARLETON RoDE-Levett, from' Two Brewers,' fri
Francis Taylor M.P., J.P. commandant; Sergeant Henry DrcKLI<~BURGH-Chenery, from his house, fri. & sat
Newble, drill instructor; head quarters, Crown hotel, HoxNE-Whit ton, from ' Greyhound,' tues. & fri
Crown street KENNINGHALL-Noller, from 'Two Brewers,' fri. at 4 p.m.
PUBLIC OFFICERS:- LONDON-Sutton & Co. from Mr. Abbott's, daily, 3 p.m
Clerk to the Commissioners of Taxes, Henry Edwin LONH STRATTON-Chenery, Mere st. tues. & fri. at 4 p.m
Garrod, Mount st ; assistant commissioner, Stphn.N ewsom NEw BucKENIIAM-Lcvett, from' Two Brewers,' fri. 3 p.m.
-Collector of Taxes, John William Reeve, Crown street ~ OHTH LoPHAM-Grant, ·Cherry Tree,' tues. & fri. noon
Assistant Overseer, Hobert Hewitt, Victoria - road ~ ORWICH-Chenery, from Mere st. every tucs. & fri. 4 p.m.
Coroner for the Liberties of the Duke of Norfolk in Norfolk PuLHAM-Chenery, from Mere street, tues. & fri. at 4 p.m.
& Suffolk, Henry Edwin Garrod, Mount street RrcxrNGHALL-Sheppard, from 'Greyhound,' fri. 2 p.m
Medical Officer & Public Vaccinator,sth district,Gniltcross ScoLE-Chenery, from Mere street, tues. & fri. at 4 p.m
union, Charles Draper .Fenn, Mere street STRADBROKE-William Meen, from ' Crown & Anchor,'
Medical Officer & Public Vaccinator, 5th district, Depwade tues. &; fri. 3 p. m. ; Rose, from • Sun,' mon. wed. & sat
nnion,Frederick Edmund Hubbard L.R.C.P.LOnd. Mount st WrNFARTrrrso-Munford, from 'Two Brewers,' every
Registrar of Marriages, Arthur John Lusher, I Albion tues. & fri. at I p.m
villas, Victoria road WINGFIELn--Whitton, from 'Greyhound,' tues. & fri. at 4.
Town Crier, George Edward Wright ~EWSPAPER-" Diss Express & Norfolk & Suffolk Journal,"
PLACES OF WORSHIP, with times of services:- seat published every friday, by Edward Ab bott, Mere street
Parish Church, St. Nicholas Rtreet, Rev. C. R. Man- Railway Station, Juseph William Norman, station master~
ning M.A. ; 10.45 a.m. & 3 & 6.30 p.m; 8 a.m. & 5 Omnibus & flys from King's Head & Crown hotels ro
p.m. daily ......................................................... 750 meet every train

PRIVATE RESIDENTS. I Chenery Robert, Victoria road Howlett Miss, Rose villa, Victoria road
Abbott Mrs. Mere street Churchvard

Mrs. Victoria road Hubbard Frederick Edmund, Mount st
Aid rich Mrs. Frederick, Roydon road Clarke J obn Osmond, Church street Hubbard Mrs. West villa
Aldrich Mrs. Georgc, Roydon road Cocks Stroud Lincoln, Uplands Hull Rev.' George [Primitive Method-
AldrichMrs.HarryCrornwell, Roydon rd Collins Thos.Chas.TbeLimes,Sunnyside ist J, Shelfanger road
Aldricb Harry Edward, Mount street Copping Mrs. Roydon road Humphries Josiah, Market place
Aldrich John, Market square Cox Miss, H.oydon road Jackaman William, 2 Victoria t.errare
Aldrich Robert, Mount street Cullum J ames, Victoria road J arrett Mrs. Victoria road
Aldrich Mrs. Robert, St. Nicholas st Dack James, 7 Sunnyside J oily Thomas, Roydon road
Alger Cleer Sewell, Brunswick house, Davies Mrs. St. Marie's terrace King Harry Parker, 8 Sunnyside
Roydon road Dearle George, St. Marie's terrace Kirby Mrs. North house, Mount street
Alger Frederick, Victoria road Doubleday . Frcderick Thomas, ;a Park Langley Mrs. Mount street
Alger James, Waveney house villas, Denmark street Leeks Alfred J useph, 5 Sunnysiue
Alger William, Io Sunnyside Downton Mrs. Hall hills Lewis Bcnjamin, 9 Sunnyside
Amyot Miss, Mount street Dowsou Frank Withers, Brewery house Limon Rev. Marsball [Wes.J, Mount st
Amyot Thomas Ed ward, Mount street Earl George Edward, Victoria road Loveless William, Roydon road
Askew Rev.Edwin[Methodist],Mount st Easter Rev. James [Baptist], Church st Lusher Arthur John, I Albion villas,
Baldwin Robert, Victoria road Eaton Mrs. Victoria road Victoria road
Barrett Miss, Victoria road Esling Mrs. Denmark street Lusher Frederick, 3 Park villas
Barron Mrs. Market hill Farrow Charles, Denmark street Lyus Henry Ormiston, The Terrace
Blight William Lyne ~I.D. Hill house, Fenn Charles Draper, Park ho. Merest Madgett Thomas Button, Oxford house
Denmark street Finch Miss, Victoria road Manning Rev. Charles Robertson M.A.,
Bobby Alfred, Mount street Fisher George, 4 Sunnyside F.S.A., J.P. [rector & rural d.eaJI1
Bobby J ames, Brunswick house Garrod Henry Edwin, The Grove Rectory
Bobby Samuel, Victoria road Gibson Rev. George [Wes.], Victoria rd Mase Harry, Roydon road
Bobby William, Victoria road Gilman James, Eaton lodge Mason Charles, Denmark street
Broadbent Alfred, Denm&.rk street Gilman Miss, Eaton lodge Matthews Mrs. Victoria road
Bryant James K. Parkfields road Goldsmith Jame.sRodgers,St.Marie's ter Mayhew Miss, Walcot green
Bryant Robert Aldrich, Crows lodge, Gostling Thomas, I Sunnyside Monson Rev. George Edward [Con-
Church street Gostling Thomas Preston, Linden house gregational], Church street
Bumstead Mrs. Denmark street Green Harry Chase, The Limes, Vic- Moon James, The Nunnery,Denmark st
Cadge John, Market hill toria road Muskett Mrs. Mount street
Cas ton Mrs. Roydon road Hall Leonard, 2 Sunnysrde Newson Stephen, St. Marie's terrace
Caton Joshua, Mount Street road Harrison James, Chapel street Olley Mrs. Mount street
Chase Geo. Buckingham ho. Victoria rd Harwood Mrs. Linden vil. Victoria rd Orford Alfd.Rochester ho. Shelfangerrd
Chenery Charles, Denmark etree~ Hemstock Arthurl Mer~ tJtre~t Q:ll;borougn ()harles 1 Church street -
DIREcr'ORY.J NORFOLK. ms~. 373
Palmer Mrs. St. Marie's terrace Studd John, Roydon road Vincent Mrs. Victoria road
Pike Mrs. Henry, Victoria road Swootman Mrs. Victoria road Ward Miss, Houghton ho. Denmark st
Quadling Benjamin, Brinsley house Taylor Francis M.P., J.P. Mount street; Welbam Miss, The Cottage, Mount st
Ringer George, Walcot green & 54 Victoria streets w; Reform & WcllerRev.Jamcs n.A.[curate],Mount st
Scolding George, Mere street R. T. Y. clubs, London Whitrod Henry Fredric, Crown street
Simonds Mrs. 6 Sunnyside Tipple Frederick Albert, I Park villas Wright George Edward, Victoria rmd
Slack Thomas, Market hill Tubbs William J ames, Mount street Wrinch Waiter Godfrey, 3 Roydon rd
Smith William, The Entry Tyrrell Arthur, Browery ho. Fair green Youngs Elijah, The Terrace

Coller R. & Son, corn, coal, ca.ke & seed merchants, Rail-
COMMERCIAL.
way station & at Lynn, Attleborough, Aylsham, Watton,
Abbott Edward, printer & stationer, Mere street Buxton, Dersingham, Hardingharn, Melton, Reepham,
AI bright Joseph P. ironmonger, Crown street Thetford, Woolferton, Woodbridge, Wymondha.m; offices,
Aldrich & Bryant, grocers & provision merchants, St. St. Stephengates ; depots, Victoria&Trowse statns. Norwich
Nicholas street & Victoria road Cook John Owen, grocer, Fair green
Aldrich John & Co. ironmongers, plumbers & glaziers, oil & Cooper Theophilus, farm bailiff to Charles Farrow esq.
color-men, glass cutters & dealers & agricultural imple- West brook green
ment agents, Market place; established 1832 Cooper Thomas, baker & wholesale & retail pastrycook &
Aldrich Bros. brush, mat & matting makers, St. Nicholas st confectioner, Mere street
Aldrich Emily M. (Miss), brush warehouse & fancy reposi- Copping Arthur Rayner, linen draper, Mere street
tory, St. Nicholas street Corn Exchange, St. Nicholas street
Aldrich Harry Edward, auctioneer & valuer, Market place County Court (His Honor H. Eardley- Wilmot Q.C. judge;
Aldrich William, hatter, Market plac-e Donald Charles Warnes, Eye, registrar), Corn hall
Algcr Clecr Sewell, land surveyor & lithographer, Merest Cracknell William, tailor & outfitter, ~t. Nicholas street
Alger Cleer Sewell, jnn. photographer, Mere street Crick Edwin, White Hart P.H. Victoria road
Alger Frederick, land surveyor & lithographer, Vietr.ria rd Croft John E. builder, Chapel street
Alger James, estate agent, accountant & surveyor, inspector Cupiss Francis ( exors. of), printer, sole proprietor of the
of nuisances & collector to the local board, Victoria road Constitution horse balls, The Wilderness
Amyot & Hubbard, surgeons, Mount street . Cuthbert Henry, maltster & merchant, Victoria road
Angold Charles, carpenter, Mount street Davey Henry, Bee Hive P.H. Denmark street
Angold Harriett (Miss), dress maker, Mount street Da>-ey John, farmer, Walcot green
Angold Henry, builder, Mount street Day ~amuel & Co. butchers, Market place
Anness Waiter, butcher, St. Nicholas street & Victoria road Dearle George, dentist, St. Marie's terrace
Archer Alfred, fishmonger, Mere street Dent Frederick, beer retailer, Walcot green
Austin James, saddler & harness maker, Mere street Derisley Charles, Half Moon P. H. St. Nicholas street
Baker Henry, farmer, Wolsey bridge Dig by Margaret (Mrs.), fishmonger, St. Nicholas street
Baldwin Robert, cattle & horse dealer, Victoria road Diss Express & Norfolk & Suffolk Journal (Edwanl Abbottr
Barfoot Charles, beer retailer, Mere street publisher; published fridays), :\Iere street
Barham William, shopkeeper, Church street Diss Gas Co. Limited (John Aldrich, managing director~
Barkham William Henry F. upholsterer, Market place Henry E. Garrod, sec.), Victoria road
Barns William Fry, watch maker, St. Nicholas street Diss Public Library & Reading Room (John William Reeve,
Bartrum Albert, builder & carpenter, Denmark street sec.), Corn hall
Bates Edmund, grocer & dealer in wines, St. Nicholas street Diss Public Weighing Machine (Charles John Lai t, collector)r
Bayles Charles William, tailor, Park Fields road Mere street
Heales Adam, beer retailer & cattle dealer, Victoria road Doubleday Luther Soulby,mineral water manfr.Denmark st
Bird Robert Harry, furniture dlr.&c.Denmark st.&Chapelst Dowson F'rank ·withers, brewer, see Taylor, ~ons & Dowson
Bishop & Son, boot & shoe makers, .Market place Dykes Albert, cooper & broker, Denmark street
Blight Willia.m Lyne M. n. surgeon, Hill house, Denmark st Easto Caroline (Mrs.), grocer, Fair green
Bobby Henry & Sons, tailors, hosiers, hatters & outfitters, Easto IIenry, fishmonger, Victoria road
Market square Evans John, currier, Denmark street
Bobby James Horatio & Son, drapers, St. Nicholas street Evans Williarn, leather merchant & currier, Church street
Bobby Angel! James H. tailor, Crown street Everson Henry, school attendance officer Roydon school
Bobby Samuel, silk dress & millinery wareho. Market hill board, Victona road
Booty Ann Howes (Mrs.), farmer, Heywood Fairweather George, blacksmith, Mount Street road
Boyce William, fish dealer, Denmark street Fenn Charles Draper, surgeon & medical officer & public
Brighton James, baker & corn chandler, Victoria road vaccinator, 5th district, Guildcross union, Mere street
Brighton Waiter Edward, baker, Mount street Fish Ed.ward, Denmark Arms P.H. Denmark street
Broadbent Alfred, maltster, Victoria road Fisher Martha & Ella (Misses), dress makers, 4 Sunnysirle
Brooke John S. far mer, Heywood Flatman John, painter & decorator, Mere street
Brown Thomas, general dealer, Denmark street Ford George, basket maker, Market place
Bryant Martha (1\Irs.), dress maker, Park field Fraud Mary Ann (Mrs.), shopkeeper, Fair green
Bryant Samuel Dixon, grocer, see Atdr1Ch & Bryant Garnham Bros. boot & shoe manufrs. Crown st. & Moat rd
Buckle George, baker, Fair green Garrod & Wilson, solicitors, Mount street
Bullen James, beer retailer N. shopkeeper, Shelfhanger road Garrod Hy. Edwin (firm, Garrod & Wilson), solicitor, clerk
Bullock Isabella (Mrs.), upholsteress, Denmark street to commissioners of taxes, coroner for the liberties of the
Bullock Thomas, cooper & job master, Denmark street Duke of Norfolk in Norfolk & Suffolk, clerk to the magis-
Burrage E. S. (Mrs.), baby linen warehouse, Mere street trates & solicitor & secretary to the Diss Gas Co. Mount st
Burrage Frederick Joseph, King's Head family & Gaze Thomas William, auctioneer, valuer & estate agent,
commercial hotel & posting house ; a billiard table; an Crown street & at Frenze Hall
omnibus to meet each train, Mere street Gooderbam J ames, farmer, Oak farm, Heywofld
Burroughes Frederiek,mi!lcr (wind & steam),Shelfhangerrd Goodwin Wm. Tbos. beer retailer, near tlle Railway station
Burrows Waiter, corn mer. & manure agent, St. Nicholas st Goody Jesse, shopkeeper, Fair green
Button J. & W. E. roller millers & corn, cake & manure Gostlmg & Co. chemists & dentists, Market hill & Crown st
mers. Victoria road & at Weyland (Suffolk) & Needham Gostlin!! Harriet Anna(Miss), bookseller & stationer,Mere st
Carter Samuel (exors. of), farmers, Wolsey farm Grant R1ehard, Saracen's Head P.H. Mount stre.et
Cemetery (H. 0. Lyus, clerk to the burial board), Hey- Gray George Thomas, tailor & outfitter, Mere street
wood road Green Harry Chase, merchants' agent, Victoria road
Chaplyn William Edward, auctioneer, valuer &estate agent, Grirnes Owen, boot maker, I•'air green
Victoria road Gurneys, Birkbecks, Barclay & Buxton, banker& (Thomas
Chaplyn William Frederick, miller, maltster, corn, coal & Slack, manager), Market hill; draw on Barclay, Bevan &
cake merchant & farmer, Victoria road Co. London E c
Chapman Lewis Aaron, grocer & confectioner,Church street Hague Emma (Miss), corset warehouse, Mount street
Chase John & George, millers (wind & steam), Victoria road Hales Hettie (Miss), dress maker, Mount street
Chase Charles, farmer & landowner, Walcot hall Hammond Frederick, boot & shoe maker, Mere street
Chenery Maria (Miss), dress maker, Chapel street Harrington Thomas Sims, baker, Mere street
Chenery Mary Ann (Mrs.), upholsterer, Denmark street Harrison Sarah (Mrs.) (exors. of), cabinet maker, Mere st
Ch8nery Hobert, coal & coke merchant, Victoria road Harrison \Villiam, cabinet maker & turner, Moat road
Chenery William, carrier, Mere street Harrison Wm. HenTy, jun. cabinet maker, Chapel street
Clarke John Osrnon<l, solicitor, Church str~t Harvey Isaac, brazier, Frenze lane
Cobb Artbur Hazilla, refreshment rooms, St. Nicholas street Harvey Thomas, hardware dealer, Market place
Cobb Charles, farmer, Heywood Haystead Joseph, hawker & general dealer, Sandy lane
Coe Henjamill, paiuter1 De11milr~ itree~ Head Goorge Henry, tobaccomst & cabiuet maker, Mere s~
DISS. .NORFOLK. [KELLY'B

IIemstock Arthur, professor of music & organist of parish Rackha.m Nehemiah George, bricklayer, Mount Sf.l'eet road
church, Mere street Rampley James, bailiff to George Symonds esq. Heywood
Hern Benjamin, fanner, Heywood Rayner William, Greyhound P.H. St. Nicbolas street
Hem George, farmer, Heywood Reeve Alfred, Dolphin P.H. Church street
Hewitt Robert, assistant overseer & farmer, Victoria road Reeve John William, collector of taxes, saddler & harness
House Samuel George, :reporter, Victoria road maker & stationer, Crown street

Howard ltobert Walter, boot&; shoe maker, Victoria road Reeve William, fanner, Burston road
Howard Thomas, farmer, Sandy lane Rice Ephraim, whitesmith, Church street
Howes Henry, Railway tavern & nurseryman, Victoria road Rice John, florist, Church street & Market place
Hubbard Frederick Edmund L.R.C.P.LOnd. (firm, Amyott Rice 'William George, jeweller, Crown street
& Hubbard), physician &surgeon, medical officer & public Roberts Kate (Mrs.), dress & mantle maker, Mount street
vaccinator, 5th district, Depwade union & medical officer Hobinson James, pork butcher, Denmark street 1
to Diss urban ~anitarv district, Mount street Robinson Mary Ann (Miss), ladies' school, Mount street
-
Hudell John, Bell P.H. Market place Rout William, beer retailer, Heywood
Hudson Judith (:Vlrs.), Star P.H. Market place Saunders Herbert, hair dresser, St. Nicholas street
H umph ries J osiah, manager of the London & Pro\·incialBank Saunders Solomon, carpenter, Mount Street road
& treasurer to the local board & guardians & rural sanitary Scolding George, manager of The Cuthbert stores, Mere st
authority of Guiltcross union, Market place Sewter Frederick, grocer &c. Mere street
Hurrcn Jane (Mrs.), fruiterer, St. Nicholas street Sharman Samuel, farmer, Heywood
Inland Revenue Office(Wm. Albt. Smith, officer), Church st Ship Charles, boot maker, The Terrace
Jolly Robert, boot maker, Bhelfhanger road Simonds Willi1m Fincham, Ship P.H. Mere street
Kemp William, painter & glazier, Denmark street Singer & Co. sewing machine manufacturers (James King
Kett Alfred John, farml•r, Heywood manager), Mere street
King Edward Jamcs J.LR.c. v.s.L. veterinary surg. Church st Slack Richard, shoeing smith, Chapel street
King James Arthur, farmer, Heywood Slack Thomas, manager of Gurneys' Bank & agent to the
King ·waiter, boot & shoe maker, Denmark streetl Life Assurance of Scotland, Market hill
Lacy 1Villiam, butcher, Mere street Slade William, Cherry Tree P.H. Roydon road
La it Charles John, coach builder, Mere street Smith George, plumber, Park Fields road
Lait Esther (Miss), milliner, Mere street Smith ffarry, farmer, Walcot green
Larter Ezekiel, boot maker, Mount street Smith William Albert, inland revenue officer & inspector of
Leeks Geo. matting & mat manufacturer, Mount Street rd corn returns, Church street
Le Goode Martha Ann (Miss), dress maker, Mount street Smith William, estate agent, Mount street
Lines Emma (Miss), dress maker, Victoria road Spink Walter, butcher, St. Nicholas street & Denmark street
Lines \Villiam Amos, hair dresser, Mere street Stainer Maurice, photographer, Victoria road
Ling Hannah (Miss), dre!!s maker & milliner, Church street Stamp Office (Frederick Mendham, distributor), Mount st
Ling Phoobe (Mrs.), beer rt>tailer, Victoria road Htannard Mrs. builder, Fair green
Livock Alice (Mrs.), dress maker, Mount street Stanrrard Thomas, Sun P.H. Mere street
Livock Robert, waiter, Mount street Stead & Simpson Limited (Miss Mary Lock, manageress),
Livock Belinda (Mrs.), watch maker, Mere street ::Vlere street
London & Provincial Bank Limited (branch) (Josiah Hum- Studd Henry John, hair dresser, Denmark street
phries, manager), Market place~ draw on head office, 7 Talbot Elijah, farm bailiff to George SymondB esq. Black-
Bank buildings E c & Glyn, Mills, Currie & Co. London thorn farm
Lush Brothers, machinists, Denmark street & drapers, St. Taylor Dennis & Son, watch makers, silversmiths& jewellers,
Nicholas street Mere street
Lusher Brothers, printers & bookbinders, passage brokers & Taylor, Sons & Dowson, brewers, maltsters & wine & spirit
emigration agents, Mere street merC'hants, Upper brewery; & at the Stores, Walsham·
Lusher Arthur John, registraruf marriages, 1 Albion villas, le-Willows, Suffolk
Victoria road The Cuthbert Stores (Youngs, Crawshay & Youngs), wine
Lyus George & Sons, solicitors, The Terrace & spirit importers & ale & stout agents (George Scolding,
Lyus P,enry Ormiston (tirm, Lyns G. & Sons), solicitor & manager), Mere street •
clerk to the local & burial boards, The Terrace Thurgar James C. boot & shoe maker, Market place
Macro Emma (Miss), draper & grocer, Post office, Victoria rd Tipple David, grocer &c. Mere street
Madgett George, shopkeeper, Moat road Tipple Robert, tinplate worker, Church street
Maling John, music, stationery & sewing machine ware- Turner John, farmer, Heywood
house, Crown street Vickery William, linen draper, Market place
Mark well Charles, gunsmith, Fair green Volunteer Battalion (4th) Norfolk Regiment (B Co.) (Capt.
Markwell Harry, basket maker, Mere street Francis Taylor M.P., J.P.); headquarters, Crown hotel,
Mason Charles & Co. timber merchants, Victoria road Crown street
Mendham Frederick, postmaster, Mount street 1Vard John, stone mason, Denmark street
Middleton Richard, farmer, Shelfhanger road Ward Wm . fly, mourning coach & hearse propr. Victoria rd
Middleton Walter, general dealer, Denmark street ·warne Leonard, farmer, Heywood
Miller Francis, farm bHiliti to Thomas William Gaze esq. Watling John, farmer, Heywood •
Brewery farm, Shelfhanger road Watling Lemon, market gardener, Victoria road
Moore James, farmer, Heywood Watson Paris White, c&ach builder, Victoria road
Morley James, grocer & furniture dealer, Mount street Waveney Coffee Tavern (The) (Thomas B. Dalton, proprie-
Mortimer Robert Ramsbury, shopkeeper, Victoria road tor), St. Nicholas street
Mowle \\'illiam, carpenter, Churob street Weavers Edward, confectioner, Mere street
Newhle Henry Edward, drill instructor to B. Co. 4th. Vol. Webb George William; butcher, Market place
. Battalion Norfolk regiment, The Armoury, Denmark st Wells Charles, Rampant Horse P.H. Heywood
N cwson DaVId, insurance agent, Mount street Welton Charles, farmer, Heywood
Newson Stephen, Jaw clerk & clerk to Diss, Roydon & Whorwood Benjamin, boot maker, Mere street.
v\'ortham school boards & assistant clerk to commis- Wilson Roland Henry Bouchier, solicitor (firm, Garrod &
sioners of taxes, St. Marie's terrace Wilson), )fount street
Nichols John, White Horse P.H. Market place Wood Mark, florist, Denmark street
Nunn Mary Ann (Mrs.), Two Brewers P.H. St. Nicholas st Woods Arthur, grocer &c. Church street
Nunn Rohert, bill poster, Shclfhanger road Woodcock Elizabeth (Mrs.), shopkeeper, Victoria road
Osborne Isaac, builder & timber dealer, Denmark street Woodrow Thomas J. baker, Market hill
Palmer John Chapman, drug & oil stores, Mere street Woodrow William, jun. baker, Fair green
Panks George Slrnon, Crown family & commercial Woodward James, Cock P.H. Fair green
hotel & posting house; billiard table & lavatory, Crown st Wright Ephraim, china & glass dealer, Victoria road
Parke Dudley (~1iss), grocer, Victoria road Wright George Edward, builder & wheelwright, Victoria rd
Payne Henry, boot & shoe maker, Market hill Wright George Edward, town crier
Pearce Thomas, boot maker, Denmark street Wright Stephen, farmer, Walcot green
Pcrfitt Richard F. stone & monumental mason, Victoria Wrinch Walter Godfrey, grocer, & agent for W. & A. Gil•
road. See advertisement bey, wine & spirit merchants, Market hill
Petts John, general dealer, Shelfhanger road Youngs, Crawsbay & Youngs, brewery (Arthur tyrrell,
Potter William, baker & corn dealer, Shelfhanger road manager), Crown Brewery stores; & at Crown brewery;
Prentice Arran, farmer, Heywood Norwich
Pretty Robert, whitesmith, Parkfields road Youngs E. & Co. engineers, iron & brass founders, boiler
Pretty William, stay manufacturer, Mount street makers & machinists, agents & makers of every descrip-o
Punt George, blacksmitH, Sandy lane tion of agricultural implements, Waveney iron works &
Quad ling Benj. coal, lime & salt merchant, Victoria road . Swootman foundry, Victoria road
DIRECTORY.] NORFOLK. POCKI.NG~ 37.5
DITCHING HAM is a parish and widely scattered vil- duced circumstances; they are admitted at any age above 3
tage, with a station on the Waveney Valley !->ranch of the and under 13, with the understanding that they remain in
Great Eastern railway, near Bungay, Suffolk, separated the Home until after confirmation; the house will hold 30
from it by the river Waveney, which is here crossed by an orphans ; respectable girls of the lower classe~:~ are also re-
iron bridge : it is r 3 miles south-east from Norwich, in the ceived into a separate cotta~e, in the same grounds, for- in-
Southern division of the county, Loddon hundred, Loddon dustrial training-as domestic servants. t
and Clavering petty sessional division and union, Hungay All Hallows Country Hospital is capable of holding ao
and Beccles county court district, rural deanery 'of Brooke, patients, who may be admitted without restricthn from any
eastern division, archdeaconry of Norfolk and diocese of practicable distance., at a small weekly payment : incura.bles,
Norwich. The church of St. Mary, situated on a height~ is convalescents and lady patients are also received ~tan in ..
a building of fiint with stone dressings, in the Perpendicular creased charge. A mission house was erected in x883, and
style, consisting of chancel, nave, north aisle, south porch is also used for parochial meetings &c. All these institutions
and an embattled western tower, with pinnacles, containing 01ore under the care of the Sisters of the House of Mercy, who
6 bells: the stained east window is a memorial to Samuel also hold the Grange farm.
Ives Sutton esq. and there is another to Colonel George The poor have certain allowances; and the rent of the
Wilson ;, the aisle and vestry were added to the church in town lands, which are let for about £roo yearly, is applied
1873, and the chancel was thoroughly restored in r88o: to the various public burdens of the parish. A charge of
there are 350 sittings. The register dates from the year £2 a year on a piece of land is given to the poor in bread.
I,'i59· The living is a rectory, average tithe rent-charge Here is a large silk crape manufactory belonging to Messrs.
1,423, net yearly value £317, with 32~ acres of glebe and Grout and Co. of Yarmouth and London, in which about
residence, in the gift of and held since 188r by the Rev. 250 hands are employed.
John Charles Scudamore M.A. of St. John's College, Oxford. Ditching ham Hall, a stately mansion, standing in llo beauti.
All Hallows church, erected in r865 as a chapel of ease, is a ful park, thickly st.udded with fine oak and other trees, is the
small building of flint with stone dressings in the Early Eng- property and residence of Williarn Carr esq. J.P. Tindall
lish style, consisting of chancel and nave and a bell-turret Hall, now converted into a farmhouse, belongs to Lord De
containing one bell: there are about r8o sittings. A ceme- Saumarez J.P. of Shrub! and Park, Suffolk. In this parish
tery of r~ acres was formed in 1879, and has a closed lych- are the manors of Pirnhow and Ditching ham, of which the
gate, which is used as a mortuary chapel; the cemetery is Duke of Norfolk K.G. and William Carr esq. J.P. are respec-
under the control of a Burial Hoard of nine members. tively lords. Lord De Saumarez, W. Carr esq. J.P. and Henry
The House of Mercy, opened in r859, in connection with Rider Haggard esq. J.P. are the principal landowners.
the Church Penitentiary Association, is under the care of the The soil is light loam; subsoil, gravel. The chief crops
sisterhood of All Hallows, and has for its object the reception are wheat, barley and turnips. The area is 2,o84A. 2R. 13P.;
of penitent women from all parts of England; the house is rateable value, £4,370; the population in r8gx was r,o83.
a large cruciform building and includes a beautiful chapel, Parish Clerk,. Charles Woods.
forming the eastern arm of the cross; in x887 a new wing of PosT OFFICE.~.A.rthur Woods, receiver. Letters through
red brick, in a simple style, from designs by Mr. Augustu.s B ungay arnve · at 6 . 30 a. m. & 2 p. m. ; sun d ays, 6 . 30 a.m. ~
Frere F.R.I.B.A. architect, of Lon d on, was erecte d as a d h d & d
· l h R -11 . Ed , d h fi iEpatc e at 12.55 5.40 p. m. ; sun ays, 1z. 30 p.m.
memoria tot e ev. WI mm ward Scu amore, t e rst Bungay is the hearest money order & telegraph office.
warden, who died in r88r : the new building, called "Holy Postal orders are issued here, bnt not paid
Cross House" is intended for an order of penitents who desire
to consecrate the r~mainder of their lives to pious works, and WALL LETTER Bo~, Holly hill, cleared at 5.20 p. m. i sun-
will conveniently hold 12 inmates: the older structure is days, 12 · 1 0 P· m
available for 30 penitents ; the Sisters have a "Community National School (mixed), erected in r84o & enlarged in 18721
House" adjoining; warden, Rev. Herbert Frere B. A. ; Lucy for 150 children ; average attendance, 130 ; Mrs. Ann
Hipkin, treasurer. Britten, mistress
All Hallows Home, founded in 1 86 7, is an orphanage for Railway Station, James Stevenson, station master ·
girls of the better classes whose parents have fallen into re- CARRIERS pass through from Bungay to Norwich
PRIVATE RESIDENTS. Barber William, baker, miller (wind & Mann R. & W. maltsters, & agents for
Baker Thomas M. Holly Hill lodge steam) & corn merchant Barclay, Perkins & Co.'s brown
Carr William J.P. Ditchin1rham ball Brady Nathaniel, manager of the stout, Wainford maltings
Carr William, jun. J. P. Old hall Factory gas works Martin Henry, farmer
Frere Rev. Herbert B. A. [curate &war- Brock Joseph Oliver, farmer Morriss Robert, builder & contractor
den of House of Mercy J Burdett Henry, blacksmith Page Saul, shopkeeper
Bage-ard Hy.Rider J.P. Ditching ham ho Cemetery (Charles Woodsy clerk to the Poll Charles Herbert,farmer,land agent
Hipkin Sister Lucy (treasurer), House burial board) & valuer, & agent for the Liverpool &
of Mercy Cornaby John, plumber & painter London & Globe Insurance Co. Old
Jenney Arth. Hy. J.P. Ditchingham ldg Crowfoot & Co. brewers, & agents Hall farm
Mann Robert Campbell, Wainford ho for Burton ales & London stout, also Pulford Mark, shopkeeper
Manwaring Moses, Ivy house coal merchants Ramus J as.cowkpr. & assistant overseer
More Thomas, Elm house Cuddon Charle!l, corn mer. & maltster Read George, farmer & hay dealer
Osborne Rev. EdwardAllinson[assistant Dickerson Harry, thatcher & basket ma Robson Jonathan, wheelwright
curate], Laburnam cottage Foreman Robert, cooper Smith Robert, manager at silk factory
Peniston l\Irs Garrould William Ziba, shopkeeper & Stevenson Jas. station mastr.R.aily.statn
Pipe John Watson baker , Thacker Alfred, beer retailer .
Rust John William, The Grove Green William & Son, coach builders Todd James, marine store dealer
Scudamore Rev. John Charles M.A. Grout & Co. silk crape manufacturers Tyrrell Jande (M iss), dbress make r
[rector], Rectory Hammond John, farmer, Tindall hall Underwoo Wi 1liam, eer retai 1er
Smith Mrs. Isaac Hardingham Alfred, Duke of York P.H Walker William David & .Arthnr Ernest,
Smith Robert High James, wheelwright maltsters, corn, coal, cake & lime &c.
TaylerMiss Adele (lady superior),llouse Hood George Williarn, farm bailiff to merchants, Railway station; & at
of Mercy Henry Rider Haggard esq. Ditch- Geldeston & Great Yarmouth; head
Tunney John Robert Wm. The Elms ingham House farm office, Earsham street, Bungay
Wightman Henry, The Chestnuts House of Mercy (Rev. Heroert Frere Williams Ambrose,carpenter & builder;
Wilson Misses, Hillside B. A. warden; Sist!'r Lucy Hipkin, estimates given for all kinds of work,
treasurer; Miss Adele Tayler, lady Norwich road
COMMERCIAL. superior) \\'oods Charles, shoe maker, clerk to
Algate Waiter, boot & shoe maker Hunting John, blacksmith the burial board, & registrar of births
All Hallows Country Hospital James Mary (Mrs.), dress maker & deaths & vaccination officer for
All Hallows Home for Girls Johnson Samuel, bricklayer Woodton sub-district
Appleton Alfred, farmer JohnsonSaml.hay& straw dlr.Station rd Woods James, butcher
Baker George, shoe maker KnightsEmily (Miss),earthenware dealr Wright George William, Falcon P.H
DOCKING is a parish and union town, pleasantly situ- was formerly called Dry Docking, froiQ the great scarcity of
ated on the old road from Lynn to Wells, on the highest point water that prevailed here, but the deep wells now amply
of Norfolk, with a station on the West Norfolk Junction rail- supply the inhabitants with excellent water of icy coldness.
way from Lynn to Wells, 6 miles south-west from Burnham The church of St. Mary is a building of flint with stone
:Market, 13 west from Wells, 12 north-west from l<'akenham, dressings, in the Perpendicular style, consisting of chancel~
17 north-east from Lynn and II7i from London, in the nave, north aisle, organ chamber, south porch and an em ..
North Western division of the county, Smithdon hundred, battled western tower containing one bell: there ara several
Smithdon and Brothercross petty sessional division, Little monuments to the Hare family, and the stained west window
Walsingham county court district, Heacham rural deanery, is a memorial to Mrs. B. Hare, mother of the present vicar,
Norfolk archdeaconry and diocese of Norwich. This place who died in x887: the lectern, of ca.rvei oak, was presente<l
-
1
S76 DOCKL.~G. (KELLY S
in' ··1882 by the Misses Chadwick, of Tunbridge Wells, in Heacham, Holme-next-the-Sea, Hunstanton, Ingold\&.
memory of Mrs. H. E. Hare : the ancient font is adorned thorpe, Ringstead, Sedgeford, Shernbonrne, Snettisham,
with many carved figures, much mutilated: the church wa.s Stanhoe, Thornham & Titchwell
new roofed in 1875• and additions made, at a cost of o>er Police Station, John Ward, superintendent & deputy chief
£4,000, and now affords 650 sittings. 'fhe register dates · consroble, & 2 constables-
from the year 1558: The living is a discharged vicarage, DocKING UNION.
average tithe rent-charge £434, gross yearly value £540, Board day every alternate wednesday at 10.30 a.m. at the
•with 45 acres of glebe and residence, in the gift of the Pro- · Workhouse.
vost and Fellows of Eton College, on the nomination of the The union comprises the following parishes. Eastern Divi-
Bishop of Norwich, and held since 1873 by the Rev. Hugh sion :-Bagthorpe, Harmer, Barwich, Brancaster, Burn.
James Hare M.A. of Queen's College, Oxford and rural dean ham Westgate, Burnham Deepdale, Burnham Norton,
of Heacham. The great tithes are commuted at £x,II4. Bnrnham Sutton & Ulph, Burnham Overy, Burnbam
The Wesleyan chapel is of red brick and was erected in 1821; Thorpe, Broomsthorpe, North Creake, South Creake,
the Primitive Methodist chapel, also of brick faced with Houghton, East Rudbam, West Rudham, Stanhoe, Syder-
cement, was erected in 1836, and has 350 sittings. A Police stone & Waterden. ·western Division :-Anmer, Bircham
Station, of white brick, was erected here in 1854, at a cost r Newton, Bircham Tofts, Bircham Magna, Choseley, Der-
of [, 1,2oo, and contains a residence for a superintendent, singham, Docking, Fring, Heacham, Holme-next-the-Sea,
and two well-ventilawd cells; a sessions room was added in Hunstanton, Ingoldisthorpe, Great Ringstead, Sedgeford,
1874 at the expense of the county. · The Literary Institute, Shernbourne, Snettisham, Thornham & Titchwell. The
erected in x86g, is a building of flint with red brick dressings area of the union is IOI,136 acres; rateable value,
and is supplied with daily and weekly papers and periodicals. £xo6,302; the population in 1891 was 17,255
The principal hotel is the ''Hare," situated near the railway Treasurer, Somerville Gurney esq. of Lynn
station. The common was inclosed in x86x, 4 acres being Clerk to the Guardians, John A. Stoughton, Fakenham
reserved for recreation and 41 for allotments. The Town Relieving Officers, Eastern district, William Smith, Burn-
Well, in the centre of the parish, was sunk in 1760, to the ham Westgate ; Western district, Richard Wright,
depth of about 237ft. at the sole expense of a Mrs. Henley ; Snettisham
a man is in attendance to draw the water, which is sold at Vaccination Officers, the Registrars of Births & Deaths
a farthing a pail. The well in the High street was sunk in Medical Officers, Burnham district, Samuel M. Hamill B. A.,
I 85 I, and on the 23rd April in the same year, one side of the M. D. Burnharri Westgate ; Docking district, George
well fell in and two men were killed. Sir William Hovel! Hales Parry L.R.C.P.Edin. Beech villa, Docking; Rud-
Browne ffolkes bart. D.L., J.P. of Hillington Hall, who is lord ham district, Alan Reeve Manby, East Rudham; Snet·
of the manor; Major Humphrey John Hare J P. Mrs. tisham district, John White Hopkins L.F. P. s.Glas. Snet-
Seymour and Henry Calthrop Hollway-Calthrop esq. J.P. of tisham
Stanhoe Park, are the principal landowners. The soil is of Public Vaccinators, Docking district, George Hales Parry
a light sandy nature; subsoil, principally gravel or flint. L.R.C.P.Edin. Doeking; other districts same as Medical
The crops are wheat, barley, turnips, mangold-wurtzel and Officers
seeds. The area is 6,218 acres; rateable value, £7,010; the Superintendent Registrar, John Daniel Nurse, Thornham;
population in x8gr was x,3r9 1 including III officers and in- deputy, Joseph Crane, Thornham
mates in the workhouse. Registrars of Births & Deaths, Burn ham sub-district, William
Parish Clerk, Charles Goodwin. Smith, Burnham Westgate; deputy, George Hudson,
SuMMERFIELD (anciently Southmere) is a parish It miles Burnham Westgate; Snettisham sub-district, Richard
north-west from Docking, with which it is connected for Wright, Snettisham; deputy, Henry Ewer, Snettisham
poor law purposes; it contains upwards of 1,2oo acres, the Registrar of )>Iarriages, John D. Nurse; deputy, Charles
property of Major llumphrey John Ilare J.P. and farmed by Good win, Docking
Mr. T. F. Ringer. The foundations of the church once The Workhouse, erected in 1836, at a cost of about £g,ooo,
L

existing here can still be traced. The living is a sinecure is an extensive brick building, about a mile west from
rectory, annexed to Sedgeford ; average tithe rent-charge the church, & will hold 250 inmates; John Rigby Lay-
£495, joint net yearly value £390, in the gift of the Dean land, master; Rev. Hugh James Hare M.A. chaplain;
and Chapter of Norwich and Eton College alternately, and George Halcs Parry L.R.C.P.Edin. medical officer; Mrs.
held since r874 by the Rev. James .Ambrose Ogle M.A. of Emma Layland, matron; Florence E. Cbinery, school-
Brasenose College, Oxford, and surrogate, who resides at mistress
Sedgeford. RURAL SANITARY AUTHORITY.
PosT, M. 0. & T. 0., S. B. & Annuity & Insurance Office. Meets at the Workhouse on every alternate wednesday, at
-Mrs. M. A. Carson, sub-postmistress. Letters received 10.30 a.m.

· through Lynn, delivered at 7 a. m. & I.35 p.m. to callers; Clerk, John A. Stoughton
dispatched at 10.15 a. m. & 5.30 p.m. on week days; sun- Medical Officer of Health, Charles Richard Whitty B.A.,
days, delivered at. 7 a. m.; dispatched at 2.40 p.m M.D. Hunstanton
WALL LETTER Box in Grove Farm wall cleared at 4·35 p.m. Treasurer, Somerville Gurney esq
on week days only Inspector of Nuisances, John Walker, Hunstanton
ScHoOL ATTENDANCE CoMMITTEE.
CouNTY !liAGISTRATES FOR SMITHDON AND BROTHERCRoss Meets at the 'Vorkhouse on every alternate wednesday, at
PETTY SESSIONAL DIVISION. 10.30 a.m.
le Strange Hamon esq. D.L. Hunstanton hall, Hunstanton Clerk, John A. Stoughton
R. S. 0. chairman Attendance Officers, Richard Wright, Snettisharn & William
Green Sir Edward bart. Ken Hill, King's Lynn Smith, Burnham Wcstgate
Hollway-Calthrop Henry Calthorp esq. Stanhoe hall, near National School (mixed & infants), erected in the year 186o
King's Lynn & enlarged in 1873, to hold 220 children; average attend-
Hunt Waiter Freeman esq. M. A. Sedgeford hall, King's Lynn ance, 190; Arthur \Villiam Narborough, master ; Miss
Neville-Rolfe Eustace esq. Heacham hall, King's Lynn Katc G1lbert, assistant mistress; Miss Florence Kirby,
Clerk to the Magistrates, G. Whitby, Hunstanton infants' mistress. The schoolmaster's house, situated in
l'etty Sessions are held at the Sessions house the last monday its own grounds near the school, is a neat building of tlint.
in every month & at Beeton's buildings, in Hunstanton, with red brick dressings
on the second monday in each month at I 1 a.'m. The Railway .Station, Alfred Thomas Drake, station master
following places are included in the petty sessional divi- CARRIERS TO : -
sion :-Barwick, Bircham Great, Bircham Newton, Bir- FAKENHAM-WilJiam Playford, thurs
cham Tofts, Brancaster, Choseley, Docking, !<'ring, LYNN-William Playford, tues

PRIVATE RESIDENTS. Livock John Isaac Bates John, manager to J. & R.Marriott
Masters The Misses Bayfield Gcorge Smith, butcher
Burgis Mrs. The Lodge Oliver Henry, Manor house Benn Henry, Bell P.H
Burgis Richard Parry George Ben nett Arthur Thomas, general grocer
Burgis Mrs. Robert, The Villa Parry George Bales, Beech villa & draper, hosier, glover & haber-
Burnett Rev. Rd. [Primitive Methodist] Preston Thomas Goodall dasher, family mourning, funerals
Crisp Misses Ringer Herbert Everitt, Summerfield furnished ; & branch at Stanhoe
Curl John Ringer Thomas Frederick, Summerfield Bennett Fanny (Miss), dress maker
Dalby Alfred Edward Sharpe Mrs Bennett James, blacksmith
GrahamRev. John[ Primitive Methodist] Watson Mrs Bennett Thomas, baker
Grimes William, The Model cottage Bird George & Fredk. market gardeners
Groom Edmund Cooper, Docking hall COMMERCIAL. Burgis Richard, farmer, North farm
Hare Rev. Hugh James M.A. [vicar, & Alien Samuel, tailor Butcher John, grocer & draper
, chaplain of the workhouse], Vicarage Anderson Mary (Mrs.), shopkeeper Bussey John, car proprietor & coal
larrett John, Lugden hill AshmanGiles,ironmgr.& tinplate workr dealer
DlRECTORY.J NO-RFOLK: DOWNHAM... 3 .,.7
I

Callaby John, coal dealer Henderson John, travelling draper 1 Overton Walter,watciJ. maker&confectnl."
Carson John, shopkeeper, Post office Jarrett John, farmer, Lugden hill Parry George Hales L.R.C.P.Edin.
CoombeMary(Mrs.),stra w bonnet maker JohnsonBritiff,saddler & harness maker medical officer & public vaccinator,
Crisp Stephen, beer retailer & butcher Jones Richard (Mrs.), news agent Docking district, & medical olficer,
Crowe Robert, farm bailiff to E. C. Keane Dennis, inland revenue officer Workhouse, Beech villa
Groom esq. Sunderland farm Kennedy Jameil~ dirtrict surveyor Parry George, surgeon
Dalby Alfred Edward M.R.c.v.s.LOnd. appointed by the county council Playford Samuel, corn dealer
veterinary surgeon, government vet- Lake Anguis~ hair dresser Playford William,baker & dealer in beer
erinary inspector for Smithdown & Lawson Charles, grocer & draper & PrestonThornasGoodall, teachr.of music
Brotbercross; branch,BurnhamMrkt collector of taxes Raines Robert l''rederick, baker
Derisley James, farmer, East End farm Mace Thomas, blacksmith 1 RidingJosephJohn, chemist, proprietor
Docking Co-operative Society Limited Mahon William Barford, Hare family & of Riding's B.1lsarnic mixture for
(Charles Lown, managet) c11mmercial hotel & posting house ; coughs, colds, bronchitis, asthma &c-
Emerson Thomas, Plough commercial first class accommodation for shooting Ringer Thomas Frederick, farmer,
hotel & posting house ; first class parties,commercial & smoking rooms; Summerfield farm
accommodation for shooting parties farmer, assistant overseer & deputy Sainty Christopher, ironmonger &c
& gentlemen attending coursing collector of taxes Smith Artbur Alex. blacksmith, wheel-
meetings , Marriott John & Robert, maltsters, coal! wright,painter & farm implement ma
Goodwin Charles, farmer & carpenter,& & corn merchants; & at Lyon Smith Charles, carrier for G. E. Railway
registrar
. of marriages for Docking MasonCharles,Railway inn,& coal dealer Smith John, King William inn
umon :Masters :Frederick, butcher Sporne Samuel, bricklayer
Goodwin George, boot & shoe maker Meek James, farm bailiff to Edmund Tidd James, refreshment rooms
Groom Edmund Cooper, farmer, Dock- Groom esq 1 Vincent Frances}iary(Mrs. ),shopke~per
ing hall )ierrison William, fartner, Grove farm Vincent Thonus, implement maker ·
Hendry Frances (Mrs.), shopkeeper }brris Henry, bnilder & wheelwright Wagg Harriet (Mrs.), baker
Hendry Robert, coal & hay dealer Oliver Henry, farmer, Manor farm Wartl John, superintendent of police &;
Hendry Thomas, shoe maker OliverHy.Chaplin,farmr.NorthEnd frm deputy chief constahle
Howard Thomas, bricklayer
Hagon Henry Thomas, hair dresser
Oliver William, farmer, High house !
Willia.mson John, basket maker

DOWN HAM (or DOWNHAM MARKET) is a market and I carr-stone panels in the Renaissance style, froni designs by
union town, parish, and the head of a county court district, Mr. J. J. Johnson A.R.I.B.A. architect, of London: it corn-
with a station on the Lynn and Ely section of the Great prises a large hall, 74 by 33 feet, with. a platfot·m 12 feet
EasUlrn railway and a branch line to Stoke Ferry, 88 miles wide, a corn exchange, reading, committee and retiring
from London, 59± west from Norwich, rsi north from Ely rooms, library, lavatories and offices: the hall will seat 500
and I I south from Lynn, in the Soutb Western division of the persons, and has two ordin'l.ry entrances and special exit
county, Clackclose hundred and petty sessional division, rural doors. The Literary Institute and Stanley Library, now
deanery of Fincham, archdeaconry of Norfolk and diocese of occupying rooms in the Town hall, was established in 1865,
Norwich. The town is seated on the eastern acclivity of the on the foundation of th.e Mechanics' Institute, dissolved in
vale of the navigable river Ouse, over which and the neigh- December, x865, and provides in the reading-rnom most of
bouring country is a fine uninterrupted view: the main the daily and weekly London pap&r3, weekly local papers
streets and roads are well paved, and the town is lighted and the principal periodicals; the extensive and carefully
with gas from works near the railway station, the property selected library was formed from a nucleus of £so, given by
of the Downham Gas Company Limited, formed in 1849, the Earl of Derby K.G. when member for King's Lynn
and is governed by a board of Improvement Commissioners ( I848-6g), and supplemented by subscriptions: the members
of 36 members, who also act as the Urban Sanitary Authority number between So and go: the subscription is merely
of the district. The Ouse is here crossed by an iron lattice: nominal. The Conservati\·o Club, opened 8 Aug. xBgo,
girder bridge with two piers, erected at a total cost of£3,5oo, occupies premises in Bridge street, formerly tenanted by the
from designs by Mr. David Oldfield c.E. and opened 9 Feb. Literary Institute: it is well supplied with most of the daily
1879· The church of St. Edmund is an ancient pile, origi- and weekly papers, and has now ( 1892) about 200 members.
nally Norman, but re-built in the Early English period, and Three large fain for horses and cattle are held yearly~
since extensively altered: it now consists of cilancel, nave, Winnold fair on Mareh 3rd and the three following days,
aisles, south porch and a low embattled western tower, and other fairs on the first .Friday in May and the 2nd
()f carr or rag- stone, with buttresses and quoins of freestone, Friday in November; and hirings for servants are held on
and containing 8 bells: in r884 f\ stone reredos was erected the Saturday fortnight before and the Saturday after Old
and the chancel floor rclaid, and in I 886 a stone statuette of Michaelmas Day. The Down ham Market Company Limited
St. Edmund the Martyr was set in a niche over the entrance was formed in r8.S6. The market is held every Friday in
to the south porch and a brass lectern placed in the church, the Market squa.re, where s·,ands a clock tower, presentecl
both at the cost of the late Mr. Henry Oakcs : the stained to the town by James Scott esq. in 1878: it is in the Gothic
east window was placed in 1873 by J. Wortley esq. of Skey- style, from the designs of Mr. William Cunliffe, of London,
ton, in memory of his wife's family, and there arc several and the shaft and lower portion being octagonal, with a.
other memorial windows: during the building of the new rectangular cluck chamber above presenting four illuminated
organ chamber in 1873 an original Norman window was dials, lighted automatically: the roof of the tower is relieved
discovered, built up in the wall behind the chancel arch, on by tracery and surmounted by a vane. The County Police
the north side : in I 876 the arms of the ancient family of Station, in Cilurch lane, has rooms for a superintendent and
Bardolph and those of Ramsey Abbey, formerly on the two constables, besides cells. There are three large brick
church, were carved in stone and replaced, the arms of the yards here, where a superior class of white bricks and pan-
sees· of Canterbury and Norwich and those of Thomas Leigh tiles are made ; an extensive steam flour mill, owned by J.
Hare esq. J. r., n. L. the present lord of the manor, being M. Bird esq. ; large malthouses, belonging toT. H. Wenn&Co.;
&dded: the curious old font has been repaired and re-set: a brass foundry and two breweries. TheAmerican nurseries of
the church was repaired in 1855 at a cost of £7oo, and Messrs.Bird&Vallance,neartherailwaystation,coversev~ral
affords 700 sittings, 200 being free. The register dates acres, well stocked with evergreen and ornamental trees and
from the year xs6o. The living is a. discharged rectory, shrubs : the inhabitants, by permission of the proprietors, are
average tithe rent-charge £395, net yearly value £roo, allowed to use the nurseries as a promenade during the
including 29 acres of glebe, with residence, in the gift of the summer months. In the town are several good hotels and
Rev. Edward H.obert Franks B.A. rector (I85o-82), and held inns: the Crown hotel, in the Market place, and the Castle
since 1890 by the Rev. Edwd. Douglas Lennox Harvey M. A. of hotel, High street, are old established and well-appointed
Trmity College, Cambridge, surrogate and J. P. There are houses. There are charities of about £86 yearly value, fur
Wcsleyan, Baptist, Strict Baptist an!l Primitive Methodist distribution in fuel, clothing and provisions: this amount
chapels. Mount Tabor Free Methodist chapel, Bridge street, includes a sum of £66, being the proportion assigned to this
erected in r85g, will seat about 260 persons. The Wesleyan parish from the Hundred Acres charity, the income derived
chapel, in Lynn road, was thoroughly repaired., two vestries from which is equally divided between the parishes of Wim-
built and the school-room enlarged in 1864, and in 1876 a botsham1 Stow and Downham; there is also a sum of about
new organ loft was added: it has 450 sittings. Zion chapel, £20 from the Batchcroft charity, and consisting of the rent
in Parson's lane, was rebuilt in 1874 1 and seats 170 persons. of land; and there are other estates, the produce of which is
A Cemetery of 2 acres, with two mortuary chapels, was applied in keeping the church in repair and maintaining the
formed in 1856, at a cost of about £x,6oo, and in x884 wa:s bridge over the river Ouse. Thomas Leigh Hare esq. M.~ .•
enlarged py the addition of 2~ acres at a cost of £soo: it is D.L. of Stow Hall, and Edward Roger Murray Pratt esq. B. A.,
nnder the control of a Burial Board of nine members. The J.P. of Ryston Hall, who are the lords of the several .manors,
Town Hall, erected in I887-B, at a cost of £r,73o, occupies J. Wortley esq. Thomas La.ucelot Reed esq. of Crow Hall,
a site facing the Market place and Bridge street, and is a Denver, Mr. Robert Haylett, sen. Mr. Edward Hyde, Mr.
structure of white and moulded brick, relieved by brown John Wortley, of Frettenham, and the trustees of tqe late
DOWNEAM. NORFOLK. (K.ELLY's
Joseph Kemp are the chief landowners. Under the Divided £ro,8gr; the population in 1891 was 3,oo6, of which 2,53
7
Parishes Act the acreage of the parish of Downham Market are in the Improvement Commissionera' district.
has been increased to 2,687, o£ which 853 acres are in the Sexton, George Neal, High street.
Improvement Commissioners' district; rateable value,
Official Establishments, Local Institutions &c.
PosT, ::\1. 0. & T. 0., S. B. & Annuity & Insurance Office.- 1 VoLUNTEERS.
Step hen Lock, postmaster, High street. Letters from 3rd Volunteer Battalion Norfolk Regiment (K Co. ), Hon.
Lrmdon arrive at 2.55 a. m. 12. ro noon & 5.10 p.m. ; dis- Major Edward Stephens Copeman, comrnandin~
patched at 11.25 a. m. & 5.20 & 9·35 p.m. ; box closes at DowNHAM UNIOS".
u.25 a. m. & 5.20 & 9 p.m. Letters received till g.Io p.m. The union compri~es 34 parishes, viz.:-Barton l'xmdisb,
with an additional halfpenny stamp Bexwell, Boughton, Crimplesham, Denver, Duwnbam
PosT & M. 0. 0., 8. B. & Annuity & Insurance Office.-J ohn Market,Fincham, Fordham, Hilgay, Holme-next-Runcton,
Hammaway, sub-postmast'!r. Letters dispatched at I I. 15 Marham, Roxharn, Ryston, Shouldham, Should ham
a.m. & 4.40 & 8 p.m. (\veek days only) Thorpe, Suuth Runcton, Southery, Stoke Ferry, Stow
WALL LETTER Bon;s. -Bridge street, cleared at I I. ro a.m. Bardolph, Stradsett, Tot ten hill, Wallington-curn-Thorp-
& 7.50 p.m.; Bridge road, at 6.30 p.m. summer & 6 p.m. land, Watlington, Welney, Werebam, West Dereham,
winter; Lynn road, at 7.20 p.m.: London road, at II.IO W1ggenhall St. German, Wiggenhall St. Mary Magdalen,
a.m. & 4·55 & 8.r5p.m.; Railway Station, at rr.roa.m. Wiggenhall St. Mary-the-Virgin, Wiggenhall St. Peter,
& 7·45 p.m. week days onl~·: Salter's Lode, 5·45 p. m Wimbotsham, Wormegay & Wretton. The population of
COUNTY MAGISTRATES FOR THE DIVISION OF CLA.CKCLOSE. the union in I8gr was 18,377; area, 83,687 acres j rate-
BaggeSir Alfred Tbos. D.L.,R.N. Crimplesham hall,Downham ahle value, £IIr,990
Hare Thomas Leigh esq. M.P., D.L. Stow hall, Downham Board day, alternate fridays, at u, at the workhouse
Harvey Rev. Edward D. Lennox M.A. The Rectory Clerk to the Guardians & Assessment Committee, Thomas
Latter Rev. Arthnr Simon M.A. Rectory, Outwell, Wisbech Lancelot Reed, Bridge street, Downham
Pratt Edward Roger Murray csq. B.A. Ryston hall, Downham Treasurer, S.Jmerville Arthur Gurney, Lynn
Read George esq. Wereham, Stoke Ferry S.O Relieving & Vaccination Officers, Downham district, James
Stocks Major Michael, Woodhall, Hilgay, Downham Watson, Church lane, Downbam; Wiggenhall district, J.
Taylor Captain Chauncy Arthur, Southery manor, Downham \V. Bussens, Wormegay
Wilford Rev. Edward Rnssell M.A. Rectory, Welney, Wisbech Medical Officers & Public Vaccinators, Downham district,
Clerk to the Magistrates, John Joseph Nunn, White house Alexandm· James Mackintosh lii.D., c. M. Downharn;
Petty Sessions are held at the Court house e\'ery alternate Fincham district, George Frederick Cross M.B., B.S.
monday, except Bank Holidays, at I I a.m. Parishes Fincham; Hilgay district, Thomas Garneys Wales, Down-
in petty sessional division : --' Barton Bendish, Hex- ham; Stoke Ferry district, Henry Fredk. Steele L.R.C.P.
well, Bough1on, Crimplesham, Denver, Dereham West, Land. Stoke Ferry~ North Welneydistrict, Harry Pearson
Downham Market, Fincbam, Fordham, Hilgay, Holme, Gilbert L.R.C.F.Edin. Upwell; South Welney district,
Mar ham, Outwell, Roxham, Rtmcton South, Ryston, Frederic Hone Moore L.R.C. P.Irel. Littleport; Wiggenhall
Redmere, Shouldham, Shouldham Thorpe, Southery, district, Thomas r.ornelius Lawson, Watlington
Stoke Ferry, Stow Bardolph, Stradsett, Tottenhill, Up well, Superintendent Registrar, Thomas Lane dot Reed, Bridge
Wallington-cum-Thorpland, "'atlington, Welney, Were- - street, Downham; deputy, HarryWayman, Bridge street,
barn, Wimbotsham, ·wormegay & Wretton Downham
DOWNHAM IMPROVEMENT COMMISSIONERS. Registrars of Births & Deaths, Downham sub-district., Jas.
(Acting as the Urban Sanitary Authority.) Watsun, Church lane, Downham; dL1mty, B. Parrot!,
Board Room, Town hall, the first tuesday in every month. London road, Downham ; Fincham sub-district, H. F.
Chairman-Harry Wayman. Steele, Stoke Ferry; deputy, George Watson, Stoke Ferry;
William Andrews John Joseph Nunn Wiggenball sub-district, J. W. Bussens,Wormegay.Lynn;
John Lee Bennett • Benjamin Parrott deputy, John Gamble, Worrnegay, Lynn
Charles Heart Augnstus Pope Registrar of Marriages, Joseph Thomas Coe,Cannon square,
Robert S. Bennctt Harry Pope Downham ; deputy, Renjamin Parrott, London road
Jacob M. Bird • William Pope, sen The Workhouse is a spacious building of brick & rag stone,
James Emery Thomas Lancelot Reed on rising ground, at the entrance of the town from the
John Flatrnan James Scott London road, & will hold 239 inmates; William South,
Thomas H. Flatman · Waiter Scott master; Rev. Edward Douglas Lennox Harvey M. A. chap-
Robert Gage Edward IIarrison Shackle lain; Thomas Garneys Wales, medical officer; Mrs.
John Goodchild John William Sly Susannah South, matron
George Grigson Robert L. Spencer RuRAL SANITARY AUTHORITY.
John Hamrnaway Abram Valiance Meets at the Workhouse on the 4th friday of each month at.
Rev. E. D. L. Harvey Thomas Garneys Wales noon. '
Charles Hawkins James Watson Clerk, Thomas Lancelot Reed, Bridge street, Downham
Alfred William Langman Waiter Wayman Treasurer, Somerville Arthur Gurney, Lynn
Alexander B. Laxon Thomas Hooton Wenn Medical Officer of Health, Frederick Wm. Kirkham L.R.c. P.
Wilfred Arnold Mellor George I•'lower Wood Edin. London road, Downham
George William Mills I · d
OFFICERS OF THE lMPROVEl\IENT CoMMISSIONERS. nspector of Nuisances, BenJ. Parrott, London-, . Downbam
Clerk, Thomas Lancelot Reed, Bridge street ScHOOL ATTENDANCE CoMMITTEE.
Treasurer, Somerville Arthur Gurney, banker, Lynn Meets at the Workhouse on Board days, at noon.
Medical Officer of Health, Thomas Garneys Wales, High st Clerk, Harry Wayman, Bridge street, Downham
Surveyor, John Snelling, Bridge road Attendance Officer, James Long, London road, ll01mham
lnspector of Nuisances, James Long, High street PUBLIC OFFICERS:-
Collector, George Rayner, The Green Certifying Factory Surgeon, Thos. Garneys Wales, High st
PUBLIC EsTABLISHMENTs:- Clerk to the Commissioners of Property, Income & Land
Cemetery, Thomas Lancelot Reed, Bridge street, clerk to Taxes, John Joseph Nunn, White house, London road
the board; Joseph Thomas Coe, Cannon sq. registrar Coroner for the Hundred & Half Hundred of Clackelose,
County Court, London road, His Honor Edwin Plumer Thomas Lancelot Reed, Bridge street; deputy, Harry
Price, judge; Harry Wayman, registrar ; Thomas Hugh Wayman, Bridge street
Pink, clerk ; Benjamin Parrott, Downham Market, high Assessor & Collector of Taxes & Collector of Poor's Rt.tes &
bailiff & bailiff appointed under the Agricultural Holdings Assistant Overseer for Down ham Parish, George Rayner,
Act. The County Court district comprises the following The Green ·
places :-Barton Bendish, Bexwell, Boughton, Crimple- Surveyor of High Roads, John Snelling, Bridge road
sham, Denver,Dereham West,Downham Market, Fincham, Adjuster of Weights & Measures for the Hundreds of Clack•
Fordham, Holme-next-Runcton, Hilg-ay, North Delph, close, Freebridge Marsliland, South Greenhoe, part of
Roxham, Runcton Sonth, Ryston, Shouldham, Should- Mitford & Launditch, Chri~"'topher Balding
ham Thorpe, Souther.v, Stoke Ferry, Stow Bardolpb, Veterinary Inspector under the Contagious Diseases (Ani-
Stradsett, Tottenhill, Wallington-cum-Thorpland, Wat- mals) Act, Georgc Grigson M.R.c. v.s. Bridge street
lington, Wereham, Wiggenhall St. Peter, Wimbotsham, Town Crier, George Ncal, High street
Wormegay, Wretton, Welney ' ' PLACF.S OF WoHSHIP, with times of Se:rvices :-
Certified Bailiff appointed under tbe "Law of Distress St. Edmund's Church,Rev.Edward Douglas Lcnnox Harvey
Amendment Act," James Long, 'High street M.A. rector; Rev. HenryRogers M.A. curate; 8 & II a.m.
County Police Station, Church lane, Henry Bretmash, & 3 & 6.30 p.m.: wed. 8 p.m.; fri. 12 noon 1 saints' days,
• superintendent. & 2 constables 1 :t a. m ·
Fire Engine Station, Church lane, George Neal, captain Baptist (Strict), Parson's lane, Rev. Frederick 'Marshall;
· Stamp Office, S. Lock, Post office 10.30 a. m. & 6.30 p.m. ; wed. 7 p.m
DIRECTORY.] NORFOLK. ,POWNHAM. 379
Baptist (Particular), London road, Rev. Samuel Howard; .Board Schools, Paradise lane, erected in 187I, at a cost of
10.30 a. m. & 6.30 p.m. ~ wed. 8 p.m £3,044, exclusive of\£3oo given for the site, for 280 child-
Primitive Methodist, London road, Rev. James Kemish ; ren & 200 infants; average attendance, g6 boys, 85 girls
10.30 a.m. & 6.30 p.m.; wed. 7.30 p.m & 153 infants; Enoch Priest, master; Miss Clara Birchal,
Primitive Methodist, Salter's lode, supplied from Down- mistress ; Miss Anna \Vildridge, infants' mistress
ham; 2.30 &6.30 p.m.; thurs. 7.30 p.m Bnard School, Salter's lode, built in x883 for the hamlet of
United Methodist Free Church, Bridge street, Rev. Waiter Salter's lode, in the pariShes of Downbam Market & Den-
Hope; 10.30 a. m. & 6.30 p.m.; wed. 7.30 p.m ver, the latter parish & that of Outwell being contributory
Wesleyan, Lyon road, Hev. Charles Bingant; 10.30 a. m. districts ; the school will hold 84 children; average at-
& 6.30 p.m. ; wed. 7 p.m tendance, 64-; Sheriff Lon'!, master; Mrs. Long, mis-
Friends' Meeting House, Bridge street, sundays, 3 p.m tress; attendance officer, Thomas Newton, Salter's lode
Salvation Army Barracks, Church lane; I r a. m. & 3 & 6.30 Great Eastern Railway Station lEast Anglian branch), Wm.
p.m. ; daily, 8 p.m Smith, station master. Omnibuses from the Castle &
Wesleyan Mission Rooms l Bridge street, 2.30 p. m.; Bridge Crown hotels, to meet every train
road, 2.30 p.m CARRIERS TO:-
ScHOOLS:- HILOAY-Sharpe & Son, fri
A School Board of 5 members was formed May 21, 1871, LONDON-Suttou & Co. Bridge st. ; Harry Gates, agent
with Denver & part of Outwell contributories, each sending LYNN-William Hunter, tnes. thurs. sat. put up at the
one member; Thomas Lancelot Reed, Bridge street, clerk 'Star,' returning same evenings
to the board ; William Canham, Bexwell road, attendance SHOULDHAM-Pikett, fri
officer SouTHERY & HrLGAY-G. Porter, fri
PRIVATE RESIDENTS. Hawkins Chas. The Rosery, Bexwell rd Redit David, Lynn road
Andrews Mrs. Jardine villa, Bexwell"rd Hayden Francis Saml.Ban k ho. Br1dge st Rogers Rev. H y. M. A. [curate], Bexwell rd
Andrews William, Railway roa.d Haylett Mrs. Bridge street Rose Mrs. Railway road
Barber John George, Railway road Holmes Isaac Clayton, Holmeleigh Salter Fred Marner, Sandfield house
Barrow Miss, The Laurels Hope Rev. Waiter [United Metb.odist Scarnell Mrs. George, London road
Beart Charles, White house, Rail way rd Free Cb.urch ], Railway road Scarnell Mrs. Henry, Bennett street
Heart Mrs. High street Horsley Miss, Bridge street Scott James, Railway road
Bell John, Lynn road Howard Rev. SI. [Baptist], Bexwell rd Seott Waiter, Bridge street
Bennett John Lee, Station villa Johnson Mrs. Union terrace Sewter James, Bexwell road
Bennett John Rose, Mount Pleasant Jones Henry, Bridge road Shearhod Edward, Bex:well road
Bennett Mrs. Union terrace Kemish Rev. James [Primitive Metho- Smith Robert Samuel, Hythe house
Bingant Rev. Charles [Wesleyan], Fern dist], London road · Snelling John, Shipto!l house
villa, Bexwell road Kirkham Fredk. Wm. LL.B. London rd Southwell Leonard George, Victoria
Bird Arthur, Bridge street Long John Vince, Salamanca house villa, Bexwell road
Bird Frederick, Bridge street Mace Miss, Bexwell road Spinks Fredk. Pleasant ho. Bexwell rd
Bird Jacob Mason, Eagle ho. Bridge st Mackintosh Alex. Jas. M.D.,C.M.High st Suttaby Benjamin, Lynn road
Bunkall Mrs. Hailway road Marshall Rev. Frederick [BaptistJ, Taylor Oscar John, Hyston end
Cambridge Mrs. Bexwell road Albert villa, Bexwell road Tingay Mrs. Bridge street
Casebow Mrs. Union terrace Millican Waiter, W adswrth .vil.Bexwll. rd Trotter Mrs. Rhoda, Bridge street
Collins John William, Chestnut villa Mills Geo. Wm. The Retreat, Lynn rd Trotter Samuel Geo.Brier ho.Railway rd
Conlson Albert, lligh street ~unn John Joseph B.A. White house, Wales Misses, The Firs, Lynn road
Coulson :Frederick William, High street London road Wales Thomas Garneys, High street
Ekins Mrs. Bexwell road Oakes Misses, Nelson house, Bridge st Ward Thomcts, R~xwell road
Gage Rubert, Prospect villa, Hexwell rd Page Francis, Lynn road Warne George, Holly house, Bridge rd
Gage William Green, Bexwell road Pearman Mrs. Lynn road Wayman Harry, The Towers
Goodchild Simon, London road Pilgrim Mrs. Bexwell road Wenn Mrs. Railway road
Goose Robert, Rail way road Pink Thomas Hugh, Bridge Road ter Wenn Thomas Hooton, Dial house
Gromett Mrs. Hennel,t street Pope Augustus, High street Whiteman Johe~, Lynn road
l:Iarvey Rev. Edward Douglas Lennox Pope William, l:ligl1 street Wood George Flower, Trafalgar house,
M.A., J.P. [rector & surrog-ate,& chap- Rawlings William Kirk, Church lane Parson's lane
lain to the workhouse], Rectory
COMMERCIAL. Carley John, boot & shoe maker, Porter street
Alflatt Katherine (Miss), dress maker, R'lilway road Carter Ephraim, carpenter, Lynn road
Alfiatt Mary (Miss), milliner, Bridge street Carter William, beer retailer, Lynn road
Alflatt William, Temperance coffee house, Bridge street Cash & Co. boot & shoe manufacturers, Market place
Arnold Waiter, shopkeeper, Bridge street Cemetery (Thos. Lancelot Reed, clerk to the burial board;
Arson Jn. assist. supt. to Prudenti,~l Assurance Co. Bridge st J oseph Thomas Coe, registrar)
Baker Whitmore, chemist, High street Chapman Thos. ~Son, black & shoeing- smiths, R:J.ilway rd
Baker Maria (Mrs.), dress maker, Paradise lane Glarke Charles, engineer &c. Porter street
Barber Amos, tinplate worker, Bridge street Coe Brothers, fancy repository, Bridge street
Barber Elisha, coal dealer, London road Coe George Starling, tea dealer, Bridge street
Hayfield George Smith, butcher, Bridge street Coe George Starling, jun. comrn~rcial traveller, Railway rd
Beart & Co. corn, seed, cake & coal merchants; granaries, Coe Joseph Thomas, registrar of marriages & registrar of
Stow station ; stores, Railway station the cemetery, Cannon square
Bell William, watch maker, Bridge street Cole Harriet (Mrs.), dyer, Lynn road
Bennett John Lee & Son, corn, cake, seed & coal merchants, Collina & Barber (late Bennett), contractors, builders &
Station Yilla builders' merchants, timber & stone merchants, monu-
Bennett James, shopkeeper, London road mental masons, bricklayers, stone &; wood carve-rs, plum-
Bennett John Lee, brick manufactr. & farmer, Station villa bers, plasterers, glaziers, painters & paperhangers, car-
Bennett Hobert S. ironmonger, High street penters, joiners & undertakers, Railway works
Bennett Thomas, beer retailer, London road Collina .John Williarn 1 auctioneer, valuer, builders' sur-
Bird Jacob Mason, miller (steam) & corn mer. Station mills veyor, house & estate agent; agent for Cunard & Union
Bird & Valiance, seed merchants & nurserymen (tele- Steam Ship Co. agent for Standard, Sceptre, West of
grams, "Valiance, Downham "), American nurseries, England & Norwich Assurance Companies, sec. to Down-
Bridge street. See advertisement ham Market Market Co. Limited, Railway road
Blades Clarissa (Miss), dress maker, London road Coulaon Frederick Williarn 1 family grocer & provision
Bond William, coal dealer, Porter street merchant, & agent for Messrs. Gilbey's wines & spirits, &
Bradley F. W. dentist, Market place wholesale tobacconist, High street
Bretma.sh Henry, superintendent u( police, Police station County Court (His Honor Edwin Plumer Price Q.C. judge;
Brooks Robert, farmer, Ouse bank Harry Wayman, registrar; Thomas Hugh Pink, clerk;
Brooks William, coal merchant, }{ailway road . B. Parrott, high bailiff), London road
Hrowne Fanny Stebbing (Miss), fancy repository, ,High st Cowling William, beer retailer, Lynn road
Browne Harry, dealer in game & greengrocer, Bridge street Culling Ann (Miss), stay maker, Market place
Browna Henry, baker & grocer, Bridge street Culling John, game dealer, Market place
Bull George, saddler, Market place Davidson William, pork butcher&; shopkeeper, London rd
Bunkall Charles, butcher, High street Dawson Ann ( :\1i~s ), upholstress, llexwell road
Butcher Galloway, boot maker, Church lane Dent Robert Raglan, shoeing smith, Parson's lane
Calver El~beth P!rs. ), butcher, Market place Downham Conservati,·e Club (E. H. Shackle, bon. sec. ;
Ca.lver Mart ha (.Mrs.), lodgings, I,.ondon road James Williams, assistant sec. h Hridge street
Canham William, school attendance officer, Bexwell road Down ha m Market Gas Works( Geo. F. Wood, sec. & manager)
380 D'OW~HAMJ NORFOLK. [KELLY'8

Downhani & District Liberat Association (John Gray, sec.), Jackson James Marriott, secretary to Princess Royal lodge,
- Railway road Oddfellows, Nightingale cottage
Downbam Market Gazette (published friday), Bridge street Jackson Mary .An ne (Mrs.), registry office for serv&nts,
Downham Market Market Co. Limited (John Wm. Collins, London road
sec.; George Neal, collector), Railway road James William, farmer, Salter's lode
Downham Market Town Hall Co. Limited (Joseph Thomas Johnson Jonah & Son, builders, Lynn road
Coe., sec. ) 1 Cannon square JohnsonFra.ncis Henry, bricklayer, Lynn road
Downham & Btoke Ferry Railway Co. Limited (Ed ward Johnson Richard James, watch maker &c. High street
Copeman, sec.), High street J ones Henry & Son, grocers, tea dealers & provision mer-
Dungay George, beer retailer &c. Railway road chants, The Bridge
EbbinsJohn, Hat & Feather P.H. Market place Jones Henry, farmer, Bridge road
Edge Jonathan Ash, farmer, Salter's lode Kemp Anthony, fanner, Salter's lode
Edge Sophia Jane (Mis~), lodging!',& band machine stocking Kemp Margaret (Mrs.), farmer, Salter's lode
maker, Railway road Kendel William, cabinet maker, Lynn road
Edwards James, yeoman, Lynn road Kenney Ilarriet (Mrs.), lodging house, Bridge st.reet
Eley Elizabeth Anne (Mrs.), lodging house, Lynn road Kenney William, beer retailer, Bridge road
Emery James, family draper & milliner, hatter, outfitter & Kerry Cbas. iron & tin plate worker, Bridge st. & Porter st
dress & mantle maker, Bon Marche, High st. & Market pl King William, miller (wind), Salter's lode
Euglisb Noab, chimney sweeper, Bridge road Kirby George Henry, Queen's Head P.H. Bridge street
English William, chimney sweeper, Lynn road Kirkham Frederick William L.R.c.s.Edin., LL.B.camb. sur-
Fickling Waiter, blacksmith & beer retailer, Bridge road geon, & medical officer of health to rural sanitary authority,
Flatman John, house agent, Bridge street London road
Flatman Thomas Henry, builder, Bridg-e street Lack Ilcpzibah (Miss), dress maker, Paradise lane
Flegg Tbos.,milling engineer to J~ M. Bird csq. Linden villas Lack William, farmer, Lynn road
Foreman James, farmer, Salter's lode Lancaster Edward Wright, jobbing gardener, London road
Foreman Jane (Miss), dress maker, Bexwell road Land Thomas, boot maker, Bridge street
Francis William, carpenter, Lynn road Langman Alfred William, upholsterer &c. High street
Fuller Albert John, tinplate worker, Lynn road Langman William Booth, corn, seed, hay & cake merchant
Gage Robert & Son, builders, Bexwell road & baker, High street
Gage Sarah (Miss), dress maker~ Church lane Laxon Allix Barker (late Henry Oakes);family grocer,
Gaminara Henry, mail contractor, Lynn road provison merchant & italian warehouseman, china. & glass
G-ardener Emily (Miss), young ladies' school, Bridge street warehouse, agricultural salt warehouse, High street
Gates Harry, agent to the Prudential Assurance Co. & agent Lewis Charles Hutch ins, teacher of music, Lynn road
for Sutton & Co. carriers, Bridge street Literary lrultitute (Fredk. Mottashed, hon. sec.), Town hall
Gates Thomas, boot maker, Lynn road Lock Ellen (Miss), booksellE~r & stationer, High street
Gaunt .Frederick, hair dresser, ~ridge street Lock Stephen, postmaster & stamp distributor, High st
Giscard Wm. Saml.watch maker & furniture broker, High st Lock Stephen, jun. emigration agent, Post office, High st
Glasscock Frederick, saddler & harness maker, High street London & Provincial Bank Limited (sub-agency) (Goorge
Goddard John, painter &c. Paradise lane William Page, manager). open moudays, wednesdays &
Goodchild John 1 farmer, Railway road fridays ; draw on bead office, 7 Bank buildings, ~ondon
Gooden Charles, basket maker, Bridge street E c & Glyn, Mills, Currie & Co. London E c
Goodrick Georgej tailor, Parson's lane Long .Foster John, painter, & sub-bailiff to county court,
Goodson John Cependale, carpeni.:er, Railway road Church lane
Grant 'Yilliam, general dealer, Bridge road Long James, shopkeeper, & inspector of nuisances for the
Gray John, linen & woollen draper, Railway road improvement commissioners, High street
Green .Eliza .Jane, Elizabeth & Matilda (Misses), ladies' Long James Henry, plumber & glazier. Parson's lane
school, High street Long J obn Vince, monumental mason, London road
GrigsonGeorge M.R. c. v .S.L. veterinary surgeon, & veterinary Lowe William Francis, shopkeeper, Lynn road
inspector undex: the Contagious Diseases (Animals) Act, Lyon Adam, pastrycook, confectioner & refreshment con-
Bridge street tractor; public teas, luncheons, picnics,soirees&wedding
Gromett Charles, fishmonger, Bridge street breakfasts supplied, Market place
Gromett Frederick, farmer, Porter street Mackintosh AlexanderJ ames M. D., c. M. physician & surgeon,
Gull Mary Ann (Miss), dress maker, Downham bridge medical officer & public vaccinator for Downham district,
Gurneys, Birkbeck, Barclay, Buxton & Cresswell, bankers High street
(Francis Samuel Hayden, manager), Bridge street; draw Mann Arman, farmer, Barroway drove
on Barclay & Co. London Mann Benjamin, beer retailer, Railway road
Hailstone & Cossey, farmers, Salter's lode Marchant Thomas, pork butcher, Bridge street
Halliday Sarah (Mrs.), grocer, Bridge street Markbam Mary (Mrs.), boarding school, Bridge street
Hammaway John, butcher & grocer, & post office, Railway rd Martin Frederick, Swan hotel, High street
Ilammond Ernest, tinplate worker, Bridge street Martin Henry Richard, Coffee Pot P.H. High street
Harper Charles, bricklayer, Howdale Mason Robert, gasfitter, Union terrace
Hawkins Charles, auctioneer, valuer, land & estate Maycroft Harriet (Mrs.), dress maker, Lynn road
agent, & agent for the Woodhall, Ox borough & An mer Mayo William Case, grocer, tea & provision dealer, agent
estates, Lynn road; & Bank chambers, King's Lynn for Morse's herbal ointment & pills, Leath & Ross' medi·
Harvey Robert, tailor, Paradise lane cines, Railway Road stores
Harvey William, outfitter, Bridge street Melior Wilfrid Arnold, solicitor, High street
Hayden Francis Samuel, manager at Messrs. Gurneys & Melton Thomas, chimney sweeper, Lynn road
Co.'s Bank, Bridge street Merrison John, farmer, Ouse bank
Haylett Benjamin Fox, coal dealer, Railway road Miller John, farmer, Downham fen
Haylett Robert George, farmer, Bridge street Mills Elijah, glover & gaiter maker, High street
Haylett Robert, farmer, Railway road Mills George William, brewer, Parson's lane
Haylett William, boot maker, Paradise lane Mills Harry, hair dresser, Market place
Ha:ylock Charles, baker, Paradise lane Moore Henry, tailor, Lynn road
Haylock George, confectioner, Bridge street Moore William, tailor, Market place
Haylock Matthew, boot maker, Paradise lane Mottashed Frederick, draper, High street
Hewing Jonathan, Railway Station hotel, Railway road Mountser Margaret Ann (Mrs.), registry office for servants,
Hewitt Harry, horse slaughterer, Howdale Bridge street
Hinde Wm. Hall l\I.R.C. v.s.L. veterinary surgeon, Church la Mumford Mary Ann (Miss), preparatory school, Bridge st
Holme Isaac Clayton, chemist, Bridge street Murrell William, wheelwright & coach &. carriage repairer,
Howe .Ada Jane & Evelyn Jane (Misses), fancy re,Pository, Bridge street
High street Neal George, bill poster, town crier & market toll collector,
Howe Thomas Edw~rd, Rampant Horse P.H. High street High street
Howes Joscph Martin, watch & clock cleaner, Lynn road Neave John, horse breaker, Paradise lane
Hubbard George,chemist & dentist, wine, spirit, ale & porter Newel! Daniel Abram, Live &'Let Live inn, & black.smith1
dealer; foreign & british wine3 of superior quality ; agent London road
for Horniman's & John Rose's teas; foreign & british Newell William, brewer of ales, pale ales & stout"; families
cigars, High street & Paradise lane supplied with casks of 4!i gallon8 & upwards, St. Edmunds
Hudson George, White Hart P.B. Bridge street brewery
Hudson Simclll Alfred, commission agent, Church lane N orton William, boot maker, Bexwell road
Hunter William, carrier, Lynn road Nunn John Joseph B.A. solicitor, clerk to the justices for the
Jackson Alexander,greengrocer, Bridge street hundred of Clackclose, income tax & land tax commi-1·
Jackson Philip, general dealer, Lynn road sioners, Ouse Bank general commissioners, Ouse Bank
-DIREGI"ORY.] . NORFOLK: l>OWNHAM. .J8l
4th, sth & 6th dtstrict, Downbam fen, Hilgay Great West I Spmks P'rederick, clerk to Swke Ferry & Wereham school
fen draiooge, Stoke ·ferry &c. drainage commissioners, & boards, Pleasant house, Bexwell road
agentto the Norwich Union Fire & Life Assurance, White Rtaff George, fishmonger, Railway road >
house, London road Stannard Richard, baker, Lynn road
Nurse William, tailor & woollen draper, Bridge street Sutton & Co. carriers (Harry Gates, agent), Bridge street
Page Thomas, temperance hotel, Bridge street Swinger John, wheelwright, Church lane
Paling Joseph Harrison, beer retlr.& shopkeepr.Salter's lode Talbot George, farmer
Panks Henry, beer retailer, Railway road Tarrant Caroline (Miss), milliner, Bridge street
.Parrott Benjamin, high bailiff to the county court; inspec- Taylor John, baker, Rail way road
tOT of nuisances rural district & deputy registrar of births, Terrington Anna Elizabeth & Frances Anne {Misses), dress
deaths & marriages, pouse agent & agent to Liverpool & makers, Lynn road
London & Globe Insurance Co. London road . Thompson Edmnnd, shopkeeper, Salter's lode
ParrottJohn Joseph, picture frame maker, Bridge street Thorne John Woolmer, grocer & draper, hosier & milliner,
~etchell John, beer retailer, Bridge street High street
Pike Frederick, horse dealer, Paradise lane Tiffen William & John, farmers, Salter's lode
Piket~ William, cowkeeper, Railway road Townsend Beatrice (Miss), dress maker, Lynn road
Pope & Sons, brick & tile mak~rs, Railway road Towson William, farmer, Downham fen
Pope William & Sons, wholesale & retail linen & woollen Trottel" Rhoda & Sons, agricultural, iron & tin plate
drapers, hosierst clothiers (home & export), outfitters, works, ironmongery establishment, implement depot, oil
warehousemen, cabinet makers & complete house fur- & col or warehouse; our own workmen sent out to any
llishers, contractors for tents, tent equipment,condemned distance, Bridge street; & branch at Methwold
army, navy, volunteer, police & railway clothing, arms & Trotter Samuel George, ag-ent for Sun Fire & Life Assurance
accoutrements, valuers of drapery, ready-mll.de clothing Co. Brier house, Railway road
& grocery stocks, fixtures, fittings & furniture; account- Trower George, farmer, Salter's lode
ants & assessors of fire claims, stock rooms for sale or Trower Matthew, farmer, Salter's lode
stock by tender in London, Liverpool, ·Manchester~ Bir- Turner Fram:is, Chequers inn, Lynn road
mingham & elsewhere, .High street & Cannon square Upshaw Edward, farmer, Salter's lode
Porter & Son, brick makers, Railway road Valiance Abram, lleedsman, see, Bird & Valiance. See advt
Prentice Anne (Mrs.), Castle hotel, High street Vince Althea A. Z. J. (Miss), mill:ner, Church lane
Preston Frederic, iron, tin & zinc plate worker, High street Volunteer Battalion (3rd), Norfolk Regiment (K. Co.) (Hon.
Preston Isa"bella (Miss), dress maker, Railway road . Major Edwd.Stephens Copeman, commanding), Drill ball
Preston William, Bull P. H. High street Wales Thomas Garneys, surgeon, & mediral officer & public
Raby Charlotte Kezia Martha (Mrs. ),pork butcber,Bridge st vaccinator for Hilgay district, Downbam union & medical
Raby Mary Ann (Mrs.), shopkeeper, London road officer to the workhouse, also medical officer of health to
Rayner George M.F.s. tearher of shorthand, assistant over- Improvement Commissioners & certifying factory sur-
seer & assessor & collector of taxes, collector for Improve- geon, High street
ment Commissioners & collector of poor rate, The Green Wallace William Harry Binckes, dentist; attends alternate
Redit David, agricultural, hot water, gas, mechanical & fridays; High street
general engineer, Railway road Ward Robt. (exors. of), carting agts.& coal dlrs.Railway rd
Reed & Wayman, solicitors, Bridge street Warnes Wm. shopkeeper, Bridge street
Reed James Henry, baker, Railway road Watson Emma (Mrs.), refreshment rooms, High street
Reed John, beer retailer, Bridge ruad Watson George, farmer, Bridge road
Reed Thomas Lancelot (firm, Reed & Wayman), solicitor, Watson George William, account book manufacturer &
clerk w the Guardians' Assessment Committee & Rural bookbinder, Bridge street
Sanitary Authority, & superintendent registrar of Down- Watson James, academy, High street
ham union, clerk to the burial & school boards, to the Watson James, relieving & vaccination officer for Downham
Improvement Commissioners, to the hundred of Clack- district & registrar of births & deaths for Downham sub-
close Association for Prosecution of Felons, to Watlington district, Church lane
school board, coroner for the hundred & half hundred of Watson Royal, printer, stationer & news agent, & agent for
Clackclose & sec. to Downbam Agricultural Association, Inman's & International Steamship Co. Limited, "Down-
Bridge street ham Market Gazette" office, Bridge street
Register Larman, farmer, Bridge road Watson William, shopkeeper, Salter's lode
Register William Porter, miller (wind & water), Lynn road Watts John, farmer, Downham fen
Robb Thomas Mehew, farmer, Ouse bank Way Frederick Charles, watch maker, High street
Rowe Frederic Baker, printer, stationer, bookseller & news- Wayman Harry (firm, Reed & Wayman), soliciwr, registrar
agent, agent for Midland Counties Insurance Co. Bridge st to county court, deputy coroner for the hundred & half
Russell Elias, fishmonger & shopkeeper, Lynn road hundred of Clackclose, deputy superintendent registrar,
Sacker Clara (Mrs.), laundress, Paradise lane clerk to school attendance committee, clerk to Southery
Savage Frederick, beer retailer, Bridge street school board, registration agent w S. W. Norfolk Con-
Scarnell, Wood & Co. corn, coal & ale & porter mer- servative Association, Down ham, Fincham, Southery & dis-
chants, Bridge road trict, clerk to Plover Commissioners, Bridge street
Scott W. & J. grocers, drapers, hosiers & glovers, general Wells Alice & Caroline (Misses), dres!'l makers, London road
warehousemen & stock valuers; funerals economically & Wells Collins, plumber, High street
completely furnished, Commerce hall Wenn T. H. & Co. maltsters; & Newport, Essex & Bury St.
Seppings & Wdkin, solicitors; attend mon. & fri. ; High Edmunds
street; & at Lynn White John, farmer, Bridge road
Seppings William (firm, Seppings & Wilkin), solicitor & Wilkin Robert Alfred (firm, Seppings & Wilkin), solic-iwr &;
clerk to theNar Valley Drainage Board & deputy coroner deputy coroner for Duchy of Lancaster, attend mon. &
for Western division of the county of Norfolk, attends fri.; High street; & at Lynn
mon. & fri. ; High street; & at Lynn Williams James, assistant overseer for Swke Ferry &
Shackle Edwd. Harrison,mangr. toJ.M.Eird esq.Linden viis insurance agent, High street
Shingles Thomas John, corn factor, Bridge street Williamson & Co. grocers, Market place
Sly John William, baker &c. Market place Wilson S. A. (Mrs.), clothier & outfitter, Market plare
Smith Charles, coach builder, Hexwell road Wood George Flower, corn, seed, linseed cake & coal mer-
Smith Robert, beer retailer, Market place chant, & sec. & manager of Downham Market Gas works,
Smith Rt. SI. agent to Life Assurance of Scotland, Bridge rd Parson's lane
Smith William, station master, Railway road Wood John, clothier, Lynn road
Snelling John, road surveyor & supermtendent of Ouse Woodget Richard, master mariner, Bexwell road
Bank & Stoke Ferry drainage, Shipton house,Bridge road Woodhouse Obadiah, boot maker, Lynn road
South William, master of Union hou..'le, London road Wright Alfred, sergeant instructor to 3rd Norfolk Rifle
Southwell William, coal dealer, Downham fen Volunteers, Bridge street
Speck M. A. C. (Mrs.), Crown commercial hotel & posting Wright Henry, coal, brick, tile & drain pipe mer. Bridge rd
house, Market place, opposite Town hall Wr1ght Jasper J. photographer, Bennett street
Spencer Robert Lemon, plumber & painter, Church lane

DRAYTON is a compact and pleasant village in the vale I sion of the county, Taverbam hundred and petty sessiona
olthe river Wensum and on the road from Norwich toFaken- division, union of St. Faith, Norwich county court district,
ham, with a station on the Eastern and Midlands railway, rural deanery of Taverham and archdeaconry and diocese
about 4~ miles north-west from Norwich station on the of Norwich. The church of St. M:ugaret is a building of
Great Eastern line, 117i from London, in the Eastern divi- flint, in the Transitional Decorated style, consisting of
C. N. & s. 25
38~ l>B4YTOX .. NORFOLK:
chancel, nave, south porch and a modern embattled western shaw, James Jolm Winter, of Heigham :Souse, Norwich;
tower containing 3 bells: the nave was restored and the Frederick William Magnay, of Old Drayton Lodge, Arthur
chancel rebuilt in I866 by the present rector.: the stained Bunting and Samue~ Bunn esqs. are the principal land.
east window was presented in 1872 : there are 200 sittings. owners. The soil is sandy; subsoil, chalk and gravel. The
The registers date from the year ISS8. The living is a chief crops are wheat, oats, barley and turnips. The area
rectory, consolidated with that of Hellesdon, average yearly is I,296 acres; rateable value, [1,911; the population in
value from tithe rent-charge £533, with 24 acres of glebe at I8gz was 420.
Drayton, and 27 at Hellesdon, and residence, in the gift of Deputy Parish Clerk, William Munford.
the
. Bishop
d H of
11 Norwich, and held
C since If855d by the Rev.
f ,... 0 . a· ., s. B. & A nnmty
p OST, ....... . & I nsurance v;...ffice ~
H m s owe M.A. of Merton °11 ege, 0 x or • proctor or Henry Pyle, receiver. Letters arrive from Norwich by
the archdeaconries of Norwich and Norfolk, honorary canon the Reepham mail cart at 4 _43 a.m. & by cart at 4 p.m. &
of Norwich and rural dean of Taverham. There are Baptist dispatched at II. 4o a. m. & 5 _40 p.m. Telegraph office at
and Free Methodist chapels. The rentg of 50 acres of land Eastern & Midlands Railway station (Drayton)
here belong to the poor, and there are 3 acres, the rent of
which is received by the churchwardens and spent on the National School (boys, girls & infants), erected in IB59 &
repairs of the church. In the parish is a field, called since enlarged, for 120 children; average attendance, 76;
"Bloodsdale," where tradition says a great battle was Miss Gertrude Maria. Case, mistress ; Miss Ellen Rutter,
fought; and in the village stands a wayside cross, restored infants' mistress
in 1879 by the rector. The Bishop of Norwich and H. Railway Station, Eastern & Midlands 1 William Waiter
S. N. Mickletbwait esq. are lords of the manor, Mrs. Brad- Whistler, station master
Bunting At'thur, Drayton house Bunn Samuel, farmer & landowner, Martin James, saddler & poultry dealer
Howard Mrs. J Church farm Norris William Daniel, plumber
Howell Rev. Canon Hinds M. A. [rector, Dade Charles, Cock P.H Orris Robert Wilston, farmer
& rural dean of Taverham ], Rectory I Eke Robert, blacksmith Randall Frederick Butcher, Red Lion
Magnay Frederick Wm. Old Drayton lo Fitt George Richard, grocer & draper P.H. & coal agent
Winter Lt.-Col. Hy. Burton, The Lodge Hipper Robert, pork butcher & grocer Read Henry, market gardener
coMMERCIAL. Hipper Thomas, butcher Ribbons Edward, farmer
Adcock William, boot maker Howard Robert, farmer Snelling John, farmer
Bell William, carpentet' & wheelwright Jeckell William Frederick, shopkeeper Spinks William, farmer
Bone George, farmer & coal merchant Lewis William S. farmer
GREAT DUNHAM (or DuNHAM MAGNA) is a parish of £5 yearly, under the will of Dalton Chamberlayne esq.
and ancient village of detached houses, 1 mile north-east dated I8o8 and of£ I 12s. yearly, under the will of Wm. Allee
from Dunhamstationon theLynnandDerehamsection of the esq. left in 1629 and now derived from the estate of Mr.
Great Eastern railway, 5 north-east from Swaffham and Keppel, East Lexham; besides these there is the rent of the
II7l from London, in the Mid division of the county, Laun- Poor's lands, of 33i acres ; the total amount is distributed
ditch hundred, Mitford and Launditch petty sessional divi- in coal. Robert Harvey Mason esq. D.L., .J.P. is lord of the
sion and union, Swaffham county court district, rural manor. The principal landcwners are Dalton Chamber·
deanery of South Brisley and archdeaconry and diocese of layne esq. the trustees of the late Thomas Palmar, John
Norwich. The church of St. Andrew is an ancient structure William Davy esq. J.P. of Kilverstone Hall and William Ril:.
of flint, with some portions of reputed Saxon date, and con- The soil is heavy ; subsoil, clay and gault. The chief crops
sists of chancel, nave, south porch and an embattled central are wheat, barley, hay and turnips. The area iB x,g67
tower containing 2 bells: in the chancel is a brass to Henry acres;. rateable value £2 173I; the population in xBgi was
Bastard gent. lord of the manor, who died 23 Aug. 1624 : 4I6,
the font and piscina are curious: the church was restored Sexton, William Cory.
in I885, at a cost of £I,ooo, under the direction of W. 0. Milne PosT OFFICR.-Wi!liam Regester, postmaster, Letters
esq. architect: there are about 170 sittings. The register arrive here from Swaffham by mail cart at 5·45 a.m. &
dates from the year 1539. The living is a rectory, average 4.20 p.m. & are dispatched at 1.20 & 6.50 p.m.; & on
tithe rent-charge £434, net yearly value £343, including 41 sundays at I .40 p. m. Litcham is the nearest money
acres of glebe, with residence, in the gift of R. H. Mason order & telegraph office
esq. D.L., J.P. of Necton Hall, and held since I875 by the WALL LETTER Box cleared at 5.30 p.m
Rev. John Blake Humfrey B.A. of Trinity College, Cam- A School Board of 5 members was formed compulsorily
bridge. Here are Wesleyan and Primitive Methodist Dec. I, 1873 ; Richard Curtis, Gaywood road, King's
chapels. A Roman altar and remains of the destroyed Lynn, clerk to the board & attendance officer
church of St. Mary ha\'"e been discovered in the garden of Board School (mixed), average attendance about 6o; Miss
the rectory house. The poor have the benefit of a charity Kate Maria Symonds, mistress
Humfrey Rev. John Blake B.A. Rectory. Johnson James, farmer Regester William,shopkeeper,Postoffice
COMMERCIAL. Keeley William, blacksmith Rix Robert John, farmer
Barker James, Flower Pot P.li Mann Robert, farmer Rix William, farmer & landowner
Chamberlain Waltr.carpntr.& wheelwrt Porrett Waiter, builder Roberson Charles, farmer
Chamberlayne Dalton, fat·mer,Hall frm Rallison Walter, Three HorseShoes P.H Rowe .Alfred, shopkeeper & hawker
Cory William, shoe maker & sexton Rands William, gardener to Rev. John Rush Wm.frmr.&cattle dlr.Chnrchfrm
Critoph Erncst, miller (wind & steam) Blake Humfrcy B.A Tuck John, farmer
Downs Robert, farmer Raw ling .Arthur \V alter, shoe maker Wharton Fdk. Saml. farmer, Wood frm
Gamble John, carpenter Raw ling James, shopkeeper Wharton Saml. Porter, fa.rmr. The Hills
Howard William, shopkeeper&; farmer Regester James, baker
LITTLE DUNHAM is a village and parish with a Primitive Methodist chapel, built ih I844. The poor have
station on the Lynn and Dereham section of the Great some charities, amounting to about £so yearly, including
Eastern railway, 4 miles north-east from Swaffham and 9 the rent of fuel allotment of 34 acres. Dunham Lodge is in
west from Dereham, in the Mid division of the county, bun- the occupatiOn of Mrs. Copeman. The trustees of the late
dred of Launditeh, Mitford aud Launditch petty sessional George Copeman are the lords of the manor; they, Messrs.
division and union, Swaffham county court district, rural William G. and Charles H. Large and Richard Dusgate esq.
deanery of South Brisley, archdeaconry of Norfolk and are the principal landowners. James W. YoungmaQ. esq. is
diocese of Norwich. The church of St. Margaret is an also a landownP.r. The soil is clay; subsoil, the same. The
ancient building of stone covered with ivy, consisting of chief crops are wheat, barley and turnips. The area. is
chancel, nave of three bays, north aisle, south porch and a I,821 acres; rateable value, £"2,686; the population in 18gr
western tower containing I bell : the chancel was restored was 273.
and the stained east window inserted by the rector in I868, Parish Clerk, Robert Archer.
and in 1886 a memorial window. was placed to Edward PosT 0FFICE.-Artbur G'eorge Huson, postmaster. Letters
Humphrey Hare, eldest son of the rector, d. 1885: in I862 arrive from Swaffham by mail cart at 5-35 a. m. & 1.50
the church was restored, a new roof placed ou the north p.m. & are dispatched at 4· IS & 7-5 p.m. Necton is the
aisle, and the interior reseated, and there are now 168 nearest money order office & telegraph uffice at the
sittings. The register dates from the year r562. The station for collection & Litcham for delivery of tela-
living is a rectory, average tithe rent-charge .£38o, net grams. Postal orders are issued here, but not paid
yearly value £372, including 24 acres of glebe, with resi- Xation~tl School (mixed), erected in 1872, for 6o children.;
dence, in the gift of the Rev. Hugh James Hare M.A. vicar ' average attendance, 40; Miss Alma Maria Barnes, mist
of Docking, and held since r866 by the Rev. Ed ward Railway Station, .Alfred Page, station master
Montaguo Hare lir.A. of Trinity College, Oxford. Here is a CARRIER. -Archibald Elliot, to Swaffham, tues. & sat
Andrews Mrs . [. HareRev.Edwd. Montague M.A.Rectory Archer Robert, gardener to the Rev.
Copeman Alfred George, Dunha.m lodge ' Large Mrs. Old Manor house E . .M. Hare M:.A
Copeman Mrs. Dunha.m lodge I Trundle Mrs Bird Robert, boot & shoe maker
DIRECTORY.] NORFOLK. EARS HAM. 383
Clarke Charles & Sons, sheep dressers Huson Arthur George. grocer & Marriott John & Robert, coal merchants
Coe James, Swan P.H draper, Post office (Robert C. Haverson, agent)
Durrant John, baker Large William G. & Charles H. farmers Southgate Charles, blacksmith
Horney John, wheelwright & landowners Warren William, Crown P.H
DUNSTON is a parish on the river Tas, Ii miles and held since 1884 by the Rev. Emest Henry Kellett Long
north-east from Swainsthorpe station, on the Ipswich and M.A. of Christ Church, Oxford, who is also rector of and
Norwich section of the Great Eastern railway, and 4 miles resides at Newton. Dunston Hall, now tho residence of
south from Norwich, in the Southern division of the county, Lieut.-Col. Sir Edmund Broughton Knowles Lacon bart. l.P.
Swainsthorpe petty sessional division, Humbleyard hundred, is a mansion of brick in the Elizabethan style, standing in
Henstead nnion, Norwich county court district, rural an extensive and well-wooded park, and is the property of
deanery of Humbleyard, arch deaconry of Norfolk and Fortescue Waiter Kellett Long esq. B.A. who is lord of the
diocese of Norwich. The church of St. Remigius is a small manor and chief landowner. The soil is mixed ; subsoil,
building of flint. in the Early English style, consisting of clay. The chief crops are wheat, oats, barley and turnips.
chancel and nave and an embattled western tower con- The area is 6r6 acres; rateable value, .£2,or8 ; the popula-
taining 3 bells : in the chancel is a brass with effigies to tion in 189r was 94·
Clere Talbot and his two wives, ob. 1649, and there are two Letters through Norwich, via Stoke Holy Cross, arrive at
handsome marble monuments of the Long family, dated 7 a. m. Mulbarton is the nearest money order office; tele-
1750 and 17 57 t the church affords ISO sittings. The register graph office at Norwich
dates irom the year I557· The living is a perpetual curacy,
gross yearly value £30, in the gift of F. W. K. Long esq. The children of this place attend the school at Swainsthorpe
· Lacon Lieut.-Col. Sir Edmund Broughton Knowles hart. J.P. bunston ball ·
DUNTON-cum-DOUGHTON is a parish and very I8S5 by the Rev. Edward William Dowell B.A. of Jesus
small village, situated on the river Wensum, over which College, Cambridge. The Earl of Leicester K.G., L.L. who
there are two iron bridges, and is 3 miles west from is lord of the manor, and the Marquess Townshend are the
Fakenham station on the Great Eastern railway, and 2 sole landowners. The soil is a light loam; subsoil, clay and
miles from Raynham Park station on the Eastern and Mid- brick earth. The chief crops are wheat, barley and roots.
lands railway, in the North Western division of the county, The area is r,72I acres; rateable value, ,£1,339; the popu.
Gallow hundred and petty sessional division, Walsingham lation in 1!!9r was 165.
union and county court district, rural deanery of Burnham, Parish Clerk, James Allcock. ,
archdeaconry of Norfolk and diocese of Norwicb.. The J,etters received through Fakenham, which is the nearest
church of St. Peter is a building of cut flint, in the Gothic money order & telegraph office, arrive at 8 a.m. ; dis-
style, consisting of chancel, nave, south porch and a western patched at 5 p.m
tower containing one bell: there are several stamed windows, A School Hoard of 7 members, called the Dun ton-cum-
three of which are memorials, and the church affords 100 Doughton United District School Board, was formed
sittings. The register dates from the year 1784. The living compulsorily, July 16, I 873, & comprises the parishes of
is a consolidated vicarage, average tithe rent-charge £134, Dunton-cum-Doughton, Toftrees & Shereford: the school
net yearly value .£I2I, including 4 acres c,>f glebe, with is at Shereford; W. M. Rumbelow, Fakenham, clerk to
residence, in the gift of the Lord Chancellor, and held since the board
Dowell Rev. Edward William
[vicar], Vicarage
B.A.J
. .
Long John, farmer & auctioneer ITingey John Thomas, fariQer

EARLHAM is a parish forming part of the city of Norwich, which see.


EARSHAM is a scattered village and parish, separated from the year I5S9· The living is a rectory, average tithe
from Suffolk by the river Waveney, with a station on the rent-charge £493• net yearly value £376, induding 46 acres
Waveney Valley branch of the Great Eastern railway, one of glebe, with residence, in the gift of Capt. J. P. Meade, and
mile west from Bungay and II2~ from London by rail, in held since 1886 by the Rev. Ralph Henry Sneyd M.A. Qf
the Southern division of the county, Earsham hundred and Pembroke College, Cambridge. The fuel allotment consists
petty sessional division, Depwade union, county court dis- of 5 acres and lets for £rs, which sum is distributed in coal:
trict of Harleston, rural deanery of Redenhall, archdeaconry a sum of about £4o, being the rent of the town estate of 8
of Norfolk and diocese of Norwich. The church of All acres, is distributed in clothing: £35 from the Wyndham
Saints, standing on the site of an early encampment of oval Dalling Charity is distributed to the clothing and other
form, is an ancient edifice of flint and rubble, in the Perpen- parochial clubs, and applied to the purchase of school prizM
dicularstyle, consisting of chancel, nave, north porch, vestry, and the relief of the sick poor, and .£4 from Bra.nsby's
formerly the south porch, and an embattled western tower Charity is distributed in coals. By a scheme of the Charity
with wooden spire containing 3 bells: the roofs are of oak, Commissioners, dated July 3oth, 188o, the Wyndham
that of the chancel being a hammer-beam roof: the stained Dalling Charity was vested in trustees, consisting of the
east window was erected by the Rev. William Peckham rector, churchwardens and William Hartcup esq. Earsbam
Goode M.A. rector, I855-83, who also presented the organ: Hall, the property and residence of Capt. John Percy Meade
in the nave is a memorial window, placed by Mrs. Allen, D.L., J.P. is a fine mansion of red brick, pleasantly situated
late of Earsham Lodge, to Sir William Wyndham Dalling in a park of over 100 acres. The Elms is the property and
bart. of Burwood Park, Surrey, and his daughter, and there residence of Francis Edmond O'Gorman esq. The Duke of
are other stained windows: the church plate includes a Norfolk K.G. who is lord of the manor and Capt. John Percy
chalice, dated 1567, paten 1727, and flagon 1621 : the font Meade, lord of the manor of Dub bells, are the chief land-
is a good example of the Perpendicular period and is carved owners. The soil is loamy ; subsoil, gravel. The chief crops
with representations of the seven sacraments in fair preser- are beans, wheat and barley. The area is 3.4S3 acres; ra.te-
vation: the ~hancel was restored in 1890, under the direc- able value, .£·3,741 ; the population in 1891 was 572.
tion of Mr. A. H. Skipworth, architect, the flooring being PosT 0FFICE.-Henry Daniels, postmaster. Letters through·
relaid and the interior refitted in carved oak ; a reredos, Bungay, which is the nearest money order & telegraph
painted and gilded, was also erected, and the organ removed office, arrive at 7.30 a.m.; dispatched at 5·45 p.m.; no
hither from the gallery; the total cost was £450; an oak delivery or dispatch on sunday
eagle lectern, brass altar furniture, prayer books &c. were National School (mixed), erected in 1876 & enlarged in
presented at the same time; during the restoration a fine 1884, chiefly with the gift of £5oo from Mrs. Dalling;
piscina of the early 14th century and sedilia, all in good it will hold ISO children ; average attendance, 75 ; Thomas
preservation, were discovered blocked up in the south wall Simpson, master; Mrs. Ada Amelia Simpson, infants' mist
of the sanctuary: there are 250 sittings. The register dates Railway Station, Francis Cornelius Foulger, station master
Czerny Mrs Beckett James, farmer Debenham Samuel, farmer
Hanmer Capt. John Graham Job R.N. Bedwell Charles, farmer Dow John, farmer
Earsham lodge Bedwell George, builder & wheelwright Felby John, tailor
Hill Charles, Mile End cottage Bed well William, plumber Flatman Matilda (Mrs.), dress maker
Meade Capt. John Percy D.L., J.P. Ear· Button Thomas, farmer Foulger Fras. Cornelius, station master
sham hall Chase George William, farmer Francis Robert, farmer
O'Gorman Francis Edmond, The Elms CW!vers Arthur, shopkeeper Fraser John, draper
Parrinton Thomas Fermor Clarke Thomas, miller (steam & water) Frewer William, shoe maker
Sneyd Rev. Ralph Henry M.A. Rectory & merchant, Earsham mill Holland George, farmer
COMMERCIAL. Coker James Playford, farmer & horse Holsworth Robert Dennis, Duke's Head
Bayfield John, gamekeeper w Captain dealer, Park & Church farms P.H. & bricklayer
J. P. Meade J.P. Hall farm Daniels Hay, beer retailer Hunt Charles, baker & grocer
Beckett George, Euck l'.H Daniels Henry, blacksmith, Post office

L
C. N. & S. 25*

384 E.AltSB.AM. NORFOLK. [KELLY's
Johnson William James Clarke, farmer Peck William, farmer Talbot William, farm bailiff to Capt.
& collector of taxes Rackham George, steward • to Capt. John Percy Meade J.P. Hill farm
Jordan William, farmer Meade Taylor George, boot maker
Minns William, farmer Randell Robert Henry, farmer Wittrick John, farmer & cattle dealer
Moore George, farmer Rose Robert, farmer Wright Isaac, shopkeeper
Pattrick Maria. (Mrs.), beer retailer Sturman Wm.farmer, High Green farm
EASTON is a village and parish on the Dereham road, yearly value from tithe rent-charge £132, with 27 acr!lS of
6. miles west-by-north from Norwich, xo east from East glebe and residence, erected in 1883, in the gift of Robert
Dereham 1 and about 4 south-west from Drayton station on Fellowes esq. and held since r882 by the Rev. Warrenne
the Eastern and Midlands railway, in the Mid division of the James Blake. Easton was the birthplace of Adam de
county, Forehoe hundred, petty sessional division and union, Easton, a cardinal and a prelate of great learning, who
Norwich county court district, rural deanery of Hingham, flourished in the reign of Richard II. A.D. 1385. Lord!
Forehoe division, archdeaconry of Norfolk and diocese of Stafford is lord of the manor, Mrs. Berney, of Morton-on-
Norwich. The church cf St. Peter is a. building of flint, the-Hill, and Robert Fellowes esq. D.L., .LP. of Shotesham
consisting of chancel, nave, north aisle, south porch and a Park, are the principal landowners. The soil is light and
western turret containing one bell; the tower fell in 1778 r flinty; subsoil, vanous. The chief crops are wheat, oats,
there are marble mural tablets to Ambrose Mears, ob. barley and turnips. The area is 1,542 acres; rateabi&
I7I2; Philip Vincent, ob. 1724: and to Capt. Thomas F. E. value, £r,599; the population in 1891 was 263.
Knox, 18th Hussars, d. rBBs: the chancel was restored in Parish Clerk, Geurge Nelson.
1883 at a total cost of about £4oo, under the direction of
Mr. R. Makilwaine Phipson F.S.A. architect, of Norwich, PosT 0FFICE.-A1fred Blythe, receiver. Letters received
when the external walls were refaced with flint and stone from Norwich by mail cart at 5.20 a.m. & dispatched at.
and a new coping and cross of stone added to the eastern gable, 5.25 p. m. Honing ham is the nearest money order offioo.
the floor of the chancel relaid, new oak stalls and a lectern & Drayton station is the nearest telegraph office
set up and a new chancel arch built. The register dates National School (mixed), erected in 1857, for 6o children;.
from the year r679. The li''ing IS a vicarage, average average attendance, 40; Mrs. Alfred Blythe, mistress
Blake Rev. Warrenne Jas. The Vicarage Cook Robins, farmer, Easton Hall farm 1 Hebgin William Wright & Sun, thrash-
Brett Alfred Henry, West lodge Dickason Horace, farmer ing machine proprietors
Garnett Col. Frederick W Harrowven Henry, pork butcher & frmr Oswick David, farmer & market gardnl"'
Buxton Frederick, grocer & farmer Hawkes William, farmer, Hill farm Randall Wait. Howard,Dog P.H.& farmr
Blythe Alfred, smith & wheelwright, Hebgin Wm. Wright, farm bailiff to J. Taylor Garrett, farmer & estate agent
Post office J. Colman esq. M.P. & assist. overseer
EATON is a parish forming part of the city of Norwich, which see.
ECCLES is a parish on the north bank of the river Thet, Eccles Hall, an ancient mansion, standing in a park of about.
half a mile south from the Eccles Road station on the Thet- 6o acres, is the residence of the Hon. Arthur Edward Cassa-
ford and Wymondham section of the Great Eastern railway, major Cole J.P. Lord Egcrton of Tatton and Sir Hugh.
103 miles from London and 4 south from Attleborough, in Reeve Beevor bart. M.B. of King's College chambers, London,
the Mid division of the county, Guiltcross and Shropham are chief landowners : the latter is lord of the manor. The-
petty sessional division, Gniltcross nnion,Shropham hundred, soil is clayey loam; subsoil, clay and chalk. The chief crops:
Attleborough county court district, rural deanery of Rock- arc wheat, barley and oats. The area is 1,685 acres; rate-
land, archdeaconry of Norfolk and cliocese of Norwich. The able value, {,2,802; the population in rBgr was 216.
church of St. Mary is an ancient structure of flint and stucco, Parish Clerk, vacant.
in the Early English style, consisting of chancel, nave, north PosT OFFICE.-Henry George Rix, postmaster. LetterS>
porch and a round embattled western tower containing 3 received from Attlcborough by foot post at 7.20 a.m. k
bells: the stained east window is a memorial to the Rev. dispatched at 7.10 p.m ; sunday, 12 a.m. Quidenhamis
Richard Lubbock, rector r837-77, d. 1879: the nave of the the nearest money order & telegraph office. Postal orders
church was partially restored in IBBs, at an expense of £soo, are issued here, but not paid
when the whole interior was reseated with open benches : School (mixed), built in 1856 for the parishes of Eccles.
there are 150 sittings. The register dates from the year Wilby & Hargham: it will bold so children ; average
1675. The living is a rectory, average tithe rent-charge attendance, 46; the school is endowed with [,u by the-
£194, net yearly va.lue £136, including 26 acres of glebe, late Sir T. B. Beevor bart. ; Andrew McGrath, master
in the gift of Hertford College, Oxford, and held since 1877 Railway Station, George Roger Jackson, station master&;
by the Rev. William Edward Deane M.A. of that college. goods agent
Cole Hon. Arthr. Edwd.Cassamajor J.P. Gamier Lady CarolineElizabeth, Quid- stores, New Buckenham & Stand 84,
Eccles ball ; &Carlton club,London sw enbam cottage Norwich corn exchange
Deane Rev. William Edward M.A. [rec- Bryant Richd. & Son, corn & coal mers Farrer Percy Abbott, farmer
tor, chaplain of Guiltcross union], Drane Robert, Railway tavern, corn, N ottidge Ralph Clarke, frmr. Overa frm
The Rectory c.oal, seed, ale & porter & wine il; Rix Henry Geo. estate agent to SirHugb
Farrer Edmund spirit merchant, Eccles station ; & Beevor hart. M.B. Post office, Station
ECCLES-BY-THE-SEA is a parish and village 3 of New Ross, eo. Wexford, and resides at Castlecomer, eo.
miles north-east from Stalham stition on the Eastern and Kilkenny. The land here came into the possession of the
Midlands railway, 19 from Yarmouth and 9 east from North Lombe family in 1668: the Rev. Henry Evans Lombe B. A.
Walsham, in the Eastern division of the county, Tnnstead is lord of the manor and principal landowner. The soil ~
and Rapping petty sessional division, hundred of Rapping, good mixed; subsoil, sand, gravel and clay. The chief
Smallburgh nnion, North Walsham county court district, crops are wheat, oats and barley. The area is now 297
rural deanery of \'Vaxham, Tunstead division, archdeaconry aeres, having been reduced from 2,ooo by the encroach·
of Norfolk and diocese of Norwich; and is united for paro- ments of the sea; rateable value is given with Hempstead;.
chial purposes with Hempstead. The church of St. Mary, the population in 1891 was r8.
with the exception of the tower, was destroyed by tbe sea Letters through Norwich arrive at Lessingham at 7· ro a. m.
before 1605: the tower is still standing, but is now encom- from whence they are fetched; Stalham & Happisburg are
passed by the sands. The living is a sinecure rectory, tithe the nearest money order offices & Stalham is the nearest
rent-charge £54, net yearly value £59, including 10 acres telegraph office
of glebe, in the gift of the Rev. H. E. Lombe B.A., J. P. of This place is included in Lessingham United School Board
Bylaugh Park, and held since r886 by the Rev. Hugh Hum- district & the chtldren of this place attend the Board
phrys B. A. of Trinity College, Cambridge, who is also curate school there
Clements George, farmer 1 Clements John, farmer I Wbitaker William & Jeremiah, farmers

EDGEFIELD is a parish 3 miles north-east from Melton stone, in the Early English style, consisting of chancel,
Constable junction station, and about 3 south from Halt nave, aisles and north porch, and has one bell: the east end
station, both on the Eastern and Midlands railway, and 12 of the south aisle is inclosed by an ancient carved screen:
south-south-west from Cromer, in the Northern division of thero are 250 sittings. The register dates from the year
the county, Holt petty sessional division, hundred and 1653. The living is a rectory, commuted tithe rent-
county court district, Erpingham union, rural deanery of charge £574, gross yearly value £430, with 17 acres of
Halt and archdeaconry and diocese of Norwich. The glebe and residence, in the gift of John Marcon esq. and
church of SS. Peter and Paul has, with the exception of the held since 1876 by the Rev. Waltcr Hubert :Marcon M.A. of
tower and south porch, been pulled down. The new church, St. Alban Hall, Oxford. There is a Primitive Methodist
erected in a central part of the parish, at a cost of more chapel, rebuilt in 1883. The charities include the Poor's
than £1,800, and in part with the materials of the former Fuel Allotment, of so acres of land, the rent of which is
structure1 is a large building of flint, rubble and free- expended annually in coal; also £3 10s. left by Simon
DIRECTORY.] NORFOLK. ELLINGHAM, 385
Woodrow-Ios, for beautifying the church, and £2 to be PosT 0F.FICE.-Robert William Henry Hipper, receiver!
expended among five poor widows. A clothing club, a child- Letters by foot messenger from Briningham S. 0. arrive
ren's penny bank and a circulating parish library are also about 8. IS a. m. ; dispatched 4-I5 p.m. The nearest
maintained. Constance M~rchioness of Lothian, John Mar- money order office is at Briston & telegraph office at Bolt.
con esq. J.P. of 44 Cadogan place, London s wand John Postal orders issued here, but not pttid
Tudor Frere esq. J.P. of Roydon Hall, are lords of the WALL LErrER Box, Ramsgate street, cleared at 4 p.m. ;
manor of Edgetield with Ellingham and Edgefield Bacon. dispatched at 4 p.m. week days only
The principal landowners are John Marcon esq. John Tudor A School Board of s members was formed October 2, 1874:
Frere esq. Constance Marchioness of Lothian and Mn. Rev. W. H. Marcon M.A. hon. clerk to the board;
.Ballachey. The soil is light mixed; subsoil, gravel and sand. Charles Knowles, Bolt, attendance officer
"''he chief crops are wheat, turnips, barley and grass. The
:area is 21 43S acres; rateable value, £2,480; the population Board School (mixed), built in 1879, for 97 children ; aver-
in 189I was 450. age attendance, 62 ; K. Etchells, master
Ballachey Mrs. The ~onnt Flegg North, carpenter &. White Stringer Robert, blacksmith
Marcon Rev. WalterHubert M.A.Rectory Horse P.H Taylor Robert, farmer
Fox Ilannah (Mrs.), grocer Temple James, farmer
COMMERCIAL. Hagen William, farmer Temple William, farmer & land-
'llennett George, Frere Arms P.H Hipper Robert William Henry, grocer, owner
Barratt Edward, farmer Post office Thompson Edward, farmer
Couke Corbett John, farmer Money Thomas, blacksmith Towler George, shopkeeper
Dagless William, farmer Potter Thomas, farmer Towler Henry, seed & manure agent
Dermis Bosom, cattle dealer Roberts John, farmer Williams William, shoe maker
English Arthur, builder SanQ.s George Edward, farmer Woolsey Horace, carpenter
"'E1·erett John, farmer, Hall farm Sands Thomas, sen. farmer
.EDINGTHORPE is a parish near the coast, with houses Hall, is lord of the manor. The Earl of Kimberley and the
much scattered, :1~ miles north-east from North Walsbam trustees of the late Matthew Neave esq. of North Walsham,
station and the navigable Ant and I7 from Norwich, in the are the principal landowners. The soil is fine mixed; sub-
~astern division of the county, Tunstead and Rapping petty soil, sand and gravel. Tbe chief crops are wheat, oats and
sessional division, hundred of Tunstead, Smallburgh union, barley. The area is 1,123 acres; rateable value, £x,219 ;
North Walsham county court district, rural deanery of the population in 1891 was 223.
·Wax:ham, Tunstead division, archdeaconry of Norfolk and Parish Sexton, Francis Wiley .
.diocese of Norwich. The church of All Saints is a small and PosT OFFICE (for sale of stamps only).-Mrs. Harriet Pes-
very ancient building of flint, partly in the Early Decorated tell, receiver
style, consisting of chancel, nave, south porch and a round
western tower with octagonal belfry stage containing 2 bells: LETTER Box is cleared at 4.30 p.m. Letters through North
there is an ancient carved screen, which separates the chan- Walsham arrive at 8.30 a. m. There is no sunday post.
eel from the nave: the whole church is much dilapidated The nearest money order & telegraph office is at Bacton
and urgently needs restoration: there are at present ISO A School Board for the united parishes of Paston & Eding-
sittings. The register dates from the year 1558. The thorpe was formed compulsorily May 24, 1875; J. S.
living is a rectory, average tithe rent-charge £180, gross Empson, North Walsham, clerk; Robert Landymore,
yearly value £20CJ, including 18 acres of glebe, with resi- Edingthorpe, attendance officer
dence, in the gift of the Duchy of Lancaster, and held since Board School (mixed), erected in 1878, for 73 children;
1891 by the Rev. George Shirley. John Mack esq. of Paston average attendance, 61 ; Miss Edith Thompson, mistre8s
Sharley Rev. George, Rectory Landymore Mary (Mrs.), brick maker Pestell Wm. Bartholomew, shopkeeper
l'lrady James, carter Neave Isaac, farmer & beer retailer
Hush Thomas Salmon, farmer Norgate Henry, farmer Riches Isaac, blacksmith
Fuller Adam, farmer Plumbly Charles, farmer Withers Francis, farmer
EGMERE is a parish consisting of one farm and a few that of Waterden annexed, average tithe rent-charge £I68,
-eottages, 3 miles west from Walsingham, in the Northern joint gross yearly value £I86, including 18 acres of glebe,
.division of the county, North Greenhoe hundred and petty in the gift of the Earl of Leicester K.G. and held since 1888
-sessional division, Walsingham union, Little Walsingham by the Rev. William Fitzgerald Gambier B.A. who is vicar of
·county court district, rural deanery of :walsingham and and resides at Holkham The Earl of Leicester K.G., L.L. is
.archdeaconry and diocese of Norwich. The church of l:;t. the sole landowner. The soil is a rich loam, and in a high
.Edmnnd has long been dilapidated, but is still an interest- state of cultivation, farmed by Mr. George Tingey. The
ing ivy-clad ruin, its remains consisting only of the tower chief crops are wheat, barley, turnips and oats. The area
-with its newel staircase and portions of the walls of the is 1,237 acres; rateable value, £1,445 ; the population in
.nave; it was used as a barn by Sir Nicholas Bacon, of Stiff- I89I was III.
key, Lord Keeper of the Privy Seal to the Queen Elizabeth,
·but is now inclosed and preserved. The inhabitants attend Letters through Walsingham (Railway Sub-Office), the
the church at Walsingham. The- registers are included in nearest money order & telegraph office
those of Little Walsingham. The hving is a rectory, with The children of this place attend the school at Walsingham
Tingey George, farmer
"ELLINGHAM is a village and parish, separated from poor have the residue of about £83 yearly, arising from the
.Suffolk by the River Waveney, with a station on the Wave- town lands and other portions of land, after the expenses of
ney Valley branch of the Great Eastern railway, 2~ miles keeping ~he church in repair have boon deducted, and this
north-east from Bungay and 117 from London by rail, in surplus is distributed yearly in coals. There is also an
"the Southern division of the county, Clavering hundred, annuity of 2os. left by one Packard, in 1822, and distributed
Loddon and Clavering petty sessional division and union, in bread. Ellingham Hall, a modern mansion situated in
..Bungay and Beccles county court district, rural deanery of the midst of a picturesque park, is the seat of Henry Smith
Brooke, Eastern division, archdeaconry of Norfolk and esq. n. L., J. P. who is lord of the manor and principal land-
·diocese of Norwich. The church of St. Mary is a building owner. The soil is mixed clay and sand; subsoil, clay,
>Q( flint and rubble erected in the 12th century, and consists gravel and sand. The chief crops are barley, wheat, tur-
of chancel, nave, south aisle, south porch and an embattled nips and hay. The area is I,379 acres; rateable value,
western tower containing 5 bells : the chancel retains a £1,748; the population in I891 was 342.
·piscina, and at the west end is a good painting, representing Parish Clerk, James Kent .
.. , The Angel liberating St. Peter :" the stained east window
was the gift of the Rev. Robert Cartwright B. A. rector I8 43 _ PosT 0FFICE.-George Chipperfield, receiver. Letters
.g2, and there are some memorial windows: on the north arrive by foot post from Bungay about 7.40 a. m. & dis-
wall of the nave is a figure of the head of a bishop and a patched at 4.30 p.m. There is no delivery or dispatch of
11astoral staff, both much mutilated: the interior was thor- letters on sundays. Geldeston is the nearest money order
-oughly repaired in 1868, and has 20CJ sittings, 6o being free. & telegraph office
"The register dates from the year 153 8. The living is a WALL LETTER Box, Railway station, cleared at 4 p.m
rectory, tithe rent-charge £362, average £268, net yearly National School (mixed), erected in 1865, for 65 children;
value £310, including 72 acres of glebe, with residence, in average attendance, 52; Miss Anne Elizabeth Cotton,
-the gift of trustees, and held since 1882 by the Rev. William mistress
Day French M.A. of Emmanuel College, Cambridge. The Railway Station, Charles Hubbard, station master
Beverley Barnabas COMMERCIAL. Bensley John, farm bailiff to Henry
French Rev. William Day M.A. Redory Barber Frederick, blacksmith Smith esq. D.L., J.P. Manor farm
Smith Henry D.L, 1 J.P, Ellingham hall Brown Frederick (Mrs.), dress maker , Burrowes William, cowkeeper
ass ELLINGHlM, NORFOLK. (KELtY'S
Calthorpe John E. Bird-in-Hand inn " Kent Samuel, shopkeeper \ , Snowling Frederick, cattle dealer
Chipperfteld George, tailor, Post office Manning William, farmer, Church farm Thetford Sidney, farm bailiff 1o Mt8'.
Cnlley Harry, White Horse P.H. & Pearce Susan (Mrs.), farmer Tallent
wheelwright Pumfrey James, shopkeeper '· Whaley Amos, farmer & haycutter
Fisk Marion (Mrs.), grocer · Smith Thomas & Co. millers (steam) & Yimngman Henry, farmer, millet'
Hubbard Charles, station master corn & coal merchants; head office, (water) & coal merchant, & agent for
Gordon Samuel, Lock House P.H Market place, Bungay Baly, Sutton & Co.'s mannres,Elling-
Howes James, farmer Spalding Robert, farmer, assistant ham patent roller mills
Kent James, parish clerk 1 overseer&; road surveyor
GREAT ELLINGHAM is a village and parish about about go members, holds its meetings here. Lord Walsing-
3 milesnorth-wBstfrom Attleborough station on the Norwich ham is lord of the Bury Hall manor, and Alfred Taylor esq.
and Thetford section of tho Great Eastern ra.ilway, in the of the other two manors. The principal landowners are
Mid division of the county, Guiltcross and Shropham petty Lord Walsingham, George TyrrellTJTrell esq. of Thetford,
sessional division, Shropham hundred, Wayland union, Sir William Howyer-Smijth bart. an Henry Norton csq. of
Attleborough county court district, rural deanery of Rock- Norwich. The soil is various; subsoil, various. The chief
land, archdeaconry of Norfolk and diocese of Norwich. The crops are wheat, barley and oats .. The area is 2,670 acres~
church of St. James is a spacious building of flint, With rateable value, £3,88r ; the population in r8gr was 6o3.
stone dressings, in the Early English style, consisting of Parish Clerk, Robert Barnard Lebbell.
chancel, nave of four bays, aisles, north porch and an em-
battled western tower with spire, containing 5 bells: there PosT OFFICE.-William Wilkins, postmaster. Letters from
are 500 sittings. The regiswr dates from the year r6 53 . Attleborough arrive at 4-50 a. m. ; dispatched at 8.40
The living is a vicarage, annexed to the rectory of Little p.m. Rockland All Saints is the nearest money order&;
Ellingham, average tithe rent-charge £s6 3 , joint net yearly Attleborough the nearest telegraph office. Postal orders
value £4 48, including 39 acres of glebe, in the gift of and are issued here, but not paid
held since 187~ by the Rev. Samuel William Turner B. A_ of ScHOOLS:-
Oriel College, Oxford, who resides at Little Ellingham. A School Board of 5 members was formed June 3, 1873;
The Baptist chapel, founded here in r6gg and rebuilt in 1824, H. W. Grigson, Watton S. 0. clerk to the board
is of red brick with stone dressings, and will seat about 300 Hoard (mixed), formerly British, erected in 1855, for 70
persons. There is also a Primitive Methodist chapel. children; average attendance, so; John Field, master
The poor have the benefit of a fuel allotment of 52 acres National (mixed), built in r865 at a cost of £3r8, for 6o
producing £57 17s. 6d. yearly. A Foresters' lodge, having children; average attendance, 59 ; Miss Howlett, mistress
Cobon Henry, The Hall Downes John, farmer, Cottage farm Lebbell Robert Barnard, blacksmith &;
Harvey Rev. Frederick [Baptist] Drake James, farmer parish clerk
Toll Rev. James [Baptist] Ducker James, shopkeeper Le Grice Frederick, farmer
COMMERCIAL. Fox James, farmer Loveday Alfred, farmer
Bailey Harriott (Mrs.), farmer Foresters' Lodge (Robert Bar nard Mace John, Queen's Head P.H
Barlow Geo. fanner & assistant overseer Lebbell, sec) l\Iatthews James, farmer, Tan yard farm
Barnard Charles William, Crown P.H Frost Robert, farmer Meek John, blacksmith
Basham George Smith, farmer Houchen Jonathan, farmer Nuby Henry, fanner
Brighton Frederick, farmer Houchen William, farmer Pease Robert, farmer
Brighton Walter, farmer Jude George, farmer Rivett Charles, farmer
Butler George, miller (wind) & baker Kendell Willi9m, farm bailiff to James RushbrookErnestEdwin,frmr.Buryhall
Carter Ellis, Chequers P.H Bacon esq. Hill house Stebbing Charles, butcher
Clarke Alfred, farmer, Portwood farm Kerrison William, bricklayer & farmer Tufts William, farmer
Cobon Henry, farmer, The Hall · Kybird William Robert, wheelwright Warren Hy. harness maker & shopkpr
Colman Henry, farmer. Haw Hill farm Lane Bcnjamin, Prince of Wales P.H West William, farmer & landowner
Corston Charles, farmer Lane Jarnes, farmer Wilkins William, grocer, Post office
Dixon l''redcrick Thos. draper & grocer Lcbbcll Wm. carpenter & wheelwright Wright Robert, farmer
LITTLE ELLINGHAM is a village and parish, 5 Samuel William Turner B.A. of Oriel College, Oxford. Here
miles north-west from Attleborough station on the Great is a small Primitive Methodist chapeL The poor's allotment
Eastern raiiway, in the Western division of the county, of 40 acres produces£ 14 yearly; and the town lands of 25
Wayland hundred and union, petty sessional division of acres produce £23 r8s. Ellingham Hall, the residence of
Watton, Attleborough county court district, rural deanery George Samuel Ilanchett esq. is a modern mansion in the
of Breccles and archdeaconry and diocese of Norwich. The Italian style, built in r855. and standing in park-like
church of St. Peter is a small building of flint, in the Early grounds. The principal landowners are Major Colgmve,
English style, consisting of chancel, nave and a tower on the who is lord of the manor, John Cottenham Tingey esq. John
south side of the aisle containing I bell : there are four Harman esq. and the Rev. William N orton. The soil is
stained windows: the font, of porphyry, was presented in clayey loam; subsoil, clay and chalk. The chief crops are
x869 by Miss Corsellis: the nave was destroyed and the wheat, barley and turnips. The area is r,519 acres; rateable
chancel considerably injured by fire on Sunday, December value, £r,984; the population in r88x was 298.
1st, r867 ; the former was rebuilt by subscription and the Parish Clerk, Alfred Scent.
chancel repaired at the expense of the rector in the same LETTER Box cleared 7.15 p.m. Letters through Attle-
year: there are 2r6 sittings. The register dates from the borough arrive at 7.30 a. m. Hingham is the nearest
year 1649. The living is a rectory, with the vicarage of money order & telegraph office
Great Ellingham annexed, average tithe rent-charge 1,'563, National School (mixed), built in 1871 1 at a cost of £300,
joint net yearly value £448,includmg 39 acres of glebe, with for 6o children; average attendance, 39; Miss Emma V.
residence, in the gift of and held since 1872 by the Rev. White, mistress
Eagling Thomas, Rose cottage I Beales James, farmer Scent Alfred, farmer
Hanchett Geo. Samuel, Ellingham hall 1 Chaplin .John, b:acksmith Starke Charles Robert, farmer
Turner Rev. Samuel William D. A. Cooper Thomas, Crown P.H Walker Geo. boot & shoe ma.& shopkpr
[rector], Rectory Eagling William Johnson, farmer Warren Daniel William Cockin, farmer,
Groom Arthur, shopkeeper Hall farm
COMMERCIAL. Houchen Ed ward, blacksmith Warren John, farmer, Church farm
Alien Charles, farmer, Rookery farm Huggins James, farmer
ELMHAM (or NoRTH Er.MHAM) is a village and parish, clerestoried nave of six bays, aisles, south porch and an em-
with a station on the Dereham and Wells section of the battled western tower with pinnacles containing a clock
Great Eastern railway, 5 miles north from East Dereham and 8 bells: there are marble monuments in the chancel to
and rii from London, in the Mid division of the county, Richard Milles esq. whose only daughter and heiress, Mary
Launditch hundred, Mitford and Lannditch petty sessional Elizabeth, married Lewis Thomas, 2nd Baron Sondes: and to
division and union, East Dereham county court district, Richard Warner esq. who was lord of the manor, and built
rnral deanery of South Brisley and arehdeaconry and diocese Elmham Hall, and died in I757 : the stained east window is
of Norwich. Elmham was the seat of a bishopric from 673 a memorial to George John, 4th Baron Sondes, d. 17 Dec.
to 870, but after the death of St. Humbert, 10th Bishop of 1874: there are four other memorial windows, and the aisle
Elmham, the see remained vacant until 9SS. when it was windows contain fragments of ancient stained glass; the side
united with that of Dunwicb, and so continued till 1075, chapels are separated from the chancel by oak screens deli-
both sees being in rogx merged in that of Norwich, Herbcrt cately carved : a portion of the rood screen with paintings
Losinga, abbot of Ramsey and lord chancellor, becoming on the panels, discovered during the restor.1tion lying with
the first bishop. The church of St. Mary the Virgin is a its face to the earth and serving as a flooring for several
large building ot .flint with stone dressings, in the ,Perpen- pews, has been replaced in its original position : the church
dicular style, consisting of chancel with side chapels, was thoroughly restored in !882, chiefly at the cost of the
DIRECTORY.] NORFOLK. ELSING.. 387
p1esent vicar, the original carved pulpit of 1626 replaced, ham, the Bite of wli.icb, since t867, has been exrovated, and
the chancel furnished with carved oak stalls and the church numerous relics were met with. In a part of the parish
re--seated with oak benches: there are soo sittings, 250 called "Broom Close" a great number of urns, coins and
being free. The register dares from tbe year 1538. The other Roman antiquities have been found. Elmham Hall,
living is a 'Vicarage, average tithe rent-charge £352, net the property of Earl Sondes, but occupied by John B. Akroyd
yearly value £z8o, with 8 acrel'l of glebe and residence, in esq. was built in 17271 and is a mansion of red brick
the gift of Earl Sondes, and held since 1867 by the Rev. standing in a park of 300 acres, well timbered with oak and
Angustns George Legge M.A. of Christ Church, Oxford. containing a small lake : the plantations are stocked with
Here are Congregational and Wesleyan chapels. The game and the park contains a herd of fallow deer: the estate
Norfolk County School stands on the summit of a hill near has acquired considerable reputation for its herd of Norfolk
the rive-r Wensum, surrounded by 57 acres of land in this red polled cattle, which have been kept here for upwards of
and Bintry parishes, about 2 miles north from Elmham a century. The parish is in two manors-viz. Elmham
station and a quarter of a mile from County School station Xowers and North Elmham; Earl Sondes is the lord of the
on the Great Eastern railway: the foundation stone was laid former and the Dean and Chapter of Norwich are lords of
on Easter Monday, 1873, by H.R.H. the Prince of Wales, the latter. The Earl of Leicester K.G., L.L. owns 479 acres
and the school was opened in 1874: the buildings are in the and Cains College, Cambridge, about no acres; nearly all
Domestic Gothic style, and consist of a central hall, school- the remainder is the property of Earl Sondes ; Bernard Le
room, dining ball, library, class rooms and dormitories, N eve Foster esq. J. P. of Sennowe Hall, is one of the
together with a head master's residence: H.R.H. the Prince of landowners. The soil is loam and clay; ssbsoil, clay and
Wales has presented a sum of £zso for annual scholarships : gravel. The chief crops are wheat, barley, turnips and hay.
a scholarship of £10 yearly value has also been founded as a The area is 4,361 acres ; rateable value, £6,745 ; the
memorial to the late Mr. Robert Overman, of Egrnere, and population in 1891 was I,ro3.
in 1887 an additional endowment of £soo was contributed Parish Clerk, John Chapling.
by gentlemen of the county as a memorial to the lateR. PosT, M. 0. & T. 0., S. B. & Annuity & Insurance Office.-
England esq. J.P. : there also are seventeen other scholar- Robert Kerrison, sub-postmaster. Letters arrive from
ships and numerous prizes: the chapel, erected in 1883, and Dereham at 4.40 a. m. & 4'45 p.m.; dispatched at 10.15
consecrated by the Bishop of ~orwich, Wednesday, r6 Oct. a.m. & 1.5 & 7.20 p.m. Delivery on sunday morning to
in that year, is an edifice of flint with buttresses of red callers only. Money order office open from 9 a.m. to
brick and dressings of Bath stone, in the Early English 6 p.m.; telegraph office, from 8 a. m. to 8 p.m
style : the pulpit, of Stoke stone, with columns of granite WALL LETTER BoXEs.-Railway station, cleared 6.20 p. m. &
and serpentine, is a memorial to the late B. Watson esq. The Hall, cleared 6.35 p.m
and there is a lectern of oak: the chapel seats 250 boys. National School (mixed), rebuilt in 1873 at a cost af about
The school is the property of a limited liability association, £700, & endowed with lands of about £so yearly value;
with a capital of £1s,ooo, and is conducted on the public the school will hold 212 ch1ldren: average attendance,
school system : William Edward Humphreys M.A. head 16o; William Webster Pearson, master
master; Rev. Ebenezer Bertwistle Pollard B. A. chaplain. RAILWAY STATIONS:-
The church lands of 8o acres are let at £8g yearly. North Elmham, Herbert Scott Everson, station master
There is a fuel allotment of so acres, let at about £30 County School, John Walpole, station master
yearly, and charities of £g yearly value for distribution. CARRIERS:-
In the reign of Richard II. (1387) Bishop H. de Spencer Pleasance Nichol, to Dereham, mon. wed. & fri. ; Rudd,
obtained a licence to embattle his manor house at Elm- from Docking, passes through from Norwich once weekly
Akroyd John B. Elmham hall Fenn Eve Maria (Mrs.), beer retailer North Elmham Cricket Club (F. W.
Humphreys William Edward M.A. (head Fenn !<'rank, farmer Wells & J. W. Vincent, hon. secs)
master), Norfolk County school Fulcher Thomas Blomfield, farmer, & North Elmham & District Horticultural
Legge Rev.Augustus Geo. M.A. Vicarage land steward to Earl Sondes Society(A.E.Sm1th & C.Longley,secs)
Mace Mrs Harrison William Charles Thomas, Ostler Robert, relieving officer for the
Norton Mrs practical watch maker, jeweller &c North Elmham district
Pollard Rev. Ebenezer Bertwistle B.A. Howell George, farmer Quintan Rebecca (Mrs.),Railwaytavern
[chaplain], Norfolk County school Howell James, farmer, Grange farm Rackham Arthur Richard M.R.C.S.Eng.
Rackham Arthur Richard Hubbard Thomas Henry, farmer, Fox- L.R.C.P.11:din. surgeon, & med. officer
ltansom Mrs burrow farm & public vaccinator, North Elmham
Kerrison Robert,grocer & draper & sub- distnct, Mitford & Launditch union,
COMMERCIAL. postmaster & med. officer Norfolk County school
Abbott William, grocer & draper Knock Geo. Waiter, medical herbalist Riches Georginia (Mrs.), farmer & coal
Bensley Brightmore, farmer Lake Robert, bake-r & corn merchant
Bensley George, boot maker Merrison Anne Elizabeth Breeze (Mrs.), Rook Clara (Mrs.), grocer & draper
Bidewell Frederick, shopkeeper miller (water), & farmer, Worthing Savage Edmund, plumber
Bone John Frederick, coach builder mill Sainty llarnabas & Co.grocers & drapers
Bradfield Mary (Mrs ),preparatory schl My hill George, shoe maker Sm1th Albt.Edward,nursery&seeds man
Bunn John, farmer, Black Hills farm N eal William, bricklayer & farmer Smith William Valentine, baker
Burton Solomon, butcher Nelson Emma (Mrs.), dress maker Southgate George, farmer, sm1th &
Calver Thomas, plumber Nicholson John & Frederick, butchers wheelwright
Case Thos. Hy. farmer & cattle salesmn N orton Thomas, miller (water) & farmer Tolman William, George & Dragon P.H
ChaplingJohn, tailor & reg. of births& Norfolk County School (H.R.H. The Stone Thomas, farmer; & at Bintry
deaths for N orthElmham sub-district Prince of Wales, patron; the Earl of Tombling Jacob, carpenter
Clark Brightmore, farmer Leicester K.G. president; William Vincent Jas. Wm.farmer,Ramsley farm
Clitheroe James, picture frame maker Edward Humphreys M.A. head mas- Wells Randall, saddler
Cook Elijah, tinman & brazier ter; Rev. E. Birtwistle Pollard B. A. Wells Wm. Christmas, King's Head P.H
Edwards James Wm. Nelson, farmer chaplain ;A.R.RackhamL:R.C.P.Edin., Willby George, tailor
Elmer Ed ward, farmer, Spong farm M.R.C.s.Eng.. medical officer) Willimont John, coal merchant&farmer
ELSING is a straggling village and parish on the south the chancel retains a piscina and sedilia and there is a holy
side of the river Wensum, s! miles east-north-east from water stoup at the north door: the church was restored in
Dereham station on the W ymondham and Wells section of 18]6: the church aff01·ds 200 sittings. The register dates
the Great Eastern railway, and about the same distance from the year 1558. The living is a rectory, average tithe
south-west from Lenwade station on the Eastern and Mid- rent-charge £zss, gross yearly value £zn, including 18 acres
lands railway, in the Northern division of the county, Eyns- of glebe, with residence, in the gift of Richard Charles
ford hundred and petty sessional division, Mitford and Browne esq. J.P. and held since 1852 by the Rev. Julins
Launditch union, Dereham county conrt district, rural John Culpeper Valpy B.A. of Clare College, Cambridge.
deanery of Spar ham and archdeaconry and diocese of Nor- Here is a Primitive Methodist chapel. The church lands of
wich. The church, dedicated about 1340 to St. Mary, is a 24 acres produce £30 yearly. Charities of£ 10 yearly value
fine building of flint of the Decorated period, consisting of are distributed in bread and clothing. Elsing Hall, the pro-
chancel, nave, sacristy, north and south porches and an em- perty of R. C. Browne esq. and the residence of John Robin
battled western tower, with pinnacles, containing 5 bells: in Gray esq. is a very fine and interesting moated mansion, of
the chanoel is a mutilated brass, dated 1347, to Sir Hugh de late Perpendicular date, the north front being of rubble and
Hastings, founder of the church: in the nave, which is of freestone and the south front of half-timbered work : the
unusual width, stands an octagonal font, also of the Deco- entrance hall with its porcb, and the chapel, are the princi-
rated period and of very good design: its canopy, once of pal ancient features: the windows of the remaining portion
rare beauty, 18 somewhat lat.er in date than the font, and have been restored: the porch bears the arms of Hastings
has a central spire, supported on traceried panels and pin- and Foliot quarterly (Margery, daughter of Richard Foliot,
nacled buttresses, the panels still bearing traces of colour and I
having married before 1330, Hugh de Hastings, a younger
gilding; considerable remains of a rich screen also exist: eon of John, Lord Bergavenny) impaling Morley. Richard
• 388 ELSING • NORFOLK( 1
• [ KELL'11' B
CharlM Browne esq. J.P." whO' is lord of the manor, and the '4.40 p.m: Swanto·n 'Motley· is. the' nearest. money order
Rev. Henry Evans-Lombe B.A., J.F. of Bylaugh Park; are office & East Dereham the nearest telegraph office.
the principal landowners. The -soil is mixed, part light, Pn.. LAR BoxE~ cleared at 4.20 & 4,50 p.m,; sundaya,
part heavy; subsoil, same. The principal crops are barley 9.15 a.m . 1· • 1
and wheat. The area is r,5 n acres: rateable value, £2,003 ; A School Board of 5 members was formed compulsorily
in I891 the population was 362. January 20,1875; George Rix, clerk to the board
Parish Clerk, William IsbeU. Board f:-ichool (mixed), erected in I876, at a cost of £46o,
PosT OFFICE.-George Rix, sub-postmaster. Letters arrive· for 8o children; average attendance, 70; Edward Kin·
. through East Dereham at 8.40 a. m. & are dispatched at naird, master; Mrs. Wlnifred F. Kinnaird, mistress
Browne Richard Chas. J.P. Hall farm Edwards George farin bailiff to R. C'. Matthews R'Dbert, farmer & thrashint
Gray John Robin, Elsing hall Browne esq machine proprietor
Valpy Rev. Julius John Cnlpeper B.A. Fox Edward, plumber, glazier &c Miles William, farmer
[rector J, Rectory Fox Thomas, farmer NichoTson Robert Norton, farmer, Three
Wier Alfred Isbell Charles, farmer Bridge farm
Kent John Pryme, Mermaid P.H. & Rix George, shoe maker, Post office
COMMERCIAL. wheelwright Salisbury Charles, farmer, Green farm
Rowes William John, shopkeeper Leggett Joseph & Son, blacksmiths Sayer John James, miller (water~, & at
Bushell William, estate carpenter Love Henry, shoe maker Lenwade
Cbilvers Charle.'!, farmer Mason James, shopkeeper Wier John, brickla:rer & builder

EMNETH is a straggling village and parish on the Frederic Morehouse Metcalfe esq. J.P. Algernon Peckover
na\·igable N ene, I mile south from the Emneth Road station esq. F. L.S. of Si bald's Holm, Wisbech, Alexander Peckover
on the Wisbech and Lynn section of the Great Eastern rail- esq. F.L.s., F.R.G.S. of Bank House, Wisbech, and Thoma11
way, 3 miles east-south-east from Wisbech and 98! miles Dearlove Dea.rlove esq. of Oxburgh Het!!. The soil i.s loam;
from London, in the North Western division of the county, subsoil, clay. The chief crops are wheat and marketgarden
FreeJridge Marshland hundred and petty sessional division, produce; thete is -also much pasturage ground. The arel
Wi:>bech union and county court district, rural deanery of is 3,449 acres; rateable value, £6,638 ; the population in
Wisbech and under the peculiar archidiaconal jurisdiction 189I was 922.
of the Bishop of Ely, The church of St. Edmund js an Sexton, Robert Francis Hunsley.
ancient bmlding of stone in the Early English and Perpen- PosT 0FFICE.~W·illiam B.acey, receiver. Letters arrive-
dicular styles, consisting of chancel, clerestoried :r;tave, aisles, from Wisbech about 4 a. m. & x p. m. ; dispatched at 9·55
south porch and a large embattled western tower containing a.m. & 8.25 p. m. The nearest mom~y order & telegraph
5 bells : the interior was restored in I 866, and bas 400 office is at Elm. Postal orders are issued here, but not
sittings, 220 of which are free. The register date.'! from the paid
year 1586. The living is a vicarage, average tithe rent- LETTE8 BoxEs:~Hungate, cleared week days only at 7.25
charge £307, net yearly value £247, including I~ acres of p.m.; near the church, cleared week days at ID a.m. &
glebe, with residence, in the gift of the Bisl;wp of Ely, and 8.30 p.m. ; Railway station, cleared week days only at 6.35
held sinee I868 by the Rev. Edward Henry Lovelock M.A. p.m.; Wishecl1 road, cleared week days & sundays at
of St. John's College, Cambridge. There are Wesleyan, 7.20 p.m _
Primitive Methodist and Wesleyan Reform chapels here, all The boys of this pari;;h are entitled to attend the Endoll'ed
erected in 1854. Inglcthorpe Hall is the seat of Frederic school at Elm, in Cambridge'
Morehouse Metcalfe esq. D.L, J.P. who Js lord of' the National School, erected in I86o, for 120 children; average
manors of Hagbech and Inglethorpe. The principal land- attendance, 97·; Olive Snelling, mistress
owners are Ed wd. \V m. Trafford esq. J. P. of Brundall House, Rail way Station, Frederick All en, station master
'
Dearlove ThomasDearlove,Oxburgh hall Ekins George William, farmer, Fen Morris & ·ward, wheelwrights, Hungate
Lovelock Rev. Edwd. Hy. M.A. Vicarage Frusher Thomas, farmer l\'"ewling Wm. Allred, farmer, Dial ho
Metcalfe Frederic Morehouse D.L., J.P. Goodger Anthony, farmer Palmer Moses, farmer, Trafford house
( Lt.-Col.3rdCamb. V. bat. Suff.regt. ), Goodson William, beer retailer ParlettHy. beer ret. &blacksmith,HungUl
Inglethorpe hall; & 6 York row, Wis- Gray John, market gardener Racey William, baker & butcher, Post off
bech Gray Wm. steam miller & sack letter Robb Samuel, farmer
Robb William, Lansdown house Green Robert, farmer Sllarp Robert, builder
Wade Jacob Tomlinson Gromett John, jun. farmer Sharp Robert, farmBr
COMMERCIAL. Handley Henry, farmer Sharp Thomas Lynn, m1.rket gardener
Bailey Uriah, market gardener Handley Hugh, farmer Shepherd Wm. George, miller (wind)
Bailey William Cole, farmer Handley Philip, farmer Smithee Robert, shoe maker
Balding John Smithee, pig jobber Harvey Robert, market gardener Smithee William, market gardener
B·-1.11 James, farmer Horne George, farmer, Hungate Steley Joseph, beer r~tailer, Hungate
HJld wickJn.farm bailifftoMr.W.Greeves Hub bard William, farmer Stimson John, farmer
Bowett Hugh, farmer, Gaultree farm Hunter Edward, farmer Tagg John, farmer
Boyce Blows, blacksmith Hunter Jame~, sen. farmer Terrington John, farmer, Ilungate
Brown Henry, sen. cowkeeper Hunter James, jun. farmer ThompBon John, farmer, Hungate
Bullen John, Swan P.H. & farm~r Hunter Jeremiah, market gardener Thompstm John, jun. beer retailer
Bnllen John, farmgr Jackson John & Joseph, rope makers Thompson William, heer retailer
Hurgess Thomas-, farmer Long Wm. builder, wheelwright&carpntr Utteridge J os~ph, chimney sweeper
Carr Thomas, farmer Lynn John, farrper & market gardener Welbourne RufW!, Blacksmiths' Arms
Carter James, farmer Lynn Thomas, m'l.rket gardener P.H. & blacksmith
Crofts Henry, market gardener Markham George, blacksmith \Vright John :Newcome, farmer, Hun·
Diggle Robert, shopkeeper, Hungate Martin James, farmer gate house
Doubleday John, market gardener Masham John, builder · '
• '
ERPINGHAM is a parish and l'illage (from whence the Trinity College, Dublin, bas been curate in charge since I884 .
name of this and adjoining hundred was derived), 3~ miles There is a Reformed Methodist chapel. Part of the parisb. i.!l
north from Aylsham station on the East Norfolk brancb of in the Earl of Orford's manor; the remainder was formerly
the Great Eastern railway, 2~ north from Aylsham Town held by a family of its own name, one of whom was Sir Thomas
statiOn on the Eastern and Midlands railway and 7 west de Erpingharn K.G. a chivalrous knight who accompanied
from North Walsham, in the Northern division of the John, Duke of Lancaster, throughout the Spanish wars of
county, South Erpmgham petty sessional division, Aylsham 1399, and those of Henry IV. and V. and is frequently men·
union and county court district, rural deanery of Ingworth tioned by Shakespeare in Henry V. (Act iv. Scene I) as one
and archdeaconry and diocese of Norwich. The church of of the English leaders at Aginconrt ; he was also a larg-e
St. Mary is a noble pile of stone and flint in the Early Eng- benefactor to Norwich, and erected there, about 1420, the
lish style, consisting of chancel, na\·e, south aisle, north and gateway standing immediately before the west front of the
south porches and a western tower containing 4 bells : the cathedral, upon which his arms and those of his two wives

church was new roofed in 1842, and repewed .at the cost of are carved, together witb. the word " thenk," on ~oils .
the late Dowager Lady Suffield: an organ was erected in The principal landowners are Constance, Marchioness of
I879: there are 240 sittings. The register dates from the Lothian, who is also lady of the manor, the Rev. Goorge
year I559· The living is a rectory, consolidated with that Fish B.A. rector of Ingworth, the Rev. Siimuel Marsh Shep-
of Blickling, average tithe rent-charl!e £67r, joint net yearly heard B.A. vicar of Calthorpe, and Robert Ives esq. s.P. of
value £283, including 32 acres of glebe, with residence, in Calthorpe; there are also a. few smaller holders. The soil
the gift of Constance, Marchioness of Lothian, and held since is loam ; subsoil, red sand. The chief crops are wheat, oats
;x868 by the Rev. Frederick Meyrick M.A. of Trinity College, and hay. The area is I,3JO.<\. IR. 26P. ; rateable value,
Oxford, and canon and prebendary of Lincoln Cathedral, £2,478; the population in x881 was 362.
who resides at Blickling; the Rev. Moritz Kaufmann M. A. of Parish Clerk 1 Stephen Huller.
tllltECT011Y.] FAKERHAM. 389
Letters through Norwich, via Hanworth, at-t"ive abont 9 a..ril. National School (mixed), erected in ~86~, fo1' 10 ~hildten i
WALL LETTER Box cleared 4·I5 p.m. on week days only. average attendance, 59~ Miss Alice Shaw, certifica.ted
The nearest money order & telegraph offices are at Ayl- mistress
sham & Hanwarth ' '
Fish Rev. George B.A. [rector of Ing• Abbs Lucy (Miss), Spread Eagle P.:s;. & Johnson Benj. miller (water) & farmer
worth], The Lodge farmer · Johnson Robert, sawyer & farmer,
Kaufmann H.ev. Moritz M.A. {curate in 'Bastard Benj. carpenter & wheelwright Scarrow Beck
charge], Rectory · Beck Austin, farmer Learner Edwin Thomas, farmer

Shepheard Rev. Samuel Marsh B.A. Burrell Joseph, farmer Neeve J<'rederick Wm. grocer & draper
(vicar of Calthorpe J Davison John, farmer Shepherd William, farmer, Manor farm
Walpole Jonas, sen. The Limes Dunham GeorgP, farmer Slaughter Edgar, farmer
Walpole Jonas, jun. Holmstead Fisk Eliza (Mrs.), King's Head P.H Walpole & Son, farmers & machinists
Watts James, Oakfield house Hall Branford, farmer & cattle dealer Watts Willia~ grocer, draper&: farmer
COM!!oiERCIAL. Ives Robert J.P. landowner & farmer Whitbam Henry, blacksmith
J1arrett Joseph, farmer I
FAKENHAM (otherwise FAKENHAM-LANCASTER) is a Brethren, Primitive Methodist and Wesleyan Methodist
small well-bmlt market town and parish, with two stations, chapels and Salvation .Army barracks. .A new Weslej'an
one on the Wyrnondbam and Wells branch of the Great chapel is now (1892) in course of erection. The Cemetery,
Eastern railway, the other on the Eastern and Midlands line, situated on an eminence in the northern suburbs of the
139 miles by rail from London, I2} north fro:m Dereham, 33i town, is 4 acres in extent, and containS" a mortuary chapel:
north-west from N orwicb, 38t nnrth-east from Lynn and it is under the control of a burial board of nine members.
16 north from Swaffham; in the North Western division of The Corn Hall, in the Market place, erected in 1855, at
the county, Gallow hundred and petty sessional division, a cost of £3,000, is a structure of brick, with stone dressings,
Walsingham union and county court district, rural deanery and contains a spacious corn exchange, a.'!sembly and read-
of Burnham, archdeaconry of~ or folk and diocese of Norwich. ing rooms, and a library of 6,ooo 'Volumes. The Free
The town, which stands in a rich and fertile district, is Library, formerly in Bridge street, has been removed to the
pleasantly seated on a declivity north of the river Wensum, Boys' National school. The Cattle market, near Bridge
here crossed by a brick bridge of three arches, built in 1833. street, was constructed in 1857, and i!l the property of a
The town is lighted with gas from works on the south side limited company. The market for corn and cattle is on
of the river, the property of the Fakenham Gas Company. Thursday, and is well supplied. Weekly cattle sales of
The water supply is derived from private wells. The stock are held in the market by Messrs. Long and Son, and
ehurch of SS. Peter and Paul is a structure of flint, chiefly by Messrs. Vincent and Beck in their newly-established sale
in the Decorated style, consisting of chancel, nave, aisles, yard. Three fairs, on Whit-Tuesday, on the rst week in t-;ept-
soutb porch and a lofty embattled tower of the Perpendicu- ember, and on November 22nd, principally for cattle, are held
Jar period containing a clock and 8 bells: on each side of the on Hempton G-reen, about one-third of a mile from the town.
west window is a canopied niche, and above are symbols There are three banks. Here are some ma.ltings, and on
representing the dedication of the church to SS. Peter and the Wensum IS a large flour mill. Among the provident
Paul, and their initial letters, or (as some think) the initial institutions of tile town are se\·eral Friendly Societies and
letters of the Duchy of Lancaster 1 the sedilia are fine two Lodges of Foresters, both held at the Bell inn, and one
examples of the transi ional style from Decorated to Perpen- of Odd Fellows, of the Manchester Unity, held at the ''Royal
dicular: the octagonal Perpendicular font is adorned with Oak." The Nurses' home, in Tnnn street, is for supplying
emblems representing the four Evangelists, the Trinity and trained nurses to attend on sick and indigent persons. The
the Passion: the lectern, presented by Mrs. Damant in I887, County Industrial School and Orphanage, in Station road,
at a cost 1of £I2o, is a memorial to her husband, Thomas is for the training of 70 girls, and both this and the pre-
William Damant esq. F.R.c.s.E. d. I876: in I864 the church ceding inst.itution were founded by and are under the
was thoroughly restored, the restoration of the chancel superintendence of Mr8. Hamond. Charities :-Mi8s Ann
being carried out at the cost of the Rev. l\'licbael .Angelo Harrison bequeathed, in I:/'94• the sum of £1,666 13s. 4d.
Atkinson M.A. rector 1839-87, who furnished it with new oak in the £3 per Cent. Consols, to which Mr. Peckover added
tlt.alls and erected a carved reredos of Caen stone: in 1890 £333 6s. 8d.like Consols; the late reduction of Consols has
and 1891, by the bequest of Mrs. Damant, the belfry was reduced the a\·ailable annual sum to £so, which is distri-
refitted; the bells reb.ung (one also being recast); the east buted in blankets, wearing apparel and coals and also
window of the south aisle restored and fitted with stained applied to educational purposes. Lady Towns bend's charity
glass; the old chapel, forming the east end of the south now produces £20 yearly to bind apprentices, a boy and
aisle and dedicated to S. Thomas of Canterbury, restored as a girl alternately each year, by course for ever. Sheldrake's
chapel for daily service; and the old organ renovated and charity produces £12 ss. yearly, and Salmon's gift of 3 acre3
enlarged; the total cost was over £ I,5oo..- of which £130 of land yields £5 a year. Wortley's charity of £ t a year
was given by subscription: there are 742 sittings. The is paid by Caius College, Cambridg·e. Sir Lawrence John
register dates from the year 1720. The living is a rectory, Jones bart. of Cranmer HaU, is lord of the manor, and
with Alethorpe annexed, average tithe rent-charge £6oi, courts leet and baron are held annually. Tbe chief landed
joint net yearly value £524, with S1 acres of glebe and proprietors are Lord Ilastings, the Rev. James Lee-Warner,
r~sidence,in the gift of Trinity College, Cambridge, and held l of B~ckley, Rye, Sussex, Hen~y Lee-Warner esq. J. P. of
smce 1887 by the Hev. Alfred Edward Humphreys M.A. late Walsmgham .Abbey, Algernon D1gby esq. Algernon Peckover
fellow of that college and surrogate, and also vicar of esq. of ·wisbech, and George Anthony Wats~m esq. The
Hempton. The Church mission room on the Heath, erected , ar~a. is 2, 140A. 3R. 2BP. ; rateable value, £12,637; the
in 1885, at a cost of £6o, is an iron building and will seat So I population of the parish in 1891 was 2,goo.
people; there are alt:Jo Baptist, Congregational, Plymouth I Parish Clerk, John William Smith.
Official Establishments, Local Institutions &c. •

PosT, l\'I. 0. & T. 0., S. B. & Annuity & Insurance Office, COUNTY ~1AGISTRATE5 FOR GALLOW PETTY
Market place.-:\-Iartin Bambridge, postmaster. London SESSIONAL DlVISIO:!).
& cross mails recei\'ed at 5 & 9· 30 a. m. & 2.30 & 6.30 p.m. ;
dispatched at ID a.m. 12 (noon) & 7 & 7· 30 p. m. 1 dis- Jones Sir Lawrence John bart. ?.I.A. Cranmer hall, 'fak.en-
patched to Kjng's Lynn & the North &·Midlands, Scotland ham, chairman
& Ireland at 3.30 p.m. .A mail arrives from Norwich at Cholmondeley }Iarq uess, Hough ton hall, Rom;ham, Swaffb.am
2.30 & 4.30 p.m. ; dib1Jatched at 7 & 7.30 p.m. ; fmm Townshend Marquess, Raynham hall, Swa.ffham
Derebam at 5 p.m.; dispatched at 6, 7 & 7.20 p.m. .A Davey John G-eorge Ellis esq. Holkham 1

mail from \\'ells & Walsingham arrives at 7 p.m.; dis- Groom ~Iaj. John Edmund, Berry hall, Walsingham
patched at 5 a. m. The Letter Box closes at 7.30 p.m. Hamond Charles .Anncsley, Twyford hall, Guist
On sundays there is a delivery at 7 a. m.; box closes at Le ~eve Foster Bernard, Senno,ye hall, Guist
6.45 p.m. :\-Ioney orders are granted & paid from 9 a. m. Clerk to the Magistrates, Geo. Anthony Watson, Market p1
to 6 p.rn. (saturdays 8 p.m.). Office open for tP.legrams Petty Sessions are held at the Corn hall the last monday
8 a.m. tillS p.m.; sundays Still 10 a.m every month at I I a. m. The places in the division are:-
WALL LETTER BoxEs cleared as follows, week days only:- Alethorpe, Bagthorpe, Harmer, Barsham (East), Barsharn
Hayes lane, 9.25 a. m. &2.15 & 6.I5 p.m.; Norwich street, (North), Barsham (West), Broomsthorpe, Croxton,
9-45 a.m. & 2.20 & 6.30 p.m. ; The Heath, 5.30 p.m.; Dunton, Fakenham, Fulmodeston, He]houghton, Hemp-
Railway station (Great Eastern), 9-35 a. m. & 2.15 & 5.40 ton, Houghton, Kettlestone, Pensthorpe, Pudding Norton,
p.m. ; Railway station (Eastern & Midland~). 9-50 a. m. Ra~"Jlbam (East), Raynbam (South), Raynham (West),
& 2.20 & 6 p. m. ; Sculthorpe road, 9.30 a. m. & 3 & 6 Rudham (East), Rudham (West), Ryburgh (Great),
p.m.; Queen's road, 9.40 a.m. & 3.15 & 5-45 p.m Ryburgh (Little), Sculthorpe, Shereford, Snoring (Little),
Parcels Post, delivery at 8 a. m. & 3 & 7· 15 p.m. ; dispatched Stibbard, Syderstone, Tatterford, Tattersett, Testerton &
at :~tos.m. & 6 & 7 p.m Toftrees
390 YAKENH.AM. NORFOI. .K. (KELt"t'S

}'UBUC EsTABLI!l!JMENTS ::-' lnla.nd RennueOffice-r & Inspeetor <>f Corn Retums,Edwatd
Cemetery, Martin Bambridge, clerk, to the burial board; John Fisher, Queen's road
John Gates, keeper Medical Officers & Public Vaccinators, Walsingharo union,
Corn Hall, Market place, Robe!'t John Sidney, sec.; John Raynham district, Frederick Carden Brodie 11.11., B.S.
William Smith, hall keeper Oak street; Fakenham district, Francis Coomber, Oak st
County Coqrt, Corn hall, His Honor Edwin Plumer Price Medical Officer of Health, Walsingham union & Medical
Q.C. judge; George Anthony Watson, registrar & high Officer & Public Vaccinator, Colkirk district, Mitford t
bailiff; Richard Cowburn, assistant registrar; Harry P. Launditch union, Francis Coomber L.R.C.P.Lond. Oak st
Gonld, Norwich, bankruptey official receiver. The courts Rate Collector, Waiter Hobert Bradfield, Post office
are held at the Corn hall, Fakenham, except two courts Registrar of Births & Deaths & Relieving & Vaccination
during the year, which are held at Little Walsingham; Officer, Fakenham district, Albert George Utting, Mar-
the district comprises the following places :-Alethorpe, ket place
Bale, Barney, Barsham (East), Barsham (Xorth},Barsham Stamp Distributor, Martin Bambridge, Market place
(West), Binham, Briningbam, Barwick, Bircham (Great), Town Crier, Martin Bambridge
Bircham Newton, Bircbam Tofts, Brancaster, Bagthorpe, Vestry Clerk, Walter Robert Bradfield, Post Office
Barmer, Broomsthorpe, Burnham Westgate, Burnham PLACES OF WORSHIP, with times of services:-
Sutton, Burnham N orton, Burn ham Thorpe, Burn ham St. Peter's church, Rev. Alfred Edward Humphreys x.A.
Overy, Burnham Deepdale, Cockthorpe, Creaka (North), rector ; Rev. William John Johnson M.A. & Rev. Robert
Creake (South), Dunton, Docking, Egmere, Fakenbam, Wilmot Whiston M.A. curates; I I a. m. & 3 & 7 p.m. &
Field Dalling, Fulmodeston-with-Croxton, Fring, Gun- · 2nd & 4th B.xs a. m.; seat 742
thorpe, Helhoughton, Ilempton, Hindringham, Holkbam, Baptist, Rev. Alfred James Causton; 10.30 a.m. & 6.30
Houghton-in-tbe-Dale, Houghton (New), Kettlestone, p.m.; mon. 7.30 p.m. ; seat 3SO
Pensthorpe, Pudding Norton, Raynham (East), Raynham Congregational, Rev. Isaac Way; I0.4S a.m. & 6.30 p.m.;
(South), Raynham (West), Ryburgh (Great), Ryburgh wed. 7·4S p.m. ; seat 400
(Little), Rudham (East), Rudham (West), Sculthorpe, Plymouth Brethren (Gospel Hall), 11.30a.m.; 6.30 p.m. ;
Sharrington, Shereford, Snoring (Great), Snoring (Little), t.ues. 8 p.m. ; seat ISO
Stibbard, Stiffkey, Swanton Novers, Syderstone, Stan- Primitive Methodist, Rev. Charles Priestley; ro.30 a.m. &
hoe, Tattersett, Testerton, Thursford, Toftrees,Tatterford, 2. 30 & 6. 30 p.m. ; seat 450
Thornham, Titchwell, Waterden, Walsingham (Great), Wesleyan Methodist, Rev. Charles .Adie Pollard; ro.3o
Walsingham (Little), Warham, Wells-next-the-Sea & a. m. & 6.30 p.m. ; wed. 7· 30 p.m. i seat 300
Wighton Mission room, The Heath, 7.15 p.m.; tues. 8 p.m. ; seat 8o
Certified Bailiff appointed under the "Law of Distress SCHOOLS:-
Amendment Act," Robert John Turner, Queen's road County Industrial School & Orphanage for Girls, Station
County Police Station, Gladstone road (this is a branch of road, Mrs. Elizabeth .Marshall, matron
the Walsingham division of the county constabulary), National (boys), School hill, erected in 1846, for 200 child-
\\'illiam Read, sergeant, & I constable ren; average attendance, IOI ; George Bales, master
Free Lihrary, National school, G. Bales, sec. & librarian National (girls), Wells street, erected in 1848, for 130
Reading Room & Library, Corn hall, G. W. Page, hon. sec children; average attendance, 95 ; Miss Annie Johnson,
Volunteer Fire Brigade (engine house, Chapel street) ; mistress
C. W. Horsley, capt. ; R. RichardsfJn, supt. ; T. J. National (infants), Wells street, erected in 1848, for xoo
Andrews, sec. & I2 men: the keys are kept by T. Mansell, children; average attendance, 70; Miss Annie Simpson,
Norwich street, R. Richardson, Bell inn, Station road & mistress
•r. J. Andrews, Bank house ' British (boys, girls & infants), X orwich road, erected in
1844 & rebuilt in x886, for 398 children; average attend-
VOLUNTEERS:- ance, 88 boys, ss girls & 68 infants; Norman Smith,
3rd Volunteer Battalion, Norfolk Regiment (D Co.), Corn master ; Miss Lucy Hankinson, mistress ; Miss Ada Daff,
ball, Capt. Sir Lawrence John Jones bart. commandant; infants' mistress
Sergeant John Walker, drill instructor RAILWAY STATIONS:-
PUBLIC OFFICERS : - Great Eastern, Edwin Woodcock, station master
Clerk to Commissioners of Taxes, George Anthony Watson, Eastern & Midlands, William Edwd. Smith, 8tation master
Market place CARRIERS TO : -
Clerk to the Guardians of Walsingbam Union & Superin- CREAKE-Seaman, from the 'Bell,' tues. thurs. & sat
tendent Registrar, Wm. Merrick Rumbelow, Bridge st DocKING~Playford, from the 1 Bell,' every thurs
Inspector of Nuisances, Walsingham Union Rural Sanitary RunHAM-Dann, from the 'Star,' thurs
Authority, Charles Swann, Queen's road SYDERSTONE-Playford, from the 1 Bell,' every thurs
Income Tax Collectors, M. llambridge & C. W. Balderson, WEASENHAM-Chapman, from 'Bell,' thurs
Queen's road WnrssONSETT-Thing, from the 1 Bull,' tues. thurs. & sat
PRIVATE RESIDENTS. Garland Michael Raven, Market place Rumbelow Wm. Merrick, Greenway la
Andrews Frank, Bank house Garrood John, Wells road Sear le Mrs. Prospect house,N orwicb rd
Andrews Thomas J. Bank house Goggs Thomas Richard, Grove house Sheringham Miss, Market square
Atkinson Miss, Hayes lane Gower Waiter Charles, Bridge street Shering-ham William George,Market sq
Baker Miss, Rose villas, Gladstone road Groves Rev. Barnes James [Baptist] flillett Robert John, Oak street
Balderson Charles Waiter, Lancaster Hall William, 'fhorpland lodge Smith Henry Spelman, Oak cottage,
• terrace, Queen's road Hamond Capt. Robert Nicholas R.N. Queen's road
Bales George, Sculthorpe road Thorpland hall Smith Norman, Sculthorpe road
Bambridge Martin, Greenway lane Hamond Blomfield, Norwich road Southgate William K. Wells road
Bassham Benn, Weybread house Hamond Miss, Tunn street Stoughton John Arnold,Greenway lane
Beare Philip, Wells road Hamond Mrs. Tunn street Syder James, Bridge house
Bonlter Robert, Hayes lane Hamond Nicbolas, Tunn street Syder Mrs. Wells road
Bowles Frederick, Swan street Harrison Mrs. Bolt house, Holt road Tindale William, Nelson street
Brodie Frederick Carden M.B. Oak st Ilarrison Richard, Oak street Tuthill Charles, Wells road
Bull J obn, Queen's road Horsley Charles William, Hill side Tuthill Mrs. Sculthorpe road
Butcher Robert Symonds Howlett Miss, Oak street Utting Reginald Arthur, Queen's road
Cadge Robert Henry, Queen's road Humphreys Rev. Alfred Edward M.A. Wade John, May villa, The Heath
Case Edward, Bridge street [rector & surrogate], The Rectory Watsou George Antbony, Market place
Cates Mrs. The Limes Jaggard Robert Lock, Queen's road Way Rev. Isaac [Cong. ], The Heath
Causton Rev. Alfred James [Baptist], Magnese Henry, Oak street Wheeler Albert John, Holly bank, Nor·
Swan street Margetts Henry, Oak street wich road
Chapman Thus. Kendall, "White Horse st Marshall Mrs. Station road Whiston Rev. Robert Wilmot "M.A.
Charlton Thomas, Sculthorpe road Miller Thomas John, Heath house [curate], Oak street
Cook Mrs. Oak street Miller W1lliam Osborne, Norwich road Willimont Alfred, Wells road
Coomber Francis, Oak street Newson Henry, Market square Willimont Howlett Robt. WhiteHorse st
Cross Mrs. Tunn street Oakford William, Queen's road Wooffindin John, Sculthorpe road
Curtis Osborne Sargent, Summer hill Page GeorgeWoodward,White Horse st Wright Mrs. Brookland ho. Norwich rd
Dawson Edwin, Queen's road Pollard Rev. Charles Adie [Wesleyan],
Denton William Benjamin, Rose villas, Bridge street COMMERCIAL.
Glads~one road Priestley Rev. Charles [Primitive Me- Andrews Frank, solicitor, see Gates k
Desborongh Mrs. Wells road thodist], Lichfield street Butcher
Dewing Richard William, Baron's ball Rudge Edward Drosier M.D. Wells road Baker Joseph, ironmonger, gasfitter,
Digby Algernon M.A. High field Rudge The Misses, Wells road bellhanger, gun maker & bicycle
Frost Robert, Queen's road Rudge Miss A. A. Queen's road agent, Norwich Street. iron worlc.<l
DIUCTOitY.] NORFOLK-- YA~NHAM~ 391
Baker Charles Thomas, hydranlie, gas County Court (His Hortdr Edwin Piu- Harrison Ha.ITiet (Mr~. )", 1adies' school,
~ sanitary engineer, ironmonger, mer Price Q.C. judge ; Geo. Anthony Holt honse, Bolt road
plumber, gas & water fitter &c. Watson, registrar &high bailiff: held HarrisonThos. tinplate wrkr.Norwich rd
Market place ; & at Holt & Sherring"' at Fakenham & Little Walsingham; Harrison Richard, house agent, Oak st
ham. See ad vertisemont oflicP- at Little Wa.lsingham) Harvey Wm. Crown corn mercial &family
Baker William, tailor, Holt road Crisp Elizabeth (Mrs.), Rampant Horse hotel & posting house, Market place
Bales Georgo, deputy registrar of mar· P.ll. Queen's road Hodgctt Mark William, grocer, Market
riages, &:ulthorpe road Cubitt John,carpenter & joiner, Tunn st place
BaldwinMary(Mrs.),farmr.Heath house Curson George R. traffic superinten- Holloway Arthur Lorane A. c. o. organist
Bambridge Martin, town crier & post- dent, Eastern&; Midlands railway & teacher of music, Queen's road
master, Market place Dennis John Thomas, greengrocer & Horsley A. & H. ironmongers, bell-
Barkel" Henry Thomas, picture frame fishmonger, Oak street hangers & gasfitters, Norwich street
maker, Norwich road Dewing Richard Williarn, maltster & & Nelson road
Barnes Rerry, china & glass dealer, corn merchant, The Maltings, Rail- Horsley Charles & Son, millers (steam,
Oak street way station wind & water) & corn & seed mer-
Barnett Martin Robert., beer retailer, Digby Algernon M.A. (firm, Watson & chants, Fakenham mills & Railway
Norwich road Digby), solicitor, Market place station ; & at Hempton, Sculthorpe &
Barnett William, shoe maker, White Dolman Thomas, gro(,-er, Oak street Wendling
Horse street Darling Charles Henry,Star P.H.Oak st Horsley George William, beer retailer,
Barrett George, cattle salesman,Sunset Drage & Son, corn &c. merchants, & greengrocer, Bridge street
view, Wells road Great Eastern Railway station ; & at HudsonOliver,farmer, Watcrhouse farm
Barrett Jas. butcher & farmer, Oak st East Rudham Johnson Charles, Bull P.H. Bridge street
Barrett James,jun.cattle dlr. Chapel st DrewellCharlt.(Miss),drss.ma. Bridge st J ohnsonEd winHy .coach bldr. Queen's rd
Barrett Robert, tobacconist, Briclge st Drewell John, farmer, Providence cot.~ Kerrison Stalham, butcher & dealer in
Baxter Henry, fishmonger & beer re- Drewell Robert Warner, hair dresser & game, Oak street
tailer, Holt road shopkeeper, Bridge street Lack Frederick, saddler, Oak street
Baylis Thomas, furniture dlr. Bridge st Eagling John, Sun P.n. & farmer, Nor- Lancaster Coffee House Co. (T. J. An·
Beck Frederick William, auctioneer &c. wich street· drews, sec.; William Sawyer, man·
eee Vincent & Beck Ebberson Robert, grocer,& refreshment ager), Bridge street
Bell Samuel, Nelson P.H. & bay trusser rooms, Bridge street Large Wm. farmer & coal mer. Oak st
& farmer, Hayes lane Eke & Webster,drprs.&millinet"s,Oak st Liberator Building Society (N. Smith,
Blyth John, monumental mason & Fakenharn Cattle Market Co. Lim. agent), Sculthorpe road
sculptor, Hayes lane (Herbert Samuel Smith, sec) Lingwood Albert Ethelbert, grocer &
Bone & Readwin, cycle agents, Nor- Fakenbam & Dereham Times (A. J. provision dealer, Norwich street
wich street Wheeler, publisher ; published fri- London & Provincial Bank Limited
Bone Richard H. watch & clock maker, day), Norwich street (branch) (Henry Newson, manager),
jeweller,gold & silver smith, optician, Fakenham Friendly Society (David Market square; draw on head office,
gilder & electro plater,Norwichstreet Pat rick, sec.), Station road 7 Bank buildings & Glyn, Mills,
Bottomley Charles, stone & marble Fakenham Gas Works (William Cooper Currie & Co. London E c
mason, White Horse street Pearson, sec. ; Waiter Robert Brad- Long John & Son, auctioneers
Bowles Bros. general drapers, millfhers field, collector) Long Robert, market gardener & seeds·
ltc. Old Market house & Bridge st Fakenham Gulf Club (H. Newson, hon. man, Old lane
Bradfield Walter Robert, rate collector sec.), Market square Louder Jn. beer retlr. & butehr. Wells rd
& collector to the Gas Co. house Fakenham Poultry Society (William Love Alfred, tailor, Oak street
agent & vestry clerk, Post office Henry Readwin, sec.), Norwich st Loynes E. B. & Son, solctrs. Market sq
Brett Henry, cabinet maker, Market pl Fire Brigade Engine House(Volunteer), Mackley Thomas J. surgeon-dentist ;
Brewster Rose Ellen (Miss), ladies' & Chapel street attends at Mr. Carr's, chemist, the
children's outfitter, Norwich street Fisher Edward John, inland revenue first thursday in every month
Brodie Frederick Carden M. B., B.S., officer & inspector of corn returns, Mansell Thomas, watch & clock maker,
M.R.C.S.Eng., L.R.O.P.Lond., L.S.A. Queen's road Norwich street
surgeon, & medical officer & public Fleg~ James, agent to Button & Co. Marriott John & Robert, maltsters &
vaccinator, Raynham district, Wals- carriers, Sculthorpe road mers. &c. Railway station; & at Lynn
ingham union, Oak street Flegg Thomas, tailor, Swan street Marshall Elizabeth (Mrs.), matl'on of
Hurrell George, hair dresser, Bridge st Flowers Rouse, cooper, Norwich road the Girls' Indus trial School & Or-
Burton William, basket maker, Nor- Free Libr,uy (George Rales, sec. & phanage, Station road
wich street librarian), National school Metcalf RowlandAlfred,chemist & drug-
Butcher Robert Symonds, solicitor, Frost AI f. grocer & provision dlr. Oak st gist, Market place ; & at Lyon
(firm, Cates & Butcher), Swan street Fuller Ernest, hair dresser, Bridge st Miles Frederick, leggings manufacturer,
Carr Ed ward, chemist, Bridge street Gant Richard, baker, Norwich street Market. place
Case Edward M. n.c. v .s. L. veterinary Garland E. (Mrs.) ,ladies' schl. Market pl Miles William Frederick, boot & shoe
surgeon, Bridge street Garratt John, district road surveyor, maker, :\'larket place
Cates & Butcher, solicitors, Swan st Scul thorpe road Millar Peter, linen & woollen draper
Catton Williarn, agent fur the Singer Gates Samuel, leather cutter, Oak st Miller, Son & Co. Limited, steam
Manufacturing Co. Sculthorpe road Girls' Industrial School & Orphanage printers, stereotypers & bookbinders,
Ca.wthorne Ed wd.horse breaker, Oak st (Mrs. Elizabeth Marshal!, matron), Norwich street
Cemetery (Martin Ba.mbridge, clerk to Station road . Miller !<'red k. photographer, Norwich st.
burial board; John Gates, keeper) Goggs Thomas Richard, flour & corn Miller William Osborne, china, glass
Chapman Edmund Crowc, butcher, merchant, Bridge street; & miller &c. warehouse, Norwich street
Norwich street (steam & water), Hempton; & farmer, Moore Sarah (Mrs.), baker, Ha yes lane
Charlton Harry Hunt, coal merchant, Colkirk National Provincial Bank of England
Eastern & Midlands station Gower Waiter Charles, manager fur Lim. (agency) (E. W. M. Cowtam,
Charlton Thomas, manager for Greene, William Sheringham, wool, seed, wine manager ; open on thursdays from
King & Sons Limited, brewers & & spirit merchant, Market square 12 till s), Market place; draw on
mineral water manufacturers Grave Charles William, boot maker, head otlice
Chichele Theological College, see under Sunny Park terrace Needs James, builder, Queen's road
Hemp ton Graves Henry, blacksmith, Queen's rd Newman Ralph William, hair dresser,&
Colman William, beer retailer, Nor- Graves Mary Ann (Mrs.), registry office fancy repository, Norwich street
wich street for servants, Norwich road N ewson Henry, manager, London &
Cook James, wheelwright, Holt road Greene, King & Sons Limited, brewers Provincial Bank, Market square
Coomber Francis L.R.C.P.Lond,surgeon, &mineral water manufacturers(Thos. Nurses' Home (:\Iiss Hamond, man-
medical officer of health, Walsingharn Charlton, manager); breweries,Bury ageress), Bank house, Tunn street
union & medical officer & public St. Edmunds Oakes James, tailor, Tunn street
Va.C"Cinator,Fakenham district, Wals- Gurneys, Birkbecks, llarclay & Bnxton, Oakford Thomas, timnan, Oak street
ingham union & Colkirk district, bankers (Capt. Robert N. Hamond, Oldman Frederick, fishmonger & green-
Mitford & Launditch union, Oak st manager); head office, Market place; grocer, Norwich road
Corn Hall Co. (Robert John Sidney, draw on Barclay, Bevan, Tritton & Olley I<'rances (Mrs.), draper, & registry
sec.; John William Smith, hall Co. London E c office for servants, Tunn street
keeper), Market place Hagon Guy, beer retailer, Heath Owles Henry William, Red Lion com-
Cornish Jabez James, agricultural im· Hall John, boot maker, Bridge street mercial hotel, Market place
plement manufacturer, Cattle mar- Hall William, farmer, Thorpland Parker Robert, watch jobber, Swan st
ket; & at Old Walsingham & Wells. Hamond Blomfield, Butveyor of parish Parker William, watch & clock maker,
See advertisement roads, Norwich road White Horse street
392 NORFOLK/ [ KEI.J,y'a
Pearson William Cooper; Paker &·con~ Sheripgham William., wool, seed & wine Utting Albert George,registrar tlf birth«
fectioner, & sec. to the ;fakenham & spirit merchant, Market square & deaths- & relieving & vaccination
· Gas Co. Oak street Sidney Robert John, registrar of mar- officer, }<'akenham district, Marketpl
Phillips W. L. & Son, grocers, & agents ri,ages & sec. to theCornHallCo.Hill ter Utting Reginald, deputy registra.r of
for W. & A. Gilbey, wine & spirit Sidney William Daniel, deputy supt. births & deaths, Queen's road
merchants, Norwich street registr~J.r, Hill terrace Utting Richard, shoe maker, Market pl
Piercy Elijah, blacksmith, Hayes lane Sillett Robert John, wool & wine & spirit Vincent & Beck, auctioneers, valuers &
Plattin Henry Ramm, chemist & sur- merchant & maltster~ Market place estate agents, Cattle Market street
geon-dentist, Norwich street Smith Eliza (Mrs. ),farmer & landowner, Vincent J ames, ·linen & fancy draper,&:;
Pope Step hen Ratcliffe, solicitor The Hea,th · boot & shoe warehouse, Norwich st
Pottle Matilda Amy( Mrs. ),dress maker, Smith Frank L. assistant supt. Pruden- Volunteer Battalion (3rd) Nor folk Regi-
Oak street tial Assurance Co. Heath view ment (D Co.) (Captain Sir Lawrence
Powell John William, saddler, Oak st Smith Herbert Samuel, farmer,& sec. to John James hart.; Sergt. .Tohn
Pratt Brothers, seed merchants & nur- Fakenham Cattle ,Market Co. Limited, Walker, drill instructor), Corn Hall
serymen, Market place The Heath Wainwright J oseph, musical iillltrn-
Priest William, registered plumber. gas Smith J ames, plumber, painter & house ment dlr. & pianofte. tuner, Market pi
& hot water engineer & bellhanger, decorator, White llorse street WalkerSergt.Jn.drill instruct<Jr,HoltTd
builder & general contractor, paper- Smith John William, builder & parish Ware Geo. Stephen M. B., B.s., M.R.c.s.,
i

hanger & decorator (agent for the' clerk, Lichfield street L.R.C.P., L.S.A. surgeon, Oak street
Wenham Gas Lamp), Oak street Smith William Bartlett, solicitor, per- Warters Wm. coach builder, Well8l'oad
Read & Sayer, grocers & drapers, Nor- petual commissioner & commissioner Watson & Digby, solicitors & commis-
wich street 1 to administer oaths & county court sioners to take acknowledgments of
Read Alfred George, furniture dealer & ' advocate, Oak street married women & to administer
brewers' agent, Market place Smith William Edward, station fiJ.aster, oaths, Market place
Read William, sergeant of police, Police Eastern & Midlands railway Watson George Anthony ~firm, Watson
station, Gladstone road Southgatc S. Vincent, coach bidr. Oak st & Digby), solicitor, & registrar of
Reading Room & Library (G. W. Page, I Southgate Wm. K. farmer, Wells road Walsingham county court & clerk
hon. sec.), Corn hall Stead & Simpson, boot & .shoe ware- to Gallow magistrates & to commis-
Read win William Henry, corn, seed & house, Norwich street sioners of taxes, Market place
manure merchant, Norwich street Stewardson & Co. printers, books<Jllers, West Norfolk Meat Co. (Fred WellB 1
Read win Wm. Hy.saddler,Market place stationers, fancy repository & news manager), butchers, Bridge street
Reed er Chas. Whittred, tailor, Swan st agents, Market place Wheeler Albert John, wholesale &retail
Richard son George, bill poster, & agent Stoughton J n. Arnold, solicitor & clerk stationer, bookseller, news & adver-
for American & Orient R M. S. S. to the Guardians of the Docking tising agent, office of the" Fakenham
Norwich road Union, Bridge street & Dereham Times," Norwich street
Richardson Richard, Bell P.H. & coal Strangleman Geo. cattle dealer, Tunn st Whitton Fanny (Mrs.), draper, & berlin
merchant, Norwich road Sutton & Co. carriers (James Flegg, wool repository, Norwich street
Rix Arthur Foule, Royal Oak P.H.Oak st agent), Sculthorpe road Williamson John Geo. herbalist, Oak st
Rotten bury John, Morgan, draper, Upper Swann Charles, inspector of nuisances, Withers Bros. tra velhng drapers, Oak st
market Walsingham Union rural sanitary Woodcock Edwin, station master,Great
Rndge Edwd. Drosier M.D.surg-. Wells rd authority, Green way lane Eftstern railway
Rudland Mary Ann (Mrs.), wardrobe Syder Frank, cattle s1Uesman, Oak st Wright & Morgan, boot & shoe makers,
dealer, White Horse street SyderJames, cattlesalesman,Bridge ho Swan street
Ruffles Geo. Thos. butcher, Oak street Sydet Soutten, farmer & coal dealer, Wright Wm. & Son, seed mers. Wells rd
Rum below William Merrick, solicitor, Norwich road Wright Chas. horse breaker, Queen's rd
clerk to the guardians of Walsingham Till son Mary Ann (Mrs.), dress maker, Wright Edward, boot & shoe factor, &
union & supt. registrar, Bridge street White Horse street warehouse, Market place
Rush J as.Great Eastern inn, Norwich rd Tuck Robert Den ton, baker, Oak street Wright J ohn,silk mercer ,family draper,
Sands Elizh. (Mrs. ),dress 1o-:1aker, Oak st Turner James, coal mer. White Horse st tailor, habit maker, hatter, outfitter
Sayer John, grocer, see Read & Sayer Turner Robert John, auctioneel' & & shirt maker, Market place
.Scott John Main, furniture broker & valuer, Queen's road Wright Jn. leather seller, WhiteHorse st
dealer, Oak street Tuthill E. & M. (Misses), private school, Wright Jonas Fidgett, photographer,
Reppings Fk. Arthur, carpenter,Holt rd Sculthorpe road Wells road
Seppings William, blacksmith, Bridge! TuthillChas.builder&brick ma.Wells rd Wright 'l'hos. boot & shoema. Tunnst
street & curiosity shop, Norwich st i Tuthill S.( Mrs. ),bkr .& cnfctnr. N rwch st Young Ishmael, fishmonger, Oak street
FELBRIGG is a parish about 3 miles south-west from with effigy in armour, ob. I599; and to Jane, wife success-
Cromer railway s;tations on the Great Eastern and Eastern ively of John Pope esq. of Wroxton, Oxon, and of Humphrey
and Midlands railways and Io north-west from North Wals- Coningsby esq. ob. 1608 ; this brass was placed by Sir John
ham, in the Northern division of the county, North Erping- Windham : the foundations of the ancient vestry on the
barn hundred and petty sessional division, Erpingham union, north side of the chancel still remain: there are roo sittings.
Bolt county court district, rural deanery of Repps, archdea- The register dates from the year I7oo. The living is a rec-
conry of Norfolk and diocese of Norwich. The church of St. tory, with that of Metton annexed, average tithe rent-charge
Margaret, picturesquely situated in the park, is a building £2I7, joint net yearly value £274, including 76~ acres of
of flint with stone dressings, in the Perpendicular style, con· glebe attached to Metton, with residence, in the gift of R.
sisting of chancel, nave, north and south porches and an W. Ketton esq. and held since 1872 by the Rev. Robert
embattled western tower containing one bell : in the church James Simpson ~LA. of Trinity C'JOllege, Duhlin, who resides
1s a beautifully executed monument, by Nollekens, to the at Metton. Felbrigg Hall, the seat of Robert William
Right Hon. William Windham, a distinguished statesman, Ketton esq ..l. P who is lord of the manor and chief landowner,
-d. 3 June, IBIO: on a large marble slab in the nave is a fine is a spacious and handsome mansion in the Early Tudor
sepulchral brass, with ettigy, in complete armour, to Sir style, standing on a commanding height in a well-wooded
.Simon de l''elbrygge, Knight of the Garter and standard park of 700 acres. The soil is a rich loam, with a subsoil of
bearer to Richard II. ob. I443, and to his first wife, Mar- red sand. The chief crops are wheat, oats and hay. The
garct, daughter of Primislaus, Duke of Teschen, in Bohemia, area is 1,557 acres ; rateable value,£ I ,559; the population
ob. 1416; the effigy of the knight carries a banner, and that in I88r was 165.
of the lady is clad in a mantle; above rises a canopy, and WALL LE'ITER BoxEs, The Green, cleared at 3.40 p.m.l
there are shields of arms and a fetterlock badge~ there is near the Mill, cleared at 3.50 p.m
also a brass, with effigies, to Symon de Felbrig, c. 1351, his Letters through Norwich arrive at 8 a. m. Cromer is the
wife Alice, buried at Herling, and to Roger de Felbrig, nearest money order & telegraph office
buried in Prussia, c. 1380, and his wife Eliz'1beth, with an This parish is included in the .Aylmerton United SchoOl
-inscription in Norman French: there are other brasses to a Board district, formed compulsorily October I, 1874-o &
lady, c. 1480; Thomas, third son of Sir Edmund Windham, the children attend at .Aylmerton
Ketton Robert William J. P.Felbrigg ball Farrow Matthew Thomas, farmer 1 Ward Joshua, head gamekeeper t<J R.
Balls Charlotte (Mrs.), farmer Lincoln Robert, farm bailiff to R. W. I W. Ketton esq
Tiurrant Henry, farmer Ketton es-q. Park farm
FELMING HAM is a parish with station on the Eastern division, archdeaconry of Norfolk and diocese of Norwich.
and Midlands railway from Yarmouth to Lynn, 2~ miles The church of St. Andrew is an edifice rebuilt of red brick,
west-south-west from North Walsbam, 5 east from Aylsham with the exception of the tower, in I742, in the Georgian
and 13 from Norwich, in the Eastern division of the style, consisting of nave and a Perpendicular western ~owet
county, Tunstead and Rapping petty sessional division, of flint, supported by buttresses and containing 6 bells:
hundred of Tunstead, union of Hmallburgh, North Walsham there are :0150 sittings. The register dates from the year
county court district, rural deanery of Waxham, Tunstead 1754- There are two benefices in this parish, a rectory and
DlRECTORY .J NORFOLK". FELTWELL. 393
a vicarage ; the average tithe rent-charge of latter is £wr, wheat, oats and barley. The area is 1,816 acres; rateable
net yearly value £88, including 12 acres of glebe, with value, {,2,973 ; the population in 1891 was 424.
residence, built in I 870, in the gift of the Bishop of N orwicb, Fari~h Clerk, Cliarles B\'ady,
and held since 1885 by the Rev. Edward Charles King Beal."-
croft LL. B. of Queens' College, Cambridge, and surrogate : PosT OFFICE.-Mrs. Leah Pardon, receiver. Letters
the rect.ory iil endowed with one-fourth of the rectorial tithe, through North Walsham; arrive at. 8 a. m. & dispatched
average yearly value of tithe rent-charge £ II7, besides 14 at 4-40 p.m. North Walsham is the nearest money ordar
acres o( glebe, in the gift of John Seaman Postle esq. o.nd & telegraph office
held since 1886 by the Rev. Edward Henry Banfather B. A. A Schrml Board of _') 'm~mbers(now increao;;ed t.o 7) was
of Corpus Cbristi college, Cambridge, who resides at Coltis- formed compulsorily July q, r875, for the United District
hall ; the remaining three-fourths of the rectorial t.ithes are of felmingham & Banningha.m, with Colby & Suffi.eld as
in the hands of the Ecclesiastical Commissioners. There is contributory, sending one merp.per each; H. J. Gidney,
a Primitive Methodist chapel built in 1882. In 1844 some Aylsham, clerk to the board; John Suffiing, Aldborough,
Roman antiquities were found here. Felmingham Hall is attendance officer
in the occupation of Mr. George H. Plumbly, farmer. The
trustees of the late J. S. Postle esq. D.L., J. P. are lords of Board School, built in 1879 at a cost of £2,ooo, for 17~
Felmmgham Hall manor, and Lord Suffield, of Rugge's children; average attendance, 140; Henry Colegate,
Hall manor. The principal landowners are Lord Sutfield, master ; Mrs. Anna Maria Colegate, mistress
William Postle esq. and William Primrose esq. The soil is Railway Station (Eastern & Midlands), Henry Cullington,
loamy ; subsoil, sancl and gravel. The chief crops are station master
Bearcroft Rev. Edward Charles King Daniels George, pork butcher Plumbly George H. farmer & cattle
LL.B. Vicarage . Dennis William, blacksmith dealer, Felmingham hall
Postle William Dixon Robert (Mr,;.), shopkeeper Plumbly Herbert, farmer, auctioneer&.
Wortley Misses Gaze Thomas, farmer & miller (water) valuer, estate agent &cattle salesman,
COlllMERCIAL. Gibbons Charles, fish dealer Ruggs hall; & Auction mart, Yar-
Atkins William, grocer, wheelwright & Gibbons John, thrashing machme owner mouth road, North Walsham
blacksmith Grimes James, farmer Postle "'illiam, landowner & farmer
Blythe Thomas, King's Head P.H. & Hall Thomas, farmer Primrose William Hayes, farmer
farmer & boot maker Lake Thomas, farmer Printer George, cattle dealer
Chamberlin Robert, farmer Pardon Charles, blacksmith Sharpe George, farmer
Culley George, farmer PardonLeah (Mrs.),shopkpr.Post office Wortley John (exo~s. pf), farmers
FELTHORPE is a parish and widely scattered village, George Downing Dewe M.A. of St. Catherine's College, Cam-
S miles south-east from Cawstnn station on the East Norfolk bridge. Rrereton's charity of £40 yearly i~ applied in pay-
section of the Great Eastern railway, 7 miles north-north- ments t.o almswomen, the poor, and t.o the repair of the
west from Norwich, 3 miles north-east from Attlebndge, church. The fuel allotment of 46 acres produces about£ 10
and about the same distance from Drayton station on the yearly. Felthorpe Hall, the residence of Mrs. James Bour--
Eastern and Midlands railway, in the Eastern division of the chier; stands a short distance north of the Norwich road, and
county, Taverham hundred and petty sessional division, St. is surrounded by plantations. There are four manors, three
Faith's union, Norwich county court district, rural deanery belonging to Lord Stafford, the Bishop of Norwich and Lord
of 'faverham and archdeaconry and diocese of Norwich. De Ramsey, lord of the manor of Russells, and the Rectory
The church of St. Margaret is a. structure of flint, consisting manor. Lord De Ramsey and Samuel Gurney Buxton esq.
of chancel, nave, aisles, north porch and a w-estern tower D.L., J.P. of Catton Hall, are the principallandowners. The
containing one bell : the stained east window was inserted soil is sandy; subsoil, sand. The chief crops are wheat.
in 1878 hy the late Major James J. Bourchier, in memory of roots, barley and hay. The area is 2,237A. 3R. 18P.io rate-
his brother, Col. Claude T. Bourchier, and there are several ble value, £1,432 ; the population in 1891 was 400.
other stained windows erected by Major Bourchier, who also Parish Sexton,
repaved t-he church at his sole expense, a stone reredos PosT OFFICE.-John Turner, receiver. Letters throngll
erected, both to his memory: the church has been enlarged Norwich arrive at 8 a.m. & are dispatched at 4 p.m. week
and partly rebuilt, and was thoroughly restore:! in 1878: days only. The nearest money order office is at Drayt.on
there are 200 sittings, 130 being free and unappropriated. & telegraph office Drayton station. Postal orders are
The register dates from the year 1715. The living is a issued here, but not pa1d
rectory, a\-·erage tithe rent-charge {,205, net yearly value Church of England School (mixed), built by Lord De Ram-
£t78, including 33 acres of glebe and residence, in the gift sey in 1846, for 100 children; average attendance, 65;
of the Bishop of Norwich, and held since 1877 by the Rev. Miss H. M. Cowles, mistress
Bourchier Cecil E. Felthorpe hall Hawes Henry, farmer & coal merchant, Stannard George, farmer
Bourchier Mrs. James, Felthorpe hall l\'Iill farm Thompson Thomas, farmer
Dewe Rev. Geo. Downing M. A. Rectory Howlett Robert, farmer Turner John, shopkeeper, Post office
COMMERCIAL. McMichael Charles William, farmer Wade Clarke, blacksmith, iron
Adams William J a.mes, shopkeeper McMichael James, farmer founder & agricultural implement
Barrett Francis, tailor Newton Rit:hard, shoe maker maker [letters should be addressed
Chinner.v Henry W. farmer, Breck farm Palmer Mary (Mrs.), shopkeeper Ha.verland, Norwich]
Ebbage Harry, shopkeeper Sparkes Alfred, market gardener '~'erneking George, farmer
Foulger Edward A. farm bailiff to Lord Stannard Albert, Mariners' .Arms P.H Witard E. & Son, millers (water)
De Ramsey

FELT WELL is ~ parish and large village 3 miles north but ancient structure, the upper part of which has been reo-
from Lakenheath station on the Ely and Thetford section of built with flint, and consists of nave, south aisle, south porch
the Great Eastern railway and 6 north-west from Brandon, and a small round western tower containing 5 bells: it is
in the South Western division of the county, Grimshoe hun- now used as a mortuary chapel op.ly. The earliest register
dred and petty sessional division, Thetford union and county is dated, on the cover, A. D. 1559, but the first entry is in the
court district., rural deanery of Cranwich, south division, year 1562 ; the first two leaves have evidently been removed
archdeaconry of Norfolk and diocese of Norwich. The many years. The living is a rect.ory, aver.J.ge tithe rent-
parishes of St. Mary and St. Nicholas are now united. The charge {,987, gross yearly value £1,187, including211 acres
church of St. Mary is an edifice in the Decorated style, con- of glebe, with residence, in the alternate gift of the Lord
sisting of chancel, nave, aisles and an embattled western Chancellor and the Bishop of Norwich, and held since 1879
tower with pinnacles and various sculptured figures and by the Rev. Henry Thoma..-. O'Rorke M.A. of Trinity College,.
highly wrought ornament, and containing 3 bells; the nave Dublin. There are Wesleyan and Primitive Methodist
is divided from the chancel by a carved oak screen : the chapels. The Moundeford charity of [486 yearly, subject
chancel retains a piscina and two mural brasses to Margaret to deductions for G.rainage rates, is derived from 612 acres of
Moundeford and Francis Het he, of Mildenhall ; and there are land ; £255 is applied to the school, £I 8o t.o the support of
others with effigies, to Francis Muundeford and his two wives almshouses, and £so is distributed in clothing. There are-
and to Osbert Moundeford, all of the 16th century, besides eight almshouses, endowed in 1642 1 by Sir Edward Moun-
other brasses to the Newcome family : the east window and deford kt. and re-erected by the parish in 1819, besides
others are stained: the church was considerably enlarged many minor charities bequeathed by the families of Clough,.
and the northern arcade rebuilt for the use of the inhabitants Rawlins and Atmore, which are distributed among the poor.
of the two parishes, about 1864, at the sole expense of the late The Poor's Common consists of 36o acres of fen, on which
Rev. Edward BowyerSparke, rectorfrom 1831: there are 68o all such inhabitants of the township as are legally settled
11ittings, 300 being free. therein and occupy lands or tenements of not more than
The church of St. Nicholas, standing on rising ground, in £ ro a year may cut fuel under the direction of the lords of
~e western part of the village, is a much smaller and plainer the manor, rector, churchwardens and overseers, who were
~94 FELTWELL. NORFOLK. (KEI,LY"B

appointed trustees for the management of the common by soil, chalk and sand. The chief crops are wheat, barley, oat.
the In closure Act, dated x8x3. At the eastern approach to and turnips. The area is 13,120 acres, one half of whicll ia
the village, in the centre of the roadway, is an ancient oak ten; rateable value, £xo,6c)s ; the population in x8gx Wll8
tree of immense size, standing on a grassy mound or plot x,557·
.eight or ten feet in diameter; an iron railing has been placed Parish Clerk, John Pearson.
to preserve the tree. A fair is held on November 2oth. PosT, M, 0. & T. 0., S. B. & Annuity & Insurance Office.-
Feltwell Lodge is a large mansion of brick; in park-like Miss Anna Spencer, postmistress. Letters arrive from
ground11, occupied by Col. Edward George Hibbert. Felt- Brandon at 4 a.m. & 5.20 p.m. ; delivery 7 a. m. only;
well Hall, the seat of Mrs. Newcome, is also of brick. East dispatched at 1.50 p.m. & 7-55 p.m
Hall, the seat of Mrs. Edward Sparke, is a fine mansion of A School Board of 5 members was formed August 2, for the
brick, in the Elizabethan style. The Rev. William Cyril New- united district of J<'eltwell Anchor & Feltwell St. Mary &;
come, rector of Boothby-Pagnel, Lines, is lord of the chief or St. Nicholas ; E. N, Cole, Croxton, clerk to the board
capital manor; Mrs. Newcome is lady of the manor of South Free School (mixed), built, with master's residence, in x819,
Hall; the representatives of the late Rev. Edward Bowyer by the Moundeford Charity Trustees, & a mistress's
Sparke are lords of the manor of Wendlings, Spinvills and residence since added; about 70 boys are educated free;
Duntons; and the Masters and fellows of Christ':~ College, 1
the school will hold 200 children; average attendance, 1:23;
Cambridge, are lords of the manor of East Hall ; the ab01·e ! Enoch Mears, master ; Miss Wilkins, mistress ; infants',
1

are also the principal landowners. The soil is mixed ; sub- for Ioo ; average attendance, 71 ; Miss Garrett, mistress
PRIVATE RESIDENTS. Dent John Henry, shoe maker Peacock John Loddington, fanner,
Archer Ern est George Doy Arthur, agricltrl. machnst.& enginr Felt well fen
Archer George Fairchild Henry, beer retailer & butcbr Perry Latten John, shopkeeper
Heading Mrs. Cambridge house Fcetham James, farmer,Brandon bank, Pryer Edward (Mrs.), farmer
Hibbert Col. Edward Geo. Feltwellldg Feltwell fen Pryor Thomas, farmer
Newcome Edwd. CyrillJ.P.Feltwell hall Gent Christopher, boot repairer Read Oddcn Fredcrick, solicitor
Newcome FrancisD'ArcyWilliamClough Griffin Frederick Caney, steward tu the Rice Martha (Mrs.), Chequers P.H
D. A., J.P. J<'eltwell hall Rev. W. Newsome Rolfe Richard, agent for Mrs. Sparke
Newcome Mrs. Feltwell hall Harvey James,agent for R. & I. Ardley, Rolfe Rubert Sepping, farm steward to
O'RorkeRev. Henry Thos. Jd.A.Rectory London, Shrub h1ll Fcltwell Lodge estate
Sparke Mrs. Edward, East hall Harwin Francis, butcher Roper William, Oak inn, & coal dealer
Stallon Lambert Heading Henry, farmer Rudland Jonathan, farmer
Stallon Mrs Hollax Henry, beer retailer Scarfe Henry, grocer, draper & general
Upcher Henry Morris .J.P., F.Z.B. East Hollax Robert, farmer warehouseman, Manchester house
hall; & at Sheringham Houchen John, jun. solicitor; & at Shearing James Thomas, beer retailer
West Miss Thetford. Shearing Rudd Wilson, wheelwright &
Whitmore Jonathan Taylor Jellico Ernest, butcher blacksmith
COMMERCIAL. Kelland John Skinner, veterinary surgn Smith George, farmer
Addison Henry, shopkeeper King Eliza (Mrs.), stationer & druggist Spencer Anna (Miss), postmistress &
Addison Henry, jun. painter King Francis, butcher assistant overseer
Andrews Thomas, farmer King Horace Edmund, baker & miller Spencer Elizh.(Mrs.),Cock inn,&farmer
Archer Ernest Geo. surgeon, & medical (wind) Spencer Francis, farmer
officer, Felt well dist. Thetford union Lambert Daniel, farmer Spencer William, farmer & land agent
Ashton Parke,ironmonger & whitesmith Lambert William, landowner & farmer to the Duchy of Lancaster
Barnes Geo. Hy. farmer, Feltwell fen LambleyMartha(Mrs.),landownr.&frmr Stallon John, beer retailer & farmer
Barnes John Wm. farmer, Feltwell fen Martin William (Mrs.), farmer Stallon Lambert, farmer
Barnes Joseph, farmer, Feltwell fen Oakes, Bevan & Co. bankers (John Starling Robert, farmer, Feltwell fen
Burcll J oseph Wm. steward to F .D'Arcy Houchen,agen t) ; open mondays only, Steward Samuel, saddler
W. C. Newcome esq. B.A., J.P 12.0 a.m. till g.o p.m.; draw on Turner John, farmer
Cadman Ann (Mrs.), dress maker Barclay, Bevan & Co. London E c Turner John, jun. farmer
Caney George, shoe maker Palmer Arthur John, grocer, draper & Upcraft Waiter, boot maker
Cock Greenfield, wheelwright, builder, wine & ale merchant West Elizabeth(Mrs. )( exors.of),fa.rmers
steam saw mills, & miller (steam) Parker Charles, grocer & draper Whittle George, farmer
Cock Robert, farmer Payne Robert & Son, farmers & thrash- Wightman John, farmer
Currey William, beer retailer ing machine proprietors Williams George, tailor
Danes John, wheelwright & carpenter Pearson John, bricklayer Willingham William, beer retailE)r
.
FERSFIELD is a village and parish 5 miles north- in eleven large volumes, in x8os-ro, was born here 23rd July,
west from Diss station on the Ipswich. and Norwich sec- 1705; he was instituted to this living 13th September, 1729,
tion of the GrPat Eastern railway, in the Southern division and held it till his death in 175I. Algar House, the seat of
of the county, Diss hundred, petty sessional division and the late Miss Mortimer, is pleasantly situated, but at present
connty court district, Guiltcros.'l union, rural deanery of unoccupied. The Duke of Norfolk K.G. is lord of the manor
Redenhall, archdeaconry of Norfolk and diocese of Norwich. andchieflandowner. AcharitywasleftbyJefferyEllingham
The church of St. Andrew, rebuilt by Sir Robert and William in 1493 of 4 marks a year and 23 acres of land and a. house,
Du Blois, is an ancient building of flint in the Perpendicular producing £3o yearly, which sum is applied towards the
style, consisting of chancel, nave, south aisle, south porch repairs of the church. The soil is heavy ; subsoil, clay.
and a western tower con taming one bell: there are marble The chief crops are wheat and barley. The area is 1,386
monuments to the founders and a marble slab to the Rev. acres; rateable value, £x,648; the population in 1891 was
Francis Blomefield B. A. rector here for 23 years, who died 25 6.
15 Jan. 1751 : the communion plate includes a chalice and Parish Clerk, Waiter Crick.
paten believed to date from the t1me of Queen Eli7.abeth: PosT 0FFICK-Herbert Arthur Hall, sub-postmaster.
there are 170 sittings. The reg1stcr dates from the year Letters through Diss, arrive at 8.45 a. m. ; dispatched at
IS6s. The living is a rectory, average tithe rent-charge 5· 15 p.m. The nearest money order & telegraph office is
£273, gross yearly value [300, including 6o acres of glebe at Kenninghall
and residence, in the gift of and held since I878 by the Rev. A School Board of 5 members was formed December 20,
Arthur Braithwaite, of St. Bees. Francis Blomcficld, the r872; Isaac Vertigen, New Buckenham, clerk t<>theboard
distinguished antiquary and author of the well-known & attendance officer
"History of Norfolk," first printed and published in 1739-95 Board School, for so children; average attendance, 33;
and afterwards reprinted by Mr. William .Millert of London, (vacant), mistress
Braithwaite_Rev. .Arthur, Rectory Fairweather Charles, blacksmith Levis William, farmer
COMMERCIAL. Finbow John C. farmer, Wood farm Reynolds George, farm bailiff to the
Bean John, farmer Garrood Fuller, farmer Duke of Norfolk K.G
Brasnett Walter Thomas, farmer, Garrood Warren, farmer Robins on Caleb, farmer & beer retailer
Fersfield hall Hardy Roberf, farmer Spurling Robert, farmer

Bullock Charles, shopkeeper Hoskins Charles, farmer Witham Richard, farmer
Ea ton George l<'rancis, farmer Hoskins Charles, jun, farmer
FIELD DALLING is a parish and scattered village, 5' conry and diocese of Norwich. The church of St. Andrewis
miles west from Holt station and 4 north-north-east from I an ancient building of flint with stone dressings in the Early
Thursford station, Qoth on the Eastern and Midlands rail- [ English style, consisting of chancel, clerestoried nave, north
way, 4 south from Blakeney and 6 east from Walsingham, , aisle, south porch and an embattled western tower, rontain<
in theN orthern division of the county, North Greenhoe hun- i ing 5 bells: the interior is seated with open oak benches. some
1
dred and petty sessional division, Walsingham union and of which are massive and ancient: the stained east window
county court

district, rural deanery of IIolt and archdea- is a memorial t() the Rev. William Upjohn, vicar from 18n,.
DIRECTORY.] NORFOLK. PL~CHAM. 395
d. 1855, and there are several others~ there is a crypt under Bales, of Halt and Ed win Walker are the chief landowners.
the tower, but the entrance to it is now walled up : the The soil isloo.m ; subsoil, chalk and brick earth. The crops
church affords 240 sittings, 16o being free. The register are chiefly wheat, barley and turnips. The area is r,6xg
dates from the year 1538. The living ill 11. discharged acres; rateable value, [2,164; the population in 18g:t was
vicarage, average tithe rent-charge £-120, net yearly value 346.
f,13o, including 39 acres of glebe (26 of which are in thi~ Parish Clerk, Samuel Hurrell.
parish and 12 in Bale), with residence &tanding in grounds PosT OFFICE.-Charles Leeder, sub-postmaster. Letters
of 3 acres, in the gift of Edwin Walker esq. of Huddersfield, from Dereham arrive at 9 _30 a.m. & are dispawhed at
and held since 1859 by the Rev. Henry Spencer, of St. Bees: _50 p.m. Blakeney is the nearest money order &; tele-
3 h ffi
the rectorial tithes, c"Ommuted at £3og, are owned by the 0
Misses Rippingall. There is a Free Methodist chapel and a grap ce
Primitive Methodist chapel, built in r8 7 r. Charities of an A School Board was formed compulsorily June 22, r875, for
average yearly value of £35 are distributed at Christmas in the united district of Field Dalling & Saxlingham; Samuel
money to the deserving poor. John Henry Pearson esq. Fox, Binbam, clerk & attendance officer
who is lord of the manor, Edward Bowyer Sparke esq. M.A., .Hoard School (mixed), built in 1879, for us children; aver-
n.L., J.P. of Gunthorpe Hall, George Dixon esq. Dr. John age attendance, 70; Herbert Hacker, master
Pearson John Henry, Manor house Hodge Elizabeth (Mrs.), dress maker Page James, hawker
Savory Henry Nicholas Hodge William, shoe maker Page John, Jolly Farmers P.H. & pork
Spencer Rev. Henry [vicar], Vicarage Howell William, farmer butcher
COMMERCIAL. Leeder Charles, grocer, draper, out- Savory Henry Nieholas, farmer
Clarke Edith (Miss), dress maker fitter, boot & general dlr. Post office Stanford Albert, baker
Clarke James,,thrashing machine owner Massingham Edward, blacksmith Stonex John & Wm. Thos.wheelwrights
Clarke William, jun. thrashing machine Massingham George, farm bailiff to the Stonex William Thos. grocer & draper
owner exors. of J. R. Massingham Walker Robert, farm bailiff to Edwin
Clarke William, sen. farmer Massingham Richard, Plough P.H Walker esq
Coe Susanna (Mrs.), farmer May Rhoda (Mrs.), farmer Walker William, farmer & landowner
Cooke Emma (Miss), dress maker Pearson John Henry, farmer & land- Wright Edward, farmer & cattle dealer
Copeman W1lliam, farmer owner, Manor house
FILBY is a parish 2 miles south-west from Ormesby Presbyterian chapel. The fuel allotment of 10 acres pro-
station on the Eastem and Midlands railway, about 6 miles duces £27 yearly. The parish is famous for its excellent
north-west from Yarmouth and i7 north-east from Norwich, raspberries, many hundred pounds worth of which are sent
in the Eastern division of the county, incorporated hundreds, to London and other towns during the season. Filby was
}>etty sessional division and incorporation of East and West given by William the Conqueror to Rabell, the .engineer
Flegg, county court district of Great Yarmouth, rural officer who had charge of the balistre and other military
deanery of Flegg and archdeaconry and diocese of Norwich. engines: the manor was afterwards held by a family of i~
The name, like many of those in the Flegg district ending in own name. Filby House, a mansion of white brick, is the
.. by," is of Scandinavian origin. The church of All Saints, seat of Charles Belgrave Lucas esq. J.P. lord of the manor
situated on a height overlooking the lake, is a building of and chief landowner. The soil is mixed; subsoil, clay. The
stone in mixed styles, consisting of chancel, nave, aisles, chief crops are wheat, barley and oats. The area is 1,425
north porch and a lofty embattled tower of fine proportions acres, of which about roo are plantations and 160 are
containing 5 bells, rehung in 1886: there are seven stained occupied by a lake, forming a portion of the system of broads
windows, one of which, erected in 1883, together with the in the neighbourhood; rateable value, £2,903; the popula-
lectern, form a memorial to Mrs. Lucas, wife of the Rev. tion in 1891 was 581.
Charles Lucas M.A. rector r848-8g, to whose memory a Sexton, John Green.
stained window was also erected in 18go; there are various PosT & M. 0. 0., S. B. & Annuity & Insurance Office.-.-
monuments to the Lncas family, one of which, executed by Benjamin English, sub-postmaster. Letters arrive from
Herrman, of Dresden, to Charles Lucas esq. who died in Yarmouth at 5·45 a. m. & 3 p.m. & are dispatched at 12.50
1831, is a fine piece of sculpture; there are others to Gibson & 6.30 p.m. The nearest telegraph office is at Ormesby
Lucas esq. d. 15 Aug. 1790, and to Mary Ann Lucas, his St. 2\Iargaret
wife, d. 12 Dec. 1774 : the fine panelled oak screen is in part WALL LETTER Box, near King's Head inn, cleared at 6 p.m. ~
ancient, but the upper portion was added by the late rector no sunday collection
in 1886: the church was restored in 1873 and affords 300 A School Board of 5 members was formed compplsorily
sittiugs. The register dates from the year 1599. The living February 25, 1875, with Mauthy contributory with :i
is a rectory, tithe rent-charge [597, average £454, net members; Rev. H. H. Lucas M.A. clerk to the board;
yearly value £4oo, with r7i acres of glebe, with residence, \Villiam English, Filby, attendance officer
in the gift of Charles B. Lucas esq. and held since 1889 by Board School, built in 1838, at a cost of £soo & enlarged
the Rev. Herbert Hamilton Lucas M. A. of Trinity College, about r?.77 & infants' room added in 1882; it will hold
Cambridge. There is a Primitive Methodist chapel, erected 127 children ; average attendance, go ; George Willia.UJ
in 1886, and a Unitarian chapel, built and endowed by Payne, master; Miss Minnie Green, infants' mistress
Henry Daliel, in the beginning of the r8th century 1 as ~ GARRIERS TO YARMOU'rH.~Adam Howes & Isaac Watson, ~1;
Cox Edward English Benjamin, shopkpr. Post office Neave John,Fox & Hounds P.H. & fruit
Lncas Charles Belgrave J.P. Filby house English William, farmer grower & merchant
Lucas Rev. Herbert Hamilton M.A. English William, market gardener Palmer Edmund, market gardener
[rector], Rectory English Zachius (:\frs. ), market gardnr Smith Daniel,farmer, Craft farm ; & at
Pell Henry W Fuller Esther (Mrs.), butcher · Manor & White Gate farms, Runbart\
COMMERCIAL. Gaze Marker, blacksmith & wheelwright Trett Ed ward Elijah, farmer & ~sist..-
Allard John, market gardener Giles Frederick, boot maker ant overseer, Grange farm
Allard William, market gardener Goodwin George, market gardener Walpole R.obert, boot maker
Benns Stephen, farm steward to Henry Gorble George, market gardener Walpole Samuel, market gardener &
Sidney-Hammet Lacon esq Gorble Luke, market gardener fruit grower & proprietor of Filby
Ennn William English, beer retailer, Green George, market gardener Villa tea gardens ; good fishing &
King's Head inn Harris John, saddler & harnP.ss maker boating. See advertigement
Chapman William, butcher & farmer Howes Adam, shoe maker & carrier Ward Edward, market gardener
Culling John, market gardener . Hub bard Wm. market gardnr. & carrier Watson Isaac, fisb. curer
Culling Robert, market gardener Hunt William B. blacksmith Wright Adam, market gardener
Culling Robert, jun. market gardener Hunt William James, wheelwright Wright Henry, market gardener
Dady Amelia (.Mrs.), market gardener Kerrison Robert, market gardener Wymer Robert, farm bailiff to C. 1f,
Dixon Alec, farmer . Lingwood James, market gardener Lucas esq
Edwards George, market gardener Nockolds Louisa (Mrs.), market gardnr
FINCHAM is a parish and village on the road from and a lofty embattled western tower, containing a. clock and
Downham to Swaffham, 5 miles north-east from Downham 6 bells; the ancient Norman font has a basin 2 feet 7 incheS
station, Ely and Lynn section of the Great Eastern railway, i.'quare, and is -ornamented with sculptures represent~
in the South Western division of the county, Clackclose "The Fall of Man," "The Offerings of the Magi," .£•The
hundred and petty sessional division, Downham union and Birth and Baptism of Onr Saviour,'~ and figures of John the
county court district, rural deanery of Fincham, archdeacoury J3aptist• jlnd a bishop, but some of these are much deface!!~
of Norfolk and diocese of Norwich, The ancient church of the chancel, rostored in r87o by the late Miss Hebgin, has a
St. Michael, formerly existing here, WitS taken down in 1745. hagioscope and a memorial window, erected in !1.886 by the
The church of St. Martin is a large building of flint and parishioners, to the late Rev. William lllyth M.!A. fo:t 4d
stone, in the Perpendicular style, witb traces of an eaYlier years rectal" of this parish 1 there are several ancient floo"l
structure, and consists of chancel, nave, aisles, ~outh porch 11tonos to ~be Fiuchams, but the figures on these are almost
~96 YINCHAM. NOHfOLK. (KELLY'8

obli~rated. Sir Nicholas Fincham, who built the vestry, sett through J<'incham and Barton· Bendish, and thooce into
was interred here in 1503: the church was restored and the river Wissey at Stoke Ferry. The people or Fincham
extensively repaired during the incumbency of tho Rev. were largely involved in Ket's rebellion, in >549, and did
William Blyth li.A. ( 1846-86 ), when severaL stained windows ' much to give importance to the movement. Thomas Leigh
were erected: there are 400 sittings: the churchyard was Hare esq. M.P. is lord of the manor of Fincham Hall and other
enlarged in I864, by a gift of land from Mr. Hcbgin, part manors in this parish, and the trustees of Mr. Calthrop are
impropriatDr of the tithes. The register dates from the year lords of Fairswell·in-Fincham. Tbe principal landowners are
1541. The liYing is a rectory, averag~ tithe rent-charge Thomas Leigh Hare esq. M.P. John Boughen Aylmsr esq.
£520, net yearly value £528, with 30 acres of glebe and The Hall, Miss Aylmer, the trustees of the late Mills Hebgin,
residence, in the alternate gift of the Lord Chancellor and John Brigham Barsham esq. and the trustees of the late T.
the representatives of the Rev. W)lliam Hlyth ~LA. late rector, Cossar M. D. of Corstorphine, N.B. The sml is chalk and rich
and held since r886 by the Rev. Charles By. Crosse M.A., alluvial; subsoil, clay. The chief crops are wheat, barley
LL. M. of Caius College, Cambridge. The rectory 'house was &c. The area is 2,968 acres : rateable value, £4, r85 ; the
built in I624. There are Wcslcyan Methodrst and Primitive population in 1891 was 695 ..
.Methodist chapels here. About 54 acres of land, allotted to P..trish Clerk, Isaac Kendall.
t~e p_oor, produc~ ~n ~~era_ge rental of £40 yearly, which is PosT & ~. 0. 0., s. B. & Insurance & Annuity Oflice.-
distributed year]) m co~ls_, the poor have also a yearly rent- RobertJ Henry Laws, postmaster. Letters received from
charge of gs. 4d. ~eft, 1t IS suppos~d, by the Rev. Thomas Downham at 7 _45 a. m. & 2. 30 p.m. ; dispatched at 3 & 6
B?dham, and the mterest of £23 g_1ven by unknown donors. p.m.; on sundays at 10. 20 a.m. The nearest telegraph
Fmcham Hall, bmlt a.bou~ the t1me of Edward IV. was -office is at Downham 1

formerly the seat of the Fmchams, and though frequently . , . . .


repaired and modernized, some portions still retain their Natmnal Elementa!y School (G;hurch) (mixed), erer.ted m
ancient character: it is at present in the occupation of John 1848 & enlarged m 1875, for 156 children; average attend-
Roughen Aylmer esq. The village is nearly equally bisected a,nce, I 17 : the school has an endowmen~ or £4 ,r7s: yearly;
by a deep channel called "the Lode Dyke,'; which is the George Day, master; Mrs. Jane Day, mfants mistress
straightened course of a natural stream flowing from Strad- CARRIER.-James Waldon, to Lynn, tues. & sat
Able John · Bly Thomas, saddler & harness maker Laws Henry, tailor
.Able Mrs Bowers William, Swan P.H Parker William, butcher
.AnthonyJohn, Ivy house BywaterJames, baker Riches Edward, tailor
".Aylmer George Winearls, Manor house Coleman Henry, bricklayer Rixx William, plumber & glazier
Aylmer John Boughen, Fincham hall Cox Joseph, Crown P.H Saunders Richard, bricklayer
.Aylmer Miss . Cl,'oss George Frederick M.B. &. B.s. Shelton James, wheelwright
'Barsham John Rrigham Durham, surgeon, & medical officer Southgate Edmund, plumber & glazier
Cross George Frederick M.B. & :s.s. & public vaccinator, Fincham dis- Spencer Theodore, grocer, draper &
Durham, Holly house trict, Downham union, Holly house collector of poor's rate
Crosse Rev. Chas. Hy. M.A.,M.L. Rectory
Docking Lawrence, hurdle maker Sporne Thomas William,miller (stea!I))
Lubbock Richard Girdlestone, St. Edwards Alfred, farmer, Shrublaud ho & baker
Mary's lodge Edwards Frederick, farmer Staines John, coach builder, wheelwrt.
Parker Henry Fendick Robert, shoe maker builder, contractor & timber merchnt
Fendick Tee, grocer Stanford John, farmer
COMMERCIAL. Gregory Charles, boot maker Stout James, grocer
.Able Elijah, butcher Howard Prince, saddler & harness ma Toler George, oilman
Able William, butcher Hudson John (exors. of), grocers Waldon James, carrier
Aylmer George Winearls, farmer, Jackson Robert, farmer Whiskerd Robert Fisher, beer retailer
Manor house Kemp Robert. veterinary surgedn ·wood Charles, baker
Aylmer John Roughen, farmer,The Hall Kcndall Isaac,blcksmth.&shoeing smith Younge Frederick, shopkeeper
Rellham William, boot maker Laws Henry, beer retailer

FISHLEY is a parish, bounded on the east by the river the carved oak lectern is a memorial: the church affords
Rure, and united in 1831 with U pton for parochial purposes, 102 sittings. The records (not registers) date from the year
1~ miles from Acle station on the Norwich and Yarmouth I.S.S8, and there is a complete list of the rectors from 1310,
section of the Great Eastern railway, I2 miles east from The living is a rectory, commuted tithe rent-charge £r6s,
Norwich and 9 west from Yarmouth, in the Eastern divi~ion average yearly value £126, with 4~ acres of glcbr. and
of the county, Rlotield and Walsham petty sessional division, residence, in the gift of H. W. Edwanls esq. and held since
Walsham hundred, Bloficld union, county court district of r88o by the Rev. David Thomas Barry B.A. Trinity College,
Norwich, rural deanery of Blofield and archdeaconry and Dublin. The rectory house was built by the late Miss
diocese of Norwich. The church of St. Mary is an ancient Edwards at a cost of £I,6oo. H. W. Edwards esq. of
structure of flint, in the Norman and Early English styles, Hardingham Hall is the sole landowner. The soil is good
consisting of chancel, nave, 8outh porch and a round em- mixed; subsoil, gravel and clay. The chief crops are wheat,
battled western tower, containing one bell: the Norman barley and oats. The area is 476 acres; rateable value given
font has been finely reproduced: the tower is supposed to be with tJpton; the population in 1891 was r8.
in part the remains of an earlier edifice, erected before the Letters received from Norwich, via Acle. Acle is the nearest
Conquest: the church was thoroughly restored in r86x at money order & telegraph office
the cost of the late Miss Edwards, of Hardingham, to whom The children of this place attend Upton school
Preston Lieut.-Col. Henry E. R.A I Read Henry, farmer, Fishley hall
FLITCHAM (anciently FELIXHAM)-with-APPLE- I barrow called "Flitcham Bury," on which the hundred
TON is a village and parish, I mile north from Hillington court used formerly to be held. The Earl of Leicester K.G.,
station on the Eastern and Midlands railway, 9 miles north- L.L. is lord of the manor and principal landowner. A part
east from Lynn and xo8 from London, in the North Western of Hillington park is in this parish. The soil Is Hght; the
division of the county, Freebridge Lynn hundred, petty ses- subsoil, chalky. The land is farmed on the four-courstt
sional division and union, Lynn county court district, rural system. The area is 4,130 acres ; rateable value, £3,568;
deanery of Lynn Freebridge and archdeaconry and diocese in 1891 the population (including Appleton) was 483.
of Norwich. The church of the Virgin Mary, originally built Parish Clerk, William Linford.
by Bishop Felix, the coadjutor of St. Augustine, is a struc- PosT OFFICE.-Miss Isabel Creamer, receiver. Lette~
ture of rubble in the Norman and Perpendicular styles, con- through Lynn arrive at 5 a. m. ; dispatched at 6. 40 p.m.
sisting of nave, south aisle, south porch and an embattled Hillington is the nearest money order & telegraph office.
tower at the east end containing one bell: the south tran;;ept Letters for Appleton through Lynn, via West Newton.
is in ruins, and the chancel has been taken down to the Postal orders are issued here, but not paid
foundations: the church was restored in r88r at the cost of National School, built in 1 374, for 93 children; averag~t
the Earl of Leicester K.G. who is patron and lay rector: attendance, So; Robert Craven, master; Miss Mabel
there are 200 sittings. The register dates from the year Craven, mistress
1771. The living is a vicarage, tithe rent-charge £64, net
yearly value £1oo, including 5 acres of glebe, with residence, CARRIER TO LYNN.-George Linford, tues. & sat
in the gift of the Earl of Leicester K.G. and held since 1872 .APPLETON is a decayed parish, 8 miles north-east-by-east
by the Rev. Bryan O'Malley M.A. of Trinity College, Dublin; from Lynn, joined for civil purposes to Flitcham, but
the Rev. David Jones is curate in charge. There is a ecclesiastically annexed to the rectory of Babingley. The
Primitive Methodist chapel here, erected in x885. Here are church is in ruins. The living is a vicarage, yearly value
remains of a priory founded by Sir Robert Aiguillon in the £8 only, in the gift of H.R.H. the Prince of Wales, and held
reign of Henry IlL (r25o) for canons of the Augustine order, j by the Rev. Frederick Alfred John Hervey M.A. hon. ea?on
&nd dedicated to St. Mary at the Well. In the parish is a 1
of Norwich, who is also rector of and resides at Sandnn~r·
DIRECTORY.] NORFOLK. FOB~ Cl l'T ST. PE'rEH. 897
barn. H.R.H. the Prince of Wales and the Earl of Leiceoter [ is about 700 acres; the rateable value and population are
x.G. are the chief landowners. The works for supplying the ! included with Flitcham.
Sandringham estate with water are in this parish. The area I The children of this parish attend the school at Flitcham
.clarke Col. Stanley, Appleton Betts William, farmer, Harpley dams Curson Samuel, shopkeeper
()'Malley Rev. Bryan M.A. Vicarage Billing John, wheelwright & carpenter Linford George, carrier & coal dealer
&well W!lliam, Flitcham abbey Brereton George, farmer, Flitcham hall Linford William, parish clerk
COMMERCIAL. Bretten James, grocer & draper Patrick James, butcher
Barrett William, estate carpenter Bridges Benjamin Tindle, Bell inn Sewell William, farmer,Flitcham abbey
Betts Matthew, boot & shoe maker Creamer Henry, Xew inn
FLORDON is a scattered village and parish with a station gift of Sir Kenneth Hagar Kemp hart. and held since 1886
()n the Ipswich and N orwrch section of the Great Eastern by the Rev. Isaac F.aston. Clahburn's charity of £5 4s.
zailway, 7~ miles south-by-west from Norwich, 106 from yearly is for bread and fuel. Raintlwrpe Hall, an ancient
London and 6 south-east from \Vymondham, in the Southern mansion in this parish, the residence of Major Sir Charles
.division of the county, Swainsthorpe petty sessional division, Harvey hart. J.P. gives its name to a manor, which extends
Humbleyard hundred, Hen stead union, Norwich county into the parishes of Tasburgh and Newton Flotman. Sir
court district, rural deanery of Humbleyard, archdeaconry Kenneth Hagar Kemp hart. B. A., J. P. of Mergate Hall, near
Clf Norfolk and diocese of Norwich. The Taas stream flows Norwich, is lord of the manor of Flordon and chief land-
to the east of the parish and forms the boundary on that owner. The soil is sand and flint; subsoil, various. The
~ide. The church of St. Michael and All Angels is an ancient area is 929 acres; rateable value, £1,720; the population
~difice of flint and brick, consisting of chancel, nave, south in 1891 was 16g.
porch and a small brick turret containing one bell, added in Sexton, John Martin.
1873 by the Rev. Gascoigne Frederick Whitaker M.A. a PosT OFFICE.-William Arthur Watson, receiver. Letters
former rector: the floor of the chancel was relaid by the through Long Stratton reeeived at 7·45 a.m. ; dispatched
Rev. James Liggins Cotton M. .A. the late rector: the church at 5.30 p. m. Long Stratton is the nearest money order
was partially restored in 1873, and has 150 sittings. The & telegraph office, but messages are received at the rail-
register dates from the year 1558. The living is a rectory, way station
tithe rent-charge £240, average £228, gross yearly value Railway Station, John William Stone, station master
{,278, net £238, with residence and 26 acres of glebe, in the The children of this place attend the school at Hapton
Brightwell Mrs. Flordon Mill house
Easton Rev. Isaac [rector], Rectory
I Bullen Gcorge, Black Horse P.H
Greenwood Mary(Mrs. ),Railway tavern
Potter William, farmer, White House
farm
H!\rvey Major Sir Charles bart. J.P. Marshall Solomon, farmer & coal dealer Watson William Arthur, farmer &
Rainthorpe hall Moffat Robert, stud groom to Sir blacksmith, Post ollice
Bird John, farmer Humphrey F. de Trafford bart. Williams William, coal dealer
Blomfield Louisa (Mrs.), miller (water) Flordon hall
~ORDHAM is a parish and small village on the navig- Crookshank M.A. of Trinity ColleQ"e, Dublin. Edward Roger
able river Wissey, with a station on the Downham and Stoke Murray Pratt esq. B. A., J. r. of Ryston Hall, is lord of the
Ferry branch of the Great Eastern railway, 3 miles south manor and principal landowner. The soil is of a varied
from Downham, in the South Western division of the county, description, one part being a strong mixed soil and the
Clackclose hundred and petty sessional division, Downham other light land. The chief crops are grass, wheat, barley
Ullion and county court district, rural deanery of Fincham, and beans. The area is 2,204 acres, half of which is fen ;
arcbdeaconry of Norfolk and diocese of Norwich. The church rateable value, £2,470; the population in 1891 was 210.
of St. Mary is a small building of stone in the Decorated Parish Clerk, Henry Robinson.
style, consisting of chancel and nave and a belfry containing
~ne bell: the chancel appears to have been built" in the 13 th Letters from Downham, which is the nearest money order
century: there are 120 sittings. The register dates from & telegraph office
the year 1576. The living is a vicarage, united wrth Rox- Here is the Ryston Estate District School, erected in 1856
barn to that of Ryston in 1877, average tithe rent-charge for the united parishes of Fordham, Ryston & Roxham ;
£ I6r, joint net yearly value £232, including 32 acres of for so children; average attendance, 28 ; Miss Sarah
.glebe, with residencfl, in the gift of the Dean and Chapter of Richmond, mistress
Norwich, and held since 18go by the Rev. Gerrard Alexander Railway Station (called Ryston), Jn. Halliday, station mast
Crookshank Rev. Gerrard Alexander Feltham George, farmer, Snore hall Russell Thomas Weasenham, farmer,
M.A. Vicarage ~artin Joseph, farmer Church farm
llrundle Arthur, farmer Matthews Abraham, farmer
FORNCETT ST. MARY is a village and parish on the the gift of the Earl of Effingham, who must present a fellow
river Taas, near the Forncett station on the Ipswich and of St. John's College, Cambridge, and held since 1853 by the
Norwich section of the Great Eastern railway, 6~ miles Rev. John Edward Cooper M.A. late fellow of that college.
5outh-east from Wymondbam and ro south-west from Nor- There is a Primitive Methodist chapel erected in 1884.
wich, in the Southern division of the county, Depwade hun- William Henry Cole esq. of West Woodhay House, Newbury,
dred, petty sessional division and union, Wymondham county Rerks, is lord of the manor. The principal landowners are
court district, rural deanery of Depwade, archdcaconry of Major Sir Charles Harvey hart. J.P. of Rainthorpe Hall; the
Norfolk and diocese of Norwich. The church of St. -:\fayr is Girls' Hospital at Norwich, and Sir Francis George Manning-
a small building of flint with stone dressings, in the Perpen- ham Boileau hart. B.A., n. L., J.P. of Ketteringham Park. The
dicular style, consisting of chancel, nave, north porch and soil IS various ; subsoil, various. The chief crops are wheat,
.an embattled western tower containing 3 bells: the chancel barley, oats and beans. The area is 720 acres; rateable
retains a piscina, and there is an ancient font: the church value, £985; the population in 1891 was 279.
was thoroughly restored, new roofed and seated with chairs, Parish Clerk, Dennis Moore.
and the chancel rebuilt, in 1869, at a cost of [x,10o; to-
wards which the rector gave £8oo ; and a new organ and PosT OFFICE.-Thomas Falgate, receiver. Letters received
<lrgan chamber were added in r884 at a cost of £3oo, de- through Long Stratton at 7· 15 a. m. & dispatched at 6 p.m.
{rayed by the rector and his friends: there are 120 sittings. The nearest money order & telegraph office is at Long
The register dates from the year 1662. The parish was Stratton
<>riginallyunited to that of Forncett St. Peter, was separated National School (mixed), built in 1815, for 100 children;
from it in 1845, tithe rent.-charge £515, average £392, net average attendance, 55; with a smaU endowment; Miss
yearly value £'q6, with 8 acres of glebe and residence, in Jessie M. S. Leach, mistress
Cooper Rev. John Ed ward M.A. [rector J, Falgate Thomas, farmer, Post office Mickleburgh J onas, blacksmith
Rectory Falgate Thomas, jun. farmer Moore Dennis, farmer & parish clerk
COMMERCIAL. George George, farmer Moore William Henry, farmer
Alborough Jeremiah, farmer Harvey George, Chequers P.H Newman Robert, farmer
Blanchtlower George, farmer How William, farmer Reynolds George Henry, farmer
Brookes David, farmer Jeffrie.s Robert, farmer Self John, farmer
Coleman William, shoe maker Ludkin John, farmer & landowner Spicer Julia&Emma(Misses),dressmkrs
Falgate Geo.farmer & assistant overseer Ludkin William, farmer I ;:,picer Henry, farmer
FORNCETT ST. PETER is a village and large parish, from Wymondham, in the Southern division of the county,
with a station, one mile north-east from the village, on the Depwade hundred, petty sessional division and union, county
Ipswich and Norwich section of the Great Eastern railway, court district of Wymondham, rural deanery of Depwade,
103 miles from London, 8 north from Diss and 7 south-east archdeaconry of Norfolk and diocese of Norwich. The Taas
C. N. & S. 26
398 FORNCETT ST. PETER. NORFOLK. [ KELLY's

stream flows through the parish. The church of St. Peter (now £1 7s. 6d. yearly) to be given to poor widows and
is a small edifice of flint with stone dressings, in the Per- single women over 6o years of age. This is the chief manor
pendicular style, consisting of chancel, nave, aisles, north of the honor, liberty, or jurisdiction of the Duke of Norfolk
porch and a fine round embattled western tower containing K.G. in this county, which onginally included 4 hundreds
5 bells: in the church is a curious alabaster tomb of the ISth and 127 parishes ; but several of the sub-manors have been
century, supposed to be that of the founder of the church, and sold. Alfred Clayton Cole esq. of 64 Portland place, London
there are brasses to the Baxter family dated 1484 and 1535 : w, is lord of the manor. The principal landowners are Sir
the chancel and north aisle retain piscin<E, and there is a holy Francis George Manning ham Boileau bart. B. A., D.L .. ~.P.
water stoup in the porch; the carved poppy heads at the ends of Ketteringham Park ; Major Sir Charles Harvey bart. J,P.
of the oak benches are rich specimens of 15th century wood of Rainthorpe Hall, the Very Rev. Dr. Jex-Blake, dean of
carving: there is a memorial window to the Rev. Joseph Wells, John Furness esq. Thomas Pal mer esq. and Miss
Bell, formerly curate of this parish, d. 1854, besides several Braclshaw. The soil is clay and good mixed soil; subsoil,
others: in the chancel is a memorial brass to Charles William clay and gravel. The chief crops are wheat, barley, beans
Wilson, youngest son of the rector, d. 26 May, 1882, and a and peas. The area is r,831 acres ; rateable value, £2,778;
handsome brass corona has been presented as a memorial in 1891 the population was 6oo.
by his late school friends and companions: the organ was Parish Clerk, John Peake.
erected in 1873 at a cost of£ ros : the church was completely PosT & M. 0. 0., s. B. & Annuity & Insurance Office.-John
restored and reseated in I857 and has 200 sittings. The Moore, sub-postmaster. Letters through Long Stratl.on
register dates from the year I56I. The living is a rectory, arrive at 7 a.m.; dispatched _1. 30 p.m. Long Stratton is
tithe rent-charge £587, average £446, net yearly value the nearest telegraph otlice. WALL LETTER BoxES cleared
£325, including 47 acres of glebe and residence, in the gift at 6 . 10 p.m.; & one at the railway station, cleared at
of the Earl of Eftingham, and held since I847 by the Rev. 6 _30 p.m. week days only
William Greive Wilson M. A. late fellow of St. John's College,
Cambridge, J. P. for Norfolk and rural dean of Depwade. ScHOOLS:-
The Baptist chapel at Forncett End, erected in I 754 , and ~ ational, erected in 1848 ; average attendance, 55; the
reRtored in I8 7 5, will seat ISO persons, and has a burial school is endowed with £8 IOS. yearly; Miss Annie Poll,
ground attached: the Primitive Methodist chapel, also at mistress
J<'orncatt End, is a large structure of red brick built by Mr. Infants', Forncett End, established in 1848; average at-
Thomas Palmer in 1865 and afterwards sold; it has about tendance, r8 ; Mrs. M. Caston, mistress
300 sittings. A repository sale for cattle is held every Tues- Police Station, John Yaxley, constable
day, near the station, by Mr. Robert Borrett, of Pulham Railway Station, Edward Phipps Friend, station master
Market. Gen. Sir Robert John Harvey K.C.B., K.T.s. by CARIUER TO NmtWICH.-Mrs. Eliza Williams, mon. wed. &
deed dated January 1st, 1853, gave £so, the interest thereof sat. returning same days
Furness John, Forncett grove Fox David, grocer & draper Nicholson James Wigg, farmer
Palmer Thomas Furness John,solicitor,derk to Depwade Palmer Thoruas, landowner & farmer
Wilson Rev. William Greive M.A., J.P. union & commissioner of taxes, supt. Peake John, parish clerk
[rector & rural dean], Rectory registrar, Depwade union, perpt.com- Quantrett George, farmer
COMMERCIAL. missioner, commissioner for oaths & Reynolds Edward, farmer
Alborough George,farmer & assist.over- agent for South Norfolk Conservative Rush Richard, fishmonger
seer & collector of income & land taxes Assoc. Forncett gro. ; & at Norwich Self Charles, farmer, Sandpit farm
Austin Samuel, blacksmith Hales Frederick, blacksmith · Smith William, shopkeeper, farmer,
Bilham John, farmer Hales James, farmer surveyor of highways & registrar of
Bloom Susan (Miss), farmer Humphreys George, farmer & bricklayr births & deaths, Forncett sub-district
Bowman Wm. Jas. farmer, Home farm Keeler Rt. Safety Valve inn, & coal mer & of marriages, Depwade union
Browes James, Trowel & Hammer F.H Knights Judith (Mrs.), miller (wind) & SpmttJas.miller(wind),frmr.&lndownr
Brown James, farmer & butter dealer beer retailer Tann Miles, grocer & draper
Cannell Eliza (Mrs.), farmer Lloyd Henry, shoe maker Thurston William, farmer & landowner
Chapman Thomas, farmer Love Thomas, farmer Took John, shoe maker
Charlish Wm. butcher ; & atLongStrattn Ludkins Hy. Jn. miller (steam), corn & Tooley Mary (Mrs.), farmr.& landowner
Clarke Arthur, carpenter coal tner. seed grower & manure agnt Tyler Frederick, farmer
Coleman Elijah, farmer Moore John, baker, & deputy registrar Walpolc James, farmer
Cooper William, farmer, Butts green of births & deaths, Forncett sub- Ward John, farmer
Day Robert, saddler (tucs. & fri) district & of marriages, Depwade Waters John, farmer
Dunthorne Henry, farmer 1
union, Post office Watling William, fanner
English Mary (Mrs.),shopkpr.& beer ~t, Moore William Henry, farmer 1 Williams Eliza (Mrs.), carrier & farmer

FOULDEN (or FouLDON) is a parish and scattered amount to about £16 ss. a year for clothing, and every fifth
village, separated from Northwold by the river Wissey, 5~ year the poor have in addition about £25, derived from
miles east from Stoke Ferry terminal station on a branch of land at Old Buckenham, purchased with £6o, left by
the Great Eastern railway, 8 south-west from Swaffham and Edmund Atmere, in 1579, for distribution in kersey, duffel
8 north from Brandon, in the South Western division of the and flannel, to the poor of this parish and the parishes of
county, South Greenhoe hundred and petty sessional Brandon, Feltwell, Northwold and Weeting. At the in-
division, Swaffham union and county court district, rural closure in 1781, 3o6A. 3R. 29P. were left open to supply
deanery of Cranwich, southern division, archdeaconry of pasturage and fuel allotments for the poor. William
Norfolk and diocese of Norwich. The church of All Saints, Amhurst Tyssen Amherst esq. D. L., J. P. of Didlington
which stands in the western part of the village, is a building Hall, is lord of the manor, who with Waiter Oldfield esq.
of flint and stone in the Early English style and consists of are the chief landowners. The soil is light and clay; sub-
chancel, nave, aisles, north and south porches and one side of soil, chalk. The chief crops are wheat, barley and oats.
the ruined tower, to which a bell is attached; a portion of the The area is 3,395 acres; rateable value, £2,609; the popu-
stone newel staircase which led to the belfry, now in great lation in 1891 was 415.
part overhung with ivy, still remains : there are 300 Parish Clerk, Charles Pointer.
sittings. The register dates from the year 1538. The living PosT OFFICE.-William Bird, receiver. Letters through
is a discharged vicarage, annexed to the rectory of Ox- Stoke Ferry S.O. arrive at 8 a.m. & 3 p.m. ; dispatched
borough, average tithe rent-charge £soo, joint net yearly at 9 a. m. & s.go p.m.; sundays at 9.30 a.m. Northwold
value £327, including 52 acres of glebe, in the gift of Caius is the nearest money order & telegraph office
College, Cambridge, and held since r885 by the Rev. William National School (mixed), built in 1847 & enlarged in 1871 1
Henry Brown M.A. formerly fellow of that college, who re- for roo children; average attendance, 8o; endowed with
sides at Oxborough; the Rev. Rupert Turner, of St. ,Bees, £5 ye1rly, left by Burnham Raymond in 1728, for the
has been curate in charge since 1888. There are Wesleyan free education qf 12 poor children; Joshua Z. B. Bootes,
Methodist and Primitive Methodist chapels. The charities master .
Oldfield Waiter, Foulden Old hall Dorman Wrlliam, White Hart P.H I Parnell John, shopkeeper ".
Scales Mrs. May villa Gathercole Thomas, beer retailer Pond Charles Frank, farmer
Turner Rev. Rupert [curate in charge] Harrison James, farmer PondMary(Miss),dressmei.&shopkeepr
COMMERCIAL. Harrison Jonathan, farmer Riches :Vlary Ann (Mrs.), Bell P.H
Bird William, butcher, Post office Harrison Thomas, farmer Simons Dusgate, farmer
Carter James, farmer Nelson Francis, farmer , Upton Charles Pond, wheelwright
Carter John, farmer Oldfield Waiter, landowner & farmer Whybro John, farm bailiff to P.
Dixon Robert, farmer Pal mer Hannah (Mrs.), butcher Richards esq
FOULSHAM is a parish with a station on the East Nor- I lands railway, I2 miles west from Aylsham and ng from
folk branch of the Gre::.t Eaf.tern railway, and another I~ 1 London, in the Northern division of the county, Eynsford
miles north-east from the village, on the Eastern and Mid- hundred and petty sessional division, Aylsham union and
DIRECTORY. J NORFOLK. FOXLEY. 399
county court district, rural deanery of Sparham and arch- commander, and is now occupied as a farmhouse by Mr.
deaconry and diocese of Norwich. The church of the Holy A. G. Gibbs. Lord Hastings is lord of the manor and chief
Innocents is a large and handsome structure of flint, in the landed proprietor; Robert John Woods Purdy esq. of
Decorated style, consisting of chancel with clerestory, nave, Aylsham, Charles M. Tatham esq. the Rev. Henry Evans-
aisles, transept, south porch and a fine Perpendicular em- Lombe R.A., J. P. of Bylaugh Park, Mr. John Vincent
battled western tower with pinnacles, containing a clock and Chamberlain, of Kempston, Mrs. Price and Mrs. Reeves are
2 bells : it was originally built about the year 1489 by one landowners. The soil is clay and sand ; subsoil, clay and
of the Lords Morley, but was partly rebuilt in 1770, after a gravel. The chief crops are wheat, roots, barley and hay.
fire which destroyed a number of houses and left the church The parish contains 3,226 statute acres; rateable value,
in a ruinous condition: in the chancel is a monument to Sir £5,371; the population in 1881 was 950.
Thomas Hunt knt. ob. r6r6, with his effigy in armour, and Parish Clerk, Samuel Gee.
figures of his three wives kneeling behind him : there is also PosT, M. 0. & T. 0., S. B. & Annuity & Insurance Office.
a memorial to the Rev. Thomas Astley LL.B. a former -Samuel Gee, receiver. Letters arrive from Dereham at
recwr, d. 1743: and a brass to a member of the Themel-
thorpe family, dated 1526: a new oak pulpit and a stone
7 a.m. & 5.30 p.m.; dispa~hed at 12.55 & 5·35 p.m. on
week days & ro a.m. on stmdays. Money order office
font were introduced in I 887, when also the Testoration of open from 9 a.m. to 6 p.m. Telegraph business trans-
the church was begun, at an estimated cost of £8oo, and acted from 8 a.m. to 8 p.m.; sunrlays, 8 toro a.m. :
the work is still progressing ; the restoration of the tower post office open from 7 a. m. to 8 p.m.; sun days, 8 toro a. m
being now ( r892) completed: there are 450 sittings. The Fire Brigade, John Roshier, superintendent
register dates from the year 1708. The living is a rectory,
average tithe rent-charge 1,"599, net yearly value [372, in- A School Board of 7 members was formed July 27, 1874
cluding 22 acres of glebe, with residence, in the gift of Lord Themelthorpe contributing 2 members ; Samuel Blade,
Hastings, and held since 1891 by the Rev. John Hendry clerk to the board ; officers, S. Blade, for Foulsham & G.
Anderson M.A. of King's College, Aberdeen. There are Bird, for Themelthorpe
Baptist and Primitive :\'lethodist chapels here. The charities Board School (mixed), erected in r876, for 171 children;
are of the yearly value of £59 17s. 4d. A fire brigade is average attendance, 151; William Edwin Leamy, master;
maintained here, consisting of a superintendent and 12 men. Mrs. Leamy, mistress
The market has been discontinued many years, but a cattle CARRIER TO NoRWICH.-Robert Palmer, to 'Duke's Palace,'
and pleasure fair is still held on the first Tuesday in May. wed. & sat
Foulsham Old Hall, formerly owned in 1551 by the RAILWAY S·rATIONS : -
Skippons, was the residence during the Commonwealth of Great Eastern, Robert Hoggar, master
Major-General Philip Skippon, a famous Parliamentary Eastern & Midlands, Arthur Ives, master

Anderson Rev. John Hendry M.A. [rec- Earl Charles, fishmonger No bleJames,gardener ,seedsman&florist
tor], The Rectory Eglington Thomas, whiting dealer Palmer Robert, beer retailer
Back Alfred Henry Emms Harry, farmer, Wade's farm Payne Henry, farmer
Bennett Rev. Julian Levett [curate of Empson J osiah, beer retailer Pegg John, farmer
Themelthorpe], High street FarmanSamuel, basket maker&tha tcher Raven JamesTheophilus,grocer&draper
Emms Henry George Fisher George, baker &c Riches Robert, farmer, High house
Graver John Foulsham & District Horticultural So- Riseborough Thomas, farmer
Hastings Mrs. Hill house ciety (Rev. J. H. Anderson, sec) Russell George, watch maker
Price Mrs Foulsham Mcu's Club, meet in Rectory SaintyArchibald,corn chandler,bakr.&c
Reyner Mrs schoolrooms (Rev. J. L. Bennett, sec) Sanders Charles, butcher
Vince Rev. Henry [Baptist] Gee John, baker Seaman Robert William, shoe maker
Wayman Clement Page Scott Gee Samuel, assist. overseer, Post office Siggens Ho well, White Horse P. H
Williams William Henry Gibbs Alfred Geo. farmer, The Old hall Skipper Richard, boot maker
COMMERCIAL. GoldsmithSml. miller( wind)&merchan t Smith John, blacksmith
Adams William, farmer,KeelingHall rd Grice J olm, florist & seeds man Spooner George, confectioner
Amiss William, brazier Hastin'is Florence (Mrs.), Home school Stroulger Henry, painter
Armour J ames, travelling draper (ladies'), Hill house Stroulger William, farmer
Austin Thos. Matt. farmer, Manor frm Hendry Philip, farmer & machine pro- Thrower Thomas, wheelwright
Balls Martha (Miss), farmr.Hcath farm prietor, Woodrow farm Turner John, tea dealer, grocer, draper
Barber Cornelius, shoe maker & baker Hurn Thomas, grocer & draper & tailor ; agent for Snelling's, & Hill,
Blade Samuel, grocer & draper Isbcll William, shopkeeper Evans & Co.'s british wines
Blyth Thomas Henry, builder & farmer Jacobs Elizabeth (Mrs.), laundress Wayrnan &Back, surgeons
Carter George William, Ship P.H Jeary Edgar, tailor Wayman Clement Page Scott, surgeon,
Chapman James, King's Arms P.H Lake Samuel, farmer & medical officer & public vaccinator,.
Chapman John, gunsmith Lambert Philip, shopkeeper 3rd district, Aylsham union
Chipperfield Marshall, machinist Leamon Edmond Robert, plumber Williamson William F. beer retailer
Cooper Benjamin, shoe maker Lea.mon Philip, saddler Woodhouse Herbert,vet.surg. & farmer
Cooper Sophia (Miss), ladies' school Long Jeremiah, brick & tile maker \Voodhouse Samuel J. builder & con-
Carry Charles, farmer Maddison Henry Gildon, chem1st tractor, timber merchant, income
Crowe John, hair dresser & seedsman Maidstone William, butcher tax collector & assistant overseer for
Dack Benjamin, grocer Massingham Sarah (Mrs.), butcher Bintry & Billing-ford
Dack John, Bull inn, & blacksmith Mesney Walt. Alex. farmer,Keeling hall Wright William, marine store dealer

FOXLEY is a village and parish 7 miles north-east from Lombe B. A. and held since 1840 by the Rev. Louis Augustus ·
East Dereham, 2 west from :Foulsham station on the East Norgate R.A. of Corpus Christi college, Cambridge, hon.
Norfolk branch and 3 east from North Elmham station on canon of Norwich -and surrogate, who is also vicar of
the Dereham and Wells section of the Great Eastern railway, Bylaugh. The Rev. Henry Evans-Lombe n A., J.P. is lord
in the Northern division of the county, Eynsford hundred of the manor and principal landowner; Robert John Woods
and petty sessional division, Mitford and Launditch union, Purdy esq. of Aylsham is also a landowner. The soil is
East Dereham county court district, rural deanery of mixed; subsoil, sand and gravel. The chief crops are
Spar ham and arch deaconry and diocese of Norwich. The wheat, roots, barley and hay. The area is 1,620 acres ;
church of St. Thomas is a building of fiint, with stone rateable value, £1,972; and the population in 1891 was 1B5.
drP~~sings, chiefly in the Perpendicular style and consisting Parish Clerk, William Scott.
of chancel, nave, south porch, and a fine embattled western
tower with pinnacles, containing 6 bells : the chancel is PosT OFFICE.-Lutber George Meal, receiver. Letters
Early English : there are 150 sittings. The register dates through East Dereham, arrive 8. 30 a m. ; dispatched 4· 55
from the year 1700. The living is a rectory, average tithe p.m. week days only. The nearest money order office is
rent-charge £312, net yearly value £280, including 20 acres at Bawdeswell & telegraph office is at Foulsham
of glebe, with residence, in the gift of the Rev. Henry Evans- The children of this parish attend the school at Bawdeswell
Burrows Daniel ' Meal Luther George, grocer & draper, Purdy Henry,Chequers P.H &carpenter
Xorgate Rev. Louis Augustus R.A. [rec- I Post office & farmer, & vaccination officer for
wr,hon.canon of Norwieh&surrogate] Purple Erlgar, carpenter Bawdeswell district, Mitford union
Chaplin Ziba, shoe maker Purple Robert, farmer Wright Henry, Hare & Hounds P.H.
Howell Henry, farmer Robinson John, farmer & machine propr thrashing machine proprietor & far-
Howell John, farmer Scott William, shoe maker mer & blacksmith
Lewell Edward Robert, farmer
C. N. & ~.
400 FRAMI~GHAM EARL. NORFOLK. [ KELI..Y's

FRAMINGHAI\I EARL is a village and parish, 5 acres produces £18 yearly. The Earl of Rosebery P.c. is
miles south-east from Norwich and 5~ north-east from lord of the manor. The prinr:ipal landowners are James
Swainsthorpe station on the Great Eastern railway, in the Christie esq. and Major William Robert Fitzgerald, of
Southern division of the county, Swainsthorpe petty Framingham Pigot Ball. Framingham Earl Hall, which
sessional division, Henstcad hundred and union, Norwich stands in well-wooded grounds, is the property of James
county court district, rural deanery of Brooke, Western Christie esq. and now occupied by George Nix Latham esq.
division, archdeaconry of Norfolk and diocese of Sorwich. The soil is sandy; subsoil, sand, gravel and clay. The
The church of St. Andrew is an ancient and curious struc- chief crops are wheat, oats, barley and turnips. The area
turc of flint and stone, in the Norman and Early English is 610 acres; hteablc value, [962; the population in 1891
styles, consisting of chancel, nave, north and south porches was 137.
and a round western tower containing one bell : there is a PosT OFFICE.-Miss Anna Chaplin, sub-postmistress.
piscina and a holy-water stoup, and several fine Norman Letters received from Norwich by mail cart at 4·35 a.m.;
arches with rich mouldings: the church has been repaired dispatched at 5-45 p.m. Trowse & Brooke are the
and reseated and has 90 sittings. The register dates from nearest money order offices ; Trowse is the nearest tela-
the year 1721. The living is a rectory with that of Bixley graph office. Postal orders are issued here, but not paid
annexed, average tithe rent-charge £32, joint net yearly Board School, under the Poringland United District School
value £298, including 46 acres of glebe, with residence, in Board, built in 1840, enlarged in 1874, at a cost of about
the gift of :Mrs. C. Turner, and held since r887 by the Hev. £6so & further enlarged in 1882, for 220 children; aver-
Alfred Edward Alston. The tithe is exchanged for corn age attendance, 190 ; David Parsons, master
rent. Here is a Methodist chapel. The fuel allotment of 13 CARRIERS TO & I<'ROM NoRWICH pass through daily
Alston Rev. Alfred Eel ward, Rectory Chaplin Anna ()fiss),dress ma. Post off Osborne Arthur, blacksmith
Latham George Nix, The Hall· Mason Levi, coal dealer Roberts Maria (Mrs.), shopkeeper
Andrews William, farmer Middleditch Robert, Railway tavern Smith William, farmer
Bligh Horace, market gardener
FRAl\liNG HAM PI GOT is a village and parish, 4 William Robert Fitzgcrald. Framingham Manor House, the
miles south-east from Norwich, in the Southern division of seat of James Cluistie esq. is a mansion of reel brick in the
the county, Swainsthorpe petty sessional division, Hensteacl Tudor style, situated in a park of 75 acres. The Bishop of
hundred and union, Norwich county court district, rural N orw1ch, who is lord of the manor, the trustees of the late
deanery of Brooke, western division, archdeaconry of Nor- G. H. Christie esq. James Christie esq. and Major William
folk and diocese of X orwich. The church of St. Andrew is Robert Fitzgerald, are the principal landowners. The soil
an edifice of stone and flint in the Early English style, is sandy; subsoil, sand, clay and chalk. The crops are of
erected at the sole expense of the late Geo. Hy. Christie esq. the usual kind and there are several market gardens,
.T.P. and consists of chancel, nave, south porch and a tower which supply Norwich market with vegetables. The area
at the north-west angle, with spire IIO feet in height and is 610 acres; rateable value, £r,344; the population in
containing a clock an<i 3 bells: the west windows and those r8g1 was 276.
in the chancel are stained and there is also a memorial Sexton, Moses Frosdick.
window to the late George Henry Christie esq. : there are WALL LETTER Box cleared at 5 p.m. Letters received
r5o sittings. The register dates from the year I555· The from Norwich arrive at 9 a.m. The nearest money order
living is a rectory, average tithe rent-charge £r68, gross & telegraph office is at Trowse
yearly value £2o7, including 25 acres of glebe, with resi- This place is included in the United School district of Poring-
deuce, in the gift of the Bishop of Norwich, and held since land, formed compulsorily June 16, 1874. The school IB
r887 by the Rev. Richard Hopkins Prowse M.A. of Caius at Framingham Earl
College, Cambridge. The rectory house stands about a There is a good lecture-room & a school-room (for the sun-
quarter of a mile north of the church. Here is a Baptist day school only), both of which belong exclusively to the
chapel. The land allotted for the poor consists of 7 acres, rector
let at £r4 yearly. Framingham Hall is the seat of Major CARRIERS TO & FROM NORWICH pass through daily
Christie James, Manor house COMMERCIAL. Frosdick Moses, assistant overseer
Denny Richard Harrison, Framingham Adams George, butcher & cattle dealer Hawkes Daniel, market gardener
cottage Aldis John, market gardener Hawkes John, market gardener
Fitzgerald Major William Robert, Aldis John, jun. market gardener Lansdell Frederick William, relieving
Framingham hall Aldis N oah, market gardener officer to Henstead union
Norgate Mrs. Portland house Aldis William, glove maker Meek Robert, market gardener
Pigott Paynton D.L. (barrister-at-law & BarrettAbraham,market grdnr. &farmr Nunn William, grocer
I

chief constable for the county), Barrett Walter, bricklayer l Read Jonathan, carpenter & builder
M1nor farm Beaumont James, farmer Reading Room( Moses Frosdick,caretkr)
Prowse Rev. Richard Hopkins M.A. The Beaumont Robert, shoe maker TitlowArthurJas.Feathers P.H. & farmr
Rectory Culling Arthur, market gardener Youngs William, Gull P.H. & farmer
GREAT FRANSHAM is a village and parish with a and the rector are lords of the manor, and Frederic More-
~tation on the East Anglian section of the Great Eastern house Metcalfe esq. J.P., D.L. of Inglethorpe Hall, Emneth,
railway, n8~ miles from London, 6~ west from East Dere- is lord of the manor of Ellinghams, and the principal land-
ham and 6~ east-north-east from Swaffham, in the Mid owners are Robert Harvey Mason esq. J.P. of N ecton Hall,
division of the county, hundred of Launditch, petty sessional Harry Wilson Benson esq. Frederic Morehouse Metcalfe esq.
division and union of l\Iitford and Launditch, county court J.P., D.L. and the trustees of the late James Hubbard. The
district of Der~ham, rural deanery of South Brisley and soil is mixed, and portions stiff; subsoil, clay. The chief
archdeaconry and diocese of Norwich. The church of All crops are wheat, barley, tnrnips and hay. The area is r,88o
Saints is an ancient structure of flint in the Early English acres; rateable value, £2,869; the population in 1891 was
style, consisting of chancel, nave, north porch and a western 315.
tower, with low spire, containing one bell : there are two Parish Clerk, William Cross.
ancient brasses: the church was restored in r878 at a cost Letters received from East Dereham at 9 a.m. WALL
of about £7oo, and affords 160 sittings. The register dates LETTER Box cleared at 4.30 p.m. Little Fransham
from the year 1558. The living is a rectory, average is the nearest money order office & telegraph office at
tithe rent-charge .£4o6, net yearly value £4oo, including Litcbam
62~ acres of glebe, With residence, in the gift of Magdalene PILLAR LETTER Box, High House corner, cleared at 5·5
College, Cambridge, and held since r888 by the Rev. George p.m
Preston M.A. and late fellow of that college. Here is aWes- School (mixed), built in 1871, for 8o children; average
leyan chapel, erected in 1877. The fuel allotment of 8 acres attendance, 56; M1ss Esther Quartermain, mistress
produces £12 yearly. The trustees of the late John Hudson Railway Station, Robert Durrant, station master
Benson Harry Wilson, High house Burton William, wheelwright Purple Henry, farmer
Preston Rev. George M.A. Rectory Catton Robert, farmer Stibbard Jesse, miller (wind) & farmer
Churchman Samuel, farmer Thompson ArthurRobt.grocer&coal dlr
COMMERCIAL. Crane William, timber mer. implement Tye G-eorge, Fox & Hounds P.H
Archer William, higgler maker, church bellhanger & farmer Warman William, farm bailiff to John
llarrett Joshua Robert Leeds,cowkeeper Claxton Sarah (Mrs.), Lord ~ elson P.H Thomas Clark esq
& coal dealer Fox Thomas, Chequers P.H Warmer Charles, farmer
.Benson Harry Wilson, farmer & land- Howard John, Pine Apple P.H Wyatt Mary Ann (Mrs.), farmer
owner, High house Lack John, artist Young Andrew, farmer, Curds hall
.Boddy Thomas, farmer N ewell John, farmer
LITTLE FRANSHAM is a parish on the road from Lynn and Dereham section of the Great Eastern railway, 6
DerPham to Swaffham, about I± miles south-east from Fran- west from Dereham and 6 east-by-north from Swaffham, in
sham station and 2 west from Wendling station, both on the the Mid division of the county, hundred of Launditch, petty
DIRECTORY.] NORFOLK. :FRETTENHAM. 4.01
sessional division and union of Mitford and Launctitch, of much greater extent than at present. William Butcher
county court district of East Dereham, rural deanery of esq. of Norwich, is lord of the manor. The principal land-
South Brisley and archdeaconry and diocese of N orwicb. owners are Jamcs Griggs esq. of South Creake, and Fredk.
The church of St. Mary is an ancient edifice of flint, in the Williams Dunn esq. of 4 Curwn street, London s w. The
Early English style, consisting of chancel, nave, south soil is mixed, with portions of heavy clay; subsoil, princi-
porch and a turret containing one bell: in tht> church are pally clay. The chief crops are wheat, barley, roots and
several mural tablets to the family of Dickens, 17fl9, to clover. The area is r,oos acres ; rateable value, £ 1,S33 ;
Hammond Alpe esq. d. 1767, and to the Rev. Edward the population in 1891 was 181.
Swatman, 33 years rector (r8o3-36), d. 1839, and there is Parish Clerk, William Wiggett.
an ancient and curious font and a piscina: in 1891 the in- p OST & """
~u. 0 . 0 ., S . R . & A nmnty
· & Insurance Offi ce.
terior of t h e chancel was restore d , the flooring rclaid and -John Lovett, receiver. Letters from East Dereham
oak choir stalls and a vestry added: there are 250 sittings. arrive at 8. 30 a_m_; dispatched at 4 _45 p.m. week days
The register dates from the year rss8. The living is a only. Litcham is the nearest telegraph office
rectory, average tithe rent-charge £232, net yearly value
£ 234 , including 30 acres of glebe with residence, in the gift A School Board of S members was formed September 14•
of trustees, and held since 1g90 by the Rev. Kirshaw Thom- x887 ; John Lovett, clerk to the board & school attend-
son Pierson M.A. of Hertford College, Oxford. There is a ance officer
fuel allotment of I I acres, let at £21 yearly. The Old Hall, Board School (mixed), erected in r887, for so children;
now occupied as a farmhouse, has evidently been a building average attendance, 29 ; Miss Philippine Kuttner, mistrss
Green Samuel, Rose villa 1 Blades Allen, Crown P.H I Mace James, blacksmith
Griggs Miss, The Old hall Button Frederick, farmer Norman Comfort, farmer
Griggs Money, The Old hall Crispe John, carpenter Pestell George, vermin destroyer
Pierson Rev. Kirshaw Thomson M.A. Linford George, farmer Rix Henry, farmer, Lings end
[rector J Lovett John, shopkeeper, Post office
FREETHORPE is a parish and village, 2 miles from Joseph Kaye, rector of Wickhampton, has been curate in
the navigable Yare and Reedham station on the Norwich charge since r88g. There is a Primitive :Methodist chapel
and Yarmouth section of the Great Eastern railway, 13 here, built in x86S. The late R. H. Vade Walpole esq.
south-east from Norwich, 9 west from Yarmouth and 127 ~ erected alms houses here in 1871 for six widows of Freethorpe,
from London, in the Eastern division of the county, Blofield Wickhampton and Halvergate, each of whom receives ss.
and Walsham petty sessional division, Blofield hundred and weekly and one ton of coal at Christmas; and in r879, in
union, Yarmouth county court district, rural deanery of conjunction with Harriet his wife, Mr. Walpole also built in
Blofield and archdeaconry and diocese of Norwich. The the village a pump house and clock tower. The land chiefly
church of All Saints is an ancient building of stone, in the belongs to Spencer Walpole esq. who is lord of the manor,
Norman style, consisting of chancel, nave of two bays, north and Mrs. Gilbert. The soil is light mixed; subsoil, clay.
aisle and a low round western tower with conical roof and The chief crops ar11 wheat, oats and barley. The area is
containing one bell: in the church is a handsome marble 88o acres; rateable value, £2,013; the population in 1891
tablet, surmounted by a bust to Edward Walpole, d. I Oct. was 416.
1844, besides several other memorials to members of the Parish Clerk, Lambert Curtis.
Walpole family: the churdt was thoroughly restored in PosT 0FFICE.-John Edward Lacy, receiver. Letters re-
1849, and the churchyard enlarged in 18SJ, at the sole ex- ceived through Norwich arrive at 8.25 a. m. & dispatched
pense of the late Richard Henry Vade Walpole esq. D. L. : the 3 p. m. N 0 sunday post. Reed ham is the nearest money
nave and porch were new-roofed iu I89o at a cost of £r6o: order & telegraph office. Postal orders issued here, but
there are 18osittings. The register dates from the year 1758. not paid
The living is a vicarage, consolidated with the rectory of
Reedham, tithe rent-charge £6ro, joint net yearly value National School (mixed), erected in 184S & enlarged by the
£ 429, including n 2 acres of glebe, with residence, in the addition of an infants' schoolroom in 1876 ; the school
gift of Col. Hill Mussenden Leathes, and since 1a70 by the will now hold 100 children; average attendance, 75 ; Miss
Rev. Carteret Henry Leathes B. A. of St. John's College, Ethel Reynolds, mistress
Cambridge, who resides at Reedham rectory ; the Rev. CARRIER TO NoRwiCH.-Leonard John Shearing, wed. & sat
Carver Henry, White house 1 England George, farmer Sharman John George, blacksmith
Gilbert Henry Charles Bliss Hindes Henry, carpenter Shearing Leonard, coal dealer & carrier
Jones Amelia (Mrs.), bricklayer Sutton Henjamin Charles, butcher
COMMERCIAL. Jones Isaac, bricklayer Wales Isaac John, brick, tile & pipe
Erinded Thomas, cowkeeper Key Henry, shopkeeper manufacturer ; & at Reedham, Yar-
Brock Charles John, tailor Lacy John Ed wd. genl. dlr. Post office mouth. See advertisement
Cater William, cowkeeper Long James, Rampant Horse l'.H Youngs John, pork butcher
Cory James William, saddler Moll Adnah, shopkeeper Youngs Robert, carter
Ellis Samuel, farm bailiff to Henry C. Neave John, beer retailer Youngs William, wheelwright
B. Gilbert esq Pears on Frederick W. boot & shoe ma
FRENZE is a parish on the river Frenze, a branch of the gift of Francis 'Taylor esq. M.P. and held since 1877 by the
Waveney, which here divides this county from Suffolk, I~ , Rev. John Rule Tucker M.A. of Trinity College, Dublin. This
miles north-east from Diss station on the Great Eastern parish is united to Scole and Thorpe Parva for the support of
railway, in the Southern division of the county, Diss bun- the poor. Frcnze Hall, an ancient mansion formerly standing
dred, petty sessional division and county court district, here, on the bank of the river Frem·.e, has been demolished
Depwade union, rural deanery of Redenhall, archdeaconry and new farm buildings have been erected on the site by
of Norfolk and diocese of Norwich. The church of St. FrancisTayloresq.M.P.ofDiss,whoislordofthemanorand
Andrew, which adjoins the Hall, is a small but ancient chief landowner. The soil is mixed, heavy and light; subsoil.
building of rubble, in the Early English style, consisting of clay and gravel. The chief crops are wheat, barley and
nave, south porch and a western belfry containing one bell: some roots, and pasture land. The area is 399 acres ; the
there are brasses to the Blennerhassett family, who formerly population is included with that of Scale.
resided here, and the church affords 70 sittings. The Sextoness, Mrs. Jaue Reeve.
register of burials dates from 1651 ; baptisms, r6S4; marri-
ages, r662. The living is a rectory, average tithe rent- Letters through DiRB, the nearest money order & telegraph
charge £8o, gross yearly value £84, with 3 acres of glebe, office
and 4! acres of Queen Anne's bounty land in Deuton, in the The children of this place attend the school at Scole
Tucker Rev. John Rule M.A. [rector],
The Cottage
IBishop William, farmer
Gaze Thomas William, farmer, land
I agent, auctiOneer & valuer, I<'renze
hall ; & at Diss
FRETTENHAM is a village and parish 6 miles north- dates from the year 1558. The living is a rectory, with
by-east from Norwich and 3 west from Coltishall station on that of Stanninghall annexed, average tithe rent-charge
the East Norfolk branch of the Great East.ern railway, in £366, joint net yearly \"alue £3:10, with 19 acres of glebe
the Eastern division of the county, Taverham hundred and and residence, in the gift of and held since x884 by the Rev.
petty sessional division, St. Faith's union, Norwich county Andrew Samuel Hunter Wood B.A. of Trinity College, Cam-
court district, rural deanery of Taverham and archdeaconry bridge: the tithe.~ were commuted for £481 IOS. yearly.
and diocese of Norwich. The church of St. Swithin is an Here is a Primitive Methodist chapel, built by Mr. J. Fryer.
ancient edifice of flint and stone, in the Gothic style, con- The common land was inclosed in 1846. Sir Edward Birk-
sisting of chancel, rebuilt in r869, nave, aisles, south porch beck bart. D.L., "· P. of Horstead Hall, who is lord of the
and an embattled western tower, with pinnacles, containing manor, and John Wortley esq. are the chief landowners.
2 bells: there are 200 sittings, 50 being free. The register The soil is a fine mixed land ; subsoil, rich loam. The chief
7
FRETTE~IIAM. NORFOLK. [KELLY S

crops are wheat, barley and turnips. The area is r,ss r p. m. The nearest money order & telegraph office is at
acres; rateable value, £1,945; the population in r8gr was Coltishall; postal orders are issued here, but not paid
229. A School Board of 5 members was formed March r2, 1875;
Parish Clerk, William Harman. Christopher Cushion, Buxton, clerk to the board &
attendance officer
PosT 0FFICK - Samuel Garrett, receiver.-Letters re- Board School, built in 1875, at a cost of £3oo, for 36
ceived through Norwich, via St. .Faith's, arrive at 7· 30 children ; average attendance, 28 ; Miss Elizabeth Hud-
a.rn. dispatched, 4·55 p.m. WALL Box cleared at 4.50 I son, mistress
Harman Leonard, Garden house Buck Benjamin, blacksmith Harman William, carpenter
IIinde Ephraim Wilkin Dobbie Henry, fiorist Mason George, Rose & Crown P.H
Wood Rev. Andrew Samuel Hunter B . .A. .Fields George, cowkeeper Palmer William, market gardener
[rector], Rectory Gowing George, farmer Riseborough William, farmer & shopkpr
Wortley John Herne Alfred Edward Sutton, farmer Sutton Herbert, farmer
COMMERCIAL. & miller (wind) WortleyJohn, farmer
Bowman Robert, blacksmith
FRING (or FRINGE) is a parish and village in a pleasant a new vicarage house was built in r88r, In a meadow
valley, surrounded by womls, 2~ miles south-west from adjoining the churchyard are the ruins of som.e ancient
Docking station on the Hunstanton and West Norfolk rail- building supposed to have been a cell belonging to the
way, I4 miles north-east from Lynn and 8 south-west from rnona!:ltery of Norwich. The Peddars' (or Pedlars') Way
Burnham Market., in the North Western division of the passes through the parish. .Fring Hall, a modern mansion,
county, Smithdon hundred, Smithdon and Brothercross pleasantly situated on an eminence and surrounded with
petty sessional division, Docking union, Little Walsingham pleasure grounds, is the property of Richard Dusgate Dus-
county court district, rural deanery at Reacham, arch- gate esq. who is lord of the manor and principal landowner.
deaconry of Norfolk and diocese of Norwich. The church of The soil is light mixed; subsoil, chalk, gravel and sand.
All Saints is an ancient structure of flint in the Perpendicular The land is farmed on the four-course system. The area is
style, consisting of chancel, nave, south porch and a western 1,710 acres; rateable value, [1,402; the population in r8gx
tower, containing one bell: the tower and north side of the was 153.
building are covered with ivy: there is a small and ancient Parish Clerk, Benjamin Kemp.
west window, and some curious mural paintings, much Letters received through Lynn, via Docking. The nearest
obliterated: the church affords 100 sitt.ings. The register money order & telegraph office is at Docking. PILLAR
dates from the year 1671. Tha living is a vicarage, with LHTTER Box cleared at 4· 30 p. m.; no clearance on sun days
that of Shernborne annexed, joint average yearly value from
tithe rent-charge £ 135 , besides 78 acres of glebe, with National School (mixed), built in 1875, by Mrs. Locke, for
residence, in the gift of the Dean and chapter of Norwich, 40 children ; average attendance, 28 ; :Vliss Sarah Dean-
and held since 1872 by the Rev. Thomas Tweeddale M.A. of ington, mistress
St. John's College, Cambridge, who resides at Shernborne: CARRIER TO LYN::>~.-Edward Pattingale, tues
Dusgate Richard Dusgate, Fring hall Lane William Alma, farmer, auctioneer Pattingale John, beer retailer
Pattingale Edward, shopkeeper & & valuer, White house; & at 38 Rail- Waters William, farmer, Church farm
carrier way road, Lynn
FRITTON is a pari~h and pleasant village situated on a The register dates from the year r559. The living is a
green of about 63~ acres, 4~ miles east from Forncett station rectory, average tithe rent-charge £2r7, net yearly value
on the Ipswich and Norwich section of the Great Eastern £2ro, including 17 acres of glebe and residence, in the gift
railway and II south from Norwich, in the Southern of Captain Thomas Holmes R.N., J.P. and held since r892 by
division of the county, Depwade hundred and umon, petty the Rev. Leonard Plurnptree Howes. In the adjoining
sessional division of Long Stratton, county court district of parish of Morningthorpe is a small farm, the profits of which
Harleston, rural deanery of Depwade, archdeaconry of are applied to the repair of the church, and in Hempnall !!.re
Norfolk and diocese of Norwich. The church of !:lt. Catharine two acre~ of land, the rent of which is applied in providing
is a structure of flint with stone dressings in the Perpen- tools for poor labourers in this parish. Mrs. Irby, of Boy-
dicnlar style, consisting of apsidal chancel, nave, south porch, land Hall, :M:orningthorpe, who is lady of the manor, and
vestry and a round embattled western tower, with octagonal Captain Thomas Holmes R.N., J.P. are the principal land-
belfry, containing 3 bells: in the church is a fine old screen owners. The soil is various; subsoil, clay and gravel.
the lower paneLs of which exhibit some curious paintings of The chief crops are wheat, barley and beans. The area is
The Four Latin Fathers, which have been restored : on the 817 acres; rateable value, £ r,o48; the population in r8gr
nortl} wall are two frescoes, in good preservation, repre- was r84.
sentmg St. Christopher and St. George and the Dragon, Parish Clerk, Denis Tyrrell.
and there is some colouring in the apse: there are two
memorial windows, and in the north wall is a Nor man door- Letters through Long Stratton, which is the nearest money
way leading to the vestry: remains of the rood loft stairs order & telegraph office, arrive at 8 a.m. WALL LETTER
still exist, and there are two holy water stoups, one inside Box cleared at 7·45 a. m. & 6.20 p.m. week days; sundays
and the other outside the porch : the vestry was added in at 7·45 a.m
1874, and in 1879 an oak lych-gate wa8 erected by Mrs. Irby National School (mixed), erected, with residence for mistress,
as a memorial to her husband, the late Frederick William in 1854, for the children of this parish & those of Morning-
Irby esq. of Boyland Hall, d. r June, 1877: the church was thorpe, for 6o children; average attendance, 45 ; Miss
partially restored and reseated in 1853, and has roo sittings. Agnes Hawtrey, mistress
Howes Rev.LeonardPlumptree,Rectory I Foulger George,farmer,FrittonEnd frm Watlmg Thomas, carpenter
Betts Frederick Thomas, farmer & sur- Lansdell Lewis; blacksmith Westgate Charles, farmer
veyor of highways, The Grange Riches Martin, head grdnr. to Mrs.Irby Wilson John, fowl dealer
Betts Thomas, farmer & landowner Searle Samuel, shopkeeper, farmer & Wright Jonathan, farmer
Elsie Henry, The Nags P.H assistant overseer
FULMODESTON and CROXTON are united' fellow of that college. There are Primitive Methodist and
parishes and scattered villages. Fulmodeston is 2 miles Baptist chapels here. There is a fuel allotment of nearly 30
south-east from Thursford station on the Eastern and Mid- acres, let to Lord Hastings for £40 yearly, and other chari-
lands railway and 5 east from Fakenham, in the North ties of £4o annual value for clothing. "There is a subscrip-
Western division of the county, Gallow hundred and petty tion library of 250 volumes, now (r8g2) supported by so
sessional division, Walsingharn union and county court members. The Earl of Leicester K.G., L.L. is lord of the
district, rural deanery of Burnham, archdeaconry of Nor- manor and principal landowner; Lord Hastings also has
folk and diocese of Norwich. The church of St. Mary, estates in the parish. The soil is a rich strong loam ; sub-
closed in r882, is a venerable edifice of stone, in the Gothic soil, clay. The crops are wheat, oats and barley and green
style, with an embattled western tower containing one bell: crops generally. The united parishes contain 2,333 statute
in the church are some handsome monuments of the Browne acres; rateable value, £2,319; the population in 1891
family, including one to John Browne, 16g3, and others dat- was 337·
ing from 1767 to 1826. Christ church, erected in r882 at a At CROXTON", 1 mile north-west, there is a thatched church
cost of [2,500, is a building of flint, consisting of chancel, named in honour of St. John the Baptist, but now going to
nave, south aisle and a north porch, and affords 200 sitt.ings. ruin.
The register dates from the year 1556. The living is a rec- Sexton, Alfred Harrison.
tory, tithe rent-charge as commuted £558, average £424, PosT 0FFICE.-John Emerson, receiver. Letters through
net yearly value £3:14• with 63~ acres of glebe and resi- Dereham arrive 7.50 a.m. ; dispatched 5·5 p.rn. Great
dence, in the gift of Corpus Christi college, Cambridge, and Ryburgh is the nearest money order office & Hindolve-
held since r887 by the Rev. George Robert Hobertsn.n,late stone railway station the nearest telegraph office
DIRECTORY.] NORFOLK. GARVESTONE. 403
These parishes are included in the Fulmodeston & Barney Board School (mixed), built in 1877, at a cost of £t,OCXJ, for
120 children; average attendance, 95 ; Mark Hurley,
United School Board district, formed in 1873 master; Mrs. Susan Hurley mistress
Roberts Rev. Geo. Robert n.n. Rectory 1 HawBs Thomas Henry, grocer & drarer Pitcher Jn.Hastings Arms P.H.&farmer
COMMERCIAL. Jackson John Robert Hunter, farmer, Platten Alfd.farmer& cattle dlr. Croxtn
Emerson John, grocer & provision Fulmodeston hall Platten Richard (the exors. of), farmers,
dealer, & post office King William, beer retailer Clipstone house, Croxton
Gent James, wheelwright & blacksmith Neale Robert (Mrs.), farmer Subscription Library (:Miss R. M.
Green Geo. miller (wind), Croxton mill Notley George, farmer, l\Ianor farm Roberts, sec)
:FUNDENHALL is a scattered village and parish I persons. There is a fuel allotment of 5 acres, producing
mile south from Ashwellthorpe station on the Wymondham £7 Ios. yearly, which is distributed to the poor in coals in
-and Forncett branch of the Great Eastern railway, 4 south- the winter. The Baroness Berners, who is lady of the
east from Wymondham and 9 south-west from Norwich, in manor, Sir Francis George Manningham Boileau bart. D.L.,
the Southern division of the county, Depwade union, petty J.P. of Ketteringham Park, Mrs. Gerard Barton, Reginald
:Sessional division and hundred, Wymondham county court Steward esq. Charles Arthur Bathurst Bignold esq. D.L.,
district, rural deanery of Depwade, archdeaconry of Norfolk J. P. and Edward Brown esq. are the principal landowners.
and diocese of Norwich. The church of St. Nicholas is an The soil is various; subsoil, chiefly clay. The chi~f crops
ancient structure of fiint, consisting of chancel, nave, north are wheat, barley, hay and roots. The area is 1,346 acres ;
porch and a massive central tower containing 5 bells: the rateable value, £1,651 ; the population in 1891 was 297.
south entrance retains a Norman doorway, and in the
chancel is a memorial window to Mary Elizabeth Bar ton, d. Parish Clerk, Robert Squires.
6 Nov. 1865 : the church was restored in 186g, at a cost of PosT OFFICE.-Thomas Chapman, receiver. Letters through
j,I,soo, when a pulpit was given by the Rev. Thomas Wymondham arrive about 9.15 a. m.; dispatched at 6.20
Sedger, then curate, and oak benches put in the nave: the p.m. The nearest money order office is at Wreningham
chancel was restored by the late George Duckett Berney esq. & telegraph office at Wymondham. Postal orders are
of Morton Hall, patron and lay impropriator: there are r6o issued here, but not paid
sittings. The register dates from the year 1559. The living
is a vicarage, average tithe rent-charge £31, yearly value PILLAR LETTER Box, Wymondham road, cleared at 7 p.m
£105, with residence, in the gift of the trustees of the late National School (mixed), for 6o children; average attend-
George Duckett Berney esq. of Morton, and held since 1891 ance, 45 ; Miss Esther Thurston, mistress
by the Rev. Joseph Thomas Kingsmill n.n. of Trinity Col-
lege, Dublin. The Primitive Methodist chapel, erected in CARRIERS TO NoRWICH.-William N. Bailey, sat. ; Thomas
I8go, is of red brick with stone dressings, and will seat 200 Chapman, sat
Bailey Frederic Charles, The Grange Bailey Frederic Chas. surg. The Grange Clarke Rohert, farmer
Browne Edward, The Rookery Bailey Wm.Newman, shopkpr.& carrier Moore "\Villiam Carr, farmer
Kingsmill Rev. Joseph Thomas D.D. RettsEdwardWilliam,farmer,Black hall Myhill 'Villiam, farmer, Grange farm
VIcarage Bunting William, farmer Rattee Daniel Elmer M.R.c.v.s. farmer
Ratree Daniel El mer Bunting William, jun. miller (wind & & landowner & veterinary surgeon
COMMERCIAL. steam) & farmer Ringwood James, farmer
Attoe Jonathan, farmer, overseer & Chapman Thomas, farmer, landowner, Spratt John, farmer, Dairy farm
collector of rates draper & grocer, Post office Tye James Newman, farmer
GARBOLDISHAM is a parish and compact village, Kennaway M.A. of University College, Oxford. There is a.
lying in a vale, 5 miles south from Bar ling Road station on Primitive Methodist chapel. The charities amount to about
the Roudham Junction and Wymondham section of the £56 yearly, arising from lands in this and adjoining
Great Eastern railway and 7 west-by-north from Diss, in the parishes, of which sum half is assigned to a general distri-
Mid division of the county, Guiltcross and Shropham petty bution fund for the poor, one fourth for apprenticing or
sessional division, Guiltcross hundred and union, Diss payment of school fee"! and the remainder towards the
county court district, rural deanery of Rockland, archdca- church expenses. Cecil Thomas Molyneux-Montgomerie
conry of Nor folk and diocese of Norwich. Of the ancient esq. D. L., J. P. of Gissin~ Hall, is lord of the manor9 of
church of All Saints, removed in 1734, only the tower now Pakenhams-in-Garboldisham and "Cphall-in-Garboldisham
remains. The church of St. John the Baptist is a noble and I he principal landowner and the rector is lord of the
building of fiint in the Perpendicular style, consisting of Rectory manor. Garboldisham Manor, a plea~ant residence,
chancel, nave, aisles, north porch and a large embattled completed in 1873 from designs of George Gilbert Scott esq.
western tower with pinnacles containing 6 bells: the north F.S.A. architect, is the property of C. T. Molyneux-Montgo-
porch bears several Latin inscriptions: the original benches merie esq. but is now occupied by George John Cookson
are retained in the aisles, which also contain several marble esq. Garboldisham Hall, an ancient mansion, also the
tablets to the Montgomerie family : an organ was intro- property of C. T.Molyneux-Montgomerie esq. is the residence
duced in 1883 and in 1887 the east window was filled with of Mrs. Temple :Frere. The land is of mixed soils; subsoil,
t!tained glass as a memorial to Robert Temple Frere esq. chiefly clay and gravel. The chief crops are wheat, barley
M.D. who died at Garboldisham Hall in 1886 : in the chancel and oats. The area is 2,705 acres; rateable valuP, £'3,282 ;
is a small memorial window to a child of the rector : the the population in 1891 was 607.
north porch has lately (1892) been furnished with very Sexton, Righteous Reeve.
handsome wrought iron gates, the gift of Mrs. R. Temple
Frere: the church was thoroughly restored and reseated PosT, M. 0. & T. 0., S. B. & Annuity & Insurance Office.
about t86 2 , and has 350 sittings, over 200 being free. The -George Morley, sub-postmaster. Letters arrive from
register dates from the year I66 9 . The li\·ing is a rectory, Thetford, via Harling, at 6.50 a. m. ; dispatched at 6.10
consolidated with that of All Saints, average tithe rent- p.m.; sundays 7 a.m.; dispatched II.20 a.m
charge £449, net yearly value £465, including 49 acres of National Schools (mixed), erected about 1872, for 100
glebe, with residence, in the gift of C. T. Molyneux Mont- children ; average attendance, 94 ; Arthur Boulton
gomerie esq. and held since 1876 by the Rev. Charles Lewis Knights, master
Bennet Charles Harrison Caudwell Edward, farmer & maltster Morley Geo. grocer & draper, Post office
Cookson George John, Manor house Chincry Solomon, farmer Nnnn John, farmer
Eaton George EdwardsCharles, cattle dealer Peacock Robert, farmer, Ling farm
Fre7e l\1rs. Temple, Garboldisham hall Edwards Fdk.blacksmith& wheelwright Porcher Waiter, boot & shoe maker
Kennaway Rev. Charles Lewis M.A. English William, farmer Quantrill John, farmer & grocer
The Rectory Hutson Richard, pig dealer Reeve William, jun. pork butcher
Riches Mrs Jacqnes Stepheu, farmer Roe Edgar, farm sreward to the exors.
COMMERCIAL. Jolly Henry John, blacksmith of Mr. Thomas Davy, Uphall farm
Barnes William, bricklayer Lawrence Emma (Mrs.), miller (wind Stebbings John, farmer
Beeton Thomas, poulterer & steam) & farmer Stocking Iris (Mrs.), laundry
BennetChas.Harrison,farmer,Hall frm Linstcad Alfred, saddler Tyler George, farmer, Finchams fann
Bugg Benjamin, Fox P.H Maltby William Sharpe, Swan P.H Woods Robert, baker
GAR VESTONE is a village and parish on the road archdeaconry of Norfolk and diocese of Norwich. Th&
from Dercham to Hingham, near Thuxton station on the church of St. Margaret is a building of stone in the Early
Wymondham and Dereham branch of the Great Eastern Decorated style, consisting of chancel, nave, south aisle,
railway, 5 miles south from Dereham, in the Mid division north porch and an embattled western tower with pinna-
of the county, Mitford hundred, Mitford and Laundikh cles, containing 3 bells: there is an ancient font, and the
petty sessional division and union, county court district of church affords 200 sittings. The re;sister dates from the
Dereham, rural deanery of Hingham, Mitford dinsion, year 1538. The living is a rectory, avera,;e tithe rent-charge
404 GAB VEl!! TONE • NORFOLK. [ S:l!:LLy I 8
.£ 138, net yearly value £142 1 including 16 acres of glebe, Parish Clerk, William Holland.
with re~idence, in the gift of the trustees of the late Rev. PosT 0FFICE.-Jeremiah Filhy, receiver. Letters through
Francis E. J. Valpy M..A. and held since 1873 by the Rev. Attleborough arrive at 8 a. m. Box: closes at 5·45 p.m. on
Thomas Roworth Valpy of St. Rees. Here is a Primitive week days & I r a. m. on sundays. The nearest money
Methodist chapel. Charities producing £3o yearly are order office is at Hardingham & telegraph offices are at
distributed among the poor, and there is a fuel allotment of Hingham & Yaxham
7 acres, let at £12 yearly. The principal landowners are A School Board of 5 members was formed compulsorily May
the Rev. Henry Evans-Lomhe H . .A., .r.P. of Bylaugh Park, 27, r875, for the united district of Garvestone & Thnxton;
Miss Howlett and John Press esq. John Marcon esq. J.P. and R. Grigson, Upper King street, Norwich, clerk to the
the trustees of Henry Collison esq. The soil is various ; sub- board; J ames J ohnson, Garvestone, attendance officer
soil, clay. The chief crops are wheat, barley and roots. Board School (mixed), for Garvestone & Thuxton, built in
The area is 8o2 acres; rateable value, £r,707; the popula- 1876, at a cost of £gCXJ, for 8o children; average attend-
tion in 1891 was 322. ance, 67; Miss Anna Elizabeth Fryer, mistress
Isbell Charles Durrant Jamcs, farmer Howard William, farmer
Valpy Rev. Thomas Roworth [rector], Eagling James, blacksmith & farmer Johnson William, farmer
Rectory E<'cllows Henry, farmer Lewell George, farmer
COMMERCIAL. Filby Jeremiah, pork butcher, Post off Rose John William, farmer
Brown William, farmer Finch Matthew, shopkeeper Rumble Frederick, coal merchant
Buckingham Robert, White Horse P.H. Fox Lucy (~Irs.), farmer Rumble George, farmer
~farmer Greenwood Charles, farmer Rumble Thomas, King's Arms P.ll
Bush Charles, farm~ Greenwood George, farmer Saunders William, pig dealer
Chaplin Benjamin, shopkeeper Harris Georgc Nicholson, coal dealer Smith James, wheelwright
Curson George, fdrmer Holman William, beer retailer Vincent Howard, farmer
GASTHORPE is a parish and village, pleasantly situated · and held since 1872 by the Rev. John Robinson Wells, of
on the borders of Suffolk, 5 miles south from Harling Hoad St. Aidans, who resides at Riddlesworth. Gawdy's charity~
station on the Thetford and Norwich section of the Great , of £I yearly, is for fuel. Sir Thomas Thornhill bart. D.L.,
Eastern railway and about 7 south-east from Thetford, in ; J.P. of Riddlesworth Hall, is lord of the manor and sole
the Mid division of the county, Guiltcross and Shropham ' landowner. The soil is light loam ; snbsoil, chalky. The-
petty sessional division, Guiltcross hundred and union, chief crops are barley, wheat and cinquefoil. The area is
Thetford county court district, rural deanery of Rockland, 840 acres ; rateable value, £494 ~ the population in 1891
archdeaconry of Norfolk and diocese of Norwich. The was 87.
ancient church of St. Nicholas is now in ruins. The living Nearest post office at Riddlesworth. Letters from Thet-
is a rectory, consolidated with those of Riddlesworth and ford, via East Harling, arrive at 8 a. m. The nearest.
Knettishall (Suffolk), average tithe rent-charge £269, joint money order office is at Hopton & telegraph office at
net yearly value £26o, inclnding 6o acres of glebe, with Garboldisham
residence, in the gift of Sir Thomas Thornhill hart. D.L., J.P. The children of this place attend the school at Riddlesworth
Cutter William, blacksmith .
Hinnels Benjamin, farmer & shopkeeper
I I
Smith Philandear, 2nd gamekeeper to Kynaston Wilfred, farmcr,Lodge farm
Frank Penn esq. The Cottage
GATELEY is a parish about 2 miles south from Ryburgh rector of Brisley, for the benefit of widows of rectors of that
station on the Dereham and Wells sedion of the Great parish : King's benefaction of £3 yearly is for clothing.
Eastern railway, 5~ south-cast from Fakenham and 8 north- Gatelcy Hall, the property of Earl Sondcs, and now in thO'
by-west from DP-reham, in the Mid division of the county, occupation of Mr. Thomas Gagen, farmer, is said to have-
Launditch hundred, l\Iitford and Launditch union and petty l.een built in 1726, on the site of a former hall destroyed by
sessional division, Dereham county court district, rural fire ; the interior is elaborately ornamented with fine plaster
deanery of Xorth Brisley and archdeaconry and diocese of work in good preservation. Earl Sondcs is lord of the-
Norwich. The church of St. Helen is a building of flint in manor and chief landowner: Bernard Le Neve Foster esq.
the Decorated style, consisting of chancel, nave, north and J.P. of Scnnowc Hall, also has land in this parish. The soil
south porches, vestry and an embattled western tower, is mixed, consisting of stiff clay and brick earth, with a
containing 4 bells : the chancel was rebuilt and a vestry small portion of light loam and sand : it is cultivated on the
added in r866 at the expense of the RP-v. John Smith n. D. usual fonr-conrse shift. The area is 1,490 acres; rateable-
late vicar, I851-91: there are 130 sittings. The register value, £r,664; the population in 1891 was 155.
dates from the year r682. The living is a vicarage, annexed Parish Clerk, Thomas Hawes.
to the rectory of Brislcy, tithe rent-charge £438, average
£220, joint net yearly value £3oo, including 30 acres of LETTER Box cleared at 5.10 p.m. week days. Letters
glebe, with residence, in the gift of Christ's College, Cam- through Dereham arrive at g. ro a. m. The nearest money
bridge, and held since 1891 by the Rev. William Henry order & telegraph office is at Great Ryburgh
Lowe M.A. of that college, who resides at Brisley. Chari- The children of this place attend the schools at Hrisley &
ties :-A farmhouse here was left by the will of a former Great Ryburgh
Daynes William, farmer
Gagen Thomas, farmer, Gatelcy hall
I Mayes William, farmer I WhidbyGeo.farrner, ChurchHouse farm

GAYTON is a pctrish and large village 2~ miles north- Freebridge Lynn Union House, in this parish, is a plain
east from East Winch station on the Lynn and Dereham building of carr stone and brick, erected in r83o, and will
section of the Great Eastern railway, 7 east from Lynn, in hold 131 inmates; for particnlars of union, see Lynn.
the North Western division of the county, Freebridge Lynn Gayton Hall is the property and residence of the Earl of
hundred, petty sessional division and nnion, Lynn county Romney D.L., J.P.; a small rivulet rises in the grounds and
court district, rural deanery of Lynn Freebridge and arch- flows into Lynn harbour. There are three manors, viz.:-
deaconry and diocese of Norwich. The church of St. Gayton Hall, belonging to the trlliStees of the late Waltero.
Nicholas is an ancient structure of flint and brick in tl1e Dodd esq.; Well Hall, to the Earl of Romney; and West.
Transition style, consisting of chancel, nave, aisles, south Hall, of which Sir Lawrence John Jones bart. J. P. of Cran-
porch a.nd a tower with statues of the four Evangelists in mer Hall, is the lord. The principal landowners are thil'
place of pinnacles, a pointed roof and vane, and contains a trustees of the late William Dodd csq. the Earl of Romney,
clock and 2 bells, being the tenor and first treble of a peal of Sir Lawrence John Jones bart. J.P. and Philip Candler
five: the east window is stained: in r85o the church was Shepheard esq. The parish is generally fertile, of light soil,
restored, rescated, the chancel new roofed and three stained over chalk, flint, gravel and sand. The chief crops are
windows erected : the organ was presented in 1865 by the wheat, barley and oats. The area is 3,131 acres; rateable-
Rev. C. 'f. J ex-Blake M.A. vicar, 1862-7: there arc 292 value, £3,547; the popnlation in 1891 was 760, including the
sittings. The parish register dates from the year 1702. officers and inmates of the union.
The living is a vicarage, average tithe rent-charge £243, Parish Clerk, Robcrt Meek.
net yearly value £223, inclurling 19~ acres of glebe, with PosT, M. 0. & T. 0., S. B. & Annuity & Insurance Office.-
residence, erected in r 863, in the gift of the Bishop of William George Dawson, sub-postmaster. Letters arrive
Norwich, and held since 1867 by the Rev. William Aubrey from Lynn at 7.15 a.m. & 2.40 p.m.; dispatched at 10.3~
Cutting M. .A. of Corpus Christi college, Cambridge, who is a.m. & at 5.25 p.m
also chaplain of the Freel-ridge Lynn union. The rectorial
tithes belong to the see of Ely, and are let on lease of lives: WALL Box cleared at 5.15 p.m.; sundays n.15 a.m
they are commuted at £5o~. Here is a Wesleyan chapel National School, erected in 1851 on a Site given by the late
and a Primitive Methodt~t chapel, erected in 1870 and Sir Willoughby Jones bart. D.L., J.P. for 200 children;.
enlarged in 1883. At the Indosure, in 18rr, a fuel allot- average attendance, 16o; R. E. Dann, master; Mrs.
ment of 30A. r&. 22P. was awarded and is now let for abont Geraldine Dann, mistress ; MissKeziah Meek,asst. mistress.
£65 a year, whiCrr sum is distributed in coals among those CARRIERi TO LYNN.-Frederick Shinn, tues. thnrs. & sat.;.
parishioners whose yearly rent does not exceed £8. The John Rasberry, tues. thurs. & sat
DIRECTORY.] NORFOLK. G.AYWOOlJ. 405
Romney Earl of D.L., J.P. Gayton hall; Daws Richard, farmer & cattle dealer Meek Robert, basket ma. & parish clerk
& 4 Upper Belgrave street & Cai"lton Da w,;Robt.Geo. (Mrs. ),farmr .&cattle dlr Meek William, wood turner & timber dlr
& Bachelors' clubs s w & White's Dodd Waiter, farmer, Uayton Hall frm Padgett Henry, carpenter
club, London w Garrood Thos. shopkeeper & beer retlr Potter Paul de Cresse, surgeon
Cutting Rev. WilliamAubrey M. A. [vicar Green James, bricklayer Rasberry John, carrier
& chaplain of FreebridgeLynn union], Green Joseph, chimney sweeper Rasberry Waiter, White Hart P.H
Vicarage Hammond Robert, blacksmith Rudd Robert, bricklayer
Gleadow Horace Fearne, White lodge Hill WilliamJames, grocer & beer retlr Sa unders William,grocer, tea&provision
Potter Frederick Lewis Edward, miller (wind), farmer dealer, draper & coal merchant; & at
Potter Paul de Cresse & baker Grimstone
Smith Richard, Bridge house Lewis James, butcher Shaw John, road surveyor
COMMERCIAL. Maggs John, Crown P.H. & cattle dealr Shinn Frederick, carrier
Berry Peter, grocer & draper Malt by Robert Henry, relieving officer Smith Richard, farmer & cattle dealer
Bray John, Royal Oak P.H & collector for the guardians, Free- Spooner Reuben, beer retailer
Billing Robert, wheelwright bridge Lynn union Taylor Robert, blacksmith
BunkhallEldred,wood turnr.&clock repr Matthews Robt. farmer, West Hall frm Wright Thomas, Rampant Horse P.H. &
Bunting Samuel Thomas, farmer Meek Henry, wood turner & timber dlr shoe maker
Cross William Stringer, lime burner Meek John, assistant overseer
GAYTON THORPE is a parish and village 2~ miles Hamond esq. and held since I886 by the Rev. John Robert
north-east from East Winch statwn on the Lynn and Dere- Crawford, of Trinity College, Dublin, who resides at East
ham section of the Great Eastern railway and 8 east-by- Walton. .Anthony Hamond esq. D.L., J.P. of West Acre, is
south from Lynn, in the North Western division of the lord of the manor and owner of the whole of the land. The
county, Freebridge Lynn hundred, petty sessional division soil is light and sandy; subsoil, sand and chalk. The chief
and union, county court district of Lynn, rural deanery of crops are wheat, barley and turnips. The area is 2,28'}
Lynn Free bridge and arch deaconry and diocese of Norwich. acres; rateable value,£ I,382; the population in I8gi was I67.
The church of St. Mary is a building of rubble, in the Parish Clerk, James Copeman.
Norman style, consisting of chancel, nave, south porch and
a hexagonal western tower containing I bell : there are 100 Letters through Lynn, via Gayton, arrive at 8.30 a.m. The
sittings. The register dates from the year I.)8o. The neitrest money order & telegraph office is at Gayton.
living is a rectory, annexed to the vicarage of East Walton, WALL Box cleared at 5· IO p.m.; sundays at I I a.m
average tithe rent-charge £I35, joint net yearly value I The children of this parish attend the schools at East Walton
£337, including half an acre of glebe, in the gift of .Anthony & Gayton
Fryer Thomas, farm bailiff & manager Rasberry Frederick George,agent to the Wellingham John ( exors. of), farmers~
of brickyard for .AnthonyHamond esq Prudential .Assurance Co. Limited Manor farm
Hall Joseph, The Gate P.H. & farmer Rix George, farmer, Large farm

GAYWOOD is a village and parish, partly within tha much frequented. The Hospital of St. Mary Magdalene
parliamentary borough of Lynn, tu which town it forms a was founded in II45 by Peter the Chaplain ( Capellanus), for
populous eastern suburb, and for ecclesiastical purposes a prior and twelve brothers and sisters ; after being some
includes the hamlet of HIGHGAT.~<;, which for civil purposes years dissolved, it was re-founded in the time of James I.
now forms part of Lynn: it is in the North Western division and rebuilt in I64g, with twelve tenements and a chapel.
of the county, hundred, petty sessional division and union of surrounding a quadrangle: the revenues amount to about
Freebridge Lynn, Lynn county court district, rural deanery £370 a year, and are applied to the support of a reader, and
of Lynn Free bridge and archdeaconry and diocese of Nor- eleven widows of the age of sixty and upwards, selected from
wich. The church of St. Faith is a plain cruciform structure, the residents of Lynn: the hospital is under the control of
chiefly in the Early English style, and consisting of chancel, the Charity Trustees, the corporate body of Lynn being the
nave, transepts, north porch, used as a vestry, and a western feoffees. Gaywood Hall is the seat of Thomas Edward Bagge
tower of brick, containing 3 bells: the fabric retains a Nor- esq. M.A., D.L., J.P. who is lord of the manor and chief land-
man doorway in good preservation: in the western entrance owner. The soil is in general gravelly ; subsoil, gravel.
are two old Dutch paintings, one representing Queen Eliza- The chief crops are wheat, turnips, baE.ley, with a portion
beth at Tilbury Fort at the time of the attempted Spanish of meadow land. The Estuary Companyinclosed about 300
invasion, I588, and the other the Gunpowder plot, Nov. 5, acres of land in this parish and that of North Lynn during
r6os: there is a small brass in the chancel to Thomas Hares, the year I865. The area is 2,047 acres, of which I6o are
36 years rector of this parish, ob. I632: the church affords water ; rateable value, £5,778; the population of the parish
I So sittings. The register dates from the year I562, and there in I89I was 952.
is also a list of rectors since I 302. The living is a rectory, Parish Clerk, Henry David Middleton.
average tithe rent-charge £469, net yearly value £368, in- PosT & lVL 0. 0., S. B. & .Annuity & Insurance Office.-
cluding I3~ acres of glebe, with residence, in the gift of Henry David l\'Iiddleton, receiver. Letters arrive from
Thomas Edward Bagge esq. and held since I86g by the Rev. Lynn at 4· IS a. m. & I & 7· IO p.m. & am dispatched at
Richard .Ambrose Whalley B.A. of Magdalene College, Cam- 10.2s a. m. s.xo & 7.25 p.m. ; sundays at 7.25 p.m. The
bridge. The mission church at Highgate, erected in r87g, nearest telegraph office is at Lynn
has 200 sittings, and there is a Wesleyan chapel, seating I.)O SCHOOLS:-
persons, built, with school, in I874, at a cost of £6oo; and .A School Board of S members was formed March Ig, 1875;
a Primitive Methodist chapel, built in IB75· Gaywood Con- Henry Bradfield, Gayton road, King's Lynn, clerk to the
servative club room is a corrugated iron building, formerly board; W. G. Cross, Gayton road, King's Lynn, attend-
used as a reading room; the club was established in r8g2 and ance officer
has about so members, hon. members paying 48· and ordin- Board (mixed & infants), for 200 children; average
ary members IS. yearly. The charities for distribution in attendance, ISO; .Anthony Vitty, master; Miss Susan
kind consist of allutments·of I I acres, producing £ ro yearly, Dye, infants' mistress ; Miss Charlotte Wright & Miss
which is distributed in coal; and Dr. Thurlyn's charity of .Agnes Steward, assistant mistresses
£2 2s. expended in the purchase of two great coats for old Board, Highgate (mixed), built in 1877, for r8o children;
men. .A chalybeate spring, called "Reffiy Spring," is very average attendance, 130; A. J. Wharton, master
PRIVATE RESIDENTS. Shrive George, 3 Primrose terrace Bullock Samuel, fowl dealer
Adams William, Tyne villas Smith Robert Stephen Carter Elijah, general smith
Bagge Thomas Edward M.A., D.L., J.P. Spinks John M. Poplar villas Chandler Francis, Ship P.H
Gaywood hall Tayler Waiter Ernest Chesson Henry, harness maker
Barnes James, Denmark house Tebbs George, 6 Primrose terrace Cunningham Mary (Miss), milliner
Bimfield Charles Cross, Field house Trott John, Tyne villas Curtis Richard, tea merchant, & clerk
Butler John, 2 Manor cottages Varley William'-Salter's Road house to Great Dunham school board & as-
Carter "\Villiam, 4 :Manor cottages Vickery Henry, Pleasant house sistant overseer
Cater William, Sandringham terrace Vitty Anthony, Rose villa Eglington John Richard, general dealer
Dodds Miss, I Primrose terrace Whalley Rev. Hd . .Arnbrose H. A. Rectory Frost Charles Alfred, baker & shopkpr
Ducker James Ernest, Tyne villas Williamson Thomas GaywoodConservative.Association(.Alfd.
Rllis Robert, Sandringham terrace COMMERCIAI.. Bambridge, hon. sec)
Greenwood Erasmus, x Manor cottages .Allen Edward, farm bailiff to Messrs. Gaywood Conservative Club (Thomas
Jackson William, 7 Primrose terrace Makins, North farm (Edward Bagge esq. M.A., D.L., .T.P.
King Arthur Kelver, 2 Primrose terrace Avis Robert, carter president; Alfred Bambridge & Wm.
Meal Joseph, 4 Primrose terrace Banyard Thomas, market gardener Jackson, hon. secs)
Pung Miss, I Primrose terrace Bambridge Alfred, harness maker Griffin R. & Son, corn factors
8anty Artbur Henry Blake John, blacksmith, Wootton gap Grimes Stephen, farmer
Sharp Alfred Ernest, Poplar villas Blomfield .Albert, farmer, Reffiey farm Hodgson James, Cock P.H
406 G.!YWOOD. NORFOLK. [KELLY'S

Jarvis Charles, shoe maker Osborne Robert, farm bailiff to Thomas Robinson Thos.Cook,grocer,3:.Ianor cots
Leggatt William, carpenter & wheel- Edward Bagge esq Santy Arthur Henry F.R.C.v.s.umd.
wright, Wootton gap Raines Ruth Hannah (Mrs.), shopkeepr farmer, Folly farm
Marsters Samuel, White Horse ~.H. & Reynolds J. 0. & Sons, ginger beer mufrs Sharpe Harry, head gardener to Thos.
ginger beer manufacturer Riches John, beer retailer Ed ward Bagge esq
Masters Waiter, grocer & butcher Richmond Robert, cowkeeper Shears Charles, carter
Medlar William, carter Ringwood Sarah (Mrs.), ~wan P. H Stibbon Robert, New inn
Metcalfe Henry E. laundry Robert.s Charles, hardware dealer Thurston John, umbrella maker, 1
Middleton Henry David, shopkeeper & Rogers George Ernest, commercial Woodbine cottages
parish clerk, Post office traveller, 5 Primrose terrace
GELDESTON is a village and parish on the river is a list of rectors from 1307. The living is a rectory, aver-
Waveney and on the borders of Suffolk, with a station on age tithe rent-charge £132, net yearly value £145, with 32
the Waveney Valley branch of the Great Eastern railway, acres of glebe and residence, in the gift of the Lord Chan-
2~ miles north-west from Beccles and 6 south-east from cellar, and held since 1892 by the Rev. Robert Dewe M.A. of
Loddon, in the Southern division of the county, Clavering Corpus Christi college, Cambridge. The poor's land consists
hundred, Loddon and Clavering petty sessional division and of 6! acres, let for £10 yearly. Geldeston Hall, a large
union, Bungay and Heccles county court district, rural brick mansion, built in the 18th century, and standing in a
deanery of Hrooke, Eastern division, arch deaconry of Nor- pleasant and well-wooded park, but now ( 1892) unoccupied,
folk and diocese of Norwich. The church of St . .Michaelis a is the property of Capt. Waiter FitzGerald Kerrich, who is
building of flint in the Perpendicular style, consisting of lord of the manor and principal landowner. The soil is light
chancel, nave, north transept, south porch and a round em- and sandy, with mixture of clay; subsoil, sand. The chief
battled western tower containing one bell: the roof of the crops are barley, wheat and peas. The area is 824 acres;
tower and belfry timbers were renewed in x886; since 1865 rateable value, £r,662; the population in 1881 was 292.
oak choir stalls, brass altar rails and a carved oak pulpit and PosT, M. 0. & T. 0., S. B. & Annuity & Insurance Ollice.-
lectern have been presented, amounting in all to over £soo Thomas Reuben Sycamore, sub-postmaster. Letters ar-
in valne: there are remains of three piscin~, probably of rive from Beccles at 7.40 & rr.rs a. m. & are dispatched at
the 14th century, and an altar stone: the church was re- 1.20 & 5.30 p.m.
stored in 1865, at a cost of £1,2oo, and affords 155 sittings: National School (mixed), erected in r825, for 100 children;
an addition to the churchyard of 28 perches was consecrated average attendance, 59; Miss Caroline A. Bolton, mistress
in 1876. The register dates from the year r657, and there Railway Station, George Reeve, station master
Banham Miss, Dunburgh hill coMMERCIAL. Morris Frederick, farmer
Dash wood Robert J.P. Dun burgh hill Alger Harriet (Mrs.), dairy Mower Joscph Geo. frmr.Dunburgh frm
Dewe Rev. Robert M.A. Rectory Anguish William, farmer Pigney Herbert, beer retailer
Dowson Edward Theodore J.P Barber Elizabeth (Miss), shopkeeper Sycamore Thomas Rcubcn, grocer &
Kerrich Capt. Walt.Fitzgerald, Jock's lo Beckett Arthur, market gardener draper, Post office
Long Mrs. Henry, The Old house J3elward John (Mrs.), market gardener Walker William David & Arthur Ernest,
Mann C. Ernest H. Sunnyside BrundellJn.Thompson,farmr.Manor fm maltsters & coal & corn merchants;
Thornhill Edmund Bensley, Geldeston Clarke Philip, farmer & at Bungay
lodge Fiske William, cow keeper & harness ma Webb Joseph, Wherry inn
GILLINGHAM ALL SAINTS-cum-St. Mary, I and IBA. rR. 35P. let for £3o a year; the rents are applied
cum-Wins ton, cum-Windall, form a single parish partly for charitable purposes and partly in the service of
I

and village, 1 mile north-west from Heccles junction station the <:hurch. The Eden Gift is a bequest of £200 left in 1889
on the Great Eastern railway and 16 miles south-east from by the late Mrs. Henry Eden, the interest of which is to be
Norwich, in the Southern division of the county, Clavering distributed annually to the poor of the parish. Gillingham
hundred, Loddon and Clavering petty sessional division and Hall, a large mansion, built in the reign of James I. and
union, Beccles county court district, rural deanery of Hrooke, surrounded by beautiful gardens and pleasure grounds, is
Eastern division, archdeaconry of Norfolk and diocese of now the seat of John George Kenyan esq. who owns the
Norwich. The church of All Saints is in ruins. The church manor, and with Capt. Waiter J<'itzGerald Kerrich, of Gel-
of St. Mary is a building of flint in the Norman style, con- deston, is a principal landowner. The soil is light mould;
sisting of apsidal chancel, nave, aisles and a tower containing subsoil, sand. The chief crops are wheat, barley, peas and
3 bells: the south aisle was added and further restora- beans. The area is 2,oo8 acres; rateable value, £2,492; the
tion effected in x86g, but the church had been previously population in r881 was 450.
enlarged and repaired in 1858, under the superintendence of Parish Clerk, John Gowing.
Mr. T. Penrice, architect, of Lowestoft: there are 185 PosT OFFICE.-Waltcr Falgate, receiver. Letters through
sittings. The register dates from the year 1540. The living Beccles, the nearest money order & telegraph office, arrive
is a rectory, tithe rent-charge £sog, average £388, net yearly at 6. 30 & 10.30 a.m. & are dispatched at 2. 30 & 6.30 p.m.;
-value £396, including 53 acres of glebe, with residence, in on Sundays tt1ey arrive at 8.30 a. m. & are dispatched at
the gift of Mrs. Dunbar-Hutler, and held since 1879 by the 2.30 p. m. Postal orders are issued here, but not paid
Rev. Augustus Dampier M.A. of St. John's College, Oxford. School (mixed), erected in 1863 at the cost of the late Mrs.
The town lands consist of two tenements called "the Leet Eden, for go children; average attendance, 6x ; Miss Ellen
House," IOA. oR. 12P. of land, now let for £ r6 17S. yearly, Vincent, mistress
Dampier Rev. Augustus liLA. Rectory Brock John, farmer, Winston hall Good win William, market gardener
Darby Albcrt William, Bridge houso Brundell John Mapes, farmer Gowing John, thatcher
Kenyan John George, Gillingham hall Clutten John Draper, farm steward to Ha wes Fred, market gardener
COMMERCIAL. John George Kenyan esq. Hill farm Hawes Jonathan, market gardener
Balls Stephen, farmer, Windle farm DarbyEdwd.Cbas.agt.for Lawes &Co.'s :\'!ills ArtlmrGeo. wheelwrght.&carpentr
Batters James, gardener to John Geo. manures, Bridge wharf; & at Beccles Osborne William, blacksmith
Ken you esq Darby Samuel, coal, english & foreign Rackham Arthur, farmer
Bell William, farmer timber & slate merchant, Waveney Rackham J ames, cow keeper
. Bloomfield William, farm bailiff to Mr. steam saw mills; & brick& tile manu- Stammers Harriet (Mrs.), cow keeper
John Block facturer, Victoria brick works,Beccles Tripp George, blacksmith & poor's rate
Bond Edward, market gardener Ebbs George, farmer collector
Boon Martin, Swan P.H. & harness ma Falgate Waiter, shopkeeper, Post office Tripp John, farmer & landowner
GIMINGHAM is a village and parish, situated in a. by the Rev. Francis Knowles M. A. of St. Catharine's Col-
valley near the coast, on the banks of a brook, 3 miles north- lege, Cambridge_ Here is a Primitive Methodist chapel.
east from Gun ton station on the Norwich and Cromer Lord Sutlield K.C.B., P.C. is lord of the principal manor, but
section of the Great Eastern railway, 4! miles north from the rector is also lord of a small manor. Sir Thomas Fowell
North Walsham and 7 south-east from Cromer, in the Huxton bart. :rrr.A., D.L., J.P. of Colne House, Cromer, Col.
Northern division of the county, North Erpingham hundred Collyer R. E. and Stephen Gillam esq. are principal land-
and petty sessional division, Erpingham union, North Wals- owners. The soil is mixed ; subsoil, clay and gravel. Th3
ham county court district, rural deanery of Repps and chief crops are wheat, oats and barley. The area is 1,491
arcbdeaconry and diocese of Norwich. The church of All acres, of whiCh 20 are water; rateable value, £2,132; anl
Saints is an ancient structure of flint in the Perpendicular the population in 1891 was 300.
style, consisting of chancel, nave, south porch and a low Parish Clerk, James Harvey.
embattled western tower containing 3 bells: there is a brass Letters through North Walsham arrive at 8.30 a.m.; dis-
to the Browning family, dated 1632: the church affords 180 patched at 4-5 p.m. 'frimingham is the nearest money
sittings. The register dates from the year 1550. The living order office & the nearest telegraph office is at Maudesley
is a rectory, average tithe rent-charge £214, gross yearly Parish School (mixed), erected in 1834 by the Ven. Ralph
value £352, with 32 acres of glebe and residence, in the gift Blakelock ~LA. rector here 1833-92, for 45 children; aver-
of St. Catharine's College, Cambridge, and held since 1892 age attendance, 4o; Miss Whittaker, mistress
\
DIRECTORY.] NORFOLK. 407
GOODERSTONE.
Burrell Miss 1 Bates Samuel, wheelwright I Harvey James, shopkeeper
Gillam Stephen Bishop John, farmer Kirk James (Mrs.), hawker
Kuowles Rev. Francis JILA. [rector] Fincham John, farm bailiff to Mr. L. Mar shall J ames, lime burner
Porritt Mrs S. Starling Owles Ernest George, farmer, Hall frm
Gaze Walter James, miller (water & · Seagoe William, pork butcher &
COliil\rERCIAL. steam) & farmer farmer r
. Allard John, farmer Gillam Stephen, farmer & landowner, White John, blacksmith
Allard William, farmer Church farm
GISSING is a village and parish, 2 miles north from the [,4, derived from a freehold cottage and garden left to tbe
Burston and 2 south from Tivetshall stations, both on the poor of the parish by Edward Smith, is divided amongst
Ipswich and Norwich section of the Great Eastern railway, them annually. Gissing Hall, the property of Sir Kenneth
and 5 north-east from Diss, in the Southern division of the llagar Kemp bart. B.A., J.P. of Mergate Hall, Norwich, is a
county, Depwade union, Diss hundred, petty sessional modern mansion, in the Elizabethan style, situated in a
division and county court district, rural deanery of Reden- well-wooded park, and now occupied by Cccil Thomas
hall, archdeaconry of Norfolk and diocese of Norwich. The Molyneux-:Vlontgomerie esq. D.L., J.P. Sir Kenneth Hagar
church of St. Mary is an ancient building of flint, in the Kemp bart. who is lord of the manors of Gissing, Kemp-
Perpendicular style, consisting of chancel, north and south with-Dallings and Gissing-cum-Dagworth is the principal
chapels, nave, north porch and a round western tower con- landowner : the governors of Norwich Free Grammar
taining 5 bells : there is a fine Norman doorway and the School and the trustees of Doughty's Hospital, Norwich, are
roof is of carved oak : in the chancel and north chapel are likewise landowners. The soil is heavy ; subsoil, clay and
five very handsome marble monuments, with arms, of the brick earth. The chief crops are wheat, barley, peas and
Kemp family, one of the date 1612 and one to Sir Robert beans. The are'l. is r,g8r acres ; rateable value, £2,764;
Kemp kt. created a baronet by Charles I. 14 Mar. 1642, and and the population in 1891 was 434·
died 20 Aug. 1647; and a memorial to the Rev. Edward Pos·r O.n'ICE.-llurwood Brooks, receiver. Letters arrive
Howman, formerly rector of the parish, and to Ann his from Diss at 8. 30 a. m. ; dispatched at 5 p. m. The
wile: the interior was thoroughly restored in 1876-7, at a nearest money order office is at Diss ; telegrapb. offices at
cost of about £ r,5oo, and affords 120 sittings. The Tivetshall & Burston railway stations for collection & Diss
registers were destroyed by fire at the rectory some years for dispatch of telegrams
ago, but some fragments, dating from the r6th century,
have since been disco,·ered. The living is a rectory, aver- A School Board of 5 members was formed compulsorily May
age tithe rent-charge £377, net yearly value £378, includ- rB, 1875; J. Fnrness. St. Stephen's chambers, Norwich,
ing 87 acres of glebe, with residence, built in 1878, in the clerk to the board
gift of Sir Kenneth Hagar Kemp bart. and held since 1883 Board School, built in 1876, at a cost of £r,r2o, for E8
by the Rev. Arthur Theodore Farquharson M.A. of Keble children ; average attendance, 6o ; Horace Weddall,
College, Oxford. There is a Wesleyan chapel. A sum of master; Mrs. Sarah Weddall, mistress
Farquharson Rev. Arthur Theodore M.A. Colchester John, farmer Le Grys J ames, farmer
[rector], Rectory Denny George Cbapman, blacksmith Norman John, farmer
Montgomerie Cecil Thomas Molyneux Dunning James, Chequers P.H RaynerLydia(:\1rs.),plumber & shopkpr
D.L., J.P. Gissing hall Ellis A.lbert, farmer Sexton Henry, baker & corn dealer
Kemp Mrs Fairweather Charles, agent to Sir Ken- Skoulding James, farmer
COMMERCIAL. neth H. Kemp bart Smith Robert, shoe maker
Austin David, farm bailiff to exors. of Hardesty Herbert, farmer I Stearn Robert, farmer
Mr. George Womack Harris Henry Whittaker, miller (wind Websdell George,ThreeHorse Shoes P.H
Ayton William, shopkeeper & steam) Woolsey John Thos. farmer,Grove farm
Betts William, farmer Harris Henry Whittaker, jun. farmer Wright Eliza (Mrs.), Crown P.H
Brooks Burwood, wheelwght.Post oflice Hewitt John, farmer, Malthousefarm
GLAND FORD is a parish and village, situated in a Little Langham and Cockthorpe, to the rectory of Blakeney,
well-wooded vale, watered by the river Glaven, from which gross joint yearly value £4oo, including roo acres of glebe,
it derives its name, 3~ miles north-west from Halt station in the gift of Lord Calthorpe, and held since r858 by the
on the Eastern and Midlands railway and about I~ south- Rev. Richard Henry Tillard M.A. of St. John's Col!ege,
east from Blakeney, in the Northern division of the county, Cambridge, who resides at Hlakeney. The tithes have been
Halt hundred, petty sessional division and county court commuted for a rent-charge of £97; there is a glebe of
district, Erpingham union, rural deanery of Holt and arch- about 9 acres. Sir Alfred Jodrell bart. D.L., J.P. of Baytield
deaconry and diocese of Norwich. The surface of the Hall, is lord of the manor and owner of the parish. The soil
parish is undulating anrl. the higher grounds command is light; subsoil, gravel. The crops are on the four-course
extensive views over the German ocean. The church of St. system. The parish comprises 364 acres, but the parish of
Martin has been many years dilapidated and the tower an Bayfield is united with it for the support of the poor; the
ivy-clad ruin: the chancel was rebuilt and refitted in 184o,and rateable value of Glandford and Bayfield is £ r,343; the
affords so sittings, but there are no bells: in 1882 the church- population in 1891 was roo. '
yard was inclosed with ornamental iron railings at a cost of Letters through Dereham arrive at 9 a.m. WALL Box
of £1oo, chiefly defrayed by Sir Alfred Jodrell hart. J.P. and cleared at 4 p.m. The nearest money order & telegraph
was then opened to interments, having remained closed for office is at Cley-next-the-Sea
upwards of 100 years. The register dates from the year ThP children of this place attend the schools at Blakeney &
1655. The living is a rectory, united, with the rectories of Cley-next-the-Sea
Cooke Robins, miller (water), farmer & corn & coal merchant; & atBlakeney I Powell I<'redk. Nicholas Evelyn, farmer
GOODERSTONE is a village and parish, 4 miles north- chapels. There is an allotment of 53 acres, the rent of
east from Stoke l''erry terminal station on the branch of the which is expended in fuel; also four almshouses for widows,
Great Eastern railway from Downham and 6 miles south- repaired from the rent of land left for that purpose, and ~s.
south-west from Swaftham station on the same line, in the a year from Briston's charity, in the hands of trustees.
South Western division of the county, South Greenhoe The manorial rights are nearly extinct. Lord Walsingham,
hundred and petty sessional division, Swaffham union and William Amhurst Tyssen Amherst esq. D.L. 9 J.P. of
county court district, rural deanery of Cranwich, south Didlington Hall, Joseph Trueman Mills esq. n.r.., J.P. oC
division, archdeaconry of Norfolk and diocese of Norwich. Little Cressingham, Anthony Horrex Rogers Micklcfield esq.
The church of St. George is a large building of stone, in the of Stoke Ferry, James Charles and Theophilus Brooke esqrs.
Early English style, consisting of chancel, nave, south aisle, Messrs. William Carter and William Ford are the principal
south porch and an embattled wester!! tower containing a landowners. The soil is sand and loam; subsoil, chalk.
clock and 3 bells: several of the windows contain remains The chief crops are wheat, barley and pasture. The area is
of ancient stained glass and there are three sedilia and a 2,721 acres; rateable value, £2,5g3; the population in 1891
carved rood-screen, the lower part of which IS panelled and was 394·
adorned with painted pictures of the Twelve Apostles and Parish Clerk, Garrod Smith.
the four Doctors of the church, with archangels above: PosT OFFICE.-Miss Sarah Jane Cob bin, sub-postmistress.
there are 300 sittings. The register dates from the year Letters from Stoke I<'erry S.O. arrive at 1i a. m.; dispatched
1702. The living is a vicarage, average tithe rent-charge at 4·55 p.m. The nearest money order & telegraph office
£101, net yearly value £go, including 5 acres of glebe, in is at Stoke Ferry. WALL LETTER Box cleared at 5 p.m.;
the gift of Anthony Horrex Hogers Micklefield esq. and held no collection on sundays
since 1891 by the Rev. Stewart Tilney-Ba.ssett M.A. of St. National School (mixed), erected in 1845 & enlarged in r875,
Edmund Hall, Oxford: the rectorial tithes have been corn- for go children; average attendance, 75; the site was
muted at £.250. Here are Wesleyan and Primitive Methodist given by Charles Brooke esq.; John Shaw Watson 1 master
Garrod William · ' I cOM!IIERCIAL.
Tilney-Bassett Hcv.Stewart M.A. [ vicarJ Berridge John, The Cricketers P.H
\ Brooke JamesChas.landowner & farmer
BrookeTheophilus,landowner & farmer
408 GOODERSTONE. NORFOLK. [KELLY's

Carter William, farmer & landowner Drew George, shoe maker Pearce .Alfred, boot maker & shopkeepr
Cob bin John, baker Field Garrod, shoe maker Pond George, shopkeeper & beer retailr
Cob bin Sarah Jane(Miss),grocr. Post off George Arthur, wheelwright Sherwood William, blackl'mith & farmr
Dixon J ohn,farm bailiff to Wm. Ford esq King 'fhomas William, miller (wind) Warner Acton William, cattle dealer
Dunger Martin, farm steward to the Lambert Frances(Mrs. ), WhiteSwanP.H Warner William, shopkeeper
Misses Cobbin Muskett Charles, Three Tuns P.H White John, farmer
GRESHAM is a parish, about 5 miles south-west from in plan, with a semicircular projection at each angle, pro-
Cromer stations on the Great Eastern and Eastern and bably the remains of towers or turrets, and is surrounded
Midlands railways, 6 east from Holt station on the latter by a deep fosse. Gresham was formerly held by a son of
line and IO from North Walsham, in the Northern division Geoffrey Chancer, the father of English poetry, and is sup-
of the county, North Erpingham hundred and petty sessional posed to have given its name to the family of which Sir
division, Erpingham union, Holt county eourt district, rural Thomas Gresham, founder of the Royal Exchange and of
deanery of Repps, archdeaconry of Norfolk and diocese of Gresham College, London, was a descendant. Robert
Norwich. The church of All Saints is an ancient building William Ketton esq. J.P. of Felbrrgg Hall, is lord of the
of flint, with stone dressings, chiefly in the Decorated style manor. Frederick Howe Linrlsay Bacon Windham esq. of
and consisting of chancel, nave, south porch and a circular Hanworth Hall, is the principal landowner. The surface is
embattled western tower containing 2 bells : in the church hilly, and the soil in the lower grounds is strong and loamy;
are some monuments to the Spurgin family, dated 1838 and in the higher it is a light soil, suitable for turnips and barley.
1857, and to the family of Arden, dated 1854-7, and a The chief crops are wheat, turnips, barley and grass. The
curiously sculptured font: on the south wall of the chancel area is 1,269A. 2R. 2IP.; rateable value, £r 1 733; the popu-
is a tablet inscribed to Hobert Smyth, a former rector, ob. lation in 189r was 372.
1685, and on the floor of the aisle a brass (undated) to James Sexton, Robert Larwood.
Gatt: the body of the church was restored in 1856 and the PosT & M. 0. 0., s. B. & Annuity & Insurance Office.-
tower in r886, and there are sittings for 200: the churchyard William Pyke, sub-postmaster. Letters through Norwich
has been enlarged by a quarter of an acre, the gift of the arrive at 8. 55 a.rn. ; dispatched at 2 p. m. Aldborough is
rector. The register dates from the year xs6o. The living the nearest telegraph office
is a discharged rectory, average tithe rent-charge £244,
gross yearly value £ 284 , including 23 acres of glebe with PILLAR LETTER Box, Lower Gresham, cleared at 2.15 p.m
residence, in the gift of and held since 1857 by the Rev. .A School Board of 5 members was formed compulsorily
Arthur Dewing Spurgin B.A. of Clare College, Cambridge. February 28, r873, for the united district of Gresham.
There are Free Methodist and Primitive Methodist chapels. Barningham Norwood, Bessingham & East Beckham;
The Gresham Reading and Recreation Club meets in tlm Rev . .Arthur Dewing Spurgin B. A. hon. clerk to the board;
schoolroom and has a library of roo volumes; there are now John Suffiing, Aldborough, attendance officer
(1892) 75 members. The foundations remain here of a large Board School (mixed), enlarged in 1874, at a cost of over
castellated building, which Sir Edmund Bacon obtained £soo, for w8 children; average attendance, 85; Joseph
licence to crenellate r2 Edward II. (r318): it is rectangular Cox, master
Sharpen Robert, sen Greenacre Robert, farm bailiff to S. W. Pyke John Samuel, farmer
Spurgin Rev. Arthur Dewing E.A. Bird esq Pyke William, bricklayer, Post office
Rectory Mann John, blacksmith & farmer Reading & Recreation Club (Rev. A. D.
COMMERCIAL. Page James, farmer, The Laurels
~
Spurgin n.A. pres. ; Joseph Cox,scc)
.Amies James, lime burner & farmer ParsonsBros.(Chas.&Wm.),brick makrs Reeder & Sons, grocers & drapers
:Bale Simon, farmer, Chancer farm Pegg Thomas John, grocer, tea dealer, Sharpen Robert, jun. M.R.c.v.s.L. vet-
Chapman Retsey (Mrs.), shopkeeper draper & outfitter erinary surgeon & farmer
Chapman Thomas, cattle dealer l'egg William, market gardener Tice George, farmer
Farrow Thos . .Arth. bricklayer & farmer Pyke Samuel. boot & shoe maker & Wilson Mary (Miss), Chequers P.H
• Flogdell Jsph. wheelwright & carpenter collector of rates & assessed taxes YoungE.P.&L.millers (steam) & baker
Gotts Charles, hawker & grocer
G RESSENHALL is a village and parish, 3 miles north- lands consist of 2i acres. The workhouse for the Mitford
west from Dereham station on the Great Eastern railway, in and Launditch union, situated in this parish and erected in
the Mid division of the county, Launditch hundred, .Mitford 1776, is a structure of red brick, and in 186o was remodelled
and Launditch petty sessional division and union, Dereham at a cost of £2,ooo; for particulars of union see EAsT DERH-
county cour~ district, rural deanery of South Brisley, arch- HAM. Gressenhall Hall, the property of the Hill family,
deaconry and diocese of Norwich. The church of St. Mary and now the residence of John B.eginald Hargreaves esq. is
the Virgin is a large cruciform edifice of flint with stone a large mansion of brick and has attached a well-wooded
dressings, chiefly in the Perpendicular style of the ISth park and preserves, containing in all about 85 acres. Wood
century. and consists of chancel, clerestoried nave of three Hill is the residence of 1\Iathew Robert Stedman esq. J.P.
bays, aisles, south transept, south porch and a central The trustees of the late John David Hay-Hill esq. J. P. are
embattled tower containing 5 bells: in the church are lords of the manors of North and South Soken and Rough-
memorials to the le Strange, Vescy, Davy and other families: holm and Rev. John Norris Spurgeon B.A. of Twyford, is
the stained east window, placed in r8r9, is a memorial to the lord of that of Harfords. The principal landowners are the
wife of the late rector, to whom there is also a memorial trustees of the late J. D. Hay-Hill esq. the Rev. John Norris
window at the west end, placed in 1873: in 188o.a pulpit of Spurgeon B. A. and Mathew Robert Stedman esq. J.P. The
stone and alabaster was presented by the Hill family, and an soil is loam and clay; subsoil, clay and gravel. The {!hief
oak eagle lectern was given in r88o by the parishioners: the crops are wheat, barley and turnips. The area is 2,541
organ was presented in r882 by the present rector : in 188o acres; rateable value, £3,999; the population in 1891 was
the church was thoroughly restored and re.'ieated throughout, 6o9, exclusive of 226 officers and inmates in Mitford and
and now affords 210 sittings, 100 being free. The register Launditch union workhouse.
dates from the year 1720. The living is a rectory, average Parish Clerk, Thomas Freezer.
tithe
• rent-chargeb £571, . hnet yearly
'd value
. h £530,
·r 0inc)uding
f K' , PosT, M r . 0 . & T . 0 . , S . B . & Annu1ty
· & I nsurance Office.-
502 acres of gle e, Wlt resi ence, m t e gi t mg s Mrs. Sarah Tye, receiver. Letters arrive from Dereham
College, Cambridge, and held since 1873 by the Rev. John at 7 .20 a.m.; dispatched at 5 . 45 p.m. on week days; on
Martyr Ward M.A. late fellow of that college. In that part srmdays at
of the parish called Roughholm there was anciently a 9
chapel, founded by William de Stuteville, in the reign of National School (boys & girls), erected in r842, at the expense
Henry VIII. and dedicated to St. Nicholas, but long since in of the late John David Hay-Hill esq. J.P. for ro2 children;
ruins. The charities, amounting to £ 26 yearly, include the average attendance, 55; George Wolstenholme, master
poor•s land and Curson's and Wood's charities. The church CARRIER TO NORWICH.-J. Carlton, fri. returning sat
Daniels Thomas Brown. Woodlands BntterfieldJames,ThreeHorseshocs P.H. Harman Thomas, carpenter
Green Mrs. Ivy house & farmer Hill J ames William, farmer, High house
Hargreaves John Reginald, The Hall Crown Martin, blacksmith Hill John Emery, farmer, Park farm
Nicholson Miss, Bushey house Dye Edwd. Folkes, farmer, Manor farm Holman George, thatcher
Stedman Mathew Robert J.P. Wood hill Eastoe James, chimney sweeper Howard John, farmer & landown0r
Ward Rev. John Martyr M.A. Rectory EverettJohn, Royal Oak P.H Hudson Williarn, farmer
Gapp Charlotte (:\lrs. ), farmer Hyde John, beer retailer
COMMERCIAL. George Frank, farm bailiff to Mr. LarwoodJesse,farmer, Wood Hill farm
.Alpe John, farmer Richard W. Nell::on Melton Richard, farmer, Spring farm
.Atthow Jenison, farmer Grummett George, shopkeeper Merrison Timothy, farmer, Hall farm
.Ayers George, farmer Grummett Jn. farmer,Denford High ho Milk David, farmer, Sparrow green
Bateson William, farmer Halliday Charles, farmer Mower Isaac, fanner
Brown Geo. White Swan P.H.& butcher • Harman George, wheelwright & farmer Payne.dlired Wm. bui~der & wheelwright
DIRECTORY.] NORFOLK. GRIMSTONE. 409
Peck Robert, veterinary surgeon Smith 'rhomas, gamekeeper to the trus- Tuck Brothers, vermin destroyers
Rose Robert, farmer tees of the late John D. Hay-Hill esq TunneyFrederick,beerretailer&butcher
Rye Richard, farmer Stammers Herbert Chapman, miller TyeSarah(Mrs. ),grocer&draper,Post off
Shilling William, farmer (wind, water & steam), Chapel mills Tye Dennis, farmer, Union farm
GRIMSTONE is an extensive parish of scattered houses, wurtzel and grass. The area is 3,994 acres; rateable value,
If miles east from the Grimstone Road station on the £4,470; the population in 1891 was I,J4I.
Eastern and Midlands railway, 106 from London and 7 east PoTT Row is a hamlet I mile west.
from Lynn, in the North Western division of the county, Parish Clerk, William Cross.
Freebridge Lynn hundred, petty sessional division and union, PosT, M. 0. & 'I'. 0., S. H. & Annuity & Insurance Office.-
Lynn county court district, rural deanery of Lynn Free- William Worrell, postmaster. London & other letters are
bridge and archdeaconry and diocese of Norwich. The received through Lynn, arrive at 6.40 a.m. & 1.55 p.m. ;
church of St. Botolph is a spacious edifice of flint and stone sundays 7· Io a.m. ; dispatched at n. 15 a. m. & 5-40 pm. ;
in the Early English and Decorated styles, consisting of sundays I2.2o p.m
chancel, nave, aisles, transepts, south porch and a lofty WALL Box, Pott Row, cleared at 5 p.m
embattled western tower with pinnacles, containing 6 bells CouNTY MAGISTRATES FOR F&EEBRIDGE LYNN PETTY
and a clock presented by the rector in I887: there is one SESSIONAL DrvrsroN.
good stained window: in I889 the chancel roof was raised to ffolkes George Howe Browne esq. Manor house, Wolferton,
its original pitch and the sedilia, two fine niches and the Lynn, chairman
tracery of the east window carefully restored at th~ expense Romney Earl of D.L. Gayton hall, Lynn
of the rector: a new organ was also erected at a cost of about ffolkes Sir Wm. Hovell Browne hart. D.L. Hillington hall,Lynn
[2oo, partly defrayed by public subscription: there are 500 I3agge Thomas Edward esq. M. A., D.L. Gaywood hall, Lynn
sittings, 375 being free. In the churchyard is an iron anvil Davy John William esq. Congham hall, Lynn
serving as a headstone to the grave of a deceased blacksmith. Dig by Commander Hy. Almarus R.N. North Runcton, Lynn
The register dates from the year I55 2· The living is a Elsden-Everard Raoul Charles Finch esq. Roydon ldg. Lynn
rectory, gross yearly value £475, net £420, arising from 604 Elwes Lieut. Artb.Hy. Stuart R.N., D.L. Lit. Congham, Lynn
acres of glebe, with residence, in the gift of the President Gurney Somerville Arthur esq. North Runcton hall, Lynn
and fellows of Queens' College, Cambridge, and held since Hamond Anthony esq. D.L. Westacre High ho. Swaffham
1883 by the Rev. John Fowler M. A. of that college. The Jarvis Alexander Weston esq. Uphall, Hillington, Lynn
rectory house occupies the site of the ancient manor house North Charles esq. D.L. Rougham hall, Swaffham
and is surrounded by a moat of clear water; it was rebuilt Clerk to the Magistrates, Robert Huxley Aldham, King
by a former rector in I855, but part of the room in which street, Lynn
Oliver Cromwell is supposed to have once slept still remains. Petty Sessions are held at the Court house every Ist & 3rd
The mission chapel of St. Luke, at Pott Row, was opened monday at I I a. m. The following places are included in
on St. Luke's day 1884; the services are conducted by the the division :-Anmer, Ashwicken, Babingley, Bawscy,
curate of the parish. The Wesleyan chapel is a building in Bilney West, Castleacre, Castle Rising, Congham, Der-
the Gothic style, erected in I 873, at a cost of £500, and there
is a Primitive Methodist chapel, built in I8J6. The Work- singham, Flitcham, Gaywood, Gayton, Gaytol\ Thorpc,
Grimston, Harpley, Hillington, Leziate, Massingharn
:~~e~·~o~~.b~~~J~l~~~h~~t~n ti::7L:~ro~ri~e:il;e~~~gl~~a~ Great, Massing ham Little, Middlcton, Mintlynn, Newton
weekly papers and has about 60 members who pay a sub- West, Pentney, Roydon, Runcton North, Sandringham,
Setchey, Walton East, Westacre, Winch East, Winch
scription of 48· yearly. A Police Station with house for an West, Wootton North, Wootton South & Wolferton
inspector and one constable was built in I855 and a petty
sessional court house in IBSr. Grimston common was in- Police Station, William Thomas Bald win, inspector; Claxton
closed in 1867. Three fens, together I90 acres in extent, Smith & Robert Spr-agg, parish constables
have been awarded for fuel and the feeding of geese and SCHOOLS:-
are let for £32 a year, which amount is equally distributed A School Board of 5 members was formed compulsorily
amongst all the householders in the parish ; 44 acres of January 26, 188r ; H. Bradfield, Gaywood villa, Gaywood
land, let in small allotments to the poor at low rents, now road, Lynn, clerk to the board; William Worrell, Grim-
(r8g2) realize £42 yearly, which is applied to the repair of stone, attendance officer
the gates, fences, bridges and drains of the public allot- Board (mixed), Grimstone, built in I83o & enlarged in
ments, the surplus being given to the poor rate. Brick and 1878, for I34 children; average attendance, I03 ; Hugh
tile making is carried on and there are sand pits in the Hun ten Hammond, master ; Mrs. Emma Hammond, mist
parish. The Marquess of Cholmondeley is lord of the manor Board (mixed), Pott Row, built in I854 & enlarged in r883,
of Grimstone and the rector is lord of the rectory manor. for 120 children; average attendance, 108; Mrs. Ellen
The principallandowners are the Marquess of Cholmondeley, Smith, mistress
Arthur Henry Stuart Elwes esq. n L., J.P. of Congham Railway Station, Grimstone Road, John Frank Oliver,
House, Sir William Hovell Browne ffolkes hart. D.L., J.P. station master
and the rector, who has land instead of tithes. The soil is CARRIERS TO LYNN.-George Savage, tues. thurs. & sat.
various, mostly light and gravelly and some sand and chalk. 8 a. m. ; J onathan Twite, tues. thurs. & sat. 8 a.m. ;
The chief crops are wheat, barley, oats, turnips, mangold- Wilkinson, tues. & sat
Archer John Diggins William, baker Phillippo John, farmer, Spot farm
Browne James, Albion place Drew George, shoe maker, Pott row PhillippoRobt.horseslaughtr. &skindlr
Dix James DriverThos. Thacker, farmer, Pott row Rippingill Noah, farmer & cattle dealer
Driver Thomas, Pott row Fisher Henry Failes,New inn, & butcher Rudd Charles, farmer & carter
Fowler Rev. John M.A. Rectory Foreman William,sen. bricklayr.Pottrow Rudd Isaac, bricklayer, Leziate drove
Harbord Rev. Arthur Morden B. A. Foreman William, jun. butcher Ruddlsaac,lime burner&frmr.Vong frm
(curate], Rectory Fryer Stephen, beer retailer, Pott row Rudd William, baker & shopkeeper
Smith John Gamble Henry, farmer SaundersWilliam,grocer, tea & provision
Stacey Wm. Hy.Waterhouse, The Limes Gay & Wilson, sand & gravel merchants dealer, draper & coal merchant; &
Thompson John, The Lodge [letters via Leziate] branch at Gayton; coal depot, Grim-
Thompson The Misses, The Lodge Grimstone Working Men's Club(Claxton stone Road station
COMMERCIAL. Smith, hon. sec) Sayer Henry, bricklayer
Ashby James, shopkeeper HeadJohn,farm bailiff to Messrs.Robert Seaman Alfred, boot maker, Pott row
Ashley Robert, farmer & Lewis Youngman, Roydon farm Seaman John, blacksmith, Pott row
BaldingCaroline(Mrs. ),beer ret.Pott row Horsley Dennis, builder Smith Claxton, wheelwright & carpenter
Bald win William'fhos.inspector of police Howard Benjamin, farmer, Tithe farm & parish constable
Barnes John, farmer Johnson .Joshua, saddler &c Smith John, veterinary surgeon
Bates John, shoe maker, Pott row King Frank, Jolly Farmers P.H.Pott row Smith Thomas,carpenter,joiner,builder
Blackburn John Henry, farmer Layland \Villiam Thomas, inspector of & undertaker
Blomfield Robert Smith, Chequers inn, & nuisances, rural sanitary authority, Spragg Robert, bricklayer, Pott row
butcher Freebridge Lynn union, & registrar Spragg William, brick maker, Pottrow
Bridges J ames, bricklayer of births & deaths&vaccination officer, Sta.cey William Henry Water house
Bunting James, Bushel inn Ca5ltle Rising sub-district, Freebridge L.R.C.P.J<Jdiu. surgeon, & medical
Chapman John, blacksmith Lynn union, Church hill officer & public vaccinator, Eastern &
Chapman Wm.wheelwrt.& coach paintr Leggett George,farrner&carter,Pottrow xst South Eastern dist. Free bridge
Coe Robert, butcher & farmer, Pott row Medlock Richard, baker & confectioner Lynn union, The Limes
Coe Robert, fish hawker, Cliff-in-Howe Meek Reuben, farmer, Rectory farm Storey John Edward, grocer, tea &
Coppcn John, vermin destroyer Morgan's Brewery Co. Limited (branch provision dealer & draper, Pott row
Crane Charles, farmer, Leziate drove store) (Wm.Smith Weldon,manager) SycamoreJn.pork butcher,Leziatedrove
Cross William, parish clerk OsborneRobt.plumber,glazier&decoratr Symonds John, mole catcher
Curtis Henry, blacksmith & farmer Parfitt Charles William, Bell inn Taylor Edmund, blacksmith

410 GRIMSTOl\TE. 1\0RFOLK. [KELLY's

Twite Jona.than, carrier Webster Frank, butcher 1 Worrell Henry,carpenter


Warner Geoffrey. hawker WilkinsonWilliam,book maker,Pottrow WrightWm.Queen'sHeadP.H.&bntcher
Wa.tson Robert, farmer Worrell William, shoemaker, stationery Youngman Hobert & Lewis, farmers,
Weldon William Smith, manager Mor-J & fancy dealer, & school attendance Manor farm
gan's Brewery Co. Lim. branch store officer, Post office
GRISTON is a village and parish about 2 miles south- the south windows of the church in r885 by the late Rev. F.
east from Watton station on the Bury, Thetford and Swaff- Sutton, of Brant Broughton, Lincolnshire: there are 200
ham section of the Great Eastern railway and 8 west-by sittings, of which 130 are free. The register dates from the
north from Attleborough, in the South Western division of year r654. The living is a vicarage, tittw rent-charge £250,
the county, Wayland hundred, petty sessional division and average £rgo, net yearly value £138, including 14 acres of
union, Attleborough and Watton county court district, glebe and :residence, in the gift of the Bishop of Norwich, and
rural deanery of Breccles and archdeaconry and dincese of held since r88r by the Rev. Henry Andrew B.A. of Jesus
Norwich The church of SS. Peter and Paul is an ancient College, Cambridge. The poor have the interest of £r,ooo,
building of flint, in the Decorated and Perpendicular styles, amounting to £29 rrs. yearly, left by Miss Barker, of Cas-
consisting of chancel, nave, north porch and an embattled ton, which is distributed in coals and clothing by the rector
western tower containing a clock and. 4 bells : the following and churchwardens at their sole discretion. The fuel allot-
quaint inscription, carved on the front of the font, would ment consists of 6rA. IR. 12P. now let fDr £71 ;us. yearly;
seem to indicatethatthetowerwasrebuiltin 1568: "An: Do: th~jre is also a small bread dole of r8s. annually. Lord Wal-
1568 was thys steple tope newe set up to the greate coste of singham, who is lord of the manor of Griston Hall, and the
landed men: "the stair to the rood-loft is now open to view, Ecclesiastical Commissioners, who hold the rectory manor,
and a fine piscina in the south wall has been thoroughly re- Thomas Knights esq. Nathaniel Surtees esq. of Childe Oke-
stored: the nave is separated from the chancel by a carved ford House, Blandford, Dorset, John Warman, William
oak screen: the pulpit, which has a fine canopy and reading Woodcock, Mrs. Os borne and H. G. Barnham are the chief
desk, is also of oak, finely carved, and the church has been landowners; there are several smaller landowners. The soil
reseated with open oak benches, the old benches having been is mixed, principally gravel and clay ; subsoil, clay and
converted into stalls for the choir: the font has been reno- marl. The chief crops are wheat, roots; barley and hay.
vated and placed on a new stem and base: on the floor The area is 1,360 acres; rateable value, £2,170; the popu-
within the altar rails are three ancient altar slabs, cam- lation in 1 89I was 299.
paratively well preserved and with their consecration crosses Parish Clerk, Samuel Chapman.
plainly marked: the old bell turret has been restored to its LETTER Box cleared at 5.20 p.m. ; sundays, 8 a. m. Letters
original position on the gable of the nave :the stone matrices received ~hrough Watton S.O. at 8 a. m. Watton is the
of many brasses still exist : the church was rebuilt in 1477, nearest money order & telegraph office
and thoroughly restored in r884, at a cost of £1,3<)0: some National School (mixed), erected in 1876, for 55 children;
valuable 14th century stained glass was replaced in one of average attendance, 45 ; Mrs. Emma Barn bridge, mistress
AndrewRev. HenryB.A. [ricar ], Vicarage Barnbridge Fairfax, jun. farmer Playle Frederick, farmer
Barnham George, Park cottage Barnham Henry George, farmer, horse Smith James, Waggon & Horses P.H. &
Osborne Mrs breeder & landowner, Park farm blacksmith
COMMERCIAL. Bell Harriett (Mrs.), beer retailer Warner Albert, farmer
Bambridge Fairfax, farmer Chapman Samuel, wheelwright Welcher William, farmer
Bambridge George, builder, farmer & Knights Henry, farmer White Alfred, farmer
land agent to H. Hemsworth esq Osborne John, shopkeeper Woodcock William, farmer & landowner
G UESTWICK is a scattered village and parish, with a 22~ acres of glebe, with residence, in the gift of Brig.-Gen.
station 1 mile south from the village on the Eastern and William Earle Gascoyne Lytton-Bulwer J.P. and held since
Midlands railway and 4 north-west from Reepham station r8gi by the Rev. Alfred George Summersford. Here is a
on the Great Eastern railway and ro west from Aylsham, Congregational chapel, founded in 1652, and repaired and
in the Northern division of the county, Eynsford hundred partly rebuilt in r84o: attached is a burial ground and also
and petty sessional division, Aylsham union and county a minister's house. There is a charity of 2os. yearly, which
court district, rural deanery of Sparham and archdeaconry forms the nucleus of a clothing club. Brig.-Gen. William
and diocese of Norwich. The church of St. Peter is a build- Earle Gascoyne Lytton Bulwer J.P. of Quebec House, East
ing of stone in the Early English style, consisting of chancel, Dereham, and Heydon Hall, is lord of the manor and chief
nave, aisles, south porch and an ancient embattled tower of landowner. The Marquess of Salisbury K.G. James Gay esq.
Hunstanton rock stone, which formed part of anearlieredi- J.P. of Alborough Hall, and Robcrt John Woods Purdy esq.
fice standing partly on a different site ; this tower occupying of Aylsham, have also land in this parish. The soil is clay
a central position between the nave and choir; it now stands and loam; subsoil, clay and mar!. The chief crops are
at the east end of the north aisle, where there are two noble wheat, roots, barley and hay. The area is 1,646 acres;
Norman arches: the only remains of ancient glass now ex- rateable value, £2,098; the population in 1891 was 192.
isting ar£\ in a small window at the west end of the north PosT OFFICE & for the registration of letters & parcels.-
aisle : in the church are brasses to John Robertson, a former Samuel Porrett, receiver. Letters received through East
vicar, 1504, one to Catherine Everard (undated) and others · Dereham arrive at 7 _45 a. m. on week days & sundays;
to Richard Athyll, rsos, James Athyll (no" date), who, ac- dispatched at 4·45 p.m. week days & 9·3o a. m. sundays.
carding to Blomtield, the historian of Nor folk, built the north The nearest money order office is at Foulsham; the tale-
aisle, for many generations the burial place of the At hill graph office is at the rail way station
family, and Geoffrey Stuard, 1547 ; and monuments to the
Rulwer family from r6r6 to 1821: in r88o a memorial win- WALL LETTER Box, near the chapel, cleared 4·40 p.m. week
dow was erected to F. R. Gilbert, a son of the former vicar: days & sundays at 9.25 a. m
there are 130 sittings, 75 being free. The register dates Parochial School (mixed), erected for 40 children ; average
from the year 1558. The living is a vicarage, tithe rent- attendance, 28 ; Mrs. Elizabeth Cutts, mistress
charge £88, average £67, net yearly value £95, including Railway Station, Arthur Ives, station master
Hickman Rev. Edward Rrainerd [Con- Ireland E. R. & A. W. auct!om~ers, Newstead Stratton, farmer
grcgational], The Manse valuers & estate agents, & agents to Radway .A.ubrey,farm bailiff to William
Ireland Anthony Wodehouse the NationalProvident Institution; & Flux esq
Ireland Edward Benjamin, Old hall at Norwich. T.A. Gucstwick station Seaman Peter, farmer
Summersford Rev. Alfred George, Neal Thomas, farmer Seaman Robert & John Seely, farmers
Vicarage Porrett Samuel, carpenter & wheel- Ward William Henry, blacksmith
Hudson Samuel & Edward, farmers wright, Post office
GUIST (or GEISTE)isa parish, 3~miles northfromNorth Norris, d. 1816: Richard Wiggett, d. 1726; Robert Wig·
Elmham station on the Dereham and Wells section, 2 miles gett, d. 1697; Dorothy, his wife, d. 1722 1 and l<'rances, his
north from Foulsham station on the East Norfolk branch of daughter, d. 1712: the chancel was rebuilt in r886 by the
the Great Eastern railway and 6 south-east from Fakenham, trustees of the late "\Vi Ilia m Norris esq. at a cost of £300:
in the Northern division of the county, Eynsford hundred the church was restored in r8go, and now affords 207 sit-
and petty sessional div1sion, Mitford and Launditch union, tings. The register dates from the year 1586. The living
East Dereham county court district, rural deanery of Spar- is a vicarage, annexed to the rectory of Twyford, average
ham and archdeaconry and diocese of Norwich. The village tithe rent-charge £258, joint gross yearly value £276, in-
is scattered, and pleasantly situated on the banks of the eluding 38 acres of glebe, in the alternate gift of William
Wensum, over which tt1ere is a bridge of one arch. The Edward Norris esq. and the present rector, and held since
church of St. Andrew is a plain bu1lding of flint in the 1861 by the Rev. John Norris Spurgeon B.A. of Corpus
Gothic style, consisting of chancel, nave, south porch and a Christi college, Cambridge, who resides at Twyford. The
western tower eontaining one bell: in the church are monu- poor have a fuel allotment assigned at the inclosures in the
ments to William Bulwer, d. 1749; the Rev. William 1 years 1785 and 1813, and yielding £42 yearly, and there is
Norris, d. 1798; and Susannah, his wife, d. 1803; Judith l a tithe rent-charge of zos. for church and the poor, left by
DIRECTORY. J NORFOLK. HACKFORD. 411
Robert Wicks. William Edward Norris esq. of Wood Nor- Parish Cierk, Gabriel Nobes.
ton, who is lord of the manor, and the trru;tees of the late PoST & 1\i. 0. 0., S. B. & Annuity & Insurance Office.-
Mr. Preston and Eernard Le Neve Foster esq. J.P. of Sen- Mrs. Annie Abbey, receiver. Letters through Dereham
nowe Hall are principal landowners. The soil is mixed; arrive at 5 a. m. & dispatched at 2.30 & 7 p.m. ; sundays,
subsoil, clay and sand. The chief crops are wheat, roots, 6.45 a. m.. The nearest telegraph office is at Foulsham
barley and hay. The area is x,642 acres; rateable value, Parochial School (mixed), erected in 1875, for 120 children;
£2,fXJ6; the population in 1891 was 366. average attendance, 8o; Miss Fanny Newman, mistress
Frost :Mrs. Guist ball Fenn James, farmer Martin William, Swan P.H. & painter &
COMMERCIAL. Frost Frederick, carpenter glazier
AbbeyAnnie (Mrs.),sbopkeeper,Post off Kendall Robert, farmer, Manor house Smith John, farmer
Bunn James, farmer Lake Philip, farmer & lime burner Tann Frederick, shoe maker
Chapman Richard, farmer Pollard Thomas John, grocer & draper Wilkinson Francis, blacksmith
GUNTHORPE is. a parish and village, in a valley about of University College, Oxford, who resides at Bale. The
xi miles from Thursford station on the Eastern and Mid- Wesleyan chapel was built. in 1872 and will seat 70 persons.
lauds railway, 2~ north-west from Melton Constable, 8 The poor have £1 ss. a year out of "Maltbouse Pightle,"
north-north-east from Fakenham, 5~ south-east from Wal- left by Christopher B.inger, 1678, and by John Town in I777·
singham station and 5~ west-south-west from Holt, in the Bread to the value of £r xs. is annually distributed amongst
Northern division of the county, IIolt petty sessional division the poor. Gunthorpe Hall, a mansion of red brick, stand-
and hundred and Walsingham union and county court ing in a well-wooded park of about roo acres, containing a
district, rural deanery of Holt and archdeaconry and diocese lake of 4 acres, is the seat of Edward Bowyer Sparke esq.
of Norwich. The church of St. Mary is a fine building of M.A.., D.L., J.P. who is lord of the manor and chief land-
flint in the Early English style, consisting of chancel, with owner. The soil is mixed; subsoil, gravel. The chief crops
organ chamber on the north side, nave, south porch and an are wheat, oats, barley and grass. The area is r,oBgA.
embattled western tower withpinnacles, containing one bell: 3R. I2P.; rateable value, £1,473; the population in 1891
the chancel retains a sedile and a piscina, and has a reredos : was 213.
the stained east window is a memorial to Henry Astley Parish Clerk, Stephen Fitt.
Sparke, a son of the late rector, who was killed in the
famous cavalry charge at Ealaclava, Crimea, Oct. 25 , 1854 : Letters received through Dereham by messenger from
there are a few mural monuments,. and a beautiful altar- Briningham, arrive about 7· 20 a. m. WALL LETTER Box
cloth presented by E. B. Sparke esq. of The Hall: the cleared week days at 5 p.m. & at I I a.m. on sundays.
church was thoroughly restored in 18 6 3 , and affords 180 The nearest money order & telegraph office is at Melton
sittings. The register dates from the year 1684. The Constable
living is a rectory, with that of Bale annexed, tithe rent- National School (mixed), built at the sole ~xpense of the
charge £629, average £so8, joint gross yearly value £570, Rev. Canon J. H. Sparke, rector here 1831, & opened
with 65 acres of glebe, in the gift of E. B. Sparke esq. and r Jan. r868, for 126 children; average attendance, so;
held since r89o by the Rev. Herbert Methuen Wells H.A. Frederick Pierpoint, master; Mrs. MinniePierpoint, mist
Sparke Edward Bowyer M.A., D.L., J.P. Fitt Edward, Cross Keys P.H. & farmer Livick Robert John, farmer
Gunthorpe hall Gunthorpe Reading Rooms (Joseph Mann Jn. farm bailiff to E.B.Sparke esq
John Kiddle, hon. sec) Massingham George Walt~r, farmer
COMMERCIAL. Hunter Alfred, carpenter to E. B. Payne Porter, carpenter & wheelwright
Bambridge William, farmer Sparke esq Payne Robert, grocer
Codling William, blacksmith Kidd George, grocer Phillipo James, farmer
Docking William, farmer Kiddle Joseph John, assistant overseer Strike Francis, head gardener to E. B.
F1sh George, gamekeeper to E. B. & assessor & collector of Queen's taxes Sparke esq
Sparke esq Knights William, farmer
GUNTON is a parish in the Northern division of the and pleasure grounds: the mansion stands in the oontre of
county, .North Erpingham hundred and petty sessional a park of about 1,ooo acres, portions of which o.re ih the
division, Erpingham union, county court district of North parishes of Suffield, Thorpe Market and Hanwortli: there
Walsham, rural deanery of Repps, archdeaconry of Norfolk are six entrance lodges and a picturesque drive through the
and diocese of .Norwich, 4! miles south from Cromer and park of nearly 3 miles; it is surrounded with extensive
16 north from Norwich. Gun ton station, 2~ miles east, on woods and contains two lakes of '-37! acres and IS! acres,
theN orwich and Cromer branch of the Great Eastern rail- respectively. The whole of the land in the parish is corn-
way, is in the parish of Thorpe Market. The church of St. prised in the park and g-rounds of Gunton House. The soil
Andrew is a small edifice of white brick in the Classic style, is rich sandy loam; subsoil, sand and clay. The chief crop
consisting of nave only, with a portico supported by ~ix is grass. The area is 945 acres; rateable value, £1,693;
pillars: there are go sittings, 50 being free. The register the population in r88r was 74·
dates from the year 1723. The living is a rectory, consoli- Parish Clerk, John Joseph Vince.
dated with the vicarage of Hanworth, joint average yearly Letters received through Norwich arrive at 8 a.m. & 7·45
value from tithe rent-charge £I55, with 77 acres of glebe, p.m.; dispatched at r2 noon & 4 p.m. Hanworth is the
in the gift of Lord Suffield K. c. B., P.c. and held since I 866 nearest money order & telegraph office
by the Rev. Henry Harnmont Lubbock l\LA. of Caius The parish is included in the Antingham & South Repps
College, Cambridge, who resides at Hanworth. Gunton United School Board district, formed compulsorily, Oct.
Park is the ~at of Lord Su1lield K.C.B., P.C., D.L.: the 2, 1875; tbe elder children attend the Board school at
mansion, partly destroyed by fire in December, 1882, is of Antingham & the infants go to Lady Suffield's school at
white brick, in the Italian style, with a terraced front in- Suffield
closed by balustradcd walls and about 16 acres of garden Railway Station, James Atkins, station master
Suffield Lord K.C.B., P.C., D.L., J.P. Ilarbord The Hon. Harbord J.P. (agent Paul William Edward, estate c1erk to
Gun ton park; & 4 Manchester sq w ; to Lord Suffield ), Gun ton park ; & Lord Suffield, The Cottage
& Brooks', Travellers' & Marlborough Heathfield house, Norwich Press Brothers, millers & maltsters
clubs, London s w Harbord Edward Ralph, Gunton park &c. Gunton station
Glyn Geofftey, Elderton lodge Allan Wm. head gardener toLordSuffield Vince Joseph John, estate carpenter
Harbord Capt. the Hon.Chas.Gunton pk Poll Edmund,dairyman to Lord Sutli.eld
HACKFORD is a village and parish, 1 mile south from £159, net yearly value£ 150, including 25 acres of glebe, in
Kimberley station on the Wymondham and Dereham rail- the gift of Robert Thornhaugh Gurdon esq. D.L., J.P. and
way and 4 miles west from Wymondham, in the Mid held since 1892 by the Rev. Jacob Porter M. A. of Queens'
division of the county, Forehoe hundred, petty sessional College, Cambridge, who resides at D~opham. The fuel
division and union, Wymondham county court district, allotment of 10 acres produces £ I4 yearly, which is
rural deanery of Hingham, Forehoe division, archdeaconry distributed in coals to the poor. The Earl of Kimberley
of Norfolk and diocese of Norwich. The church of St. Mary K.G., P.C. is lord of the manor and chief landownel"', The
the Virgin is a small building of stone in the Early Decorated soil is clay; subsoil, brick earth. The chief crops are wheat,,
style, consisting of chancel, nave, south porch and an em. barley, turnips and hay. The area is 75& acres; rateable
battled western tower containing a clock and one bell: there value, £1,196; the population in r8gr was 193.
are remains of a rood loft and traces of mural paintings, Parish Clerk, John Thurgall.
and in the porch is a holy-water stoup: the church was
thoroughly repaired and reseated in r867, at the sole cost Letters received through Wymondham. LETTER Box
of the Rev. Martin Bay lie Darby, rector 1838-80, .who died cleared at 6.15 p. m. The nearest money order & tele~
15 :March, rBBo; and was further restored, new roofed and graph office is at Hingham
reseated in 1886, and now affords 140 sittings: the church- This place is included in the Wicklcwood United School
yard is entered by a lych gate. The register dates from the Board district, formed compulsorily April 2o, 1875, & the
year I730. The living is a rectory, average tithe rent-charge elder children attend the Board school there
412 HACKFORD. NORFOLK. [KELLY's
Allen Harry, farmer Downes John, farmer & dealer Phillippo James, farmer
Askew Charles ~exors. of), farmers Downes Robert, cattle dealer & farmer Phcenix Thomas & Samuel, farmers
Burgess Arthur, farmer Durrant Isaiah, farmer Tooke William J. beer retailer & fow
Chaplin Joseph, farmer Fielding Esau, farmer &c. dealer
ChilversArthur, Red Lion inn,& farmer Galer Wtliiam, market gardener Turner Sarah (Miss), farmer
DCJwnes Frederick, pork butcher Garner John, blacksmith & grocer Wade Harriet (Miss), farmer
HACKFORD-BY-REEPHAM is a parish forming part of the town of Reepham, which see.
HADDISCOE is a pleasant village and parish on the House, the property of Frederick Grimmer esq. and now
borders of Suffolk, in the vale of the Waveney, with a sta- occupied by Mrs. Carman, are residences pleasantly situa-
tion on the Norwich and Lowestoft section of the Great ted and commanding fine prospects: adjoining the Hall
Eastern railway, 5~ miles north from Beccles, 6 east-south- are fish ponds, stocked with home and foreign water fowl,
east from Loddon, 8 west-north-west from Lowestoft and 9 and surrounded by shrubberies and choice trees, amid
south-west from Yarmouth, in the Southern division of the which are some beautiful and retired walks. Frederick
county, Clavering hundred, Loddon and Clavering petty Grimmer esq. who is lord of the manor, and Ambrose John
sessional division and union, Beccles county court district, Read Palmer esq. J.P. are the chief landowners. The soil is
rural deanery of Brooke Eastern divisiOn, archdeaconry of mixed light land; subsoil, loam. The chief crops are wheat,
Norfolk and diocese of Norwich. The llerringfieet juncLion barley, turnips and hay. The area, nearly half being marsh
station on the section of the Great Eastern mentioned above, land, is 2,071 acres, rated at £3,215; the population in
and that from Yarmouth to Ipswich is in this parish. The 1881 was 390.
church of St. Mary, situated on an eminence, is an ancient Parish Clerk, George Gowing (deputy).
structure of flint in the Perpendicular style, consisting of PosT 0FFICE.-James Bee, sub-postmaster. Letters arrive
chancel, nave, north aisle, south porch and a round em- from Norwich, via Loddon, at 8.15 a. m. & 2.30 p.m. &
battled western tower of Norman date containing 5 bells, dispatched at 2.35 p.m. ; no sunday post. Letters for
re-hung in r8go at a cost of £65 : the church was restored Waveney Valley works, Haddiscoe & St. Olave's junction
in x862, at a cost of nearly £6oo, and has 200 sittings. The station & "Queen's Head," through Great Yarmouth.
register dates from the year 1558. The living is a rectory, Toft Monks is the nearest money order office; Reedham is
consolidated with that of Toft Monks, average tithe rent- the nearest telegraph office for delivery & the railway
charge £325, net yearly value £350, including 30 acres of station for collection of telegrams
glebe, with residence, in the gift of King's College, Cam- Haddiscoe Drainage Commission.-Jacob Elliott Sayer,
bridge, and held since 1877 by the Rev. Arthur Wace B. A. surveyor
of that college. There is a small Primitive Methodist This place is included in Toft Monks & Haddiscoe United
chapel here. The poor's land of 4A. 2R. produces £12 School Board district, formed compulsorily July r, 1873.
annually, which is distributed in coals. The Waveney The school is in the parish of Toft Monks
Valley chemical manure works of Messrs. G. andJ. Bagshaw, RAILWAY STATIONS : -
standing on the banks of the river in this parish, maintain Haddiscoe (Lowestoft branch), James Stone, station master
an extensive home and foreign trade. Haddiscoe Hall, the Herringfleet station (Exchange station), M. Goodrum,
seat of Ambrose John Read l'almer esq. J.P. and the Manor station master
Carman Mrs. Manor house ColeWm.blcksmth.&survyr.ofhighways Gowing Geo. thatcher&dep.parish clerk
Palmer Ambrose John Read J.P. Had- Curtis Robert, shoe maker Ives Ambrose Gem·ge, grocer, draper
discoe hall Dawson James, market gardener & genl. stores, malt, hop & flour mer
Wace Rev. Arthur B.A. [rector],Rectory Dawson Thomas, market gardener Jermyn Wm. shopkpr. & market gardnr
COMMERCIAL. Dingle Herbert, Queen's Head P.H Keable James, market gardener
l3agshaw G. & J. chemical manure East.er Henry Robert, coal merchant Kett Samuel, market gardener
manufacturers & bone crushers, Farman .Ambrose, market gardener Prettyman William, farmer
Waveney Valley works; & at Norwich Farman Jacob, marshman Sayer Jacob Elliot, farmer, & surveyor
BeeJames, wheelwright& sub-post mastr Farrnan James Charles, marshman to Haddiscoe drainage commission,
Buck James, market gardener Flaxman Absalom, market gardener Burnt House farm
Buck Thomas, market gardener Flaxman Henry, market gardener Stearman Robert Marler,market gardnr
Ruck William, market gardener Garwood James, market gardener \Voods John, market gardener
Carman-, farmer,Manor house Gorrod William George, Crown P.H Youngman George, Three Tuns P.H
HALES is a pleasant village and parish, 4 miles south- The Earl of Rosebery P.c. who is lord of the manor of Hales
west from Recdham station on the Norwich and Yarmouth Hall, D. Palmer esq. lord of the manor of Loddon Hall,
and Lowestoft sections of the Great Eastern railway, 2 miles Nicholas Hy.Bacon esq.of Raveningham Hall; D.Palmer esq.
south-east from Loddon and 6 miles north-north-east from Thomas R. West esq. and the trustees of :Mr. E. Easter are
Bungay, in the Southern division of the county, Clavering the principal landowners. The soil is good mixed; subsoil,
hundred, Loddon and Clavering petty sessional division and sand, clay and gravel. The cb.ief crops are wheat, oats and
union, Bungay and Beccles county court district, rural barley. The area is g8o acres; rateable value,£ 1,245 ; the
deanery of Brooke Eastern division, archdeaconry of Norfolk population in r88r was 265.
and diocese of Norwich. The church of St. Margaret is a Sexton, Alfred Barber.
small building of flint originally Norman and consisting of PosT 0FFICE.-James Bane, receiver. Letters through
apsidal chancel, nave and a round western tower containing Norwich arrive at 7 a.rn. ; dispatched at 3.40 p.m. on
2 bells: there are 200 sittings. The register dates from the week days only. Loddon is the nearest money order &
year 1674. The living is a vicarage, with that of Hecking- telegraph office
ham annexed, average tithe rent-charge £48, joint gross A School Board of 5 members was formed September 30,
yearly value£ 88, in the gift of Sir William Bowyer Smijth 1875, for the united district of Halcs & Heckingham; J.
hart. and held since 1874 by the Rev. Thomas Parr, who C. Copeman, Loddon, clerk to the board
residP-'1 at Loddon: the impropriate tithes have been corn- The children of this place attend the Board school at
muted for £204 yearly. There is a small Wesleyan chapel. Heckingham
Ridley William Robinson Hadingham Chester Charles, corn mil- Preston J ames, brick, pipe, tile & pot
COMMERCIAL. ler (wind & steam) works, & farmer
Baldry Edward, shopkeeper Kimpton Joseph, farmer & land owner Spinlove John, wheelwright & carpenter
Bane James, dealer in corn, flour, pol- Lamb Robert Spence, farmer, & over- Spurgeon Tabitha (Mrs.), farmer,Hales
lards & malt, Post office seer & surveyor for Hales, Hales grn green
Easter Charles, Carpenters' Arms P.H Lawn Charles, farmer, Hales green Stone Sus an (Mrs.), butcher
Fisher Harry, blacksmith Leman John Spence, grocer & draper Vincent John, shopkeeper, Hales green
Fisk William, machine owner Lusher Christopher, farmer West Thos. Rnbt. farmer & landowner
Eardesty James, Garden House inn Smith Benjamin, shopkeeper Wiskar Thomas, farmer
HALVERGATE is a parish and village about 3 miles taining 6 bells: the brass eagle lectern is a memorial to the
north from Reedham junction station on the Norwich and Rev. Arthur Stanley Omerod, 31 years vicar of this parish,
Lowestoft section of the Great Eastern railway, 14 miles d. 1884. and was the gift of his family: the church was
south-east from Norwich, 7 south-west from Yarmouth and thoroughly restored in 1874, and affords 250 sittings. The
in the Eastern division of the county, Blofield and Walsham register dates from the year 1550. The living is a dis-
petty sessional division, Walsham hundred, Blofield union, charged vicarage, with the vicarage of Tunstall annexed in
Yarmouth county court district, rural deanery of Blofield r885, average tithe rent-charge £183, joint gross yearly
and archdeaconry and diocese of Norwich. The church of value [.377, with 75 acres of glebe and residence, in the gift
SS. Peter and Paul is an ancient edifice of stone, in the of the Bishop of Norwich, and held since r884 by the Rev.
Perpendicular style, consisting of chancel, nave, south porch Harry Dallimore; the rectorial titbes, commuted at £330,
and a fine embattled western tower 84 feet high, with are held by the Dean and Chapter of Norwich. Here is a
figures of the four Evangelists in place of pinnacles, and con- Primitive Methodist chapel, built in 1878, at a cost of £550.
DIRECTORY.] NORFOLK. HAPTON. 413
The poor's allotment of about r6 acres is now let for about crops are wheat, oats and barley. The parish contains
£35, which sum is distributed in money yearly; the sum of 2,675 acres, r,78o of which are marsh lands; rateable value,
£,5, left by Judith Lambe in 1735, is distributed to the poor £4,518; the population in r8g1 was 504.
in bread. Halvergate Hall, the seat of Robert Gillett esq. Parish Clerk, Robert Flint.
is a large mansion of white brick, standing in pleasant
grounds. The Rookery is the residence of Robert Howard PosT 0FFICE.-John Gaze, postmaster. Letters through
G1"ll ett esq. M.A., J.P. 1J..o b er t F e11 owes esq. D.L., J.P. o f Norwich arrive at 7.25 a.m.; dispatched at 3.20 p.m.;
Shotesharn Park, who is lord of the manor, Robert Gillett there is no sunday post. Acle is the nearest money order
esq. Algernon Charles Fountaine esq. n. L., J .P. of N arford & telegraph office
Hall, the trustees of the late R. H. Nesbitt and Joseph National School (mixed), with teacher's residence, was
Houchen Kerry esq. of Wickhampton, are the principal erected in 1854, for 130 children; average attendance,
landowners. The soil is mixed; subsoil, clay. The chief 102; Miss Eva Goodchild, mistress
Dallimore Rev. Harry, Vicarage Carter Thomas, hay dealer Mallett George, butcher, grocer,draper
Gillett Robert, Halvergate hall Crane Jacob, miller (wind) & assistant overseer
Gillett Robcrt Howard M. A., J. P. The Ford er Charles, thatcher MallcttRobt. carpenter, buildcr&contrctr
Rookery Gaze John, butcher, Post office Mutton B'rederick, cowkeeper
COMMERCIAL. Gedge Robert, plumber &c Mutton James, bricklayer
Barr John M.R.C. v.s. veterinary surgn Gillett Robert Howard, famer & land- Mutton Jeremiah, bricklayer
Beck James, bricklayer . owner, The Rookery Row land Georgiana (Mrs.), shopkeeper
Bradshaw Frederick, Hare&Hounds P.H Harper Robert Charles, Red Lion inn Wyand Alfred, carpenter
Carter John, cowkeeper I Jones Samuel, boot maker ·wyand Jarnes, blacksmith
HANWORTH is a village and parish 3~ miles west from is distribut.ed in coal. Hanworth Hall, the residence of
Gunton station on the Norwich and Cromer section of the yrcdcrick Howe Lindsay Bacon Windham esq. is a noble
Great Eastern railway, 4~ north-east from Aylsham and 5 modern mansion of brick, standing m a pleasant park of r6o
from North Walsham, in the .Northern division of the county, acres, and is partly surrounded by trees. Lord Sutfield
North Erpingharn hundred and petty sessional division, K.C.B., P.c. who is lord of the manor, and F. H. L. B. Wind-
North Erpingham union, North Walsham county court dis- ham esq. are the principal landowners. The soil is mixed;
trict, rural deanery of Repps, archdeaconry of Norfolk and subsoil, clay. The chief crops are wheat, turnips, barley
diocese of Norwich. The church of St. Bartholomew is a and grass. The area is 1,347 acres; rateable value,£ 1,785;
building of flint, with stone dressings, in the Decorated and the population in r88r was 221.
Perpendicular styles, and consists of chancel, nave, north Parish Clerk, Christopher Murgett.
aisle, north porch and a western tower, with dwarf pinnacles,
containing 5 bells: the chancel has been restored by Lord PosT, M. 0. & T. 0., S. B. & Annuity & Insurance Office.-
Suffield. The register dates from the year 172 r. The liv- Henry Brooks, receiver. Letters arrive through Norwich
ing is a vicarage, consolidated with the rectory of Gunton, at 6. ro a. m. ; box closes at 4·35 p.m. Day mail, via
joint average yearly value from tithe rent-charge £rs 5 , Gunton station, dispatched at rr a.m.; day mail from
with 77 acres of glebe and residence, in the gift of Lord Suf- London, via Gun ton station, arrives at 4 p.m
field, and held since r866 by the Rev. Henry Hammont School (mixed), erected in r854, for 44 children; average
Lubbock M.A. of Caius College, Cambridge. The Hanworth attendance, 19 ; the school is supported by voluntary sub-
fen rent of £ro yearly is distributed in bread and £4 yearly scriptions; Miss Elizabeth Perks, mistress
Lubbock Rev. Henry Hammont M.A. ChapmanWm.buildcr & contrctr.&frmr Knights James, farmer
Vicarage Dennis Jarnes, shopkeeper Suffiing Sarah (Miss), dress maker
Windham Frederick Howe Lindsay Emery H. M. & C. farmers Saul Sarah (Mrs.), shopkeeper
Bacon, Hanworth hall Green Robert, farmer
liAPPISBURG H is a parish and village on the sea- the "low ; " but the light of the lower lighthouse has been
coast, 5 miles north and north-east from Stalham and Honing discontinued; the remaining lighthouse is wo feet high, and
stations, both on the Eastern and Midlands railway and 7 east is lighted with gas; the light disappearing once in every
from North Walsham, in the Eastern division of the count,y, half minute for five seconds. C. T. Col! er esq. is lord of the
Tunstead and Happing petty sessional division, Rapping manor. The trustees of the late Mrs. George Wilkinson,
lmndred, Smallburgh union, North Walsham county court Robert Baker esq. J.P. and the trustees of the late John
district, rural deanery of Waxham, Happing division, arch- Palmcr esq. are the principal landowners. The soil is rich
deaconry of Norfolk and diocese of Norwich. The church of and strong ; subsoil, clay and gravel. The chief crops are
St. Mary, situated on a lofty eminence, is an edifice of flint wheat, oats and barley. The area is r,953 acres of land and
in the Perpendicular style,consisting of chancel, nave, aisles, 210 of water; rateable value, £3,444; the population in
south porch and a lofty embattled western tower, 110 feet r8gr was 516.
high and containing 5 bells : the stone font bears the figures Parish Clerk, William Green.
of the four Evangelists and of four angels with stringed in- PosT & M. 0. 0., S. B. & Annuity & Insurance Office.-
struments in alternate panels, and is supported by four Mrs. Harriett Ducker, receiver. Letters arrive from
grotesque figures, the whole finely carved : a carved oak Stalham S.O. at 8 a. m. & arc dispatched at 2.45 p. m.
screen, in good preservation, separates the chancel from the The nearest telegraph office is at Stalham
nave: there are 436 sittings. The register dates from the Coastguard Station, Arthur Harding, commissioned boat-
year 1553. The living is a vicarage, consolidated with Wal- man in charge, with 3 men
cott in r884, average tithe rent-charge £175, joint net Lighthouse, Frederick Spurr, principal; John .Avcry &
yearly value £296, with residence, in the gift of the Bishop William Fisk, keepers
of :Sorwich, and held since 1859 by the Rev. James Slater A Lifeboat is stationed here, Rev. Geo. Spackman n.A. sec
M.A. of Que<ms' College, Cambridge. Here is a Primitive National School (boys & girls), erected in 1861, for 140
Methodist chapel. The charities amount .to £42 yearly, children; average attendance, 95 ; Miss Hannah Elizabeth
which is partly distributed in kind and otherwise applied to Pilch, mistress
the support of the schools. Until June, 1883, there were CARRIERS TO NoRWICH. - Lcatherdale, for coach which
two lighthouses here, called respectively the "high" and starts from Maid's Head inn, Stalham, on man. wed. & sat
Bartram l\Irs Cole Frederick, shoe maker Plummer Charles, farmer
Cubitt George Cubitt Robert Thomas, Hill hotel Royal National Lifeboat Institution
Cubitt Miss Ducker Harriett(Mrs. ),grocer & draper, (Rev. George Spackman B. A. sec)
1\lowle William, Mill road Post office Siely Cubitt, farmer
Siely Mrs Gibbs Alfred George, farmer, Hill farm Siely Mary Anne Elizh. (Miss), shopkpr
Slater Rev. Jarnes M.A.[vicar],Vicarage Gibbs Arthur George, farmer, The Ilall Siely Reg-inald Cubitt Johnson, farmer
Spackman Rev. George B.A. [curaw] Harvey Charles, carwr Storey William, builder
Jay Thomas William, land steward to Suffiing William, butcher
COMMERCIAL. trustees of late Mrs. George Wilkinson Taylor Alfred, farmer, The Common
Bates Arthur, miller (wind) Littlewood John, farmer Thompson John (Mrs.), blacksmith
Bond J ames, farmer Miller John, farmer Whittleton Robert & Samuel, farmers,·
Bullman William, market gardener Mowle William, jun. land steward to Manor farm
Cason Charles, beer retailer the executors of R. S. Baker esq Wyllie Andrew, farmer
Clements Benjamin, Swan inn PlummerCharles,farmer,Barney's farm Young Bathsheba (Mrs.), shopkeeper
liAPTON is a village and parish, I~
miles west from branch of the Great Eastern railway, 5 south-east from
Flordon station and about the same distance south-east from Wymondharn and 9 south-west from Norwich, in the South-
&hwellthorpe station on the Wymondham and Forncett ern division of the county, Dcpwade hundred, petty sessior al
C. N. & B. 27
414 H.APTO~. NORFOLK. [ KELLY'B

division and union, Wymondham county court district,TliTII.l is lady of the manor and Major Sir Charlr-s Harvey bart.l.P.of
deanery of Depwade, N orfulk archdeaconry and diocese of Rainthorpe Hall, is the chief landowner. The soil is gravel
Norwich. The church of St. Margaret is a small but ancient and flint; subsoil, mixed.• The chief crops are wheat, oats,
edifice of flint stone in mixed styles, consistmg of chancel, barley and turnips. The area is 695 acres ; rateable value,
nave, south porch and an embattled western tower, erected [,t,027; in r8gr the population was 171.
in 1847, and containing one bell: the church, which retains Sexton, Michael Abbs.
a piscina, was restored in 1869, and has 100 sittings. The •
register dates from the year 1653. The living is a vicarage,
average tithe rent-charge £n4, net yearly value £177, in- Letters received through Long Stratton, arrive about 8.30
cluding 63 acres of glebe, witn residence, in the gift of a.m. WALL LETTER Box cleared at 4.30 p.m. Wren-
Christ's College, Cambridge. Here is a Presbyterian chapel, ingham & Long Stratton are the nearest money order
seating 200 persons, and founded in 174r by Mrs. Gay, with offices; telegraph office at the Flordon railway station
·a residence for the minister and an attached burial ground; National School (mixed), formerly two cottages, was adapted
the chapel is endowed with the rent of about £121 acres of to its present purposes in 1872; it will hold so children;
land in the parish, let for £,170 a year. The Baroness Berners average attendance, 42; Miss Frances Read~ mistress
Carter-Knapton Rev. James [Presby- Barnes George, carpenter & shopkeeper Leeder Nicholas, farmer, Hapton hall
terian], l:lapton house Bobby James, shoe maker Lockwood Thomas, cow keeper
.Alliban Thomas, farmer Dunthorne Norton, farmer Oakeley William, shopkeeper
Baker Philip, boot & shoe maker GreenJn.Lee,WhiteHorseP.H.&blcksmth Piggin Wm. pork btchr. & market gdnr

HARDINGHAM is a very scattered parish, with a property of Frederick Oddin Taylor esq. Norwich, and is
station 1 mile north-east from the village, on the. Wymond- now the residence of Sir William Foster bart. D.L., l.P.
ham and Dorcham branch of the Great Eastern railway, 121 The Earl of Kimberley K.o., P.C. is lord of the manors of
miles from London and st west from Wymondbam, in the ,Flockthorpe and Hardingham. Henry William Bartholo-
Mid division_ of the county, Mitford hundred, Mitford and mew Edwards esq. D.L.~. l.P. John Oddin Howard Taylor
Launditch union and petty sessional division, Wymondham esq. and the trustees ofthe late Philip William Rose are the
county court district, rural deanery of Hingham, Mitford principal landowners. The soil is clayey ; subsoil, brick
division, archdeaconry of Norfolk and diocese of Norwich. earth. The chief crops are wheat, barley, turnips and hay.
'l'he church of St. George is a building of flint and stone in The area is 2,415 acres; rateable value, £41589; the popu-
the Early English style, consisting of chancel, nave and an lation in 1891 was 528.
embattled tower on the south side containing one bell; the Parish Clerk, Abel Male.
lower stage of the tower forms the entrance: the original fasT & M. 0 .. 0., S. B. & Annuity & Insurance Office, near
font, sedilia and piscina remain, the latter being of a peculial' the Hall.-Arthur Riches, receiver. Letters received
design with intersecting arches: there are 250 sittings. The through Attleborough, arrive about 7 a. m. & 4.30 p.m.;
register dates from the year 1699. The living is a rectory, dispatched at 7 p.m.; sundays 12 noon. The nearest;
average tithe rent-charge [,6o1, net yearly value £sro, in- telegraph. office is at Hingham. PILLAR LETTER Bo:r;
eluding 66 acres of glebe, with residence, in the gift of Clare (near station) cleared about 6.30 p.m. week days; sun-
College, Cambridge, and held since 1874 by the Rev. Charles days I I 30 a. m
Stuteville Isaacson M.A. formerly fellow of that college. The Church of England school, erected with master's house, in
poor have £,2 10s. yearly in bread, and the rent of 23 acres 1862, at a cost of £I,3oo, by the late Miss Edwards &
let for £,25 yearly, which sum is distributed to the poor now supported by H. W. B. Edwards esq. D.L., J.P.: the
in coals in the winter. Hardin15ham Hall, the seat of Henry school wa~enlarged in r883, & in 1892 a clock with bell was
William Bartholomew Edwards esq. D.L., J.P. erected to- erected by the parishioners in memory of the late Miss
wards the close of the 17th century, is a mansion of red Edwards; the school will hold 130 children; average at-
brick, and has been much altered and beautified by the pre- tendance, r2o ; Thomas Redford, master; Mrs. Elizabeth
sent occupier. Hardingham Lodge, the property of H. W. Ann Redford, mistress
B. Edwards esq. D.L., J.P. is surrounded by very fine gar~ Railway Station, Charles Howard Smith, station master
dens and conservatories, but is at present unoccupied. CARRIERS TO NoRwiCH.-Robert Garner, sat. ; Matthew
Hardingham Grove is a modern mansion. of brick, the Spinks, on sat
Ba.ly George John, Station farm Baly, Sutton & Co. Limited, vitriol & Denmark John, steward to Sir William
Edwards Henry William Bartholomew, manure manufacturers; works, Foster bart. D.L., J .P
D.L., J.P. Hardingham ball Runbam Vauxhall, near Yarmouth Goldson William, beer retailer
Foster Sir Wm. bart.D.L.,J.P. The Grove Breeze Henry, farmer, Dunmore farm Male Abel, parish clerk
Issacson Rev. Charles Stuteville M.A. Breeze Jn. Wm. farmer, White Cross frm Norton Jn.frmr.Mansion grn.& Hillfrm
[rector], Rectory Breeze Richard, farmer, Low St. farm Riches Arthur, baker, Post office
coMMERCIAL. Bush Frederick, beer retailel' Riches Sarah (~Irs. ), shopkeeper
Alien Thomas (exors. of), millers Hush James, farmer & overseer Rudd William, farmer, Mansion green
(water & wind), Hal'dingham mills Bush John, farmer Smith Charles Howard, station master,
Anderson Hy. Rich d. blacksmith, Low st Cadge John, farmer Railway station .
Bar stead Richard, farmer & coal dealer, Capps Georgc, farmer, N ordle corner Spinks Matthw. btchr. shopkpr .& carrier
Hackford road Coleman William, farmer & cat.tle dealr Tricker Robert, millers' manager, Har-
Baly John & Son, corn, coal & general Caller R.& Sons, corn, coal, cake & seed dingham mills
merchants & farmers, Station farm mers.; &atAttlebrgh.; Diss&Norwich W oolnough George, head gardener at
& gl'anaries Cordy William, farmer, Gresham farm Hardingham lodge
Barnard James,wheelwright & blcksmth Garner Robert, carrier Youngman Robert, farmer, Old hall

HARDLEY is a parish about 3 miles south-west from muted in 1842 for £328), and held since 1891 by the Rev.
Reedham station and 2 south-east from Cantley station, William Ford Hale M.A. of Oriel College, Oxford, who
all on the Norwich and Lowestoft section of the Great resides at:Redhill, Surrey; the Rev. Francis John Kidgell,
Eastern railway, u miles south-east from Norwich of Durham University, has been curate in charge since 1B9I,
and 2i north-east from Loddon, in the Southern divi- and resides at Chedgrave. Here is a Wesleyan chapel. Sir
sion of the county, Loddon hundred, Loddon and Clavel'- Reginald William Proctor-Beauchamp bart. J.P., n.L. of
ing petty sessional division and union. county court district Langlcy Park, is lord of the manor and principal landowner.
of Norwich, rural deanery of Brooke eastern division, arch- The soil is fine mixed ; subsoil, sand, gravel and clay. The
deaconry of Norfolk and diocese of Norwich. In this parish chief crops are wheat, barley and roots. The area is 1,462
the Chet falls into the navigable Yare. The church of St. acres; rateable value, £1,598; the population in 1881 was
Margarct is a building of flint in the Perpendicular style, 243·
consisting of chancel, nave, north porch and a round ern~ Parish Clerk, William Fish. · ·
battled western tower containing 3 bcUs: there are rso sit- Letters through Norwich arrive at 7.30. WALL LETTER
tings. The register dates from the year 1715. The living Box cleared at 2.50 p.m. Loddon is the nearest money
:is a vicarage, average yearly value from tithe rent-charge order & telegraph office ·
.£ II4, ih the gift of the trustees of the Great Hospital, Nor- The children of this place attend the schools at Langley &
wich (who are the irnpropriators of the rectorial tithes, corn~ Chedgra ve ·
Barber James, Chequers inn Fish William, farmer , Rudrum Daniel, shopkeept~r & f11ormer
Erereton Jeremiah, farmer !<'order William, farmer Sadler George, farmer
Cannell & Sons, rnangel &. tur- Hayward Edward \Valter,farmer,llard- Shreeve Riohd.fat'mer & market ga.rdnr
nip seed growers, Seed farms ley hall; & proprietor of Model dairy, Thorp Mary Ann (Mrs.), shopkeeper
Cannell Chas. G. farmer, Avenue .farm go King street, Yarmouth Whitmg Joshua, blacksmith & poor's
l)a.rver James, farmer~ cattle dealer Lutkin Samuel, farmer rate collector
Carver WilJiam, farmer, Church farm Mann Robert William, maltster
DIRECTORY.] NORFOLK. BABLESTON. 41~
HARDWICK is a parish and village, 5 miles north-east acres of glebe, in the gift of Frederick Bacon Frank esq. and
from Tivetshall station on the Ipswich and Norwich section, held since r88r by the Rev. Charles Blomfield Smith, who
and4~ north-west fromHarleston station,on the Waveney sec- resides at Shelton. Here is a small Wesleyan chapel, built
tion of theGreatEastern railway,13 miles south from Norwich in r868. Sir Thomas Richardson, knighted at Wbitehall25
and 7l west from Bungay, in the Southern division of the Mar. r62r, speaker of the House of Commons, 162o-22, and
county, Depwade hundred, petty sessional division and Lord Chief Justice of the Common Pleas r626, and of the
union, Harleston county court district, rural deanery of King's Bench in 1631, was baptised here 3 July, I569, being
Depwade, archdeaconry of Norfolk and diocese of Norwich. the son of Dr. William Richardson, a clergyman, subse-
The church of St. Margaret is a small but ancient structure quently of Mulbarton; his wife Elizabeth (Beaumont), and
of rubble, consisting of chancel, nave, south porch and the widow of Sir John Ashburnham, was created (23 Feb. 1627-
remains of a round western tower (which fell down in rno), 8) Baroness Cramond, but the title is supposed to have
containing one bell : a new pulpit and lectern were set up become extinct on the death ofWilliam, 5th Baron, 28 July,
in r882: the chancel retains piscina and sedilia, and tho 1735. There was a hospital here, founded before 12 Edw.
stairs leading to the rood-loft and an ancient carved font Ill. (1338-9), and dedicated to St. Lazarus. Frederick
also remain : in the chancel are two fine altar tombs, with Bacon Frank esq. M.A., D.L., J.P. of Earlham Hall, is lord of
black marble tops and shields of arms on the front panels, the manor and ehief landowner. The soil is heavy, and ex-
one of which commemorates Sir Peter Gleane bart. an ad- ceedingly fertile; subsoil, chiefly clay. The chief crops are
herent of Charles I. who, during the eivil war, raised and wheat, barley, oats, peas and beans. The area is 856 acres;
armed two companies of foot, at his own expense, and was rateable value, £9n ; the population in r891 was 183.
M.P. for the city of Norwieh and afterwards, in 1678, for the
Parish Clerk, Esau Reeder.
county of Norfolk; be died in r694: on the same tomb is an
inscription to his wife Penelope ( Rodney), ob. x68 3 ; the PosT 0FFICE.-Mrs. Ameli a Lee, sub-postmistress. Letters
other tomb is that of Thomas Gleane esq. eldest son of through Long Stratton arrive at 9 a.m. ; dispatched at
the above, and Dame .Maude his wife, ob. 27 Jan. 166o : the 5.30 p.m. The nearest money order & telegraph office &
church was restored and reseatcd in r882, and has 75 sit- savings bank is at Long Stratton
tings. The register dates from the year 156o. The living This parish is included with Shelton & Hardwic:k United
is a rect<Jry, consolidated with that of Shelton, average tithe School Board District. The children of this place attend
rent-charge £487, joint net yearly value £298, including 30 the school at Shelton
Byles Mrs Byles John Ed ward, carpenter & builder Moo re J ames, poultry dealer ,
Nurse Mrs Constable James, blacksmith Puncherd George, farmer, Hares green
Thurling Mrs Copping Henry, miller (wind) & brmer Reeder Esau, farmer & landowner &
Deeks Charles, shoe maker parish clerk
COMMERCIAL. Devereux Eenjamin, farmer Seagar William, farmer & butter dealer
.Alexander Arthur Richard, farmer & Ho ward John, shoe maker Vi pond Geo.carpntr. farmer& landowner
surveyor of highways, Hard wick hall Lee Amelia (Mrs.), shopkpr. Post office Ward Fras.Rose& Crown P.n. & farmer
Borrett John, farmer Lighton Thomas Goddard, farmer Ward James, farmer
Bower Joseph, farmer Ling John, farmer
.
HARG HAM is a parish on the road from Attleborough 1886 by the Re'T· Francis Charles Birch B. A. of Pembroke
to Thetford, I mile north from Eccles Road station on the College, Cambridge, who resides at Wilby. Hargham Hall,
Thetford and Norwieh section of the Great Eastern railway the property of Sir Hugh Reeve Beevor bart. M.A. is a
and 3 south-west from Attlcborough, in the Mid division of modern mansion, standing in a well-wooded park of about
the county, Guiltcross and Shropham petty sessional divi- so acres, and now occupied by Samuel John Bell esq. Sir
sion, Shropham hundred, Wayland union, county court Hugh Reeve Ecevor hart. M.n. of King's College chambers,
district of Attleborough, rural deanery uf Roekland, arch- London, is lord uf the manor and chief landowner. The
deaconry of Norfolk and diocese of Norwich. The church of soil is principally gravel; subsoil, gravel. The chief crops
All Saints is a small and plain building of flint, in the Early are wheat and barley. The area is 1,180 acres; rateable
English style, consisting now only of chancel and nave, value, £r,747; the population in 1891 was 6r.
which was new roofed and the church restored in 1874, at a Deputy Parish Clerk, William Barnard.
total cost of about £soo: the old tower, now a ruin, stands
apart from the church: there are 6o sittings. The register Letters through Attleborough, the nearest money order &
dates from the year rs6r. The living is a rectory, united telegraph office, arrive at 7.30 a.m. LETTER Box, near
to that of Wilby, joint net yearly value £ 320, with 49 acres Eccles Railway station, cleared at 7· ro p.m
of glebe, in the gift of John Goodacre esq. and held since The children of this parish attend the school at Eccles
Bell Samuel John, Hargham hall
Hanton William, farmer, South farm
IBell Samuel John, game breeder, The
Game farm. See advertisement
I Griffin Joshua, farm bailiff to Samuel
John Bell esq
HARLESTON or REDENHALL-with-HARLESTON with part of MENDHAM.
IIARLESTON is a market town, on the north bank of the river bers of their family : there are also tablets to Thomas Pen-
Waveney, and On the borders of Suffolk, and is the head of rice; John Kerricb, d. 1757; Simon Kerrich, d. 1748;
a county court district, with a station on the Waveney Valley Elizabeth Wogan, d. 1728; Offiey Smith, d. 1777; and to
branch of the Great Eastern railway, 19 miles south from John Oldershaw B.D. 5I years archdeacon of Norfolk, and
Norwich, ro north-east from Diss and 99 from London, in rector of this parish, d. Jan. 31st, r847, and Anne his wife:
the Southern division of the county, Depwade union, Ears- the church was completely restored and re-seated in x8s8.
ham, hundred and petty sessional division, parish and rural and the chancel new roofed in I 864, by the V en. Archdeacon
deanery of Redenhall, archdeaconry of Norfolk and diocese Ormerod: there are 750 sittings, 375 being unappropriated.
of Norwich. That part of the parish of Mendham which is The register dates from the year 1558. The living is a rec-
in the county of Norfolk was added to IIarleston for civil tory, average tithe rent-charge £761, gross yearly value
purposes 25th March, x885. The town is lighted with gas £8rs, including 28 acres of glebe, with residence, in the gift
from works erected in I 840 and belonging to Mrs. S. K. of the Duke of Nor folk K.G. on the nomination of the Bishop
Chappell, and is supplied with water from springs. The of Norwieh, and held since 1874 by the Ven. Thomas Thoma-
£bnrch of St. Mary, at Redenhall, about a mile from the son Perowne B.D. late fellow of Corpus Christi college, Cam-
town, is an edifice, chiefly of flint with stone dressings, in bridge and Archdeacon of Norwich. The church of St. John
the Gothic style, and was rebuilt by Thomas Plantagenet, the Baptist, Broad street, which occupies a site given by the
surnamed "de Brotherton," eldest son of Edward I. and late W. M. Hazard esq. of this town, and was opened 23
Earl of Norfolk, in the early part of the 14th century. the June, 1872, is a building of stone and cut flint, in the Deco-
chancel being the work of William deN euport, who was pre- rated style of the time of Edward II. from designs by l't'lr.
sented to the rect<Jryin I3II, and is buried here: it consists R. M. Phipson F.S.A. architect, of Norwich, and consists of
of chancel, nave, aisles, north porch and a lofty embattled apsidal chancel, nave of four bays, aisles and transepts: there
western tower with pinnacles, begun in 1460, and containing are five single stained windows in the apse and three memorial
8 bells; the tower, shattered by lightning in r616, was windows to the late W. M. Hazard esq. who died in I883,
braced together in x68o; subsequently one of the pinnacles besides others: the seats are of richly carved oak and the
was struck by lightning and rebuilt. but was again destroyed reredos of alabaster : there are 400 sittings, half being un-
from the same cause on January 2rst, I834, and restored appropriated. The Congregational chapel is a structure of
anew: the fine organ was erected in 184r, and there are red brick, rebuilt in r886, at a cost of £8oo, on the site of an
memorial windows to the late V en . .Archdeacon Ormerod, older chapel erected in 1819: the chapel is endowed with £25
rector here r847-74, d. Dec. 2nd, 1874, and others, and to yearly, from a farm at Alburgh, left by James Whiting of
Maria Susan his wife: in the north chapel is a handsome Wortwell,in I774,and thepoorattendiugthis chapel have also
monument with arms to John Wogan, of Gawdy Hall, d. interest of£ roo left by the late Wm. Hanworth: there are
May 31st, 1778; Elizabeth his wife and several other mem- sittings for 400 persons. The Wesleyan chapel is a small
('. N. & ~.
418 BARLES'rON. NORFOLK. [KELLY 8
1

building erected in 1837· The CornHall was erected in 1849: a friday for indictable offences. The places in the petty
market for corn is held every Wednesday, and is well atrended; sessional division are :-Alburgh, Billingford, Brockdisb,
is also let for lectures, entertainments &c. by the lessee, Den ton, Earsham, Needham, Pulham St. Mary the Virgin,
Mr. W. R. Baillie. The subscription reading-room, established Pulham St. Mary Magdalen, Redenhall-with-Harleston,
at the Corn Hall in 1872, was removed to premises formerly Rushall, Starston, Thorpe Abbotts, Langmere, Mendbam
the Old Red Lion inn, purchased in 1884 by the late Henry L. & Wortwell
Hudson and vested by him in trustees for its present purpose : PuBLIC EsTABLISHMENTS:-
the reading-room is well supplied with the London and local County Court, His Honor Hugh Eardley-Wilmot, judge;
newspapers and magazines, and has a room for bagatelle, George 0. Lyus, registrar; Edward M uskett, high bailiff.
chess, draughts and other games; there are at present 27 .A County Court is held here about onee in two months in
honorary and about go ordinary members. The two fairs, the Corn Exchange. The following parishes are included
formerly held on July sth and September gth, are now dis- in the district :-Alburgh, Billingford, Brockdish, Denton,
continued. Repository sales for all kinds of live and dead Dickleburgh, Earsham, Flixton, Fritton, Fressingfield,
stock are held every Wednesday by Messrs. George Durrant Hardwick, Hernpnall, Homersfield, Langrnere, Mendham,
and Sons. Here are the agricultural implement works and Metficld, Morningthorpc, N eedham, Pulham St. Ma.ry-
foundries of Messrs. Knights and Stacey, where every de- the-Virgin, Pulham St. Mary Magdalen, Redenball-with
scription of agricultural and pumping machinery is made; Harleston, Rushall, Syleham, She! ton, South Elmham .All
there is also a small hosiery manufaetory belonging to James Saints, South Elmham St. Nicholas, South Elmham St.
Lewis and Co. and extensive maltings and corn warehouses Cross, South Elmham St. James, South Elmbam St.
carried on by Messrs. W. Edwards and Co. The charities Margaret, South Elmham St. Michael, South Elmham St.
smount to about £r8 yearly. In 1871 the Rev. Samuel Peter, Starston, Stratton St. Mary, Stratton St. Michael,
Titlow, of Norwich, left £8oo in trust to the rectors of Tharston, Thorpe Abbotts, Tivetshall St. Mary, Tivetshall
Redenhall and Starston, the interest to be devoted chiefly to St. Margaret, Weybred, Withersdale, Wacton, Wingfield
the apprenticing of poor boys of these parishes, four-fifths & Wortwell
being allotted to the former and the remaining fifth to the Certified Bailiffs appointed under the " Law of Distress
latrerparish. Gawdy Hall, an ancient mansion in the Eliza- Amendment Act," Edward Nichols Bunn, Mendham road,
bethan style, pleasantly situated in a well-wooded park and Harleston; Arthur Edward Vincent, London rd. Harlestn
partly surrounded by a moat, is the seat of John Sancroft Corn Hall, W. R. Baillie, lessee
Holmes esq. M.A., D.L., J.P.: the ball took its name from County Police Station, Broad street, Edmund Gooch, ser-
the Gawdy family, who formerly resided hare, and is sup- geant, & r constable
posed to have been built by Sir Thomas Gawdie kt. in the Fire Engine Station, Thoroughfare, Robert Knights, super-
latrer part of the 16th century: from the Gawdys it de- intendent, & 20 men
scended to the Wogans, and since to the present owner, by Reading Room, George Stebbings, hon. secretary
whom it has recently been restored and improved. James Stamp Office, London rd. John Rackharn Miles, distributor
John Winter esq. and Edward Cubitt Francis esq. of Nor-
wich are lords of the manor of Harleston, and John Sancroft VoLUNTEERS:-
Holmes esq. is lord of the manors of Redenhall, Holbrook, Norfolk 1st Artillery (Eastern Division) Royal Artillery
otherwise Alburgh, Hawkers and Coldham with Redenhall. (No. 10 Company), Lieut. J. Everson; Sergt.-Major
The principal landowners are John Sancroft Holmes esq. Sir ·Alfred Bradley, drill instructor
Hugh Edward .Adair bart. D. L., J. P. of Flixton Hall, Suffolk, 4th Volunteer Battalion Norfolk Regiment (A Co.), Hon.
the trustees of the late Osborn Springfield and Frederick Major Thomas Edward Bond, commanding; George Dur-
Bacon Frank esq. M. A., D.L., J.P. of Earlbam Ilall. The soil rant, jun. & Williarn Henry Hazard, lieutenants; John
is mixed; subsoil, clay. The chief crops are wheat, barley Smyth, drill instructor
and beans. The area is 3,318 acres; rateable·value, £6,852; PUBLIC OFFICERS : -
the population in r8gr was 1,742, and 261 in that part of Clerk to the Commissioners of Taxes, Robert Borrett, Pal-
Mendbam parish in Norfolk ; total, 2,003. ham Market
Parish Clerk & ~exton, William Dowling. Assistant Overseer & Collector of Rates & Taxes, Robert
PosT, M. 0. & T. 0., S. H. & Annuity & Insurance Office.- Borrett, London road
Joseph Chatterton, postmaster. Letters from London & Certifying Factory Surgeon, Medical Officer No. 6 district,
all other places delivered at 7 a.m. 1.25 & 8 p.m.; dis- Depwade union & )iendham district, Hoxne union &
patched to Bungay 4-35 a.m. all parts at 9.30 a.m. ; to & Medical Officer of Health, Depwade Union Rural Sanitary
through Norwich at 6. 55 p. m. ; to & through London & district, John Candler
to & through Norwich 7.40 p.m.; sundays, arrive at 7 Relieving Officer & Registrar of Births, Deaths & Marriages,
a.m. (delivered to callers 7 to 10 a.m.); dispatched 7.40 Boardman Silcock, Starston; deputy, Charles Woods,
p.m Harleston
PILLAR Box, Redenball road, cleared g.3o a.m. 12.20, 2 & Inland Revenue Officer, .Alex. Nelson, London rd. HarlB.'ltn
7 p.m. ; not cleared on sunday SCHOOLS:-
WALL Box, London road, cleared g.2o a.m. 12.10, r.so & A sum of money, which now usually amounts to £soyearly,
6.40 p.m. ; not cleared on sundays from the bequest of Mr. John Dove, is paid by the trustees
COUNTY MAGISTRATES FOR EARSHAM PETTY SESSIONAL towards the maintenance of the National schools. The
DIVISION. sum of £3o yearly was granred by Archbishop Sancroft,
a:olmes John Sancroft esq. M.A. Gawdy hall, Harleston, in I68g, to the Master & fellows of Emmanucl College,
chairman Cambridge, for a clergyman to perform the service on
Bateman Sir Frederic, Upper St. Giles street, Norwich week days & to teach some boys ; but this sum is now
Donnison Rev. James Watson State M.A. The Dove house, paid towards the salary of the National s~hoolmaster, the
Mendbam, Harleston rector undertaking to supply certain services on thurs-
Fellows Rev. Spencer M.A. Rectory, Pulbam Market, Harlestn days & holy days in the church
France Rev. George M.A. Rectory, Brockdish, Scale National {boys), erected 1870, for 92 childen; average
Meade Captain John Percy, Earsham hall, Bungay atrendance, 77; Edward "'ilson, master
Pembcrton Waiter Hamilton esq. Denton house, Harleston National (girls & infants), erected in r85o, for So girls & So
Taylor .Alfred esq. Starston Place, Harleston infants; average attendance, 43 girls & 56 infants ; Miss
Clerk to the .Magistrates, Wm. Henry Hazard, Harlcston 1'\arah 'Hobson, girls' mistress ; Miss Agnes Golden, in-
Petty Sessions are held at the room at the rear of the Corn fants' mistress
hall every third friday at 11 a.m. and are also held any Railway Station, Matthew Bird, station master

PRIVATE RESIDENTS. Chase .Alfred Henry, London road Garrould Miss, 3 Wilderness terrace
Aldis Thomas, jun. Thoroughfare Churchyard Mrs. Broad street Gibbs Mrs. London road
Aldous Miss Clark Mrs. Yew Tree cottage, Redenhall Goodrum Miss, Acacia house
Baillie William R Clutren Miss, The Limes Hall Mrs. Old Market place
Branch Miss, The Cottage, London road Cordwell Walter, 5 Wilderness terrace Hammond John, The Firs, London rd
Brock Oliver, 4 Wilderness rerra.ce Crisp Mrs. The Gables Hazard Mrs. St. Martin's lodge
Brock William Edward, H.edenhall road Crisp Miss, Reydon house Hazard Mrs. Thomas, Caltofts
Broughton Edwin John, Broad street Crisp Mrs. London road Holmes John Sancroft M.A., D.L., .r.P.
Browne Mrs. W. London road Denny George, London road Gawdy hall
.Bryant Mrs. Old Market place Dennv•
William, London road Hudson Miss
.Buckingham Herbert Dounison Rev. James "'atson Store Hudson Mrs. H. L
Buckingham Herbert, jun M.A., J".P. Dove house Jarrett Amos John, Redenhall
Bunn Edward Nichols, Mendham road Durrant George, Redenhall grange J effes Miss, Broad street
Campling Mrs Durrant Gem·ge, jun. Richmond house Jex William, Haddiscoe lodge
Candler John Everson John A. Thoroughfare Johnson Miss, Redenhall
Candler William John Fox Miss, Broad street King :Miss, London road
Ca.udwell Eber · Gambrill Thomas, Loudon road Knights John Rt. May villa, London rd
DIRECTORY.] NORFOLK. HARLESTON. 417
Knights Robert, London road Chappell E. ironmonger, gasfitter, hot Harleston Gas Light & Coke Works
Lyus George Ormiston water engineer & gunsmith (Mrs. S. K. Chappell, proprietress)
Metcalfe Rev. Wallace M.A. 2 Wilder- Cnappell James Wm. (exors.of),painters Harleston Horticultural & Cottagers'
ness terrace Charlish Charles, butcher, Market pi Society (John Geo. Prentice, hon.sec)
Miles Johu Rackham, London road Charlish Thomas, carter & beer retailer Harleston Technical Education Com-
Olley George Edward, London road Chatton William, greengro. Market pl mittee (Waiter Cordwell, local sec)
Peck Henry, Broad street Cbilver Samuel, glover & hair dresser, Harper George, farmer,& assistant over-
Perowne Ven. Archdeacon Thomas Thoroughfare seer for Mendham
Thomason B.D. Rectory Churchyard Arthur E. pharmaceutical Hazard & Pratt, s )\icitors
Pipe John, Selborne & analytical chemist, Market place Hazard Wm. Hy. LL.B. solicitor& clerk
Pratt Thomas, The Beeches Clnttcrham John, blacksmith, Bullock to the magistrates (firm, Hazard &
Prentice Mrs. London road Fair yard Pratt) ; London office, 8 Old Jewry EC
Robinson George, Red ho. London road Cocking Thomas, boot & shoe maker & Holmes William, Green Dragon P.H
Salisbury• Mrs. London road leather seller, Thoroughfare Hudson Henry,coal,corn,lime & general
Scolding Waiter, Station road Coleby David, farmer, Pleasure farm merchant & maltster, & agent for
Smith :Miss, Redenhall Cook Edward & Co. manure merchants Morse & Woods, brewers & maltsters,
Stacey William, The Laurels (G. N. Youngman, agent) Redenball road ; & miller (wind &
Stebbings George, Bank Cook .Arthur, Railway tavern steam), Tower mill
Thomas Maurice, 1 Wilderness terrace Cook Adolphus, bricklayer Jex William, farmer, Redenhall
Towle Rev. William Harrison [Con- CooperHerbert,hair drssr. Thoroughfare J ohnson Washin~ton, tailor, Thoroughfre
gregational], Old Market place Cordwell Waiter, local sec. to Ilarleston Keeley George,plumber &c. Broad street
Vincent Arthur Edward, London road Technical Education Committee, 5 Kent Charles, dairyman, Redcnhall
White Mrs. London road Wilderness terrace Kerridge Thomas Rarnes, dairyman &
Wragg Ellis, London road Corn Exchange (W. R. Baillie, le~see) carter, School lane
County Court (His Honor Hugh Eardley Knights & Stacey, agricultural imple-
COMMERCIAL. Wilmot, judge ; George 0. Lyus, ments & pumping machinery manu-
Ablett Samuel, saddler, Thoroughfare registrar; Edward Musket, high facturers, engineers, millwrights &
Aldis Thomas, curricr & leather seller bailiff) wholesale ironmongers &c. London
AlluredAlfred,tailor&draper,London rd Gumming William Lionel, commercial road; & Corn exchange, Norwich
Allured Ell en (Mrs. ),dress ma.Broad st traveller, Old Market place Land Geo. Wm. fishmonger, Broad st
Ancient Order of Foresters (Earl of Curl Brothers, drapers & outfitters &c. Lewis James & Co. hosiery manu-
Waveney court, No. 4,301 & Juvenile Thoroughfare; & at Norwich facturers, Wavcncy factory
branch) (Waiter Cordwell, sec.) ; Denny William & George, ironmongers, London & Provincial Bank Limited
meets at the Swan hotel Market place (branch)(W1lliam Bryant,managcr) ~
Baillie William Rolland, family draper, Dimmock Joscph Barnard, farmer, draw on head office, 7 Bank buildings
milliner, dress maker, outfitter, boot Shotford hall E c & Glyn, Mills, Curric & Co.
& shoe, carpet & furniture warehouse, Durrant George & Sons, auctioneers, London E c
Thoroughfare land&estate agents, valuers & farmers, Lyus George Ormiston, solicitor &
BarkwayWlt. Wm. watch ma. London rd Redenhall grange & Thoroughfare ; commissioner for oaths & registrar of
Barnwell Sarah (Mrs.), professor of & at Beccles county court
music & singing, Thoroughfare Edwards William & Co. corn, coal, cake Mackley George William, surgeon-den-
Barrett Susan (Mrs.), pork butcher, & manure merchants, maltsters & tist ; attends at the Swan hotel (from
Broad street millers (steam); depot, Homersfield Norwich) the first wed. in each month
BaylesEdgar,grocer & draper,Market pl Railway station Maddison, Miles & Maddison, surveyors,
Beare Charles, butcher Edwards John, baker & confectioner, auctioneers, valuers & estate agents ;
Bell ward Robert, farmer, Darby's farm Thoroughfare & at Great Yarmouth; Cantley
Benns Edmund Thomas, china dealer Ell is Richard Canada, market gardener, & Lowestoft
& tobacconist, Thoroughfare Thoroughfare Markwell John, basket maker
Bird Matthew, station master Everson John A. wholesale & retail Mendham Emma (Mrs.), farmer,
Blackmore Sl.shopkeeper, The Common wine, spirit, ale, porter, tobacco, Lodge farm, Redenhall
Bond John, boot & shoe ma. Middle st ci~;ar & tea merchant & manufacturer l\'Iiddleton Christopher, shoe maker,
Borrett Mary (Mrs.), flour dealer of mineral waters & aerated bever- London road
Borrett Robert, assistant overseer & ages & importer of foreign mineral Miles Fredk. G. butcher, Thoroughfare
collector of rates & taxes, London rd waters, & general insurance a~ent; & Miles John Rackham, stamp distributor
Borrett Samuel, bricklayer, London rd at Framlingham, Suffolk & farmer
Bradley Sergt.-Major .Alfred, drill Fairhead Jarnes Edward, insurance Mothersol E. (Mrs.) & Son, watch makrs
· instructor No. 10 Co. 1st Norfolk agent, Bullock Fair yard .Murray Robert, The Duke William P.H
Artillery Volunteers, London road Feaviour & Sons, coach builders .Muskett Charles, baker, Broad street
Brctt Henry, builder, Redcnhall road Feavyear William, grainer & decorator, Nash Richard, cabinet maker & builder,
Bridges John, pork butcher, Broad st London road Broad street
Brown John, greengrocer, Broad street Fenn Frank, gardener to John San croft Nelson .Alexander, inland revenue
Bryant Williarn, manager of the Lon- Holmes esq. J.P. Redenhall officer, London road
don & Provincial Bank Limited Fennell Em m a (Mrs.), laundress, Red- Nichols William, farmer, Redenhall
Buckingham Herbert M.R.c.v.s. vet- enhall Norfolk rst ArtilleryVolunteers(Eastern
ermary surgeon Fire Engine Station (Robert Knights, Division) Royal Artillery (No. 10 Co.)
Buckingham Herbert, jun. M.R.c.v.s. superintendent), Thoroughfare Lieut. J. Everson; Sergt.-Major
veterinary surgeon Frost .Ambrose, brick maker, Redenhall .Alfred Bradley, drill instructor)
Burgess James & Son, fishmongers, Gedny Frederick Albert, draper & mil- Norman George, Cherry Tree P.H
Broad street liner, Thoroughfare Nuthall Henry Chapman, grocer &c,
Butcher Benj.greengrocer, Broad street Gill Robert, merchant tailr.London rd see Pipe & Nuthalt
Byles John, assistant insurance superin- Gillman Wait. Jn. watch ma. Londonrd Owles Frederick Henry, tailor, & man-
tendent, London road God bold Robt. carver in wood & stone ager of the Reading room
Candler John, surgeon, medical officer Gooch Edmund, police sergeant, County Parker Frederick Albert, farmer, Pied-
for No. 6 district, Depwade union & Police station, Thoroughfare bridge farm
Mendham district, lloxne union & Good George, clerk to the Mendbam Parker llenry, farmer, Oakland farm
medical officer of health, Depwade school board, Broad street Patrick James, broker & secondhand
union rural sanitary district, & Goodwin .Alfred, farmer, Bethel farm, clothes dealer, London road
certifying factory surgeon Redenhall Payne John, grocer, Broad street
Candler William J obn, surgeon Good win Frederick, farmer, Briar Perfitt John Locke, stone, marble &
Cann Consuelo (Miss), girls' modern farm, Redenhall granite mason, London road
school, London road Gosha wkEd wd. hair drssr. Thoroughfare Pipe & N nthall, grocers, & agents for
Cann Robert Rcdgrave, printer, book- Gowing George, Three Horse Shoes P.H W. &A. Gil bey, wine& spirit merchants
seller, news agent, stationer, jeweller, Green Cbarles,Royal Oak P.H.Middle st Pratt Thomas, solicitor & commissioner
& berlin wool & fancy repository, Green Oaklcy John, coach builder for oaths (firm, Hazard & Pratt)
auctioneer, valuer, land agent & Gurneys, Birkbeck, Barclay, Buxtons & Prentice John G. grocer, Thoroughfare
dealer in antiquities, Market place Orde, bankers (branch) (George Steb- Prime Frederick, tinman & brazier,
Carman Samuel, watch maker, Broad st bings, agent) ; draw on Barclay, Broad street
Caudwell Eber M.R.c.s.Eng., L.R.C.P. Bevan & Co. London E c Prime James, rarmer, Anthill farm
LOnd.,F.s.sc.A., A.P.S. surgeon; & at Hall Christopher Claydon, boys' board- Rayner Arthur F. builder & carpenter
Pulham St.. Mary-the-Virgin ing school, Redenhall Rayner Eliza (Mrs.), servants' registry
Chaplin George, florist & seedsman, Hammond Charles H. (Mrs.), furniture office
London road broker, London road Rayner Bob, builder & carpenter
418 HARLESTON. NORFOLK. [KELLY'S

Reading Room (George Stebbir.gs, hon. t Stacey William, engineer, see Knights Vincent A. E. & Co. auctionrs. & valuers
sec.; Frederick H. Owles, manager) & Stacey Ward Hy. coal dlr. & carter, Jay's gm
Reeve George, hair dresser, hardware Stamp Office (John Rackham Miles, Warden Henry, bill poster & bricklayer,
dealer & general fancy repository distributor), London road London road
Robertson William John, grocer & china Stanton Thomas Smith, farmer & coal Wells Jas. apartments, Thoroughfare ha
dealer, Market place & Broad street merchant, Thoroughfare West John, fishmonger, Mendham lane
Robinson Jsph. Hy.Hope inn, Market pl Stebbings George, agent for Gurneys ·whitaker Waiter, farmer, Coldham
Rod well Jn. Two Brewers P.H. Broad st & Co. bankers hall, Redenball
Rolfe Jeannetta (Mis§), ladies' school, Swan commercial & family hotel & White Mary Ann (Miss), farmer,
Acacia house posting house & funeral establish- Clintergate farm
Rose Annie Elizabeth (Mrs.), dress ment (G. N. Youngman, owner), Williams John, confectioner, Market pi
maker, London road wine, spirit, ale & porter merchant, Woods Charles, chemist & druggist,
Rust John William, timber merchant & agent for E. Greene & Sons & Bass oil & calor man & artificial manure
Ruth William, Yew Tree P.H. Redenhall & Co.'s family ale agent, & relicvmg officer & deputy
Samson John, bacon curer, London rd Symonds William, woodman to John registrar of births, deaths &
Shibley Waiter, Magpie family & corn- Sancroft Holmes esq. J.P. Redenhall marriages, Thoroughfare
mercial hotel; funeral cars & mourn- Titlow Ann (Mrs.), milliner, dress & Wright James, Sir Robert Peel P.H.
ning coaches & general posting mantle maker, Broad street Mcndham lane
Ship Robert, fishmonger, Broad street Titlow Samuel, tailor, Old Market place Wright Rubert, boot & shoe maker, &
Smith Joshua & Son, builders, Broad st Turner John, Cardinal's Hat inn agent to the Hand-in-Hand .Fire &
SmithCharles,harness maker,London rd Valiant John, watch maker, Market pi Life Insurance Co. Thoroughfare
Smith Robert, baker, London road Volunteer Battalion (4th) Norfolk Regi- Yallop Charles & Son, cabinet makers,
Smyth Joseph, sergt.-instructor A Co. ment (A Co.) (Major Thomas upholsterers & general furnishers,
1st Norfolk Rifle Volunteers, Old Edward Bond, commanding; George sewing machino agents, antique
~ Market place Durrant, jun. & William Henry furniture restorers, paperhangers
Soanes John, bill poster, Broad street Hazard, lieutenants; John Smyth, & undertakers, Broad street
Spaul Samuel, shopkeeper, London rd drill instruc-tor) Youngman Godfrey Neale, Swan hotel

EAST HARLING (or MARKET HARLING) is a parish was then largely attended, but rapidly declined after the
and small market town, situated on an acclivity above the construction of the railway to Norwich. The annual fair
river Thet, with a station called "Harling Road" on the days, viz. :-May 4th, the first Tuesday after Sept. 12th and
Thetford and Norwich section of the Great Eastern railway, Oct. 24th, are now, as far as sheep and bullocks are con-
Ii mile."l north-we.~t from the village, 9 miles north-east cerned, obsolete. In the place of these there are annual
from Thetford and 104~ from London, in the Mid division sheep sales, one on the first Thursday in July, principally
of the county, Guiltcross and Shropham petty sessional divi- for lambs, a great many being bred in the district around, and
sion, Guiltcross hundred and union, Attleborough county another in April, chiefly for hoggets, a large number of sheep
court district, rural deanery of Rockland, archdeaconry of being penned on each occasion. The town lands of 96 acres
Norfolk and diocese of Norwich. The church of SS. Peter produce £76 yearly, which is distributed as follows :---{)ne
and Paul, standing on a. slight elevation close to the high third to the church, one third towards the support of the
road, at the western entrance to the town, was erected in the public school and the remainder to an Improvement fund :
15th century (c. 1449) by Sir William Chamberlain kt. and under an order of the Inclosure Commissioners, £45. the
completed by Sir Robert Wingfield kt. is a building of stone rent of 56 acres of fen land, is laid out in fuel for the
in the Perpendicular style, consisting of chancel with north poor. Old Ilarling Hall, a structure of brick, with an em-
or Jesus and St . .Anne's chapels, nave, aisles, south porch battled tower, was bnilt by Sir Thomas Lovell kt. but during
and a lofty western tower with 12 pinnacles and au elegant the time of his successor, Gregory Lovell, it was allowed to
spire and containing 6 bells: in St. Mary's or the Harling fall into ruins. Flint Hall is now (1892) unoccupied. The
chapel, at the east end of the south aisle, which still retains manors were granted by IIenry VII. about 1485, to Sir
much of its elaborate carving and ornamental work, was Thomas Lovell, knighted 1487, and wer'o! some time after-
buried John de Ilerling, c. 1392 ; here also is an altar tomb, wards held by Gregory Lovell, and on his death by his half-
with recumbent marble effigies, to Sir Robert Harling, slain brother, John Lovell: the property subsequently passed to
in 1435, during the Frenc:h war, and subsequently interred Charles Wright esq. and thence descended to his grandson,
here, and to his lady ; the tomb is adorned with figures of who was lord of the manor and patron of the living in 1736,
unicorns and pelicans, and is inclosed by an iron railing : on and the Wright family or their representatives continued to
the south side of the chapel is a stately altar tomb of various- have interests in this parish until about 1822. The water
ly coloured marbles, with recumbent effigies, to Sir Thomas mill and adjacent lands belonged for several generations
Lovell kt. ob. 16oo, and his wife, ob. 16o4, and round the before r 820 to the family of Rod well. Miss lluxton, of
whole an iron grating: in the chancel, under an arch open- Shad well Court, near Thetford, is lady of the manor. Col.
into St. Anne's chapel, is a tomb, surmounted by a fine slab the Earl of Albemarle K.C.M.G. Sir Thomas Thornhill D.L.,
of Purbeck marble, once bearing effigies in brass, to Sir J.P. of Pakenham Lodge, Suffolk, Cecil Thomas Molyneux-
William Chamberlain K.G. commander in France, ob. 1462, Montgomerie esq. D.L., J.P. of Gissing Hall and Timothy
and Anne, daughter of the above Sir Robert Harling, his Colman esq. are the chief landowners. The soil is light
wife, but the brasses have long been missing; she after- loam ; subsoil, chalk. The chief crops are wheat, barley and
wards married Sir Robert Wingfield kt. and subsequently turnips. The area is £2,572 acres; rateable value, £3,649;
became the third wife of Sir John Scrape, fifth Baron the population in r891 was r,o36.
Scrape, of Bolton·; one side of the tomb displays the arms of Parish Clerk, Thomas Morris Last.
Chamberlain ; there are also other monuments, including
a number of coffin-shaped tombstones near the chancel door PosT, M. 0. & T. 0., S. B. & Annuity & Insurance Office.-
to members of the Rod well family: the east window is filled Mrs. Maria Barnard, postmistress. Letters by mail cart
with ancient glass, previously removed hence to the old hall, from Thetford arrive at 4·35 a.m. & 3.15 p.m.; dispatched
but replaced about 1700 by Charles Wrightesq.: the church at 2.35 & 8 p.m
was restored and seated with open benches in ;x878-79, and CoUNTY MAGISTRATEs FOR GmLTCnoss & SHROPHA:M
affords 300 sittings : the churchyard was enlarged and sur- PETTY SESSIONAL DIVISION.
roanded by a wall in 1829. The register dates from the year
1544. The living is a rectory, average tithe rent-charge £450, Nugent Sir Edmund Charles bart. The Hall, West Ear-
gross yearly value £6oo, net £461,with 68 acres of glebe and ling, Thetford & at I4 Lowndes sq. London s w chairman
residence, in the gift of Grigson Heyhoe Wigg esq. and held Bury Viscount, Quidenham park, Thetford
since r888 by the Rev. Baseley Hales Grigson B.A. of Corpus :Keppel Major William George, Old Buckenham
Christi college, Cambridge. There is a Primitive Method- Montgomerie Cecil Thomas Molyneux- esq. n. L. Gissing
ist chapel, erected about r83o, and seating 200 persons, hall, Diss
and the Society of Friends have a meeting house and burial Morris Sydney esq. Wretham ha!I, Thetford
ground attached. Harling Unionist Club was established in Nugent Gcorge C. esq. West Harling
1889 for the working people of this parish. In a pictures- Partridge Henry Thos. esq. The Hall, Hock ham, Thetford
que spot on the outskirts of the town is a. flour mill, worked Clerk to the Magistrates, Arthur Tallent Clowes, New
both by the river Thet and by steam power, and employing a Buckenham
considerable number of hands. A short distance north of Petty Sessions are held at the Police Station, East Harling,
the town is a limekiln. A corn market is held here every every second monday at u a.m. The following places
Tuesday. A market, to be held on Tuesdays, and two are included in the Petty Sessional Division :-Attle--
yearly fairs were granted by Edw. IV. in 1474; during the borough, Banham, Besthorpe, Blo' Norton, Brettenham,
last and the earlier part of the present century the market .ilridgham, Buckenham (New), Buckenham (Old), Eccles,
was well supplied, cheese, butter and provisions being sold Garboldisham, Gasthorpe, Great Ellingham, Ha.rgham,
on Cheese hill, and in the Market place the worsted, yarn Harling (East), Harling (West), Hockham, lllington,
and hempen goods manufacturedin the locality; the market Kenninghall, Kilverstone, Larling, Lopham (North), Lop•
DIBECTOBY .] NOR'F'OLK. lUST BARLING, 419
ham (South), Quidendam, Riddlesworth, Rockland (All PUBLIC OFFICERS:-
: Saints & St. Andrew's), Roudham, Rusbford, Shropham, Medical Officer & Public Vaccinator, 4th district, Guiltcross
Snarehill (Great & Little), SnBttBrton, Wilby, Wretham union, William Edward Soffe L.F.P.s.Glas
(East) & Wretham (West) Relieving Officer & Registrar of Births, Marriages & Deaths,

William Henry Berry
Punuc EsTABLISHMENTs:- National Voluntary School (mixed), erected in 1842, for 220
Inland Revenue Office, Swan hotel children; average attendance, 185 ; Alfred James Cold-
County Police Station, CharlBs Wright, superintendent, & ham, master ; Miss Ev<!. Kerridge, assistant mistress
2 constables Railway Station, Barnes England, station master
"PRIVATE RESIDENTS. Graham Thomas & Son, lime burners Page James, shopkeeper, Market place
Eailey Wm. Town frm. Garbaldsham rd Gurneys, Birkbecks, Barclay & Buxton, Peake Josiah, blacksmith &wheelwright,
Bocock Rev. Enoch [Primitive], White bankers (branch) (Thomas Slack, Cheese hill
Hart street manager, from Diss branch, attends Peake M aria (Mrs.), dress makert
Eryant Richard John, Atmore house tues. & fri.) ; draw & Barclay, Bevan, White Hart street
Colman Timothy, Eastfield house Tritton & Co. London E c Porcher John, boot & shoe maker; re-
Cracknell Wm. Oetavius, White Hart st Rambling Thomas, shopkeeper, Mar- pairs neatly executed; ready-made
Day Daniel, Limo Kiln house ket place boots & shoes kept in stock ; all orders
Gayford Arthur, White ho. ChBese.hill Howlett Charles Edward, Nag's Head punctually attended to ; charges
Goodchild Robert, White Hart street P.H. & mail contractor ; good accom- most moderate, Market place
Grigson Rev. Baseley Hales B. A. [rector] modation for commercials Richarus Philip, dispensing & agricul-
Kerridg e Mrs. Market place H ndson Ed ward, Swan hotel, Market pi tural chemist, & agent for W. &; A~
KBrridge Miss, Market place James George, iron &. brass founder, Gilbey, wine & spirit merchants
Soffe William Edward, White Hart st agricultural implement & machine Read Frederick William,cabinet maker :
Youels Samuel, White Hart street maker, ironmonger & oil & color furniture bought & sold, White Hart st
merchant, Market place Rudd Henry, bricklayer, White Hart at
COMMERCIAL. Kerridge Henry, tailor, Market place Rush Edward, watch maker; charges
Alderton Geo. coal·dlr. Garbaldsham rd Hug-hes Martin Luther, warehouseman, most moderate, Cheese hill
Anstee Arthur, boot maker &c. & Mount Pleasant, Kenninghall road Sayer Thomas, veterinary surgeon,•
election agent, White Hart street & Hunt James,chimney sweeper,Garbald- Vine cottage, near White Hart street
Station road sham road Seakens Frederick, assistant overseer,
J3ailey Arthur William, plumber & Kerrison Herbert, farmer & brick Garbaldsham road
glazier, Rose cottage, Station road maker, The Hill farm Sharman Harriet (Mrs.), Bull P. H.
Bailey William, farmer, Town farm Kerrison Rebecca (Mrs.), carrier to & Market place
Barnard Charles, boot makr. Market pl from rail way st.a tion,G .E. R. Cheese hl Soffe William Edward L.F.P.s.olasg.
Barnard Maria (Mrs.), postmistress, Kerry William, beer retailer, Fan lane surgeon, & medical officer & public
Market place Knight Jas. farmer, Garbaldsham rd vaccinator,4th dist. Guiltcross union,
EarrettWm.agent Prudential LifeOffice Last Thomas Morris, tailor, Schoollane White Hart street
Bryan t Richard & Son, corn merchants ; Lawrence Thomas, miller (wind) & Smith Tbeophilus,fishmonger,& Trowel
charges most moderate; retail stores, farmer, Kenninghall road & Hammer P.H. White Hart street
Market place; & at Harling Road London:& ProvincialBank Lim.(branch) Sally Alfred, butcher & farmer ; charges
statn. Eccles & Kenninghall. See advt (John H umphries,manager) ; attends most moderate, Market place
Burlingharn John, farmer, Fan lane, every tues. & fri.; draw on head Squires John, shoe maker, King street
White IIart street office, 7 Bank buildings E c & Glyn, Tillott Thomas Aaron, draper, grocer,
Butters Charles, news agent, Market pi Mills, Currie & Co. London E c tea, flour & provision dealer ; ready-
Colman Thomas Banyard, miller (water Leaper Geo. beer retlr. Garbaldsham rd made clothing, boots & shoes, brushes,
& steam), corn, seed & manure mer- Long Waiter, draper, grocer, stationer, mats &c. ; also farmer. See advert
chant, coal, coke & salt factor & agent millinery, scotch fingering & berlin Towell Harry, hair dresser, Market pl
for Ind, Coope & Co. Romford ales, wools, fancy goods ; mourning orders Unionist Club (~ir Edmund C. Nugent
Steam & Water mills attended to ; & boots & shoes & fancy bart. J. P. president ; Robert Good-
Crook George, shopkeeper, Gallants repository, Market place. See advert child, vice-president & sec)
lane, White Hart street Mason Edward J. B. agent for Imperial Warby Henry William, grocer &draper;
Crook Robert, boot ma. White Hart st Live Stock & National Provident Life, shoPs & boots of every description
Cullingford Williarn, watch & clock Carriage Insurance Co. General Hail kept in stock ; agent for the cele·
maker, Market place Storm Insurance, Norwich, & also brated ::\iazawattee teas; malt &hops
Daynes Alfred, cooper & basket maker, Plate Glass Insurance Co. Limited, of superior quality ; all goods sup-
dealer in all kinds of wicker-work, Harling mills plied at the lowest possible price for
brushes, mats &c. ; hams & tongnes N ewson & Sons, stone masons, builders, cash
smoked & dried ; established 1840, decorators &c. Cheese hill Wharton Henry William, farmer &
Cheese hill OsborneAlban,harness maker& saddler; brick maker, Hill house ; & agent fo-.:
Day Danl. far)ller,& land agent & bailiff wash leathers,mops,sponges, brushes, the Alliance Life Offices
to Lord Egerton, Lime Kiln farms brooms, horse clothing, harness Whewell Harriet (Mrs.), china & glass
Dodd Walt. Jn.coaldlr.Garbaldsham rd cornpo, ropes & twme of all kinds dealer, Market place
Edwards George, White Hart P.H. & &c. &c Whewell John Rircher, dealer in game
carpenter, White Hart street Os borne Alban,Royal Oak P.H.Cheese hl & farmer, White Hart street
Everett Waiter, grocer & draper & Os borne William,grocer,linen & woollen Whewell Williarn Bircher, butcher ;
wine merchant, Market place draper, men's & boys' ready-made charges most moderate, White Hart st
footer Arthur Ben jam in, Queen's Head clothing, flour & provision merchant, Williams William, White Lion P.H. ;
P.H. & fishmonger, Market place ironmongery, boots & shoes, brushes accommodation for commercials,
Frost Samuel, beer retailer, King street &c; charges most moderate Market place
Gayford Arthur, farmer, & land agent Osborne Hobert, coal dealer, White Woods Alfd. family butcher, Station rd
to Lord Egerton, of Tatton Hart street
WEST HARLING is a parish in the southern vale of 150 sittings. The register dates from the year 1559. Tha
the river Tllet, 2~ miles south from the Harling Road living is a rectory, gross tithe rent-charge [193 xos. average
etation on the Great Eastern railway and 7 north-east from £144. net yearly value £86, including 20 acres of glebe,
Thetford, in the Mid division ·of the county, Guiltcross and with residence, in the gift of Sir Edrnund C. Nugent hart..
Sbropham petty sessional division, hundred and union of and held since 1883 by the Rev. Edward George Boultbee
Guiltcross, Attleborough county court district, rural deanery Inge. The town lands, lying in Banham and Kenninghall,
(){ Rockland, archdeaconry of Norfolk and diocese of Nor- and given by Margaret, wife of John Gawdy esq. mentioned
wich. Middle or Little Harling was united to West Harling above, now (1892) produce £13 ros. yearly, which sum is
in 1433· The church of ..All Saints, situated in the park, is distributed every year in clothing to the oldest and poorest
an ancient structure of flint, in the Decorated style, consist- men and women alternately. In the time of the Conqueror
ing of chancel with chapel, nave, south porch and an ern- there were here several small manors held as a berewic of
battled western tower containing 8 tubular bells, presented the capita.l manor of Kenninghall by the Albinis and their
by Lady Nugent: in the chapel were buried several mem- successors, the de Angerville fam1ly; about 1564 the estate-
bers of the Gawdy and Berdwell families, including John was purchased by Bassingbourne Gawdy esq. of Mendham,
Gawdy, ob. 29 Nov. 1694: on the south side of the chancel Suffolk, from whom it descended to the family of Berdwell
is a tomb with effigy, the feet resting on a greyhound, to and was held by them for many years, and subsequently
William llerdwell esq. some time lord of this manor: the came into the possession of Nicholas William (Ridley-Col-
church was thoroughly restored by Sir E. C. Nugent hart. borne), rst baron Colborne, whose seat this was until his
in r890; the pulpit )Va8 the gift of Lady Nugent: there are death, 3 May, rS54. when the title became extinct. Berd-
420 WEST HARLING. NORFOLK.
-well Hall, an embattled mansion of stone, sul"l.'ounded by a now indicated by a circular plantation, of the church of St.
deep moat, formerly occupied the site of the present Hall, Andrew, Middle Harling, demolished in I543· The soil is
but was pulled down in 1725 by Joshua Draper esq. who had sandy; subsoil, chalk. The chief crops are wheat, rye,
purchased the West Harling estate from the three nieces and barley and oats. The area is 3,013A. 2R. sP·; rateable valur,
heiresses of Sir Bassingbourne Gawdy, 3rd and last bart. .£"I 1 I08; the population in 1891 was I35·
d. I723 : the existing Hall, a mansion of brick, begun Parish Clerk, George Wilson, Stone House farm.
about 17 2 5 by Joshua Draper esq · was sold by him in 173 6 Letters from Thetford, via East Harling, which is the nearest
to Richard Gipps esq. who completed the work : the house, money order & telegraph otlice
which stands in the centre of an extensive and beautiful
park, watered by the river Thet, is built in part with the No Letter Box. Letters are delivered in the morning about.
materials of Old Berdwell Hall, and is now the property and 7· 30 & called for in the evening at 5· 30
residence of Sir Edmund Charles Nugent bart. D.L., J.P. lord The children of this place attend East IIarling & Bridgham
of the manor and chief landowner. In the park is the site, schools
Inge Rev. Edward George Boultbee Bennett Charles,farm bailiff to Timothy Lock John, Tborpe farm
[rector], Rectory Colman esq Riches Jeremiah, gamekeeper to Sir E.
Nugent Sir Edmund Charles D.L., J.P, Coote Robert, 2nd g-amekeeper to Sir C. Nugent hart
bart. West Harling ball Edmund Charles Nugent bart. The Wiggett Arthur, head gardener to Sir
Nugent George Colborne J.P. West Lodge E.C.Nugent hart. Gardeners' cottages
Harling hall Hanton George, farm bailiff to Sir Wilson George, farm bailiff to Timotb.y
EdmundChas. N ugent bart. Paper cot Colman esq. Stone House farm
HARPLEY is a parish and village, half a mile from .Mas· 1871. Fourteen acres of land, let for £14 yearly, have been
~;ingham station on the Eastern and Midlandsrailway,I2 miles left for the repairs of the church, and £22 2s. 3d. for chari-
east-north-east from Lynn and 10 south-west from Faken- ties, £18 6s. 8d. of which was left by Mr. Herring, wh()
ham, in the North ·western division of the county, Free- also erected and endowed almshouses in 1 85o for eight old
bridge Lynn hundred, petty sessional division and union, people, each of whom receives ss. per week. The Marquess
county court district of Lynn, rural deanery of Lynn Free- of Cholmondeley is lord of the manor and principal land-
bridge and arch deaconry and diocese of Norwich. The owner ; :Mrs. Raven owns about 400 acres. The soil is
church of St. Lawrence, which stands on an eminence, is a mixed ; subsoil, clay and chalk. The crops are on the four-
large structure of flint and stone, in the Early English style, course shift. The area is 2,213 acres; rateable value,
consisting of chancel, nave with clerestory, aisles, handsome £2,355; the population in 1891 was 422.
south porch and an embattled western tower, with pinnacles, Parish Clerk, Robert Porter.
containing 5 bells : the south aisle is battlemented and the PosT OFFICE.- James Steel, receiver. Letters arrive
oo.k door on this side is carved with figures, and the rood- through Swaffbam at 6.30 a.m.; dispatched at 6.30 p.m.;
screen still remains under the chancel arch : the chancel sundays, 6. 30 p. m. East Rudham is the nearest money
was restored in 1878: the church is seated with open benches, order office & Houghton is the nearest telegraph office.
affording 320 sittings. The register dates from the year Postal orders are issued here, but not paid
1722. The living is a rectory, average tithe rent-charge
National School (mixed), for Ioo children ; average attend-
£350, net yearly value £:;2o, with 90 acres of glebe and
residence, in the gift of Horace Beck esq. and held since ance, 90; the school has an endowment of £w a year,
188o by the Rev. Harry Edward Beck 11I.A. of Trinity Hall, left by Mr. Herring above mentioned; Jas. Grieves, mastr
Cambridge. Here is a Methodist New Connexion chapel, CARRIER TO LYNN.- Robert Porter, tues. thurs. & sat.
built in 1873, and a Primitive Methodist chapel, built in returning same days
Beck Rev. Harry Edward M.A. Rectory Bartle Henry, farmer Porter Robert, carrier
Beck Borace Butcher Nathaniel, scedsman & florist Simpson Alfred, baker & farmer
Quinet Rev. Reginald Hewes [rector of Claxton Cath. (Miss), White Lion P.H Southgate Walt. bricklayer & pork btchr
Anmer] Claxton Francis, boot & shoe maker Steel James, grocer, draper, plumber
Tingey Frederick Edward, Manor house Everett Robert, carpenter &c. Post office
COMMERCIAL. Fake Sarah ( Mrs_ ), baker Steel William, carpenter
Balding SarahA.nn (I\lrs.),Rose & Crown Hammond Robert (Mrs.), grocer White George Herbert, grocer, draper
P.H. & carpenter Mountain Charles, blacksmith & beer retailer
Boddy John, builder & contractor & Morfet Thomas Wrate, farmer Woods Frederick,farmer & cattle dealer,
building material dealer, Rose cot- Norman Wm. Jn.miller (wind &steam) Harpley ball
tage ; & at Tittleshall
HASSINGHAM is a parish about I mile east from 1 Beauchamp bart. and held since 1871 by the Rev. George
Buckenham station on the Norwich and Lowestoft section of Elwin B.A. of Corpus Christi college, Oxford, who resides at
the Great Eastern railway, 9 miles east-south-east from Nor- Buckenham Ferry. The tithes have been commuted for
wich and 11 west from Yarmouth, in the Eastern division £238 yearly. The poor's allotment of 14 acres produces
of the county, Blofield and Walsham petty sessional division, £10 IOS. yearly. Sir Reginald William Proctor-Beauchamp
Blofield hundred and union, Norw.ch county court district, bart. D.L., J.P. of Langley Park, who is lord of the manor
rural deanery of Blofield and archdeaconry and diocese of and Major Gilbert, of Cantley, are chief landowners. The
Norwich. The church of St_ Mary is a small edifice of stone, soil is mixed; subsoil, gravel and sand. The chief crops are-
in mixed styles, consisting of chancel, nave, south porch and wheat, oats and barley. The marshes are used for grazing-.
a fine round western tower, with an octagonal belfry sur- The area is 574 acres, rated at £8o2; the population in 1891
mounted by eight pinnacles, and containing one bell : the was 122.
church was reseated and decorated by the Rev. T. W. H. Parish Clerk, Wllliam Patterson.
Beauchamp, rector from 1814 and affords go sittings. The LETTER Box cleared at 3· Letters through Norwich arrive-
register dates from the year 1563. Tl1e living is a rectory, at 8.30. Lingwood is the nearest money order, & tele-
consolidated with that of Bm:kenham Ferry, average tithe graph office at Blofield
rent-charge £186, joint net yearly value £200, including 34 The children of this place attend the school at Buckenham
acres of glebe, in the gift of Sir Reginald William Proctor- Ferry
Crowo Waiter Thomas, farmer I Gilbert Arthr. Wm. farmr. Church frm I Loades Edward, farmer
GREAT HAUTBOIS is a parish and village on the removed from the old church : there are 200 sitting& The
navigable Bure, adjoining ColtishaJI, with a station at Coltis- register dates from the year 1563. t'he living is a rectory,
hall and 3 miles from Wroxham station, both on the East annexed to that of Coltishall, average tithe rent-charge
Norfolk section of the Great Eastern railway and 7 north £165, joint gross yearly value £138, including 12 acres of
from Norwich, in the Eastern division of the county, South glebe, w1th residence, in the gift of and held since 1859 by
Erpingham bur:.drcd and petty sessional division, A.ylsham the Rev. John Colk Girling M.A. of Caius College, Cam-
union and county court district, rural deanery of lngworth bridge. Here is a reading-room supported by subscription.
and archdeaconry and dioC"ese of Norwich. The old church Here was formerly an hospital and a castle, of which few
of St.. Theobalu, a mile from the village, and now in ruins, traces now remain. Sir Edward Birkbeck bart. J.P. of
is a structure of flint and st~ne of the Norman and English Horstead Hall, who is lord of the manor, Ina Lady Dur-
periods, consisting of cbnncel, nave, south porch and rant and the Rev. John Colk Girling M.A. are the chief
western tower : the chanr·Pl has been converted into a landowners. Here are extensive lime works belonging to
mortuary chapel, but the "ails of the nave and south porch Charles M. G. Girling esq. The soil is various; subsoil,
and the circular western tower are still standing. The mar!. The chief crops are wheat, barley and turnips. The
church of the Holy Trinity, consecrated in r864, is a build- area is 610 acres; rateable value, £1,134; the population in
ing of flint with frecstone dressings, and consists of chancel, 1881 was 190.
nave, aisles and urgan chamter: the ancient lout was Parish Clerk, Frederick John Starling.
DIRECTORY.] NORFOLK. IIEACH.AM. 421
'
Letters received through Norwich, via Coltishall, which is This parish forms, with that of Coltishall, a united Board
th8 nearest money order & telegraph office, arrive at School district; the school is at Coltishall
7 a.m
Girling Rev. John Colk M. A. Rectory Bond Robert, harness maker Heroe Robert, farmer
Girling Charles M. G Child Willia.m, butcher Hoode Charles, farmer
Girling Edward Hugh FarmanRobert, basketmaker,thatcher, Reading Room
COMMERCIAL. osier mer. & fancy chair & table ma. Smith Charles, beer retailer
Alderton James, general ironmonger Girling Charles M. G. lime works Taylor William, farmer
Bales Richard, boot & shoe maker Gooch Henry, joiner & builder Trory William, farmer
·-
LITTLE HAUTBOIS, see LAMMAS. '
HAVER LAND (or HnERINGLAND) is a parish and opposite the King's Head inn. Ilaverland IIall, the seat of
village, 5 miles west from Buxton statwn on the East Norfolk Lord De Ramsey D.L., J. P. is a handsome modern mansion in
section of the Great Eastern railway, 2~ north-by-east from the Classic style, standing on the eastern side of an extensive
Attlebridge station on the Eastern and Midlands railway, park, which is well-timbered and ornamented by a sheet of
8 north-west from Norwich, and 11 south-west from water of considerable extent. Lord De Ramsey is lord of
North Walsham, in tho Northern division of the county, the manor, impropriator of the tithes and chief landowner.
Eynsford hundred and petty sessional division, St. Faith's The soil is sand and loam; subsoil, day and gravel. The:
unioR, Aylsham county court district, rural deanery of chief crops are wheat, roots, barley and bay. The area.
Sparbam and arcbdeaconry and diocese of Norwich. The is 2,o63 acres; rateable value, £_1,794; the population in
church of St. Peter is a building of flint in the Norman rBgr was 121.
style, consisting of nave, north aisle, north and south porches PosT OFFICE, for sale of stamps only.-Mrs. s. Harvey. Let-
and a circular embattled western tower containing 3 bells: ters received through Norwich at 7 _30 a. m. ; dispatched
the windows are all stained and the church affords 300 at 4 p.m. The nearest money order office is at Cawston
sittings. The register dates from the year r694. The living & telegraph office at Cawston railway station
is a. vicarage, gross yearly value £ro3, net £63, including
I5~ acres of glebe, with residence, in the gift of Lord de School (mixed), built in 1848, for 55 children; average at-
Ramsey, and held since I892 by the Rev. Hugb Cairns tcndancc, 45 ; Mrs. E. J. Ampse, mistress
Alexander Back M.A. Trinity College, Cambridge, who is CARRIER TO NoRWICH.-Kybire passes through from
rector of Brandiston. The stocks formerly in use in this Cawston, mon. wed. & sat. to 'Duke's Head,' returning
parish for the punishment of offenders are still standing same day
De Ramsey Lord D.L., J.P.~Haverland I Hickling John Shepbeard, farmer; re- I Rernblents William T. hurdle maker
hall; &2 Grosvenorsquare & Garlton sidence, Cawston Savage Jamcs, bead gamekeeper to
club s w London Menzies Robert, land agent Lord De Ramsey
Body George, farmer, Larter's farm Musk George, head gardener to Lord Symonds James J. farmer, Abbey farm
Gray John, King's Head P.H De Ramsey
HAYNFORD (or liAINFORD) is a scattered village and lets for about £ roo a year, which, together with a yearly
parish, 5~ miles west from Wroxham station on the Norwich rent-charge of 6os. left by T. Bulwer esq. is paid to the poor
and Cromer section of the Great Eastern railway and 7 miles parishioners; they also receive £3o yearly as fuel money.
north from Norwich, in the Eastern division of the county, A small portion of the population are weavers. Haynford
Taverham hundred and petty sessional division, St. Faith's Hall, the seat of Rear-Admiral Edwin John Pollard, i'l a
union, :Korwich county court district, rural deanery of modern mansion, pleasantly situated. Lieut.-Gol. Edward
Taverham and archdeaconry and diocese of Norwich. The George Keppel J.P. who is lord of the manor, and C. Foster
church of All Saints, erected in 1840 at a cost of about esq. of Thorpe, are the principal landowners. The soil is
£ r,2oo, is a plain structure, chiefly of flint and brick, con- sand and gravel; subsoil, sand. The chief crops are wheat
sisting of nave and transept, west porch and a turret con- and barley. The area is I ,6oo aeres; rateable value, £2,466 ;
taining one bell1 there are 355 sittings: the old chnrch is the population in 1891 was soB.
in ruins. The register dates from the year 1556. The Parish Clerk, James Everson.
living is a rectory, tithe rent-charge £425, average /,322, PosT 0FFTCE.-Williarn Philip Roberts, receiver. Letters
yearly value £3SO, net £242, including 35 acres of glebe, arrive from Norwich via St. Faith's at 8.20 a. m. ; dis-
with residence, in the gift of Robert Wortley esq. of Suffield patched at 4.ro p.m. Cottesball is the nearest money
Hall, and held since 1888 by the Rev. John Freeman Darrell order & telegraph office. Postal orders are issued here,
B.A. of Gains College, Cambridge. There is a Primitive but not paid
Methodist chapel here. The Poor's Land, left by T. Bulwer National School (mixed), for 140 children; average attend-
esq. John Sporle and Mr. Bolts, consists of 72 acres, and ance, roo; Miss 8. Mary Coulton, mistress
Darrell Rev. John Freeman B. A. Rectory Daniels George, farmer Reynolds John, land steward to C.
Pollard Rear-Admiral Edwin John, Dodds Robert Philip, farmer Foster esq
Haynford hall; & United Service Earl Samuel, chimney sweeper RobertsWm.Philip,plumber, Post office
club, London s w Everson James Smith, carpenter Smith Jacob, farmer
COMMERCIAL. Everson Thos. carpenter & wheelwright Tallowin Wm. farmer, Manor farm
Algate Horace, boot maker Flood Charles, boot maker & shopkeepr Village Club & Reading Room (Mrs.
Arthurton Robert, Chequers P.H Golding Robert, farmer & butcher Land, caretaker)
Baldwin William, shopkeeper Haylett Artbur, farmer Wells George, shopkeeper
Bean William, Wbeatsheaf P.H Howlett Horatio, farmer Williams George, farmer
Coleman Charles, shopkeeper Lusher Charles, Maid's Head P.H Woodcock Peter, fowl dealer
Coman J obn Robert, shopkeepr.& farmr Marsh George, farmer Woodcock Zeph, cattle dealer
Gory James, blacksmith Pearce James, farmer
HEACHAM is a pn.rish and large village, pleasantly the windows contain some ancient stained glass and there
situated on the German Ocean and on a small rivulet, are 300 sittings, 8o being free. The register dates from the
with a junction station of the West Norfolk and Lynn year 1558. The living is a vicarage, average tithe rent-
and Hunstanton sections of the Great Eastern rail- charge £202, net yearly value £18o, with 7~ acres of glebe,
way, 12 miles west from Bnrnham Market, 14 north- in the gift of Eustace Neville-Rolfe esq. J.P. and held since
north-east from Lynn, 3 from the pleasant watering 1873 by the Rev. George Thomas Thompson B.A. of Trinity
place of Hnnstanton and u2 from London, in the College, Cambridge. There is a Wesleyan chapel, built in
North Western division of the county, Smithdon hundred, 1831 and restored in x8g1,and a Primitive Methodist chapel,
Smithdon and Brothercross petty sessional division, Dock- erected in I 86o. The poor's land of 6 acres is let for £ r2 ros.
ing union, Lynn county court district, Heacham rural yearly, which sum is distributed in coals, as also is a
deanery, Norfolk archdeaconry and Norwich diocese. The charity of 20s. yearly ; Rolfe's, producing £ rG,is for clothing.
village appears in the distance as if embosomed in wood, A fair is held on the 2oth J'tlne in each year. Here was
above which peeps the church tower: it has fine firm sands, anciently a Cluniac priory, a cell of Lewes Abbey and dedi-
which render sea bathing both safe and agreeable, and the cated to St. Mary. In 185o, coins of the reigns of Henry I.
small stream on which it stands abounds in trout. Colliers' !Land Ill. were dug up in the churchyard. In the vicinity
and other small craft can unload here. The church of St. are several excellent quarries of carr stone, which is used
Mary is a noble edific8 of stone and flint in the Gothic style for building purposes; this stone when first quarried is soft,
of the 15th century, and exhibits traces of having undergona but hardens on exposure to the air. The Hall, a picturesque
repeated alterations: it consists of chancel, nave, aisles, south mansion of red brick, pleasantly situated, is the property of
porch, vestry and a central embattled tower containing 2 Eust.ace Neville-Rolfe esq. ;r_p_ and now ocenpied by Hugh
bells: in the church are monuments to Charles Edward Hose esq. Hamon le Strange esq. J.P., D.L. of Hunstanton
Neville-Rolfe M.A. d. 1863; to Charles Fawcett Neville-Rolfe, Hall, who is lord of the manor, Eustal'e Neville-Rolfe esq.
d. 1869, and to Nicholas Stylernan e.sq. d. 30 April, 1833: J.P. and Caius College, Cambridge, are the principal land
422 HE.ACHAM. [KELLY's

owners. !'he soil is various; the subsoil is chiefly chalk. are received through Lynn by mall cart, arrive at 6 &
The chief crops are wheat, barleyj turni:ps and mangold 10.30 &.m. & are dispatched at 10.4o·a.m. & s.so p.m
wurzel; and beans on the part next the sea. The area is Scnoor,.s : -
3,353 acres of land and 1,500 ot water ; rateable value, Public Elementary School (mixed), for 115 children;
£6,388; the population in r8g1 was gBg. In 1851, 225 average attendance, roo; Frederick Suter, master
acres of common were inclosed from the sea. Infants' School, erected in r838, for 8o children; average
attendance, 58 ; Miss Jane Yellow, mistress
Parish Clerk, Josiah Nourse. Railway Station, William Nelson Wright, station master
PosT, M. 0. & T. 0., S. B. & Annuity & Insurance Office. CARRLERs.-Matthew Patrick, to Lynn, tues. thurs. & sat. ;
--,Jamea Kemp, suo-postmaster. London & other letters other carriers pass through for Lynn
PRIVATE RESIDENTS. Wells Robert, High house Moulam George, grocer
Baney Mrs. Sea view house Newton Sarah (Mrs.), beer retailer
Bates Mrs. Thurlow house - COMMERCIAL. i Norfolk Regiment 3rd Volunteer
Bates Miss, Mostyn house Alien Edward, market gardener Battalion (H eo.) (Captain Wiiliam
Black Mrs. Church house Benstead Thomas, baker Pattrick, commanding officer)
Blakeley Samuel, Heacham house Boothby Octavius, market gardener Nourse Robert Edmund Joice, FcJX &
Chadwick Mrs Brown Geo. B. M. farmer, Manor farm Hounds l'.H
Cox Mrs. The Willows BrownWm.Thos.frmr.Heacham bottom Nourse William, farmer
Cnnningham Mrs Chapman Alfred, cow keeper Patrick Robert, farmer
FerrersRev.NormanMcLeod D.D.,F.R.S. Cousins Waiter, beer retailer Perfitt Robert Samuel, grocer & draper
(master of Gains college,Cambridge), Duffield Thomas, farmer Pull James, plumber, glazier & painter
Heacham lodge Elliott Augustus, furniture dealer Pnll Reginald, butcher
lngleby Holcombe, Homemead Farrin Robert, butcher Rix William, farmer
Metcalf Wm. Charles l.P. Summer hill Frary Farrow, coal dealer l Roberston Geo.Long, butcher& farmer
Plowrigbt George Henry, Holly lodge Graver Frederick, Wheatsheaf P.H Roytborne Robert, wheelwright
Plowright Henry, Cedar cottage Jelly Frederick, drill instructor Russell Benj. Farrow, grocer & drap~l'
Rose Hugh,Heacham hall; & 39 Rolan4 Lake Daniel, market gardener Skerry Thomas, shoe maker
gardens, London s w Lake Senior, carpenter Spencer George, baker
Sbaw Frederick Emil, Summer hill ~ Land Annie (Miss), farmer Taverner Wm. John, grocer & draper
Spencer The Misses, Chesnut cottage Lewis Alfred, miller (water) & farmer, Taylor Herbert George, baker
Spencer Mrs Caley mills Wilson James, farmer & coal merchant
Strangleman Arthur, Chester house Mallett Granger, blacksmith, & fancy Witton Thomas William, builder, car·
Stewart Mrs. Park house repository penter,coach builder & wheelwright ;
Thompson Rev. George Thomas B.A. Massingham - 1 West Norfolk hotel estimates free on application
[vicar], Vicarage

HECKINGHAM is a parish and scattered village on the general average is about roo; for particulars of union,
the Cbet or Ket, 4 miles south-west from Geldeston see Loddon. Capt. Nicholas Henry Bacon J.P. of Ravening-
station on tbe Waveney Valley section of the Great Eastern ham Hall, is lord of the manor of Dage9 with Heckingham.
railway, 2 P-ast from Loddon and 6 south-east from Beccles, The principal landowners are Sir William Bowyer·Smijth
in the Southern division of the county, Clavering hundred, bart. Charles Abbotts Lewin esq. and John William Rose
Loddon and Clavering petty sessional division and union, esq. of Old Hall, Reedham. The soil is mixed; subsoil,
county court district of Rungay and Beccles, rural deanery sand, brick earth, clay and gravel. The chief crops are
of Brooke eastern division, archdeaconry of Norfolk and wheat, oats and barley. Tho area is 1,084 acres; rateable
diocese of Norwich. The church of St. Gregory is a small value, £ r,2o8; the population in T88I was 330, including
thatched structure in theN orman style, consisting of chancel, ros officers and inmates in the Loddon Union Workhouse.
nave, south porch and an octagonal western tower containing Parish Clerk, Thomas Baxfield.
2 bells: there are 130 sittings. The register dates from the Letters through Norwich, arrive at 7.30. Loddon is the
year I542· The living is a vicarage, annexed to that of nearest money order&, telegraph utflce
Hales, average tithe rent-charge £48, joint gross yearly
. value £88, in the gift of Sir William Bowyer-Smijth hart. A School Board of 5 members was formed compulsorily
and held since 1874 by the Rev. Thomas Parr, who resides September 30, x875, for the united district of Hales &
at Loddon. The poor's land is 2A. 3R. awarded at the Heckingham; J. C. Copeman, Loddon, clerk to the board
inclosure of 1822. The Loddon Union House, situated in Board School, erected in 1878, at a. cost of £soo, for 69
this parish, is a large building, erected in 1764, but partially children ; average attendance, 45 ; Miss Charlotte Taylor,
destroyed by fire in 1836; it is available for soo poor, but mistress ·
Hood James Robert, farmer Mobbs James, farm bailiff to Thomas Spence Frances (Mrs.), farmer
Hovells Samuel, boot maker , Robt.West esq. Heckingham Old hall Tammis William, farm bailiff to N. H.
Lewin Chas.Abbott,farmr.& landowner Sayer Last, frmr .overseer & rate collectr Hayward esq
HEDENHAM is a village and parish, 2~ miles from in the parish of Hempn!'.ll, let for about £35 a year;
Ditchingham station on the Waveney Valley section of the there are also two cottages, let for £g, which sum is applied
Great Eastern railway, 3~ north-west from Bnngay and I I to the use of the parish. On January 7, 1858, in a. field
south-east from N orwich 1 in the Southern division of the near the brick-kiln, a discovery of H.oman pattery was made,
county, Loddon hundred, Loddon and Clavering petty including two or three urns, one of which, interesting in
8CSsional division and union, Bungay county court district, form and containing bones, was saved. .Hedenham Hal~
rural deanery of Brook a eastern division, archdeaconry of an ancient mansion of brick, is now. tenanted by Mrs.
Norfolk and diocese of Norwich. A small stream flows Raikes. Mrs. F. W. Irby, of Boy land Hall, Long Stratton,'
through this parish. The church of St. Peter is a fine who is lady of the manor and William Carr esq. J.¥. are the
building of flint and rubble in the Early English style, con- principal landowners. The soil is clay, sand and gravel;
sisting of chancel, nave, south porch and an embattled subsoil, clay. The chief crops are wheat, barley, clover
western tower containing 6 bells: the chancel is full of and beans. The area is 1,773 acres; rateable value, £1,846;
monuments to the Bedingfield family, dating from rsgo, the population in r8gr was 228.
and in the nave are several monuments to the Garneys Sexton, 'Stephen Sampson.
family: in 1865 the chancel was new-roofed, and in 1885 an PosT 0FFICE.-Mrs. Sarah Ann Juby, receiver. Letter!J
organ chamber was erected and a new organ provided, at a from Bungay arrive at 7 .rs a.m. week days & suudays;
cost of about £350, defrayed by subscription: the church d"rspatc hed at 4·5S p.m.; sun d ays, 11.30 a.m. Bungay
was t horoug hl y restored au d reseate d in r362-3, an d aff or d s is the nearest money order & telegraph otfiGe. Postal
150 sittings. The register dates from the year 1559- The orders are issued here, but not paid
living is a rectory, average tithe rent-charge £348, yearly
value £345, net £ 3 r8, including 29 acres of glebe and resi- National School, built in 1874, for 63 children; average
dence, in the gift of William Carr esq. and held since r8sg attendance, 38 ; Thomas K. Woodward, master
by the Rev. Robert Manning Marshall M. A. of Exeter College, CARRIERS to Norwich & Bungay pass through daily; & to
Oxford. The poor's land con.sists of a farm of 54 acres, IIalesworth & Norwich, wed. & sat
Marshall Rev. Robert Manning M. A. Folkard Jacob, shopkeeper Reeve George, market gardener
Rectory Goodrum Benjamin, farmer Rnmsby Charles, farmer
George Martin, The Lodge Jnby Sarah Ann (Mrs.), shopkeeper, Sampsun Stephen, farmer & sexton
Raikes Mrs. The Hall Post office Stone l''rederick, farmer, Valley farm
COliM:b:HCIAL. More William Richard, fanner Thompson Fdk. farmer, Hill House frrn
Bowman James, farmer, Wood farm Preston D.miel, Mermaid P.H. & florist Whitwood Elijah, farm bailiff to Wm.
Bull Lewis, brick maker Read Sl.blcksrnth.crpntr.& wheelwright Carr esq. Old Hall farm
DIRECTORY. J NORFOLK. JIEMBLI NGTON. 423
HEIGHAM is a parish forming part of the city of Norwich, which see.
HELHO UGHTON is a parish, three quarters of a mile yearly. A Library and Reading Room was erected in 1844
south-west from Raynham Park station on the Eastern and by the Marquess Townshend and has now (1892) 70 mem-
Midlands railway and about 5 miles south-west from Faken- bers. The Marquess Townshend is lord of the manor and
ham, in the North Western division of the county, Gallow the principal landowner. The soil is of good quality; sub-
hundred and petty sessional division, Walsingham union soil, clay, brick earth and chalk. The land is cultivated oh
and county court district, rural deanery of North Brisley the usual four-course system. The area is 1,637 acres;
and Toftreesand archdeaconry and diocese of Norwich. The rateable value, [t,950; the population in 1891 was 355·
church of .All Saints is a plain building of flint in the Early Parish Clerk, Thomas Willemott.
English style, consisting of chancel, nave and a western PosT 0FFWE.-Mrs. FrancesMaryYoung, receiver. Letters
tower containing one bell: in 1890 the church was arrive from Fakenham at 8 a. m. & 5 p.m.; dispatched at
thoroughly restored and reseated with open benches and 8 . 45 a. m. & 5 . 35 p.m. East Rudham is the nearest
now affords 210 sittings. The register dates from thB year money order & telegraph oflicB. Postal orders are issued
1540. The living is a vicarage, with that of South Raynham here, but not paid
annexed, average tithB rent-charge £22r, joint net yearly
value £26o, including 53 acres of glebe, in the gift of the WALL LETTER Box, Raynham Park station, cleared at 9
'Marquess Townsbend, and held since 1871 by the Rev. a.m. & 5-I5 p.m. week days only
George John Ridsdale M.A. of Magdalcne College, Cam- National School (boys & infants), for this parish & the
bridge, who resides at South Raynham. There is a Primi- parishes of East, West & South Raynham, erected in
tive Methodist chapel here, rebuilt in 188o. The charities ~857 & enlarged in 1887, for go boys & 40 infants;
include a dole of £~ 6s. 8d. yearly, the gift of Lady Ber- average attendance, 95 ~ James Layland, master. The
keley; a sum of £6 J4S. 8d. alternately with West Rayn- girls attend the school at West Raynham
ham, and a fuel allotment of 20 acres, at present let for £r3 Raynham Park Station, Thomas Read .Mills, station master
Booth Mrs Francis Thomas William, farmer Scott John, tailor ,
COMMERCIAL. Lacey Waiter, pork butcher Tuffs Thos. beer retailer & pork butcher
Bolingbrook Alfred, brick maker Library & Reading Room (James Lay- Walker John (Mrs.), farmer
Bond John, wheelwright land, hon. sec) Woodgett Charles, Buck P.H. & coal dlr
Brunton Frederick, baker MannCharles, shoe maker Young Frances Mary (Mrs.), grocer &
Butcher Julia&Son,farmers,Painswhin Parsons Edward, blacksmith draper,& genl.supply stores, Post off
Chasteney E. & M. (Misses), dress mas 1
HELLESDON (or HELLESDEN) is a parish and village, large brick and tile works of Messrs. Middleton and Son.
with a station on the Eastern and Midlands railway, about The Bishop of Norwich is lord of the manor. Captain Hugh
2 miles north-west from Norwich and II5! from London, in Berners R.N. of 12 Eaton square, London, and Woolverstone
the Eastern division of the county, Taverham hundred and Park, Ipswich; Charles Middleton esq. Charles Cunnell esq.
petty sessional division, St. Faith's union, Norwich county of Newmarket road, Norwich, Sir Harry Bullard D.L. and
court district, partly within the county of the city of Norwich, the trustees of .Mrs. Taylor, are the principal landowners~
and in rural deanery of Taverham and archdeaconry and The soil is sand and gravel; subsoil, clay, limestone and
diocese of Norwich. The church of St. Mary is a small build- gravel. The chief crops are of the usual kind, viz. wheat,
ing of flint and stone, in the Perpendicular style, consisting of oats, barley and turnips. The area is 2,024 acres, of which
nave, north aisle, south porch and a wooden belfry with 1,159 acres are in the county and 865 in the hamlet; rate--
spire containing one bell: the church was reseated through- able value, £3,089; the population in 1881 was 45r for the
out in oak, and generally improved in 186g, and has I5o whole parish, including 302 in the Norwich City Lunatic
sittings. The register dates from the year r513. The living .Asylum.
is a rectory, consolidated with that of Drayton, average yearly Sexton, J ames Paul.
value from tithe rent-charge £533, with sr acres of glebe, in PosT, M. o. & T. 0., s. B. & Annuity & Insurance Office,
the gift of the Bishop of Norwich, and held since I 855 by the Upper Hellesdon.-William Witard, receiver. Letters
Rev. Hinds Howell M.A. of Merton College, Oxford, honorary are delivered from Norwich at 7. 30 & u. 30 a. m. & 3 . 30,
canon of Norwich and rural dean of Taverham, who resides 5.30 & 8 .30 p.m. ; d'1spatc h ed at 9.20 a.m. & 12.20, 3.3o,
at Drayton; t h 6 R ev. eh ar les AI exan d er H ope M.A. 0 f St. 6. rs & 8.15 p.m. .A WALL LETTER Box placed near the
John's College, Cambridge, has been curate in charge since church is cleared at 12 . 20 & 6 p.m. ; snndays, 6 p. m
187o, and resides at Aylsham road, Upper Hellesdon. The
Norwich City Lunatic .Asylum, situated in the parish, is National School (mixed), erected in 1852, for 8o children;
described under Norwich. The extensive brick works of average attendance, 6o; Miss Emma Barking, mistress
Mr. Charles Cunnell are in this parish; here are also the Railway Station, George William Hill, station master
Bullard Sir Harry D.L. Hellesdon house Baxter George, brick manufacturer Gowing Charles G. farmer, ·Old hall,
GowingChas. G. Old hall, Up.Hellesdon Bowman John Russell, blacksmith, Upper Hellesdon
Go wing Geo.Hill house, Lower Hellesdon Lower Hellesdon Gowing George, farmer, Hill house,
Harris William F.R.c.s. (resident Cunnell Charles,manufacttirer of bricks, Lower Hellesdon
medical superintendent, Norwich tiles (Hoffman's pawnt) & lime ; Middleton & Son, brick & tile makers
City Lunatic asylum) postal address, 8 Newmarket road, Middleton Charles Wiley, farmer
Middleton Charles Wiley Norwich ; & Old Catton [The remainder of names in HELLEs~
Middleton Miss Fox Hy. carpenwr &c. Lower Hellesdon DON are now given under NoRwrc:a:]

HELLINGTON is a parish and village, 4 miles south who is also rector of and resides at Rockland St. Mary.
from Buckenham station, on the Norwich and Lowestoft There are several small bequests for the benefit of the poor,
.section of the Great Eastern railway and 6 south-east from the principal being those of Messrs. Cocks, Seaman and
Norwich, in the Southern division of the county, Loddon Barham. Sir Charles llenry Stuart Rich bart. of Claxton
hundred, Loddon and Clavering petty sessional division and .Abbey, who is lord of the manor, John Marcon esq. J.P.
union, county court district of Norwich, rural deanery of Rev. Richard Cooke Denny M. A. of Burgh Apton and
Brooke western division, archdeaconry of Norfolk and Doughty's Hospital, Norwich, aretheprincipallandowners.
diocese of Norwich. The church of St. John the Baptist is The soil is mixed; subsoil, loam. The chief crops are wheat,
a small building of flint and stone in the Perpendicular style, barley and roots. The area is 516 acres ; rateable value,
consisting of chancel, nave, south porch and a round weswru £6r8; the population in 1881 was 100.
tower containing one bell: the east window is stained: the Parish Clerk, Frank Buttle.
church ha.s been restored by Cyrus Gillett esq. of Holrerston l
Ball, and has 8o sittings. The register dates from the year Letters through Norwich via Framingham Earl, arrive at
1562. The Jiving is a rectory, average tithe rent-charge 8.30. Burgh Apton is the nearest money order otfice &
£93, net yearly value £ 79 , including 12 acres of glebe, in TrowseNewton the nearest telegraph station [
the gift of Sir Charles Henry Stuart Rich bart. and held The children of this parish attend Rockland St. Mary &
.since r888 by the Rev. Philip Williarn Blyth, of St. Bees, Claxton schools
Bolman James, butcher & farmer
Hurrell John, farmer
lLeeder John, farmer l
Yallop George, shopkeeper

HEMBLINGT ON is a. village and parish, 3 miles north- Gothic style of the 15th century, consisting of chancel, nave:,
ea.st from Brundall station on the Norwich and Yarmouth south porch and round western tower containing 2 bells:
1
section of the Great Easwru railway and 8 east-by-north there are 100 sittings. The register dates from the yea.r
from Norwich, in the Eastern division of the county, Blofield 1561. The living is a vicarage, gross yearly value £77, in-
and Walsham petty sessional division, Walsham hundred, eluding 28 aeres of glebe, in the gift of the Dean and Chapter
Blofield union, Norwich county court district, rural deanery of Norwich, and held in sequestration since 1890 by the
of Biofield and archdeaconry and diocese of Norwich. The Rsv. Percival Oakley Hill who is also vicar of and resides a.t
church of All Saints is a small building of rubble in the Upton. There is a Mission Room here. Henry Randal
424 BEMBLINGTON. NORFOLK. [KELLY's

Burroughes esq. of The Hall, Burliugham St. Peter, who is Parish Clerk, Edward Crowe.
lord of the manor, and Major Robert Herbert Heath Jary Letters through Norwich arrive at 7 a. m. & are dispakhed
l.P. of Bitteswell Hall, Lutterworth, Leicestershire, are the from Blotield corner, which is the nearest post office, at
principal landowners. The soil is mixed; subsoil, clay. 4.30 p.m. The nearest money order & telegraph office is
The chief crops are wheat, barley and roots. The area is at Blofield
739 acres; rateable value, £r,x86; the population in x8g1 Hemblington is included in Blofield United School Board
was rg6. District. The children attend the Board School in Blofield
Easter Alfred Hazel Charles, pork butcher Mack Thomas Edward, farmer
Bayes Robert, carpenter Jermy & Cutton, plumbers &c Moore John, blacksmith
Evans William, thatcher London Robert, shopkeeper Weston Godfrey William, farmer
Gowen Robert, pork butcher Loynes George, shoe maker
HEMPNALL is a parish and considerable village on the of an extensive burying ground of the British and Anglo-
river Taas, 3! miles south-east from Flordon station on the Roman period, containing cinerary urns, burnt bones and
Ipswich and Norwich section of the Great Eastern railway, ashes; the urns measured I4 inches in diameter, and have
9 south from Norwich and 7 north-west from Bungay, in been placed in the British Museum. Fairs were formerly
the Southern division of the county, Depwade hundred, held here on Whit Monday and on the IIth December
petty sessional division and union, Harleston county court yearly, but have been now for some time abolished. Hemp-
district, rural deanery of Depwade, archdeaconry of Nor- nall House, built in r871 by 'r. N. Ward esq. is now the
folk and diocese of Norwich. The church of St. Margaret property of R. H. Inglis Palgrave esq. of Belton, near Great
is an ancient building of flint with stone dressings, in the Yarmouth: it is pleasantly situated, having a southern
Early English and Perpendicular styles, consisting of chan- aspect, and is approached by two drives ; the grounds
eel, nave, aisles, south porch, with priest's chamber over, are well laid out: the house is now unoccupied. The
used as a vestry, and an embattled western tower sur- principal landowners are John Stanley Mott esq. J.P. who
mounted by a wooden bell-turret containing a clock and one is lord of the manor; Mrs. Irby, of Boy land Hall, Morn-
bell : there are tablets to the Rev. Robert Rolfe B. A. 30 years ingthorpe ; Sir Frederic Bateman M. D., J .P. of Norwich and
vicar of this parish, d. 3 Nov. I85o ; Elizabeth, his wife, Mr. Thomas Betts, of Fritton: there are also several small
and two daughters ; to the Rev. Robert Rose Rolfe B. A. son holders. The soil is clay; subsoil, clay and gravel. The
of the above, 7 years curate of this parish, d. I9 Aug. 1846; chief crops are wheat, barley and beans. The area is 3,572
and Harriet Ann, his widow; and to Henry Robert Rolfe, acres; rateable value, £4,143 ; the population in 1891
his eldest son, who died of fever at Jubbulpore, India, 6 was 884.
Aug. x863 : the interior was thoroughly restored m 1857 at Parish Clerk, William Rackbam.
a cost of £I ,400 and affords 451 sittings, 323 being free. PosT & M. 0. 0., s. R. & Annuity & Insurance Office.-
The register dates from the year IS6o. The living is a Charles Bullen, sub-postmaster. Letters arrive from
vicarage, average tithe rent-charge £295, net yearly value, Norwich by mail cart at 6. 30 a.m. ; dispatched at 2. 20
about £26o, including 48 acres of glebe, in the gift of John & . 15 p.m.; telegraph office at Long Stratton
Stanley Mott esq. and held since I887 by the Rev. Edward 5
Ewer Ward B.A. of Jesus College, Cambridge. The Wes- WALL LETTER Box, on The Green, cleared at 4.40 p.m.
leyan chapel here was erected in 1839 and the Primitive week days only
Methodist chapel in 183 7 . The land belonging to the Feoffee A School Board of 5 members was formed May 2, I873; J .
.trust is now (I8g 2 ) let for £ 70 a year gross rental; the net Bullen, clerk to the board; William Cheney, attendance
proceeds are apportioned as follows-one-fourth to the officer
schools, one-fourth to the repairs of the church, and the Board (formerly National) School, erected in I847 at a cost
remaining two-fourths to be expended on general parish of £soo, exclusive of the site, given by the late J. T. Mott
purposes, subject to the approval of the Charity Commis- esq. & enlarged to bold I9.S children; average attendance,
sioners. The poor's land allotment produces £24 x9s. 120; connected with the school is a library of upwards of
yearly, which sum is principally applied in aid of the poor soo volumes, for the use of the parishioners; John Binley;
rates. There is also Row's charity of ro3. yearly, left in master ; Mrs. A. C. Binley, mistress
1662; and 3s. 4d. yearly from an unknown donor. In June, Police Station, William Ducker, constable
x854,in a field to the east of the church, remains were found CARRIER TO NoRWICH.-James Leggatt, wed. & sat
Brock Robert, Park farm Edge James, chimney sweeper & farmer Peacher Robert, farmer
Claxton Mrs Ellis William M.R.c.v.s.L. vet. surgeon Peggs George M. King's Head P.H
D'Oyly Mrs Elvin Thomas, hoop & hurdle maker Rackham Agnes (:Miss), dress maker
Hall Mrs Forder Henry, tailor Raekham William, shoe maker, shop-
Hickling Frederick French Matilda (Mrs.), grocer keeper & parish clerk
.Richardson James Hardy Robert, farmer Read Alice (:\lrs.), grocer & draper
Roberts Mrs Hardy William, farmer Read Edward, farmer
Ward Rev. Edward Ewer B. A. [ viear] Hazell March, shopkeeper Read Jonathan, bricklayer
COMMERCIAL. Hickling Coby, pork butcher & sbopkpr Read J oseph, bricklayer
Arnold William, farmer Hickling Fredk. harness ma. & farmer Read Saml. carpenter, builder & farmer
Binley John, schoolmaster, & clerk to Hickling John, Queen's Head P.H Richardson Flora & Clara (Misses),
Feoffee trust HippersonSaml.Head,farmr.&landownr dress makers
Bir~bam Michael, farmer & cattle dealr Hylton Waiter Henry, miller (wind) Riches John, farmer
Blake Samuel, butcher Kennedy Robert, dealer Roberts Edwin, wheelwright
Brock Robert, farmer, Park farm Kennedy William, tailor & outfitter Roberts James, jun. farmer
Buck Elliss Sword, farmer Knights William, baker & shopkeeper Roberts Roger, farmer
Jlnck Henry, farmer & landowner & Lake Wellington W. M.R.C.S.Eng. sur- Roberts Samuel, farmer
highway surveyor geon, & medical officer & public vac- Sanham Rachel (Mrs.), fruit dealer
Buck Robert (Mrs.), farmer cinator, No. 7 district,Depwade union Scarnell Wm. W. carpenter & joiner
Jlullen Charles W. watch maker & Lansdell Brothers, blacksmiths Seaman Frederick, miller (wind)
jeweller, Post office Laskey John M. shopkeeper Smith John, farmer
.Bullen Edgar James, tobacconist LeggattJa.s.farmr.carrier&horse clipper Smith Maria (Mrs.), Lord Nelson inn
.Bullen John, watch maker & jeweller, & Moore Charles, farm bailiff to Samuel Sporle Isaac, shoe maker
clerk to the school board Newton Delf esq Sporle Lucy (Miss), farmer
Bnssey Josiah, farmer Miles George C. butcher Sporle William, farmer
Chaney William, farmer Moore Fanny (Mrs.), farmer Stammers Jn. Jsph. grocer i; outfitter
ClarkWm.Horse Shoes P.H.&blacksmith Moore George, farmer & machinist Stebbing Thomas H. farmer
Cullen John, farmer Moore John, farmer Tibbenham James, drill owner
Dickerson John, farmer & thatcher Muskett George, miller (wind) Ward Thomas Nash, farmer & la.nd-
D'Oyly Henry John Thomas, farmer Nasb Alice (Mrs.), milliner owner, Hempnall house
Dowe George, farmer Nash John, farmer Whyatt John, farmer
Earl Lucy (Mrs.), Swan P.H Page George, beer retailer
HEMPSTEAD is a parish on the sea-coast, 4 miles stone, with a thatched roof, in the Early English style and
north-east from Stalham station on the Eastern and Mid- consists of chancel, nave, south porch, and low western
lands railway, I 8 miles north-east from Norwich and 8 east tower containing 3 bells; it was restored in I 879 and affords
from North Walsham, in the Eastern division of the county, I30 sittings. The register dates from the year 1707. The
Tunstead and Rapping petty sessional division, hundred of living is a rectory, annexed to that of Lessingham, average
Rapping, union of Smallburgh, county court district of tithe rent-charge £420, joint gross yearly value £sro, in-
North Walsham, rural deanery of Waxham, Rapping divi- eluding 70 acres of glebe, with residence, in the gift of
sion, archdeaconry of Norfolk and diocese of Norwich. The King's College, Cambridge, and held since 189I by the Rev.
church of St. Andrew is an ancient building of flint and James Pounder Whitney M. A. of King's College, Cambridge.
DIRECTORY.] NORFOLK. HEMSBY, 425
The poor have pasture land here, and the benefit of some Letters through Norwich arrive at 7.30 a.m. Stalham &
small chal"ities. Miss Blake is lady of the manor. The Happisburg are the nearest money order offices ; Stalham
principal landowners are George Ives esq. of Bradfield Hall is the nearest telegraph office
and Thomas Warts esq. of Sutton and Miss Blake. The soil
is good mixed; subsoil, sand and clay. The chief crops are A School Board for the joint parishes of Lessingham with
wheat, oats and barley. The area is 907 acres, rateable Hempstead and Eccles has been formed: the school is at
value, £x,so8; the population in 1891 was 139. Lessingham
Whitney Rev. Jas. Pounder M.A.Recrory LittlewoodChas. farmer ,Hempstead hall Thompson J ames,farm bailiff to George
Bartram John, farmer Pestell George, farm bailiff to Thomas Ives esq
Hewett William, farmer, The Heath Warts esq
HEMPSTEAD-by-HOLT is a parish about 2 miles age house was erected on the glebe in 1876. The reading
south-east from Halt station on the Eastern and Midlands room, formerly used as an infants' school, is a red brick
railway, and II south-west from Cromer, in the Northern building erected in r877. John Henry Gurney esq. J.P. of
division of the county, Halt hundred, petty sessional division Keswick Hall, is lord of tho manors of Hempstead, Nether-
and county court district, Erpingham union, rural deanery hall and Lusehall, and Constance, Marchioness of Lothian,
of Halt and archdeaconry and diocese of Norwich. The John Stanley Matt esq. of Earning ham Hall and Lady Eade,
church of All Saints is a plain building and consists of nave, of Norwich, are chief landowners. The soil is light; sub-
south porch, and a western tower of brick containing one soil, gravel. The chief crops are wheat, turnips, barley and·
bell ; the stained east window is a memorial, and was grass. The area is 1,756 acres; rateable value, £1,665; the
inserted in 1876 by the Rev. Charles Louis Rudd M.A. vicar population in 18gr was 225.
1873-89, who also presented a carved oak reredos and mas- Parish Clerk, John Wright.
sive brass lectern ; there are 100 sittings. The register
dates from the year 1558. The living is a discharged vicar- PosT 0FFICE-John Neal, receiver. Letters from Holt
age, average tithe rent-charge £w6, net yearly value £r54. R.S.O. arrive at 7·35 a. m.; dispaLched at 4.50 p.m. No
with 23 acres of glebe and residence, in the gift of the Dean mail on snnday. The nearest money order & telegraph
and Chapter of Norwich, who a.re impropriators of the great office is at Halt
tithes, and held since 1889 by the Rev. Thomas Webster The children of this place attend the school in the adjoining
Whistler B.A. of St. Peter's College, Cambridge. The vicar- parish of Baconsthorpe
Whistler Rev. Thomas Webster B.A. Bond Robert, farmer & owner Hagen John, farmer, The IIole farm
Vicarage Cooper James, farmer Neal John, White Horse P.H. & shop-
COMMERCIAL. Dixon Grandison Abel, farmer keeper, Post office
Baker Charles Thomas, blacksmith ; & Fowle Samuel, farmer, & gamekeeper to ' Quantrill Martha (Mrs.), dress maker
at Halt; Fakenharn & Sherringharn. H. G. Barclay esq Reading Room
See advertisement Ling Alfred, farmer & agricultural Rump & Hendry, farmers
l3eckett Joseph, farmer valuer, Hempstead hall Scarf Robert, Hare & Hounds P.H
HEMPTON is a parish adjoining Fakenham, on the it on Whit Tuesday and 22nd of November, and on the first
south bank of the Wensum, in the North Western division Wednesday in September, which is principally for sheep.
of the county, Gallow hundred and petty sessional division, Here was once a priory, founded by Roger de St. Martin in
Walsingham union and county court district, rural deanery the reign of Henry I. for Augustine canons, and dedicated
of North Brisley and Toftrees and archdeaconry and diocese to SS. Mary and Stephen ; the revenue at the Dissolution,
of Norwich. The church of the Holy Trinity, begun in r855, when there were four canons only, was estimated at
consists at present of chancel only, built of stone, in the £39 os. gd. The Marquess Townshend is lord of the manor
Early English style: there is a fine reredos, erected in 1867 and the principal landowner. The soil is gravelly; subsoil,
and all the windows are stained : there are 8o sittings. The brick earth in many parts. The Green affords a large
register dates from the year 1856. The living is a vicarage, amount of pasturage, and the arable land is farmed on the
yearly value £w, with 4~ acres of glebe and residence, in usual Norfolk four-course system. The area is 484 acres,
the gift of the Crown, and held since 1887 by the Rev. Alfred including about 70 acres of common ; rateable value,£ 1,575;
Edward Humphreys M. A. of Trinity College, Cambridge, who the population in I8gi was 476.
is also rector of Fakenham, where he resides. IIere is a
charity of £ro yearly, arising from 4-A· 2R. I2P. of land, in LETTER Box cleared at 5.50 p.m. Letters through Faken•
the parish of Shereford, and distributed to the poor, who ham, the nearest money order & telegraph office, arrive
have a settlement in the parish. Hempton Green is cele- at 6.30 a.m
brated for the three large cattle fairs which are held upon The children of this place attend the schools at Fakenham
Barley Edmund Johnson Eyre E. & Co. (of Lynn), brewery stores Huggins William, blacksmith
Burrell Mrs Fennings Edward John, grocer&draper Loads Alfred, coal merchant
Curson George Robinson Fisher Isaac William, carpenter Palmer George, dog dealer
Johnson Rev. William John M.A. [curate Gates Edward, Bell P.H Pitcher William Richard (Mrs.), baker
of Fa ken ham J Gates Mary (Mrs.), Buck P.H Salmon Richd. John, King's Head P.H
Lynn Miss Goggs Thomas Richard, miller (steam Sharman Emma(Mrs. ),frmr.Abbey frm
Mann Robert & water), corn merchant & farmer; Tuthill Charles, brick manufacturer
Miller Thomas John, W ensum house res. Fakenham Working Men's Club (F. T. Weller,
COMMERCIAL. Horsley Charles & Son, millers (wind, hon. sec)
Butcher Jas. cabinet ma. & shopkeeper steam & water); & at Fakenham; Wright James, timber merchant
Dennis J ames, boot & shoe maker Sculthorpe & Wendling
HEMSBY (or HEMESBY) is a parish on the sea-coast, with Commissioners in 1873 into a. single trust; the rents,
a station on the Eastern and Midlands railway, 6~ miles amounting to over £so, are distributed yearly in coals.
north from Yarmouth and 21 from Norwich, in the Eastern Hems by Hall, the seat of Mrs. Bassett Haggard and occupied
division of the county, incorporated hundreds and petty by Thomas De la Garde Grissell esq. is a large mansion of
sessional division of East and West Flegg, county court dis- red brick with stone facings, standing in extensive grounds.
trict of Great Yarmouth, rural deanery of Flegg and arch- Mrs. Bassett Haggard, who is lady of the manor, the trustees
deaconry and diocese of Norwich. The church of St. Mary of the late Mrs. T. Clowes and Frank and Richard Clowes
is a building of stone in the Perpendicular style, consisting are the principal landowners. The soil is mixed ; subsoil,
of chancel, nave, south porch and an embattled western clay. The chief crops are wheat, barley, oats &c. The area
tower containing a clock and 3 bells: the greater part of the, is 1,710 acres of land and 75 of water; rateable value,
building dates from about the middle of the 15th century: £3,6II; the population in 1891 was 692.
it was restored in 1868 at a cost of about£ 1,200, largely at PosT OFFICE.-Mrs. Emily Woolston, sub-postmistress.
the expense of Robert Copeman esq. and has 250 sittings. Letters arrive from Yarmouth at 6.50 a. m.; dispatched
The register dates from about the year 1556 and is in good at7 p.m. The nearest money order office is at Ormesby
preservation. The living is a vicarage, average tithe rent- & telegraph office at the station. Postal orders are issued
charge £140, net yearly value £r53, including 25 acres of here, but not paid
glebe, with residence, in the gift of Mrs. Bassett llagga.rd,
and held since 1864 by the Rev. Henry William Harden B.A. Parochial School (mixed), built in 1841, at the sole expense
of Magdalene College, Cambridge. Here are Congregational of the late R. Copeman esq. for 135 children; average
and Primitive Methodist chapels. An ancient bequest of attendance, ros; l<'rederick Brookes, master; Mrs. Eleanor
land of 10 ac-res and an allotment under the Commons In- Brookes, mistress
closure Act, of 15 acres, were consolidated by the Charity Railway Station, Frederick Watson, station master
Ferrier Miss I Gedge Jonathan Grissell Thos. De la Garde, Hems by ball
FolleyRev. John [Congregational] Gcdge Robert I Harden Rev. Henry Wm. B.A. Vicarage
4~6 BEMSBY• NORFOLK.
HilL .Alexander, The Rallies Dunham Richard, farmer Myhill Samuel, farmer
Wooden Thomas, Station villa Frosrlick Thos. farmer, Church farm Nichols Charles, market gardener
COMMERCIAL . Gooch Thomas, market gardener Nichols Joseph, boot & shoe maker
.Alien Albert, pork butcher Goweu Richard, ·market gardener Nicholl'l Rohert, blacksmith
Alien Cli:fford, butcher Harbord George, carpenter Nichols William, fish dealer
.Allen George., butcher Harbord Hy. bricklayer & mrkt. gardnr N orton J ames, beer retailer
Beach John, bricklayer Hewitt Stepben, farmer Pettingill Waiter Dowe, blacksmith
Beck George, farmer King Albert, market gardener Raper John, farmer
Boulton Henry, nurseryman & florist Knight William, market gardener . Raper Waiter Montague, miller (wind)
Boulton Robert, florist Knights Elijah, farmer Starling Alphase, corn & flour dealer
Boulton Thomas, coal agent Knights George, farmer Thurtell Albert, Bell inn
Chaney Henry, market gardener Lingwood Robert, grocer Tnngate Williarn, farmer •
Chaney Stephen, market gardener Littlewood David, coal merchant Webster Thos. farmer, Hill House frm
Cnbitt J ames, farmer &c Long William, market gardener Woolston Emily(Mrs. ),groc-er & draper,.
Edmonds Joseph, jun. collector of rates Myhill Robert, farmer Post office
· & taxes & farmer Myhill Samuel, butcher W oolston Henry, farmer

HETHEL is a parish and village of scattered houses, 3 the gift of John Steward esq. and held since I891 by the
miles south from Hethersett station on the Thetford and Rev. Joseph Cawood Walker: the rectory-house is pleasantly
Norwich section, about 2 north from Ashwellthorpe station situated, and surrounded by a moat, which still remains full
on the Wymondham and Forncett branch of the Great of water. Near the church is a thorn tree, known as
Eastern railway, 7 south-west-by-south from Norwich, and "Hethel thorn," and said to date from the time of King
4 east from Wymondham, in the Southern division of the John; Hethel Hall, the property of Sir Francis George Man-
county, Swainsthorpe petty sessional division, Humbleyard ning ham Boileau hart. n.L., 1. P. is a modern mansion;
hundred, Henstead union, Wymondham county court dis- occupying the site of the old Hall,· pulled down in r825; it
tric;t, rurfl.l deanery of H umbleyard, archdeaconry of Nor- stands in a small park and is at present unoccupied. Potash
folk and diocese of Norwich. The church of All Saints is Farm House, now called "llethel Wood farm," is the pro.
an ancient building, chiefly of flint and brick, consisting of perty of Sir F. G. M. Boileau bart. and at present held by
chancel, nave, south porch, north aisle and an embattled Mr. John Roots. John Henry Gurney esq •.T.P. of Keswick
western tower, with pinnacles, containing one bell: the win- Hall, who is lord of the manor, John Steward esq. of the
dows in the chancel were renewed in I882, at a cost of the Manor House, East Carlton and Sir Francis · George Man~
:tector: in the porch is a holy-water stoup, and on the north ningham Boileau bart. n.L., J.P. of Ketteringham Park, are
side of the chancel is a handsome monument, with arms and the prinCipal landowners. The soil is clay ; subsoil, marl.
recumbent effigies, to Myles Branthwaite, ob. I6I2, and his The chief crops are wheat, beans, peas, turnips &c. The
wife; at the side are kneeling figures of their three children: area is 1,428 acres ; rateable value, £t,7o8; and the popu~
there is also a brass to Elizabeth Branthwaite, their lation in 1891 was 149.
daughter, ob. I62r, and marble tablets to Wm. Branthwaite, Parish Clerk, Edward Bailey. ·
serjeant-at-law, ob. I729, and to .Anna Bettina Finch, eldest Letters from Norwich, via Bracon Ash, arrive at ro a.m.
daughter of Thomas Be~vor ~sq. of Hethel Hall and wife of The nearest money order office is at Wreningham, & tele~
William Finch Finch esq. of Shelford, Cambs. ob. r78o: graph office at Wymondham & Ashwellthorpe station
there are ISO sittings. The register dates from the year This place is included in the llracon Ash United School
I709•. The living is a rectory, average titb.e rent-charge Board District, formed compulsorily July I, 1875 ; & the
£36I, gross yearly value i;4o3, with 6o acres of glebe, in children attend the Board school there
[Names marked thus • receive letters Bussey Joshua, farmer, Wood farm *Millard Geo. farmer, Corporation farm
through Wymondbam.] ' Myhill Frederick Charles, farmer & Smith James, farm bailiff to Mr. John
Walker ReV". Joseph Cawood, Rectory collector of taxes, Dairy farm Roots, Hethel Wood farm
*Banham Henry, farmer, Neals farm ' I

HETHERSETT is an extensive and l'ery pleasantvillage dead man found upon it after the parish officers had refused
and parish on the high road from London to Norwich, with to inter him. Thickthorn Hall, a modern residence, th6
a station in Ketteringham parish 1 mile south from the vil- property of John Henry Gurney, esq. of Keswick Hall,
lage, on the Ely and Norwich section of the Great Eastern Norwich, is now occupied by Mrs. Hay Gurney. Hethersett
railway, I20 miles from London, 4 north-east from Wy- Hall, the seat of Mrs. Henry Back, is a large modern man-
mondham and 5~ south-west from Norwich, in the Southern sion on the south side of the village, near the church,
division of the county, Swainsthorpe petty sessional division, pleasantly situated in a park of about 6o acres. Hethersett
Humbleyard hundred, Henstead union, Norwich county Old Hall, the seat of J. Alfred Back esq. originally built
court district, rural deanery of -Humbleyard, archdeaconry about the rsth century, was much enlarged in 1774, and has
of Norfolk and diocese of Norwich. The church of St. a fine avenue of chestnut trees. William Henry Back esq.
Remigius, built about J350 on the site of an earlier struc- is lord of the manor. .The principal landowners are John
ture, is a plain building of flint in the Late Decorated sty le, Henry Gurney, esq. Sir Francis George Manningham
consisting of nave, aisles, north porch and an embattled Boileau bart. n.L., J.P. of Ketteringham Park, also tha
western tower with small wooden sp1re containing 6 bells : trustees of Col. Charles Nor gate, William Henry Back esq.
the chancel has been in ruins since 1535: the organ was and J . .Alfred Back esq. The soil is loamy ; subsoil, clay.
giVen by the late Henry Back esq. in 1874; in the south aisle The chief crops are wheat, barley, turnips, hay and beet~
is an altar-tomb of the I4th century, with effigies, to Sir R. root. The area is 2,674 acres; rateable value, £6,278 ; the
Berney and his wife, and a mural monument with arms to population in I891 was I 0 I34·
Lsaac Mothan, 1703-4, and Elizabeth, his wife, 1699: there Parish Clerk, John Curson.
18 a memorial window to the Rev. Arthur Taylor, formerly
PosT, M. 0. & T. 0., S. B. & .Annuity & Insurance Office.-
VIcar of Paston, d. 4 Feb. 188I, besides others : the pulpit, Nathaniel Parnell, postmaster. Letters received from
of oak is a memorial to Jeremy Day, rector of this parish, Norwich by mail cart at 5.10 a.m. & 2.40 p.m.; dis-
I820-55, d. 1 Nov. 1855: the church was teseated in 1857, patched at 12.50, s.so & 7·5 p.m. ; on sundays at 5.50
and has since been restored : the quasi-chancel was deco~ p.m. ; delivery commences at 7 a. m.; letters received by
rated in I866 and the rest of the building in 1874: there are the 2.40 mail are delivered to callers only. PILLAR
400 sittings, 240 being free. The register dates from the year LETTER BoxEs, at Orchard lodge, cleared at 5.40 p.m.
I616. The living is a rectory, with that of Canteloffe an~
week days ; Mill road, cleared at 6.45 p.m. week days;
nexed, average tithe rent-charge £594, joint net yearly value
Wymondham road, cleared at 6.30 p.m. week days
£558, including 58 acres of glebe and residence, in the gift
of Caius College, Cambridge, and held since r856 by the ScnooLs:-
Rev. William Reynolds Collett M.A.late fellow of that college National (mixed), erected in I86o, for rgo children;
and rural dean of Humbleyard. There is a Wesleyan chapel average attendance, :x4o·; Edward Barnes, master; Mrs.
here seating about 200. The Baptists hold their services in Alice L. M. Barnes, mistress : Miss Beatrice .Artis, assi.s~
the British school. The charities now consolidated, amount taut mistress
to £6o yearly, of which £4o is distributed in clothing and British (mixed), erected about I837 & since enlarged for
£2o applied to educational purposes. The Oak of Reforma- ISO children; average attendance., 72; Edward Beeby,
tion, under wluch Robert Ket and his followers took a master; Mrs. Carolina Beeby, mistress
solemn oath to reform the abuseg of Church and State, in Railway Station,- Youell, station master
the insurrection of 1549, is still standing on the high road CARRIRRS TO Nonwrca.-Ed. Smith, of Wymondham,
from Wymondham to Hethersett. In the year I 8oo the passes through mon, wed. & sat.; George Clabburn, mon.
common and village green were inclosed, and the parishioners wed. & sat. ; Mallows, mon. wed. & sat. ; Balls, mon.
claimed and obtained part of Wymondham common as being wed. tbnrs. & sat. ; Knott, of Rockland, wed. & sat. ;
within tbis parish, on the ground that they had buried a Want, from Attleborough, wed. & sat
DIRECTORY.] NORFOLK. HEY DON. 427
PRIVATE RESIDENTS. Bloom John Lofty, farm bailiff toEd- Howard Chas. Mills, Queen's Read P.H
Aldred Mrs ward Elliot esq. White house Howard Jeremiah, pork butcher
Back Mrs. Henry, Hethersett hall Brown William Thomas, baker, flour Ireland James, carpenter, Lynch green
Back J. Alfred, The Old hall dealer, grocer & drapel' J ackson Robt. thrashing machine owner
Bailey Frederic Buckingham Arthur Nicholas, farmer, Livick Jacob, farmer
Bailey Mrs Old Hall farm Lofty William, butcher
Bale Mrs. S. A. Ilolly cottage Buckingham Frederick Thomas, plum- :Miller James Leonard; harness maker
Barkiey :Mrs. The Lodge ber & painter Moore George, head gardener to Mrs.
Browne Mrs. Ilill house Canham Mindham, baker H. Back
Bullard Ernest, Wood hall Copeman Jas. fishmonger & woodman Moore Samuel, shoe maker
Bullard Mrs. Charlie, Wood hall Cunningham Wm. Matthew, shoe makr Xickalls Charles, farmer
Clarke James, Shrublands Curson Anthony, pork butcher & farmr Parnell N f\thanl.dnper & grocr .Post off
Collett Rev. William Reynolds M.A. Curson J n. boot & shoe ma. &parish clerk Porrett James, farmer
[rector & rural dean], Rectory Curson John Aves, builder & farmer Pumfrey James, farmer, Station farm
Deacon G. Edward Dade William, blacksmith Reading Room & Club (Arthur C. L.
Deacon George Frederick M.D Dann ·waiter, butcher & farmer Back, sec)
Elliot Edward Deacon George Ed ward, surgeon Richardson Robert, farmer
Gurney Mrs. Hay, Thickthorn hall Elliot Edward, artist Riches Wm. farmer, Thickthorn farm
Harvey Walter Grounds J obn Henry, beer retailer & Ringer Lydia (Mrs. ),farmr.Church frm
Howard David poultry &c. dealer Robertson Charles Lofty, farmer &
Mitchell James, Beulah house Grounds Thomas, poultry &c. dealer landowner & rate collector
Norgate Mrs Harvey George, coal & coke merchant Sharman Frederick, grocer & draper
Pinwill Mrs. The Grange Harvey John, manufacturer of thrash- Sipping Frederick, thatcher
Sharman Thos. Faulkner J n. Beulah ho ing, winnowing & agricultural ma- Sipping Mary Anu (Mrs.), farmer
Taylor Mrs. Arthur chines of every description & thrash- Smith Wm. Greynound P-11· & boot m~
Woods Miss ing machine proprietor ; & CatLle Standley Jacob, market gardener
COMMERCIAL. market, Norwich Traxton James, tailor
Aldborough Robert, market gardener Hawes Edward Alfred, grocer & wine, Traxton John, well sinker
Andrews Alfred, carpenter spirit & ale stores Turner Ed ward Fulham, tailor
Bailey & Son, builders & contractors Hethersett Co-operative SocietyLimited Wade William, coa.:;h builder
Bailey Thomas, shoe maker (Edward Beeby, sec) Warmoll Wm. farmer~ The Grange frm
Bale Robert Harrison, brick maker Hickling Thomas, saddler & harness ma Woodrow John, market gardener
Earham Frederick H. market gardener Hood John (exors. of), farmers Woolner Walter, market gll.l'dcner
Bassingthwaighte Jas.frmer,Cantley fm Hood Walter, farmer
HE VIN G HAM is a parish and widely scattered village in gifts of coal to the poor; there is also a poor's allotment
on the road from Norwich to Cromer, 3 miles west from of 146 acres of common land. Rippon Hall, a mansion of
Enxton Lamas station on the East Norfolk section of the brick in the Elizabethan style, is the seat of Mrs. H. P.
Great Eastern railway, 3~ south from .Aylsham and 8 north Marsham : the park attached to it, but about a mile from
from Norwich, in theNortberndivision of the county, South the mansion and containing r8o acres, was granted in 1284
Erpingham hundred and petty sessional division, Aylsham to the Bishops of Norwich, who had a palace here, and in
union and county court district, rural de>1.nery of Ingworth 1581 Henry VIII. granted it to Sir James Bulleyn, of Blick-
and archdeaconry and diocese of Norwich. The church of ling, from whom it descended to the Hobarts, afterwards
St. Botolph is a large edifice of flint, in the Gothic style, Earls of Buckinghamshire, and was sold by them to the
consisting of chancel, nave, south transept, south porch and Marsham family in 1659. Mrs. Marsham is owner of the
an embattled western tower, with pinnacles, containing 5 manor of Cats-cum-Cricketots and chief landowner, and
belli: the font is arcaded and enriched with sculptured figures William Forster esq. of The Lodge, Blickling, is lord of
much defaced: a stained window was erected in r88r by the llevingham-with-Marsham. The soil is mixed; subsoil,
late Rev. Henry Philip ~Iarsham LL.B. of Rippon Hall: the gravel and sand. The chief crops are wheat, roots, barley
church was thoroughly restored and reseated in r88r, and and hay. The area is 2,830 acres; rateable value, £3,303 ;
affords 250 sittings. The register dates from the year 1654. the population in r8gr was 760.
The living is a rectory, average tithe rent-charge £416, net Parish Clerk, Robert Savage.
yearly value £370, including 33 acres of glebe and residence, PosT & M. 0. 0., S. B. & Annuit<y & Insurance Office.-
in the gift of Sir Ilugh Reeve Beevor hart. and held since Michael Wade, receiver. Letters received from Norwich
1889 by the Rev. John Hare Beevor B.A. of Pembroke Col- at 5.10 a. m.; delivery commences at 7.10 a.m.; dis~
lege, Cambridge, diocesan inspector of schools for the patched at 5-45 p.m.; sunday, 5·45 p. m. The nearest
deanery of Ingworth. There are Wesleyan and Primitive telegraph office is at Buxton Lamas
Methodist chapels here. Bulwer's charity, being the A School Board of 5 members was formed October 26, 1874;
interest on £858 3s. rd. Consols, is distributed among the Henry James Gidney, Aylsham, clerk to the board;
poor at Christmas; Hall's charity consists of the old school Robert Savage, attendance officer
house and 5 acres of land, the proceeds of which are applied Board School (mixed), built in 1875, at a cost of £6oo, for
to the clothing of 10 children and the maintenance of 140 children; average attendance, 122; James Elston,
elementary education; Beevor's charity consists of a sum master; Mrs. Mary Elston, mistress. The old free school
of£ wo in Consols, the intE;Jrest on which is- spent annually has been incorporated with the Board school
Beevor Rev. John Hare H.A. Rectory Crane Ellen (Mrs.), & Son, agricultural Medler Thos. beer retailr. & shopkeeper
Marsham Mrs. H. P. Rippon hall implement makers & blacksmiths Mitchell Charles, wheelwright
Marsham Major Henry Savill D.L., J.P. Gibson ·waiter, farmer & dealer Neal Alfred, Marsham Arms P.H
Rippon hall Harvey George, farm bailiff to Charles N orton Esaias, shopkeeper
Louis Buxton esq Palmer Walter,Sir John Barleycorn P.H
COMMERCIAL. Haylett Robert, farmer Palmer William, jun. bricklayer
Balls Charles Fox P.H Hubbard John, farmer Phillippo John Green, farmer
Benton Matthew, farmer Kidd Horace, carpenter Pratt James Wortley, landowner & far-
Bentun Robert, farmer Marley Robert, farm bailiff to George mer, Avenue farm
Bunn John, farmer Wood & Son Rump John, blacksmith & farmer
Burton Arthur, farmer Matthewson James, farmer, shopkeeper Sexton Thos. gamekpr. to Mrs.Marsham
Burton George, beer retailer & steam grinding mills Spink Henry, baker
Burton Jeremiah, farmer Mayes William, shoemaker . Wade Miehael, farmer, Post office
Burton John, farmer Medler Alfred, dealr. in live poultry &c Watker Robert, beer retailer
Case William Henry, brick manufao- Medler Charles, shopkeeper Westney Stephen, farmer
turer & farmer, Rippon Hall farm Medler Joshua, mole catcher Willimott Charles, shopkeeper
HEYDON is a parish and pleasant village, 3 miles north- f pinnacles, containing 6 bells: in the church are monuments
west from Cawston station on the East Norfolk section of and brasses to the Dynne, Earle and Bulwer families, and
the Great Eastern railway, 2 west-by-north from Bluestone some stained glass: there are 150 sittings, 100 free. The
station on the Eastern and Midlands railway, 6 miles west . register dates from the year :1538. The living is a rectory,
from .Aylsham and 14 north-west-by-north from Norwich, in consolidated with that of Irmingland, joint net yearly value
1

the Northern division of the county, South Erpingham I £320, including 20 acres of glebe, witb residence, in the gift
hundred and petty sessional division, Aylsham union and [ of Brig.-Gen. William Earle Gascoyne Lytton Bulwer
county court district, rural deanery of Ingworth and arch- ~.P. and held since 1888 by the "Rev . .Henjamin John Arm-
deaconry and diocese of Norwich. The church of SS. Pete~ strong H.A. of Caius College, Cambridge., Heydon Hall, the
and Paul is a stately pile of flint with stone dressings, in the seat of Brig.-Gen. William Ear le Gascoyne Lytton Bulwer
Perpendicular style, consisting of chancel, nave, aisles, north : J.P. and lord of the manor, is a mansion of red brick
and south porches and a lofty embattled wilstern tower wi t.b with stone dressings, erected in the reign of Queen Elizabeth
428 HEYDON. NORFOLK. [ KELLY's
{1584) : on the stone balustrade which adorns the roof are a PosT 0FFICE.-James John Skelt, receiver. Letters received
number of quaint and curious figures, and above the doors through Norwich at 7 a. m.; dispatched at 3.30 p.m. week
are various shields of arms: near the hall is a large oak, days only. Saxthorpe is the nearest money order office
known as "Cromwell's Oak," the Lord Protector having & Corpusty & Saxthorpe station the nearest telegraph
been a personal friend of tlerjeant Erasmus Ear le, one of the offices
(!Ommissioners who met at Uxbridge in Jan. 1645, to nego-
tiate the matters in dispute between the King and the Par- Parish School (mixed), built with residence for the mistress
liament. The Grange is the residence of Lieut.-Gen. Sir by the late William Earle Lytton Bulwer esq. m 1842, for
Edward Earle Gascoigne Bulwer K.C.B. The soil is sand and so children; average attendance, 22 ; Mrs. t:labina Daver-
loam; subsoil, clay and gravel. The chief crops are wheat, son, mistress
barley, roots and hay. The area is 1,883 acres; rateable
Talue, £ r,95 4 ; the population in 1sg 1 was 205 . Blues tone Station, I. Meal, master
.Armstrong Rev. Benj. Jn. M.A. Rectory Daverson Samuel, shoe maker Moore James, Earle Arms P.H
£ulwer Lieut.-Gen. Sir Edward Earle Golding John William, assistant over- Owen James, farmer
Gascoigne K.C.B. The Grange seer, Ollands farm Rounce Timothy, farmer
Bulwer Brig.-Gen. William Earle Gas- Golding William Lawrence, farmer, Skelt James Jn. shopkeeper, Post office
coyne Lytton J.P. Heydon hall Ollands farm Thrower Alfred Bernard, blacksmith
Ireland Benjamin S. Park farm Green llenry John, farm bailiff to Lt.- Vout George, estate carpenter to Brig.-
COMMERCIAL. Gen. Sir E. E. G. Bulwer K.C.B. Gen. Lytton Bulwer
:Bartram Waiter, farmer Crofton hall Wright James, head gamekeeper to
Bramble James, wheelwright Laxen Albert Richard, saddler &c Brig-Gen. Lytton Bulwer
Cornish Ezra. lime manufacturer
HICKLING is an isolated parish and scattered village, ants are employed in agriculture or in the neighbouring
3 miles north-east from Catfield station on the Eastern and North Sea fisheries. Hickling Priory was foundod by
Midlands railway, 8 east from Worsteadstation on the Nor- Theobald de Valoins or Valence in nBs, for canons of the
wich and Cromer section of the Great Eastern railway, r6 order of St. Austin, and dedicated to St. Mary, St. Austin
north-west from Yarmouth, 3 south-east from Stalham and and All Saints: Robert Botyld, alias Wymondham, became
18 north-west from Norwich, in the Eastern division of the the last prior in r5o3,and with three of the canons subscribed
county, Tun stead and Rapping petty sessional division, to tbe King's supremacy in 1534, when the revenues were
llapping hundred, Smallburgh union, North Walsham estimated at £r37: the ruins of the priory are gradually
county court district, rural deanery of Waxham, Happing decaying. Henry Sharnborne Nathaniel Micklethwait esq.
division, arch deaconry of Norfolk and diocese of Norwich. of 'raver ham Hall, is lord of the manor and the largest land-
About one-third or the parish may be said to be marsh and owner. The soil is fair mixed; subsoil, sand and clay. The
common lands; the marsh lands are drained by water mills. chief crops are wheat, oats and barley. The area is 4,334
Hickling Broad, an expanse of water of about 700 acres, is acres; rateable value, £4,845; the population in 1891 was
used by small craft to communicate with the river llure. 807.
The church of St. Mary is a very flne building of flint and Parish Clerk, Benjamin Bates.
stone, consisting of chancel, nave, aisles, south porch and an PosT & M. o. o., S. B. & Annuity & Insurance Office.-Jas.
embattled western tower, go feet in height and containing Turner, sub-postmaster. Letters arrive via Stalham S.O.
5 bells: the nave was thoroughly restored in 1875 at a cost at 7 _45 a. m.; dispatched at 2. 40 p.m. on week days only.
of £r,Bn, and in the following year the chancel was re- The nearest telegraph office is at Stalham
stored at a further cost of £573: there are nearly 500
sittings. The register dates from the year 16 53 . The Jiving National School (mixed & infants), erected in 186r & en-
is a vicarage, average tithe rent-charge £ 26 1 , net yearly larged in 1874 & r886, for 16o children ; average attend-
value £6o, including- 16 acres of glebe, with residence, in ance, 155; the school has an endowment of £250 left by
the gift of H. s. N. Micklethwait esq. and held since r88g by the Rev. John Wells & invested in Consols; there is a
the Rev. Arthur Adam Taylor Crosse M.A. of Emmanuel teacher's residence, erected & furnished in 1879 at a cost
College, Cambridge. The vicarage house was built in 1850 of £325; John Prickett, master
by the patron, at a cost of about £r,4oo. There are CARRIERS:-
Wesleyan and Primitive Methodist chapels. The poor's James Bell, to 'Duke's Palace,' Norwich, on mon. wed. &
land of 83 acres produces about £5o, which is dis- sat. returning at 4 p.m
tributed in coals, and the widows' acre produces £3 : other Thomas Knights, to the Duke's Palace plain, Norwich, on
charities are also distributed annually. The rr,arket was sat
formerly held here, as well as a pleasure fair held on the Gcorge Beevor, to the 'George & Dragon,' & Samuel Bell,
23rd of April, but both are now obsolete. The inhabit- to Nurse's, St. Nicholas road, Yarmouth, on sat
Borrett John, Hickling hall Dawson Robert, boot maker Newman Samuel, farmer, The Heath
Crosse Rev. Arthur Adam Taylor M.A. Deary Arthur, thatcher Nudd Alfred, marshman
[vicar], Vicarage Durrant Chas. pork butcher, Stubb rd Nudd Robert, marshman for the corn-
Ready Rev. Henry B. A.-[ vicar of Pall- Gibbs & Son, farmers missioners of drainage
ing & rector of Waxham] Gibbs Alfred Geo. farmer, Church farm Pollard James, miller (wind) & farmer
Singers C. Douglas, Broad house Gibbs Charles, Bull inn Pollard Robert, blacksmith, The Green
COMMERCIAL. Gibbs Frederick, White Horse P.H. & Pratt Rebecca (Mrs.), farmer
Applegate James, farmer, The Heath blacksmith Rice Benjamin, farmer
Baker Jane (Mrs.), pork butcher Gibbs Herbert Henry, draper Saddler Matthew, farmer, Winmere
BarberGeo. Vincent,farmer &landowner Gibhs John, shopkeeper Slipper Elizabeth Alice (Mrs.), farmer,
Bates Benj. carpenter & parish clerk Gibbs William, farmer Winmere hall
Beales George, farmer & coal dealer, Harmer Samuel, vermin destroyer Southgate Waiter, Greyhound P.H. &
The Green Harvey Robert, farmer, The Heath boat builder
Beales George, jun. Pleasure Boat inn Helston Henry, farmer, Eastfield Taylor Wil'iam, vermin destroyer
Beckett Emily (Mrs.), farmer & butchr Lambert John, bricklayer Trorey Wilham, farmer, Heath
Beevor George, butcher & carrier Mason James, chimney sweeper Tuck Thomas, carter
:Beevor Robert, farmer Mason Robert, boot & shoe maker Turner Jarnes, grocer & draper,
Bell James, carrier, The Heath Myhill Edward. carpenter, builder, Post office
Bell Samuel, butcher & carrier wheelwright & general contractor, Turner Richard, farmer & landowner
Bishop James Louis, grocer, draper & assistant overseer & collector of rates, Turner Hichd.Frank,farmer,The Green
general outfitter, The Green taxes &c Turner William, builder
Bishop William, butcher My hill Lewis, farmer Vincent Robert,, vermin destroyer
Borrett John, landowner & farmer, Myhill Richard, farmer Whittleton Leonard, farmer, Heath
IIickling ball Neal Geo. Wm. farmer, Brightmere frm Wiseman William George, farmer
Chapman Josiah, farmer, The Heath Newman John, farmer & landowner, Woolston Benjamin, boot maker
Chapman Reuben, vermin destroyer Priory farm Woolston Ja.mes, flour dealer
HILBOROUGH(orHrLBURGH) is a parish and village on a slight acclivity a short distance from The Hall, is a. very
the high road from Brand on to Swafiham, about 7 miles west ancient edifice, built principally of fiint, with stone quoins, in
from Watton station on the Bury, Thetford and Swaffham the Florid Gothic style, and consists of chancel, nave with
section of the Great Eastern railway and 6 south from clerestory, aisles, south porch and an embattled western
Swaffham, in the South Western division of the county, tower, with pinnacles, containing 5 bells: the chancel
South Greenhoe hundred and petty sessional division, retains piscina and sedilia on the south:::ide: the church was
Swaffham union and county court district, rural deanery of restored in r86g, and has 200 sittings, 100 being free. The
Cranwich, North dil""ision, archdeaconry of Norfolk and register dates from the year rs62. The living isarectory,
diocese of Norwich. The church of All Saints, standing on average tithe rent-charge, £339, net yearly value £"362,

DIRECTORY.] NORFOLK. . HILG.AY. 4.29


including 6o acres of glebe, with residence, in the gift of and acres is 3,093 ; rateable value, £2,223 ; the population in
held since 1874 by the Rev. John Burrough M.A. of Queen's' 1891 was 297.
College, Oxford. Here are the ruins of a pilgrims' chapel. Parish Clerk, Aaron Hudson.
The poor have six acres of fen land for pasture and a charity PosT OFFICE (Railway Sub-Office. Letters should have
of£ x 17s. yearly for clothing. Hilborough Hall, near the R. S. 0. Norfolk added) .-John Walker, sub-postmaster.
road side and in the centre of the village, but at present Letters arrive week days at 2 15 a. m.; sundays, 7 a.m.;
unoccupied, is a large and beautiful mansion, surrounded dispatched at xo. 15 p. m. Mundford is the nearest money
by plantations and an extensive park, and is the property of order & telegraph office. Postal orders are issued here, but
Joseph Trueman Mills esq. J.P., D.L. of Clermont Lodge, not paid
Watton, who is lord of the manor and sole landowner. The National School (mixed), for roo children; average attend-
soil is a light loam, with a subsoil of gravel and chalk. The ance, 6o; John Walker, master; Miss Emmeline Walker,
chief crops are wheat, barley and pasture. The number of assistant mistress
Burrongh Rev. John M,A. Rectory Cooper Robert, baker Goddard William, farm bailiff to J. T.
Darling Waiter, head bailiff to J. T. Mills esq
COMMERCIAL, Mills esq Rodwell Fre-lerick, miller (water)
Bridges Robert, Swan P.H. & farmer Fuller Joseph, estate carpenter to J. T. Stabbings William, shopkeeper
Buckle James, farmer Mills esq Stocking William, wheelwright
Chapman Samuel, blacksmith Garrod Henry & John, farmers & Tuck William, head gamekeeper
Clarke Henry, shopkeeper thrashing machine proprietors

HILGA Y is a large village and extensive parrsh 3~ miles William Jones, formerly marshal of the Queen's Bench
east from Hilgay Fen station on the Ely and Lynn section prison, in whose family it continued till 1878, when it was
and 1 south from Ryston station on the Downhamand Stoke purchased by Major Michael Stocks D.L., J.P. of Woodhall,
Ferry branch of the Great Eastern railway, 4 south from the present owner. A new pumping station and dam, con-
Downham and 83~ from London, in the South Western structed near Hunt's sluice by Messrs. Edward Easton and
division of the county, hundred and petty sessional division Co. of Delahay street, Westminster, for the Feltwell and
of Clackclose, union and county court district of Downham, Methwold drainage commissioners, was opened in 1884:
rural deanery of Fincham, archdeaconry of Norfolk and from these works about roo tons of water per minute can be
diocese of Norwich. The river W issey, a tributary of the pumped into the river Ouse. At Ten Mile Bank is an engine
Ouse, runs past the village, and the Ouse itself bisects the erected in 1842 for the Littleport and Downham drainage
parish. The church of .All Saints is a large building of commissioners, working in connection with one nine miles
freestone, consisting of chancel, nave, south aisle and an distant, in the Isle of Ely: these together drain 30,000
embattled western tower of brick containing a clock and 8 acres ; the wheel is 43ft. Bin. in diameter, and contains
bells, rehung in 1877, at a cost of upwards of [.2oo : 50 ladles, with an average dip of 4ft. emptying the water
the chancel and nave are Decorated and 1ihe south aisle into the River Ouse at the rate of about 130 tons a minute.
Perpendicular : the organ was presented in 18Bx by the Major Michael Stocks D.L., J.P. of Woodhall, who is lord
rector: the church is approached by a long and fine avenue of the manor; Rdmnnd Peel esq. J.P. of Bryn-y-pys, near
of trees, at each end of which is a handsome oak: lych-gate, Ruabon, Flint; Sir Joseph Thellusson Rowley bart. of
erected at a cost of £ 16o by Miss Beechey : the church has Tend ring Hall, Suffolk ; William Henry Rose esq. and Harry
been restored, and contains 300 sittings. The register dates Wayman esq. are the principal landowners. The soil con-
from the year 1583. The living is a rectory, average tithe sists of upland and fen, the former a rich day and gravel,
rent-charge [.r,2r8, net yearly value £653, including 85~ the latter peat with good clay underlying. The chief crops
acres of glebe, with residence, in the gift of Hertford College, are wheat, barley, oats and beans. The area is 7 ,86o acres,
Oxford, and held since 1872 by the Rev. St. Vincent Beechey of which 6,ooo are fen; rateable value, £8,964; the popula-
M.A. of Cains College, Cambridge, honorary canon of tion in 1891 was 1.491.
Manchester and domestic chaplain to the Earl of Ellesmere. TEN MILE BANK is a hamlet on the Ouse.
The distriet church of St. Mark, erected in r847, is a plain Parish Clerk, Anthony Ferguson.
edifice of brick, consisting of nave only and a turret con- PosT & M. 0. 0., S. B. & Annuity & Insurance Office.-
taining one bell: there are 140 sittings. Phineas Fletcher, Charles Edward Lock, receiver. Letters received from
author of the "Purple Island" (a poem in the style of Downbam at 7 a. m. ; dispatched at 6.15 p.m.; dispatched;
Spenser) and other poems, was rector here from 1621 and at 10.35 a. m. on sundays. The nearest telegraph office-
probably till his death in r6so, but there 1s no trace of his is at Southery
burial in the register. There are two Wesleyan and two PosT OFFICE, Ten Mile Bank . ...:.....Peckett Porter, receiver._
Primitive Methodist chapels, one being on the Ten Mile Letters arrive from Downham at 8.15 a.m.; dispatched"
Bank. .A dole of 40 sixpenny loaves is distributed on St. at 4·55 p.m. No sunday delivery. Southery is the-
Til.omas's day: 168 acres of land, yielding on an average nearest money order & telegraph office. Postal orders
£z6o yearly, have been left for the poor; and, for the are issued here, but not paid
repairs of the church, 52 acres, producing a rental of about PILLAR LETTER Box, Hilgay Fen Railway Station, cleared
[r2o yearly. A fair is held here on May rst. Here is an at 4-40 p.m. week days only
ancient hall, formerly one of the seats of the .Abbots of ScHOOLS : -
Ramsey, to whom the estate belonged before the dissolution N atwnal, All Saints, erected in 1838, for 200 children ;~
of that monastery in 1537, when it was granted by Henry average attendance, rso; James Henry Leyland, master;
VIII. together with the advowson of the living, to James Miss Barbara. Brown, assistant mistress
Howe esq. whose daughter bronght it in marriage to Sir St. Mark, Ten Mile Bank, for 120 children ; average
John Willoughby knt. from whom it passed to the Wrays attendance, 86 ; Henry Edward Elderkin, master ; Mrs.
and Sandersons, and, in course of time, by sale, to Captain .Ada Elderkin, mistress; Mrs. J ane Pry or, infants' mistress-
G. W. Manby F.R.S. inventor of the rocket and other Railway Station, Hilgay Fen, Andrew Jesse Gladwin,
apparatus for saving life from shipwreck, and afterwards to station master
Beechey Rev. Canon St. Vincent M. A. Church Temperance Institute (William [ Goodchild William,farmer,TenMile bnk.
[rector], Rectory Shrewsbury, steward) 1 Goodman Thomas Herbert, surgeon
Cossey Samuel Cooke George Alfred, blacksmith, iron- 1 Grimmer Ralph, George & Dragon P.H-
Goodman Thomas Herbert monger & agricultural machinist Hall John, carpenter
Rose William Henry, Ten Mile bank Crouch Samuel, farmer, Hilgay fen Howlett John Foreman, beer retailer~
Scott William Curtis Louisa (Mrs.), confectioner Ten Mile bank •
Smith Mrs. Ten Mile bank Daintree Geo. Ekins, farmer,HiJgay fen Howlett Thomas, farmer, Ten Mile bnk
Stocks MajorMiehael D.L.,J.P. Woodhall Dearsley James, bricklayer Kemp William, tailor
Stokes Jabez Dent Isaac, plumber, painter & glazier King William, saddler & harness maker-
Trendell Rev. George John Wollaston Driver George William, carpenter Leflay Geo. miller (wind), Ten Mile bnk
M.A. [curate] Elcegood Robert, farmer, Hilgay fen Leflay John, farmer, Ten Mile bank
Waiters Henry Engledow William, farmer, Hilgay fen Leflay William, shopkpr. Ten Mile bnk
COMMERCIAL. Firman Henry, butcher & baker Leyland Jas. Hy. organist of All Saints
Ambrose Henry, blacksmith Firth .Alfred & Son, grocers, drapers, Lock Charles Edward, grocer, draper &
Bailey Harry, butcher corn dealers & ale & porter merchnts collector of assessed taxes, Post office
Baker Jabez Bunting, grocer & draper Franklin Herbcrt, corn & flour dealer Mann John, bricklayer
Bedford Geo. blacksmith, Ten Mile bnk Franklin J olm, grocer Morfoot Cook, cattle dealer
Brundle .Frederick, farmer, Hilgay fen Gates George, farmer, Hilgay fen Newell William, Bell P.H
Carlton Charles, beer retailer Glover John, farmer, Hilgay fen Norburn Joseph, farmer
Case Robert, farmer Goodchild John, farmer & landowner, Osier William Thomas, baker
Chapman John, wheelwright & carpntr Ililgay fen PeacockWm.Crabbe, farmer,Ililgay fen

C- N. & S. 28
7
430 lliLGAY. NORFOLK. [KELLY S
Pell Rt. Nicholas, boot ma. TenMile bank Rose William Henry. farmer & land- Thnrlow Samuel, farmer
Porter Emanuel, boot maker owner, Ten Mile bank Tuck James, Dog;& Duck P.H. Hundred
Porter Mary Ann (Mrs.), dress maker Rowell James,shopkeeper, TenMile bank Ff>et bank
& confectioner Scott Setb, farmer Walker Wm. beer retailer, Ten Mile bnk
Porter Peckett, shopkeeper, Post office, Seeker George, coal dealer Waiters Henry, farmer
Ten Mile bank Smith James, farmer, Ten Mile bank Waymao Harry, farmer & landowner,
Porter Susannah (Mrs.), Jolly Anglers Smith Robert Alphonso, farmer, Ten Hilgay fen
P.H. Ten Mile bank Mile bank Whittome George, engineer, mill-
Porter Thomas, farmer, Hilgay fen Sprag gins John, beer retailer wright, machinist, brass & iron
Proctor Anthony, farmer, Hilgay fen Stokes Jabez, farmer founder, shoeing & general smith &
Redhead BensleyWm.frmr. TenMile bnk Sucker Robert, Railway tavern, & miller (wind & steam)
Redhead Thomas Henry, rate collector farmer, Hilgay fen Williamson Rebecca (Mrs.), shopkeeper
& assistant overseer, Ten Mile bank Tangay James, farmer Woodgett Ann (Mrs.), butcher
Reeve Thomas, shopkeeper Tann Jas. Rose & Crown P.H.& cattle dlr Young Thomas, farmer, Hilgay fen
Riches Isaac, beer retailer 'I'heobaldHarry,shopkeepr. TenMile bnk

HILLINGTON is a parish and pleasant village on the there is the interest of £rs6, bequeathed by the Rev. R.
Lynn and Fakenham and Wells road, with a station on the Bales, rector from 1822, which is rlistributed annually to
Eastern and Midlands railway, 7 miles north-east from poor widows of good character above 6o years of age, being
Lynn, in the North Western division of the county, Free- members of the Established Church. The Hall, the seat of
bndge Lynn hundred, petty sessional division and union, Sir William Hovell Browne ffolkes hart. D.L., J.P.lord of the
county court district of Lynn, rural deanery of Lynn Free- manol' and sole Jandownel', is a handsome and picturesque
bridge and archdeaconry and diocese of Norwich. The mansion, erected in 1627, and much enlarged and beautified
.church of St. Mal'y is a plain building of stone, brick and by the last possessol': it is built of carr stone, with Ketton
flint, in the Perpendicular style, consisting of chancel, nave, and sandstone dressings, in the Domestic Gothic style, and
north chapel and an embattled western tower containing has extensive gardens attached: at the entrance to the park
one bell: the nave was rebuilt in 1824: in the church are are the remains of four ancient crosses : a trout stl'eam
some ancient tombs to Sil' William Hovel kt. r6n ; Sir flowing through the park expands into a serpentine lake,
Richard Hovel kt. 1653 ; William Hovel esq. r669 ; to the which extends ovel' 250 acres. The soil is of a light nature;
ffolkes family, 1705-73, and to Sir Mal'tin ffolkes bal't. subsoil, chiefly chalk. The chief crops are wheat, barley,
F.R.S. d. I I Dec. r82r; Sir William Browne, president of turnips, mangold-wurtzel and pasture. The area is 2,480
the Royal College of Physicians, 1774. and Mary, his wife, acres; rateable value, £2,260; in rBgr the population was
1763; the Rev. William Atkinson, rector, d. 1822 ; and to 275·
Lady Lucretia Georgiana West, d. 1828: the organ was built Parish Clerk, James Woodhouse.
by Snetzlel', in 1756: there are memorial windows to Sir PosT, M. 0. & T. 0., S. B. & Annuity & Insurance Office.-
-William Henry Martin Browne ffolkes bart. d. 24 Mar. Mrs. Blaxter, sub-postmistress. London & other letters
r86o, and to Martin ffolkes, 1849 : there al'e 172 sittings, are received through Lynn, arrive at 5 & 11.40 a.m. &
70 being free. The register dates from the year 1695. The are dispatched at 12.30 & 6.40 p. m. ; on sunday dis-
livrng is a rectory, average tithe rent-charge £342, net patched at 3.40 p.m
yearly value £268, including 44 acres of glebe, with resi-
dence, in the gift of Sir William Ho>ell Browne ffolkes hart. Parochial School (mixed), erected in 1855 by Sil' W. J. H.
and held since 1853 by the Rev. Henry Edward ffolkes M.A. Brown ffolkes hart. for 6o children ; average attendance,
. of University College, Oxford, and rural dean of Lynn. 36; Miss Edith Foulsham, mistress
Calli but's charity consists of about £4o yearly, derived from Railway Station, Henry Colville, master·
land in Grimston, half of which belongs to East Walton CARRIERS TO LYNN.-Porter, of Harpley, on tues. thurs. &
parish ; £I r6s. yearly was l~ft by an unknown donol' ; and sat. & Linford, of Flitcham, on tues. & sat
fiolkes Sir William Hovell Browne bart. COMMERCIAL. Hooks Thomas, farm bailiff to Sir W.
D.L., J.P. Hillington hall; & Brooks' Il. Browne ffolkes bart. Valley farm
club, London s w - Bass Henry, shoe makel' Pyecraft John, farm bailiff to Sir W.
ffolkes Rev. Henry Edward M. A. [rector Brereton George, jun. farmer, Warren Il. Browne ffolkes bart. Dairy farm
& rural dean], Rectory farm Reynolds & Woods, :ffolkes Arms P.H.
Jarvis Lady, Uphall Bridges Benjamin Tindle, Buck inn, & & farmel'
Jarvis Alexander Weston J.P. Uphall; blacksmith, grocer & draper Shephel'd William, head gamekeeper
& 120 Mount stl'eet w & Carlton, Codling lsaac, shoe maker Vinter J. 0. (of Cambridge), coal mer-
Marlborough & Bachelors' clubs, Colville Henry, station master chant (George Linford, agent), Rail-
London s w Ford er J ames, head gardener to Sir W. way station
-Jarvis Charles James Ernest, Uphall H. Browne ffolkes bart Webster Frank, butcher

.HINDOLVESTON, commonly called HrLDERSTON, is Methodist chapel, built in 1828. The charities for distribu-
a parish and village, with a station on the Eastern and :Mid- bution amount to about £4o yearly. The Ecclesiastical
lands railway, about 8 miles east from Fakenham, 8 south Commissioners are lords of the manor. Lord Hastings is
from Holt and 125 from London, in the Northern division of owner of the great tithes and is also chief landowner. The
the county, Eynsford hundred and petty sessional division, soil is mixed; subsoil, clay and marl. The chief crops are
Aylsham union and county court district, rural deanery of wheat, roots, barley and hay. The area is 2,470 acres;
Sparham and archdeaconry and diocese of Norwich. The rateable value, £3,600; the population in r8gr was 613.
church of St. George is a large and ancient building of PosT 0FFICE.-Mrs. Mary Ann Taylor, receiver. Letters
flint in the Pel'pendicular style, consisting of chancel, with received through Dereham by foot messenger from Guist,
vestry on the south side, nave, north aisle and a western arrive at 7 . IS a. m. ; dispatched at p.m. week days &
5
tower containing one bell : there is a brass with effigies, to 11 a.m. sundays. The ncal'est money order office is at
Edmund Hunt, ob. 1558, his wife Margaret, ob. 1568,and their Melton Constable. The telegraph otlice is at the railway
ten sons aRd four daughters. The register dates from the station. Postal orders are issued here, but not paid
year 1734. The living is a vicarage, average tithe rent-
.charge £ 137 , net yeal'ly value £ 220 , with r6~ acres of A School Board of 5 members was formed July 31, 1874;
glebe and residence, in the gift or the Dean and Chapter of Samuel Aberdein, clerk & attendance officer
Norwich, and held since r887 by the Rev. Arthur Hilton Board School, built in r88g, fol' no children; average
Skipper M.A. of St. John's College, Cambridge. The old attendance, roo; Frederick Hockham, master; Mrs.
National school is now used as a chul'ch mission room. Hockham, mistress; Miss Walker, assistant mistress
There is a Wesleyan chapel, built in 1838, and a Primitive Railway Station, Charles J. Neeves, station master
McKinley James Cooper James, blacksmith Pegg George, grocer, dl'aper & general
SkipperRev.ArthurHilton M.A. Vicarage Cooper William, coal dealer warehouseman
COMMERCIAL. Craske Samuel, fal'mer, Beck farm PeggWm.miller(wind&steam)& farmer
Aberdein Alexander, assistant overseer Davidson Arthul', cal'penter Perry Charlotte (Miss), shopkeeper
Aberdein Samuel, wocer & draper Frary Fen, shoe maker Pratt William, fal'mer
Barsted Abraham, farmer Fulcher Elizabeth (Mrs.), beer retailer Salkind Beare, watch &c. maker
Barsted William, plumbel' & painter Holsey Charles, farmer Vinter J. 0. coal merchant, Station
Beane Charles D. grocer, draper, gen- Holsey John, Red Lion P.H. & farmer VoutJsph.gamekeepertoLordHastings
eral dealer & boot warehouseman Lee Robel't F. farmer, Church farm Wakefield Robert, farmer
Beckham Cyrus, Maid's Head P.H Lockett William, carpenter Wiley Edward, bricklayer
Blomfield Thomas, farmer Martin James, farmer Worship John, farm bailiff to Mr. J. W.
Colman James, Chequers P.H Page John, shopkeeper Butler
DffiEGrORY.] NORFOLK. HINGHAM. 431
HINDRINGHAM is a straggling village and large and a Primitive Methodist chapel. The charities amount
parish, about 4 miles east from Walsingham station on the to about £94 yearly. Hindringham Hall, the property of
Dereham and Wells section of the Great Eastern rail- Edmund Plane Middleton esq. J.P. is an ancient moated
way, 7 south-east from Wells and 7 north-east from mansion, now occupied by Mr. John Dixon, farmer. The
Fakenham, in the Northern division of the county, Dean and Chapter of Norwich, who are lords of the manor,
North Greenhoe hundred and petty sessional division, Wal- Edward Bowyei' Sparke M.A., D,L., J.P. of Gunthorpe Hall,
singham union and county court district, rural deanery of Wi!liam George Waters M. A., J. P. of Mansfield street, Port-
Walsingham, archdeaconry and diocese of Norwich. The land place, London w, Richard England esq. of Binham,
church of St. ,Martin is an ancient building in the Perpen- Joseph Stonehewer Scott-Chad esq. )LA., J.P. of Pinkney
dicular style, consisting of chancel, nave with clerestory, Hall, Tatterford, and Captain William George England R.N.
aisles, south porch, and a lofty embattled western tower are the principal landowners. The soil is heavy loam; sub-
containing 5 bells: in the chancel is a memorial window to soil, clay. The chief crops are wheat, barley and oats. The
Richard England, Capt. 12th (East Suffolk) Regt. killed at area is 3,313 acres; rateable value, £4,742; the population
the massacre of Waiaru, New Zealand, June 17, 1843, and in 1891 was 6or. ·
to his father, mother, and only sister : the window was Parish Clerk, Samuel Sands.
erected by his brother, the late William England M.D. of
Ipswich, in 1862: at the east end of the south aisle is a piscina PosT 0FFICE.-William Mayers, receiver. Letters received
and a hagioscope; in 1870 the chancel was rebuilt and the from Walsingham (Railway Sub Office) at 8.15 a.m. ;
church partially restored, and it now affords 400 sittings. dispatched at 4.15 p.m.; sundays arrive at 8.15 a.m. ;
The register dates from the year 166o. The living is a dispatched at 10 a. m. The nearest money order & tele-
vicarage, average tithe rent-charge £-244, net yearly value graph bffice is at Walsingham. Postal orders are issued
[220, including 23 acres of glebe, with residence, in the here, but not _paid
gift of the Dean and Chapter of Norwich, and held since National School (mixed); built in 1845, for 120 children;
1877 by the Rev. Thomas Edward Platten ~r.A. of Lincoln average attendance, 8~ ; Miss Susanna Frances Beane,
College, Oxford. There is a Wesleyan chapel, built in r845, mistress
Frankling Robert Smith Dixon Abel, farmer Mallett Robert, Folgate P.R
Overman The :Misses Dixon John, farmer, Bindringham hall Mann W1lliam, boot repairer
Platten Rev. Thomas Edward M. A. England Richard, farmer; & at Binham Mayers William, butcher, Post office
Vicarage Flood William (Mrs.), farmer Pretty - , farm bailiff to James Coker
Francis John, wheelwright esq. of Beetley
COMMERCIAL. Frankland Robert, hawker Roll James, farm bailiff to Richard
Balls Edward, shopkeeper & baker Golding John, farmer England esq. of Binbam
Beane Abel Benjamin, farmer Hall James, general merchant Russell William, farmer
Bell Thomas, grocer & draper Hawes Frederick Twigg, shopkeeper Sands Robert, miller (wind) & farmer
Chestney Thomas, bricklayer Ha wes Thos. beer retailer & wheelwright ~ands Samuel, farmer
Clarke Matthew, shoe maker Jan·is Stephen & Sons, blacksmiths Sands William, farmer
Coker Jamcs, farmer, Field house; & Lake John William, Crown P.R Southgate Samuel, shopkeeper & farmr
at Be.etley & Brisley Lake Thomas, blacksmith Wall Harry, baker
Daplyn Harcourt, farmer Leach Samuel, farmer Wall Robert, miller (wind)
Daplyn Henry, fanner Loads John Thomas, Red Lion P.R Woodrow George, Duke P.R
Daplyn Maria (Mrs.), shopkeeper Mackey Alice (Mrs.), farmer
HINGHAM is a small market town and parish on the the church, and being prosecuted in consequence by Bishop
road from Norwich to Brandon, 3 miles south-west from Wren (r635-8) he fled the kingdom, and went over to New
Kimberley and Hardingham stations on the Wymondham England with many of his parishioners, who sold their
and Dereham section of the Great Eastern railway, about estates, and formed in New England a town and colony of
n6 from London and 6 west from Wymondham, in the the name of Hingham, where many of their posterity still
Mid division of the county, Forehoe hundred, petty ses- remain : Mr. Peck, after ten years' voluntary banishment,
sional division and union, Wymondham county court dis- returned here in r646 and resumed his rectory, and died in
trict, rural deanery of Hingham, Forehoe division, arch- the year 1656. The Congregational chapel, erected in 1836,
deaconry of Norfolk and diocese of Norwich. The town is is an edifice of red brick and will seat 450, and there is a
lighted with gas by a company formed in 1871. The Primitive Methodist chapel seating roo. Fairland Hall is a
church of St. Andrew, a noble edifice of flint stone, is a fine building erected in r883 by and belonging to Mr. Henry
specimen of the Decorated style, consisting of chancel, lofty Kitteringham ; it is used for concerts and entertainments,
nave of six bays, aisles, south porch, vestry on the north and will seat about r6o FJersons. A Mutual Improvement
side, and a massive western tower containing a clock and 8 Society meets at the old National school once a fortnight
bells re-hung in 189r at a cost of £8o: in the chancel is a during the winter months. The Loyal Wodebouse Lodge
stained window presented in 1814 by John, first Lord Wode- of Oddfellows of the Attleborough district, No. 3,66r, Man-
house, and there are various others, including one to the chcster Unity, meets here and has at present (1892) 306
Rev. Martin Baylie Darby, nearly fifty years rector of the members and a capital of £4,300. The "Robin Hood, the
adjoining parish of IIackford, who resided at Ilingham, and Pride of Hingham " Lodge of the Ancient Order of Foresters,
died March 15th, 188o; on the north side of the chancel is No. 3,415, also meets here and has about 148 members and
a lofty and highly-wrought monument to Thomas 5th Baron a capital of £1,332. The market day is Tuesday, and the
Morley, Marshal of Ireland, who died in 1435: some fine market, which is principally for pigs, is held at the "Cock"
paintings of the murder of S. Thomas of Canterbury were inn, and the poultry market at the "Bell." Two fairs, re-
• discovered in 1855 on the south wall of the chancel: in the established in 1885 after having been for some time in abey-
nave are two small and ancient brasses dated respectively ance, are held annually for cattle and pleasure on March 7th
1615 and 1622, but without any names : there are memorials and Oct. 2nd. The fuel allotment of 34 acres produces £45
to Matthew Amyas M. D. 1729: John Watson M.A. formerly yearly, which is distributed among the resident poor of the
rector nf this parish and Scoulton, d. 1727, and to Elizabeth parish in coals; and charities producing [41 13s. nd. yearly
his wife; a brass to Frederick Wodehouse, captain R.A. son are distributed in bread to the poor. Here is a large lake
of the Hon. and Rev. William Wodehouse, rector here from or mere covering about 20 acres, and abounding in pike,
18n, who died at St. George's Fort, Bermuda, 25 Sept. roach, perch and other fish. Hingham Hall, the seat of
1853, and various inscribed tablets: in 1872 the church was Rawdon Hunter-Muskett esq. D.L., J.P. is a large mansion
new-roofed, re-seated and restored at a cost of about £3,300, of brick standing in a well-wooded demesne of about 50
and in 1874 the porch was restored as a memorial to the acres. The Earl of Kimberley is lord of the manor and
Rev. Edward Gurdon, late rector, who died July 3rst, chief landowner. Hamilton Hawtrey Hurnard esq. is lord
1873: a new organ was added in r878 at a cost of £550: in of the manor of Hingham Gurneys. The soil is of a mixed
the same year a massive brass lectern was given by Lady nature ; subsoil, clay and brick earth. The chief crops are
Mary Currie, and carved oak stalls were erected in the chan- turnips, barley, wheat and mangolds. The parish consists
eel: in r886 the vestry was restored at a cost of £r,ooo, of 3,6g8 acres; rateable value, £7,68o; the population in
wholly defrayed by the Rev. Maynard Wodehouse Currie 1891 was 1,560.
M.A. late rector, d. I I May, 1887: the east end of the chan- Parish Clerk John Sare
eel was raised and paved with marble mosaic work in r88o ' · .
and 1882: there are r,o2o sittings. The register dates from PosT, M. 0. & T. ~- & S. B.-Robert Kmgaby, receiver
the year 16 01 . The living is a rectory, average tithe rent- Letters ~re recmved from Attleborough at 5.15 a. m. & 5
charge £950, net yearly value £750, with 25! acres of glebe P·III:·; dispatched ~t 3 & 8.r5 p.m. Box closes at 8 p.m.
and residence, in the gift of the Earl of Kimberley, and held Savmgs bank busmess transacted from 9 a.m. to 8 p.m.
since r887 by the Rev. Arthur Chas. Wodehouse Upcher M.A. & money order 9 a.m. to 6 p.m.; sat. 9 a. m. to 8 p.m
of Trinity College, Cambridge. Robert Peck M.A. a former Police Station, Hall Moor, Sergeant William Sewter, in
rector, levelled the altar and the whole chancel a foot below charge
C. N. & s.
432 RING HAM.

NORFOLK. l
(KELLY's

VOLUNTEERS:- was erected in 1892, & attached to the school is a covered


4th Volunteer Battalion, Norfolk Regiment (F Co. ), Capt. playroom & good football, cricket & tennis fields ; tha
Waiter C. Crawshay, commandant; Sydney G. Atkins & school will hold so boys, & has an income of about £200
R. G. Hunter-Muskett, lieutenants; Sergeant-Major a year, & IS managed by a governing body of 10 persons.
Thomas Christopher Babbage, drill instrucwr. There is George Kildare Dobbs A.C.P. head master; Herbert Web-
a shooting range of 6oo yards ster B.A.camb. second master
ScHOOLS:- A School Board of 5 members was formed May 2I, 1873;
Hingham Endowed School was founded & endowed in 1727 Jcsse Rivett, clerk to the board & attendance officer
by William Parlett esq. & in May, 1883, was re-organized Board School, opened in 1875 for 94 boys, 94 girls & no
under a new scheme; attached to the school are three infants ; average attendance, 89 boys, 82 girls & 65 in-
· scholarships of not less than £8 nor more than £ro for fants; Charles John King, master ; Mrs. Elizabeth King,
boys from the elementary schools of Hingham,Woodrising& mistress; Miss Ellen Davey, infants' mistress
South Burgh, & a sum of £6o is applied in establishing CARRIERS TO NoRWICH.-John Laskey, mon. wed. & sat_
& maintaining exhibitions tenable at a school of a higher returning same days ; Thomas Risebrook, tues. thurs. &
grade for boys who have been at this school for not less sat. ; Cornell, from Watton, passes through on tues. re-
than three years ; a new chemical & physical laboratory turning wed

PRIVATE RESIDENTS. Cooper John, shoe maker Lack Thos. Lambert,surgeon,&medical


Brasnett Mrs Cordy John, beer retailer & florist officer of health for the rural sanitary
Crawshay Charles J.P. St. Andrew's ho Cowles Harriett (Miss), shopkeeper authority, Wymondham union
Crawshay WalterCubitt,St.Andrew's ho Dodman Richard, chimney sweeper Lambert William, farmer
Dobbs George Kildare A.C.P, (head Dowsing Mary Ann (Mrs.), shopkeeper Land Geo. farmer, Gurneys Manor frm
master of Endowed school) Drake Thos.Garner, farmer, Lyngwhite LarkmanHarrietEllen(Miss),grcr.&drpr
Elsy Miss E. A Duchess Thomas, market gardener & Laskey John, farmer & carrier
Fagan Rev. John [curate] seedsman Lee Charles, plumber & glazier, & sec_
:Feltham Henry EaglingJohn&Edward,Angel inn,& boot of the Gas works
Feltham Miss & shoe makers Lilley George, beer retailer
:Fletcher Rev. Robert [Congregational] Eagling Susan (Mrs.), dress maker Lister John Henry, hawker
Gurdon Misses, Bears farm Edmonds Wm. Theo. farmer, Frostrow Mallett Richard, shopkeeper
Heald Robert Etheridge John, general dealer Mapes Samuel James, shoe maker
• Howard Philip Farman John, basket maker & thatcher MiddletonJn.Wesley,saddlr.&harnSii.ma
Runter-Muskett Rawdon D.L., J.P. Fawkes Charles, fishmonger Middleton John Wesley, jun. baker &c
Hingham hall Feltham Fairman, harness maker Moore George, general dealer
Hurnard Hamilton Hawtrey, Gurneys Feltham l!"rances (Mrs.), dress maker Mortlock Thomas, general dealer &
manor Feltham Hannah (Miss), confectioner farmer, Money hills
Hurnard Mrs. St. Andrew's lodge Feltham Henry, solicitor Muffett William&Son,painters&glaziers
King Charles John Felt ham Philip, painter & glazier Munford Wm. Fredk. baker & eonfectnr
King Mrs Feltham Robert, farmer Murrell Benjamin & Son, corn, flour &
Lack Thomas Lambert Feltham William, blacksmith seed dealers
Laing Mrs Frankland George, tinman & brazier Mutual Improvement Society (Charles
Lilley Mrs Frankland Susannah (Mrs.), dress ma John King, hon. sec)
Matthews Mrs Fuller George, farmer, Rectory farm N ewbyGeorge, thrashing machine owner
Murrell Benjarnin Fysh Harry, watch maker Newson Frederick William, solicitors'
Ormsby Mrs Gapp Alfred, beer retailer clerk & insurance agent
Pillard Charles, Woodrising cottage Gapp Philip, blacksmith NewsonWilliam,Ringers P.H.&assistan\
Sawyer Mrs Gee Elizabeth (Mrs.), laundress overseer & assessor
Seaman Mrs Gee John, farmer, Hall moor Norton John, tailor & draper
Tallent Mrs. Beaconsfield house Gibbs Robert Ellis, Carpenter Oddfellows (~Ianchester Unity) (Loyal
Upcher Rev.Arthur Charles Wodehouso Glover Geo. Hcrbert, farmer, Hall farm Wodehouse,No. g66r,lodge) (William
M.A. Rectory Gricks John, Cock commercial inn Newson, sec)
Vince Miss Gricks John, jun. stone & marble masn Page William, farm bailiff to C. Craw-
Watson Henry Gurneys, Birkbecks, Barclay & Buxton, sbay esq. Bears farm
Watson Mrs bankers (branch) (Walter Finder, Palmer James, farmer, The Elms
Webster Herbert B.A. (second master agent); open on tuesday & friday Pearce Jemima (Mrs.), laundress
Endowed school) from 10.30 to 3; draw on Barclay, Purdy George, Unicorn P.H
Wood Capt. Robert John, The Limes Bevan & Co. London E c Rae Jas. Edgar, draper & outfitter &c
COMMERCIAL. Hallock James, carpenter & cabinet ma Ransome Robert, vermin destroyer
Ancient Order of Foresters(Robin Hood Harrod Arthur Frederick, corn. travellr RichesHy.farmer&miller(wind & water)
thePride of Hingham,No.3415, lodge) Harwood Herbcrt, grocer Rise brook Thomas, carrier
(William Sent, sec) Heald Robert, snrgeon,&mcdicalofficer Rivett Jesse, grocer &c .
Andrews Charles, chimney sweeper & public vaccinator, No. 2 district, Rix John William, farmer, J<'rostrow
Andrews Richard, builder Forehoe incorporation & Harding Rose James, draper
Andrews William, builder & beer retailer district, Mitford & Launditch union R udderham J ames, builder& contractor,
Ayers Thomas Francis, draper & grocer Billing Emily (Mrs.), shopkeeper Fairland place
.Back Stephen, shoe maker Hingham Endowed School (George Sadd Charles, general dealer
Back Thomas, farmer Kildare Dobbs~ A.C.P. head master; Sadd Walter, jobbing gardener •
.Barber Ambrose, insurance agent Herbert Webster B.A. second master) 1 Sainty Jas. beer retailer & blacksmith
.Barber William Samuel, miller (wind) Hingham Gas Co.Limited (Charles Lee, Sare John, tailor & parish clerk
.Barcham John Robert, butcher sec. ; Henry John Balls, manager) Seaman Chas. Geo. farmer & cattle dlr
Barker Thomas, farmer Holley Charles, beer retailer Semmence Alfred, butcher & dealer
Barnard Bartlett, general dealer Holman Palmer, farmer, Frostrow Semmence Francis, tailor
Batson John, bill poster Hook George, beer retailer Semmence John, butcher & farmer
Bayes Thomas, farmer Howchin Ellen Maria (Mrs),fancy repos Sent Robert, corn & flour dealer
Bilham Mark, bricklayer Howchin Robert, butcher Sewell Arthur, farmer & landowner
Blackburn ~ose (Mrs.), laundress Howlett John James, tailor Se well George, boot & shoe maker
Blackwell John William, grocer, draper Hoy John William, watch & clock makr I Sewter 'Vm. police sergeant, Hall moor
& wine & spirit merchant Hubbard Thomas Henry, White Hart Skitmore William, blacksmith
Bowery John, farmer hotel & posting house Starke Isaac, farmer, Lyngwhite
Bunn Benjamin, cooper Hunton John, iron founder & wheel- · Stebbing Clara (Mrs.), apartments
Hunn Herbert Samuel, farmer 1 wright &c Stockings Cbarles,farmer,Warren farm
BurtHorace David, baker&corn chandler J enness George, dealer Thompson Ed ward, farmer, W oodrising
Bush Frederick, farmer, Lyngwhite .Jenness William, pork butcher Thurston Eliza (Mrs.), laundress
Butwn Elizabeth (Mrs.), dress maker Jowling Ernest Row land, farmer, ThurstonMaryAnn(Mrs.),baker &lndrss
Cannell John, farrier School farm Tillett.Jn.Plowman,farmr.MoneyHl.frm
, Carlton David, farmer & horse dealer, Jude Charles, farmer Tub bey William, wheelwright
Manson Green farm Kemp William, farmer, Lyngwhite Turner Charles, ironmonger & tobccnst
·caston Georga-, tailor & hair dresser King Edward, boot & shoe maker Turner Jnlia (Mrs.), laundress
Chittock & Woods, solicitors (attend Kingaby Robert, stationer, ginger beer VassarChas.M.R.c.v.s.veterinarysurgn
here tuesdays 10 to 4) ; & at Norwich manufacturer & post office Vincent Jesse, farmer, Lodge farm
{Jlarke Louisa (Mrs.), shopkeeper Kitteringham Hy. grocer,drpr.& auctnr Vincent Lac:ey Andrews, ironmonger &
Cook Frederick, baker & confectioner & , Knott Vrm. thrashing machine owner chemist, & agent for W. & A. Gilbey,
dealer in malt, hops, chaff & hay 1 Lack & lleald, surgeons wine & spirit merchants; &at Watton
J

DIRECTORY .J NORFOLK. HOCKWOLD-CUM -WILTON". 433
Vincent Charles, mineral water• manu-~ Walker Susan (:Mrs.), laundress Websdalo William, Dog inn, & painter
facturer; & at Watton Warren Abi!!ail (1\Iiss), laundress Whitear George, grocer
Volunteer Battalion (4th) Norfolk Regi- Watt Peter Cheyne, chemists' manager Whyatt Harry, farmer, Frostrow
ment (F Co ) (Capt. Walter C. Craw- & photographer Williamson Mendham, farmer
shay, commanding; Ser;;t.-Major
Thos.Christr .Babbage,drill instrul!tr)
Webb Henry E. horse breaker IWright William, farmer, Money hill

HOCKERING is a village and parish, on the road from · dist chapel. The poor's and town lands produce £65 yearly,
East Dereham toN orwich, 6 miles east from Dereham station, £ x6 of which is expended in coal and clothing. The trustees
in the Mid division of the county, l\:itford hundred, Mitford of the late George Duckett Berney esq. of Morton, are lords
and Launditch petty sessional division and union, East of the manor and principal landowners. The soil is clay;
Dereham county court district, rural deanery of Hingham, subsoil, clay. The chief crops are barley, wheat and roots.
Mitford division, archdeaconry of ~ orfolk and diocese of Tl:e area is 1,93 r acres ; rateable value, £ 2,6og; the popu-
Norwich. The church of St. Michael is a building of flint lation in 1891 was 359·
in the Early English style, consistmg of chancel, nave, north Sexton, William Girling.
aisle, so~th P?rch and an eii_Jb.attled western Perl?endi.cul~r PosT & M. 0. 0., s. B. & Annuity & Insurance Oflice.-
tower ~lth J.nnnacles, contammg one bell: the mterwr IS Robert Huggins, postmaster. Letters arrive, East Dere-
fitted with riChly carved oak seats and has an. elaborately ham at 7. 30 a.m.; dispatched at 5.40 p.m.; sundays at
carved octagonal font: the church was restored m 1856, and 10 . 20 a. m. Mattishall is the nearest telegraph o!Iice
affords I70Sittings. The register dates from the year I56I. . . .
• - The living is a rectory, with that of Mattishall Burgh N atwnal s:ho?l (mixed), for 70. ch1ld_ren; average attend-
annexed, average tithe rent-charge £rs2, with so acres of ance, 6o • Miss Eleanor Elderkm, mistress
glebe here and 20 at Mattishall ilurgb, and residence, in the CARRIERS TO : -
gift of the trustees of the late George Duckett Berney esq. LYNN, Sw.A.FFHAM & NonwrcH-By the carrier between
and held since 1856 by the Rev. Michael James Anderson those places & Dereham & Litcham
M. A. of Trinity College, Dublin. Here is a Primitive Metho- Nonwrcn-Arthur Leeds, wed. & sat
Anderson Rev. Arthur J ames [curateJ Galer George, farmer Sbickle J ames, farmer
Andcrson Rev.Michacl Jas. M. A. Rectory Ho ward Thomas J ames, The Cock P.H Shickle Lambert, farmer & pig dealer,
COMMJmCIAL. Huggins Rt. baker & grcr.&c.Post office Yew Tree farm
Andrews John, beer retailer Leveridgc James, farmer Smith Jonathan, farm bailiff to Mrs.
Relderson James, grocer & draper Maek Amelius, farmer Berney, Manor farm
Hiythc William, blacksmith Matthews William, farmer Thain Edward, farmer
Comer Isaac, farmer, Heath farm Melton Theodosia ( Ylrs. ), farmer Wil kinson Phi lip, farm bailiff to Lt.-Col.
Curson Alfred, Butchers' Arms P.H Miller Jamcs Leonard, saddler Hy. Edwd. Hyde M.A., J.P. Ley farm
Fisher Thomas, farmer & butcher Ram m John, wheelwright & carpenter 1
GREAT HOCKHAM is a parish and village, pleasantly manor and chief landowner, is a comfortable family mansion
situate about 2 miles north-east from Wretham station on of red brick,, surrounded by an undulating park of about
the Watton and Thetford branch of the Great Eastern rail- roo acres. Furze Moor is the residence of Algernon Edward
way, 8 miles north-east from Tbetford, and 7 from Attle- Perk ins esq. The soil is of a mixed character; subsoil, clay.
borough, in the Mid division of the county, Guiltcross and The chief crops are wheat, barley and roots. The area is
Shropham petty sessional division, Way land union, Shrop- 3,4o6 acres; rateable value, £3,622; the population in r8gr
barn hundred, Attleborough and Watton county court d~- was 518.
trict, rural deanery of Rockland, archdeaconry of Norfolk LITTLE HocKHAM, formerly a separate parish, but now
and diocese of Norwich. The church of the Holy Trinity, united with Great Hockham for parochial purposes, lies
situated in the park, is a grac;eful building of the Decorated about one mile south. ·
period, consisting of chancel, nave with clerestory, aisles, Parish Clerk, James Saunders.
south porch, and a belfry containing one bell : the tower fell
early in the 18th century : the chancel retains two low side PosT, ~1. 0. & T. 0., & S. B.-John Joseph Warren, sub-
windows and a beautiful double piscina, and there is another postmaster. Letters arrive from Thetford, via Larling-
in the south chapel: a new organ was placed in the church ford, at 7.50 a.m.; dispatched at 6.15 p.m.; sundays,
about 1892 : there are 250 sittings. Tile register dates from arrive at 8. 5 a. m ; dispatched at g.so a.m
1ihe year 1563. The living is a vicarage, average tithe rent- ScHOOLS : -
charge £zzo, gross yearly value £2og, including 6 acres of A School Board of 5 members was formed July r8, I871, for
glebe, ,with residence, in the gift of and held since 1889 by this parish, to whiL:h Breckles has been made a contributory
the Rev. John Frederick Spurgin ~LA. of St. Mary Hall, district with 2 members; H. F. Grigson, Watton S.O.
Oxford. There is a Primitive Methodist chapel. The fuel clerk to the board; Leonard Lemmon, Great Hockbam,
allotments of 40 acres produce on an average £17 yearly for attendance officer
coals. Joseph Ashton, commonly known as "Tinker Joe," Board School (formerly National), built in r832, & enlarged
a native of Northamptonshire, resided in this parish for in r882 at a cost of £zoo, for 130 children; average attend-
many years and died here at the age of 112. Hockham Hall, ance, 120; John Beach, master; Mrs. Agnes Beach, mist
the seat of Henry Thomas Partridge esq. J.P. lord of the Wretham Railway Station, Thomas Bedford, collector
Partridg-e Hy. Thos. J.P. Hockham hall Edwards Henry, blacksmith, Wretham Tilbrooke John, boot maker
Perkins Algernon Edward, Furze moor Edwards Jeremiah, Red Lion P.H. & Warma.n Wm. farmer, Hockha.m lodge
Spurgin Rev. John l<'redk. M. A. Vicarage blacksmith & wheelwright Warren Arth. Wm. carpenter & coal mer
COXMERCIAL. Hunter Henry Jn. W. farmer, Hill farm Warren John Joseph, shopkeeper &
Adams Waiter, grocer & draper Lemmon Leonard T. Eagle inn, & black· baker, Post office
Barham Henry, estate bricklayer to H. smith & school attendance officer Willson Jn.farmr.&landowner,Moat frm
T. Partridge esq Nurse George, baker Willson John Bullock, grocer, draper,
Bird Hy. thrashing machine proprietor Nurse William Warren, farmer milliner & dress m:>ker
Boddy Robert, farmer Pinner Robert, shopkeeper & baker Wright Thomas, Unicorn P.H. farmer &
Eoddy Thomas, farmer Prewer Waiter, farmer dealer
Boyce Robert, plumber, painter &c Riches Frederick, tailor & outfitter WyattThosJrmbailiff to A.E.Perkins esq
Breeze John, farmer, West farm RichesLeonard,Crowninn,btchr.&frmr Yaxley John, head gamekeeper to A.
Bush Charles, carpenter & builder Spurting Charles, estate carpenter to H. E. Perkins esq
oCocking William, shoe maker T. Partridge esq
HOCKWOLD-cum-WILT ON is a parish and village, an embattled western tower, with lofty stone spire contain-
.1mile north from Lakenbeath station on the Ely and Thet- ing a clock and 6 bells: the chancel is divided from the nave
ford section of the Great Eastern railway and 3~ miles west by an ancient carved oak screen : the church was restored
from Brandon ; the parish, formed by the union of the con- in r843, and has 270 sittings, 170 being free. The register
tiguous parishes of Hockwold and Wilton, is in the South dates from the year 1663. St. Peter's church, Hockwold, is
Western division of the county, Grimshoe hundred and petty a very plain building of flint with stone dressings in the
sessional division, Thetford union and county court district, Decorated and Perpendicular styles, consisting of chancel,
rural deanery of Cranwich south division, archdeaconry of nave, south aisle, south porch and a tower at the south-west
Norfolk and diocese of Norwich; the Little Ouse, here angle containing 3 bells : the east window is stained : the
crossed by a suspension bridge to Lakenheath, anciently church was completely restored in r857, and has 260 sittings,
indicated at this point the boundaries of the counties of x6o being free. Divine service is held in each church morning
Norfolk and Suffolk ; but, owing to the alteration in the and afternoon alternately. The register dates from the year
course of the river's bed it does not now accurately define r6s8. The living is a rectory with the vicarage of Wilwn
their limits. St. James' church, Wilton, is an edifice chiefly annexed; average tithe rent-charge £584, net yearly value
of flint with stone dressings, in the Decorated and Perpen- £475, including 91 acres of glebe, with residence, in the gift of
dicular styles, consisting of chancel, na~·e, south porch and the i'.Iaster and Fellows of Caius College, Cambridge, and held
434 HOCKWOLD-CUM-WILTON. NORFOLK. [KELLY'S

since t86r by the Rev. William Wayman Hutt M.A. formerly Master and Fellows of Caius College, Cambridge. The prin-
fellow of that college and rural dean of South Cranwich. cipal landowners are F. d' A. W. C. N ewcome esq. Henry
There are Wesleyan and Primitive Methodist chapels. The Morris Upcher esq. J.P. of Feltwell, and Caius College.
charity land co:1sist s of 49 acres, 30 acres of which are under The soil is light and sandy; subsoil, chalk. The chief crops
cultiv~ion and produces about i,26 yearly; the remaining are wheat, barley and turnips, and there is a considerable
19 acres are fen land, useless for the purpose of cultivation, quantity of fen land. The area is 7,309 acres; rateable
but from which the parishioners can dig turf; ~here is also value, £5,304; the population in 1891 was 809.
a bequest of Mr. Adamson, a former rector, which produces Parish Clerk, John Pettitt.
£6 a year, and an annual grant of £2o provided for by a PosT & M. 0. 0., S. B. & Annuity & Insurance Office, Wilton.
bequest of the late Mrs. Newcome. In the centre of the -John Pcttitt, receiver. Letters arrive from Brandon at
village is an ancient stone cross, 15 fee~ in height, rising 3.30 a.m. & 4.30 p.m.; delivery at 7 a.m. only; dis-
from a circular pedestal of brickwork 4 feet high. A fair is patched at 2.50 & 8.20 p.m. The nearest telegraph office
held here on July sth. Hockwold Hall, an.andent mansion is at Feltwell. WALL Box, Hockwold, cleared at 8.20 p.m
of brick, the property of Francis d' Arcy \\>'illiam Clough National School (mixed & infants), built in 18441 for 100
Newoome esq. B.A., J.P. of Feltwell Hall, is at present un- boys & girls & so infants; average attendance, 8r boys &
occupied. There are two manors, one belon~ing to Francis girls & 30 infants; James Watson, master; Mrs. Watson,
d'Arcy William Clough Newcome esq. and the other by the mistress; Miss Harriet Eliza Pettitt, infants' mistress
Hutt Rev. William Wayman M.A., J.P. Greenfield James, jun. baker Palmer Kent, farmer, Hockwold fen
[rector, rural dean of S. Cranwich & HardingRobt.Geo. beer retailer& farmer Palmer Thomas, butcher
• hon. canon of Norwich], Rectory Harrison Granger, shopkeeper & butchr Peacock John William, farmer
Hewson Mary (Mrs.), shopkeeper & Peacock Robert, farmer, Black dyke
COMMERCIAL. keeper of Temperance hall Pearson George Thornton, grocer,
Balding Willliam, Black Horse P.H Hicks James, Red Lion P.H draper & farmer
Bell Henry, shoe maker Hub bard Mat!lda (Mrs.), shopkeeper Pearson Wm. Hy. nursery & seedsman
Bell John, shoe maker Jacob George Robert, farmer Pearson Henry, farmer, College farm
Cater George, farmer, Hockwold fen Johnson Edward, farmer Pettitt John, tailor, & post office
Cock Charles, farmer & coal dealer Johnson Mark, farmer Rolfe Isaac, miller (wind) & baker
Cole Thomas, merchant & surveyor Johnson Robert, blacksmith Rolph Evans, beer retailer & butcher
Cossey Wm. & Jn. farmrs.Hockwold fen Kiddle George, farm bailiff to H. M. Shinn Henry, farmer
Enefer J ames, shoe maker Upcher esq. J.P. Black dyke Temperance Hall (Mrs. ~Iary llewson,
Enefer Jesse, New inn, & farmer Lamb George, farmer keeper)
Enefer Samuel, blacksmith Lawson Eliza (Mrs.), farmer West Sophia (Miss), shopkeeper
Gillett Emma (Mrs.), farmer Moore John Simon, corn,seed &coal mer Wisbey Henry, farm ba1liff to Francis
G.-een William, Anchor P.H. & farmer Morley Geo. Rt.grocr.drapr.&bricklayer d'Arcy William N ewcome esq. J. p
Greenfield Jas. wheelwright & builder Norley David, thrashing machine propr
I
HOE (or Hoo) is a village and parish, 2~ miles north from now (r892) the residence of Grigson Heyboe Wigg esq. is a
Dereham station on the Great Eastern railway, in the Mid modern mansion, standing in well-timbered grounds. Gor-
division of the county, Launditch hundred, Mitford and gate Hall, the seat of George Bagnall esq. is a plain square
Launditch petty sessional division and union, Dereham mansion of brick, erected in the early part of the 18th
county court district, rural deanery of Hingham, Mitford century, and standing in grounds of about 100 acres, well
division, archdeaconry of Norfolk and diocese of X orwich. w~tered and timbered. The Rev. Henry Evans-Lombe B. A.,
The church of St. Andrew is a small building of flint with, J.P. of Bylaugh Park, who is lord of the manor, Thomas
stone dressings, in the Early English style, consisting of. Grounds esq. and John Hotblack esq. of Norwich, are the
chancel, nave, north and south porches and a low western principal.landowners. The soil is light mixed, some portion
tower containing one bell: there are roa sittings. The inclining to heavy; subsoil, gravel, clay and brick earth.
1

register dates from the year 1733. The living is a chapelry, The chief crops are barley, wheat and turnips. The area is
consolidated with the vicarage of East Dereham, tithe rent- r,4oo acres; rateable value, £r,961 ; the population in r891
charge, Hoe £IIB, joint net yearly value £3o6, including was 185.
6o acres of glebe, in the gift of the Lord Chancellor, and held Parish Clerk, Robert Barker.
since 1888 by the Rev. Henry James Lawes Arnold M. A. of LETTER Box cleared at 6.15 p.m
Pembroke College, Cambridge, and surrogate, who resides Letters through East Dereham, which is the nearest money
at Dereham. Gooch's charity of about £ro ros. yearly is order & telegraph office & savings bank, arrive at 8 a.m
distributed to the poor, who also have 12 acres for cutting The children of this place attend the schools at Dereham &;
fuel.. Hoe Hall, the property of Thomas Grounds esq. and Swanton Morley
Bagnall George, Gorgate hall [postal j Brown W1lliam, The Chestnuts 1 Bush Charles, farm bailiff to Mr. John
address, Heetley] Vassar Waiter, Hoe lodge Roots, Hall farm
Bartlett Rev. Thomas Willis Butler Wigg Gri~?son Heyhoe, Hoe hall Joice John Arthur, farmer
[chaplain to the union & vicar of Ayers Walter, Angel P.H. & farmer Springall Jsph.&Son, brick & tile makers
Kempston], The Hermitage [postal ¥arrow Geo. farmer, Manor House farm Vassar Walter, farmer, Hoe lodge
address, BeetleyJ

HOLKHAM is a parish and village on the coast, with a by the Rev. William Fitzgerald Gambier Sandwith B.A. of
station on the Lynn and Hunstanton section of the Great Chri~t Church, Oxford, who is also rector of Egmere with
Eastern railway, 1;f miles west from \Veils, about 5~ north- Waterden. Here are alrnshouses, founded in 1757 by the
west from Walsingham and 127~ from London by rail, in Countess Dowager of Leicester, at a cost of about £2.300,
the Northern division of the county, hundred and petty and endowed with a sum of £so a year charged upon the
sessional division of North Greenboe, Walsingham union Holkham estate and an estate containing 97 acres in the
;.tnd county court district, rural deanery or Walsingham and parish of ·weasenham St. Peter's: they are occupied by 3
archdeaconry and diocese of Norwich. Holkham Hay has a men and 3 women, each of whom has coals, faggots, bedding,
very fine, firm and safe beach, which is resorted to for bath- clothing and 6s. in money per week. In tile village is a
ing in the summer months. The church of St. Withburga beautiful building in the Swiss cottage style, with a tower,
is situated west of the village and about half a mile from the erected in r886tby the Earl of Leicester, at the cost of£ J.,SCXJ,
Hall, on an artificial mound, supposed to be Saxon, and as a reading-room and library for the workmen and labour-
near a tumulus in which bones and iron armour have been ers on the llolkham estate. Henry Ill. gi."anted a market
founa : It is an edifice in the Decorated and Perpendicula.r and a fair, both now obsolete. Brick and tile making is
style:!, repaired in I767 by the Dowager CountP-SS of Leices- carried on at Peterston. In the marshes; and easily acces-
ter, at a cost of £1,000, and consists of chancel with north sible by a road leading- from the church lodge, is a large
and south chapels, nave with clerestory, aisles, south porch camp, constructed on natural features of the soil, and pro-
and a lofty embattled tower at the south-west angle con- bably used successively by Romans, Saxons and Danes.
taining 6 bells : in the north chapel is a beautiful monument, In Edward II.'s time, Holkham was a port of some con-
erected in 187I, with a recumbent figure in marble, by the sequence; subsequently, it belonged to the Boleyns and the
late Sir J. E. Boehm bart. R.A. of the late Countess of Leices- Greshams. In the 17th century, the Coke family (partly
ter, who died 21 April, r87o: in the south chapel is a fine by marriage and partly by purchase), acquired the whole of
monument to John Coke and his wife, and the interior has the parish. Thomas William Cokeesq. M. P. for the county,
also a good deal of finely carved oak : in the years 1868-g well-known as" Coke of Norfolk," and distinguished as the
the church was restored and decorated at an expenditure of greatest agriculturist of his day, succeeded to the estate in
nearly £g,ooo, by the Earl of Leicester K.G. and now affords 1776, and was created Earl of Leicester and Viscount Coke,
350 sittings. The register dates from the year 1538. The 12 Aug. 1837, taking the title from the previous creation in
living is a vicarage, average tithe rent-charge £1;52, gross 1744, which had become extinct in 1759 on the death of
yearly value £rs6. including I acre of glebe, with residence, Thomas (Coke), rst and only Earl of Leicester of that
in the gift of the Earl of Leicester K.G. and held since 1887 family. Opposite the north front of the house there is a
DIRECTORY.) NORFOLK.

E;OLME-NEXT-RUNCTON • 435
Corinthian column, erected in 1850 by public subscription, The south lodge of the park is approached through a. mas-
to the memory of the Earl. Holkh.am Hall, the seat of the sive triumphal arch of the Doric order, I! miles northwards
Earl of Leicester K.G. Lord Lieutenant of the county, erected from which is an obelisk 8o feet high, erected in I729; to
in 1734-6o, is one of the finest seats in the county : the two the left is a small temple, much admired for its portico.
principal fronts are each 344 feet in length, with a Corinth- The Earl of Leicester K.G. IS. lord of the manor and sole
ian portico on the south side, opposite to which is a foun- landowner. The Victoria hotel is a convenient temporary
tain, consisting of a group of figures representing St. George residence for visitors, and the occupiers of several houses in
and the Dragon, the work of Charles Raymond Smith: on the parish take in lodgers during the summer and autumn.
each side of the approach on the north are a male and Every description of soil exists in the parish, from strong
female lion in bronze, executed by the late Sir J. E. Boehm clay to blowing sand ; subsoil, strong clay, marl, chalk,
bart. R.A. in 1872: the picture gallery is rich in tine works, brick earth, gravel and sand. The chief crops are wheat,
particularly in Claudes: the sculpture gallery also contains barley, turnips, mangold-wurtzel and grasses. The area is
some celebrated productions: the library, besides books, in- 5,2o8 acres of! and and 765 of water; rateable value, £5,167 ;
eludes a very fine collection of manuscripts: the mansion and the population in 1891 was 481.
stands in an extensive and well-wooded park, which together NEW HoLKHAM or LoYGLANDS is a hamlet at the south
with the pleasure grounds, is open every Wednesday during end of the parish, about 2 miles south from the Hall.
the summer months. Her i\Iajesty the Queen, when Prin-
cess Victoria, visited Holkham in 1835, with her mother Parish Clerk. Russell Young.
the late Duchess of Kent ; and the Prince and Princess of Letters from Wells, by foot messenger, arrive about 8 a. m.
Wales are frequent visitors . . The park, which is well & 4.30 p.m. Collection from WALL LETTER Box, week
stocked with deer and game, contains about 3,2oo acres, of days 6.30 a. m. & 4- 25 p.m. sundays at 8.30 a. m. ·Wells
which 1, 100 are wood, and there is a lake I,os6 yards long, is the nearest money order & telegraph office
frequented by large flocks of water-fowl: the whole is in- National School (boys, girls & infants), erected in 1837, for
closed with a wall, erected in 1833·9 and within 20 yards of 120 children; average attendance, 50 boys & girls & 35
being 9 miles in extent. About the year r66o, 360 acres infants; the schools are supported by the Earl of Leices-
were inc!used from the sea; and the first Earl of Leicester ter K.G. ; .William Belcher, master; Mrs. Belcher, sewing
inclosed .:;.oo more in I722, and also reclaimed Holkh.am mistress; Mrs. Emma Young, infants' mistress
Heath, and the present Earl has reclaimed about 700 acres. Railway Station, Frederic William Fisk, station master
Leicester Earl of K.G. (Lord Lieu- Crook Frederick, grazier, & lodging ho lVIunroHugh,forestr. to theEarl,Lnglnds
1

· tenant), Holkham hall Davey John George Ellis, agent to the Palmer James, farmer
Coke Viscount J'.P. Holkham hall ; & I3 Earl of Leicester; estate offices, Holk- PedderGeo.T.clerk of the wrks.Longlnds
Cadogan square, London s w ham hall I Peterstone Brick & Tile Works (William
Davey John Geo. Ellis J.P. Longlands Davidson John, chief clerk to the Earl · Wiley, manager)
Sandwith Rev. William Fitzgerald Ellender James, lodging house Ringer James, grocer & draper
Gambier B.A. Vicarage Freezer James, farm bailiff to the Earl Smith George Young, Victoria family &
COMMERCIAL. of Leicester, Longlands commercial hotel ; home comforts &
Beesley Arthur H. clerk & house ste- Freezer Samuel, clerk to the Earl . moderate charges ; wines & spirits,
ward to the Earl of Leicester, & Julings Isaac, farmer, & lodging house , best brands ; good stabling
I

assistant overseer · j Lancaster Abner, head gardener I Topham Alexander Joseph, farmer,
Bone Samuel, park keeper to the Earl •. Middleton Charles, farmer, Branthill i Model farm
Carr George, lodging house I I •

HOLME HALE is a vil1age and parish, near the river £55 yearly, of which sum £3o is allotted to the school,
Wissey, with a station on the Thetford and Swaffham sec- £2 to the widows of the parish, £7 ss. IId. for coal, and
tion of the Great Eastern railway, 5 miles east-by-south the balance £15 14s. Id. to the maintenance of the church.
from Swa:ffham, in the South Western di~ision of the coun- The poor's allotment of 24 acres is let to poor people and
ty, South Greenhoe hundred and petty sessional division., the rent returned to them in coals at Chnstmas. Captain
Swaffham union and county court district, Cranwich rural Henry Smith Adlington J.P. who resides at the Hall, a
deanery north division, Norfolk arch deaconry and Norwich modern mansion, is lord of the manor, and be and Artbur
diocese. The church of St. Andrew is a large and ancient Ernest Powell esq. of Mundham, are the chief landowners.
building of flint and stone, in the Norman style, consisting The soil is sand and clay, and the subsoil is chalk and
of chancel, nave of four bays, north aisle, north porch and gravel. The chief crops are wheat, barley, turnips and
an embattled western tower containing a clock and 6 bells. pasture. The area is 2,549 acres ; rateable value £3,238 ;
The chancel is divided from the nave by a handsome rood the population in I881 was 374·
screen of carved oak, and retains a double piscina: there is Sexton, Thomas Seeker.
also a single one in the north aisle, and a stoup in the north PosT 0FFICE.~John Arthurton, sub-postmaster. Letters
porch. The church was restored in 1868, at a cost of about through Watton S.O. arri;e at 7·45 a.m.; dispatched at
£65o, and has 200 sittings. The register dates from the 5.30 p.m. ; sundays 9.30 a.m. West Bradenham is the
year 1538. The living is a rectory, tithe rent-charge £470, nearest money order office & telegraph office at Swaff-
average £435 1 gross yearly value £478, including 56 acres ham
of glebe and residence, in the gift of and held since I888
by the Rev. John William Corbet M. A. of St. John's Col- National School (mixed), erected for 6o children; average
lege, Cambridge. There is a small Wesleyan Methodist attendance, 48; Mrs. Fanny Elise Swann, mistress
chapel here. The town estate of 46A, IR. 38P. produces Railway Station, Arthur Finch, station master
Adlington Capt. Henry Smith J.P., Baker William, jun. farmer Kiddle Alfred, fish dealer
Holme Hale hall Barrett Robert, farmer Lock J ames, farmer
Baker Willia.m Gibson, Shrub house Brown tharles, saddler Nelson Edward, farmer, Elm f~rm
Cor bet Rev. John William M.A. [rec- Clarke Levi, shopkeeper Ong David, beer retailer
tor], Rectory Copsey Arthur, beer retailer Oxborough William, shopkeeper
Ford George Charles Copsey James, farmer Payne James, blacksmith
Daines George, Railway inn Pearce George, farmer
COMMERCIAL. Dewing Eliza Maria (Mrs.), farmer Regester Thos. baker,coal mer. & farmr
Adeock Henry, farmer, Erneford house Gathercole Joseph, Red Lion P.H Scales William, farmer
Allcock James, boot maker Girling James, farm bailiff to Nelson H. Spencer Susan (Mrs.), farmer
Andrews Thomas, farmer Hayward esq Swan Jas. assessor & collector of taxes
Arthurton John, shopkeeper, Post office Hart George Whitby, shoe maker Swan Jas. organist of the parish church
Badley Willia.m Duckett, farmer Heyhoe Anthony, farmer, Church farm
HOLME-NEXT-RUNCTON is a. village and parish· I867 to the Rev. Canon Wray, late rector: there are r8o
xi miles south-east from the Magdalen Road junction sittings. The register dates from the year I562. The
station on the Ely and Lynn section of the Great Eastern living is a rectory, consolidatea with those of South
railway, and the branch to Wi.sbech, and 4 miles north from Runcton and Wallington, tithe rent-charge £319, with
Downham, in the South Western division ot the county, 12 acres of glebe and residence, joint gross yearly
Clackclose hundred and petty sessional division, Downham value £650, in the gift of Edmund Peel esq. J.P., n.L.
union and county court district, rural deanery of Fincha.m, and held since I866 by the Rev. Charles Greenwood
archdeaconry of Norfolk and diocese of Norwich. The I<'loyd l'tr.A. of Christ Church, Oxford : the land is
church of St. James is a small building of stone and brick, subject to a modus of £ r8 a year in lieu of tithes. Here
in the Early Norman, Early English, Decorated and Perpen- is a Primitive Methodist chapel. The charities amount to
dicular styles, consisting of chancel, nave, 80uth porch and £9 yearly. Thomas Somers Cocks esq. D.L., J. P. of Thoma11
an embattled western tower containing 3 bells: in 1856 a Bank, Great Marlow, Bucks, is lord of the manor. Sir
vestry was added: there is a memorial window to the Rev. William Hovell Browne ffolkes hart. M. A., D.L., l.P. of
E. J. R. Hughes, formerly a curate here, and one erected in Hillington Hall and Congham Lodge, Edmund Peel esq.
-
436 HOLME-NEXT-RUNCfON. NORFOLK. (KELLY's
D.L. 1J.P.of Bryn-y-pys, Ruabon, eo. Flint, and Cains College, order & telegraph office. WALL LETTER Box cleared at
Cambridge, are the chief landowners. The soil is mixed ; 6.10 p.m. & on sundays at 10.25 a. m
subsoil, gravel and clay. The chief crops are wheat, barley,
beans &c. The area is r,og6 acres; rateable value, £r,6o5; National School( mixed) for children of the parishes ofHolme,
the population in 1891 was 211. South Runcton & Wallington, erected in 1869, for 120
Parish Clerk, John Reeve. children; average attendance, 5I ; Miss Sarah Gamble,
Letters through Downham, which is the nearest money head mistress ; Miss Phrebe llowes, assistant mistress
FloydRev.Chas.Greenwood M.A.Rectory Boon William, farmer & hay agent Heading George, farmer
Baldrey James, farmer Capp John, carpenter & beer retailer Stibbon John, cowkeeper
Baldrey Samuel, farmer Gotobed William Crab he, farmer Stibbon Frank Osborne, farmer
Bligh Thomas, nurseryman Gutteridge Elizabeth (Mrs.), shopkeepr Warren Waiter, farmer
HOLME-NEXT-THE-SEA is a village and parish the nave was rebuilt in 1778: the chancel was
situated between Hunstanton and Thornham, on the coast restored by Mr. Hamon le Strange the lay rector, and a
road from Wells to Lynn and in a richly cultivated country, new roof placed on the nave: in 1887 the church was re-tiled
3 miles north-east from Hunstanton terminal station on the and reseated and a new puipit of Bath stone erected: there
Great Eastern railway, and 18 tmles north from Lynn, in are 300 sittings. The register dates from the year 179~.
the North Western division of the county, Smithdown The living is a vicarage, average tithe rent-charge £129,
hundred, Smithdown and Brothercross petty sessional net yearly value l, 167, including 28 acres of glebe and resi-
division, Docking union, Lynn county court district, rural deuce, in the gift of and held since 1891 by the Rev. John
deanery of Heacham, archdeaconry of Norfolk and diocese of Church ·Francis Hare M.A. of Exeter College, Oxford,
:Norwich. The beach is fine, firm and smooth, and the who resides at Hunstanton. There is a Primitive Methodist
coast is secured against the incursions of the sea by sand- chapel, built in 1875. The poor's land consists of IIA. 3R.
hills, called "meales," and a sea wall, erected about the 9P. the present rent of which, £,3o, is distributed in coals.
year 186o, inclosing some 400 acres of marsh land abounding There are five manors-viz. Hunstanton-with-Mustrels,
with rabbits. The church of St. Mary the Virgin, partly Ringstead-with-Holme and NorthaH, of which Hamon le
rebuilt by Henry Notyngham in the reign of Henry IV. Strange esq. D.L., J.P. of Hunstanton Hall, is lord and
( 1399-1413), is an ancient edifice of flint and stone, mainly Holme-next-the-Sea (late Holkhams and Rerrys) and Hoods-
in the Perpendicular style, consisting of chancel, nave, in-Holme, of which Anthony Blyth esq. is lord. The chief
vestry and an embattled western tower with pinnacles con- landowners are Hamon le Strange and Reginald H. Blyth
taining 5 bells : the chancel retains sed ilia and a double esqrs. Mr. John Nelson and trustees of Henry N clson and
piscina: against the south wall of the chancel is a peculiar James Nelson. The soil is rich and productive; the subsoil
alabaster monument with kneeling effigies to Richard Stone is chiefly chalk. The chief crops are wheat, barley, turnips,
and Clemens his wife, 7 sons and 6 daughters, and is dated beans and mangold-wurtzel. The area is 1,647 acres of
1607: there is a fine brass with the following inscription:- arable and pasture land; rateable value, 2,296; the popu-
in three rhyming couplets:-" Henry Notynham and lation in 1891 was 288.
his Wyffe lyne her yt madden thys Church Stepull Sexton, Francis Frohawk.
and Queer. Two vestments and bells they madden PosT 0FFICE.-Henry Potter, receiver. Letters are re-
also. Christ Jesu sav ther-for ym ffro woo, and to ceived through Lynn by mail cart, arrive at 7 a.m. & are
bring their souls to blis of hevyn syth Pater and dispatched at 5·5 p.m. The nearest money order office &
Ave with mylde Stephyn i" the font consists of a telegraph office is at Thornham. Postal orders are issued
basin of Bath stone, ornamented with tracery and dog- here, but not paid
tooth ornament, resting on columns of Irish and Devonshire
marble: a new communion table was given by Mr. C. R. A School Board of five members was formed compulsorily
Fenwick and a cloth and hangings were presented by Miss July 14, 1875; G. Whitby, Hunstanton,clerk to the board;
Fenwick : in the church are buried :-Barbara Le Strange, George Whitby, Hnnstanton, attendance officer
d. 1704; Hamon Le Strange d. 1717; Mary LA Strange d. Board School (mixed), built in 1843 at a cost of £,2oo, for 63
1755; Mrs. Christian !sabell a Le Strange, d. 1756 and children; average attendance, 52; Mrs. Mary Ann Taylor,
Hamon Le Strange d. 1769 ; various members of mistress
the Hollys and Nelson families are also interred here: CARRIER TO LYNN.-George Taylor, tues. & fri
Bl~1;h Robert Crowe George, machinist & thrashing Page William, horse breaker
Nelson James machine proprietor Robinson Frederick White, farmer
Bloomfield Cbas.bathing machine propr Fuller George, grocer, draper, & boot & Seapey Alfred William, farmer
Blyth Robert, farmer shoe warehouse Wales John Farthing, carpenter
Bond Alfred, White Horse P.H. ; situ- Green Frederick, farmer, carpenter & Wales John Farthing, jun. bricklayer
ated half a mile from the sea; every wheelwright; wagons & carts &
accommodation for visitors · general farm implement maker

HOLT is a sm!dl market town and parish and the bead of families: a new commumon table was presented m 1881 by
a county court district and petty sessional division, with a Sir Alfred Jodrell bart. of Hayfield Hall, in memory of his
station on the Ea~.tern and Midlands railway, 23 miles north- brother, the late Edward Jodrell esq. and is made of cedar-
north-west from Norwich, 18 north-by-east from Dereham, wood grown on the Hayfield estate and olive-wood brought
12 north-east from Fakenham, 10 west-by-south from by his late brother from Italy : the communion plate includes
Cromer and 123 from London by road, in the Northern a flagon, presented by King George the Second when Prince
division of the county, Erpingham union, Holt hundred, of Wales; a paten, given by Sir Robert Walpole and one by
rural deanery of Halt and archdeaconry and diocese of Lord Charles Townshend: the fine organ was built in 1882,
Norwich. The word "bolt," in Saxon, signifies a wood, at a cost, including organ-chamber, of ~about £soo: the
whence it is inferred that the town was surrounded by tim- church was reseated in 1864, under the direction of Mr. W.
her. In the reign of Edward the Confessor it was held in Butterfield, architect, and now affords 350 sittings. The
royal demesne and after the Conquest the lordship belonged register dates from the year 1558. The living is a rectory,
to the family oC De Vaux, or De Vallibus. The town, average tithe rent-charge [438, gross yearly value [529,
remarkable for the purity of its air, IS pleasantly situated on with 57 acres of glebe and residence, in the gift of the
rising ground, in the midst of a fertile district, and commands Master and fellows of St. John's College, Cambridge, and
a delightful prospect of the surrounding country: in the held since 1853 by the Rev. Edward Brumell B.n. formerly
year 1708 a destructive fire consumed nearly every house fellow and tutor of that college and rural dean of Holt.
and building in the town, including the market stalls, and There is a Wesleyan chapel, built in 1838 and seating 250
greatly injured the church. The town is paved and is persons, and a Primitive Methodist chapel, built in 1872,
lighted with gas, from works on Spouts Common, the with 220 sittings, 180 being free. The Free Methodist chapel,
property of a limited company and supplied with water erected in 1862 at a cost of about £,2,000, is of brick and flint
from works erected in 1885 by the Rural Sanitary Author- in the Gothic style, and affords 400 sittings. The Literary
ity ; these include a tower of red brick in the Shirehall Institute has a library of over 3,000 volumes and is well
Plain, 56 feet in height, with a tank holding 15,000 gallons; supported. The market for corn is held on Wednesday and
the town has also been thoroughly drained and the total cost there is a cattle sale every alternate Friday during the first
of the waterworks and drainage was over £s,ooo. portion of the year. Messrs. Gurneys, Birkbeck, Barclay
The church of St. Andrew is an edifice in the Decorated and Buxton's bank, in the High street, is a handsome stmc-
and Perpendicular styles, consisting of chancel, nave, aisles, tnre of brick. The fairs, chiefly for stock, are held on April
south porch and a western tower containing a clock and one 25th and November 25th and the following days ; and a
bell; it once had a lofty spire which served as a landmark: statute fair for hiring servants is held at Michaelmas. Holt
in the church are several mural monuments, including one Hall, the seat of John Rogers esq. M.A., J.P. is a brick man-
to John Holmes, for more than 30 years master of the sion in the Elizabethan style, situated a mile east of the
Grammar school and author of a Greek Grammar; and town, in grounds tastefully laid out and containing a fine
others to Edmund Hobart and to the Newdegateand Briggs piece of water. Thomas Girdlestone, an eminent physician
DIRECTORY. J NORFOLK. HOLT. 437
and author of several medical works, was born here in 1758 Fire Engine Station, Shirehall plain, William Randall,
and died in 1822. William Withers esq. who wrote several superintendent & 8 men
works on the rearing and planting of forest trees, was also Literary Institute, New street, R. Funnell, hon. sec
a native of Holt. Thomas Cooper, master of the Grammar Office of Corn Returns, Feathers hotel, Market place; A.
school during part of the 17th century, is said to have been W. Stubbs, officer
hanged in front of the school-house for his adherence to the Shire Hall, Shirehall plain, George Fisher, keeper
cause of Charles I. In 1810 the commons and heaths that PUBLIC 0FFICERi : -
surrounded the town were inclosed for cultivation: 120 acres Assistant Overseer, James Outlaw, King's head
were allotted for the supply of fuel and pasturage to certain Clerk to the Commissioners of Taxes & to the Deputy
householders whose yearly rent is under £ IO, and on the Lieutenants, Henry Starling Ransom, High street
east side, towards Cromer, are now handsome and thriving Clerk to the Gas Inspectors, Thos. Jn. Preston, Market pl
plantations of forest trees, interspersed with dwelling houses. Inland Revenue Officer, Arthur White Stubbs, Cromer rd
John Henry Gurney esq. J.P. of Keswick Hall, is lord of the Inspector of Police & under the Explosives Act, John
manors of Halt, Bolt Bales and Holt Market. The Fish- Clarke, Station road
mongers' Company are lords of the manor of Holt Pereers. Medical Officer & Public Vaccinator, Blakeney district,
The chief landowners are G. Barker esq. and John Rogers Walsingham union, Jn. Truscott Skrimshire M.D. Hill ho
esq. M.A., J.P. The soil is light and the land in a high state Medical Officer, Beckham district & Workhouse, Erping-
of culti\·ation. The area is 2,991 acres; rateable value, ham union, Robert Turner Bales M.D. Obelisk plain
£6,177; the population in 1891 was 1,750. Medical Officer, Bolt & Briston district, Erpingbam union.
Parish Clerk, George William Fisher. John Hales-Tooke, The Lawn
PosT, M. 0. & T. 0., S. B. & Annuity & Insurance Office Registrar of Marriages, John Oakes Pashley, New street;
(Railway Sub-Office-Letters should have R.S.O. added). deputy, Charles Clarke, Cromer road
-Samuel Critoph Clare, postmaster. Letters are received Public Vaccinator, Robert Turner Hales M. D. Obelisk plain
from Dereham at 6.25 a.m. & Norwich 9·55 & 4.30 Relieving Officer & Registrar of Births & Deaths for Bolt
p.m. & are dispatched via Norwich 11.15 a.m. Dereham district of Erpingham union, Thomas John Balls, Cromer
5.30 p.m. & Peterborough 7.15 p.m.; sundays, received road; deputy, Charles Clarke, Cromer road
at 6.25 a.m.; dispatched, via Dereham, at 5.30 p.m Road Surveyors, William Rush, Cromer road & John
CoUNTY MAGISTRATES FOR HOLT PETTY SESSIONAL Dennis Ellis, Norwich road, Holt
DIVISION. Vaccination Officer, Thomas John Balls, Cromer road
Cozens-Hardy William Hardy esq. Letheringsett ball, Bolt PLACES OF \VoRSHIP, with times of Services:-
R.S.O. chairman
St. Andrcw's Church, Hev. Edward Brumell B.D. rector;
Cozens-Hardy Clement Wm. Hardy esq. Cley hall, Dereham
Hastings Lord, Melton Constable, Dereham 10.30 a. m. 3 & 7 p.m
Primitive Methodist, Rev. Gervase Hall ; 2.30 & 6.30 p.m
Jodrell Sir Alfred bart. D.L. llayfield ball, Dereham United Methodist Free Church, Rev. William Henry James;
Rogers John esq. M.A. Holt hall, Dereham
SparkeEdwd.Bowyer esq.M.A., D. L. Gunthorpe ball, Dereham 10.30 a.m. & 6.30 p.m. ; thur~. 7.30 p.m
Wesleyan, Rev. Caleb Arthur Walker; 1o.go a. m. & 6.30
Clerk to the Magistrates, Henry Starling Ransom, High st
p.m. ; tuesdays & fridays 7 p.m
Petty Sessions are held at the Shire Hall every fourth man-
day at I I a.m. The following places are included in the SCHOOLS:-
petty sessional division :-Bale, Blakeney, llodham, The Grammar School, founded by Sir Thomas Gresham
Briningham, Brinton, Briston, Cley-next-the-Sea, Edge- knt. in 1554, is now under the management of the Wor- ·
field, Glandford-with-Bayfield, Gunthorpe, Hempstead, shipful Company of Fishmongers : the old school & school-
Holt, Hunworth, Kelling, Langham, Letheringsett, Mel- house were replaced in 1858-6o by new buildings which
ton Constable with Burgh Parva, Morston, Salthouse, have large playgrounds attached; attached to the school
Saxlingham, . Sharrington, Stody, Swanton Novers, is an exhibition of £4o yearly to either of the Universities,
Thornage, Weybourne & ·wiveton & Smith's fellowship & scholarship, with an exhibition of
PuBLIC EsTABLISHMENTS:- £r2 yearly to Sidney Sussex College, Cambridge. belong
Albert Hall, James Weston, proprietor to the school; there are at present upwards of 6o boys,
Concert Hall, New street, Arthur Preston, proprietor including boarders, of whom so are taught free, but free
County Court, His Honor Edwin Plumer Price Q.C. judge; nominations are confined to inhabitants of Norfolk; the
George Wilkinson, registrar & high bailiff ; Henry Bond, 1 Rev. Reginald Jolliffe Roberts M.A. head master; John
bailiff ; Harry Pearce Gould, 9 King street,N orwicl;t, official 1 Henry Howell M. A. second master; William Thorpe, third
receiver in bankruptcy. Court held alternate months in 1 master ; Herr Fuoss, teacher of modern languages
the Shire Hall at 12 noon .. The following places are A School Board of 5 members was formed compulsorily,
within its jurisdiction :-Aldborough, Aylmerton, Bacons- December 2r, 1877, for the United District of Bolt &
tborpe, .Barningham Town, Barningham Norwood, Beck- Letberingsett; J. Simmons, Letheringsett, clerk to the
ham (East), Beckham (West), Beeston Regis, Bessingham, board; Charles John Knowles, High st. attendance officer
Blakeney, .Bodham, Brinton, Briston, Cley-next-the-Sea., Board (mixed), New street, erected in 1851 & enlarged m
Cromer, Edgefield, Felbrigg, Glandford-with-Bayfield, r886, for 250 children; average attendance, 175 : Francis
Gresham, Hempstead, Halt, Hunworth,Kelling,Langham, Thomas Hutcbens, master; Miss Annie Hough ton, mis-
Letheringsett, Matlaske, Melton Constable-with-Burgh, tress ; Miss Sarah E. Clarke, assistant mistress
Metton, Morston, Overstrand, Plumstead, Runton, Salt- National, Norwich road, erected in 1842, for r61 children;
house, Saxlingham, Sheringham, Stody, Sustead, Thur- average attendance, 136; Henry N. Butchard, master;
garton, Thornage, W eybourne & "Wiveton William D. Burton,assistant master; Miss Sophia Barney,
Certified Bailiff, appointed under the "Law of Distress mistress
Amendment Act," George R. West, Cromer road, Halt Railway Station, George Ridley, station master
County Police Station. Station road, John Clarke, inspector CARRIERS TO NoRWICH.-Henry Cooke, from his house,
& 9 constables Bolt, every saturday, returning same day from the
Inland Revenue Office, at the Feathers hotel, Market place 'Golden Lion,' St. John's, Norwich

PH.lV ATE
RESIDENTS. Hudson Mrs. Valley hon.<;e Walker Rev. Caleb Arthur [Wesleyan],
Baker Charles Thomas, The Acacias James Rev. William Henry [United New street
Bidewell William, Cromer road Methodist Free Church1. Shirehall ho Walker Mrs. Cromer road
Brumell Rev. Edward B.D. [rector & Knight Edward, Bolt lodge Wilkinson George, Woodlands
rural dean], Rectory Lee Warner Mrs. Septimus, The Grove Winkley Miss, Fairstead row
Burrell William Holmes, Market place Lowe Mrs. East grove, Cromer road Withers Miss, Church street
Cook J. Harold Loynes Robert, High street
Cooper Mrs. Cromer road Mackintosh Mrs. Cromer road COMMERCIAL.
Cox Mrs. The Shrublands Mobbs John, Cromer road AdamsCecilia(Mrs. ),laundress,Albert st
Ellis John Dennis, White house Preston Arthur, New street Ainger Mary (Mrs.), shopkpr. High st
England Thomas Wailer, Tower street Ransom Henry Starling, High street AlbertHall( Jas. W eston,prpr. ),Albert st
Funnell Richard, Bank house Reeve John, Cromer road Baker Charles Thomas, hydraulic, sani-
Fuoss Herr (teacher of modern lan- Roberts Rev. Reginald Jolliffe M.A. tary & gas engineer, plumber, gas &
guages Grammar school), ~ew st (head master), Grammar school water fitter, builders' merchant,
Gooch Mrs. New street Rogers John M. A., J.P. Bolt hall whitesmith & bellhanger, brass fin-
Bales Robert Turner M. D. Obelisk plain Rudkin Mrs. Market place isher & locksmith, insur<~once agent,
Bales-Tooke John, The Lawn Rust Misses, The Limes, High street implement salesman & contractor for
Ball Rev. Gervase [PrirnitiYe Method- Rust Mrs. Bengal lodge all building repairs, drainage & sani-
ist1, Cromer road Skrimshire John Truscott M.D. l\fill ho tary work,Market place ; & at Faken-
Horsiead :Miss, Tower street Stimpson Mrs. Market place ham & Sherringham. See advert
Howell John Henry M. A. (second master Thorpe William (third master Gram- Baldry Cecilia Ann (Mrs.), baker &
Grammar school), Wansbeck house mar school), Church street confectioner, Shirehall plain
438 HOLT

• NORFOLK. (KELLY's
"
Balls Thomas John, relieving & vaccin- DuffieldEdwd. James,farmer ,Cromer rd Jermy Edward, Bull inn, Tower street
ation officer & n;gistrar of births & Dusgate William, baker & confectioner, Jex Charles, fishmonger, Tower street
deaths for Halt district, Erpingham Fish hill & Tower street KaberryJas.commercial trav.Cromer rd
union & collector to the guardians, Earl Thomas, steward for Dr. F. B. Keymer James~eale,millwright,New st
Cromer road O'Connor, of London, Heath house Knowles CharlesJohn,tailor,hair dresser
Barney SamL (Mrs.), Star P.H. Fish hl Edwards Zachariah, chimney sweeper, & school attendance officer, Market pl
Barningbam James, market gardener, Norwich road LarnerGeo.grocer&draper, :VIarket place
Grove lane ElKs John Dennis, farmer, White house, LeeAlfred, wine,spirit&tea dealer,N ew st
Basham Maria (Mrs.), glass & china Norwich road Leggatt William, White Lion com-
dealer, High street Empson Waiter, umbrella ma.Market pl mercial inn, brewer & maltster,
Basbam Thomas, saddler, High street English William, shopkeeper, Fish hill auctioneer, appraiser & land,
Beane Hy.farmr. Heath frm.Cromer rd Farrow John, butcher, Tower street house & estate agent, Cromer rd.
Beresford John, hay dealer, New street Feathers Green Bowling Club (Henry & brick, tile & drain pipe manufac-
Bicks Charlotte (Mrs.), apartments, Bond, hon. sec) turer, Norwich road & farmer, Percers
Lion street FirrnageGeorge,boot&shoe ma.Fish hill farm, Cley road
Bird George, miller (wind), Fairstead Fisher Geo. Wm. parish clerk, Church st Le Pla Herbert, agent Prudential Assur-
row & (water) Hempstead mill Fisher William,lodging house, Station rd ance Co. Limited, New street
Bond Henry, solicitor, clerk & bailiff to Free Grammar School (Rev. Reginald Lewis Charles, grocer, Market place
the county court, New street Jolliffe Roberts M.A. head master ; Lewis James, greengrocer, Tower st
Bond ~1ary (Mrs. ), dress m a. Cromer rd John Henry Howell :?tr.A. second Lion Green Bowling Club (Stephen L.
Bond Mary (Mrs.), sen. dress maker, master; William Thorpe, third Gooch, hon. sec.), White Lion hotel
St. John's cottage master ; Herr 'l'uoss, teacher of Literary Institute (Richard Funnell,
Bond Wm. carpenter&painter ,Cromer rd modern languages), Market place bon. sec. ; Wm. Frost,sub-librarian),
Bone Henry, shopkeeper,Shirehall plain l<'rost William, sub-librarian of Literary New street
Bone Jas. \Vm. cart owner, Grove lane Institute, New street Loynes John, blacksmith, High street ·
Bowles Ro bt. grocer & draper, Market pl Funnel! Richard, agent for Gurneys' & Moore John, cart owner, Pearson's bldgs
Brighten Louisa "Mary (Miss), dress Co. & hon. sec. of Literary Institute, MoultonWm.clothier & boot dlr. High st
maker, New street Bank house Neal Owen, watch maker,Market place
Brown & Cook, solicitors, Market place ; Gooch James KingM.R.c.v.s. veterirmry Nichols Thos. Jas. hair dresser ,Market pl
& at Cromer surgeon & farmer, Market place Nurse James, farmer, Cromer road
Buck James (Mrs.), dress maker, Fair- Gooch Stephen Leeds (late Rar- Nurses' Home(Mrs.Ann Emery, nurse),
stead row cham), family & dispensing chemist, Fish hill
Bullock Mary Ann (Mrs.), laundress, rlmggist, wine retailer & tobacconist, Olley James, horse trainer, Prospect
Mill house · Market place villa, Cromer road ; stables, Tower st
Bullock William, farm bailiff to John Gray William Copeman, cab owner & Outlaw James, King's Head hotel &,
Rogers esq. J.P posting establishment; horses, traps assistant overseer, High street
Bunkell Robt.apartme11ts,Obelisk plain & wagonettes for commercial men & Page & Turner, corn, coal, coke, seed &
Bunnett John, tailor, !<'ish hill pleasure parties ; cabs meet all trains, manure merchants & ship owners,
Burrell Ann Elizabeth (Mrs.), dress Cromer road Station ; & at Cley & Blakeney
maker, Shirehall plain GroomJamesJoseph,grocer,High street Page Herbert Henry, butcher, Tower st
Burrell Edward Elden, basket & sieve Gurneys, Birkbecks, Barclay & Buxton, Palmer John Herbert, marbleS; general
maker, High street bankers (Richard Funnell, agent) mason, carver & builders' material
Burrell William Holmes, builder, regis- (wed. 10 to 6 ; sat. 10 to 1 ; other merchant ; head stones, tombs, crosses
tered plumber, glazier & house decor- days 10 to 4), High street; draw on & granite monuments supplied,
ator, Station road Barclay, Bevan & Co. London E c Station works & New street
Burroughes Stephen Barnabas, coal & Hales Robert Turner M.D. surgeon, & Pashley John Oakes, plumber & regis-
corn merchant; &at Cley & Langham medical officer of Beckham district trar of marriages, New street
Case Cubitt, pig killer, Market place & workhouse, & public vaccinator, Payne Alfred, coach builder, see Vince
Chestner Elijah, carpenter, joiner, Erpingham union, Obelisk plain & Payne
painter, cabinet maker & undertaker, Hales-Tooke John, surgeon, & medical Pe.rrg Robert, bill poster, Shireball plain
Lion street ; res. Southwold house officer, llolt & Briston districts, Phillippo Ernest Ed ward, watch & clock
Chestney Job, Queen Adelaide inn, & Erpingham union, The Lawn maker, Fish hill
trap owner, New street Henson Gilbert John, supt. Prudential Pilch Richard, tailor, Market place
Chestney Robert, coal dealer Assurance Co. Lim. 3 Albert street Plain Joseph, shoe maker
Chestney William, cooper, Albert street Holt Brass Band (Arthur Preston, band Potter Thomas, higgler, Grove lane
ChildEliza(Mrs. ),dress maker,Church st master), New street Preston Arthur, machine printer, book-
Clare Samuel Critoph & Son, stationers, IIolt Concert Hall (Arthur Preston, seller & stationer, teacher of music,
Post office, High street proprietor), New street proprietor of Holt concert hall &
Clarke Charles, sec. to Reepham Prov. Holt Cric_liet Club (E. R Outlaw, hon. organist to parish church, High street
Society & deputy registrar of births, sec.), High street & New street
deaths & marriages, Cromer road Holt Football Club (Llewellyn Hughes, Preston Thos. John, stationer & printer,
Clarke John, inspector of police & under hon. sec.), Market place Market place
the Explosives Act, Station roacl Holt Gas Co. Limited (William Legga.tt, Prudential Assurance Co. Limited
Cook J. Harold, solicitor (firm, Brown & sec. manager); works,Spoutcormnon; (Gilbert John Henson, supt. ; H. Le
Cook), ~arket place; & at Cromer offices, Church street & Cromer road Pla & W.Robinson, agents),3Albert st
& ·Sheringham Holt Horticultural Society (Lord Railway Family & Commercial
Cooke Henry, carrier, Norwich road Hastings, president; E. C. Cooper, Hotel & Posting House (Geo.
Cooper Ed win Carter, wine & seed mer- hon. sec.), High street B. Rush, propr.),Station rd. See advt
chant & soda water maker, High street Holt Parochial Library (Miss Rogers, Randall John Holmes, cutler, New st
County Court(His Honor Ed win Plumer manageress), Fish hill Randall William, watch maker & gun-
Price Q c. judge ; George Wilkinson, Holt Tennis Club (Mrs. E. C. Cooper, smith, New street
registrar & high bailiff), Shirehall bon. sec.), High street Ransom Henry Starling, solicitor, com-
Craske Thomas Augustus, chemist & Holt Water Works (William Leggatt, missioner to adrninster oaths in the
druggist, & agent for W. & A. Gilbey, manager) ; office, Cromer road; supreme court, derk to the magts-
wine & spirit merchants, l:Iigh street works, Spout common trates, commissioners of taxes &to the
Crowe Fredk. shopkeeper ,Fairstead row Horne "'alter, monurnental mason, deputy lieutenants, High street
CroweRichard, jobmaster, Tower street Obelisk plain Ransom Horatio, tailor & woollen
Culley Harry, family grocer, tea dealer, Horne Wm. boot maker, Obelisk plain draper, Market place
draper, milliner, clothier, hosier, Horstead Marian A. (Miss), private Ransom Wm. boot & shoe ma.l\Iarket pl
haberdasher & funeral furnisher, school, Tower street Ridley George, station master, Albany
Market place Hudson George, solicitors' managing terrace, Crmner road
Dack Charles Blunderfield, tobacconist clerk & assistant clerk to commis- Rix Richard, carman, Thornage road
& bird preserver, Market place sioners of taxes, New street Robinson William, agent for Prudential
Dade Harriet (Miss), pork dlr. Tower st Hudson Mary Ann (Miss), apartments, Assurance Co. Lim. 'rhnrnage road
Davy Wm. sec. Forester's club, Albert st Rose cottage, Albert street Royal Wm. beer retailer, Tower street
Daplyn Robert W. Feathers family & Ives George, butcher, Market place Rush William & Son, builders, contrac-
commercial hotel & posting house, & Iveson Benjamin, hay dealer, Tower st tors & lime burners, Cromer road
farmer, Market place J acob Geo. general ironmonger, High st Rush George Bambridge, Railway com-
Diggens Charles Inkerman, butcher, Jacob William, painter, New street mercial &family hotel&posting house,
Shirehall plain J arvis George, common lodging house, Station road. See advertisement
Draper Mary Jane (Miss), dress maker, Shirehall plain Rush William, sen. builder &c. see
Albert street J enkinsonJ ohn, beer retai ler,N orwich rd Rush Wm.&Son,& farmer, Cromer rd
J)IUCTOBY.] NORFOLK. EONINGBAM. 439'
Rust Misses, ladies' school, The Limes, Turner Isaac, blacksmith,Fairstead row i Wilkinson George, solicitor, perpetual
High street Vinca & Payne, carriage builders, commissioner & commissioner to ad ..
SearlesFras.Jane(Mrs.),sbopkpr.Lion st Cromer road minister oaths in the supreme court
Skrirnshire John Truscott M.D. surgeon, Wade Betsy (Miss), dress m a. High st & registrar & high bailiff of the
& medical officer & public vaccinator, Wailer Amelia (Mrs.), baker, New st county court, Church street
Blakeney district, Walsingham union, Waller Daniel, farmer, Obelisk plain Wilson James, saddler, High street
Hill house WallerFanny(Mrs.),pork btchr.High st Working Men's Club (Charles Thomas
SmithRobt.Hy.shopkpr.Shirehall plain WallerHerbert Daniel, coaldlr. New st Baker & Charles Clarke, hon. secs.),
Sparks Sarah (Mrs.), farmer, Waterloo Wailer John, farmer Shirehall plain
farm, Cromer road Waller Samuel, farmer, Hunworth rd White Henry Alhert, foreman iron-
Stubbs Arthur White, inland revenue Wailer William, carpenter, Norwich rd monger, Cromer road
officer & inspector of corn returns, West George Robert, dairyman, & Yull John, gardener, florist & seedsman
Cromer road bailiff under the Law of Distress & dealer in pot plants, bouquets,
Thurtle Jn. beer retailer,Shirehall plain Amendment Act, Cromer road wreaths & all kinds of garden requi-
Turner Henry, brewer, maltster & wine Westcott Frederick,Angel P. H. Tower st sites, New street
& spirit merchant, High street Weston James, builder, Shirehall plain
HOLVERSTON is a village and parish 5 miles south- College, Cambridge, rural dean of West Brooke and J.P.
east-by-east from Norwich, in the Southern division of the who resides at Burgh-Apton. A small modus is paid in
county, Swainsthorpe petty sessional division, Henstead lieu of tithes. John Marcon esq. is lord of the manor and
hundred and union, Norwich county court district, rural chief landowner. The soil is mixed; subsoil, loam. The
deanery of Brooke western division, archdeaconry of Norfolk chief crops are wheat, barley and roots. The area is 480
and diocese of Norwich. The chnrch of St.. Mary, which acres; rateable value, £553; the population in I89I was 38.
stood in a field at a short distance from the Hall, was Letters received through Norwich. The nearest money
demolished some centuries ago, and no part of it now order office & telegraph station is at Brooke
remains. The living is a rectory, united to Burgh-Apton,
joint net yearly value £228, in the gift of and held since This place is included in Rockland St. Mary United School
I864 by the Rev. Wllliam Ford Thursby LL.B. of Emmanuel Board district; the children attend the Board school there
AshtonPcrcy Hyatt, farmr.Holverston hll Culling Leonard, mrkt.gardener & frmr 1
HONING is a village and parish on the ri\'er Ant, with a produce about £34 yearly, half of which is devoted to the
station on the Yarmouth to Lynn section of the Eastern and expenses of the church, i,-I6 to the support of the school and
Midlands railway, 2~ miles from Worstead station on the the remainder is given to the poor. The charities are
North Walsham branch of the Great Eastern railway and 4 managed by trustees appointed by the Charity Corn-
south-east from North Walsham, in the Eastern division of missioners. Honing Hall, built in 1748 and enlarged in
the county, Tunstead and Rapping petty sessional division, 187I, is a fine mansion of red brick, standing in a park of
hundred of Tunstead, Smallburgh union, North Walsham about 6o acres and is the seat of Ed ward George Cubitt esq.
county court district, rural deanery of Waxham, Tunstead J.P. who is lord of the manor and the principal landowner.
division, arch deaconry of Nor folk and diocese of X orwich. The soil is rich loam with parts light sandy ; subsoil, sand,
The river Ant is navigable, and for some miles forms part of clay and small quantities of gravel. The chief crops are
the Dilham and North Walsham canal. The church of SS. wheat, oats, barley and turnips. The area is 1,400 acres, of
Peter and Paul, conspicuously placed on a height, is a which about 200 acres are uninclosed, over which there are
structure of flint, consisting of chancel, nave, south porch rights of pasturage, and 6o acres wood; rateable value,
and a western tower containing 5 bells : it was rebuilt in £2,129 ; the population in I89 r was 299.
1795 with the exception of the tower and the arcades of the Parish Clerk, the Vicar.
nave, which were then built up and the aisles removed: Deputy Parish Clerk, Robert Webster.
there are now ISO sittings, so being free. The register PosT OFFICE.-Mrs. Ann Gotto, receiver. Letters through
dates from the year 1630. The living is a vicarage, consoli- Norwich via Smalburgh arrive at 7·45 a. m. ; dispatched
dated with that of Dilham, average tithe rent-charge £231, at 2.40 p.m. on week days only. The nearest money
joint gross yearly value £252, net £220, including 21 acres order & telegraph office is at Worstead. Postal orders are
of glebe and residence, in the gift of the Bishop of Norwich, issued herE~, but not paid
and held since 1872 by the Rev. John Alfred Laurence B.A. National School (mixed), erected in 1871, for s6 children;
of Emmanuel College, Cambridge. There is a small Primi- average attendance, 6o; Miss Waller, mistress
tive Methodist chapel built in 1883, Baxter's and Husband's Railway Station (Eastern & Midlands), Thomas Gant,
charities,arising from land situated in Dilham and Tunstead, station master
Calthrop Jas. Sykes, The Manor house Cubitt & Walker, merchants & millers Lines Nathaniel, farmer
Cubitt Edward George J.P. Honing hall (steam & water) March Herbert, basket maker
Gaze Robert Gedge Charles, farmer,Old Corner corn Purdy James, Gardeners' Arms P.H ,
COliiMERCIAL, Gedge George, farmer Sculfer Frederick George, farmer, &
Andrews Robert, farmer Green Thomas, farmer farm bailiff to E. G. Cubitt esq. J:.P [
Bacon Charles, farmer Griffin Jas. plumber & glazier & shopkpr Thirtle George, farmer ,,
Beck George, farmer Jarvis Robert, hurdle maker Watkinson Geo. nursery & seeds man
Buffham Frederick, farmer Larter Henry, carpenter & farmer Watson Ann Elizabeth (Miss), groce.J.
Dixon George, farmer Larter John, blacksmith & draper
HONINGHAM is a village and parish on the road from and Anne (Gurney) his wife, ob. 3I Jan. I6]7, and another
East Dereham to Norwich, 5 miles south from Attlebridge to Henry, sou of the preceding, and 2nd Baron Cram1md
station on the Eastern and Midlands railway and 8 miles M.A. camb. ob. 5 Jan. 1701 : in the church was also buried
east from Dereham. in the Mid division of the county, bun- Mary, 5th daughter of Sir Thomas Richardson kt. Lord
dred and petty sessional division of Forehoe, St. Faith's Chief Justice of England, who died 3 March, I638, and
union, ~orwich county court district, rural deanery of Henry, son of Sir Thomas Richardson kt. buried 6 Sept.
I
Hingham, Forehoe division, archdeaconry of Norfolk and I663: there are I75 sittings. The register dates from the
diocese of Norwi~h. The church of ~t. Andrew, situated I year 156r. The living is a discharged vicarage, with that
mile east of the village, is a building of flint, in the Perpen- of East :Tuddenham annexed, average tithe rent-charge
dicular style, consisting of chancel, nave, south porch and £48 5, joint net yearly value £322, including 102 acres of
an embattled western tower, with pinnacles, containing 5 glebe, in the gift of the trustees of the late Lady Bayning,
bells; the fifth bell was presented in 1878 by the ltev. W. and held since 1892 by the Rev. Herbert James Bodington
C. Ward, and tbo organ was given in 1875 by Emma M.A. of Queen's College, Oxford, who resides at East
{Fellowes), wife of Henry (Townshend, afterwards Powlett), Tuddenham. A charity, producing £I ns. 6d. yearly, is
3rd Baron Bayning of Foxley, and vicar of Honingham, at fOI" bread. The manor of Honingham was purchased about
whose death, 5 Aug. 1866, this title became extinct: on the I6oo of William Barrow esq_ by Thomas Richardson esq.
south wall of the chancel is a monument of black and white afterwards Sir Thomas Richardson kt. Chief Justice of thtl
marble, with a medallion portrait in armour to Sir Thomas King's Hench, 1631, and previously ( 162o-22) Speaker of the
Richardson kt. Master of Cramond, ob. I2 March, I642; on House of Commons, at which time he was knighted, and
either side are Ionic shafts, supporting an ornamental the manor remained in that family until his grandson,
scrolled cornice, surmounted by a quartered shield of Thomas, Ist Baron Cramond, sold it to Richard Baylie n.n.
arms with supporters, crest and mantling and the president of St. John's College, Oxford, and dean of Sarum
motto" Virtute acquiritur bonos," below which on either 1635-67. The barony of Cramond, originally granted (23
side are oval shields, inclosed in scroll-work, bearing the Feb. 1627-8) to Elizabeth, wife of the Chief Justice, is
impaled arms of his wives Elizabeth (Hewitt) and Ma.ry supposed to have become extinct on the death (28 July,
(Sandys) and beneath the medallion is an inscription in 1735) of William, sth baron. Capt. the Hon. Ailwyu
Latin; here is also a monument with armorial insignia to Ed ward Fellowes M. P., l. P. resides at Honingham Hall. a
Thomas, his son, rst Baron Cramond, ob. 16 May, 1674, fine old mansion in the Elizabethan style, standing in a well~
440 HONING HAM. NORFOLK. [KELLY'S

wooded park of 57 acres. Honingham Thorpe is the resi- received at q a. m. from Norwich; dispatched at 4·Sop.m.
dence of Clare Sewell Read esq. J.P. The trustees of Lady The nearest telegraph office is at Mattishall
Bayning are lords of the manor and sole landowners. The
soil varies from a stiff clay to a blowing sand. The chief CARRIEHS : -
crops are wheat, barley and turnips. The area is 2 , 56 3 Wm,Buck, to Norwich, wed. & sat. returning the same days
acres; rateable value, £ 2 , 76 7 ; the population in 1 s91 was John Martin passes through from East Dereham on wed.
31 6 . & sat. returning same days
PosT & M.O.O,, S.B. & Annuity & Insumnce Office.-Harry The children of this place attend the National school at East
.Aldous, receiver. Letters from London & all parts are Tuddenham
Fellowes Capt.The Hon ..AilwynEdward Child James, blacksmith & farmer Minns David, farmer
M.P., J.P. Honingham hall; & 3 Bel- Gowing & Son, farmers, Church farm Reeve William, farmer
grave sq. & Carlton club, London s w. Grand Charles, head gamekeeper to Rowbottom Francis, estate agent to
Read Clare Se well J.P. Honing ham 1 Captain Fellowes M. P Capt. The Hon . .Ailwyn E. Fellowes
Thorpe Grand William, Buck inn, & farmer M.P. Hall farm
CO:UMERCIAL. Hipkin Thomas, farmer Seeker John, shopkeeper
.Aldous Harry, butcher, Post office Millett Emma (Mrs.) & Fredk. Cullum, Shearing William, farmer
BirdCharlesHarvey,farmer,Grange frm millers (wind & water) & farmers
HORNING is a parish and villa<Te on the navigable river against William the Norman, and the gate-house, a structure
Bure, 3~ miles east from Wroxham station on tho Norwich of brick and stone, with angle turrets, still standing among
1

and Cromer section of the Great Eastern rail way, 3~ from : the marshes, is a favourite subject with artists: the church
Potter Heigham station on the Eastern and Midlancls railway :was 270 feet in length: the abbot was mitred, but as in 27
and 12 north-east from Norwich, in the Eastern division of Hen. VII. (1535-6) the abbey was united to the see of
the county, Tunstead and Rapping petty sessional division, Norwich, in exchange for some episcopal lands, the Bishop
Tunstead hundred, Smallburgh union, Norwich county of Norwich is now also Abbot of St. Benet's-at-Holm.
I

court district, rural deanery of Waxham, Tunstead division, There was also a hospital here dependent on the abbey and
archdeaconry of Norfolk and diocese of Norwich. The dedicated to St. :James. The chapel of the hospital still
Tillage consists of two streets, long and irregularly formed exists, but is now used as a barn, in connection with
and nearly surrounded by fen or marsh land, on which are Horning Hall farm; traces also still remain of the causeway
numerous windmills, constantly employed in pumping the which united the hospital to the abbey. The Ecclesiastieal.
water from the low lands, which, at certain seasons, are Commissioners are lords of the manor and the principal
eompletely inundated. The church of St. Benedict, which landowners. The soil is very rich; snbsoil, clay. The
stands on a hilly meadow, midway between the upper and chief crops are wheat, barley and oats. The area is 2,567
lower streets of the village, is an ancient building of flint acres; rateable value, £3,362; the population in 1891 was
with stone dressings, in the Gothic style of the 13th century 415.
and later periods, consisting of nave, south aisle, south Parish Clerk, Benjamin Grimes.
porch and a lofty embattled western tower, with statues of PosT 0FFICE.-Mrs. Lucy Morriss Rope, sub-postmistress.
the four Evangelists as pinnacles, and containing one bell: Letters through Norwich arrive at 7.25 a. m. & are dis-
at the east end is a mural monument to the Hev . .Anthony patched at 3· 55 p. m. week days & I I. 30 a. m. sundays.
Barwick, for 56 years vicar here : the church was restored The nearest money order office is at Ludham & telegraph
in 1874, and has 250 sittings. The register dates from the office at Woodbastwick
year I558. The living is a vicarage, average tithe rent- WALL LETTER Box, near the "Half Moon," cleared at
charge £I34, net yearly value £200, with 36 acres of 3.25 p.m
glebe and residence, in the gift of the Bishop of :Xorwich, .A School Board of 5 members was formed compulsorily
and held since 1888 by the Rev. Lewis Meadows White M.A. Dec. 11, 1873; T. Curtis, Hoveton St. John, clerk to the
of Trinity College, Cambridge. There is a Church mission board
room in Lower street. The fuel allotment of 30 acres pro- Board School (mixed), built by the Ecclesiastical Commis-
J

duces£ 16 IOS. yearly.~' .At Cow holm, in this parish, are the sioners in 1876, at a cost of £I ,o4o, for So children ; aver-
ruins of the Benedictine .Abbey of St. Benet's-at-Holm, or age attendance, 6o; William Cooke, Stalham, attendance
Hulme, founded in 1031 by King Cnut the Great, on the officer
site of an earlier foundation destroyed by the Danes in 870: CARRIERS.-John Skipper, to Yarmouth, wed. & sat.; Bell,
this abbey being strongly fortified held out for some time from Hickling, passes through to Norwich, mon. wed.& sat
Hagen Simeon Warner, The Pines Grimes Richard, cowkeeper & farmer Long William, market gardener
Obee Frederick Holmes John, pork butcher Platten John, New inn, & boat & yacht
White Rev. Lewis Meadows M. A. [vicar], Howlett Ho race, steam miller ; & at proprietor
Vicarage Salhouse & Wroxham roller flour Hope Lucy Morriss (Mrs.), shopkeeper,
COMMERCIAL. mill:~, Hoveton St. John. See advert Post office
Barrett Edith Julia & Jessie (Misses), Jay James, farmer, Hall farm Simms James, shoe maker
grocers &c Knights Thomas, farmer Skipper J uhn, carrier
Bullard & Sons, maltsters Lockett James, farmer, Fern cottage Slaughter Robert, Half Moon P.H
Carman Frederick S.farmer, The Grove Lockett Robert Clarke, coal, coke, cake, Thompson George, Ferry hotel, & boat
Crowe John, cowkeeper reed, rushes, fodder &c. merchant; proprietor ; good accommodation for
Dye Benjamin, shoe maker wharfinger & carrier by water; visitors
Ford Robert, Swiln inn freightage by wherries to different Trorey William, carpenter
Grimes Benjamin, shopkeeper places
HORNINGTOFT is a scattered village and parish, 3 Douglas Lane, and held since I865 by the Rev. Francis
miles north-west from North Elmham station on the Dere- Charles De Lona Lane M.A.cantuar, who resides at Whisson-
bam and Wells section of the Great Eastern railway and sett. The Primitive Methodist chapel here was erected in
about 5 miles south-by-east from Fakenham, in the Mid r873. There is a charity of about £6 yearly. The Manor
division of the county, Launditch hundred, Mitford and House is the residence of Guy Davey esq. Tho principal
Lannditch union and petty sessional division, East Dere- landowners areJ ohn George Ellis Davey esq. J. P. of Holkham,
barn county court district, rural deanery of North Brislcy and the trustees of the la to Matthias Phillippo. The soil is
and Toftrees and archdeaconry and diocese of Norwich. mixed; subsoil, clay. The crops are on the usual four-course
The church of St. Edmund is an ancient building of flint, shift. The area is 1,405 acres ; rateable value,£ r,744; the
in the Early English style, and consists of chancel, nave population in r89r was r84.
and a western turret containing one bell : the tower fell Parish Clerk, J arncs N ea le Thing, Whissonsett.
in I796 and has not been rebuilt: the font is ancient: the Letters received through Dereham arrive at 7.30 p.m. The
church was thoroughly restored in r871, and has ISO sit- postman leaves at 5-55 p.m. The nearest money order
tings. The register dates from the year I54I. The living office is at Whissonsett & telP-graph otfice at Great Ryburgh
lS a rectory, annexed to that of Whissonsett, average tithe This parish is included in Whissonsett United School Board
rent-charge £5or, gross joint yearly value £734, including district, formed cmnpulj;orily Dec. g, 1873, & the children
93 acres of glebe and residence, in the gift of Captain of this place attend tho school there
Davey Guy, Manor house Drew George, builder, carpenter & Tait :Mary .Ann (:Mrs.), farmer
Hurdle P.H Tuffs George, farmer
COMMERCIAL, Fish Robert., beer retailer Webster Robert, farmer
Bassham Thomas, farmer Johnson Robert, farmer Wilmerson Edward, farmer
Cobb William, farmflr Mitchell Edward, farmer Winearls Augustus, farmer
Cnrson Thomas, farmer Mitchell Mary Ann (:\'Irs. ), farmer Youngman .Alien, farmer & Ja.ndowner
Doy Philip, shopkeeper Stratt<m Thomas, farmer
I
HO~SEY-NEXT-THE-SEA is a village and parish, Midlands railway, about I I north-by-west from Yarmouth
4 miles north from Martham station ou the Eastern and and 21 from Norwich, in the Eastern division of the county,
-
DIRECTORY.] NORFOLK. '
HORSIIAM ST. FAITHS. 441
Tunstead and Rapping petty sessional di\•ision, Rapping the inclosure in r8r6, is now ( r 892) let for about£ 12 yearly,
hundred, Smallburgh union, Great Yarmouth county court which sum is distributed in coals. Horsey Hall, rebuilt in
district, rural deanery of Waxham (Rapping division), arch- 1845, is the seat of Capt. Charles Compton Rising R.N. The
deaconry of Norfolk and diocese of Norwich. This parish trustees of the late Robert Rising esq. J.P. are lords of the
was frequently flooded until purchased by the late Robert manor and principal landowners. The soil is mixed ; subsoil,
Rising sen. of Horsey Hall, who, by repairing the sea bank clay and sand. The chief crops ara wheat, oats and barley.
and draining the marshes, brought it to a high state of pro- Here is a Coastguard station. The area is r,83o acres, 120
ductiveness; he also constructed a road to Somerton, which of which form a sheet of water known by the name of Horsey
is of great advantage to the inhabitants. The church of All Mere; rateable value, £r,28o; the population in 18gr was
Saints is an ancient building of stone in the Gothic style of I55·
the 13th century, consisting of chancel, nave, south porch Little Waxham, formerly extra-parochial and an-
and an embattled tower, round at the base and octagonal nexed to Waxham, is now, under the Divided Parishes Act,
above and containing one bell: on the north side is a amalgamated with this parish; it has an area of about 300
memorial window, erected in 1872 to the Rev. E. P. Neale, acres. Bernard James Cuddon-Fletcher esq. J.P. of Somer-
late vicar and in the chancel three to the Rising family : ton Hall, is lord of the manor and sole landowner.
the finely-carved rood-screen is a work of the 13th century: PosT OFFICE.-Mrs. Margaret Goose, sub-postmistress.
the church was restored in r855, at a cost of £3oo, and Letters arrive from Yarmouth at 8 a.m. & are dispatched
has 120 sittings. The register dates from the year I559· at 4.30 p. m. Martham is the nearest money order &
The living is a vicarage, average tithe rent-charge £'63, telegraph office. Postal orders are issued here, but not
net yearly value £ros, including 47 acres of glebe, w1th paid
residence, in the gift of the trustees of the late Robert School (mixed), built by the lateR. Rising esq. in 1858, for
Rising esq. and held since 1889 by the Rev.Stafford Meredith 30 children; average attendance, 22; Miss Mary Bald win,
Brown. The poor's allotment of gA. 3R. gP. awarded at mistress -
Brown Rev. Stafford Meredith [vicar], I Rising Fras. Simon R.N 1 Goose Thomas, farmer
Vicarage Webster W1lliam Goose Margaret (Mrs.), shopkeeper,
Johnson Mrs. William Beckett John, farmer Post office
Rising Capt. Charles Compton R.N. Clarke Daniel, farmer Walker Fredk. gamekpr. to Capt. Rising
Horsey hall Dack Geo.Nelson's Head P.H. & farmer
HORSFORD is a village and parish, with its houses are the remains of several tumuli. In tha grounds of
widely scattered, from 4 to 5 miles north-west from Nor- Horsford House is a very ancient Scotch pine tree, mentioned
wich, on the high road to Holt, and 2 east from Drayton in Grigor's " Arboretum." Horsford Manor is the residence
station on the Eastern and Midlands railway, in the Eastern of Thomas Barrett Lennard esq. J".P. Thomas Barrett
division of the county, Taverham hundred and petty ses- Lennard esq. J.P. who 1s lord of the manor, the Countess
sional division, St. Faith's union, N orwieh ~ounty court dis- von Rechberg, who resides in Vienna, and Gerard James Day
trict, rural deanery of Taverham and archdeaconry and esq. of Davos Platz, Switzerland, are the chief landowners.
diocese of Norwich. The church of All Saints is a low but The soil is sand, with subsoil of sand and gravel. The chief
ancient structure of brick and stone, in the Early English crops are wheat, roots, barley and hay. The area is 4,189
style, consisting of chancel, nave, north aisle, south porch acres, including a large heath ; rateable value, [3,654; the
and an embattled western tower containing one bell: the population in r8gr was 740.
north aisle was restored in r86g: the font is supposed to Parish Clerk, John Harvey.
date from the 12th century: the roof of the chancel is PosT 0FFICE.-J ohn Wade, sub-postmaster. Letters arrive
thatched, but the nave was covered with slates in 188o: from Norwich at 7 a.m. & dispatched at 5 p.m. The
there are 220 sittings. The register dates from the year noarcst money order & telegraph office is at Horsham St.
IS97· The living iB a. vicarage, average tithe rent-charge Faith's
£76, gross yearly value £r8r, net nil, including 153 acres
of glebe, in the gift ofthe Countess von Rechberg, and held WALL LETTER Box, at the' Crown,' cleared at s.ro p.m.;
since 1863 by the Rev. J osiah Descarrieres Ballance M.A. of no sunday collection
Trinity College, Cambridge, who resides at Horsham St. National School (mixed), erected in 1865, for 150 childrfln;
Faith's. There is a Free Method.ist chapel. In the parish average attendance, II7; Miss Laura Gushing, mistress
Hill Rev. George William [curate] Bone William, cattle dealer &c Laws Samuel, Crown P.H.
Lennard Thomas Barrett J.P. Horsford Bunn Herbert Samuel, bricklayer March Jeremiah,wheelwright &Dog inn
manor Bunn Jas. Wm. shopkpr. & rate collectr March William, farmer
Pratt Mrs. The Lindens Bunn John, carpenter Ohver William, firewood dealer
Pratt William Wortley Burton Brothers, farmers Pratt Robert Wortley, farmer
COMMERCIAL. Cannell Isaac, butcher & farmer Pye Abraham, baker
Andrews Edwd.mrkt.gardnr.& shopkpr Chapman James, coach painter Snelling John, farmer
Andrews Lewis, shoe maker Chapman Lewis, coach maker Spruce Robert, farmer
Arms John, farmer Chapman Robert, vermin destroyer Wade John, blacksmith, Post office
Bacon George Samuel, cowkeeper Field Samuel, farmer Walker Ezra, farmer
BarrettJames, shoe maker Forder George, farmer WarrenJas.Wm.pork butchr. & farmer
Barrett Juniper, farmer Harpley Charles, beer retailer Willimott Wm. Chas. market gardener
Barrctt Richard, farmer Harvey John, shoe maker IWoodcock Thomas Youngman, farmer,
Barrett Thomas, beer retailer Howe William, bricklayer : Heath farm
Bartram Holland, shopkeeper Howe Charles Francis, blacksmith I Woodrow Edward,miller(wind)& baker
HORSHAM ST. FAITH'S (better known as ST. at Newton St. Faith's. Here was once a Benedictine priory,
FAITH's), is a parish and head of a union, 3~ miles east founded in nos by Robert FitzWalter as a cell to the
from Drayton station on the Eastern and Midlands railway. monastery of Conches, and dedicated to St. Faith: at its
4~ north from Norwich, 7 south from .Aylsham and u8! dissolution there were seven monks, and revenues estimated
from London, in the Eastern division of the county, Taver- at £162. There was also here a hospital, founded by Ralph
ham hundred and petty sessional division, Norwich county de Glanville in the reign of Henry II. A market was for-
court district, rural deanery of Taverham and arcbdca- merly held here, but it is now obsolete. Horsehair weaving
conry and diocese of Norwich. NEWTON ST. FAITH's is a is carried on here. The Countess von Rechberg, who resides
mile further north, on the direct road to Aylsham from in Vienna, is lady of the manor and chief landowner. The
Norwich. The church of St. Mary the Virgin is an ancient soil is mixed ; subsoil, marl and clay. The chief crops are
building of flint with stone dressings, consisting of chancel, wheat, barley, turnips and hay. The area, including New-
nave, aisles, south porch and a lofty embattled western ton St. Faith's, is 2,300 acres ; rateable value, £'4,535 ; the
tower containing 6 bells : the stained east window iB a. population in r8gr, including 69 in the workhouse, was 989.
memorial to members of the Twining family, and there is Parish Clerk, Thomas Fox.
a medireval pulpit with painted panels, and an ancient font PosT, M. 0., LICENSING & T. 0., S. B. & Annuity & In-
and screen: the church was restored in 1874, at a cost of surance Otllce.-Thomas Fox, sub-postmaster. Letters
over £3,000, of which Miss Twining gave £r,ooo: there are arrive by mail cart from Norwich at 4.30 a.m. & 6.15
350 sittings. The register dates from the year 1620. The p.m.; dispatched at 6.rs p.m. LETTER Box, Newton,
living is a vicarage, gross yearly value £,87, with residence, cleared at 6 p.m
in the gift of the Countess von Rechberg, and held from 1863 ST. FAITH'S UNION.
to 1884, and secondly since 1885, by the Rev. Josiah Board day, 11 a.m. wednesday, fortnightly at the Union.
Descarrieres Ballance M.A. of Trinity College, Cambridge, The union of St. Faith comprises the following places:-
who is also vicar of Horsford. A parsonage house was Alderford, Attlebridge, Beeston St. Andrew, Rooton,
erected in r866, at a cost of £-r,ooo. The Sunday School Brandistone, Catton, Crostwick, Drayton, Felthorpe,
and 1\lission Room were erected in r88o. There is a Wes- Frettenharn, Haynford, Haveringland, Hellesdon (part
leyan chapel at Horsham and a Primitive Methodist chapel , of), Honingham, Horsford, Horsham St. Faith's, Horstead
1
442 HORS HAM ST I FAITH s. NORFOLK, (KELLY'B

with Stanninghall, Morton-on-the-llill, Rackheath, Ring- The Workhouse, half a mile north-east of the church, &
land, Salhouse, Spixworth, Sprowston, Swanington, erected in 1805, is a large structure of red brick, capable
Taverham, We.ston Longville, Wit<:hingha.ms (Great & of holding 500 inmates; Alfred Barker, master; Rev.
Little) & Wroxham. The population of the union in 1891 Josiah Descarrieres Ballance M.A. chaplain; Robert J.
wa.s 12,183; area, 48,304 acres; rateable value, £66,613 Horn L.R.C.P.Edin. medical officer; Mrs. Ann Dickerson,
Clerk to the Guardians & Assessment Committee, G. R. matron. The workhouse children attend the National
Cooke, Norwich School
Treasurer, Henry Birkbeck, jun. Norwich RURAL SANITARY AUTHORITY.
Relieving, Vaccination & School Inquiry Officers, Eastern Meets at Workhouse, wednesday, fortnightly.
district, Thomas Johnson, Sprowston; Western district,
George Hogarth Gedge, Horsham St. Faith's Clerk, George R. Cooke, Norwich
Medical Officers & Public Vaccinators, J<'rettenham district, Treasurer, H. Birkbeck, jun. Norwich
H. Taylor L.R.C.P.Edin. Coltishall; Norwich & St. J<'aith's Medical Officer of Health, Shephard Thomas Taylor M. B.
districts, Robert Jame.s Horn L.R.C.P.Edin., Horsham St. Norwich
Faith's ; West on district, W illia m Henry Griffith-Williams SCHOOL ATTENDANCE COMMITTEE.
L.R.C.P.Edin. Mattishall; Great W1tchingham district, Meets at Workhouse, wednesday, fortnightly.
Edmund Reeve, Reepham
Superintendent Registrar, Robert James Horn L.R.C.P.Edin. Clerk, George R. Cooke, Norwich
Horsham St. J<'aith's; deputy, Richard Eglington, Hors- Attendance Officers, George Hoga.rth Gedge, St. Faith's;
ham St. Faith's Thomas Johnson, Constitution place, Sprowston
Registrars of Births & Deaths, St. Faith's Western division, CARRIERs.-.Eastern & Midlands Railway, Hcrbert William
George Hogarth Gedge, St. Faith's; Sprowston Eastern Rowlaml, ag-ent
division, Thomas Johnson, Sprowston; deputy, F. National School (mixed), built in 1853 & enlarged at
Andrews, Sprowston different periods, for 250 children ; average attendance,
Registrar of Marriages, George Hogarth Gedge, St. Faith's 174; Miss Alico Edith Steward, mistress
Ballance Rev. Josia.h Descarrieres M.A. Drake Waiter & Edward, blacksmiths Lockett John William, Crown P.H
Vicarage -Eglington Richard, miller (water) & Medler Samuel, King's Head P.H
Barker Edmund, The Lilacs grocer & deputysupt. registrar Newton Richard, beer retailer, Newton
Cook William Warner, The Abbey Eglington William C. shopkeeper Newton William, poultry dealr.Newton
Horn Robert James, Lincoln house Farman Wm. basket maker & thatcher Potter Henry, shopkeeper
Matthews Samuel, Brook cottage Folk William, baker- Priestley William Walter Woolsey,
St. John Miss, 'fhe Moyse Forster Christopher Spanton, cowkeepr butcher & farmer
COMMERCIAL. Forster Thomas, bricklayer Pumphrey John, baker
Andrews Charles, grocer & draper Fox & Gold, builders Randall Henry Conyard, harness maker
Barker Alfred, master, The Workhouse Gedge George- Hogarth, registrar of Randall Henry Pestell, provision dealer
Barker Edmund M.R.c.v.s. inspector births, deaths & marriages, relieving, & rate collector
under the Contagious Diseases (Ani- vaccination&school attendance officer Reynolds Edward William, farmer,
mals) Act for the hundred of Taver- & collector for the guardians East farm, :Kewton
ham, The Lilacs Horn RobertJames L.R.C.P.&L.M.Edin. Reynolds Geo. Edwd. farmer,Elm farm
Bircham John, Crown P.H. Newton physician &surgeon, & medical officer ReynoldsWm.frmr.Wood farm,:Newton
BloomFras.Stphn.&Son,horsehairwvrs & public vaccinator, St. Faith's & Rowland Herbert William, Cross Keys
BonnickJsph.Richd.Swan P.H.& butchr Norwich districts & medical officer P.H. & florist & pleasure gardens
Bullard Walter&:VIary Ann(Mis!;l ),farmrs workhouse & supt. registrar of births, Rudd John, White House P.H
Bullard Robert, farmer, Newton deaths&marriagesforSt.Faith'sunion Thrower & Co. market gardeners
Bullard Waiter, shopkeeper, Newton Jermy Charles, Jolly Butchers P.H. & Woodcock Joseph, farmer, Newton
Cook Robins, farmer, Heath farm market gardener WoodcockPeter,market gardnr.Newton
Cook Wm. Warner, farmer, Abbey frm Jermy William, general smith & agri- Woodcock William, carter
Cooper Rachel (Mrs.), shopkpr.Newton cultural engineer
RORSTEAD•cum-STANNINGHALL form a Christmas for the benefit of the poor. Horstead Hall,
parish; the former is a village on the bank of the navigable erected in 1835, a mansion in the Elizabethan style, pleasantly
Bure, half a mile from Coltishall station on the Great Eastern situated in a dale on the river Bure, is the seat of Sir Edward
railway and 6 miles north-by-east from Norwich (the latter Birkbeck bart. D.L., J.P. Heggatt Hall, a fine Elizabethan
is 2 miles south from Horstead, and consists of one farm house, about a mile from the village, and close to Hag-
only), in the Eastern division of the county, hundred and gard or Heggatt Street, is the property of Mrs. Blake
petty sessional division of Taverbam, union of St. Faith's, Humfrey, of Wroxham, and now occupied by Mrs. Buck-
Norwich county court district, rural deanery of Taverham worth. The Provost and Fellows of King's College, Cam-
ami arch deaconry and diocese of Norwich. By an order bridge, are lords of the manor; there is also a sub-manor.
which came into operation March 25, 1885, a detached part Mrs. Blake Humfrey, Sir .Edward Birkbeck, William Henry
of Frettenham was amalgamated with this parish. The Trafford esq. D. L., J. P. of The Hall, "Troxham, and Col.
church of All Saints is a structure of flint in the Decorated Edward John Stracey- Clitherow J. P. of Boston House,
style, consisting of chancel with south chapel, nave, south New Brentford, Middlesex, are the chief landowners. The
aisle, south porch and an embattled western tower contain- soil is sand and gravel ; subsoil, mar!. The chief crops are
ing 3 bells: the roofs are of open timber work, massive and wheat, turnips and barley. The area is 2,733 acres; rate-
riCh in detail: the church was restored and rebuilt in 1879, able value, £3,067; the population in 1891 was 583.
at a cost of £3,IJ8, under the superintendr.nce of Mr. R. HAGGARD or flEGGATT STREET is an ancient hamlet I mile
Makilwaine Phipson F.S.A. architect, and has zoo sittings. south-east.
The register dates from the year 1588. The living is a Parish Clerk, John Coman.
rectory, net yearly value from tithe rent-charge £366, with LETTER Box cleared at 4·55 p.m
58 acres of glebe and residence, in the gift of the Provost Letters through Norwich, via Coltishall, arrive at 7 a.m. &
and Fellows of King's College, Cambridge, and held since for Stanninghall, via Crostwick, arrive at 6 a. m. Coltis-
1881 by the Rev. Russell Day M.A. late fellow of that college. hall is the nearest money order & telegraph office
At Stanninghall are the ruins of a church, which fell into A School Board of 5 members was formed August 4, 1874;
decay in the time of Queen Elizabeth. Betwe~n 6 and 7 Christopher Cushion, Buxton, clerk to the board; Jame.s
acres of poor land are vested in six trustees for the benefit Hunter, Coltishall, attendance officer
of the poor of the parish : the land is let in small plots to Board School (mixed), built in 1875, for 78 children; aver-
various tenants, and the rents are expended in coals at age attendance, so; Miss Annie Chestney, mistress
PRIVATE RESIDENTS. Wright Mrs · Howlett Hezckiah, farmer
Barwood Benjamin, Mill house COMMERCIAL. Minns Jacob Spence, farmer
Birkbeck Sir Edward bart. D.L., ·J.P. Amies Robt. Sharpe, corn & timber mer Moore William, farmer
Horstead hall ~ & ro Charles street Baldwin William, builder, brick maker, Norgate Sarah (Mrs.), grocer
Berkeley square w & Car!ton & Mad- lime burner & steam saw mills Norgate William Henry, shoe maker
borough clubs. London s w Barwood Benjamin, miller, East Nor- Pratt Robert, Recruiting Sergeant P.H
Buckworth Mrs. Heggatt hall folk roller mills; & at Norwich Pratt Thomas Jacob, draper
Collyer D' Arcy Bedingfeld Broome Wm. Townshend, asst. overseer· Rye William, farmer
Day Rev. Russell M.A. Rectory Brown William, farmer Smith Elizh. (Mrs. ),farmer & apartmnt.s
Falcon Michael, Horstead house Coman John, tailor Spanton .John, genl.smith & farrier
Fordcr Charles Field James, farmer & repairer of all kinds of machinery
Grant Mrs. Drummond Foulger John, blacksmith Stebbings Charles, boot maker
Lanchester Mrs Frost John, veterinary surgeon Sutron George, farmer
Utting Thomas Waiter [letters through Ketteringham He7.ekiah, farm bailiff to Utting Thomas Waiter, farmer, Stan-
Crostwick.] Sir Edward Birkbeck bart. J.P ninghall [letters via Crostwick]
DIRECTORY.] NORFOLK. BOVETON ST. JOHN. 443
HOUGHTON (HorrGHTON-IN-T:aE-DALE, or HoUGHTON On the side of the road to Walsingham are the ruins of s
ST. Gn..Es) is a parish and village on the south-east bank of beautiful little wayside chapel, in the Later Decorated
a small river, r mile south from Walsingham station on the Transition style of the 14th century, anciently a resting-
Dereham and Wells section of the Great Eastern rail way and place for the pilgrims worshipping at the shrine of Our Lady
4 miles north from Fakenham, in the Northern division of at Walsingham; here they deposited their sandals and per-
the county, North Greenhoe hundred and petty sessional formed the rest of the journey barefoot : it is now dilapi-
division, Walsingham union and county court district, rural dated and is used as a barn. Henry Lee-Warner esq. J. P. of
deanery of Walsingham and archdeaconry and diocese of Walsingham Abbey, is lord of the manor. principal land-
Norwich. The church of St. Giles, rebuilt in 1879, consists owner and lay impropriator. The soil is various; subsoil,
of chancel, nave, south porch and a low western tower, con- chalk. The chief crops are wheat, turnips, barley and grass.
taining 3 bells : there are two stained windows and a fine The area is 978 acres; rateable value, £1,456; the popula-
old illuminated rood screen : the church affords 130 sittings. tion in 1891 was 177.
The register dates from the year 1529. The living is a Parish Clerk, William Hunt.
vicarage, annexed to Little or New Walsingham, average
tithe rent-charge £102, joint net yearly value £ 170, with LETTER Hox cleared at 5-3S p.m.; sundays, 9 a.m. Letters
31 acres of glebe, in the gift of Henry Lee-Warner esq. and through Walsingham R.S.O.; delivery at 7 a.m. The
held since r88 9 by the Rev. Henry Arthur Wansbrough ALA. nearest money order & telegraph office is at Walsingham
of St. John's College, Oxford, and who resides at Little Wal- This parish is included in the Barsham United School Board
singharn. The Rev. Montagu Russell Butler, of Caius district, formed compulsorily Dec. 31, 1873, & the
College, Cambridge, has been resident curate since 189r. children attend the Board school at Barsham
Butler Rev. Montagu Russell [curate Butler Mark Barrat, farmer, Manor ho Crafer Henry James, farmer
of St. Giles'] Clarke Charles, blacksmith Gould William, Buck inn
Crafer William, Canister hall
HOUGHTON-ON -THE-HILL is a parish consisting of North Pickenham, average tithe rent-charge £380, joint
<Jf one farm, 2 miles south-west from Holme Hale station net yearly value £430, including no acres of glebe, in the
on the Thetford and Swaffham section of the Great Eastern gift of E. Champion esq. and held since 189r by the Rev.
railway and 4t miles south-east from Swaffham, in the Francis Beresford Champion B.A. of Jesus College, Cam-
South Western division of the county, hundred and petty bridge, who resides at North Pickenham. Col. Charles
sessional division of South Greenhoe, union and county l\Iundy Applewhaite J.P. of South Pickenham, is lord of the
court district of Swaffham, rural deanery of Cranwich, manor and principal landowner. The soil is good stiff
Northern division, archdeaconry of Norfolk and diocese of loam, and the subsoil is chalk. The chief crops are wheat,
Norwich. The church of St. l\Iary is a small building of barley and turnips. The area is 6or acres; rateable value,
stone in the Decorated style, consisting of chancel, nave and £8og; the population in 1891 was sr.
a western tower containing one bell: some ancient windows Letters from Swaffham by foot post arrive about 7.30 a. m.;
in the nave, supposed to date from about 1020 and which dispatched at 5 p.m. Swaffham is the nearest money
had long been built up, were re-opened and glazed in 1889: order & telegraph office
the church affords so sittings. The register dates from the The children of this place attend the school at North Pick-
year 1678. The living is a rectory, consolidated with that enham
Waters Jamcs, farmer
NEW HOUGHTON (or HoUGRTON-IN-THE-BRAKE, or rector of and resides at Ilarpley. This place was for many
HouGHTON-NEXT-HARPLEYJ is a parish and village 7 miles centuries the seat of the de Walepol or Walpole family; Sir
south from Docking station on the Great Eastern railway, Henry de Walepol was lord of Houton 35 Edw. I {1300-7)
and about 3 north from Massing ham station on the Eastern and his son, also Sir Henry, was knight of the shire for
and Midlands railway, 14 north-east-by·east from Lynn and S orfolk in 1316, and lord of Buckenharn, Bagthorpe and
ro west from Fakenham, in the North Western division of Houghton. .Houghton Hall, one of the seats of the
the .county, Gallow hundred and petty sessional division, Marquess of Cholmondeley D.L. is a mansion of freestone,
Docking union, Little Walsingham county court district, with two principal fronts, relieved by cupolas at each angles,
rural deanery of Burnham, archdeaconry of Norfolk and the front one of these, which is colonnaded, being 450 feet
diocese of Norwich. The church of St. Martin, standing long: the house was built by Sir Robert Walpole, first earl
in Houghton Park, is a structure of flint and stone in the of Orford K.G., K.B. prime minister in the reigns of George
Perpendicular style, and consists of chancel, nave, aisles, I. and George II. and some time M.P. for Lym~ Regis, from
west porch and a small embattled western tower, with the designs of Thomas Ripley, architect, and its erection
pinnacles, containing one bell: the tower was built by Sir occupied a period of 13 years. The Hall stands in a domain
Robert Walpole, rst Earl of Orford K.G., K.B. who died of r,400 acres, of which 700 are wood and 700 park and is
March 18, 1745 : the church contains monuments to Geoffry surrounded by beautiful grounds with some fine old trees.
Walpole esq. M.P. for Lostwithiel, 1714-15, d. 1726, and to The Marquess of Cholmondeley is lord of the manor and sole
Catherine (Shorter), wife of Sir Robert Walpole, who died landowner. The soil is light ; the subsoil is marl and
August 20, 1737: there is also in the church a coffin lid of chalk. The crops are wheat, oats, turnips, barley, grass,
grey marble with carved effigy and the date 1307, brought peas and rye. The area is 1,495 acres; rateable value,
to Houghton from Cokesford priory in 1522, and believed to £r,o33; the population in r8gr was 170.
represent one of the priors of Cokesford : it was replaced in Parish Clerk, Edward Ramm.
1855: the chancel was restored in r867 by the Marquess of PoST & T. 0.-Miss Martha Groom, sub-postmistress.
Cholmondeley, lay rector, when an aumbry was discovered, Letters throughSwaffham arrive at 7.50 a. m.; dispatched
which remains: there are 300 sittings. The register dates ' at 5 p.m. East Rudham is the nearest money order
from about r65o. The living is a vicarage, average tithe office. Postal orders are issued here, but not paid.
rent-charge £83; net yearly value £72, including 4 acres School, erected in 1846, for 8o boys & girls; average attend-
of glebe, in the gift of the Marquess of Cholmondeley, and ance, 20 ; the school is supported by the Marquess of
held since r888 by the Rev. Harry Edward Beck M. A. of Cholmondeley; Richard Thomas Haywood, master
Trinity Hall, Cambridge, and barrister-at-law, who is also CARRIERS TO & FHOM LYNN frequently pass through
Cholmondeley :Marquess of D.L. Hough- Corbett Waiter John,farmer,Home frm Morton Jn. Jsph. farmer, Village farm
ton hall Freuer William F.S.I. estate agent & White James, lhead gamekeeper to the
Corbett Waiter John, Home farm valuer, Estate office, Houghton hall Marquess
Morton John Joseph, Village farm Mason John, clerk of works
HOVETON ST. JOHN is a village and parish near tithe rent-charge £r79, joint gross yearly value £250, net
the navigable Bure, 8 miles north-east from Norwich, in the £202, with 6 acres of glebe and residence, built it 1882, in
Eastern division of the county, Tunstead hundred, Tunstead the gift of the Bishop of Norwich, and held since 1886 by
and Rapping petty sessional division, Smallburgh union, the Rev. Jonathan William Woolley M.A. of Corpus Christi
North Walsham county court district, rural deanery of college, Cambridge. There are four almshouses, with
Waxham, Tunstead division, archdeaconry of Norfolk and gardens, supported by the lord of the manor. Hoveton
diocese of Norwich. Wroxham station, which is the Little Broad covers about 6o acres. Hoveton House, the
junction of the line from Aylsham with the Cromer branch seat of Thomas CalthorpeBlofeld esq. M.A.., J.P. who is lord
of the Great Eastern railway, is in this parish. The church of the manor and chief landowner, is a mansion of red
of St. John is a small but ancient building of flint, in the brick, situated in an extensive and well-wooded lawn, and
Gothic style of the 15th century, consisting of chancel, nave, commands a fine view of the Great Broad, which extends
north porch and an embattled western tower of brick, con- over r2o acres, and is close to the Rure. The soil is mixed:
taining one bell. The church was restored and re-seated in subsoil, clay and graveL There is an extensive brick-field
1890, at a cost of about £4oo, and now affords 200 sittings. here. The chief crops are wheat, oats and barley. The
The register dates from the year 1673· The living is a area is :r,541 acres; rateable value, £2,041 ; the popula-
vicarage, united to that of Hoveton St. Peter, average tion in 1891 was 304.
~

444 HOVETON ST. JOHN. NORFOLK.


li ,Parish Clerk, Thomas Curtis. This parish was made contributory to the Wroxham School
WROXHAM PosT, M. 0., T. 0., S. B. & Annuity & Insur- Board May 21, 1875, sending 2 members
ance Office.-Edward Jn. Ward, sub-postmaster. Letters
through Norwich delivered at 7 a.m. & 2.15 p.m.; dis- National School (mixed), erected in r886 at the expense of
patched at 12. so, S· 10 & I. 30 p. m. A WALL LETT:I!.'R T. C. Blofeld esq. for go children; average attendance,
- Box near the "Black Horse" is cleared at 4.30 p.m. sun- 45· Miss Harriett S. Grounds, mistress
days 12 noon
Blofeld Worshipful Thomas Calthorpe Daws Donald, tea, g-rocery & provisions Jimpson James, King's Head P.H
IILA., J.P. Hoveton house of the finest quality; pure teas, the Lambert Fredk. Wm. Black Horse P.H
~Bipkins Charles Utting growth of India & China, Point Lockwood l<'rances (Mrs.) & Rachel
Moore J ames Brett House stores (Miss), shopkeepers
Wheeler Rev. Thos. Archibald [Baptist] Dawson John Barwick, carpenter Mitchell Walter James, farm bailiff to
Woolley Rev. Jonathan William M.A. Farman Robert, baker & shopkeeper T. C. Blotield esq. M.A
The Vicarage Fox William Mason, builder Mitchell William, farmer
Girling William, farmer, Home farm Morter William Chas. sedge collar makr
COMMERCIAL. Hargrave William, farmer Press Herbert, boat builder
Buck Isaac, farmer, Mill House farm llowlett Horace, miller (steam), wheat Read Charles, Horse Shoes P.H
Curtis Benjamin, market gardener meal manufacturer, coal & seed mer- Spanton George, blacksmith
Curtis Thomas. overseer & rate & tax chant, Wroxham roller flour mills ; & Spooner William, farmer
collector & clerk to Homing school at Salhouse & Horning. See advert Ward Edwd. Jn. tobacconist, Post office
board lludson Jn. N orris, farmer & reed mer Wiley Thomas Hall, butcher
HOVETON ST. PETER is a parish of scattered college, Cambridge, who resides at Hoveton St. John.
houses, on the Norwich road, r! miles north from Wroxham Hoveton Hall, the property of Sir Henry J a cob Preston
station on the Norwich and Cromer section of the Great bart. J.P. of Beeston Hall, Beeston St. Lawrence, but at
Eastern railway, and 9 north-east from Norwich, in the present occupied by James William Malcolm esq. is a hand-
Eastern division of the county, hundred of Tunstead, Tuns- some mansion, surrounded by a park of 200 acres, conta.m-
stead and Happing petty sessional division, Smallburgh ing an ornamental piece of water, out of which flows a small
union, North Walsham county court district, rural deanery rivulet, which eventually falls into the river Bure. Sir
of Waxham Tunstead division, archdeaconry of Norfolk and Henry Jacob Preston bart. is lord of the manor and principal
diocese of Norwich. The church of St. Peter, situated to landowner. The soil is mixed ; subsoil, sand, clay and
the south-west of Hoveton Park, is a small edifice of brick gravel. The chief crops are wheat, oats and barley. The
and stone in a plain style, consisting of nave, south porch I area is 952 acres ; rateable value, £1, r8o; and the popula-
and a western bell-cot containing one bell: the porch bears tion in r8gr was 136.
the date 1624 : the cl~u~ch was re-seate_d by subscription in Pansh Clerk, Thomas Curtis.
1885, and has So s1ttmgs. The register dates from the
year 16 24 . The living is a vicarage, annexed to that of Letters received through Norwich arrive about 8 a.m. The
.Hoveton St. John, average tithe rent-charge £ 179, ·joint nearest money order & telegraph office is Wroxham, in
gross yearly value £250, net £202, with 6 acres of glebe, in the parish of Hoveton St. John
the gift of the Bishop of Norwich, and held since 18g6 by The children of this parish attend the school at Hove ton St.
the Rev. Jonathan William Woolley M.A. of Corpus Christi John
1\Ialcolm James William, Hoveton hall Ling Benj. farmer, Hall farm [letters Ling William, farmer, Hall farm
Fox George, farm bailiff toT. C. Blofield should be addressed Ashmanhaugh, [letters should be addressed Ashman-
esq. North farm Neatishead, Norwich] haugh, Neatishead, Norwich]
Hargrave William, farmer
HOWE is a village and parish, 5 miles east from Swain- I yearly value,£275,with 56 acres of glebe and residence, in the
thorpe station on the Ipswich and Norwich section of the gift of Charles Wheler esq. and held since 1871 by the Rev.
Great Eastern railway, and 6 south-east from Norwich, in Charles Henry Lipscomb, of Queen's College, Oxford.
the Southern division of the county, Clavering hundred, I There is a small charity, left in 1738 by the Lady Elizabeth
Loddon and Clavering petty sessional division and union, Hastings, for the education of eight poor children. George
Norwich county court district, rural deanery of Brooke John Holmes esq. J.P. of Brooke Hall, Norwich, is lord of
western division, archdeaconry of Norfolk and diocese of the manor and sole landowner. The soil is sand and clay;
Norwich. The church of St. Mary is a small but ancient subsoil, mixed. The chief crops are wheat, oats, beans and
building of flint, in the Early English style, consisting of barley. The area is 757 acres; rateable value, £712; the
chancel, nave, south porch and a round western tower population in r88r was 92.
contaming one bell : the stained east window was placed by Parish Clerk Philip Stone.
the Rev. C. H. Barling, of Brooke, and there is a small '
stained lancet window in the chancel: the staircase to the Letters through Norwich, via Brooke, arrive at 7·5o a.m.
rood-loft remains and has been repaired : the church was Brooke is the nearest money order office & Trowse
restored in r86 4 at the cost of the Rev. William Tattersall Newton the nearest telegraph office. LETTER Box, cb.urch
B.A. rector (1840-71 ), and the Rev. John Holmes, of Brooke ; wall,, cleared at :4· 3° P· m
and affords 75 sittings. The register dates from the year The children o~ thrs place attend the school at Brooke
1559· The living is a rectory, with that of Little Poring- A sunday school was founded by Lady Elizabeth Hastings
land annexed, average tithe rent-charge £21i; joint net 1 in 1734 & rebuilt by the present rector iu 188 I
Lipscomb Rev. Charles Henry [rector], Seaman Hayward, farmer, The Hall Tidnam James, farmer, Church farm
Rectory
- OLD HUNSTANTON with HUNSTANTON.
OLD HUNsTANTON is a parish, village and healthful sea- tains a very fine brass to Sir Roger L'Estrange, esquire of the
bathing place, with terminal station at Hunstanton, on a body to Henry VII. ob. 15o6, and includes his effigy in
branch from Lynn, of the Great Eastern railway, about armour, covered with an heraldic tabard, the hands being
r mile from the old village, II4 miles from London, 17 uplifted with the palms outward; above his head is a helmet,
north-by-east from Lynn and ro west fromBurnham market, with lambrequin and crest, and over all rises an elaborate
in the North Western division of the county, Smithdon bun- triple canopy, supported by pinnacles enriched with 8 niches.
dred, Smithdon and Brothercross petty sessional division, containing effigies of his ancestors, all in heraldic tabards:
Docking union, Lynn county court district, Heacham rural there is also an inscription to Henry le Strawnge, ob. 1485,
deanery, arch deaconry of Norfolk and diocese of Norwich. and Katherine (Drury), his wife; and another to Sir Hamon
The sands extend 3 miles, and the bathing is safe and le Strange bart. ob. r654, and Dame Alice (Stub be) his wife,
agreeable. Both villages are lighted with gas from works I ob. r6s6: there are other memorials to Sir Thomas L'Estrange
at New Hunstanton, the property of a Limited Company, bart. d. Xov. 1751, and Dame Ann (Calthorpe} his wife, d.
and supplied with water hy another Limited Company, from 1742, Sir Henry L'Estrange bart. his son, d. 21 Sept. 176o,
a spring at Old Hunstanton. The district is governed by without issue, when the title became extinct, Charles
a local board of 7 members, formed March 25, r8g2. The L'Estrange, d. 25 Aug. 1692, Ann L'Estrange, d. r647 and
church of St. Mary the Virgin is a noble structure of flint Ann L'Estrange, d. r663: there is also a brass to Edmund
and freestone, in the Decorated style, and consists of chanf'el, Grene and Agnes, his wife, c. 1490, and one of a man in
clerestoried nave, aisles, south porch and au embattled towel" i armour, c. 1485 : the porch was restored in r864 in memory
at the west end of the north aisle, containing one bell ; there I of the late Mr. le Strange: the church affords 6oo sittings.
is an ancient Norman font, round which a pavement of rich The register dates from the year 1538, but no entry occurs
mosaic has been laid by the present lord of the manor: the during the reign of Queen Mary: there is also a terrier of
stained east window, a memorial to the late Mr. le Strange, the time of Philip and Mary containing an inventory of
was erected by his wife and children: the south rlerestory ehurch furniture. The living is a vicarage, with the rectory
windows are also filled with stained glass: the church con- of Ringstead l'arva annexed, average tithe rent-charge,
DIRECTORY.] •
NORFOLK. •
OLD BUNST.ANTON • 445
£193; gross yearly value, £640, including 12 acres of glebe, red brick facings and Bath stone sills, opened on Easter
with residence, in the gift of Hamon le Strange esq. and held Monday, 1879. by T.R.H. the Prince and Princess of Wales:
since 1891 by the Rev. Herbert Deedes Barrett B.A. of this institution was designed as a memorial of thanksgiving
Magdalen College, Oxford, and surrogate. Gibson's charity, for the recovery of the Prince of Wales from his severe ill-
consisting of a rent-charge of £24, is appropriate] equally ness in I 872 ; the interior comprises 1 I bed rooms, uniformly
between the poor and repairs of the church. In Old llun- furnished, two large sitting rooms at either extremity of the
.stanton there is a good hotel, the "Neptune," a few lodging- building on the ground floor for men and women respec-
houses and a supply of batt1ing machines. Hunstanton tively ; a dining room, 30 feet by 20, well furnished in oak
cliff, which rises to a hei,ght of about 6o feet above the and beech, and a visitors' hall, together with rooms for the
beach, is commonly called "St. Edmunds Point," from a committee and matron ; the total cost, including site, was
tradition that St. Edmund the Martyr landed here when he £7,000, of which ,£1,000 was given by the Earl of Le1cester
came from Germany to be crowned King of East Anglia: K. G. : a new wing, capable of holding 20 patients, was
this cliff exhibits one of the most attractive geological sections erected in 1883: the Home, now available for 6o patients, is
on the coast ; at the base is carrstone of dark brown tint supported by voluntary contributions and the payment of
below and yellow above; on this rests a band of bright red small sums by the patients; convalescents are received from
chalk, above which, forming the top of the cliff, is white the Eastern and Midland counties generally, and even from
chalk : near the highest point of the cliff stands the light- London. The Police Station is in Princes gate, and includes
house, a substantial building, completed in 1830 by the a residence for a sergeant : petty sessions for Smithdon and
Trinity House and npwards of so feet in height ; the light Brothercross petty sessional division are held at Beeton's
exhibited is on the catoptric principle, and can be seen from rooms, Hunstanton, on the second :\Ionday in each month
the decks of vessels on dark nights, with a clear atmosphere, at II a. m. and at Docking every fourth .Monday at 11 a. m.
at a distance of 18 or 20 miles. In a field adjoining the I<' or list of magistrates and places in the divisions see DDcking.
lighthouse are the ruins of l::lt. Edmund's chapel. The sea PosT & M. 0. 0., S. B. & Annuity & Insurance Office, Old
washes against the cliff with great force, but at low water Hunstanton.-Mrs. Annie Downing, postmistress. Letters
persons may walk along the sands for a distance of nearly received through Hunstanton R.::l.O. arrive at 7 a.m. &
a mile, to a place called " the Oyster Sea," where skate, are dispatched at I2.35 & 5- IS p.m. Telegraph office at
haddocks, codfish, codlings, soles, turbot, plaice, oyst.ers, Hunstanton
lobsters, crabs and shrimps and periwinkles are taken in
PosT, M. 0. & T. 0., S. B. & Annuity & Insurance Office,
abundance. The coast on each side of the cliff is secured Hunstanton (Railway Sub-Office Letters should have
a,"'linst the incursions of the sea by sand heaps, called
R.S.O. Norfolk, added).-Samuel Southgate, postmaster.
'' meales." Golf Links were formed on the Sand hills close by Letters arrive at 6.15 & 10. IS a.m. & are dispatched
the sea in I891, the club already numbers about 10omembers.
at 10.3s a.m. & 6.45 p.m.; sunday, 5-2S p.m. only.
There are coastguard and lifeboat stations; the Licensed Money order business, 9 a. m. till 6.15 p.m. ; telegraph
Victuallers' Association erected a boathouse and presented
business 8 a.m. till 8 p.m. week days & from 8 till xo
a lifeboat in 1867, which in 1887 was replaced by a new life-
a.m. on sundays
boat of improved construction. Hunstanton Hall, a fine
mansion, standing in a beautifully wooded park, is the seat WALL BoXEs, Greeve Gate road, cleared at 10 a. m. & 3 & s.so
of Hamon le Strange esq. D.L., J.P.; in 1853 it was much p.m.; flhmgle Pit road, at ro a. m. & S-30 p.m. & Station,
injured by a fire, when the ancient banqueting hall aud IO.IS a.m. & s.3o p.m. PILLAR LETTER Box, Cliff
eighteen other rooms were destroyed. Hamon le Strange esplanade, cleared at 9·45 a. m. & 5.30 p.m
esq. is lord of the manor and principal landowner. The LocAL BoARD.
BOil is rich loam, and very productive; the subsoil, chalk.
The chief crops are wheat, barley and turnips. The Downs, Clerk, John Samuel Bedford Glasier. Tamworth house
near Great Ringstead, are a delightful resort for gipsy and Medical Officer of Health, Chas.Richd. Whitty B. A. ,M. D. ,M.ch
picnic parties. The area is 1,983 acres of land, and 795 Collector, James Cookson Walker, s Church .street
water; rateable value, £10,831; the population in I871 was PuBLIC EsTABLISHMENTS : -
816; and in x88x, I,soB, and in x891, r,7o6, including 6 in Coastguard Station, Edwd. Smith, chief boatman in charge
the lighthouse. Lifeboat, Edward Smith, coxswain in charge
Parish Clerk (Deputy), Rubert Mellows. Lighthouse, William Evans, keeper
Police Station, Benjamin Lowe, sergeant ; two constables
Hunstanton is a district adjoining Old Hunstanton. in the summer & one in the winter months
The church of St. Edmund, a chapel of ease to the parish
church, is a building of flint and red chalk with carr stone PUBLIC OFFICERS : -
dressings, in the Decorated style, and consists of chancel, Collector of Assessed Taxes, Geo. Hy. Mallett, Hunstanton
Medical Officer of Health for Docking Union Rural Sanitary
nave, aisles and a west porch, but there is no tower or bell:
the north aisle, called "the visitors' aisle," was erected in Authority, Charles Richard Whitty B.A., M.n., M.ch.
1879, at a cost of nearly £8oo, principally contributed by Minna lodge, Hunstanton
visitors : there are several memorial windows and a richly Pier Master, Charles Marsters, Hunstanton
carved oak pulpit, formerly in the choir Clf Peterborough PLACES OF WoRSHIP, with times of Services:-
cathedral, but recently (I892) removed and presented to St. Edmund's church, Rev. Herbert D. Barrett B. A. vicar;
this church by H. P. Gates esq. J.P. : the church affords 700 8, 10.30 & 11.30 a. m. & 3 & 6.30 p.m. ; daily, 10.30 a.m.
sittings. Here is a Nonconformist Union chapel, built in & S-30 p.m
187o, for all denominations, with 300 sittmgs, and an iron Union Congregational chapel, Rev. Richard Athol Cliff;
Wesleyan chapel, erected in 1889. Hunstanton, now a well- 10.30 a.m. & 6.30 p.m.; thurs. 7.30 p.m
known and much frequented watering-place, occupies, with- Wesleyan, Rev. Frederic Henry Thomas; 11 a.m. & 6.30
out doubt, one of the most healthy sites in the kingdom: p.m. ; wed. 7.30 p.m
the climate is usually dry and bracing, owing to the scanty SCHOOLS:-
rainfall and the absence of fog, except at very rare intervals, A School Board of 5 members was formed May 29, 1874;
and the air is known to be strongly impregnated with ozone; George Whitby, clerk to the board & attendance officer,
in spring the east wind is less keen than in the midland Groove Gate terrace
counties: the pier, erected in 1870, is Boo feet in length, Board (Hunstanton), built in 1874, with teachers' residence,
supported on cast-iron columns, resting on screw piles, and at a cost of £1,700, for 150 boys & girls & 50 infants;
affords a spacious landing-place and an agreeable promenade. average attendance, 100 boys & girls & 30 infants; George •
The bathing is both safe and good. There are three good Henry Mallett, master; Miss .A.lice Crossby, infants' mist
hotels, a few villa residences, and numerous lodging-houses. Church of England Endowed, Old Hunstanton, erected in
The Ringstead chalybeate spring, extensively recommended 184I, for 110 children; average attendance, 36; George
by the faculty, is situated on the Downs within a walk or Crosby Lockwood, master
short drive of the town ; the surrounding country affords Night schools are held during the winter months
pleasant drives and walks ; wild fowl congregate here in
great numbers during the winter months. The Hunstanton Railway Station, John Crane, station master
Convalescent Home, for men, women and children, which Carrier to Great Eastern Railway Company, Wm. Oldfield
stands on an elevated site of about 2 acres, close to the C.a.RRIEB.S.-Lynn & other places between Hunstanton &
Lynn road, commanding a view of the sea, fii"St established Lynn, Robert Bales, tues. & fri. ; James Jarviq, tues. &;
in June, 1872, now occupies a building of carr stone with sat.; Thornham, Robert Bales, wed. & sat
I Hare Rev. John Church Francis x.A !le Strange Roland l.P. The Hall
Hunsta.nton (Old). [vicar of Holme-next-the-Sea] Newton John Joseph
Barrett Rev. Her bert Deedes B. A. [vicar] Howard Mrs. Sea View house Bailey Emest, le Strange Arms hotel
Campbell Mrs. Fraser, The Nutahell Hunn John William Bnllen Elizabeth (Mrs.), lodging house
Fenwick Noel le Strange Ha.mon D.L. 1 J.I'. The Hall Burgess Thomas, baker
C. N. & S. 29
- - -
'446 OLD HUNSTANTON. ·NORFl>LK. LKEI.l.y 8
• t

Dodman William Chad wick, fat'Iller Balding Mary Ann (Miss), lodging Feltham Emma (Miss), milliner, ~
Downing Annie (Mrs.), Post office house, 3 Beaconsfield parade Stuart terrace
Fidderman Waiter William, beer·retlt Baldrey John Marshall, lodging house, Fertig Frank, hair dresser, De Linden.
Holmes Israel, shopkeeper 6 Stnart terrace house, 2 Church street
Hooks William, lodging house Bales Sl. lodging ho. Charlbnry bldngs FittMary( Misll ),rlrP_ssma.xGreeveGtB.rd
Hunn John William, farmer Barkham Thomas Hall, lodging house, Fletcher Fredk. lodging ho. 2 Albion ter
Lambert Waiter, lodging house Sunny side · !<'!etcher Selina (Mrs.), lodging house,
Laws Robt. Wm. Neptune hotel, builder Barnes Mary (Miss), boot & shoe maker, Tower Hill cottages
Lewis Chas. Robt. farmer, Lodge farm 4 le Strange terrace Forster Priscilla. (Mrs.), lodging house,
Mel ton John, farmer Batterham John, grocer, Sand Pit road 3 Roseneath terrace
Mitchley Samuel, tailor Beeton James, lodging house,& builder, Gamble Mary Ann (:\1~. ), lodging
Newton John Joseph, land agent to H. Cranmer house house, 6 Charlbury buildings
le Str11.nge esq · Beeton John Wm. stationer & printer Gane Charles (Mrs.), lodging house, 4
Parsons Emily (Mrs.), Victory P.lt: Begley James Richard, boot maker, & Beacnnslield terrace
Richardson Henry, carter _ lodging house, 3 Charlbury buildings GaylerElijah, lodg.ho. I I Chrlbnry.bldgs
Royal National Lifeboat Institution Beverley & Home, painters & paper- Glaiser John Samuel Bedford, private
(Rev. H. D. Barrett, hon. sec) hangers, 18 Church street boarding house, & clerk to the local
Watson Henry John, grocer, draper & Beverley Elizabeth· (Mrs.), lodging board, Tamworth house
wine & spirit mer.; & at Hunstanton house, Ocean lodge Godfrey Hy. lodging ho. Highfield cots
Wicks Mary (Mrs.), laundress Bishop Henry, lodging house, High st Gomm Isabella (Mrs.), lodging house,
Woods James, shoe maker Bishop Waiter, lodging house, 9 Parkfield lodge
Charlbury buildings Green & Almond,lodging ho.Wobum ho
Hunstanton. Blow Mary (Mrs.), lodging house, Green Alexander, lodging house, &
PRIVATE RESIDENTS. Marlborough house painter, 8 Church street
Armes Mrs. Irby lodge Blundell Misses, lodging house, St. Green Jas. lwlgiug- ho. 2 Highfield cots
Bagge The Misses, Mintlyn house Mary's villa Gregson Charles Alfred Fitzherbert,civil
Ba.rkha.m Thomas Hall, Sunnyside Bond Samuel, butcher, le Strange ter engineer, Ivy lodge
Beloe Mrs. t Stuart terrace Bowler Benj. lodging house, 3 Beach ter Groom Elizabeth (Mrs.), lodging house,
Blathwyte Mrs. The Holme Bowles Isabella (Mrs.), lodging house, 3 Greeve Gate terrace
Bradfield Mrs. Glaisda.le lodge Peterboro' house Gurneys, Birkbeck, Barclay, Euxton &
Bridges Misses, Lyndhurst Bowman John, baker & confectioner, Cres.'!well, bankers (branch of) (H.
Burcham John G. Surrey lo. Church st le Strange terrace J. Wat.son, agent), open mon. thurs.
Cann Miss, Homefields Breeze Benjamin, lodging house, 2 & sat. ro till 2 ; draw on Ba.rclay,
Cave Miss, Lanuria house Roseneath terrace Bevan & Co. London E c
Cliff Rev. Richard Athol [Congre- Bridges Annie Maria &Florence( Misses), Hackney Arthr. J n. boys' school, Towyn
gationaL], Marlborough house ladies' school, Lyndhurst Hackney Arthur John (Mrs.), ladies'
Clifton Cyrus Arthur, Northcote house Brown Margaret (:Mrs.), lodging house, school, Rheanva
Cresswell George, 5 Cliff esplanade, Carman villa Haines Elizh. (Mrs.), refreshmt. ho. kpr
Evison Charles, Avondale house Buck James, cab propr. Cambridge ho Hall Christr. lodg. ho. 6 Cliff esplanade
Fitz-Roy Mrs. I Belvoir terrace Bunting Jn. beach bailiff, Tower Hill ho Hanley Thomas, shoe maker, & lodging
Fleming Mrs. Grace, St. Mary's vill11 Burgess James, confectioner, High st house, 14 Church street
Gates Henry Pearson, Cosgrove lodge· Burgess Susannah (Mrs.), lodging Hart Peter Eagleton, mana.ge1' & col·
Glaiser Jn. SI. :B3dford, Tamworth ho house & fancy repository, High st lector of water works, 12 Church st
Gregson Ch!iTl)s Alfred Fitzherbert Callaby Robert George, ironmonger, Hepgin A..nnie Elizabeth (Miss), lodging
C.E. Ivy lodge general agricultural & shoeing smith, house, 3 Victoria buildings
Hackney John Arthur, Stuart terrace tinman, brazier, zinc & iron plate Hill Rosa (~'lrs. ), lodging house, 4
Hansman Henry, 3 Bel voir terrace worker; tricycles & ponies & traps on Greeve Gate road
Hewitt I<'rancis, Wollaston house hire, Tabor house. ::-lee advert Hill Thomas, general ironmonger, sani-
Jermyn Alfred, Shelford cottage Gallaby Robert George (Mrs.), lodging tary gas & water fitter, mechanical
Kelly Mrs. Louisa Ann, 5 Stuart ter house, Tabor house engineer, whitesmith & bellhanger,
Kendle Henry, 4 Bel voir terrace · Callagon Hannah (l\1iss), lodging house, 4 Ureeve Gate road
Monement Mrs. Vinery lodge Church street Hodgett.s John Thomas,farmer & green-
Morgan-Brown Rev. John M.A. St. Cave Emma (Miss), lodging house, grocer, High street
. Hodgetts Sarah (Miss), lodging house,
Edmund's school I Lanuria house
Morgan-Brown H. Heathcote, · St. Cawston Susannah (~iss), lodging Pierpomt house
Edmund's school house, Hatfield house Holmes Thos. lndging ho. 6 Church st
Morgan-Brown J. Cyril B.A. St. Chad wick Jn.R plumbr.Greeve Gate rd Homefields Ladies' College (Miss E. R.
Edmund's school , , Chilvers Frederick Tibbett, nursery- Cann, lady principal)
Morga.n-Brown Mrs. St. Winifreds man, Heacham road Hooks J n. lodging ho. 2 Greeve Gate rd
Page John Henry Clifton Cyrus Arthur L.F.P.s. surgeon, Bunstanton Esplanade Co. Limited
Pattrick William; & at Lynn N orthcote house (Ingram Watson, lessee of hall &
Pitt RElv. Edwa.rd Martin M.A. [r~ctor Convalescent Home (Charles Richard grounds), 2 le Strange terrace
of Bagthorpe] . Whitty, hon. medical officer ; Mrs. IIunstanton Gas Co. Limited) H. Brad-
Robin son Chas. Thos. Mansfield• house Page, matron) field, sec)
Saunders Miss, Gatl~y college Cook E. (Miss), preparatory school for Hunstanton Golf Club (C. R. Whitty,
Smythe Mrs. Eton villa. boys, York house hon. sec)
Taylor Joshua, Holmleigh CouisinsJohn,lodging ho.Hutts cottages llunstanton Library & Subscription
Thomas Rev .FredericHen ry[W esleyan ], Crisp Thomas, lodging ho. l\'Iaissonnette Reading Room (Miss M. Louisa Kelly,
Clarence house '· Crisp Wm. bootmaker, Greeve Gate rd librarian), The Pier
Thompson George, Burleigh house Crown Abraham, town crier & bill Hunstanton Water Co. Limited (Peter
Thompson John, I Beaconsfield :parade · poster, 5 Roseneath terrace · Eagleton Hart, manager & collecwr)
Todhu~ter Mrs. Retr~at villa , , · •
Crown Robt. dairyman, Heacham road J a.rv1s ..Ja.mes, carrier & dairyman, 6
1 Dabbs Charles, lodging house, Shel- Greeve Gate road
Troubndge The Misses
Turner Jabez, Lindum lodge · don ho·1se J ones & Dunn, hosiers, le Strange ter
Walker H.ev. Henry M. A. Victoria house Downing John! lodging ho. Osborne ho J onesAlfd.Isaac,blacksmith,Stanley cost
Whitty Charles Richard B.A. 1 M.D. Drake Jn. Wm. lodging ho. 3 Albion ter J ones Lewis, fancy rep os. le Strange ter
Minna lodge Drnry & Lovejoy, architects & survey- Joyce Stephen Matthew, lodging house,
- , •· 1 .· • ors, Gra fton villa. 12 Charlbury buildings
COMMERCIAL. ,, , L. Ducker & Co. carriage builders, coach KleinConrad,lodging house,4 Albion ter
Adcock Willi11m, tailor,& lodging house, & shoeing smiths &c.; horses carefully Lambert & Sons,grocers,& agents for W.
Chalk Pit road _ . shod by experienced workmen. See & A. Gilbey, wine& spirit merchantS',
Alien & Neal, chemist~ .&· druftgists :· 'advertisement Somerset house
prescriptions carefully mad~·· up; Duck er Elizabeth (Mrs.), apartments, Leach Lionel,lodgmg house,& carpenter,
cigars & tobacco of the fines't quality; Thorpe cottage ' Charmouth house
le Strange terrace; & at Lynn . . Ducker Wm. lodging ho.6 Roseneath ter Linnell Martha (Mrs.), lodging house,
Andrews Charles, wholesale, & tetail Ed'wards Frederick (late Willoughby), Victoria buildings
.wine, spirit & beer merchant, 5 'Vl.c,- old establ:lshed public luncheon, din- Londori & Pro~incial Bank- Limit.ed
. toria buildings. ~ee advettiSe~nt ing & tM rooms, opposite the Rail- 1 (sub-agency) (George W. Pago,
Archer Henry, lodgmg ho. W'iSl,l~di no way station. See advertisement manager); open tu~da:ys, thursdays
Arnold Robt.lodging ho.2Langlf"!i-M~ots Eghhgton Armie ~Mrs.}, l-odging house',. & saturdays, ro till 2; draw on head
Baker David Moyce1 .IJmlterer, 2 Belvoir terrace office, 7 Bank buildings E c & Glyn,
Grosvenor house Ellill James,carpenter,Keen Hill terrace Mills, Currie & Co. London E c
D1RECTORY.] NOEFQLK! ICKBOROUGH,

MaceBros.photogphrs.Esplanade studio St. Edmund's Preparatory School (The Walker Kate (Miss), todgina- house, St.
Mace L. & M. (Misses), lodging house,·:~; Rev. J. Morgan-Brown M.A. of Wor- Edmund's villa ·
Roseneath terrace cester college, Oxford, head master) Waters Margarct Sarah (Miss),lodg~
McLean Wm.photographer&fancy repos Sandringham Family Hotel, now the house; superior furnished apartment~
Mallett Goorge Henry, assessor of land property of the G. E. Railway Co.; facing the sea, Britannia house &;
& income tax & rate collector for the close to the station & overlooks the Granville house
districts of Old & New Hunstanton green & promenade&pier; sitting&; Walsham Elizabeth & Jane (Misses),
Marsters Charles, pier master, Olive ho bed rooms en suite ; telegraph ad- apartments, 6 Beach terrace
Marsters Martha (Miss), lodging house, dress, Sandringham hotel, Hunstantn WatsonHy.Jn.drapr.&atOldHunstanton
· 2 Greeve Gate terrace ~aundersBetsy(Mrs. ),lodg.ho.Church st Watson In gram & Co. auctioneers,
MasonThos.boot & shoe ma.2 Clifton ter Saunders J.(Miss),young ladies' school; house & estate agents & valuers, 2 1~
May Mary (Mrs.), lodging house, 3 St. pupils prepared for examinations ; Strange terrace & at Esplanade hall
Edmund's terrace home comforts; terms moderate, Gat- Watson Ingram, draper, fancy reposi-
MeltonThos.lodg.ho. xo Charlbury bldgs ley college tory. & dealer in english & foreign
Mitchley William, lodging house,Hill ho Sea.born11 George, cabinet maker 1 & goods, le Strange ter. & Esplanade hall
:Morgan-Brown Rev. J. M.4. of Worces- apartments, De Linden house Watson James, lodging ho. 3 Church st
ter college, Oxford, St. Edmund's Sharp~ Caroline (Mrs.), loJging house, Watson John Wm.lodging ha. Austin bo
preparatory school 13 Church street Watson Mary Elizabeth (Miss), ladies'
Morrell Thomas, lodging ho.6 Beach ter Sharpe William, bricklayer & slater, 13 school, St. Edmund's house
Moulam Lucy (Mrs.), lodging house: Church street Webster Harriet (Miss), lodging house,
superior furnished apartments facing SbarpeWilliam,cab proprietor& farmer; ro Church street
the sea, Victoria buildings furnished apartments, close to rail- Weeks Step hen, lodging ho. Rothesayho..
'Moulam William (Mrs.), grocer & con- way station & beach, Fern house Whit by George, clerk to school board &
fectioner, 2 & 3 Victoria buildings Smith James, greengrocer, 5 Greeve attendance officer,clerk to the justices.
:Kelson John, grape grower,Scarboro' ha Gate road & Charlbury buildings Greeve Gate terrace
Nelson John, builder & contractor; Smith William o:iver, coal dlr.lrene cot Whitty Charles Richard B.A.,M.D.,M.ch.
estimates on applicaton, Scarboro' ho South Alexander Francis,lodging house, surgeon, medical officer of health for
Neep Frederick, lodging house, & coal 3 Cliff esplanade· Docking union rural sanitary authori-
mer. Mordaunt lodge, Greeve Gate rd Southgate Frederick, lodging house, ty & medical officer of health for
Norton Alban,lodging house,6 Albion ter Richmond house, Cliff esplanade Hunstanton local board, Minna lodge
Nourse &. Roweii,GoldenLion family Southgate Sa.muel, lodging house, & Wicks Phoebe (Mrs.), lodging house, St.
& commercial hotel, facing the sea postmaster, Windsor house Owen's lodge
OldfieldWilliam,cab prop. Caledonian ha Southgate William, lodgmg house, & Wiles William, ladies' & gentlemen's
Osborne Samuel, refresh.rms.Church st builder, High street .boot & shoe maker; every description
Page John Henry, high school for boys Spanton Rohert, lodging house, Gas cot of boots & shoes made on the
Parsons Caroline (Mrs.), lodging house, Steer Mary( Mrs.), lodging house, 4 Cliff premi;;es; best quality & good work-
Norwich house esplanade mans hip guaranteed; repairs of every
Peek Misses, lodging house, Clairville Swainson George Browne, organist & description neatly executed, Norwich
Penson Mari>ha (Miss), lodging house, I professor of music, Surbiton lodge house
Charlbury buildings Tennis Grcnmds (Ingram Watson & Co. WilloughbyJames,family grocer & wine,
Pitcher Rayner, lodging ho. 4 Church st lessees) spirit, ale & stout merchant, in caskil
Police Station(l:lenjaminLowc,sergeant) Terrington Snphia Sarah(Mrs. ), lodging or bottles, 3 le Strange terrace
PondCharles, watch makr.le Strange ter · house, 4 Roseneath terrace Willoughby James, private hotel &.
PopeSarah(Miss ),lodging ho.Gcneva cot Thompson Gco. lodging ho. Burleigh ho boarding house; a home from home.-
Potter Charles, lodging ha. Brighton ha Thompson William Ghristopher, car- near station, beach & pier, Middleton
Pratt Charlotte (Miss), lodging house, penter, Humber lodge terrace. See advertisement ,
Laurel house, Beach road Tomlimon Thomas, lodging house, 2 Willoughby Robert, butcher & lodgin~
Pratt Walter, plumber & glazier, 7 St. Edmund's terrace house, Camden house
Charlbury buildings Turner Misses, ladies' school, 8 Beacons- WilloughbyWalt. boot ma.3GreeveGt.rd
Rands.Frank, butcher, Victoria building> field parade · \YinchHy.&Sons, fishmongrs.Station yd
Ranger Charles, lodging ho. 15 Church st Twiss Charles, lodging ha. Somerset ho Winch Henry (Mrs.), lodging house,
Reynolds Elizabeth (Mrs.), lodging Wagg William,lodg.bo.& carter,High st Langham cottages
house, I Victoria buildings WalesAlfred Wm.lodging ho.sAlbion ter WinloveHenry, baker&confctnr. Bank ho
RippingaleMartha(Miss),lodginghouse, Wales Charles, coal merchant. Wood George, lodging house, & boot
Grafton villa Wales Sarah Ann (Mrs.), Railway maker,g Church st.&Railway crossing
RixMary(Mrs. ),lodging house,Clifton ho family & commercial hotel & posting Woodcock J oseph, lodging ho. Beach ho
Roberts Rober~ Watsor1, lodging house, house, facing the Rail way station \Voodrow J olm, lodging ho. Tavistock ho
& bathing machine proprietor, Mid- Walker James Cookson, inspector of WoodsGeo.Herbert,grngrcr.Somersetpl
dleton terrace nuisances for the Docking rural Wright Rosina (Mrs.), furnished apart-
Rowell Benjamin Frederick, mineral sanitary authority & collector for ments with good sea view; terms
water manufacturer Hunstanton local board, 5 Church st moderate, 4 Beach terrace
HUNWORTH is a parish on the Glaven, about 2 miles of Caius College, Cambridge. There is a small Primitive
south-south-west from Holt station and 2~ from Melton ~Icthodist chapel. Constance Marchioness of Lothian is
Constable station, both on the Eastern and Midlands rail- lady of the manor and principal landowner. The soil ie
way, in the Northern division of the county, Holt hundred, light; subsoil, gravel and chalk. The chief crops are
petty sessional division and county court district, Erping- wheat, turnips, barley and grass. The area is 838 acres ;
ham union, rural deanery of Halt and archdeaconry and rateable value, [771; population in x891 was 206.
diocese of Norwich. The church of St. Lawrence is an PosT 0FFICE.-Mrs. Frances Green, receiver. Letters
edifice of flint in the Perpendicular style, consisting of through Dereham arrive at 7.30 a.m.; dispatched at 5
chancel, nave, south transept, south porch and an embattled p.m. Holt is the nearest money order & telegraph oftice1
\l'estern tower : there are about 100 sittings. The register No sun day post. WALL LETTER Box cleared week days
dates from the year 1653. The living is a rectory, consoli- at 4.30 p.m
dated with that of Stody, tithe rent-charge (Hunworth School (mixed), built for this & Stody parishes, about 18491
£152 Jos. Stody £237), average £294, joint net yearly for 70 children; average attemlanee, 35; the school is
value £225, including S7i acres of glebe, with residence, supported chiefly by Constance Marchioness of Lothian,
built in 1Bso, in the gift of Con stance Marchioness of Lothian, but has also an endowment of £6 yearly; Mrs. Jane
and held since x88I by the Rev. Hugh Scales Fullagar M. .A. Loads, certificated mistress
Fullagar Rev. Hugh Scales 11LA. Rec- [ Ebden Edward, grocer & draper
tory [letters through Melton Con- ! Greves Robert, flour dealer
I
Lake James, farmer, Beck farm
Loads John William, farmer
stable] J Hinsley John, Bell r.rr I Pegg William, miller (water)
ICKBOROUG H (or IcKBURGH) is a parish on the road ' consisting of chancel, nave, north porch and an embattled
from Brandon to Swaffham and on the river i-\·issey, 6 miles western rower containing a clock and one bell: there are
north-east from Brandon station on the Ely and Thetford brasses to Francis, 3rd Baron Ashburton, d. 6 Sep. 1868,
section of the Great Eastern l'"'dilway, in the South \Vestern aml to Denzil Hugh Baring his second son, who died at Nice
division of tbe county, Grimshoe hundred and petty sessional 26 May, x866: all the windowil are stained and there is a
di_vision, Swafibam union an~ .county court district, Gran- 1 finely carved pu~pit: the <:hu!ch, with the exception of the
T

lnch rural deanery, South diviswn, archdeaconry of :'\or folk 1 tower, was entirely rebwlt m x865-6, at the expense of
and diocese of Norwich. The church of St. PP-ter is a build- Francis, 3rd Barou Ashburton, and has 200 sittings. The
ing of flint with stone dres~ings, in the Early En~lish style, register dates from the ye~r 1740. The living i£~ a rectory1

j' ' . . f ,
C. N. & s. 29•
• •
-
448 ICKBOROUGH.· NORFOLK. [KELLY's
annexed to that of Langford, average tithe rent-charge£ I88, weekly newspapers, besides various magazines, and i..'! undet
joint net yearly value £16I, including 33 acres of glebe, with the superintendence of Mr. William Johnson. William Am-
residence, in the gift of William Amhurst Tyssen Amherst burst Tyssen Amherst esq. of Didlington Hall, is lord
esq. and held since I89I by the Rev. Wm. Ledwich of the manor anrl chief lantiowner. The soil is light and
Mitford M.A. of University College, Durham. A charity of sandy ; subsoil, clay. The crops are chiefly barley and
27 acres of land, bequeathed by the Dingle family to the turnips. The Rectory and two farmhouses, with a few
poor inhabitants, is arranged in allotments of 3 roods each labourers' cottages, comprise the whole village. The area
and now produces £19 I41J. 6d.; each allotment, when vacant, is I,6o6 acres ; rateable value, £883; the population in 1Bg1
being re-let by auction. There are also four almshouses, was I8 I.
erected in 1887, on a site given by William Amhurst Tyssen Parish Clerk, John Ollett.
Amherst esq. M. P. m pursuance of a bequest of llortense Letters from Mundford (Railway Sub-Office), which is th~
Eugenie Claire, daughter of Hugues Bernard (Maret), the nearest money order & telegraph office, arrive at 8 a.m.
Due de Bassano in France and widow of Francis 3rd Lord & 5-45 p.m. W.&LL LETTER Box cleared at 8.30 a.m. &
Ashburton (d. 15 Dec. 1882). At West Farm is a public 5·45 p.m
reading room, lent by Mr. Tyssen Amherst, for the benefit School (mixed), built in 1851 by Lord Ashburton & snp-
of the parishioners of Langford, Buckenham Tofts, Colveston ported in part by W. Amhurst Tyssen Amherst esq. M.P. ;
and Ickborough and also for the tradesmen generally em- it will hold 8o children ; average attendance, 44 ; Miss
played on his estate. The room is supplied with daiiy and Esther Dennant, mistress •
Mitford Rev. William Ledwich
Rectory
M.A.,
Bloy Henry, blacksmith
Dixon John, shopkeeper
I
Johnson William, farm bailiff to W. A.
Tyssen Amherst esq.
ILLINGTON is a parish and village on the banks of a restored: a new cross has been placed on the eastern gable
rivulet, I} miles east from Wretham station on the Great of the chancel, and the west doors and the churchyard gates
Eastern railway and 7 north-east from Thetford, in the have been renewed in oak: the church was reopened after
Mid division of the county, Guiltcross and Shropham petty restoration November 8, IB87, and affords about 70 sittings.
ses!lional divis10n, Shropham hundred, Wayland union, The register dates from the year r672. The living is a rec-
Attleborough county court district, rural deanery of Rock- tory, average tithe rent-charge £103, net yearly value £8o,
land, archdeaconry of Norfolk and diocese of Norwich. The including 25 acres of glebe, with residence, in the gift of F.
church of St. Andrew is a small edifice of flint, in the Per· W. Kellett Long esq. and held since r86r by the Rev. God- '
pendicular and Early English styles, consisting of chancel, frey John Bird, of St. Bees. Fortescue Waiter Kellett Long
nave, south porch and an embattled western tower contain- esq. B.A. of Dunston Hall, is sole landowner. The soil is
ing 3 bells: there is an inscription to Sir John Churchman sandy; subsoil, chalky. The chief crops are wheat, barley
knt.: a new oak roof was placed on the nave in r88r, the and oats. The area is 1 1 298 acres of fertile land; rateablB
floors relaid and the walls plastered; in the course of the value, £561; the population in x8gr was 78.
work fragments of an alabaster figure were discovered on Parish Clerk, John Baxter.
the south.west side of the chancel arch, and two small win-
dows were found, one in the north, the other in the south LETTER Box cleared at :;.30 p.m. Letters through Thetford
wall, and an inscription on stone outside the church at the arrive at 7.30 a.m. East Wretham is the nearest money
north-west angle of the nave ; the chancel has. since been order & telegraph office
new roofed "'ith oak, the flooring renewed and the windows The children of this place attend a Dame school in the village
Bird Rev. Godfrey John [rector]
Harvey William Robert, Illington hall
I
Pavey John, gamekeeper to William R.,
Harvey esq
INGHAM is a parish and village 2 miles from the navig· 1364 to 1466: the chancel was restored in 1876, at the cost
able Ant, ri miles east-by·north from Stalham station on of the Ecclesiastical Commissioners, and the nave and ai~les.
the Eastern and Midlands railway, I6 north.east from Nor. at a total cost of about £3,000: there are 300 sittings. The
wicb and 9 south·east from North Walsham, in the Eastern register dates from the year 18o1 only, the previollS registers
division of the county, Tunstead and Happing petty sessional having been destroyed by fire. The living is a vicarage,
division, Rapping hundred, Smallburgh union, North Wals- average tithe rent-charge £"189, gross yearly value £220,
ham county court district, rural deanery of Waxham, Hap- including 25~ acres of glebe, w1th residence, in the gift of
ping division, archdeaconry of Nor folk and diocese of Norwich. the Bishop of Norwich, and held since 1873 by the Rev.
The church of the Holy Trinity, formerly collegiate, is a Nathaniel Wilson. In the parish are 17 acres of land, the
large and handsome building of flint, with stone dressings, rent of which, £22, is given to the poor in money; there is
in the Gothic style, consisting of chancel, nave, south aisle, also a charity of £3 for poor widows, and another called
south porch and a. lofty embattled western tower with pin- "need money," being the interest on £so invested in Con·
nacles containing 2 bells (one of which is cracked) : under sols and producing 27s. 6d. yearly. A fair for cattle and
an arch on the north side of the chancel is an altar tomb stock is held annually on Trinity Monday. The lordship of
with recumbent effigy to Sir Oliver de Ingham, Seneschal of Ingbam was possessed by a family of the same name, of
Guyenne in 1325 and who died in 1344 ; on the side of the whom Oliver de In~ham was living in xr83 and John da
tomb was the following inscription: Ingham in the reign of Richard I. Sir Oliver de Ingham,
"Jttl)tlnsitt ®libct be lngltam gist icJ].. great grandson of the last, Seneschal of GasCCligne and Aqui-
d ~amc <!fll~abctlt sa .cmnvagnc, qne ln!! ~icn be taine and Lord Warden of the Marches of Guyenne in the
.les al mcs, ait mntJ.l : " reign of Edward Ill. had two daughters and co-heiresses,
the effigy, like that of Sir Roger de Kerdeston at Reepham, the younger of whom, Joan, conveyed Ingham to her second
reposes on a bed of stones or pebbles and the position is also husband, Sir Miles de Stapleton, of Bedale, in Yorkshire,
identical, the right hand being laid on the sword and the left who, in the 14th century, founded a cha.ntry in the church
arm thrown aCl'oss the right so that the band tou~hes the of Ingham with a warden and two priests, in honour of th~
pebbles on the right side ; the figure is clad in mail, with Holy Trinity ; this foundation afterwards became a priory
bascinet and camail; at the back of the arch is a mural of friars of the order of the Holy Trinity, otherwise known
painting, now nearly destroyed, representing a forest with as " Trinitarians " or " Mathurines :" at the Dissolution
wild beasts and an archer winding his bugle : at the east end there were seven friars and a revenue estimated at £63
of the south aisle is an altar-tomb, with sculptured figures yearly: the priory lands were granted to Sir William Wood-
of Sir Roger de Bois and Margaret his lady ; the knight is house, of Waxham, who afterwards exchanged the priory
in complete armour, his head resting on a Saracen's head, grange manor, appropriate rectory, and lands with William
coupe, and at his feet is a bound, with its paw on a gauntlet; Rugg, Bishop of Norwich, for the priory of Hickling and
his arms :-argent, two bars with a canton gules, over all a other possessions, which are still attached to that see: a
fillet sable, are yet visible on his surcoat, and his wife's robe portion of the walls of the priory still remain and there was
is checked with his arms and her own ; it is remarkable that a cloister on the north side of the church. Ingham Hall, th&
both figures wear the mantle of some order, having as a badge ancient seat of the De Ingham Stapletons, has been modern-
on the right shoulder a cross pattoo, the upper limb of which ized; hut portions of the old hall are still standing, and the
was removed to make room for a motto, now illegible ; the estate and ball are now the residence of John Borrett esq.:
inlaid brasses in the chancel, which included some of the Mrs. Coustos (formerly Whaites) is lady of the manor. The
r1chest in the county, were nearly all stolen in x8oo, when principal landowners are John Borrett esq. George Walter
St. Mary's chapel was pulled down to save the expense of Whittleton esq. Robert Ives esq. l. P. of Calthorpe, William
repairing its roof, and the church laid open: but there still Wenn esq. of Walcott and Fr-,mcis Clowes esq. of Sutton
remains a singular brass with effigies to Sir Miles de Staple- Hall, Norwich. The soil is good mixed ; subsoil, sand,
ton, founder of the priory, ob. Dec. 4, 1364, and Joan (de gravel and clay. The chief crops are wheat, oats and barley.
lngham), his wife ; the figure of the knight is clad in a The area is 1,5o3 acres; rateable value, £:a,46o; the popu-
bezanted 11urcoat, over studded armour: in r889 a brass lation in 1891 was 415.
plate was placed over the vestry door by the Hon. Miles Parish Clerk, Barnabas Kirby.
Stapleton (now Lord Beaumont), bearing the names of the
leading members of hi8 family buried in the church from PosT OFFICE.-Lewis Francis Myhill, sub-postmaster. Let-

DIRECTORY.] NORFOLK. .lNTWOOD. 449
• ters through Stalham S.O. arrive at 7 a.m. ; dispatched National School (mixed), erectM in t865 by the Rev. Isidor
at 3·40 p.m. No post on sunda.y. Stalha.m is the neare-st Lichtenstein, for 6o children ; average attendance, 46 ;
money order & telegraph office Miss Emma Glover, mistress
. Borrett John, Old hall Ames Robert, jun. farmer, Halthorpe I Myhill Lewis Francis, relieving & vac-
Coustos Mrs. Manor house Borrett Jn. farmer & landowner,Old hall cination officer for Rapping district &
Gladden Mrs Cracknell Alfred, market gardener registrar of births & deaths for Stal-
Wenn Herbert, The Grange Cutting William, Swan P.H ham sub-district & school attendance
Whitaker Henry Wright Dyball John William, farmer & carter officer,for the Small burgh union, Post
Whittleton George Walt. Ingham house Gibbs William, farmer office •
Wilson Rev. Nathaniel, Vicarage Gladden Geo. (Mrs. ),farmer, The Grove Wells Thomas grocer & draper
Gladden Geo. Rt. miller (wind) & farmr WennHrbrt.frmr.& lndownr.TheGra.nge
COMMERCIAL. Hales William, blacksmith Whittleton George Waiter, landowner
A\lard Robert William, farmer & carter Harris Thomas, farmer & farmer, Ingham house
..Allard Willia.m, farmer & carter Harvey Martha (Miss), dress maker Woolston Aaron, farmer [lett~rs
..Ames Robert, wheelwright Lane Thomas, farmer, Junction farm through Palling]
INGOLDISTHORPE is a village and parish, on the The living is a rectory, average tithe rent-charge £236, net
Lynn and Hunstanton road, I mile east from Snettisham yearly value £220, including 40 acres of glebe, with resi-
.station on the Lynn and Hunstanton branch of the Great dence, erected in 1858, in the gift of and held since 1855 by
Eastern railway and ID miles north-north-east from Lynn, the Rev. William Thomas Beckett M.A. of Trinity College,
in the North Western division of the county, Smithdon Oxford. The common was inclosed in 1858, 30 acres being set
hundreu, Smithdon and Brothercross petty sessional divi- apart for fuel allotments, 8 acres for cottage gardens and
sion, Docking union, Lynn county court district, rural allotments and 4 acres as a recreatwn ground. On the
deanery of Heacham, archdeaconry of Norfolk and diocese of summit of the bill at the foot of which the village is situated
Norwich. The parish is watered by a small rivulet called the stands Mount Amelia, a plain square mansion, the residence
Jngol, which flows westward to the Wash, and from which the of the Misses Davy. The Manor House, a substantial modern
village takes its name. The church of St. Michael, which house of red brick with white stone facings, is the seat of
.occupies the site of at least two earlier structures, is a large the Rev. James Bellamy D. D. president of St. John's College,
.building of flint and stone in the Early English and Perpen- Oxford. The Rev. James Hellamy D. D. of St. John's College,
.cular styles, and consists of chancel, nave with clerestory, , Oxford, who is lord of the manor, Miss Davy, John William
.aisles, south porch and an embattled western tower, contain- ! Davy esq. of Kilverstone, near Thetford, and the trustees of
ing 3 bells: the chancel is Perpendicular, but has a Decora- the late John B. Goggs esq. of Dersingham Hall, and
.ted east window and there are windows of this date in the Emmanuel College, Cambridge, are the principal land-
.aisle : the nave is Early English : the oldest portion is the owners.. The soil is of a light mixed character ; subsoil,
.tower, which is partly built of rubble; the font is Norman, chalk and green sandstone, called in the neighbourhoodcarr
and has some fine carved work ; the chancel has modern stone. The land i'l farmed chiefly on the four-course system .
..sedilia and the roof beams are supported on corbels, enriched The area is I, 390 acres ; rateable value, £2,361 ; and the
1

with figures of saints and angels, executed by the late Mr. population in 18gr was 308.
W. Brown, of Lynn: the rood loft staircase exists on the Parish Clerk, Thomas Townshend .
.north side of the chancel arch, but the doorway has been built PosT 0FFICE.-William Townshend, sub-postmaster. Loo-
up; a Perpendicular screen of "oak separates the nave and don & other letters are received through Lynn by ma1l
cbam•el; the corbels of the nave roof represent the patri- cart at 5.30 a.m. & are dispatched at 6.15 p.m.; box
archs and prophets: the east end of the south aisle, inclosed cleared at 5-30 p.m. Snettisham is the nearest money
by screen-work, forms a chapel, containing a piscina and order & telegraph office. Postal orders are issued here,
'bracket: in 1876 a memorial window was erected to Capt. J. but not paid
Davy R.N., J.P. and there are six other stained windows: the I Parochial School (mixed), built in 1858, for 6o children;
.benches in the nave and chancel were both copied from average attendance, 51 ; Miss Elizabeth Hannah Wright,
;ancient examples in the church: opposite the south porch mistress
stands an ancient cross: the church was restored in 1857-8, CARRIERS pass through the village several times during the
.and has 189 sittings. The register dates from the year I76o. week to & from Lynn
Beckett Rev, Wm. Thm:~. M.A. Rectory I Emmerson James, shopkeeper
Bellamy Rev. James D. D. Manor house Fayers Thomas, cooper
I
Martins John, butcher
Newstead Herbert, blacksmith
Uavy Mis.ses, Mount Amelia Grange Robert, cattle dealer & farmer Lewis Richard, farmer, Manor & Old
COMMEHCIAL.
Abbott Ge_o~ge, beer retailer
Askam Wllliam, coal dealer
I Hodgetts John Thomas, farmer
How~rd John, ~hip inn
MarrmgtonDaVId,carpntr.&wheelwrght
Hall farms
Utting William, fish dealer
'

.ING WORTH is a l""illage and parish, in the vale of the B. A.of Trinity College, Cambridge, who resides at Erping-
.river Bure, 2 miles north from Aylsham station on the East ham Lodge. Here is a Free Methodist chapel. Constance
Norfolk section of the Great Eastern r.1ilway, and I~ from Marchioness of Lothian is lady of the manor of Ingworth
.Aylsham Town station on the Eastern and Midlands rail- on the part of Hoe, and Frederick Howe Lindsay Bacon
way and 7 north-west from North Walsham, and stands in Windham esq. of Hanworth Hall, is lord of the manor of lug-
the Northern division of the county, South Erpingbam bun· worth. The principal landowners are the rector and Con-
-dred and petty sessional division, Aylsham union and county stance Marchioness of Lothian. The soil is sandy; subsoil,
court district, rural deanery of Ingworth and arcbdeaconry sand and gravel. The chief crops are wheat, roots, barley
.and diocese of Norwich. The Bure is here crossed by and hay. The area is 11 507A. IR. IP. ; rateable value,
two bridges, each of a single arch. The church of St. Law- £936; the population in 1881 was 144.
.rence is a small but ancient building of f:lint, in the Early Parish Clerk, Robert N ewstead.
English style, consistin1r of chancel, nave and south porch
and has one bell; the church formerly bad a round tower, PosT OFFICE.-James Gaul, receiver. Letters received
which fell in 1822 : there are I 50 sittings, So being free. through Norwich, Yia Aylsham, are delivered about 8
The register dates from the year I558. The living is a a.m. & are dispatched at s.Io p.m. The nearest money
Tectory, average tithe rent-charge £129, net yearly value order & telegraph office is at Aylsham
.£139, including 13 acres of glebe, in the gift of F. H. L. H. The children of this parish attend Aylsham & Erpingham
Windham esq. and held since IB35 by the Rev. George Fish schools
Beck Robert, farmer I Gaul James, post office I Ives Robert .J.P. fanner
.Brett George, farmer Harmer Caroline & Fanny (Misses), Neave Jacob, shopkeeper
Brett William, boot maker farmers Watts 'Ihomas, farmer
Burrell John, market gardener Hart Henry Gardiner, miller (water) & Wilson John, shoe maker
Uunbam George, farmer farmer
lNTWOOD is a village and parish, pleasantly situated 3 the east window is stained : the church was thoroughly re-
miles east from Hethersett station on the Thetford and Nor- paired in 1853, at the expense of the late Joseph Salisbury
IIVich section of the Great Eastern railway, and 3§- south- Muskett and Hudson Gurney esqrs. and has 150 sittings.
west from Norwich, in the Southern division of the county, The register dates from the year 1538. The living is a
:Swa.insthorpepetty sessional division, Humbleyard hundred, rectory, consolidated with that of Keswick, average tithe
Renttead union, Norwich county court district, rural rent-charge, £282; joint gross yearly value £303, including
deaaeryof Humbleyard, archdeaconry of Norfolk and diocese 4<>t acres of glebe, with residence, in the gift of Lient.-Col.
of Norwich. The church of All Saints is a structure of flint C. W. J. Unthank, and held since 1842 by the Rev. F..dmund
and stone in the Perpendicular style, consisting of chancel, Saul Dixon li.A. of Corpus Christi college, Cambridge; the
oa.ve, south porch and an embattled western tower with a Rev. William Barlee )[.A. of St. Mary Hall, Oxford, who
circnlar base and octagonal belfry storey containing 5 bells: resides at Cringleford Hall, baa been curate in charge si!'JCA!
r45o INTWOO'"D. NORFOLK. (:k:Ett.Y's
lntwood Hall, a modern mansion, the seat of Lieut.-~ The chief crops are of the usual kind. The area is 617 acres •
"! :r87g.
:Col. Clement William Joseph Unthank ;J.P. sole freehold rateable value, £r,422; the population in 1891 was 62. '
landowner, was rebuilt on the· site of a house long occu- Parillh Clerk, Mark Carman.
pied by Sir Thomas Gresham, who founded the Royal Ex- Letters through Norwich, via Eaton, arrive at 7.15 a.m.
change, London, A.D. I565, in the reign of Queen Elizabeth. The nearest money order & telegraph office is at Eaton
The soil is light; subsoil, chalk and brick earth and gravel. The children of this place attend the school at Cringleford
Unthank Lieut.-Col. Clement William Page William, farm bailiff to Lieut.-~
Joseph D.L., J.P. Intwood hall Col. Unthank
IRMINGI.AND is a parish on the Bure, a mile east William Earle Gascoyne Lytton BulwerJ.P. of HeydonHall,
from Corpusty station on the Eastern and Midlands railway is lord of the manor. Waiter H. Bolton esq. of Oulton Hall,
and si miles west-north-west from Aylsham, in the North- and the Earl of Orford are the principal landowners. The
ern division of the county, South Erpingham hundred and soil is mixed ; subsoil, clay and gravel. The chief crops are
petty sessional division, and Aylsham union and county court wheat, roots, barley and hay. The area is 714 acres; rate-
district. The ancient church once standing here was taken hle value, £732; the population in 1891 was 6.
down many years since. The living is a rectory, consolidated ELMERDALE is a hamlet I mile north-east.
with that of Ileydon, joint net yearly value about £320, in-
. eluding 20 acres of glebe, in the gift of Brig.-Gen. w. E. G. Letters through Norwich via Aylsham. Saxthorpe is the
Lytton Bulwer J. P. and held since r888 by the Rev. Benja- nearest money order & Corpusty station is the nearest
min John Arm strong M. A. of Caius College, Cambridge, who telegraph office
re<;ides at Heydon. Of the ancient hall only one wing now This parish is included in Corpusty United School Board
remains, and is occupied as 8 farmhouse. Brig.-Gen. district., formed in 1875
Cornish Ezra, farmer & lime merchant
IRSTEAD (formerly called 0RSTEADA) is a parish and, church was extensively repaired in 1844, and has r8o sittings.
straggling village on Barton Broad, which is here joined by 1 The register dates from the year I538. The living is a rec-
the navigable river Ant, 3 miles north-west from Wroxham i tory, average tithe rent-charge i,"rso: gross yearly value
station on the North Walsham branch of the Great Eastern I £r73, with 13 acres of glebe and residence in the gift of the
railway, 8 south-east from North Walsham and r I north-east!' Bishop of Norwich, and held since r887 by the Rev. Roger
from Norwich, in the Eastern division of the county, Tun- Lee M A. of Trinity College, Cambridge, and domestic chap-
1

stead and Happing petty sessional division, Tunstead bun- ; lain to the Earl of Gosfnrd. Here are allotments for the
dred, Smallburgh union, North Walsham county court dis-: poor, on which tarf is cut. Sir Henry Jacob Preston bart.
trict, rural deanery of ·waxham, Rapping division, archdea-: J.P. of Hill House, Northrepps, Cromer, who is lord of the
conry of Norfolk and diocese of Norwich. The church of St. ! manor, and Charles and Benjamin Cubitt esqrs. are the
Michael is a small building of flint and stone in the Late f principal landowners. The soil is mixed: subsoil, sand,
'

Decorated style, with the exception of the aisle, which is gravel and clay. The chief crops are wheat, oats and barley.
1

Perpendicular; and consists of chancel, nave, south aisle; The area is 1,o65 acres; rateable value, £r,o26; the popu-
with porch, and a western tower containing one bell: in the i lation in 1891 was 136.
chancel is a memorial window to William of Wykeham,rector I Letters through Neatishead by mail cart from Norwich,
of this parish in the year 1347, founder of New College, arrive at 9 a.m. The nearest money order office is at
1

Oxford, 1380, and of Winchester College 1378, and Bishop Neatishead, telegraph oflice at Wroxham
of Winchester from 1366 until his death Sept. 27, 1404: the 1 The children of this parish attend the school at Neatishead
Lee Rev. Roger M.A. Rectory Chaplin Edward, farmer Yotmgs William, farmer
· Alien Robert, reed merchant
Balls Thomas, shoe maker
Gay John, coal mer. & wherry owner
Sidell John, farmer I
I
Youngs \Vm.jun. farmer, The Hall farm

, ISLINGTON (or TILNEY-CUM-lSLINGTON) is a village modern mansion, is the seat of William Derisley Harding
and straggling parish, near the high road between Lynn esq: the Islington Lodge estate was reclaimed from the bed
and Wisbech, 2 miles south from Clenchwarton station and of the river Ouse in I82I, and has been converted into good
3! east from South Lynn station, both on the Bourn and pasture land. Thomas Edward Bagge esq. of Gaywood
Lynn joint rail"ay, 5 west-south-west from Lynn and Hall, is the impropriator of the great tithes and lord of the
9i from Wisbech, in the North Westr,rn division of the manor. Gustavus Helsham esq. of St. Mary's Hall,Wiggen-
county, hundred and petty sessional division of Freebridge hall St.-Mary-the-Virgin, Sir William Hovel! Browue fiolkes
Marshland, union of Wisbech, county court district of Lynn, hart. D. L., J .P. of Hillington Hall, Thomas Edward Bagge
rural deanery of Lyon Marshland and archdeaconry and esq. and William Derisley Harding esq. the trustees of the
diocese of Norwich. The church of St. Mary, situated near late Watson Failes, and Roger Kerrison esq. of Norwich, are
the Hall, at the north end of the parish, is a cruciform 1 the prinr:ipal landowners. The soil is loamy and clayey,
building of stone, in the Early English style, consisting of and the subsoil is sand. The chief crops are wheat and
chancel, nave, transepts, north porch, and an embattled beans. A great part of the parish is fen and drained by a
western tower containing 2 bells: in the chancel is a me- i steam engine of 40 horse power. The area is r ,65u.
moria! window: there are ISO sittings, 100 being free. 'l'he ; 2R. I3P.; rateable value, £2,634; the population in 1881 was
register dates from the year I559· The living is a vicarage, 271.
average tithe rent-charg-e £79, net yearly value £194, in- Parish Clerk, Solomon Alien.
eluding 6 acres of glebe, with residence, in the gift of the Letters through Lynn, arrive at 9 a. m. The nearest money
Lord Chancellor," and held since 1874 by the Rev. William order & telegraph office is at Wiggenhall St. Germans
Baker Punsfer F.R.G.s. and Theo. Assoc. of King's College, I WALL Box near the Vicarage cleared at 5.1o p.m. on
London. Islington Hall, a mansion of red brick, standing week days only
in well-wooded grounds, i~ the property of Thomas Edward National t-ichool (mixed), for 75 children; average attend-
Bagge esq. M. A., n.L., J.P. and temporarily occupied by ance, 52; master vacant
Captain .kicardson Charles Saunders. Islington Lodge, a CARRIER TO LYNN.-Cassell, tues. & sat
Harding Wm. Derisley, Islington lodge Fearing John, Fox & Goose P.H. & Kent John, cow keeper
Puns fer Rev. WilliarnB'lker Th.A.K.C.L., farmer, Dale Linfred John William, farmer, Smeeth
F.R.G.S. Vicarage Gardner Thomas, farmer house,Marshland [letters via Terring-
Saunders Captain Ricardson Charles, Goodley Lewis, farmer & landowner, ton St. John]
Islington hall Lord's Bridge farm Pearmain N oah, gardener to Capt. R. C.
Alien Solomon, parish clerk Haynes John, farm bailiff to Gustavus Saunders
Bart Crawford, beer ret. Lord's bridge Helsham esq. Fen Plowright David, farmr. White Hall frm
Beckett 'I'hos.Hall,farmr. The Chestnuts Hunt John, farmer, Poor Quaker's frm Shinn W1lliam, farmer, Lord's bridge
Cassell John, shopkeeper Inglet James, farmer, & assessor & col- Softley William, cowkeeper
Elliott James, cowkeeper, Toll house lector of Queen's taxes, Lord's bridge Tann \Vatts, cowkeeper
ITTERINGHAM is a village and parish, 4 miles north- three stained windows; attached to the church are the ruins
west from Aylsham station on the East Norfolk branch of of a s·mall chapel: there are 100 sittings. The register dates
the Great Eastern railway and 3~ miles from Corpusty sta- from the year ·156o. The living is a reetory, with that of
tion on the Eastern and Midlands railway, in the Northern Manningtonannexed,titherent-charge£352;average£267,
division of the county, South Erpingham hnndred and petty joint net yearly value £214, including 22 acres of glebe, in
sessional division, Aylsham union and county court district, the gift of the Earl of Orford, and held since 1856 by the
rural deanery of lngworth and archdeaconry and diocese of Rev. Peter James El win, of St. Bees. There is a Wesleyan
Norwich: the village is on the river Rure, over which is a chapel on Itteringham common, and a Primitive Method~
. bridge of one arch. The church of St. Mary the Virgin is an ehapel in the Wolterton roarl. The Earl ot Orford, who is
edifice of flint in the Perpendicular style, consisting of chan· lord of the manor, 11.nd Constance Marchioness of Lothian
eel, n&ve and 8 western tower containing one bell, and has are the chief landowners. . The soil·. is sandy and gravel'

DffiECTORY.J NORFOLK/' KENNINGHALL.

45l
subsoil, various. The chief crops are wheat, turnips, barley patched at 3.40 p.m. The nearest money order & tele-
and grass. The area is 1,442 acres; rateable value, £1,762; graph office is at Aylsham. Postal orders are issued here,
the population in r88r was 319. . but not paid ·
Parish Clerk, Edward Slipper. Parochial Schools (mixed), erected in 1846 & enlarged 1875 1
PosT 0FFICE.-Herbert Williamson, receiver. Letters for 65 children; !!overage attendance, 6o; Mrs. Laura C.
received through Aylsham, deli ,·ered at 8. soa. m. ; dis- Williamson, mistress .
Elwin Rev. Peter James, Rectory Cook Benjamin, miller (water); & at Neal Elijah, baker
Ives Frederick D. ltteringham house Dunkirk, Aylsham Seely Waiter Henry, farmer
Davison George, farmer Slipper Edward, wheelwright
COMMERCIAL. Fowell Robert, carpenter & farmer Weaights Matilda (Mrs.), Walpole Arms
Ayton Stephcn, farm bailiff to Robert Hall Henry, blacksmith P. H
Ives esq Hawkins George, farmeF Williamson Herbert, grocer & draper,
Barwick William, farmer Ives FrederickD. farmer,Itteringham ho Post office
Clark John, boot & shoe maker Lake J ames, farmer
· KELLING is a parish about 3 miles north from Holt manor, William Davy, the trustees of William Arnold esq.
station on the Eastern and Midlands railway, and 9 west and Mr. W. T. Bird are the chief landowners. The soil is
from Cromer, in the Northern division of the county, Holt light heath; subsoil, gravel and sand. The chief crops are
hundred, petty sessional division and C'Ounty court district, wheat, turnips, barley and gra..'!s. The area is 2,191 acres
Erpingbam union, rural deanery of Holt, and archdeaconry of land, formerly including Boo of heath (500 of which is
and diocese of X orwich. The eh urch of St. Mary is a now under cultivation) and 20 of water ; rateable value,
building of ·flint with stone dressings, in the Later Gothic £1,591; the population in x8gx was 228.
style, and consists of chancel, nave. north transept, north Parish Clerk, James Nurse.
porch and an embattled western tower containing one bell; Letters through Holt R.S.O. arrive about 8 a.m. WALL
thB south transept is in ruins: in 1888 the church was re· LETTER Rox, cleared at 3.50 p.m. week days only. No
seated, and an oak pulpit erected at a cost of £ roo, and it sunday post. Holt is .the nearest money order & tcle-
now affords 130 sittings. The register dates from the year graph oilice
1558. The living is a rectory, with that of Salthouse Board School (mixed), for the Wabourne United School
annexed, joint tithe rent-charge, £520; average, £375; Board district, erected· in xil76 & opened in October, 1877 ;
net yearly value, .£310, with x6 acres of glebe and resi- it will hold 128 children; average attendance, 89: & has
deuce, in the gift of John Savory esq. and held since 1885 master's house & large garden attached ; James
by the Rev. Charles Ernest Lowe M.A. of St. Edmund Hall, FiP.lding-Cottrill, master ; Mrs. Emily Fielding-Cottrill,
Oxford. Onesiphorus Randall esq. who is lord of the mistress
Baker William C. Kelling cottage \ Duffield James, farmer Nurse Jas. Platten,miller (wind)&farmr
Lowe Rev. Charles Ernest M. A. Rectory Ebden John, shopkeeper Starling Frederick, market gardener
Dewing William, beer retailer Green Robert, farmer Taylor Edward, farmer, Hill farm
Duffield Charles, farmer
KEMPSTON is a parish 2 miles north from the Frans- value, £156, including go acres of glebe, in the gift of the
ham station on the Lynn and Dereham section of the Great Earl of Leicester K.O. and held since 1885 by the Rev.
Eastern railway and 9 west from Dereham, in the Mid Thomas Willis Butler Bartlett, who resides at Hoe. The
division of the county, hundred of Launditch, union and Earl of Leicester K.G. lord Iieut. is lord of the manor and
petty sessional division of Mitford and Launditch, county owns the whole parish. '.l'he soil is various ; subsoil, clay
court district of Dereham, rural deanery of South Brisley and gravel. The chief crops are wheat, barley and turnips.
and archdeaconry and diocese of Norwich. The church of The area is 8r4 acres; rateable value £889; the population
St. Paul is a small building of flint with stone dressings, in in I 8gr was 49·
the Early English style, consisting of chancel, nave, north Parish Clerk, John Beevis.
porch and a western tower covered with ivy: the church
retains an ancient font and a piscina and affords So sittings. Letters through Swaffham arrive at 7·30 a. m. Gressenhall
The register dates from the year 1770. The living is a is the nearest money order & telegraph office
vicarage, average tithe rent-charge, £85; gross yearly The children of this place attend the school at Litcham

Manor house
I
Chamberlain John Vincent, farmer, Waters Horace Matthews, farmer, The
Lodge ·
I
KENNINGHALL is a parish and small market town for sheep and neat cattle are held on July 18th and Sep-
3 miles south-east from Eccles Road station on the Thetford tember goth. Kenninghall is supposed to have been the seat
and Wymondham section of the Great Eastern railway, 7 of Queen Boadicea and the East Anglian Kings, and some
north-west from Diss and 107! from London, in the Mid ancient mounds supposed to mark the site of the royal
division of the county, Guiltcross and Shropham petty castle are still visible; the parks are now converted into
sessional division, Guiltcross hundred and union, Attle- farms, called "Kenninghall Place." The Duke of Norfolk
borough county court district, rural deanery of Rockland, K.G. is lord of the manor, which is an ancient demesne held
arch deaconry of Norfolk and diocese of Norwich. A fine by service as chief butler at. Coronations. The Duke of
avenue of trees, upwards of a mile in length, leads from Norfolk K.G. and Lord Egerton of Tatton are the chief land-
Kenninghall to Quidenham. The church of St. Mary, owners. The land is mixed ·soil; subsoil, chiefly clay and
situated on the hill, is a very large building in the Perpen- gravel. The chief crops are wheat., barley and oats. The
dicular style, consisting of chancel, nave, aisles, south porch area is 3,995 acres; rateable value, £5,193: the population
and an embattled western tower of flint and stone contain- in 1891 was 1,o67, including 54 officers and inmates of the
ing a clock and 8 bells: the chancel was thoroughly re- workhouse.
stored in r874, and the nave in r89o at a cost of about Parish Clerk, Jeremiah Mordey.
£ 1,6oo: there are 3~0. sit~ings .. The register d~tes from PosT, M. 0. & T. 0., S. B. & Anuuity & Insurance Office.
the year 1558.. The hvmg 18 a VIcarage, _averag:e tithe rent- -Charles Buxton, postmaster. Letters through Thet-
charge, .£2'!7, n~t year!~ value, £ 21 4• mclu?mg I I acres ford -via Harling, received at 7 a.m. ; delivered at 7-15
o~ glebe, with r~sidence, m the gtft of t?~ B1shop of Nor- a. m. & 5 p.m.; dispatehed at I.O & 6.go p.m. ; sundays,
Wlch, and held_ smc~ 1888 by the Rev. W1l~mm Walter Tyler delivered 7 _15 a.m.; dispatched 11 . 20 a.m. WALL
B.~. o_f the Un~verstty of Du~ham. Th~ ~~~arage house, re- LETTER BoxEs, on the Heath, cleared at 6 p.m. week
bmlt m 1879, 1spleasantl! s:tuate,d_ a~]_mmng the ~hurch. days, sundays at II.Io a. m.; Church street, cleared
There are Parttcu~a:r Baptist, I_nmtttve Methodist and 6 _10 p.m. week days no collection on sundays
Wesleyan chapels, wtth small burml grounds attached: the '
Wesleyan chapel was built in 1 g 54 , rebuilt and enlarged A School Board of 5 members was formed Mar 211, 1871 ;
about 18 73 , and an organ was placed in it in 1 s77. The cl~r~ to the boa_rd & attendance officer, Albwn Graham
poor's land of so acres is let for £:-s yearly. John Dyer, Wilhams, The ~I~es
in 182 8, left about £ 40 yearly for educational purposes. Board Schoo~, bmlt ~ 1872, a\ a cost of about £840, for Bo
The Guiltcross Union Workhouse, r~ miles south, is a plain boys_, 8o girls.~ 40 mfants ; average attendance,_ 75 bo~s,
building, principally constructed of clay lump faced with 65 guls & . 40 mfants I Henry Meek, master ; M1ss Emily
red bricks, and was erected in 1836, for :.a8o inmates, at a Barker, mtstress
cost of about £3,000; for particulars of the union see New CARRIERS TO:- ·
Bnckenham. A market for cattle is held every Monday in D1ss John Noller, fri
a yard belonging to the Crown hotel. toll free. The fairs NoRWICH-V out, mon. & thurs. & Filby, wBd. & sat
PRIVATE RHSIDEN'IS. Coe George S Peveritt Robert
Bauly Mi.sa, The Terrace Hoffe Mrs Pilgrim John, Pen ton villas
Bauly Mrs. The Terrace Jolley Mrs. The Grange SpurliBg Miss
.JJerry William Henry~ The Villa I Parr Alfred, Penton villas .J ;rurner Nehemiah. Guiltcross villa.
452 XEtiNINGHAtt. N011F0t.K. [KELLY's
• •
Tyler Rev. William Waiter B.D. 'Vicarage Buxton Charles, tailor, & assessor & col- Long Hannah M. (Mrs.), dl'ess maker
Williams Albion Graham, The Limes lector of taxe"" Post office Lusher Christopher, shoe maker
Wilson Joseph Henry, The Cedars Buxton Kate (Miss), grocer & draper Mallott Alfred, bricklayer
Youels Mrs Clarke James, farmer & dealer Mallott John, carpenter
COMMERCIAL. Claxton David, sawyer MarkRobert,George inn, & furniture dlr
Avis Joseph, farmer & carpenter . Claxton David, jun. market gardener Miller, Stevens & Son, S()licitors, & stew.
Bailey Abel, Crown family & commer- Claxton John, baker ards of Kenninghall Rectory manor
cial hotel & posting hou~e Claxton John, jun. Red Lion P.H. Murton & Turner, iron & brass foun·
Halls Lewis, White Horse P.H Coe Ellen (Miss), dress maker ders, engineers & agricultt.:ral imple-
Barkaway Alfred, boot & shoe maker Cole J ames, master of Guiltcross union ment manufrs. Guiltcross iron works
Barker Thomas, blacksmith workhouse Mitson Alfred, blacksmith & shopkeepr
Barker Walter, farm bailiff to Caleb Ellis Waiter William, farmer Mordey Alfred, saddler
Barker esq Fincham Wm. farmer, Kenninghall pl Murton John, tailor
Bateman David, beer retailer Fordham Arthur George, miller (wind) Parr David, grocer & draper
Baxter George, farmer, Fen farm & farmer, Chimney mills Riches Leonard, butcher & farmer
Bealcs A.rnold, pork butcher J<'oulser Frederick, farmer Rolfe Ada (Mrs.), milliner & dress ma •

Beales Arthur, butcher Fox Charles, boot & shoe maker Rolfe Oscar, tailor
Berry William Henry, relieving & school Garrett N athaniel, coach builder Shepheard Thomas Cubitt, shopkeeper
attendance officer & registrar of mar- Gibson Thomas, grocer Snelling Harper Chas. grocer & draper
riages for Guiltcross union & collec- Goodcrham Wm. Geo.farmr. &landowner Spurling- Hannah (Miss), dress maker
tor to guardians, vaccination officer Greenwood James, butcher Spurling Robert, shopkeeper
& registrar of births & deaths for Gunns Robert, farmer Wells Alexander, miller {wind & sream)
Kenninghall ~mb-district, The Villa Holman William, farmer Williams Albion Grabam, accountant,
Blackburn George, farmer Holman William, jun.farmer, WI.Uill frm clerk to Kenning-hall school board &
C-

Rloomfield Ada (Mrs.), dress maker Holmes William, dealer school attendance officer & Bridgham
Bore ham George,curricr & leather seller Hunt Gabriel, Prince of Wales P.II United District school board, & clerk
Boyce George Henry, plumber & glazier Jessop Elijah, farmer to Dyers Charity trustees, The Limes
Bryant & Son, coal merchants (Timothy Kemp Christopher, brick maker Wilson Joseph Henry, surgeon, & med·
Turner, agent); & at Harling Road Kettle George, baker ical officer & public vaccinator, 2nd
station, Roudham ; Eccles & East Knights Thomas, farmer district & medical officer to the work·
Harling. See advertisement Long Henry, farmer house, Guiltcross union, The Cedars
Bullock David Kelly, miller (wind) Long Joseph, assistant overseer for Witham John, farmer
Burrows Charles, farmer Kenninghall & deputy registrar of '\\'omack Thomas, farmer
Burrows Charles, jun. farmer births, deaths & marriages for the Wretham Robert, farmer
Burrows Thomas, miller (steam) Guiltcross union Youels Robert, farmer & cattle dealer
Butcher Frederick William, grocer
XERDISTON, see REEPHAM.

KESWICX 1s a parish on the river Yare, 3 miles south- esq. J.P. who is lord of the manor and chief landowner.
south-west from Norwich, in the Southern division of the Keswick Old Hall, an ancient mansion about 3 miles from
county, Swainsthorpe petty sessional division, Humblcyard the city of N m:wich, has been the property of the Gurney
hundrerl, HPnstead union and Norwich county court dis- family above 140 years ; it now bel(lilgs to J. H. Gumey
trict. Of the church of All Saints nothing now remains but esq. and is the residence of Henry Birkbcck esq. jun. The
part of the round tower, which occupies an elevated site, on soil is sandy; subsoil, chalk and marl. The chief crops are
which is a large group of lofty trees. Divine ser>'ice was wheat, oats and barley. The area is 729 acres; rateable
last held in the church in 1602. The churchyard is now valu~>-, £r,6BI; the population in 189r was r87.
( 1892) about to be reopened for interments. The living is PosT OFFICE.-George Stone, receiver. Letters received
a rectory, consolidated with that of Intwood. Here is a from all part11 through Norwich at 7 a. m.; dispat.ched at
reading room, built by J. H. Gurney esq. and opened in 5·45 p..m. The nearest money order & telegraph office is
1887. Here is an extensive corn mill, workP-d by the river at Eaton
Yare. Keswick Hall is the residence of John Henry Gurney The children of this place attend the school at Cringleford
Birkbeck Henry, jun. Keswick Old hall
Gurney John Henry J.P. Keswick ball
I Candler Horace Robert, miller (steam
& water), Keswick mills
IReading Room
Reynolds John William, farmer
K"F)TTERINGHAM is a village and parish r mile History of Gloucestershire, d. 29 Oct. 1711; there is another
south-west from Hethersett station on the Thetford and monument, with arms and the figure of a woman weeping,
Norwich section of the Great Eastern railway, 3~ miles eaRt to Edward Atkyns esq. d. 1794, and to Wright Edward
from Wymondham and 6 south-west from Norwich, in the Atkyns, his only son, d. r8o4: on the north wall are brasses
Southern division of the county, Swainsthorpe petty ses- with arms to Sir John Peter Boileau bart. F. R.s. d. 9 March,
sional division, Humbleyard hundred, Henstead union, r86g, Lady Catherine Sarah (Elliot), his wife, rl. 25 June,
Wymondham county court district, rural deanery of 1862, to John Elliot, their eldest son, who died at Dieppe in
Humbleyard, archdeaconry of Norfolk and diocese of Nor- France, 8 Oct. r86r, and to Charles Augustus Penrhyn,
wich. The church of St. Peter is an edifice chiefly of flint their 4th son, Iieut. Rifle Brigade, d. at Malta, of wounds
stone, in the Perpendicular style, consisting of chancel, received before Sebastopol, I Aug. r855; there are also
nave, north porch, vestry and a western tower surmounted several monuments to the Peach family; the church was
at the angles by two full-sized figures of angels, one of St. thoroughly restored and reseated in r837, and in 1870 the
Peter and one large pinnacle, and containing 5 bells and a tower, rebuilt in r6og, was restored and furnisqed with a
clock, erected in r87o by Sir F. G. Manningham Boileau clock by Sir F. G. Manningham Boileau hart. at a cost of
hart. : the east window was once entirely filled with stained I £620 : there are 224 sittings, 170 being free. The register
glass to the Grey family, but only a few fragments now dates from the year 1557, and records that during the night
remain: the chancel retains a. piscina and the porch a holy- , of July 2oth, z6o8, the steeple suddenly fell down, but was
·water stoup: the font, richly carved, dates from the t>.arly rebuilt the following year. The living is a vicarage, average
part of the r6th century: on the north side of the chancel is . tithe rent-charge £129, net yearly value £142, inrluding 30
a marble monument, with arms and kneeling effigies of a I acres of glebe, in the gift of Sir F. G. Manningham Boileau
man, woman and child, and above them the figure of an hart. D.L., J.P. and held since 1887 by the Rev. Frederick
angel with a rbild in her arms, ascending to hea\·en, erected Charles Davies M.A. of St. John's College, Cambridge, who
by Mary, Lady Heveningham, in 1678, to herself and resides at Shrubland Lodge, Albemarle road, Norwich.
children and to her husband, William IIeveningham, who' Outside the Norwich Lodge gate is a tumulus, and on the
was one of the judges of Charles I. and surrendered as a road from Carlton to Hetherset.t was another, in which
regicide in 166o: on the south side is an altar tomb with fragments of Roman pottery were found, hut this was razed
brasses to Thomas Hevenyngham, ob. 1490, his wife and to the ground about rBso. Ketteringham Hall, the property
children ; there are other undated brasses with effigies to and residence of Sir Francis George Manningham Boileau
John Colvyle and Richard Wright and one to Lady Grey, hart. B.A., D.L., J.P., F.S.A. who is lord of the manor, is a
ob. 1492 : on the same side is a monument to Sir Edward castellated mansion of the Tudor period, improved and
Atkyns kt. Baron of the Exchequer, ob. at Albury Hall, decorated and enlarged by the addition of a spacioiiS hall
Herts, 1669 ;. to Sir Robert Atkyns K. B. his eldest son, by the late Sir John Peter Boil eau hart. who died IO Mar.
sometime M.P. for Evesham, Lord Chief Baron of the Ex- 1837: it stands in a well-wooded park of 500 acres, contain-
chequer and Speaker of the House of Lords 1689-93, d. 18 ing' extensive pleasure gardens and two small lakes, with &
Feb. 1710; to Sir Edward Atkyns kt. his youngest son, also running stream, which joins the river Vare at Cringleford:
a Baron of the Exchequer, d.· Oct. r6<)8 1 and to Sir Robert in the grounds are the remains of the uppilr portion of the
Atkyns, eldest son of the above Sir Robert and author of ~ old west window of Norwich Cathedral. In the HalHs a fine
DIRECTORY.] NORFOLK, KIMBERLEY. 453
collection of arms, armour, pictures, oak furniture, works post from Wymondham arrive at 7.30 a. m.; dispatched
of art and curiosities. The soil is of a mixed nature; sub- at 6.40 p.m. week days; sundays at 10 a. m. The nearest
soil, brick earth and clay ; the Hall stands on a gravelly money order & telegraph office is at Hethersett
soil, which extends over a considerable portion of the park.
The chief crops are wheat, barley, turnips and hay. The National School (mixed), erected in 1839, with mistress's
area is 1,579 acres; rateable value, £2,958 ; the population residence, for so children ; aver;~ge attendance, 46; Miss
in 1891 was 208. Fanny Tolliday, mistress: the school is entirely supported
Acting Parish Clerk, David Woodrow. by Sir F. G. Manningham Boileau bart
PoST OFFICE.-William Smiths on, receiver. Letters by foot Railway Station, Hethersett, Harry Y nuell, station master
.Boileau Sir Francis George Manning- Boileau Maurice Colborne D.L., J.P. Ireland William, farmer
ham hart. D.A., D.L., J.P. (Lt.-Col. Ketteringham park Grix Henry, farm bailiff to Sir Francis
l'etired from 3rd Norfolk Volunteers, BassingthwaighteJohn,estate carpenter G. M. Boileau hart. Hall farm
F.S.A. barrister-at-law, a Knight of BradbrookJohn William, head gardener Milk David, head gamekeeper to Sir
the Order of St. John of Jerusalem to Sir Francis G. M. Boileau bart Francis G. M. Borleau bart
I
in England &c. &c.), Ketteringham Claxton George, farmer, Ivy Housefrm Owles Charlotte (Mrs.), farmer, High
park; & Brooks' & Travellers' clubs, Eddington Francis, butler to Sir Francis Ash arm
London s w I G. M. Boileau bart 1 Smithson Wm. blacksmith, & post office
KETTLESTONE is a parish about 3~ miles east-north- been kindly brou_2"ht up here as a poor boy; there are other
east from l<'akenham station on the Dereham and Wells charities of £3, left by a former rector of the name of
section of the Great Eastern and Eastern and Midlands rail- Howes, and a sum of £I ss. left by a rector of the name of
ways, in the North Western division of the county, Gallow llranthwayte; a sum of £5 a year is derived from land
hundred and petty sessional division, Walsingham union allotted to two or three poor's cottages, and there is also a
and county court district, rural deanery of Burnham, arch- fuel allotment of 25 acres. The principal landowners are
deaconry of Norfolk and diocese of Norwich. The church Joseph Stonehewer Scott Chad esq. M.A., J.P. of Thursford
{)fAll Saints is a plain but ancient building of flint in the Hall, who is lord of the manor, Str Lawrence John Jones
Perpendicular style, consisting of chancel, nave, north aisle, bart. J.P. of Cranmer IIaU, and Edward Case esq. The
north porch and an octagonal tower containing one bell: soil' is mixed; subsoil, various, gravel, sand and clay. The
the chancel was rebuilt and the church restored in 187I, and land is cultivated on the usual four-course shift. The area
it now affords ISO sittings. The register dates from the is I,r68 acres; rateable value, £1,307; the population in
year 1540. The living is a rectory, commuted tithe rent- I89r was 187.
charge, £300; average, [,234; net yearly value £400, Sexton, Waiter HilL
including 43 acres of glebe, with residence, in the gift of LETTER Box cleared at 5 p.m. week days only
and held since r864 by the Rev. Ed!!ar William Montagu Letters through Fakenham, the nearest money order &
M.A. of Caius College, Cambridge. There is a charity of telegraph office, arrive at 7.30 a. m
£13 r5s. a year, arising from a sum of £soo, invested in The children of this place attend the National School at.
Consols, and left by a Mr. Newman, of London, who had Little Snoring
Case Edwarcl, The Cottage 1 ColmanAlfred, farm bailiff to J.S.Scott- 1 Massingham James, well smker
Montagu Rev. Edgar Wm. M. A. Rectory Chad esq. M. A., J.P. Manor farm Reeder Rnbert, shopkeeper & butcher
Hoon William, blacksmith Colman Thomas, beer retailer Wright Mary M. (Mrs.), farmer, Ket-
Case Edward, farmer & landowner, Green John, farmer tlestone house
The Cottage Hill Warner, tailor
KILVERSTONE is a parish, in the vale of the Thet Kilverstone Hall, the property o! JohnWilliam Davy esq. J.P.
river, 2 miles east from Thetford junction station on the who is lord of the manor and sole landowner, and now occu·
Great Eastern railway, in the Mid division of the county, pied by Josiah Vavasour esq. is a mansion of flmt, situated in
Guiltcross and Shropbam petty sessional division, Thetford an ancient park of 230 acres, inclosed on the north side by a
union and county court district, hundred of Shropham, rural low wall, the entrance being throug·h large iron gates west
deanery of Rockland, archdeat:onry ot Norfolk and diocese of the hall : the estate abounds with game and is surrounded
of Norwich. The church of St. Andrew, situated near the by extensive woodland, bounded by the river Thet. The soil
Hall and erected in the 13th century, is an ancient structure is sand and mar! ; subsoil, chalk. The chief crops are wheat
of flint and brick in theN orman f>tyle, consisting of chancel, and barley. The area is 2,026 acres; rateable value, £r,523;
nave, south porch and a round embattled western tower the population in r891 was 77·
containing one bell: it was thoroughly restored and reseated Parish Clerk, John Hall.
in 1857, and has 64 sittings. The register dates from the Letters received 7.30 a. m. & delivered by the country post-
year 1558. The living is a rectory, average tithe rent-charge man at 7-30 p.m. WALL LETTER Box cleared 7.30 p.m.;
£roB, net yearly value ,£"128, including 26 acres of glebe, in sundays, 5 p.m. Letters through Thetford, the nearest
the gift of the Lord Chancellor, and held since r8gr by the money order & telegraph office
Rev. William Glen ton Malim B.A. of Durham University, who This place is included in Thetford United School Board dis-
is also vicar of St. Cuthbert's, Thetford, and resides there. trict. The children attend Thetford school
Cooper Arthur Wade, Kilverstonc lodge Halls James, head gardener to Josiah Maund William, gamekeeper to Josiah
Vavasour Josiah, Kilverstone hall Vavasour esq. The Cottages Vavasour esq. The Cottages
Cooper Arthur Wade, farmer, Kilver- Leach Robert, shepherd to Arthur ·west William, jun. farmer
stone lodge 'Vade Cooper esq ·
KIMBERLEY is a village and parish, with a station on towers at the angles, was erected early in the last century, •
the \\'ymondham and Dereham section of the Great Eastern and is t.he seat of the Earl of Kimberley K.G., P.C., D.L.,
:-ail way, 3~ miles north-west from Wymondham, in the Mid J. P. the representative of the Wodehonse and Falstolf fami~
division of the county, hundred, petty sessional division and lies, and is situated in a beautiful park of about 646 acres,
union of Forehoe, county court district of Wymondham, 58 of which are in the parish of Carleton Forehoe, 276 in
l'ural deanery of Hingham, Forehoe division, archdeaconry Wyrnnndham (in which the House stands) and the re:>t in
of Norfolk and diocese of Norwich. The church of St. Peter Kimberley and Crownthorpe: the park has a fine lake, and
-is a small building in the Early Decorated style, consisting is well stocked with deer. 'fhi~ place has since r866 afforded
of chancel, nave, south porch and a western tower with the title of Earl to the Wodehouse family, Barons Wode-
pinnacles and a small spire containing 2 bells: in the chancel house. The Earl of Kimberley K.G., P.c., is lord of the
-and nave are a number of stained windows to the Wode- manor and sole landowner. The soil is clayey; subsoil,
house family, Barons Wodehouse and Earls of Kimberley brick earth. The chief crops are wheat, barley, turnips and
from 1834 to 1877: the organ was presented by Charlotte hay. The area is 1,569 acres; rateable value, £2,456; the
Laura Lady Wodehouse in 1839: the chancel retains a pis- population in r8g1 was 179.
cina and a monument with kneeling tignre to Dame Eliza- Parish Clerk, James Riddle.
beth Strutt, daughter of Sir Thomas Wodehouse and wife of Letters through Wymondham, which is the nearest money
Sir Denner Strutt. ob.6 Nov. 1651 ; aml there are two brasses order & telegraph office, arrive at 7-45 a.m. PILLAR
to the Wodohouse family, by whom the church was repaired LETTli.R Box cleared at 6.40 p.m. & on sundays at 9 a.m
and decorated in 1835, and it now affords [ J sittings. The
register dates from the year 1753· The living is a VIcarage, School (infants), erected in 185o, for 25 caildren; average
con..~olidated with Barnham Broom and Bixton, average
attendance, 13; & supported by the Earl of Kimberley;
tithe rent-charge £425, joint yearly value £579, with 92 Miss Alien, mistress. The elder children attend the school
acres of glebe and residence, in the gift of the Earl r.f Kim- at Carlton Forehoe
berley K:.G. and held since 1887 by the Rev. John Edward Railway Station, James Raney, station master
.Parker Bartlett, of St. Bees, who resides at Barnham CARRIERS TO NORWICH.-John L<L'Ikey, from Hingham,
.Broom. The poor's allotment of 2 acres produces £4 yearly, passes through Kimberley every mon_ wed. & sat. i k
which is .distributed among the poor in fnel. Kimberley John Risebrook, every tues. thurs. & sat. returning to
House, an ancient and spacious mau~ion of brick, with Hingham same days
454 KIMBERLEY. NORFOLK: (KELLY'S
'
'
Kimberley Right Hon. Earl of x.G.,P.C., I Banham Thos.farmer & cattle dlr.Green I Howes Henry, brick & tile maker
D.L., J.P. Kimberley house; & 35 Cubitt Arthur, farmer, Park farm Paltner llerbertMark,head gamekeeper
Lowndes sq. & Brooks', Travellers' Cubitt Thomas, farmer, Manor farm to the Earl of Kimberley K.G., P.c
Athena:um & Devonshire clubs, Lon- Gayford Charles G. corn & coal mer- Palmer Waiter, blacksmith
don s w chant, Kimberley station ~mith Richard, farmer, Station farm

KIRBY BED ON is a village artd parish, bounded on the tings. The register dates from the year rsss. The livmg
north-east by the navigable Yare and comprising the is a rectory, average yearly value from tithe rent-charge
parishes of KIRBY BEDON ST. A.'mREW' and KmBY BE DON £ rgo, with 6 acres of glebe and residence, in the gift of and
ST. MARY, 2! miles south-east from Trowse station on the held since 1875 by the Rev. Ralph Kinder, of St. Bees. The
Great Eastern railway and 3 south-east from Norwich, in remains of the church of St. Mary, consisting of part of
the Southern division of the county, Swainsthorpe petty ses- the tower and walls, are now covered with ivy. Of the old
sional division, Henstead hundred and union, Norwich Hall, an ancient manswn, pulled down in 1842, the kitchens
county court district, rill?! deanery of Brooke western clivi- only now remain, and are inhabited by labourers. Isaac
sion, arcbdeaconry of Norfolk and diocese of Norwich. The Bugg Coaks esq. of Thorpe Hamlet, Xorwich, is lord of the
church of St. Andrew, standing on a height, is a building manor. The Norwich Corporation, Samuel Taylor esq.
of stone and flint in the Perpendicular style, consisting of Isaac Bugg Coaks esq. and James Christie esq. are the prin-
chancel, nave, south porch and an embattled western tower cipal landowners. The soil is mixed ; subsoil, clay. The
containing 3 bells : in the church are several monuments to chief crops are wheat and barley. The area is-Kirby
the Brooke family, from 1739 to 1840, and one to Francis Bedon St. Andrew 625, and Kirby Bedon St. Mary 740
Cremer, 1730; there is also an ancient monument, with acres; rateable value, .£"2,239; the joint population in 1891
sculptured figures of a man and woman kneeling at a desk, was 330.
to Robert Sheppard esq. and Anne his wife, dated 16oo: in Letters through Norwich arrive at 7 a. m. The nearest
the churchyard is a marble monument, protected by a mas- money order & telegraph office is at Trowse. Rectory
sive iron railing, to Charles W"eston esq. late of Thorpe, who I WALL LETTER Bo.x cleared at s.rs p.m.; Sundays, 12.15
died in 1864; another to the Harvey family, dated 1872, A School.Board of 5 members was formed compulsorily July
and a. memorial of granite to Sir William Foster bart. d. 2 12, 1875, for the united parishes of Bramerton & Kirby
Dec. 1874: the church was restored, re-seated and new- Bedon; W. Cheney, Swardeston, clerk to the board &
roofed, and part of the walls rebuilt, in I 876 ; a new tower attendance officer
was erected in r883 and a new south porch in 1885, the Board School (mixed), for 100 children; average attend-
whole restoration costing about £1,400: there are 120 sit- ance, 75; Miss Annie Snashall, mistress
Kinder Rev. Ralph, Rectory Horne Robert, Stracey Arms P.H I Perfitt John, farmer
Taylor Samuel
COMMERCIAL.
Leeds Edward, farmer
Mitchell William, farmer I Riches William, rate collector
Taylor Samuel, farmer
Ford George, market gardener
Gender John P. tea garden proprietor
Goflin J ames, shopkeeper
I Neave Richard, market gardener
Newstead Joseph, market gardener
Peart Thomas, farmer .1
Taylor ThomasWilliam Garrett,farmr
I Thnrlow William, farmer
KIRBY CANE is a village and parish, I~ miles north College, Cambridge. Here is a small We.sleyan chapeL The
from Ellingham station on the 1Vaveney Valley section of poor have £25 7s. IOd. yearly for fuel from Bonfellow's
the Great Eastern railway, 4 south from Loddou and 3~ charity, ap.d £24 from the rents of allotments. Kirby Cane
north-east from Bungay, in the Southern division of the Hall, an ancient and imposing white mansion, standing in a
county, Clavering hundred, Lorldon and Clavering petty commanding position, surrounded by a park, is the property
sessional division and union, Bungay county court district, of B. M. Haggard esq. and now in the occupation of Charles
rural deanery of Brooke eastern division, archdeaconry of Gurdon Kemball esq. BamtL ~fichael Haggard esq. who is
Norfolk and diocese of Norwich. The church of All Saints lord of the manor, the Rev. Abbot Upcher B.A. and George
is an ancient structure of flint in mixed styles, consisting of Cross esq. of Post wick Hall, are tbe principal landowners.
chancel, nave, north aisle, south porch and a round embattled The soil is various, light and heavy; subsoil, mixed clay
western tower containing 5 bells: the south doorway is good and sand. The chief crops are barley, wheat, beans and
Norman: in the chancel is a fine stained window, and there peas. The area of the parish i~ 1,745 acres, rated at £1,800;
are monumental tablets to the Rev. Henry, Baron Berners, the population in 18BI was 420.
d. 26 Feb. 1851, and to Elizabeth (Sumpter), his wife, d. 19 Parish Clerk, Joseph Youell.
Dec. 1845; there is also a memorial to Elizabeth Catelyne, PosT OFFICE.-Baker Flowers, receiver. Letters received
ob. r68r: the church afford~ ~oo ~ittings. The registerd~tes 1 from Bun~ay at 9.15 a.m.; dispatched at 4.15 _P.m.
from the year 1536. The hvmg 1s a rectory, average t1the ! Geldeston 1p the nearest money·order & telegraph office
rent-charge £323, gross yearly value £352, including 4ot Parochial School (mixed), built by the late Lord Berners &
acres of glebe, with residence, in the gift of Lady Berners, the rector, for 70 children; average attendance, 6o; Mrs.
and held since 1851 by the Rev. Abbot Upcher B.A. of Trinity England, mistress
Kemball Chas. Gurdon, Kirby Cane hall Clare Edward, grocer & draper Fisk Henry, market gardener
Laight Mrs. Clarke Philip, farnlPr,Kirhy Green farm Harvey Joseph, wheelwright & carpentr
Upcher Rev. Abbot B.A. Rectory Clutten George, farmer, Dulls farm Morris Jame.s, farmer, Green farm
COMMERCIAL. Crickmore Jan·is, Swan P.H Pilgr1m Robert, farmer, Green farm
Benns Philip, fa}'mel", Leethill farm Doe John, farmer, Home farm Skinner Samuel, farmer
BradnumRobt.market gardener, Green Doe John, jun. farmer, Kirby Row farm Stannard George, market gardener
Brown Samuel, blacksmith Fisher Eliza (Miss), shopkeeper I Youell Joseph, market gardener
KIRSTEAD (or KIRSTEAD-WITH-LANGHALE) is a parish by the ReY. Thomas Galliers M.A. late fellow of that college.
and village, 6 miles north from Ditchingham station on the The poor have 2os. yearly, left by Thomas Spooner in 1630.
Waveney Valley section, and 6 south-east from Trowse sta- Kirstead Hall, a mansion of the Jacobean period, is dated
tion on the Wymondham and Yarmouth section, of the 1614, and fnrmerly contained some fine wood carving: it is
Great Eastern railway and 7 south-east from Norwich, in now occupied as a farm-house. H. Garrod esq. is lord of
the Soutllern division of the county, Loddon hundred, the manor. Viscount Canterbury, George Danby Palmer-
Loddon and Clavering petty sessional division and union, Kernson esq. and Mr. Robert Bound Dring Whall are the
Bungay and Beccles county court district, rural deanery or principal landowners. The soil is strong mixed; subsoil,
Brooke western division, archdeaconry of Norfolk and gravel and clay. The chief crops are wheat, oats and bar-
diocese of Norwich. The church of St. Margaret is a ley. The area is r,ox2 acres; rateable value, £x,I63; the
st;ructure of flint with stone dressings, in the Early English population in 188 x was 201.
style, consisting of apsidal chancel, nave, south porch and Parish Clerk, Dennis Pye.
an embattled western tower containing one bell: the chancel Letters through Norwich, via Brooke, which is the nearest
and tower were added, a new open roof constructed and the money order office, arrive at 10.30; telegraph office at
interior considerably improved, in I 864: the eh urch was re- [,oddon
opened 9 Dec. 1854, and now affords rso sittings. The WALL LETTER Box cleared at 10 a. m. on week days only
register dates from the year 1663. The living is a rectory, A School Board of 5 members was formed compulsorily,
tithe rent-charge commuted at £3o6, average £232, net July 29, 1873 ; A. F. Yallop, Brooke, clerk w the board
yearly value £220 including 37 acres of glebe and residence, Board School (mixed), built for so children; average
in the gift or Caius College, Cambridge, and held since r879 attendance, 32; Mrs. Elizabeth Rharrod, mistress
Gallierlil Rev. Thomas M. A. The Rectory I<'iddy Robert Wright, farmer 1 Sturman George, farmer
Garrard Waiter, f<l.l"mer 1 TippellWaldegrave,farmer&hay trusser
. COMMERCIAL. Jeffries Samuel, Green Man P.H Utting Charles,wheelwright&shopkeepr
Alexander George, farmer
Barmby John, farmer, Kirstead hall
Cannell Carlos, farmer
Moore Joshua, farmer & cattle dealer
Pye Dennis, farmer & parish clerk
\ Redgrave Wm. bricklayer & shopkeepr
I Youngs George, farm bailiff to George
Danby Palmer-Kerrison esq
· ·

'DmECTORY.) NORFOLK. l.ANGFORD. 455
KNAPTON is a parish, on an eminence, 2i miles north-[ Cambridge, alternately, and held since r837 by the Rev.
east from North Walsham stations on the Great Eastern William Lawson Bames M.A.. of St. John's College, Cam•
and Eastern and Midlands railways and 8 south-east from bridge, who resides at Cornwall Villa, Dorchester, Dorset.
Cromer, in the Northern division of the county, hundred and The Rev. William Drake M. A. of St . .John'-li College, Cam-
the petty sessional division of North Erpingham, Erping- bridge, and rector of Sedgbrook, has been curate in charge
ham union, North Walsham county court district. rural since 1887. Here is a Primitive Methodist chapel. Knap-
deanery of Repps, archdeaconry of Nor folk and diocese ton House is the residence of Henry Matthew Cooper
of Norwich. The church of SS. Peter and Paul is an andent Robinson l!.A., J.P. The Master and fellows of St. Peter's
building of stone, partly in the Early Decorated style, con- College, Cambridge, are lords of the manor of Knapton-
sisting of chancel, nave, south porch and an embattled Brornholm and Green, and Lord Suffield K.C.B. pf Knapton-
western tower containing 5 bells: the roof is ornamented Cecils manor. The principal landowners are Henry
with hand1:>ome carved work and 15th century paintings of Matthew Cooper Robinson esq. M. A., J.P. the trustees of the
figures under canopies, angels &c. : there is a fine chancel late Henry Atkinson esq. of Cotton, M:aris J. Collings and
screen, at present whitewashed, but traces are visible of John A. Coleman esqrs. and the Master and fellows of St.
coloured decoration, the original gates of the screen have PeLer's College, Cambridge. The soil is mixed; subsoil,
been replaced by others of Jacobean character: the font, of sand and gravel. The chief crops are wheat, oats and
Purbeck marble, standing upon a bold ascent of steps, barley. The area is 1,442 acres; rateable value, £2,481;
bears the following singular inscription in Greek, which can the population in 1881 was 316.
be read either way, "NI'l'ON ANOMHMA M:H M ON AN Parish Clerk, George Mace, jun.
O'l'IN" (Wash thou, not only my face, but my trans- PosT OFFICE (for the issue of stamps only).-Joscph Sexton,
gression) : the chur~:;h was restored in 1882, by public receiver
subscription, at a cost of £2,ooo, under the direction of the LETTER Box cleared at 5 p.m. Letters through ~orth
late Sir G. Gilbert Scott R.A. : there are 700 sittings. The "\Valsham arrive at 7.30 a.m. The nearest money order
register dates from the year 166o. The living is a rectory, office is at Trunch & telegraph office at Maudesley
average yearly value from tithe rent-charge £360, in the Church Sc:hool (mixed), erected in 1837, for 6o children;
gift of Lord f:luffield and the Master of St. Peter's College, average attendance, 6o; Miss Charlotte Watson, mistress
Cooper Alfred, Sunnyside Barcham Herbert S. farmer, Knapton Hewitt Robert, farmer
Drake Rev. William :r.r.A. [curatl.l in Old hall Pain John Harold, farmer
charge 1, Knapton cottage Blanchfiower Timothy Coleman, farmer Rolfe George, grocer & draper
Grimes James Watts, Knapton hall & landowner Small George, carpenter
Robinson Henry Matthew Cooper M.A.., Brady Samuel, farmer & carter Steward Joseph, bricklayer
J.P. Knapton house · Grimes Rebecca (Miss), grocer Swann George, shoe maker
COMMERCIAL. Hall Peter, blacksmith Tice William, farmer
Barcham & Son, auctioneers Hedge Edward, steward to Mr.Dunning Watts George, cattle dealer
LAKENHAM is a parish forming part of the city of Xorwich, which see.
LAMMAS with LITTLE HAUTBOIS is a village Rackheath Park, and Edward Wright. esq. are the principal
and parish, delightfully situated on the navigable Bure, landowners. The soil is sand; subsoil, marl. The chief
one mile east from Buxton Lammas station on the East crops are wheat, barley and turnips. The combined area
Norfolk section of the Great Eastern railway, 4~ south-east of Lammas and Little Hautbois is 829 acres; rateable
from Aylsham and 9 north-east. from Norwich, in the E::tst- Yaluc, £r,52o; and the combined population in 1891 was
ern division of the county, South Erpingham humlr.!Ll and 28 I.
petty sessional division, Aylsham union and county court Parish Clerk, John Baker.
district, rural deanery of Ingworth and archdeaconry and Letters through Norwich, via Hevingham. The nearest
diocese of Norwich. IIere is a bridge of one arch crossing money order & telegraph office is at lluxton. WALL LETTER
the Bure. The church of St. Andrew is a building of flint Box, near Buxton mill, cleared 4.15 p.m. week days only
in the Early English style, consisting of chancel, nave, south School (infants), for 20 children; average attendance, 17;
porch and a low embattled western tower containing 4 bells; Miss Anna Fielding, mistress. The elder children attend
1n the chancel is an Early English piscina : the porch was at Buxton
rebuilt in I 878, and in 1887 the church was restored at a
cost of £ 1, 200 , under the direction of Mr. H. J. Green, CARRIER TO NoRWICH.-William Gostling, jun. passes
architect, of Norwich, the chancel being rebuilt, the nave through t? the 'Bell' on mon. wed. & sat. returning
new roofed and re-floored and 6 new windows inserted. The same evenmg
register dates from the year 1538. The living is a rectory, Little Hautbois is a decayed parish, on the navigable
consolidatei with Little Hautbois, average tithe rent-charge Bure, 8~ miles north-east from Norwich, 2 south-east from
£190, net yearly value .£"2oo, including 36 acres of glebe and Buxton Lammas stat;on and 2 north-west from Coltishall
residence, in the gift of Mrs. Grain, of Stanley gardens, station, both on the East Norfolk section of the Great
Kensington, and held since 1885 by the Rev. Lancelot; Eastern railway. The Bishop of Norwich is lord of
William llale Andrews M.A. of Trinity College, Cambridge. the manor. The principal laPdowners are the Norwich
There is a Wesleyan chapel, formerly the property of the Charity Trustees and Lady Durrant. There was formerly
Society of Friends, who still use the burial ground. ~ir a church here, dedic~ted to St. Mary. Little Haut~JOis Hall,
John Lubbock bart. D.C.L., F.R.S., LL.D., P.c., M.P. of Hrgh now a farmhouse, IS a good example of the Elizabethan
1

1
Elms, Beckenham, Kent, who is lord of the manor, Philip • Domestic style.
Edward Sewell esq. c.E., F.R.A.S. of St. Clement's hill, Nor-! Letters through Norwich, via Coltishall; the latter i3 the
wich and Dud wick, Sir Edward Paulet Stracey bart. of nearest money order & telegraph office
Lammas. Claxton John, carpenter Preston Thames Valentine, farmer
Andrews Rev. Lancelot William Hale Collins Benjamin, shoe maker Rayner John, plumber & glazier .
M.A. Rectory Cooper William, blacksmith Shreeve George, miller
Frere Mrs. Henry Temple, The Hall Ell wood Charles, farmer Shreeve William, farmer
r'rere Bartle Henry Temple, The Hall Gladden James, tailor Spink Josepb, farmer
Stockings Mrs. & Miss Goodwins Arth. Fk. Anchor of Hope P.H
Gostling Henry, farmer Little Hautbois.
COMMERCIAL. Gostling William, jun. carrier Gostling Emily (Mrs.), Adam & Eve
Barber Eleanor (Mrs.), shopkeeper Gould 'Villiam, farmer P.H. & farmer
Clarke James, lodging house keeper Hook Susannah (:~Irs.), dress maker Ladbrooke James, farmer, The Hall
LANGFORD is a parish, on the rit'er Wissey, 8 miles on his marriage wi.th Henrietta, {',ountess of Bath in h11r
north-east from Brandon station on the Ely and Thetford own right, and died 26 April, I8II : the church was re-
section, 8 south-west from Watton station on the Swaffbam stored in 1888 at the expense of William Amhurst Tyssen
and Roudham junction branch, of the Great Eastern railway, Amherst esq. and now affords [ · ~ sittings. The register
and 8 from Swaffham, in the South Western division of the dates from the year 1770. The livmg is a rectory, consoli-
county, t-;outh Greenhoe hundred and petty sessional dated with that of Ickborough, average tithe rent-charge
division, Swaffham union and count.y court district, rural £188, net yearl~ value £161, including 33 acres of glebe,
deanery of Cranwich south division, archdeaconryof Norfolk in the gift of W. A. Tyssen Amherst esq. and held since
and diocese of Norwich. The church of St. Andrew is a 1890 by the Rev. William Ledwich Mitford M.A. of Uni-
bnilding of stone, in the Early English style, consisting of versity College, Durham, who resides at Ickborough. Wil-
chancel, nave, south porch and a turret containing one liam Am burst Tyssen Amherst esq. n.r•. , J". P. Middlesex
bell! the chancel retains a piscina and there is a monu- and Norfolk, of Didlington Hall, is lord of the manot and,
ment to Sir J acob Garrard kt. and bart. alderman and sole landowner, and cultivates the land. The JJoil is light
11heriff of London, ob. circ. 1666, and a tablet to Sir Jarnes loam, with a 11ub~oil of chalk and gravel. The chief crops
Mnf!"lly-Pulteney bart. who assumed the name of Pulteney are -wheat, barley; oats and turnips. The area is 1,413
456 LANGFORI), NORFOLK. ( KELLY's
acres; rateable value, [,701 ; the population in 1891 was Lettars through Mundford R.S.O. arrive at 9 a.m .• The
44· nearest money order & telegraph office is at Mundford
. Parish Clerk, John Ollett. The children of this place attend the school at Ickborough
LANGHAM (or LANGHAM BISHOPS) is a parish, about 5 Rippingall, d. I856: the church was restored in I868, and
miles west-north-west from Holt station and 5 north from affords 220 s1ttings : the churchyard, enlarged in I885, con-
Thursford station, both on the Eastern and Midlands rail- tains the tomb of Capt. Marryatt. The register dates from
way, 7 south-east from Wells, 2 south-south-west from the year 1695. The living is a discharged vicarage, gross
:Hlakeney and 6 east from Walsingham, in the Northern yearly value £rso, including IOO acres of glebe, with resi-
di·dsion of the county, Holt hundred, petty sessional divi- dence, in the gift of the Bishop of Norwich, and held since
sion and county court district, Walsingham union, rural r8so by the Rev. John Montagu Randall Th.A. King's Col-
deanery of Holt, and archdeaconry and diocese of Norwich. lege, London. Manor Cottage, now the residence of Flor-dnce
There were formerly two parishes, called respectively Lang- Thomas Step hen Rippingall esq. J .P. stands in nicely wooded
ham Magna and Langham Parva, but the church of the grounds commanding extensive views; it was formerly the
latter is completely destroyed and its rectory has been con- residence of Capt. Marryatt, the celebrated novelist, who
solidated with that of Cockthorpe and .Blakeney. The wrote most of his works here. Langham Hall, a handsome
church of SS. An drew and Mary is a building of flint with modern mansion, in the Tudor style, is the seat of the Misses
stone dressings, in the Early English style, consistmg of Rippingall. Miss Rippingall, who is lady of the manor,
chancel, nave, south aisles, north porch and a lofty em- F. T. S. Rippingall csq. J.P. John C. Routh esq. of Bedale,
battled western tower containing a clock and 3 bells : a new Yorks, and the vicar are the chief landowners. The soil is
pulpit and reading desk have been erected : the font is of light; subsoil, chalky. The chief crops arc on the four-
Norman date: there are brasses to John Andrews, jun. conrse system. The area is I,95o acres; rateable valne,
date illegible, and w Robert Barnard, x6os; marble tablets 2,298; the population in r89r was 397·
to the l<'rost and Rippingall families, 176g-I858; an in- Parish Clerk, Thomas Barnes.
scribed stone to John Palgrave, 16ro, with very fine shield PosT OFFICE.-Thomas Boast, sub-postmaster. Letters
of arms and crest, and a handsome marble tablet to Capt. received from Dereham at 9 a.m & dispatched at 4 p.m.
}~redk. Marryatt B.N., C.B., F. R.s. the celebrated novelist, week days only. The nearest money order & telegraph
who resided here, where also be died 2 Aug. r848, and to office is at Blakeney. Postal orders are issued here, but
his son Lieut. Fredk. Marryatt B.N. who was lost at sea in not paid ·
the" Avenger" in the same year; the stained east window, National School (mixed), erected in 185o, for 144 children:
erected in x858, is a memorial to the Rev. Step hen Frost average attendance, no; Alfred Smith, master
Randall Rev. John Montagu Th.A.K.C.L Allen Herbert H. blacksmith &c. ; & at Howard George Edward, builder &c
Vicarage Blakeney Hudson Henry, horse trainer
Rippmgall Florance Thomas Stephen Roast Thomas, shopkeeper, Post office Loads Edmund William, Bell P.H
J.P. Manor cottage Burroughes Stephen Barnabas, baker Savory Harrison, farmer, Grove
Rippingall The Misses, The Hall Clarke Mark, coal dealer & farmer Stanford Arthur, shopkeeper
coMMERCIAL. Crafer Charles, farmer Stanford Samuel, tailor & draper
Bangey Shadrick, shopkeeper Crane William, farmer
LANG LEY is a parish and widely scattered VIllage, 3 his parents. Here are the ruins of Langlcy Abbey, founded
miles south-west from Buckenham station on the Norwich in the year ng8 by Roger Fitz Roger or Clavering, for Pre-
.and Lowestoft section of the Great Eastern railway, I mile monstratcnsian canons, and dedicated to St. Mary: the
north from Loddon and ID south-east from ~orwich, in the abbey was colonized from Alnwick and at its dissolution
Southern division of the county, hundred of Loddon, Loddon there were fifteen canons and revenues estimated at £312.
and Clavering petty sessional division and union, Norwich There formerly stood near the Abbey a stone cross bearing
.county court district, rural deanery of Brooke eastern four statues, but this has been removed to Langley Park
division, archdeaconry of Norfolk and diocese of Nurwich. and now stands at the point where the four parishes of
The church of St. Michaelis an edifice of flint in the Perpen- Langley, Chedgrave, Thurton and Carleton-St.-Peter meet.
dicular style, consisting of chancel, nave, north and south Langley Hall, the seat of Sir Reginald William Proctor-
porches and an embattled western tower, with pinnacles, Beauchamp bart. D. L., J .P. lord of the manor and sole land-
containing 4 bells: the church was thoroughly repaired and owner, is a splendid mansion, erected in 1740, and standing
-decorated in I803 with stained glass, brought from Rouen in a park of 8oo acres; it contains many valuable paintings,
cathedral at the time of the first French revolution by a statues, busts and other works d art. The soil is fine
former Lady Beaucbamp Proctor, at whose cost the restora- mixed ; subsoil, sand, gravel and clay. The chief crops are
.tion was chiefly effected: there are 250 sittings. The wheat, oats and barley. The area is 2,696 acres; rateable
register dates from the year 1695. The living is a vicarage, value, £2,948; the population in r88r was 308.
gross yearly value £so, including 12 acr~s of glebe, in the Parish Clerk, Ed ward Ellis.
gift of Sir Reginald William Proctor-Beauchamp bart. and LETTER BoxEs cleared at 2.15 p.m. & 6. 15 p. m. Letters
held since I853 by the Rev. Henry Alfred llarrett M.A. of through Norwich arrive at 9 a. m.; no sunday post.
Worcester College, Oxford, and of tit. John's College, Cam- Lnddon is the nearest money order & telegraph office
bridge, rural dean of Brooke eastern division and rector of School (boys & girls), erected in 1877, for roo children;
Chedgrave, where he resides. The fuel allotment of 40 average attendance, 6o; the school is supported by Sir
acres produces £6o yearly for coals for the poor. There are Reginald W. Proctor-Beauchamp bart. ; there is also a
almsbouses for six poor widows, erected in x86r by the laU! teacher's residence adjoining; Mrs. Annie Spence,
Sir Thomas W. B. Procwr-Beauchamp bart. in memory of mistress -
Proctor-:Beauchamp Sir Re!.;inald Wm. Daines Isaac, estate carpenter
1 Meen Samuel, farmer
bart. D.L., J.P. & Lady Violet, Lang- Des Forges Samuel Rowel!, farmer N eaveFredk. Cubitt, farmr .Grange farm
ley hall Ecclcston Jane (Mrs.), farmer Owen Sarah (Mrs.), shopkeeper
COMMERCIAL. Ellis George, farmer Potter George, beer retailer
Allam William, farmer Ellis John, farmer Shepherd James. dealer in corn, cake,
Carver James, farmer Hammond Edwin, head gamekeeper to feeding stuffs, coals, manures &c
Chilvers George, farmer Sir R. "'· Proctor-Beauchamp bart Spence George Daniel, farmer
Crisp William, farmer, Marsh farm Jeffrey John, steward to Sir R. W. Stimpson William, farmer
Cnmby Charles, blacksmith Proctor-Reauchamp Waters Henry Jas. farmer, The Abbey
Cumby John, farmer Jeffrey William, gardener
LARLING (or LABLINGFORD) is a scattered village and· Cerjat esq. d. 2 June, I8or: in the churchyard is buried the
parish, 1 mile north from Harling Road station on the Rev. Philip Leach, 35 years rector of this parislJ. and 42
Thetford and Norwich section of the Great Eastern railway years rector of East Winch: the church was restored in
and 8 miles north-east from Thetford, in the Mid division of 1867, and an ancient altar-stone, discovered under the floor-
the county, Gniltcross and Shropham petty sessional divi- ing, was replaced in its original position, as well as a stoup
sion, hundred of Shropham, Wayland union, Attleborough at the south doorway: the tower and bells were restored in
county court district, rural deanery of Rockland, arch- I88g at a cost of [,230, and a vestry was built in I890 at a
deaconry of Norfolk and diocese of Norwich. The church of further cost of £150 by the mother and sister of the rector,
St. Ethelbert, which stands in a field a quarter of a mile who also presented a stained window: there are ISO sittings.
north from the village, is an ancient structure in the Nor- The register dates from the year 1500. The living is a
man and Later styles, consisting of chancel, nave, north rectory, average tithe rent-charge 1:x48, net yearly value
aisle and an embattled western tower of flint dating from £108, including 42 acres of glebe, with residen{.-e, in the
the 14th century and containing 3 bells: the south entrance gift of Sir Edward Charles Nugent J.P. of West Harling Hall,
is a fine specimen of Norman work: in the church are and held since 1887 by the Rev. John Balfonr Atkinson L. Th.
marble monuments to William W()()(lley esq. many years of University College, Durham. The fuel allotment of 31
lord of the manor, d. 30 March, I807, and to Goorge John acres produces £2~ IOS. yearly. Sir Edmund Cbas. Nugenli
DIRECTORY.] NORFOLK. LE'fTON. 4.57
1. P. of The Hall, West Harling, is lord of the manor and the telegraph office. Postal orders are 'issued here, but not
principal landowner. The soil is various ; subsoil, l'n.rious. paid
The chief crops are wheat, barley and oats. The area is
r •.~SSA· IR. ; rateable value, £ 1, 192 ; the population in This place is included in the United School Board district of
g
1 91
was 6. Bridgham, formed compulsorily April 4, r875
15
Parish Clerk, Samuel Kidd. Board School (mixed), built in 1879 & enlarged in r882 at a
PosT OFFICE.-Chnrles Doe, postmaster. Letters received cost of £250 & again in r8gr at a. cost of [97, for 6o
from Thetford at 4.20 a. m. ; dispatched at 8. rs p. m. ; children; average attendance, 48 ; Miss Elizabeth Rcbecca.
sundays, 6.45 p.m. Harling is the nearest money order & Cater, mistress
At kin son Rev. Jn. Balfonr L. Th. Rectory I Ed waras Robert, sen. farmPr I Smith Shadrach William, jun. farmer,
Barrett Benjamin Cutty, farmer Edwards Robert, jun. farmer Common farm ·
Dent Joseph, farmer Kidd Robert, market gardener Starr Robert, shopkeeper
DoeCharles,photographer & shopkeeper, Kidd Samuel, farmer Steggles John, Angel P.H. & horse
Post office ~mith Shadrach, farmer, Manor farm dealer & farmer
LESSINGHAM (or LAsiNGHAM) is a pleasant village founded by Sir Thomas de Lessingham as a cell to the
and parish near the seacoast, with a station on the North abbeys of Rec in Normandy and Okebourne, Wilts, and
Wa.lsham and Cromer branch of the Great Eastern railway, dedicated to All Saints. At the dissolution its revenues were
3! north-east from Stalham station on the Eastern and M: id- estimated at £44· The Master and Fellows of King's
lands railway and 8 east-by-south from North Walsham, in College, Cambridge, are lords of th11 manor. The laud
the Eastern division of tbe county, Tunstead and Rapping chiefly belongs to Miss A. Nickels and Thomas Worts esq. of
petty sessional division, Happing hundred, Smallburgh Button. The soil is strong mixed ; subsoil, sand, clay and
union, North Walsham countycourt district, rural deanery gravel. The chief crops are wheat, oats and barley. The
of Waxham, Ilapping division, archdeaconry of Norfolk and area is 639 acres; rateable \'alue, £ r,ogg; the population
diocese of Norwich. The church of All Saints is an ancient in r8gr was 182.
building of flint and stone, consisting of chancel, south PosT 0FFICE.-Mrs. Sarah Clements, sub-postmistress.
porch, nave and an embattlerl western tower containing 3 Letters received from Stalham s.o. at 7 . 10 a.m. & dis-
bells ~the roof of the church, which was thatched, fell in patched at 3 _20 p.m.; no post on sunday. The nearest
some years ago and it has since been closed. The register money order offices are at Stalham & Happisburg ; the
dates from the year 1558. The living is a rectory, incorpo- former is the nearest telegraph office
rated with that of Hempstead, average tithe rent-charge
[4 2 o, joint gross yearly value £sro, including 70 acres of A School Board for the parishes of Lessingham with Hemp-
glebe, in the gift of King's College, Cambridge, and held stead & Eccles was formed compulsorily May 26, 1875;
since r8gr by the Rev. James Pounder Whitney M.A. of William Henry Cooke, Stalham, clerk to the board & at-
King's College, Cambridge, and B. A. of Victoria University, tendance officer
Manchester. Here is a Primitive Methodist chapel. The Board School (mixed), erected in 1877, for 70 children;
poor have the benefit of a few small charities. Here was average attendance, 62; Henry Darlow, master; Mrs_
anciently an alien priory for monks of the Benedictine order, Mary Jane Darlow, mistress
Darlow Henry Cooke Daniel, beer retailer Reynolds James, butcher
Nickels Miss Lacey Cubitt, Star P.H Sharley George, seed merchant
COliiMERCIAL. Mason Thomas, farmer Vincent William, boot maker
Baker Rt. Summers (exors. of), tarmers Moy James, farmer Wallage George, farm bailiff to Williarn
Clements Benj. Saml. grocer & draper Osborne Frederick, blacksmith Forster esq
Clements Sarah (Mrs.), grocer&draper, Pollard Susannah (Mrs.), shopkeeper Wilkins John, farmer&; builder
Post office
LETHERINGSETT is a parish and village, pictur- · 1872 by the Rev. John Marshal! Webb M.A. of Trinity
esquely situated in a well-wooded valley of the Glaven, College, Oxford. Here is a large brewery with malt-house
about 1 mile west from Holt station on the Eastern and belonging to Messrs. Cozens-Hardy and Son. Letheringsett
Midlands railway, in the Northern division of the county, Hall, the seat of William Hardy Cozens-Hardy esq . .J.P. is
Holt hundred, petty sessional division and county court dis- a fine mansion with gardens and plantations. William
trict, Erpingham union, rural deanery of Holt and arch- Hardy Cozens-Hardy esq . .J.P. who is lord of the manor, Sir
deaconry and diocese of Norwich. The church of St. Alfred Jodrell bart. D.L., J.P. and Miss Cobon are the chief
.Andrew is a structure of flint in the Gothic style of the landownel'l!. The soil is light; subsoil, chalky. The
13th century, consisting of chancel, nave, aisles, vestry, chief crops are wheat, barley and turnips. The area is
south porch and a round western tower of Norman date 843 acres; rateable value, £r,481; the population in 1891.
containing 3 bells: the font is also Norman : iu the chancel was 284.
is a memorial window, erected by Mrs. Jodrell, of Bayfield,
as a memorial to Capt. Edward Jodrell, r8th Royal Irish PoST 0FFICE.-Mrs. Rosamond Anna Sheringham, receiver.
Regiment, who died 27 Jan. r868 : the .church was restored Letters from Holt R.S.O. received at 7.20 a.m. ; dis-
in 1875 at a cost of nearly [1,200, and in r8go was new patched at 4-45 p.m. Holt is the nearest money order &
roofed, and the porch rebuilt from plans by Mr. W. Butter- telegraph office. Postal orders are issued here, but not
field, architect: it affords 210 sittings. The register dates paid
from the year 1653. The living is a discharged rectory, net This parish, with Holt, forms the United School Board
yearly value £r83, average tithe rent-charge [192, with 25 district; the children of this place attend the school at
acres of glebe and residence, in the gift of and held since Holt
Cobon Misses, Riverside cottage Farrow John Henry, King's Head P.H Howes William, miller (water)
Cornish Mrs. Hill house Filby George John, farmer Sheringham Rosamond Ann11 (Mrs.),.
Cozens-Hardy William Hardy J.P. Filby John William, farmer shopkeeper, Post office
Letheringsett hall Gosling Jonas, farmer Simmons James, clerk to school board
Waldy Mrs. The Lodge Grout Samuel, farm bailiff to Sir Alfroo of Holt united district, assistant..
Webb Rev. John Marshall M.A. Rectory Jodrell hart. Hayfield Home farrr.. overseer & collector of taxes
COMMERCIAL. Hewitt Edward, shoe maker Turner Robert Buck, blacksmith
Cozens-Hardy &Son,brewers&maltsters Hewitt George, builder & contractor
LET TON is a parish, 4 miles west from Thuxton station on division, and honorary canon of Norwich, who resides at
the Wymondham and Dereham section of the Great Eastern Cranworth. Letton Hall, within a. park of about 200 acres,
railway and 6 south from Dereham, in the Mid divi- is the seat of Robert Thornhaugh Gurdon esq. M.A., n.L.,
sion of the county, Mitford and Launditch petty sessional J.P. who is lord of the manor and owner of the whole
division, Mitford hundred, Mitford union, East Dereham of the parish; the house, which is of white brick, was de-
county court district, rural deanery of Hingham, Mitford signed by Sir John Soane, and contains a large number of
division, archdeaconry of Norfolk and diocese of Norwich. pictures. The soil is part heavy and part light; subsoil,
Of the church of All Saints only the foundations now remain; mixed. The chief crops are wheat, barley, roots and oats.
the parishioners attend the church of the adjoining parish of The area is z,274 acres; rateable value, £x,6n; the popu-
Cranworth. The register dates from the year 1653. The lation iu 1891 was II9.
living is a rectory, annexed with Southburgh to that of LE'M'EB Box cleared at 6 p.m. Letters through Thetford
Cranworth, average tithe rent-charge [541, joint net yearly via Shipdbam, which is the nearest money order & tale-
value £307, including 38 acres of glebe, in the gift ofRobert graph office, arrive at a. m
Thornhaugh Gurdon esq. and held since 1874 by the 7
Rev. Thomas Parry Gamier M. A. and formerly fellow of The children attend the school at Cranworth for the united
All Souls College, Oxford, rural dean of Hingham, Mitford parishes of Lettoo, Southburgh &: Cranwonh
NORFOLK, ( KELLY'5
Gur1on Robert Thornhaugh M.A..j Crafer George, farmer, Lower farm Gowing James, gamekeeper l
D.L., J.P. (chairman of quarter Fraser James, steward toR, T. Gurdun Hales Alfred, estate carpenter
sessions & col. 4th Volunteer Batt. esq Jermyn William, farmer, Hooks farm
Norfolk Regiment), Letton hall; & 5 Goddard James Norton, farmer, Park WatsonAlfred,gardener toR. T. Gur.
Portman sq w & Brooks' & United farm & ~ orton Grove farm don esq
University clubs, London s w
EAST LEXHAM is a village and parish 3 miles north Richard Bingham M.A. of Trinity College, Carrbridge, who
from Dunham station on the Lynn and Dereham section of resides at Litcham. Here is a Primitive Methodist chapel.
the Great Eastern railway and 6 north-by-east from Swaff- The poor's allotment of 26 acres, now ( 1892) let at £2r yearly,
ham, in the Mid division of the county, Mitford and is for fuel, and Allee's charity of 32s. yearly for bread.
Launditch petty sessional division and union, Launditch Lex:ham Hall, the property of the trustees of William
hundred, Swaffham county court district, rural deanery of Bertram Keppel esq. (a minor) .and now occupied by A.
South Brisley and archdeaconry and diocese of N(}rwich. W. Ridley esq. is a well-built house, with extensive gardens,
The church of St. Andrew is a small edifice of stone, consist- 1 prettily situated in a well-woorled park of IIO acres,
ing of chancel, nave, south porch and a round western tower, throug-h which flows the river Nar. The trustees of W. B.
now covered with ivy and containing one bell : in the chancel K eppel esq. are lords of the manor and principal landownerS.
are three mural tablets to the Keppel family, dating from The soil is light loam, and the '::lubsoil gravel and chalk.
183o to 1858 ~ the stained east window is a memorial to The chief crops are wheat, barley and turnips. The area i~
Frederick Walpole Keppel, d. 1858, and to Colonel Edward r,rgo acres; rateable value, £1,179; the population in
George Walpole Keppel, d. 1859: on the south side of the 1891 was 198.
chancel are sedilia. and a piscina: there are 100 sittings. Parish Clerk, Frederick Bird.
The register dates from the year 1546. The living is a WALL LETTER Box cleared at 5·35 p.m.; no collection on
discharged l"ectory, consolidated with that of Litcham, sundays. Letters through Swaffham via Litcham arrive
average tithe rent-charge £498, joint net yearly value about at 7.30 a.m. The nearest money order & telegraph office
£500, including 45 acres of glebe, in the gift of the Rev. C. is at Litcham
W. Heald M.A. rector of Chale, Isle of Wight, and the Rev. National School (mixed), for 58 children; average attend·
J. M. Heald M.A.. and held since r886 by the B.ev. Charles ance, 42; Miss Mary Jane Handley, mistress
Ridley A. W. Lexham hall Goddard George,gardener,Lexham hall Oldfield William, coal & fish dealer
Clark Thomas, farmer, Church farm Johnson William, farmer Wiskard Hannah (Mrs.), Chequers PH
· Clark William T. Lodge farm I Oldfield John, shopkeeper I
WEST LEXHAM is a parish 4 miles north from Dun- yearly value £qo, including 52 acres of glebe and good
ham station on the Lvnn and Dereham section of the Great residence, in the gift of trustees, and held since r873 by
Eastern railway and· si north from Swaffham, in the Mid the Rev. Francis Fenwick Reavely M. A. of Trinity College,
division of the county, Launditch hundred, Mitford and Cambridge. The poor receive fuel cut annually from oak
Launditch union and petty sessional division, Swaffham stubs, aml a dole of £I 12s. is yearly distributed in bread.
county court district, rural deanery of South Brisley and The Earl of Leicester K.G., L.L. is lord of the manor and
archdeaconry and diocese of Norwich. The church of St. principal landowner. The soil is a light loam; subsoil,
Nicholas is a small building of stone, in the Decorated chalk and gravel. The chief crops are wheat, barley, tur-
style, consisting of chancel, nave, south porch and a circular nips, and some land is in pasture. The area is 1,130 acres;
western tower, probably of Saxon date, containing one bell: rateable value, £835; the population in 1891 was 122.
the church was partly rebuilt in 1881 at the sole expense of Sexton, William Head.
the Earl of Leicester K.O. a marble pavement being at the WALL LETTER Box cleared at 5·5 p. m. week days only.
same time laid in the chancel and the east window filled Letters through Swaffbam, via Litcham, arrive at 8 a. m.
with stained glass at the cost of the rector: the church Litcham is the nearest money order & telegraph office
affords 56 sittings. The register dates from the year r689. This parish is contributory to the school at Castle Acre, but
The living is a rectory, average tithe rent-charge£ 148, net the children also attend the school at East Lexham
Firman Rev. Frederick B. M. A. [curate Cresswell Edward,Red Lion P.H. & pork Fitzhugh George, farmer, Glebe farm
in charge], Glebe farm butcher Harrison Harris, farmer
Heavely Rev.· Francis Fenwick lll.A.
[rector], llectory
LEZIATE is a parish 2 miles north from East Winch Groom B.A. of Trinity College, Cambridge, who resides at
station on the Lynn and Dereham section of the Great Ashwicken. Anthony Hamond esq. D.L., J.P. of West Acre
Eastern railway and 4! east from Lynn, in the North High House, who is lord of the manor, Sir Lawrence John
Western division of the county, hundred, petty sessional Jones hart. J.P. of Cranmer Hall, Captain Howes and Albert
division and union of Freebridge Lynn, county court district Collison esq. are the chief landowners. The soil is variom ~
of Lynn, rural deanery of Lynn Freebridge, archdeaconry of subsoil, mostly clay. The chief crops are wheat, barley and
Norfolk and diocese of Norwich. Of the church of All Saints turnips. The area is 1,356 acres, including 104 acres of
nothing now remains but t.he foundations. A mission church rabbit warren and common; rateable value, £r,200; the
was erected here in 1876 by subscription, and has 100 sit- population in r8gr was 212.
tings. The living is a rectory consolidated with that of Ash- Letters through Lynn arriYe at 8 a.m. The nearest money
wicken, average tithe rent-charge £396, joint gross yearly order & telegraph office is at Gayton
value £520, including 13 acres of glebe, with residence, in
the gift of and held since 1877 by the Rev. Arthur John Thfl child!'en of this parish attend Ashwicken school
Hawkins George Ezra, Halt house
Gamble Henry Barton, farmer & tile maker, Holt house
I
Hawkins George Ezra, farmer & brick Rye Robert, beer & wine retailer
Wilson Eldred Winteringham, farmer,
Pelgrave George, farm~r Rolfe William Chilvers, farmer I Chilver house
LIMPENHOE is a village and parish near the na¥igablc and impropriator of the great tithes. There is a small
Yare, It miles JlOrth-east from Cantley station on the Primitive Methodist chapel. The principal landowners are
Norwich and Lowestoft section of the Great Eastern railway, the Rev. John Emeris M.A. and Clare Sewell Read esq. J.J?,
10 south-west from Yarmouth, in the Eastern division of of Honingharn Thorpe. There are some copyholds in this
the county, petty sessional division of 13lofield and Walsham, parish, beld of the manor of Reed ham Hall, of which John
hundred and union of Blofield, Great Yarmouth county Williarr1 Rose esq. of Old Hall, Reedham, is lord. The soil
court district, rural deanery of l3lnfield and archdeaconry is light mixed; subsoil, sand and gravel. The chief crops are
and dioeese of Norwich~ The church of St. Hotolph is an wheat, oats and barley. The area is r,o75 acres, nted a11
edifice of flint with stone dressings, in the Decorated and £2,006; the population in r881 was rgg. By an order
Perpendicular ,styles, cqnsisting of chancel, 1mve, north which came into operation March 25, 1884, a detached part
porch and an embattled western tower containing one bell~ of South wood was amalgamated with this parish.
the south doorway, a fine example of X orman work, has been Parish·Clerk, William Fowler !Iall.
restored: the church was rebuilt in 188:~;, and has 155 sittings.
The register dates from the year l6S?· The living is a dis- Lettets through Reed ham R. S.O. atrive at 9 a.m. & 5 p.m.
charged vicarage, annexed to the rectory ~f Southwood, WALL LETTER Box cleared at 4·45 p.m, weeks days only.
!ithe rent-charge £2 77,. average £ 2 ro, join~ net yearly Reedham is the nearest money order & Cantley railway
value [ rs6, including 10 acres of glebe, with residence, in station the nearest telegraph office ,
the gift of and held since I87I by the Rev. Theodore Henry National School (mixed), erected about r84o,for so children;
Crossman Day B. A. of Caius College, Cambridge, surrogate average attendance, 40; Miss Lizzie Clifford, mis~,ress.
Day Re"v. Theodore Benr)' Crossman Carter William Robert 1 shopkeeper Pearce George, Old Falcon P.H
B.A. [vicar & surrogate], Vicarage Forder Robert, farmer · Shearing Albert, farmer, Marli.h fa11m
Brown LucJC (1\'liBs)f farmer t Mallett Last, farme-r r Tills Da\'id, farmer, Low farm. {
Carter Elizh.,Mrs,),farmr~Churchfarm May Arthur Wipiarp' farmer '· . .. o.~ U.
DIRECTORY.] NORFOLK. 469
LING WOOD is a village and parish with a. station on soil U1 good mixed; subsoil, sand Jlnd ):>rick earth. The
the ~orwich and Yarmouth section of the Great Eastern chief crops are wheat, oats and barley. The area is 66x
railway, 8 miles east from Norwich and 12rf from London, acres; rateable value, £x,667; the population in x891 wa.s
in the Eastern division of the county, petty sessional division 421, including 71 officers and inmates in Blofield Unfofi
of Blofield and Walsham, hundred and union of Blofield, Workhouse. By an order which came into operation March
county court district of Norwich, rural deanery of lllofield 25, 1884, a detached part of Burlingham St. Edmund was
and archdeaconry and dwcese of Norwich. The church of amalgamated with this parish. · ·
St. Peter is a small but ancient building of stone, in the Sexton, Josepb Lake.
Later English style, consisting of chancel, nave, south PosT 0FFICE.-Samuel Jones, receiver. Letters through
porch and a western tower containing one bell: there are Norwich, delivered at 6.so a.m. & 4 . 30 p.m.; sundays,
:r8o
. sittings.
· · The register dates
d from the
t
year
f B
1566.
. 1 The 6.so a.m.; d'1spatch ed at 6 .5o a.m. 4.30 & 7.20 p.m.;
1IV 1ng IS a VICarage, annexe to t 1le rec ory o 1
ur wg mm sundays,xo.ss a. m. Burlingham is the nearest money order
St. Edmund's, average tithe rent-charge £ 222 • net yearly office; telegraph office at Railway station for collection
value £286, with 31 acres of glehe and residence, in the & Blofield for delivery of telegrams
gift of Henry Randal Burroughes esq. J.P. and held smce
,as 9 by the Rev. Frederick Taylor. Here is a Primitive WALL LETTER Box at the Union House gates, cleared at 7·5
Methodist chapel, erected 1866. An allotment of land a.m. & 4.20 p.m. ; sundays at 10.45 a.m
awarded to this parish lets for £r2 a year, which sum is ScHOOLS:-
distributed in coals to the poor. The workhouse for Blofield National School( mixed), belonging to the three Burlinghams
Union, in this parish, is a large structure of brick avail- & Lingwood, for 146 children ; average attendance, 102;
able for 248 inmates and adjoining is an hospital for 20 JamesThomas Richards, master; Mrs. Richards, mistress
patients (for particulars of the union, see Blofield). Henry A new school was erected in x88;~ & is partly supported by
Randal Burroughes esq. J.P. of the Hall, Burlingham St. H. R. Hurroughes esq. J. P
Peter, is lord or the manor and principal landowner. The Railway Station, William Belton, station master
KeithFrederickThomas,Lingwood lodge Gilden Harriet (Miss), market gardener Rix Spencer, wine & spirit & ale & por-
Rix Spencer, Manor house Hindes Samuel, thrashing machine & ter merchant, & agent for Warwick &
Taylor Rev. Frederick, Vicarage traction engine proprietor & wheel- Richardson's Trent ales; also corn,
COMMERCIAL. wr1ght & farmer seed, coal, artificial manure., salt, oil
.Alexander Thomas, shopkeeper Hindes Thomas, farmer cake & flour merchant, & boat owner,
.Alien William, farmer Hunt James William, cowkeeper farmer & prize fowl breeder. 'l'ele-
;Beckett Robert, jun. assistant overseer Key Zachary & Elisha, farmers graphic address, "Rix, Lingwood
Brooks Henry, market gardener & fruit Loynes Christopher Bridgman, market station." See advertisement facing
grower; cucumbers,tomatoes,grapes, gardener & cucumber grower commencement of Norfolk
raspberries &c. Hose cottage Manthorpe Robert, coal dealer Starling Samuel Gibson, farmer
Cooper John, farmer Pryke James, grocer &c Wilkerson Reuben, King's Head l'.H
Everett Henry Philip, farmer Rix Thomas, florist, The Nursery Wilsou llenjamin, coal dealer
Gedge William, bricklayer & shopkeeper

Dunham station on the Lynn and Dereham section


I
LITCHAM is a parish 3 miles north-east-by-north from and Primitive Methodist chapels.
of the for
There is an almshouse
two aged persons ;:ind the poot: have the benefit of
Great Eastern railway and 8 north-west from Dereham, in several small charities. A portion of the commons has
the Mid division of the county, Launditch hundred, Mitford been inclosed, but there are still upwards of so acres
and Launditch petty sessional division and union, Dereham left for recreation and the use of the poor. The resi·
~ounty court district, rural deanery of South Brisley and deuce called the " The Priory" was formerly a House of
archdeaconry and diocese of Norwich. The church of All Rest for pilgrims. The trustees of the late Rev. William
Saints is a large edifice of flint with stone dressings, J?rinci- Arnold Walpole Keppel B.A. of Lexham Hall (d. 26 Nov.
pally in the Perpendicular style, consisting of chancel, nave, r888), who are lords of the manor, and William Thomas
aisles, south porch and an embattled western tower of brick, Collisun esq. J.P. of Yarmouth, are the chic{ landowners.
with pinnacles, and containing 5 bells: an oak screen of The soil is various; subsoil, gravel and clay. The chief
elaborate workmanship, dating from the early part of the cropg are barley, wheat and roots. The area. is 1 1932 acres i
lSth century, separates the nave from the chancel, in which rateable value, £3,120; the population in 189r was 8oq.
are several memorials: there are two memorial windows Parish Clerk, William King.
ere~ted in r8s_r by D. Lynes esq. and Miss C. Lynes to PosT, M. 0. & T. 0., s. B. & Annuity & Insurance Office.-
thelr parents: m r8go a new organ was erecte~ at a. cost of Mrs. E. N orthway Polkinhorne, 'postmistress. Letters
£120: the church h~s. been thoro~ghly repaired an~ re- received from Swaffham at 6 a. m. & s.2o p.m.; delivered
seated, and has 300 s1ttmgs, 1~0 be1!1~ fre~. '.fh? register 7 a.. m. & 5 p. m; & dispatched at 1, 5 & 6. 30 p. m. : sun·
dates from th_~ year 1~50. fhe ll\lng 1s a discharged days, delivered 7 a. m. ; di~patched, 1 . 25 p.m
r~ctory, consolidated wtth. that of East Lexbam, average Brewster Sessions are held at the Bull inn, Litcham, about
t1the rent-char~e £498, jomt gross yearly va_lue £6~5, net August in each year at 11 a.m
a~out £500, Wlth 45 acres of glebe and residence, m the County Police Station John Thurtle inspector & 4 constableS
g1ft of the Rev. C. W. Heald M.A. rector of Chale, Isle of . ' . . ' . .'
Wi~ht, and the Rev. J. :\'I. Heald M.A. and held since Nat1~nal School (boys,guls & mfants), bmlt m 1845 for 190
1888 by the Rev. Charles Richard Bingham M.A. of Trinity children; average attendance, .140 ; Thoti_tas Charles
College, Cambridge. The Odd Fellows' Hall, erected in l\Ioore, master ; .Mrs. Em~a Polkmghorne~ mistress: Mrs.
189o, is an edifice of brick with a. stage and retiring Isabella Moore, mfants' mistress
.rooms and will seat 350 persons; it is let for enter- CARR.IERS. -John Carlton & Robert Barnes, to East Dere-
tainments and public meetings. There are Wesleyan ham, on fri. & to Norwich, return sat
Adams Rev. Josiah [curate], The Priory Collison George, carpenter Laws Frederick, shoe maker, leather
Bingharn Rev. Charles Richard M.A. Cooke Chas. Earsharn, farmer, High ho cutter & ironmonger
[rector], Rectory Copcman William Hicks, saddler & Makins Robert, butcher & farmer
Dundas l\Iordaunt George harness maker Medlock Willianl, 'baker
Farrer William Money Crispe George, carpenter & builder Middleton J oseph, farm bailiff to the
Hammond Rev. John [Wesleyan] Cullum George, butcher Hon. Mrs. Keppel
Munday David · Curtis William, buihler & contractor & Mitchell Ja.mes Parker, wheelwright
Raven Henry lime burner Mobbs Joseph, oil &c. dealer 1

Temple-Lynes Miss Dundas Mordaunt George, surgeon, Munday David, surgeon


COMlltERCIAL. medical officer & public vaccina.tor to Odd Fellows' Hall (James Fitt, sec)
Archer George, farmer the Fransham & Litcham district Overton Jacob, shopkeeper
Askew Harriett (Mrs.), farmer Fitt Sarah (Mrs.), baker Overton John, shoe maker
Askew Sharman John, watch maker l''itt James, painter,& school attendance Ramm Geo. Hy. blacksmith & ironmngr
-Banha.m John, bricklayer office!' for Mile ham & Bees ton & sec. Randall William Fort in, grocer
Barnes Edmund, shopkeeper to Odd Feliows' hall Raven Henry F.R.c.s.Eng. surgeon, &
Bown John Albert 1\LR.c.v.s.L. veter- Gunton John Percy, New inn medieal officer L1tcharn district of
' inary inspector for Litcham district Holdup Charles James, Hull hotel Mitford & Launditch tmion
Bunting Hy. confectnr.& fancy stationer Hop son Alfred, farmer · Reading Roorrl ( James Chatten, sec)
11urrows DavPy, painter ' Howard Henjatnin, basket maker Reyner John, plumber &c ·
Burton Abel, machine owner J ackson Charles William, grocer 4 Reyner Sarah (Mrs.), plum be, & glazier
Bur ton David, Eing's Armll P.a. & draper, & agent for W, &·A. qilbey H.oyle James Patrick, reg1sba.r qf birth»
wheelwright , , Johnson Thomas, shoe Uiaker & deaths for Litcham ilnb·disfrict
!;attou George, tailor . King John, wheelwright & carpentex; Savage Samuel, shopkeeper , .,
Chatten James, farmer~ Manor farm,. • ~ William, paris~ cle,r~ 1 Thurtle Joh,n, nspecf.or ,qf poli~ .,. J

9
460 LITCilAM. NORFOLK. (KELLY S

Wag-g George, blacksmith


Wales Emma (Mrs.), straw bonnet ma. I Dragon P. a
I
Walker Charles Stapleton, The Green White Waiter, chemist & druggist

LODDON is a small market and union town and parish, Clerk w the Magistrates, James Cole Copeman
bounded on the north by the river Chet, 5 miles south The Petty Sessional division is the same as the Loddon union.
from Buckenham station and the same distance south-west Petty Sessions are held every alternate wednesday at the
from Reedham station, both on the Norwich and Lowestoft Town hall, at I 1 a. m
section of the Great Eastern railway, 7 north-west from PuBLIC EsTABLISHMENTS : -
Beccles, Io south-east from Norwich, IS south-west from Coun~y Police Station, Edgar Ea.gling, superintendent, ser.
Yarmouth and 112 from London, in the Southern division of geant & I2 constables
the county, Loddon and Clavering petty sessional division, Town Hall, James Cole Copeman, hon. sec
hundred of Loddon, county court district of Bungay and LonDON & CLAVERING UNION.
Beccles, rural deanery of Brooke eastern division, arch- Board day every alternate monday, at 11 a. m. at the Work-
deaconry of Norfolk and diocese of Norwich. The town is house, Heckingbam.
lighted with gas by a company established in I863, from The union comprises the following places :-Aldeb~· • .Al-
works in the Lower Bungay road, and supplied with water pington, Ashby, Bedingham, Bergh .Apton, Brooke,
from pri'""ate wells. The church of the Holy Trinity is a llroome, Burgh St. Peter, Carleton St. Peter, Chedgrave,
large structure of flint with stone dressings in the Perpen- Claxton, Ditchingham, Ellingham, Geldeston, Gillingham
dicular style, consisting of chancel, nave with clerestory, All t:3aints-cum-St.-Mary, Haddiscoe, Bales, Hardley,
aisles, south porch and an embattled western tower with pin- Heckingham, Hedenham, Hellington, Howe, Kirby Cane,
nacles, containing a clock and 8 bells :the organ was presented Kirstead, Langley, Loddon, M undham, N orton Subcourse,
by T. Reynolds in I82I : the east window is stained and there Raveningham, Seething-, Sisland, Stockton, Thorpe-next-
is an ancient stone font, much defaced : in the south aisle is a IIaddiscoe, Thurlton, Thurton, Thwaite St. Mary, Toft
curious framed painting, dating from I496, and represent- Monks, Topcroft, Wheatacre All Saints, Woodton & Yel-
ing Sir James Hobart and his wifP., kneeling, with views of verton. The population of the mlion in I891 was I3,204;
Loddon church and St. Olave's bridge and an inscription area, 59,40I acres; rateable value, £73,465
beneath stating that Sir James built the church, and his wife Clerk to the Guardians & .Assessment Committee, James
the bridge : the lower panels of the rood screen are also Cole Copeman, Loddon
painted with various scripture subjects : in the chancel is a Treasurer, Henry Birkbeck, Norwich
brass w Sir James Hobart kt. ob. 16r5, and Frances his Collectors & Relieving Officers, Aldeby district, John Read
wife, ob. I669: in the north aisle is a marble altar-tomb, Sayer, Toft Monks; Loddon district, Jn. Cossey, Loddon
with a recumbent figure of Lady Williamson, who died in Vaccination Officers, the Registrars of Births & Deaths
I684 l there are soo sittings. The register dates from the Medical Officers & Public Vaccinators, No. I district, Robert
year ISS6. The living is a vicarage, averag-e tithe rent- Ives Metcalfe M.D. Beccles; No. 2 district, Thomas Harry
charge £265, net yearly value £I83, including 3 acres of Bate Rod well, Loddon ; No. 3 district, George Gillett,
glebe, with re8idence, in the gift of the Bishop of Norwich, Brooke ; No. 4 district, George Herbert Whitaker, Bungay
and held since 1884 by the Rev. Caleb Baskett Mayhew. .A Superintendent Registrar, James Cole Copeman, Loddon;
parish room, in connection with the church, was built in deputy, William Grimble, Loddon
1887 at a cost, including furnishing, of about £3oo, and Registrars of Births & Deaths, .Aldeby sub-district, John
will hold 140 persons. There is a Wesleyan chapel, built in Read Sayer, Toft Monks; deputy, Henry 'f. Smith, Toft
I835 and Primitive Methodist chapel, erected in 1852. The Monks; Loddon sub-district, John Cossey, Loddon;
Town Hall. built in 187o, is a structure of red brick, in the deputy, Alfred Ward, Loddon: Woodton sub-district,
Italian style, used for meetings and entertainments and Chas.Woods, Ditchingham; deputy, W. Woods, Hedenham
will hold goo persons. .An engine house was built in 1859 Registrar of Marriages, William Riches Blunderfield, Lad-
by the parish, and in addition to the parish engine there don; deputy, George Grimson, Loddon
is a fire engine placed here by the Norwich Union Fire Workhouse, Heckingham, a building of red brick, built in
Office. In the 28th Edward 1., J. Seagrave obtained for the 1764, to hold Sio inmates, James Ward, master; Rev.
town a charter for a market, to be held every Tuesday, for William Willes Hobson, chaplain; Thomas Harry Bate
corn, and a fair for stoek on Easter Monday and on the Rod well, medical officer; Mrs. Elizabeth C. Ward,
first Monday after November 22nd. The town estate con- matron; Miss Elizabeth Mnran, schoolmistress
l!ists of a boose and a farm of 76 acres, the rent of which, RURAL SANITARY AUTHORITY.
amounting to £136 yearly, is applied as under: three- Meets at tee Workhouse, Heckingham, every alternate
sevenths for the repair, maintenance and services of the monday when board meeting is over.
church, two-sevenths for the common burdens of the parish, Clerk, James Cole Copeman, Loddon
one seventh for the education of the children of the deserv- Treasurer, Henry llirkbeck, Norwich
ing poor and one-seventh for the benefit of deserving poor Medical Officer of Health, Edward Manby Rod well, Loddon
persons. George William Danby Palmer-Kerrison esq . .r. P. Inspector of Nuisances, llenry Thomas Smith, Toft Monks
of Ranworth, is lord of the manor. The land belongs to ScHOOL ATTENDANCE' CoMMITTEE.
11everal owners, amongst whom are - Poyser esq. John Meets at the Workhouse, lleckingham.
Wilson Gilbert esq. of Eaton grove, Norwich, and Captain Clerk, James Cole Copeman, Loddon
Clarke. The area is 2,952 acres; rated at £4,288; the Attendance Officers, John Read Sayer, Toft Monks & John
population in I881 was I, I45· Cossey, Loddon
Parish Clerk, Edward William Goate. PUBLIC OFFICERS:-
PosT, M. 0. & T. 0., S. B. & Annuity & Insurance Office. Assessors & Collectors of Property & Income Tax, Alfred
-Thomas William Ellis, postmaster. Letters are re- Ward & William Robinson Riches
ceived from Norwich at 6.5 a.m. ; dispatched per mail Clerk to Commissioners of Taxes, Mrs. Ellen Jane Kiddle
cart at 4.20 p.m. ; by special messenger at 7 p.m. to Clerk to Haddit~coe Drainage Board, w Chet Valley Com-
mail train at Buckenham mission of Sewers, J ames Cole Copeman
CoUNTY MAGisTRATES FOR LonnoN & CLAVERING PETTY Overseers, Alfred Ward & John Spence Leman
SESSIONAL DIVISION. Highway Surveyor, William Chapman, jun
The senior magistrate in the chair. Inspector under the Contagious Diseases (Animals) Act,
J>roctor-Beauchamp Sir Reginald William hart. D.L. Langley Daniel George Hunting
park, Norwich ScHOOLS:-
Bacon Nicbolas Henry, esq. Raveningham hall, Norwich The School Board, formed compulsorily May 25, x88o, for
Carr Wm. jun. esq. B.A. llall farm, Ditchingham, Norwich the united district of Loddon & Sisland, consists of 5
Dashwood Robert esq. Gillingham, Beccles members, who meet at the school on the second monday
de Poix Edmond Albert Joseph Edouard Marie 'Iyrel esq. in each month, at 7.30 p.m. ; J. C. Copeman, clerk to the
Broome Place, Bungay board; D. P. Powell, Loddon, attendance officer
Ferguson-Davie Rev. Charles Robert H.A. Rectory, Yelver- Board (formerly Loddon Public) School, erected in 1857 &
ton, Norwich enlarged in I88I to hold 160 boys, 84 girls & 81 infants;
Haggard Henry Rider esq. Ditchingham house, Bungay average attendance, boys 84, girls 75· infants 56;
Holmes George John esq. Brooke hall, Norwich Harry Thomas Woodward, master; Miss Woolliscroft,
Holmes John esq. Brooke hall, Norwich girls' mistress; Miss Otter, infants' mistress
Palmer Ambrose John Read esq. Haddiscoe hall, Norwich CARRIERS TO : -
Smith Henry esq. D.L. Ellingham hall, Bungay NORWICH~eorge Wells, wed. &; sat.; John Woolner,
Thursby Rev. William Ford B.C.L. Recrory, Bergh-.Apton, mon. wed. fri. & sat. ; Ship, mon. wed. fri. & sat
Norwich ' YARMOUTH-Alfred Ship, wed. & sat. returning same days
PRIVATE RESIDESTS, I Copeman James Cole I Leman John Spence
Beaumont Miss Copeman Miss Mayhew Rev. Caleb Ba.skett [vicar]
Blunderfield William Ellis Greengrass Mrs. S. M Nelson Rev. John B.C.L
Browne Frederick Waiter Grimble William Parr Rev. Thomas [vicar of Bales &
Cadge Ed ward, Bank house HardcastleRev. John Wm. [Wealeyan] Heckingham1

D~RECTORY.] NORFOLK. LODDON. 461
Powell David Pryse Cossey John, registrar of births & Leman John Spence, grocer, linen &
Prior Edward Thurlow deaths & relieving & vaccination offi- woollen draper, stationer, earthen-
Rod well Edward Manby cer, school attendance & inquiry ware dealer & ironmonger & overseer
Rod well Mrs officer for Loddon district Leman William, saddler
Rodwell Tlwmas Harry •
Bate Crake William, watch maker Marsden Charles Marmaduke, sadJler
Sadd Arthur Charles, The Beeches Cunningham Charles Thomas, farmer, & harness maker
Sadd Henry Ed win Town farm, Loddon Hall farm & Mayhew Elizabeth (Miss), ladies' school
Shaw Rev. Robert Jn. Southend house llales Hall farm Mullinger Harry Samuel, Swan com-
Weston James, Stubbs green Dowe Robert, shopkeeper mercial hotel & posting house
Worsley Rev. Algernon Edgar [curate Eagling Edgar,superintendent of police Nobbs & Goate, general printers; & at
of Chedgrave] Elden Lewis, builder & ironmonger Beccles TelegTams " Goate, Loddon"
Ellis James, market gardener Nobbs Ellen (Mrs.), tailoress
COMMERCIAL. Ell is Thomas Wil!iam M.P.S. chemist & Packer Rd. Waldegrave, clerk to Wood-
Artis Saml. boot maker & hair dresser druggist, bookseller,stationer & post- ton school board & agent for the
Baley Jacob, horse clipper master, & agent for W. & A. G1lbey, West of England Fire & Life, West-
Bishop Robert William, watch maker & wine & spirit merchants, & agent for minster Fire, Rock Life, Norwich &
jeweller (attendance tuesdays); & at the Norwich Union Life & Provincial London Accident & Employers'
Earsham street, Hungay Life Insurance Companies Liability Assurance Corporation Lim
Blunderfield William Riches, grocer, Fairhead George, cattle dealer . Pert Leonard Henry, plumber
draper,farmer & miller(wind &steam) Fish James, boot & shoe maker Powell D. P. school attendance officer
& registrar of marriages Fisher Mary Ann(Miss ),grocer& draper Prior Edward Tburlow, surgeon
Braddock Jane (Miss), dress maker Frost Rohert, boot maker Reeder George Waiter, grocer & baker
Braddock Rd. Wm. cooper & bill poster Galer Albert, shopkeeper Rice William, farm bailiff to A. Y.
Browne & Son, coach builders Galer George, market gardener Watson esq. Beech Grove farm
Browne Fredk. Waiter, pianoforte tuner Galer Frank, florist & market gardener Riches Wm. George, farmer, Stubbs ho
Brundell John Mapes, plumber, glazier Galer Samuel, market gardener&farmr Riches William Robinson, farmer &
& painter Garrard Austin, farmer assessor & collector of property &
CadgeEdward(firm,Copeman & Cadge), Garrard John, tailor & furniture broker income tax, The Elms
solicitor & commissioner for admini- Gas Co. (John Spence Leman, man- Rodwell Edward Manby, surgeon, &
stering oaths in the supreme court ager ; James Cole Copeman, sec) medical officer of health to rural
of judicatme Goate Ed ward William, news agent, & sanitary authority·
CarP & Reading Rooms (Miss E. White, correspondent to local papers Rodwell Thomas Harry Bate, surgeon,
manageress) Goate Samuel, boot maker medical officer & public vaccinator
Cannell William G. farmer, Stubbs grn Goodwin Charles, farmer for No. 2 district & medical officer to
Case & Steward, corn, coal, cake & seed Gower Arthur, farmer workhouse
merchants, & agents for Lawe's ma- Gower Thomas Barnaby,farmer,Stubbs Ship Alfred, carrier
nures (R. W. Packer, manager); & at green & Street farm Smith Samuel, brick maker
Norwirh & Yarmouth Green Philip, butcher & farmer Sutton Elijah, Fox & Hounds P.H
Chapman Charlotte (Mrs.), pork butchr Grimble William, solicitors' clerk & Symonds N athaniel, farmer & land-
Chapman William, jun. baker & high- deputy superintendent registrar owner, Loddon Ingloss
way surveyor Grimson George, deputy registrar of Todd Susannah (Mrs.), milliner
Chaston & Grimson, carpntrs. & buildrs marriages Town Hall Co. (James Cole Copeman,
Clarke Charles, shopkeeper Gurneys, Birkbecks, Barclay & Buxton hon. sec)
Cleveland William, King's Head P.H (branch), bankers (J. C. Copeman, Ward Alfred, assessor & collector of
Cooper AlfredGcorge,registered shoeing agent) ; draw on Harclay, Bevan & property & income tax & deputy
& general smith Co. London E c registrar of births& deaths & overseer
Cooper George, grocer & ironmonger Hall Henry, boot maker Ward James Charles, butcher
Copeman & Cadge, solicitors; & at Hatch Horatio John, Angel inn Warman George, Red Lion P.H
Beccles (fridays) & Norwich (sat) Hoddy John, pig dealer & butcher Watson Alfred Yeoman, farmer &land-
Copeman James Cole (firm, Copeman Huggins Anna (Mrs.), dress maker owner, Beech grove
& Cadge), solicitor, commissioner Hunting Daniel George M.R. c. v.s. vet- Wells George, carrier
for administering oaths, perpetual erinary surgeon, & inspector under Wigg Elizabeth (Mrs.), dre.!!s maker
commissioner for taking acknow- the Contagious Diseases(Animals)Act Woods, Sadd, Moore & Co.
ledgments by married women, clerk & agent for the Accident, the Live Limited, agricultural seed
to magistrates, school board, guar- Stock & the National Provident Life rnerch nts. (seeds specially machine
dians & school attendance & assess- Insurance Companies cleaned), wool staplers, maltsters &
ment committees & rural sanitary Kemp George, farmer millers (steam wind & water), cake
authority of Loddon union, & super- Kiddle Ellen Jane (Mrs.), clerk to merchants, agents for Anglo-Conti-
intendent registrar forLoddon district commissioner of taxes nental manures; & at Lowestoft
Copling Richard, plumber, glazier & Lack James, shopkeeper Woolner John, carrier
painter Lambert Charles, Jolly Farmers P.H
LONGHAM is a parish and village on the road from broke College, Cambridge. Here is a small Wesleyan
Dereham to Lynn, 2 miles north from Wendling station on chapel, built in r869, and two cottage almshouses for two
the Lynn and Dereham section of the Great Eastern railway old married couples, or four single women. The Earl of
and 5 west-north-west from Dereham, in the Mid division Leicester K.G., L.L. is lord of the manor, chief landowner
of the county, Launditch hundred, Mitford and Launditch and lay impropriator. The soil is mixed; subsoil, clay and
petty sessional division and union, Dereham county court gravel. The chief crops are barley, wheat and roots. The
district, rural deanery of South Brisley and archdeaconry area is r,304 acres; rateable value, £r,428; the population
and diocese of Norwich. The church of St. Peter is a in r89I was 310.
structure of flint and rubble, in the Perpendicular style, Parish Clerk, Henry Thompson.
consisting of chancel, nave, south porch, vestry and an em-
ba.ttlPd western tower containing one bell: in 1 a7s the PosT OFFICE.-Mrs. Mary Ann Horne, receiver. Box
church was thoroughly restored and reseated and a new cleared at 5.5 p.m. ; no collection on sundays. Letters
pulpit erected: there are 153 sittings. The register dates received through East Dereham, arrive at 9 a. m. Gressen-
from the year 1539 . The living is a vicarage, with the hall is the nearest money order & telegraph office. Postal
rectory of Wendling annexed, average tithe rent-charge £ 23 , orders are issued here, but not paid
joint net yearly value £'IIS, including 6o acres of glebe, Church of England School (mixed), erected by the Earl of
with residence, in the gift of the Lord Chancellor, and held Leicester in r862, for roo children ; average attendance,
since 1891 by the Rev. Louis Henry Ransom M.A. of Pem- 57; Miss Alice Boughey, mistress
Hastings John, Longham hall Clamp Thos. beer retailer & blacksmith Kendle William, farmer & landowner
Ransom Rev. Louis Henry M. A. [vicar, H<l.stingsJn.(exors.of),farmers, TheHall King Robert, painter &c '
& rector of Wendling], Vicarage Horne James Joseph, relieving officer Leeds George, farmer & cattle dealer
COMMERCIAL. for the Litcham district Savage Matthew, beer retailer
Alcock Jacob, shopk€eper Horne Mary Ann (Mrs.), shopkeeper, 1 Syer James, castrator
Belsham Richard, farmer Post office TurnbnU Jacob Armstrong, farmer
Brown Peter, shoe maker" Hunter '\''illiam, farmer Wiskar James, thatcher
Brown Mary Ann (Mrs.), farmer
LOPHAM is a stra!?'gling town, consisting of the two 17 miles west-by-north from Diss station on the Ipswich and
villages and parishes of North and South Lopham, and is Norwich section and 4t south-east from H<1rling Road
c. ~. & s. 30
462 LOPHAM. NORFOLK. [ KELLY's

station on the Thetford and Norwich section of the Great Board School (hired from the trustees of the Wesleyan
Eastern railway, in the Mid division of the county, Guilt- chapel), holding roo children ; average attendance, 83;
cross and Shropham petty sessional division, Guiltcross ·william Mann, master; Mrs. Mann, mistress
hundred and union, Diss county court district, rural deanery The village of South Lopham, the adjoining parish,
of Rockland, arch deaconry of Norfolk and diocese of Norwich. is a mile south from that of North Lopham. The church of
The church of St. Nicholas, North Lop ham, is a fine and St. Andrew, situated in a field, is an ancient building of flint
large edifice, in the Early English style, consisting of chancel, and stone, consisting of chancel, nave, south aisle, south
nave, aisle, south porch and an embattled western tower, porch and a fine central Norman tower, with pinnacles, and
principally of flint: the south porch is Norman, and the containing a clock and 6 bells : traces of a north aisle still
outside of the church and the buttresses exhibit many Latin remain: the chanl"el was thoroughly restored in r866 and
inscriptions: the chancel was thoroughly restored in r862,
the fine Norman arches of the tower thrown open: the rest
and in r887 the nave and aisles were reseated and part of of the church was restored and reseated in r874, and in r878
the tower converted into a vestry : there are 250 sittings.
an organ was obtained : there arc 400 sittings, 130 being
The earliest registers date from the year 1558. The livings
free. The register date8 from the year I554· The lidng is
of North and South Lopham form a consolidated rectory,
consolidated with that of North Lopham. The town lands
tithe rent-charge North Lopham £303, South Lopham and church charity are applied by the trustees, according
£495, joint net yearly value £620, including 32 acres of to a scheme sanctioned by the Court of Chancery, to the
glebe, with residence, in the gift of and held since r86r by maintenance of the church and schools of South Lop ham;
the Rev. John Fitzherbert Bateman M.A. and formerly the yearly surplus, or a sum not exceeding one-fourth of the
fellow of St. John's College, Cambridge, and rural dean of net income, is distributed amongst the poor who have not
Rockland: the patron is bound to present a fellow of St.
received parish relief for six months previously. The poor
John's College, Cambridge. There is a small Primitive have the benefit of a charity left by William Branch Elliott
Methodist chapel and a Wesleyan chapel, with a burial esq. and there is a fuel allotment in the fen, consisting of
ground, and a school room, now let to the School Board. A abou1, 200 acres, of which part is for South Lop ham and part
cemetery of a quarter of an acre was formed in r871, at a for North Lopham. Henry Edward Garrod esq. of Diss, is
cost of£ 150, and is under the control of the Burial Board of lord of the manor. The principal landowners are the Duke
nine members. The town is noted for the manufacture of of Nor folk K. G. Thomas Buckcnham esq. and .Mrs. Jarrett, of
linen, diaper, dowlas and huckaback, principally by small Diss; the trustees of the lateWilliam Ayton; the trustees of the
manufaL-turers, who traverse the neighbouring shires to sell late Thomas Davy esq. of Flint Hall, East Harling; Robert
their goods. The town lands and charities are applied by the Wornack esq. and Rev. John Fitzherbert Bateman are also
trustees according to a scheme framed by the Charity Com-
landowners. The chief crops are wheat, beans, barley and
missioners in 1870, for the benefit of the most deserving and turnips. The land comprises some kindly working loams
necessitous poor of the parish and for providing rewards for
resting on clay subsoil, and some of a heavy kind, all of
the school children, as well as for the maintenance and which are good corn-growing lands. About a mile east of
repair of the church. The land is chiefly the property of
South Lopham, in the fen or low lands, is Lopham Gate,
the Duke of Norfolk K.G. but there are several smaller
where there are two springs, from which flow the Little
owners. Henry Edwin Garrod esq. of the Grove, Diss, is
Ouse and vVavcncy; the former takes a course through
lord of the manor. The land is of mixed and heavy soil;
Thetford, Brandon and Lynn, and the latter flows to Yar-
subsoil, clay. The chief crops are wheat, barley and roots.
mouth, and both divide the counties of N OTfolk and Suffolk.
The area is 2,000 acres; rateable value, £2,791 ; the popu-
The area is 1,937 acres; rateable value, £2,604; the popu-
lation in 1891 was 598.
Parish Clerk, William Mann. lation in r8g1 was 476.
PosT & M. 0. 0., S. B. & Annuity & Insurance Office.- Parish Clerk, Charles Algar Keeble.
Alfred Ruddock, receiver. Letters arrive through Thet-
ford, via East Harling; delivered at 7· 30 a.m.; dispatched PosT 0FFICE.-Thomas Cox, receiver. Letters received
at 5-55 p.m. ; sunday delivery, 7-55 a.m. ; dispatched through Thetford, via East IIarling, at 7.50 a. m.; dis-
10.25 a. m. The nearest telegraph office is at Kenninghall
patched at 5.25 p.m. ; sundays at 7.50 a. m.; dispatched
~SCHOOLS:- ro a.m. The nearest money order & telegraph office is at
A School Board of 5 members was formed compulsorily Garboldisham
May 26, 1877 ; F. Fowell, Garboldisham, clerk to the Parochial School (mixed), with master's residence, was
board ; Thomas Tyler, North Lopham, attendance officer erected here in 1863, at a cost of about £8oo, for 120
"The old National School, now called "the Albert room," children ; average attendance, 8o ; the school is under
was built, with master's residence, in 1871, at a cost of the management of trustees, of whom the rector &
£7oo, on a site given by Mrs. G. E. Buckenham: it is churchwardens are ex-officio & there are ro others;
.now used as a sunday school & for lectures, meetings &c Marcus K. Bardwell, master

North Lop ham. Cole Aldis, farmer, Whitebread farm Womack Thomas Wm. grocer & draper
PRIVATH RESIDENTS. Cole Alfred, farmer, Noddle farm WomackWilliam John, King's Ilead P.H.
Crook Charles, blacksmith & wheelwright
~eales Stephen, sen Crowe:Malteyward ,farmer, Church farm Womack William Newson,miller (wind)
Buckenham Mrs. G. E. The Limes Emms Sarah (Mrs.), fanner Yeates Jesse, grocer & draper
Chamberlain Thomas Elsey George, farmer
Edwards Thomas Foster William, bricklayer South Lopham.
Fletcher Mrs Fuller Philip, farmer Bateman Rev. John Fitzherbert M.A.
Garrod Mrs Gooch John, poultry dealer [rector], Rectory
Hinds William Thomas Hogg William, farmer Buckenham Thomas
Land Mrs Holden Charles, farmer Muskett Edward
Pitt Rev.Richard Warcup M.A.[curate] Holden James, farmer Self Mrs
Rolfe William Waiter Holden Stephen, fanner COMMERCIAL.
Warne Miss Howard Robert, Bell P.H. & shoe maker Barker Mary Ann (.Mrs.), Crown P.H
Womack Mrs Jolly Maurice, mill stone dresser Bloomfield Arthur, farm bailiff to the
COMMERCIAL. Kebble Arthur, boot & shoe maker Rev. John Fitzherbert Bateman
Anderson William, farmer Kettle James Alfred, plumber & glazier Bowel! Levi, farmer
Baker James, farmer Land George, carpenter Bowell William, farmer
Banham Richard, baker Murton Edward (Mrs.), linen manufr Bowhill Jacob, blacksmith
Beales Robert, carpenter N ewson George William, linen manu- Huckenham T. W. & J. linen manufactrs
Beales Stephen,jnn.linen manufacturer facturer,assistant overseer & collector Bnckenham Thomas, farmer
Beales Samuel, butcher & farmer of taxes for Harling district & appoint- Bullock Waiter, farmer
Beales Wm. carpenter& wheelwright &c ed bailiff under the Law of Distress Cock Robert, farmer
Bowel! Frederick, farmer Amendment Act Cock Thomas, farmer
Bowel! Robert, farmer Reeve Righteous, thatcher Crowe Edgar,farmer, ·walnut Tree farm
Bowell Thomas, farmer Reeve Robert, thatcher & farmer Downing Saml. coal mer. & news agent
Brock Frederick, farmer Robinson Thomas, farmer & cab propr Eacock William Frost, farmer
Brock William, farmer Rolfe George Nelson, farmer Eaton William, farmer
Brown Charles, farmer, Lodge Ruddock Alfd. tailor & grocer,Post office Garnham Thomas, carpenter
Buckenham T. W.& J. linen manufactrs Shaw William Arthur, farmer Garnham Walter H. carpenter
Bush Herbert Benjamin, farmer Smith George, Bull P.H Goddard Henry,Chequers P.H.& builder
Cattermole Richard, fruiterer Thnrlow Mary (Mrs.), Cherry Tree P.H & contractor
Cemetery (F. Fowell, Hopton, clerk to Walker Isaac, carpenter Goddard Jesse, wheelwright
the burial board) White Harvey, Black IIorse P.H Grant Joseph, shoe maker
Chamberlain Thomas, farmer Womack John, farmer Grant Phillis (Mrs.), baker
Coe Josiah, boot & shoe maker Womack Thomas, farmer, Park farm Holden Henry, farmer
DIRECTORY. J NORFOLK. LYNG. 463
Howard Stephen John, White Horse P.H Musk George, farmer 'Vitton Ed ward, farmer& assist.overseer
Huggins Charles, farmer Muskett Edward, farmer Witton Sidney Brooks, miller (wind &
Land John, farmer Orford Mary Ann (Mrs.), farmer steam)
Land Walter, farmer Pcarce Waiter William, farmer Womack Robert, miller (wind), farmer
Matthews Story, farmer Sare William, shopkeeper & landowner
Murton Charles, poulterer & dealer Wallis Susan (Miss), shopkeeper
LUDHAM is a parish and small town, near the navigable , into an episcopal dwelling : the greater part was burnt
Bure, 2 miles south-west from Potter Heigham station on down in x6xr, but the palace was restored and enlarged by
the Eastern and Midlands railway, r3 north-east from Bishop Harsnet, who built a chapel of brick, which, after
Norwich, 13 north-west from Yarmouth and 13 south-east the bishops ceased to dwell here, was converted into a
from North Walsham, in the Eastern division of the county, granary, and the remainder of the edifice into a farmhouse,
Tunstead and Rapping petty sessional division, Smallbnrgh now called Ludham Hall. The Bishop of Norwich is lord of
union, Tunste!l.d hundred, Norwich county court district, the manor; Thomas Slipper esq. of .Bradeston Hall, the
rural deanery of Waxham Happing division, archdeaconry trustees of the late William Augustus Page esq. Ash
<Jf Norfolk and diocese of Norwich. The church of St. Rudd esq. J.P. of East Ruston Hall, Alfred Neave esq.
Catherine is a building of stone and flint, in the Perpen- William Frederick Green esq. of The Grange, Wro1:ham,
dicular style, consisting of chancel, clerestoried nave of six Mrs. Bacon and the trustees of the late Aaron Neave esq.
bays, aisles and an embattled western tower containing a are the chief landowners. The soil is mixed; subsoil, sand
clock and 5 bells; the chancel, which is separated from the and brick earth. The chief crops are wheat, oats and
nave by a richly carved screen, was restored in r86x : the barley. The area is ::.1,920 acres; rateable value, £5 1 191 ;
interior of the church was thoroughly restored and reseated the population in 1891 was 767.
in 1891 at a total cost of about £x,8oo: there are 500 Parish Clerk, Thomas William Thurgate.
s.it~ingl'!_. The. date of the earli~st register is 1583. The PosT & M.O.O., S.B. & Annuity & Insurance Office.-John
l1vmg IS a VIcarage, a_verag~ tithe rent-charge, £ 2 ~ 1 ; Thomas Thurgate, sub-postmaster. Letters received
net_ yearly_ value 1;22 3• mclud 1:Ug 2 7 acr:s 0 ~ glebe, Wlth from Norwich at 8 a.m. ; dispatched at 2.35 p.m. and
res1dence, m the g1ft of the B1shop of ,Norw1ch, and held 5 _30 p.m. via Yarmouth on week days & 10 _25 a.m. on
smce. x886 by the Rev. John James ~ Jl!mott. Here are sunday. Telegraph office at Potter Heigham railway
Bapt1stand Wesleyan chapels. About £65, the proceeds of station. WALL LETTER Box, Fritton, cleared at 4 p.m.
land give~ at the In~losure and from the .sale of tow? & a. m. on sundays
property, 1s annually d1v1ded among the poor m coals. This 9 .
place formerly had both a market and a fair, granted by A School Board of 5 members was formed April r8, 187::.1 ;
Elizabeth to Bishop Redman; the market is given up, but W: H. Cooke, Stalham, clerk to the board, attendance
the fair is held on the Thursday and Friday after Trinity officer •
Sunday, chiefly for pleasure. This place, after the dissolu- Board School (mixed), built in 1873 at a cost of £1,350, and
tion of the abbey of St. Bene't-at-the-Hulme or Hulme, near now (1892) being enlarged at a cost of about £6oo, for
Homing, to which the manor belonged, was given by Henry 200 children; average attendance, 187; David Edwards,
VIII. to the Bishop of Korwich, who converted the Grange master
Clarke John Ewles James, marshman Lake William, miller (wind)
Fendick Mrs Fairhead Clarissa (Miss), shopkeeper Lemon James, farmer
Gordon James Alexander, Manor house Farrow James, plumber Lemon James John, farmer
Hacon Mrs Gibbs Richard, farm bailiff to Thomas Lincoln GeorgeWm.beer ret.&bricklayr
Willmott Rev. John James, Vicarage Warts esq Lyon Grace (l\'Irs.), grocer & draper
COMMERCIAL. Gordon James Alex. L.R.C.P., L.R.c.s. Millett William,farm bailiff to William
Barber Robert, farmer & L.M.Hdin. surgeon & physician, & Frederick Green esq
.Beevor James, farm bailiff to Thomas medical officer, public vaccinator & May John Henry, sen. farmer
Slipper esq registrar of births & deaths, Ludham N eave Alfred, farmer & lando""w'T'Iner
Blaxell Charles, farmer dist. Small burgh union, Manor house Newton Ebenezer, corn, flour, pollard &
llond Benjaruin, farmer Grapes George, shopkeeper coal merchant ; carrier by water &
Bond Thomas, shopkeeper Grapes James, farmer emigration agent
Hush Henry, blacksmith Grapes William, glover Oakley Theodore, boot maker
Chaplin John, jun. wheelwright Green William Frederick, farmer; & Pa.geJarnes Alfred Porter,assist.overseef'
Chapman Fredcrick, miller (wind) at Wroxham & Little Plumstead Page William, painter
Clark Robert Samuel, farmer Hacon Herbert Jeffrey, farmer Press Walter, corn merchant
Clark Winter, Spread Eagle P.n.& baker Harrison Robert, boat builder Slaughter Eldred,Crown P.n.&fish deal(
Cox George, Dog inn Heath W"illiam Henry, coal merchant Spantou Ann (Mrs.), farmer
England Daniel Chastney, King's Arms Howcll Charles, marshman Sykes Edward A. farmer, The Laurels
P.H. & millwright Kittle Benjamin, farmer Vince William Carey, grocer &c
England Harriet (Mrs.), shopkeeper Kittle John, farmer Wenn Charles, sen. pork butcher
England Kerby Edwin, butcher Knights George Samuel, saddler &c Wright James, farmer
L YNFO RD is a parish, 5 miles north-east from Bun don and Child: there are xoo sittingf!. Lynford Hall, the se!l.t of
station, on the Ely and Thetford section of the Great Mrs. Lyne-Stephens, is a mansion of red brick with stono
Eastern railway, 7i north-west from Thetford and 93 from dressings, in the Elizabeth!l.n style, approached by a band-
London, in the South Western division of the county, Grim- some carriage drive; it is situated in a emall park, nearly
shoe hundred and petty sessional division, and Thetford inclosed by wood, and surrounded by 2,ooo acres of common.
union and county court district. There was once a church, land, covered with gorse, forming an excellent preserve for
but it has long since disappeared: there is no incumbent, game, which abounds here. Mrs. Lyne-Stepbens is lady of
nor is it ecclesiastically connected with any other parish. the manor and sole landowner. The soil is light sand, and
The inhabitants attend the church at West Torts. The in severe windy weather it drifts, though not so much as
Catholic chapel, erected in r879, from the designs of Mr. formerly, every part of it which is not heath and wood
Clutton, architect, at the expense of Mrs. Lyne-Stephens, having been brought into cultivation. The chief crops 11.re
and dedic11.ted to Our Lady of Consolation and St. Stephen, wheat, bsrley and turnips. The area is I,soB acres;
is 11. building of flint with stone dressings, consisting of rateable value, £644; the population in 188x was xog.
ll!l.ve, north porch and a sm!l.li turret cont!l.ining I bell: there LETTER Box cleared at 6.30 a.m. & 7.30 p.m. Letters
is a fine stone reredos and a l'!creen of o11.k: the chapel is through Mundford R.S.O. which is the nearest money
seated with open carved oak benches : at the entrsnce is !1. order & telegraph office
marble stonp and above it a statue group of the Msdonna The children of this place attend Mundford school
Lyne-Stephens Mrs. Lynford hall
Dwane Rev. Michael [Catholic]
I Lee Frederick, bead gardener to Mrs., Read William Henry, land agent to
Lyne-Stephens Mrs. Lyne-Stephens
L YNG is a village ·and parish on the river Wensum, 4t chancel, nave, south porch and a western tower containing
miles south-by-west from Reepham !!tation on the East 5 bells. The church possesses an interesting altar-cloth, 6
Norfolk section of the Great Eastern railway, 3 west from feet 9 in. by 3 feet 8 in., fashioned out of three different
Lenwade station on the Eastern and Midlands railway, and vestments of the 15th century, viz. two copes of blue and
7 north-east from Dereham, in. the Northern division of red velvet respectively, and a third veetmcnt of orange or
the county, Eynsford hundred and petty sessional division, t!l.wny velvet; the cloth is chiefly made up of f.he bluo
Mitford and Launditch union, Dereham county court dis- cope, which is decorated with conventional tlowers, double-
trict, rural deanery of Sparham and archde!l.conry and headed eagles, cherubim with four and seraphim with six
diocese of Norwich. The church of St. Michael is a sm11.ll wings, holding scrolls, bearing the inscription " ~~~ gmiant
building of flint, in the Early English etyle, consisting of ~ta; " the orphreys of this cope, worked with figur~ of
C. N. & S. 30*
'464 LYNG. •
NORFOLK. [KELLY'S

. saints, hl\ve been cut up to form part of the border of the Evans-Lombe B. A., J. P. of By laugh Park; the latter is lord
cloth; the other two vestments have simply been used for of the manor. The soil is of a light character; subsoil,
fllling in ; the material is foreign, but the embroidery is sand. The area is I,899 acres; rateable value, £2,376; the
entirely English : there are 214 sittings, 140 being free. population in 1891 was 437, including LYNG EASTHA.UGH
The register dates from the year I539· The living is a hamiet, I mile east.
rectory, average tithe rent-charge £4o2, gross yearly value Parish Clerk, Willi11om "'right,
£474• including 58 acres of glebe, with residence, in the PosT OFFICE.-John Long, receiver. Letters through
gift of the Rev. Henry Evans-Lombe B.A.' and held since Norwich, received at 8.15 a.m. ; dispatched at 2.55 p.m.;
:1867 by the Rev. Charles Thomas Jex-Blake M.A. of Jesus no delivery or dispatch on sundays. The nearest money
- Colle~e, Cambrioge. There are Wesleyan, Reform and order office is at Great Witchingham & telegraph office at
Primitive Methodist chapels. The charities for distribution Lenwade railway station. Postal orders are issued here,
Hmount to £3 17s. yearly, and there are 16 acres which but not paid
aupply fuel for the poor. In the eastern part of the parish
are the ruins of an ancient chapel, dedicated to St. Ed- National School (mixed), erected in 1863 for 120 children;
mnnd. A fair was formerly held on November 2oth. The average attendance, 90; James Willsher, master; Miss
chief landowners are Col. Sir Hambleton Francis Custance Louisa Juniper, assistant
x.c.B., n.L., J.P. of Weston House and the Rev. Henry CARRIER TO & FROM NORWICH.-Herbert Burton, sat
Jex-Blake Rev. Charles Thomas Burton John, wheelwright
M.A.. LongJohn,baker&shopkeeper,Postoffice
Rectory Burton Herbert, carrier Natt Maria (Mrs.), shopkeeper
Cobon Edward Jas. farmer, Manor farm Oswick Philip, farmer & grocer
COMMRRCIAL. Corner Isaac, farmer, Easthaugh Pigg Elijah, grocer & draper
Baker John, farmer, Colends green Earl-, tinsmith & farmer, Easthaugh Rayner Benjamin, King's Head P.H
BarkerElizh.(Mrs. ),farmer,Colends grn English Mary Ann, Lydia & Julia Reeve John, grocer & draper
Barrett William John, blacksmith (Misses), farmers, Yew Tree farm Sayer JohnJames,farmer, Primrose grn
Bird John, farmer, Primrose green llarris John, carpenter Sewter Edward, rate collector
Blanche George, beer retailer Hayward Robert, shopkeeper Sewter William, farmer, Mill farm
Blythe Albert, farmer & shopkeeper llenry George, Fox & Hounds P.H Speakman Frederick, boot maker
:Blythe Edgar, farmer, Easthaugh Howard Samuel, boot & shoe maker Wright Edward, farmer, Primrose grn
· Buck Chas. Blake, watch ma. & jeweller Hudson Stephen, boot maker

LYNN .
LYNN, KING's LYNN, or LYNN REGIS, the chief town in corporation under it consisted of a mayor, twelve aldermen,
West Norfolk, is a parliamentary and municipal borough, eighteen councillors, recorder and town clerk. The muni-
market and poor law union town, a head of a county court cipal borough now consists of the parishes of St. Margaret
district, and the great seaport of all the eastern lowlands, and All Saints or South Lynn : the parliamentary borough
on the east bank of the Great Ouse, near its junction with includes in addition part or Gaywood: by the Municipal
the river Nar, 2 miles from the Wash, 99 from London by Corporations Act of 1835 (S and 6 Wm. IV. c. 76) the
railroad and 98~ by road, 41~ north-east from Cambridge, borough is divid~d into the north, middle and south wards,
26f north-west-by-west from Dereham, r I north from and the corporation consists of a mayor, six aldermen and
Downha.m, 26! north from Ely, 48! west-by-north from eighteen councillors, who also act as the Urban Sanitary
Norwich, I4~ north-west-by-north from Swaffham and I5~ Authority : other officials are the high steward, recorder,
north-east from Wisbech, in the North Western division of town clerk,. coroner, surveyor, treasurer, sword-bearer,
the county, petty sessional division of Freebridge Marsh- town crier and sergeants-at-mace. The borough has a
land, hundred of Freebridge Lynn, rural deanery of Lynn commission of the peace and a separate court of quarter
Marshland and arch deaconry and diocese of Norwich. Lynn sessions. The borough court for the trial of civil actions
.is an important terminus of the Great Eastern, Great has been superseded by the county court ; and the courtleet,
Northern, the Midland and the East.ern and Midlands Rail- formerly held by the corporation as lords of the manor, has
way Companies, by which lines it has direct communication not been held for several years past .
. with London, Cambridge, Ely, Wisbech, Peterborough, The port of Lynn, from its position in relation to the
Hunstanton, Wells, Norwich, Spalding, Grimby and inland navigation connected with 1t on the one band, and
Hull, Cromer and Yarmouth, and, by way of Cambridge, its free communication with the German Ocean on the other,
Peterborough and Stamford, with all the principal towns in is of considerable importance, especially in the corn, timber,
the north and west of the kingdom. and coal trades. Under the provisions of the Customs Con-
At the period of the Norman Conquest Lynn was already solidation Act, 1853 (16 & 17 Vict. c. 107), modified by
a port, with considerable custDms and many salt works : in relimitations in I876, the port is defined to extend from
the reign of William Rufus, Bishop llerbert Losinga Eau Brink Cut (Norf) to the Sparrow Gap, the limit of
( I09I-I 121) founded the church and priory of St. Margaret; Yarmouth, and to include the river Ouse : fishing boats
and in the time of Henry I. the priory of Norwich obtained and implements belonging to the port to be distinguished by
the grant of a fair to be held at Lynn on the fea~t of St. the letters L. N. The harbour, formed in a wide reach of
Margaret, with various other privileges : in the reign of the Ouse river, is very deep and wilt hold upwards of 300
Henry VIII. much of the ecclesiastical property passed to vessels, the rise of the tide here being 22 feet : the upper
the Crown, and the name of the borough was changed from streams are under the care of the Conservators of the Ouse
Lynn Episcopi to Lynn Regis. outfall, and have been much improved. The harbour is
During the Civil War the Mayor and burgesses of Lynn under the control of the corporation and several bodies of
declared for the Royal cause, and in 1643 fortified the town commissioners. The number of vessels belonging to this
against the attack of I 8,ooo Parliamentary troops, under the port is nearly wo, the aggregate tonnage being about g,ooo,
command of the Earl of Manchester: the town was closely besides small craft, lighters, and nearly 200 fishing-boats.
besieged from August 28 to September 26, when the The exports are principally corn, wool, sand, and coprolites
garrison, consisting of s,ooo men, was obliged to surrender : to British· ports, and coals, machinery, implements and
during the siege, on Hun day, 3 Sept. a sixteen pound manufactured goods for the foreign trade : in I887 tile
shot was fired from West Lynn into St. Margaret's church, quantity of coal shipped was 22,955 tons; in I8go, 49,552
where it did no further harm than to shatter a pillar into tons, and in I89I, 117,877 tons, and the timber trade is
p1eces and disperse the congregation: the town was after- also on the increase. The imports are 'Principally coal,
wards garrisoned by the Parliament, and remained in their timber, wine, maize, barley, linseed, cotton seed and oilcake,
power till the close of the Civil War. King John visited and a great variety of raw and unmanufactured goods from
Lynn in 1205, and on the petition of John Grey, Bishop of the Continent. The wine trade here is as ancient as the time
Norwich (1200-22) that monarch granted Lynu a charter to of Henry Ill. The fisheries include soles, cod and smelts.
be a free borough. The borough sent two members to Vast quantities of shrimps, besides mussels and cockles, are
Parliament from the 26th of Edward I. (1297-8) until the also sent hence to London and other large towns. There
passing of the Redistribution of Seats Act, 1885, when the are malthouses and breweries, corn mills, iron and brass
number was reduced to one; it has had no fewer than nine- foundries, agricultural implement manufactories, cork-
teen charters, granted during the reigns of John, Henry IlL cutting establishments, machine makers and millwrights,
Edward I. Edward Il. Edward Ill. Henry V. Henry VIII. seed crushers, coach builders and rope and sail makers.
Edward VI. Mary, James I. Charles II. and Georgeii.: the Efforts are being made by the Eastern Counties Naviga-
first governing charter, which appointed nnd fixed the tion and Transport Company to resuscitate the old navi-
municipal corp()ration, was granted by Henry VIII. and the gation of the rivers Great Ouse and Lark, and minor canals
'
DIRECTORY.] NORFOLK. LY~. 465
and waterways. A line of barges, towed by steam tugs, and at Soutbgate, established in 1825, and enlarged in I873, and
also steam barges, now run on fixed days every week, and will now belonging to a company. The water supply is derived
put Lynn in direct water communication with the towns of from works the ;:'roperty of the Corporation, the water
Littlepurt, Ely, Cambridge, Mildenhall, Thetford and Bury being obtained from a stream rising in the chalk strata at
St. Edmunds on the East; Peterborough, Wisbech, St. Gayton and Grimston.
Neots, St. Ives, Northampton, Birmingham, and all places St. Margaret's church, formerly that of the Benedictine
served by the Grand Junction Canal on the West. priory of SS. Mary Magdalene and Margaret, founded by
The Alexandra Dock, constructed in 1867-g, from the Bishop Herbert in noo, is a fine cruciform structure o[
designs of Mr. Brunlees, and opened by H.R.H. the Prince freestone, in the Early English, Early Decorated and Per-
of Wales, 17 July, I86g, is situated at the north end of the pendicular styles, and now consists of chancel, with chapels,
town, adjoining the harbour, and contains about 7 acres of nave, aisles, and two western towers 86 feet in height and
water area ; the form is an irregular quadrangle, the containing IO bells, two of which were presented in I887 by
southern side 780 feet in length and the northern 590; the Wm. Burkitt esq.: one of the towers was formerly sur-
width from south to north, between the edges of the quays, mounted by a spire, which bf)ing blown down in 1741,
about 440 feet: at the water surface the width is 420 feet, destroyed in its fall the nave and the central lantern; the
and the average depth of the dock is 31 feet: the inclination church, thoug·h curtailed of its original dimensions, is still a
of the slopes forming the sides is I~ horizontal to I perpen- noble pile 240 feet in length and 132 feet wide: the chancel,
dicular, the slopes being faced with solid concrete blocks : enclosed by screens of carved stone, has a peculiar east
small craft are able to approach near the edge ; but for the window, and contains a number of carved sta11s, several with
convenience of vessels of large draught, substantial timber misereres, and there are some ancient memm·ials and curious
staiths or projecting quays have been constructeri : each brasses, one of which, to Braunche, mayor uf Lynn, is a
staith is 32 feet long, projecting somewhat beyond the base magnificent Flemish work IO by 5 feet, and represents a pea-
of the slope, and its flour ur dec:k is furnished with rails cock feast given to Edward Ill. by this mayor, who died in
leading on to a turntable upon the lines of railway by which 1364; another brass to Adam de Walsoken, represents the
the duck is entirely encompassed: there is a continuous ingathering of an orchard : the chapels adjoining the chancel
covered timber wharf, 250 feet long, on the south side, were dedicated to the Trinity and 8t. Stephen; two chapels
furnished with steam cranes, at which steamers load and on the south side were taken down about 1741, and in I747
discharge their cargoes, and at the end of the dock is the nave and aisles were substarltially rebuilt, though in a
a powerful hydraulic lift for the shipment of coal from the debased style, but in I 875 this part of the church underwent
Nottinghamshire and Derbyshire coalfields: with these very extensive alteration, at a cost of £7,000, under the
appliances several vessels of an average tonnage of I,ooo each direction of the late Sir Gilbert Scott RA. when the galleries
can be directly loaded or delivered ; the total capacity of the were removed and the interior reseated, the chancel being
dock is about so,ooo tons; the dimensions of the entrance at the same time restored by the Ecclesiastical Commission-
lock are :-width, so feet; length between gates, 200 feet; ers, under the superintendence of lVIr. Ewan Christian,
depth, 30 feet: the platforms on which the lock gates work architect: there are upwards of 2,ooo sittings. The register
are 9 feet 6 inches below low water of average tides, and dates from the year ISS9· The living is a vicarage, annexed
with the surrounding walls form an immense mass of sub- to the rectory of North Lynn ; tithe rent-charge commuted
stantial masonry. During the construction of this dock, at L539, average £409 ; joint net yearly valt1e L 285, in-
various interesting remains were brought to light, including eluding 20 acres of glebe, in the gift of the Dean and Chapter
many tons of bones of animals extinct in this country-such of Norwich, and held since I89r by the Rev. Ed ward George
as the elephant, wild boar, tiger, elk, wolf, beaver, and A.dlingtnn \Vinter M.A. of Keble College, Oxford.
others of far greater antiquity, together with examples of St. Nicholas, a chapel of ease to St. Margaret's, is an
British, Roman and Saxon pottery, and other objects. elegant building of stone in the Late Perpendicular style,
A branch railway, three-quarters of a mile in length, consisting of chancel, cleresturied nave, aisles,srmth porch and
belonging to the Dock Company, connects the dock with the I a western tower, with lead-covered spire, and containing a
Great Eastern, Eastern and Midlands, Midland, Great clock and 8 bells : the east window is stained, and there i!!
Northern, and London and ~orth Western railway systems: one other: the font, of finely wrought stone, standing on a
in 1877 an Act was obtained authorizing the Dock Company pyramidal flight of steps, was presented by Bishop Harsnett
to extend the existing dock, by the addition of another basin in I627: the spire, desi~ned by the late Sir G. Gilbert Scott
called the Bentinck Dock, I,ooo feet long by 400 feet wide, R.A. was erected by public subscription in 1869: the interior
connected with the old dock by a short canal, and shut off was thorou!5hly restored and reseated and the gallery re-
by a pair of lock gates, thereby forming an inner dock, moved in 1853. There are about I,soo sittings.
which, with the surrounding land for the storage of timber St. John the Evangelist's is an ecclesiastical district, formed
~nd the erection of sheds, covers about 70 acres: this ad- I7 March, 1846, out of St. Marga.ret's parish. The church,
ditional dock was commenced in 188I, and opened for traffic in St. John's terrace, occupying a site given by the corpor--
in r8R4. Hydraulic mains are placed around the whole of ation, and opened 24th September, 1846, at a cost of about
the quays, which are well provided with hydraulic and £s,ooo, is a buildin~ of stone in the Early English style,
other cranes, both fixed and portable, ranging from I to 15 from designs by Mr. W. Sa.\vin, architect, consisting of
tons lifting power. There is also a coal tip at each dock. chancel, nave, aisles, north porch and a belfry containing
There are altogether in the Dock Company's premises some one bell: the east window is stained: a handsome pulpit and
twelve miles of sidings, all in connection with the quays; the reading desk were presented in 1885, as a. memorial to
total acreage of the docks, quays, railways &c. exceeds 100 Joseph Francis Cresswell esq. : in r88g-go two exterior
acres. buttresses were erected at the west end, and two piers in
On the land side, the town is encompassed by a fosse, the interior of the church rebuilt at a cost of £soo; and in
formerly defended by a strong embattled wall, flanked I892 a new organ was erected at a cost of £300: there are r,oo8
by nine bastions: fragments of this wall still remain, sittings, 8oo of which are free. The register dates from the
together with the south gate, a fine Gothic structure with a year 1846. The living is a vicarage, net yearly value £210,
lofty pointed archway for carriages and two smaller ones with residence, in the !;ift of the Bishop of Norwich, and held
f@r foot passengers : near the fosse, on the east side of the since r8go by the Rev. Henry Harkness Streeten B.A. of
town, is an octagonal two-storied chapel, called the Red Exeter College, Oxford, chaplain to the West Norfolk and
Mount, formerly much visited by pilgrims and others. Lynn hospital. A mission hall of corrugated iron for this
The town is about a mile and a quarter in length, and more parish was erected in r8Br in the Railway road, and will seat
than half a mile in breadth, and its eastern suburb contains 300 persrms.
many villa houses. The streets and lanes are generally nar- The Catholic Church, in the London road, dedicated to St.
row, but clean and well paved, and there are many excellent Mary and erected in I844 from a design by A. L.Welby Pugin
shops and good hotels. Near the London road are public esq. at a cost of £z,soo, is a structure of grey brick with
walks, planted with trees and shrubs ; one of these extends stone dressings in the Early English style, consistmg of
from Guanock terrace, at the south end of the town, to the chancel, nave, north aisle and south porch, and in 1852 a
Red Mount, and from thence along the site of the town wall, north aisle was added, and a residence erected for the priest:
as far a!'l the Railway Station: this pleasant promenade has there are 200 sitting-s.
a range of lofty lime and chestnut trees on each side, forming There are three Wesleyan chapels ; that in Tower street
a shady avenue, with recessed seats at convenient distances was erected in 18 r2, at a cost of £4,500, and has 1,200 sit-
one of which is surrounded by a group of trees called the tings; that in the London road is an edifice of red brick in
"Seven Sisters." the Gothic style and will seat about 500 persons. The Wes-
Thc Marshland Iron Bridge, over the river Ouse, con- leyan chapel at North End, King's Lynn, opened inN O'l'ember
necting Lynn with West Lynn, was built by the Ouse r883, is a structure of red brick with Bath stone dressings in
Outfall Commissioners, at a cost of £2o,ooo, and opened 30 the Early English style, from designs by Mr. J. A. Hillam,
July, r873 ; it is constructed of wrought-iron lattice girders, architect, of Lynn, and has a spired turret and angle pin-
and is soo feet in length between the abutments, with a nacles: there are sittings for 400 persons, and in the rear
roadway 25 feet wide, and is supported upon four piers. are three class-rooms. The Congregational chapel, New
The ferry across the Ouse, belongs to and is controlled by Conduit street, built in 1838 at a cost of about .£3,000, is
the Corporation. The town is lighted w1th ga.s, from works an edifice of brick and affords about goo sittings. Tho
466 LYNX. NORFOLK. (KELLY'S

Stepney Baptist chapel, Dlackfriars street, erected in 1841 The premises of the Young Men's Christian Association,
at a cost of £2,ooo, has been re- seated and decorated at an in St. James' street, are of red brick, in the Tudor style,
outlay of £7oo, and will seat 8oo persons. The Union Bap- and were erected in 186o, at a cost of about £2,000.
tist chapel, Market street, built in 1859 at a cost of £3,ooo, The Theatre is in St. James' street, and belongs in part to
is a cruciform building in tl1e Early English style, with a the Corporation, with other shareholders.
small tower and spire, and has 550 sittings. The Methodist Lynn is a great market for cattle, corn and other agricul-
New Connexion chapel, Railway road, erected in 1852-3, at tural produee, brought here for shipment : the markets are
a cost of about£ 2,ooo, will seat 620 persons. The Primitive held on Tuesday and Saturday, the former, for corn and
Methodist chapel, in the London road, opened in 1857 at a cattle, being the principal market; there are three market
cost of about 1:2,ooo, is of brick in the Italian style and places, one of which is for live stock only, the others being
affords 85o sittings : adjoining are large schoolrooms ; there respectively known as the Tuesday and Saturday Markets;
is also a small Primiti,·e Methodist chapel at Highgate, tlle latter has a market house for butchers, and in the former
erected in 185o, with 50 sittings: the Unitarian chapel; is the corn exchange and the latter meat, poultry and fish
erected in 1875, is an edifice of white and red brick with market. In the centre of the Tuesday .Market stands an
Bath stone dressings, in the Decorated style, and has about ornamental column, erected at a cost of about £3oo, defrayed
400 sittings. The Society of Friends have a meeting house by Mr. John .:VIalam, and serving both as a lamp standard and
in New Conduit street with a school in the rear, erected in a publ1c fountain: the cattle market adjoins Broad street, and
x88g. is near the rail way terminus, where there are very extensive
The Salvation Army barracks, in W'ellesley street, will cattle and sheep pens ; it is held on Tuesday, and is very
seat between Boo and goo. largely supplied with sheep and cattle.
The Borough Cemetery in the Hard wick road covers about A pleasure fair, called the Mart, begins on St. Valentine's
eight acres of land, and has two chapels united by an arch- Day, and lasts for a fortnight; another, called the Cheese
way, over which rises a turret with slated spire : there is fair, held on the 17th October, was abolished in 1878: cattle
also a mortuary, and curator's lodge: the cemetery is under fairs are held on the second Monday in the months of April
the control of a Bur:al Board of I I members. and November; the former principally for sheep, of which
The Guildhall, formerly the hall of the Trinity Guild, in nearly 20,000 are sometimes penned.
the Saturday Market place, has a fine Gothic window and a The West Norfolk and Lynn Hospital, first established in
ltenaissance porch of fi[nt (ind stone: the Assembly Rooms Dec. 1834, now occupies a spacious edifice of white brick,
form a part of the building, and by means of folding doors near the London road, ereeted at a cost of more than
are made to form a spacious apartment, 87 feet long by 22 £3,000: in 1847 two new wings were added and a separate
broad and 22 feet in height : adjoining these are the council ward for contagious cases was erected in 1877 as a memorial
and magistrates' rooms: a few full-length portraits adorn to the late Rev. John Freeman, the biographer of Kirby the
the walls. Here is preserved the Red Register of Lynn, said entomologist. The hospital will hold 52 patients, and is
to be the oldest paper book in exiswnce, besides other ancient supported by voluntary contributions.
muniments belonging to the Corporation. The revenue of Framingham's Hospital, in the London road, founded
the corporation is about £4,000 a year. The corporation in 1676 by Alderman Framingham, is a structure of brick,
possesses an elegant covered cup of silver, double gilt and with stone dressings, arranged for twelve inmates, and an
enamelled, weighing 73 ounces, and holding about half a attached chapel; a lawn extends in front, and in the rear
pint, but not of earlier date than the 14th century. The are small gardens for the almspeople : the hospital has a
state sword carried before the mayor is repuwd to have been revenue of £402 yearly.
given to the corporation by King John, but this is quite St. James' Hospital, in St. James' road, founded in the
doubtful, and could at most refer only to the blade; the hilt r4th century, and rebuilt in 1772, consists of twelve houses,
and pommel, overla.d with silver and partly gilt, seem to with a chapel, and has an income of about [,r6g.
date from about 1425-30, and there have been additions since The Wesleyan, or Smith's Almshouses, in St. James' road,
the time of Hen. Vlll. ( r528-9) as appears by an inscription for eight poor women above sixty years of age, were founded
on the quillons, one side of "hich has another inscription and endowed in 1822 by Eenjamin Smith esq. ; the endow-
asserting the sword to have been presented by King John; ment amounts to about £130 yearly.
the scabbard, of crimson velvet, decorated with the national Elsden's Almshouses, in South Lynn, founded in 1842, for
emblems, belongs to the 17th century; four silver-gilt maces eight persons, have an income of£ II2 4s.
are also carried before the mayor on all public occasions. Valinger's .Almsbouses, in South Lynn plain, founded in
The Corn Exchange, in the Tuesday Market place, er~cted r8II by Thomas Valinger, are for four poor women of South
in 1854, is a large structure of brick, with a stone front and Lynn parish: the yearly endowment is about £34·
glass roof. 'Sugar's Almshouses, in Goodwins road, erected in 1887,
The Custom house, Purfleet quay, erected in r683, is a and endowed by John Sugar esq. formerly of King's Lynn,
building of freestone, in the Italian style, with a curious are for six widows. There are also general charities for
pyramidal roof, from which nses a small open turret, ter- distribution.
minating in a pinnacle at the height of go feet : a statue of Near St. J ames' street and the Theatre stands a fine
Charles II. is placed over the entrance. hexagonal tower of Perpendicular date, the only remains now
The Athemeum, in Baxter's plain, erected in 1854, is an existing of a Franciscan or Grey Friary, founded here before
ediJice of brick, the principal portion of which is used as a 1264 by Thomas de Fellsharn.
Post Office; another portion, serving as a Museum, contains A handsome graniw drinking fountain was erected in 1885
a spacious hall with a gallery, and has a large collection of at the corner of St. John's terrace and St. James' road by
ornithological specimens, to which J. II. Gurney esq. was a Mrs. Richards as a memorial to her husband, the late Rev.
munificent contributor. The museum is supported by sub- Valentine Richards M. A rector of South 'Vootton.
scription, but is freely open to the public: the Athen<eum The following eminent literary men were natives of Lynn~
also comprises a very fine hall, 84 by 42 feet, used for con- viz. :-John Capgrave, an Augustinian friar and sometime
certs, lectures and exhibitions, besides numerous rooms and provincial of that order in England, who was born here
o!lices. The building is now private property. 21 April, 1393, and was the author of the "Chronicles of
The Stanley library, in St. James's road, presented to the England," and other works, and died at Lynn r2 Aug.
town by the Earl of Derby K.G. is a building in the Doric r464: Nichulas, or Friar Nicholas, a musician and astrono-
style, erected in 1883 from designs by :\lessrs. Adams and mer, who died in 1360; William Sautre, or Sauter, a Wick-
Sons, architects, of Lynn, a!ld comprises the Stanley library, litlite priest, burnt at Smithfield in 1401 ; William Gale, an
the St. 1\iargaret's Church library (containing MS. books eminent member of the Augustinian order, ob.15o7; Sir Benj.
chiefly of tlle 13th and 14th centuries), reading room, and a Keene, ambassador to Spain, d. 1757; and W. Whitting-
committee room. ham, bookseller, and editor of one of the editions of the
The Lynn Public Baths, on Common Staith quay, opened County History, d. 18r8.
4th July, 1856, comprise hot and cold, salt and fresh water ~OUTH LYNN is a parish. The church of All Saints is an
baths, and shower and swimming baths. ancient cruciform structure of flint and stone in the Deco-
The Pilot Office, also on Common Staith quay and erected rated style, consisting of chancel, nave, aisles, transepts and
in 1863, is a structure of red brick, surmounted by an octa- a western turret containing one bell: tbe tower fell in 1763:
gonal tower so feet high. in r86o the church was thoroughly repaired and re-seated
The King's Lynn and West Norfolk Conservative Club, St. and again restored in 1887, when the chancel floor was re-
James's House, St. James's street, in the centre of the town, laid; there are x,ooo sittings. The register dates from the
and the property of a limited company, has attached an year 1558. The living is a rectory, tithe rent-charge [,3oo.
extensive lawn, and grounds available for lawn tennis and net yearly value £280, with residence, in the gift of the 1
other games. The club is managed by a committee. Bishop of Norwich, and held since 1855 by the Rev. William
The South Lynn Working Men's Liberal Club has 300 Leeper M.A. of Trinity College, Dublin.
members ; president, Mr. Robert !<'. Springall. SEECHE is a hamlet of South Lynn, distant 2 miles south.
The Church of England Young Men's Society's Rooms, in The school chapel, erected here in 1863, is a building of ·
Railway road, erected in 1885 at a cost of about £9oo, are flint and brick, in the Gothic style, and serves for this ham-
of red brick and comprise reading, smoking, conversation let and for that of Saddlebow, a part of the parish of Wig--
and class rooms. genhall St. Mary's, the church of which is situated on the
DIRECTORY.] NORFOLK. LYNN. 467
opposite side of the river Ouse, about 3 miles from this por- acres of water; rateable value of St. Margaret's parish,
tion of the parish. £5o,366 and All Saints, £5,647; and the population in x8gx
WF.sT LYNN is a suburb and parish on the west bank of was-All Saints, 5,647 1 including the of'licers anrl inmates
the Ouse, with which there is a communication by a ferry in the workhouse; and St. Margaret's 12 16x8, including the
and a bridge. GAYWOOD is also a suburban parish. The West Norfolk and Lynn IIospital; total, 18,265. The popu-
Directory of these suburbs will be found under separate lation of the municipal borough in 1891 was 18,265 ; and of
headings. the parliamentary borough, 17,226 in 1871, and in 1891,
The area of the borough is 3,100 acres, inclusive of 55 18,265.
Official Establishments, L'Jcal Institutions &c.
PosT, M. 0. & T. 0., S. B. & Annuity & Insurance Office, MAILS INWARD. )!ails
.
Deliveries
Athenooum buildings. Robert Teare, postmaster. From arrtve. commence.
MAILS OuTwARD. London & all parts ................... .. 2.10 a. m. 7 a.m
London, Peterborough & North ..... . 8.45 a.m. 9.30 a. m
Burnham mail-Hillington, Grimston, Ga:ytun, East Wal- 11 a.m. 1.30 p.m
Gaywood day mail ................... ..
ton, Bircham, Flitcham, Stanhoe, Docking, Rarwick &
Terrington, Clenchwarton & West
Burnbam, 3.50 a. m.; Hunstanton mail- Gaywood,
Lynn .................................... · rx a.m.
Wootton, Rising, Wolferton, West Newton, Sandringham,
Hunstanton, Burnham & Snettis-
Dersingha.m, Ingoldisthorpe, Snettisham, Hcacham,
ham day mails ....................... . II-45 a. m. 1.30 p.m
Hunstanton, Holme, Thornham, Sedgeford, Ringstead,
London & Midland counties ....... .. 12.30 p.m. r.3o p.m
Titchwell, Brancaster, 3.50 a. m. ; Rural letter carriers- Peterborough & Wisbech .......... ..
z.1op.m. 1.30 p.m
Wormegay, Magdalen, Terrington, Tilney, Terrington
Peterborough, Wisbech & Midland
St. John East, Winch & districts, 5-55 a.m. ; Wolfcrton-
counties ................................ . 4-40 p.m. 6.15 p.m
6.2o a.m. (sunday, 3.50 a.m.); London 1st day mail-
London, Norwich, Cambridge,
all parts, 7.50 a. m.; Dersingham, Heacham, Hunstanton,
Dereham, Fakenham, Swaffham
Old Hunstanton & Snettisham, 9 a.m. ; Hillington day
& Hunstanton ........................ 5-35 p.m. 6.15 p.m
mail, 10-40 a. m. ; London 2nd day mail-Cambridge &
Rural letter carriers..................... 7 p. m. 8.30 p. m
all parts, n.20 a.m.; Dereham & Norwich, 12 noon;
Hunstanton & Burnhammails ...... 7-45 p.m. 8.30 p.m
Gaywood day mail, 12 noon : West Lynn, Clenchwarton
Sundays Mails arrive from London & all parts at 2. ro
& Terrington day mail, 12 noon; Dereham, Dersingham,
a.m. Deliveries commence at 7 a. m
Docking, Hunstanton, Snettisham, Burnham, Congham,
Grimston, Ga.yton, East Walton, East Winch, Hillington Member of Parliament.
& West Bilney day mails, 12 noon ; Magdalen & St. Ger-
mans day mail, 1.30 p.m.; London 3rd day mail-all Thomas Gibson Bowles esq. Wilbury house, Newton Tony,
parts, 2.50 p.m. ; Downham & Wolferton, 2.50 p.m.; Salisbury, Wilts
Wisbech clay mails, 4.10 p.m.; Norwich, Colchester & Returning Officer, the :Mayor
Ipswich day mails, 4· 10 p.m. ; London 4th day mail- Corporation.
South & West, 4·55 p.m.; Dereham,Swaffb.am, Hunstan- r8gr-g2.
ton & Old Hunstanton, 4-55 p.m. ; Leicester mail-Peter- High Steward, Right Hon. the Earl of Derby K.G., P.C., D.L.,
borough, Birmingham & the North & West, 5.20 p.m. ; J.P. Knowsley hall, Lancashire; & 23 St. James' square,
Gaywood, 6. ro p.m.; Dereham & Wells day mail, 7.50 Londonw
p.m. ; London night mail-all parts, 9· 30 p. m. ; Mails on MAYOR-Alderman William Read Pridgeon
sundays, 9.30 p.m. ; Burnham & Hunstanton mails & REcoRDER-Carlos Cooper esq. Norwich
rural letter carriers as on week days ; late inland letters ALDERMEN.
with !d. & colonial & foreign letters with Id. stamp tJames Bowker William Read Pridgeon
extra tGeorge Holditch George Gold Sadler
RECEIVING 0., M. 0. 0., S. B. & Annuity & Insurance Offices. t Alfred Ream William S. V. 1\'Iiles
Hours of Collection. Marked thue t retire in lll92.
Marked thus ! retire in 1895.
Alexandra docks (r & 2 St. Ann's street) (rst) 2.45 a.m.;
(3rd) 10.30 a.m.; (4th) 12.45 p.m.; (5th) 2.15 p.m.; ComrcrLLORS.
(6th) 4-15 p.m.; (7th) 5 p.m.; (8th) 7·35 p.IIL; (gth) North Ward.
8.35 p.m. Sundays (rst) 2-45 a. m.; (2nd) 8.35 p.m *Frederick Sa·m!Se tDaniel Barnard
East gates (n3 Norfolk street) (xst) 2.45 a. m.; (3rd) 10.30 t John Thomas Stanton tGeorge Bristow
a. m.; (4th) 12.35 p.m.; (5th) 2.5 p.m. ; (6th) 4·5 p.m. ; tGeorge Edward Rose BasilDuckwotth Quiham pton
(7th) 4·45 p.m.; (8th) 7.25 p.m.; (9th) 8.25 p.m. S1m-
day (xst) 2.45 p.m.; l2nd) 8.25 p.m *Frederick John Miles
xo8 High street (rst) 2.45 a.m.; (3rd) ro.so a..m.; (4th) *Frank Sherwood Thew
I
Middle Ward.
tRichard Green
tCharles Barrett
x p.m.; (5th) 2.25 p.m.; (6th) 4.25 p.m.; (7th) 5-5 tJohn Thomas Bunkall I !Edwin Dunn
p.m.; (8th) 7.50 p.m.; (gth) 8.50 p.m. Sunday (1st) South Ward.
2.45 a.m.; (2nd) 8.50 p.m *George Young Bettinson tGeorge Smith Woodwark
South Lynn (53 London road) (1st) 2.45 a..m.; (3rd) 10.30 *Darius Clack tThomas Brown
a. m. ; (4th) 12.40 p.m.: (5th) 2.5 p. m. ; (6th) 4·5 p.m.; tAlfred Jermyn tJohn Jex RoUe
(7th) 4-45 p.m.; (8th) 7.30 p.m.; (gth) 8.30 p.m. Sun- Marked thus • retire in 1892.
days (rst) 2.45 a. m.; (2nd) 8.30 p.m )farked thuR t retire in 18g3,
Parcels are dispatched from the Receiving Offices lio the IIead Marked thus t retire in 1894.
Mayor's Auditor, Darius Clack
-Office (1st & 9th collections excepted) at the same time as
the letters Auditors, W. B. Whall & E. J. Colman
Rural postmen at 6 a.m., town postmen at 7 a.m. & Istday OFFICERS OF THE COUNCIL & URBAN SANITARY
mail to London at 7. 50 a. m · AUTHORITY.
The 2nd oollection is included in the day mail to Dersing- Town Clerk, Clerk of the Peace, Clerk to the ITrban Sanitary
ham, Heacham, Hunstanton &c. at 9 a. m. & local delivery & Port Sanitary Authority, Burial Board & School ·
at 9.30 a.m Attendance Committee, Thomas Goodwyn Archer, King
The 3rd collection is included in the 2nd day mail to Lon- street
don at n.20 a.m. & Dereham, Norwich, Hunstanton, Borough Treasurer, G. F. A. Cresswell, The Bank
Sandringham &c. at 12 noon Borough Coroner, Ed ward Milligen Beloe, New Conduit st ·
The 4th collection is included in the local delivery at I. 3D Medical Officer of Health to the Urban & Port Sanitary
p.m. & Magdalen & St. Germans Authorities, Ste"Venson Moreton Wightman Wilson,
The 5th collection is included in the 3rd day mail to London I Nelson street
at 2.50 p.m. & Downham & Wolferton at 2.50 p.m. & · Public Analyst, William Johnstone, 13 Fish Street bill,
Norwich, Colchester, Ipswich & Wisbech at 4- ro p.m Eastcheap, London F. c
The 6th collection is included in the late day mail to Lon- , Borough Surveyor, Manager of the Water· Works & In-
don, Dereham, Swaffham, Hunstanton &c. at 4-55 p.m spector of Nuisances, E. J. Silcock A.M.I.C.E. Queen street
The 7th collection is included in the local delivery at 6.10 Chief Constable & Inspector of Weights & Measures, Petro-
p.m. & North & West mails at 5.20 p.m leum & Explosives, George Ware, Police station
The 8th collection is included in the local delivery at 8.25 Collector of Town, Mooring, Estuary & Bar Flat Light Dues,
p.m John Paul, Common Staith quay
The gth collection is included in the mails to all parts at Inspector of Common Lodging Houses & Nuisances to the
10 p.m Urban & Port Sanitary Authorities, Edward J. Silcock
The rst collection on sundays•
i8 included in the Burnham & A.M.l.C.E Queen street
Hunstanton mails & rural & town postmen's dispatch Port & Harbour Master, Director of Moorings, George
The 1st sunday co:lection is included in the mails to all parts Edward Winslow, Common Staith quay & Boal quay
at 10 p.m Collector of Port Dues, John Paul, Co=nmon Staith quay
468 LYNN. NORFOLK. LKELLY's
Gas Inspector, George Plowright, High street County Court Office (Bankruptcy & Admiralty Judicature),
Superintendent of the Corn E:ll:change, Charles Holman, London road, His Honor Edwin Plumer Price Q.c. judge;
Nor folk street Frederick llenry Partridge, registrar & high bailiff; H.
Water Bailiff, Sebastian Terelinck, ro Queen street P. Gould, bankruptcy official receiver; John Thomas
Master of Technical Education Classes, J. H. Haigh,Gaywood Lindsey, clerk; Richard ::Vlurray Codling, London ro3.d,
Mayor's Officer, John Carr, Railway road sub-bailiff appointed under the Agricultural Holdings
Collector of Cattle Market Tolls, John Johnstone, 22 Coro- .Act; the court is held monthly. The County Court Ilouse,
nation square on the east !!ide of the London road, was erected in r86I;
Collector of Provision Market, John Carr it is a plain brick building in the Italian style. The fol-
Serjeants-at-l\Iace, George Wakefield Lake, Robert Cotton,. lowing parishes comprise tbe district :-Anmer,Ashwicken,
James Williamson & James Johnson Babingley, Bawsey, Bilney West, Castle Rising, Clench-
Sword-bearer, Edward Hains warton, Congham, Dersingham, Flitcbam, Gaywood,
Town Crier, William Henry Wright, :u North Everard st Gaywood llighgate, Gayton, Gayton Thorpe, Grimston,
Borough Magistrates. Hunstanton, Hardwick, Holme-next-the-Sea, llarpley,
Heacham, Hillington, Ingoldisthorpe, Lynn West, Lynn
'l'nE MAYOR. North, Leziate, Massingham (Great),:\ifassingham (Little),
Ayre Charles Harris, King street Middleton, Mintlyn, Newton West, Pmtney, Roydon,
Bowker James Runcton North, Ringstead (Great), Saddlebow, Sand-
Burkitt William, Hill house ringham, Sedgeford, Setch, Shcrnburne, Snettisham,
Clifton William, Forest Gate, London Terrington St. Clement, Terrington St. John, Terrington
Cresswell George F. A. King street Cross Keys, Tilney All Saints, Tilney St. Laurence, Tilney-
Croad Charles William, 7 Portland place cum-Islington, Walton (East), Winch (East), Winch
Dodman Alfred, Good wins road (West), Wolferton, Wootton (North), Wootton (South),
Hart W1lliam Wiggenhall St. Mary Magdalen, Wiggenhall St. Mary
Household Robert Henry, West Bilney hall the Virgin & Wiggenhall St. Germans
Lowe John M.D. 42 Green street, London w Bailiffs appointed under the Law of Distress Amendment
Pattrick William, Hunstanton Act, Richard M. Codling, London road, & William Free-
Plowright Charles Bagge L.R.C.P.Edin. King street man, Valinger road
Robinson Charles Thomas, Mansfield house, Hunstanton Custom House, Purfleet quay, John Cameron, collector &
Sadler George G. New Conduit street receiver of wreck; F. W. Bune, clerk; R. D. Morrison,
Savage Frederick, Estuary villa as8istant examining officer; I. McDonnell & P. E. Lad-
Thompson William, Glaisdale house, Exton's road; & Hut- more, outdoor officers; A. L. Whincop & G. Hodgkinson,
ton lodge, Hunstanton boatmen
Wilson Stevenson More ton Wightman, Nelson street Eau Brink Cut Toll Office, Boal quay, William Bumfield,
Wood George William, 97 London road collector
Woodwark George Smith, Croyland, The Chase Fire Eng-ine Station, Common Staith quay & Boal quay, E.
Clerk, David Ward, Tuesday Market place J. Silcock, superintendent & I3 men
Borough Petty Sessions are held at the Town hall every Haling Tolls & Corporation Dues Office, Boal quay, William
monday & thursday at I I a. m. Bumtield, collector
Consuls. Harbour Master's Office, Boal quay, George Edward Wins-
low, harbour master
Austria-Hungary,Gcorgc SmithWoodwark (consular agent), Inland Revenue Office, Kingstaith sq. : Tax Department-
Tuesday Market place Benjamin Robert ::Vloody Leech, surveyor of taxes for
German Empire, Sweden, Denmark & Norway, William H. King's Lynn & the hundreds of Clackclose, Freebridge
Garland, King street Lynn, Freebridge Ma.rshland, Gallow, Greenhoe North,
Greece, Arthur Geo. Russell (vice-consul), Alexandra dock Greenhoe South & Smithdon & Brothercross. Excise De-
Russia, Ueorge Smith Woodwark (vice-consul), Tuesday pa.rtment--John Milmine, mpervisor; William Bywater
Market place & Jabez Cross, officers
River Ouse Haling Commissioners. King's Lynn Dock Co.'s Offices, Alexandra dock, J. S. Valen-
tine c. E. chairman; James B. Bond, sec. ; Arthur George
The Mayor or his Deputy. Russell, general manager
Bateman Samuel, Denver Meter's Office, Common Staith quay, Richard Sparks, head-
Bennett John, Do.wnham Market man
Beart Charles, Stow Provision Market, John Carr, collector of tolls
Boon William, Tottenhill Public Baths, Common Staith quay, Thomas Langley,
Burkitt William, King's Lynn manager
Bushell W. D. King's Lynn Stanley Library, St. James' road, G. F. Pratt, librarian
Cambridge William, South Runcton Theatre, St. James' street, Robert Wardle, lessee
Coombs Rev. J. St. Peter's Town Hall, Saturday Market place, George Wakefield Lake,
Davies Rev. F. Magdalen hall keeper
Edwards Charles, Stow Town & Mooring Dues Office, Common Staith quay, John
Eggett Richard, Saddlebow Paul, collector
Ffolkes George, Wolferton Manor House West Norfolk & Lynn Hospital, London road, The Marquess
ffolkes Sir W. H. B. bart. Hillington Hall of Cholmondeley, president; G.F.A.Cresswell, treasurer;
Goulder William, Wimbotsham Stevcnson Morcton Wightman Wilson & Charles Bagge
Gromett James, Downham Market Plowright L.R. c. P. Edin. consulting surgeons ; Henry Cal-
Helsham Gustavus, St. Mary's Hall throp .Allinson, sen. surgeon ; Frederick Arthur Field,
Heading George, Thorpeland house surgeon & sec. ; Rev. Henry H. Streeten B.A. chap·
.Jackson William, St. Peter's lain; Miss R. Ashbee, matron
J ones George, Stow
Marston James, St. Mary's VoLUNTEERs.
Morton John, West Rudham
Procter W. Bexwell 3rd Volunteer Battalion, Norfolk Regiment (A & B Cos.);
Robb T. M. Downham armoury, Baker lane; Capt. G. F . .Archdale & Lieut. H.
Clerk of the Commissioners, D. Ward P. Morgan ; Charles Frederick Brewster, drill instructor

Public Establishments. KING's LDIN UNION.


Athenceum Museum, Baxter's plain (open daily from 12 till The union comprises four parishes, viz. : All Saints (South
4), A. Hitchcock Lynn), St. Edmund (North Lynn), St. Margaret (King's
Borough Cemetery, Hardwick road, Thomas G. Archer, (Lynn), & St. Peter (West Lynn), covering an area of
clerk to the burial board; David Melton, curator 6,oos acres ; rateable value, .£74,984 ; the population in
Borough Police Station, Saturday Market place, Geo. Ware, 189I was I9,053
chief constable, I inspector, 5 sergeants & 23 men, 4 of Board day, alternate fridays at IO a.m. at the Workhouse.
whom are river police Clerk to the Guardians & Assessment Committee, John Jas.
Cattle Market, Paradise fields, John Johnstone, collector Coulton, King street
Church of England Young Men's Society, Railway road, Treasurer, Somerville Arthur Gurney, Lynn
Rev. E. G. A. Winter, president ; Rev. J. A. Lloyd, W. Assistant Clerk, Richard Calthrop Coulton, King street
F. Offord & J. J. Ruscoe, hon. secs Assistant Overseers, Frederick Augustus Curson, New Con-
Coastguard Station, Estuary bank, W. G. Martin, chief duit street, St. Margaret's district ; James Crisp, jun.
officer Windsor road, South Lynn district
Corn Exchange, Tuesday Market place, Charles Holman, Collectors, William Bartle, Wellesley street & John Youngs,
supt Railway road
DIRECTORY.] NORFOLK. LYNX. 469.
Collector to the Guardians, Alfred Dow, St. James' house, ScHOOL A'ITENDA"iCE CoMMITTEE.
St. James' place Meetings held every fourth week, at the Workhouse,
Relieving & Vaccination Officer for the Union, Alfred Dow, Gayton, at r p.m.
St. James' house, St. James' place Clerk, Robert Huxley Aldham, King street
Medical Officers, North district, Joseph William Earrett, g8 School Attendance Officer, B.obert Henry Ma.ltby, Gayt<Jn
London road; South district, William Webster, 23 Lon-
don road Almshouses.
Public Vaccinator, William Webster, 23 London road Elsden's, Friar street, for 8 persons
Superintendent Registrar, John James Coulwn, King st.; Framingham's, London road, for 12 persons
deputy, William Charles Ore, St. Nicholas street St. James's, St. James' end, for 12 persons
Registrar of Births & Deaths, Alfred Dow, St. James' house, Sugar's, Goodwin road, for 6 widows
St. James' place ; deputy, Arthur G. Dow, jun. St. James' Valinger's, South Lynn plain, for 4 poor women
house, St. James' place Wesleyan, or Smith's, St. James' road, for 8 poor women
Registrar of Marriages, Richard Calthrop Coulton, King st.;
deputy, George \\'illiam Easter, Whitefriars terrace Pu blio Officers.
Workl10use, Exton's road, is a large brick building, erected Assessor of Land & Property Tax, Frederic S. Wade, II9
in 1856, at the coet of above£ r2,ooo, to hold 468 inmates; London road
the present number of inmates is about rso; the chapel Certifying Factory Surgeon, Lynn District, Frederick Albert
is over the dining room; an infirmary is situated a short Barrington, Chapel street
distance from the main body of the building; Richard Clerk to Charity Trustees for the Borough of Lynn, Edward
Bennett, master; Hev. William Leeper M. A. chaplain; J. Milligen Beloe, New Conduit street
W. Barrett, medical officer; Mrs. Mary Bennett, matron Clerk to the Commissioners of Sewers for Nor folk, to Com-
RURAL SANITARY AUTHORITY. missioners of Property, Income & Land Tax for Free-
Meets at Mr. Coulton's office, King street, on the 1st tuesday bridge Marshland, & Clerk to the River Ouse Haling
in January, April, July & October, at 4 p.m. Commissioners, David Ward, Tuesday Market place
Clerk, John James Coulton, King street Clerk to Commissioners of Land, Income Tax & Inhabited
Treasurer, S. A. Gurney, Lynn House Duty for the Hundred of Freebridge Lynn, to the
Medical Officer of Health, William Webster, 23 London road Commissioners of Land & Inhabited House Duty & Income
Inspector of Nuisances, Alfred Dow, St. J ames' house, St. Tax for the Borough of King's Lynn, & High Constable for
J ames' place Freebridge Lynn, Robert Huxley Aldham, King street
Clerk to the Eau Brink Navigation Commissioners, Thomas
ScHOOL ATTENDANCE CoMMITTEB. G. Archer, King street
Meets at Board room, on 1st Board meeting after usual Clerk to the Ouse Bank Commissioners ( xst & 2nd Districts),
quarter days, at ro a.m. to the Magdalen Drainage Commissioners & w the Holme
Sluice District, David Ward, Tuesday Market place
Clerk, John James CoultDn Clerks to Ouse Outfall Board of Conservators, Goodwyn &
Attendance Officer, Alfred Dow, St. James' ho. St. James' pl. Harold Archer, office at Ely
Clerk to theNar Valley Drainage Board, William Seppmgs,
FREEBRIDGE LYNN UNION.
King street
The union comprises the following parishes :-Ashwicken, Clerk to the Select Trustees of Lynn Harbour, E. M. Beloe,
Babingley, Bawsey, Bilney (West), Castle Acre, Castle New Conduit street
Rising, Congham, Flitcham, Gaywood, Gayton, Gayton Clerk to Watlington & Magdalen Eridgereeves, David Ward,
Thorpe, Grirnston, Harpley, Hillington Leziate, Tuesday Market place
Massmgham (Great), Massmgham (Little), Middleton, Collector of Customs, John Cameron, Purfleet quay
Mintlyn, Newton (\Vest), Pentney, Roydon, Runcton Coroner for the Western Division of the County of Norfolk,
(North), Sandringham, Setchey, Walton (East), West- Robert Alfred Wilkin, King street ; deputy, William
acre, Winch (East), Winch (West), Wootton (North), Seppings, King street
Wootton (South) & Wolferton; tile area of the union is Deputy Coroner for the Duchy of Lancaster, Robert Alfred
78,492 acres; rateable value £76,964; the population in Wilkin, King street
1891 was 12 1 251 Engineer to the Bedford.. Level Corporation, William D.
Board day alternate fridays, except at the end of each Harding, Islington ·
quarter, when two weekly meetings are held, at 11 a.m. Lloyd's Agents & Surveyors, Garland & Flexman, King st
at the board room, Gayton Workhouse Vestry Clerk of St. Margaret, John James Coulton, King st
Clerk to the Guardians & Assessment Committee, Robert Vestry Clerk of South Lynn, Steward of the Manors of
Huxley Aldham, King street, Lynu Howards in Terrington & Docking Hall in Docking,
Treasurer, Somerville Arthur Gurney, Lynn Robert lluxley Aldham, King street
Relieving Officer for the Union, R. H. Maltby, Gayton Surveyor of Taxes, Benj. Robt. Moody Leech, Kingstaith sq
Vaccination Officers, Hillington, Gayton & Castle Rising & Supervisor of Inland Revenue, John Milmine, Kingstaith sq
Middleton sub-districts, same as Registrars of Births &
Deaths Meters (according to seniority).
Medical Officers & Public Vaccinators, Eastern district, Richard Sparkes, headsman.
William Henry Waterhouse Stacey L.R.C.P.Edin. Grim- FAST METERS.
stun; rst South-eastern district, William Henry Water-
house Stacey L.R.c. P.Edin. Grimston; 2nd South-eastern Street George Simpson Robert
district, Georgo Cardwell Porter L.R.C.P.Irel. Castle Joplin John Langley Edward
Acre ; Western district, Fredk. Albert Barrington L.R.C.P. Walsh William Holman Horace
Beesou Frederwk Rowe Williarn C
Irel. Lynn
Collector to the Guardians, Robert Henry Maltby, Gayton
Superintendent Registrar, Robert Huxley Aldham, King's
Leggett Robert
Harper James
I Cranmer Frederick
I Bonnett Charles
Williamson John Bullen William
Lynn; deputy, Waiter Cross, 21 Valinger's road
Registrars of Births & Deaths, Castle Rising sub-district,
\~·illiam Thomas Layland, Grimston; deputy, Charles
Spooner Robert I Rust Henry C
EXTRA METERS.
Alfred Frost, Gaywood; Gayton sub-district, B. J. Barker, Hitchcock Frederick Fake Alfred
Gayton ; Hillington sub-district, James Rowe, Great Hitchcock James Akers Henry
Massing ham ; Middleton sub-district, Henry Marsh, East Lemon John Hitchcock A. N
Winch; deputy, Robert Henry Maltby, Gayton Fox John Sainty James P
Registrar of Marriages, Herbert Henry Verdon, 6 Millflcet Beaty Frederick
ter. Lynn; deputy, Frank Cross, 8 Whitefriars rd. Lynn
Workhouse, Gayt.on, a building of earr stone & brick, built Pilot & Harbour Mooring Commissioners.
in r83o, to hold 131 inmates; Benjamin James Barker, The Mayor, Aldermen & Councillors.
master ; Mrs. Mary Barton, matron ; Rev. William Ayre Charles H Freeman F. L
Aubrey Cutting M.A. chaplain ; William Henry Water- Bridges Ed ward C Hodd T. H
house Stacey, Grimston, medical officer Bird Philip Howard John Hillman
RURAL SANITARY AUTHORITY.
Brooke John I• Lancaster William
Brown William Leake Herbert A
Board days every fourth week, after the conclusion of the Bush Robert Potter George
guardians' meeting, at the Workhouse, Gayton. Carpenter F. J Plowright Henry
Clerk, Robert Huxley Aldham, King street, Lynn Curson Thomas Rix J ames B
Treasurer, Somerville Arthur Gurney, Lynn Dickerson F
Medical Officer of Health, Charles Bagge Plowright M.D. Dudding James
I
Russell A. G
Scott A. J
King street, Lynn Finch H. J Smith 'William R
Inspector of Nuisances, Wm. Thomas Layland, Grimston Flexman William Springall R. F
470 LYNN. NORFOLK. [KELLY'S

Suggett D
Wales Joseph
I Watson William
Whall William B
St. Margaret's National, Grey Friars road, erected in 1849,
for 240 boys, 196 girls & I75 infants; average atten-
Clerk to the Commissioners, W. M. Bennell, 67 High street dance, boys 16o, girls ISO, infant 200; Jackson Stephen-
Headman of the Pilots & Director of Moorings, George son, master; Miss Rachael Hayden, mistress ; Miss Ellen
Edward Winslow Mitchell, infants' mistress
Pilots. All Saints', South Everard street, erected in 1852, for I8o
boys, ISO girls & I70 infants; James D. Rutter, master;
Brooks John Robert Gamble William Miss Florence Allard, mistress ; Miss Mary Ann Smith,
Creek George Blyth George infants' mistress
Green acre Ed ward Dent William Green St. John's, Albion street, erected I853, for 248 boys, I8o
Gamble John N ea] Ed ward
Haines W alter I Potter William
HULL TRINITY PILOTS.
girls & 100 infants ; average attendance, boys 224, girls
136, infants 134; Ernest W. Bray, master; Miss Shim-
ruin, mistress; Miss Royds, infants' mistress
Goodson J oseph, jun / Smith Henry St. Nicholas' (mixed), Pilot street, North end, built in I87o,
Forman Henry J ones J ames J oseph for 162 boys, 170 girls & I94 infants ; average attend&nce,
LONDON TRINITY PII.OT (deep sea). 154 boys; I20 girls & I65 infants; Alfred Whitehonse,
- Sparkes Wia. m head master; Miss Harriett E. Ward, mistress; Miss
Lucy Gerrard, infants' mistress
Newspapers. School Inquiry Officer, Alfred Dow, St. James' house
Lynn Advertiser, Wisbech Constitutional Gazette & Norfolk Catholic (mixed), Coronation square, considerably improved
& Cambridgeshire Herald, published every friday evening, in 1889 & now holding 6o children; average attendance,
by Thew & Son, I, 2, 3 & 4 High st. See advertisement 50; Miss Marianne Maher, mistress
Lynn News & County Press, published every friday evening, British, Blackfriars street, built in 1843, for 220 boys, 220
by the. Lynn News & County Press Co. Limited (Joseph girls & ISO infants ; average attendance, 215 boys ; 140
Cooke, manager), Purfleet street. See advertisement girls & 95 infants; Edwin Broome, master ; Miss Emma.
Gowing, mistress; Miss Phrebe Wyatt, infants' mistress
Places of Worship, with times of Services.
St. Margaret's Church, Saturday Marketplace, Rev. Edward Railway Stations.
George Adlington Winter M.A. vicar; Rev. James Abbott
Lloyd M.A. Rev. R. C. S. Sweeting M.A. & Rev. E. Great Eastern, William Wilson Clifton, station master
Daubeney B.A. curates; Joseph Walker, clerk; 8.30 & 11 Midland & Great Northern (Lynn & Bonrne Joint Com-
a. m. 3.30 & 6.30 p.m.; daily matins, 8 a.m.; evensong, mittee), Francis Smith, agent
5 p.m. ; wed. 7.30 p.m Eastern & Midlands, Robert A. Read, receiver & manager ;
All Saints', South Lynn, Church lane, Rev. William Leeper Joseph S. Dun bar, accountant; Henry Curson, chief clerk,
M.A. rector; Rev. Alfred Ernest Hooker Hill, enrate; 8 & traffic department ; bead office, Austin street; Alfred
I I a.m. & 6.30 p.m. ; thnrs. 7.30 p.m Blo:x:ham, station master, Blackfriars road
St. John's, St. John's terrace, Rev. Henry Harkness Streeten Midland, H. Drew, agent, Tuesday Market place
B.A. vicar; Rev. Frederick James Lory, curate; n a. m. Great Northern, Percy S. Twelvetrees, district agent, Tues-
& 6.30 p.m. ; wed. 7.30 p.m day Market place
St. Nicholas' Chapel of Ease, St. Ann's street ; served by London & North Western, E. Taylor, agent, High street
the clergy of St. Margarei;'s ; Mrs. Pamment, clerk; 8. 30 Omnibus from the Globe hotel, Tuesday Market place, to
& n a. m. & 6.30 p.m.; fri. II a. m meet every train
St. Mary Catholic, London road, Rev. George Wriggles-
worth, priest; 8.30 & 10.30 a. m. & 6.30 p.m; daily mass, Water Conveya.nce.
8 a.m. ; thnrs. benediction 8 p.m ANTWERP Anglo-Relgian Steamship Co. Limited; steamers
Seat. every sat.urday; William E. Beer, sec. Tuesday Market pl
Society of Friends' Meeting House, New Conduit street; GRANGEMOUTH & HULL.-Carron Co. from Alexandra dock,
10.30 a.m. & 6.30 p.m.; tues. 7.30 p.m. (October to every saturday; James Bowker & Co. agents
May inclusive); tburs. IO a.m .............................. 150 HuLL & NEWCASTLE-UPON-TYNE.-East Coast Steam Ship
Baptist (Stepney), Blackfriars street, Rev. Thomas Co. Limited, steamers twice a week (wednesday & satur-
Perry; I0.30 a.m. & 6.30 p.m.; mon. 7.30 p.m.; day) to Hull & once a week (tuesday) to Newcastle-upon-
wed. 7.30 p.m .................................................... 8oo Tyne, each from Boal quay; William J<'urley, sec. Boal
Baptist (Union), Market street, Rev. CharlesHoughton; wharf
10.30 a.m. & 6.30 p.m. ; wed. 7.30 p.m ............... 550 HAMBt:RG.-Lynn & Hamburg Steamship Co. Limited, first
Congregational, New Conduit street, Rev. Arthur class steamers every fonr days from Bentinck dock;
Fnrner; 10.45 a. m. & 6.30 p.m ........................... 900 Thomas Henry Hodd, manager, Alexandra dock
Methodist New Connexion (Tabernacle), Railway road,
Rev. William Stephen; 10.30 a. m. & 6.30 p.m.; Carriers.
wed. 7 p.m ...................................................... 6oo
Primitive Methodist, London rd. Rev. Charles Shreeve, With the places they go to & inns they start from, with days
Rev. Thomas Tempest & Rev. James Cooper; 10.30 of departure.
a.m. 2.30 & 6.30 p.m ............................................ Sso BARTON-Rumble, 'Maid's Head,' Tuesday Market pl. tues
Primitive Methodist, Higrusate, 11 a. m. 2. 30 & 6.30 p.m go BrRCHAM-Wagg, 'Star,' Norfolk street, tues.; Wadlow,
Primitive Methodist, ~ orth end, IO a.m. 2.30 & 6.30 p.m 106 'Green Dragon,' Norfolk street, tues. & fri.; Roy, 'Star,'
Unitarian (Free Christian Church), Broad street, I I Norfolk street, tnes. & sat
a. m. & 6.30 p. m .................................................. 40<J BRANDON-Crisp, 'Maid's Head,' Tuesday Market place,
Wesleyan, Tower street, Rev. Thomas Austin & Rev. tues. thurs. & sat
George Bee bee; I0.30 a. m. & 6.30 p.m. ; mon. & CAsTlEACREJ-1\:Iason, 'Maid's Head,' Tuesday Market place,
tburs. 7 p.m ................................................... I,200 tues. & sat
Wesleyan, London road, I0.30 a. m. & 6.30 p.m.; tues. CLENCHWARTON-Minns, 'Shakespeare,' King street, tues.
7 p.m ................................. ...... ························ soo thurs. & sat
Wesleyan, Pilot street, ro.3o a.m. & 6.30 p.m.; fri. DENYER-Sharp, 'Maid's Head,' Tuesday Market place,
7 p.m ............ ······ ............................................. 400 tues. thnrs. & sat
Salvation Army Barracks, Wellesley street, 10.30 a.m. DERSINGHAM-Flegg, 'Black Horse,' Chapel street, tues.
& 6.30 p.m.; daily, 7 p.m ................................. , .. Bso thurs. & sat.; Mitchell, ~Maid's Head,' Tuesday MarkBt
place, tues. thurs. & sat
Schools. DoCKING-Playford, 'Maid's Head,' Tuesday Market place,
The Grammar school, in St. James's street, founded by tues
Thomas 'fhoresby, in the reign of Henry VIII. was DowNHAM-Ilunter, 'Star,' Norfolk street, tues. thurs. &
formerly under tbe control of the town council, but since sat. ; Sharpe, 'Maid's Head,' Tuesday Market place, tues.
1884 has been managed by a body of I2 governors, of thurs. & sat
whom one is appointed by H.R.H. the Prince of Wales, FINCHAM-Walden, 'Three Tuns,' Church street, tues.& sat
the Mayor of King's Lynn being a governor ex-officio ; FLITCHAllr-Linford, '''Vhite Hart,' St. James' street, tues.
secretary to the governors, Mr. Frank B. Archer: the & sat
mastership is endowed : there are no free scholars ; but FRINO Pattengale, 'Maid's Ilead,' Tuesday Market pl. tnes
some small exhibitions of about £3o yearly are awarded, GAYTON-Raspberry, 'Sun,' Norfolk street, tues. thurs. &
& the Prince of Wales gives a gold medal; Rev. Waiter sat. ; Shinn, 'Maid's Head,' Tuesday Market place, tues.
Boyce B.A. head master: Eugene Aram, usher of Lynn thurs. & sat
Grammar school in 1757, under Mr. James Knox, was GRIMSTON-Savage, 'Green Dragon,' Norfolk street, tues.
apprehended here in 1758 for the murder of Daniel thurs. & sat.; Wilkinson, 'Bird-in-Hand,' Norfolk street,
Clarke, committed at Knaresborough, in Yorkshire, in tnes. & sat. ; Twite, 'Black Horse,' Chapel st. tues. thurs •
. 1744, & was executed at York, 6th August, 1759 & sat
DIRECTORY,] NORFOLK. LYSX. 471
liARPLEY-Porter, 'Bird-in-Hand,' Norfolk street, tues. STANHOE-Beals, 'Dog & Duck,' thurs
thurs. & sat.; Jarvis, 'Rummer,' St. James' st.tues. & sat STOKE FERRY-Pilgiim, 'Temperance hotel,' Blackfriars
HEACHAM-Pattrick, 'Green Dragon,' Norfolk street, t.ues. street, tues. tburs. & sat.; Salmrm, 'Star,' Norfolk street,
thurs. & sat tues. thurs. & sat
HrLGAY--8barpe, 'Maid"s Head,' Tuesday Market place, TERRINGTON ST. CLEME"'T-Minns, 'Shakespeare,' King
tues. thurs. & sat street, tues. thurs. & sat. Deans, ' Maid's Head,' Tuesday
HrLLINGTON-Linford, 'White Hart,' tues. & sat. ; Porter, Market place, tues. & fri
'Bird-in-Hand,' tues. thurs. & sat TERRINGTON ST. JoHN-Storey, 'Maid's Head,' Tuesday
HoUGHTON--Jarvis, '.Hird-in-Hand,' Norfolk street, tues Market place, tues. ; Blomtield, 'White Hart,' St. James'
HUNSTANTON-Bales, 1 Star,' Norfolk street, tues street, 'ues. fri. & sat
lNGLETHORPE-Covell, 'Carpenters' .Arms,' ~orfolk street, TnoRNHAM-.Allen, 'Green Dragon,' Norfolk street, tues. &
tues. & sat fri. ; Taylor, ' Shakespeare,' King street, tues. & fri
lsLINGTON-Cassel, • :Maid's Head,' Tuesday Market place,
tues. & t>at TILNEY-Fayers, 'Three Tuns,' Church street, tues. & sat.;
LONDON-Sutton & Co. (John Joseph Lowe, agent), from Drew,' Barley Mow,' Railway road; Blomfield, 'White
'Black Horse,' Chapel street, daily Hart,' St. James' street, tues. fri. & sat
MAGDALEN-Bl&de, 'Three Tuns,' Church street, tues.thurs. TITTLESHALL - Stapleton, ' Black Horse,' Chapel street,
& sat. ; Haryey, 'Bird-in-Hand,' .Norfolk street, tues tues. & sat
MARHAM - Harrison, 'Three Tuns,' Chureh street, tues. & WALPOLE-Bailey, 'Star,' Norfolk street, tues. ; Barnes,
sat. ; Brown, 'Maid's Head, 1 Tuesday Market place, tues 'Rummer,' St. James' street, fri
MASSINGIIAM- Carlton, '1Vlaid's Head,' Tuesday Market
place, tues. thurs. & sat. ; Dolman, 'Sun,' Norfolk street, WATLINGTON-Spratt, 'Three Tuns,' Church street, tues. &
tues. & thurs. ; Nobbs, '.Black Horse,' Chapel street, sat. & Casow, ' White Hart,' St. J amcs' st. tues. & sat
tues. ; Roy, 'Green Dragon,' tues WESTACRE-Eagle, 'Star,' Norfolk street, tues. & sat
METHWOLn--Crisp, 'Maid's Head,' Tuesday Market place, WEsT NEwTON-Flegg, 'Black Horse,' Chapel street, tues.
tues. tlmrs. & sat thurs. & sat
:MIDDLETON & NAnnonouGu-Huntcr, 'White Hart,' St. "\VIGGENHALL ST. GERMANs-Blade, 'Three Tuns,' Church
James' street, tues. & sat street, tues. & thurs
NoRTHWOLD-Crisp,' Maid's Head,' tnes. thurs. & sat
PENTNEY-Hunter, 'White Hart,' St. Jarnes' st. tues. & sat WIGGENIIALL ST. PETER's-Blade, 'Three Tuns,' Church
RrNOSTEAD-Smith, 'Star,' Norfolk st. tues. thurs. & sat street, tues. & thurs
RuDHAM- Dann, 'Bird-in-Hand,' Norfolk street, tues. & WIGGENHALL MAGDALF.N-Blade, 'ThrBe Tuns,' Church
sat.; Smith, 'Star,' Norfolk street, sat street, tues. thurs. & sat.; Harvey,' Bird-m-Hand,' Nor-
RoUGHAM-Hilton, 'Maid's Head,' Tuesday Market place, folk street, tues
tues. ; Carlton, 'Maid's Head,' Tuesday Market place, WINCH (EAsT)-Hunter, 'White Hart,' St. James' street,
tues. thurs. & sat tues. & sat
SHOULDHAM-Preston, ' Maid's Head,' Tuesday Market
place, tues.; Pikett, 'Star,' Norfolk street, tues. & sat WrsBECH-Storey, 'Maid's Head,' Tuesday Market pl. tues
SEDGEFORD-Herring, 'Star,' Norfolk street, tues WORMEGAY--Watkins, 'Rummer,' St. James' st. tues. & sat

PRIVATE RESIDENTS. Bishop Albert, 43 Railway road Chadwick William, 7 B!ackfriars road
.Addison Thomas, 5 Bridge street Bishop Geo.Wm.Guy's cliff,Gaywood rd Chapman Daniel, 12A, Blackfriars st
.Affieck Wm. Joseph, Old Bank house, Bishop Robert, 23 Railway road Chatterton Percival Thomas, White
Kingstaith square Blackie Mrs. Blackfriars road house, London road
.Aiken Mrs. 6 Whitefriars road Blacklock Mrs. 26 South Everard street ChealWilliam Hy.Rose vil.Goodwin's rd
.Aldham Robert Huxley, Kingst3ith sq Blencowe Misses, Nelson street Choate Ebenezer, 56 London road
.Alexander Miss, 7 Guanock place Bloxham .Alfred, Goodwin's road Clack Darius, 19 London road
.Allarde Miss, 2 Windsor road Blytll Charles IIoratio Day,32London rd Clarke John, Glenthorne, The Chas&
.Alien Henry, 6 Union street Bootman Charles, Ivy . house, The Chase Clifton William, Littleport street
.Alien Mrs. 108 London road IJouch .Agrippa Fayer, 2 Blackfriars rd Coates Mrs. 35 London road
.Alien Mrs. 55 South Everard street l~oulding Edward, 53 Railway road Cochrane Andrew, 2 Blackfriars street
.Allinson lly. Caltluop, St. Margaret's pl Bowen Mrs. 30 Friars street Cocks William Richard, 21 London rd
.ArchdaleGeorgeFrancis, nSt.John's ter Bows her WilliamHare bottle,St.James'rd Codling R1chard, IJO London road
.Archer Thomas Goodwyn, 9 Portland st Boyce Rev. Waiter B.A. (head master Coe John, II6 London road
.Ashley James, 28 Railway road Grammar school), St. James' street Coe John Elijah, 3 Coronation square
.Atmore Edward .Alfred, 2 Ilaylett ter Boyer John, 16 Coronation square Coe Mrs. 15 Portland street
.AttwoodWilliamFrederick,42London rd Bradfield Hy. Gaywood vil. Gaywood rd Colinson Arthur, 28 South Everard st
.Austin Rev. Thomas l Wesleyan ], I 3 BradfieldRobt.Gaywood vil.Gaywood rd Coiling W illiam M uir, Jubilee villas,
Valinger's road Bridges Geo. TheFriary ,CountyCourt rd Gaywood road
.Ayre Charles Harris, King street Bristow Charles, Good win's road Collinson Thomas, rg Portland street
Backharn Mrs. 31 London road Hristow George, Sunnycote, Gay wood rd Collison Henry, Tuesday Market place
Baker David Moyse,jun.3 Blackfriars rd Brittan Thomas, Good win's road Colman Edward, 28 Valinger's road
Balding Miss, 95 London road Britton Charles J. 7 Whitefriars road ColmanEdwd. J n.Sun nymead, TheChase
Bardell John, Goodwin's road Brown Edward, 77 London road Cook Miss, Tuesday Market place
Bardell William, South Everard street Brown Harry, 57 London road Cooper Rev. James [Primitive Meth-
Barnard Daniel, I r Broad street Brown J ames, Chase house odist l, 9 Valingcr's road
Barrett Joseph William, g8 London rd BrownJohn,2 Gaywood vls.Gaywood rd Cooper -Miss, St. Nicholas street
Barrett Mrs. Gaywood road Brown Mrs. 77 London road Copland Miss, 32 Railway road
Barrington FrederickAlbt.Chapel street Brown Thomas, Exton's road Cupley Rubert Flower, Monement
llarron .Alfred, 52 South Everard street Brown Thomas, Josford ho. The Chase house, Norfolk street
Bartle "\Villiam, 8 Exton road Brown William, 20 Railway road Coppin Seth James, 13 Whitefriars ter
Barwood Frederick, 7 .All Saints' street Brown William, 13 St. James' road Cory Miss, 17 St. James' road
Bassett Joseph Martin, 9 Railway road Brown William Henry, 30 London rd Coulton Richard Caltborpe, St. Ann st
Bath Misses, I3 Broad street Brunning Mrs. 93 London road Cox Sidney, 24 King street
Bath William Bradfield, 3 Blackfriars st Bull Samuel, 14- Albert street Cracknell George, Paradise
Batter bee .Mrs. Eastdale, Gaywood road Bullen James William, 34 Friars street Cradock Mrs. 3 London road
Batterham .Alfred, jun. Killingworth, Bunkall John Thomas, New Conduit st Crawford John, 3 Whitefriars terrace
Goodwin's road Burch Mrs. 23 Valinger's road Cresswell George F. A. King street
Bear J ames, IO South Everard street Burcham Robert, Kingstaith square Crisp .Alfd.Hy. Nassau vil. Goodwin's rd
Beart 'Valter J ames, 48 London road Burkitt William, Hill house Crisp James, Windsor road
Beaty George, Market street Burrell Mrs. Ladybridge ho. Bridge st Cross Frank, 8 Whitefriars road
Beck Miss, 87 Norfolk street Burton George, New Conduit street Cross Waiter, 21 Valinger's road
Beckinton Miss, 5 Guanock place Bywater 'Villiam, Exton's road Cruso Miss, 94 London road
Beebee Rev. George [Wesleyan], I6 Callaby Robert, I26 London road Cubitt Mrs. 21 Railway road
Portland street Cameron John, Silverdale, The Chase Curson Fredk . .Augustus, 14 Valinger's rd
Beecroft Samuel,Nar house,Wisbech rd Carpenter Frederick John, High street Curson Henry, Laurel ho. Goodwin's rd
Bedingham William, Goodwin's road Carpenter Mrs. 42 South Everard street Curson Mrs. Exton's place
Beloe Edward Mi!hgen, Paradise Carr John, I6 Railway road Curson Mrs. Goodwin's road
BennellWilliam Mayes,16Whitefriars rd Carver Mrs. 9 London road Curtis Mrs. 22 London road
Bettinson George Young, Norfolk villa, Case James, 25 "\Visbech road Cushion Mrs. l Providence street
Goodwin's road Catling Mrs. 12 Portland street Da veyClifford, 10Al bion ter. Ga ywood rd
Bird Mrs. 2 The Chase Chad wickGeorgeRichd.St.Margaret's pl Da vy W illiam, 45 South Everard street
7
472 LYNN. NORFOLK. [ KELLY S

Daw William Edward, 4 Gaywood road Hayden Henry George, 2 Portland st Lincolns Miss,4Gaywood vils.Gaywd.rd
Dawson Mrs. I St. James' road Hayden Mrs. IS Portland street Lindsey John Thomas, Io6 London rd
Dawson William, 8 North Everard st Hayes William Thomas, III London rd Lloyd Rev. James Abbott M.A. [curate
Day Mrs. Paxton terrace Heffer Mrs. 67 London road of St. Margaret's ], King street
Dennis Mrs. I7 London road Hewetson Richard, 46 London road Long bottom Mrs. Tuesday Market place
Dennis Mrs. 92 London road Hewson Chas. 4 Bridge ter. Gaywood rd Looker William, I The Chase
Diggons Mrs. 5 Blackfriars street Hill Rev. Alfred Ernest Booker [curate Lory Rev. Fredenck James [curate of
Dmes Willmm, 17 Whitefriars road of All Saints'l, The Chase St. John's], London road
Divers Frederick, 7 London road Hillam John Aston, Windsor road Lowe Frederick Browne, r28 London rd
DodmanAlfred.Sutmyside,Goodwin's rd Hillam Luke, I I Union street Lubbock Mrs. 26 Coronation square
Dodman Mrs. Mountfield, Goodwin's rd Hillenne J ames, 5 Whitefriars road Lush Isaac, 8 Railway road
Dow Arthur Graham, 2 Coronation sq Hilton John, sr South Everard street Mapes Frederick, 4 North Everard st
Downes William Payne,2 Whitefriars rd Hitchcock Wm. The Beeches, Avenue rd Marshall Mrs. St. Ann's street
Drew Jas. Joseph, 27 South Everard st Hoarc Mrs. 31 Railway road Marsters Jas. S. Addleton,n Portland st
Dudding Joseph, Goodwin's road Hodd Thus. Hy. The Oaks, Gaywood rd Mat!ess John Benjamin, 5 Checker st
Dudgeon Mrs. I7 Exton's road Hodgkinson George, 32 Valinger's road Matsell John Mark, r8 Union street
DuffieldMrs,8A,Albion ter.Gaywood rd Hogge Miss, King street Meal Mrs. Blackfriars road
Dunbar Joseph S. 23 North Everard st Holditch George, IOS London road Metcalf Henry, 17 Southgate street
Dunning William, 15 Blackfriars street Holditch Miss, 4r London road Miles Albert, 4 Albion ter. Gaywood rd
Durrant Martin, 6r London road Holland Frederick Edwin, Burnham Miles Frederick John,Athenreum house,
Durrant Mrs. 29 King street house, Nelson street Blackfriars street
Dye Robert, Guanock terrace Holland Henry William, 9 Black friars st Miles Mrs. Athenreum ho. Black friars st
Eagleton Louis Fountain, 24 Nelson st Holman Thomas N. 32 Railway road Miles William, Stanley ho. Littleport st
Easter Geo. William, I4 Whitefriars ter Holmes Abraham, 47 London road Miller William, 2 Millfleet terrace
Easter Wm. Hy. 44 South Everard st Holmes Mrs. 4 Stanley street Milmine Jn. Woodleigh vi!. Goodwin's rd
Eastland Mrs. 9 St. John's terrace Holmes Mrs. John, Holme vil. Wisbech rd Minns George, 13 Nelson street
Eaton Charles James, 7 Railway road Hopkins Robert Shepherd, 20 Albert st Mitchell ::VIrs. 7 St. James' street
Eccles James Laird, 44 Railway road Hopkins William, Wisbech road Mitchley Miss, 23 Friars street
Eggett Edward, 6S London road Houghton Rev. Charles [Baptist], 3 Monkman Wm. The Ferns, Avenue road
Eggett William, IS Southgate street Whitefriars road Moore Edward, 18 Guanock terrace
Eggleston Miss, 36 Broad street Howard Joseph James, 7 Union street Morley William, IS Queen street
Elham John, 2 Paxton terrace Howell Henry, 3 Guanock place Morriss Charles William, 12 London rd
Emms Edgar, 5 Stonegate street Hudson Mrs. SI Railway road Mowton Mrs. 12 Guanock terrace
Emmerson Edward Morris, Gaywood rd Hudson Thomas William, 6 London rd Moyce Swift, Wisbech road
Everett Wm. R. Glenville, Goodwin's rd Buns William, St Nicholas street Moyse Miss, King street
Exley Mrs. I Queen street Irving Mrs. Market street Munton Miss, 14 St. James' road
Failes Matthew, I7 South Everard st Ives Charles Theophilus, 6 Portland st Nash William, Swiss cottage
Faircloth Miss, Tuesday Market place Jackson Charles, King street Neale John, Woodbridge ho.Gaywood rd
Fayers Robert William, 1 Kingstaith sq Jackson James, r3 Blackfriars street Nelson Miss, St. John's terrace
• Jackson Miss, 11 Whitefriars road
Fiddaman Mrs. Chapel street Nelson Mrs. 2 Blackfria.rs street
Field Frederick Arthur, West Norfolk Jemson Miss, 2 Albion ter. Gaywood rd Nelson Mrs. 38 Tower street
& Lynn hospital, London road Jermyn Alfd. Burleigh ho.Goodwin's rd Newman Mrs. 14 Railway road
Finch Henry, Io Portlaud street Johnson George, The Firs, Gaywood rd Newton Robert. 8 St. James' road
Fisher Martm, 6 Albert street Johnson Isaac, 11 St. James' road Nokes John Aton, Fairlight lodge,
Fletcher Major Samuel, r Guanock pl Johnson Mrs. Wisbech road Goodwin's road
FlexmanJames,Holly ldge.Goodwin's rd Johnson William, 13 Portland street Offord Miss, 96 London road
Flood Mrs. 3 Blackfriars street Johnson William, ro St. James' street Oldfield Mrs. 66 London road
Floyd Frank Rust, Queen street J ally Miss, 1 St. John's terrace Oliver James, 41 Queen street
Foister Thomas, 109 London road Jones Miss R. S. 5 Albert street Osborne Rev. Alfred Thomas [Baptist],
J<'oreman Robert, Guanock terrace Jones Waiter Owen, 12 St. John's ter 4 Haylett terrace
Forster William, Blackfriars road Jape John, 13 Guanock terrace Oswell George, I2 Nelson street
Foster Chas. Hardy,Springtld. TheChase Joyce James, 31 All Saints' street Page Achilles Sylvester, 2 St. John's ter
Franklin Lloyd Fairfax, 4 Portland st Keene Charles Murray, Tennyson villa, Page George W. Tuesday Market place
J<'reeman l"rederick Laird, 37 Queen st Gaywood road Page John William, 29 Friars street
Freeman Herbert, 24 South Everard st Kendrick George, 8 St. John's terrace Page Mrs. 3 Gaywood viis. Gaywood rd
Frost Edward, 23 Albert street Kennedy Mrs. 64 London road Palmer Andrew Octavius, 8 Guanock pl
Frost William, 22 Valinger's road Kennedy-Pnrvis Charles Kennedy R.N. Palmer Jn.Hillington cot. Goodwin's rd
Ji'urner Rev . .Arthur [Con g.], Exton's rd (inspecting commander of coast Pamment :Mrs. 13 Albert street
Fysh George, 30 Valinger's road guards), Hill ho. Tuesday Market pl Pamment Robert, r7 Albert street
J<'ysh Mrs. 62 London road Kent Alfred, rs North Everard street Parsons Henry Sanford,St. Augustine's,
Gagen Mrs. 33 Friars street Kent John, St. Nicholas street Chapel street
Garland William Henry, 33 Queen st Kidd Jn. Jas. Tecoma cot. Windsor ter Parsons James Ambrose B.A. Fairlie
Gibbons James Charles, 23 Railway rd King Arthur, High street villa, The Chase
Giddens Charles Boon, 21 Guanock ter King Mrs. 35 Austin street Parsons Mrs. Edmund Strange, St.
Gilbert Miss, 4 Whitefriars road Kirby Arthur, r6 Whitefriars terrace Augustine's, Chapel street
Gooch Robert, 9 Whitefriars terrace KirkhamMrs. Brooklvn vil. Good win's rd Partridge Frederick H. Littleport street
Green Henry, 41 South Everard street
-
Knight J<'rederick Joseph, 5 Gaywood Patrick Mrs. Wisbech road
Green Miss, 5 St. John's terrace villas, Gaywood road Pattrick William, I3 Tuesday Market
Gl'eenacre Mrs. 3 St. James' street Knight Frederick Thomas,jun. Thurlow place ; & a.t H unstanton St. Edmunds
Gregory Edwin, 14 Southgate street house, Goodwin's road Paul John, I Haylett ter. Exton's road
Grundy Mrs. Lyndon ho. Blackfriars st Knight Mrs. 31 Tower street Peeps Mrs. 1 Stanley street
Gudgeon John Joseph, Kingstaith sq Lancaster Misses, 104 London road Perry Chas.Wrn.Orwell ho.Gaywood rd
Gurney Rev. William Hay M.A. Bank Lane Fred William, 19 Friars street Philcox Isaac, 20 Valinger's road
house, Tuesday Market place Lane John, 6 Stanley street Philcox Mrs. I St. John's street
Haigh John Henry, Gaywood road Langford Mrs. r S Union street Pitcher Mrs. I I St. John's terrace
Hall Mrs. 36 South Everard street LangleyMrs.6Gaywood vils.Gaywood rd Plant George, 27 All Saints' street
Halstead Mrs. 1 Carmelite terrace Laird Henry Richard, Blackfriars road Platten John, 18 Valinger's road
Hammond James, 8 Stonegate street Larwood Geo. 6 Albion ter. Gaywood rd Playford William, 4 Albert street
Hammond Mrs. 14 North Everard st Lee Mrs. I Millfteet terrace Plowright Charles Bagge, King street
Hammond Oswald Sidney, 20 South Leech Benjamin Robert Moody, The Plowright James Horatio,4Tower place
Everard street Oaks, Wisbech road PlowrightRbt.Sl.Beech ho.Goodwin's rd
Hammond William Jas. 53 Railway rd Leeper Rev. William M.A. [rector of Plowright ThomasEd ward, Littleport st
Hampson Leonard, 45 London road South Lynn & chaplain of King's Poley Waiter, 6 St. James' road
Ilamson Joseph, 5 Union street Lynn union], Rectory, Goodwin's rd Pooley Waiter, 7 Albert street
Hardy Benjamin, IS Broad street Leete Mrs. 4 St. John's terrace Pope Harry, Avenue house, The Chase
Harris John Brown, 43 South Everard st Lemmon Charles Herbert, 24 Friars ~t Potter Frank Pbilip, 32 King street
Harris Mrs. 31 l"riars street LemmonErnestEdwd.7SouthEverard st Potter Joseph, 29 Valinger's road
Harris Reuben John,16 SouthEverard st Lemmon Mrs. 24 North Everard street Pratt Mrs. ro All Saint<;' street
Hart James Collett, 8 Blackfriars road Leney Waiter, Bridge street Pratt Robt.Goldsmith,Red ho. Tower st
Harvey Henry James, 7 Valinger's rd Lewis William, 39 London road Pridgeon Mrs. 17 Portland street
Hastings Miss, 23 Nelson street Lift William, Gaystock, Gaywood road Pridgeon William Read, King street
Hastings Philip Charles, 3 Arthur street Linay Mrs. St. Nicholas street Pung Thomas, Exton's road
...DIRECTORY, J NORFOLK. LYNN. 473
Pycroft Wm. Nicholas, 76 London road Smith Claude, r6 All Saints' street Underwood William, 5 Gaywood road
Queen Robert, g Guanock place Smith Francis, Woodstock, Gaywood rd Vune Frederick William, 3 Exton's road
Quihampton Basil Duckwortb, Lady- Smith Henry, 22 Friars street W'agg Mrs. 74 London road
bridge house Smith Henry Ransome, 6 Marsball st Waldegrave Chas. Wm. 3 St. John's st
Radley Miss, 9 All Saints' street Smith James, 72 London road Walker William Frank, Bridge house,
Ratcliffe Miss, I2 St. J ames' street Smith Miss, I4 London road Littleport street
Rayner Mrs. Queen street Smith Mrs. IO Blackfriars street Wallace William Harry Bincke.'l, IO
RaynerWm. Wallace,4oSouthEverard st Smith Mrs. 30 King street St. John's terrace
Read John, Jubilee villas, Gaywood rd Smith Mrs. 63 London road Wanty Mrs. South Lynn plain
Read John Rhotting, 39 King street Smith Mrs. 75 London road Ward Charles Edward, Wisbech road
Reader Miss, 4 Blackfriars street Smith Mrs. 13 St. John's terrace Ward John Danderson, 27 Valinger's rd
Ream Alfred, King street · Smith William Edward, I7 Union street Ward ale Henry, 37 Railway road
. Ream John Wade, 40 Queen street Smith William Ostler, 19 Nelson street \\'ardale Robert, 31 South Everard st
. Reed Robert Rhodes, Tuesday Market pl Smith William Robert, 38 Queen street Warner Hy.Lawrence,32Sth.Everard st
Reeve George, I London road Snelling James, Woodville,Goodwin's rd Watson Mrs. 6 Friars street
Reeve John, 34 London road Sofley Mrs. 21 South Everard street Watt Alfred, Exton's road
Regester Charles, Exwn's road Sooby John Goulton, Elm Tree house, Watts George, 53 South Everard street
Reid Simson,Burleigh terrace,Austin st Gay wood road 'Vatts Henry, I:;& Albert street
Rennie Alexander, 22 Paxwn terrace Southwell Waiter, The Chase Websdale William, 22 Albert street
Renshaw Mrs. 8 Albert street Spencer Mrs. I3 Whitefriars road Webstcr Alfred, 19 Va.linger's road
Reynolds John Oliver, 9 Albion terrace, Springall Robert French, The l"riars Webster Geo.Elmer lodge, Goodwin's rd
Gaywood road Spurr Thomas, I4 Queen street Webster Jonathan Geo. 18 London road
Reynolds Miss, 16 Albert street Staines Mrs. 7 Albion ter. Gaywood rd Webster Mi!!~, 24 London road
Ridley Regina.ld 0. St. Ma.r.saret's place Stanton John Thos. St. Margaret's pl Webster William, 23 London road
Rippengill Henry, South Lynn plain Stanton Mrs. 49 London road Wedgwood William Brackenbury
Rix Charles, 33 Valinger's road · Stephen Rev. William [Methodist New L.R.C.P.LOnd., M.R.c.s. King street
Rix James, Tuesday Market place Connexion J Werrey Mrs. I::l3 London road
Robertson Ja.mes, 6 Guanock place SterneJoseph, 5 Albion ter.Gaywood rd Weston Misses, 15 Market street
Rolfe FrederickJobn,25SouthEverard st Stimpson John, 29 London road Whistler Mrs. so Railway road
Rolfe John Jex, 12 Va.linger's road Swckings JohnJabez, Blackfriars street Whitehead Mrs. 5 St. James' street
RoseJohn,IGaywood villas,Gaywood rd Stott John Henry, 39 South Everard st Whiteman Robert, 9 North Everard st
Rowe Edmund Creed, 8 Albion terrace, Streeten Rev. Henry Harkness B. A. [vicar Whit more Mrs. I8 Portland street
Gavwood

road of St. John's], St. John's vicarage Whyler George, 38 Friars street
Rowell John, 20 London road Sudbury MartinWm.3sSouthEverardst Whyte Mrs. Brookfield, Goodwin's road
Rowlett Samuel Robert, 32 Friars st Suggett Dix, 5 Railway road Wicks Herbert, 10 Whitefriars road
Rust John, 5 Blackfriars road Suggett John Dix, II Valinger's road Wigg William Carter, Exwn's road
Rust Mrs. Railway road Suggett Mrs. 29 All Saints' street Wiggett Wm. 20 Albion ter.Gaywood rd
Rutter James, 36 Checker street Swatman Francis John, Nelson street Wild Walter, 3 Albion ter. Gaywood rd
Rutter Stansfield, 88 Norfolk street Swatman Miss, King street Wild bur William Thomas, 5 Nelson ter-
Sadler George G. New Conduit street Swatman Miss, 9 Whitefriars road race, Wisbech road
Sadler William Russell, New Conduit st Tabrahm Robert, 25 All Saints' street Wilkin Horace M. 33 London road
Sainty Miss, 14 Portland street Taylor Edwin, 2 Blackfriars street Wilkin Robt.Alfd.Coburg cot. The Chase
Samson Thos. Alfd. 25 North Everard st Taylor HarryArthur,ISt.John's terrace Williams Mrs. 36 London road
Savage Frederick, Estuary villa Taylor Mrs. 4 Union street Williams William Thomas, Exton's road
Savage John Thomas, St. Nicholas st Taylor Richard, 17 Friars street Wilson John, 8 Portland street
Savage Mrs. I2 Southgate street Teare Robert, Wesley house, Paradise W'ilson Mrs. 2 Providence street
Savage ''-'illiam, I I St. James' street Teasel William, I2 Whitefriars terrace ~'ilson Stevenson Moreton Wightman,
Scales Mrs. I6 St. James' road Tempest Rev. Thomas [Primitive Meth- ~ elson street
Sconce Albert, Surrey villa, Avenue rd odist J, 33 South Everard street Winslow George Ed ward, 99 London rd
Sconce Waiter, Ig Union street Thew Mrs. Stonegate street ' Winter Rev. Edward George Adlington
Scott Arthur John, 26 All Saints' street Thompson Mrs. 4 Mars hall street 1 M.A. [vicar ofSt.MargareL's ],Nelson st
Scrimshaw George, II5 London road Thompson Robert, Rosedale villa, · Winter Henry, Ig South Everard street
Sculpher Mrs. 32 Valinger's road Goodwin's road j Winterton Alfred, 8A, Hlackfriars street

Seals Robert, 49 South Everard street Thompson William,sen.Glaisdale house, Wise Mrs. go London rqad
Seppings Miss, New Conduit street Exton's road Wise Mrs. 34 South Everard street
Seppings Willia.m, 13 St. John's terrace Thompson William, jun. Eskdale villa, Witt Harry, 6 Valinger's road
Shallow Mrs. 7 Swnegate street Goodwin's road Witt Mrs. 36 Queen street
Sharp James, Wisbech road Tiler Mrs. 4 Nar buildings, Wi,;bech rd Wood George WiUiam, 97 London road
Sharpin John, Good win's road Tilson Oswald Loose, 45 Railway road Wood Robert, ::;& Union street
Sherringham Misses, Blackfriars road Tilson Thos.James Loose,17 Railway rd Woodwark Georgo Smith, Croyland,
Shore Thomas, 5 Valinger's road Tornpson Miss, 68 London road The Chase
Shreeve Rev. Charles [Primitive Meth- Trenowath Mrs. 10 London road W ootton Mrs. I 14 London road
()(list ], 46 Rail way road Tuffs Robert, 23 Paxton terrace 'Vrigglesworth Rev. George [Catholic],
Simms John, 28 North Everard street Tweedy John, 5 Bridge street North Everard street
Skipper John, 24 Railway road TwelvetreesPercySkipwortb,Littleprt.st Wright Wm. Frederick, 2 Blackfriars st
Skipper Rd. Goodwin's vi!. Goodwin's rd Twigg Joseph John, 37 Bridge street Yeates Mrs. 54 South Everard street
Slator J n. Wm.Fern villa, Goodwin's rd Ulyat Edward, South Lynn plain Youngs John, 6 Railway road
Sly Mrs. 3 Market street
COMMERCIAL. Allinson Henry Calthrop, surgeon, St. Margaret's place
Adams Thomas, boot & 8hoe maker, 74 Norfolk street Anderson Charles, beer retailer, Pilot street
Adams William, greengrocer, 72 Norfolk street Anderson George Howard, accountant, 1 Whitefriars road
Akers Richard Hammond, greengrocer, 50 Nor folk street Anderson Thomas, fish curer, Pilot street & Railway road
Akers Thos. Wm. Bradshaw, Robin Hood P.H. 2I Union st Andrews Thomas, bellhanger, St. James' street
Aldham & Son, solicitors, King street Andrews Thomas (Mrs.), butcher, St. James' street
Aldham Robert Huxley (firm, Aldham & Son) solicitor & An~lo-Belgian Steamship Company Limited (Willia.m Elliot
notary public, clerk to the magistrates for hundred of Beer, sec.), Tuesday Market place
Freebridge Lynn, clerk to the guardians, to rural sanitary Appleby John, Royal Liver Friendly Society's agent,
authority, to assessment & school attendance committees, 9 Stanley street
& superintendent registrar for Freebridge Lynn union, Archer & Archer, solicitors, King street
vestry clerk of South Lynn, clerk to tax commissioners Archer Thomas Goodwyn (firm, Archer & Archer), solicitor
for hundred of Freebndge Lynn & borough of King's & town clerk, clerk of the peace & clerk to the Eau Brink
Lynn, steward of the manors of Howards, Terrington & Navigation Commissioners & to the urban sanitary & port
Docking hall, Docking, King street sanitary authority, to the burial board & school attendance
Alexander William, chief engineer, Io Whitefriars terrace committee & hon. sec. to the governors of the King's Lynn
Allen & Neale, chemists, 55 High street; & at Hunstanton, Grammar School, King street
St. Edmund's S.O Arkinstall Alfred, superintendent Prudential Assurance Co.
Alien & N eale, seed & manure merchants & agricultural Limited, 2 Guanock place
chemists, 55 High street ; & at Hunstantou Armes Frederick, Sun tavern, Pur fleet street
Allen Solomon, beer retaile.r & slater, I Valinger's road Athenamrn Museum (A. Hitchcock, sec.), Baxter's plain
Alien Thomas Henry, master mariner, I5 'Vh.itefriars road Atmore George, pharmaceutical dispensary & agricultural
Allflat Charles, bricklayer, 27 North Everard street chemist, 48 High straet
474 LYNN. NORFOLK. [KELLY'B

Atmore George, master mariner, Exton's road Biggs Charles, stationer & coal dealer, Tower street
Atmore Jonathan, lath manufacturer, Common Staith quay Billing William Elijah, plumber & glazier, 98 Norfolk street
Auker John, watch maker, South Church lane Bird J. M. & Sons, millers (steam), Harbour mills
Ayre Charles Harris, corn, oil cake & coal mer. King street Bird Herbert. Philip, Crystal Palace inn, Railway road
Back William, shopkeeper, Market street Bird John Cornelius, printer, see Foster & Bird
Bagge Williarn &. Thomas, brewers, maltsters, whole- Bird Philip, master mariner, 14 South Everard street
sale spirit dealers & coal merchants, King street Bishell Louisa (Miss), apartments, 2 Waterloo street
Bagge Eliza (Mrs.), beer retailer, Broad street Bishop Mary (Miss), patent medicine vendor,g Blackfriars st
Bagley William Ives, shopkeeper, Setchford lane Blackster Louisa (Mrs.), Green Dragon P.H. 145 Norfolkst
Bailey James, Flower Pot P.H. 132 Norfolk street Blanchflower Willia.m, tobacconist, 7 St. J ames' street
Bailey Thomas, master mariner, 13 Carmelite terrace Bloch George, watch & clock maker, Railway road
Bailey William, chemist & drnggist, 25 Railway road Blomfield Thomas Williarn, Print:ess Royal P.H. hay & corn
Baines Henry, artist, 14 Union street merchant & cattle canvasser for the Great Eastern rail-
Baker Harriet (Mrs.), fishmonger, Church street way; also proprietor of lllomtield's Weigh-Bridge, Black-
Baker Harry, tobacco pipe maker, 5 Chapel street friars street ; stores, near the Railwav•
station
Baker Joseph Charles, woollen draper, 62 High street Rlomfield William Hy. baker & confectionel", 49 Norfolk st
Baker L. (:\'l.iss), dress maker, Lewis street Blott Eleanor (Mrs.), tobacconist, 128 Norfolk street
Balls John, shell fish merchant, 4 Lansdown street Bloxham Alfred, station master, Eastern & Midlands Rail-
Balls Robert Henry, shopkeeper, 13 North Everard street way station, Hlackfriars road
Balls William Henry, Castle P.H. St. James' road Blyrh Charles, scrap iron dealer, 2 Littleport terrace
Bambridge William Henry, greengrocer, 15 Tower street Blyth George, pilot, 9 Friars street
Bann William, Whitesmiths' Arms P.H. Pilot street Blyth Hobert William, Highland Laddie P.H. Wisbech road
Bardell Brothers, builders & marble masons, London road Backing Herbert, gilder, 4SA, Railway road
Barker Eliza (Miss), confectioner, 5 St. James' road Backing Isabella (Miss), milliner, 27 Friars street
Barker John, shell fish merchant, Burkitt street Backing John, boot & shoe maker, 22 Market street
Barker J oseph, Filden Smith P. H. Pilot street . Backing Walpole, tailor, 23 Austin street
Barker Thomas William, fish merchant, r Eirchwood street Bone Andrew Walton, stone & marble mason, 124 London rd
Barlow John, county court bailiff, 7 Checker street Bone John J. builder, Black friars road
Barnaby Henry, builder, Windsor road Bone Martin, bricklayer, Pilot street
Barnard Daniel & Son, fish merchants & dealers in sprats Bone Robert, dairyman, 8 W"hitefriars terrace
for manure, 1 I Broad street Bonnett Caroline (Mrs.), fishmonger, 28 Norfolk street
Barnard Sarah & Emma (Misses), milliners, fancy drapers Boon Wm.Donaldson, dispensing chemist,3SaturdayMrkt.pl
& dress makers ; family & mourning orders promptly Boor James, master mariner, 16 Valinger's road
attended to, 56 Railway road Booty Albert, Lattice inn, Chapel street
Barnard & Son, ship chandlers, St. Ann's fort Barle-y Henry William, Three Pigeons P.H. St. James' street
Bal'nard David, fishmonger, Windsor road Borough Cemetery (Thomas Goodwyn Archer, clerk to the
Barnard George John, wholesale & retail coal, coke, salt & burial.board; David Melton, curator),.Hardwick road
sprat merchant & carting contractor, Bentinck coal depot, Borough Police Station (George Ware, chief constable),
Alexandra Dock head ; residence & head office, Laburnam Saturday Market place
house, Austin street Bouch Jarnes Pearman, Bentinck hotel, Cresswell street
Barnard Samuel, Cro•"'W""Il & Mitre P.H. Common Staith quay Bowen Agnes (Miss), greengrocer, North street
Barnes & Son, boot & shoe makers, 8o High street Bowen Frederick, shopkeeper, North street
Barrett C. G. & Co. dyers & cleaners, 86 High street Bowker A. & J. maltsters & corn mers. St. Margaret's pl
llarrett & Parr, dress & mantle makers, 36 Tower street Bowker Jarne& & Co. ship brokers & shipping agents, &
Barrett Chas. grocer & pravsn. mer. 100 High st. & Tower st agents fo:r:- Carron Co's. Line of weekly steamers, Alexan-
Barrett Joseph William, surgeon & medical officer north dra dock
district, King's Lynn union & to King's Lynn workhouse, Bradfield Frederick, baker, lligh gate
g8 London road Bradfield Henry, deputy registrar of births, deaths &
Barrington Frederick Albert L.K.Q.C.P.uel. surg-eon & marriages, Castle Rising sub-district & clerk to the Gay·
medical officer & public vaccinator for Western district, wood school board, Uaywood villa, Gaywood road
Free bridge Lynn union & certifying factory surgeon, Lynn Bradfield William Charles, hosier &c. 51 High street
district, Chapel street Bray Edwin, piano & music warehouse, 21 lligh street '
Bartle William, rate collector No. I district, St. Margarct's Brett Richard, Royalty P. H. Purfleet street
parish, Wellesley street Brewster Charles Frederick, sergeant instructor t,o A & B
Barwick Henry William, grocer, 54 Norfolk street Companies 3rdVol.Bat.N orfolk regirnent,g Sth.Everard st
Batch Isaac, poultry dPaler, JI8 London road Bridges Benjamin, St. James' hall keeper, 12 Carmelite ter
Batch Isaac, Royal Standard P.H. County Court road Bristow & Copley, timber merchants & saw mills; office,
Batch John, potato merchant, 101 London road Chapel street; works, Bentinck dock
IJath William & Son, coach builders, 14 Broad street Brittan Frances (Mrs.), apartments, 6 All Saints street
Batterbee Elijah & Son, pork butchers, 37 Tower street llritton Charles J. grocer, 12 & 13 Baxter's plain
Bayes Daniel, greengrocer, Saturday Market place Brookbank George, master mariner, 7 Whitefriars terrace
Bayes Sarah (Miss), dress maker, 21 Coronation square Brooke William Maurice, baker, 37 Chapel street
Beaney Eliza. (Mrs.), Victory P.II. Tuesday Market place Brooks John Robert, pilot, I4 Wbitefriars road
Bear William James, baker, 7 & 8 Friars street Brown A dam Hook, master mariner, 17 Whitefriars terrace
Beart Waiter James M.H.c.v.s. veterinary surgeon, Tower Brown Ernrna (Miss), dress maker, I I Chad wick street
place & 48 London road Browne Phrebe Ann (Mrs.), clothes dealer, 7 .Austin street
Beat Maude (Miss), dress maker, 8 Market street Brown Sarah Ann (Mrs.), draper, 19 & 20 Norfolk street
Beck Edmund & Sons, land & estate agents & surveyors &c. Brown Thomas, secretary to the West Norfolk Farmers'
Chapel street; & at City chambers, 1'1 orwich Manure Co. Limited, \Visbech road
Beer William Elliot, secretary Anglo-Belgian Steamship Brown Williarn Henry, builder, contrador & stone &
Co. Limited, Tuesday Market place marble mason; sanirory work a speciality, joinery pre-
Belderson John, grocer, Bridge street pared by the latest improved machinery, estimates on
Belding George Edward, saddler, 26 St. James' street application ; office & works, Bridge st. ; res. 30 London rd
Bell Robert, coach builder, Railway road Bnlllsaac, shopkeeper & plumber, 7 Coburg street
Bell Thomas Matthew, beer retailer, 31 King street Bull John, boot maker, ro Windsor road
Beloe Edward Milligen, solicitor, commissioner of oaths & Bullen Edward John, baker, South street
perpetual commissioner & coroner for the borough, clerk Bullen Israel, butcher, I8 Nor folk street
to the Charity trustees & to the Harbour trustees, New Bullen Mark, ships' baker, St. Ann's street
Conduit !!treet Bullen Thomas, beer retailer, Boal street
Benefer Charles, Norfolk Arms P.H. North street Bumfield William, toll collector, 2I Checker street
Bennell "\Villiam Mayes, accountant &c. clerk to the Pilot & Runtield lsabella (Miss), fruiterer, 5I London road
Harbour Mooring Commissioners & hon. sec. to the Ship- Bunfield William Robert Cross, plumber, painter & glazier,
wrecked Fishermen & Mariners' Royal Benevolent Society, 52 London road
67 High street Bunkle Richard, Red Cow P.H. Church street
Bennett Richard, master of King's Lynn workho. Exton's rd Bunn Frederick William, cabinet maker, 16 Windsor road
Bennett 'Villiam Thomas, horse slaughterer, Wisbech road Bunn Jacob, beer retailer, Pilot street
Bennifer Alfred, baker, Surrey street Bunn J ames, Victoria inn & fish merchant, Pilot street
Berry George William, wheelwright, Southgate street Burcham Thomas, Bricklayers' Arms P.H. Setchford lane
:Hest Samuel, draper, I24 Norfolk street Burgess Hannah (Mrs.), Vine P.H. 140 Norfolk street
Bcttinson George Young, wool broker &c Burgess William James, auctioneer & valuer, Cattle mar-
BettlesWm.Prudential Insurance Co.agent, I Nth.Everard st ket (tues. only) ; & at Wiggenhall St. Mary Magdalen
Betts Frederick George, brewery agent, 4 Railway road Burkitt Wm. & Samuel, corn mers. & maltsters, Queen st
DIRECTORY.] NORFOLK .. LYNN. 47{)
Burley Andrew, carter, 74 Norfolk street Coston William ~ewton, greengrocer, 35 Tower street
Burlingham Daniel Catlin, watch ma. & jeweller, 8I High st Coulstone Ann (Miss), shopkeeper, 26 South Clough lane
Burnett Sarah Elizh. (Miss),ladies' school,r6North Everard st CouJton & Son, solicitors, King street
Burrell Anthony, Scotch Grey P.H. & butcher, Friars street Coulton John James (firm, Coulton & Son), solicitor,& clerk
Burrell Frederick, grocer,& post office, I & 2 St. Ann street to the guardians, to assessment committee & to school
Burton l<'rederick, Duke of Connaught P.H. St. Nicholas st attendance committee & rural sanitary authority of
Burton Frederick Matthew, gunsmith, 7 Purfleet street King's Lynn union, & superintendent registrar, King st
Burton Page, Cattle Market tavern, Broad et!"eet Coulton Richard Calthrop (firm, Coulton & Son), solicitor,
Burton Thomas, boot & shoe maker, 8 Chapel street commissioner for oaths, assistant clerk to the guardians
Bush Hobert, baker & confectioner, 5 St. James' street of King's Lynn union, deputy superintendent registrar &
Butcher Fanny (Mrs.), milliner, 12 Union street registrar of marriages & vestry clerk of St. Margaret's,
Butcher George, china & glass dealer, Church street King street .
Butcller Harry, shopkeeper, South Clough lane Count Sydney, chemist & druggist, 17 High street
Bycroft James, ironmonger, 143 Norfolk street County Court Office (His Honor Ed win l'lumer Price,
Bywater William, inland revenue officer, King Staith square judge ; Frederick Henry Partridge, registrar & high
Callow William, baker, South Clough lane & shopkeeper, bailiff), London road ·
Blackfriars street CountySchool fm·Girls (MissHarrison,head mistress),King st
Cameron John, collector o£ customs & receiver of wreck, Couperthwaite Wm.Myers&Sons,ironmongers,23&75High st
Purfieet quay Cowen David, sh1ps' steward, 14 All Saints' street
Campbell Ann (Mrs.), lodging house, 6 Blaekfriars road Cowen James, Dock tavern, North street
Carlisle Esther (sirs ), dress maker, 4 Tower street Cox Bros. teamen & provision dealers, 94 & 95A, High street
Carter Augustus (Mrs.), dress maker, 24 All Saints' street Cox Joseph & Son,engineers & bicycle makers,r8 Railwayrd
Carter Hy. Geo. asst. supt. Prudential Assur. Co. Wisbechrd Cozens' Temperance Hotel (Miss Hall, proprietress),
Cash & Co. boot warehouse, 20 & 87 High street Blackfriars road
Cater Harriet (Mrs.), Star inn, r:a Norfolk street Cozens George, baker, Church street
Catleugh Robert, clothwr, I4 Nor folk street Cracroft Samh Ann (Mrs.), shopkeeper, South Lynn plain
Cator Susan (Miss), lady superintendent of Girls' Friendly Crake J ane (Mrs.), lodging house, 4 Bridge street
Society Lodge, ~ elson street Creek George, pilot, 19 North Everard street
Cattle Market (John Johnstone, collector), Paradise fields Creed Edward, boot maker, Hlackfriars street
Cawston & Son, watch & clock makers, I I St. J ames' street Cringle Robert, master mariner, 8 Chadwick street
Cawthorne William, greengrocer, 14 South Clough lane Cringle Robert John, master mariner, I Coronation square
Chad wick George Hichard, surgeon, St. Margaret's place Crisp Henry, butcher, Windsor road
Chad wick John Henry, plumber & painter, 83 High street Crisp James, jun. Live & Let Live P.H. & assistant over~
Chapman John Pett1t-t, asst. supt. PearlAssur.Co. 1oAlbert st seer for South Lynn district, Windsor road
Cbapman William, boot maker, Kirby street Croad Charles Wm. academy, 7 Portland st. & Railway rd
Chase Matthew, shell fish merchant, North End yard Crosby Jesse Thomas. grocer & tea dealer, 79 High street
Chase William, Dock hotel, St. Ann's street Cross Frank, dep. registrar of marriages, 8 Whitefriars rd
Chenery George, oyster rooms, A.lbion street Cross Jabez, inland revenue officer, 8 Union street
Chenery James, lock & general smith, .Albion st.Railway rd Cross Thomas Carnell, shopkeeper, Pilot street
Chilvers James, wood dealer, 4 Broad street Cross Waiter, deputy superintendent registrar, Freebridge
Church of England Young Men's Society (Rev. E. G. A.. Lynn umon, 2 r Valinger's road
Winter, president; Rev. J. A. Lloyd, W. F. Offord & J. Crow Henry & Co. sack contractors, 17 Nelson street
· J. Ruscoe, hon. secretaries), Railway road Crow Edward, beer retailer, Queen street
Clack Darius, building surveyor, Tuesday Market place Crow Mary Ann (Mrs.), shopkeeper, 17 Nelson street
Clark Susannah (Mrs.), apartments, South Church lane Crowe Henry, secondhand clothes dealer, 20 Broad street
Clarke Brotb.ers, grocers, 4 Norfolk street Cruso & Wilkin, auctioneers, valuers & estate agents,
Claxton Edward, jeweller, Tower street Tuesday :Market place
Clifton William Wilson, station master, Great Eastern Rail- Cubitt & Chatterton, cake factors & importers, London road
way station, Blackfriars road Culey David, beer retailer, Queen street
Clough Thomas, gun maker, 52 High street Culling Susan & Maria (Misses), dress & corset makers,
Coast Guard Station(W.G.Martin,chief otlicer),Estuary bnk I Stanley street
Coates Robert Rhodes, corn & flour dealer, 4 Guanock place Curry Charles, fruiterer, I04 High street
Coates William, machine owner, ro Guanock terrace Curson Bullen, hatter, hosier & glover, r8 High street
Cocher John Aickman (exors. ), chemist, 3 St. James' street Curson Frederick .Augustus, assistant overseer, St. Mar~
Cockerill Elizabeth (Mrs.), glass, china & earthenware garet's district, New Conduit street
dealer, 137 Norfolk street Curson Henry, chief clerk traffic department, Eastern &
Cockle W illiarn Henry, chemist & druggist, 59 High street Midlands Railway Co.'s office, .Austin street
Cocks Elijah, butcher, Windsor road Curson Robert, Stanley .Arms P.H. I5 Railway road
Cocks Wm.Thos.Stone Masons' Arms P.H.29 Sth.Everard st Curson Thomas Harrison, hosier & haberdasher, 29 St.
Codrington Sidney, soda water manufacturer, Littleport st J ames' street
Coe Florence (Miss), tobacconist, 106 Norfolk street Curt is Ed ward Eli, hair dresser, I I lllackfriars street
Coe George Henry, saddler, 40 Norfolk street Curtis George James, glass & china. warehouse & corn
Coe John Elijah, cork importer, 106 Norfolk street dealer, Littleport street
Coe Julia. Fendley (Miss), milliner, 25 St. James' street Cushing William, Greyhound P.H. & shopkeeper, 25 High st
Coker .Alfred, shopkeeper, 28 A.ll Saints' street Custom House( John Camcron, collector & receiver of wreck),
Col by .Ann (Mro;. ), shopkeeper, IO Chapel street Purfleet quay
Coli er R. & Sons, coal, coke, cake, seed & salt merchants ; Dack Benjamin, cabinet maker, Leach yard, Tower street
office, Athemeum parade; dep6t, Railway station; & at Daisley John, baker & grocer, Providence street & I 13
.A tile borough, Diss & Norwich London road
Collieson Thumpson, butcher, 1 .All Saints' street Dales Hugh(Mrs.),registry office for servants,107London rd
Collins Robert Edward, hair dresser, 3 Broad street Davis Charles, practical machine bookbinder, ruler & ac-
Cullins Robert Richard, baker, Pilot street count book maker to the trade &c.; price lists & specimens
Collinson John .Archer, Beaconsfield P.H. 68 High street on application, Blackfriars bookbinding works
Collison & Reeve, fellmongers, Highgate Daw & Sons, pork butchers, Church street
Collison & Son, corn & coal merchants, Southgates & Dawson Henry, commission agent, I St. James' road
.Athenreum buildings Day Joseph, pork butcher, 101 Norfolk street
Collison Benjamin, butcher, 64 Norfolk street Dennick John Iles, coal merchant, u London road & .St.
Collison Henry,builder,4 South Everard st.& Nth.Everard st Margaret's place
Collison J acob, butcher, 63 Norfolk street Dennis Thomas F. bricklayer, 30 All Saints' street
Collison Mary Ann (Miss), dress maker, 12 All Saints' street Devonshire Daniel, fishmonger, Blackfriars street
Colman Edward John M.S . .A.. architect, surveyor & valuer, Devonshire John, fishmonger & game dealer, 135 & 24
Tuesday Market place Norfolk street
Cook J. T. & Co.colliery agents & coal & coke mers.Sth.qnay Dexter Lewis, butcher, 146 Norfolk street
Cook George W. engineer, Broad 11treet Dexter Waiter Sothern, photographic artist, Blackfriars st.
Cook John Thomas, salt merchant, ship & insurance broker & stationer, High street
& general commission agent, South quay Dickenson Fountain, corn factor, Blackfriars street
Cooper George, boot maker, 6 Littleport street Dines Claydon, coal merchant, Nelson street
Cooper William, dairy, 5 London road . Dines Francis William, blacksmith, Union street & 4 White-
Coote Thomas & Son, colliery agents, South quay & at St. friars terrace
Ives, Hunts Dixon ''Valter, Honest Lawyer P.H. London road
Copley Robert Flower, timber mer. see Bristow & Copley Do bson George, provision dealer, I 5 Norfolk street
Corn E:x:change (Chas.Holman 1collector), Tuesday Market pl Docking William, fishmonger, Queen street
476 .LYNN. NORFOLK. [ KELLY"B

Dodman Alfred, engineer, iron & brass founder, boiler Felgate John G. shopkeeper, Pilot street
maker & marine engineer; patronized by H.R.H. The Fendley Sarah & Susan (Misses), milliners, 25 St. James' st
Prince of Wales & Her Majesty's Govt. Highgate foundry Fenley Mary Ann (Mrs.), dress maker, Windsor road
Dodman Edmund, dairy, 21 & 22 All Saints' street Field Frederick Artlmr M.R.c.s.Lond. house surgeon & lli!C.
Dodson Charles, apartments, 25 Coronation square to the ·west Nor folk & Lynn hospital, L6ndon road
Dodson Henry, whitesmith, Baker lane Finch Jacob & Henry Young, chemical & artificial manure
Donaldson Andrew, fish salesman, 141 Norfolk street merchants, dealers in linseed & cotton cakes, coals &c.
Dorer Maria (Mrs.), laundress, 20 Paxton terrace .Alexandra docks ; branch office, Swaffham, & principal
Dorman .Arthur, hair dresser, 61 Norfolk street railway stations in the Eastern counties .
Dorr Saral.t (Miss), ladies' school, 17 Valinger's road Fire Engine Office (E. J. Silcock, supt. ), Common Staith qy
Dow Alfred, registrar of births and deaths for King's Lynn Fisher Mary Ann (Miss), hosier, 4 St. James' street
& collector to the Guardians, & relieving & vaccination Fison James & Sons, maltsters & merchants in bones, copro-
officer for King's Lynn union, & school inquiry & attend- lites, oil cakes &c. manufacturers of oil of vitriol & manures,
ance officer & inspector of nuisances, St. James' house, King Staith lane ; & at Thetford, East Dereham & Whit-
St. J ames' place tington, Stoke Ferry
Dow .Arthur G. jun. deputy registrar of births & deaths Fitt Harry, saddler & harness maker, 8 St.. James' street
for King's Lynn sub-district, St. James' ho. St. James' pl Flanders Alfred, fishmonger, St. James' road
Dow .Ar1hur Graham, manager of the King's Lynn Gas Fley Samuel, Tower tavern, Tower street
Co. Wisbech road Floyd Frank R. & Co. corn, cake & coal mers. Queen street
Drake .Alfred, Grey Friars tavern & cab propr. Blackfriars rd Foreman Frances (Mrs.), shopkeeper, Littleport street
Drake Arthur, Norfolk .Arms P.H. 23 Norfolk street Forman Henry, Hull trinity pilot, Lansdown road
Drew Joseph, coal dealer, Southgates Forster William, boot & shoe maker, Union lane
Driver Mary (Mrs.), greengrocer, Church street Foster & Bird, printers, stationers, lithographers,account
Dudding Jane (Mrs.), glass & china dealer, 2 Purfleet st book manufrs. label makers & bookbinders; specialities,
Duke's Head hotel (.Alfred Moses Everard Tuddenham, chemists & florists labels, St. Margaret's works, Baker
manager), Tuesday Market place lane & 9 High street
Dunbabin James Thomas, hair dresser, u6 Norfolk street Fox Jeremiah & Son, carvers & gilders, New Conduit st
Dunbabin John .Abraham, plumber, gasfitter & painter, Fox Jane (Mrs.), Black Dog P.H. 26 Norfolk strtlet
I IO London road Fox John, shopkeeper, Windsor street
Dunbar Joseph S. accountant, Eastern & Midlands Rail- Fox Thomas Lucas, carriage builder, Paradise road
way Co.'s office, Austin street Francis George, beer retailer, King street
Dunn Edwin, hatter &c. see Jones & Dunn Freeman, Hardy& WillisLim.boot & shoe wareho.47High st
.Durrant & Wright, land surveyors, valuers & estate agents, Freeman Frederick Laird, corn merchant, Queen street
30 King street Freeman George Alfred, master mariner, 6 Whitefriars ter
Durrant Henry, .Anchor inn, South Lynn plain Freeman William John, auctioneer, 25 Valinger's road
Dye Reuhen, carpenter, 20 Windsor road Freeman William South, baker & confectioner, Windsor rd
Dye Robert, builder & contractor, South Gate yard Frost Alfred, bricklayer, Regent street
Dye Samuel, hor!:le slaughterer, 6 Bridge ter. Gaywood road Frost Charles, lath manufacturer, Guanock terrace
Dyson James Wm. Ferry Boat inn & boatbuilder,King st Frost Herbert, baker, 9 Queen street
Earl Thomas, Victoria tavern, 9 Market street Frost John, boot & shoe maker, South Clough lane
East Coast Steam Ship Co. Lim. (William Furley, sec.); Frost Louisa (Mrs.), fish merchant, North street
office, Boal wharf Fuller Mary & Esther (Misses), milliners &c. 12 Railway rd
East Henry, rope & twine maker, 52 Norfolk street Fuller & Robertson, tailors & woollen drapers, 78 High st
Easter George William, deputy registrar of marriages for Fuller .Ann (Mrs.), fish merchant, North street
King's Lynn district, Whitefriars terrace Fuller Henry, Black Goose P. H. St. Nicholas street
Easter Henry George, grocer, North street Fuller Waiter, agent to the Eastern Counties Navigation &
Easter Waiter, butcher, 55 Norfolk street Transport Co. Limited, Tuesday Market place
Eastern Counties Navigation & Transport Co. Limited Furbank Arthur, inspector G. E. railway, 9 Blackfriars rd
(Waiter Fuller, agent), Tuesday Market place Fysh Ehenezer, grocer & provi~;ion dealr. 35 Valinger's road
Eastern & Midlands Railway Co.'s Office (Robert A. Read, Fysh George, fly proprietor, Valinger's Road livery stables
receiver & manager; Joseph S. Dunbar, :eccountant; Fysh James, White Hart P.H. St. James' street
Henry Curson, chief clerk traffic department), Austin st Fyson J ames Simeon, Foul Anchor P. H. Boa! street
Eastwick William, millwright, Austin street Gage Frederick George, shoe maker, South Lynn plain
Eau Brink Cut Toll Office (William Bnmfield, collector), Gage Henry, boot maker, Queen street
Boal quay Gage Susan (Mrs.), fruiterer, South Lynn plain
Edmonds Percival Dungar, fishmonger, 13 St. James' st Gamble John, pilot, 9 Birchwood street
Eggett Edward, coal & wood dealer, Wisbech road Gamble William, p1lot, Loker road
Eggett RichardKnight,London Porter House P.n.London rd Gardiner Samuel, Black Joke P.H. North street
Eggleton John, shoe maker, 7 Broad street Garland & Flexman, ship brokers & Lloyds agents, King st
Eglington Ursula Maria (Miss), dress maker, Church st Garland William Henry, consul for the German Empire,
Elliott J oseph, beer retailer, Nelson street Denmark, Sweden & Norway, King street
Ellis .Arthur Cooke, carpenter, 12 South Everard street Garner Robert, fishmonger, Church street
Ellis Robert, Alexandra inn, St. Ann's street Garrod Robert, dining rooms, Tuesday Market place
Emms Samuel, gardener, 5 Coronation square Gates John, hosier, III High street
Empson George, boot maker, Church street Gathergood Frederick, coal merchant, 3 Guanock terrace
Empson 'William, shoe maker, Purfieet street Gathergood George William, grocer, Church street
Euefer John, carman, 19 Stanley street Gautrey Robert, boot maker, llroad street
Ess James, baker & confectioner, Tuesday Market place Gazley George, tailor & outfitter, 120 Norfolk street
Etheridge E. & B. wool & seed merchants &c. King street & Gee George, furniture dealer & greengrocer, 17 Black friars st
at Stoke Ferry Gemmell George, draper & outfitter, ng High street
Everard Robert, boot maker, 6 Coronation square George Hy. boot ma. 17 All Saints' st. & I I New Checker st
Everett Harry Frith, corn & flour factor, 55 London road George Martha (Miss), laundress, 20 All Saints' street
Everitt John, plumber, painter & glazier, 6 Blackfriars st Gibb William Muir, tailor, 13 Railway road
Everitt Susannah (Miss), dress maker, 7 Blackfrmrs street Gibson Richard, master mariner, Broad street
Everitt Thomas, grocer, Surrey street Gibson Robert, wardrobe dealer, 17 Tower street
Ewen William, beer retailer & chimney sweeper, Bridge st Gibson Thomas B. bill poster, Purfteet street
ftxley Elizabeth Martha (Mrs.), corn & flour dealer, 127 Gibson Wm. turncock&water works inspector, 22Guanock ter
Norfolk street Gilbert Rebeeca. .Adelaide (Miss), apartments, 3 Portland st
Exley Thomas, excavators' tool maker, I'27 Norfolk street Giles Alfred, agent for Messrs. Cranfield Brothers, millP.rs,
Eyre Elijah & Co. brewers, maltsters, mineral water Ipswich, 5 Portland street
manufacturers, spirit, corn & coal merchants, Lady Giles John, shopkeeper, 4 Wood street
Bridge brewery; & at ·wells, Mepai, Cambridgeshire & Giles John Broadway, shopkeeper, Highgate
Peterborough Girls' County Schools Association Limited (W. G. H . .Ander-
Farr Francis, baker, Bridge street •
son, sec.), I Whitefriars road
Farrow John, grocer, 34 St. James' street &Tower place Girls' Friendly Society Lodge( Miss Susan Cator,lady supt.),
Farrow Thomas, bookseller, stationer & printer, Railway rd Nelson street
Faulkner (Misses), dress makers, 8 Blackfriars road Gittings Robert, shopkeeper, Bridge street
Fayers Edward, picture frame maker, Duke's Head lane Glasier John Samuel Bedford, solicitor, clerk to the Norfolk
.Fayers Robert William, builder, contractor, carpenter, County Schools .Association Limited, & clerk to Hunstan-
joiner, brick;ayer, plumber, painter, glazier & gasfitter, ton local board, King street; & at Hunstanton
paperhanging & all kinds of sanitary work done ; office, 28 Gleadhill Richard, grocer, Bridge street
Broad street; workshops, .Austin street Globe hotel (King's Lynn Hotel Co, Lim. proprs.), King st
DIRECTORY.] NORFOLK. LYNN. 477
Golden Frederick, Seven Sisters P.H. Exton's road Ha wkins Charles, auctioneer, estate & land agent for E. R. M.
Golding Frederick, secondhand furniture warehouses, the Pratt esq. Ryston estates; Major Stocks' \Voodhall estates;
largest & cheapest stock in Norfolk, 13 London road Sir Henry Pastou-Bedingfield bart. Oxborough, Caldecote
Golding Williarn Nicholas, family grocer, tea & provi- & Boughton est.a.tes & for the Hand-in-Hand Insurance
sion merchant, 27 Norfolk street C':J. ; holds a weekly stock auction in Lynn cattle market ;
Goodson James, fish merchant, North street chief office, Bank chambers ; & at Downham Market
Goodson Josepb, jun. Hull trinity pilot, Pilot street Hawkins Jas. Arthur, basket & sieve maker & dealer in wood-
GoodwinStephen, baker, King street ware ; orders solicited & promptly executed, 29 Norfolk st
Goose Jane S. S. (Mrs.), milliner, II7 High street Hawks Richard, Barley Mow P.H. Railway road
Gordon Henry, shopkeeper, North street Hawley Ann (Mrs.), Rose & Thistle P.H. South Clough lane
Gowen George William, reporter, 15 Whitefriars terrace Hayden Misses, ladies' Sr!hool, Windsor road
Grammar School (Rev. Waiter Boyce B.A. bead master), St. Ifayes & Porrett, fancy drapers, I02 High street
James' street Hayes & Riches, ironmongers, 43 High street
Gray J ames, pastry cook, 36 Norfolk street Hayes Henry William, grocer & prov. mer. I22 Norfolk st
Great Northern Railway Co's. Office (Percy S. Twelvetrees, Hayes James, cabinet maker & upholsterer, 4I High street
agent Lynn & district), Tuesday Market place Hayes James Robert, chemist & druggist, II5 Norfolk street
Green Thomas & Son, clothiers, hatters &c. 44 High street Hayes Nelson Roberts, cooper & basket ma. 121 Norfolk st
Green Frances Elizh. (Mrs.), upholsteress, 3 Paxton terrace Hayes William Thomas, cork manufacturer, 3 Albert street
Green Henry, greengrocer, Windsor road Herdman John James, outfitter, I7 Chapel street & sewing
Green Richard, plasterer, I Bridge terrace, Gaywood road machine dealer, 12 Broad street
Green Robert, plasterer, 9 Guanock terrace Hettich Martba Jane (Mrs.), tobacconist, 37 Norfolk street
Green Thomas, haberdasher & outfitter, 2 r & 22 High street Hewetson Benjamin, slate merchant & slater, King street
Greenacre Edward, pilot, Southgate street Hides John Roe, shopkeeper, South Clough lane
Gree'tiacre J essie (Mrs.), tailoress, I Graham street Hildon George, china & earthenware dealer, 44 London road
Greenwood James, beer retailer, St. Ann's street Hill Charles, shopkeeper, H.egent street
Greeves John Stephen, whitesmith, Purfleet street Hilton Williarn, painter, 2 Albert street
Greeves Robert, Two Brewers P.H. Purfleet street Hinds Jacob, dining rooms, King street
Uregory Stephen, auctioneer, valuer & estate agent, Bank Hitchcock Williarn, agent for Scottish Widows' Life,
chambers; Tuesday Market place (tuesday only) ; & at Alliance Fire, Norwich L" nion Fire, Norwich Accident
Tilney All Saints & Whittlesey Insurance & the Guarantee Society, Messrs. Gurney's bank
Gregorys & Hampson, corn merchants, South quay Hodds Henry, Fisherman's Arms P.H. Pilot street
&ridley George Francis, chemist, ro8 Norfolk street Hodson George, shopkeeper, Exton's road
Grierson James, travelling draper, 69 & 70 London road Hogge (George) & Seppings, brewers, maltsters & spirit
Griffin Robert, corn dealer, I2I London road merchants, King street (tuesday only); & at Setch
G'rriffin William, hair dresser, 6 High street brewery & Stoke Ferry
Grimes James, shoe maker, Littleport street Holdcroft Harriet (Mrs.), Queen's Head P.H. 45 High street
Groom John William, commission agent, r6~ South Everard Holditch George, corn, oil cake & coal merchant, Nelson st
street Holland Frederick Edwin, lamb & calf food manufacturer,
Gunton Thomas, fish merchant, 34 Lansdown street Britannia mills, Nelson street
~urneys, Birkbeck, Bare lay, Buxton &. Cress-ell, Holland George, bricklayer, St. Nicholas street
bankers ; head office, Tuesday Market place; draw on Holman Charles, tobacconist, 30 Norfolk street
Ba.rclay, Bevan, Tritton & Co. London E c Holman Frederick John, monumental mason, Railway road
Guy Ja.mes, fisherman, Ferry street Holman Horace, Gun tavern, Tower street
Haines Abel, leather seller, 91 Norfolk street Holman Thomas N. (25 years with Mr. W. Bath), coach
Haines Frederick, hair dresser, rr Bridge street builder &c. Norfolk carriage works, Market st. & Albion st
Haines Susa.nMaryAgnes(M rs. ), Windsor tav-ern, Windsor rd Holrnes J oseph, umbrella maker, 6 Hlackfriars street
Haines Walter, pilot, n Whitefriars terrace Holmes Robert, corn dealer, I03 Norfolk street
Hales James, Sun P.H. 38 Norfolk street Hopkin George Wells, Jolly Farmers P.H. Wisbech road
Haling Tolls & Corporation Dues Office (Willia.m Bumfield, Hopkins James, Anchor of Hope P.H. 95 Norfolk street
collector), Boa! quay Horn Arthur, Shakespeare P.H. King street
Hall & Son, leather sellers & boot makers, Tuesday Market Harmer Rose (Miss), dress maker, 4 Coburg street
place Howard Abel, baker, Baker lane
Hall Edward, shoe maker, Surrey street Howard John Hillman, Valiant Sailor P.H. Nelson street
Hall John Henry, photographer, 4 London road Howard Thomas Shaw, tobacconist, 20 St. James' street
Hall Joseph, master mariner, 4 Coronation place Howe William John, Crown inn, London road
Hall Robert William, Lincoln tavern, Mill Fleet terrace Huddlestone Thomas, boot & shoe maker, Church street
Hall Waiter, plum bar, glazier & gasfitter, 4 Valmger's road Hughcs John, greengrocer, St. Nicholas street
Hammond George, coal merchant, Regent street Hughes Mary (Miss), dress maker, 9 St. James' road
Hammond William, dairy, Wisbech road Humphrey William James, agent for Steward, Patteson,
llamnett Holland, watch maker, 113 Norfolk street Finch & Co. brewers (Norwich) ; stores, :Marshall street,
Hampson Leonard,corn merchant,see Gregorys & Hampson Railwav road
•'

Hampton Francis, printer, Baxter's plain Hunstanton Esplanade Co. Limited (Frederick Henry Part-
Hampton William, tailor, Priory lane ridge, sec.), Chapel street
llamson Brothers, pawnbrokers & outfitters, ro6 High street Hunstanton Gas Co. Lim, (Hy. Bradfield, sec.), Chapel st
Ilancock Henry, shopkeeper, 10 Friars street Hunstanton Pier Co. (Hy. Bradfield, sec.); office, Chapel st
Hannah Martha (Mrs.), baker, Garden row, Highgate Hunstanton Water Co. Lim. (Hy. Bradfield, sec.), Chapel st
Hanwell Henry, draper, 17 Austin street Hunt Samuel Denny, merchant tailor, woollen draper, hosier,
Harbour Master's Office (George Edward Winslow, harbour clothier, hatter & general outfitter, 38 High street
master), Boal quay Hye Mary (Mrs.), beer retailer, High gate
Harbour Sarah (Mrs.), greengrocer & seedsman, 7 High st Ibberson Char le~'!, grocer, cheese factor & tallow chandler, 57
Hardy Benjamin, ironmonger & tinman, 58 High street High street & 1 Saturday Market place
Hardy Edward, Earl of Richmond P.H. Pilot street Inkson Henry & Son, bookbinders, 23 King street
Hardy John, manufacturing stationer, see Ross & Hardy Inland Revenue Office; tax department (Benjamin Robert
Hardy Robert, grocer, Windsor road :M. Leech, surveyor of taxes); excise department (John
Harle John, pilot, 33 Kirby street Milmine, supervisor), King Staith square
Harper Elizabeth (Mrs.), greengrocer, Littleport street Isley George James, Bird-in-Hand P.H. Norfolk street
Harper John, pork butcher, I Broad street Ivy Mtss, dress maker, 15 Valinger's road
Harper Kate (Miss), pork butcher, 5 Tower street Jackson Charles, physician & surgeon, King street
Harrison George, grocer, 7 Bridge street Jackson Donald Frederick, solicitor & clerk w the Gaywoo
Han-ison John William, pork butcher, 112 London road burial board, Bank chambers, TuP~'!day Market place
Harrison Louisa (Mrs.), toy dealer, 6 Tower street Jarvis & Son, solicitors, Tuesday Market place
Harrowing Robert, butcher, 21 Norfolk street Jarvis Edward A. manager of Messrs. Lacons, Youell &
Hart Alfred Smith, plumber, painter &c. 94 Xorfolk street Co.'s bank, High street
Hart Henry, chimney sweeper, Cross yard, Littleport street Jarvis Phoobe (Miss), shopkeeper, I8 North Everard street
Hart Peter, pilot, 21 Stanley street Jarvis William, builder, Friar street
Hart Robert, confectioner, II4 Norfolk street Jary James, Lamb inn, King street
Hart Waiter, pie shop, Purfleet street Jeffery Chas.& Co.mers.& maltsters,King st. ; & at Swaffbam
Hartley John, butcher, 4 Providence street Jerrnyn &. Perry, linen drapers, silk mercers, carpet
Hastings Edward, carman, Austin street warehousemen & undertakers, West Norfolk drapery
Haverson James, Lady Bridge tavern, Bridge street establishment, I21 I3, I4, IS & I6 High street
C. N. & S. 31
478 LYNN. NORFOLK. [KELLY's

.Jel"myn & Scott, cabinet, npholswry & bedding manu- Knight Frederick Thomas, eoal merchant, Railway road
facturers & gener,al house furnishers &c. High street ; Knights John IIammond, King's, Head P.H. & brewer, Queen
steam works, St. James' street Street brewery•
Jewel! Brothers, linen drapers, 76 & 77 High stre,et Knowles Brothers, butchers, High street
Jex William, tobacconist, I I High street Lacons, Youell & Co. bankers< branch) (Edward A. Jarvis,
Johnson Benjamin Wade, plumber & gasfitter, Railway road manager), High street; draw on Glyn, Mills, Currie &
Johnson Frederick, confectioner, 119 Norfolk street Co. London E c
J ohnson George, oil & color man, go High street Ladyman & Go. wholesale & retail gtocers, tea dealers &
Johnson James Henry, saddler, 3 St. James' road agents for W. & A. Gilbey• wino~ spirit merchants, 39&
Johnson John Augustus, East Anglian hotel, Blackfriars rd 40 High street
Johnson Martha (Miss), news agent, 25 Norfolk street Lancaster William, Hulk inn & carma~ Bridge street
Johnson Sarah (Mrs.), certified midwife, 25 Chapel street Lane Fred William, engliRh & foreign timber merchant,
Johnson William Hy. sewing machine dealer, St. James' st Friars steam saw mills, The Friars
Johnstone John, drapers' traveller & collector of market Lane lsaac, shopkeeper, Pilot street
tolls, 22 Coronation square Lane Wiiliam, coal dealel' & grocer, Cht~rch street
Jolly Hannah (Miss), lodging house, I St. John's terrace Lane William A. auctioneer & estat~ agent, 38 Railway road
dones & Dunn, hatters 1 hosiers, glovers, clothiers & shir't Langford Emerson, tobacconist, Blackfriars road
& collar makers, 26 & 27 Tuesday Market pl.& at Hunstantn Langley Thos. & Son, timber mers.& g~re manufrs.King st.
Jones William & Son, bakers, 20 Chapel street Langley James, cowkeeper, Double row, Highgate
J ones Waiter Owen, teacher of music & organist of St. John's Langley John, carpenter1 67 Norfolk street
church, 12 St. John's terrace Langley John, Wool pack hotel, Tuesday Market place
J ones William, pilot, Miles court, Chapel street Langley Thomas Henry, greengrocer, 2 Tower street
Jordan John, beer retailer, Coronation square Langley Thomas Henry ,shopkeeper,35 Double row,Highgate
Joyce Ann (:Miss), shopkeeper, Garden row, Highgate Large Alfred, manager Star Tea Co. 37 High street •
Joyce James, horses & traps on hire, Hummer's yard Large John, shopkeeper, Blackfriars street
Jubey William Henry, butcher, Tower street Larkman James, Carpenters' Arms P.H. 44 Norfolk street
Juby Samuel, shopkeeper, Wood street Larwood Georgc, general d ler, 6 Albion ter. Gaywood rd
Judd Phcebe (Mrs.), upholstress, 3 Bridge ter. Gaywood rd Laws ~ Co. (1<'. J. Carpent ) (established 184o), brewers.
Kendrick George & Mary (Miss) 1 boot & shoe makers, 19 & wholesale & retail wine; spi it & bottled bee-r merchants &
20 High street mineral water manufacturers, High street
Kenney Thos, marine store deale~ & beer retailer, Queen st Leach Martha (Mrs.), apartmentsj Nelson street
Kent Elizabeth (Mrs.), George P.H. New Conduit street Leake Henry & Son, seed crushers, linseed & cotton cake
Kent Harry, Shoulder of Mutton P.H. & fish mer. Chapel st manufacturers, Oil Cake mills, Baker lane
Kent John, coal merchant, see Smith, Kent & Co Lee Benjamin, Mariners' Arms P.H. South quay
Kent William, beer retailer, Stonegate street Leech Henja.minRobt.Moody ,surveyor of taxes,Kingstaith sq
Kerkham & Son, general drapers, 82 High street Le Grice Brothers, drapers &c. 21 & 22 Higb. street
Kerr George Ea ton,, bicycle & tricycle maker, between 96 & Leman George, shell fish merchant, Pilot street
97 Norfolk street , Leman Henry, shell fish merchant, 20 Pilot street
Ketteringham John, corporation sluice keeper, Wisbec:h rd Le man John, Lord Nelson P .H. 28 Austin street
Kew John, Custom House inn & carpenter, Purfleet bridge Lemmon Ernest Edward, family grocer, tea & provision
Kidd John James, florist, The Chase nursery, Goodwin's rd dealel'!, South LyiJ.n grocery stores, 15 .I<'riars street
Kidd William, greengrocer, Windsor road Leverett Eliza (Mrs.), confectioner, 6 St. James' street
King Angelina (Mrs.), baker, 6 Broad street Leverett John, boot maker, 4 Birchwood street
King Frederick Horatio, confectioner, 42 Tower street Leverington Sidney, Plumbers' Arms P.H. Broad street
King Meadows (Mrs.), ladies' school, 50 London road Lift William, butcher, Purfleet street
King William, Clough Fleet inn, Blackfriars street Lift William Henry, grocer, 33 All Saints' street
King William Johnson, watch maker & jeweller, 54 High st Lilly Ja.ne Susannah (Mrs.), midwife, Crooked lane
King's Lynn Coffee Tavern Co. Limited (Harry Gibson, Lincoln Henry James, grocer, 107 Norfolk street
manager), High street Lincoln Jsph.Stephen, furniture broker; Saturday :Market pl
King's Lynn Dock Co. (J. S. Valentine C.E. chairman ; Lock llenry Stephen, butcher, 17 Nelson street
James B. Bond, sec. ; Arthur George Russell, general Lock Wm. gasfitter & plumber, 15 & 16 Norfolk street
manager) ; offices, Alexandra dock ; London office, 4 Lock William Manning, greengrocer, n8 Norfolk street
Queen Anne's gate, Westminster s w Logsdail Henry, chemist, 69 High street
King's Lynn Gas Co. (Arthur Grabam Dow, manager; J. London & Provincial Bank Limited (branch) George W.
J. Coulton & F. H. Partridge, joint secs.),. Wisbech road Page, manager), TuPBday Market place; draw on Glyn,
King's Lynn Horticultural Society (F. Hampton & W. J. :Mills, Currie & Co, Lonuon E c
Hides, hon. secs.), Athenreum chambers London Tailoring Co.(Frcdk. T.Bhmll,mngr. ),85&86High st
King's Lynn llotel Co. Limited, proprietors of the Globe Long Zedekiah & Son, corn mers. Purfleet pl. (tues. only)
hotel, King street Love Brothers, tailors & outfitters,,()r High. street
King's Lynn & ~orth Sea Fishery Co. Limited (William Love Mary (Mrs.), baker, 10 Bridge street
Briscoe Whall, sec.), Market Sgaure chambers Lowe Elizabeth (Mrs.), dining rooms, 3 Norfolk street
King's Lynn Oil & Cake Co. Limited (F. T. Ackland, Lowe Frederick Brown, corn factor, 129 London -road
managing director), Albert Oil mills, Alexandra docks Lowe James, fancy repository, 53A, High street
King's Lynn Omnibus Co. Lim. (J.S.B.Glasier, sec.),.King st Lowe James, stationer, & post ottice 1 53 London road
King's Lynn Rowing Club (G. Hcrbert Cawston, hon. sec.), Lowe John Joseph, Black Horse hotel, wine & spirit mer-
St. James' street chant, & agent for Sutton & Co. London, Chapel street
King's Lynn Town Cricket Club (C. W. Winkley, hou. sec) Lowe Nathaniel, corn, cake& flour dealer,1 & 2 St. James' st
King's Lynn Union ~Workhouse (Richard Bennett, master; Lowe Waiter Horace, ironmonger, 5 High street
Mrs. Mary Bennett 1 matron), Exton's road Lubbock Henry, dairyman, I Blackfriars road
King's Lynn & We..'it Norfolk Conservative Club (The Right Lucas William, fish hawker, Cross yard, Littleport street
Hon. Marquess of Salisbury, president; Charles T. Ives Lusher Elizabeth (Mrs.), pork butcher, 105 Norfolk streei
& H. Bradfield, secs. & Thomas Shafto, steward), St. Lynn Advertiser, Wisbech Constitutional Gazette & Norfolk
James' house, St. James' street & Cambridgeshire Herald (Thew & Son, proprietors &
King's Lynn & West Norfolk Dog, Poultry, Pigeon, Cat & publishers ; published friday evening), I, 2, 3 & 4 High
Cage Bird Society (W. D. Winkley, sec.), High street street. See advertisement
King's Lynn & West Norfolk Permanent Building Society Lynn Angling Association (W. J. King~ sec.), High street
(William Briscoe Whall, sec.), Market Square chambers Lynn Cycling Club (E. M. Beloe,j un. hon. sec. ),N ewConduit st
King's Lynn & West Norfolk Stallion & Foal Show Society Lynn District Lying-in-Charity (.Mrs. Archer, sec.), Tower pl
(W. Nicholls, sec.), Norfolk street Lynn & Hamburg Steamship Co. Lin"litec;t {The)
King's Lynn Working Men's Co-operative Society Limited, (Thomas H. IIodd, managerh Alexandra.. dook r
grocers &c. Valinger's road Lynn Lawn Tennis Club {H. C. Brown &; E. J. Sil~ock, hon.
King's Lynn Young .Men's Christian Association (C, W. secs)
Perry, president; A. Jermyn, treasurer,; · W. Neal, Lynu Liberal Club (Frederick Johnr Miles, hon; sec.),
finanoe & organizing sec,), St. J a.mes' street· r • Atbenreum buildings
Kirby Thomas Potter, grocer & tea dealer, dairy & small• Lynn Ne-s & County Press (Lynn News &. County
ware, Windsor terrace Press Co. Limited, publishers;. Joseph Cooke, manager;
Kirby William,. shoe maker, I~ Union street published friday evening), Purfleet st. See advertisement
Kirk George, boot warehouse~ 72 High street · Lynn Public Baths(Thos.Langley,mpgPo ), CommonStaith qy
Kirkland John French, trav. draper, 20 North Everard st McClune James William, hair dresser, .Railway road
Kitchener John George, wheelwright, Railway road ~Iacdonald Alexander Wm. travelling draper, 73 London rd
Kitchiner Frank, grocer, 97 Norfolk street :Mclntyre James, superintendent Pearl Life Assurance Co.
Knape Eliza (Miss), dress maker, Waterloo street 26 Valinger's road
DIRECTORY.] NORFOLK. LYNN. 479
Malby Henry, weighing machine maker, 2 Wellesley street Norfolk Regiment 3rd Volunteer Battalion (A & B eom•
Malt James, fishmonger, Railway road panics) (Capt. G. F. Archdale & Lieut. H. P. Morgan,
Marrett Hannah (Mrs.), Lord Napier P.li. Guanock terrace commandants; Charles Frdk. Brewster, drill instructor) ;
Marriot Edwin, Fox & Hounds P.H. 93 Norfolk street armoury, Baker lane
Marriott John & Robert, maltsters & merchants,King- Norton llenry Herbert, baker, North street
staith square; & at Wells; Fakenham; East Dereham; Noverre Frank William Bianchi, teacher of the violin, As-
Dunham; Swaffham; Narborough; Snettisham & Docking sembly rooms; & at Norwich
Mason Fairfax Hardy, shopkeeper, Purfteet street Nurse Robert, carver & gilder, Purfteet street
Massingham Edward, butcher, 7 Chapel street Nurse William, Chequers inn, Southgate street
Massingham James, butcher, Tower street Nuthall Edith (Miss), dress makerf I Checker street
Massingham Thomas Robert, butcher 30 St. James' street Oakcs Arthur, Dolphin inn & coal dealer, Friars street
Masb;.rs Sarah (Mrs.), shopkeeper, Hillington square Oakes Joseph, coal dealer, 31 Checker street
Matsell & Targett, booksellers & stationers, ro High street Oakford John & Son, bill posters, Blackfriars street
Matthews George, window blind maker, 35 Railway road Offord Robert James & Sons, surgic..al instrument makers,
May Ann (Mrs.), tobacconist & toy dealer, 31 Norfolk street 134 Nor folk st
May James, hardware dealer, Purfteet street Oliver Thomas, bricklayer, Church street
May Susan (Mrs.), marine store dealer, Surrey street Ollett James, Salisbury Arms P.H. 19 Uuanock terrace
Mayes Robert Charles, boot & shoe maker, Setchford lane Openshaw William, fishmonger, 8 Blackfriars street
Mayes Sarah Ann (Mrs.), milliner, Sctchford lane Ore William Charle.<;, deputy supt. registrar, St.. Nicholas st
Mays Henry, master mariner, 20 Whitefriars terrace Osborne Henry Million, Woolpack P.H. Gaywood road
Medd Joseph, oil mill manager, 18_ Whitefriars terrace Oswell George R. printer, 33 Norfolk street
Medler John, Spread Eagle P.H. & horse dealr. Gaywood rd Page Elizabeth (Mrs.), Prince of Wales P.H. Wisbech road
Medlock Mary (Mrs.), baker, Church street Page Ueorge W. manager of the London & Provincial Bank
Melton Elizabeth (Miss), shopkeeper, North street Limited, Tuesday Market place
Melton Sarah Ann (Mrs.), haberdasher, 38 All Saints' street Page John A. smack owner, 38 Lansdown street
Melton William, builder, 9 Windsor terrace Palgrove John, newsagent, 4 Purfleet stt'eet
Merrikin Elizabeth (Miss), shopkeeper, North street Palmer William Jsph. pharmaceutical chemist, 92 Norfolk st
Merrikin Joseph, Earl Grey P.H. Surrey street Pamment Margaret (Mrs. ),clerk of St. N ieholas, 13 Albert st
Metcalf Charles Valentine, plumber & glazier, King street Pank Alfred Everard,plumbcr,painter & grazier, Windsor rd
Metcalf James llorrell, grocer &c. 6 Chapel street Parker Emma (Mrs.), shopkeeper, 6 Providence street
Metcalf Rowland Alfred, chemist, 5 Norfolk street & at Parker Samuel, mast & block maker, Queen street
Fakenham Parlett Sophia (Mrs.), dress maker, Purfleet street
Middleton Royal Hubert, tobacconist, 7 Windsor road Parnell Robert Hickleton, Three Tuns P.H. Church street '
Midland Railway Co'.s Office (Henry Drew, agent), Tuesday Parsons Edmund Strange & Son, stock & share brokers •
.Market place & Alexandra docks Athenreum chambers
Miles & Sons, auctioneers, Athenreum Parsons James Ambrose B.A.camb. solicitor, commissioner
Miles Fredk. John, chemist &c. Tower st. & 8 Windsor rd for oaths & agent to the Atlas Assurance Co. King street
Miller Alfred, shoe maker, 53 Norfolk street Partridge & Co. solicitors, Chapel street
Miller Thomas, boot & shoe maker, r5.All Saints' street Partridge Frederick Henry (firm, Partridge & Co.),
Milmine John, supervisor of inland revenue, Kingstaith sq solicitor & registrar & high bailiff of county court, Chapel st
Milson Charles Christopher, Apollo P.H. & jobbing gardener, Patterson Samuel, dairyman, Setchford lane
90 Norfolk street Paul John, collector of port dues, Common Staith quay
Mitchell W. & D. livery & bait stables, St. James' street Paul Robert, ship chandler, St. Ann's s~reet
Mitchell Charles Alfred, milliner & fancy drapel' &c. 56 Payne Samuel Brett, agent for rubber stamps & presses,
High street daters, numerators, rubber-faced type & accessories &
Moates Erruna (Mrs.), shopkeeper, I I Southgate street embossing presses, 2 Market street
Moore Forster Grand & Co. soda water manufacturers, Peacocks John Samuel, pork butcher, 126 Norfolk street
New Conduit street Pearmain Frances (Mrs. ),fancy stationer,SaturdayMarket pl
Moore Alfred, sugar boiler, lllackfriars road Pearman Samuel, Ship inn, Bridge street
Moore Edward, coal dealer, 5 Garden row, Highgate Peck James, carter, llentinck street
Moore Edward, lath render, Wisbech road Peck James, milk dealer, Johnson's yard, Albert street
Moore Henry, Blacksmiths' Arms P.H. Surrey street Peek George, goldsmith & jeweller, 9 St. Jame.~' street
Moore Jane (Miss), baker, r5 St. James' street Peeps John Hudson, master mariner, 2 Whitefriars terrace
Moore Martha (Mrs.) (exors. of), baker, 12 Windsor road Peeks Mary Ann (Mrs.), Bowling Green P.H. Checker st
Morris & Son, carpenters, 71 Norfolk street Pegg Harriet Maria (Mrs.), milliner, High street
Morris Ed ward, florist, South Everard street Perry Charles William, linen draper &c. see J ermyn & Perry-
Morriss Charles William, St. James' classical & commercial Pidgeon Frederick, ironmonger, II7 London road
school, & agent to the Westminster Assurance Association Pipe Edgar Philip, brewer, South street ; & wine & spirit
(fire & life), 12 London road merchant, St. J ames' st. & Oxford Arms P.H. 104 Norfolk st
Mote Ford ham, iron & brass founder & agricultural machin- Pipe Eli1,abeth (Mrs.), Rose P.H. South street
ist; depot, Market place; works, Burnham Market Piper Arthur, hair dresser, St. James' street & Church st
Moulton Frances (Mrs. ),secondhand clothes dlr.g&IOUnion st Piper Fredk. Geo. paperhanging wareho. 11 New Conduit ~Jt.
Moy James, tobacconist, lllackfriars street Pitcher William, market gardener, 100 Norfolk street
Moyse John Henry, beer retailer, Paradise lane Playford John, grocer & baker, 8r Norfolk street
Murray James, builder, 25 Albert street Plowright Elizabeth & J a ne (Misses), dress ma.'l. Littleport st
Murrell George, butcher, 129 Norfolk street Plowright & Pratt, wholesale ironmongers, 8 Norfolk street
Murrell William, hair dresser, 133 Norfolk street Plowright Arthur H. civil engineer, St. Nicholas street
Museum (A. Hitcbcock, sec.), Athenreum Plowright Charles Bagge M.D.Edin. surgeon, & medical officer-
Nar Steam Ship Co. (Williarn Furley, sec.); office,Boal quay of health to rural sanitary authority of Freebridge Lynn
National Amalgamated Sailors & Firemen's Union of Great union, King street
Britain & Ireland (C. W. Arnold, sec.), St. Ann's street Plowright George, tinner & brazier, g6 High street
National Teleplwne Co. Limited (C. Worte, manager), Plow:right James, bicycle manufacturer, Railway road
Broad Street chambers Plowright James Jackson, lead & glass merchant & bi:"ick,
Neal Hy. Dent, hair dresser & tobacconist, 28 London road tile, pipe & flower pot manufacturer & builders' merchant,
Neal Wm. Refuge Assurance Co. agnt. 22 North Everard st 3 Tower place; & works, Magdalen road, Watlington.
Neale James, boot maker,. r6 Broad street See advertisement ·
Neale James, grocer, 105 High street & 4 Blackfriars street Plowright Robt. Wm.Jackson,art & general printer, Tower pl
Neale John, chemist, see Allen & Neale Pointer Thomas, butcher, St. James' street
Newby Arthur Isaac, grocer, tea dealer & wine & spirit Pond Charles, umbrella maker & jeweller, 35 & 36 High st
merchant, 33 Norfolk street Pooley Thomas, shopkeeper, I I Checker street
Newhy Jane (Mrs.), milliner, 38 Railway road Potter Catherine (Mrs.)., tobaccQnist, 53 High street
Newham Charles, engineer & machinist & field & entrance Potter Frank P. manufacturer of gates, troughs, bins, racks,
gate band manufacturer, 23 Guanock terrace ladders, stacking stages, shepherds' houses &c. Purfteet qy
Newman John, Cross Ways P.H. South Lynn plain Potter George, master mariner, IS South Everard street 1..J
Newton Mary Ann (Mrs.}, shopkeeper, Broad street Potter Willi&m, pilot, so South Everard street
N icholas Mary (Miss ),servants' registry office, 120 London rd Potter Wm. Grant, wine & spirit mers. 110 & I I I Norfoik;st
Nicholls William, Fiddaman's hotel & wholesale wine & Powell Herbert R. boot maker, 32 St. James' street
spirit & beer merchant, 11 Norfolk street Powley Edward, boot make!", 40 All Saints' street
Nightingale Matilda (Mrs.). Drovers' Rest P.li. 32 Austin st
Nokes John Henry, boot & shoe maker, 97 High street Umon. street -
Powley Mary Matilda (Mrs.), ladies' school, Welwick·house,

C. N. & S.
480 LYNN. NORFOLK. [ KELLY's
(lrat1: Ern est, auctioneer, valuer & land agent &c. Tuesday Savory James, Reindeer P.H. Highgate
Market place ( tuesday only) ; & at Terrington St. Clement. Sawyer William, butcher, 27 St. James' street
See advertisement Sayer Matthias, Portland Arms P.H. Wisbech road
Pratt Robert Goldsmith (late Henry Plowright), drain pipe, Scandinavian Steam Ship Co. (Montague Smith & Co. man-
tile & fire brick merchant, 40 Tower street agers), Tuesday Market place ·
Pridgeon William Read, watch & clock maker & glass & Scarles William, boot maker, 35 Chapel street
china deal~r, ro3 & ro3A, High street Sconce Walter, scenic artist & printer, Church street
Priest Joseph, Old Town Wall P.H. Wyatt street Scott Arthur John, commission agent, King Staith lane
Pryke Palmer, coach builder & carriage repos. 25 Broad st Scott Edward, grocer, 24 Coronation square
Radford Alfred, butcher, Broad street Scott Frederick, Coach & Horses P.H. & tobacconist, Satur-
Ramm Zebina Urbin, tailor, 24 Albert street day Market place
Ramsell William, ginger beer manufacturer, St. Nicholas st Scott John, baker, I8 Albert street & I23 Norfolk stre(lt
Rands Henry, butcher, 6 tlaturday Market place Scott Thomas Wm. cabinet &c. manufr. see Jermyn & Scott
Rayner Waiter, Plough P.H. King street Scott William, grocer & provision dealer & home made jam
Read & Wildbur, builders & undertakers, Nelson street manufacturer, 25 Guanock terrace
Ream Alfred & Son, wine & brandy merchants, 6I High st Scrimshaw Elizabeth (Mrs.), dress maker, 2 Carmelite ter
Reddie Josiah Henry & Son, professors of music & music Sculpher Charles, confectioner, sr ~orfolk street
sellers, 42 High street Sculpher Robert, boot & shoe maker, 136 Norfolk street
Reddy Wilham A. tailor, 8 St. James' street Seaman Benjamin, boot & shoe maker, ro 'Tower street
Reed Frederick, Ship inn, King street Seaman Charles, confectioner, Blackfriars street
Reed John, basket maker, I Austin street Seaman Frederick Charles, hair dresser, I9 Chapel street
Reed Robert Rhodes, surgeon, Tuesday Market place Seapy John, dairyman, 3 North Everard street
Reed Thomas Carrington, basket maker, 3r St. James' st Self Frederick, fried fish shop, Littleport street
Reed William, basket maker, St. Margaret's lane Self John, cabinet maker, 7 Norfolk street
Reeve Edward, fellmonger, see Collison & Reeve; & butcher, Self Philip, boot & shoe warehouse, 70 High street
26 High street Senter Thomas, fishmonger, ro2 Yorfolk street
Regester Charles Thos. ironmonger & tinman, 6 St. James' st Seppings & Wilkin, solicitors & commissioners for oaths,
Regester Henry Addison, draper, 65 & 66 Norfolk street King street; & at Downham Market
Regester Rebecca (Miss), confectioner, r8 St. James' street Seppings William (firm, Seppings & Wilkin), solicitor &
Regester William, baker, Pm·fleet street clerk to theNar Valley drainage board & deputy coroner
Remmington Harry, Albert inn, 21 Albert street for Western division of the county of N orfolk,King street;
Renaut Edmund, master mariner, 46 South Everard street & at Downbam :\1arket
Renaut· John Kemp, hair dresser, Church street Setchell John, greengrocer, 12 Bridge street
Renaut William, master mariner, 4 Checker street Sharp Caroline (Mrs.), pawnbroker,25 & 26 New Conduit st
Rennie Alexander, Duke of Edinburgh P.H. Littleport street Shaul Francis Dennis, master mariner, 22 Nelson street
Riches Charles, ironmonger, see Hayes & Riches Shearman Hobert, brush maker, 75 Norfolk street
Rivett Elizabeth (Miss), shopkeeper, Highgate Shears .Arthur Charles, shopkeeper, 32 Purfleet street
Rivett William, American Flag P.H. Purfleet street Sheppard & Coston, hosiers & haberdashers, 9 St. James' st
Rix James Brown, lamp &c. warehouse, 71 High street Sheppardson Samuel, chimney sweeper, Norfolk street
Robinson Charles Thos. wine & spirit merchant, King street Shinkfield Robert, cowkceper, Ravenshaw's yard
Robinson Elizh. (Miss), dress maker, 17 North Everard st Shipwrecked Fishermen & Mariners' Royal Benevolent
Roddick James & William, linen drapers, 47 Railway road Society (W. M. Bennell, hon. sec ), Whitefriars road
Rolfe John Jex, brewer, malt..~ter & spirit merchant, London Shorthouse John Gardner, baker, William street
Road brewery Silcock E. J. A.lii.I.C.E. borough surveyor & inspector of
Roll James, Fountain inn, Blackfriars street nuisances & superintendent of police brigade & manager
Roll John, shopkeeper, 3 Coburg street of water works, Queen street
Rose John & Son, saddlers & harness makers, brush, carpet, Simpson James, coal dealer, Friars street
sack &c. warehouse, 63 & 64 High street Sims Elizabeth (Miss), grocer, 69 Norfolk street
Rose Michael, Theatre tavern P.H. Stonegate street Singer Manufacturing Co. 9 Norfolk street
Rose Robert, Horse & Groom P.H. Chapel street Sket"ray Jane (Miss), fishmonger, xosA, Norfolk street
Ross & Hardy, manufacturing stationers, St. Nicholas st Skerrey William, carpenter, Wisbech road
Rowbottom George, Yorkshire Stingo P.H. Chapel street Skerry Louisa Catherine (Mrs.), news agent, Bridge street
Rowe William Chas. Maid's Head inn, Tuesday Market pl Skinner John, marine store dealer, Surrey street
Rowell Oliver, Lynn Volunteer stores, I Union street & Skipper Charles, pastrycook, 2 Norfolk street & Littleport st
Coronation square Slator John William, agricultural engineer & implement
Rowlett Samuel & Co. watch makers, jewellers, opticians maker, agent to the Royal Fire & Life & the Railway
&c. 144 Norfolk street Passengers' Accidental Insurance Co." South gates &
Russell Arthur George, general manager to the King's Broad street
Lynn Dock Co. & vice-consul fur Greece ; offices, Slipper Jane (Mrs.), dress maker, St. James' street
Alexandra dock Smallbone John, coal merchant, 16 Queen street
Russell George, boot & shoe maker, Setcbford lane Smalley William llenry, stationer, lllackfriars street
Rust & Company (late R. D. Rust), surgeon dentists, Smith Alfred & Son, boot & shoe makers, 138 Norfolk street
Railway road Smith, Kent & Co. colliery agents & coal factors, South quay
Rust Arthur James, Grapes P.H. Saturday Market place Smith Montague & Co. ship brokers, Tuesday Market place
Rust Charles, corn & flour merchant, 112 Norfolk street Smith Thomas & Sons, photographers, 6o High street
Rust Henry, traps let out on hire, 71 Norfolk street Smith Alfred, china & glass dealer, 101 lligh street
Rutland George, sand merchant, South Clough lane Smith Alfred, watch maker & jeweller, High street
.Rutland William, sugar boiler, rB All Saints' street Smith Ann (Mrs.), fish merchant, Pilot street
..Ryder & Crosskill, provision dealers, High street Smith Chas. glass & china dealer, St. James' st. & Tower st
Rye Stephen, plumber &c. 85 Norfolk street Smith Charles, Jovial Fisherman P.H. North street
Sadler & Son, tailors & woollen drapers,z3 Tuesday Market pl Smith Charles Meadows, baker & confectioner, so High st
Sadler Elizabeth Lydia (Miss),teacher of music, I I Railway rd Smith Claude, china & earthenware dealer, I47 Sorfolk st
. Sadler J ames Creak, tailor, 5 Purfleet place Smith Edward, boot maker, 22 South Everard street
Sadler Michael Burgess, grocer, II Railway road Smith Edwin, boot maker, Littleport street
; Sadler "'illiam Russell, solicitor, Tuesday Market place Smith Henry, London trinity pilot, Pilot street
St. Ann's Coffee Tavern Co. (Alfd. Pank, man.), St. Ann's st Smith John William, master mariner, 37 All Saints' street
..St. James' Classical & Commercial School (Charles William Smith Mary (Mrs.), dress maker, xo Stanley street
Morriss, propriet<Jr ), I 2 London road Smith Mary Anne (.Wrs. ), grocer & provision dealer, 6o
.Sainty George, baker, Pilot street London road
.Sainty Robert, chimner sweeper, 23 Chapel street Smith R. (Mrs.), tailoress, Stonegate street
Salter & Salter, boot warehouse, II3 High street Smith Samuel Fuller, dispensing chemist, 32 All Saints' st
.Sampher Thomas Taylor, fish salesman, Chapel street Smith Simon, shoe maker, 62 Norfolk street
.::-lamp son John Henry, corn &c. dealer, 33 Tower street Smith Stanley, commission agent, 2 I North Everard street
Santy William, butcher, 37 Norfolk street Smith Thaddeus Joseph, Engineers' tavern, Blackfriars rd
Saunders Elizabeth (Mrs.), dress maker, Austin street Smith Thomas, carpenter, St. Nicholas street
Savage Frederick, mechanical engineer, manufacturer Smith Thomas Hy.Meadows, professor of music, so High st
of patent ploughing, winding, traction & portable engines, Smith William, general smith, Setchford lane
boiler & agricultural implement maker, iron & brass Smith William Frederick, builder, Norfolk street
founder & agent for all kinds of patent implements & Smith William Linnett, butcher, 54 London road
patentee & manufacturer of all kinds of steam roundabouts Smith William Oshert, sail, tent, marquee, rick, stack &
& patent horse hoes,St.Nicholas irou wrks . .Alexandra dock waggon cover maker & contractor, I20 High street &
Sayage I<'rederick William, coal merchant, St. Nicholas st South quay
DIRECTORY.] NORFOLK. LYNN. 481
Smith William Bobert., ship broker, South quay Thew & Son, printers & stationers to H.R.H. the Prince
Smoothy Frederick, butcher, 121 & 122 High street of Wales, bookbinders, account book makers &c. ; pro-
Smyth Augustus, boot maker, IS Guanock terrace prietors & publishers of the "Lynn Advertiser, Wis-
Snasdell Thomas, baker, 47 South Everard street bech Constitutional Gazette & Norfolk & Cambridge
Snodgrass Donald, travelling draper, 88 London road Herald," I, 2, 3 & 4 High street & Saturday Market place.
Soundy Sarah (Miss), ladies' school, 3 St. John's terrace See advertisement
South Lynn Working Men's Liberal Club (Robcrt Green, Thing & Son, carpenters, x2oA, High street
sec.), 9 Guanock terrace Thornpson, Pattrick & Woodwark, timber & slate
Sparkes William, reporter, 3 Union street merchants, steam sawing, planing & moulding mills &
Sparkes William, 'sbopkpr. & London trinity pilot, Chap~ st creosote works for preserving wood, Alexandra & Ben-
Sparks Martha Ann (Miss), milliner, Church street tinck docks ; offices, Tuesday Market place
Sparks Richard, bead meter & customs bill of entry office, Thompson Annie Elizh. (Miss), fancy repository, 49 High st
& timber measurer, 14 Carmelite terrace Thompson Charles, shell fish merchant, Pilot street
Speed Alfred, watch maker, 34 Railway road Thompson John, seedsman, florist, fruiterer, market gar-
Spencer William, coal factor, see Weller & Spencer dener & fruit grower, I25 Norfolk street
Spinks Alfred, sugar boiler, 92 High street Thorn James George, confectioner, 9 Tower street
Sporne William, shopkeeper, South street Thorn James John, boot maker, 22 Chapel street
Spragg S. & Son, builders, 5 & 6 Bedford street Thrower Arthur Stephen, shoeing smith, Hlackfriars road
Spridgens Samuel, shopkeeper, Wisbech road Thrower Robert, Blue Lion P.H. 68 Norfolk street
Springall Robert French, english & foreign timber Tilson & Son, corn merchants, Railway road
merchant, saw mill & grist mill proprietor ; offices, Bridge Tilson Geo. Augustus Wilson, wardrobe dealer, 88 Norfolk st
street; saw mills, Boal quay & Bridge street: & Friars Tinkel Marie (Miss), dress maker, 82 Norfolk street
Gate g-rist mill, South Lynn ; branch depot, Rail way Tinker Alfred, chimney sweeper, South Clough lane
station, Watton S.O Toll Henry, boot maker, 1 Friars street
Spurr Thomas, iron & brass founder, Lynn foundry, King st Tomlin John, boat builder, Birchwood street
Stacey Thomas, cowkeeper, Pilot street Tooley William & Son, tailors, 27 London road
Staff Alick John, beer retailer, Windsor road Towler James, master mariner, I8 Coronation square
Stafford James, block & mast maker, Boal street Towler John Checker, hair dresser, 106 Norfolk street
Stafford Robert, baker, Setchford lane Towler Joseph, greengrocer, Church street
Stagles Henry Thomas, grocer, Windsor road Towler Joseph, leather seller, 93 High street & King street
Stamford, Spalding & Boston Bankin~ Co. Limited (agency) 'fowlers William, hair dresser, 2 London road
(William H. Sharpe, manager), High street ; open tues. Town Hall (George Wakefield Lake, hall keeper), Saturday
only from :ro to 5 Market place
Stanley Library (G. F. Pratt, librarian), St. James' road Town & Mooring Dues Office (John Paul, collector), Com-
Stanton J, T. & eo. timber, stone, slate, brick, tile, mon Staith quay
staffordshire ware, drain pipe & cement merchants, Alex- Townsend Charles, corn merchant, 45 Norfolk street
andra & Bentinck dock ; offices, 7 St. Ann's Fort Trenowath Brothers, linen drapers, cabinet makers &c. 73,
Stanton & Son, ironmongers & oil merchants, 130 & 131 74 & no High street
Norfolk street Triance John, dairy, 3 Providence street
Star Steam Tug Co. King's Lynn Limited (William Flex- Tuck Henry, New Railway tavern, Wisbech road
man, sec.), King street Tuddenham Alfred Moses Everard, manager of Duke's Head
Star Tea Co. (Alfred Large, manager), 37 High street hotel, Tuesday Market place
Starling Mary Ann (Mrs.), Duke of Cumberland P.H. 86 Tuffs Benjamin Robert, Mermaid & Fountain P.H. Tower st
N odolk street Tungate James, boot maker, 6 Douro street
Stevens Robert, confectioner, Church street Tungate John, shoe maker, Douro street
Stevens Samuel, Dog & Duck P.H. Pilot street Turner Alfred Andrew, miller (wind), Gaywood mills
Stevens Samuel, fish curer, Pilot street Turner Edward, corn dealer, 68 Norfolk street
Stevens William, fishmonger, Broad street Turner George, Three Crowns P.n. Queen street
Steward, Patteson, Finch & Co. brewers & wine & Turrell Ann (Mrs.), shopkeeper, I I Queen street
spirit merchants (Norwich) (William James Humphrey, Twaits Henry, fishmonger, 13 Tower street
agent); stores, Marshall street, Railway road Tweedy Stephen, baker, 37 [<'riars street
Steward Waiter, manager, 19 Whitefriars terrace Twelvetrees Percy Skipworth, district agent to the Great
Strawson Alfred, Hob-in-the-Well P.H. Littleport street Northern Railway Co. Tuesday Market place
Street Mary (Miss), teacher of music, 46 High street Underwood John, mat maker, Purfieet street
Street Samuel Grigson, professor of music & music seller, Underwood William, linen draper, 139 Norfolk street
46 High street Valentine Frederick, cinl engineer, King street
Studu Richard Butter, poultry dealer, 2 Tower street Verdon Herbert Henry, registrar of marriages, 6 Millfleet ter
Sucker John, grocer, Providence street Vynne & Everett, corn & cake merchants & agents for Pren-
Suggett E. M. (Miss), milliner, 99 High street tice Brothers' & Laws' manures, Athenreum buildings; &
Summers Miss, dress maker, Bridge street at Swaffham
Surveyor of Taxes Office (Benjamin Robert :Moody Leech, Wade Frederick Stockdale, corn merchant, Clifton's lane, k
surveyor), King Staith square collector of Queen's taxes, 119 London road
Sutherland Edwards Henry, butcher,14 & 41 Norfolk street Wadlow Robert, grocer, Lansdown street
& North street, Northend Wagg Renjamin, beer retailer, ·Friars street
Sutton & Co. general carriers (John Joseph Lowe, agent), Wag'g Sarah (Mrs.), shopkeeper, Purfleet street
Chapel street Walden T. H. & Co. farriers, Chapel street
Swaine Sedgwick, shopkeeper, S~. Nicholas street Wales R. Charles, Hummer P.H. St. James' street
Swam1 John, draper, 84 High street Walker Elizabeth (Mrs.), shopkeeper, 15 Paxton terrace
Swann Lister M.R.C. v.s.I~. veterinary surgeon, 16 London rd Walker John, parish clerk of St. Margaret's, Church street
Sydal Richard Jenkin, master mariner, 34 All Saints' street Walker Thomas, beer retailer, 99 Norfolk street
Sylvester Anicrato, confectioner, 34 Chapel street Walker William Frank, engineer, brass & iron founder kc.
Symonds .Uetsey (Miss), milliner, 26 Purfieet street Mill works, Gaywood road
Syre Ann (Mrs.), poultry dealer, 83 Norfolk street Wallace Wm. :ijarry Binckes, surg. dentist, xo St. John's ter
Taylor Alfred, pork butcher, 31 Norfolk street Walsh Mark, provision dealer, Church street
Taylor Chas. Hy. who. grcr. & tea & prov. dlr. II4 High st Wanford Alfred J. leather seller, Tower street
Taylor Edmund, clothier, 10 ~orfolk street Wanford Edward, builder, 26 London road
Taylor Robert, baker, Wisbech road Ward David, solicitor, clerk to the borough magistrates, to
Taylor Rt. seedsmn. seed mer. & fruit growr. 142 Norfolk st the commissioners of sewers for Norfolk, to commissioners
Taylor Ryley, tobacconist, Tower street of property, income & land tax for Freebridge Marshland,
Taylor Thomas, carpenter, Tower street clerk to river Ouse Haling commissioners, to Ouse Bank
Taylor Thomas, plumber, 5 Providence st. & Crooked lime commissioners (Ist & 2nd districts), to the Magdalen
Taylor William Henry, bookseller & depository of the So- drainage commissioners & to the Holme Sluice district &
ciety for Promoting Christian Knowledge, 108 High street Watlington & Magdalen Bridgereeves, Tuesday Market pl
Taylor William Thomas, Bee Hive P.H. Bridge street Ward Hannah (Mrs.), corn & flour dealer, I9 St. James' st
Teare Robert, postmaster, Athen1Eum buildings Ward Robt. Queen's Arms P.H. & greengrocer, 15 London rd
Technical Educational Classes (H. Barrett, sec.; J. H. Ward Thomas, beer retailer, Pilot street
Haigh, master), Broad street Ward William Robert David, solicitor, vestry clerk to Ter-
Terelinck Sebastian, clothes dealer, 10 Queen street rington & solicitor to the Marshland Tramroads Co. Tues-
Terrey James, hair dresser, Purfleet street day Market place ; & at Terrington St. Clements
Terrington Edward Binstead, printer, Broad street Wardale Hy. coal, coke & salt mer. Broad Street chambers
Thacker Alice & Adelaide (Misses), apartments, 26 Albertst Ware George, chief constable & inspector of weights &
Theatre (Robert Wardle, lessee), :::lt. James' street measures, Police statwn
482 LY.NN. NORFOLK. [KELLY'S

Warne John,

ginger beer manufacturer, 24 Chapel street Wilkin Horace M. auctioneer, valuer & estate agent, see
Warnes \Villiam, corn merchant, Purfleet place Cruso & Wilkin
Water 'Works (E. J. Silcock, manager), Kettle mills Wilkin Robert Alfred (firm, Seppings & Wilkin), solicitor,
Watson Charlotte Adelaide (Mrs.), aprtmnts. 8 Valinger's rd coroner for Western division of the county of Norfolk &
Watson John, confectioner, 42 Norfolk street deputy coroner for the Duchy of Lancaster, King street;
Watson Mary Ann (Miss), tripe dresser, 43 Norfolk l'ltreet & at Downham Market -
Watson William, coal merchant, Railway rd. & Waterloo st Wilkin Thomas, smith &c. 22 Austin street & North street
Watts John Thomas, tobacconist & tailor, St. James' street Wilkin Waiter Wagstaff, tailor & woollen draper, 118 High st
Watts Robert, builder, r Windsor road Williams George William, sign writer, 89 London road
Webb William, apartment9, 19 Albert street Williamson Henry,inspctr.ofwghts. & rneasures,Gaywood rd
Webster John, beer retailer, Setchford lane Willis & Co. bakers & confectioners, 112 High street
Webster 'William, surgeon & medical officer to rural sani- Wilson Henry William, grocer & baker, Lansdown street
tary authority & south district of King's Lynn union & Wilson John J. baker, Tower street
public vaccinator, 23 London road Wilson Stevenson Moreton Wightman, surgeon 1/;r; consulting
Wedgwood William Brackenbury L.R.C.P.Lond., M.R.c.s. & surgeon to the West Norfolk & Lynn Hospital & medical
L.S.A. physician & surgeon, & medical officer to the Scottish officer of health to the borough & port of King's Lynn,
W1dows Life Assurance Society, King street Nelson street
Weg-g William, butcher, 36 Chapel street Wilson Williarn, naturalist, 29 Broad street
Weller & Spencer, coal factors & colliery agts. 48 Railway rd Winch Mary (Miss), news agent, 11 Tower street
Wenn Lizzie (Mrs. ),confctnr. & wine & spirit dlr. 123 High st Winch Richard, tobacconist, I Gaywood road
Wenn Robert, greengrocer, 8 Purfleet street Winch William, grocer, St. James' street
We!!t Elizabeth (Mrs.), lodging house, 23 All Saints' street Winearls Henry, commission agent, 8 All Saints' street
West James Lawrence, fried fish shop, 3 Valinger's road Winkley Wm.& Son, glovers & gaiter mkrs. t 15 & r 16 High st
'Vest Norfolk Farmers' Manure Co. Lim. (Thomas Brown, Winlove Chas. Recruiting Sergeant P.H. Saturday Market pl
sec.), Wisbech road Winslow George Edward, harbour master, director of
West Norfolk & Lynn Club (Thomas Goodwyn Archer esq. moorings, buoy & beaconer & pilot master, Common
chairman; George Francis Archdale, hon. sec.), Satur- Staith quay & Boalquay
day Market place Winter Henry, watch maker & jeweller, JI7 Norfolk street
West Norfolk & Lynn Hospital (Stevenson Moreton 'Wight- Winterton .Joseph Beeson, carman, 26 Kirby street
man Wilson & Charles Bagge Plowright L.R.C.P.Edin. con- "''isermm John, boot maker, ro Austin street
sulting surgeons ; Henry Calthorpe Allinson, senior Withers James Goss, wood turner, Broad street
surgeon ; George R. Chad wick, surgeon ; .Frederick Witley John Samuel, tailor, 5 Bridge terrace, Gaywood rd
Arthur Field M.R.C.S.Lond. house surgeon & secretary; Witt Charles, master mariner, 14 Coronation square
Rev. Henry H. Streeten B.A. chaplain; Miss R. Ashbee, Witt George, fish curer, North street L

matron), London road WoodsMaryAmy (Mrs.),Carpenters' Arms P.H.122London rd


Weston Anne Maria & Eliza (Misses), juvenile outfitters & Woodward Georgc W. insurance agent, Church street
berlin wool warehouse, 95 High street Wood wark George Smith, consular agent for Austria-
Westwood Thomas, shopkeeper, St. Ann street Hungary & vice-consul for Russia, Tuesday Market place
Whall Ann (Miss), lac-lies' school, 6 & 7 St. John's terrace Working Men's Consenative Club (Robert Pegg, hon. sec.),
Whall Wm. Briseoe, public accountant, Market Sq. chmbrs St. Ann's street
Whitby William, dining rooms, 32 Nor folk street Working Men's Institute ( J n. Pal grave, sec.), Blackfriars st
White James, coal dealer, 48 South Everard street Worte Charles, district mngr. National Telephone Co. Lim
White J obn, coal merchant, South gate street Wright & Son, hatters, clothiers & outfitters, 34 High street
White Robert, dairyman, Setchford lane & r & 2 Conduit street
White William, coal merchant, 2 St. John's street Wright Edward, greengrocer, 21St. James' street
Whiteley John, Yorkshire tavern, Queen street Wright Henry, boot maker, King street
Whiteman Martha Ann (Mrs.), leather seller, 22 Norfolk st Wright Jasper James, baker, Providence street
Whitmore & Barnard, carpenter3, joiners & undertakers & Wright Jasper James, photographer, 125 London road
manufacturers of gates, ladders, bins & troughs, Albion Wright Robert juu. grocer, Providence street
street, Cattle market Wright William Edward, land surveyor &c. (see Durrant &
Whitmore Robert, carpenter, Bentinck street Wright) & agent to the Sun Fire Insurance Co
Whittaker Henry Samuel, Lynn Arms P.H. Norfolk street Wright William Frederick M. R.C. v. S.L. veterinary surgeon,
Whittaker William, Spotted Cow P.H. St. James' place 2 Blackfriar3 street
Wickham George Charles, plumber, Blackfriars street Wright William Henry, town crier, n North Everard street
Wickham John, Golden Ball P.H. Tower street Young Frank, coal merchant, 73 Norfolk street
Wildbur Robert, grocer, 36 All Saints-' street Young Jane (Miss), dress maker, St. James' street
Wildbur Susannah (Miss), milliner, 12 Whitefriars road Young Men's Christian Association Cricket Club (A. Bur-
Wildbur Thomas, rope & twine manufacturer, Wisbech lingham & J. Hampton, secs.), St. J arnes' street
road, South Lynn Young Men's Christian Association Football Club (J. Hamp-
Wild bur William, rope maker, Whitefriars road ton, sec.), St . .James' street
Wildbur William Thomas, builder, see Read & Wildbur Youngs John, house agent & rate collector, 6 Railway road
Wiles Thomas, baker, 9A, Guanock terrace
NORTH LYNN is a decayed parish, 1 mile north-west oats, beans and peas. The area is I,o65 acres, of which
from Lynn, in the North Western division of the county, 435' are water; rateable value, £954 ; the population in
Freebridge Marshland hundred and petty sessional division, r89r, including West Lynn, 693. By an order which came
and King's Lynn union and county court district. The church into operation March 25, 1885, a detached part of Clench-
of St. Edmund has disappeared. The living is annexed to warton, in \Visbech union, was amalgamated with this parish.
that of St. Margaret's, Lynn, at which church the inhabit- Letters received from Lynn, which is the nearest money
ants attend. The Duke of Portland P.C. is lord of the order & telegraph office, arrive at 7.30 a. m
manor and the principal landowner. The soil is loam and
clay; subsoil, clay and silt. The chief crops are wheat, The children of this place attend the school at West Lynn
I
Collison Robert, farm bailiff to Mr. Clarke John, Bentinck cottage
William Marshall
[ Marshall Wm. & Edwd. frmrs. The Hall

.
SOUTH LYNN parish forms part of the town of LYNN, which see.
WEST LYNN is a village and parish, on the west side of r849, is a memorial to Amelia Walker, of North Lynn. A.
the Great Ouse river, opposite the town of King's Lynn, brass l13ctern was presented in 18go as a memorial to Giles
with which it communicates by a ferry for foot passengers, Walker, of North Lynn: the ancient octagonal stone font is
but vehicles cross by the Marshland Iron Bridge, over the carved with representations of the seven sacraments of the
New Cut on the south side of the harbour, a dista-nce to Lynn Catholic church: the seats are of carved oak and afford 200
of nearly 3 miles. West Lynn is in the North Western sittings. The register dates from the year 1695. The
division of the county, hundred and petty sessional division living is a rectory, average tithe rent-charge £373• gross
of Freebridge Marshland, union and county court district of yearly value £435, including 30 acres of glebe, with resi-
King's Lynn, rural deanery of Lynn Marshland and arch- demce, in the gift of the trustees of the late. Joseph Phipps
deaconry and diocese of Norwich. The church of St. Peter, Townsend esq. and held since r863 by the Rev. Frederick
erected soon after 1271, is a structure of brick in the Late Jackson 1\LA. of Trinity College, Cambridge, and rural dean.
Perpendicular style, consisting of transepts, nave and an Here is a Baptist chapel, built in r844, and a Wesleyan
embattled western tower, with small lead-covered spire, chapel, erected in r87o. The charities amount to £12 a
containing one bell : there is a fine brass to Sir Adam Out- year. The land is all freehold. The trustees of the late
lawc, ob. I503: the stained east window, erected in July, Christopher Goddard, Sir William Hovell Browne ffolkes
DIBECTOB Y ·1 NORFOLK. :MABKS.EU.LL. 488
hart. n.L., J.P. of Hillington Hall, William Clifton esq. of Parish Clerk, William Bates.
Portland street, Lynn, the Dean and Chapter of Ely, Robert
Hemy Hou!'!ehold esq. of West Bilney Hall, and the Ouse PosT & M. 0. 0., S. B. & .Annuity & Insurance Office.-
Out fall Board, are the principal landowners. The soil is loam Frederick ~tephen Little, receiver. Letters arrive from
and clay; subsoil, clay and silt. The chief crops are wheat, Lynn at 6.30 a. m. & 12.30 p.m.; dispatched at 10.4oa..m.
oats, beans, peas and pasture. The area of the parish is & 6.40 p.m. The nearest telegraph office is at Lynn
r,619 acres ; rateable value, £4,299; the population in 189r,
incln_ding North Lynn, was 693. By an order which eame National School (mixed), for 126 children; average attend-
into operation March 25, r885, a detached part of Clench- ance, IIS; .Ambrose Mitchley, master
war-ton i.n Wisbech union was amalgamated with this parish.
Ja.ckson Donald Frederick Crome James, cooper & coal merchant Liberal Club (Thomas Edwin Owen,sec)
Jackson. Rev. Frederick M.A. Rectory Ellis Thomas, carpenter Merry .Adam, ma~ket gardener
Santy Edmund William, White hall Ellis William .Allen, bricklayer Merry William, cowkeeper
Vincent Robert C Elsd.on Mark,nurseryman &vine grower, Reach & Little, grocers, drapers, dress
COMMERCIAL, The Vineyards makers, milliners & wine merchants,
J3arratt Benjamin, general dealer Embling John, market gardener Post office
Blade .Arton, coal merchant Embling Robert, Cherry Tree P.H Santy EdmundWilliam,farmer & horse
lloswell A\bertWm.bread &biscuit baker Fox: .Alfred, Freebridge inn dealer, White ball
Eoswell William Thomas, butcher Fox Arthur, coal merchant Sparrow William, Ferry Boat P.H
Bullon John, baker Fox Joseph, farmer Swift Robert, farmer
Childs John Henry, boot maker Hammond Mary Ann(Mrs.),shopkeeper ThompsonJohn,market gardener &frmr
Conservative Club (Thomas Downing Hildon James, shopk'!eper Waite Benjamin, boot & shoe maker
Wildgoose, sec) · Hudson Frederic, farmer & horso dealr Walden Harriett (Mrs.), Swan P.H
Crane Matthew, coal merchant • Johnson Thomas, Bentinck .Arms P.H Young-s John, beer retailer & blacksmith
MANNINGTON is a parish, 2 miles north-east from since 1856 by the Rev. Peter James Elwin, of St. Bees, who
Corpusty station on the Eastern and Midlands railway and ·resides at Itteringham. The Earl of Orford is lord of the
5 north-west from .Aylsham, in the Northern division of the manor and sole landowner, and resides at the Hall, an
co\lnty, South Erpingham hundred and petty sessional divi- ancient and irregular bnilding of stone and black flint, lying
sion, Aylsham union ancl connty court rltstrict, rural deanery very low and surronnded by a moat. The soil is light;
of Ingworth and ~rchdeaconry and diocese of Norwich. The subsoil, varions. The chief crops are wheat, turnips, barley
church is in ruins. The living is a discharged rectory, con- and grass. The area is 548 acres; rateable value, £523:
solidated with that of Itteringham, tithe rent-charge £352, t' the population in 1881 was B.
average £267, joint net yearly value £214, including 24 Letters through Norwich. 'fhe nearest money order office,
acres of glebe, in the gift of the Earl of Orford, and held Saxthorpe, & nearest telegraph office at Corpusty station
Orford Earl of M.A., D.L., J.P. Manning-~ Davison George, head gardener to the
ton hall ; & 6 Cavendish sq. London w Earl of Orford
I
MARHAM is a parish and village, 4 miles sonth-west have turf under the direction of the trustees. There was
from Narborough station on the Lynn and Dereham section formerly here a nunnery of the Cistercian order, belonging
of the Great Eastern railway, 1 west from t:lwaffham and 9 to Ely .Abbey, founded in 1249 by Maud (de Verdnn), wife
north-east from Downham, in the South Western division of of J obn Fitza.lan, sth Earl of .Arundel, and dedicated to SS.
the county, Clackclose hundred and petty sessional division, Mary, Barbara, and Edmund the King: at the Dissolution,
Downham union and county court district, rural deanery of when there were 10 nuns and revenues estimated at £33, it
Fincham, archdeaconry of Norfolk and diocese of Norwich. was granted to Sir Nicholas and Robert Hare : some remains·
"!'he church of the Holy Trinity is a large building of flint of it may be seen at a farm-house and outbuildings a little
and stone in the Perpendicular style, con!Sisting of chancel, west of the church, and joining .Abbey Farm. Marham
nave, south aisle, south porch and a lofty embattled western House, the delightful mansion of Colonel Hugh Smith Baillie
tower, with quoins of freestone and containing 6 bells: about and h1s wife, the Viscountess Glentworth, was principally
1844 the church waH new roofed and several stained windows built in r86r. Marham Hall is the residence of Mr. Thomas
erected, some of which were presented by the late Henry Brown, the well-known breeder of Cotswold sheep and red ..
ViUebois esq. of Marham Hall, who died in IB86: in the polled cattle. Thomas LeighHareesq. B.A., M.P., J.P., D.L.
church is an ancient tomb, with recumbent effigies of native of the Hall, Stow Bardolph, is lord of the manor of New Hall
chalk, to John Steward esq. and .Anne (Shouldham), his wife, and Shouldham, and Viscountess Glentworth is lady of the
buried here in 1603-4: in 1867 the north wall of the nave manor of Old Hall and Westacre. The chief landowners are
was restored and in 1875 the whole of the interior was re- T. L. Hare esq. M.P. Viscountess Glentworth and Mr. John
stored and re-seated at a cost of £r,_soo; of this amount Reynolds. The soil is sand and peat; subsoil,principallychalk.
.£250 was contributed by St. John's College, Cambridge, for The chief crops are roots, barley, seeds and wheat. · The
improvements in the chancel: there are 200 sittings. The area is 3,966 acres ; rateable value, £3,224 ; the population
churchyard was considerably enlarged in 1864. The regis- in 1891 was 583.
ter dates from the year 1562. The living is a vicarage, Parish Clerk, William Dye.
average tithe rent-charge £281 ; net yearly value £354, with
56 acres of glebe and residence, in the gift of St. John's PosT & M. 0. 0., S. B. & .Annuity & Insurance Offi.ce.-
College, Cambridge, and held since 1868 by the Rev. Henry Robert Parlett, receiver. Letters arrive from Downham
.J osiah Sharpe M. A. late fellow of that college. TQere are at 8 a.m. & dispatched at 5.30 p.m. week days & 10 a.m,
Wesleyan and Primitive .Methodist chapels here. In 1799 on sundays. The nearest telegraph office is at Narborough
two poor's allotments were awarded under the Inclosure National School (mixed), considerably enlarged in 1872 &
Act, containing 200 acres of fen land 1 in I86g-7o, by a now holding 140 scholars ; averag-e attendance, no ~
scheme of the Charity Commissioners, these allotments Waiter Gladstone RandE;, master; Mrs. Mary Ann Rands,
were let and now produce about go yearly, the net proceeds mistress .
being distributed in coals, and a few of the cottagers also CARRmR TO LYNN.-John Neville Harrison, tues. & sat
.Baillie Col. Hngh Smith & Viscountess Dent Geo. miller( wind) & road surveyor Hudson John (exors. of), grocers
Glentworth, Marham house Dye John, butcher Ketteringham William, boot maker
Brown Thomas, Ma.rham hall Dye Robert, beer retailer Miller William, blacksmith
Sbarpe Rev. Hy_ Josia.h lii.A. Vicarage Dye Robert, carpenter , ParlettRt.grcr.drapr.&newsagt.Post offt
COMM.I<:RCIAL. Dye Williarn, carpenter Peck Walter, land steward to Vis..,
Andrews Thomas Henry, butcher :Fox ''Villiam, cabinet maker countess Glentworth
Brasnett Charles Robert, farmer Gooderson Thomas, beer retailer H.amm Jn.Fox&Hounds P. rr.& cattle dlr
Brasnett Stanley, farmer· Green Gates, farmer Reeve Charles, farm bailiff to Georgo
Brown Jacob, Old Bell P.H Harrison Charles, cowkeeper Heading esq
Brown Thomas & Son, fanners, Hall frm Harrison Jn. N eville, cowkeepr.& carrier Steeles William, jnn. wheelwright
Codlin Thomas, shoe maker Harwin Jamcs, farmer Towler James, farmer
Curson Robert, grocer & draper Hewing Edward, butchel' Wilkinson Jeremiah, baker & grocer
MAR.KSHALL (or MATI'ISHALL HEATH) is a parish, 2~ I average tithe rent-charge £350, joint net yearly value £327,
miles south from Norwich, in the vale of the river Tas, in 1 including II acres of glebe, in the gift of and held since 188x
the Sonthern division of the county, Swainsthorpe petty · by the Rev . .Anthony South Morse lLA. of Corpus Christi
sessional division, hundred of Humbleyard, Henstead union college, Cambridge, who resides at Caistor. Mrs. Green,
and.Norwich county court district. The church was dese- who is lady of the manor, and Fortescue Waiter Kellett
crated in 1695, hut some remains of it are still to be seen. Long esq. of Dunston Hall, are the chief landowners. The
Tile living is a rectory, annexed to Caistor St. Edmund, soil is mixed ; snbsoil, gravel. The chief crops are wheat.
484. MARKS HALL. NORFOLK. [KELLY's

barley•
and roots. The area is 547 acres; rateable value, This place is included in the United School Board District of
£I ,oB I ; there are only seven houses; the population in I891 Poringland, formed compulsorily, June I6, 1874. The
was 47· central school is at :Framingham Earl, but the nearest in
Letters through Norwich via Caistor. The nearest money connection with this Hoard is at Stoke Holy Cross
order & telegraph office is at Trowse Newton
Alien Thomas, farmer
MARLINGFORD is a parish and scattered village in yearly value from tithe rent-charge £23, with 35 acres of
the Yare valley, 6 miles west-by-south from Norwich, 5~ glebe and residence, in the gift of Benj. Edgington Fletcher
north from Wymondham station and 5 north from Hether- esq. and held since 188o by the Rev. George Hichards n.n.
sett station, both on the Thetford and Norwich section of of Pembroke College, Oxford. A Free Methodist mission
the Great Eastern railway, in the Mid division of the county, room was opened in 1884. Mary Wright, in 1798, left the
Forehoe hundred, petty sessional division and union, ~or- interest on £10 yearly for the poor; Anne Chandler Greene.
wich county court district, rural deanery of Hingham, Fore- in 1868, left £5oo, the interest of which is given yearly to
hoe division, archdeaconry of ~orfolk and diocese of Norwich. the poor, principally in coals. Marlingford Hall, a Tudor
The church of St. Mary the Virgin is a building of flint and building, is the seat of Benjamin Edgingtou Fletcher esq.
rubble in the Decorated and Early English styles, consisting who is lord of the manor; he and the Rev. Henry Evans•
of chancel, nave, north aisle, south porch and an embattled Lombe B.A., J.P. of Eylaugh Park, and John Wi11iam Uose
western tower containing one bell: the south doorway is esq. of Old Hall, Reedbam, are chief landowners. The soil is
Norman and there is also a Norman font, restored by the various; subsoil, various. The chief crops are wheat, bar·
1

rector, to the memory of two infant children: the stone ley, roots and bay. The area is 683 acres ; rateable value-,
1

pulpit is a memorial to Arthur Frederick Vincent, d. 2 April, £'936; the population in r89r was 233. By an order which
r875, and was erected by his parents, the Rev. Sir Frederick came into operation March 25, 1885, a detached part of
Vincent bart. M.A. and Lady Vincent, in 1881 : there are Easton was amalgamated with this parish.
two piscinre, and the staircase formerly leading to the rood- Parish Clerk, Thomas Fox.
loft has been restored and now gives access to the pulpit: PosT 0FFICE.-Mrs. Mary Bean, receiver. Letters through
in the chancel is a marble tablet to the Rev. Thomas Greene Norwich arrive at 7 a. m. ; dispatched at 4·45 p.m.
M. A. 21 years rector of this parish, d. 10 Oct. 1814; and Hethersett is the nearest money order & telegraph office,
there are other memorials to John Cullyer, r672, Samuel but the money order & telegraph offices chiefly used are-
Colby, gent.. 1704-5, and Elizabeth, his wife, 1697 : the those of Wymondham & Norwich
church was thoroughly restored in 188r at a eost of over Parish School (mixed), with house fur the mistress, erectecf
£I,CXXJ, and has 150 sittings. The r~gister dates from the by Mrs. Green in 1870, for 75 children; average attend-
year 1558. The living is a discharged rectory, average ance, 32; Miss Elizabeth Howes, mistress
Fletcher Benj. Edgington, Marlingford Elyth Robert, hawker Lewin Leonard, farmer, The Old hall
hall Fox Thomas, parish clerk Mattbews Henry, shopkeeper
Richards Rev. George D.D. Rectory Hart Philip, farm steward t~ B. E. Sadd John, Bell P.H
Baker George, head gardener to B. E. Fletcher esq Thompson George William, miller-
l<'letcher esq llipperson George, bricklayer & farmer (water & steam), The Mill
Blyth Frederick, blacksmith
MARSHAM is a parish and considerable village, on the under cultivation by spade: it is calculated that from got~
road from Aylsharn to Norwich, 2 miles south from Aylsham 95 per cent. of the boys sent here are reclaimed: the institu-
statiou on the East Norfolk branch of the Great Eastern tion is arranged to hold from 55 to 6o boys, they attend the-
railway and about 3 from Aylsham Town station on the services of tho parish church: the expenses average about
Eastern and Midlands railway and ro north from Norwich, [,I,ooo yearly. The parish charities amount to £36 12s. 7d.
in the Northern division of the county, South Erpingham yearly. There are 181 acres of heath land allotted for fuel..
hundred and petty sessional division, .Aylsham. union and The Mutual Improvement Institution is a building used for
county court district, rural deanery of Ingworth and arch- lectures and entertainments. Bolwick Hall, the seat of
deaconry and diocese of Norwich. The church of All Saints Charles Louis Buxton esq. J.P. is locally in the parish of
is an edifice of stone, in the Perpendicular sty le,consisting of Aylsham, but for postal purposes is more conveniently giverr
chancel, nave, aisles, south porch and a western tower con- here. Marsbam Hall is an old-fashioned but substantial
taining 8 bells: the font is carved with representations of residence, now (1892) unoccupied. William Forster esq. of
the Sacraments of the Catholic Church and there is an Blickling, is lord of the manor. The principal landowners
ancient painted screen with figures of saints and confessors are Charles Le Neve esq. William Case esq. and Charles-
and St. George and the Dragon : in the chancel are me- Louis Huxton esq. J.P. The soil is sand and loam; subsoil,
moria! stones to the Norris and other families: the church gravel and clay. The chief crops are wheat, roots, barley
affords 400 sittings. The register dates from the year 1538. and bay. The area of the parish is I,819 acres, about 333
'fhe living is a rectory, average tithe rent-charge [,27I, net of which are taken up by woods and heath; rateable value,
yearly value {,287, including 66 acres of glebe, with resi- £2,287; the population in 1891 was 561, including the.
deuce, built in I 845, in the gift of the Earl of Lichfield and inmates and officers in the Buxton Reformatory School.
held since 1886 by the Rev. William Seddon Trapp, of St. Parish Clerk, Henry Spink.
Bees. There is a Primitive Methodist chapel here. Buxton PosT 0FFICE.-Thomas Crane, postmaster. Letters through
Reformatory, situated in this parish, but adjoining the Norwioh delivered at 7.30 a.m. ; dispatched at 5.30 p.m.
parish of Buxton, was founded in 1853 by John Wright esq. The nearest money order & telegraph office is at Aylsham.
Sir Edward North lluxtou hart. M. P. and George Kett and Postal orders are issued here, but not paid
John Henry Gurney esqrs. for the voluntary reformation of A School Board of 5 members was formed April 3, r88g ;-
boys or young men who had been confined in Norwich Rev. W. S. Trapp, clerk to the board
Castle : it was taken over by Government and certified for School (mixed), built about r8so, for 150 children ; average-
criminals in r855: the building is of red brick and includes attendance, 84; Edwin Knowles, master; Mrs. Knowles,.
apartments for the governor and schoolmaster and rooms mistress
for officers; attached is a large courtyard and in the centre Buxton Reformatory, Thomas Babington, governor; Mrs-
is a large playground, besides which there i!l also a covered Elizabeth Anne Eabington, matron; Thomas Babington,
playground: the boys are taught shoemaking, tailoring,farm- jun. schoolmaster; James Lusher, bailiff; Luke Edwards,.
ing and agricultural duties, so acres being for this purpose shoe maker ; Waiter Chapma.n, labour master
Burton Gent, Oak cottage Crane Thomas, blacksmith, grocer & Lovett John, Plough & Shuttle P.H
Buxton Chas. Louis J.P. Holwick hall farmer, Post office Melton Edward George, miller (wind}
Cooper Miss Daniels James, farmer Randell Letitia (Mrs.), beer retailer
Edwards Rev. Henry M. A Dyke Natbaniel, farmer Shreeve A. E. & Sou, fanners
Howe John Edwards Thomas, shopkeeper Skipper Isaac, shoe maker
Trapp Hev. William Seddon [rector] Gladden Edward, shopkeeper Soame Samuel George,engineer, iron&.
Gladden Henry, farmer brass founder. See advertisement
COMMERCIAL. Grix Benjamin, farmer Spiuk Henry, baker & farmer
Buxton Reformatory (Thomas Babing- Howe John Robert, farmer,Pound farm Stearman William, farmer
ton,g-overnor; Mrs. Babington, matrn) Jex George, farmer Stevens Richard, farmer
Cockrell Willia.m, farmer Jones John, grocer & draper Thompson Thomas, farmer
"Coe Martha (Mrs.), farmer Jones Robert, shoe maker & shopkeeper Watts Christopher, White Hart P.H
Coldbam George, farmer Lake Hammond, farmer Watts Hobt. wheelwright & blacksmith
Cook Sopbia (Mrs.), shopkeeper Le N eve Charles. landowner & farmer
MARTHAM is a parish and large village delightfully north-west from Yarmouth, in the Eastern division of the
.situated on rising ground above the marshes, with a station county, incorporated hundred, petty sessional division and
()D the Eastern and Midlands railway, about 10 miles north- incorporation of East and West J<'legg, county court district
DIRECTORY.] NOHFOLK. M.ARTHAM. 485
of Great Yarmouth, rural deanery of Flegg and archdeaconry is in the north of the parish. The soil is light mix:ed ; sub-
and diocese of Norwich. The church of St. Mary is a fine soil, clay and gravel. The ehief crops are wheat, barley and
structure of Norfolk flint with stone dressings, chiefly in the oats. The area is 2,6go aeres; rateable value, £5,743; the.
Early Perpendicular style, and consists of chancel, nave, population in r891 was r,I77·
aisles, south porch and a lofty embattled western tower of CEss, :r mile west, and DAMGATE, I mile east, are hamlets
fine proportions containing a clock and 6 bells : the chancel in this parish.
was rebuilt in 1855, at a cost of nearly £8,ooo, given by Parish Clerk, George Hayton.
Mrs. Dawson, now Mrs. Major Longley, daughter of the PosT, M. 0. & T. 0., S. B. & Annuity & Insurance Office.-
Rev. George Pearse M.A. vicar here from Dec. 1834, as a Harbard Hooper, postmaster. Letters arrive from Yar-
memorial to her husband, the Rev. Jonathan Dawson M.A. mouth at 6.20 a.m.; dispatched at s.so p.m
to whom there is a raised altar tomb: the east window is WALL LETTER Box, Church yard, cleared 5.30 p.m
stained, and there are memorial windows to Mrs. Pearse and SCHOOLS:-
tu her daughter Mrs. Inigo Jones, besides some curious A Free School was founded here pursuant to the will of
ancient glass : the ancient octagonal font bears, in panels, Christopher .Amis, who left£, r ro for that purpose in 1622;
sculptured representations of the Seven Sacraments of the this sum, with several small donations, was laid out in pur-
Catholic Church and the Last Judgment: the church has chasing the school house & SA. IR. of land, which were
been completely restored, and affords 360 sittings. The exchanged at the inclosure in 1812 for 7A. 3R. 7P. : the
register dates from the year 1558 and is in an exeellent school has ceased to exist, but the old school house is now
state of preservation. The living is a discharged vicarage, let at a rental of £r4 a year, which sum is added to the
average tithe rent-charge £276, net yearly value £255, charities. The Creasy, Bowman & Amis charities are
including- 7 acres of glebe, with residence, in the gift of the now consolidated by the name of the" Martham Educa-
Dean and Chapter of Norwich, and held since r876 by the tional Charity," under a scheme of the Charity Commis-
Rev. George Merriman M. A. of Exeter College, Oxford, and sioners issued in r883 : the funds are applied in paying
rural dean of Flegg ; the great tithes belong to the Dean . the school fees & in gifts of clothing to about 6o children
and Chapter of Norwich. Roger Gunton, in 1170, gave the attending the Board school
church to the prior and convent of Norwich "for the re- .A School Board of five members was formed March 14,_
demption of his soul." There are Baptist and Primitive 1872 ; Daniel Rust, jun. clerk to the board; Richard
Methodist chapels here. There are charitable bequests for Rogers, Martham, attendance officer
the benefit of the poor of the parish ; also 78 acres of land, Board (mixed), built in 1879, at a cost of £569, for about
which were awarded at the inclosure in 1812. The 100 children; average attendance, 100 ; William Roland
poor's land or fuel charity is distributed in coals. .Alfred Hume, master
Mabbott Wiseman esq. is lord of the manor. John Love Board (infants), erected in 1852, by the Rev. G. Pearse for-
esq. Richard Knights esq. the Rev. Benjamin Rising, vicar about 120 children ; average attendance, Bo; MisS"
of Moreton, Newport, Salop; Samuel .Aldred esq. of Yar- Marianne Short, mistress
mouth and William Gladstone Ulph, of the Grange, Mart- Railway Station, John Benstead, station master
ham, are the chief landowners. There are many small CARRIERS TONORWICH-George Watson, wed. &sat. return-
landowners also. Martham Broad, several acres in extent, ing the same days

PRIVATE RESIDENTS. Collins Samuel, lodging house, TheGrn Love John, farmer, The Hall
.Ash Rev. Henry Charles M. A. [vicar of Crisp .Anthony, surgeon, registrar of Lown Richard, coal merchant,Repps rd
Repps-cum-BastwickJ births & deaths for the West Flegg Mayes William, carpenter
Beales Moore William, Olive house sub-district, medical officer to the Moore Edward, carpenter
Braddock Daniel West Flegg district of East & West My hill Robt. mrkt.gardener & briek ma.
Brown William Flegg incorporation & Horsey district Myhill William, farmer, Town end
Cannon Sampson of Smallburgh union, & certifying Nichols Charles, farmer
Colman William, Beaufoy villa factory surgeon Nichols George, miller (wind)
Crisp Anthony Cooper-Faulke James, relieving officer Nichols Mark, carter
Daniels Robert Minister for East & West Flegg district Nichols Robert, farmer •
Halford Alfred Daniels Richard, carter Pitchers Sophia (Mrs.), beer retailer
Hardingham Charles Stephen Deary John, thatcher &c Pyman James Rix, grocer & draper, &
Jeary Mrs Debbage William, corn, flour, pollard, agent for W. & A. Gilbey, wine &-.
Johnson Mrs. William, The Farm malt & hop merchant, Old School ho spirit merchants
Lewis Thomas William Dove Willi11.m, market gardener Reeve James, watch maker
Love John, The Hall Durrant Albert, plumber & glazier Reeve Robert, carpenter
Mahomet Rev. Albert John [Baptist] Dyball Humphrey, farmer Ribbons Jonathan, farmer
Merriman Rev. George M. A. Vicarage Dyball Thomas, farmer Rigg William .Arthur, baker
Moore Rev. William [Primitive Method- Easter George, farmer, Cess Rogers Riehard, refreshment houseP
istJ, The Manse Edmonds Elizh. (Mrs. ),King's .Arms inn assistant overseer for Martham &
Olley Mrs Edmonds William, farmer, Grove farm Horsey & school attendance officeP
Powell William Edwards .Alfred Robert, tailor, hosier for Martham & collector of rates &
Rising Benjamin William, Sutfield ho & hatter, The Green taxes
Rising Thomas Sutfield, Cess Fisher John, butcher Rose George Ed ward, harness maker
Say John, White house Futter Henry, wheelwright, earpenter Rouce James, farmer &c
Seabright Frederick, The Green & joiner. See advertisement Rust Daniel, engineer & millwright
Self Mrs Gallant John, farmer Rust Ellen C. (Miss), school
Smith William Goose Benjamin, farmer & market Shipley William M.R.c.v.s. veterinary
Ulph William Gladstone, The Grange gardener, Cess surgeon, The Green
VmcentMrs GowenJas.markt.gardener& brick makr Smith George, tailor
Whincop Miss Greenacre John, boot & shoe maker Starkins Sarah (Mrs.), lodging house,.
\\'iseman .Arthur, Martham house Greenacre Mary (Mrs.), lodging house The Green
WoodMrs Grimble George, farmer Starling Oliver .Aldred, engineer & agri-
Youngs Mrs Grimble William, shopkeeper & farmer cultural implement agent, The Green
COMMERCIAL. Grimson Henry, farmer Stoliday William, farmer, Cess
.Alien George, farmer Harman John, farmer Button Thomas, blacksmith, The Green
Alien Geo. market gardener, The Green Harmer & Thompson, blacksmiths Tomlin John, coal merchant
.Alien John, Prudential agent Hayton Edmund, pork butcher Tongate Elizabeth (Mrs.), lodging
Balls J ames, farmer Hooper Harbard,grocer & drapr. Post off house, The Green
Beales Moore William, surgeon Howell Obadiah, farmer, Cess Took Jonathan,poultry dealer,Repps rd
Blyth Geo. William, builder, contractor Huggins Robert, farmer, Cess Took Rachel Jane(Mrs.), pork butcher
& cowkeeper, Repps road Jay H.obert, market gardener Took William, farmer, Cess
Bracey William, builder, contractor, Jeary Herbert Wilson, butcher Tooley Wm. Jas.miller (wind & steam)
carter & brick merchant; & at St. Johnson Elijah, boot maker Ulph William Gladstone, farmer
Nicholas road, Yarmouth Johnson James, boot maker Utting Geo. Wm. beer retailr. & dealer
Braddock Edwin, market gardener & Kirby Clement, wheelwright Varley Benjamin, shopkeeper
cow keeper Kirk William Hy. inland revenue offier Varley George, pork butcher, Cess
Brooks Ed ward, bricklayer Kirkland William, draper, Stone house Warnes William Grimson, farmer
Brooks William, boot maker Kerrison Mark, boot maker Watson Robert, farmer, Cess
Brown James, farmer, Cess Knights Richard, farmer & landowner WebsterW m. Eldred, plumber & painter
Brunson Benjamin,farmer &c. Dam gate Lacey George, saddler Wiseman .Alfred Mabbott, farmerp
Burleigh William Victor, boot & shoe Lack Will iam, grocer&d ra pr. Norwich ho Martham house
maker, The Green LambertHy.blacksmith&tinplate workr Woolston Henry, farmer
Chubbock Mark, saddler Lark J ames, market gardener Y oungsRobert,lodging house, TheGreen
486 GREAT M.ASSINGHAM. NORFOLK.
GREAT MASSING HAM is a parish and village, 9 penny loaves given away every week and £4 gs. yearly
miles north from Swaffham station on the LYnn and for distribution. This place had anciently a market and a.
Dereham set:tion of the Great Eastern railway, ·~~ south fair continued for three days 1 it was also the site of a
from Massingham station on the Eastern and Midlands rail- priory of .Austin eanons, founded by Nicholas de Syre before
way and 1:2 miles east-by-north from Lynn, in the North 1260 and dedicated to SS. Mary and Nicholas. The Marquess
Western division of the county, Freebridge Lynn hundred, of Cholmondeley is lord of the manor of Great Massingbam,
petty sessional division and union, Lynh county court d1strict, and the Earl of Leicester of the manors of Monks and
rural deanery of Lynn Freebridge and archdeaconry and Felthams. The Mar'!uess of Cholmondeley; the Earl of
diocese of Norwich. The church. of St. Mary is a building Leicester K.G., r.. L. and Anthony Hamond esq. D.L., J.P.
of stone in the Perpendicular style, consisting of chancel, of West Acre High Houset are the principal landowners.
clerestoried Dave of tive bays, aisles, south porch and an em- The soil is light loam; subsoil, gravel. The chief crops are
battled western tower with pinnacles, containmg a. clock wheat, barley and turnips. The area is 4,067 acres ; rateable
and ::1 bells: in the south wall of the chancel are sedilia and value £3,797, the population in r8g1 was 827.
a piscina : the church wall repaired and reseated in cedar- Parish Clerk, James Fish.
wood in :~:862, at a. cost of about £2 1000 and again restored PosT &; M. 0. 0., S. B. & Annuity & Insurance Office.-
in 1890 at a cost of £250, when the chancel was refloored: John West, receiver. Letters arrive from Swaffharn at 6.25
there are 350 sittings. The register dates from the year a.m.; dispatched at 7 p.m. The nearest telegraph office
1564. The living is a rectory, average tithe rent-charge is at Rougham
£685, net yearly value £323, including 32 acres of glebe National School (mixed), erected in 18;74 for 150 children;
and residence, in the gift of the Marquess of average attendance, 130: the school is endowed with £20
Cholmondeley, and held since r8B7 by the Rev. John yearly in acco"Pdance with the will of Charles Calthorpe,
Reuben Taft M•.A. of Durham University, and F.G.s. dated 5 May, 1676; Alexander Charles Cracknell, master
There are Wesleyan, Free Methodist and Primitive CARRIERS TO LYNN.~William Carlton, tues. thurs. fri. &
Methodist chapels. The charities include a gift of six sat. 7 a.m.; George Nobbs, tues. at 8 a.m
Stanton William, Heath farm Glaswell Charles, blacksmith Riches Fi11ley George, tailor ,
Taft .Rev. John Reube~ M. .A., F.G.s.The Gowers Charles, grocer & draper Rowe Helen (Miss), registrar of births
Rectory Herdman George & James, farmers & deaths for the Hillington sub-dist
COMMERCIAL. Hodson James, bricklayer Sayer James, baker
Barre'ttSarah (Mrs.), grocer & draper Johnson George Hotson, reporter .Seaman John, grocer
Eartle Jacob, farmer KidallJohn, saddler & beer retailer Stebbing Williarn, miller (wind)
Carlton William, carrier Lever(ltt Williarn, baker Steele Charles, carpenter
Caudwell Joseph, farmer, Leicester ho Mallows William, boot & shoe maker Thomas Alfred Eenjamin, butcher
Coker James, shoe maker Mason James, !<'ox & Pheasant P.H. & West John, grocer, Post office
Ewer Thomas, boot & shoe maker farmer West Jn. Hoyal Oak P.R.& wheelwright
Fish James, cooper & parish cler)j: Mason John, painter & plumber Whisler Henry, farmer, Heath farm
Forster Wharton William M.R.c.v.s. Mason Robert, farmer Wiles R. I;I. farmer ,
veterinary surgeon, & Swan inn Morris James, butcher Woods Waiter, farmer & cattle dealer,
Gage Thomas, farmer, Kennel farm Nobbs Susan (Mrs.), pork butcher Malt House farm
George George, horse breaker r.r" Ockley John Lawson, baker & grocer Wright W.m.beer retailer & shppkeeper
George John, blacksmith , , •
-
LITTLE MASSINGl:IAM i~~ parish and village with held smce 1867 by the Rev. Joseph Lloyd Brer~ton M . .A. of
a station on the Eastern and Midlat'lds railway, 109~ miles University College, Oxford, and prebendary of Exeter. C.
from London, 10 north frcln Swaffliam and 12 north-east Brocklehurst esq. is lord of the manor and chief landowner,
from Lynn, in the NortH. 'Western, division of the county, The soil is a mixture of loam and clay; subsoil, gravel,
Freebridge Lynn hundred, ~ctty sessional division and union, The chief crops are wheat, barley and turnips. The area is
Lynn county court district, rural deanery of Lynn Free- 2,278 acres; rateable value, £2.397 j the population in 1891
bridge, archdeaconry of Norfolk lmd diocese of Norwich. was 180. ·
The church of St. Andrew is a building of stone in the Early l'arish Clerk, John Coe.
English style, consisting of charlce1, nave, aisles, south PosT 0FFICK-George Turner, receiver. Letters from ·
porch and an embattled western tower containing 3 bells: Swaffham arrive at 7 a.m, ; dispatched at 5.30 p.m.
in the church is a monument to Sit CJ;!arles Mordaunt hart. Great Massingham is the nearest money order office &
of Little Massingham and Walton D 1Evill, eo. Warwick, ob. Houghton is the nearest telegraph office
1648: there are 150 sittingS'. Th~ register dates from the WALL LETTER Box, Railway station, cleared at' 6.45 p.rn
year J 558. The living is a rectory, average tithe rent-charge The children of this place attend the school }lt Great Mas-
.£so2, net yearly value £452, including 30 acres of glebe, singham
with residence, in the gift of Charles Erocklehurst esq. and Railway Station, "\Villiam Frederick Bill, station master
Brereton Rev. Prebendary Joseph Lloyd Herd Thomas, farm bailiff to Richard I Field Robert Smith, Railway inn
M.A. Rectory · , .
Dewer Charles, farmer, Hall farm
Dring esq ,
.
I
Wright Da,niel Albert., farmer
l "
MATLAS"It:E is a parish about 4~ miles north-north-east Lancaster, and held since r883 by the Rev. Herbert Wynell·
fro~,AJorpusty station on the Eastern and Midlands railway, Mayow, who resides at Plumstead. There .is a .I<'ree
7 north-north-west from .Aylsham and 6 south-east from Methodist chapel here. George Gunton esq. of .Aylsham, is
Holt, in the NortHern division of the county, North Erping- lord£?~ the manor and chief landowner. The ~oil is a light
ham hundred and petty sessional division, Erpingham union, loam;, subsoil, brick earth. The chief crops are','Wbeat 1
Holt county court district, rura~ deanery of Repps, arch- turnips, badey and grass. The parish comprises 472 acres f
deaconry of Norfolk and diocese of Norwich, \The church rateable value, £68o; the population in 188I was 164.
of St. Peter is a plain edifice of flint in the Perpendicular Parish Clerk, John Lubbock.
style, consisting of nave, south aisle, north and south porches
(the latter used as a vestry) and a round western tower with Letters through Norwich, by me.~senger from Hanworth,
octagonal embattled belfry containing one bell : the chancel arrive about 9 a. m. W .ALL LETT:ER Box cleared at 2.45
fell on 19 March, 172 6, and has not been rebuilt: the roof p.m. week days only. The nearest money order & tele-
of the existing building was thoroughly restored in 1871 : graph office is at Aldborough
there are 130 sittings. The register dates from the year The Board School for Earningbam united distr~ct, in this
1558. Tho living is a rectory annexed to Plumstead, aver- parish, was opened in 1876 ; it includes a residence for
age tithe rent-charge £236, joint net yearly value £184, in- the master & will hold 120 children; average attend·
eluding so acres of glebe, in the gift of the Duchy of ance, 85; \ValtorWilkinson, rnaster ; ~Irs. Wilkinson,mis~
Springfleld Geo. Osborrte,Matlaske hall
Grand Sarah (Mrs.), shopkeeper
I
Leader William, shopkeeper .
Leedcr Bros. blacksmiths& wheelwrights

Temple Joseph, farm bailiff to John
Shepheard esq. of W ollerton
MATTISHALL is a large village and parish, 3 miles porches and an embattled tower containing a clock and 6
east from Yaxham Junction station on the Wymondham and bells, the fine wooden lectern is a copy of that in Shiphdam
Dereham section of the Great Eastern railway and 5 south- church : the church was partially restored and reseated with
east from Dereham, in the Mid division of the county, open benches in 1857-8, and was thoroughly restored, with
Mitford hundred, Mitford and Launditch petty sessional the exception of the tower, in 1890-2, at a cost of about
division and union, Dereham county court district, rural £2,700, and two memorial windows have been placed, one
deanery of Hingham, Mitford division, archdeaconry of Nor- by Mr. George Taylor, in memory of his wife, and the other
folk and diocese of Norwich. The church of All Saints is a by Mr. and Mrs. Roget, of London, to Mrs. C. Mowbrar
large building of flint in the Perpendicular style, consisting Donne ~ there are 415 sittings. The register dates from
of chance~ with side chapel, nave, aisles, north and south the year 1656. The living is a discharged vicarage with tha
DIRECTORY.] NORFOLK. MELTON CONSTABLE. 487
rectory of Pattesley annexed, average tithe rent-charge hay and roots. The area is 2,229 acres ; rateable value,
£225, joint net yearly value £336, including 13r acres of £4,000; the population in 1891 was 836.
glebe, with residence, in the gift of Caius College, Cambridge, Parish Clerk, Samuel Fowler.
and held since 1885 by the Rev. Andrew Johnston Hunter PosT, M. 0. & T. 0., S. B. & Annuity & Insurance Office.-
M.A. of that college. There are Congregational and Primi- G-eorge Henry Seaman, sub-postmaster. Letters from
tive Methodist chapels and the Society of Friends have a. London & all parts arrive from Dereham at 7.30 a.m. &
meeting house. The charities produce about £70 yearly per foot post at 4 p.m. & are delivered at 8.10 a. m. & 4
for clothing, and there is a fuel allotment of 6o acres, let at p.m. r Letters are dispatehed to Dereham at u.45 a. m. &
£62 yearly. The tt"UStees of the late George Duckett 5.30 p.m.: sundays at 10.30 a.m
Berney esq. are lords of the manor. The principal land• National School <mixed & infants), bnilt in 1872 & enlarged
owners are the Rev. Charles Edward Donne M.A. of Favers...- in r883, for 215 children; average attendance, 176; Miss
ham vicarage, Kent, and Edward Bowyer Sparke esq. M.A., • Elizabeth Johnson, mistress
D.L., J.P. of Gunthorpe Hall. The soil is heavy; subsoil, I CARRIER To NoRWICH.-William Howes, wed. & sat. re-
clay and brick oarth. The chief crops are wheat, barley, turning same days
Griffith-Williams William Henry Fitt Frederick, George P.H King Lebbell carpenter
Howlett Miss Francis George HastingsKnapp, farmer Leveridge John, carcase butcher
Howlett Mrs Gapp John, farmer Leveridge John, farmer
Hunter Rev. Andrew Johnston M.!. Gapp Robert, farmer Lusher George, market gardener
[vicar], Mattishall hall George Robert l''redk. grocer & draper Meale John, grocer & draper
Riches Mrs Godfrey William, cooper Middleton Walter, builder
Taylor George Graves John, insurance agent Norton Clement, ba~er
Tbackeray Rev.Joseph[Congregational] Greenwood Matthew, farmer Norton Thomas, baker
Thorpe William Nicholas Griffith-Williams Wm. Henry L.R.C.P. Parling John, wood carver
CO:\IMERCIAL. Edin. surgeon, & medical officer & Pond William, White House P.H
Bambridge William, shopkeeper public vaccinator,No. 4 dist. Forehoe Reeve George, plumber
Beckett George, boot maker union & Mattishall district, Mitford Rix James, timber dealer
Beckett Henry, shopkeeper & Launditch union, & registrar of SeamanGeorgeHenry.shoe mkr.Post off
Blanch Samuel, blacksmith births & deaths for Mattishall sub- Sharman Edward, farmer
Bunting Sarab (Mrs.), farmer district, Mitford & Launditch union & Smalls Sarah (Mrs.), shopkeeper
Bunting William, farmer medical officer & public vaccinator, Sparke Edward, farmer & lando"'w,ner &
Clarke Eli, farmer St. Faith union maltster, Malthouse farm
Culyer John, Eight Ringers P.H GuntonWilliam,Duke of Edinburgh P.H Tann Isaac John, farmer
Curtis Geo. farmer, Kensington house Harmer John, Swan P.H Taylor George, surgeon
Dobbs Frdk. wheelwright & blacksmith Hill John, farmer Tofts Etnest, butcher
Dobbs Frederick, jun. Ivy f'AJttage P.H Horne George, tailor & draper Tofts Nicholas, cattle dealer & farmer
Drew William, sheep dresser Horne ""'illiam, shopkeeper Tooley Peter, farmer
Edwards John, saddler HornoWilliamMann,shopkpr.South grn Warner James, farmer
Fish James, farmer Howes William H.aynes, carrier Wigg Wright Goddard, farmer
Fisher Clare, farmer Hoy Edwd. Jn.farmer & a.ssist.overseer '¥ire Waiter, farmer
l<'itt Edward, shopkeeper Hoy Eriward Sussens, watch maker
MATTISHALL BURGH is a parish, 3~ miles east- held since 1856 by the Rev. Michael James Anderson M.A.
by-north from Yaxham station on the \Vymondham and of Trinity College, Dublin, who resides at Hockering.
Dereham section of the Great Eastern rail way and 6 east Thornton's charity of £16 yearly is divided between Mattis·
from Dereham, in the Mid division of the county, hundred hall and Mattishall Burgh; the fuel allotment of 18 acres
of Mitford, petty sessional division and union of Mitford and is let at £25. The trustees of the late George Duckett
Launditch, Dereham county court district, rural deanery of Berney esq. are lords of the manor. The principal land-
Hingham, Mitford division, archdeaconry of Norfolk and owners are Edward Bowyer Sparke esq. M.A., D.L., J.P. of
diocese of Norwich. The church of St. Peter ia a small Gunthorpe Hall, and the Rev. John S~wuldham. The soil
building of flint in the Gothic style, consisting of chancel, is mixed; subsoil, chiefly clay. The chief crops are wheat~
nave, north transept, south porch and an embattled western l:larley and roots. The area is 6o8 acres ; rateable value,
tower with pinnacles, containing one bell: there are I 20 £gs8 ; the population in 1891 was 153.
sittings. The register dates from the year 1561. The LETTER Box cleared at 5 p.m. Letters received through
living is a rectory, united with that of Hockering, average Dereham arrive at 8 a. m. Great Mattishall is the nearest
tithe rent-charge £152, joint gross yearly value £195, in- money order & telegraph otlice
cluding 20 acres of glebe here and so at Hockering, in the
gift of the trustees of the late G. Duckett Berney esq. and The children of this place attend the school at Mattisha\l
Basey Arthur, Cross Keys P.H Gricks Frederick, farmer Savory Palmer, farmer
Coe Edward, farmer • Xorton Lindoe, farmer 'l'hoader John, farmer
Gay Alfred John, farmer Os borne Charles, farmer Tooley Henry, farmer

MAUTBY is a parish, near the navigable Bure, 3 miles Fellowes esq. and held since r838 by the Rev. Charles
west from Caister station on the Eastern and Midlands rail- Fellowes M.A. of St. John's College, Cambr1dge, who is also
way and about 5~ north-west from Yarmouth, in the Eastern rector of and resides at Shotesharn, near Norwich~ the Rev.
division of the county, incorporated hundreds, petty sessional Charles Luther Wanstall has been curate in charge since
division and mcorporation of East and \Vest Flegg, county 1886. In the parish are a few modern plantations and a,
court district of Great Yarmouth, rural deanery of Flegg, small decoy of 9 acres. Many of the well-known Paston
archdeaconry of Norfolk and diocese of Norwich. The letters (re-edited by Mr. James Gairdner in 1872-5) were
church of SS. Peter and Paul is a small building of flint in written from this place ; Margaret Paston, wife of John
the Early English style, consisting of chancel, nave, south Paston, having inherited the property from her father, Joh:Q.
porch and an embattled western tower, with a circular base Mautby. Robert Fellowes esq. D.L., l.P. of ShoteshaiQ
and octagonal belfry containing one bell : in the south wall Park, is lord of the manor and sole landowner, ',{'he soil is
of the nave is a tomb, with cross-legged recumbent effigy loamy; subsoil, sand and gravel. The chief crops are wheat,
in armour, to a member of the Mautby family, formerly oats and barley. The area is r,917 acres, chiefly arable, in-
lords of the manor: there is also a mural tablet to the Rev. eluding 260 acres formerly extra-parochial; rateable value,
Richard Gay Lucas, a former rector, d. IJ7I, and to Mary, £3,107; the population in r8gi was II2.
his wife, d. 176o : the font is octagonal and has a canopy: Parish Clerk, Harry Pipes.
in 1884 the church was restored nnder the superintendence Letters received through Yarmouth arrive at 8. 3 o. a.m.
of Mr. Arthur S. Hewitt A.R.I.H.A. of Yarmouth, when the Filbyis thenearestmoneyorderoffice; telegraphofficesa~
south aisle, which had been destroyed, was rebuilt, the Ormsby & Caister
arcade, previously blocked up, being reopened and the
interior reseated : there are now 100 sittings. The register The parish was made contributory to the Filby School Board
dates from the year x663. The living is a rectory, average district, April g, 1875, with two members ,
tithe rent-charge £456, gross yearly value £525, including The children Df this place attend the schools at Runham &
46~ acres of glebe, with residence, in the gift of Robert Filby
Kidman Frederic, Church farm; & at Banham James, farmer, Marsh farm Scales Waiter, farmer, Wood farm
Ormesby St. Michael · Browne John, farmer, Decoy farm Wilson William,farm bailiff to Frederic
\Vanstall Rev. Charles Luther [curate Gorble George, farmer, Rectory farm Kidman esq. Church farm
in charge] Howell Wm. farmer, The Hall farm
MELTON CONSTABLEwithBURGH PAR VA 1on the Eastern and Midlands railway, of the lines to Lynn,
is a parish and vilbge, with an important junction station Fakenham, Norwich, Yarrnoutb, Halt and Cromer, 8 mile$
488 MELTON CONSTABLE. NORFOLK. [KELLY'8

east-north-east from Fakenham, 6 south-west from Bolt, 12 surrounded hy elegant terraces, inclosed by ornamental
from North Walsham and about 127 from London, in the grounds, and affords a fine view of the large lake; it is si tu-
Northern division of the county, hundred, petty sessional ated in an extensive and well-timbered park, which is stocked
division and county court district of Holt, union of Walsing- with red and fallow deer, bemg the second park in England
ham, r11ral deanery of Holt and archdeaconry and diocese where the red deer were introduced: the various
of Norwich. BuRGH PARVA has always been annexed to apartments contain a fine collection of valuable paintings
Melton Constable, but the church of St. Peter is in ruins, and porcelain. Melton was granted by the Norman
and only the tower and portions of the walls are now stand- Conqueror to Arfastus, Bishop of Thetford, of whom it was
ing. The church of St. Peter at Melton is a small but held by R@ger de Lyons, whose descendants assumed the
ancient building of Hunstanton stone, in mixed styles, name of Mealton, and sometimes signed themselves De Con-
consisting of chancel, nave, transepts and a. low central stable, from the office which they held under the bishop:
Norman tower containing one bell: the east window is it has now been for centuries the seat of the Astleys,
stained: the church was restored in 1884 atthe sole expense Barons Hastings. The Swanton Great Wood, famous
of Lord Hastings, a north transept being added to form as a preserve for woodcock shooting, is upon this estate.
a vestry; the family pew of Lord Hastings, which was The stud farm and paddocks, which adjoin the park, are
erected in x681, is adorned with shields of arms : the celebrated a.'! the birth-place of the Derby winner" Melton,"
church was refitted with good carved oak benches, a new and the H_ome farm for its herd of red polled cattle and flock
oak lectern and a reading desk: there are monuments to of Southdown sheep. Lord Hastings is lord of the manor
various members of the Astley family: the church affords and sole landowner. The soil is mixed; subsoil, clay. The
xoo sittings. The registers of Melton Constable date from chief crops are wheat, oats, barley, turnips and grass. The
the year 1551 and those of Burgh Parva from I559· The area is 2,710 acres; rateable value, £3,234; the population
living is a rectory, consolidated with that of Burgh Parva, in x8gr was 393·
average tithe rent-charge £xgx, joint gross yearly value Parish Clerk, Mark Watson.
£231, including 33 ac. of glebe, in the gift of Lord Hastings, Pmn, M. 0. & T. 0., s. B. & Annuity & Insurance Office
and held since 1855 by the Rev. Charles Norris B.A.. of Caius (Sub-Office. Letters should have s.o. ~orfolk added).-
College, Cambridge, who is also vicar of and resides at John Linder, sub-postmaster. Letters through Dereham
Briston. The extensive repairing shops and perrnanen t by foot messenger from Briningham delivered at 7 a. m.
way depot of the Eastern and Midlands Railway Co. have & through Norwich at _45 p.m.; dispatched at . 30
3 5
been erected here, as well as two streets of houses and a p.m. by Dereham & at 7 . 45 p.m. via Peterboro
mission ball for the use of the employes. Melton Constable,
the princely seat of Lord Hastings, is a rectangular mansion Railway Station, Seth Bastow, station master; Joseph P.
of brick and ;;tone, to which-various additions have been Foster, goods agent
made, including a corridor over 100 feet long, connecting the The children of this place attend the schools at Briston &
hall with the wing on the site of the old hall : the house is Swan ton N overs
Hastings Rt. Hon. Lord J.P.Melton Con- Codling Henry,Hastings Arms cam mer- Reading Room (Robert Whyatt, sec)
stable ; 22 llrnton street w ; Carlton cial hotel & posting house, Station Robinson Charles F. storekeeper for the
& Marlborough clubs s w & Turf Eastern & MidlandsRailwayCo. Locomo- Eastern & Midlands railway
club w London tive Department(Wm.Marriott,supt) Sbingler William, head gardener to
Law Mrs. Burgh hall · FishJohn,gamekeeper to Lord Hastings Lord Hastings
Peel Edward L.agent to Lord Hastings, Foster Joseph, goods agent for the Silcock Jacob, farm bailiff to Lord
The Dairy house Eastern & Midlands railway Hastings
Hutchins James, stud groom Vickery Dand, permanent way inspec-
COMMERCIAL, Marriott Wm.locomotive superintendent tor for the Eastern&Midlands rail way
Rastow Seth, station master ):1etchem William, gamekeeper Vinter J. 0. coal merchant, Station
Belson Richard Bell, traffic inspector Pockney James, g-amekeeper Williams Henry, signal inspector for the
Blower Byron, house plumber &c. to Roberts Thomas, woodman to Lord Eastern & Midlands railway
Lord Hastings Hastings
GREAT MELTON is a parish between 2 and 3 miles sittings. The register dates from the year 1557. The liv-
north-west from Hethersett station on the Thetford and ing is a rectory, average tithe rent-charge £569, gross
Norwich section of the Great Eastern railway, 5~ west- yearly value £sg8, including 22 acres of glebe, with resi-
south-west from Norwich and 4 east-north-east from Wy- dence, in the gift of Caius College, Cambridge, and held
mondhatn, in the Southern division of the county, Humble- since 1877 by the Rev. Alfred George Day M.A. formerly
yard hundred, Swainsthorpe petty sessional division, union fellow and president of that college. Snelling's charity of
of ;Henstead, Norwich county court dtstrict, rural deanery £I 17s. 6d. yearly is derived from a piece of land situate in
of Humblcyard, archdeaconry of Norfolk and diocese of Wramplingham, and is distributed to the poor in clothing.
Norwich. Great Melton consists of two distinct parishes. Melton Hall, the residence of the Rev. Henry Evans-LombB
St. Mary and All Saints, consolidated in the reign of Queen H. A., .J.P. lord of the manor and chief landowner, is an
Anne: both churches stood side by side in one churchyard, ancient mansion in t-he Elizabethan style, built in x6u by
but All Saints church, in accordance with an Act of Parlia- the Anguish family, with a fine lawn in front, and is
ment passed in 17Io, was allowed to fall into decay, the surrounded by a richly-wooded park of about 100 acres.
church of St. Mary alone being used ; this church, however, The soil is various ; subsoil, same. The chief crops are
having in turn become much dilapidated, was pulled down wheat, turnips, barley and hay. The area is 2,488 acres;
in 1883, since which All Saints church has been rebuilt, a rateable value, £3,280; the population in 1891 was 322.
new north transept and vestry being added, at a cost of Parish Clerk, Thomas Fox. .
about £ 2,(X)(): the present edifice is a building of flint with
stone dres..'lings, chiefly in the Decorated style, and consists Letters through Norwich, via Hethersett, arrive at 7 a.m-
of chancel, nave, north transept, south porch and a western Hethersett is the nearest money order & telegraph office.
tower containing 3 bells: the chancel contains an Early LETTER Box cleared at 6 p.m. ; sundays at 10.45 a. m
English window, removed from the church of St. Mary: National School (mixed), erected in 1852 at the sole expense
the large east window has been filled with stained glass in of the late Charles Lombe esq. for 6o children; average
memory of the Rev. C. E.:vres, late rector: there are 130 attendance, 38; Miss llessie Wigg, mistress
Day Rev. Alfred George M.A. Rectory Bloom .Ann (Nfrs.),farmer,College farm Gowing Edwd.Sayers,frmr.Churchfrm
Lombe Rev. Henry Evans- D.A., J.P. Cannell Jamcs, market gardener Kendal Pbilip, farmer, Chapel farm
Melton ball
I
Cross Thomas, farmer, Whiterail farm Le Urice Saul, farmer, Hall farm
Lombe Edward Henry Evans D.L., J.P. Cunningham James, carrier & farmer Norton Samuel, farm bailiff to the Rev.
Melton hall
COMMERCIAL.
BlytheEd. Wm. GreenMan P .n.&blksmth
Drew Jeremiah, farmer
I Henry Evans-Lombe, Lime Kiln frm
Gayford George J. farmer, Wongfarm Porrett James, farmer, High ho!lSe

LITTLE MELT ON is a scattered parish, 2 miles north another piscina: there is an ancient Norman font, and :.
from Hethersett station on the Thetford and Norwich section carved chancel screen : in the chancel is a black marble
of the Great Eastern railway, 5 north-east from Wymond- tablet, with arms, to Richard Skottowe, ob. 1656, and below
ham and 4 west-by-south from Norwich, in the Southern are several brasses to Bridget Skottowe, d. 1766 ; Augustine
division of the county, Swainsthorpe petty sessional division, Skottowe, d. 1683, and Susannah, his wife, d. 1681 ; Thomas
Humbleyard hundred, Henstead union, Norwich county Skottowe, d. 1758, and Katharine Skottowe, d. 1769; on
court district, rnral deanery of Humbleyard, archdeaconry the south side is a monument of white marble, with arms,
of Norfolk and diocese of Norwich. The church of St. Mary to Thomas Johnson, d. 1714, and Mrs. Mary Johnson, d.
and All Saints is a building of flint in the Perpendicular 1716 : near the pulpit is an ancient brass to Dorothy Anguish,
style, consisting of chancel, nave, aisles, south porch and an ob. x6o4, and to Robert, her son: there are 130 sittings.
embattled western tower containing 3 bells: in the chancel The register dates from the year I733· The living is a con-
is a double piscina and two sedilia, and in the north aisle is solidated vicarage, consisting of the rectories of Melton Flot-
DIRECTORY.] NORFOLK. METHWOLD. 489
man, or All Saints, and Melton St. Mary, united by Act of The area is 66o acres; rateable value [1,373; the popu-
Parliament, :r2 Queen Anne (1713-14), average tithe rent- lation in 18gr was 334·
charge £73, net yearly value £76, including 19 acres of Parish Clerk, James Pearce.
glebe, with residence, in the gift of Emmanuel College, WALL LETTER Box at Rose & Crown, cleared at 8.15 a.m. &
Cambridge, and held since 1883 by the Rev. John Jordan 5 . 10 p.m.; sundays, 8. r5 a. m. Letters through Norwich
Soden M.A. of that college. Here is a Gospel Mission hall via Hethersett, arrive at 7 . 30 a.m. Hethersett 1s the
seating about 200 persons. The poor's land of 1! acres nearest money order & telegraph office
produces £r6 yearly, which is distributed among all the · .
cottagers both agricultural and artisan, in the proportion of . A School Board of 5 members. was. for.med c~mpulsorily
28 . to adults, rs. to children and 28 . 6d. each to widows and November 27, 1873, foX: the united di~tricts of L1ttle Melton
widowers. Frederick Bacon Frank esq. M. A. of Campsall & Colney; H~v. J. J. Soden M. A. chairman & hon. cler~ to
Park Doncaster Yorks who is lord of the manor and the the board ; George Cheney, Swardeston, attendance officer
'
Rev. 'Henry Evans-Lombe ' land-
' B.A., J.P. are the principal Board School (mixed), built in 1874, at a cost of [750, for
owners. 'fhe soil is of a mixed nature; subsoil, brick 8o children; average attendance, 71 ; Miss Henrietta
earth. The chief crops are wheat, barley, turnips and hay. Hall, mistress
Cook Isaac Carr Robert, market gardener Lack Henry, farmer, Church farm
Soden Rev. John Jordan M.A. Vicarage Carter Jo.seph, farmer Lack William, farmer
COMMERCIAL. Diaper William Spencer,farmer & cattle Nichols John Hy.florist&market gardnr
Andrews Richard, farmer dealer, Manor farm ReynoldsEmma(Mrs. ),Rose&CrownP.H
Aves John, farmer & sheep dresser Fox: Benjamin, market gardener Sharp Chas. yeoman & assist. overseer
BaileyWilliam,pork butcher&shopkeepr Fox Edmund,plumber,painter & glazier Sparkes Watson John,market gardener
Barrell Samuel, miller (wind & steam) & Go ward Godfrey (Mrs.), laundress Sword Samuel, market gardener
assessor & collector of taxes Hill Mary Ann (Mrs.), market gardenr Symonds Ruth (Mrs.), laundress
Cannell Philip Bane, farmer
MENDHAM is a parish in Ho:xne union, partly in this county, but principally in Suffolk, and particulars will be
found in "Kelly's Directory of Suffolk."
MER TON (anciently called Mere-tune or Mere-town) is there are 12 free allotments of ro rods each for the poor.
a. parish on the road from Watton to Thetford, 2 miles south Merton Hall, the seat of Lord Walsingham, is a noble
from Watton statwn on the Bury, Thetford .and Swaffham mansion of red brick, in the Elizabethan style, built about
section' of the Great Eastern railway, 10 north from Thetford the year 1613, on the site of a house which had been in the
and 12 north-west from Attleborough, in the South Western possession of the de Grey family since the middle of the 14th
division of the county, hundred, petty sessional division and century, and previously of their ancestors by the female
union of Wayland, county court district of Watton and line, the Baynards, to whom the property was granted at
Attleborough,.rural deanery of Breccles and archdeaconry the Conquest: some portions of the older buildings still re-
and diocese of Norwich. The church of St. Peter, situated main: extensive stabling with coachman's house, from
in the park, about 300 yards north-east from the Hall, is a designs by Milne and Hall, architects, of London, have been
crnciform structure of flint, consisting of chancel, nave, recently erected. The house stands in a park about 2 miles
south aisle, north and south porches and a circular Norman in length, which, near the mansion, is studded with fine
western tower containing 3 bells: the chancel and nave are timber: the grounds are chiefly remarkable for the large
Decorated, and have windows with elegant tracery: the collection of pines and firs; a noble oak of great antiquity,
nave is divided from the chancel by a carved oak screen, on which measured 23 feet 4 inches in circumference a.t o feet
which is an iron bracket for holding an hour glass: the pews from the ground, fell in January 1892, and proved to be
are of oak, with carved poppy heads: the chancel retains a quite hollow. The Merton Hall estate comprises the whole
double piscina and graduated sedilia: the doorway and steps village of Merton, with the adjacent villages of Tottington,
to the rood-loft still remain, and there is a fine hagio- Sturston, Stanford and parts of the parishes of Thompson,
scope: many of the windows are filled with modern stained Watton, Griston, Stow Bedon, Caston and Great Ellingham.
glass: there are two very fine brass shields, with the de Lord Walsingham is lord of the manor and sole landowner.
Grey quarterings, and tablets to Edmund de Grey, ob. 1548, The land is generally of a somewhat light character, with a
and Thomas de Grey, ob. 1556, and his wife Elizabeth, be- marl and clay subsoil; but by bringing clay to the surface
sides the blank matrices of many others: the handsome (for which purpose there is a clay pit in nearly every field)
font canopy of carved oak, executed by Captain Kitto in the soil has been much improved in the past, but the practice
.I843, and presented by the late Lord Walsingham, reaches has been discontinued of late years. The parish comprises
nearly to the roof, and is a copy of the old cover, which bad 1,715 acres; rateable value, i,-1,410; the population in 1891
fallen to decay: in r885, a carved oak reredos, with a repre- was r8o.
sentation of the Last Supper was erected by Lord and Lady Parish Clerk, John Buckle.
Walsingham, as a memorial to the Rev. George Crabbe B.A. LETTER Box cleared at 6. 30 p.m. week days, & 10. 30 a. m.
rector of this parish for 33 years: and in rSBg a new organ on sundays. Letters through Thetford, via Watton, which
was presented by Lady Walsingham: there are 174 sittings. is the nearest money order & telegraph office
The register dates from the year 1564. The living is a
rectory, average tithe rent-charge £ 16 2 , net yearly value Merton Hall is connected with the Estate office & with Wat-
£ 138, 'including 16 acres of glebe and residence, in the gift of ton Post office by government telephone
Lord Walsingham, and held since 1885 by the Rev. Arthur Infants' School, erected by Lord Walsingham in 1874, for
Morse Reid M. A. of Pembroke College, Cambridge. The 30 children; average attendance, 22; Mrs. Kate Kirk,
rectory house, erected in 1851 by Lord Walsingham, is rt mistress
miles north-east of the church. The rents of 5 acres of town The elder boys of this place attend Watton school, the girls
land and 4 cottages, are applied to parochial purposes, and attending the school at ThorJ?-pson
Walsingham Lord M.A., F.R.S., D.L.,J.P. Bush John, head gamekeeper to Lord Day John, shepherd to LordWalsingham
Merton hall; & 66A, Eaton square & Walsingham Mallott l<'rederick, estate carpenter
Carlton &; White's clubs, London s w Cbaston William, farmer Matthews Martha & Charlotte (Misses),
Durrant John Hartley (private sec. to CraneChas.shepherd toLordWalsinghm farmers
Lord Walsingham) Crane James, estate office clerk Silcock Cubitt, farmer, Broom hill
Reid Rev. Arthur Morse M.A. Rectory Davy John Gunning,farm bailiff to Lord Tal bot William,farm bailiff to theMisses
Walsingham 1\Iatthews
COMMERCIAL. Howes George, head gardener to Lord Woodforde Lionel Burnct, agent to
Ames Charles, estate office clerk Walsingham Lord Walsingham
METHWOLD is a parish and small town on the road Perpendicular and the latter retains at its angles the bases
from Brandon to Lynn, 4 miles south-west from Stoke Ferry of pinnacles: the roof is of the 15th century, with alternate
terminal station on a branch of the Great Eastern railway tie and hammer beams: the former are adorned with shields
and 6 north-west from Brandon, in the South Western and figures of cherubs, the latter supported by angels bear-
division of the county, Grimshoe hundred and petty sessional ing wreaths, crowns or other emblems : the roof of the north
division, Thetford union and county court district, rur-.U aisle has handsomely moulded principals on grotesque carved
<leanery of Cranwich south division, archdeaconry of Norfolk corbels: the chancel retains a Decorated piscina and there is
and dioc-ese of Norwich. The church of St. George is an one 'of Perpendicular date in the north aisle: the church
edifice of clunch and freestone, with a tower of flint and affords 370 sittings, 120 being free. The register dates
freestone and consists of chancel, nave, aisles, south porch from the year 1683. The living is a discharged vicarage,
and a western tower, with a square lower stage and an average tithe rent-charge [265, net yearly value £194 1 with
-QCtagonal belfry, surmounted by an elegant stone spire and residence, in the gift of the Lord Chancellor and held since
eontaining a clock and 6 bells: the chancel is Decorated, but 1873 by the Rev. John Denny Gedge B. A. of Hertford College,
has Perpendicular windows : the nave and tower are both Oxford and surrogate. There was once an older church
490 :rdETHWOLD. NORFOLK. [KELLY S
1

11ituated at the edge of the close on which still stands the METiiWOLo HYTHE, anciently called Otering-Hythe, xi
tithe-barn of the Augustinian priory of Bramwell (later miles west-by-north of th~ town, is part of the parish and
Eroomhill) founded by Sir H. de Plaiz, in the reign of King consists of a few farmhouses, some cottages, two public-
John, and dedicated to SS. Mary and Thomas, of which houses and a small Wesleyan chapel. There are also a
various remains have been disinterred: it was probably the considerable number of houses along the Sams cut, in the
church of the original Saxon settlement of the Buntings, by south-western division of the fen 1 amounting to a hamlet
which last name the lowest part of the village is still known. and generally known as POPPYLOT {originally spelt Poplot) <
The Wesleyan cha:pel is a building chiefly of rlint, erected in a road, constructed through this district from Feltwell to
1832; the Primitive Methodist chapel, an edifice of brick Southery, was opened in x88r,
and stone, was erected in r866. The charities amount to Parish Clerk and Sexton, Henry John Boldry.
£ss yearly. There are six almshouses, built in r88o by Mr. .
W. J. Coote, who left the rent of one dwelling-hOuse for PosT~ M. 0. & T. 0., S. B. & Ann pity & Insurance Ol;fice.-
keeping them in good repair. Here is a reading and news Robert r Wright Flatt, postmaster. Letter~ arrive by
room well supplied with newspapers and periodicals. A mail cart from Stoke Ferry S.O. at 4 a.m. & 2.30 p.m. ;
sub-branch of Gurneys' hank, at Thetford, is open here 1
delivered at 7 a. m. only; dispatched at g. IS a.. m. & 7·35
every Monday. A flourishing market for cattle and corn is p.m
held here on Mondays and a fair for cattle is held on April ScHOOLS ._
23rd. The Wa~re~, which formerly covered r,soo acres, is Nationai School, erected in x8s8 & since enlarged to hold 200
now ~nder cul.tivatwn, to the extent of about one-half, t~e , children; average attendance, 110 ; it is principally sup-
r!'mamder bemg used as a she~p-walk. The Crown, m parted by the Duchy of Lancaster, which contributes £"8o
r1fl'ht _of the Duchy of L~ncaste~, ~ own~r of the manor and yearly; Thomas Croxall, master; infant school, witb. 70
~rmClpal landowner. The sml lS a mix:ure ·of fen peat, children ; average attendance, 6o ; Mrs. Croxall,. mistress
light loam, sandy and strong gault; subsml, chalk and sand. N t.10 1 H th {' f t) ted · 1 8 f 20 h'ld
The chief crops are wheat barley oats and turnips. The a . na • Y e m a!l s • erec m 75, or c 1 ren;
. ' '
area IS I3,912.A. 3R. gP. ; rateable value, £"8,8S7; the popu- M1ss Flora Rolfe ' mistress
lation in 18gr was, in Methwold High Town, 917; in Hythe, CARRIERS TO BR.ANDON . .....;..Crisp, from Northwold, mon. wed,
165; and on the Fen, 28o; total, r,362. i & fri. ; Salmon, from Stoke Ferry, wed. & fri
Eanham Edward, Xew hall Fison George, boot & shoe maker PooleyWm.blacksmith,&ChequersP.H
Banham Joseph John, Lion house Flatt John, jun. beer retailer, Hythe Portel' Thomas, farmer, Fen
Coote Miss I<'latt Robcrt, farmer, Fair hill Priest Wm. Geo. inland revenue officer
Gedge Rev. John Denny B •.A. [vicar & Flatt· Robert Wright, tailor & shop• Reynolds George, farm· bailiff undel'
surrogate], Vicarage keeper, Post office Duchy of Lancaster
King Miss Flatt Saul, farmer, Hythe Roberts Henry, shopkeeper •
Spencer Mrs I<'latt William, farmer Rolfe John, chimney sweeper
Whitmore William Fox Charles, farmer, Hall farm Simons "William, carpenter
Wortley Henry Gathercole James, steward to Warren Smith Robert, builder • ·
Yates Rev. Grimshaw [Wesleyan] lodge, under Duchy of Lancaster · Spencer Henry, Gearge commercial inn
COMMERCIAL. Goodrich John, carpenter & shopkeeper Spinks John, watch & clock maker
Adcock Theophilus, watch & clock ma Goodrich Robt. King,farmer, Brook glen Spinks Maria (Mrs.), Cock inn
Alger Robert, sen. cattle dealer Goodrich Waiter, shopkeeper ' Taylor Jacob, blacksmith
Alger Waiter, farmer Gra\"es William John,farm bailiff under Theobald Joseph, miller (wind) 1 baker
Alien Jacob, baker & miller Duchy of Lancaster, Catsholm & farmer
.Armstrong John, shopkeeper Green Wm. Rysdale,frmr. Larman's fen Thorpe Walter, butcher
Aspin James, fishmonger Gurneys, Birkbecks, Barclay & Buxton Thorpe William King, Globe P.H
Ealaam Frederick, Swan inn (branch of), bankers (W. E. Sowels, Tibbett Edward, grocer & draper
Eanham Edward & Son, auctioneers, agent) (open monday, 12 to 2); draw Tompson Mary Ann (Mrs.), baker, &
valuers, surveyors & estate agents on Barclay, Bevan & Co. London E c Green Man P.H. Hytho
BanhamJosephJohn,farmer,auctioneer, IIall John, thrashing machine proprietr Trotter Rhoda & Sons, wholesale &
valuer & estate ·agent, Lion house Harrod Robert, farmer, Hythe general ironmongers & agricultural
Baggers .1'ohn, landowner & farmer, Haverson Jas. thrashing machine propr implement agents & makers; & at
Red house Horrex Anthony, Crown inn Downham Market
Eoldry Evan & Son, blacksmiths Howes John, beer retailer Wag Henry Barrington, baker
Eoldry Thos.Curry,bldr. & wheelwright IIowes John, farmer Walpole Waiter Hobert, solicitor &
Boldry Wm.Ashley,carpenter & builder Howes Robert, builder commissioner for oaths (attends mon-
Buttifant Josiah I<'rederick; chemist Hudson Samuel, farmer, Hythe day); & at Northwold
Carr Augustus, watch repairer Johnson Susan (Mrs.), shopkeeper Warren William Henry, farmer
Coates Edward, farmer, Hythe Johnson William, farmer, Larman's fen Watson William, farmer & landowner
Coates John, carpenter & joiner King Susan (Miss), farmer Webb William, market gardener
Coates Wm. farmer & assistant overseer Larner Jacob, ironmonger & garden Whatnell Robt. draper & warehousemn
Constable William John, farmer, Hythe seed merchant Whitmore Williatn, farmer
Constable William Phillips, farmer Laws Richard, marine store dealer Whitta Albert, grocer & draper, & agent
Copeman & Melior, solicitors (attend Lister Franci<>, farmer, Clough farm for W. & A. Gilbey, wine & spirit mm-s
mondays, ro till 4) Manning John, shoe maker Woodfield John, farmer, Hythe
Durrant Waiter, Bell inn (market held ParrottFrederickWrn.farmer,Glebe frm Wortley John, farmer, Hythe
here, monday) Payne Robert & Son, machine owners Wortley Thomas, farmer, Hythe
Edwards Albert, butcher Pointer Henry, farmer, Hythe Younge Thomas, saddler
Fendick William, farmer, Hythe ·
M.ETTON is a parish 3! miles south from Cromer 1738. The living is a discharged rectory, consolidated with
stations on the Great Eastern and Eastern and Midlands that of Felbrigg, average tithe rent-charge £217, joint net
railways, 9 north-west from North Walsham and 9 west from yearly value £"274, with 76 acres of glebe and residence, in
Holt, in the Northern division of the county, North Erping- the gift of R. W. Kctton esq. and held since 1872 by the
ham hundred and petty sessional division, Erpingham Rev. Robert James Simpson M . .A. of Trinity College, Dublin.
union, Holt county court district, rural deanery of Repps, Frederick Howe Lindsay Eacon Windham esq. of Hanworth
archdeaconry of Norfolk and diocese of Norwich. The Hall and Robert William Ketton esq. J.P. of Felbrigg Hall,
church of St . .Andrew is a small building of stone, in the who is lord of the manor, are the chief landowners. The
Early English style, consisting of chancel, nave and an soil is a loam, with a subsoil of red sand. The chief crops
embattled western tower containing 2 bells : in the church are wheat, oats and hay. The area is 66o acres ; rateable
is a brass to Robert Doughty, .()b. 1493, and Matilda, his wife, value, £873 ; the population in x88r was 98.
and there is a memorial window, painted by the present Letters through Norwich, via Roughton, arrive at 8 a.m,;
rector, to Mr. G. Brown, who died in r886: the tower has a. WALL LETTER Box cleared at 3.20 p.m. The nearest
passage through it similar to 'that at Wrotham, in Kent: money order office is at Cromer & telegraph, ;affice at
tire piscina. remains and the headings of the sedilia, previously Aldborough
built into the masonry of the wall, have recently been This parish is included in· the .Aylmerton United School
opened: in 1890 the roof was-closed in with boarding: Board district, formed October 1 1 1874;. the children. of
there are 120 sittings. The register. dates from the year this place attend the Board School at Aylmerton-

Amis Edward, horse breaker .


I
Simpson Rev. Robert Ja.s. lll.A. Rectory Bird William, farmer ,.
Parsons Isaac, farmer •· 1
11
'
· I Wright John, farmer·
1 '
. ,
MIDDLET ON is a parish and village, with a station, .r± east from Lynn, in the North Western division of the county,
,miles north from the village, on the Lynn and Dereham hundred, petty sessional division and union of Freebridge
section of the Great Eastern railway, 4 miles south-south- Lynn, county court district <>f Lynn, rural deanery of Lynn
D%1\EO'rOB'\' .J NOnFOLK. l'diLEB!M. 491
Freebridge and arobdeaconry and diocese of Norwich. The 1were estimated at [42. Middleton Hall iB the residence of
church of St. Mary the Virgin is an ancient edifice of ca.rr the Hon. Misses Milles. Middleton Towers, restored and en•
stone and briek in the Early English style, consisting of larged in x86o, is now (1892) unoccupied. Algernon James
chancel, clerestoricd nave, aisles, south porch and an Cubitt esq. of Blakeney, Mrs. Chambers, of Ecclesall, Staf...
embattled western tower containing one bell : the chancel fords hire, the Dean and Chapter of Norwich and W. E.
was restored in I862, when a stained east window was pre- Wrigbt esq. are the principal landowners. The soil is light
sented by E. L. Wood esq. ; the west window was the gift sand and loam, with a little fen; subsoil, carr stone, clay
of the late Sir Lewis Whincop Jarvis kt. who also presented and sand. The chief crops are wheat, barley, oats and
a cedar wood pulpit, reading dosk and lectern; the corn- turnips. The parish contains 2,994 acres; rateable value,
m union table was given in x867 as a memorial to certain £4,0I r; the population in 1891 was 882.
members of the Blencowe family : the church was reseated BLACKBOROUGH, I mile south, TowER END, quarter of a
in I88o at a cost of £300; and in 1892 the organ was re- mile north, and l<'AIR UREEN 1 three-quarters of a mile north,
stored and placed in the chancel and choir stalls ereclcd at are hamlets.
a cost of £1o: there are piscinre in the chancel and south Parish Clerk, Levi E. Rummeny.
aisle: the church affords 200 sittings. The register dates PosT OFFICE. James Hall, receiver. Letters arrive from
from the year I56o, and there is also a list Q( vicars from Lynn at ·7 a..m. & 2 p.m. ; dispatched at 2 & 6 p.m.;
the year 1598. The living is a vicarage, average tithe rent· sundays, arrive at 8 a. m. ; dispatched at II.45 a. m. The
charge £249, net yearly value £-227, including 12 acres of nearest money order & telegraph office is at East Winch.
glebe, with residence, in the gift of Mrs .. H. G. Rosedale, Postal orders are issued here, but not paid
and held since I891 by the Rev. IIonyel Gough Rosedale M.A. WALL LETTER BoxEs at Blackborough cleared at 5.30 p.m.
of Christ Church, Oxford. Here is a small Wesleyan chapel, week days only & at Railway station, cleared at 2.35 &;.
built in I 86o. Curie's and Hope's charities, of£ I 7s. yearly, 3· IO p. m
are for poor widows. At Blackborough are almshouses for 10 National School (mixed), erected in I859 & since enlarged at
poor persons. In the vale of theNar, I mile south, are the a cost of [Ioo, for I5I children; average attendance, 140;
ruins of Blackborough Priory, founded by Roger Scales, in William John Thistle, master; James Cullen 1 assistant
the time of Henry I. for Benedictine nuns and was dedicated master ; Miss Harriet Ellen Whittle, assistant mistress
to SS. Mary and Cathorine; at its dissolution the revenues Railway Station, WiJliam DaviB, station master
Garnett Herbert, Valley field Downing John, blacksmith Juby Samuel & Son, grocers
Matthews Thomas- Downing Wm. blacksmith, Tower end Lawn George, beer retailer, Fair green
Mawby Misses, Tower end Drew Thomas, miller (wind & 'steam), Lawn Robert & Son, gravel merchants,
Milles Hon. Misses, Middleton haH ' farmer & baker, Blackborough mi.l.ls Blackborough
Rosedale Rev. Honyel Gough M. A. Ewen Levi,chimney sweeper,Blackboro' Marshall Robcrt Atkins, tailor
[vicar], Vicarage Flood William, blacksmith Palmer James, farmer & cattle dealer,
Rosedale Rev. Wm. Lewis LL.D. Vicarage Fox Step hen, coal dealer, Black borough Blackborough
Wright William Edward, West hall Gamble George, carpenter Pool James, shoe maker-
COMMERCIAL. Gamble W"illiam,saddler & boot mender, Read Geo.grocer&draper,Blackborough
Allfl.at William, bricklayer, Blackboro' Blackborough Roofe John Robt. farmer, Old Hall farm
Eardell John, brewer, Blackborough Goodwyn William, farmer, & agent to Rudd Henry J. Castle P.H. & coal
BardellWm.Cross,f;j,rrner,Blackborough Joseph Critchley Martin esq. of Nar~ dealer, Blackborough
Boam Joscph Limited, sand merchants borough ball, Tower farm Rye James, boot maker
Brasnett John, farmer Griggs Jonathan, grocer & draper Shaull Matthew, hawker, Blackborough
Chilvers Edward, estate carpenter & Hall Frank, farmer, Tower end Shaw John, farmer, Manor farm
assistant overseer, Tower end HanslipMaria(Miss),shopkpr. Tower end Shaw Susan (Mrs.), farmer, Blackboro'
Chilvers Edward Hall, butcher Hearu William, Royal Oak P.H Sutterby William, farmer, Mill farm
ChilversFrcderick,farmer,Blackborough Howes Waiter John & George, millers Tuckfield Edwin Jamcs, Crown inn
Chilvers William, farmer & carpenter, (steam), bakers & butchrs.Blackboro' Wicks Jn. wheelwright & general smith
Blackborongh Howes Waiter John, farmer, Priory Wright William Edward, farmer &
CurlJn.head gardenr.Middleton towers farm, Blackborough landowner, West hall
Davis William, station master
MILEHAM is a parish on the road from Lynn to Ayls- Stoke Poges, Rucks, 3 Sept. 1634, in the 83rd year of his
ham, 4~ mile~ north-east from Fransham station on the age, and is buried at Tittleshall in this county, in the church
Lynn and Dereham section of the Great Eastern railway and of which there is a monument to his memory. Mileham
7 north-west from Dereham, in the Mid 'division of the Hall is the residence of Albert Collison esq. J.P. J. J.
county, Launditch hundred, Mitford and Launditch petty Winter esq. of Norwich is lord of the manor of Mileham
sessional division and union, Dereham county court district, and Beeston, ~tnd the Earl of Leicestm:- K.G. is lord of t]J.e
rural deanery of South Brisley and archdeaconry and dioces~ manor of Burghwood. The Earl of Leicester, John Wiliiam
of Norwich. The church of St. John the Baptist is an Davy esq. of Kilverstone Hall, and J. J. Winter esq. are the
ancient building of flint with stone dressings, in the DeeD· principal landowners. The soil is light loam and clay; sub•
rated style, consisting of chancel, nave and an embattled soil, clay and gravel. The chief crops are wheat, barley,
western tower with pinnacles containing a clock, presented turnips and hay. The area is 2,85r acres; rateable value,
by the late Rev. Augustus Sutton M. A. of West Tofts, and 5 £3,244; the population in 189r was 462.
bells, hung in 1878: in the church are several monuments Parish Clerk, John Reeder.
to the families of Strange, Barnwell and Davy, dated 1720, PosT OFFICE.-Philip Beeston, sub-postmaster. Letters
1787 and 18o2, and a brass, dated 1526, to Christopher Crow through Swaffham, via Litcham, arrive at 7 .I5 a.m. &
and his wife: the west window is stained: an organ was in- _'). 40 p. m. ; dispatched at 5 _45 p.m. ; sundays, arrive at
traduced in 1883: there are 350 sittings, :300 being free. _ a. m. ; dispatched at u. 20 p.m. The nearest money
7 15
The register dates from the year I538. The living is order & telegraph office is at Litcham
a rectory, average tithe rent-charge £495, net yearly
value £ 4 88, including 19 acres of glebe, with residence, A School Board of 5 members was formed compulsorily
built in x88 3 , in the gift of and held since 1gg 2 by the Jan. IB, I875, Stanfield being contributory with 2 mem-
Rev. Charles William Cartwright. The fuel allotment bers ; Samuel Moore, Mile ham, clerk to the board; J ames
of 2 6 acres produces £ 13 yearly, and there are chari- Fitt, Litcham, attendance officer
ties of about £7 yearly value. Here are some remains Board (formerly National) School (mixed), rebuilt, with
of an ancient castle, supposed to have been built by master's house, in I879 & endowed with 3 acres of land,
Alau, son of Flaad, to whom William I. gave the manor. which let for £7 ss. yearly; it will hold 125 children; aver-
Mileham was the birthplace in 1549 of Sir Edward age attendance, 87; Britiff Tidd, master; Mrs. Agnes
Coke, Lord Chief Justice of the King's Bench,· who died at Emma Tidd, assistant mistress
Cartwright Rev. Charles William Cason James, Castle P.H Mnndy Benjamin, shoe maker
[rector], Rectory Clamp Robert, blacksmith Parker Robel;'t, farmer
Gant Mrs Claxton Waiter, bootmakeT" Parker Walter, shoe maker
Collison Albert J.P. The Hall Daws H. & Son, carpenters &c. & Regester Samuel, grocer & draper
thrashing machine proprietors Reynolds Richard; farmer 6 r
COMMERCIAL. Daws Henry.. Unicorn P.H 1 Riches Horace Edward, farme:r
Beck Frcdericll. Wil!iam, auctioneer, Dunger Henry~ wheelwright , , Riches Jesse, farmer 1
valuer, estate agent, & farmer,t see Gant James, .sho&make.ll · Rivett H. M.(Mrs.. ),farmr."Burgwood fm
Vincent&. Beck, East Dereham Jaggs Goorge, Royal Oak P.H Roberson Alfred., farmer
Beeston Philip 1 grocer & draper & sub-- Johnson Samuel, saddler Rush Jane (Miss), farmer
postmaster Leeds Harriett(Mrs. ),frmr.OldHall frm Sillitoe John, shopkeeper
Bell John, bricklayer Leeds Samuel, farmer StegglesHenry, miller (wind) & thrash..
Breeze George Bird Cooper, wheel· Moore Samuel, baker, & clerk to the ing machine proprietor
wright~builder&poultry appliance ma school board
492 MINTLYN. NORFOLK. [KELLY's

MINTL YN is a decayed parish 2~


miles east-by-south The soil is gravel and sandy. The chief crops are wheat and
from Lynn, in the North Western division of the county, barley, with a portion of meadow. The area is 1,045 acres;
Freebridge Lynn hundred, petty sessional division and union rateable value, £964; the population in x89r was 33·
and Lynn county court district. The ancient church of St.
Michael is now in ruins, and the inhabitants attend Gay- Letters through Lynn, the nearest money order & telegraph
wood church. Thomas Edward Bagge esq. M.A., D.L., J.P. oflice, arrive at7.30 a.m. & 2.30 p.m
of Gaywood Hall, is lord of the manor and sole landowner. The children of this place attend the school at Gaywood

Warnes William, farmer


I
Benson William (the exors. of), farmers Webster - , head gamekeeper to
Thomas Edward Bagge esq
MORLEY ST. BOTOLPH is a village and parish, 3! producing at present £24 yearly, which is given to the poor
miles north from Attleborough station on the 'Thetford and in coals. The .Manor House, an ancient building pleasantly
Norwich section of the Great Eastern railway and 3 west- situated, is occupied byWalterJohnBaileyesq. Thetrustees
south-west from vVymondham, in the Mid division of the of ''Villiam M. Sutton esq. who are lords of the manor and
oounty, Forehoe hundred, petty sessional division and union, Thomas Chaplin esq. are the principal landowners. The
Wymondham county court district, rural deanery of Hing- soil is of a mixed nature ; subsoil, clay. The chief crops
ham, Forehoe division, archdeaconry of Norfolk and diocese I are wheat, barley, hay and turnips. The area is 85r acres;
of Norwich. The church of St. Botolph is a building of I rateable value, £ r ,308 ; the population in I 8gr was 229. By
stone in the Perpendicular style, consisting of chancel, nave, an order which came into operation March 25th, x885, cer-
south porch and an embatted western tower, containing a tain detached parts of this parish were amalgamated with
elock and 3 bells: the nave was restored in r867 by the He\', Morley St. Peter.
l''. B. De Chair, then curate of the parish, in memory of his Parish Clerk, .Mrs. Mary Hewett.
mother and s1ster: the chancel was rebmlt in r88o, and in PosT 0FF10E.-Mrs. John Buck, receiver. Letters through
:.:884 a memorial window was erected to the Rev. Charles Wymondham arrive at 8 a.m. ; dispatched at 6.30 p.m.
Beauchamp Cooper M.A. rector from r832: there are 200 week days only. Hingham is the nearest money order &
sittings. The register dates from the year 1539. The liv- t~legraph office
ing is a rectory, with the chapelry of Morley St. Peter an- National School (mixed), erected in 1847, for So children:
nexed, average tithe rent-charge £450, joint gross yearly average attendance, 63 ; the school has an endowment left
v.alue £50J, including 43 acres of glebe, with residence, in by the will of Elizabeth Browne, late of Colton, amounting
the gift of Mrs. De Chair, and held since 1878 by the Rev. to £8 yearly, for the education & clothing of ten poor
Frederick Blackett De Chair M. A. of Jesus. College, Cam- children of the two parishes of Morley St. Botolph & St.
bridge, who is also evening lecturer at Wymondham church Peter; Miss Georgiana Grimes, mistress
and rural dean of Hingham, Forehoe division, hon. canon of CARRIERs.-John Raynor, from Rockland & - Knott from
Norwich and J.P. There is a. fuel allotment of r6 acres,· Rockland, pass through to Norwich on wed. & sat
Bailey Waiter John, Manor house Cable George, laundry Potter Allan (Mrs.), farmer
De Chair Rev. Canon Frederick Blackctt Cunning ham John, farmer Pyman Ellis Rix, farmer
M.A.,J.P.[rector&ruraldean],Rectory Flint Robert, thrashing machine owner Ringer George, farmer
Haughton Mrs. Fir grove & farmer Smith Obadiah, beer retailer
COMMERCIAL. Flint William, farmer Smith William, boot & shoe maker
Bailey Waiter John, farmer, Manor ho Lake William, woodman Smith William, jun. grocer, draper,
Buck John (Mrs.), beer ret. Post office Lake William, jun. farmer wheelwright & blacksmith
Clarke Charles, farmer Lovett William & James, bricklayers Wigby .Mary Ann (Mrs.), farmer
Clarke Edward, farmer Patrick Robert, farmer
MORLEY ST. PETER is a small parish, with a scat- • and surrounded by extensive grounds, is now in the occupa-
tered population, 2 miles north-west from Spooner Row i tion of Captain F. R. Thackeray. Morlcy Old Hall, an
station on the Thetford and Norwich section of the Great ancient structure in the Elizabethan style, surrounded by a
Eastern railway, 3~ south-west from Wymondham and 3 moat, and formerly the residence of the Sedley family, is
north from Attleborough, in the .Mid division of the county, now occupied as a farmhouse. The trustees of the late J. ll.
Forehoe hundred, petty sessional division and union, "\\'y- Graver-Browne esq. who are lords of the manor, and Mrs.
mondharn county court district, rural deanery of Hingham, Graver-Browne are the principal landowners. The soil is
Forehoe division, archdeaconry of Norfolk and diocese of various; subsoil, clay and brick earth. The chief crops are
Norwich. The church of !"St. Peter is a small building of wheat, barley, turnips and hay. The area is x,o25 acres;
rubble, in the Early English style, consisting of chancel, rateable value, £r,66o; the population in 1891 was 174. By
nave, south porch and a low western tower containing one an order which came into operation March 25th, r885, car-
bell : against the north wall of the nave is a monument to tain detached parts of Mm·ley St. Botolph were amalgamated
Martin Sedley esq. who resided at the Old Hall; there are with this parish.
1:20 sittings. The register dates from the year 1562. The Parish Clerk, Mrs. Mary Hewett.
1iving since 1878 is a chapelry, annexed to the rectory of Letters through Wymondham, arrive at 8 a. m. Attle-
Morley St. Botolph, average t1the rent-charge £450, joint borough & Wymondham are the nearest money order &
gross yearly value £5o7, including 43 acres of glebe, in the telegraph offices
gift of Mrs. De Chair, and held since IB78 by the Rev. 'The children of this place attend the school at Morley St.
Frederick Blackett De Chair M.A. of Jesus College, Cam- Botolph
bridge, and J.P. who resides at Morley St. Botolph. Morley CARRIERS.-Robert Want, from Attleborough & -Capes,
Hall, a modern mansion of white brick, pleasantly situated from Attleborough pass through to Norwich, wed. & sat
Thackeray Capt. F. R. Morley hall Barnard Isaac (Mrs.), laundress Hardiman Elisha, farmer
COMMERCIAL. Canham John, farmer Hewett George, farmer
Barker David, farmer Clarke William, farmer Pilgrim William & Morris, farmers
Barker Philip, farmer Greenwood Matthew Bennett, farmer "\\'arren W. Charles, farmer, Old hall
Barnard John, farmer Hardiman David, farmer
MORNINGTHORPE is a parish and village 3! miles memorials to the Howes family: the chancel retains a pis-
east from Forncett Junction station on the Ipswich and cina and in front of the western gallery is a fine carving of
Norwich section of the Great Eastern railway and I I south the royal arms in oak: the church was restored in x88g at a
from Norwich, in the Southern division of the county, Dep- total cost of £r,rso, when a stained cast window was erected
wade hundred and union, petty sessional division of Long by Mrs. Green in memory of her family: the church affords
Stratton, Harleston county court district, rural deanery of 100 sittings. The register dates from the year 1558. The
Depwade, archdeaconry of Norfolk and diocese of Norwich. living is a rectory, average tithe rent-charge £228, gross
The church of St. John the Baptist is a small building of yearly value £272, including 7 acres of glebe and residence,
flint, with stone dressings, in the Perpendicular and Early in the gift of the Lord Chancellor, and held since r884 by
English styles, cons1sting of chancel, nave, south porch and the Rev. Edrnund Deace Ford M. A. of Corpus Christi college,
a round embattled western tower containing 3 bells: on the Cambridge. Warde's char1ty of £2 yearly is for fuel. The
north side of the chancel is a memorial window to .Rear- town land of 14 acres is let for £ r2 ros. yearly and devoted
Admiral the Hon. Frederick Paul lrby c.B. d. 24 April, 1844; to church expenses. Mrs. Irby is lady of Boyland manor,
, and to Emily Ives (Drake), his first wife, d. 7 Aug. r8o6; and resides at Boyland Hall, a mansion in the Elizabethan
:and on the south side is another memorial window to style, built in I55I, and situated in a valley about r mile
Frances (Wrigbt), his second wife, who died x6th Jan. r852: north-east from tbe village; it has a large lawn and exten-
in the chancel is a fine altar tomb with arms to the Garney sive pleasure grounds and shrubberies, and above one of the
family, who formerly resided at Boyland Hall; and monu- entrances is a bust of Queen Elizabeth, removed from Til-
-ments to Sir "\\'illiam Gostlin kt. alderman and sheriff of bury House: the park, which extends over ISO acres, is
the city of London, and Margaret, his wife, d. 23 Jan. 1723; 1 planted with thriving oak, fir and other trees, and is watered
and to Caroline Gostlin, d. I767 ; there are also several by the river Taas. Morningthorpe Manor is the property
DIRECTORY.] NORFOLK. MOULTON ST. MICBAEL. 493
and residence of Captain Thomas Holmes R.N., J.P. lord of Parish Clerk, Charles Tibbenham.
the manor of Morningthorpe ; the mansion is of red brick
with stepped .gables, in the Elizabethan style, and is plea- Letters through Long Stratum arrive at 6.50 a.m. WALL
santly situated near the church. Mrs. lrby, Captain Box at Mr. Hylton's gate, cleared at 6.15 p.m. ; &
Holmes R.N., J.P. and Miss Fryer are the chief landowners. one near Boyland Hall, cleared at 7-5 a.m. & 5.30 p.m.
The soil is mixed and the land very rich ; subsoil, clay. The week days; sundays, 7·5 a. m. Long Stratton is the nearest
chief crops are wheat, barley and beans ; the area is 986 money order & telegraph office
acres; rateable value, £I.JOS; the population in 1891 was
136. The children of this place attend the school at Fritton
Curteis Miss, Shelton lodge Alexander EdwinJohn,farmr.Alston'sla HyltonHy.Hayward,farmr.Church fnn
Ford Rev. Edmund Deace M. A. Rectory Barnes John Matthew, farmer Mickleburgh Frederick, farmer & land
Holmes Commander Thomas B. N., J.P. 1 Clarke Robert, blacksmith steward to Mrs. lrby
Morningthorpe manor Formby William, farmer, Moor farm Tibbenham Charles, parish clerk
Irby Mrs. Boy land hall; & 18 Chester Hylton Fredk.asst.overseer,Church frm Westgate Samuel, brick maker & farmer
, square, London s w
MORSTON is a parish about I mile from the sea-beach resides at Stiffkey. The parochial charities amount to £2o
and 6 east from Wells station on the Great Eastern railway, yearly. Here is a coastguard station. The Marquess
in the Northern division of the county, Holt hundred, petty Townshend is lord of the manor and principal landowner.
sessional division and county court district, Walsingham The soil is most part light; subsoil, gravel. The crops are
union, rural deanery of Holt and archdeaconry and diocese on the four-course system. The parish contains about
of Norwich. The church of All Saints is a building of rubble x,695A. 2B. 4P. of land, exclusive of a tract of low marshes,
in the Early English style, con!'isting of chancel, nave with whieh are overflowed at spring ticles, and is intersected by
clerestory, aisles, north and south porches and embattled Blakeney harbour, and I,7r5 of water ; rateable value,
western tower containing one bell : in the chancel is a pis- £x,o46; the population in 1891 was 162.
cina and a brass dated 1596: an ancient screen divides the Parish Clerk, Richard Adcock.
chancel from the nave, and there is an ancient carved stone
font: the church affords 200 sittings. The register dates LETTER Box cleared at 4· IS p.m. Letters received through
from the year 154a. The living is a rectory, consolidated East Dereharn, via Blakeney, arrive at 8 a. m. The nearest
with that of Stifikey, average tithe rent-charge £s88, gross money order & telegraph office is at Blakeney
yearly value £521, with 56 acres of glebe and residence, in The children of this place attend the school at Langham
the gift of the Marquess Townshend, and held since 1883 by CARRIER TO NoRWICH.- Samuel Wordingham, from his
the Rev. Eugene Sweny M. A. of Trinity College, Dublin, who residence every thurs. returning fri
Coomber William, chief boatman in Piercey Jeremiah, Anchor P.H Wood Brereton Page, farmer
charge, Coastguard station Temple Sarah (Mrs.), Townshend Arms Wood William, farmer
My hill James, farmer P.H Wordingham Samuel, shopkpr.& carrier
MORTON -ON -THE-HILL is a village and parish on trustees of the late George Duckett Berney esq. and held
the river Wensum, I mile south from Attlebridge station on since x882 by the Rev. Thomas Draper Roberts of St. Aidans.
the Eastern and Midlands railway, about 4~ south from The trustees of the late George Duckett Berney esq. are
Reepham station on the East Norfolk section of the Great lords of the manor and chief landowners. Morton Hall, a
.Eastern railway, and 8 north-west from Norwich, in the fine mansion, standing on a rising ground, commanding a
Northern division of the county, Eynsford hundred and beautiful prospect, is occupied by Mrs. Berney. The soil is
petty sessional division, St. Faith's union, Norwich county sand and loam; subsoil, clay and gravel. The chief crops
court district, rural deanery of Sparham and archdcaconry are wheat, roots, barley and bay. The area. is 977 acres ;
and diocese of Norwich. The church of St. Margaret, re- rateable value, £I,OI7; the population in 1891 was 117.
paired in x865, is a small but ancient building of flint in the Parish Clerk, William Gregory.
Gothic style, consisting of chancel, nave, south porch and a PosT OFFICE.-James Hall, receiver. Letters arrive from
round western tower, with octagonal belfry stage and con- Norwich by the Reepham mail cart at s.so a.m.; delivery
taining 3 bells : there are 8o sittings. The register daws commences at 7 a.m.; box closes for dispatch at S· 10 p.m.
from the year 1559. The living is a discharged rectory, The nearest money order & telegraph office is at Lenwade.
average tithe rent-charge £136, net yearly value £,112, in- Letters can be registered from 7 a.m. to 4·45 p.m
eluding 6 acres of glebe and residence, in the gift of the The children of this place attend the school at Attlebridge
Berney Mrs. Morton hall BuntingAnthony,shopkeeper & machine ' Sharpin Samuel, farmer, Street farm
Roberts Rev. Thomas Draper, Rectory proprietor l:;timpsonRobert,butcher& cattle dealer
ArthurtonRobt. WhiteHorseP.H.&farmr Hall James, post office
MOULTON is a scattered parish 2 miles north from benefit of £16 annually arising from the rent of an allot
Cantley station on the Norwich and Yarmouth section of the ment of 9 acres, awarded them in 1803. Viscount Massereene
Great Eastern railway, 12 east from Norwich and 9 west and Ferrard, who is lord of the manor, Magdalene College,
from Yarmouth, in the Eastern division of the county, Blo- Oxford, and the Rev. W. R. Eaton B.A. rector of East Bra-
field and Walsham petty sessional division, Walsham bun- denham, and G. S. Eaton esq. of Norwich, are the chief
dred, Blofield union, Norwich county court district, rural landowners. The soil is light mixed; subsoil, principally
deanery of Blofield and archdeaconry and diocese of Nor- clay. The chief crops are wheat, barley, oats &c. The
wich. The church of St. Mary is an ancient building of number of acres is 1,or8; rateable value, £1,624; the-
stone in the Early Norman style, consisting of chancel, nave, population in 1891 was 208.
south porch and a. round western tower containing one bell: Parish Clerk, Robert Cbapman.
there are 150 sittings. The register dates from the year PosT 0FFICE.-Adam W. Collins, receiver. Letters from
1539. The li\"ing is a. vicarage, average tithe rent-charge Norwicharriveat7.3oa.m.; dispatched at4.op.m.; there
£II6, net yearly value £I4I, including 33 acres of glebe, is no sunday post. Acle, about 2! miles distant, is the.
with residence, in the gift of Lord Massereene and Ferrard, nearest money order & telegraph office
and held since 1853 by the Rev. Augustus J<'rederic Bellman School (mixed), built in 187I for 43 children; average at-
B.A. of St. Peter's College, Cambridge. 'fhe poor have the tendance, 32; Mrs. Ann Disney, mistress
Bellman Rev. Augustus Frederic B.A. Disney George, miller (wind) I Loads Charles, boot maker
Vicarage Gilbert Robert, blacksmith Thirkettle Robert, cowkeeper
Frederick Henry Penrice Hindes John, market gardener Wright Samuel, farmer & landowner
CollinsAdamW.boot&shoema.Postoffice Lake Benjamin, market gardener Wright Samuel, jun. farmer
· Chapman Robert, carpenter Lincoln William, Golden Anchor P.H
MOULTON ST. MICHAEL (or GREAT MouLTON) Sanctuary." The church of St. Michaelis a small building
is a village and parish 2 miles north from 'l'ivetshall station of flint with stone dressings in the Perpendicular style,
and q south from the l<'orncett station, both on the Ipswich consisting of chancel, nave, north aisle, south porch and low
and Norwich section of the Great Eastern railway, and 9 embattled western tower, containing one bell: in 1887 the
south-by-east from Wymondham, in the Southern division church was completely restored; a new roof and several new
of the county, Depwade hundred, petty sessional division windows were erected and the interior refloored and re-
and union, Wymondham county court district, rural deanery seated throughout, under the supervision of Mr. H. Green,
of Depwade, archdeaconry of Norfolk and diocese of Norwich. architect, of Norwich, and now affords 266 sittings : in
There were formerly two parishes, called respectively Great the churchyard is a fine tomb of the 14th century, the in-
and Little Moulton, but the church of the latter, dedicated scription on which is now illegible; there is also a stone to a
to All Saints, was demolished in 1570; its site, which is member of the Wykeham family. The register dates from
about a mile from the present church, is still called "The the year 156o: The living is a rectory, average tithe rent-
- C. N. & S. 32
'l94 MOULTON f;ll'o MIQl;I.AEL... ;NORFOLK. [KELLY's
oharge £350, net yearly value £300, with 2oacres of glebe and pal landowners. The soil is clay; sub!)oil, clay. The chie(
residence, in the gilt of C. W. Chute esq. and held since 1889 crops are wheat, barley and beans. The area is 1,347 acres;
by the Rev. Theophilus Dacre Chute !.LA. of Keble College, rateable value, £2,o63; the population in 1891; was 373·
Oxford. The town land of IOA. oR. 14P. produces about l'arish Clerk, George Aldis.
£4o yearly, which is divided between the schools, the church PosT 01"1-'ICE.-Mrs. Alice N. Hearne, sub-postmistress.
and the poor. Samuel Hammond in 1744 left £2o, which Letters through Long Stratton, arrive at 7· 30 a. m.: dis.
was lent towards building a cottage ; the interest, amount- pat<;hed at 6 p. m. The nearest money order & telegraph
ing to 2os. yearly, is given to the poor in bread at Christmas. office is at Long Stratton
Edward Betts esq. who is lord of the manor, ~rs. Copeman National School (mixed), erected in 1874, for 70 childrea i
and the trustees of the late Charles Walford esq. are princi- averdge attendance, 61; Miss Amelia LuC"as, mistress
Betts Edward Gallant James, farmer Neave Riches, farmer & landowner
Betts Mrs. John, The Cottage Gostling Mary Ann (Mrs.), dress maker Potter Robert, bricklayer & shopkeeper
ChuteRev.TheophilusDacreM.A.Rectory Guyton Samuel, hawker Potter Thomas, carpenter
Stimpson Samuel, Bridge farm Guyton William, shoe maker Potter Thomas John, carpenter
COMMERCIAL. Herr1e J ames, farmer & bricklayer Self Thomas, farmer
Aldis George,parish clerk&asst.overseer Herne James, jun. farmer, Bridge farm Smith Isaac, farmer
Arterton GBorge, farmer & fishmonger Herne Waiter James, shopkeeper Smith Robert, New inn
Bales James, farmer · Howell Frederick, farmer Smith William George, farmer
Betts Edward, farmer & landowner Howlett William, farmer Hpicer Robert, farmer
Cadman Samuel, miller (wind) Kett Alfred John Brown, farmer Stimpson Edmund, tailor
Cole Alfred; farmer Leighton Ellis, Fox & Hound" P.H. & Stimpson John, farmer
Drane William, farmer shupkeeper Thompson John, farmer
Feavearyear Robert, farmer Martin George, farmer Tunmore "''illiam, farmer
P'ish John, farmer 1
MULBARTON-with-KENINGHAM is a pleasant! and held since r8gr by the Rev. Herbert Wilson M.A. of
village and parish, scattered round a. green of 47 acres, 2 'Exeter College, Oxford. KENI:VGHAM has been annexed to
miles west from Swainsthorpe station on the Ipswich and Mulbarton since 1452 : the church has long since gone to
Norwich section of the Great Eastern railway and 5 miles decay. Dr. \'Villiam Richardson, a clergyman of this place,
south-west from Norwich, in the Southern division of the and Agnes his wife, were the parents of Sir Thomas Richard-
·County, Swainsthorpe petty sessional division, Humbleyard son kt. Lord Chief Justice of the King's Bench in the reign
.hundred, Ilenstead union, Norwich county court district, of Charles I. and some time Speaker of the House of Com-
·rural deanery of Humbleyard, archdeaconry of Norfolk and mons, who was baptised at Hardwick, 3 July, I.S6g. Rich's
~iocese of Norwich. The church of St. Mary Magdalen is charity of Io acres produces £20, which is distributed yearly.
an ancient structure of flint in the Early English style, con- Benjamin Bennett left in 1879 i,"Ioo, the interest to be dis-
.sisting of chancel, nave, south porch and an embattled tributed in bread during the winter months. John Steward
-western tower containing 5 bells : the chancel and south esq. of East Carlton, and William Henry Hackblock esq. of
windows have some stained glass, and the chancel retains a Mousehold House, Norwich, are chief landownerS", the former
piscina: there are several marble tablets to the Rich family, being lord of the manor. The soil is clay: subsoil, various.
I651 ; the family of Turner, 1875; Mrs. Sarah Seargill, ob. The chief crops are of the usual kind. The area is 1,348
· 168o; and the Rev. Benjamin Lany, ob. 1766; Agnes, wife of acres~ rateable value, £2,762; the population in 1881 was
Dr. Wm. Richardson, and mother of the Lord Chief Justice, sr8, and in 1891 was 536. ·
was buried here 6 April, 1582: since 1875 the porch has been Parish Clerk, Samuel Gowing. _
Testored and a north aisle and vestry added, and the in- PosT, M. 0. 0. & S. B.-Samuel Gowing, receiver. Letters
terior thoroughly restored and reseated: in 1887 a new received from Norwich at 7·45 a. m. ; dispatched at 5.10
. org-an was built at a cost of £125 : there are I8o sittings. p. m. ; sun day, dispatched at 10.20 p.m. Ea ton is the
·The register dates from the year 1547. The living is a rec- nearest telegraph office .
tory, with that of Keningham annexed, average tithe rent- National School (mixed), erected in 1865 & enlarged in 1887,
charge £404, joint gross yearly value £5oi, including 73 for t5o children; average attendance, 98 ; Arthur George
. acres of glebe and residence, in the gift of John Steward esq. Hub bard, master
.
Clay Arthur Lloyd, Mulbarton lodge 1 Draper John Riches, farmer, Hall farm Mulbarton Cricket Club (Arthur George
White Mrs 1 Fairman James, farmer Hubbard, sec) ·
Wilson Rev. Herbert M. A:. Rectory GowingGeorgeHy.farmer & shopkeeper Perfitt Samuel, shopkeeper .,
UWingfield Mrs. Mulbarton hall GowingSamuel,shoe maker,& post office Peake William, rate collector
COMMERCIAL. Harvey John Henry, farm bailiff to W. Rice Robert, blacksmith
· Banham Alfred, builder & plumber H. Hack block esq . Rix John, market gardener & well sinker
_BarrettA braham,pork butcher & farmer Howlins Robert, World's End inn Sayers Benjamin, vermirf destroyer
Barrett James, market gardener Huggins & Hart, millers (wind) Sooby Richard, farmer'
Blake Samuel, butcher Lincoln Ellis, farm bailiff to Samuel Thompson Alfred, miller & farmer,
·Church William, nurseryman & florist Westgate esq. Keningham Mulbarton steam & wind mills
Dye Charlotte Sarah West (Mrs.), beer Mitchell Isaac, tailor Whittaker John, coal dealer
retailer & wheelwright

"MUNDESLEY (o-r MuNDSLEY) is a parish, bathing· persons. 'Lord Suffield K.c.:a., P.C. is lord of the manor
place and pleasant little village on the coast, commanding a William 'Thomas Mullen esq. John Mack esq. of Paston Hall,
fine view of the North Sea, 3i miles east from Gun ton and George Gordon esq. are the prindpallandowners. The
,station on the Norwich and Cromer branch of the Great soil is mixed; subsoil, clay and gravel. The chief crops are
Eastern railway, 8 miles south-east from Cromer and 5 wheat, oats and barley. The area is 574 acres of land and
'north from North Walsham, in the Northern division of the ro of water, but the measurement cannot be stated with
-county, North Erpingham hundred and petty sessional certainty on account of the continual encroachments of the
division, Erpingham union, North Walsham county court se'l; rateable value, £2,II_:j; the population in 1891 was
'<listrict, rural deanery t>f Repps, archdeaconry of Norfolk 4II.
and diocese of Norwich. It ·is much frequented by visitors Parish Sexton, George Gotts. ,
during the summer, having a very fine beach for bathing. PosT, M. 0. & T. 0., S. B. & Annuity & Insurance Office.-
Although not a port, vessels load and unload cargoes of coal, Arthur Jabez Haggith, receiver.· Letters arrive from
corn and timber on the beach, and some fishing is also North Walsham at 8.45 a. m & 5 p.m.; dispatched at 9.30
carried on. The church of All Saints, seated on a lofty part a. m. & 4 p.m • '
of the cliff, was originally a fine building, but the tower and A School Board of 5 members was formed here November
chancel are now in ruins, and only a very small portion of 21, 1874; Alfred Larter, Mundesley, clerk to the board &
the nave is in sufficient repair to permit of divine service attendance officer
being performed in it : there are 200 sittings. The register Board School (mixed), for 70 children : average attendance,
dates from about the year 1;725. The living is a rectory, 57; Miss Warren, mistress
average tithe rent-charge £137, net yearly value £u8, in- Coastguard Station, Fred.erick Hext, chief officer, & 4 men
ciuding 5 acres of glebe, in the gift of the Duchy of Lancas- CoAcrr.-During the summer months leaves the "Royal
te~, and held since 188S by the Rev. Henry Crozier Casson Hotel" daily for North Walsbam, returning same day
:B. A. of Christ's College, Cambridge. A new rectory house CARRIERS TO:- .
was built in 1891 at a cost of £x,5oo, raised by subscription NoRWICH-Charles Bensley, to the 'White Horse,' St.
and aided by a grant of £6oo from Queen Arme's bounty. Peter's, wed. & sat. r p.m
The Baptist chapel, erected in x843, has sittings for 200 NORTH WALSHAM-George Puncher, daily, I1 a.m
PRIVATE RESIDENTS.
Butcher 1\'Irs. Cliff.holl.'3e
l
Burton Geoffrey I Clabburn Mrs. The Grange
Casson Rev. Henry Croziern.A. [rector] I Cooper Augustus Henry, Rosaville
DIRECTORY.] NP;RFOLK. NARBOROUGH.

Cormick Mrs. Kinclaren Bensley Charles, carrier Hext .Frederick, coastguard officer
Davies Fairfax Biterlich Edwd. Nicholas R. boarding ho Juniper Robert, farmer
E b bet ts J ames Elm er Clark~ Joseph, jobbing gardener Juniper William S. Ship hotel, caterer
Empson Josiah Sadler Clarke William, farmer & pleasure boat proprietor & farmer
Gordon George Cole Charles, grocer & draper Larter Alfred, clerk to school boa,rd &
Gordon Mrs. Beu1ah Cook Sarah Ann (Miss); East Hill House attendance officer
Green Mrs boarding establishment Larter William, miller (water & steam)
.Johnson Henry Fielder,Mundesley house Dix Robert (Mrs.), lodging house Leverage Thomas Vincent, coffee tavern
Lincoln Nathaniel Drury James, grocer Mullen Wm. Thos. farmer & landowner,
Loraine Rev. Nevison Elden & Spencer (Misses), Royal hotel Pull Daniel, lodging house
M a tthews Rev. Thomas Robert [Baptist J Fox Emma (Miss), Life Boat inn Puncher George, carrier
Morris Captain Charles, Rill house Gaze Charles, blacksmith Rayner Robert,plumber, glazier, painter
Powles Miss Gaze George Thomas, baker & paperhanger
Robinson Haynes Spurrell Gaze Harriet (Mrs.), builder Spurgeon Thomas, butcher
Simmonds Alexander H Gaze Eleanor (Mrs.), fariQer, Hill farm Wegg John, shoe maker
Wigston- Gotts George, builder , Wilson William, brick & tile manufac•
COl\iMERCIAL. Haggith Adonijah, tailor turer; & at North Walsham
Eensley Alfred, ponies for hire HaggithArthr. Jabez,grocer, Post office Youngman Christopher, farmer
.
MUNDFORD is a parish, pleasantly situated on the at 6 a.m. & 3 p.m. ; delivered 7 a.m. only; dispatched
London road and southern bank of the river Wissey, 4~ at 8.45 a.m. & 10 p.m
nliles north-east from Hrandon station on the Ely and Thet-
ford section of the Great Eastern railway and 8 north-west COUNTY MAGISTRATES FOR THE PETTY SESSIONAL DIVISION
from Thetford, in the South Western division of the county, OF GRtMsHOE.
Grimshoe hundred and petty sessional division, Thetford r]pchcr Henry Morris esq. Feltwell, Brandon, chairman
union and county court district, rural deanery of Cranwich, Amherst William Amhurst Tyssen esq. D.L. Didlington hall,
south division, archdeaconry of Norfolk and diocese of Brandon
Norwich. ThR church of St. Lawrence is a small and plain Angerstein William esq. H. A., D. I~. Weeting ball, Brandon
building of flint in the Early English style, consisting of Angerstein John Richard J. esq. Weeting hall, Brandon
chancel, nave, north porch and a tower at the south-west Fison Cornell Henry esq. Ford Place, Thetford
angle, surmounted by a small spire and containing 5 bells, IIutt. Rcy. William Waymari M". A. Rectory, Hockwold-curr1 ...
Qne of which is cracked : in the chancel is a stained window Wilton, Bmndon ·
erected by Mrs. Lyne-StephenS in 1862, in memory of her Mack Hugh Paston esq. Northwold lodge, Brandon
husband: there are 270 sittings, r2o being free. The regis- Mackenzie Col. Edward Phillippe, Downham hall, Brandon
ter dates from the year 1699. The living is a rectory, aver- ~ewcome Francis d' Arcy William Clough esq. B. A. Feltwell
age tithe rent-charge £"Io4, net yearly value £97, including hall ·
18 acres uf glebe and residence, in the gift of and held sim:e Clerk tb the Magistrates, Robert Sewell, Swaffham
I892 by the Rev. Arthur Frcderick Rivers, of Queen's Col· Petty Sessions are held at the Crown irtn the first tuesday
1ege, Birmingham. Here is a small Wesleyart chapel, erected in every mu nth at I I a. m. The following- places are in-
in r873. Mrs. Lyne-Stephens, of Lynford Hall, is lady of eluded in the petty sessional division :'--Buckenham
the manor and chief landowner. The soil is light a.nd Tofts, Colveston, Cranwich, Croxton, Feltwell, Hockwold·
sandy; subsoil, chalky. The chief crops are wheat arid cum-W1lton, Ickborough, Lynford, Methwold, Mundford,
barley. The area is 2,050 acres; rateable value, £r,o2g ;· Northwold, Santon, Stamford, Sturston, Weeting& West
the population in r8gi was 298. 'fofts
Parish Clerk, Edward Oakley. Free School (mixed), erected in r864 & opened in :r866, for
PosT, M. 0. & T. 0., S. B. & Annuity & Insurance Office 120 children; average attendance, 68; the school is
(Rail way Sub-Office-Letters should have R. S.O. Norfolk supported by Mrs. Lyne-Stephens; Mrs. Emily Corn ell,
added).-Frederick Parrement, receiver. Letters arrive mistress
Baker Mrs Coates Thomas, grocer & draper, & Lingley Henry, miller (wind) & farmer
Chapman Miss agent for W. & A. Gilbey, winfl & Parrement I<'k. general stores, Post office
Powell A. Ernest spirit merchants Poll Charles, baker
Rivers Rev. Arthur Frederick [rector] Cocks Edward John, Crown inn Rae Matthew, tailor
TewartAugustusChas.Rt.TheBungalow Dixon George, butcher Reynolds Samuel, baiiiff to Mrs. Lyne-
Gaskeu John, King's Head P.ll Stephens, Hall farm '
cpMMERCIAL. Green George, blacksf!litl} Williams Ambrosc, tailor
Baker Thomas, farmer, Hall f~J.rm Johnson Charles, saddler Wrigh~ Edward, plumber
MUNDHAM is a village and parish 2~ miles west from . trustees of the Great Hospital, Norwich, and held since :r88r
Loddon, 6 north from Ditchingb.am station on the Waveney by the Rev. Charles Hocking Hicks, who resides at Seething.
Valley section of the Great Eastern railway and 9! south-east The poor's allotment of g.A. 2R. is let at £6; there is also a.
from Norwich, in the Southern division of the county, Loddon yearly rent-charge of 2gs. left by Thomas Spooner in r68o,
hundred, Loddon and Clavering pett;y sessional division and together with :ros. left by a. donor unknown. Visoonnt
union, county court district of Bungay and Beccles, rural Canterbury, who is lord of the manor, Mrs. Powell and
deanery of Brooke, eastern dlvision, archdeaconry of Nor folk Edward Stephen Osmond Clarke esq. are the principal land·
and diocese of Norwich. The ancient church of St. Ethelbert owners. The soil is mixed; subsoil, sand and brick earth.
is now in ruins. The church of St. Peter is a small but aneient The chief crops are wheat, oats and barley_ The area is
edifice of flint with stone dressings in theN orman style, con- 1,527 acres, rated at £x,787; the population in x88 I was 265.
sisting of chancel, nave, north aisle, south porch and a lofty· Parish Clerk, George Leverington.
embattled western tower with pinnacles containing 3 bells: Letters from Norwich, via Brooke, arrive at 8 a.m. The
the south doorway is a good example of Nor man work : there nearest money order & telegraph office is a.t Loddon.
are 200 sittings. The register dates from the year :r566. WALL LETrlm Box cleared at 4 p.m. week days only
The living is a vicarage annexed to Seething, joint average The children of this place attend the sehools at Seething &
yearly value from tithe rent-charge £202, in the gift of the Loddon
Alexander Richard, farmer I Goff Johnson, farmer & ~iller (wind 1 Sargeant William, market gardener ·
Balls John & William, farmers & steam) Tillett Ellen (Mrs.), farmer
Beverley Thomas, farmer Harrod James, grocer & draper Tillett Thomas, farmer
Button Alfred, farmer Hinde Frederick William, farmer Tuddenham Albert James, blacksmith
Gilbert Humphrey Hubert, farmer Hubbard William, Garden House P.ll
NARBOROUGH (or NARBURGH) is a parish and village church are several monuments to the Spelman family and
on the south ba;nk of the river Nar, with a station on the others, :r607-76; on the south side of the chancel are two
Lynn and Dereham section of the Great Eastern railway, 8i stained windows, one to the father of the Rev. W. E. Alfree
miles east-south-east from Lynn, 107~ from London and 5~ M.A. late vicar, d. 18 May, xBs6, and the other to the late
north-west from Swaffham, in the South Western division Herbert C. Marriott esq. d. 31 Oct. 1864: in the north aisle
of the county, South Greenhoe hundred and petty sessional is a window containing some old glass, including a shield of
division, Swaffham union and county eourt district, rural the Spelman arms : the church was restored and reseated
deanery of Cranwich, north division, archdeaconry of Norfolk in I865 : the chancel retains several ancient br~J.sses and a
and diocese of Norwich. The church of All Saints is a build- double piscina, and there is a single piscina in the north
ing of flint in the Early English and Perpendicular styles, aisle: the church affords 290 sittings. The register dates
consisting of chancel, nave of three bays, aisles, south porch from the year 1596. The living is a vicarage, consolidated
and embattled western tower containing one bell: in the with Narford, average tithe rent-charge £385, joint net

0. N. & S. 32"'
496 NARBOROUGH. NORFOLK.
yearly value £423, including 19 acres of glebe, with residence, ' of Normans, Rock land St. Mary, and Viscountess Glentworth.
in the gift of R. Hright-Betton esq. and held since 1886 by The soil is sandy; subsoil, chalk. The chief crops are wheat,
the Rev. Edward Augustus Hright-Betton B. A. of University barley and turnips. The area is 3,154 acres; rateable value,
College, Durham. There is a Wesleyan chapel, built by £3,325; the population in x8g1 was 427.
Henry Boyce esq. The Foresters' Hal_l, bui~t in x886, at .a PosT, M. 0. &. T. 0., S. B. & Annuity & Insurance Office.-
cost ~f £r,ooo, holds 400 persons, and ~s ava1lable for public John George Faulkner, receiver. Letters arrive from
mee~I':lgs, conce~ts and other entertan~ments. There are Swaffham at 7. 30 a.m. & 2 _30 p.m. & are dispatched at.
chanties amountmg to £4o. yearly, left m x8x.o by the Rev. _ p.m. ; & on sundays at 10 a. m. WALL LETTER Box
5 40
~enry ~pelman, a former VIcar. A !ery considerable trade at the Railway station cleared at 5_30 p.m .. no collection
IS earned on by the Messrs. Marnott, as maltsters and d '
merchants. Traces of a high entrenchment connected with on s~n ays . . . .
a fosse and rampart may betraccd for Smiles. Narborough Parochml_ School (m1xed) (boys & g1rls), bmlt m 1870, for
IIall, the seat of Joseph Critchley Martin esq. J.P. lord of the 112 ch1ldren; average attendance, 105; also a. sunday
manor, is a noble and ancient building, situated in a well- school, partly endowe~; Edward Haydon, master; Mrs.
wooded park: the other principal landowners are John Lewis Mary Ann Haydon, mistress
Marriott esq. llenry Hoyce esq: John S. Hotblack esq. J.P. Railway Station, James Chapple Smith, station master
Betton Rev. Edward Augustus Br1ght- Arnold William, shoe maker Holman James, gamekeeper to Josepb
M.A. [vicar], Vicarage Hoyce Chas. ·wesley, farmer, Lower frm Critchley Martin esq
Boyce Henry Clayden Robert, Ship inn, & brewer Howlett Benj farmer, The Grange farm.
Everctt Frith Cresswell Harry Edward, carpenter & Hudson Robert, farmer, Chalk farm
Martin Joseph Critchley J.P. Nar- wheelwright Marriott John & Robert, maltsters &-,
borough hall Everett Frith, miller (water) & baker merchants; & at Swaffham; Lyon;
Pereh William Faulkner John George, grocer Fakenham; Docking; East Dere-
COMMERCIAL. Foresters' Hall, W. Arnold, keeper ham; Snettisham & Wells
Amoss James Willis, butcher Gooderson Thomas, shoe maker, draper Powley James, blacksmith
Arnold & Son, drapers & grocers & post office
N ARFORD is a parish bounded on the north by the river timbered park containing a large lake of pure spring water,
Nar, IJ miles north-east from Narborough station, on the and has been for some generations the seat of the I<'ountaine
Lyon and Dereham section of the Great Eastern railway, family, who came here from Sall during the Protectorate,
and 5 miles north-west from Swaffham, in the South Western and to whom there are several monuments in Sall parish.
division of the county, South Greenhoe hundred and petty church: Algernon Charles Fountaine esq. D.L., J.P. the
sessional division, Swaffham union and county court district, present owner, is lord of the manor and chief landowner.
rural deanery of Cranwich, north division, archdeaconry of Here are the kennels of the West Norfolk Fox Hounds,
Norfolk and diocese of Norwich. The church of St. Mary built in 1884 by Algernon Charles Fountame esq. who is
the Virgin is an ancient building of stone in mixed styles, both master and huntsman. Swaffham, Lynn and Faken-
consisting of chancel, nave, aisles, south porch and a western ham are convenient places for hunting visitors. The soil is
tower with pinnacles containing one bell: there are 100 light and sandy, with a gravelly subsoiL The chief crops
sittings. The register dates from the year 1596. The living are wheat, barley and turnips. The area is 2,396 acres;
is a vicarage, annexed to that of Narborough, average tithe rateable value, £'1,324; the population in r891 was 158.
rent-charge £385, joint net yearly value £423, including :19 Parish Clerk, Thomas Reeder.
acres of glebe, in the gift of R. Bright-Hetton esq. and held Letters received through Swaffham arrive at 8.30. Nar-
since 1886 by the Rev. Edward Augustus Bright-Hetton M. A. borough is the nearest money order & telegraph office.
of Durham University, who resides at Narborough. On the WALL LETTER Box cleared at 5.40 p.m.; sundays
a
hill wa~ formerly a. chapel, dedicated to St. Thomas Becket. II.30 a. m
Narford Hall is a mansion, pleasantly situated in a well- The children uf this place attend the school at Narborough
Fountaine Algernon Charles D.L., J.P. Gayford Gerald, agent to A. C. :Foun-[
N arford hall taine esq. Hall farm
NEATISHEAD is a parish and village between the in r857, will seat 300 persons. The Village Club was built.
navigable river Hure and the Ant, 3~ miles north-east from in x887, on ground also given by the late Sir Jacob H.
Wroxham station on the Norwich and Cromer branch of the Preston bart. at a cost of £r2o. Tbe funds arising from
Great Eastern railway and ro! north-east from Norwich, in some small charities, and the fuel allotment, about £6o, are.
the Eastern division of the county, Tunstead and Happing distributed in coals. The manor formerly belonged to the
petty sessional division, hundred of Tun stead, Small burgh 13ishop of Norwich, but it is now vested in the Ecclesiastical
union, North Walsham county court district, rural deanery Commissioners. The principal landowners are Sir Henry
of Waxham, Tunstead division, archdeaconry of Norfolk and Jacob Preston bart. J.P. of Hill House, Northrepps, and
diocese of Norwich. The church of St. Peter is a small but Charles Cubitt and Frederick Neave esqrs. The soil is good
ancient building of flint and stone in the Perpendicular mixed; subsoil, sand, clay and gravel. The chief crops are
style, being only a part of the original structure, a great wheat, oats and barley. The area is 1,905 acres; rateable
portion of which was taken down in 1790, and the remainder, value, £3,049; the population in 1891 was 545-
consisting of little more than the original chancel, put into Parish Clerk, John Fox.
good repair : the church bad originally a tower containing 3 PosT & M. 0. 0., 8. B. & Annuity & Insurance Office.-
bells, but this being also in a dilapidated state was removed Henry Boswell, sub-postmaster. Letters arrive from
at the same time, the bells put away, and a single new bell Norwich by mail cart at 5.30 a.m.; dispatched at 4.50
placed in a cupola at the west end: a new east window was p. m. The nearest telegraph office is at Wroxham
added in 1870 by subscription, and in 1870 six side windows Parish School (mixed), enlarged in x863 for 140 children;
in the Perpendicular style were put in by R. Alien esq. of average attendance, 95 ; the school is supported by the
Saxlingham : there are 200 sittings. The register dates Misses Preston, of Barton Hall & voluntary subscriptions,
from the year 1676. The living is a vicarage, average tithe Arthur Miles, master; Mrs. Ellen Jane Miles, infants' mist
rent-charge £133, net yearly value £233, including 46 acres CoNVEYANCE TO NoaWICH.-Coach from St.alham, through
of glebe and residence, in the gift of the Bishop of Norwich, Neatishead, to the Royal hotel, mon. wed. & sat. return-
and held since 1859 by the Rev. Henry Browne M.A. of ing same days at 4·45 p.m
Trinity College, Cambridge, who lives at Lowestoft; the CARRIERS TO NORWICH.-William Dix, wed. & sat. return-
Rev. Henry James Casterton Smelt K.C.L. has been curate ing same day; Hy. Edridge, to 'White Lion,' Magdalen
in charge since x8gx. The Primitive Methodist chapel was st. sat. returning same day; Leonard Lubbock (from
erected in 1868 on a site given by Sir Henry Jacob Preston Barton Turf), to 'Waggon & Horses,' Tombland, mon.
bart. J.P . . The Baptist chapel, built in 1809 and enlarged wed. & sat. returning at 4.30 '
Cubitt Benjamin, Point house Barrett Henry Waiter, butcher Jary William, tailor
Cubitt Charles, Holly grove,,._ Heane Rt. Leonard, farmer & landowner J ones Alfred, market gardener
Curson Samuel Boast James, boot & shoe maker Loveday Henry, boot & shoe maker
Miles Arthur Boswell Hy. grocer & draper, Post office Lubhock Samuel, sedge collar maker
Nevett Sidney Thomas, Beech grove Chandler Sarah (Miss), dress maker Morter William, collar maker (sedge)
Richards Rev. Albert Richard [Bap- Chaplin Richard Thomas, beer retailer Neave Frederick, farmer, Hall
tist], The Manse DanielsGeo.farmer&veterinarysurgeon Nobbin John, wheelwright
Sawyer Walter Edward, Holly grove Dix William, carrier Scarland Jacob, miller (wind & steam)
Smelt Rev. Henry James Casterton Easlea Thomas Oscar, grocer, draper & Scarland William, sedge collar maker
K.C.L. [curate in charge] general outfitter Slater Francis John, blacksmith
COMMERCIAL. Easton Fred, saddler, shopkeeper & Smith William, blacksmith
Adcock Henry, farmer assistant overseer Village Club ,
Ealdwin John, jnn. bricklayer Felstead Edward, butcher Wailer 1:-iamuel, White Horse inn
Earnard Elizabeth (Mrs.), laundress Fisher Job, boot maker, Cangate Woodhouse Browne, thatcher
DIRECTORY. J NORFOLK. NEWTON-BY-CASTLE .ACRE. 497
NECTON (formerly called Neigbton) is a parish and· 27 acres of glebe, with residence, in the gift of Mrs. Povab,
I
village, 2~ miles south from the Dunham statwn on the Lynn and held since 1887 by the Hev. Edward Ilamilton Nelson
and Dereham section of the Great Easwrn railway and r! , M..A. of Trinity College, Dublin. Mr. Andrew Young is the
north from Holme Hale station on the Swaffham and Thet- lay impropriator of tithes, amounting to £252 yearly. Here
ford section of the same line, 4 east from Swaffham, in the are Baptist and Wesleyan Methodist chapels. There are
South Western division of the county, South Greenhoe bun- charities of about £140 yearly value, being the rent of 137
dred and petty sessional division, Swaffham union and acres of land chiefly in Great Fransham, but partly in
county court district, rural deanery of Cranwich north divi- N ecton ; a moiety of this sum is applied to the support of the
sion, archdeaconry of Norfolk and diocese of Norwich. The school, the other moiety being devoted to church purposes.
church of All Saints is a building of flint, in the Perpendi- The village library was erected in 186r by the late Licut.-
~ular style, consisting of chancel w1th chapel of St. Cathe- Col. Mason, and here science and art classes conducted by
rine, clerestoried nave of four bays, south-west or Mason Mr. Arthur Stead are held once a week during the winter
1

.chapel, aisles, vestries and an embattled western tower, with months. Robert Harvey Mason J.P., D.L. is lord of the
I

pinnacles and fieche, or spirelet, of metal work; the tower manor and chief landowner, and resides at Necton H2.ll, a
was rebuilt in 1864-5, at a cost of about £1,200, and con- mansion surrounded by a finely-timbered park, which has
tains a clock and 6 bells: the roof of the church is of ex- been the property of the Mason family since the time of
quisite workmanship and adorned with ten large figures of Henry VII. The soil is mixed ; subsoil, clay. The chief
angels, carved in oak: there arc twelve stained windows: crops are wheat, barley and roots. The area is 3,748 acres;
the reredos includes a painting of the "Raising of Lazarus," rateable value, £4,501; the population in r8g1 was 735·
.after Sebastian del Piombo : there are several mural tablets Parish Clerk, Robert Phillips.
and brasses: the south aisle retains a double piscina, and in PosT & M. 0. 0., S. B. & Annuity & Insurance Office.-
St. Catherine's chapel is a single piscina: the pulpit, elabo- Robert Phillips, sub-postmaster. Letters arrive from
ratcly carved in oak, dates from r636: there is a small Swaffham at 7.30 a. m.; dispatched at 5.30 p.m.; sundays
-western gallery of beautifully carved oak, from which the at 10 a.m. Swaffham is the nearest telegraph office
organ was removed in 1885 : there are 325 sittings. The School, erected, with master's house, in 1866, by Miss Mason,
-churchyard was considerably enlarged in 188g. The regis- for 150 children; average attendance, IIO; Arthur Stead,
ter dates from the year rssB. The living is a rectory, aver- master; Mrs. Cressy Stead, mistress
.age tithe rent-charge £497, net yearly value £447, including · CARRIER.~Mrs. Fanny Jarvis, Swaffham, sat. & wed
Borrett The Misses, Church lane Gage Henry, beer retailer Sample Williarn, gamekeeper to Robert
Cross Miss, East Gat.e cottage Green Alfred, farmer Harvey Mason esq. J.P., n.L
:MasonRobt.HarveyJ.P.,D.L.Nectonhall Green W1lliam, beer retailer Softley George, farmer
Nelson Rev. Edward Hamilton M.A. Grummett Thomas, grocer & draper Stammers Arthur,farmer,Sparham hall
[rector], The Rectory Hudson Charles, sieve & basket maker Stead Arthur C. organist of the parish
.Sparham Rev. Thomas Henry [Baptist] Huke James, boot & shoe maker church
Young Miss, Cambridge cottage Kemp James, farmer Stebbings George, shopkeeper
COMMERCIAL. Makins George (Mrs.), farmer Stebbings Joseph John, saddler
Ashman Eliza (Mrs. ),laundress, Hale rd Makins William, farmer & cattle dealer, Stibbon John, farmer
Benstead William, Three Tuns P.H Corbett's lodge Tbomson James Shiel, farm bailiff to
Boddy George, farmer Miller Omar, tailor R. Harvey Mason esq. n. r.. , J. P
£ond John, Good \Nornan P.H · MooreThomas,carpenter & wheelwright Trollop William, blacksmith
ClarkeJn.Thos.farmer,Mona}fount frm Nelson William, butcher Village Library (Miss Mason, hon. sec)
"Couzens George, farmer Nelson William, farmer & seedsman Wace Richard \Valter,farmer, Wood frm
Cutting Waiter, grocer & draper ParkerSusanah(Mrs. ),farmer, Erne frm Walker George, farmer
Disdale " 7 illiam, farmer Pestell George, blacksmith Walker George, jun. farmer
Dunn Charles, baker PhillipsRt.shoe maker &sub-postmaster Ward Frederick, farmer
Ellis Charles, farmer Reditt Susan (Mrs.), dress maker Wortley Robert, horse slaughterer
Frost Susan (Mrs.), shopkeeper Roberts Henry, blacksmith
NEEDHAM is a parish and scattered village, on the Bishop of Norwich, who resides at Redenhall. There is a
banks of the Waveney, 1~ miles south-west from Harleston town estate, the income of which is applied in gifts of coals
.station on the Waveney Valley section of the Great Eastern to the poor, the maintenance of the school, and in defraying
~ailway and 8 miles east from Diss, in the Southern divi- church expenses. The parish consists of five manors. The
~ion of the county, Earsham hundred and petty sessional following are tbe lords of the manors, who are also the prin-
-division, Depwade union, Harleston county court district, cipal landowners :~Witchington, Sir Hugh Edward Adair
Tural deanery of Redenball, archdeaconry of Norfolk and hart. D. L., J. P. of Flixton Hall, t:3uffolk ; Dourts-in-N eed-
diocese of Norwich. The church of St. Peter is an ancient ham, Frederick Bacon !<'rank esq. M. A. Earl ham Hall; Den-
.building in the Norman style, consisting of chancel, nave, sons, Capt. John George punbar J.P. of Wobnrn House,
south porch and a western tower, round at the base, with Donaghadee, Belfast, Ireland ; Gunshaws, William Machell
~n octagonal embattled belfry above and containing 3 bells ; esq. of Hope cottage, Bath road, Hounslow; and Seymers,
the tower is of stone and flint and the walls of the church George Warner Lawton esq. The soil is marshy in the
are of brick, with stone dressings : in 1884 the chancel was valley, but heavy on the high lands; subsoil, clay. The
Testored by the late Lord Waveney: the oak reading desk chief crops are wheat, barley, peas and beans. The area. is
was presented by the Rev. John Galliene Bichanl, vicar I,IOI acres; rateable value, i,-1,355; the population in 1891
1:882-8, and his wife, and some new benches and a harmo- was 335·
nium were furnished by subscription: there are 200 sittings. Parish Cler!r, John Bedford.
The registers date from the year 1643. The living is a
vicarage annexed to the rectory of Redenhall, average tithe Letters through Scole arrive at 8 a.m. Harleston is the
:rent-charge £ 7 6 1 , joint gross yearly ,.alue £8r 5 , with 2 g nearest money order & telegraph office. WALL Box
acres of glebe, in the gift of Sir Hugh Edward Adair hart. cleared at 6.10 p.m. week days; sundays at 9.30 a. m
and held since 1888 by the Ven. Thomas Thoma.son Perowne National School (mixed), erected in 1873 for 70 children ;
~.D. archdeacon of Norwich and examining chaplain to the average attendance, 49; (vacant) mistress
Martin Robert Buxton Samuel, plumber & glazier Miles Frederick G. farmer, White house
Miles Mrs. White house Calton Charles, pig dealer Owles William, farmer
Filter Rev. William Turnbull K.C.L. Chaplin Charles, farmer, Dole's farm Parsons Thomas, farm bailiff to Messrs.
[curate of Redenhall-wlth-Harleston J Crooks William, Red Lion P.H Cook & Son
Vicarage Ebbage Barnabas, farmer Ransome Wm. poultry dealer & shopkpr
.Simmens :Mrs Ebbage George, beer retailer & farmer Short Thomas, Fishmongers' Arms P.H
COMMERCIAL. Fisher James, carpenter Smith Thomas, farmer & landowner
.A.lgar George, farmer, Skeatsmere Gardner Alfred, shoe dealer & repairer SpinkJn.rag& metal merchant & farmer
Bedford John, blacksmith & parish clerk Johnson Robert, bricklayer Tooley Charles, farmer, Gunshaws hall
.Button John & William Edmund, Kay Thomas, shopkeP.per Warmoll John Richd.farmer,Shingle ho
farmers & millers (water); & at Leftley David, farmer & pig &c. dealer, Whurr John, poultry & marine store dlr
Weybread (Suffolk) & Diss Cherry Tree farm
NEWTON-by-CASTLE ACRE is a village and Saints, reputed to date from the time of Edward the Con-
parish, 3 miles north-west from Dunham station on the fessor, is a building of stone, originally cruciform, but the
Lynn and Dereham seetion of the Great Eastern r<~.ilway transepts have disappeared; it now consists of chancel and
and 4 north-east from Swaffham, in the South Western nave and low central tower containing one bell, and affords
. division of the county, South Greenhoe hundred and petty 6o sittings. The register dates from the latter part of the
sessional division, Swaffham union and county court dis- 16th century. The living is a. vicarage, annexed to that of
· trict, rural deanery of Cranwich north divi,.,ion, archdeaconry Castle .Acre, average tith" rent-charge £2or, joint net yearly
of Sorfolk and diocese of Norwich. The church of .All value £260, including 6~ acres of glebe, in the alternate
498 NEWTON-BY-CASTLE ACRE. NORFOLK.

patronage of the Earl of Leicester K.G. wlio has two turns turnips and pasture. The area is r,o58 acres ; rateable value,
and the Bishop of Norwich one turn, and held since r8go by £888; the population in r8gr was 74·
the Rev. John Thomas Powell, who Tesidcs at Castle Acre. Parish Clerk, Richard Bloy.
The principal landowners are Algernon Charles Fountaine
esq. JP., D.L. of Narford Hall, who is lord of the manor, Letters through Swaffham, via Litcham, arrive at 8 a.m.
and Clifton Angreaves esq. of Bedford. The soil is light Castle .Acre is the nearest money order & telegraph office
loam; subsoil, gravel. The chief crops are wheat, barley, The children of this place attend the school at Castle Acre
Stows :Kenyon
Mason John, beer retailer & farmer
I .Askew James, farm bailiff to Geurge Seaman Charles, farm bailiff to A. C.
Hamilton esq. Church farm Fountaine esq
NEWTON FLOTMAN is a village and parish, r! Kellett Long esq. B.A. of Dunston Hall, who is lord of the
mlies north-east from Flordon station on the Ipswich and manor, Robert Fellowes esq. D.L., J.P. of Shotesham Park,
Norwich section of the Great Eastern railway and 7 miles and Major Sir Charles Harvey bart. J.P. of Rainthorpe Hall.
south from Norwich, in the Southern division of the are the principal landowners. The soil is sand and clay ;
county, Humbleyard hundred, Swainsthorpe petty ses- subsoil, mixed. The chief crops are wheat, oats, barley and
sional division, Hen stead union, Norwich county court turnips. The area is r ,173 acres ; rateable value, £" r,g66;
district, rural deanery of Humblevard, archdeaconry of the population in r89r was 246.
Norfolk and diocese of ~orwich. The church of St. Mary Parish Clerk, Thomas Bullen.
the Virgin is a str_ucture of flint and stone, dating from r3oo PosT OFFICE. _Mrs. Emma Yallop, receiver. Lettcr1r
to r5oo, and consists of chancel, n~v_e, south porch and _a ' through Long Stratton arrive at 8. 10 a.m. ; dispatched at
fine embattled western ~ower, contammg one bell : there IS 5 . 20 p.m. Long Stratton is the nearest money order &.
a brass of the Blondenlle family with dates from 1490 to tele""raph office
r638 : the church affords 120 sittings. The register dates . "' , . . . .
from the year 1557 . The living is a rectory, annexed to Natwual Sehool rruxed), enlarged In r8.86 for 75 children~
that of Swainsthorpe, average tithe rent-charge £"46o, joint average attendance, 65; (vacant), mistress
net yearly value £"43.<;, including 68 acres .of glebe and CARRIERS from Pulham Mary & Long Stratton to Norwich
residence, in the gift of and held since r884 by the Rev. pass through mon. wed. & sat. at 9.30 a.m. returning
Ernest Henry Kellett Long M.A. of Christ Church, Oxford. same days ; also a carrier from Diss to .K orwich, 'Yh()
The charities amount to £"9 yearly. Fortescue Waiter passes through at ro.45 a.m. sat
Long Rev. Ernest Henry Kellett M.A. Cutting Charles, boot & shoe tnaker Kirby Edward, thatcher
[rector], Rectory Dyball Thomas James, baker Long Albert, farmer
COMMERCIAL. Gage Samuel, farmer Sayer John, market gardener
BettsThomas,farmer, Hundred Acre frm Gooch James, farmer I Sheldrake t:larah (Mrs.), butcher
Brighton Jes.."le, Maid's Head P.H Harbon Edward, market gardener Yallop Emma (Mrs.), grocer & draper.
Brighton Richard, shopkeeper Harvey Frederick, farmer Post office
Brown Frederick, farmer, Glebe farm Hubbard William, farmer
WEST NEWTON is a Yillage and parish, 7 miles presented by the Bishop of Norwich: the church affords
north-north-cast from Lynn and 2 east from Wolferton sta- 250 sittings. The register dates from the year r56o. The
tion on the Lynn and Hunstanton section of the Great living is a rectory, annexed with that of Babingley to the
Easte,rn railway, in the North Western division of the rectory of Sandringham, average tithe rent-charge £271•
county, Freebridge Lynn hundred, petty sessional division joint gross yearly value £363, with 37~ acres of glebe and
and union, county court district of Lynn, rural deanery of residence, in the gift of H.R.H. the Prince of Wales, and held
Lynn Freebridge and archdeaconry and diocese of Norwich. since 1878 by the Hev. Frede1ick .Alfred John Hervey M.A.
The church of SS. Peter and Paul is an ancient building of of Trinity College, Cambridge, domestic chaplain to H.R.H.
carr stone, in the Late Perpendicular style, consisting of the Prince of ·wales, chaplain in ordinary to Her Majesty
chancel, nave, north aisle, porch and an embattled western the Queen and hon. canon of Norwich, who resides at
tower, with pinnacles, containing one bell : the church was Sandringham. The fuel allotment consists of 12 al:res.
restored in 188r and again in r8gr, when the north aisle The Village club, for the servants and workmen employed
was added, by H.R.H. the Prince of Wales, under the on the Sandringham estate, a buildingin the Swiss Domestic-
direction of Sir .a. W. Blomfield u.A., A.R.A., F.S.A. archi- style, was erected in r873 by T.R.H. the Prince and Princess
tect, who also presented the carved oak lectern : the stained of Wales, and has now ( r892) 8o members. A number of
east window was the gift of Christopher Sykes esq. M.P. and picturesque cottages have also been built in this parish by
the reredos of tiles and mosaic was given by H.R.H. the H.R.H. the Prince of Wales, the lord of the manor and chief
late Duke of .Alba.ny K.G.: the jewelled altar cross of brass, landowner, principally for the use of persons employed on
. with two candlesticks and vases, were presented by the late his estate at Sandringham, and the public road has been
German Emperor, Frederick Ill. and the Empress Fred- diverted through the village in order to enlarge the park.
erick, the alms dish by Lord Colville of Culross, and the The soil is sandy and chalk ; subsoil, chalk, carr stone and
rich crimson and purple altar covers by T.R. H. the Duke gravel. The land is cultivated -on the four-course system.
nnd late Duchess of Cambridge: the chancel is fitted with The area is 1,205 acres; rateable value, £1,449; the popu-
stalls of carved oak, the gift of H.R.H. the Duke of Edin- lation in r891 was 304.
burgh K.li-. and the pulpit was the offering of the Prince of PosT OFFICE.-ilenry Cook. receiver. Letters through
Wales's household: the stained west window was erected Lynn, viil. Dersingham, arrive at 6.30 a.m. ; dispatehed
by T.R.H. the Prince and Princess Christian, the Duke and at 6.45 p.m.; the box closes at 6.30 p.m. The nearest
Duchess of Connaught, the Princess Louise (Marchioness of money order & telegraph otfice is at Dersingbam. Postal
Lorne) and the Marquess of Lorne K.T.; there are other orders are issued here, but not paid
stained windows, the gifts of H.R.li. the Prince of Wales Day School (in connection with Sandringham, Appleton &
and the late Grand Duke of Hesse: Her Majesty the Queen Babingley), built in r88r, for 120 children; average:
gave the fine organ, and the Bible and prayer book were attendance, 94; Waiter Jones, schoolmaster

Cook Henry, shopkeeper, Post office


I
BiddulphRev.GodfreyJohnM.A.[curate] Copeland Joseph, groom to H.R.H. the Dodrnan William, blacksmith
Princess of Wales Sheringham Edward Thomas, farmer
NORDELPH, see UPWELL. .
NORTHREPPS is a village and parish, 7 miles north pation of the West Indian slaves, often attended this church
from North Walsham, ~ south-east from Cromer stations and died at Northrepps 19 Feb. 1845: there are276 sittings.
on the Great Eastern and Eastern and Midlands railways, 3 The register dates from the year 1558. The living is a.
from Uromer town and 3 from Gunton station on theN or- rectory, average yearly value from tithe rent-charge £453,
wich and Cromer branch of the Great Eastern railway, in with r3~ acres of glebe and residence, in the gift of the
the Northern division of the county, North Erpingham Duchy of Lancaster, and held since 1879 by the Rev.Sarnuel
hundred and petty sessional division, Erpingham union, I Francis Creswell D.D. of St. John's College, Cambridge,
North Walsham county court district, rural deanery of Repps, F.R.G.s., F.R.A. s. There are reading rooms at Church street
a.rchdeaconry of Norfolk aud diocese of Norwich. The and Cross Dale. Northrepps Hall, the property of John
church of St. Mary is a building of flint with stone dress- Henry Gurney esq. J.P. and occupied by Richard Hanbury
ings, chiefly in the Perpendicular style, consisting of cleres- Joseph Gurney esq. J.P. is an Elizabethan mansion, with
toried nave, aisles, south porch and an embattled western modern additions, and is situated in a small park. John
tower containing 5 bells: two lancet windows, originally Henry Gurney esq. J.P. of Keswick Hall, Lord Suffield K.C.B.,
constructed for wooden shutters, and some fragments of P.C. who is lord of the manor, trustees of the late Benjamin
zigzag moulding still remain: the Perpendicular screen, Bond-Cab bell esq. of Oromcr Hall, and Samuel Hoare esq.
found in a barn, is now placed in ·position at the base of the , 111. P. of Cliff House, Cromer, are the principal landowners.
tower; the upper stage, which is modern, is decorated with The soil is light; subsoil, gravel. The chief crops are
royal shields of arms, monograms &c. : .Sir Thomas Fowell wheat, turnips, barley and grass. The area is 2,731 acres;
J3uxton hart. who laboured so conspicuous!y for tLe emam:i- rateable n1.lue, £3,278; th2 population in r88r was 573.
DIRECTORY.] .NORFOLK. NORTHWOLD • 499

· Parish Clerk, George Golden. Registrars of Births & Deaths, Southrepps sub-district,
POST OFFICE.-Henry Wells, receiver. Letters arrive from Robert Daniel Kimm, Southrepps; deputy, Robert
Norwich at 6.35 a.. m. ; dispatched at 4· 5 p. m. A mail is Howes, North Walsham; Cromer sub-district, Misfl
dispatched from Northrepps to Gnnton station at 1:0.30 Louisa Catherine Thursby, Sheringham; deputy, Edward
a.m. & one. is received from there at 4.15 p.m. Over- Graham Sava;;e, Sheringham; Halt sub-district, Thomas
strand is the nearest money order & telegraph office. John Balls, Halt; deputy, C. Clark, Halt
Postal orders ·are issued here, but not paid. WALL Registrars of Marriages, Cley-next-the-Sea district, S. Star-
LETTER Box near the Church cleared at 10.55 a.m. & ling, Cley-next-the-Sea; Cromer district, Ambrose
3·30 p.m Horatio Fox, Cromer; deputy, (vacant); Holt district,
ERPINGHAM UNIOY. John Pashley, Bolt ; deputy, C. Clark, Holt; Southrepps
Board day, every alternate monday at the West Beckbam district, James Spurrell Plumbly, Southrepps; deputy,
workhouse at n a.m. William Temple, Southrepps
The Union comprises the following places :-Aldborough, Workhouse, West Beckham, a building of brick, built in
.Antingham, Aylmerton, Haconsthorpe, Barningham-N or- 185o, to hold 539 inmates (but partly destroyed by fire on
wood, Barningham Town, Hayfield, Beeston Regis, Bess- Easter day, 1888) ; Waiter Emery, master; Rev. Arthur
ingham, Bodha.m, Briston, Cle:v-next-the-Sea, Cromer, Dewing Spurgin B. A. chaplain; Robert Turner Hales M. D.
East Beckham, Edgefield, Felbrigg, Gimingham, Gland- medical officer: Mrs. Emery, matron. The children·
ford, Gresham, Gunton, Hanworth, Hempstead, Bolt, attend the Board school at Gresham
Hunworth, Kelling, Knapton, Letheringsett, Matlaske, RURAL SANITARY AUTHORITY.
Metton, Mundesley, Northrepps, Overstrand, Plumstead, Meets at the Workhouse on board days at I I a.m.
Roughton, Runton, Salthouse, Sheringham, Sidestrand,
Southrepps, Stody, Suffield, Sustead, Thornage, Thorpe Clerk, Thomas Ling, Nortbrepps
Market, Thurgarton, Trimingham, Trunch, West Heck- Treasurer, Samuel Gurney Buxton, Norwich
ham & "''eybourne. The population of the union in 1891 Medical Officer of Health, Shephard Thomas Taylor M.B.
was 18,772 : area, 64,926 acres; rateable value, l98,8o5 Chingford lodge, Essex
Clerk to the Guardians & Assessment & School Attendance Inspector of Nuisances, George Ling, Hempstead, Halt
Committees, Thomas Ling, Northrepps; deputy clerk, J. ScHOOL ATTENDANCE CoMMITT~<;E.
T. Willis, Cromer Meets at the Workhouse on alternate board days at 11 a. m.
Collectors to the Guardians & Relieving Officers, Holt dis- Clerk, Thomas Ling, Northrepps
trict, Thomas John Ball~, Halt; Sonthrepps district, Attendance Officers, James Kemp, Runton; Ch.ll'les John
- Robert Daniel Kimm, Southrepps Knowles, Holt; Hy. Hewitt, Southrepps; John Suffiing,
Treasurer, Samuel Gurney Buxton, Norwich Aldborough
Vaccination Officers, The Registrars of Births & Deaths A School Board of 5 members was formed 25 January,
Medical Officers, Aldborough district, John Wigmore Hig- n379 ; John Tourle Willis, clerk to the board & attendance
ginson L.R.c.P.Lond. Aldborough; Heckham district, officer
Robert Turner Hales M.D. Halt; Briston district, John Hoard School (mixed & infants), erected 1879, at a cost of
Hales, Holt ; Cley-next-the-Sea district, Waiter Sumpter £700, for 108 children; average attendance, 95; William
M. D. Cley-next-the-Sea; Cromer district, Henry McClure Vcalc, master; Mrs. J. Veale, infants' mistress
M.D., M.ch. Cromer; IIolt district, John IIales, llolt; Here is a Sunday school, erected at the sole cost of the ReT.
N orthrepps district, Robert Fenner 1 .. R.C.P.Erlin, Cromer; Thomas Hay n.n. rector from 1813; at his death in 1830,
Southrepps district, John Shepheard B.A., L.R.C.P.LOnd. he also left an endowment of £1,000 Consols, for the sup-
North W abham port of the school, to be expended at the discretiun of the
Public Vaccinators, The Medical Officers rector ; there arc 52 children in attendance
Superintendent Registrar, James Spnrrell Plumbly, South- CARRIER TO NORWICH.-Robert Foulger, tues. & fri. at 8
repps; deputy, William Temple, Suuthrepps a. m. returning sat. 8 p.m. to Wuolpack inn, St. George's
Callow .Mrs. N orthrepps lodge Golden Eliza (Mrs.), Mark Lane & Reading Room, Crossdale
Creswell Rev. Samuel Francis D.D., I<'oundry Arms P.H Reynolds Robert, carter
F.B.o.s., F.R.A.s. Rectory Golden Francis, farmer, Ivy 'house Savory John, shoe maker
Gurney Richard Hanbury Joseph J.P. [letters through CromerJ Savory John Howes, shoe maker
Northrepps ball Kerry Frederick, gamekeeper to S. Sheppard George, gamekeeper to John
Preston Sir Henry Jacob bart. B.A.,.T.P. Hoare esq Henry Gurney esq
The Hill Ling Elizh. (Mrs.), farmer ,Church farm ' Storey George, farmer
COMMERCIAL. Ling Thomas, clerk to the guardians & Storey James,grocer & draper,provision
Bloom Charles, farmer assessment & school attendance I merchant & general stores
Burton Thomas William,iron founder & committees & sanitary authority, Turner Richard Richardson, farmer &
geneTal smith Erpingham union, & farmer assistant, overseer
Callow Michael John, farmer Reading Room, Church 11treet Wells Henry, grocer, & post office
Cooper Mayhcw, blacksmith

NORTHWOLD is a parish and village, on the road I self-supporting. The almsbouses for poor are fourteen in
from Thctford to Lynn and on the river Wisscy, 3 miles I number, five of which are at the disposal of the rector and
south-east from Stoke Ferry terminal station on a branch of churchwardens; the remaining nine were erected by the
the Great Eastern railway, 7ft north from Brandon and 95 late Mrs. Norman in 1874, in memory of her husband, the
from London, in the South Westeru division of the county, Rev. Charles Manners Richard Norman M.A. rector from
Grimshoe hundred and petty sessional division, Thetford 1833, and endowed by her with £.soo £.2i per Cent. Consols
union and county court district, Cranwich rural deanery for keeping them in repair. The charities include .Atmere's
south division, archdeaconry of Norfolk and diocese of Nor- of £25 every fifth year, Carter's of £200 in £2i per Cent.
wich. The church of St. Andrew is a building chiefly of Consols, and Richard Holden's, consisting of 5 acres of land,
flint, in the Perpendicular and Early English styles, consist· lleft in 1736; there are other small sums. of money left by
ing of chancel, nave, aisles, north and south porches and a different persons, for the benefit of the poor of this parish.
western tower of the 14th century, with eight pinnacles, and .A fair is held yearly on the 3oth November and following
containing a clock and 8 bells: the roof of the nave is of oak, day. There is a large chalk pit in this parish. At the
painted and richly gift and ornarnented with figures of Stoke end of the village is an ancient stone cross similar to
angels with extended wings: the carved font was given in that at Hockwold. The village has a fire-engine purchaE"ed
1882, and the very beautiful font cover in 1887, by the pre- out of the church estate in 1814. H. S. Partridge esq. who
sent incumbent: the western arch is a fine example of the is lord of the manor, John Carter esq. William Amhurst
Perpendicular style: the church was reseated in 1852, and Tyssen Amherst esq. J.P. of Didlington Hall and H. P.
affords 640 sittings, 3-1-0 being free. The register dates from Mack esq. J.P. are the principal landowners. The soil is a
the year 165o. The living is a rectory, average tithe rent- mixture of loam, sand, chalk and fen; subsoil, chalk. The
charge £583, net yearly value £237, including 57 acres of chief crops are wheat, barley and turnips. The area is 5,2r4
glebe and residence, in the fc,rift of the Bishop of Norwich, acres; rateable value, £5,897; the population in 1891 was
and held since x88o by the Rev. William Cowpel' Johnson 1,144·
M. A. of Corpus Cbristi college •. Cambridge, hon.- canon of WHITTINGTON, a hamlet of this parish, is given under a
N orwlCh and rural dean of Hmgham. There 1s a large separate heading .
Wesleyan chapel '!l.nd a Primitive Methodist chapel. . The . ~
village ball, formerly the school, is used for parochial meet- Parish Clerk, George Warren.
ings and entertainments. The reading room, an old farm- PosT, M. 0. & T. 0. & S. B.-Frank Upton, postmaster.
house bearing- the date 1635, was endowed by the late Mrs. Letters arrive from Hrandun & are delivered at 7 a.m.
Norman with £soo invested in Consuls, and has 11. library only, & arrive lrom Stoke Ferry S.O. at 2 p.m. for callers
of 150 'Volumes. Another library was given by the Rev. only; di!ipatched at 10 a. m. via Stoke Ferry & at 7.20
Richard Snowdon-Smith 1\LA. rector (1873-8o), and is now p.m. via BrandoB •·
600 NORTHWOLD. NORFOLK. (KELLY'S

WALL LETTER Box, East end, cleared at 6.45 p.m. Central school has a library of 400 volumes; James Marshal!,
box at 6.45 p.m mastfr; Mrs. Marshall, sewing mistress
Infants', for go children ; average attendance, 65: sup-
"ScHOOLS : - ported by an endowment of £go yearly, by the late
The Norman National School was erected in 1873 on Mrs. Norman, from Consols; this school has also a library
ground given by C. Carter esq. at the sole expense of the of 300 volumes, the gift of the same donor; Miss Eliza-
late Mrs. Norman, wife of the Rev. C. M. H. Norman M.A. beth Mastin, mistress .
at a cost of about £1,400 & endowed by her with £1,000; CARRIER.-Crisp, to Brandon, on mon. wed. & fri.; to
it will hold 140 children; average attendance, 112: the Lynn, on tues. & sat
PRIVATE RESIDES"TS. Carter lsaac, wheelwright Northwold Reading Room & Library
Chandler William, blacksmith (Rev. William C. Johnson M.A. pree)
Basham Mrs Chinery Robert, coal dealer Nurse William, farmer
Carter Mrs Dye John, blacksmith Nurse William, jun. boot maker
Carter John Burroughs Etheridge Edward, landowner Offiey Daniel & Michael, millers (wind)
Carter Miss, Linden cottage Fendick William, farmer & farmers
Carter Mrs Flanders Shrewsbury, farmer Parker George, grocer & draper
Denny Miss Fuller Fredk.game dealer& tax collector Pratt Waiter, butcher
Denny James, Sycamore house Goddard George, farmer Reynolds John, baker
Elgar Richard, Ivy cottage Gould James, bricklayer Rickett Frederick, farmer
Hill Mrs Harpley Wm. carpenter & beer retailer Rome John, farmer
Johnson Rev. William Cowper M.A. Harrison Anthony, Crown P.H.& farmer Royal James, shoe maker
[rector, hon. canon of Norwich &rural Hopkms lsaac, plumber, painter &c 1 Scales John, farmer
dean J, Rectory Horne James (~Irs.), shoe ma. & farmer Thompson George, baker
Jolley Reuben Jolley Alfred, George & Dragon P.H. & Thompson John, butcher & dealer
Joy Frederick William, The Beeches carpenter & builder Thompson Susan (Mrs.), secondhand
Joy Thomas William, The Beeches Jolley Rcuben, farmer clothes dealer
Mack llugh Paston J.P. Northwold ldg Jolley Vl'illiam, Red Lion P.H Thorpe Herbert., baker
Silverlock Capt. William Greenhill R.N. Joy Frederick William L.R.C.P.Edin. Thorpe Robert, grocer & draper
Pooly house physician & surgeon, & medical Upton Frank, shopkeeper, Post office
Sutterby Joseph officer of health Thetford urban & Village Hall
Walpole Waiter Robert rural sanitary districts, & medical Walpole Waiter Robert, solicitor & corn-
Whitmore Miss officer Northwold district, Thet.ford missioner,& agent for the Law Union
union & Ickborough district, Swaff- Fire & Life Insurance Co. ; & at Moth-
COMMERCIAL. ham union wold on mondays
Beales James, tailor & shopkeeper Kemp Ann (M.rs. ), baker Warren George, shoe maker
Bovill John, coach builder Lemon William, butcher Watts Thomas, beer retailer & shoe ma
Bovill William, shopkeeper Maycroft Robert, shoe maker Wood John, butcher
Bowen Benjamin, flour dealer ~lyhills Edward, carpenter YoungeWilliamRd.saddler&harness ma
NORTON SUBCOURSE is a parish and widely scat- ingham Hall, is impropriator of the great tithes. The
tered village, 3~ miles south-west from Reedham station on Primitive Methodist chapel here was erected in r864. The
the Norwich and Lowestoft section of the Great Eastern church land consists of 6A. zn.; at the lnclosure 8A. 2R. were
railway, 3~ east from Loddon, 9 north-east from Bungay allotted to the poor and are let at an average rent of about
.and 5~ from Beccles, in the Southern division of the county, £ ro yearly, which sum is distributed in coals. Sir William
Clavering hundred, Loddon and Clavering petty sessional Bowyer-Smijth hart. is lord of one manor and Nicholas
division and union, county court district of Bungay and Henry Bacon esq. of the other: Mrs. Denny, of the Manor
Beccles, rural deanery of Brooke eastern division, arch- liouse, Burgh Apton, and .Miss Beane are the chief land-
deaconry of Norfolk and diocese of Norwich. The church owners. The soil is light mixed; subsoil, sand, gravel and
of St. Mary is a large and ancient structure of flint, in the clay. The chief crops are wheat, oats and barley. The
Early English style, consisting of chancel, nave and a round area is 1,862 acres; rateable value, £1,945; the population
western tower containing 4 bells: in r889 an organ was in 1891 was 352.
purchased from Blofield church, at a cost of £3o, and in Parish Clerk, William Self.
1892 the church was internally renovated : there are 240 PosT & M. 0. 0., S. B. & Annuity & Insurance Office.-
sittings. The register dates from the year rs6r. The George John Ellett, sub-postmaster. Letters through
living is a vicarage, average tithe rent-charge £122, net Norwich arrive at 7·45 a.rn.; dispatched at 3·5 p.m.
yearly value£ 123, including 16 acres of glebe, with residence, Reedham is the nearest telegraph office
in the g1ft of Nicholas llenry Bacon esq. J.P. and held since National School (mixed), with residence for schoolmistress,
1885 by the Rev. Arthur Thomas James Thackeray M.A. of erected in 1856-7 by the late Sir E. Bacon hart. for 6o
Trinity College, Cambridge. The rectorial tithes have been children; average attendance, 47; Mrs. Hannah Lamas,
commuted for £179. Nicbolas Henry Bacon esq. of Raven- mistress
Thackeray Hev. Arthur Thomas James Funnell Willi3;m, cowkeeper I Reeve William, sen. farmer
M.A. Vicarage Galer Robert, market gardener Reeve William, jun. marshman
,. COMMERCIAL. lireengrass Lucy (Mrs.), farmer Roberts Jas. market gardener & farmr
.Barber Jonathan, market gardener Hayward .:Velson Hylton,farmer,Carr ho Saul John, Swan commercial hotel
Benns George, marshman Holland John, rate collector & assistant Scarll James, carpenter & builder
Brabben David, farmer overseer Shardalow Emrna (Miss), farmer
Curbs Jarnes, blacksmith Knights Thos.Cockatrice P.H.& coal mer Soanes Robert, farm bailiff to N. H.
Disney William, farmer, Norton hall Lamb Emily Rose (Mrs.), farmer, Hayward esq
Edwards James, cattle dealer & farmer Church farm · Warnes William, market gardener
Ellett Geo. John, grocr.& drapr.Post off Nursey Robert, farmer Wentworth Wm. Jn. plumber & glazier
Evans William, wheelwright Reeve James, market gardener Yallopl•'rcdk. Wm. boot makr. & grocer

/
NORWICII.
NORWICH is a city and county of itself, the seat of a bishop's Communic~tion is obtained with the general railway
see, a municipal county and parliamentary borough, the system by the Great Eastern railway and its branches to
assize town of the shire, place of election and polling place Yarmouth, Lowestoft, Lynn, Wells, Hunstanton, North
for the Eastern division of the county, and a union and Walsham and Cromer: the Eastern and Midlands also has
county court town, on the navigable river Wensum, just access to this city and connects it with Crorner and Lynn.
above the junction with the Yare, with stations on the Great At Trow8e i.s a large and important cattle station, belonging
Eastern and Eastern and Midlands railways, 113i miles to the Great Eastern Railway Co.; on the departure side of
from London, 20 west from Yarmouth, 48! east-by-south the line are 13 lairs and 19 loading pens, capable of storing
from Lynn, 23! west-north-west from Lowestoft, 53! from 2,000 head of beasts and 4,000 sheep; on the down side are 9
Ely, 68~ from Cambridge, 45~ from Ipswich, 62t from lairs and 13 pens, which will store x,soo beasts and 3,000
Colchester and 43 from Bury St. Edmunds, in the Hlofield sheep : the lairs and pens cover an area of nearly 7 acres : a
~nd Walsham petty sessional division, rural deanery, arch- new bridge over the line was built at Trowse in 1883. The
deaconry and diocese of Norwich. The river Wensurn flows river Yare, falling into the sea at Yarmouth, and the Waveney
through the city and is crossed by 10 bridges. at Lowestoft, afford two independent channels seawards.
DlRECTORY.l
.J
:NORFOLK. NORWICH • 501
Tradition assigns to Norwich an origin of considerable building, a rectangular structure of considerable size, 57 by
antiquity : it is said to have been fortified in 575 by Uffa, 36 feet, was, however, removed by Dean Gardiner in the
the first king of the East Angles, who built the castle and 16th century to save the cost of repairs. Violent conflicts
made it his residence; and in 642 Anna, king of the East between the monks and the populace, which broke out on
Angles, is reported to have kept his court in the royal palace August n, 1272, resulted in the partial destruction of the
at the Castle. In t.he time of Alfred the Great it was cathedral and its adjacent buildings, but in 1275 the citizens
attacked by the Danes, and after its capture is stated to have were ordered tu pay 3,000 marks towards its restoration, and
become the capital of Guthrum. Under· the later Saxon on Advent Sunday, 1278, it was reconsecrated by Bishop
kings it had a mint, and the Domesday Survey shows that Waiter (or William) de Middleton (1278-88) in the presence
in the time of Edward the Confessor it was one of the largest of Edward I. and his queen; a spire of wood, covered with
towns in the kingdom, having 1,328 burgesses. In 1336 a lead, erected by Bishop Ralph Walpole in 1295, and blown
number of Flemish weavers, driven out of their country by down by a terrible storm of wind, January 15, 1362, was
an inundation, settled here, and greatly improved the r11placed in 1364-9 by a new spire of stone, finished by Bishop
worsted and clothing trades: in 1565 a further Immigration Thomas Percy (1354-70) and repaired by Bishop Walter
of artisans took place, in consequence of the persecutions in Lyhart (1445-72); the cloisters, begun by Walpole in 1297,
the Netherlands. In 1348 Norwich suffered severely from were finished in 1430, the south walk being the work of
"The Black Death," which destroyed a great part of the Bishop Salmon (1299-1325), who also erected the greater part
population. In 1549 it was the scene of the rebellion headed of the charnel house, the palace hall, three bays of the gal-
by Robert Ket, a tanner of "\Vymondham, who on Aug. I lery at.d a chantry chapel: about the middle of the 14th
took possessiOn of the city, but being defeated in an engage- century two chapels, one on the north side and the other on
ment with the Earl of Warwick, he was taken and hanged the south side, were erected, about midway between the
in chains at Norwich Castle. It was part of the king's transepts and the side chapels of the apse, openings being
demesne, and was probably governed by an officer of his cut through the walls, and Decorated stone arches, supported
appointment until 1194, when Richard I. granted the city on columns, inserted so as to connect these, like the other
to the citizens at a fee farm rent, and gave them leave to chapels, with the aisles; St. Andrew's chapel, on the north
choose their own provost. In 1223, 4 bailiffs were sub- side, is entirely destroyed, and that on the south side, the
stituted for the provost, and this form of government Beaucharnp chapel, has lost its original character, having
continued till 1403, when the city received a new charter been altered from the Decorated to the Perpendicular style
fi"Om Henry IV. by which it was for ever to be governed by during the 15th century : considerable alterations were made
a mayor and sheriffs elected by the citizens, and thereby in the upper part of the presbytery in the middle of the 14th
became a county of itself. William Appleyard was the first century, about which time Bishop Percy erected the present
mayor of Norwich. In 1413 the first Corporation was clerestory. Bishop James Goldwell (1472-99) spent 2,200
formed, consisting of twenty-four aldermen and sixty marks upon repairs of the spire (struck by lightning in 1463),
common councillors. the erection of a chantry chapel and the construction of the
The city and county of the city is now governed by a vaulting of the choir, to sustain which he reared a series of
corporation, consisting of a mayor, sixteen aldermen and flying buttresses ; in the middle of the 15th century Bishop
forty-eight councillors, with a sheriff, under-sheriff, recorder, Alnwyk built the present west entrance to the nave and the
judge of the borough court, town clerk, clerk of the peace, large window over it, and his successor, Bishop Lyhart, the
coroner and other officers. There is a separate commission stone vaulting of the nave; and early in the 16th century
of the peace for the city, holding quarter sess;ons and daily the north and south transepts were vaulted with stone by
sessions, and the Corporation act as the Urban Sanitary Bishop Richard Nix. (15oo-36).
Authority. The revenues of the Corporation, exclusive of The cathedral, as at present existing, is a cruciform struc-
the amount received from borough rates, are about£ 11,500 ture, consisting of apsi.:l.al choir of four bays, with aisles and
a year. lateral chapels ; transepts, with an ancient apsidal chantry
The city has returned two members to Parliament since or sacristy projecting eastward from the northern arm, nave
~298 or earlier. of fourteen bays, and a central tower with spire, 315 feet in
Under the "Local Government .Act, 1888," Norwich is total height, and containing 5 bells; the total length, formerly,
declared a county borough for certain purposes of that Act. with the Lady chapel, 464 feet, is now 407 feet, the width,
Under an Act of Parliament obtained in 1867 a system of inclndi~ the aisles, 97 feet, and the height to the centre of
drainage has been completed at a cost of about £12o,ooo: nave ,-aulting, 69 feet; the vaulting over the prGBbytery is
by whieh the sewage is conveyed to Trowse, where there is 83 feet in height from the floor; the breadth across the
a pumping station for the irrigation of the sewage farm at transepts 178 feet, and the height of vaulting 73 feet. The
Crown Point. choir terminates eastward in a semicircular apse, which still
By a Local Act passed in 1889 sanction was given for the retains the double-arched entrance, formerly conducting to
re-sewering of the city on the separate system, and works the now destroyed Lady chapel; westward, the choir is con-
for this purpose, estimated to cost £8o,ooo, are now ( 1892) tinued two bays into the nave, but the stalls do not reach
in progress under the direction of Mr. P. P . .Marshall c.E. further than the lantern; these, 62 in number, are of oak,
city engineer. in the Perpendicular style, canopied and pinnacled, and have
The city is lighted with gas from extensive works at curious misericords; in the central bay of the apse, upon a
Bishop's bridge and St. Martin's at Palace, belonging to the small plaVorm, are fragments of the Bishop's throne, and
:Hritish Gas Light Co. Limited. Water is supplied by the on the pavements and the nearest pillars traces of the three
City of Norwich Waterworks Co. whose pumping station is steps which led up to it, according to the Basilican arrange-
at Heigham, and the water is distributed by gravitation from ment ; the clerestory is mixed Det:orated and Perpendicular,
.storage reservoirs at New Lakenham. a vaulting with elaborate bosses covering the central avenue;
Norwich became the seat of a diocese in 1094, when the see the windows, each of four lights, are set between canopied
was transferred from Thetford, and at one time included the niches; the choir aisles are continued round the apse, form-
~nt.ire counties of Norfolk and Suffolk. In 1837 the arch- ing an eastern processional path, which opens into two
deaconry of Sudbury in the latter county was transferred to radiating chapels of circular form, each with a semicircular
the diocese of Ely, and the diocese of Norwich now consists apse projecting eastward: the Jesus chapel is on the north and
of parts of three parishes in Cambridgeshire, the whole of St. Luke's on the south, the latter serving also as the parish
Norfolk (with the exception of parts of a few parishes) and church of St. Mary in the Marsh, which originally stood a
the greater part of Suffolk, and is comprised within the short distance south-east of the cathedral, within the pre-
archdea.conries of Norwich, Norfolk and Suffolk and in- cincts, and was destroyed in 1563 ; its Perpendicular font
cluded in the province of Canterbury. now stands in this chapel : opening from the south choir aisle
The Cathedral of the Holy Trinity, founded by Bishop is the Beauchamp chapel, a Decorated work, and there was
Herbert Losinga, in 1096, after the removal of the see from a corresponding chapel of St. f::ltephen attached to the north
Thetford, is a stately edifice, principally in theN orman style, choir aisle ; crossing this aisle is an Early Decorated porch-
and invaluable as an illustration of the pure Norman ground like gallery, probably t.he chamber of an anchorite and once
plan, which it retains in a manner almost unchanged since communicating with an exterior building, called the Sanc-
its erection. The choir with its aisles and chapels, the tran- tuary men's chamber, or Relics chapel ; the eagle lectern is
septs and the central tower, were completed by the founder, Late Decorated; a rich screen on either side of the choir,
who carried his work as far as the altar of the Holy Cross with niches, canopies, and an open pai"'d.pet rising to the floor ·
(afterwards St. Williarn's) m the nave; Bishop Everard, who of the trtforium, conceals the pillars and aisles, and the choir
.succeeded him in n2o, continued the nave and aisles west- screen of Bishop Browne incloses it at the west end. The
ward, and in 1150 the remains of St. William, the boy saint transept is without aisles, but has in the north wing the
{crucified by the Jews in II37 1 or March 1oth, u44), were eastern apsidal chapel of St. Anne ; the corresponding chapel
translated into the apse; a fire in 1171 damaged the struc- in the south wing has given place to a Decorated sacristy
ture, but it was repaired by Bishop de Furbes (1151), and of the 15th century, vaulted, with an upper chamber; the
John of Oxford, bishop from 1175, finished the work continued vaulting bosses of the transept exhibit, in a series of nearly
by Everard; in 124~-58, Bishop Waiter de Suffield erected a go sculptures, the story of theN ativity, but the work is later
Lady chapel at the extreme east end, on the site of the than and inferior to that of the nave ; the south wing is
Norman Lady chapel, which he probably demolished; this finished on the exterior with square turrets on either side the
7
502 N"ORWlCH. .N'ORFOLK. [KELLY S

gable, arcaded at the summit, and terminating in crocketed received amount to £9oo. The dean has (r892) been
pinnacles. Above the crossing, raised on massive piers, rises presented with a handsome brass lectern for the cathedral,
the magnificent tower, the loftiest and richest example of a by the members of the Cathedral Bible class.~
Norman tower in England; it consists of four stages, three The Erpingham gate, opposite to the west front of the
of which are surrounded with arcading, and the fourth dis- cathedral, erected between 1411 and 1420 by Sir Thomas
plays a double row of large circles, the upper tier being Erpingham, is a very early example of the ornamental
glazed so as to light that stage of the tower ; the Decorated Perpendicular flint work peculiar to the eastern counties,
battlements are adorned with shields, and at the angles are and forms a stately structure, with two demi-octangular
square embattled turrets, with crocketed spirelets, of the buttresses profusely sculptured, and has thirty-eight small
same date as the great octangular spire, which is richly statues, as well as shields, figures of birds and foliage, and
crocketed and capped with an elegant finial. The nave, in over the entrance the effigy of the founder, with his motto,
its simple majesty, is the largest, grandest, and most in- "~tnlt," i.e. "thank; ' 1 the charnel chapel of St. John the
teresting of any in this country, but is out of all proportion, Evangelist, standing obliquely between this gate and the
as regards length, to the rest of the fabric; on either side cathedral, was built by Bishop Salmon in 1316, and consists
are seven double bays, with piers, alternately round and of a chapel built over a. crypt, which has a double row of
square, supporting an open triforium, of disproportionate columns 14 feet high, and many-foiled round windows; some
size, the arches of which, heavy and circular, are too nearly distance south of these stands St. Ethelbert's Ol" the Court
of a height with those of the arcade below ; the windows of Gate, built by the citizens about 1272, with a hanging or
the clerestory, each of one light, appear through the centre upper chapel of black flint in the Decorated style.
arch of an arcading, with three arches in each hay; and On the north side, in St. Martin's plain, is the Palace or St.
above these spreads a superb vaulting of stone, of Perpen· Martin's Gate, erected by Bishop Alnwick, about 1430 ; near
dicular date, adorned with 328 elaborately sculptured bosses, it is the Bishop's Palace, a considerable pile, dating from the
illustrating the history of the world, from the Creation to foundation of the church, and embracing almost every sub-
the Doom, which have been admirably described in the fine sequent style; very extensive restorations and alterations
work published by Dean Goul burn in 1 876. The south aisle were carried out in 1858-9 by the present prelate Dr. Pel-
is of uncommon height and has three storeys, with an em- ham, under the able guidance of Ewan Christian esq.; the
battled parapet ; in the north aisle is a door leading to the private chapel, which stands a little in advance of the palace
green-yard, where there was anciently a preaching cross ; eastward, was built by Bishop ~almon about 1320 and
the window-s of both aisles have been filled with Late tracery. thoroughly t"estored and refitted during the prelacy of Bishop
The west front, although possessing the advantages Hall (1641-6r); this chapel suffered much from the hands
afforded by a surrounding open space and forest trees, is of the Puritans, who destroyed all the paintings, demolished
wanting in dignity and importance, and consists simply of all the stained windows, and stripped and sold the lead from
a gable between two turrets crowned with spirelets, while the roof; it was, however, restored by his successor, Bish<>p
on either side extend the ends of the aisles, three storeys Reynolds ( 1661-76), about the middle of the 17th cen•
in height, with embattled parapets, and Norman turrets tury : in the palace gardens are the remains of a Decor-
flanking each angle; the chief entrance is through a re- ated chapel (r3o by 30 feet) and of the Palace hall (roo by
cessed doorway, with four canopied niches, above which is 6o feet), built in 1299-1325, and destroyed by Cromwell, as
a rich Perpendicular window of nine trefoiled lights, filled well as the basement of a gate-house erected by Bishop
in 1854 with stained glass as a memorial to Edward Stanley Salmon, and a kitchen of the 13th century.
D. D. bishop of Norwich, 1837-49; a small light is set in the The Chapter Library in the audit room, at the south-east
head of the gable, which terminates in a cross. The angle of the Close, consists of 3,200 volumes for the use of
-cloisters adjoining the cathedral on the south side, and in the clergy.
part occupying the angle between the nave and south tran- The parish churches are numerous and all ancient.
sept, date from 1297-1430, and are only inferior in size to All Saints', in Westlegate street, is a small building of flint,
thosa of Salisbury, being 177 feet in length on the west and in the Perpendicular style, consisting of chancel, nave, north
east sides and 176 on the north and south, with a height of aisle, south porch and an embattled western tower with
, IS feet; at the north-west angla are a slype, and outer or pinnacles, containing 3 bells: the church has a richly-
great parlour; in the west alley are the Early English door sculptured octagonal font and there are mural tablets to
of the guest-house and the lavatories, fol"mcd by inclosing John Moss, d. 1837; Mrs. Evans, "d. 1856; and to Dr.
arches recessed in the wall, panelled and enriched with Evans, d. 1862: there are 150 sittings. The register dates
carved foliage, while at the back are narrow canopied from the year 1573. The living is a rectory, consolidated
niches, inclosing pedestals ; in the East alley are the with St. Julian's, joint gross yearly value £2o6, net £w6,
processional door, with radiating tabernacles, three niches with 104 acres of glebe, in the gift of the Rev. Henry Clem-
for book aumbries, and the beautiful triple entrance to the ent Sculthorpe B.A. vicar of Beeley, Derbyshire, and held
now destroyed chapter house, which projected 8o feet east- since 1868 by the B.ev. William Kant LL.B. of London Uni-
ward and had a polygonal apse ; the vaulting of the cloisters versity and M.A.. of Glasgow. In 1883 a portion of the
is particularly fine and has richly sculptured bosses ; the parishes of All Saints and St. Julian was annexed to St.
dark cloister at the south-east angle led to the infirmary ; Etheldred's, and at the Eame time a portion of St. Ethel-
three Late Norman pillars of its hall, built by Bishop John of dred's was annexed to All Saints.
Oxford I 175-1200, still remain ; west of the cloisters are a St. Andrew's,. in Broad street, rebuilt in 15o6, is an
guest hall and cellarer's apartments, and between these inter- edifice of flint and stone in the Perpendicular style, con-
venes a. Norman building, the purpose of which is unknown; sisting of chancel, lofty nave, aisles, north and south porches
•On the south side were the refectory and kitchen. and a western tower with pinnacles, containing a clock with
The principal monuments in the cathedral are the follo,v- chimes (erected in 1883) and Io bells: there are monuments
ing: Bishop Herbert Losinga, ob. ro9r, a modern altar-tomb to Sir John Suckling, ob. r6r3, and his wife, and to Francis
erected in 1682; Prior W. Walsham, I2I8; Sir Thomas Rugg, 'thrice mayur of Norwich: the chancel retains sedilia
Erpingham, 1420, low temb i Sir Thomas Wyndham, viee- and a credence, and there are several stained windows : the
admiral, 1421, an altar tomb; Bishop John Wakeryng, 1426; church affords 700 sittings. The register dates from the
•:Bishop J ames Gold well, 1499, with canopied effigy ; Sir John year 1558. The living is a vicarage, net yearly value £179,
Hobart, attorney-general to Henry VII.; Bishop Richard arising from 1to acres of gleb~ with residence, in the gift of
Nykke or Ny.x:, 1536, a flat tomb, arched over, with the iron the parishioners, and held since 1856 by the Rev. Arthnr
work for the sacring bell of the chantry chapel ; Bishop John Charles Copeman M. B., A.K.C.L. honorary canon of Norwich,
Parkhurst, i:575 ~Lady Elizabeth Calthorp, 1582; and Chan- rural dean, of N orwicb, surrogate, and episcopal commissary
cellor Miles Spenc-er, an altar tomb of the 16th century, for the a.rchdeaconry Elf Norwich.
on which the tenants formerly paid their rents; there is also St. Augustine's church, in St. Augustine street, is a plain
a statue in Can-ara. marble, by Chantrey, to Bishop Henry but aneieut building of flint in the Perpendicular style, con-
Bathurst, who died in r837. In the sacristy the table of sisting of chancel,_ nave, aisles, south porch and an embattled
the reredos of the Jesus chapel ( r38o-qoo) has pictures, western tower of brick containing 3 bells: the church was
on panel, of the 14th century, in five compartments, partially restored in 1879 at a cost of £soo, and is now
representing the closing scenes in the Life of our Lord; ( r 892) undergoing further restoration : it affords 240
the heads are treated in the Italian manner, and the sittings. The register dates from the year r558. The living
grouping is that of the Siennese school. Many important is a rectory, gross yearly value j;159, including 15 acres of
internal restorations were carried out by Dr. Goulburn, the glebe, in the gift of the Dean and Chapter, and held since
late dean, in the period from 1871-r882, and a new clock 1877 by the Re...-. William Alexander Elder B.D. of Corpus
with chimes, presented by Mrs. Goulburn, has been placed Christi college, Cambridge.
in the tower. A large sum of money was also spent on ex- St. Benedict's church, in St. Benedict's street, is an
tensive repairs to the tower and spire internally during the ancient building of flint, in the Early English style, consist-
years 1884-5· Considerable repairs are now ( 1892) in progress ing of chancel, nave, north aisle, north and south porches
in the choir and transepts under the direction of Mr. C. J. and a round tower with octagonal belfry stage containing 3
Brown, surveyor to the Dean and Chapter. A new episcopal bel·s: the church has been restored, anq. affords 200 sittings.
throne is like!y shortly to be erected, as a mark of esteem The register dates from the year 1563. The living is a
to the bishop; the subscriptions already (June, 1892) vicarage, net yearly value £IOo, including 56 acres of glebe,
DIRECTORY.] NORFOLK. NORWICH. 503
in the gift of the parishioners, and held since I 89t by the of the Hishnp ef Norwich, and held since ·1887 by the Rev.
Rev. Josiah 'Wedgwood, of University College, Durham, and Henry Pickford M.A. of Corpus Christi college, Cambridge,
St. Aidans. and A.Mus. of Trinity College, London.
St. Clement's, in Colegate street, is an ancient structure St. Giles' church at the top of St. G-iles' street, is a build-
of flint, with stone dressings, chiefly in the Perpendicular ing of flint stone in the Perpendicular style, consisting of
style, consisting of chancel, nave, south aisle and an em- chancel, lofty nave, aisles, south porch and an embattled
battled western tower containing- 3 bells: in the churchyard, western tower 120 feet in height and containing a clock and
opposite the south door, is the tomb of the parents of Matthew 8 bells: there are mural monuments to Adrian Payne, ob.
Parker, archbishop of Canterbury (1559-75), who resided 1686, Alderman T. Churchman, ob. 1742, Dr. William
here: adjoining the west wall is a tomb without any inscrip- Offiey, ob. 1767, and to Sir Thomas Churchman, d. 1781;
tion, but known as the ~·Leper's tomb," which, tradition and brasses to Richard Baxter, ob. 1432, and to a member
says, was raised over the remains of a leper : there are of the Purdannce family, ob. 1430: the church was thoroughly
sittings for 350 persons. restored in 1867 at a cost of £4,500 9 and has soo sittings.
St. Edmund's, in Fishgate street, is a small and plain The register dates from the year 1538, but for several years
edifice of flint in the Perpendicular style, consisting of from that date the entries are only copie~ of the onginals.
chancel, nave, south aisle, north porch and an embattled The living is a vicarage, net yearly value £70, including 7~
western tower containing one bell: the church was restored acres of glebe, with residence, in the gift of the Dean and
in 1882, and has sittings for 425 persons. The register of Chapter, and held since 1886 by the Rev. Sydney Adolphus
St. Clement's dates from the year 1538, and that of St. Boyd H.C.L., M.A. of Worcester College, Oxford.
St. Gregory's, in Pottergate street, is a. building of flint,
Edmund's from 1550. The living is a rectory, united in
x882 to that of St. Edmund, average tithe rent-charge £37, chiefly in the Decorated style, consisting of chancel, nave,
aisles, north and south .porches, both grained, and a western
joint net yearly value £ Ioo, including 70~ acres of glebe,
with residence, in the gift of Caius College, Cam bridge, and tower containing 6 bells : there are a few brass inscriptions
of the 1-5th century and a monument to Sir Francis Bacon
held since 1890 by the Rev. CharlesWilliam HeathcoteBaker
B.A. of Hertford College, Oxon. Cookes's Almshonses for 8 knt. a judge of the King's Bench in the reign of Charles II.
d. 22 Aug. 1657, and ano_ther to Sir Peter Seaman knt. d.
poor persons, erected by the benefaction of Thomas and
1715: the east window is stained and there is one memorial
Robert Cookes, in 1692, were remoyed in 1892 from Rose window: at the west end of the north aisle is a curious
lane, in the parish of St. l'eter-Permountergate, and were
painting, in distemper, of St. George, a relic of the ancient
re-erected in- St. Clement's parish. guild of St. George, the members of which worshipped in
St. Etheldred's church, in King street, is an ancient this church: the church, which retains an ancient brass
.structure of flint and brick, in the Norman and Perpendi- eagle lectern, was once a place of sanctuary or refuge ; the
cular styles, consisting of chancel, nave, south porch and sanctuary knocker, now attached to the vestry door, is a
a small western tower, round at the base with an octangu- 14th century work, but has lost the ring : the interior and
lar belfry storey containing 4 bells: the Norman remams roof were restored in 1861 and 1874, and there are 434
include a fine doorway : in the chancel is a monument to sittings. The register dates from the year 1571. The
William Johnson, alderman, ob. 161 I, with his effigy in livmg is a vicarage, net yearly value £97, including 32 acres
municipal robes and kneeling figures of his wife, son, and of glebe, in the gift of the Dean and Chapter, and held since
chree daughters: the monnment.B and brasses belonging to I 890 by the Rev. W illiam Armine Slipper M. A. of Emmanuel
the church of St. Peter, Southgate, taken down in 1887, College, Cambridge.
were removed here: the nave was restored in 1882-83 at a St. Helen's, in Bishopsgate street, now the church of the
cost of £goo, and has 150 sittings. The register of baptisms Great Hospital, is an aHc<ent edifice of flint, in the Perpen-
dates from the year x668; marriages, 1677; burials, r665. dicular style, consisting of chancel, nave, south porch, tran-
The registers of ~t. Peter, Southgate, dating from 1558, are septs, cloisters and a Perpendicular western tower contain-
also now depnsited here. The living is a perpetual curacy, ing one bell : there is a very fine piece of graining in the
united to St. Peter's, Soutbgate, average tithe rent-charge south transept, representing The Coronation of the Virgin:
£3, gross yearly value £138, including 88~ acres of glebe, John Kirkpatrick, the antiquary, who assisted in compiling
in the gift of the trustees of the Great Hospital aiHl the Blomfield's History of Norfolk, is buried here : the choir of
Bishop of Norwich alternately, and held since 1890 by the the church has been converted into wards for the alms-
Rev. Matthew Bower M.A. of Corpns Christi collrge, Cam- women, and all that part of the nave and aisles extending
bridge. In 1883 a portion of St. Etheldred's parish was from the tower to the south porch is divided into apart-
annexed to St. Julian's, a portion of St. Julian's being at ments for the men, the intermediate space with the south
the same time annexed to St. Etheldred's, and subsequently chantry being all that is left open for divine service and
St. Etheldred's was united to St. Peter's, ~outbgate, in King affording 250 sittings: the church is kept in repai-r by the
street. trustees of St. Gilcs's or the Great Hospital: near the
St. George, Colegate, is a large and handsome structure church stands the tower of the old hospital church of ~t.
-of flint in the Perpendicular style, rebuilt at diffrrent Giles. The register dates from the year 1678. The living
periods, viz. : the tower and nave in 1459 ; the chancel in is a vicarage, gross yearly value, including the chaplaincy oi
- 1498 ; the north aisle with the chapel of St. Mary in 1504 ; the Great Hospital,.. £2o6, with residence, in the gift of the
and the south aisle with the chapel of St. Peter in I 513 ; trustees of the Great or St. Giles Hospital, and held sinco
it consists of chancel, clerestoried nave, aislesj south porch 1891 by the Rev. George Harris Cooke M.A. of Wadham
and a lofty embattled western tower containing a clock and College, Oxford, and surrogate.
3 bells : the east window is stained and there is much fine St. J ames' with Pockthorpe is a small but ancient Perpen-
oak carving, especially on the reredos, pulpit sounding dicular edifice of flint, consisting of chancel, nave, south
board and the spaces between and above the clerestory aisle, south porch and an embattled western tower contain-
windows: the monuments include one to John Crome, the ing one bell : the ancient panelled font is richly ornamented
founder of the Norwich School of artists and generally with figures representing the .Apostles and Evangelists and
known as "Old Crome," who was born at Norwich in r769 eight female saints: there is a mural monument dated 1632
and d. 22 April, 182r, and another to John Herring esq. and a brass dated 1618: the church was restored in 1885 at
mayor in 1799, by the younger Bacon. Many of the Nor- a cost of about £500, and has 240 sittings. The register
wich mayors and sheriffs are interred here. In the chapel dates from the year 1558. The living is a vicarage, gross
of St. Mary is an altar tomb in terra-cot ta to Ro bert J annys, yearly value £3oo, including 37 acres of glebe, with
a. great benefactor to thiR parish and city ; and the north residence, in the gift of the Deau and Chapter, and held
aisle retains a fine brass to William N orwiche, dated 1475, since 1872 by the Rev. Alfred Davies M.A. of Clare College,
and a piscina : the rood stair turret still remains on :the Cambridge.
south side: the church is seated with oak benches, affording St. John's, Maddermarket, is a building of flint and stone,
soo sittings. The register dates from the year 1538. The in the Decorated and Perpendicular styles, consisting of nave
living is a vicarage, net yearly value £so, in the gift of the of three bays, aisles, north and south porches and an em-
Bishop of Norwich, and held since 1887 by the Rev. William battled westem tower with pinnacle.s, containing 6 bells,dated
Cooke Matthews, of St. Bee8. There are good parochial 1782: there are some fine brasses to the families of Mone-
charities for tha poo:r. · -slee 1412, Terry 1520, Marsham 1525 and Sontherton 1540,
St. George's, Tombland, is a large edifice of flint, in the and a tablet to Lady Margaret (Audley), second wife .of
Perpendicular style, with portions of older date, and consists Thomas, fourth Duke of Norfolk K.G. who was interred here
of chancel, nave, aisles;' north parch and a fine embattled in 1563: in the south aisle are mural monuments of coloured
western tower containing a clock and 5 bells: there are stone to Nicholas Southerton, ob. 1540, and to Christopher
memorial windows to Dr. Sutton, d. 1846, and to Miss Saycr, ob-. 1600: the church was restored in 1868 at a cost
Hudson, d. :t867, erected by her nieces; a fin9 pulpit and a of £r,2oo, and ha<1400 sittings. The register dates from
few ancient monuments, one of which is to the founder of the year 1558. The living is a discharged rectory, average
the G-reat Hospital: the church was re~tored in 1883 at a tithe rent-charge £roo, net yearly value £122, with- 8o
cost of about £t,5oo, and has 220 sittings. The register acres of glebe and rllsidence, in the gift of New Colle~e.
dates from the year 1538. The living is a l"icarage, net Oxford, and held since 1888 by the Rev. Arthur Felton Still
yearly value £-Ioo, including 100 acres of glebe, in the gift Hill M. A. of that college.
504 NORWICH. NORFOLK. [KELLY'S
St. John de Sepulchre, at the top of Bel' street, is a large consisting of chancel, nave, transept, south porch and an
building of flint, in the Perpendicular style, consisting of ancient round western tower containing 6 bells: the pulpit
chancel, nave, transept, north porch and a lofty western is ancient and panelled : the church has been partially re-
tower containing a clock and 5 bells : the stained east wm- · seated, but is now (1892) closed for restoration. The regis-
dow is a memorial to the Rev. Samuel Stone, a former ter dates from the year 1558. The living is a vicarage, net
vicar: the church was restored in 1866, and has 300 sit- yearly value £so, including 48 acres of glebe, in the gift of
tings. The register dates from the year I559· The living the Marquess Townshend, and held since r89r by the Rev.
is a vicarage, average tithe rent-charge £6, gross yearly Sydney Albert Dudley Suffiing, of University College, Dur-
'\'alue £ r 14, with glebe, in the gift of the Dean and Chapter, ham, who is also rector of St. Michael-at-Coslany.
-and held since r8yo by the Rev. George Nicholas IIerbert The church of St. Mary-in-the-Marsh, which stood in the
M. A. of Corpus Christi college, Cambridge. precincts, about roo yards south-east of the cathedral, was
St. John the Baptist's, Timberhill, in Rer street, is a destroyed in r563, and the Dean and Chapter,then granted
building of flint in the Perpendicular style, consisting of the parishioners t.he use of St. Luke's chapel and the aisle of
-chancel, nave, aisles, south porch with parvise, two small St. John the Baptist, both in the cathedral, for the purpose
chapels and a western bell-cot of stone containing one bell ; of holding their services and burying their dead ; and the
the tower fell in 1784 : the south chapel retains a piscina chapel of St. Luke still continues to be the church of this
and a new piscina and sedilia have been placed in the chan- parish. The register dates from the year 1591. The living
-cel: the interior of the church was restored in 1874 and a is a vicarage, gross yearly value £8o, with 32~ acres of
considerable-portion of the fabric in r878 ; in r889 the nave glebe, in the gift of the Dean and Chapter, and held since
and chancel were new-roofed, the roofs of the aisles and 1879 by the Rev. William Thomas Moore M.A. of Emmanuel
ehapels being at the same time restored: there aTe 200 sit- College, Cambridge, minor canon of the cathedral and sur-
tings. The register dates from the. year I539· The living rogate.
is a vicarage, gross yearly value £185, including 59 acres of l::lt. Michael's-at-Coslany, commonly called "St. Miles,"
glebe, in the gift of the Dean and Chapter, and held since in Coslany street, is a large and ancient building of flint,
~871 by the Rev. Edward Ram Th.A. of King's College, chiefly in the Perpendicular style, consisting of chancel,
London. The population in 1891 was 1,054· nave, aisles, north porch and a lofty embattled western
St. Julian's, in King street, is a small but ancient building tower containing a clock and a fine peal of 8 bells: there are
of flint, in the Norman style, consisting of chancel, nave, two ancient brasses with effigies in shrouds, to Henry Scot-
north porch and a small round embattled western tower towe, alderman, ob. 1515, and Alicia, his wife, and to lUchard
containing one bell : there is one stained window : the Ffrench, four times mayor of Norwich, ob. 1501; and there
interior was restored and reseated with open oak benches in is another to Helen Elizabeth Godfrey, ob. r63o: at the end
:~871, and affords r5o sittings. The register dates from the of the south aisle, begun by Gregory Clark, alderman, and
year r589. The living is a rectory, consolidated with that finished by his son, who was mayor in 1514, is the famous
of All Saints, joint net yearly value£ 106, with 164 acres of chapel built and endowed by Hobert Thorp in the reign of
glebe, in the gift of the Rev. Henry Clement Sculthorpe H.A. Henry VII. the exterior of which is well known as furnish-
vicar of Beeley, Derbyshire, and held since r88o by the ing the finest example of flint and stone panelled work to be
Rev. William Kant LL.B. of London University and M.A. of found in this country : the north aisle and chantry chapel
Glasgow. of St. John the Baptist were built by William Ramsey,
St. Lawrence's, in St. Benedict's street, is an edifice of mayor in r5o2 and rso8, who is buried in the chapel, where
flint with freestone dressings, in the Perpendicular style, there is an altar tomb to his memory : the nave was rebuilt
-consisting of chancel, nave, aisles, north and south porches by John and Stcphen Staton, in I5II and 1512: in r883 the
and a lofty embattled western tower containing 6 bells: there old altar piece of "the Resurrection," by Heim, was re-
are several ancient brasses, and sittings for 6oo persons. moved, the blocked east window opened, the chancel re-
The register dates from the year 1559. The living is a rec- floored and fitted with stalls, and a fine organ erected; and
tory, net yearly value £r3o, with 95 acres of glebe and the exLerior of the chancel was at the same time re-faced
rP..sidence, in the gift of the Lord Chancellor, and held since with stone and flint panelling in the style of the Thorp
I8gr by the Rev. Frederick John Moule M.A. of Corpus chapel and a stained window inserted, the whole cost being
Christi college, Cambridge. defrayed by Sir Harry Bullard kt. and his family: in I888
St. Margaret's church, between Lower Westwick street the church was ·restored under the direction of the late Mr.
and St. Benedict's street, is a building of flint with frees tone E. P. Williarns, diocesan architect, at a cost of £6oo: there
dressings, in the Perpendicular style, consisting of chancel, are 700 sittings, 300 being free. The register dates from
spacious nave, south aisle, north porch, south porch with the year 1558. The living is a rectory, gross yearly value
groined roof and parvise, small chapel and an embattled £73, including 33 acres of glebe, with residence, in the gift
western tower containing 2 bells: there is an ancient brass of the Church Patronage Society, and held since 1888 by tbe
to Lady Anne Rede, ob. 1567 : the east window is a memorial Rev. Sydney Albert Dudley Suffiing, of Univer.>ity College,
to Alfred Robert Arnold esq. and was erected in r885 by h1s Durham, wlio is also vicar of St. Mary the Virgin's.
widow: the communion plate includes a silver chalice and St. Michael-at-Plea, in Queen street, is an ancient cruci-
-cover, the work of Peter Petersen and dated 1567: the form building of flint and stone in the Perpendicular style,
.church was completely restored in I888, and now affords 350 consisting of chancel, nave, transepts, a south chapel, dedi-
sittings. The register dates from the year 1559. The liv- cated to the Virgin, south-west porch and a low embattled
ing is a rectory, with that of St. Swithin annexed; net western tower with pinnacles, containing a clock and one
yearly value £r4o, principally derived from ro8 acres of bell: there are two brasses to the Ferrer family, dated
.glebe, in the gift of the Bishop of .Yorwich, and held since r6o5: the reredos is composed of old panel paintings of the
:x883 by the Rev. Samuel Smith. 14th century formerly lying loose in the church, some of
St. Martin's-at-Oak, in Oak street, and so called from an which formed part of the rood screen, and others probably
oak tree formerly standing in the churchyard, in which was belonged originally to a parclose or to a series of "Stations
placed an image of the Virgin, called '' Our Lady in the of the Cross"·; all these have been restored, those on the
Oak," is an ancient building of flint stone in the Perpen- reredos representing the Annunciation, the Betrayal, and
dicular style, consisting of chancel, nave, south aisle, west two of the Crucifixion, together with figures of St. Erasmus,
porch and an embattled western tower containing a clock St. Margaret, and St. Thomas of Canterbury : another
and 3 bells: the church was re-seated in r887 and now beautiful panel of the Resurrection is placed in a niche at the
affords 420 sittings. The register dates from the year 1656. back of the pulpit, and two more, representing Moses and
'The living is a vic-arage, net yearly value [154, including Aaron, on the west wall : the organ cost 350 guineas : there
68 acres of glebe, in the gift of the Dean and Chapter, and is a handsome carved stone pulpit, brass lectern and oak
held since r891 bytheRev. RobertMiddleton, of St. Aidans. choir stalls, constructed in part of the old wood : the church
Connected with the church is a mission hall, seating about was completely restored in r887 and re-opened on St.
300. Michael 's day in that year, and now affords 260 sittin1,rs. The
St. Martin's-at-Palace, in Palace plain, is an ancient register dates from the year 1539. The living is a rectory,
structure of flint and stone, in the Perpendicular style, con- averagl' yearly value arising from tithe rent-charge £51,
.sisting of chancel,nave,aisles,south porch with parvise and an with 40 acres of glebe and .residence, in the gift of Sir
embattled western tower with pinnacles containing one bell: Thomas Barrett Lennard hart.. M.A., D.L., J.P. of Belhus
the east windows and several others are stained : the organ Park, Romford, Essex, and Joseph Ramey Morse esq. of
was erected in 1:863 and renovated and enlarged in r887 : Lound Hall, Lowestoft, and held since 1886 by th~ Rev.
the church underwent a thorough restoration in 1854 and Percy Carrnichael Clarke B.A. of Trinity Hall, Cambridge.
1;he tower was restored and raised to its original height in St. Michael-at-Thorn, in Ber street, is a small edifice of
1874: there are 360 sittings. The register dates from the flint stone, chiefly in the Perpendicular style, consisting of
year 1538. The living is a vicarage, net yearly value £uo, chancel, nave, south porch and an embattled western tower
including 47 acres of glebe. with rel•idence, in the gift of the with pinnacles, containing one bell: the porch is Norman:
Bishop of Norwich, and held since r8go by the Rev. Samuel the tower fell3 N"ov. 1886, and was rebuilt in r887 at a cost
Cox. The vicarage is close to the church. of over £500, under the superintendence of Mr. H. J. Green,
St. Mary the Virgin's, in Coslany street, is a cruciform architect : the church has been restored, and affords 379
structure of flint and cement in the Perpendicular style, sittings. The register dates from the year 1562. The living
DIRECTORY.] NORFOLK. NORWICH. 505

is a viearage, net yearly value £87, derived from 45 acres exception of a portion of the tower, in 1887 : the bells,
of glebe, in the gift of Constance Marchioness of Lothian, monuments, brasses and registers were removed to the
and held since 1876 by the Rev. William Frederic Creeny church of St. Etheldreda, and the two parisheil are now con-
M.A. of St. John's College, Cambridge, and F.S.A. (LDnd.). solidated.
St. Paul's, in St. Paul's square, is a small building- of flint, St. Saviour's, in Magdalen street, is a small but ancient
chiefly in the Perpendicular style, consisting of apsidal chan- edifice of flint and stone in the Perpendicular style, con-
cel, nave, north aisle, south porch and a low round western sisting of chancel, nave, south porch and an embattled
tower containing- one bell: the church was restored in 1882, western tower, reduced in 1852 at considerable expense, and
when the chancel was added: there are 430 sittings. The containing a clock and 2 bells : the chancel is Decorated ~
registers date from the year 15671 and, excepting the oldest, the old south porch, which had been built up for nearly 200
are in a good state of preservation. The living is a vicarage, years and used as a baptistery, was re-opened in r89r: the
net yearly value £285, including 51 acres of glebe, with stem of the ancient font consists of four shafts, resting on
residence, in the gift of the Dean and Chapter, and held lions' heads, and supporting ogee canopies, with pinnacles
since 1872 by the Rev. Michael Satterthwaite Jackson, who between : there are 300 sittings. The register dates from
resides at Catton. In 1882 the churchyard was laid out as the year IS5.'i· The living is a vicarage, average tithe rent-
a garden, the expenses being paid by the late John Gurney charge £1n, net yearly value £142, with 36~ acres of glebe,
esp. of Sprowston Hall. in the gift of the Dean and Chapter, and held since 1856 by
St. Peter, Hungata, on Elm hill, is an ancient cruciform the Rev. William Harris Cooke M.A. of Corpus Christi
structure of flint, consisting of chancel, nave, transept, south College, Oembridge, who resides at Stracey House, Thorpe
porch and an embattled western tower containing 2 bells : Hamlet.
the east window is stained: in 1871-72 the interior of the SS. Simon and Jude's, in Wensum street, is an ancient
church was restored and the nave seated with chairs: the structure of flint in the Perpendicular style, consisting of
organ was placed in the church in 1875, the cost being de- chancel, nave, north porch and a low embattled western
frayed by voluntary subscriptions : there are sittings for 200 tower containing one bell: there are several ancient and
persons. The register dates from the year r6oo. The living curious monuments here to the Pettus family of Rackheath in
is a rectory, net yearly value about £roo, including 22 acres t.his county, who left endowments to the parish, including
of glebe, in the gift of the Lord Chancellor, and held since Thoma.'l Pettus, mayor in 1591, ob. 1597 ; Sir John Pettus
1871 by the Rev. William Ballyman Hull M.A. late scholar of kt. ob. April 9, 1613, and others: in the register is an entry
Pembroke College, Oxford, and surrogate. showing that four knights, who came to Norwich with the
St. Peter Mancroft (magna crofta castelli), which stands Earl of Warwick in the reign of Edward VI. and were killed
in the Upper Market place, is the largest and most ma!,rnifi- in the engagement at Mousehold, Aug. 27, 1549, with Ket.
cent parish church in the city. The original building was the Wymondham tanner, were buried in one grave in the
Norman, but was replaced in the 15th century by the chancel: there are 450 sittings. The register dates from
present church, which is a splendid example of the Perpen- the year 1539. The living is a rectory, yearly value £4o,
dicular style, consisting of chancel, clerestoried nave, aisles, including 37"~ acres of glebe, in the gift of the Bishop of
north and south porches, and a stately embattled western Norwich; the Rev. John Callis M.A. of St. Catharine's
tower 98 feet in height, with four angle turrets and a hand- College, Cambridge, and rector of South Heigham, has been
some fleche covered with lead and containing a peal of 12 curate in charge since 1887.
bells : the columns of the nave with the clerestory windows St. Stephen's, in Rampant Hor!!e street, is an edifice of
above are singularly light and graceful, and the roofs of the flint in t.he Perpendicular style, consisting of chancel, nortb
nave and chancel are good specimens of fan tracery, springing chapel or chantry, nave, aisles, large north porch and a
from stone shafts supported on corbels : below the sacra- tower on the north side containing 3 bells : the roof is a fine
rium, which is raised eight steps above the floor of the example of open timber-work: there are several bras..'les.
nave, IS a passage with a. vaulted roof, the greater part of including one to Dr. Cappe, a former vicar of this parish,
the church being built over a crypt adapted to the rise of ob. 1445, and another to John Stalon, ob. 1.500: a reredos
the hill, and forming the platform on which the church was was erected in 1857: three of the windows are memorials
erected: at the extreme east end is a Lariy chapel, used of to the Brownson family and one to Sir Samuel Bignold, some
late years as a vestry : the font stands under a remarkable time M.P. for Norwich, d. 1875, erected by his daughters in
canopy supported by pillars, and was formerly surmounted 1885: there are also a great number of mural monuments.
by a richly decorated cover ; only one baptistery of a not less than 6oo persons having been buried under the
similar character-that in Trunch church-is to be fonnd floor of the church, which is seated-with open oak benches,
in Norfolk: the east window is filled with old stained glass, affording goo sittings, about 500 of which are free. The
which in 188o was admirably imitated in another window register dates from the year 1538. The living is a vicarage,
in the chancel in memory of R. Seaman esq. : there is an net yearly value £332, including 28 acres of glebe, with
ancient brass to Sir Peter Reade, dated 1568, and several residence, in the gift of the Dean and Chapter, and held
mural monuments, induding one to Sir Thomas Browne since 1875 by the Rev. ·James Wilson M.A. of Jesus College,
kt. M.D. the author of" Religio Medici, ''who was knighted Cambridge.
by Charles II. on his visit to Norwich in r671, and died Oct. St. Swithin's, in St. Benedict's street, is an ancient building-
19, 1682 : the communion plate includes a large and hand- of flint in various styles, principally Decorated, now con-
some silver gilt cup and paten dated 1568, a superb cup and sisting only of chancel, nave and aisles, the small embattled
cover, given in 1633 by Sir Peter Gleane kt. mayo~ of Nor- tower having been taken down by the city authorities in
wich in 1615, embossed with a represention of Abigail r88x: the windows retain fragments of old stained glass.
bringing gifts to David ; a large flagon and other silver gilt but the church is now closed, being in a very bad state of
vessels : the whole of the exterior of the church was restored repair. The register dates from the year 1700. The living
in 1881-2 under the superintendence of the late G. E. Street is a rectory, annexed to that of St. Margaret's, which see_
esq. R.A. at a cost of £rs,ooo, and at Christmas, 1885, a The Temple charity of this parish, left in 1691 to be dis-
very fine carved oak reredos was erected : there are I ,ooo tributed to the poor in bread and clothing, is now very
sittings, about 400 being free. The register dates from the valuable, and constantly increasing.
year r538. The living is a vicarage, net yearly value £3oo, The following are ecclesiastical parishes : -
including 49 acres of glebe, in the gift of the parishioners, Christ church, New Catton, is an ecclesiastical parish.
and held since 1890 by the Rev. William Pelham Burn M.A. formed July 26, 1842, out of the parish of St. Clement. The
of Pembroke College, Oxford, and diocesan inspector of church is a crucifonn building of flint stone, in the Early
schools for the deanery of Ipswich. The population in 1891 English style, consisting of chancel, nave, transept, westeru
was 1,904· porch and a turret containing one bell : there are 629
St. Peter-Permountergate, in King street, is a building of sittings, 437 being free. The register dates from the year
flint in the Perpendicular style, consisting of chancel, nave, r841. The living is a vicarage, gross yearly value £270, and
south porch with parvise, and an embattled western tower residence, in the gift of the rector of St. Clement's, and
containing 5 bells: there are some ancient stalls in the held since r882 by the Rev. Waiter Samuel Wright M.A. of
chancel, which also contains a tomb with recumbent Corpus Christi College, Cambridge. The populatl.on in 189:1
effigies, to R. Berney esq. and his wife, dated 1623 ; a was 6,459·
reredos of carved oak, richly decorated and including a Holy 'l'rinity church, South Heigham, was formed as a
panel picture of "The Last Supper," was erected by the district chapelry out of Heigham parish Nov. 5, 1867; the
present vicar in memory of his wife, and several memorial church, in Essex street, erected in 186o and consecrated in
windows placed by the Underwood family: the organ was 1861, is a cruciform edifice of flint with brick facings, in the
erected in 1879 : there are sittings for 400 persons. The Decorated style, consisting of chancel, nave, transepts and
register dates from the year 1538. The living is a vicarage, an eastern tower with shingled spire containing one bell and
net yearly value £86, with 34 acres of glebe, in the gift of a set of tubular bells, erected in 1890: in 1866 the central
the Dean and Chapter and held since 1873 by the Rev. light of the east window was filled with stained glass, as a
William Hudson M.A. of Trinity College, Cambridge. memorial.to Mr. John Caton, by his widow : the side lights
The ancient church of St. Peter-at-Southgate, a building are memorials to the daughters of the present vicar : another
of flint and stone in the Perpendicular style, after being for memorial window was erected in r865 to children of the
some time in a ruinous condition, was taken down, with the Rev. G. C. Hoste, then vicar: the brass lectern was pre-
506 r\ORWICH. NORFOLK. (KELLY's
sented in 1887: there are x, 120 sittings, half being free. room, church parlour, class rooms, retiring rooms, and on
The register dates from the year x86x. The living is a rec- the ground floor an assembly or school room, 62 feet long
tory, tithe rent-charge £6o, average £53· net yearly value by 39 feet wide, seating, together with an adjoining class
£3oo, with residence, built in x869, in the gift of the Bishop of roQm, about 770 persons.
Norwich, and held since 1875 by the Rev. John Callis 1\LA. There are Primitive Methodist chapels in Cowgate street,
of St. Ca.tharine's College, Cambridge, who is also curate Dare ham road, Queen's road, New Cat ton and Nelson street ;
in charge of SS. Simon and Jude. Holy Trinity Parochial a Unitarian chapel in Colegate street; Free Methodist
Hall, in Essex street, built in 1877, will seat 300 people, chapels in Calvert street and Chapelfield ; Wesleyan chapels
and has a. library and class-room attached. Holy Trinity in Ber street and Lady's lane; Free Methodist at. South
mission hall and Sunday schools, in Eagle street, afford Heigham and a Wesleyan Reform chapel in Belvoir.
sittings for 250 persons. The population in x8B1 was 9·50'7· A Salvation Army citadel is now (1892) in course of
St. Philip's was formed as a district out of Heigham parish erection, at an estimated cost, with site, of £4,000, and will
March 31, 1868 ; the church, on the Heigham road, was built hold 1,500 persons. ,
in 1871 from designs by Mr. E. Power, architect, of London, The Dutch church, so called from having been leased at
and is a structure of flint with stone dressings, in the Early one time to the Dutch residents in this city, consists of the
French Gothic style, consisting of chancel, nave, aisles, choir of the church of the Black :Friars, the nave of which
north and south porches and a western tower with pinnacles is now St. Andrew's Hall.
containing a clock and one bell : a brass eagle lectern was The Norwich Cemetery, between Derebam and Earlham
placed in the church in June, 18871 there- are .Boo sit.tings, roads, was laid out in 1856, and has an a.rea of 49 acres, with
400 being free. The register dates from the year x8TI· The four mortuary chapels, and is under the control of the Cor.
living is a. ricarage, net yearly value [,212, in the gift of poration of Norwwh, acting as a Burial Board. The Rosary
the Bishop of Norwich, and held since ll888 by the Hev. Cemetery j at '.rhorpe Hamlet, opened in I 82 :~,and occupying
Alan Gwyn l3lyth M.A. of Christ's College, Cambridge. St. about 12 acres of ground, with one mortuary chapel, is the
Philip's Rooms, formerly the temporary church, are now property of shareholders, and is under the management of
used as Sunday schools and for parish purposes. ·The popu- trustees appointed by a deed of settlement.
lation in r8gx was s,soo. The Guildhall, standing in the north-west angle of the
St. Thomas's is an ecclesiastical parish, formed in 1:888 Market square, is a large and ancient building, chiefly of
from the parishes of Holy Trinity and St. Philip's, Heigham. flint and freestone, and was erected in the 15th century, the
The church in Earlham road is a building of red brick with west end bemg rebuilt in 1568 : it containl:l portraits of early
stone facings, consisting of chancel, nave, aisles, south porch mayors and benefactors, and here also is preserved the
a
and small central turret containing one bell : the stained sword of the Spanish admiral Don Xavier Francisco Win-
east windew was presented by Col. and Mr. J. J. Winter thuysen, surrendered at the battle of Cape St. Vincent, 14th
and the Rev. C. L. Rudd M. A. of Twickenham: there are February, 1797, and presented to the city by Lord Nelson,
685 sitting!!, many of which are free. The living is a vicar- whose letter, dated from the "Irre..'iistible," 2oth February,
age, yearly value £rso, in the gift of the Bishop of Nor- 1797, accompanies it. The basement <>f the Guildhall is
wich,· and held since 1884 by the Rev. Charles William occupied by the city police and the fire brigade.
Claridge. The Parish Room, opened in x885, and formerly The municipal insignia comprise a chamberlain's mace,
used as a temporary church, will seat 300 persons. 3 feet 2 inches in length, made at a cost of 20 marks
Trinity Presbyterian church, in Theatre street, an en- (£13 6s. 8d. ), about x5sr, in which year it was given to the
largement of St. Peter's Hall, opened in 1867 and en- city by the Rt. George's Gild ; it is formed of seven prisms
larged in 1874, is a structure of white brick with Bath of rock crystal and glass, mounted in silver-gilt, with silver-
stone dressings, in the Lombardo-Gothic style : in the gilt and crystal knops between ; the head is crowned and
centre of the front is a large rose window, and at the sout.h- jewelled, and bears the arms of the Tudol! sovereigns, and
west corner a square campanile IOO feet in height: the below it are figures of lions holding shields : there are other
church will seat about soo persons. A lecture hall was maces given by a former Duke of Norfolk and Sir Robert
erected in 1888 in rear of the church, and is used as a Sun- Walpole; one formerly belonging to the St. George's Gild;
day school : it will bold about 400 people. and a sword of state, with a blade of the 16th century, of
The city of Norwich is included in the Catholic See of Spanish make, bearing the well-known name of Sebastian
Northampton. Hermantez; on the pommel are .two seated figures, and the
The Catholic church dedicated to St. John the Baptist, hilt is inscribed : Ex dono frattrnitatis Sci Georgii in
begun in x884 at the expense of the Duke of Norfolk E. M., K.G. Norwico, An. Dam. 1705; the scabbard is of crimson velvet,
and still unfinished, occupies a commanding site immediately with the royal and cherubs' heads: the Corporation has also
outside St. Giles gate : the building is of stone, from designs some very valuable plate, including a splendid silver-gilt
by G. Gilbert Scott esq. M.A. but at present consists only of laver and ewer, presented in 1663 by the Hon. Henry
nave, aisles and a side chapel. Howard, and a silver-gilt salt given by Peter Reade.
The Catholic church of the Holy Apostles, in Willow lane, The Shire Hall, which adjoins the Castle, was erected in
is a structure of white brick in the Classic style, and has a 1822: the assizes and quarter sessions for the county, as
highly decorated interior and stained windows ; there are well as the County Court; are held here. The Hall was en-
also several statues in the church,. and an alt!l.r .dedicated larged in x887, when waiting rooms for witnesses and 21
to tho Sacred Heart of Our Lord. new cells for males and 4 waiting cells for females were
St. John's Catholic church, in St. .John's street, Madder- construc~ed.
market, is an ancient edifice of brick, and contains two The County Police Station is on the north-west of the Shire
altars and a sanctuary. Hall.
The Convent of the Sisters of Notre Dame is at St. St. Andrew's Hall, which stands a little to the west of the
Catherine's hill, Surrey road, and includes a boarding and Cathedral, was originally the nave of the conventual church
day school for young ladies. of the Black Friars, rebuilt by Sir Thomas Erpingham before
The Jewish Synagogue is in Synagogue street: there is a 1428 : it now forms one .Qf the finest Perpendicular halls in the
meeting house for the Society of Friends in Upper Goat lane, kingdom, being 124 feet long and 64 wide, and is used for
with 400 sittings, and a Catholic Apostolic church in Queen the triennial musical festivals, for civic feasts and for public
street, with xoo sittings. assemblies: an organ, by Messrs. Bryceson, was erected in
The Baptist chapel, Unthanks road, erected in x874-5, at the hall by public subscription in 188o, and the walls are
a cost, exclusive of spire, of about £6,ooo, is an edifice of hung with portraits : the chancel or choir of this church,
Kentish rag with Bath swne dressings, in an Early Gothic leased in 1625 to Dutch and Flemish refugees, and hence
style, consisting of apsidal chancel, nave with clerestory, called " the Dutch church," now serves as an adjunct to
aisles and a tower : in the apse are three stained windows 1 the hall.
attached are vestries and lavatories and a school room : the There are also remains of a Convent of Whitefriars or
chapel will seat 650 persons. Carmelites, founded by Philip Fitz Warin, and dedicated to
There are other Baptist chapels in Colegate street, St. St. Mary, and of the Benedictine Nunnery of SS. J'.~ry and
Mary's plain, Timberhill street, Pitt street, Gildencroft, John, at Carrow, founded in x146 by Leyna and Leftelina, or
Sayers row, Heigham, Surrey road and Southgate street. by King Stephen, and famons as a place of education for
The Princes Street Congregational chapel, erected in x8xg, daughters of the nobility.
and considerably enlarged and improved in x86g, is a build- The Corn Exchange, built in r861, in place of the previous
ing of white brick in the Classic style, with a pedimented Exchange erected in 1826, at a cost of £6,ooo, is a structure
fa<;ade; the interior has galleries on three sides and an apse of white brick, about 126 feet long by 81 feet ·wide, covered
at the end: there are about r,Ioo sittin~s. There are with a. glass and corrugated iron roof supported by two
other Congregational chapels in Priors yard, Colegate street tiers of cast iron columns, and contains portraits of the
(Old Meeting House), and one in Chapelfield, finished in founder, John Culley esq. and Thomas William Coke esq.
x8s8 at a cost of £2,000. for many years M.P. for Norfolk, who was created Earl of
Princes Street Congregational Lecture hall and Sunday Leicester, 12 Aug. 1837, and died 30 June, 1842.
schools, erected in 187g-8o, at a cost, including site, of about Norwich Castle, situated on a huge artificial mound, was
£13,000, is a structure of white brick in the Classic style, probably first founded about the year 575, by one of the early
containing large infants' school room, mothers' meeting East Anglian chieftains, and became a royal castle about 642 :
DIRECTORY.] NORFOLK. NORWICH..
the portion now remainin!! consists of the embattled Norman map.q, portraits, views &c. ; her~ also is a good supply of
keep, g6 feet by 92 feet, and about 70 feet high, and London and provincial newspapers, reviews, maga7Jnes,
from its elevated position is one of the most striking build- periodicals and directories; these rooms are open every day
ings in the city; it has, however, long been a mere shell, from 10 a. m. to 10 p.m. except Sundays (when the hours
its original apartments and roof having been entirely re- are from 3 to 9 p.m.), Christmas-days and Good Fridays.
moved : towards the close of the last century a prison was In the School of Art, at the top of the building, classes are
built within its four walls: in 1824 a larger prison, consist- held in connection with the Art DepartmBnt at South Ken-
ing of several buildings, was erected on the top of the hill sington, and here are also kept the instruments of the Nor-
adjoining the keep, and enclosed by the present embattled wich Meteorological Suciety.
granite wall ; the whole of the castle buildings being sur-· The Norfolk and Norwich Library was formed in 1886 by
rounded by a broad walk commanding good views of the the union of the Norwich Public Library, founded in 1784,
city : the sides of the hill were also at the same time and the Norfolk and Norwich Literary Institution, founded
enclosed and planted with treP.s and shrubs. On the east
in 1822: the amalgamated library contains a very valuable
side of the ancient keep is Bigod's tower, a projecting struc-
collection of upwards of ss,ooo volumes. The annual sub-
ture, about 96 feet by 92 feet, built, it is conjectured, by
scription is £ x ss. and there are 6oo subscribers. In the
Hugh Bigod, Earl of Norfolk, and supported by buttresses:
same building are included three other libraries, viz. :
it contains a very fine Norman doorway, forming the
that of theNorwich and~ orfolk Medico-Chirurgical Society,
original grand entrance to the keep: crossing the fosse is an
ancient stone bridge of one circular arch, 40 feet in span, consisting of about s,ooo volumes of medical and surgical
works~ the Norfolk and Norwich I~aw ,Library, of about
and considered to be of Saxon date. The Castle was used
3,ooo volumes, and a small library belonging to the ~orfolk
until August, r887, as a county gaol, but the prisoners were
and Norwich Archreological Society, and including some
then tr-ansferred to the new prison. erected on Mousehold.
valuable local manuscripts.
On account of this projected transfer the castle and the
greater part of the grounds were, in 1884, purchased by the The Norfolk and Norwich Museum, at present in St.
Norwich Corporation for the nominal sum of £4,000; and Andrew's Broad street, but eventually to be removed to the
the keep and other· buildings within the granite wall &re Caatle, was established in I 824, and is considered to be one of
now (1892) being converted into picture galleries and a the fine..'!t of provincial museqms: it is very ;rich in many of
museum for the reception of the collections of the Norfolk its departments; the collection of birds of prey, in particular,
and Norwich Museum, at present in Broad street. The is unrivalled, and the fossil mammalian remains from the
keep itself has been new roofed, a number of its blocked fore<~t bed are extremely fine ; the fauna from this bed being
windows reopened and its interior completely reconstructed : well represented by numerous specimens of various species
during the progres~ pf the work, the ancient well of the keep of enormous animals which have been collected along the
has been discovered: the fosse is laid out as a. public Norfolk coast. In the Geological collection will be found a
garden, The cost of the whole will be defrayed in part by good series of the Norwich crag and uppel' and lower chalk
a gift of £s,ooo by the late Joh!l Gurney esq. and otherwise fossils, In the Ornithological departmen~ i,i( the famous
by public subscription. Lombe collection of British birds, which contains ~mong
The Agricultural Hall, at the top of the Prince of Wales other rarities a. tine specimen- of the Great Auk (Alca.
road, opened in 1882 by H R.H. the Prince of Wales, is an Impennis), now extinct. There is a good miscellane()US.
edifice of red stone and red brick, from designs by Mr. J. B. collection of foreign birds, including,- besides many very rare
Pearce I<'.R.I.B.A. of Norwich, and has in front a pediment species, a specimen of the Philip bland paTI'ot (Nestor
adorned with the arms of the city : the basement of the productus) 1 also extinct.. The Conchological collections,
buildings eontains a kitchen and dining room; on the British and foreign. are extensive. There. is also a good
ground floor are the buffet and ladies' room, and the board collection of minerals and several cabinets devoted t.Q-
room, secretary'" and other offices : the main hall is 147 feet Entomology, the British Lepidoptera and Coleoptera being
in length and 98 feet wide, with pens of wrought iron, all very complete and contain rare and numerous specimens
moveable : on three sides of the hall are galleries, and collected in the city and county. The o~her collections
cranes are provided on the east and west sides for raising which are worthy of special mention are the antiquities,
exhibits: over the main ent:J:"ance and offices is a large room, which include, besides two mummies, some interesting
48 feet wide, available for public assemblies, and containing specimens from Egypt and other places; an unique series
a stage: the building is licensed for theatrical entertain- of Anglo-Saxon and Roman urns.· and paleolithic, ueolithic
ments, and will seat 1,000 persons. The Victoria Hall, in and bronze implements of great local interest; there is, in
St. Andrew's street, il'! also licensed for theatrical entertain- addition, a 'Valuable and well-arranged herbarium, witlL
ments, and will seat r,ooo persons. supplementary pollections made by Sir J. E. Smith and Sir
'rhe theatre, situated at a short distance from Theatre James Paget, and an extensive ethnologU!a.l Collection. The
plain, was erected iu 1826 1 near the site of a former theatre, museum is open to the public on Mondays and Saturdays,
built in 1757, Noverre's AssBmbly Room, 70 feet by 3.9, is and on other days visitors are ~dmitted on the production of
occasionally used for balls and concerts, for which it is well a mernber's order. '
adapted: attached are ante-rooms and supper and retiring The .collection of local pictures belonging to the East
rooms, and adjoining is a spacioue lawn with a conservatory Anglian Art Society, established in I8J6, are on view in the
to which the large room opens, with spacious entrances and r.ooms of the Museum,
separate ways of egress. The local societies for the cultivation of music include ths
The General Post Office, in Prince of Wales' road, Norwich Gate House Choir, Norwich and Norfolk Musical
originally erected by the late Sir Robert Harvey hart. in Union, Prince's Street Musical Society, Norwich Philhar-
1865 as a bank, and opened January xst, x866, has been monic Society and the Ladies' Orchestral Society. The
used as a post office since 1875; it is a building of Bath Norfolk and Norwich musical festival is held triennially in
stone, in the Italian st,yle, from designs by Mr. P. C. Hard- St. Andrew's Hall, under the management of 11. very in-
wick, architect, of London, and eomprises a large room for fluential committee. Norwich has produced several eminent
general business, telegraph room, postmaster's room and painters, particularly .rohn Crome, familiarly known as "Old
offices; the front is relieved by a portico with eigb.t coupled Crome," who was born here 2r Dec. 176rj.
columns of the Ionic order.
The Market place is about 6oo feet long and 340 feet wide, The Young Men's Christian Association, ~t. viles st;reet,
and in the centre stands a bronze st!\tue of the Duke of rwas established jn 1857, and has 578 members, exclll.Sive of
Wellington; the space is mostly occupied by butchers' stalls the junior branch in connection with it.
and a fish, butter and vegetable maTket. Markets, includ- The Church of England Young Men's Society, founded
ing a skin market, are held every Wednesday, and a corn in 1846, occupies premises in Little {)rford street.
and cattle market every Saturday on the Castle meadow, Norwich is within the Eastern military districh, the head
opposite the Castle. Tombland fair, for horses and cattle, quarters of which is at Colchester,
is held on the day before Good Friday and pleasure fairs are 1 The Ca\'alry Barracks, at Pockthorpe, built in 179r and.
held at Easter and Christmas. occupying the .site of the old Manol'l house, have been en-
The Norwich Free Library, at the corner of St. Andrew's larged and form a pile of buildings of red brick, rmrrounded
and Duke streets, is a large and handsome building, erected by a high wa\4 inclosing an area. oi ID acres ; they will
and opened in 1857 at an outlay of £xo,ooo: it includes, on hold 440 men of all ranks and about 300 horses. There are
the ~ound floor, a large room at present used by the also barracks, erected in r887 on land given by the Corpora-
Museum; a lending library of 14,000 Yolumes (exclusiYe of tion, at Mousehold beath 1 which are the depot of the 9th
3,8oo volumes circulating in elementary schools), open Regimental District and the head quarters of tM West
every day except Sundays, Thursdays, Christmas-days, Norfolk Militia, forming the 3rd and 4th Battalions of the
Good Fridays and Bank Holidays, from I I a.m. to 9 p.m. : Norfolk Regiment. The depot is about & mile and a half
on the first floor are spacious reading rooms (including one due east of Norwich Cathedral, near the Plumstead road,
specially used by women), containing the city library of ou a site presented to the War Office by the Mayor and
z,8oo volwnes, a reference library of 8,6oo volumes and Corporation of the city, and will hold 440 officers and men,
4,300 pamphlets lincluding 2,000 volumes and 2,750 including those in married quarters, and has an attached
pamphlets of a lo~al character) 1\nd a collection of local hospita:l. 1
508 NORWICH. NORFOLK.
The Volunteers of the city have a drill hall in Chapel the plan following the form of the letter H, the administra-
:Field, opened in x886 by T.R.H. the Prince and Princess of tive block being in the centre, facing St. Stephen's road:
Wales: it is a. large building of flint and red brick, in the the out-patients' department is entirely distinct, and has
Castellated Gothic style, 144 feet long and 62 feet wide : the been formed in the old north-east wing, which has been
tower formed part of the old city wall, and is now an orderly further adapted for the purposes of the anatomical museum
room. and nurses' dormitories: in the rear is a chapel in the
The Norwich and Norfolk Conservative Club occupies Gothic style: the new building was opened by T.R.H. the
premises adjoining the Norfolk Hotel, in St. Giles' street. Duke and Duchess of Connaught, 20 Aug. r883.
The Norfolk County Club is in Upper King street, and has 'fhe Norwich Dispensary, Maddermarket, was founded in
310 members. 1804, and during the year 18go had 34,658 patients.
A Chamber of Agriculture was established in 1866. The Jenny Lind Infirmary for Sick Children, in Potter-
Norwich has an extensiye trade; the chief manufactures gate street, was established in :1853·
of the city are bombazine, crape, gauze, challis, mousselin- The Norfolk and Norwich Eye Infirmary, in Pottergate
de-laine, fillover shawls, silk shawls, bandannas, camlet, street, was opened in 1822, and during the year r8go there
mohair, paramatta, poplin, barege, glove cloths, sewing were 6r8 patients.
cotton, coach lace, horsehair cloth, sacking and sail cloth. The Norwich Lying-in Charity is also in Pottergate
There are several large foundries; agricultural implements, street.
steam boilers, galvanized wire netting, iron fencing and iron The Norwich Homrnopathic Dispensary is in Guildhall
gates are extensively made here, and the proximity of the chambers; during the year 1891 there were 2,144 patients.
city to the rivers Wensum and Yare affords great facility The Norwich Friendly Societies' Medical Institute, at
for transport. There are also dyehouses, foundries, machine Ivy house, Lady's lane, was established in 187z.
works, tanneries, five large breweries, maltkilns, coach The Girls' Orphan Home is in Chapelfield, and there is
works, rope works, chemical works, soaperies, paper mills, also a training home for girls in Clarendon road, under
artificial manure works, extensive brick, tile and drain pipe Government inspection.
works; the boot and shoe trade employs some thousands of The Rescue Hospital, in Carnarvon road, South Heigham,
hands and has now become one of the staple trades of the is under the management of the Sisters of All Hallows,
city, and the manufacture of ready-made clothing also Ditching ham.
gives employment to a large number. Goods are exported St. Giles', or the Great Hospital, Bishopsgate street, St.
chiefly by river to Yarmouth and Lowestoft, and by rail to Helen's, founded about 1250 by Bishop Waiter de Suffield,
London. was afterwards granted to the Corporation by Edward VI.
There are five banks and a savings bank-Messrs. Gur- as an almshouse, and endowed by Queen Elizabeth with the
neys, Birkbeck, Barclay and Buxton, in Bank plain; the confiscated estates of George Redman: in 1558, Thomas
National Provincial Bank of England, in London street; the Codd, mayor, bequeathed various tenement~ to the hospital,
London and Provincial Bank Limited, in the Old Haymarket; and it has since received many other benefactions: in 1826
Sir Edmund K. Lacon hart. La<Xms, Youell and Co. Market and 1829 it was enlarged and now contains 93 aged men
place, and the Stamford, Spalding and Boston Banking Co. a.nd 88 women, who are boarded and lodged : the income,
Limited, Bank plain. The Savings Bank is at the corner of amounting to about £7,000 a year, is derived from estates
Old Haymarket. in the city and county and other sources ; Mr. John Cox,
The extensive Carrow Works of Messrs. J. and J. Col- master.
man, situated just outside the King Street gateli, on the Doughty's Hospital, in Calvert street, founded in r687 by
banks of the river Wensum, employ over two thousand William Doughty, who bequeathed £6,ooo for its erection
hands in the manufacture of mustard, starch, blue, and corn and endowment, consists of buildings forming a q uadiangle,
flour. with a garden in the centre, and will hold 24 poor men and
. The Norwich Vinegar Works and distillery of Messrs. Hills 19 women, each of whom receives 5s. 6d. weekly, with
and Underwood, in the Prince of Wales' road, were estab- coals, and every year a suit of purple : the hospital was
lished in 1762 : the business includes the distillation and thoroughly restored and some new buildings added in 1869;
rectifying of gin, a branch scarcely less important than the Mr. William Kett !<Inch, master.
manufacture of vinegar; also British cordials and liqueurs : Bethel Hospital, in Bethel street, was erected in 1718 by
the vinegar brewery and distillery form a handsome block Mrs. Mary Chapman, in accordance with the request of her
of lmildings, the whole, including yards and storehouses, deceased husband, the Rev. J. Chapman, rector of Thorpe,
covering an area. of several acres : the proprietors also near Norwich, for the habitation of poor lunatics; she, in
carry on an extensive trade in wine and all kinds of spirits; turn, left all her personal estates by will to seven trustees,
and their house in London comprises extensive vaults. giving to them the sole management of the asylum, for as
At t:)t. Miles' BFidge are the extensive iron works of many poor lunatics as the revenue will afford: the building
Messrs. Barnard, Bishop and Barnards Limited, whose has been enlarged at different periods and will now hold So
artistic productions in iron and brass, wire netting, horti- patients ; in the committee room is a portrait of the foun-
cultural and garden requisites have a wide teputation. dress: the income is about £1,700 yearly.
Messrs. Boulton and Paul, of Rose Lane Works, are also The Girls' Hospital, New Lakenham, for the maintenance,
extensive manufacturers of wire netting and horticultural education and training for domestic service of between 30
buildings, and every requisite for the garden, park, kennel, and 40 girls, has an income of about £6so from estates and
poultry-yard, aviary and stables. funded property.
The Norfolk County Lunatic Asylum is at Thorpe, under The Magdalen Asylum or Female Home is at York villa,
which place a description will be found. Chapel I<'ield road, and there are a number of minor chari-
The City Lunatic Asylum at Hellesdon, distant about three ties for distribution in money and kind.
miles, was erected in x88o at a total cost, including site and Chapel Field, an ancient archery ground, was converted
furnishing, of about £64,000, from the designs of Mr. R by the Corporation in 188o into public pleasure gardens. In
M. Phipson F.R.I.B.A. of Norwich, on the block system, and the centre is an elaborate iron pavilion, designed by the late
consists of a series of detached buildings connected by cor- Thomas Jeckyll esq. and exhibited at the Paris and Phila-
ridors and surrounded by airing courts: the building is delphia Exhibitions. The Police and other bands perform
available for 300 pat.ients, of whom abnut Ioo occupy single here on various evenings during the season. A portion of
rooms, the other 200 being associated together in dormi- the Chapel Field has been inclosed as a children's play-
tories containing from 11 to 20 patients each: in r88x a ground; and another portion is occupied by the Volunteer
mortuary and stables were built near the entrance lodge, as Drill Hall, already mentioned.
well as two semi-detached cottages for the artisans: attached Mousehold (anciently" Monkshold ") heath, x mile north
to the asylum are about 50 acres of land, the cultivation of of the city, and comprising an area of about 180 acres, has
which is intrusted to the patients, under direction, with been acquired by the Corporation, and is being laid out as a
very satisfactory results; Dr. William Harri& F.R.c.s. rect·eation ground.
superintendent. The following parishes are within the city of Norwich and
Heigham Hall, at North Heigham, is a private lunatic the names of the inhabitants are given with Norwich.
asylum for the treatment of lunatics of the upper and
middle classes, standing in about :12 acres of well-wooded Earlham is a parish and village within the county of
grounds, and is licensed for 94 male and female patients ; the city of Norwich, 2! miles west from Norwich station and
Mrs. Watson is proprietress, and the asylum is under the on the river Yare, over which is an old stone bridge of one
medical superintendence of Dr. Compton. arch. The church of St. Mary, partly coverej with ivy, is a
The Norfolk and Norwich Hospital, founded in 1770, was building of flint stone in the Early English style, consisting
rebuilt in part on the old site in 1882, the first stone being of chancel, nave, north transept, south porch and an em-
laid by H.R.H. the Prince of Wales, 17th June, 1879; the battled western tower containing 2 bells : the chancel is
building is of red brick with white stone dressings, in a divided from the nave by a richly-carved oak screen : there
modified form of the Queen Anne style, from designs by is a memorial window to John Gurney esq. ; and at the east
Messrs. E. Boardman and T. H. Wyatt, architects, of Nor- end is a fine and richly-sculptured marble monument t.o the
wich and London, and was erected at a total cost, including Bacon family, formerly in St. Giles' church, London, but
furnishing, of about £s7,n6: it is on the Pavilion system, transferred here by Waller Bacon esq.: the roof was
DIRECTORY.] NORFOLK. NORWICH. 509
covered with lead in 1745 and the interior repaired in 1834: Here are two churches. The parish church of St. John and
there are 120 sittings. The register dates from the year All Saints, situated r mile sonth from the Market place,
1621. The living is a vicarage, consolidated with Bow- Norwich, stands on a hill north of the river Yare, and is an
thorpe, average yearly value from tithe rent-charge £69, in ancient building of flint in the Perpendicular style; consist-
the gift of Frederick Bacon Frank esq. and held since 1885 ing of chancel, nave, south porch and an embattled western
by the Rev. William Nottidge Ripley M.A. of Caius College, tower containing 3 bells: the church retains a piscina, and
Cambridge, honorary canon of Sorwich and also rector of affords 200 sittings. The register dates from the year 1568.
Colney. Earlham Hall, the property of Frederick Bacon The living is a vicarage, annexed to that of Trowse Newton,
Frank esq. butnowoccupied bytheRcv. Canon W. N. Riplcy tithe rent-charge, Trowse 1:r78, Lakenham £r48, joint
M.A. stands a little south-east of the church and is an old gross yearly value £28I, including I I acres of glebe, in the
and picturesque mansion, standing in the midst of a park, gift of the Dean and Chapter, and held since 186o by the
ornamented with trees and plantations,. Earlham Hall was Rev. Alfred Pownall M.A. of St. Catharine's College, Cam-
the birthplace, 2 Aug. 1788, of Joseph John Gurney, the bridge. Edward South well Trafford esq. of Wroxham,is lord
eminent philanthropist, who also died here 4 Jan. 1847 : of the manor and the chief landowner. The soil is gravel;
here also his distinguished sister, Mrs. Elizabeth Fry, who subsoil, various. The chief crops are wheat and barley. The
was born at Bramerton, 21 May, 1780, passed a portion of area is given with Norwich; rateable value about £21,238;
her life, and died at Ramsgate, 12 Oct. 1845. Earlham the population in 1891 was 6,988.
Lodge is the residence of Major Henry Archibald Cubitt J.P. Sexton, John Osborn.
The principal landowners are Frederick Bacon Frank esq. PosT OFFICE.-Robert Rayner, sub-postmaster. Letters
M.A .• D.L., J.P. of Campsall Park, Doncaster, Yorks, who is received from Norwich, the nearest money order & tele-
lord of the manor, and the trustees of the late John Gurney graph oflice, arrive at 6 a. m. & 2.30 p.m.; dispatched at
esq. The area is r,255A. rR. 34P.; rateable value, £1,552; I & 6.25 p.m
the population in 1891 was 244. New Lakenham, south of Norwich, is an ecclesiastical
Parish Clerk, Robert Walpole. parish, formed Aug. 20, I844, out of the united parishes of
The children of this place attend the National School at 'frowse and Lakenham. St. Mark's church is a building of
Lower Earlham flint in the Perpendicular style, consisting of chancel, nave
Ea ton is a parish and suburb within the county of thA and an embattled western tower with pinnacles containing
city of ~orwich, extending 2 miles south-west and bounded 3 bells : the wooden lectern is a copy of that in Shipdham
by the Yare and contains a large number of handsome villa church: the chancel windows are stained: the church was
residences, occupied by the merchants and traders of the recoloured and decorated in r887, the galleries reduced in
city. The church of St. Andrew is an ancient building of size, and a new vestry built at a cost of £700 : there are Boo
flint in the Early English style, consisting of chancel and sittings. The register dates from the year I 844. The living
nave, covered with thatch, north porch and an embattled is a vicarage, gross yearly value £260, in the gift of the
western tower with pinnacles, containing 3 bells : the parents Dean and Chapter, and held since I885 by the Rev. Rowland
of Henry Kirke ·white, the poet, were interred in this Vectis Barker M.A. of Christ Church, Oxford, who is also
church: the stained east window was erected by William vicar of Arminghall.
Thomas Bensly esq. LL.D., F.S.A. of Norwich· the chancel
retains sedilia and a piscina, and the communion plate in-
Thorpe Hamlet, a suburb on the east of Norwich, was
constituted a separate ecclesiastical parish March 9, r852,
eludes a chalice dated r684 : there are r5o sittings. A lych
from the civil parish of Old Thorpe. The old church of St.
gate was erected in I887 by the parishioners in memory of
Andrew, though still standing, is now disused. The church
the late Mrs. Pigot. The register dates from the year 1568.
of St. Matthew, erect€d in I85I upon land given by the Dean
The living is a vicarage, average tithe rent-charge £81, net
and Chapter of Norwich, on the slope of a hill close by the
yearly value £378, including 22 acres of glebe, with resi-
river Wensum and constituted the parish church I7 Aug.
dence, in the gift of the Dean and Chapter-of Norwich, and
r883, is a structure of Kentish rag stone, in the Norman
held since 1875 by the Rev. William Melville Pigot lll.A. of
style, consisting of apsidal chancel, transepts and a western
Bra~:;enose College, Oxford. Chrii:it church, erected by sub- belfry containing one hell : there are several stained win-
scription, and opened November 4th, r873, is a cruciform dows, and the church is seated with open benches, affording
building of flint with brick and Bath stone faciugs, in the
6oo sittings, of which 337 are free. The register dates from
French Gothic style, consisting of nave, transept and a the year I852. The living is a "icarage, net yearly value
western belfry with spire containing one bell : there are
£287, with residence, built in r 863, in the gift of the rector
several stamed windows, some of which are memorials: the of Thorpe St. Andrew, and held since 1889 hy the Rev. John
church affords about 400 sittings. A mission room in ~del­ Henry Rogers M. A. of Wadham College, Oxon. There is a
rose road was opened in 189r. The Dean and Chapter of mission room in Plumstead road in connection with the
Norwich, who are lords of the manor, and the trustees of the church, erected in 1877, and Sunday schools built in 1853 on
late Richard Hanbury Gurney eoq. are the princ1pal land- land near the church, the gift of the Dean and Chapter.
owners. The soil is light and sandy ; subsoil, sand and The population in r89r was 22,I9r.
gravel. The crops are of the usual kind. The area is in- The area of the city of Norwich is 4,772 acres ; rateable
cluded in Norwich; gross estimated rental, £8,019 4s. ; value, £3I4,57'>; and the population in I87r was 80,386;
rateable value, £8,452; the population in 1891 was 1,848. and in r88r was 87,842; and in r89r, roo,964, as follows:-
Parish Clerk, Charles Chamberlain. Rateable
PosT & M. 0. 0. & S. B.-Mrs. Ann Featherstone, post- value
mistress. Letters are. delivered from ~ orwich at 6 a. m. Pop. of each
The nearest telegraph office is at Norwich 1891. parish.
National School (mixed), built in 1870 & enlarged in r887, £
for I20 children; average attendance, I07 ; Frederick All Saints .................... . Parish •••••• 706 . .... 3,009
Holloway, master; Mrs. Elizabeth Holloway, mistress Earlham ..•.................. ....... 2 44 ....... I,552
Ea ton & Town Close .. . ," •••••• r,848 ....... 8,452
Heigham, a parish and hamlet within the county of Heigham,N orth & South , ...... t3o,o84 ....... 68,925
the city of Norwich, forms a populous suburb on the north,
situated on the river 'Vensum. The church of St. Bartholo-
Hellesdon .. .. .. .. .. .. .... .. .
Hamlet .. . . . 722 •••••• 2,390
Lakenham........... .... .. . Parish •••••• 8,6s3 •••••• 21,238
mew, standing on an eminence one mile north from Nor- Pockthorpe ... ... .. ....... Hamlet ....... t3,365 • ••••• 5,078
wich Mai"ket place, is an ancient building of flint, in the St. An drew ... ...... ... ... Parish •••••• 710 • ••••• 9,375
Perpendicular style, consisting of chancel, nave, south aisle St. Augustine ........... . ....... 2,419 ........ 4.593
and an embattled western tower with pinnacles containing 3 St. Ben edict .............. . " ....... I ,982 • ••••• 4,288
bells: in I878 the nave, aisle and tower were restored, the St. Clement ............. .. " • ••••• 6,866 • ••••• 12,785
old porch and vestry removed and a north aisle with organ- St. Edmnnd .............. . " •••••• 593 • ••••• r,roi
chamber and vestry erected in memory of Joseph Hall D. D. St. Etheldred .......... .. " •••••• 745 • ••••• 2,002
bishop of Exeter ( 1627-41) and of Norwich from the latter St. George Colegate .... .. " •••••• 1,486 ....... 4.576
date ; he died at Heigham, 8 Sept. r656, and is buried in the St. George Tombland .. . " ....... 6 58 • ••••• 5,801
chancel : there are 300 sittings. The register dates from St. Giles .................... . " •••••• 1,346 5,409
the year 1570. The living is a rectory, average tithe rent- St. Gregory .............. . " ....... 565
• •

• •••••
I • •.

3,984
charge £76, net yearly value £217, with residence, in the St. Helen ................. . " •••••• 585 • ••••• I 0 II2
gift of the Bishop of Norwich, and held since I889 by the St. James .................... . " ....... I,497 • ••••• 1,984
Rev. Robert Aldous Hitchcock M.A. of Pembroke College, St. John Madder market " • •••• • 367 ....... 4.937
Cambridge. The Dolphin inn, formerly the residence of St. John Sepulchre ...... " ••• ••• 2,734 •••••• 4,8II
Bishop Hall, is an intere~:;ting and picturesque relic, and has "
much in it to attract the notice of the antiquary. t Including officers & inmates in the workhouse & in Heigham Hall
Lakenham is a parish within the county of the city of Lunatic asylum.
Norwich, extending I~ miles south, situated on the Yare. ~ Including the Cavalry barracks.

C. N. & S. 33
510 NORWICH.
NOHFOLK. [KELLY's
Rateable Rateable
value value
of each of each
• parish . parish.
£ £
St. John Timberhill.. .... Parish • • • • • • 1,054 •••••• 3.041 St. Peter :Mancroft . .. ... Parish • ••••• *I,904 .. .... 21,262
St·. Julian ... ~ ............. . •••••• I'74:1 I I I I I I
3.436 St. Pcter-per-Mountergate , ........ 2,]67 .. .... I0,026
St. Lawrence .............. . " • •• • •• 485 •••••• 2,250 St. Peter Southgate...... , • ••••• 695 ...... 3·647
St. Margaret .............. . " ...-.. 570 I ,41!0 St. Saviour ..............•..•. •••••• 1,364 ...... 3,075
"
I I I I I I

St. Martin-at-Oak ..... . ," 1 I I I I I 2,426 •••••• 3, I85 St. Simon & St. J ude .. .
"
....... 290
• e e I
1,342
I I

St. Martin-at-Palace ..• 6g2 •••••• 4·393 St. Step hen .............. . •••••• §3.584 • • • • • I6,931
"
I I oO I I I

St. Mary-at-Coslany ..... . ", ...... 1,131 ...... 2,465 ~t. Swithin ............. ..
" .... -.. 692 • ••••• I,gii:
St. Mary-in-the-Marsh .. . " ...... 490 ...... 3.176 Thorpe . .. . . . ... ..• . . . . . . . . . Harnlet ..... . *5,265 ....... 22,I9&
St. Michael-at-Coslany , ...... 723 .... .. 2,86I Trowsr-Millgate,Carrow} H am 1et s ......
, ...... 158 ...... 4,610 & ll racon d a Ie 290 ...... I0,729
St. Michael-at-Plea ......
St. Michael-at-Thorn ... , ...... 1,595 ...... 2,937
St. Paul ................... . , ...... 4,552 ...... B,o69 o11> Including H. M. Prison & Britannia harracks.
St. Peter Hungate ...... '' . . . • •• 303 . .• . . • 820 § lnclucling Norfolk & Norwich hospit»l.

Official Establishments, Local Institutions &c.


PosT, M. 0. & •r. 0., S. B. & Annuity & In,urance Office, DELIVERIEs-Commence at.
Castle hill.-G. E. Sturgeon, postmaster From London, Acle, Attleboro', Aylsham, Brandon, llungay,
Burlingham, Bury St. Edmunds, Buxton, Cambridge,
DISPATCH OF ~Lnr.s. Coltishall, Crom~r, Dereham, Ely, Fakenham, Harleston,
Local mail carts to-Cromer, Aylsham, Acle, Reepham & Lynn, Newmarket, North Walsham, Soham, Swaffham,
Cawston, Stalham, Loddon, North Walsham, Hempnall, Thetford, Wymondham, Hull, Peterboro', Wisbech, Great
Hetherset & Honingham, 3 , 40 a. m Yarmouth, Lowestoft, Hethersett, Loddon, Reedham,
The rural postmen to-Plumstead, Braconash, llawburgh & Ipswich, Saxmundham, Scole, Stonham, Long Stratton,
Lower Hellesdon, 5.5 0 a.m Wangford, Wickham Market, Woodbringe, Wroxham &
First day mail to-London, Cantlcy,§ Cambridga & all all parts of England, Ireland & Scotland, by town post-
parts, 7 .15 a.m men & to callers, 7 a.m
Day mail to-Ipswich &c. 9.40 a.m From London, Birmingham, Bradford, Leeds, Leicester,
Day mail to Peterborough, N. W. of England & Scotland, Liverpool, Manchester, Nottingham & all parts of England,
I0.40 a. m Ireland & Scotland, by town postmen, 10.15 a.m.; to
Second day mail to -London,Cambridge&all parts, 10.50 a. m callers, 10 a.m
First day mail to-Great Yarmouth, Lowestoft, Attleboro', From Aylsham, Cromer, N. Walsham & Great Yarmouth,
Brandon, Thetford, W'atton, '\'yrnondbam, ro.5e> a.rn by town postrnen, ro.I 5 a.In.; to callers, 10 a.rn
Day mail to-Long Srrutton, Eungay & Harleston, 1 r.4o a.m
Day m:til to-lleraham, Fakenham, ''~'ells, \Valsingham & From Great Yarmouth, Lowestoft, Peterboro', Worstead,
Swaffham, I 2 , 20 p.m Scot.tow & '\Vestwick, by town postmen, 2.ro p.m. ; to
Day mail to-Alderford, * Attlebridge, * Aylsham, Beccles, callers, 1 r. 3° a.m
Bergh Apton, * Blofield, 13rooke, * Brundall, Buxton, Bur- From Dereham, Fakenham, Wells & Wa.lsingham, by town
ling ham, Cantley, Coltishall, Cromer, Framingham, * postmen, 2. ro p. m. ; to callers, 12 noon
Haddiscoe,* Hanworth, Hevingham,* Loddon,Mar.sham,* From London, Brandon, Cambridge, Thetford & Wymond-
~ orthrepps,Southrepps, Rack heath,* Reedham, Reeplmm, ham, by town postmen, 2.10 p. m. ; to callers I p. m
St. Faith's, * Scottow, * N. 'Valsham, West.wiek, * '\V or- From Aclc, Drayton & Cossey Old Cat ton, Thorpe, Trowse,
stead* & 'Vroxham, I p. m At.tleboro', Colchester, Bungay, Harleston, Holt, Bury St.
Day mail to-Eaton & Hethersett, 1.45 p.m Edmnnds, Ipswich, Diss, Eye, Long Stratton, i::lherring-
Day mail to-Upper & Lower liellesdon, Thorpe, Catton, ham, Watton & all parts of England, Ireland & Scotland,
Trowse, Dra:~"ton & Cossey, 2 p. m by town postmen, 2. ro p. m. ; to callers, 2 p. m
Day mail to-Bringingbam, Fakenham, Holt & Milton Con-
stable, 2 _ pm From Coltishall, North '\Valsham, Cromer, Aylsharn, Ran-
35
Third day mail to-London & all parts, 2 _40 p. m worth, Ea ton, Hethersett, N orthrepps, Southrepps, Buxton
First day mail to-Colchester & Diss, 2 _40 p. m & Wroxham, by town postmen, 2. IO p. m. ; to callers,
2
Second day mail to-Ipswich, 2-40 p. m P· m
Day mail to-Harningbam, Hingham & King's Lynn, 3 p.m From Beccles, Brundall, Cantley, Great Yarmouth,
Day mail to-Bury St. Edmnnds, Caistor, * Hempnall, ~ax- Lowestoft & Reed ham, by town postmen & to callers,
ling ham,* Shottesham* & Stoke Holy Cross,* 3·35 p.m 2.10 P· m
Day mail to-Acle, Cromer, Gt. Yarmouth, Postw1ck,North From Dereham, Elmham, Foulsham, King's Lynn & Swaff-
Walsham & Wit ton, 3·45 p. m ham, by town postmen, 4.50 p.m. ; to callers, 3 p. m
North mail-Also to the Midland Counties & the 'Vest of· From London, Bungay, Cambridge, Harling, Hempnall,
England, Cambridge, Attleborough, Swaffharn, Thetford Ipswich, N. ''Va.lsham, Peterboro', Thetford & Wells, by
& Wymonuham, 4.25 p.m town postmen & to callers, 4.50 p.m
Fourth day mail to-London, the Sonth &c. 4.25 p.m
Second day mail to-Becc'es, Bnngay, Hartc 3 ton & Lowestoft, From Great Yarmouth & Lowestoft, by town postmen & to
callers, 4· 50 p. m
Fi~-~~~Ey %ail to-London & all parts, 5 . 45 p.m From De re ham & Hingham, by town postmen, 7.20 p.m. ;
Second day mail to-Dereham, 5·45 p.m to callers, 5·4° P· m
Third day mail to-Gt. Yarmouth, 6. 10 p.m From London, Aylsbam, Cantley, Cromer, N. 'Valsham,
Night mail to-Beccles, Ipswich, Nerodharn Market, Sax- Pcterboro', Wisbech, Gt. Yarmout.h, Lowestoft, Reedham,
mundham, Stonham, Stowmarke~, Wangford, Wickharn Lynn, Cambridge, Diss, Ipswich, Attleborongh, Thetford,
M<\rket & Woodbridge, 8. p.m Wymondham, Colchester, Sonthrepps, Swafiham & all
35
tNight mail to-London, Attleboro', Brandon, Bungay, local mail carts & rural postmen, by town postmen & to
Bury St. Edmunds, Cambridge, Derelnm, Diss, Down- callers, 7· 20 p.m
ham, Ely, :Fakenham, Harleston, J...ynn, Long Stratton, Letters for delivery in Norwich can be posted at the Head
Newmarket, Scole, Soham, Sw<lffham,T[1etford,Wymond- · Office up to 6.55 a.m. for the 7 a.m. delivery; up to
ham, Peterboro', Wells, 'Visbech, Hull & all parts of IO.IO a.m. for the ro.15 a.m. delivery; up to 2 p.m. for
England, Ireland & Scotland, 9 , 40 p.m the 2. IO p.m. deli1·ery; up to 4·45 p.m. for the 4.50 p.m.
Night mail to Beccles,t Gt. Yarmouth, Lowestoft & Reed- delivery; & up to 7.10 p.m. for the 7.20 p.m. J.elivery
h am R . S . 0 . 1.30 a.m HouHs OF ATTENDANCE.-This office is opened on week days
at 7 a. m. & closed 9·55 p.m. On sundays this otflce is
N.B.-The day mail despatches are made on week days only. open from 8 to IO a. m
POSTAL TELEGRAPHS.-This office is open for telegraph
business all day & all night, sundays included
o Day mail delivery to callers only. Parcel Post Mails are almost in each instance combined with
t Letter~ for this mail can be forwarded so late as 10.25 p.m. & the letter mails
posted in the letter box atte.che<l to the re.ilway tr&velling post Receiving Offices & Pillar & Wall Letter Boxes-Letters
office carriage at Thorpe station, with a halfpenny stamp affixed posted at the town receiving offices & the pillar & wall
in addition to the ordinary postage. letter boxes are delivered in the city as follows :-rst
~ Letters for Beccles must be po5ted on ~aturdays not later than collection, 7 a.m.; 2nd, Io.rs a.m.; 3rd. 2.Io p.m.; 4th·
8.35 p. m. & 5th, . 4· so p. m. ; 6th, 7.20 p. m. ; 7th & 8th' following
§Letters must be posted before 3.40 a.m. on Sundays. mormng, 7 a.m
DIRECTORY.] NORFOLK. NORWICH. 511
INLAND REVENUE LICENCES & STAMPS, MONEY ORDERS, Connty Magistrates for Taverha.m Petty Sessional
GovERME~ T STocK,GovERNMENT INSURANCEs&ANNUITIES. Division.
-Business transacted on monday, tuesday, wednesday, Birkbeck Sir Edward hart. D.L. Horstead hall, Norwich,
thursday, friday, from 9 a.m. till 6 p.m. & on saturday chairman
from 9 a. m. till 8 p.m. Savings Bank Business.-Deposits, Boileau Col. Geo. Wilson F.R.a.s., F.R.z.s. Catton, Norwich
7 a.m. to 9-55 p.m. ; withdrawals, 9 a.m. to 6 p.m. & on Huxton Samuel Gurney esq. D.L. Catton hall, Norwich
saturdays till 8 p.m. Postal orders issued & paid from 7 Cozens-Hardy Theobald esq. Oak lodge, Sprowston, Norwich
a.m. to 9-SS p.m. No money order, postal order, sav- Cubitt Major Frank Astley, Thorpe hall, Norwich
ings bank, insurance or annuity business is transacted Dawson Major Algernon Cecil, Manor ho. Catton, Norwich
on sundays, Christmas day or Good friday & not after Lennard Thomas Barrett esq. Horsford manor, Norwich
I 2 noon on bank holidays Longe Robert Bacon esq. Spixworth park, Norwich
REOISTRATION.-Letters &c. for any mail can be registered Manse! Col. Edward Berkeley, Catton house, Norwich
at the counter for the ordinary fee of 2d. 3d. 4d. sd. & fltraccy Gilbert Hardinge esq. D.L. The Lodge, Sprowston,
6d. up to 30 min. before the closing of the letter box for Norwich
that mail, or up to the actual time of closing the letter Trafford Edward Soutbwell Cl;q. Wroxham hall, Norwich
box for an extra fee of 4d · Waring Wi!liam esq. Taverham hall, Norwich
EXPRESS DELIYERY.-Lctters & parcels are accepted on week Clerk to the Magistrates, El ward Pal grave Simpson,
days at the head office & at the Market Place branch Tom bland
office from 8 a. m. to 7 p.m. to be forwarded immediately Petty Sessiong are held at the Shire hall every saturday at
by messengers to any part of the Norwich City postal I I a.m. The following places are included in the petty
delivery sessional division :-Attlebridge, Beeston, Catton, Crost-
BRANCH RECEIVING & 1\i. 0. 0. & S. E.-Hours of collections. wick, Drayton, Felthnrpe, Frettenham, Haynford, Belles-
tMarket Place B.O. 9-4S & 10.30 a. m. 12 noon & 12.4S, 1.30, don, Horsham, Horsford, Horstead, Rackheath, Salhouse,
2.2o, 3.3o, 3-5S· 5.2o, 6.4s, 8.rs, 8.45 & 9.30 p.m Spixworth, Sprowston, Tavcrham & Wroxham
Ber street, 2.30 & 9-3S a. m. & 12.3S, 2.s, 3-4S, 6.3s, 7-3S &
8.35 p.m.; sundays, 2.30 a.m. & 6.3s & 8.35 p.m Justices of the Peace for the City,
Bishopsgate street, 9.30 a.m. & 12.30, 1.4s, 3-4S, 6.30, 7.20 The MAYOR & DEPUTY MAYOR
& 8.30 p.m The RECORDER-William .Tames Metcalfe esq. Q.c. Xappa,
Carrow, 2.30& 9.roa.m. & 12.1o, 1.40, 3-IS, 6.ro, 7.10 & Clifton, Bristol
8.10 p.m.; snnday;;, 2.30 a.m. & 6.10 & 8.10 p.m Barber J. Lee esq. Lowestoft
Cowgate street-, 2.30 & 9 a.m. 12 noon & 1.35, 3.15, 6, 7 Barclay Hugh Gurney esq. Coluey hall
& 8 p.m.; sundays, 2.30 a. m. & 6 & 8 p.m Harnard Godfrey esq. The Cedars, Albemarle road
Dereham road, 9-30 a.m. & 12.30, 2, 3-3S• 6.30, 7.30 & Hateman 1:-lir Frederic M. D. Upper St. Giles
8.30 p.m Beverley Michael M. D. 54 Prince of Wales road
Havelock road, 9-S a.m. & r2.s, 1.3o, 3-S• 6.s. 7-S & 8.s p.m Bignold Charles A. B. esq. St. Giles road
Heigham causeway, 2.30 & 9-5 a. m. & 12.s, r.3s, 3-rs, 6.s, Bignold Lt.-Col. Chas. Edwd. D.L. Harford ldg. Ipswich rd
7-S & 8.s p.m.; sundays, 2.30 a.m. & 6.5 & 8.5 p.m Bolingbroke Augustus F. C. esq. St. Giles road
tMagdalen street, 2.30 &g.3o a.m. & 12.30, r.ss, 3.40, 6.3o, Boyce John esq. Old Cat.ton
7.30 & 8.30 p.m. ; Sundays, 2.30 a.m. & 6.30 & 8.30 p.m Browne William J. Utten esq. Heigham grove
Maud street, 9.15 a.m. & 12.rs, 3.25, 6.15 & 8.15 p.m. ; Bullard Sir Harry, Hellesdon house
sundays, 6.1s & B.rs p.m Buxton Samuel Gurney esq. Catton ball
Mousehold, 9.25 a. m. & 12.25, 3.40, 6.2s & 8.25 p.m.; sun- Cadge William esq. 49 St. Gilel:' street
clays, 8.25p.m Chamberlin Alexander Robert esq. The Grove, Ipswich road
New Catton, 9.1s a.n1. & I2.1S, 1.40, 3.25, 6.1s, 7.ro & B.rs Coaks Isaac Bugg esq. Fern hill, Thorpe Hamlet
p.m Caller Richard csq
tNew Lakenham, 2.30 & 9-2S a. m. & 12.25, 1.55, 3-55, 6.25, Colman Jeremiah James esq. M.P. Carrow house
7.25 & 8.25 p.m.; sunday:,j, 2.30 a.m. & 6.25 & 8.25 p.m Colman Russell James esq. Bracondale woods
Rupert street, 9.10 a.m. & 12.10, I-4S. 3.2o, 6.xo, 7.10 & Cooper Carlos esq. Lakenham
8.10 p.m Copeman John esq. St. Stephen's house, Newmarket road
tSt. Andrew's, 9-35 a. m. & 12.35, 2.5, 3-4S, 6.3s, 7-3S & Eade Sir Peter M.D. Upper St. Giles street
8.3SP·ID Fitch Robert esq. The Woodlands, l>ereham road
St. Augustine's, 2. 30 & 9-25 a. m. & 12.2s, I. SS, 3-35, 6.25, Gilman Charles Rackham esq. Stafford ho. Newmarket rd
7.25 & 8.25 p.m.; sundays, 2.30 a. m. & 6.25 & 8.25 p.m Harmer Frcderic William esq. Gringleford
St. George's, 2.30 & 9·3S a.m. & 12.35, 2.5, 3-45• 6.35, 7-35 Harvey Edward Kerrison esq. The Esplanade, Lowestoft
& 8.35 p.m. ; sundays, 2.30 a.m. & 6.35 & 8.3s p.m Hotblack John esq. St. Faith's house
tSt. Giles', 9.25 a.m. & 12.25, 1.55, 3-35, 6- 25, 7-25 & 8.25 Micklethwait Major George Nathaniel, Batk
p.m Newman Samuel esq. St. Giles street .
St. Margaret's, 9-3S a.m. & 12.3s, 2.s, 3-.J.O, 6.3s, 7-35 & Patteson Henry Staniforth esq. Cringleford
8.35 p.m Paul J. J. Dowson eliq. Eaton
St. Martin-at-Palace, 2.30 & 9.40 a.m. & 12.40, 2.s, 3.5o, Price Edwin Plumer Q.C. Unthanks road
6.40, 7.40 & 8.40 p.m. ; sundays, 2.30 a.m. & 6.40 & Ranson Joshua Farrar esq Heathside, Thorpe
8.40 p.m Reeve Simrns esq. 35 St. Giles street
St. Mary's plain,- 9.25 a.m. & 12.25, T.5S, 3-3S, 6.25, 7-25 & Smith Joseph De Carle esq. Bracondale
8.25 p.m Taylor Frederic Oddin esq. Tombland
St. Stephen's, 2.30 & 9-30 a.m. & 12.30, 2, 3-40, 6.30, 7.30 Venning James Meybohm esq
& 8.30 p.m.; sundays, 2.30 a.m. & 6.30 & 8.30 p.m Wells Thomas esq. Bracondale
Southwell road, 9 a.m. & I2, 1.30, 3.1o, 6, 7 & 8 p.m.; ·w1ld Edward esq. The Hawthorns, Eaton
snndays, 6 & 8 p. m Willett Henry esq. Carlton lodge, Ipswich road
tStafford street, 2.30 & 9.20 a.m. & 12.20, I-3S, 3.20, 6.20, Willett Louis E. esq. Plnmstead road, Thorpe St. Andrew
7.10 & 8.20 p.m.; sundays, 2.30 a. m. & 6.20 & 8.20 p.m WinterJ<J.mes John esq. Heigham house
Thorpe Hamlet (receiving office only), 12.30, 6. IS & 8. rs Clerk to the City Justices, William Robt. Cooper, Guildhall
p.m. ; sundays, 6.15 p.m Summoning Officer, Daniel N eave
Thorpe road, 2.30 & 9-30 a. m. & 12.30, 2, 3-3S• 6.30, 7.30 &
8.3op.m.; sundays, 2.30 a.m. & 6.30 & 8.30 p.m Council of the City.
tUpper Hcllesdon, 9.15 a.m. & 12.15, 3.25, 6.15 & 8.15 18go-gr.
p.m.; sundays, 6. IS & 8.15 p. m MAYOR-George Moore Chamberlin esq
Waddington street, 9-IS a.m. & I2.1S, 1.45, 3.:.w, 6.xs, 7.rs RECORDER-His Honor William James Metcalfe Q.C., M.A
& 8. IS p.m. ; sundays, 6. IS & 8. IS p.m SHERIFF-Harry Reeve esq
tTelegmph offices. UNDER-SHERIFF-Henry Jacob Mills esq .
The Market Place office is open from 8 a.. m. to 9.30 p.m. on
week days. ALDERMEN.
Members of Parliament. Retire in 1892. Retire in 189,5.
Jeremiah James Colman esq. D.L., J.P. Carrow house, Nor- Frederick \V. Harmer John Elmer
wich; The Clyffe, Corton, Lowestoft; & Belgrave man- Edward K. Harvey Matthew Sallitt Emerson
sions & Devonshire & Reform clubs s w & City Liberal John Hot black Charles Edwa.rd Bignold
club, London E c . William Hunter Robert Da ws
Samuel Hoare esq. M. A., .J. P. Hampstead Heath, Middlesex; S. Newman William Henry Hotblack
Cliff house, Cromer; & 7 Hereford gardens, Park lane w & Henry S. Patteson George White
Athenamm,C~rlton&Oxford&Cambridge clubs, London s w Samuel J. Rarton I Edward Wild
Returning Officer, The Mayor Ambrose Winter I Joshua Wormsley
C. N, & S. 33*

512 XORWICH. • NORFOLK. (KELLY'S

WARD ALDERMEN. TROWSE PUMPING STATION, NORWICH SEWAGE WORKS.


First Ward, Alderman Wild Superintendent, Richard King
Second Ward, Alderman Hotblack
Third Ward, Alderman Winter Borough Coart of Record.
Fourth W:..rd, Alderman Newman Guildhall Court.
Firth Ward, Alderman Elmer JunoE-Carlos Cooper.
Sixth Ward, Alderman White REGISTRAR-John William Sparrow.
Seventh Ward, Alderman Hunter
Eighth Ward, Alderman Emerson Insurance Companies.
Commercial Union, Sir Kenneth Kemp bart. district man-
COUNCILLORS,
ager. See advertisement
FIRST WARD. General Hailstorm (established 1843); head office, St. Giles
tJ. J. D. Paul I *J. E. H. Watson street, Charles R. Gilman, sec
tGeorge S. Hotblack tThomas C. R. King Gresham Life; office, Bank plain, ,Y, F. Stratford, local
*Robert Baldry t Arthnr W. Preston sec. See advertisement
SECOND W AHD. North British & Mercantile Fire & Life (estab. 18og), Upper
tErnest B. Grimmer *William R. Spowart
tDaniel Havers
*John H. Stacy
I tSir Harry llullard
I t John Boyce
close, P. E. Hansell, managing director. See advert
Norwich & London Accident (estab. 1856), St. Giles street,
Charles R. Gilman, sec.; C. S. Gilman, assistant sec

THIRD WARD. Norwich Union Fire ( 1797) ; office, Surrey street, Charles
tGeoffrey F. Buxton *William Saul E. Bignold esq. sec. See advertisement
tRussell .T. Colman tSilvanus Smith Norwich Union Life (18o8), Surrey street, J. J. W. Deuchar
*Samuel Matthews tCharles W. Daws F. F. A., J<'.I.A. sec. & act. See advertiscrnent
FOURTH WARD. Prudential As!lurance Co. Lim Bank plain, W. G. Bubble,
tRobert G. Bagshaw I *William Shorten district superintendent
tJames Ladyman tJohn Barnard Coates Scottish Widows' Fund; district office, Prince of Wales rd.
*Thomas Brooks tCharles R. Gilman C. J. Hornor, district sec
FIFTI! WAHD. United Kingdom Temperance & General Provident Institu-
tEd ward Boardman I *John Downing tion ; district office, Bank chambers, Thomas Beresford,
!Henry J. Cope man t Henley Curl district superintendent '
*Horace P. Colman tGeorge Green
SIXTJI WARD.
Public Establishments.
tL. W. English I *George Thomas Holmes
tRobert Murrell tWilliam G. Goddard Agricultural Hall, I Castle meadow, William Hunter, sec
*William Morter I
SEVEXTH WARD.
tHarry B. Stannard City Asylum (Male & Female Pauper Lunatics, Hellesdon),
William Harris M. D. resident medisal superintendent ;
tThomas S. Breese *Louis John Tillett Sir Frederic Bateman M. D. visiting physician; George B.
tGeorge S. Loveday tCharles Cunnell Kennett, clerk to the visiting committee
*James Mason tWalter G. Stevens Corn Exchang-e, Exchange st. Isaac George Banham, bailiff
EIGHTH WARD. District Registry of Her Maje~'!ty's Court of Probate at
tFrederick J. Crotch I *J. D. Smith, jun ~orwich, Lower Close, George Robert Harman, district
tRichard W. Ladell I tWilliam H. Dakin registrar; Benjamin Richard Gold Watling, chief clerk
*Arthur G. Howlett I tGeorge Watson Fire Brigade & .Engine House, Guildhall, Market pl. under
Marked thus ! retire in 1892. the superintendence of the chief constable of the city police
:Marked thus~ retire in 1893. Fish Market, Market place
Marked thus t retire in 1894. Free Library, St. Andrew's Broad st. Geo. Easter, librarian
Her Majesty's Prison, Mousehold heath, Arthur Edwin Clare
OFFICERS OF THE COUNCIL & URBAN SANITARY Dent, governor; Rev. Henry Morton Tbomson M.A. chap-
Au·rHoRrTY. lain; Haynes Sparrow Robinson, surgeon; W. E. Burkin-
Town Clerk & Clerk to the Urban Sanitary Authority, to the shaw, steward; Miss Whyte, matron; Robert Broom, chief
Visiting Committee of the City Lunatic Asylum, to the warder ·
River Yare Commissioners & to the ::\fonsehold Conserva- Inland Revenue Office, 27 Tombland. Hours, 10 a.m. to 4
tors, George Buttler Kennett, Munieipal offices p. m. ; thurs. Io a. m. to I p. m. Collector of Inland
City Treasurer, Hugh Gurney Barclay Revenue & Distributor of Stamps, A. R. Birt esq. ;
Coroner, .Edward Samuel llignold, Lady's lane; deputy, Clerical Supervisors, J. Aris & H. Best; Clerical
Henry Jacob Mills, 6g London street Officers, John Keane, C. B. Bates & J. N. Ward; First
Clerk of the Peace, John Wilson Gilbert, Upper King street Supervisor, F. J. Horsey ; Second Supervisor, E. D.
Judge of the Borough Court, Carlos Cooper, Orford hill Lowry ; Inspector of Corn Returns, W. J. Gapes; Inland
Registrar of ditto, John Wm. Sparrow, 6 Rampant Horse st Revenue Officers, J. Corke, D. ::\Iannings, E. W. Rogers,
Commissioners mider the Great Yarmouth Haven Act, Sir C. E. Murnane & D. W. Woods. Surveyors of Taxes:
Harry Bullard, Russell James Colman esq. & Geoffrey Lynn Survey, H. R. M. Leech ; borough of King's Lynn,
Fowell Bnxton esq hundreds of Chckelose, Gallow, Freebridge Lynn, Free-
Public Analyst, William Gustavus Crook, All Saints' green bridge :Marsh land, North Greenhoe, South Green hoe &
Medical Officer of Health, Thos. Wm. Crosse, 45 St. Giles st Smitbdon & Brothcrcross, in :-lorfolk. Norwich First
Surgeon to Police, Robert James Mills esq. M.B. Surrey st Survey, Joseph Miles; city of 1\orwich, hundreds of
Clerk to the Justices, William Robert Cooper Eynsford, Taverham, North Erpingham, South Erping-
City Accountant, Samuel Culley ham, Tnnstead & Rapping, Holt, Blofield, & Walsham,
City Engineer, Architect & Surveyor, Peter Paul Marshall inN orfolk. Norwich Second Survey, G. H. H. Clement;
c.E. Municipal offices hundreds of Depwade, Diss, Earsham, Guiltcross &
City Organist,Edward Bunnett lllUS. Bac., l<'.C.O. Upper Close Shropham, Launditch, Mitford, 'Vayland, .Forehoe &
Chief Constable, Superintendent of :Fire Brigade, Inspector Humble:yard, Henstead, in Norfolk. Yarmouth Survey,
of Street Obstructions, Explosives, Drugs & Food &c. E. B. Purchas; borough of Great Yarmouth, hundreds
Robert Hitchman of East & West Flegg, Loddon & Clavering, in Norfolk;
Inspector of Nuisances, Hackney Carriages & Common Wangford, Blything, Mutford & Lothingland, & borough
Lodging Houses, Joseph Brooks of Dunwich, in Suffolk
Inspector under the Contagious Diseases (Animals) Act. Judges' Lodgings, Eaton ball
Frederick Low M.R.c.v.s. St. Giles street Norfolk & Norwich Library, Guildhall hill, John Quintan,
Inspectors of Weights & Measures, Joshua Henry Holmes sec. & librarian & F. G. Booty, librarian
& Frecterick \Villiam Markham; office, Upper Goat lane; Norfolk & .Norwich .Museum, St. Andrew's Broad street,
open on mons. weds. & fris. from ro till I Lord Walsingham, president; George C. Eaton, hon.
Collector of Tonnage Duties,Edwin Jn.Wilkins,Carrow bridge sec. ; John Quinton, assistant sec. ; J ames Reeve, curator
Collectors of Cattle Market Tolls, Joshua Henry Holrnes & Norfolk & Norwich Law Library, Guildhall hill, :F. G.Booty,
Fredcrick William Markham, Upper Goat lane librarian
Collector Of Provision Market Tolls, Robert John Howard, 7 Norwich Cemetery, Earl ham road, G. B. Kennett, clerk to
Bloomsbury place, Rose lane the burial board ; Robert Holmes, superintendent
Collectors of Hay Weighing Dues, Frederick Newman & Noverre's Assembly Rooms, Theatre square, F. \V. B.
Henry Ramsey N overre, proprietor
Summoning Officer, Daniel Neave Rosary Cemetery, Thorpe Hamlet, Theodore Thomas Rudd,
Beadle & Hall Keeper, Francis Widdows superintendent
Messengers, William Webb (Municipal offices) & C. Staff St. Andrew's Hall, St. Andrew's plain, Thomas Gorrod, ·
.Hellman or T{)wn Crier, W. Childerhouse hall keeper
Water Bailiff, Edwin John Wilkins Stamp Office, Tombland, A. R. BiM., distributor
DIRECTORY. J NORFOLK. NORWICH. 513
fccbnical Educational Committee (Norfolk County Council), Carleton East, Carelton Saint Peter, Carrow, Catton Old,
Shire hall; Ed wards Pellow, organizing sec Catton New, Claxton, Colney, Colton, Costessey, Cringle-
Theatre Royal, Theatre street, Frederick Morgan, iessee ford, Crostwick, Drayton, Dunston, Earlham, Easton,
Victoria Hall, St. Andrew's Broad street, W. & F. E. Eaton, Felthorpe, Fishley, Flordon, Framingham Earl,
Hunter, proprietors .Framingham Pi got, Fret ten ham, llaynford, Hardley,
Military, Hassingham, Heigham beyond the Walle, Hellesdon,
REGIMENTAL DISTRICT No. 9· Hemblington, Hethersett, Hillington, Holverstone, Horn-
The Norfolk, comprising the rst & 2nd Battalions (gth ingham, Horning, Horsford, Horsbam, Saint Faith's,
Foot) & the rst & 2nd Norfolk :vlilitia, being its 3rd & 4th Horstead, Howe, Intwood, Keswick, Kirby Bedon, Laken-
Battalions ham New,Lakenham Old, Langley, Lingwood, Ludham,
Depot, Barracks, Mousehold Heath Markshall, Marlingford, Melton (Great), Melton (Little),
Commanding Regimental District, Col. C. S. Perry Morton, Moulton, Mulbarton, Newton Flotman, Newton
Adjutant, Capt. W. C. Tonge St. Faith's, Norwich, Panxwortb, Plumstead (Great),
Surgeon-Major, A. Morphew Plumstead (Little), Pockthorpe, Poringland (Great),
Surgeon· Capt. C. L. J osling . l'oringland (Little), Postwick, Rackheath, Ranworth,
STATION PAY OFFICE, Britannia barracks, Mousebold. Ringland, Rockland St. Mary, Salhouse, Saxlingham
Station Paymaster, Major J. H. H. Croft Nethergate, Saxlingham Thorpe, Shottesham All Saints,
Norfolk Regiment (3rcl Battalion) rst Norfolk Militia; head Shottesham Saint Martin, Shottesham Saint Mary, Size-
quarters, Britannia barracks, Mousehold ; Hon. Col. F. land, Spixworth, Sprowston, Stanninghall, Stoke
W. Garnett, commanding; F. H. Custance & Hon. Lieut.- Holy Cross, Strumpshaw, Surlingham, Swainsthorpe,
Col. H. E. Gower, majors; Lieut. A. H. Baillie, instructor Swardeston, Tasburgh, Taverham, Thorpe Hamlet,
of musketry; Capt. W. C. Tonge, adjutant; Hon. Lieut. Thorpe Saint Andrew, Thurton, Trowse, Upton, Wal-
W. Halpin, quarter-master sbam Saint Lawrence, \Valsham Saint :\lary, \Veston,
Norfolk Regiment (4th Battalion) 2nd Norfolk Militia; head Whitlingham, Witton, Woodbastwick, Wroxham & Yel-
quarters, Britannia barracks, Mousehold; Hon. Col. 'f. W. verton
Haines, commanding; Hon. )'lajor J. M. Leith, instructor Certified Bailiffs appointed under the " Law of Distress
of musketry; Capt. W. R. Inglis, aijntant ; Lieut. R. J. Amendment Act," Georg-e Edward Theobald, Castle
Ruche, quarter-1naster meadow; Hobcrt Smith, 14 St. Thomas' road & A. H.
Barracks (Cavalry), Pockthorpe, J. McCullock, barrack N ash, 63 Magdalen street
sergeant
VoLUNTEERS. Norwich Incorporation.
VOLUNT~~ER MEDICAL STAFF CORPS. Board day, alternate wednesdays.
Eastern District, Norwich Company.
Old Militia barracks, Upper Surrey street. The incorporation of Norwich comprises the following
Surgeon-Capt. T. W. Richardson (in command) & Sur- places :-All Saints, Earlbam Saint Mary, Eaton & Town
geon-Capt. W. S. \Varlters, company officers ; Hon. Capt. Close, Heigham (North & South), Hellesdon (part
F. Mills, quarter-master; Rev. J. Wilson M.A. acting of), Lakenham, Pockthorpe (hamlet), St. Andrew, St.
chaplain Augustus, St. Benedict, St. Clement, St. Edmund,
Norfolk rst Volunteer Brigade (Eastern Division) Royal St. Ethelred, St. George Colegate, St. George Tornb1and,
Artillery (2nd & 3rd position Batteries), Theatre street ; St. Giles, St. Gregory, St. Helen, St. Jame~, St. John
P. E. Back, captain Xo. 2 & J. A. Poock, captain Xo. 3; Maddermarket, St. John Sepulchre, St. John Timberhill,
Surg. Captain 'I'. J. Compton M.D. ; Rev. T. J. Slipper St. Julian, St. Lawrence, St. Margaret, St. Martin-at·
B. A. chaplain; Sergt.-.:\Iajor Arthur Charles Pont, drill
Oak, St. Martin-at-Palace, St. l\lary-at-Co3lany, St.
instructor Michael-at-Coslany, St. Michael-at-Plea, St. Michael-at-
rst Volunteer Battalion, Norfolk Regiment, comprising A, Thorn, St. Paul, St. Peter Hungate, St. Peter Mancroft,
B, C, D, E & F companies, Drill hall, Chapeltield road ; St. Peter-per-Mountergate, St. Peter Southgate, St.
Hon. Col. Algcrnon Cecil Dawson, commanding; <.Teoffrey Saviour, St. Simon & St. Jude, St. Stephen, St. Swithin,
Fowell Huxton, major; Capt. H. J. W. Mackenzie Thorpe, Trowse-Millgate, Carrow & Bracondale. The
Kennedy, a'ijutant ; Hon. Capt. A. Moitram, quarter- population of the incorporation in r89r was roo,g64;
master ; Very Rev. William Lcfroy D. D. hon. chaplain; area, 7,472 acres; rateable value, £313,548
Sergt.-l\lajor Herbert Collins, drill instructor: companies Treasurer, Henry Birkbeck, jun
& commandants, A, Capt. Thomas Peter;; Raven; B,Capt. Clerk to the Guardians, John Cross, Surrey street
Samuel G. Hill ; C, Capt. Edward Morgan Hansell ; D, Deputy, Georgc Williarn Girling Barnard, Surrey street
Capt. Alfred J. Clarke ; E, Capt. H. Carter ; F, Capt. Relieving Officers, Ist district, William Norman Gardiner,
Lea thes Prior 13 Bishopgate street; 2nd district, Williarn Ed ward
4th Volunteer Battalion, Norfolk Regiment; head quarters, Burrows, Aylsham road; 3rd distri-:t, Theophilus Roshier,
Silver road; Lient.-Col. C. W. J. Unth~nk, command- Oak road, St. Clements ; 4th district, Dowson Dent, I I
ing; H. T. S. Patteson, major ; Lieut. B.. G. Hunter- Newmarket road
Muskett, instrnctor of musketry; Captain Otway Mayne, Collectors, 1st district, Charles Joseph Bailey, 45 Chapelfield
adjutant ; Surgeon-Capt. C. A. 0. Owens M.D. medical road; 2nd district, Samuel Mann, Grouts court, Magda-
officer; V en. Arche:tcon Perowne B. D. acting chaplain; len street ; grd district, Everett Frcderick Howard, 51
Rev. J. Cbolrnelcy M.A. & Rev. A. F. Smith LL.D. hon. llishopgate street ; 4th district, Mark W1lliam Culling-
chaplains ton, Southwell road ; stl1 district, Alfred George Bar-
Police. nard, 36 Tborpe road ; 6th district, Frederic Silcock,
CITY. Muspole street
Station, Market place. Medical Officers, rst district, William Woodhouse, 14
Chief Constable, Robert Hitchman Chapelfield gardens; 2nd district, Robert Jame~ 1\Iills
M. H., C.M. 33 Surrey street; 3rd district,· Harrington
Chief Clerk, Henry Riches .
The force consists of 120 all told; viz. : 2 insp3ctors, ro Wyndham Darrell ~.n., c. M. 35 Surrey street; 4th dis-
sergeants & Ioo constables trict, Arthur Crook L.R.C.P.Lond. 53 l'rince of Wales'
· COUNTY. road; sth district, Henry Watson M.D., C.M. IS St. Giles
Head Quarters Station, Castle meadow. road; 6th district, John Herbert Stacy L.R.C.P.Edin. 37
Chief Constable, Paynton Pigott Exchange street ; 7th district, Georo!'e I<'rederick Orlhams
Chief Clerk, Lewis H. Amis L.R.C.P.LOnd.; 8th district, William R1btun Spowart B.A.,
The local force consists of 240 all told M.B. 37 St. <.Tiles street
Public Vaccinatnr, William Guy M. D. 57 St. George's Middle
County Court. street; station, 4 Chapelfield road
Office, 12 Castle meadow. Court held at Shire Hall. Vaccination Officer, Williarn Arthur Shorten, Davey place
Judge, His Honor Edwin Plumer Price Q.c. Holly l0dge, Superintendent Registrar, George Robert Cooke, Bridge
Unthanks rr>ad street, St. Andrews
Registrar & High Bailiff, George Freclerick Cooke Registrars of Births & Deaths, Conisford sub-district, Henry
Bankruptcy Official Receiver, Harry Pearce Goulcl, 8 Upper Thompson, St. Stephen's street ; deputy, Henry Wilding,
King street, Norwich St. Stepheu's plain: Coslany sub-district, Alfred Stockings,
Chief Clerk, Edwin Matthias Bullard Colegate street; deputy, William Burrows, St. Clement's
Bailiff, George Edwd. Tbeobald, 12 Castle meadow,Norwicb alley, Magdalen street; East Wymer sub-district, William
The County Court district embraces the following places : - John <.Tardiner, 6 Elm hill; Mancroft sub-district, Thomas
Acle, Alpington, Arrninghall, Ashby, Attlebridge, Barford, \\'illiam Crosse, 45 St. Giles street; \Vest Wyrner sub-
Bawburgh, Heeston Saint Andrew, Beighton,Bergh Apt.on, district, Benjamin Laffiiu N ockall, 69 Pottergate street ;
Bixley, Blofield, Bowthorpe, Rracon Ash, Bracondale, deputy, John Cossey, 23 St. John's street
Bradiston, Bramerton, Brooke, Brundall, Buckenham, Registrars of Marriages, Fredcric Oddin Taylor, rg Upper
Burlingham Saint Andrew, Burlingham Saint Edmund, King street & Joseph James Restieaux, 21 Grove road,
Burlingham Saint Peter, Caister Saint Edmund, Cantley, Lakenham; deputy, Charles Searle, 181 Dereham road
7
lH4 NORWICH. NORFOLK. [KELLY S
Workhouse, Dereham road, Heigham, is a handsome red Publio Officers .
brick building, in the Tudor style, about x mile north of .Acting Under Sheriff for the County, Clement Taylor, Or-
the city; it was completed in I 859 & 186o, & cost £33 10001 ford plaee
& will hold r,oo3 inmates; Hev. Samuel Smith M. A. chap- Chief Constable, Paynton Pigott D. L. Castle meadow
lam ; Cecil J effery M uriel L. R. c. P. LOud. medical officer ; Clerk to the Justices for the Division of Swainsthorpe &
John Hy. Pike, master ; Georgina Isabella Pike, matron Taverbam, Clerk to the Henstead Union & Clerk to the
Boys' Home, St. Faith's lane, .Arthur Crook L.R.C.P. Lond. Commissioners of Taxes for the Henstead District, E.
medical officer; Edwin Smith, master; Mrs. Mary Ann Palgrave SimpsoD, Tombland
Smith, matron • · Clerk of the Peace for the County & to the Norfolk County
Council, Charles Foster, Shire hall
Hospitals & Charitable Institutions. Clerks to the Trustees of Charities, E. S. Bignold (church
Asylum & School for the 131ind, Magdalen street, The Hon. list), Lady lane; Sydney Cozens-Hardy (general list),
& Right Rev. The Lord Bishop of Norwich, pre'sideut; Castle chambers
Rev. Canon Copeman, chairman; J. Farrar Ranson esq. Clerk to the Visiting Justices-of the County Asylum, Thorpe,
treasurer; G. F. Odhams M. B., C.F. bon. surgeon; J. H. Peter Ed ward Hansell, Upper Close
Bridgman, hon. dentist; John Shave, supt. & sec.; Mrs. Coroner for the County of Norfolk, Norwich District, Henry
Shave, matron Read Culley, Bank street; deputy, Charles Blackwell
Bethel Hospital fur Lunaties, Bethel street, Sir F. Bate- :Foster, Bank place
man M.D. visiting physician; James Fielding M. D. resident County .Analyst., Francis Sutton F.c.s., F.I.c. London street
medical officer ; H. .A. Pepper, master ; Mrs. M. E. County Surveyor, Thomas Hllld Blumer Heslop A.M.I.C.E.
Pepper, matron ; F. Horncr, clerk Upper King street
Convent of the Sisters of Not.re Dame, Surrey road Deputy Coroner for the Liberty of the Duke of Norfolk, John
District Visiting Society, the Mayor for the time being, pre- William Sparrow, 12 Rampant Horse street
sident ; Henry Birkbeck, treasurer; .A. R. Chamberlin, Sheriff's Officer, G. E. Theobald, Castle meadow
Rev. W. H. Cuoke & H. C. Riches, hon. secs The Diocese of Norwich.
Doughty's Hospital, Calvert st. Wm. Kett Finch, master
Girls' Orphan Home, Chapelfield, Miss Jane E. Swann, 1857· Bishop, The Hon. & Right Rev. John Thomas Pelham
matron D. D. The Palace
Girls' Training Home, 13 Clarendon rd. Miss Kemp, matron 1889. Dean, The Very Rev. William Lefroy D.D. Deanery
Great Hospital, Bishopgat.e street, .Tuhn Cox, master ARCHDEACONS.
Homooopathic lhspensary, Guildhall chambers, Eleazer 1874. Norfolk, The Yen. llenry Ralph Nevill M.A. The
Birch Roche & V\-'illiam Ross, bun. medieal officers; W. T. Close, Norwich
Livock, sec 1878. Norwich, The V en. Thomas Thomason Perowue B.D.
Jenny Lind's Infirmary for Sick Children, Pottergate street, Redenhall rectory, Harleston
_Sir Peter Eadc M.D. & Sir F. Bateman M.D. consulting 1892. Suffolk, The Yen. Richard Hudson Gibson M.A.
physicians ; Thomas William Crosse F.R.c.s.Eng. & Rectory, Lound, Lowestoft
Haynes Sparrow Robinson, consulting surgeons; Fredk. CANONS.
William Burton-Fanning M. B. physician; Samuel Henry J86o. Jas. Wm. Lucas Heaviside M.A. Lower Close, Norwich
Burton M.B., F.R.c.s.Eng. & George Reginald Master, 1861. Charles Kirkby Robinson D.D. The Close, Norwich
surgeons; Cecil Jeffery Muriel L.R.C.P.LOnd. & Thomas 1867. John Majoribanks Nisbet M.A. The Close, Norwich
Herbert Morse, assistant surgeons; Edmund Reeve, hon. 1873. Yen. Henry Ralph Nevill M.A. The Close, Norwich
sec. ; Miss L. M. Wainwright, matron
'Lying-in Charity, Pottergate street, Thomas William Crosse HONORARY CANONS.
l<'.R.C.S.Eng. consulting accoucheur; Charles Evans r8so. Bishop of Colambia D.D. Bishop's Close, Victoria,·
Muriel, Donald Douglas Day M. B., B.s. & George Fredk. British Columbia
Oldham L.R.C.P. r.ond. surgeon- accoucheurs; II. W. 1852. Robert Eden M.A. Vicarage, Wymondham
Darrell M.D., C.M. & A. Crook L.R.C.P.Lond. assistant 1856. Hinds Howell M.A. Rectory, Drayton, Norwich
surgeon accoucheurs ; W. R. Cooper, hon. sec. ; Miss 1863. Salisbury Everard M.A. Rectory, Burgatc, Diss
Foreman, matron r86g. George King M.A. Rectory, Saxlingham, Norwich
Norfolk & Norwich Eye Infirmary, Pottergate st. Sir F. 1872. Louis .Augustus Norgato B.A. Parsonage, Foxley, East
Bateman M.D. consulting physician; Haynes Sparrow Dereham
Robinsun & Samuel Herbert llurton M.B., B.s. surgeons; ~877. Arthur Charles Copeman M.B., LL.D. St. Andrew's
Charles Evans Muriel, assistant surgeon; Edward Balls, parsonage, Norwich
sec. ; Mrs. Rix, maton 1878. William Cowper Johnson M.A. Rectory, Northwold,
Norfolk & Norwich Hospital, St. Stepben's road, Sir Peter Brand on
Eade M.D.eonsulting physician; Sir Frederic Bateman M. D. 188r. Samuel Garratt M.A. St. Margaret's, Ipswich
Samuel J. Barton M.D., M.ch. & Fred W. llurton-Fanning 188r. Constantine l<'rere M.A. Rectory, Finningham, Stow-
lii.B. physicians; William Cange F.R c.s.Eng. & Thomas Market
William CrosseF.R.c.s.Eng. consulting surgeons; Charles r881. James Mourant Duport lli.A. Rectory, Denver, Down-
Williams F.R.c.s.Edin. Michael Heverley M.D. & Haynes ham Market
Sparrow Robinson, surgeons ; S. H. Burton M. B. & Donald 1882. John Patteson llf.A. Rectory, Thorpe, Norwich
D. Day M.B., B.s. assistant surgeons; Reginald Edward 1882. George Venables s.c.L. Rectory, Burgh Castle, Great
Crosse B. A., M. R.c.s.Eng. & L.R.C.P.Lond. house surgeon; Yarmouth
Richard Wentworth White M.R.c.s. & L.D.s.Eng. dental r884. Thomas Parry Garnier M .A. Rectory, Cranworth,
surgeon; Rev. Precentor G. W. Barrett M.A. chaplain; Shipdham, Thetford
Howard J. Collins, sec. ; W. G. Crook, dispenser & r885. WJlliam Nottidge Ripley M.A. Earlham hall, Norwich
analyst 1885. William Tate LL.D. Vicarage, Stradbroke, Wickhlilll
Norfolk & Norwich Magdalen or Female Home, York villa, Market
Chapemeld road, Mrs. Sarah Rice, matron 1885. Jas. Rt. Turnock M.A. Waltham rectory,MeltonMowbry
Norfolk & Norwich Staff of Nurses, Bethel st.reet, Miss Edith 1886. Ven. .Archdeacon Richard Hudson Gibson M.A.
Watson, superintendent Rectory, Loundf Lowestoft
Norwich & Norfolk Charity for Clergymen's Widows & 1886. George Robcrt Winter M.A. Rectory, Webourne, East
Children, Rev. George King, treasurer; Waiter Overbury, Dereham
Upper King street, registrar; T. F. Wrigbt, land steward, 1888. John James Raven D.D. Vicarage, Fressingfield,
Jhnk street · Harleston
Norwich Dispensary, St.. John's, Maddermarket, .Alex. R. 1888. Thomas Augustus Nash M.A. Little Wenlock, Welling-
Chamberlin, hon. sec. ; Sir P. Eade M.D. & W. Cadge ton, Salop
F.R.c.s.Eng. bon. consulting medical officers; T. W. r8go. Willliam Wayman Hutt M..A. Rectory, Hockwold,
Ricbardson, T. H. Morse, Donald D. Day M.B., B.S. Cecil Bran don
J. Muriel L.R.C.P.Lond. & Walter Scott Warlters L.R.C.P. 1891. Frederick .Alfred John llervey !II.A. Rectory, Sandring-
Lond. medical officers ham, King's Lynn
Norwich Freindly Societies' Medical Institute, Ivy house, 1892. Frederick 131ackett De Chair M.A. Rectory, Morley,
Lady's lane, C. C. Claremont & W. Leith M.B., c. M. Wymondham
medical officers; John Williment, sec MINOR CANONS.
Provident Society, Hy. Farmer, superintendent, Fishgate st x865. Edward Bulmer M.A. The Close, Norwich
Provident Surgical .Appliance Society (branch), 73 Prince of 1874· William Thomas Moore M. A. Lower Close, Norwich
Wales' road, Miss M. M. Luthmann, sec. pro tern 1877. George Willoughby Barrett M.A. (precentor), Lower
Rescue Hospital, Caernarvon roari, D. D. Day M.B., B.s. Close, Norwich
bon. medical officer ; Sister Harriett in charge
Wesley Deaconess Institute (branch), 15 Southwell road, x881. Chancellor of the Diocese, The Worshipful Thomas
Rev. John Gould, superintendent; R. T. Dawson, Calthorpe Blofeld M.A. 13 Upper King street,
treasurer ; Sister Hilda in charge Norwich
DIRECTORY.] NORFOLK. NORWICH. 515
BisHoP's ExAMINING CHAPLAIN. Rev. Edward Douglas Lennox Harvey H.A. Downham
Ven. Thomas Thomason I'erowne B.D. Rectory, Redenhall, Market
Harleston Rev. Bircham Houchen, South Pickenham
Rev. Alfred Edward Humphreys M.A. Rectory, Fakenham
Bishop's Secretaries, W. T. Bensly esq. LL.D. The Close; II. Rev. Canon George King M.A. Saxlingham
W. B. Lee esq. The Sanctuary, Westminster s w Rev. Arthur Simon Latter M.A. Outwell
Registrar of the Diocese, Rev. Eyre Stuart Bathurst M.A. ; Rev. John McGill, Stoke Ferry
deputy, W. T. Bensly esq. LL.D. The Close Rev. Charles Robertson :Manning M.A. Diss
PLURALLTIES ACT COMMISSIONERS. Rev. William Thomas Moore M.A. Norwich
For Dean & Chapter, Archdeacon Richard Hudson G1bson Rev. Jarnes Ambrose Ogle M.A. Sedgeford
M.A. Rectory, Lound, Lowestoft Rev. John Smith Owen LL.n. North Walsham, Commissary
For Archdeaeonry of Norwich, Canon Arthur Charles Cope- Rev. John Edward Player, Wells
man lJ. B., LL.D. St. Andrew's parsonage, Norwich Rev. William Chartres Safford M.A. Attleborough
For Archdeaconry of Norfolk, Canon George Robert Winter Rev. Robert Browne Slipper M.A. Wheatacre
M.A. Rectory, Selbourne, Dereham Rev. Barnard Gooch Smith M. .A. Shelton
For Archdeaconry of Suffolk, Henry Edward Tilsley Cruso Rev. John Spurgin n.n. Great Hockham
l\I. A. Vicarage, Bramford, Ipswich Rev. Henry Symonds M. A. Tivetshall
Rev. Thomas William Thompson M.A. Tibbenham
SuRVEYORS OF ECCLESfASTICAL DILAPIDATIONS. Rev. Trenham King Weatherhead J,L.B. Bnngay
1885. Herbert John Green esq. A.R.i.B.A. 31 Castle meadow, Hev. Edward Russell Wilford M.A. Welney
Norwich C. W. Willett esq. Sorwich
1 885. Edward Fernley Risshopp esq. Museum st. Ipswich
188g. Arthur John Lacey esq. 6 Upper King street, Norwich ARCHDEACONRY OF SUFFOLK.
Chapter Clerk, W. T. Bcnsly LL.D. The Close Rev. Donald Campbell M.A. Eye •
Organist, Frank Bates Mus.noc. Upper Close Rev. William Frederick Clark, Ipswich
Eight choristers, eight lay clerks Hev. Henry Venn Ellis, Stowmarket
Rev. Canon Samuel Garratt M.A. Ipswich
OFFICIALS OF THE DIOCESE. Rev. Goodrich Langley, Somersham
Coroner for the Liberty of the Dean & Chapter, Edward Rev. William Glenton .Malem B.A. Thetford
~amuel Bignold, Lady's lane; deputy, Henry Jacob Mills, Rev. John Rowselllii.A. Beccles
69 London street Rev. Canon William Tate LL.D Stradbroke
Principal Apparitor of Co"n.sistory Court (held in the Cathe- Rev. Henry Thompson B. A. A..ldeburgh
dral), Byron l<'oreman · Rev. Innes Bourguine Wane M.A. Lowestoft
Proctors. Waiter Over bury, Upper King street; Thomas Rev. Adam Washington M.A. Hoyton
William Hansell & John Baseley Toote Hales, The Close Rev. Trenham King Weatherhead LL.B. Bungay
l'roctor for the Archdeaconries of Norwich & Norfolk, Rev.
Binds Howell M.A Places of Worship, with times of services.
Proctor for the Archdeaconry of Suffolk, Rev. Constantine
Frere M. A . Cathedral Church of the Holy & Undivided Trinity; 8 &
Proctor for the Dean & Chapter of Norwich, Rev. Canon I I a.m. & 3.30 p.m. ; daily, 10 a.m. & 3 p.m.; sat. 3 p.m

John Majoribanks Nisbet M.A CHCRCHES AND EPISCOPAL CHAPELS.


Recristrar
,_, of the Archdeaconry of Norwich, Waiter Over bury, *** R. signifies Rectory; v. Vicarage.
Upper King street . All Saints, R. with St. Julians, 'Vestlegate street; Rev.
Registrar of the Archdeaconry of Norfolk, Thomas William William Kant LL.B., M.A.; J. S. Madgett, parish clerk;
Hansell patron, Rev. H. C. Sculthorpe n.A. ; value, £2o6; pop.
Deputy Registrar of the Archdeaconry of Norfolk, J. B. T. 706; I I a.m. & 3 p.m
Hales, The Close St. Andrew, v. Broad street; Rev. Arthur Charles Cope-
Registrar of the Archdeaconry of Suffolk, C. R. Steward, man M.B. ; 'f. A. Cob bald, parish clerk; patrons, parish-
Ipswich ioners; value, £,210; pop. 710; 8.30 & rr a.m. & 7 p.m.. ;
SURROGATES. thurs. n a.m. ; saints' days, 10 a.m .
St. Augustine, R. St. Augustine street ; Rev. William Alex.
ARCHDEACONRY OF NORWICH. Elder H.D. ; Simon Butcher, parish clerk ; patrons, Dean &
Rev. Herbert Deedes Barrett n.A. Hunstanton Chapter; value,£ 159 ; pop. 2,748; 8 & 11 a. m. & 7 p.m.;
Rev. Robert Singleton Bloficld M.A. Ormcsby thurs. 8 p.m
Rev. Edward Brumell B.D. Holt St. Benedict, v. St. Benedict's street; Rev. Josiah Wedg-
Rev. Edward Bulmer liLA. Norwich wood; Wm. Gaffer, sexton; patrons, parishioners; value,
Rev. Canon Arthur Charles Copeman M.B.,.LL.D. Norwich, £wo; pop. 1,982; 11 a.m. & 7 p.m.; thurs. 7.30 p.m
Cornmissarv St. Clement's, n. Colegate street; Rev. Charles Wm. Heath-
Hev. Robert Frederick Cory B.A. Tcrrington St. John cote Baker ; William Burrows, parish clerk; patrons, Caius
Hev. William Donne M.A. Great Yarmouth College, Cambridge ; value, i, roo ; pop. 407 ; 8 & I I a. m.
Rev. John Colk Girling, Coltishall & 7 p. m. ; daily ro a.m. ; wed. & thurs. 8 a. m
Rev. Ed ward Fras. Edwards Hankinson M.A. Billingford hall St. Edmund, R. Fishgate street, Rev. Chas. Wm. Heathcote
Rev. John Gurney Hoare M.A. Aylsham Baker H. A.; patrons, Caius College, Cambridge; value,
Rev. William Muskett Hobson, Ridlington
£100; pop. 593; 7.30 p.rn
Rev. William Hudson M.A. Norwich St. Etheldred, P.c. Kmg street; Rev. Matthew Bower M.A.;
Rev. William Ballytnan Hull M.A. Norwich patrons, Trustees of the Great Hospital, Norwich, & the
Rev. Alfred Edward Humphreys M.A. Fakenham Bishop of Norwich alternately; value, £130; pop. 745;
Hev. William Leeper M.A. All Saints, Lynn 8 & u a. m. & 7 p.m.; week days, accordmg to notice
Rev. William Glenton Malem B.A. Thetford St. George's Colegate, v. Colegate street ; Re'\". ~'illiam
Rev. 'Villiam Thomas ~oore llf.A. Norwich Couke Matthews ; Thos. Claxton, parish clerk ; patron,
Rev. Edward Gibbs Howes Murrell, Caister Bishop of Norwich; value, £so; pop. 1,932; 10.45 a. m.
Rev. Canon Loms Augustus Norgate n.A. Foxley & 7 p.m. ; saints' days, 11 a. m. & wed. 8 p.m
Rev. John Edward Player, Rectory, Wells St. George Tombland, v. Tombland ; Rev. Hy. Pickford
Re\T. Robert Reeve Rackham B.A. Bintry M.A., A. !llus.T.C.L.; patron, Bishop of Norwich; value,
Rev. Bowver Vaux M.A. Great Yarmouth £wo; pop. 779; 8 & I I a. m. & 7 p.m
Rev. Tre~ham King Weatherhead LL.B. Bungay St. Giles, v. St. Giles street ; Rev. Sydney Adolphus Boyd
C. W. Willett esq. Norwich B.C.L., M.A.; A. J. Chambers, parish clerk; patrons, Dean
Rev. Edward George Adlington Winter llf.A. King's Lynn & Chapter; value, £70 ; pop. 1,346 ; r r a.m. & 7 p. m.;
Rev. John Young, Walsoken ·
wed. 8 p.m
ARCHDEACONRY OF NORFOLK. St. Gregory, v. Pottergate street; Rev. William Armine
Rev. William Maxey Alien M.A. Shouldham Slipper M. A. ; Frank T. G. Covell, parish clerk; patrons,
Rev. Henry James Lawes Arnold M. A. East Dereham Dean & Chapter; value, £97; pop. 563; 8 & 11 a. m. &
Rev. H. D. Barrett, Hunstanton 3.30 & 7 p.m. ; tues. 8 p.m. & fri. 12 noon .
Rev. Edward Charles· King Bearcroft LL.B. Felmingham St. Helen, v. Bishopgate ~treet; Rev. Geo. Harr1s Cooke
Rev. Edward Bulmer M.A. Norwich M.A. ; patrons, Trustees of the Great Hospital ; value,
Rev. George Harris Cooke M.A. Norwich £200; pop. 585; 10.30 a. m. & 3 p.m.; wed. & fri. 11
Rev. Theodore Henry Croseman Day B. A. Limpenhoe a. m
Rev. Canon Robert Eden M. A. Wymondham St. James, v. with Pockthorpe, Cowgate street; Rev. Alfred
Rev. Canon Salisbury Everard M.A. Burgate, Official Davies M.A. ; R. G. Lane, parish clerk ; patrons, Dean &
Rev. Frederic !<'itch M. A. Cromer Chapter; value, £-300; pop. 4,852; 8 & ~0.30 a. m. &
Rev. Edward Southwell Garnier M. A. Quidenham 3 p.m. (alternate sun.) & 7 p.m.; wed. & frL 10.15 a.m.
Rev. John Denny Gedge B. A. Meth wold thurs. 8 p.m.; fri. 7.30 p.m •
516 NORWICH. NORFOLK. [KELLY'S
St. John Maddermarket, R. Maddermarket, Rev . .Arthur St. Mark, v. New Lakenham; Rev. Rowland Vectis Barker
Felton Still Hill M.A. ; Edwin Palmer, sexton ; patrons, M.A. ; John High, parish clerk; patrons, Dean & Chapter;
New College, Oxford ; value, .l ISO ; pop. 367 ; 8 & I I value, £190: pop. 5,093 ; 8 & I I a.m. & 3.30 & 7 p.m.;
a.m. & 7 p.m.; wed. 8 p.m.; thurs. 7.30 a.m.; fri. 11.30 mon. wed. & fri. 8 p.m
a.m. & sat. 4 p. m St. Mary, v. Earlham ; Rev. Canon William Nottidge Rip-
St. John the Baptist & .All Saints, Lakenham; Rev . .Alfred Icy )LA. ; Robert Walpole, parish clerk ; patron, F. B.
l'ownall M.A. ; patrons, Dean & Chapter ; value, £36I ; Frank esq. ; value, £89; pop. 244; 11 a. m: & 7 p.m
pop. 6,g88 ; II a.m. & 2.30 p.m St. Matthew, v. Thorpe Hamlet; Rev. John Henry Rogers
St. John de Sepulchre, v. Ber street; Rev. George Nicholas M.A. ; J. Jay, parish clerk ; patron, rector of Thorpe;
Herbert M.A. ; Wm. Debenham, parish clerk ; patrons., value, £275 ; pop. 5,265; 8, 9·45 & I l a.m. & 3.30 & 7
Dean & Chapter; value, £I29; pop. 2,734; 8 & I I a.m. p.m. ; wed. 8 p.m. ; fri. I2 noon
& 7 p.m. ; tues. 8 p.m. ; saints' days, holy corn. I 1 a. m St. Philip, Heigham, v. Heigham road; Rev . .Alan Gwyn
St. John Timberhill, v. Ber street; Rev. Edward Ram Blyth M.A. ; D. Cullum, parish clerk; patron, Bishop of
Th.A.K. c.L.; John S.Madgett,parish clerk ; patrons,Dean & Norwich; value, £296; pop. s,soo; IO.-J.5 a.m. &; 3.30 &
Chapter; value, £-rBs; pop. I,o54; 8 & I I a.m. & 7 p.m.l; 7 p.m. ; wed. 7.30 p.m
daily, 7.30 a. m. & 5 p.m St. Thomas, Heigham, Earl ham road ; Rev. Charles William
St. Julian, R. King street; Rev. ''Vtlliam Kant LL.B; John Claridge ; patron, Bishop of Norwich ; value, £150 ; pop.
Madgett, parish derk ; patron, Rev.H. C. S~.;ulthorpe M. A.; 4,100; 8 & I0.45 a.m. & 7 p.m.; wed. 7.30 p.m
value, £2o6; pop. 1,742; 11 a. m. & 7 p.m Christ Church, Eaton; Rev. Wm. Knox Ormsby M.A.
St. Lawrence, R. St. Benedict's street; Rev. Fredrick John curate; pop. 4,Ioo; I I a. m. & 3.30 & 7 p.m.; 7.30 p.m.
:Moule M.A.; F. H.Ma.lster,sexton ; patron,LordChancellor; alternate wed
value, £r2o; pop. 498; II a.m. & 7 p.m.; wed. 8 p.m.;
fri. 12 noon . St. John's Catholic Church, Maddermarket,Very Rev. Canon
St. Margaret, R. Upper Westwick street; Rev. Samuel Richard Duckett D.D. ; Rev. Jarnes Flint & Rev. Francis
Smith; Thomas W. Ward, parish clerk; patron, Bishop Byrnc, priests; mass, 8.30, 9-45 & II a.m.; benediction
of Norwich ; value, £ I40 ; pop. 570 ; I I a. m. & 3· IS & 3 & vespers & benediction 7 p.m. ; daily, mass 7.30 & S
7 p.m. ; wed. 7•3o p.m a.m. ; holy days, mass 7 & ro a.m.; thurs. benediction
St. Martin-at-Oak, v. Oak street; Rev. Robert Mtddleton; 8 p.m
patrons, Dean & Chapter; value, £143; pop. 2,426; 11 The Holy .Apostles' Catholic Church, Willow lane, Rev.
a.m. & 3 & 7 p.m.; wed. 8 p.m Thomas Fitzgerald & Rev. Augustine Peacock, prie~ts ;
St. Martin-at-Palace, v. Palace plain; Rev. Samue1 Cox; mass 8.30 & 1 r a. m. ; benediction 3 & vespers & benedic-
Benj. Thorpe, parish clerk; patron, Bislwp of Norwich; tion 7 p.m. ; daily, mass 7.30 a. m. ; holy days, mass
va1ue, £uo; pop. 692; 8 & I I a.m. & 7p.m.; wed. 8 p.m 7.30 & 9 a.m. ; wed. benediction 8 a.m
St. Mary in the Marsh, v. St. Luke's Chapel Close; Hev. • Seats.
William Thos. Moore M.A.; patrons, Dean & Chapter; Friends' Meeting House, Upper Goat lane ; I0.45 a.m.
value, £62; pop. 490; 6.30 p.m & 7 p.In. ; wed. 7.30 p.m. ................................. 400
St. Mary the Virgin's, v. Coslany street; Rev. Sydney Albert Jews' Synagogue, Synagogue st. Rev. Hein Neumann
Dudley Suffiing ; Frederick Britton, parish clerk; patron, Trinity Presbyterian Church, Theatre st. Rev. Wm.
Marquess Townshend; value, £so; pop. r,r31; closed for Alex. Mac.Allan; II a.m. & 6.30 p.m.; wed. 7.30 p.m 500
restoration Tabernacle (Countess of Huntingdon), Tabernacle st.
St. Michael-at-Coslany, R. Coslany st.reet; Rev. Sydney 10.30 a.rn. & 6.30 p.m.; thurs. 7 p.m .................. r,ooo
.Albert Dudley Suflling; .Alfd. Lowe, parish clerk; patrons, Swedenborgian, Park lane ; I0-45 a. m. & 6.30 p.m .. .
Church Patronage Society; valuc,£82; pop. 843; II a. m. Catholic .Apostolic, Queen street, Rev. Frank Smith;
& 3 & 7 p.m ro a m. & 5 p.m. ; tucs. thurs. & sat. 5 p.m. & wed.
St. Michael-at-Plea, R. Queen street; Rev. P. Carmichael & fri. 10 a.m .................................................... I80
Clarke B.A. ; patrons, Sir T. B. Lennard bart. & J. R. Plymouth Brethren, Wensum street; I I a.m. & 3 & 7
Morse esq.; value, £68; pop. IS8; 8 & I I a. m. & 6.30 p.m.; tues. & thurs. 8 p.m ··············H··············
p.rn.; wed. & fri. u a.m.; sat. I p.m
St.. Michael-at-Thorn, v. Ber street; Rev. Wm. Frederic BAPTIST.
Crceny_ M.A., F.S.A. ; Gcorge B . .Alden, sexton; patron, Colcgate street, Rev. William Ruthven; 10.45 a.m. &
. Constance .}larch. Lothian; value, £84; pop. 1,595; 8 & 6.45 p.m.; "\\·ed. 8 p.n1 .................................... 8oo
I I a.m. & 7 p.m Gildencroft, Rev. Thomas Bullamore; 10.30 a. m. &
St. Paul, v. St. Paul's square; Rev. Michael Satterthwaite 6.30 p.IIl ••••••... ••••••••••••••••••···•••··· ·•••••••••••••• ••••••
Jackson; James Saunders Strickland, parish clerk; patrons, Pitt street, Rev. Georgc Chaters; 10.30 a. m. & 6.30
Dean & Chapter; value, £244; pop. 4,552; I I a.m. & p.m. ; wed. 7.30 p.m ...... ............. ....... ... ... ......... Bo<>
7 p.m St. Mary's plain (St. Mary's), Rev. John H. Shake-
St. Peter Hungatc, R. Elm hill ; Rev. William Ballyman speare M.A. ; 10.45 a. m. I\; 6.45 p. m. ; mon.7.30 p.m
Hull M. A. ; patron, Lord Chancellor; value, £ IOO ; pop. Sayers street, Heigharn (Mission), 7.30 p.m ............. .
303; 8.15 & I I a.m. & 7 p.m.; fri. 8.IS p.m Surrey road (Ebenezer), Hev. Robert Govett ; 10.45
St. Peter 1\Iancroft, v. Upper Market place; Rev. W. Pe]- a. m. & 7 p. m. ; tues. 7. 30 & thurs. & sat. 7-45 p.m I, 3oo-
ham Burn M.A. ; Douro Potter, parish clerk; patrons, Timberhill street, Rev. George Pung; 10.30 a.m. &
parishioners; value, £300; pop. 1,904; 8 & I I a.m. & · 6. 30 p. m. ; mun. & thurs. 8 p. m ... . . . ... . . . ... . . . . .. . . . 6oo
3.15 & 7 p.m. ; daily 8 a. m. & 5 p.m Untbanks road, Rev. Peter Morrison; I0.45 a. m. &
St. Peter Pcrmountergate, v. King street; Rev. William 6.45 p.m.; mon. 7-45 p.m ................................. 650
Hudson J\LA. ; William Farrow, parish clerk; patrons,
Dean & Chapter; value, £86; pop. 2,767; 8& rx a.m. & COSGREG.ATIONAL.
7 p. m . Chapelfield, Rev. James P. Perkins; 10.45 a. m. & 6.4.5
St. Saviour, v. Magdalen street; Rev. W1lliam Harris Cooke p.n1.; mon. 7.30 p.m ........................................ goo
M.A. ; Charles Curtis, parish clerk; patrons, Dean & Chap- Princes street, Rev.George Slatyer Barrett B.A. ; 10.45
ter; value, £r.so; pop. 1,361; I I a. m. & 7 p.m a. m. 3 & 6.45 p.m. ; mon. 7.30 p.m ..................... r,roo
SS. Simon & Jude, R. Wensum street; Rev. John Callis Old Meeting House, Colegate street, Rev. John Lewis ;
M.A. ; John llaxter, parish clerk ; patron, Bishop of Nor- I0.45 a.m. & 6.45 p.m.; weCl. · 7·45 p.m ..........••.... ..,~oo
wich; value, £4o; pop. 290; 7 p.m
St. Stephen, v. Rampant Horse street; Rev. James Wilson Pli.I.l\HTIVE METHODlST.
M..A. ; patrons, Dean & Chapter ; value, £332; pop. 4 7 II5 ; Cowgate street, I0.30 a.m. 2.30 & 6.30 p.m.; tue~.
8 & 11 a.m. & 3 & 7 p.m. ; daily, 8 a.m 7-45 p.m ........................................................ .
Christchurch, v . .New Catton; H.ev. Waiter Samuel Wright . Dereham road, Thomas Bright; Io 30 a. m. & 3 & 6.30
M.A. ; Robert Carman, parish clerk ; patron, rector of St. p.m.; thurs. 7.30 p.m ................... , ................... .
Clement's; value, £270; pop. 6,459; II a.m. & 7 p.m.; ~clson st.reet, North Heigham, Thomas Bright; Io.45
wed. 7.30 p.m a. m. & 6.30 p.m. ; tues. & wed. 7.30 p.m .•.......... 143
lloly Trinity, South Heigham, R. Essex street; Rev. John Queen's road, Rev. John w· elford ; IO. 30 a_ m. 2. 30 &
Call1s M.A.; John liall 8heppard, parish clerk; patron, 6. 30 p. m. ; wed. 7. 30 p m . . .. . . ..............••..........
Bishop of Norwich; value, £310; pop. 9,507; 8 & 10.45
a.m. & 3.30 & 7 p.m. ; wed. 7.30 p.m.; fri. II.3o a.m UNITARIAN. .
St . .Andrew's, v. Eaton ; Rev. William Melville Pigot M. A. ; Colegate street;. I I a.m. & 6.45 p.m ...............•••...
. Charles Chamberlain, parish clerk; patrons, Dean & Chap-
ter; value, £447 ; pop. I,848 ; I I a. m. & 3 p.m.; 7 p.m. UNITED METHODIST FREE CHURCH.
-on second & last sundays; wed. 7.30 p.m Calvert street, Rev. James Christopher Brewitt & Rev--
St. Bartholomew, R. Heigham; Rev. Robert Aldous Hitch- Charles Buteher; 10.30 a m. & 6.30 p.m. ; mon. a·
cock J\L A. ; James Ran some, parish clerk ; patron, Bishop p.m. & sat. 8 p.rr1 ............................................ .
of Norwit:b; value,£3oo; pop. 8,48I; II a.m. & 3 & Chapelfield road, Rev. James Chr.stopher Brewitt &
7 p.m Rev. Charles Butcher; IO 30 a. m. & 6.30 p.m ••..• ']00

DIRECTORY.] NORFOLK. NORWICH. 517


WESLEYAN. Seats. by the mayor & aldermen of the city : by a decree of the.
Ber street, Rev. John Gould & Rev. Robert Foster; Court of Chancery in 1858, the school was placed under
10.30 a.m. & 6.30 p.m.; mon. & wed. 7-30 p.m ..• 300 the managemeut of I6 trustees or governors, but in 1886
Lady's lane, Rev. John Gould & Rev. Robert Foster; a new scheme for the administn.tion of the school was
10.45 a.m. & 6.30 p.m.; thurs. 7 p.m............... •. goo framed by the Charity Commissioners under the provi-
sions of the Endowed Schools Acts: it is now managed by
WESLEYAN REFORM. a body of governors, of which the Rev. Canon Heaviside
Belvoir street, Rev. George E. Stone; 10.30 a.m. &
is now chairman; the foundation is divided into a
7.30 p.m.; wed. 7.30 p.m ................................. 500 "Grammar" & "Middle" school, with entirely distinct
Salvation Army Citadel, St. Giles street .................. 1,500
school buildings and masters: attached to the Grammar
school are two Parker exhibitions of £24 & £18 a year
Norwich School Board. respectively and tenable at Corpus Christi college, Cam-
Offices, Castle chambers, Opie street ; office hours, 9 to 5 ; bridge; there is also an annual leaving exhibition of £3o,
sat. 9 to I. tenable at the universities, or at such other place of edu-
The board was formed 4 November, 187I, & consists of I3 cation as may be approved by the governors : numerous
members. Bo:trd meetings are held on the first friday in prizes are provided from the endowments, or presented
each month at 3 p.m. at the Council chamber, Guildhall by benefactors & are awarded yearly at .Midsummer; at
Treasurer, Samuel Gurney Buxton the Grammar school many distinguished persons received
Clerk, Sydney Cozens-Hardy LL.B. Castle chambers, Opie st their education & amongst others, Archbishops Parker &:.
Assistant Clerk, Arthur W. Padgett Tenison, the late t:)ir Ja.mes Brooke, Rajah of Sarawak,
Chief Attendance & Industrial Schools Officer,JonathanScott & tho illustrious hero, Horatio Viscount Nelson, to
School Attendance Officers, George Dewing, Robert Reeve, whose memory a statue has been placed in the Upper
Arthur Williams & Richard Spratt dose, facing the portico of the school; there are about 95
BoARD ScHOOLS. boys; Rev. Eustace Fyffe Gilbard M.A. master; Edward
Aver- Kirkman Man M.A. sub-master; Henry Irwme \\'hit'.y
Accom- age M.A. Christopher Hudson Moreland M.A. & Joseph Calvert
Head Teachers. B. A. assistant masters ; French master, Mons. Carlier;
modatn attend-
ance. German master, Herr t:ilonitz; drawing master, .Mr.
Bull Close roall : - Cochranc; music master, H. J. Brookos F.c.o
Ro3rs ..........•...• ~.,- J. Smith ............... . 440 The Middle School, in Bridge strep,t, was reorganized in I862
Girls ............... Miss M. Mulholland .. . 350 by the Master of the Rolls, & has about 250 boys ; Thus.
Junior mixed ... Mif's S. E. Riches ........ . 440 475 Richmond Pinder LL.B., B.A. head master; Henry Oake
Infants ............ .Miss S. J. Terry ........ . 439 42I B.A. Univ. Dublin, second master
Crook's place : - The ~orwich & Ely Diocesan Female Training College, now
Bo)rS ..............• E. Peake .................. . 468 412 in course of erection (r8g2) on the Earlham road, will
Girls ............... Miss .M. Savury ....... .. 360 310 take the place, when completed, of the present institution
Junior mixed ... l\Iiss S. Hook ........... . 175 210 in St. Geurge's plain. The building is of red brick in the
Infants ............ Mr:-1. A. Stannard ..... . J62 345 Classic style, from designs by Messrs. Oliver & Leeson,
Duke sLreet : - architeds, of Newcastle-on-Tyne, & is estimated to cost
High. Grade Boys A. R. Golden .......... .. 308 - £IO,ooo, exclusive of the site, presented by the Eccle-
siastical Commissioners. It is intended for the reception
High.GradeGirls Miss M. Hill ............. .. 320
Heigham street : - of 6o students & will comprise on the ground floor,
Boys ............... W. E. H. V\""ilson ........ . 240 principal's room, lady superintendent's room, head mis-
Girls ............... Miss S. A. Taylor .... .. 224 tress's room, library & school hall, students' dining
Junior mixed ... ••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••• room, kitchens & offices : on the north-east is the In-
Infants ............ .Miss E. Fenn ........... . 242 firmary block, the lower floor of which is assigne1 to the
Horn's lane : - servants ; on the north-west is the students' examining
Girls .............. . .Mrs. S. G. Berry ........ . 202 room. The remaining floors comprise sitting rooms &
Junior ........... . ................................ - . dormitorie!!. Adjoining the college is a practising
Infants ........... . l\Iiss C. M. Smith ...... school, erected at an additional cost of £2,200, for 150 girls
Nelson street : - & r so infants. The institution, first founded in I 852, is sup-
llo:}rS •••.•••.••••.•• C. Hubbard .............. . ported by grants from the Committee of Council on Educa-
Girls .•............. Mrs. E. F. ~tone ........ . tion & voluntary subscriptions. The Lord Bishop of Nor-
Junior mixed .. . Mrs. C. Needham ..... . wich, visitor; The Very Rev. The Dean, chairman of com-
Infants ........... . Miss L. llarker .......... .. mittee; ReY. W. N. Ripley, treasurer ; Re,r. Thomas Arch-
New Catton : - bold M.A. princ1pal; Miss Billing, lady superintendent·
Junior mixed .. . Miss A. Ball .............. . 99 Miss J ames, head governess '
Infants ........... . Miss E. Culyer .......... .. I43 Presbyterian Higher Grade School (endowed), Calvert street,
Old .Meeting:- for 145 boys; average attendance, roo; James David
Bo)-~s ..............• J. H. Goreham ........... . 177 Wrigbt, University of London, head master; George
Philadelphia:- l:"nderwood Love, Univer5ity of London, second ma~ter
Girls mixed ..... . Miss C. R. Plumsted .. . 177 Dean & Chapter's Choristers' School, V pper close, J use ph
Infants .......... .. .Miss C. E. L. Pyle ..... . II5 Henry Broek bank, master
Prospect row : - Government School of Science & Art, St. Andrew's Broad
Infants .......... . Miss E. Reeve .......... .. 1 54 I29 st. \Valter Seott, bead master; H. G. Barwell, hon. sec
· Quay side:- The Blind Asylum & Schools in Magdalen street was founded
BoJ~s ....•.......... R. 'Vebster .............. . 300 in 180+ in prP-mises presented for that purpose by Thog_
Girls ............... . Mrs. A. Draper ........... . I80 Tawell esq. & at first limited to the reception of the
Infants .......... .. Miss E. Robertson .... .. 230 indigent blmd of the City of Norwich & County of Nor-
St. Augustine's : - folk, but in 1808 thP- institution was opened to the whole
Senior lloys .... .. B. H. Barber .......... .. kingdom; new premises were erected in 18go, from
Junior buys ..... . rr. Blrly . .................... . designs by .Mr. E. Boardrnan, architect, on the site of the
-
Girls ............... . Miss M. E. Kitchen ..... . old building, at a cost of £5,320, of which amount £2,500
Infants .......... .. Miss E. Stanlev ........ . was bequeathed by the late :Miss \Vatson; John Shave,
St. Paul's : - - sec. & superintendent; :!'firs. Shave, matron
. Junior mixed ... Miss Mentha Harcourt .. 202 I 59 British (Colman's), Carrow hlll, erected in I864, for 252
Sun lane:- boys, 2I7 girls & I35 infants ; average attendance, 229
Infants .............. . .Miss E. !. Bond ........ . 131 II3 boys, 183 girls & I46 infants; Francis Isaac Beales,
Surrey road : - master; .Miss Gertrude El wood, mistress; Miss Sarah
Bo)~s .............. . J. Stannard ............. .. 335 3I8 Ann Saville, infants' mistress
Girls .............. . .Miss S. J. Gomer ........ . 230 232 Hospital (girls), Hall road, Lakenham, for 34 children ;
Infants ........... . Miss A. Workman ..... . 225 223 average attendance, 34; Miss Sar-d.h Juhnson, matron
Thorpe Hamlet : - Norman's Endowed School, founded by Alderman Norman
Boys . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . F. G. Warren ........... . in 1723 for the sons of persons related to himself or his
Girls ............... Miss .Mary Harcourt .. . first wife, & endowed with over £x,ooo a year, provides
Infants ............ Miss H. Bridgeland ..... . for the education of go scholars of the founder's kin, &
Pupil Teachers' eaeh foundation scholar, in addition to a free corm:nercial
Central classes ... Mr. H. ·w. Duffin ...... - education, recei\•es a payment of £.8 yearly, an apprentice
fee of £IS at the age of I4, & at the age of 22 a gift of
Public Schools. [, 10 to commence business with ; the school is in Cowg'!.te
King Edward the Sixth's Grammar School, situated west of I street, erected in 1839, for 99 boys; average attendance,
81 ; J oseph Brnjamin llrown, master
the.cathedral1 was founded in 1547, & at first governed
618 NORWICH. NORFOLK.

National Schools . Railway Stations.
Model, Princes street (boys), built in r84r, for 284 boys; Great Eastern; offices, Thorpe station, George Kimm esq.
district superintendent of the Northern district ; R. P.
average attendance, 264; Charles M. Amos, master
Ellis, district goods manager ; J. A. Radley, district
Model, St. Andrew's street (girls), built for 260 girls ; engineer; George Jessup, station master, Thorpe; John
aYerage attendance, 205; Miss E. F. Murrell, mistress J. Playford, station master, Victoria
St. Bartholomew, Dereham road (girls & infants), erected Trowse Millgate, Great Eastern, Wm. Bird, station master
in 1848, for 21 r girls; average attendance, 109 ; & for 200 Eastern & Midlands, City station, Alfred Wootton, station
infants; average attendance, III; Miss Fitzpatrick, mis- master
tress; Miss Parr, infants' mistress Omnibus.
St. Bartholomew, Heigham, Derby street (boys), built for Norwich Omnibus Co. Limited run omnibuses frequently
r63 boys; average attendance, I I I ; William Marshal to & from the Market place to Newmarket road, New
Alden, master Catton (Pitt street & :Magdalen street), Earlham road,
St. Gilcs' (girls), Chapel field, erected in r863, for r58 girls ; Derebam road, Unthanks road, Thorpe village, Rosary
average attendance, r6o; Miss Ribbons, mistress corner & Bracondale
St. Giles' (infants), Wellington lane, erected in r862, for 147
children : average attendance, n6 ; Miss Hannah Hill, Coaches to & from Norwich.
m1stress STALHAM-Leatherdale, Royal hotel, mon. wed. & sat.
St. James' (mixed), Barrack street, erected in r843, for r68 at 4·45
Water Conveyance.
girls; average attendance, 87 ; Mil"s S. M Rudd, mist
St. John De Sepulchre (mixed), Mariners' lane, erected in Clarke & Reeve, Duke's Palace wharf. goods forwarded to
Yarmouth, daily. The '' Norfolk " ;;team packet sails
r862, for 242 children; average attendance, 199; Miss
every fourth day between Hull & Yarmouth
Abbs, mistress
The" East Anglian" steam packet leaves Yarmouth every
St. Mark's, Hall lane, Lakenham, built for 226 boys, 178 wednesday & Newcastle friday
girls & 188 infants; average attendance, 205 boys, 177 Vessels to & from Yarmouth, daily
girls & 194 infants; Arthur Trollop, master ; Mrs. Trollop,
mistress ; Miss J ulia "\\' ild, infants' mistress Railway Carriers.
St. Martin-at-Palace (mixed), Bishopgate street, built for Pickford & Co. Exchange street
I 13 children ; average attendance, 92 ; Miss Alkin, mist Great Eastern Railway Co. Parcels Office, Haymarket
St. Miles' (girl1c1 & infants), Coslany street, erected in r872, Great Northern Railway Co. Receiving Oflice, Haymarket
for 232 girls & 232 infants ; average attendance, r42 girls Great Western Receiving Office, :Market place
& 140 infants; Miss Harriet Dyball, mistress ; :Miss Laura London & North Western Receiving Office, Exchange street
Gedge, infants' mistress Midland Railway Co. Receiving Office, 16 Bank street
Eastern & Midlands Railway Co. Receiving Office,Haymarket
St. PP.ter Mancroft (boys), Chapel field, erected in 1876, for
185 boys; average attendance, 133; Henry Summer- Carriers to & from Norwich.
scales, master Wit.h their Booking Offices & Days & Times of Leaving.
St. Peter Permountergate (mixed), King street, erected in ACLE-Lambert, York tavern, Castle hill, man. wed. & sat.
r865, for r69 children; average attendance, 151 ; Miss 4; Watson, 'Waggon & Horses,' Tom bland, wed. & sat. 4;
Lucy Raker, mistress Dove, 'Waggon & Horses,' Castle Meadow, wed. & sat. 4
St. Pbilip, Paragon street, erected in 1872, for 147 boys, 152 ALDBOROUGH (Norfolk)-Tice, 'Woolpack,' St. George's,
girls & 135 infants; average attendance, 150 boys, 148 wed. & sat. 4· 30; Olley, 'Trowel & Hammer,' St. Step ben's
girls & 145 infants ; Joseph Holford, master; Miss Eliza- road, wed. & sat. I p.m
beth Randall, mistress ; :\liss Elizabeth Court, infants' AsnLEY-:\fayes, 'White Hart,' Ber street, wed & sat. 4
mistress AsnwELLTHORPE-Williams, 'Coacbmakers' Arms,' St.
St. Saviour (infants), Peacock street, built for 183 infants; Stephen's, man. wed. & sat. 4
average attendance, 148; :Miss Durance, rnistress ATTLEBOROUGH-Capes, 'George & Dragon,' Haymarket,
St. Stephen (boys & mixed), Crook's place, erected in 1857, sat. 4; Want, '·white Horse,' Haymarket, wed. & sat. 5
. for 200 boys & 200 mixed; average attendance, 103 boys, AYLMERTON-Tice, ''\Voolpack,' St. George's, wed. & sat.
& 136 mixed ; "\'Vm. Stott, master ; Miss Stubbings, mist 4-30
Earlham (m1xed), Lower Hellesdon road, built for 98 AYLSHAM-Stapleton, ' Duke's Palace,' mon. wed. fri. & sat.
children ; average attendance, 34 ; Miss Head, mistress 4.30; Fonlger, 'Woolpack,' St. George's, wed. & sat. 2
Eaton (mixed), Eaton hill, for r~8 children ; average attend- llACTON-ALigail, 'Duke's Palace,' sat. 1.30
ance, r 14 ; Miss Holloway, mistress EANHAM-Vont, 'Lamb,' tues. & fri. 12; Olley, ' Trowel &
Unitarian (Octagon) (girls & infants), Calvert street, built Hammer,' wed. & sat. 4
for 199 girls & 125 infants; averag-e attendance, 151 girls BARFORD-Laskey, 'Black Horse,' St. Giles', mon. wed. &
& ro6 infants; Miss Charlotte Reeve, mistress; Miss sat. 4; Risebrook, '·wheat Sheaf,' Bethel street., thurs. &
Bardwell, infants' mistress sat. 4; Garner, 'White Hart,' St. Peter's, wed. & sat. 4
Catholic Sisters', Ten Bell lane, erected in 1859, for 138 BARNINGHAM-Watson, 'Waggon & Horses,' Tombland,
boys & girls & 72 infants; average attendance, 134 boys & wed. & sat. 4
girls & 72 infants BARNHAM BnooM-Norton, 'Cock,' St. Giles', wed. & sat. 4
Catholic Sisters' (mixed), St. John's, Maddermarket, built BARTON-Lubbock, 'Waggon & Horses,' Tombland, wed. &
for 170 children ; average attendance, 140 sat. 4
BAWHURGH-Risebrook, 'Wheatsheaf,' Bethel street., thurs.
& sat. 4.30
Newspapers. EAWDESWELL-Palmer, 'Duke's Palace,' wed. & sat. 3;
Argus, published tuesday & saturday, Pbilip Soman & Son, Williams, 'Black Horse,' St. Giles,' thurs. 4
publishers, London street, Upper Goat lane. See advert BECCLEs-Flegg, 'George,' Haymarket, wed. & sat. 5
Daylight, published saturday, Edward Burgess, printer, BECKHAM (EAST & WEST)-Tice, 'Woolpack,' St. George's,
publisher & proprietor, St. Giles' street. See advert wed. & sat. 4-45
Eastern Evening News, Norfolk News Co. Limited, pub- HEDTNGHAM-Gardiner, 'Lamb,' Haymarket, wed. & sat. 4
lishers, 5 & 7 Exchange street Bm.STON-Stimpson, 'Waggon & Horses,' Tombland, wed.
Eastern Dailv Press, Norfolk News Co. Limited, publisher!'!, & sat. 4
5 & 7 Exchange street BESSINGHAM-Tice, 'Woolpack,' St. George's, wed. & sat.
Eastern Weekly Press, published friday for saturday, Nor- 4-45
folk News Co. Limited, publishers, 5 & 7 Exchange street BESTHORPE-"''ant, ''\Vhite Horse,' Haymarket, wed. & sat.
Norfolk Chronicle & Norwich Gazette, published saturday, 3 ; Capes, ' George,' Haymarket, man. & sat. 4
Norfolk Chronicle Co. Limited (William Beaver, sec.), EINHAM- Williams, ' Black Horse,' St. Giles', thurs. 4
proprietors & publishers, Market place. See advert BrNTRY-'\Villiams, 'Black Horse,' St. Giles', thurs. 4
Norfolk News, published saturday, Nor folk News Co. Lim. BU.KENEY-Walker, 'Pope's Head,' St. Peter's, tues. & fri.
publishers, 5 & 7 Exchange street 12; Graveling, 'Unicorn,' St. Mary's, fri. 10.30
Norfolk Standard, published daily & weekly (saturday), BLOFIELD-Watson, 'Waggon & Horses,' Tombland, wed. &
Philip Soman & Son, publishers, London street & Upper sat. 4; Lambert, York tavern, Castle hill, man. wed. &
Goat lane. See advertisement · sat. 4· 30
Norwich Mercury, published tuesday & friday, Norwich llOTESDALE-Chenery, 'Star,' Haymarket, wed. & sat. 4
Mercury Co. (J. Fitzpatrick, sec.), publishers, 45 London BRACONASH-Williams,' Coach Makers 'Arms', St. Stephen's,
street. See advertisement man. wed. & sat. 4; Olley, 'Trowel & Hammer,' St.
People's Weekly Journal, published friday morning, Norwich Stephen's, mon. wed. & sat. 4
Mercury Co. (J. Fitzpatrick, sec.), publishers, 45 London ERAMERTON-Aidis, 'King's Arms,' Ber street, wed. & sat.
street. See advertisement 4 ; Shreeve, 'Star & Crown,' Timber hill, wed. & sat. 3.30
DIRECTORY.] NORFOLK. NORWICH. 519
BRANDON PAHVA-~orton, 'Cock,' St. Giles', we:L & sat. FouLSHAM-Stroulger, 'Golden Lion,' Maddermarket, wed.
4; Brown, 'Coach & Horses,' Bethel st. wed. & sat. 4.30 & sat. 4
BRISTOY-Wordingham,' Fishmongers' Arms,' tues. & fri. 12 FoxLEY-Palmer, 'Duke's Palace,' wed. & sat. 3
BROOKE-Drake, 'Star & Crown,' Timberhill, wed. & sat. FRAMLINGIIAM-Meen, • Lamb,' Haymarket,wed.&.sat.12.30
4; Gardiner, 'Lamb,' Haymarket, daily, 4 l<'REETHORPE-Shearing, York tavern, Castle hill, wed. &
BucKE:NHAM (NEw)-Olley, 'Trowel & Hammer,' St. Ste- sat. 4
phen's, wed. & sat. 4; V out, • Lamb,' Haymarket, tues. & FRESSINGFIELn-Meen, 'Lamb,' Haymarket, wed. & sat.
fri. I; Breeze, • Royal Victoria,' St. Stephen's, mon. wed. I2.30
& sat. 4 p.m FRETTENHAM-Bane, 'Waggon & Horses,' Tombland, wed.
BUCKENHAM (OLn)-Olley, • Trowel & Hammer,' St. ~te­ & sat. 4; Coleman, 'Cat & Fiddle,' Magdalen street, wed.
phen's, wed. & sat. 4; England, Bell hotel, sat. 3 p.m. ; & sat. 4.30
Fitt, 'George & Dragon,' Haymarkct, wed. & sat. 4 FRITTON-Leach, 'Trowel & Hammer,' St. Stephen's, wed.
BuNGA):'-Gardiner, 'Lamb,' Haymarket, daily, 4 & sat. 4
BuNWELL-Breeze, ' Royal Victoria,' St. Stephen's, mon. FUNDENHALL - Williams, 'Coach Makers' .Arms,' St.
wed. & sat. 4 Step hen's, m on. wed. & sat. -4 ; N ewman, 'Bull,' St.
BURGH AYLSHAM-Brown, 'Elephant,' Magdalen street, Stephen's, sat. 4
wed. & sat. 4 GARBOLDISIIAM-Vout, 'Lamb,' Haymarket, tues. & fri. I~
BuRGH ST. MARGARET-Watson, '·waggon & Horses,' Tomb- GIMINGHAM-Bensley, 'Whtte Horse,' Magdalen street,
land, wed .. & sat. 4 wed. & sat. 2
BuRLINGHAM-Lambert, York tavern, Castle meadow, mon. GRESHAM-Tice, 'Woolpack,' St. George's, wed. & sat. 4.30
wed. & sat. 4 GursT-Williams, ' Black Horse,' St. Giles,' thnrs. 4
BuxTON-Brown, ' Elephant,' Magdalen street, wed. & sat. 4 GUNTON-Bane, '·waggon & Horses,' Tombland, wed. & sat. 4
CAISTER-Dade, 'King's Arms,' Her street, wed. & sat. 4 IlACKFORn-Risebrook, ' Wheatsheaf,' Bethel street, tues.
CALTHORPE-N ewstead, ' Hen & Chickens,' St. Mary's, sat. 3 thurs. & sat. 4; Laskey, 'Black Horse,' St. Giles', mon.
CANTLEY-Shearing, York tavern, Castle hill, wed. & sat. wed. & sat.. 4
4; England, ' Bell,' Orford hill, sat. 3 HAINFORo-Gostling, 'Bell,' Orford hill, mon. wed. & sat.
CARBROOKE-Hisebrook, 'Wheatsheaf,' Bethel street, tues. 4; Coleman, 'Cat & Fiddle,' Magdalen st. wed. & sat. 4.30
thurs. & sat. 4.30 HALVERGATE-Shcaring, Yorkitavern, Castle hill, wed. & sat. 4
CAR LE TON FORRHOE-Risebrook, ' Wheatsheaf,' Bethel st. HARDINGHAM-Laskey, 'Black Horse,' St. Giles', mon. wed.
tues. thurs. & sat. 4 & sat. 4; Risebrook, 'Wheatsheaf, Bethel street, tues.
CARLETON RoAn-Breeze, ' Royal Victoria,' St. Stephen st. thurs. & sat. 4; Garner, '"\Vhite Hart,' St. Peter's, sat. 2
wed. & sat. 4 HARDLEY-Shreeve, 'Star & Crown,' Timber hill, wed. &
CAsToN-Knott, Star inn, Haymarket, wed. & sat. 4 sat. 3-30
CATFIELn-Amies,' Waggon & Horses,' Tombland,mon. wed. IIARDWICK-Leach 'Trowel & Hammer,' St. Stephen street
& sat. 4.30; Bell,' Duke's Palace,' mon. wed. & sat. 4 mon. wed. & sat. 4
CAWSTO:N-\\'alker, 'Pope's Head,' St. Peter's, tues. & fri. HARLESTONE-Richcs, 'Boar's Head,' Surrey street, sat. 4;
I; Kybird,' Duke's Palace,' mon. wed. & sat. 4 Meen, 'Lamb,' Haymarket, sat. 12
CLAXTON-:Mayes, ''Vhite Hart,' Ber street, wed. & sat. 4 HAVERLAND-Kybird, 'Duke's Pa.laca,' mon. wed. & sat. 4
HEnENH.\.M-Gardiner, 'Lamb,' Haymarket, daily, 4
CLEY-"\Valker, 'Pope's Head,' tues. & fri. I; Graveling, HEMPNALL-Leggatt, 'Cricketers' Arms,' Red Lion street,
' Unicorn,' St. Mary's, fri. 10.30 wed. & sat. 4
CoLTISHALL-Thurston, 'George & Dragon,' Haymarket, HETHERSETT-,Vhite, 'Star,' Haymarket, mon. wed. & sat.
mon. wed. fri. & sat. 4.30; Edwards, York tavern, Castle 4; Cunningham, 'Cock,' St. Giles', wed. & ~at. 5
meadow, mon. wed. & sat. 4; Bailey, 'Waggon & Horses,' HEYDON-Kybird, • Duke's Palace,' mon. wed. & sat. 3
Tombland, mon. wed. & sat. 4 HEVINGHAM-Daniels, 'Flower-in-lland,' l'itt street, wed. &
CoLTO:N-Johnson, 'Fountain,' St. Benedict's, wed. & sat. 5 sat. 4-30
CoRPUSTY~ Walker,' Pope's Head,' St. Peter's, tucs. & fri. 12 HrcKr,ING-Knight, ' Duke's Palace,' sat. 3 ; Bell, 'Duke's
CosTESSY-Alexander, • Cardinal's Cap,' St. Benedict's, sat. Palace,' mon. wed. & sat. 4
4; Flag, • Fountain,' St. Benedict's street, wed. & sat. 4 ; HrNDOLVESTONE~Holsey, 'White Hart,' Haymarket, sat. 2
Melton, 'Crown,' St. Benedict's street, daily, 2.30 HINGHAM-Laskey, ' Black Horse,' St. Giles', mon. wed. &
C.arNGLEFORD-Mallows, 'Star,' Haymarket, mon. wed. & sat. 4 i Risebrook, 'Wheatsheaf,' Bethel street, tues.
sat. 5; Smith,' Bull,' St. Stephen's, mon. tues. wed. thurs. thurs. & sat. 4
& sat. 4.30 HocKHAM-Rayner, 'Trowel & Hammer,' St. Stephen's,
CROMER-Foulger, ''Voolpack,' St. G-eorge's, wed. & sat. 2 wed. & sat. 4
CROSTWICK-Thurston, 'George & Dragon,' Haymarket, HoCKERING-Leeds, ' Crown,' St. Benedict's, wed. & sat. 5
mon. wed. fri. & sat. 4.30; Edwards, York tavern, Castle HaLT-Walker, 'Pope's Head,' tues. & fri. 12
meadow, mon. wed. & sat. 4 HoNING-Abigail, 'Duke's Palace,' wed. & sat. I,3o; Bell,
CROSTWIGHT-Abigail, ' Duke's Palace,' sat. r.3o 'Duke's Palace,' mon. wed. & sat. 4
DEOPHAM-Knott, • Star,' Haymarket, wc1d. & sat. 4 HONINGHAM.-Pratt, 'Cardinal's Cap,' St. Benedict's, wed.
DEREHAM-Carlton, 'Coach & Horses,' Bethel street, sat. I; & sat. 4 ; Buck, 'Plough,' St. Benedict's, wed. & sat. 4
Smith, 'Wheatsheaf,' Bethel street, wed. 4 ; Brown, HoPTON-Vout, 'Lamb,' Haymarket, tues. & fri. 12
'Coach & Horses,' Bethel st. wed. & sat. 5 ; Earl, 'Pope's HoRNING-Amies, 'Waggon & Horses,' Tom bland, mon.
Head,' St. Peter's, tues. & fri. I; Martin, ' Bee Hive,' St. wed. & sat. 4.30
Benedict's street, wed. & sat. 4.30 IlORSFORD-Kybird, 'Duke's Palace,' mon. wed. & sat. 4
DICKLEBURGH-Jolley, 'George,' Haymarket, sat. 2 ; HoRSTEAD-Thurston, 'George & Dragon,' Haymarket,
Chenery, 'Star,' Haymarket, wed. & sat. 4 mon. wed. fri. & sat. 4
DrLHAM~.ilarber, ' White llorse,' Haymarket, wed. & sat. 3 HouoHTON-Smith, ' Wheat Sbeaf,' Bethel street, wed. 4
Drss-Chenery, 'Star,' Haymarket, wed. & sat. 4 HovETON-Amies, 'Waggon & Horses,' Tombland, mon.
DrTCIIINGHA:Itl-Gardiner, 'Lamb,' Haymarket, daily, 4 wed. & sat. 4.30; Dix,' Waggon & Horses,' Tombland,
DRAYTON-.Melton, 'Crown,' St. Benedict's st. daily, 2.30 wed. & sat. 4; Bell, 'Duke's Palace,' mon. we:i. & sat. 4
EARSHAM-Gardincr, 'Lamb,' Haymarket, daily, 4 lNGHAlii-Leatherhead, 'Royal,' Market pl. wed. & sat. 4
EAST TunDENHA'\1-Howes, 'White Hart,' St. Peter's, wed. IPSWICH-Jolley, 'George,' Haymarket, sat. 2; Meen,
& sat. 4 ; Blyth, 'Fountain,' St. Benedict's, wed. & sat. 'Lamb,' Haymarket, wed. & sat. 2
4- 30 ; Barrett, ' Plough,' St. Benedict's street, sat. 4 lTTERINGHAM-Kybird, ' Duke's Palace,' mon. wed. & sat. 4
EASTON--Howes, 'White Hart,' St. Peter's, wed. & sat. 4 KENNINGHALL-Vout, 'Lamb,' llaymarket, tues. & fri. 12
EDGEl!'IELD-"\\'alker, 'Pope's Head,' St. Peter's, tueso. & KIMBERLEY-Risebrook, 'Wheatsheaf,' Bethel street, ·tues.
fri. 12 thnrs. & sat. 4 ; Laskey, 'Black Horse,' St. Giles', mon.
ELLINGHAM-Gardiner, 'Lamb,' Haymarket, daily, 4 wed. & :!at. 4
ELLINGHAM (GREAT) - Knott, 'Star,' Haymarket, St. KIRBY BEDON-Aidis, 'King's Arms,' Ber st. wed. & sat. 4
Stephen's, wed. & sat. 4 KrRSTEAn-Drake, 'Star & Crown,' Timber hill, mon. wed.
ERPINGHAM-Xewstead, 'Hen & Chickens,' St. Mary's, sat. & sat. 4; Gard.iner, 'Lamb,' Haymarket, daily, 4
3 ; Tice, ' Woolpaek,' St. George's, wed. & sat. 4· 30 KNAPTON-Benslcy, 'White Horse,' Magda.len st.wed.&sat.2
EYE-J alley, 'George,' Haymarket, sat. 2 LAMMAS-Gostling, 'Bell,' Orford hill, mrm. wed. & sat. 4
FELMINGHAM-Bane, ' Waggon & Horses,' Tombland, wed. LANGHAM-Hall, 'Hen & Chickens,' St. Mary's, fri. 12 noon
& sat. 4 LANGLEY-Shreeve, 'Star&Crown,'Timber hill, wed.&sat.3. 30
FELTHORPE-Kybird, 'Duke's Palace,' mon. wed. & sat. 4 LENWADE-Stroulger, 'Golden Lion,' Maddermarket
FIELD DALLING-Hall, 'Hen & Chickens,' St. Mary's, fri. LITCHAM-Carlton, 'Coach & Horses,' Bethel street, sat. I
I2 noon LODDON-Wells, 'George & Dragon,' llaymarket, wed. &
FILBY-Watson, 'Wagg-on & Horses,' Tombland sat. 4·30; Woolner, 'King's Arms,' Ber street, mon. wed.
FoRNCETT ST. PETER-Williarhs,

'Coach l\'Iakers' Arms,' St. fri. & sat. 4 ; Flegg, 'George,' Hayma.rket, wed. & sat .
Step hen's, mon. wed. & sat. 4 ; Olley,' Trowel & Hammer,' 5; Ship, ' Lamb inn,' Hayma.rket, mon. wed. fri. &
wed. & sat. 4 sat. 5
620 NORWICH. NORFOLK. [KELLY'S

LoNG STRATTON-Cooper, 1 Lamb,' Haymarket, mon. wed. STALHAM-Leatherdale, Royal hotel, mon. wed. & sat. 4·45;
& sat. 4 ; Riches, ' Boar's Head,' Surrey street, sat. 4 ; Stimpson, ~Waggon & Horses,' Tom bland, wed. & sat. 4
Leach, 'Trowel & Hammer,' St. Stephen's,mon. wed. & sat STIFF.KEY-Wordingham, 'Fishmonger's Arms,' St. Peter's,
LOPHAM-Vout, 1 Vtmb,' Haymarket, tues. & fri. 12 tues. & fri. 12; Hall, ' Hen & Chickens,' St. Mary's, fri. 12
LUDHAM-Amies, 'Waggon & Horses,' Tombland, mon. wed. STOKE-Gooch, 'White Hart,' Ber street, wed. & sat. 4
& sat. 4.30; Bell, 'Duke's Palace,' mon. wed. & sat. 4 Dade, 'King's Arms,' Ber street, wed. & sat. 4
LYNO · Burton, 'Golden Lion,' Maddermarket, sat. 4 STRADBROKE-Meen, 'Lamb,' Haymarket, wed. & sat. 12.30
LYNN-Sm.ith, 'Wheat Sheaf,' Bethel street, wed. 4 STRATTON STRAWLESS--Stapleton, 'Duke's Palace,' man.
MARLINGFORD-Brown, 'Coach & Horses,' Bethel street, wed. fri. & sat. 4.30; Daniels, 'Flower-in-Hand,' Pitt st.
wed. & sat. 5 wed. & sat. 4.30
MAHSHA"Y-Stapleton, 1 Duke's Palace,' mon. wed. fri. & SuRLINGHAM-Aldis, 'King's Arms,' Ber st. wed. & sat. 4
sat. 4.30; Daniel;;, 1 Flower-in-Hand,' Pitt street, wed. & BUTTON-Bell, 1 Duke's Palace,' man. wed. & sat. 4
sat. 4· 30 SusTEAD-Tice, 'Woolpack,' St. George's, wed. & sat. 4.30
MARTHAM-Watson, 'Waggon & Horses,' Tombland, wed.& SwAFIELD-Bensley, 'White Horse,' Magdalen street, weJ.
sat. 4 & sat. 2
MATTISHALL-Howes, '·white Hart,' St. Peter's, wed. & SwAINSTHORPE-Leacb, 'Trowel & Hammer,' St. Stephen's,
sat. 4; Earle, 'Pope's Head,' St. Peter's, tues. & fri. 1 wed. & sat. I
MELTON (GREAT)-Cunninghqm, ' Cock,' St. Giles', wed. & SwA:sT0:-1 MORLEY-Fleming, 'Plough,' St. Benedict's, sat.4
sat. 4.30 SwAIWESTON-Breeze, 'Royal Victoria,' St. Stephen sLreet,
MELToN PARVA-Laskey, 1 Black Horse,' St. G1les', mon. wed. & sat. 5
wed. & sat. 4 ; Cunning ham, ' Cock,' St. Gile~', wed. & TACOLNESTON-Williams, 'Coach Makers' Arms,' St. Ste-
sat. 4.30 phen's, man. wed. & sat. 4
METTON-Tice, 'Woolpack,' St. Gcorge's, wed. & sat. 4.30 TASilURGH-Cooper, 'Lamb.' Haymarket, mon.wed.&sat. 4
MoRLEY-Knott, ' Star,' Hay1narket, wed. & sat. 2 THARSTON-Cooper, 'Lamb,' Haymarket, mon.wed. & sat. 4
MonNINGTHORP.E-Cooper, 'Lamb,' Haymarket, man. wed. THORN AGE-Gravelling, 'Unicorn,' St. Mary's, fri. 10.30
& sat. 4 · ToPCROFT-Cushion, ' \\-'bite Hart,' Ber st. wed. & sat. 4
MuLBARTON-Williams, 'Coach Makers' Arms,' St. Ste- T RUNCH-Bensley, ' White Horse,' Magdalen st. wed.& sat. 2
phen's, mon. wed. & sat. 4 TuDDENHAM-llowes, 'White Hart,' St. Peter's, wed. &
MuNDHAM-Drake, 'Star & Crown,' Timber hill, wed. & sat. sat. 4; Blytb, 'Fountain,' St. Benedict'E, wed. & sat. 4.30
TUNSTEAD-llurrell, ' White Horse,' Magdalen st. sat.
3-30 2; Abigail, 'Duke's Palace,' sat. 1.30; Barber, 'White
MuNDSLEY-Bensley, 'White Horse,' Magdalen street, wed.
& sat. 2 Horse,' Haymarkct, wed. & sat. 3
NEATISITEAD-Lubbock, '"raggon & Horses,' Tombland, WACTON-Cooper, 'Lamb,' Haymarket, mon. wed. & sat. 4
wed. & sat. 4; Dix, 'Waggon & Horses,' Tombland, wed. WALSINGHAM-Williams, 'Black Horse,' St. Giles', thurs. 4
WI<~LBORNR -Howes, ' White Hart,' St. Peter's, wed. 3, sat. 4
& sat. 4
NEWTON-Riches,' Boar's Head,' Surrey street, sat. 4 WELLS-'\Vilhams, 'Black Horse,' St. Giles', thurs. 4 ~
Earle, 'Pope's Head,' St. Peter's, tues. & fri. I
NORTH REPPs-Bane, 'Waggon & Horses,' Tombland, wed. WESTON-l'ratt, 'Cardinal's Cap,'St.Benedict's,wed.& sat.4
' & sat. 4; Foulger, 1 Woolpack,' St. George's, sat. 3 ~'ESTWICK-Bailey, '·waggon & Horses,' Tom bland, wed. &
NORTH W ALSHAM-Bailey,' Waggon & Horses,' Tombland, sat. 4
wed. & sat. 4 WHISSONSETT-Smitb, '~~'heatsheaf,' Be~hel street, wed. 3
0RMESBY·-W'atson, 1 "raggon & Horses,' Tombland, wed. & WrcKrrAM MARKFT-:Vleen, 'Lamb,' Haymarket, wed. &
sat.4 sat. 12.30
OvERSTRANn-Foulger, • Woolpack,' St. George's, wed. & WrNTERTON-\Vatson,' Waggon & Horses,' Tom bland, wed.
sat. 2 & sat. 4
PALGRAVE-Chenery, 'Star,' Haymarket, wed. & sat. 3 WrTTON-Abigail, 'Duke's Palace,' sat. 1.30
PLUMSTEAn-Chapman, 'White Lion,' Palace plain, wed. & WoonBRIDGE-Meen, 'Lamb,' ·Haymarket, wed. & sat. 12.30
sat. 4 Woon DALLING-Kybird, 'Duke's Palace,' mon. wed. &
PoRING LAND-Drake, 'Star & Crown,' Timber hill, mon. sat. 4; Wordingham, 'Fishmonger's Arms,' St. Peter's,
wed. & sat. 4; Gardiner, 1 Lamb,' Haymarket daily, 4 tues. & tri. 12
PuLHAM-Riches, 'Boar's Head,' Surrey street, sat. 4; ~'OODRISING-Risebrook, ''"'heatsheaf,' Bethel street, tues.
Brown, ' White Hart,' Ber street, sat. 4 thurs. & sat. 4
RACKHEATH-Amies, • Waggon & Horses,' Tom bland, mon. WooDTON-Gardiner, 'Lamb,' Haymarket, daily
wed. & sat. 4.30 ; Stimpson, 'Waggon & Horses,' Tomb- "\'\-'oRSTEAn-Abigail, 'Duke's Palace,' wed. & sat. 1.30 ;
land, wed. & sat. 4; Dix, 'Waggon & llorses,' Tombland, Burrell, 'White Horse,' Magdalen street, sat. 2
wed. & sat. 4 ; Flag, ' Fountain,' St. Benedict's street, "\'\-'ORTWBLL-Meen, 'Lamb,' Haymarket,

sat. 12
wed. & sat. 4 WRAliiPLINGHAllf-Hisebrook, 'Wheafsheaf,' Bethel street,
RrNGLAKn-Alex:ander, 1 Cardinal's Cap,' St. Benedict's, tues. thurs. & sat.~; Laskey, 'Cock,' St. Giles', mon.
sat. 4 wed. & sat. 4
ROCKLAND-Knott, 'Star,' Haymarket, wed. & sat. 2; ~·RENNINGHAM-Breeze, 'Royal Victoria,' St. Stephen st.
Rayner, 'Trowel & Hammer,' St. Stephen's, wed. & sat.4 mon. wed. & sat. 4 ; Williams, ' Coach Makers' A1"ms,'
ROLLESBY-Watson, 'Waggon & Horses,' Tombland, wed. & St. Stephen's, mon. werl. & sat. 4
sat. 4 WlWXHA"Y-Lubbock, 'Waggon & Horses,' Tom bland, mon.
RoUGHTON-Foulger, 'Woolpack,' St. George's, sat. 2 wed. & sat. 4.30; Rnrrell, 'White Horse,' Magdalen st.
RunHAM Smith,' Wheat Sheaf,' Bethel street, wed. 4 sat. 2; Stimpson, ' Waggon & Horses,' Tom bland, wed.
ST. FAITH's-Stapleton, -' Duke's Palace,' m on. wed. fri. & & sat. 4; Dix, 'Waggon & Horses,' Tom bland, wed. &
sat. 4.30; Daniels, 'Flower-in-Hand,' Pitt street, wed. & sat. 4; Amies, ' \Vaggon & Horses,' Tom bland, mon. wed.
sat. 4· 30 & sat. 4· 30
SAHAM-CONNELL-from Moore's, Chapclfield, wed. 12 noon WYMONDHAM-Smith, 'Bull,' St.. Stephen's, m on. wed. thurs.
SAXLINGHAM-Deggatt, ' Cricketers' Arms,' Red Lion st. & sat. 4.30; Mallows, 'Star,' Haymarket, mon. wed. &
wed. & sat. 4; Dade, 'King's Arms,' Ber st. wed. & sat. 4 sat. 4; Capes, ' George & Dragon,' Haymarket, sat. 4 ;
SAxTHORPE-1-Valker, • Pope's Head,' St. Peter street Balls, 'Cricketers' Arms,' Red Lion street, m on. wed. &
ScOLE-Jolley, 'George,' Haymarket, wed. & sat. 2 sat. 3.30
ScoTTow-Bailey, '·waggon & Horses,' Tombland, wed. & YAXHAM-Earle, 'Pope's Head,' St. Peter's, tues. & fri. 1 ;
sat. 4 Howes, ' White Hart,' St. Peter's, wed. & sat. 4
SEETHING Drake, 'Star & Crown,' Timber hill, 3.30 YAXLEY-Chenery, 'Star,' Haymarket, wed. & sat. 4
SHoTTESHAM-Fennell, ' White Hart,' Her st. wed. & sat. 4 ;
Dadc, 'Waggon & Horses,' Ber street, wed. & sat. 4 Post Carts & Omnibuses from Norwich.
SKEYTON-Bane, 'Waggon & Horses,' Torn bland, wed. & ACLE-from ' Boar's Head,' through Thorpe, Postwick,
sat. 4 Whitton & Elofield
SMALLBURGH-Barber, 'White Horse,' Haymarket, wed. & AYLSHAM-from 'Boar's Head,' daily, 4.30 a. m.
sat. 3 CuoMER-through Aylsham, from 'Boar's Head,' 4· 30 a. m
SouTH REPPS-Bane, 'Waggon & Horses,' Tombland, wed. HEMPNALL-from 'Boar's Head,' daily, 5 a. m
& sat. 4; Foulger, ''\Voolpack,' St. George's, wed. & sat. 2 HoNING HAM-from ' Boar's Head,' 4 a. m
SOUTH W ALSHAM-Chapman, ' White Lion,' Palace plain, LonnoN--through Bergh Apton, from 'Boar's Head,' 4 a. m
sat. 4 NORTH W ALSHAM-through Coltishall, from Botolph street,
SouTHWOLD-Flegg, 'George & Dragon,' Haymarket, wed. daily, 3-55 a.m
& sat. 3.30 R~~EPHAM-through Attlebridge, from 'Boar's Head,' 4.30
SPA.RHAM-Williams, 'Black Horse,' St. (hies', thurs. 4 a. m
SPROWSTON-Stimpson, 'Waggon & Horses,' Tombland, SAXLINGHAM-from 'Boar's Head,' 5 a. m
wed. & sat. 4; Dix, 'Waggon & ,Horses,' Tom bland, wed. STALHAM-through Wroxham from Botolph street, daily,
& sat. 4 3·55 a.m
DIRECTORY.] NORFOLK. NORWICH. 521
PRIVATE RESIDENTS. Ba.gshaw Abraham George, 30 Essex st Bassingthwaighte William Weston, 16
Abbey John, 50 Prince of Wales road Bagshaw Mrs. I02 Unthanks road Denmark road, Earlham road .
Abbott Edward, 7 St. Mark's terrace, Bagshaw Robert George, Brunswick Batchelder Miss, 29 St. Stephen's road
City road, New Lakenham house, Newmarket road Batchelor .Alfred Williams B.C.L., M.A.
Abbott Edward Jessie, 53 Bracondale Bailey Elijah Thomas, 45 Heigham road Clarendon house, Unthanks road ,
.Abel Cain, 37 Mill Hill road Bailey Joseph, 7 Havelock road Bateman Sir Frederic M.D., J.P. Upper
A bel ~Irs. Camperdown ho. Chapelfld. rd Bailey Mansfield John, Christchurch rd St. Giles street
Abel Mrs. III Trinity st.Sonth Heigham Bailey Miss, 2 Brunswick road Bateman Miss, I5 Brunswick road
.Abel Wm. Perowne, I Mount Pleasant Bailey Mrs. 15 Thorpe rd. ThorpeHamlet Bateman Miss, 30 St. Stephen's road
Abigall Henry, I9 Alexandra road Bailey Wm. Edward, 39 Distillery st Bateman Mrs. 63 Unthanks road
.Adames W1lliam Bennes, 5 The Cres- Bailey William Walter, 50 York street Bates Charles Bothwell, 70 Park lane
cent, Chapelfield Baker Rev. Charles William Heathcote Ea tes Frank 1.rus. noc. (organist of the
Adcock Danl. Sal~m cot. Up. Hellesdon B.A. [rector of St. Clements with St. cathedral), Upper close
.Adcock Ernest Daniel, I6 Mt. Pleasant Edmunds], Rectory, Colegate street Bates Mrs. Gresham house, Rosary rd
Adcock Robert, 6r Grove road Baker Ernest Wheatstone, 23 Castle st Batterbes Edwin, ~ Grove avenue
Adcock H.obert, Hildersham,Braconda.le Baker Fredk. Charles, g6 Dereham rd Baxter George, Crescent ho.Chapelfield
Alden Arthur Huddy, 62 St. Philip's rd Baker Henry William, 91 Dereham road Baxter Henry Jas. 20 Golden Dog lane
AI den Hy. "\Ym. (sub-sacrist ),Low. close Baker Lewis William, 13 Belvoir street Baxter Miss, I Baxter court, King st
Alderson Mrs. I39 Unthanks road Baker William, 95 Dereham road Baxter Mrs. J ames, 24 Magdalen street
Alderton Geo. 31 Carlton ter. Surreyrd Baldry Robert, 4 Tombland Bayes William, 22 Trinity street
Alderton William, I r5 Trinity street, Raldwin Edwin, 19 Park lane Eayfield Thomas Gabriel,44 Bracondale
South Heigham Bald win James Georg-e,37 Cambridge st Hayfield William, I8S Up. Queen's rd
Aldis John Brown, 5 Ipswich road Baldwin Mrs. 48 Unthanks roar! Bayles Mrs. II4 Trinity st.Sth. Heigham
.Aldous Charles, I I St.Mark's tcr. City rd Baldwin Mrs. 8 Valentine street Baylis Frederick, 19 Clarence road,
Aldous Mrs. 144 Quesn's road Bales Thomas, 154 Queen's road Thorpe Hamlet
Aldred .Tames, 8 Stafford strP~t Ballord Thomas, 29 Eracondale Baynes Waiter, 233 Dereham road
Aldred John Ed ward, 92 Edinburgh rd Balls John Edward, 1 Oxford street Beales Francis, Ravenhoe, Bracondale
Aldworth Hev. John M.A. 27 Bedford Bane Frederick Morris, 30 Aylsham rd Beane James, 3 Somerleyton road
street, South Heigham Bane Mrs. 24 Aylsham road Beard George Arthur Wales, 68
Alexandel' Daniel, 5.3 Cambridge street Banger Edgar Henry, 67 Denmark Thorpe road
Alexander l\Iiss, 83 Mill Hill road road, Earlbam road Beard Mrs. 11 & 13 Heigham road
Algar Henry Howell, 27 Grove st. west Banham Francis James,4Newmarket rd Beare Albert Prater, Grove road,
Algar Jabez, 58 Prince of Wales road Banham Isaac George, 70 St. Stephen's Thorpe Hamlet
J. lien Chas. I r Cedar rrl.Thorpe Hamlet road Beatley John P. Homefields, Christ-
.Allen Joseph, I9 Tombland Banks Rev. Samuel John Sherbrooke church road
Alien Miss, 6 Queen's road M.A. Ccurate of St. Mark's, Laken- Beatley Joseph, 36 Grove street west
Alien Mrs. Fairfield house, Lime Tree ham], Surrey house, Surrey road Beatley Mrs. 2 Clarence road, Thorpe
road, Town close Banks William, ChrisLchurch lo. Eaton Hamlet •
Alien Thomas, 32 All Saints' green Barber Bcnjamin Henry, 88 York st Becher Captain Andrew C. (adjutant
Alien William, 57 Caernarvon road BarberJohn,llankTop ho.St.Martin's rd 3rd Battalion Norfolk Reg-.), The
.Allen William Josiah, Heathside road, Barber Mrs. 2 Park lane Cedars, Thorpe road, Thorpe Hamlet
Thorpe Hamlet Barber Mrs. 58 Unthanks road Beck C. Smedley, 9 Grove road west
Ames Josiah, I Grove road Barber Mrs. 143 Unthanks road Beck Edward William, 4 Chester place
Amies Mrs. Eagle cot. Newmarket rd Earcham Miss, 18 Mount Pleasant Beck Mrs. Lime Tree road
Am os Charles Morgan, 6 Bedford street Barcham Miss, I6 Newmarket road Deckett William, 55 Nelson street,
~:;outh, Heigham Barker Rev. Rowlaud Vectis M.A. North Heigham
Andrews Hy . .:\hll house,Magdalen gates [vicar of St. }lark's, Lakenham & Beecheno Charles James, .Alcxandra
Andrews Miss, 52 .St. Stephen's road vicar of Arminghall], Vicarage, City mansions, Prince of Wales road
Andrews Mrs. 20 Grove street west, road, New Lakenham Beecheno Frerlerick Rutter, 17 Cedar
Unthanks road Barker Charles "\Villiam, 64 Trinity st road, Thorpe Hamlet
Andrews Mrs. 5 Oxford street Barker WalterJames,Ivy lo. Dereham rd Belding Herbert 'Villiam Robert, Point
Andrews Mrs. 7 The Crescent, Chapel- Barker William, 21- Sussex street house, New Catton
field road Barker \\'illiam James, 130 Waterloo rd Belding Mrs. 12 Denmark road, Earl-
Andrews Robert Edward, 51 Botolph st Barnard Alfred George, 36 Thorpe ham road
Andrews Stephcn, 40 Grove road road, Thorpe Hamlet Belemore Alfred John, Oak lodge,
.Annimn William, 26 l\lagdalen road Barnard George Sydney, St. John's Thorpe road
Ardron Rd. I Neville tcr. Grove st. nth villas, Park lane Bell Rev. John Swrmont liLA. Northum-
Aris .John, 6-t Clarendon road Barnard Godfrey, The Cedars, Albe- berland house, Unthank road
Armes Mrs. 36 All Saints' green marle road Bell Albert, 7 Connaught road
Arm it age Gen. Wm.6 BrnnswickN ew rd Barnard James Lawrence Nesbitt, Bell Ambrose Winter, 53 Botolph street
Armstrong Mrs. 178 llereham road Heathside, Thorpe Hamlet Bell George, I3 Caernarvon road
Armstrong Mrs. ro Park lane BarnardThe~Iisses,33Prince of Wales rd Bell Thomas Henry, 9 Cambridge street
Armstrong William, 89 Mill Hill road Barnard Mrs. 36 Queen's road Bellman Capt. Frederick Harvey, Ends-
Arnold Horace Beadon, 8 Clarendon Barnard \\'illiam, I07 Trinity street leigh house, Grove street
road, Heigham Barnes Alfred, Dunwich villa, Thorpe Belson Richard Durrant, I2 St. Mark's
.Arnold Mrs. I03 Pottergate street road, Thorpe Hamlet terrace, City road, New Lakenbam
Ashford Mrs. 84 Prince of Wales road Barnes Charles, Eagle ho. Aylsham rd Eenest James Smytb A.M.I.C.E. Grove
Ashlcy Miss, 43 St. Stepben's square Barnes Edward William, 4 Clarence house, Newmarket road
Ashley Mrs. 28 Trinity st. Sth. Ileigham road, Thorpe Hamlet Bennett Austin, 88 Park lane
Asker Mrs. 39 Mount Pleasant Barnes Henry, 43 Heigham road Bennett Henry, 8o Rose lane
Asker Mrs. 37 Newmarket road Barnes John Edwards, 50 Mt. Pleasant Bennett Mrs. Io Newmarket road
Atcheson Halpb, 184 Dereham road Barnes Wltr. 27Cedar rd. ThorpeHamlet BennettWalter, I2 Brunswick road
Atkinson Mrs. r8 West parade Barnett Joseph, 3I Heigham road Benningten Arthur George, 9 Carrow
A tthill Anthony, 29 Bedford street, Earrett Rev George Slatyer B.A. [Con- road, Thorpe Hamlet
South Heigbam gregational], Bracondale Eensley William;n3 Unthanks road
AustenEd wd. I5Denmark rd. Earlhm.rd Barrett Rev. George Willoughby M.A. Bensly William Thomas LL.D. New-
A vey George, 36 Grove road [minor canon & precentor & chaplain market road
Ayers Jarnes Harris, 7 Valentine street, to the Norfolk & Norwich hospital], Berry Edward, 168 Dereham road
Dercham road Lower close Berry Mrs. 35 Victoria street
Ayers Mrs. 217 Dereham road Barrett George, 66 Queen's road Berry Samuel N eave, I7 Denmark road,
Ayris Jn. Heigham Grove ho.St.Giles rd Barrett William, 179 Queen's road Earlham road
Back Philip, Mile End road, Eaton Barrow Mrs. I3 Brunswick New road Berry William (sergt.-major R.H.),
Back PbilipEdwd.Curat's ho.Haymarkt Barton Rev. J. Yarker [acting chaplain 227 Dereham road
Back William Henry, Wentworth villa, to the Forces], 44 Bishopsgate street Bernasconi Paul, Colegate street
Newmarket road Barton Samuel .J. M.D. 34 Surrey st Hest Herbert, Fulham house, St.
Bacon Rev. Josiah Newbegin [Baptist Barwell Henry G. 33 Surrey street Leonards road, Thorpe Hamlet
Reformer], 58 Earlham road Barwell John, St. Catberine close, Betts Erncst Arthur, Princes street
Bacon Henry, 4 The G'rescent, Chapelfld Upper Surrey street Betts Geo. r6 The Crescent,Chapelfield
Bacon Mrs. 8 Oak villas,St. Martin's rd Barwell Miss, Surrey street Betts John Samuel, 12 Connaught rd
Bacon Walter, 53 St. Philip's road Bassingthwaighte Geo. 41 Dereham rd Betts Mrs. 23 Mill Hill road
Bagge Miss, So Prince of Wales road Bassingthwaighte William, 6 Bedford Beverley Michael, 54 Prince of Wales rd
Bagley Richard, 34 Botolph street Cross street, South Heigham Bibbey Thomas, 68 Mountergate street
522 NORWICH. NOHFOLK. [KELLY's

Bidwell William Henry, 12 Thorpe Bower Charles John, 9 St. Philip's road Bullard John, 34 Kimberley street
road, Thorpe Hamlet Bower HobertEdward, 1r5 Dereham rd Bnllard Philip Henry. 32 Grove st. nth
Bignold Lt..-Col. Chas.Edward D.L.,J.P. BowerJames Garton, I I St. Martin's la Bullard Thomas, 38 York street
Harford lodge, Ip~wieh road Bower James Garton, jun. Earlham Bullen Bcnjamin, I28 Queen's road
Bignold Chas. Arthur Bathurst D. L. ,J. P. house, Earlham road Bnlley 1\lrs. 30 Grove street north
Reymerston lodge, St. Giles road Bowhill Obadiah Hy. 34 Grove st. nrth Bu!limore Thomas, Montrose house,
Bignold Edward Samuel, Lady's lane Bow hill Thos. Hill Ho. rd. ThorpeHamlet Hellesdon road
Bignold Misses, Stanley bo. Surrey st Bowhill Waiter, 4 Lakenham terrace BulmerRev. EdwardM.A. [minor canon
Bilsborough Thomas, St. Clement's Bowles :Mrs. 27 Hcigham road & surro2ate l, Lower close
hill, New Catton Bowyer
. Mrs. .'i Victoria street Bunnett Edwd. Mus.n.cantab. Up. dose
Birch Henry, 15 Essex street Boyd Rev. Sydney Adolphus M • .A., B.c. L. Bunting Mrs. SS Park lane
Birch M1ss, Avenue road [vicar of St. Giles'l, St. Giles' vicar· Burgess Hy. 2 Essex st. South Heigham
Birch Mrs. 40 Bethel street age, Unthanks road Burkinshaw William Edward, 2 Ethel
Birch Mrs. 3 Bracondale Boyton Chas. Taylor, 42 Mount Pleasnt road, Thorpe Hamlet
Bird George Hilton, Ipsw;ch lodge, Brady Mrs. 15::> Queen's road Burleigh Mrs. 45 St. Philip's road
Ipswich road Branch J sph. River view, St. Martin's rd Burhngham Charles Fulcher, Tudor ho.
Bird John, r St. Giles terrace,Bethel st Branch Mrs. 38 Trinity street Lower Clarence rd. Thorpe Hamlet
Bird Misses, 13 Victoria street Bramwell Dan~l Kelland, 39 Grove rd Burn Rev. William Pelham M.A. [vicar
Bird Mrs. 78 St. Stcphcn's road Branford ~Iiss,Flordon ho. Unthanks rd of St. Peter's MancroftJ, St. Peter's
Bird Wa1ter Edward, jun. Up. Surrey st Bream \Villiam, go Sussex street vicarage, The Chantry
Bishop James Edward, 30 Cattle markt Breem John, 58 Trinity street Burne Mrs. 100 Queen's road
Blackwood John, 6 Chapelfield road Breese Mrs. Lower close Burrage William J ames, 34 V1ctori3. st
Blake Mrs. 3 Heigham road Breese Thomas Scurll, Lowerclose Burrell Miss, 6 \Vest parade
Blake Robert, 21 Bracondale Rrett " 1illiam George, 30 Trinity street Burrell Mrs. 6r Heigham road
Blake Walter, 27 St. Andrew's,Broad st Brewitt Hev. Jas. Christopher [United Burroughes Handall Ellis, 85 Thorpe
Blake-Humphrcy Mrs. The Close Methodist Free Church],69 Cal vert st road, Thorpe Hamlet.
Blandon Misses, 19 Brunswick road Hridgman John Brooks, 40 St. Giles st Burrow Hi(·hard, I3o Queen's road
Blazeby Henry Edward, 23 Earlham rd Bright Rev. Thomas !Primitive Metho- Burrows Edward \Villiam, 6 Osborne
Blazeby Horace Henry, 23 Earlham rd dist], 28 Denmark rd. Earlham road villas, Aylsham road
Blunderfleld Mrs. 7 Denmark road, Bright Mrs. 'l'horpe rcl. Thorpe Hamlet Burrows Ezekiel, 42 St. Giles hill
Earlham road Hristowe Mrs 53 Mill Hill road Burrows George Press, Eagle walk,
Blyth
. ReVI. Alan Gwyn . M.A. St. Brock Mrs. 36 Kimberley street Newmarket road
Philip's vicarage, Hcigham road Brock \Villia.m, 7 Somerleyton street Burton Edward,so 'fhorpe road., Thorpe
Blyth Ernest Egbert B. A., LL.B Clarence Brockbank Joscph Henry (master nf the Hamlet
road, Thorpe Hamlet Dean & Chapter's choristers' school), Burton Gent, 18 Bedford stre~t, South
Blyth Jabez James, 32 Trinity street Bi::;hop's Bridge road Heigham
Blyth J osiah Timoth_\·, 21 Earl ham rd Brook Thomas Verlander, 26 Victoria si Burton George James, 45 Oxford street
Blyth Misses, 59 Unthanks road Brooks Gcorge, Avenue road Burton John Gurney, Mile End road
lllyth Mrs. L. P. Victoria street Brooks Mrs. Lower close Rurton Miss Ellen, 38 Cambridge st
Blyth Thomas, 27 Victoria street Brooks Thomas, 62 Unthanks road Burton Miss Sarah, 40 Cambridge st
Blyth William, 40 Dnthanks road Broom Mrs. 4 Grove avenue, St. Burton Mrs. 63 Carlton ter. Surrey rd
Blyth William Thomas, 183 Queen's rd Stephen's road Bnrton Mrs. 187 Queen's road
Board man Edward F. R. 1. n. A. Oak Broom Robert, J cssamine cottage, BurtonSamuelHerbert~r.ll. soSt.Giles st
house, Newmarket road Plumstead road Hurt on-Fanning Frederick Vi'illiam 1\L n.
Boardman Edward Thomas, Queen st Broscomb James Henry, 13 Grove road 46 Prince of Wales road
Boardman James Theobald, 32 New- Brown Rev. James Landy M. A. Chapel- Burwood Richard, 82 Queen's road.
market road field grove Bury Thomas, 8 Somerleyton street
Bokenham John Vi'illiam, 8 Havelock rd Brown Charles .John, I Ma ud street, Bush George Waiter, 8 Grove road
Bolinbroke Mrs. N. 6 Grove avenue, North Heigham Bush Mrs. 179 Dereham road
St. Stephen's road Brown Frederick George, 90 York st Bu::;h l\Irs. 1 I Earl ham road
Bolinghroke Augustus Frederick Coke, Brown Freclerick · Sayers, Clarence bo. Bush l\Ira. 86 Mill Hill road
The Beaches, St. Giles road Clarence road, Thorpe Hamlet Bush Mrs. 2 Somerlevton •
street
BolingbrokeHoraceCha'l'les, The Gables, Brown George Daniel, 12 Caernarvon rd Jlushell Frederick, 8 Bloomsbury place
Christchurch road, Eaton Brown Henry, 64 Unthanks road Buston Williarn, 170 King street
Bolingbroke Leonard Geo. The Close Brown Miss, 33 Bracondale Butcher Rev. Charles [Primitiye
Bolingbroke Louis Errington, Surrey Brown Mrs. 49 St. Philip's road Methodist], 64 Mill Hill road
court, Surrey street " Brown Samuel, 20 Tombland Butcher Henry Frederick, r Chester
Bolingbroke Mrs. The Cove, Christ Brown Sydney Loclington, 28 New- place, St. Giles road
Church road market road Butcher Stephen Stone, 93 Dereham rd
Bolingbroke Mrs. Southfield, New- Brown Thomas, 22 Thorpe road, Thorpe ButlerHarry,22Essex st. South Heigham
market road Hamlet Butler Mrs. 66 Clarendon road
Bolton Mrs. 13Thorpe rd. ThorpeHamlet Brown Thomas Arth. 28 St. Giles hill Butler Thomas Bulwer, Lower close
Bond Cbarles Frederiek, The Elms, Brown Thomas Charles, 27 Essex Butler \Valter, 140 Bcr street
Mount Pleasant street, South Heigham Butler William, 66 Cambridge street
Bond Ernest Woodcock, 5 Brunswick Brownc - , College road, Unthanks rd Butler \Villiam James Gooch, Arunuel,
New road Browne Charles, 27 Prince of \Vales rd Town close
Bond Fred Arthur, 46 York street Browne George, 16 Essex street Butterfant William George, l\Iile End rd
Bond Samuel, 65 l'ottergate street Browne Henry, I r 4 Dereham road _ Butterfield Mrs. Hardingstowe, Earl-
Bond. Wm. The Shrublands, Heigham rd Browne Henry, I20 Dereham road ham road
Bone John, White house, Aylsham road, Browne John Frederick, 19 Thorpe Buttifant Joshua, 3 Bedford Cross
Upper Hellesdon road, Tborpe Hamlet street, South Heigllam
Booty Frederick Henry, 31 St. Giles rd Browne Jn.Goldsmith,66 St. Philip's rd Buttifant Thomas, 6o Trinity street
Booty Horace .rohn, 149 ThoPpe road, Brow ne John Richarrl, 35 Cambridge st Buxton :Mrs. 9 Essex street
Thorpe Hamlet Browne Miles, \Vestview, l~osary road, Byles William, l\iagdalen road
Boston George, 17 ViPtoria street Thorpe Hamlet Byrne Rev. Francis [Catholic], Pres-
lloston \'Villiam, Devonshire house, Browne Miss, 46 Queen's road b~,tery, St. George's plain
Albermarle road Brown Mrs. 192 Dereham road Cadge John Paul, Arley ho. Braconda~e
Boston William Henry, 142 Queen's rd Browne Thomas Henry, 68 Bethel st Cadge W11liam, 49 St. Giles street
Boswell Jas. Chas. Fine dell, Ipswich rd Browne WalterFrederick,g Heigham rd Cahill Robert Sanderson, go Park lane
Boswell James Freeman, Upper close Jlrowne W.John UttenJ.P.Ileigham gro Caley Albert J arman, Chapeltield grove
Boswell Mrs. 26 Grove road Bryning Alfred J ames, I9 St. Philip's rd Caley Edward J. Eaton Old house
Boswell Samuel, North Eaton farm Buckenham James, 27 Somerleyton st Caley Mrs.25 Thorpe rd.Thorpe Hamlet
Bougben Hugh, 124 Queen's road Buckenham The Misses, 18 Thorpe Callard George, go Mill Hill road
Boughen Smith, 29 Park lane road, Thorpe Hamlet Callis Rev. John M.A. [rector of South
Boulger Francis, Dereham road Buckingham George, 41 Unthanks rd IIeigham & curate-in-charge of St.
Boulter Miss, 82 Chapelfield road Buckle Mrs. 39 Bracondale Simon's & St. Jude's],. Trinity rec-
Bou !ton Fredk. \V m. 41 Grove st. west Buckley )iiss, 29 Trinity street tory, Essex street, South Heigham
Boulton Wm. Arth. 35 St. Philip's rd Bugg Miss, r Bedford Cross street Calver Miss, 53 Newmarket road
Bowden Mrs.84Thorperd.ThorpcHamlt Bugg Wm. 14 Cathedral street north Calver Mrs. 17 Cambridge street
Bower Rev. Matthew )f.A. [vicar of St.. Bullard Arc hie, The Laurels, Town close Calvert Joseph B.A. (assistant master
Etheldred's, with St. Peter, South- Bullard Charles, 34 Duke street of Grammar school), The Close _
gate], 1 If Queen's road Dullard Edwin Matthias, 20 Park lane Cameron Donald Stuart, 12 Trinity st
DIRECTORY .J NORFOLK. NORWICH. 523
Campbell Mrs. 6 Grove road Clubb Miss, 15 West parade Copeman Rev. Artbur Charles M.B.,
Campling Chas. Joseph, I2 Earlham rd Coaks Isaac Bu!S'g D.L., J.P. Fern hill, .A. K.c. L. [vicar of St. Andrew's, bishop's
Campling George Herbert, 87 Calvert st Grove road, Thorpe Hamlet commissary for archdeaconry of
Campling Mrs. 62 York street Coalman Mrs. I7 Earlham road Norwich,surrogate,rural dean & hon.
Campling Robert, 2I Golden Dog lane· Coates John Barnard, 71 'l'horpe road, canon], St. Andrew's parsonage,
Campling Thomas, 9 Denmark road, Thorpe Hamlet Broad street
Earlham road Cobb Mrs. 26 Cambridge street Corbett Samuel, IS Park lane
CannellChas. Theophilus,84Newmrkt.rd Cobbald Thos. Archer,IJ Castle meadow Corbett .Joseph, Unthanks road
Cantrell Mrs. 70 Unthanks road Cochrane Robert, 4 Park lane Corbould Miss, 12 Upper Surrey street
Capon Edward Herbert, 33 St. Giles st Cochrane Wm. Robert, 13 Cambridge st Cordcr Edward, 31 London street
Caro Jacob, Rosary ho. Thorpe Hamlet Cock George Thomas, Annesley house, Corrick Benjamin, 56 Pitt street
Carlier AntoineGuillame.6o Unthanks rd Newmarket road Corsbie Samuel \Vm. IS5 Dereham rd
Carter Henry, Beech bank, Unthanks rd Cockrill William, 29 Ca.mbridge skeet, Cossey John, Clyde house, \Vest parade
Carter Mrs. Point house, Ipswich road .South Heigham Cossey Mrs. r8 Grove street west
Cartwright Mrs. Tower ho. Bracondale Cockrill William J. Town Close road Cotter Major Edmond William, 75
Carver James, 31 Cambridge street, Codling Arthur John, 13 Grove st. west Thorpe road, Thorpe Hamlet
South Hcigham Coe Albert Ed ward, 5 Cambridge street Court Kichard Harry, 10 .l\IIill Hill road
Case Henry, 2 Trinity street Ooe Mrs. Surrey grove Cowl Alfred Ernest, 9 Aylsham road
Case Miss, 66 Earlham road Colborne Frederick, 57 Park lane Cowles H.ob~rt William, 9 St. Mark's
Case M rs 5 Chester place, St. Giles rd Colby Richard, Lower close terrace, City road, Lakenham.
Case Mrs. Lower close Coldham Harry Oakley, 37 Oxford st Cox Rev. Samuel [vicar of St. Martin's-
Case Thomas Henry, 2 Trinity street Cole John, Bs Grove road at- Palace ],St. Martin's-at-Palce. Plain
Caswall Robert Hadfield, Vine cottage, Cole Mrs. 19 Victoria street Cox Ernest Valentine, 37 Park lane
St. Leonard's road, Thorpe Hamlet Cole Wm. Hy. 25 Carlton ter. Surrey rd Cox Mrs. 77 Rosary rd. Thorpe Hamlet
Cator Mrs. Thornhill, Denbigh house, Coleby George Thomas, Sinclair house, Cox Robert, 84 Mill Hill road
Newmarket road Chap:elfield road Cox Thomas, 45 Bracondale
Cattermole Edwd. 41 Prince of Wales rd Coleby James Bennett, 42 Cambridge Coy Jeffery Sumptcr, 58 Pitt street
Chalker Horace Geo. 29 Dereham road street, Heigham Coyte :VIrs. 70 T horpe rd. Thorpe Hamlet
Chamberlin Alexander Robert, The Coleby Mrs. 72 Queen's road Cozens-HardySydney LL.B.72Bracondle
Grove, Ipswich road Coleman Ed wd. 7 Bedford stS. Heigham Crabbe Mrs. 5 Bedford Cross street
Chamberlin Ronald, Grove avenue, St. Coleman George Lovick, 26 Park lane Cracknell Alfred, I9 Heigham road
Stephen's road Coleman Horace, 33 Essex street Cracknell Mrs. 21 Heigham road ·
Chambers Rev. William Hampton n.A. Coleman John, 64 Earlham road Craake Mrs. 72 Clarendon roau
[curate of St. Bartholomew's, Coller Charles Tarrant, Lime grove, Creeney Rev. William Frederic M.A.
HeighamJ, I25 Dereham road Lime Tree road [vicar of St. l\'Iichael at 'I' horn],
Chandler Geo. 6r Carlton ter. ~nrrey rd Coller George Arthur,94 :-lewmarket rd 8 Orford hill
Chaplin Thomas, Milestone house, Collins Alfred James, 66 Essex street Cremer Robert Rolfe, 35 Princes street
Thorpe road, Thorpe Hamlet Collins Edward Thomas, 8 Denmark Cressy Miss, 3 Sout.hwell road
Chapman Henry Edward, 10 Osborne road, Earlham road Crisp John, Albion ho. Mile End road
villas, Aylsham road Collins Howard James, Norfolk & Nor- Crisp Miss, 4 Ethel road, Thorpe road
Chapman Jeremiah Geo.22Clarendon rd wich hospital, St. Stcphen's road Crook Arthur, 53 Prince of Wales road
Chapman Miss, 122 Queen's road Coils Mrs. 7 Alexandra road Crook Ed ward, 59 Mill Hill road
Chapman Mrs. I2 Chapelfield gardens Coils Saml. 41 Cambridge st.S.Heigham Crook John, York house, Chapelfield rd
Charter .Jas. B.A. Belle Vue ho. Eaton pk Colls Samuel Reeve. IO Grove a\·enue, Crook Wm. Gustavus, All Saints' green
Chiddick Francis John, I6 Oxford st St. Stephen's road Crosbie Henry Greaves, 103 Trinity st
Chilvers Horace, 44 Denmark road, Collyer Mrs. Lower close Crosbie HenryJn. Apps, r8 Clarendon rd
Ea.rlham road CollyerMrs. 17Thorpe rd.ThorpeHamlet Crosbie Horace Webster,76 Earlham rd
Chilvers John, 71 Grove road Colman Henry, I r Bracondale Crosbie Samuel ""'ebstcr, 21 Park lane
Chittock Jsph.Gordon,25Newmarket rd Colman Horace Palmer, 52 Bracondale Cross Aquila, 31 Newmarket road
Christmas Mrs. 22 Mill Hill road Col man Jeremiah James M. P., D. r.., J. P. Cross Benjamin, 74 Park lane
Christopher Mrs. ro Bedford street, Carrow house ; & The Clyffe, Carton, Cross Chas. Bedford, 8r Chapelfield rd
South Heigham Lowestoft ; & Bclgrave mansions, & Cross Jame3, 219 Dereham road
Church George Wm. 32 IIavelock road Devon!-lhire & Reform clubs s w & Cross John, 9 Mount Pleasant
Churchyard James Sarnl. Magdalen rd City Liber:J.l club, London E c Cross John 1\Iatthews, Mile End road
Churchyard Mrs. 33 Hcigham road Colman John Alfred, Wensum house, Cross Mrs. So Chapelfield road
Clabburn Jas. \'\'m. Guild ho. Thorpe St. Martin's road Cross Mrs. 25 Earlham ro·Hl
Clare Mrs. 49 Trinity street Colman John Daniel, IS Hmgham road CrossRobt. 12Clarence rd.ThorpeHamlet
Clare Walter, rg St. Stephen's sqnare Colman Mrs. 13 St. Philip's road Cross Thomas \Vm. 45 Mount Pleasant
Claremont Constantine Cecil,42 Chapel- Colman Mrs. Town Close ldg. Ipswich rd Crosse Heginald Edward B.A. Norfolk &
field road Colman Russell James, Bracondale wds Norwich hospital, St. Step hen's road
Claridge Rev. Charles William [vicar of Colman ThomasWilliam, II Bracondale Crosse Thomas William, 45 St. Giles st
St. Thomas', Heigham ], Vicarage, Compton Thomas J oseph M.D. Heigham Croskill Charles Robert, IggDereham rd
Edinburgh road hall, Old Palace road Cro3skil!RobertCus hind,201 Dereham rd
Clark George, 12 Millllill road Cook Miss, 2 Connaught road Crotch l\Irs. 3 Lynrlhurst villas, Mag-
Clark George Oliver, 59 Caernarvon rd Cook Miss, St. Bartholomew's close . dalen road
Clark James, 8 Park lane Cook Thomas, 32 Bethel street Crowe Major Stephen M. 4 St. Giles
Clark Ylrs. 29 Clarendon road Cooke Rev. William Harris M. A. [vicar terrace, Bethel street
Clarke Rev. Percy Carmichael B.A. St. of St. SaYiour's & chaplain ~orwich Crowe Alfred, 53 Carlton1.er. Surrey rd
Michael at Plea rectory, Princes st City Asylum], Stracey house, Thorpe Crowe Miss, 21 Pitt street
Clarke Archibald, Willow cot. Low. close Hamlet Crowe .Mrs. 52 Cambridge street
Clarke Frederick, 73 Newmarket road Cookc George Frederick, Holmwood, Crowe Mrs. 23 Trinity street
Clarke J. B. G lenholt, Carrow hill, Thorpe Hamlet Croxford Edward, 5 Havelock road
Bracondale Cooke George Rubert, 5 Lakenham ter Cubitt Major Henry Archibald J.P. The
Clarke James William Youngs, 39 Hall Cooke Miss, 6 Trinity street Lodge, Earlham
road, New Lakenham Cooper Carlos, Lakenham Cubitt Charles, 65 York street
Clarke Miss, 3 The Crescent, Chapel- Ccoper Ed ward, 7 Clarendon road Cubitt Christopher Jn. 28 Havelock rd
field road Cooper Francis, 6g Grove road Cubitt George, Io Brunswick New road
Clarke Miss, The Lodge, Ipswich road Cooper l\liss, 21 Havelock road Cubitt George Cole, 23 Denmark road,
Clarke Misses, 25 Trinitv street Cooper Miss, 8 .l\lill Hill road Earlham road
Clarke Mrs. 45 St. Stephen's square Cooper Miss, 76 St. Philip's road Cuddon Philip, 76 Unthanks road
Clarke Robert, 2I Newmarket road Cooper Miss, 34 Unthanks road G'ull Rev. Ernest George M . .A. [curate
Clarke William Arthur, 33 Carlton ter- Cooper Misses, 20 Newmarket road St. Stephen's], 22 Grove ayenue, St.
race, Surrey road Cooper H.obert, Waltham lodge, New- Stephen's road
Claxton Geo.3 Belle Vueter.Aylsham rd market road Cullen Mrs. 4 Christchurch road
Claxton Robert, 7 Heigham Grove ter Cooper Robert .Aspland,Aspland house, CullenThomasBarsham,73 Heigham rd
Claxton WalterCharles, 70 Earlham rd Thorpe Hamlet Cull ey Alfd. Colema n, Theli rove,Brcndle
Clements Captain George, Moss Know, Cooper William Perry, 55 St.Philip's rd Culley Henry Read, 52 Thorpe road
Mill Hill road Cooper Wm. Ro bert,Maytield, Town close Culley Miss. The Cedar.'!, Thorpe road,
Cleverley Wm. Edwd. IS Havelock rd Copeman Henry John, 2 Town close Thorpe Hamlet
Clow Mis .. , 64 Bracondalo Copeman John, St. Stephen's house, 1 Culley Samuel, 6 Chester place
Clowes Charles, Ridgemont, Bracondale Newmarket road Cullingford Robert Alfred,4 Oak villas,

Clowes Francts, Bank place, Bank plain Copeman Misses, Rose cot. Surrey gro St. Martin's roa.cl
524 NORWICH. NORFOLK. [KELLY's
Cundall Miss, 4 Brunswick road Denny :\irs. 66 Beigham road Edwards Mrs. 85 Rosary road
Cunnell Charles, 8 Newmarket ro11.d Dent Arthur Edwin Clare [governor, Egles Albt. Go!'ing, Bank ho.The Walk
Cunningham Edward Lewis, 16 Pitt st H. M. prison], Plumstead road, Eglinton Mrs. 34 Bethel street
Cnnnington Charles, I4J Dereham rd Thorpe Hamlet Elder Uev. Wm Alexander B. D. [rector
Cunnington James, 144 Dereham road Dent Mrs. 62 Heigham road of St. Augustine's J, IS Clarendon rd
Curl Edward, 4 Ipswich road DeucharJohnJamcsVt'alker F .F .A. ,F. I. A. Elder Thomas Sanderson, 87 Rosary
Curl Henley, Fairmile, Newmarket rd Fern bill, Untbanks road road, Thorpe Hamlet
Curl Jacob, 85 Newmarket road Deuchar Miss, Fern hill, Unthanks road Eldred Edwd. Jn. Hy. 14 Castle meadow
Curl Mrs. 61 Trinity street De Year Miss, I Cow hill Eldridge James Henry, 35 Earlham rd
Curtis Frederick, 25 Chapelfield road Dewing Miss, 63 Newmarket road Elliott Mrs. 2 The Crescent,Chapelfid rd
Curtis William, 24 Oxford street Dewing Mrs. 26 Gro• e street north Elliott Thomas Baines, 31 Grove st. we
Cushine Mrs. 37 Essex street Dexter Mrs. 40 Bracondale Ellis Benj. 7 Oak vils. St. Martin's road
Cushine Robert, 35 Essex street Diggens Francis George, Westwick Ell is Jas. Wm. Quebec rd. ThorpeHamlet
Gushing Mrs. 38 Grove road house, Thorpe road Ellis Miss, 26 Grove street west
Cushion Alfred, 83 St. Philip's road Dimmock George Thomas, Fairholme, Ellis Miss, 92 Newmarket road
Cushion Miss, 37 Dereham road Ipswich road Ellis Mrs. 3 Grey Friars,. Upper King st
Cushion William, 164 Dereham road Dingle Arthur,Grove rd. Thorpe Hamlet Ellis Robert Powley, Orwell house,
Dade Thomas Horace, 38 Aylsham rd Dix Charles, 4 Carrow vale, Carrow rd Lower Clarence road, Thorpe Hamlet
Daines John, 70 Heigham road Dix Francis, I Essex st.South Heigham Ellis Waiter Erskine, 75 Rosary road,
Daines. John Herbert, 185 Dereham rd Dix Miss, 20 Earlham road Thorpe llamlet
Dakin John Howard, 8 Castle meadow Dix Mrs. 3 Earlham road Elmer Edmund Jsph. 13 Wellington rd
Dakin William Howard,2 Chester place, Dix William, 87 Hall roarl, Lakenham Elmer John, 195 Queen's road
St. Giles road Dixon Irving Edward, 20 Sussex street Elmer Mrs. Frederick, 59 Trinity street
Danicll Edward, 6x Potterga te street DixonJas. Harborough,Christchurch rd Elsey Mrs. 158 Queen's road
Daniels Charles, Mile End road, Eaton Dobie Mrs. I6 Mill Hill road El wood Robt. Crickmore, r7oQueen's rd
Daniels George, The Lindens, Lime Dobson John, Town Close road Emerson Charles George, 6 Sur:rey st
Tree road, Town close Dodd Edward James, 42 Coach & Horses Emerson Matthew Sallitt, Surrey street
Darby Arthur Wellesley, 53 Denmark street, South Heigham Emms Ernest, 1 Havelock road
road, Earlham road Docson William, 9 St. Stephen's square Emms Frank Alfred, Old Parsonage,
Darrell Harrington Wyndham, 35 Doggett Frederic Ernest, 64 Thorpe Aylsham road
Surrey •
strPct road, Thorpe Hamlet Emms John Larter, 23 Grove road
Dashwood Edward H. I5 Grove st. west Donne Miss, 6 Mount Pleasant Endersby Mrs. 13 Southwell road
Dashwood Leopold, 76 St. Stephen's rd Downes Herbert Richard, 9 Thorpe Endicott Joseph, 177 Dereham road
Davidson Major James, Hill house, road, Thorpe Hamlet English Joscph, 2 Earlham road
Thorpe Hamlet Downing George John, 59 Grove road English Lawrence William,Castle cham-
Davies Rev. Alfred M.A. [vicar of St. Downing John, Victoria street bers, Opie street
James'
. with Pockthorpe ], St. James' Downs Misses, IO Denbigh rd.Park lane English Mrs. 38. Victoria street
vrcarage Dowson Frederick, rs Castle meadow English William Barker, r Town close
Davies Rev. Frederick Chas. M. A. [vicar Doyle Mrs. Lower close English William Edward, 7 Victoria st
of Ketteringbam & diocesan inspector Drake J ames, 41 Sussex street Ensor Miss, Lower close
of schools], Albemarle road Drake Robert Benjamin, 20 Havelock rd Ethendgo Miss, 30 Mount Pleasant
DaYies George Christopher, Orwell Drane Christopher, I2I Nelson street, Etheridge Percy N eale, 3 Bedford street,
house, Town close North Heigham Sou Lh Heig ham
Davis Mrs. 7 Upper Surrey street Drane Mrs. 39 Denmark rd. Earlham rd Eurcn Henry Francis, 24 Park lane
Davy Dennis, 2 llellevue terrace, Drane "'illiam Jecks, 49 Denmark road, Evans }liss, 3 Ipswich road
.A.ylsham road Earlham road Evans Mrs. l''irland dale, Mousehold,
Dawdy EJward, Carrow road, Thorpe Drapet: Henry Viney, 20 Thorpe road, Thorpe Hamlet
Hamlet Tlwrpe Hamlet Everard \Villiam, I9 Oxford street
Daws Charles Watcrhouse, 34 London st Dri\'er Charles Henry, 5 Oak villas, St. Everett Hcrbcrt, 74 Bracondalc
Daws Henry Woodhouse,72Mill Hill rd Martin's road Everett Joseph, 54 Dishopgatc street
Daws Robert, 58 Mill Hill road Driver Mrs. r9Trinity st.South Hei~ham Everitt Hy. Reeve, 32 Prince of Wales rd
Dawson Henry, I I Victoria street Dncket.t Very Rev. Canon Richard n.D. Everitt Miss, Hcigham grove
Dawsun Jabez, r8 Southwell road [Catholic J, The PresbyLery, St. Everitt Mrs. 3 Trinity st. Sth. Heigham
Dawson John, Tower ho. St. Martin's rrl Georgc's plain Eversley \Villiam Pinder !'.LA., B.C.L.,
Dawson J onathan Wm. St. Martin's rd Duffield Mrs. Southwell road Willow cottage, The Close
Da wson Robert 'fhorndick, 17 The Duffield Thomas Daws, 67 Mill Hill road Ewing Miss, r6 .All Saints green
Crescent, Chapelfield Duffin Henry William, 18 Essex street Fairman Thomas, 9 Oxford street
Dawson \Villiam Thormlick, 65 Carlton Duncan Jas. 53 Nelson st.Nth.Heigham Fairweather Miss, 83 Unthanks road
terrace, Surrey road Dundas Mrs. 8 J ohnson st. Union plllce Falce Mrs. 27 All Saints green
Day Alfred, Upper t5urrey street Dungar Miss, 52 York street FarCJ.nhar Hngh, 77 Grove road
Day Donald Douglas M.B. 4 Upper DunmoreMrs. 32Thorpe rd. ThorpeHmlt Faulkner Frcderick Wm. ro Grove st
Surrey street Dunn Mrs. 23 Chapelfield road Fecke Mrs. 66 Chapclfield road
Day George Frederick, 57 Cam bridge st Dunnan Mrs. 53 Heigham road Fellowes .Mrs. 29 Surrey street
Day Jn.Benj.8 Essex st. South Heigham Durrell Mrs. 3I Essex: st. Sth. Heigham Fendick Mrs. 31 Havelock road
Day :l\liss E. J. 7 Lakenham terrace Durrell Mrs. 3I Trinity street Fenn John Arthur, Weybread house,
Day Mrs. 47 Unthanks road Dyball Charles, 18 Bel voir street CarshalLon road, New Lakenham
Day William Hankes, 3 Surrey street Dyball John I<'rancis, I I St.Philip's road Fcrm Thos. Jas. Glcnridge, Bracondale
Daynes Alfred William, 23 Essex street Dye Miss, 2I West parade Ferraby Alfd.\Valdegrave ho.Low.closo
Daynes Mrs. 14 Dereham road Dye Mrs. 70 St. l'hilip's road Fiddy Robcrt, ror Trinity street
Daynes Mrs. 65 Newmarket road Eade Sir Peter M. D. Upper St. Giles st Fiddy Robert Wright, r r Theatre street
Daynes SI. Ivy gates, =vrount Pleaeant Eade Misses, Chapelfield grove Fiddy Thomas Henry, 7 Mill Hill road
Dean Mrs. 34 Queen's road Earle Arthnr RPginald, 43 Garden road Fiddymont Daniel James, The White-
Deane :.'llrs. 2 Paragon street Earnshaw William Armitage,Sax:thorpe house, St. Gilcs road
Dearsley Henry Hanson,44 Mt. Pleasant house, Town close Fielder Capt. Wm.Hopkins,Heighm.gro
De Boltz Henry, 70 Cambridge street Eastaugh Nathaniel, 9 Cedar road, Fielding J ames llf. n. Bet.hel street
De Carlo Vt'illiam, 14 Newmarket road Thorpe Hamlet Fields Thomas Martin, 3I Victoria st
De Caux John, 23 Park lane Easter Daniel Charles, 24 Grove st. nth Fife Georgc, 7 Chapelficld road
Decaux Lucas, I07 Unthanks road Easter Samuel, 7 St. Mark's villas, City Filby Mrs. IO Chapelfield gardens
Dcigharn Miss, 55 Mill Hill road road, New Lakenham Filby Richd. 2 Neville ter.Grove st. nth
Delf Robert l'layford, 85 St. Pbilip's rd Easter William, I4 Clarendon road Fill Mrs. 44 Chapelfield road
Delf William Muskett, I4I Unthanks rd Ea ton George Clayton, Cleveland house, Finch Jacob, 33 Denmark rd.Earlhm.rd
Delves Joseph, 20 Wellington road 'Newmarket road Finch Mrs. 48 Bracondale
Denham Mrs. River View house, St. Eddington Alexander, 20 Unthanks rd Finch William, 36 St. Giles hill
Martin's road Edwards - , 12 Mount Pleasant Finegan Mrs. 6 William st. St. Giles hi
Denison Miss, Claremont lodge, New- Edwards Edward, Prospect cottage, St. Fish William, 76 Park lane
market road Leonards road Fisher John, ro6 Queen's road
Dennes Charles Bevan, Avenue lodge, Edwards George Robert, 51 Denmark Fisher Miss, 45 Unthanks road
Newmarket road road, Earlham rO"d.d Fisher Mrs. 9 Mill Hill road
Dennes Mrs. Ivy cottage, Philadelphia la Edwards Jnsiab, 165 Dereham road Fisher Robert, 15 St. George's Middle st
Denny Alexander, 3I Clarendon road Edwards Miss, I59 Dereham road Fiske Francis Robert, 4 West parade
Denny Donald Antbony, St. Leonard's Edwards Mrs. 35 Ut reham road Fiske John Diver, 5I Chapelfield roacl
road, Thorpe llamlet Edwards Mrs. 12 N. wmarket road Fiske Miss, 3 Brunswick New road
DIRECTORY.j NORFOLK. NORWICH. 525
'
Fiske WiUiam, r6 Grove road Garnham Mrs. 2 Newmarket road Grand Alfred Robert, 17 Alexandra rd
Fison George Edward, I I \Vest parade Garrett Herbert, 237 King street Grand Mrs. 1 llellevue ter. Aylsham rd
Fitch RoLert, Woodlands, Dercham rd Garrett Mrs.22Denrnark rd.Earlham rd Grand Mrs. 36 Cambridge street
Fitt George, Windsor lodge, Town close Garrod Mrs. I5 John street Grand Samuel, 97 Pottergate street
Fitt Mrs. 7 Brunswick New road Garrod Mrs. 51 St. Philip's road Grant Henry George, 148 Dereham rd
Fitt Mrs. 17 Chapelfield road Garwood Arth. ·waiter, 33 Alexandra rd Graver Miss, 76 Upper St. Giles street
Fitt Nathaniel, 2 St. Mary's road Garwood Fredk. Hy. 77 St.. l'hilip's rd Graver Mr!1.34Denmark rd.Earlham rd
FitzGerald Rev. Thomas [Catholic], Gates Ernest E. 49 Newmarket road Graver vVilliam, I3 St. Stephen's square
Willow lane Gates Miss, 23 Grove street west Gray Frank Jamcs, Tombland house
Fitzpatrick Jas. Matth. 22I Dereham rd Gaul Donald George l!'airbrother, 67 Gray Henry Francis, 6 Clarendon road
Flatt John, 23 Tombland Unthanks road Green Geo. Lyndhurst, Christchurch rd
Fleet Mrs. 4 Neville ter. Grove st. nth Gayford George, 35 Grove street west Ureen Harry, ro St.. Mark's ter. City rd
Fletcher Mrs. J. 8o Unthanks road Gayford Mrs. uo Gnthanks road Green HerbertJohnA.R.I.B.A. 31 Castle
Flint Rcv.James [Catholic], Presbytery, Gaze Alfred Richard [missionary], 17 meadow
St. George's plain Clarendon road Green Isaac, The ~ewlands, Christ-
Ford Miss, 9 .A.lexandra road Gaze Henry, 52 Earlham road church road
Ford Mrs. IO Aylsbam road Gaze James William, 5 Valentine street Green James, 7S Grove road
Foreman Byron, 35 Trory street Gaze Richard Lansdell, 4I Distillery st GreenJas. r6Harbour rd. Thorpe Hamlet
Forrester George, 29 Tom bland Gaze William, 24 Trinity street Green Mrs. 55 Bracondale
Forrester James Brown, 8 Thorpe road, Gaze "'illiam, 6 Victoria street Green Mrs. r8 Denmark rd. Jiarlharn rd
Thorpe Hamlet Gcdge Harry, Florinda, St. Leonard's Green Mrs. 24 Essex st.South Heigharn
Forster Arth. Wm. Hill croft, Rosary rd road, Thorpe Hamlet Green Mrs. 98 (Jueen's road
F0rster Mrs. roo Dereham road Gedge Joseph Samuel, 2I Essex street, Green Selhy, 67 Newmarket road
Forster Mrs. 29 Victoria street South Heigham Green Will1am, r r All Saints' green
Foster Rev. Roht. [Wes.],2o Mill Hill rd Gedge Miss, 4 Bedford st. Sth. Heigham Green Williarn, 3 Mount Pleasant
Foster Charles B. A. Shire hall Gedge Mr~. 32 Denmark rd. Earlham rd Green William Smith, 73 York street
Foster Charles Blackwell, 28 Mill Hill rd Gee Joseph Thomas, 25 .St. Stephen's sq Greenacre 1\Irs. 9 Somerleyton street
Foster Francis Gosling, Lime cottage, Gee William Coke, 37 London street Greene Charles Jeremiah, 37 Grove rd
St. Giles road Geldart Herbert D. Grove road, Thorpe Greenwood Joseph, St. Andrew's hill
Foster Miss, 9 Lakenham terrace, New Hamlet Green woodJsph.Andrews, soEarlham rd

Lakenbam Gel dart Robt. Carrow rd. Thorpe Hamlet Gridley Miss, 24 Grove street west
Fountaine Mrs. Eaton lodge, Eaton rd George Charles Lacey, 10 Clarendon rd Griffin John, 38 Prince of Wales road
Fox Henry, 59 Park lane George Hy. 17 Williamst. St. Giles hill Griffis John, 136 Hall rd. Nw.Lakenhm
Fox John Harold, 11 Denmark road, George Miss, 23 St. Stephen's square Griffiths Mrs. 56 Earlham road
Earlham road Gibbon Mrs. 56 Clarendon road Griggs Mrs. 20 West parade
Fox Miss, 85 Unthanks road Gibson Miss, 79 Cambridge street Grigson Richard, 66 Mill Hill road
Fox Mrs. Areadia, Albemarle road Gilbard Rev. Eustace Fyffe 'l>f.A. (head Grimble Hy.Eagfe walk,Newmarket rd
Fox Robert Henry, 4 Stafford street master of King Ed ward the Sixth's Grimmer Ernest Butcher, 4 St. An-
Foyson Mrs. 3 Cedar rd. Thorpe Hamlet Grammar school), The School lodge, drew's Broad street
Francis Ed ward Cubitt B. A.22St. Giles st Upper close Grimmer Samuel, :-it. John's house, St.
Francis John, 196 Dereham road Gilbert John Wilson, Upper King street Andrew's Broad street
Franeis Mrs. 74 Rupert street Gilbert Mrs. Grove rd. Thorpe Hamlet Grimson Mrs. 20 Castle meadow
Francis Mrs. SI St. Giles street Giles Miss, 20 Oxford street Grimetone James, 23 Oxford street
FrancisR bt. 23Thorpe rd. TborpeHamlet Gill Miss, 14 Oxford street Grinling Henry llaker, 27 Colegate st
Franklin Mrs. 44 Queen's road Gillett Thomas, lloyton ho. Ipswich rd Grisdale Rev. Joscph, 8o Park lane
Fransham Miss, 26 Ha veloc:k road Gillings Edward, ro Grove road Griston Joseph, 167 Dereharn road
Fraser Donald Thomas, Mount Pleasant Gilman Charles Rackham, Stafford Griston ~Walter Francis, 27 Mancroft
Fraser FrancisGeo. 12 Brunswick~ ew rd house, Newmarket road street, Dereham road
Frazer :\lrs. 15 Palace plain Gilman Charles Storey, Elmhurst, New- Grix William, 29 St. Stephen's square
.ll'redman Joseph, 2 Upper Surrey street market road Gross Edward James, 69 Mill Hill road
Fre'lman Edward Joshua, Pelican house, Girdlestone Joseph, 48 York street Grubb Mrs. 52 Queen's road
Upper close Gissing Robert Henry, 31 Bishop Bridge Gnnn Rev. Henry[Primitive Methodist],
Freeman Miss, Alexandra mansions, road, Thorpe Hamlet 29 Wymer street
Prince of Wales road Goddard Mrs. r6 St. Stephen's square Gunn Mrs. 82 Prince of Wales road
Freeman Miss, 69 Thorpe road, Thorpe Godfery Miss, 57 Grove road Gun ton J ames, 26 Oxford street
Hamlet Goffin Mrs. 46 Clarendon road Gunton Mrs. 2 Grove terraca, Thorpe
Freeman Mrs. 69 Heigham road Golden Arthur Robert, 17 Trinity stre0t road, Thorpe Hamlet
Freeman Richard John,22 Aylsham road Golding Mrs. 65 Cnnnaught road Gurney Mrs. Old hall, Lakenham
:Freeman William.Albert,soCambridge st Goldsmith James Wales, 8 Oxford st Gutteridge :Vlrs. I IO Trinity street
Freestone Henry Rupert, I9 William Goldsmith Mrs. 20 Victoria. street Guy Wm. M.D. St. George's Bridge st
street, St. Giles' hill Goldsmith Samuel, I33 Unthanks road Guyton Joseph Hope, 24 West parade
Frere Miss, The Chantry Goldsmith Wm. Capps, 29 Havelock rd Habberton Miss, 7 Earlham road
Frewer Frederick William, 100 King st Gooch Mrs. 23 Cathedral street north Haddon Hichard Walker, IHeigham rd
Frost Charles Edward, I St. Mark's Gooch Mrs. I I Havelock road Hadfield Mrs. 69 Adelaide street
terrace, City road, New Lakenham Good Mrs. no Chapelfield road Iladley Mrs. IO Bedford Cross street
Frost Clement George, Kett's bill, Goodcbild Geo. Hy. Wilby ho. West par Hagg Frederick, 2 St. :Mary's road
Plumstead road Goodchild George Pipe, 1 West parade Hainsby Wm. Pitts, r64 Waterloo road
Frost George, I .St. George's Middle st Goodchild Herbert, 7 West parade Hairsine Henry, II Grove road
Frost J ames, 53 Distillery street Goodwin Miss, IS Willow lane Haldestein Alfred, 43 Unthanks road
Frost ~Wm. 30 Charles st. Dereham rd Goodwin Mrs. 2 r Surrey street Haldinstein Philip, The Lawns, Thorpe
FrymanChas.3oiiall rd.N ew Lakenham Goodwyn John, I Lakenham terrace road, Thorpe Hamlet
Fugl Lcopold, 39 Park lane Goose Agas Hy. 17 Prince of 'Vales rd Hales James, 37 Prince of Wales road
Fuller !<'rank, 59 Cambridge street Goose Geo. rr Oak viis. St. Martin's rd IIalcs John, Baseley Tooke, Lower close
Fuller George Arthur, 183 Dereham rd Goose Mrs. 18 Unthanks road Hall Edwin, Dorset house, West parade
Fuller Thomas lleni. 68 Mill Hill road G-ordon Frederick Wm. IO Theatre st Hall Herbert Allison, 4 Bellevne ter-
Furness William, I6 Grove street west Goreham Mrs. 25 Heigham road race, Aylsham road
Fyson Mrs. 5 Earlham road Gorhem Joseph Samuel, 39 Sussex st Hall Miss, IS Cathedral street north
Gale George Ed ward, 4 Somerleyton st Goshawk l\'Irs. I8 Queen's road Hall Miss, IS Cedar rd. Thorpe Hamlet
Gallard Joseph Ricllard, sr Dereharn rd Gosling ~'illiam, 62 Clarendon road Hall Mrs. 39 Oxford street
GalpinArth.Jas.Arundel ho.Mt.Pleasant Gosnold Charles Fredk. 138 Queen's rd Hall Mrs. 73 St. Philip's road
Gamble Thomas, 37 St. Philip's road Gostling Alfred Taylor, 5 N eville ter- Hall Richard Williarn, 30 Thorpe road,
Gandy Mrs. 2I Clarendon road race, Grove street north Thorpe Hamlet
Gandy Mrs. E. )'1. 5 Clarendon road Gotts John, 44 York street Hall Samuel, 62 Queen's road
Gapes Waiter John, 63 Dereham road Gould Rev. John [Wes.], 36 Surrey st Hallet Mrs. 65 Unthanks road
Gardiner Henry, 34 Havelock road Goulder Miss, 74 Unthanks road Halls Mrs. 75 Heigham road
Gardiner John, 2 Surrey road Govett Rev.Robert GroveM.A.[llaptist ], Halpin Wm. Mileham cot. Quebec road
Gardiner Mrs. 20 Grove road Chapelloke, Ber street Rambling Dennis, 6 Neville terrace,
Gardiner William John,52 Untbanks rd Graharn Mrs. Grove rd. Thorpe Hamlet Grove street north
Garland Henry Riehd. I90 Dereham rd Grand Edward George, Home cottage, Hamley.Mrs.46Thorpe rd. ThorpeHamlt
Garland Richard Ellary 1 I5 Earlham rd St. Leonard's road, Thorpe Hamlet Hammond Jn.Auston,3 St.Stephen's sq
C. N. & S. 34 - •
526 NORWICH. NORFOLK. [KELLY'S

Hammond Miss,TheField,Untbanks rd Heslop Thomas Hind Blumer,Alexandra l:Iorrex Mrs. The Cottage, Grove road,
Hammond Mrs. Surrey ho. Surrey rd mansions, Prince of Wales road 'l'horpe Hamlet
HammondWm.Atmore,16Brunswick rd Hewett Edward Colby, St. Clement's Horsey Frederick, 103 Thorpe road,
Hanbury William, 46 Mill Hill road hill, New Catton Thorpe Hamlet
Hancock J. H. I36 Queen's road Hewitt Harry, 41 Bracondale IIoskan Charles Heath, 28 Park lane
Hancock Mrs. 7 Palace plain Hewitt Mrs. Lower close Hotblack Frederick M1lls, 67 Pitt street
Hands Mrs. 4I Grove road Hibgame Mrs. 9 Chapelfield road Hot black George, 52 Prince of Wales rd
Hanse!L Fredk. Jn. 29 Up. King street Hickleton .Mrs. 87 Grove road Hotblack Henry, 99 Thorpe rd. Thorpe
Hansell Mrs. Upper close Hickling Robert George, 5 ~Iill Hill rd Hamlet
Hansell "'alter Edwd. Cathedral close Hickman Miss, 123 Dereham road Hothlack John, Mountergate street
Harbord Hon. Harbord .J'.P. Heathfield Higgins Miss, 39 Magdalen street Hotblack Jn. Turner, 45 Newmarket rd
house, Ipswich road High Arthur, 41 Park lane Hotblack Lombe Attbill, Elmhurst,
Harbord Hon. William, "Town Close lligham Rev. Charles William Richard Aylsham road
house, Ipswich road M.A. [assoc. sec. Church Missionary Hotson Mrs. Stratton lo. Mile End road
Harbord Arthur Sa m!. s6Chapelfield rd Soc. for Diocese of Norwich], 24 Houchen Mrs. Cbapelfield grove
Harcourt Anthony, 5 Trinity street Earlham road Houghton Henry, 15 Alexandra road
Harcourt Bosworth Wait. 39 St. Giles st Hildyard Mrs. 27 Unthanks road Houghton Mrs. 66 Park lane
IIarcourt John, 64 Heigham road Hill Rev. Arthur Felton Still M.A. [rec- IIovell William, 2 St. John's Sepulchre
HarcourtMrs.sDenmark rd.Earlham rd tor St. John's Maddermarket], St. villas, Bar street
Hardiment Robt. Wm. Lower Earlham John's rectory, Unthanks road Hovell William Ernest, 9 Victoria street
Harding l<'redk. Robt. I Newmarket st Hill Alfred, 27 Oxford street Howard Arthur S. 74 Rose lane
Hardinge Mrs. 48 Distillery street Hill Charles Rickards, 6 Lakenbam ter Howard George Frederick, 251 King st
Hardy Alfred Waiter, 94 Hall road, Hill Forster W. 7 Queen street Howard Harry •
James, 68 Bracondale
New Lakenham Hill Henry, r8 Trinity street Howard Henry, S4 York sLreet
Hardy Mrs. Vine cottage, Park lane Hill Horace Mus. noc.23 St.Stephen's rd Ho ward J ames, Bracondale
Hardy William Edward, St. Clement's Hill Mrs. 31 Thorpe rd.Tborpe IIamlet Howard John, 3 Garden road
bill, New Catton Hill Samuel Garerd, 32 West parade Howard John William, I2 Havelock rd
HarlArth. 17Kingsley ter. N w.Laken hm Ililldred Misses, 39 Marion road, Thorpe Howard Miss, 8 Nelson st. N. Heigham
Harm an George Robert, Am well villa, Hamlet Howarth William, 92 Queen's road
Albemarle road Hillen Alton William, Unthanks road Howe George, 22 Clarence road
llarmer Mrs. 41 St. Philip's road Ilinde Chas. Fountain, 38 Unthanks rd IIowe Miss, 13 All Saints' green •
Harper John, I32 Dereham road Hinde Francis, 20 All Saints' green Howeld William Henry, rr Kimberley st
Harrington Herbert Howe, Rot-hley, Hinde Frank Page, The Fernery, Thorpe Howell Mrs. 9 Brunswick New road
Christcburch road road, 'fhorpe Hamlet Howes Charles, 36 Havelock road
Ha:rrlngton Mrs. 31 Park lane Hinde William Hall, 89 Grove road Howes Charles, 36 Trinity street
Harris Mrs. 20 Southwell road Ilindes Henry, Surrey cottage, Upper Howes James, Chapelfield
Harris Richard, 78 Bmcondale Surrey street Howes James Lenny, Lower close
Harris William( medical supt,. ),Norwich Hindes Henry, The Watering, St. Mar- Howes Miss, Gays house, Upper close
City Lunatic asylum, Hellesdon tin's-at-Oak Howes Miss, 22 Park lane
Harrison Rev. Louis Julius [Jewish], Hindes Jas. Surrey cot. Up. Surrey st Howes Mrs. The Close
8o King street llindry Miss, roJ ohnson st.~th.lleigham Howes Wil\iam, 3 Town Close road
Harrison Frederick William, 32 York st Hine Mrs. q6 Queen's road · Howitt Sydney, ss St. Stephen's road
Harrison Miss, 86 Edinburgh road Hitchcock Rev. Hohert Aldous M.A. St. Howlett Henry Filby,ri Clarendon road
Harrison Mrs. r Carrow vale, Carrow rd Bartholomew's rectory, Old Palace rd Howlett John Godfery, Bracondale
Harrod George, 30 Golcling street . Hitchman Robert, r8 Park lane Howlett Miss, The Hollies, Untbanks rd
Hart Mrs. 28 Grove street north Hobrough James Samuel, Lower Howlett Miss, I r Thorpe rd. ThorpeHmlt
Hart Mrs. 6 Grove st. west, U nthanks rd Clarence road, Thorpe Hamlet Howlett Mrs. 6o Mill Hill road
Hart Waiter John, 147 Cambridge st Hobson Mrs. 77 Mill Hill road Howlett William Robert Crow, The
Hartcup Wm. Thos. Eat on grange, Ea ton Hoddy Robert William, I Somerleyton st Lawns, Christchurch road
Hartt Mrs. 53 St. George's Middle st Hodgson Mrs. 17 Park lane Hubbard Charles, 21 Denmark road,
Harverson Miss, 3 Havelock road Holden Lenton Charles, r65 Queen's rd Earlham road
Harvey Rev. Thomas Tegg [curate of Holdham George, 20 Osborne villas, Hubbard.:Vlrs. rNelson st. ~orthHeigham
St. Thomas'], Ri verina, Earl ham rd Aylsham road Hubbard Mrs. 84 Park lane
Harvey Edward Kerrison J. P. Grey Holford Joseph, 29 Heigham road Huddleston William, 28 Queen's road
Friars, Upper King street Hall Alfred Samuel, r Chapelfield road Hudson Rev. William M.A. [vicar of St.
Harvey George, 2 Stafford street !loll Edwin William, 15 Bedford street, Peter,Permountergate, & surrogate],
Harvey James, 8r Dereham road South Heigham 42 Prince of ''Vales road
Harvey Mrs. F. 5 Bracondale Holl Henry G-eorge, 6r Mill Hill road Hudson William Robert, ro2 Trinity st
Harvey Richard George, 42 Aylsham rd Roll Robt. Durant, 8 St. Lawrence lane Huggins Thomas Chas. 79 Heigham rd
Harvey Robert, St. Bartholomew's close Holley Edward Fanshawe, Gunyab, Hughes Mrs. go Chapelfleld road
llasel wood Robert, Hemingford house, Lime Tree roaLl Hull Hev. William Ballyman •
M.A.
Bracondale Hollidge Henry, IIB Hall road, New [rector of St. Peter, Hungate, &
Hatch Frederick Geo. 23 Cambridge st Lakenham surrogate], Red well street
Hatch Joseph Horace, 36 Mill Hill road Holmes Edward William, 67 York st Hull Miss, Hedwell street
Havers Albt.Chas.Hazeldene, College rd Holmes Fredk. Robt. s Upper Surrey st Humber William G. 37 Clarendon road
Havers Charles, Mill Hill road Holmes George, 5 Aylsham road Humble William Geo. 39 Clarendon rd
Havers Daniel, 5 West parade Holmes George, 2 Oxford street Humphrey Aaron, 2 Coach & Horses
Havers Frank Curtis, II2 Untlmnks rd Holmes George Randall, 122 Hall road, street, South Heigham
HaversMiss,33Grove st. we. Unthanks rd New La ken ham Humphrey CharlesBenjamin,25Essex st
Haward Miss, 4I Heigham road Holmes George Thos. 18 Newmarket rd Hunt Miss, 24 Newmarket road
llaward Samuel, 43 Park lane Holmes James, 3 Globe lane Hunter Arthur Herbert, 4 St. Bartholo-
Hawes Geo.E.Mancroft ho. Chapelfields Holmes Joshua Henry, 12 Grove avenue, mew's close
Hawes Henry Elliott, 55 Connaught rd St. Stcphen's road Hunter William, St. Augustine's house,
Hayhow Williarn Collins, 4 Essex st-reet Holmes Mrs. 20 Clarence road, Thorpe Botolph street
Hayward Hezekiah Stephen, 23 Heigh- Hamlet Hunter Wm. Phillips, 37 Excbange st
am road Holmes Mrs. 84 Dereham roact Hurn Cornelius, The Clyffe, Mousehold
Reading Robert, 58 Clarendon road Holrnes Mrs. ro8 Queen's road HurnHoratio Garibaldi, r82 Dereham rd
Heath Edward, Ivy gn.tes, Mt. Pleasant Holmes Robert, 43 Prince of Wales road Hurn Matthew Henry, 6o York street
Heath Frederick, Hillcroft, Eaton Holroyd John, St. Leonards road II urndall Mrs. 7 Garden road
HeathMiss,St. Clement's hill,N ewCatton Hood Mrs. 4 Eastbourne place, Prince Huson John, 6 Somerleyton street
Heaver William, 4T Surrey road of Wales road Hutchison Miss,3 The Crescent, Chapel-
Heaviside Rev.J amesWilliamLucas M.A. Hook John Joseph, 87 Unthanks road field road
[canon residentiary ], The Close Hooper Henry, 4 .Mount Pleasant Hutson llerbert Wm. IS CambriJge st
Hefferson Capt. James Andrew, 29 Hope Rev. Charles Alexander M.A. Ilyde James, 64 Mount Pleasant
Bishop's Bridge road [curate of Hellesdon with Drayton], Ilsley James Samuel, 61 Earlham road
Hemmant George, 5 Mount Pleasant Aylsham road, Upper Hellesdon Imray J oseph Middleton, I Mancroft
Henley Miss, 20 Grove avenue, St. Hopkins John, 29 Somerleyton street street, Dereharn road
Stepben's roarl Horne Robert, 33 St. Philip's road Ives W!lliam, 29 Oxford street
Henry John, 4S Park lane Hornor Charles, 76 Thorpe road, Thorpe Jackson Frederick, 82 Edinburgh road
Herbert Rev. George Nicholas M.A. Hamlet Jackson George Frederick, 57 Denmark
[vicar of St. John de Sepulchre], 193 Hornor Francis, 2I Thorpe road, road, Earlham road
Queen's road Thorpe Hamlet Jalland William, 41 Oak street
DIRECTORY.] NORFOLK. NORWICH. 527
JamesRev.Jn. Francis Ph. D. TheChantry Kingsman James Frederick, Carrow Linfoot Robert, 6 Theatre street
James Mrs. 43 Alexandra road road, Thorpe Hamlet Linford Mrs. 4 Eastbourne place, Prince
Jarman Albert Henry, .~4 Clarendon rd Kirby George Ed ward, 89 Hall road, of Wales road
Jarrold Mrs. S. Grove house,Bracondale New Lakenham Ling George, 31 All Saints' green
Jarrold Mrs. Thomas, The Mount, Kirby Robert, I02 Queen's road Ling Wm. Stannard, 9 Cathedral st.nth
Rosary road, Thorpe Hamlet Kirk John, 87 St. Philip's road Linging Frederick Edward, Cliff house,
Jarrold Mrs. W. P. Grove house, St. Kirkby Samuel Joseph, IO Denmark St. Leonard's road, Thorpe Hamlet
Stephen's road road, Ear !ham road List Albert, 77 Heigham road
J arvis J oseph, 2 Adelaide street Kirkham Alfred Thos. 17 St. Philip's rd Littleboy Arthur Lindley, 38 St.Giles st
Jarvis Mrs. 104 Unthanks I'oad Kitchen James Edwd. Cattle Market st Livock Edward, II6 Unthanks road
Jay Miss, 88 Chapclfield road Kitton Miss, 87 Nev;market road Livock John Wm. zo Bloomsbury place
Jay Mrs. I-Ieigham grove Kitton Misses, ro Victoria street Livock William Thos. 59 Newmarket rd
Jean Henry, 47 Grove road Knights Henry William, Mountergate st Lloyd David, 51 Park lane
Jeary Frank Gardner,r4 MountPleasant Kmghts John Henry, II2 Queen's road Lloyd Thos. 16 Trinity st. Sth.Heigham
J eary Robert, 13 Earlham road Knights Josiah, I I Bloomsbury place Loades Wm. 126 Hall rd.N ew Lakenham
J eckell Miss, 27 St. Giles road Knights Mark, 82 Mill Hill road Loads Waiter Herbert, 14 The Crescent,
J eckells George A ugustus, 7oQueen's rd Knights Mrs. James,28 Mount Pleasant Chapelfield
Jcffries Randall John, r6 Victoria street Knights Samuel Cooper, 2 Hewitt's Lock Alfred, 26 Aylsham road
Jeffries Robert, IS7 (Jueen's road villas, UpfHlr Hellesdon Lock Cha~. Hy. Archibald, Haymarket
J essup George, Thorpe Hamlet house, Knights Thomas, 38 Essex street Lock Mrs. 23 r De re ham road
Thorpe road, Thorpe Hamlet Lacey Arthur John, 6 Upper King st Lock Mrs. 28 Magdalen road
Jewson George, Braemar, Grove road, Lacey Frederick James, I6 Thorpe Lockwood James, I22 Dereham road
Thorpe Hamlet road, Thorpe Hamlet Long John, 34 York street
Jewson John William, 28 Unthanks rd Lacey Harry Horace, Rosary road, Long Miss, 2S Alcxandra road
Jewson l\Irs. 46 Unthanks ro&.d Thorpe Hamlet Longstaff Williarn, 23 Cedar road,
Jewson Hichard, Sunnynook, Park lane Lacey James Wilkin, 35 Castle meadow Thorpe Hamlet
Jodrelll\Irs. I-Iig·hfield, Newmarket road Ladell Hichard Foulsham, 6o Pitt street Looker Jn.Page,4oSt.George'sMiddle st
J odrell Mrs. 62 Mount Pleasant Ladell Richard William, Little Orford st Lord John Robert, 92 Dereham road
J obnson Alfd. 9J'l'rinity st. Sth. Heigham La dell Wm. N ethercote, Little Orford st Lord Miss, 22 Grove road
Johnson Ambrose, 14 Nelson street, Ladyman Mrs. 7I Newmarket road Lord Miss, 29 Thorpe rd.'fhorpeHamlet
North Heigham · Lain Waiter, Elm hill Lord Thomas, 37 Distillery street
Johnson Christ. Betts, 14 All Saints' grn Lake Frank, 2 St. Mark's terrace, City Love Geo. Jn. Home cot. Magdalen rd
Johnson Edward Herbert, Hcathside road, New Lakenham Loveday George Saml. 3 Chapelfield rd
road, T horpe Hamlet Lake Wellington, Hill house, Saxling- Lovcland Alfred, Hawarden house,
Johnson John Barham, The Dial house, ham, Nethergate Thorpe Hamlet
Ipswich road Lamb Miss Elea.nor, 74 Chapelfield road Lovett Mrs. S Town close
Johnson Miss, The Lawn, Ipswich roarl L<J.mb Mrs. H. 70 Clarendon road Lowe Alexander M. A. Clarendon house,
Johnson Miss,St. Paul's vil.Magdalen rd Lamb Stephen, IS Caernarvon road Unthanks road
Jobnson l\'Iiss,4oThorpe rd.ThorpeHmlt Lambert Francis, Bosco house, Trory st Lowe Arthur, 22 Victoria street
Johnson Mrs. 21 Oxford street· L[tm bertFras. J erornc,6oMountPleasant Lowe John, I9 Sussex street
Jolly Mrs. Shrublands, Albemarle road Lane Arthur,2rCedar rd. ThorpeHamlet Lowe Mrs. I4 Pottergate street
J oily Richard, 33 Cambridge street Langharn James, S St. Mary's plain Lowne Wm. 63 St. George's Middle st
J ally William, s Somerleyton street L<J.nh:tm Ja:nc3 Henry, 34 Trinity street Lowne Wm. Charles, 5 Chapelfield rd
Jones James Emery, 4 Trinity street Large Charles, r 8 Old Palace road Lowne Wm.Cbas.Deacon,8 Mt.Pleasant
Jones Mrs. 9lledford st.South Heigham Larke Henry E. 35 Eagle walk Lowry Edward Dooley, The Rosary,
Jones Mrs. 36 Essex street Larking Charles, 74 Cambridge strJet Chester place
Joplin Mrs. ro Queen's road Larkrnan W'illiam, 38 Castle meadow Lubbock Mrs. 43 St. Philip's road
Juby Mrs. rsCiarence rd. Thorpe Hamlet Lasdell Isaac Frederick,68 Cambridge st Lucas Mrs. Lower close
Kant Hev. William M.A. [rector of All La tham Mrs. "Ladygrove, Stanlcy Lyddon Mrs. 86 Chapelfield road
Saints' & SL.Julian's ],All Saints'green avenue, Thorpe Eiamlet Macallan Rev. William Alexander[Pres-
Kay Samuel Howard, I46 Dereham road Lawes Thomas William, 83 Dereham rd byterian ], The Manse, Heigham gro
Keen \Villiam Hews, 38 Earlham road Lawless Capt. William Hampden, McCormack David, 94 Chapelfield road
Kemp l\Irs. IO Grove str2et west, Thorpe rise, Thorpe road Mace Henry, I3 Havelock road
Unthanks road LawsChs.Rt.3IDenmark rd.Earlham rd Mace Walter, z63 Dereham road
Kemp \Villiam, 57 Braconda1e Laws James, 4 Havelock road McEwen David, 4 Coach & Horses
Kendall Alfred, 4 Westmoreland villas, Laws Jarnes Williarn, 139 Dereham rd street, South I-Ieigham
Thorpe road, Thorpe Hamlet Laws :Mrs. 22 Bedford st. Sth. Hcigbam McEwen Thomas, rog Dereham road
Keunett George Buttler, Afmary house, Laws Mrs. 3 Oxford street , .Mclntyre Mrs. I2o Queen's road
The Cathedral close Leader :Mrs.St. Clement's hl. N ewCa tton ::\lcJan net Mrs. 7 5 St. Philip's road
Kennett \Valter D. 2I Caernarvon road Leamon Mrs. 67 Carlton ter. Surrey rd Mack Mrs. 25 Oxford street
Kenny Mrs. 149 Dereham road Lee Waiter \Villiarn, 31 Dereham road McKelvie Mrs. I I Dereham road
Kent Alfred, Rivington, Newmarket rd Leeds }liss, 44 St. Gilcs street Mackenzie Samuel, 63 Mill Hill road
Kent Ernest Alfred, St. Andrew's plain Leeds l\frs. Grove house, Chape!field Mackie Frank, 20 Aylsham road
Kent Mrs. 6 Town close Lefroy Very Rev. William D.D. [dean], Mackie l\1rs. 68 Heigharn road
Kent Thos. Wm. College rd. Unthanks rd The Deanery Mackley George William, 53 St. Giles st
Kerry George Caythorpe, St. Clement's Leggett William, H} Newmarket road Mackley Jacob, Aviary ho. Aylsham rd
hill, New Cat,ton LeGood Artbur E. 6 St. Mark's terrace, Mackley Lewis, 6o Heigham road
Kerry William Palmer, St. Clement's City road, New Lakenham Mackley Mrs. 106 Chapelfield road
hili, New Catton Leith William, Ivy house, Lady's lane Mackley Thomas Jsph.74 Up.St.Giles st
Kersey George, I Cathedral st. south Lemmon George, 17 Grove street west Macready James, 48 Mill Hill road
Kett David, S Garden road Lemmon ~I1ss, I9 Grove street west Maddison Miss,St.Margarets,College rd
Kidd Mrs. 22 Earlham road Lemmon Mrs. 14 Muspole street Maddle Miss, Manor house, Bracondale
Kimm George, \Vaveney house, Thorpe L'Estrange John, Belle Vue house, Madge Robt.Alexander,27 Alexandra rd
road, Thorpe Hamlet Hellesdon road Maguire J oseph, I2 Grove road
Kimmance Uriah, 38 Queen's road L'Estrangc Mrs. 3 Chester place Main Thomas, ss York street
King Alfd.Steph.Chesham ho.Rosary rd L'Estrange Mrs. 5 Clarendon road Mallett Henry, 52 Ht. Pbilip's road
King Arthur, I4 Park lane L'Estrange Percy H. 2 Westmoreland Mallett Hy. J sph. 8 Cathedral st. north
King Arthur Edward, I Oak villas, St. villas, Thorpe road, Thorpe Hamlet Mallett Robert Frederick, 2 Lyndhurst
Martin's road Levett Alfred, 32 Cambridge street villas, Magdalen road
King Clande,28 Thorpe rd. ThorpeHmlt Le vine Mrs. 3 N eville ter. Grove st. nth Man Edward Kirkman M.A.(sub-master
King George Alfred, 3 Hewitt's villas, Lewis Rev. John [Gong. J, 9 Grove road of Grammar school), School lodge,
Upper Hellesdon Lickert Dorninic, 49 Carlton terrace, The Close
King John, 40 Grove street west Surrey road Manby Rev. Chas.Aug.M.A. 13 Essex st
King Mrs. 40 Mill Hill road Lickert Joseph, 28 Grove road Manu Arthur N athaniel, 46 Dracondale
King Mrs. John, Clarence road, Thorpe Light James l\Ioody, I6 Grove avenue, Mann Harry James, 85 Dereham road
Hamlet St. Stephen's road Mann Mrs. 56 Mount Pleasant
King Thomas Augustine, 3 Cathedral Limmer W'illiam, I Stone road Mann Mrs. 43 Distillery street
street north Linay Samuel, Hill house, Mill Hill rd Manser Mrs. 118 Queen's road
King Thomas Charles Rackham, Prince Lincoln Christmas Thos. 23 Bracondale Mansfield Robert Edward, 8 Bedford
' of "\Vales road Lindsey Mrs. 39 Heigham road Cross street, South Heigham
C. N. & S. 34•
1
528 NORWICH. NORFOLK. [KELLY S
Margitson Miss, Kett's Castle villa, St. Minns David, 158 Dereham road Nesbit Mrs. 27 Trinity street
Leonard's road, Thorpe Hamlet Minns Edwin, zoo Pottergate street Neumann Rev. llein, Synagogue street
Marjoram Joseph, 37 Garden road Minns John George, 22 Sussex street Nevill Ven. Henry Ralph M.A. [canon
Markham :Frederick John, Castle street Mitchell James Harry, 176 Dereham rd of Norwich & archdeacon of Norfolk],
Markham Miss, 33 Trory street Mitchell John, 12 Queen's road Lower close
Markley Mrs. 5 St. Stephen's square Mitchell Miss, 5 Theatre street Newby Edward Ray, 7 Wellington rd
Marrison Jonathan, 13 Chapelfield road Mitchell Mrs. IS Dereham road N ewcome NathanielAlbt. 72Ear!ham rd
Marsh Misses, 203 Dereham road Mobbs James, 18 Grove avenue, St. Newell ~rs. 25 Dereham road
Marshall Horace, 2 Guernsey road, Stephen's road NewhouseArnold Barbr.35Alexandra rd
New Catton Molesworth Rev. Thomas Charles Un- Newhouse Henry, 6 Mill Hill road
Marshall James John, 169 King street derwood B.A. [curate of St. James Newhouse Sidney, 31 Alexandra road
Marshall Miss, 49 Grove road with Pockthorpe ], Io Granville ter- Newrnan George Williarn, III Thorpe
Marshall Peter Paul c. E. 35 Bracondale race, Magrlalen gates road, Thorpe Hamlet
Marsters Mrs. 25 St. Philip's road Monement Mrs. I4 Grove avenue, St. Newman Henry, Rose villa, Plnmstead
Marston Chas. Washington, 15 Princes st Stephen's road road, Thorpe Hamlet
Marston Mrs. 39 Carlton ter. Surrey rd Moore Rev. William Thomas M.A. Newman Mrs. 26 Thorpe road, Thorpe
Marston Richd.Harford bdg. Ipswich rd [minor canon, vicar of St. Mary-in- Hamlet
Martin Benj.2 Grove st. we. Unthanks rd the-Marsh & surrogate], Lower close Newman Richard, 17 Southwell road
Martin George, Magdalen road Moore Chas. 14 Bed!'ord st. Unthanks rd 1'\ewman Samuel, 18 St. Giles street
Martin Henry, Grouts crt. Magdalen st Moore Fredk. Edwin, 2 Mount Pleasant Newman Thomas Richardson, 187
Martin Joseph Job, Eaton croft, New- Moore George Gaze, 55 Carlton terrace, Dereham road
market road Surrey road Newson William, 6I Cambridge street
Martin Mrs. 78 Chapelfield road Moore Henry, Belgrave house, 5 Cedar Newton John, 62 Earlham road
Martins Wm. 2 Carrow vale, Carrow rd road, Thorpe Hamlet Nicholb Geo. Valentine,3o Old Palace rd
Mase Hertry, 4 Clarenrlon road Moore John, Kctts hill Nichols Mrs. 32 Surrey street
Mase Thomas .Arthur, 2 Havelock road Moore Tom, so Queen's road Nicbolson Goddard, Elm cottage, .All
Mason Gurney, Park house, Eaton road Moore \'falter, 34 Aylsham road Saints' street
Mason J osiah, 49 Garden road Moreland Christopher Hudson M. A. (as- Nickalls John, 6 "Cpper Surrey street
Mason Mrs. 27 Bracondale Sistant master of Grammar school), Nickolcls John Henry, 120 Hall road~
Mason Mrs. Caroline, 5 Ethel road The Close New Lakenham
Mz son Robert, 7 Heigham road Morgan Benjamin Branford, Surrey Ninham Henry Wm. John,7 Bracondal~
Massingham Arthr.Davy, 23 Victoria st place, Grove road Nisbet Rev. John Majoribanks lii.A.
Massingham Joseph, 84 Chapelfield rd Morgan Charles, 92 Mill Hill road [canon, rector of St. Giles in the
M1ster George R. St. Giles plain Morgan Edwin Joseph, 6 St. Mary's rd Fields, London l, Upper close
Master Mrs. Fernside, Grove road, Morgan J<'redcrick, 53 Earl ham road N ockall Bcnj. Laflin, 43 Grove st. west.
Thorpe Hamlet Morgan Miss, Manor house, Bracondale N ockall Fred k. 2 St. Giles ter. Bethel st
Matthews Rev. William Cooke [vicar of Morgan Saml..Anthony,n8 Unthanks rd 1'\ okes Alfred, 5 Heigham road
St. George's Colegate], Dereham road Morley Edward, 29 Earlham road Norgate Alfred, 78 Unthanks road
Ma tthews Alfred, 9 Clarence road, Morley Miss, 3 Essex st. South Heigham Norman Ernest Wm. 18 Brunswick rd
Thorpe Hamlet Morphew Surgeon-Colonel .Augustus, N orrisMrs. IOIThorpe rd. ThorpeHamlet
Matthews Saml. I Raglan st.Dereham rd 'l'horpe rise, 'l'horpe road Norris Saml. Clarendon, Albemarle rd
Matting by Henry Nelson Slade, I34 Hall Morris Arthur J ames, 72 Park lane North William Frederick,42 Bracondale.
road, 1'\ ew Lakenhatn Morris George, 39 Dereham road Northy John B. I3 London street
Maulden Benjamin, 6I Denmark road, MorrisMiss, 89'l'horpe rd. ThorpeHamlet N orton Henry, 3 Grove road
Earlham road Morris Waiter William, 5 Eastbourne N orton :Miss, 11 Bedford Cross street,
May George, 31 Unthanks road place, Prince of Wales road South Heigham
May Miss E. E. 2I William street, St. Morris William Henry, 4 Earlham road N orton Miss, 86 St. Philip's road
Giles hill Morrison Rev. Peter [Baptist], r2 N orton Thos. Raby ,St. Bartholomew's cls.
Mayne Capt. Otway, Lower close Clarendon road Norwich Right Rev. Bishop of [the Hon.
Mays George, 22 Mount Pleasant Morrison Mrs. 26 Mount Pleasant John Tb.os. Pelham n.n.J, The Palace
Mayston Miss, 5 Kimberley street Morse Thos. Herbert, 10 Up. Surrey st N overre Frank Wm. Bianchi, Theatre sq
Mayston Rd. 8 Grove st. we. Unthanks rd Moss John, 3 Car row vale, Car row road Noverre Richard Percival, Southgate
Maystone Miss, Lower close Morton Joseph, 26 Trinity street, South house, Chapel Field gardens
Meachen George, 82 St. Philip's road Heigham Nudd John, 56 St. Philip's road
Meadows Henry, 32 Botolph street Mott Miss, 35 Clarendon road Nudd Waiter ..Alfred, 23 St. Giles road
Meadows Mrs. I Earlham road Mottram Alfred, Heigham hall, Old Nurse ThoB.I22A,Hali rd.NewLakenhm
Means Miss, 39 Newmarket road Palace road Nuttall Edwin, 26 Mill Hill road
Meers James \Villiam, I26 Queen's road Mottram James, Bank ho. Bank plain Oake Henry B.A. (second master King
Mendham Mrs. 57 Unthanks road Moule Rev. Freaerick John M. A. [rector Edward the Sixth's Middle school),
Messent Jn. Bilham, Denbigh rd. Park la of St. Lawrence], St. Lawrence's rec- 12 Park lane
Metcalf John, 63 York street tory, Mill Hill road Oakley Rev.Edward Charles n.A.[curat~
Middle ton Rev. Ro ber t [vicar of St. Mower Henry, Trowse millgate of St. Paul's], St. Clement's hill
Martin-at-Oak], I66 Dereham road 1 Mulholland :Miss, 24 Magdalcn road Oakley Henry Pinson, 52 Clarendon rd
Middleton Mrs. 51 Distiller;y street Mullarkey John Albert, 74 Hall road, Odhams George F. 11r. n. 53 Rethel st
Midlane Ed win, I7 Bedford street, New Lakenbam 01Iord J ames Sharpen, 46 St. Giles st
South Heigham Mnllins Frank Edward Calver, r3 Old1ield William, 6g Newmarket road
Miles Charles, 82 Dereham road Colegate street Oliver William John, 78 Park lane
Miles John Charles, 81 Thorpe road Mumford Georgc John, Chalk Hill Olley Edward, Chester cottage, York st
Miles Josepb, I Grove terrace, Thorpe house, Thorpe Hamlet Olley George Hales, 43 Clarendon road
road, Thorpe Hamlet Munday Mrs. r8 Victoria street Olorenshaw John, 3 St. Mark's terrace.
Millard Mrs. Lower close Mnnford Henry Erlward, 16 \Vest par City road, :Xew Lakenham
Miller Alfred Henry, 2I Lady's lane Munford Misses, 10 Havelock road Orams Edward, The Elms, Unthanks rd
Miller Henry Jermy, 25 Denmark road, Murdoch Wm.Wallacc, I3 Alexandra rd Orfeur Miss, Lower close
Earlham road Muriel Cecil Jeffery, 2 Willow lane O'Rourke Peter, 87 Mill Hill road
Miller Herbert, 44 Cambridge street Muriel Charles Evans, 36 St. Giles st Os born Harry, 62 Thorpe road, Thorpe
Miller Louis Charles, The Wilderness, Mnrrell Miss, 8o Rt. Philip's road Hamlet
Bracondale Murrell Mrs. 48 Grove road Osborne Walter, 193 Dereham road
Miller Miss, 82 Park lane Murrell Mrs. 5 Wellington road Oury Walter, 7 St. Philip's road
Miller Miss, go 1'\ ewmarket road Murrel Robert, 2 Lakenham terrace Overend George, 5 Clarence road,
Miller Mrs. 2 York street Muskett Miss, 5 Newmarket road Thorpe Hamlet
Miller Mrs. H. B. The Wilderness, N arracott Valentine Rd. 7Caernarvon rd Oxley Richard, 68 St. Stephen's road
Bracondale Nash Frederick, Corique, Earlham rd l'adgett Arthur William, 29 Carlton
Miller Samuel, I Victoria street Nash Frederick, 29 Castle meadow terrace, Surrey road
Milne Charles, 36 Earlham road N ash Miss, 8 Trinity street Page Ambrose, 68 St. Philip's road
Mills Capt. Fredk. I6 Chapelficld gards Nash Mrs. 26 Earlham road Page Charles Fountain, Heigham cot-
Mills George Jn. The Poplars, Eaton rd N eave Mrs. 62 ::\lill Hill road tage, I Brunswick road
Mills Henry Jacob, 12 West parade Neave Mrs. St. Bartholomew's close Page CubittLacy, Brewery ho. Pockthrp
Mills Mrs. 194 Dereham road Nelson Henry James, 3 Cardiff road, Page Frederick John, 44 Earlham road
Mills Robert Jas. M.B. 35 Surrey slreet South Heigham Page John, 6I Newmarket road
Mills S. Mealing, .35 Snrrey street Nelson Herbt. Cardiffrd. Sth. Heigham Page John Joseph Gray, The Elms,
Mills William, 62 St. Stephen's street Nelson Waiter, I I Grove street west Heigham, grove
Mingay George Nelson, 19 St .•Giles rd Nesbit Jas. 27 Trinity st. Sth. Heigbam Page Martin Fountain, 4r Clarendon rd
DIRECTORY .J NORFOLK. NORWICH. 529
Page Miss, 8 Earlham road Pike John Greaves, 73 Mill Hill road I Ram Rev. Edward Theo. Assoc. K.C.L.
Page Richard Alfreci, 65 Denmark Pilgrim Miss, 17 Chapelfield gardens [vicar of St. John's, Timberhill &
road, Earlham road Pilgrim Mrs. 132 Queen's road chaplain of the Norfolk County Asy.
Page Robert, 78 Grove road Pillings :\frs. 35 St. Giles' road lum], Chantry court
Page Samuel D. 68 F.arlham road Pinder Thomas Richmond LL.B., B.A. Ramsay John Joseph, Meadow cottage,
Pailthorpe Edwin, Rosary road, ~horpe (head master of King Edward the Bishop bridge
Hamlet Sixth's Middle school), Bridge street Ramsay Mrs. I6o Queen's road
Paley Major Edwd. Hill ho. Bracondale l'inson Mrs. 6o Chapelfield road Randall Charles Wm. 4 Town Close rd
Palmer Daniel Hotson, 25 Grove road Piper Mrs. 3 West parade Randall James Johnson, 3 Denmark rd.
Palmer Ethelred Bunn, 49 lleigham rd Pitman Maurice A. II Park lane Earlham road
PalmerFdk.Nathaniel,37Castlemeadow Plaford Mrs. 37 Heigham road Randall Martin, 32 Dereham road
Palmer John J. 6 Earlham road Playtord John, 3 Grove terrace, Thorpe Ransomo Horatio, 16 Sussex street
Palmer Jonathan, Lower close road, Thorpe Hamlet Ransome William Fenna, 45 Carlton
Palmer Miss, 7I Heigham road Playford Robert Jones, 44 Grove road terrace, Surrey road
Palmer Mrs. 4 Oxford street Pleasants Houghton Thos. 37 Sussex st Ranson Farrar, Upper elose
Palmer Mrs. 9I Unthanks road Plumbly Thomas, 22 Havelock road Ranson Joshua Farrar,Heathside,Grove
Palmer Mrs. E. H. Grove avenue, St. Plummer Charlel:l, I4 Southwell road road, Thorpe Hamlet
Stephen's road Plumstead Michael, 57 Heigham road Ratcliffe Frederick, 6I York street
Pal mer William, 4 York street Podd Edmund, 59 Connaught road Ratcliffo George, 3 Clarence road,
Pantin Mrs. 31 Chapelfield road Pointer Henry, 70 York street Thorpe llamlet
Parfitt Cornelius, I8 Caernarvon road Pollock John, 85 Chapelfield road Ratcliffe Levi William, 32 Earlham rd
Park James Samuel, 88 Newmarket rd, Pooley Edward Richard, I7 Sussex st Raven Miss, 83 West Pottergate street
Park Josepb, 31 Mowtt Pleasant Pooley Robert, Lower close Ray Rev. Henry B. A. 22 Untbanks rd
Park Mrs. I4 Caernarvon road Pooley Samuel, 42 Pottergate street Ray Fredk. Harington, 27 Bracondale
Parke Mrs. I53 Dereham road Pope Henry, r45 Cambridge street Ray Orlando Dennis, Ivy cottage, 97
Parker Granville Frederick, SI Carlton Pope Mrs. 33 Clarendon road Thorpe road, Thorpe Hamlet
terrace, Surrey road Pope Mrs. 32 Essex street Rayncr John, rChantry court, Theatre st
Parker James, I98 Queen's road Porter Henry Fisk, 3 Westmoreland Raynes Michael James, 21St. Giles' rd
Parker John, 8I Grove road villas, Thorpe road, Thorpe Hamlet Read Henry William, St.Clement's hill,
Parker John Herbert, Tower house, Porter James, 38 St. George's Middle st New Catton
Grove road, Thorpe Hamlet Porter James Arthur, Sherborne house, Read Joseph Eciward, Grove avenue,
Parker Misses, 3 Park lane Golden Dog lane St. Stephen's road
Parker Mrs. II6 Dereham road Porter Mrs. 40 Duke street Read Thomas Matthews, 6o Bracondale
Parker Wm. 31 Bedford st. Sth.Heigham Porter Thomas Clarence, St. Helen's Reustone Jas. 9 Oak viis. St. Martin's rd
Parkerson Jude, 25 Havelock road square, Bishop.ggate street Reeder William, I3 Clarence road,
Parkhurst Mrs. 7 Grove road Postle Miss, 13 Park lane Thorpe Hamlet
ParrWm.Harvey, ThcLodge,Heighm.st PostleThomas, 24 Thorpe road, Thorpe I Reeve Edmund, 27 Surrey street
Parry llugh Robert, The Chestnuts, Hamlet Reeve George, King street
Newmarket road Postle William, 53 Dereham road Reeve Harry, Heigham gro.St.Giles' rd
Parsons George, 23 Alexandra road PotterChas. 73Thorpe rd. ThorpeHamlet Reeve J ames, Lower Clarenee road,
Paston \Villiam, 4.S Distillery street Potter Herbert L. Mile End road Thorpe Hamlet
Patey Mrs. The Elms, St. Clement's Potter John, sr Bracondale Reeve Miss, so Heigham road
hill, New Catton Potter Mrs. 31 St. Stephen's road Reeve Miss, 88 Dereham road
PaulJoseph John Dawson,Eaton grove, Powell Mrs. Lower close Reeve Mrs. 28 Essex street
Newmarket road Powell Robert, 10 Earlham road Reeve Simms, 35 St. Giles street
l"aull\Irs. 105 Trinity street Powles Rev. Ernest B. A. [curate of St. Reid Mrs. 57 Bethel street
Paul Richard James, 51 Mill Hill road Mark's, Lakenham], 3I Carlton ter- Reid Mrs. Blagbie house, Heigham gro
Pawley Mrs. 192 Dereham road race, Surrey road Reid Mrs. 47 St. George's plain
Pawsey Mrs. 7 Bedford Cross street Pownall Rev. Alfred M.A. [vicar of Restieaux JosephJames, 21 Grove road
Payne Harry, 67 Rose lane Trowse-with-Lakenham],7Town close Restieaux Mrs. 6 Stafford street
Payne Mrs. S. 81 Newmarket road Poyser Josiah Thomas,Mousehold house Reynolds Hy. Edwd.56 St. Stephen's rd
Per~cock Rev. Augustine [Catholic], Pratt Edward, St. Clement's hill, New Ribbands Walstan, Poplar cottage,
Willow lane Catton Aylsham :road
Peak Henry, 72 Cambridge street Pratt Edward Jabez, I I Bedford street, Rice Arthur, 4 Bedford Cross street,
Pearce John Hond F.R.I.B.A.4Theatre st South Heigham South Heigham
J>earce Miss, I26 DerP.ham road · Presents Philip, I32 Hall road, New Rice Miss, 5 Eiffel ter. St. Martin's road
Pearce \Villiam, 76 Queen's road Lakenham Ricbards Miss K. E. St. Clement's hill,
Pearson James, 45 Denmark road, i Press Edward, II6 Queen's road New Catton
Earlham road Preston Rev. Joseph M.A. 20 Calvert st Richardson David, 12 Bedford street,
Pearson James Stannard, St. Clement's Preston Miss, 40 Prince of Wales road Unthanks road
hill, New Catton Preston Mrs. Arthur, 5 Rosary road, R1chardson Thos. Jsph. 32 Unthanks rd
P~arson Miss, 24 Queen's road Thorpe Hamlet Richardson Thomas William, 35 Un·
Pearson Mrs. Holly lodge, Telegraph Price His Honor Judge Edwin Plumer thanks road
lane, Thorpe Hamlet Q.c. 66 Unthanks road Richer Wm. I2-l Hall rd.N ew Lakenham
Pegg Matthew Henry, 3 Ethel road, Priest Ebenezer Walter, 32 Mt.Pleasant Riehcs Chas. Hsnry, 33 Unthanks road
Thorpe Hamlet Priest George, 54 St. Stephen's road R1ches Edward, 46 Earlham road
Pegler Edwin Samuel, 4I Lon:lon st Priest Mrs. Heigharn grove Riches ~Iiss, 74 Queen's road
Pelbam The Hon. & Right Rev. John Priest Mrs. Victoria cot. St. Stephen's rd Riches Thomas C. 30 Grove street west
<l'homa.s D.D. [Lord Bishop of Nor. Primrose William, II6 Unthanks road Richmond Rev. William, 9 Valentine
wich], The Palace Pring ReL Gad, 6 Havelock road street, Dereham road
l'engelly Wm. Edwd. I8o Dereham rd Prior Leathes, Oakhurst, Christchurch Ridley Samuel, Avenue road
Penny Mrs. 29 Grove street w?.sL road Rilcy Waltcr Alfred, 97 King street
Pentney JamesChapman,27Dereham rd , Pritchard Wiiliam, 23 Havelock road R;nger George, 25 St. Giles road
Pepper Henry Albert, Eethel street Proudfoot. Perth 1 II Caernarvon road Hipley Rev. Canon "William Nottidge
Perkins Rev. James Pugh [Congre- Pullen Thomas, 42 Earlham road M.A. [vicar of Earlham with Bow-
gational], 28 GrMe street west, Un- Pung Rev. George [Baptist], I64 thorpe & rector of Colney], Earl-
thanks road Queen's road ham hall
Perowne Mrs. 41 Oxford street Purcell Henry, 30 Earlham road Ripley Ernest, Cambridge ho. Tombland
Peters Thos. Aspneld, 170 Dereham rd Purdy Mrs. 8 Brunswick road Rivet.t John Richard, 72 St.Philip's road
Pettingale Miss, 9 Clarendon road Pye Jacob, 7 Aylsham road Rix Charles Edward, 56 Unthanks road
Phillips Henry, 20 Essex street Pyle Miss, 32 Aylsham road Rix Mrs. 22 Grove street west
Phipps Misses, 27 Thorpe road, Thorpe Pym Mrs. Hadford, I I Chapelfield gdns Rix Mrs. The Grove, Thorpe road,
Hamlet Pymar Mrs. Newmarket road Thorpe Hamlet
Phipps Mrs. High bury villa, Thorpe Quad ling Arthur Rarnes, 29 Essex st Roach Henry,6 F.thel rd. Thorpe Hamlet
road, Thorpe Hamlet Quintan John, 22 Calvert street Robberds Miss, 110 Queen's road
Pickford Rev. Henry M.A., A.Mus.T.C.L. Quinton F. Baillie, 33 St. Stephen's rd Roberts Arthur Carson, Thorpe Hamlet
[vicar of St. Ueorge's, Tombland], Rackbam Mrs. 197 Dereham road RobertsGeo.83Rosaryrd.Thorpeiiamlet
1:5t. Clement's hill Rack ham Thomas John, 27 William st. Roberts Miss, Neptune ho. South well rd
Piercy Misses, 38 Mill Hill road St. Giles' hill Roberts Mrs. 8I Mill Hill road
Pigg Edward Smith, 57 London street Rackham Wm. Eelward, St. Clement's Roberts Thomas Bowel Kyffin, Prince
Pi6ot Rev. William Melvi!le M.A. [vicar hill, New Catton of Wales road
of Ea ton], The Vic.:arage, Eaton Rackham William Simon, Up. King st RobertsonHy.37Denmark rd.Earlhm.rd
530 NORWICH. NORFOLK. [ KELLY'S

RobertsonMiss,Rockhill ho.Magdalen rd Saul William, 85 Pottergate t;treet Sinclair Edwd. Hutchinson, Aylsham rd
Robertson William,32 Urove street west Saunders Henry Wm. I13 Dereham rd Skedge '~'illiam, Claremont house,
Robins George, I4 Essex street Savage Robert Thomas, Heath cottage, Stone road, Upper Hellesdon
Robins Mrs. ~6 Grove street wr~~t Quebec road, Thorpe Thamlet Skelton Harry, St. Helen's house~
Robinson Rev. Charles Kirkby D.D. Savory Arthur, 5 Caernarvon road .ilishopsgate street
[master of St. Catharinc's college, Savory Miss. I37 Unthanks road , Skelton Miss, 43 Mount Pleasant
Cambridge & canon of Norwich], Say Mrs. 27 St. Giles street Skeltotl William, 27 Grove road
The Close Sayer Hy. Robt. 71 Prince of Wales rd Skinner Edward, 45 Grove road
Robinson HaynesSparrow,St.Gilesplain Sayer Wm. Latimer, 76 Newmarket rd Skipper Fredk. Wilemer, II2 Trinity st
Robinson James, I3 The Crescent, Scarf James Bishop,8oCambridge street Skipper Geo.Fdk.67 Prince of Wales rd
Chapelfield road Scarff Mrs. 8 Upper Smrey street Skipper Ueorge John, Kingsley villa.
Robinson Misses,Blenchynden,Low.close Scarle Charles, 181 Dereham road Mill Hill road
Robinson Mrs. 29 Carlton ter. Surreyrd Scott Rev.Jonathan [Primitive Method- Skipper Robert, 78 Clarendon road
Robinson Mrs. 6 Dereham road ist], Arbor Vitre cottage, Io Thorpe Skipper Robert Wilmer, I7 Clarence
Robinson William, 32 Grove street west road, Thorpe Hamlet road, Thorpe Hamlet
Roche Eleazcr Birch, 27 Surrey street Scott Arthur Wace, 72 Magdalen street Skoyles Elam, Hill side, Thorpe road,
Rock George, I I Colegate street ScottAugustus Fredk.24 Castle meadow 'fhorpe Hamlet
Roddick Matthew, 27 Rose lane Scott George, 6o Queen's road Skoyles Robert "''illiam Claxton, I The
Rodwell Henry, 79 St. Philip's road .Scott James Wm. 47 Distillery street Rallies, Unthanks road
Rod well Robert Cathpole, 62 Bracondale Scott John, Heathside road tilade Mr3. 19 Earlham road
Roe William, 63 Heigham road Scott Mrs. Thorpe Hamlet cottage, Slipper Rev. Thomas John Robert
Rogers Rev. John Henry M.A. [vicar of Rosary road, Thorpe Hamlet Armine B.A.[curate of St. Gregory's],
St. Matthew's], Thorpe llamlet, . Scott Mrs. Walter, 9 The Crescent, 15 The Crescent, Chapelfield
Vicarage, Rosary road,ThorpeHamlet I Chapelfield road Slipper Rev. William Armine M.A.
Rogers Ed win White, I o Clare nee road, I Scott Thomas John, 55 Grove road [vicar of At. Gregory's J, I 5 The
Thorpe Hamlet Scott Waiter, 29 Grove road Crescent., Chapelfield
Rogcrs Jamcs Grorge, 47 Park lane Scott "''alter Robcrt, 69 York street Slonitz Leopold, Surrey street
Rogers Thomas, 2 Queen's road SPott '\"illiam, 24 Grove road Smith Rev. Frank [Catholic Apostolic],
Raper Henry, 16 Colegate street Scrutton Henry 'fhos. 20 St. Philip's rd 27 Carlton terrace, Surrey road
Rose Mrs. 4I St. Giles road Scutcheon Frederick, 5I St Giles hill Smith Rev. Samuel [rector of St. Mar-
Rose Percy John Hill, 28 York street Seago Mrs. 35 Park lane garet's with St. Swithin's & chaplain
Rose Robt. 59 Denmark rd. Earlham rd Seaman Benj. 34 St. George's Middle st of Norwich Union & Boys' Home], 6o
Rose Thomas, Lower close Searles Mrs. 2 Brunswick New road Clarendon road
Roshier Theophilus, 3 Oak Tillas, St. • Seed Henry Goskar, Heathside road, Smith Edward, 4 Hewitt'svillas, Upper
Martin's road I Thorpe Hamlet Hellesdon
Rossi Miss, 4 Grove street west ISceley Miss, 108 Chapelfield road Smith Edwin Fred, 2 Oak villas, St.
Rossi Theodore, Grove avenue, St.. Beggar Waiter W'illiam, Rose villa, St. Martin's road
Stephen's road 1 Leonard's road, Mousehold Smith George, 49 Cambridge street
Rout John, Mar! borough ha. Grove road; Sellick Philip, 64 St. Philip's road Smith Geo.18 Clarence rd. Thorpe Hmlt
Row Charles, 188 Dereham road ISellicks Mrs. St. Paul's vils.Magdalen rd Smith Gcorge S1dney Clement, College
Rowe Thomas Dowden,54 Earlham road Sennitt .Ebenezer Cbas. 32 Queen's road road, Unthanks road
Rowing Mrs. 25 Park lane Sewell Arthur 1Velles 1ey, Hethersett Smith Joscpb de Carlc, Bracondalc
Royall Daniel, 9 Trinity ~t.Sth.Heigham house, Urove street north Smith Jsph.de Carle,jun.44 Magdalen st
Rudd Frederick, I56 Queen's road Sewell Mrs. 73 Grove road Smith Miss, Colegate street ·
Rudd Geo.Jas.Rushmcro3Lakenham ter Sewell PhilipEdwd.Clare ho.NewCatton flmith Mrs. 13 Bloomsbury place
Rudd H. Kingston, St. Uiles street Sexton Arth. St. Paul's vil. Magdalen rd Smith Mrs. 35 Carlton ter. Surrey road
Rudd Mrs. 48 Clarendon road Sexton Charles Edwd. 21 Alcxandra rd Smith Mrs. 18 Chapelfield gardens
Rudd Waiter Randall, 79 Thorpe road, Sexton Christmas James, Quebec road, Smith Mrs. I25 Dereham road
Thorpe Hamlet Thorpe Hamlet Smith Mrs. Frank de Carle, Lower close
Rudd William Gray, Avenue road SextonHy. Walt.80sbrne.vils.Aylshm rd Smith 1\Irs.Geo. St. Cross, Alhemarle rd
Rudgard Charles, .Marsh view, Thorpe Sexton Jesse Henry, 20 Magdalen road Smith Richard Buck, 6 Brunswick road
road, Thorpe Hamlet Sexton Mrs. Magdalcn road Smith Robert George, Rostrevor, Xew-
Rnmhle Mrs. 32 Gladstone street Shakespeare Rev. John Howard M. A. market road
Rump Alfd. Edgar, I9 Rampant Horse st [Baptist], The Wilderness, Bracondale Smith Sidney Francis, 78 St. Philip's rd
Rump Mrs. 20 Trinity street flhalders lsaac N oab,36 Mount Pleasant 1

Smith Silvan us, 10 Trinity street, South


Rupert William, 9 Park lane Shalders John, Redwell street Heigham
Rush William, I St. John's Sepulchre Shaldcrs Noah Edwd. 213 Doreham rd Smith Thomas Samuel, 25 Bedford
villas, Ber street Sharman Mrs. 85 Mill Hill road street south, Heigham
Rust Caleb Henry,28 Prince of Wales rd Sharpe William John, Elmwood, Thorpe Smith Thomas William, 57 Carlton ter-
Ruston Mrs. 21 Grove street west road, Thorpe Hamlet race, Surrey road
Ruthven .Rev. 'Villiam [Baptist], 16 Shattock James, 137 Dereham road Smith 'Villiam, 55 Caernarvon road
Osborne villas, Aylsham road Shave W'm. Palmer, 7 Colegate street SmithWm.l\"ixon[htyvicar],Lowerclose
Rutland William ]3ailey, 11 Cambridge Shaw llenry, go Queen's road Smith William Rogers, 7I Mill Hill rd
street, South Heigham I Shaw Mrs. 2.15 Dereham road Snell Mrs. 17 Bracondale
Ruymp James York Howlctt, St. Shead Ueorge William, 2 Victoria st Snelling ArthurThos.sB Mount Pleasant
Leonard's road, Thorpe Hamlet Shearer \Villiam, 131 Unthanks road Snelling Charles, 17 Newmarket road
RuympMiss,44Thorpe rd.TborpeHamlt tlhcel Miss, 77 Newmarket road Snelling James Gage, Eaton hall
Ruymp Robert James, St. Leonard's Sheringham Miss, St. Bartholomew's Snelling Mrs. 42 Grove road
road, Thorpe Hamlet close Snelling Wm.6 Valentinest.Dereham rd
Rye James, 47 Oxford street _ Shibley Mrs. 58 Chapelfield road SnellingWm.Oldfield,Rampant Horse st
SabbertonGeo.52Hall rd.New Lakenhm Shields Daniel, 61 Unt!Janks road Snowdon Henry, St. Leonard's priory.
Sabberton Frederick William, Mount Shields Frank Edward, 20 Clarence Thorpe Hamlet
Surrey villa, St. Leonard's road road, Thorpe Hamlet Sothern Charles, I04 Trinity street
Sabberton "\Villiam, West Pottergate Shields Frederick Geo. 47 Old Palace rd Soulby Mrs. 104 Queen's road
Sadd Mrs. I Theatre street Shields William, 10 Oxford street Southall Charles, Woodside, Thorpe
Sadd Mrs. Sarah Elizh. 7 Theatre street Short John Edwd. Day, 17 Heigham rd road, Tborpe Hamlet
Sadd Oswald, 6o Bcthcl street Sillctt Jas. Banyard, 29 All Saints' grn Southall James, The Chesnuts, Carrow
Sadd William John, 21 St. Stephen's rd Sim Alexander, 169 Dcreham road road, Thorpe Hamlet
Sadler Herbert, 16 Caernarvon road Simmonds .Arthur, 1 I Trinity Etreet South well Thomas, 10 The Crescent.
Sadler Miss, Thorpe rd. Thorpe Hamlet Sirnmonds Miss, 35 Garden road Chapelfield road
Sadler Mrs. 63 Cambridge street SirnmonsRev.Frank Th. A.K.C.L.rcurate Sowels William, I Park lane
St. John Frederick Donnc Bolingbroke, of St. Bartholomew's, Hcigham], 225 Sowter Abraham, 6 Oxford street
106 Unthanks road Dereham road Spalding Francis Wm. 33 Upper King st
St. Ledger Mrs. 42 Distillery street Simpson Elward Palgrave, 5 Tombland Spain John Sedgewick, 34 Prince of
Salmon Benjamin Jacob Hart, I4 Vie- Simpson Mrs. 7Cedar rd. Thorpe Hamlet Wales road
toria street, St. Stephen's road · Simpson Mrs. 20 St. George's Middle st Sparrow John ~'illiam, 15 Earlham rd
Salter William, 39 Vrctoria street Simpson Robert Lilly, 3 Aylsham road Spaul Alexander, 35 Caernarvon road
Samuel Mrs. I I Prince of Wales road Sirnpson Thomas Edward, Lower close Spawforth Mrs. 28 Victoria street
Samuel Solon, I Grove street ncrth Simpson Thomas Harrison (H. M. sub- Spelman Frank, 129 Unthanks road
Sanderson Mrs. 96 Mill Hiii road inspector of schools), 7 Trinity street Spelman Clement Charles Rix, Ivy
San! Arth. Tabernacle ho. Bishopsgate st Sirnpson W'illiam Rudd, 18 Sussex st house, Unthanks road
Saul Mrs. 115 Unthanks road Sims Miss, Eaton villa, West parade Spelman Henry, 42 Unthanks road

DIRECTORY. J NORFOLK. NORWICH. 531
Spencer Jonathan Betts, ro Oak villas, Sugden Geo. 6 Oak vls. St. Martin's rd Tills Mrs. 5 Cathedral street north
St. Martin's road Summerscales Henry,13 Denmark road, Till yard Charles John, Lower close
Spice Mrs. 2 Valentine street Earlham road Tillyard John Joseph, 6 Thorpe road,
Spilling Rev. James [New Church], 30 SumnerMiss,7Groveter.we.Unthanksrd Thorpe Hamlet
Park lane Sursham William John, 49 Dereham rd Tillvard

Miss, rox Unthanks road
Spink Rev. William Jacob M.A. [curate Surville Mrs. 40 Queen's road Tingey John Cottingham, 31 Surrey st
of St. :Margaret's & St. Swithin], 2 Sutton Francis F.c.s., F. I.e. St. Faith's Todd Charles Edgar, 6 Park lane
Mill Hill road · house, St. Faith's lane Todd Herbert Sinclair, 6r London st
Spooner John, 13 Connaught road Sutton Miss, St. Ben to, St. Leonard's Todd John, 30 Victoria street
Spowart William Ribton, 37 St. Giles' st road, Thorpe Hamlet Todd John Timothy, 9 Chapelfield gdns
Spratt Albert William, Chapelfield gro Sutton Mrs. I I3 Trinity st. Sth.Heigham Todd Stanley Addison, 63 Denmark
Spratt Edward Hart, I I Alexandra rd Swindell Rev. Thomas [Primitive Meth- road, Heigham
Springall Mrs. 2I St. Stephen's square odist ], 34 Grove road Todd Walter, Albemarle, Albemarle rd
Springall Wm. Newton, I7 Potter gate st Syer Vfilliam, 77 York street Todd William Henry, Primrose terrace,
Springfield Harmer, 162 Queen's road Symonds Mrs. rs St. Philip's road Quebec road, Thorpe Hamlet
Sproul John Smith, 21 Cambridge st Tadman Mrs. Ladbrooke house, St. Toll Miss, 22 Queen's road
Sprout Miss, 19 Cambridge street Leonard's road, Thorpe Hamlet Toll Octavius, 2 Grove road
Spurrell Mrs. 2 St. Philip's road Tallack Miss, 64 St. Stephen's road Tolladay Mrs. 23 Newmarket road
Squirrell Manning Prentice, Avenue Tallant Miss, 25 St. Saviour's lane Tompkinson Mrs.sWestmoreland villas,
cottage, Park lane 'fallent Miss, 30 Trory street Thorpe road, Thorpe Hamlet
St.acey Wm. Holly ldg. Newmarket rd Tann Frank Herbert, go Dereham road Tooler Robert, 43 Oxford street
Stackard Frederick, 7 Park lane Tapping Henry, 9 All Saints' green Tooley Mrs. 37 Rose lane
Stacy John Herbert, 37 Exchange st Tasker George A. 28 Distillery street Torris Miss, 30 Newmarket road
Stacy Miss, I3 St. Giles road Tatner John Ashall Leman, 6 Clarence 'fowler Mrs. 46 Mount Pleasant
Stafford Mrs. The Priory, Grey Friars road, Thorpe Hamlet 'fowler Richard Thomas, r Stafford st
Rtafford Thomas, 65 Trinity street Taylor Rev. Geo. [Baptist],21 Sussex st TownsendMrs.26Bedford st. Unthanksrd
Stammers Rohert,, South well house, 1 Taylor Arthur Hy. Colby, 42 St.Giles st Townshend Henry, 189 D~reham road
Southwell road, Lakenharo · Tavlor Clement, 42 St. Giles street Townshend Henry, 29 Newmarket road
1 Townshend Herbert Chas. I7 Princes st
Stanford Mrs. I71 Dereham road Taylor Frederic Oddin J.P. Ethelburgha
Stanford Mrs. 205 Dereham road house, Tombland TownshendSaml.Thos.4xNewmarket rd
Stanhope Waiter Stott, 37 Bracondale Taylor Garrett, Trowse house TracksonJas.16 Bedford st. Unthanks rd
Stanley Miss, 32 Aylsham road Taylor John, 48 Queen's road Trevor By. The Plantation, St. Giles rd
Stanley William Wade, 38 Grove st.wst Taylor Miss, 74 Mill Hill road Trory George, 40 York street
Stannard John, 19 Grove road Taylor Miss, 26 Newmarket road TroughtonGeo.69 Carlton ter.Surrey rd
Stannard Miss, 12 Cathedral st. north Taylor Miss, 32 Victoria street Trower Mrs. 78 Queen's road
Stannard Miss, St. Andrew's Hall plain Taylor Mrs. 4 Cedar rd. Thorpe Hamlet Tuck Algernon Devereux, St. Giles st
Stannard Mrs. 3 Alexandra 'road Taylor Mrs. 46 Queen's road Tuck Arthur, 148 Queen's road
Stannard Walter, 68 Park lane Taylor Philip 1'\ewton, 17 Oxford street Tuck Geo. 42 Denmark rd. Earlham rd
Starling Harry, 14 Havelock road TayloF Sidney Johnson, 44 Prince of Tuck John, 20 Denmark road
Starling .:\Iiss, 28 Earlham road Wales road Tuck Jsph. 20 Denmark rd.Earlham rd
StarlingRobert,76Hall rd.Nw. Lakenhm Temple Misses, 8 Bedford street, South Tuck Mrs. 2 West parade
Starmer Rev. Henry !Congregational], Heigbam Tucker Mrs. so Unthanks road
12 Clarence road, Thorpe Hamlet Templerton John, 20 Bloomsbury place Tuddenham Stephen, 68 Nelson street,
Starmer Alfred, 5 Grove road Tenant Charles, 47 St. Philip's road North Heigham
Steele Mrs. 23 Clarendon road Tenant Mrs. 39 Garden road Tuddenham Waiter Edward, 33 Duke st
Stevens Charles Edward, 57 Middle 1
Tench John Henry (H. M. assistant Tupman Mrs. 74 W illiam st. St. Giles' hill
· street, St. George's inspector of schools), Ivybank,Upper Turner Charles Thomas, 30 York street
Stevens Chas. Fredk. 23 Golden Dog la Hellesdon Turner Edwin James, 86 Park lane
Stevens Mrs. 15 Chapeltield gardens Terry Edwin, 57 Nelson street, North TurnerMiss,120sborne vils.AyL;ham rd
Stevens Mrs. 79 Thorpe road, Thorpe Heigham Turner Mrs. Surrey grove
Hamlet Terry Miss, Lichfield ho. Lower close Turner Thomas, 42 Mill Hill road
Stevens Mrs. Joseph, 14 Queen's road Thacker John, 3 Grey Friars Turner William, 78 Mill Hill road
Stevens Walter George, 'l'horpe road, Theobald Edward St. John, StorUord Tuttle William, 29 U nthanks road
Thorpe Hamlet house, West parade Tuxford Arthur, Chapelfield grove
Stevens \'\'m. Horace,II Grove st.north Theobald Waiter, 49 Chapelfield road Tuxford Wm. \\'alter, 130 Dereham rd
Stevenson Miss, 11 Grove street west Thirkettle William, roo Chapelfield rd Tyce Geo. r Trinity st. South Heigham
Stevenson Thomas, 62~ Unthanks road Thompson Benjamin, 76 Pitt street Tyler Benjamin Geo. 119 L'"nthanks rd
Steward Campbell, Lower close Thompson Charles Hy. 25 Grove st. we Tyrrell Dennis, I 82 King street
Steward Edwin Syder B. r6 Brunswick Thompson Frederick James, 42 York st Tyrrell George, 183 King street
New road Thompson Henry, \Voodside, Christ- Tyrrell Walter, 200 Queen's road
Steward Frederick Albert, Singletons, church road UnderhillFredk.s9Carlton ter.Surre}" rd
Lower close Thompson Miss, 29 St. Giles road Upton Henry Rushmer,West hill, New-
Steward Henry, 12 Grove street west Thomson Rev.llenry MortonM.A.[chap- market road
Steward James, 19 Essex street lain to H. M. prison], Chantry court, Utting Charles, 57 Newmarket road
Steward JamesRegmald,65 Heigham rd Theatre street Utting John, I6 Havelock road
Steward John, r8 John street ThoroldMiss,87'l'horpe rd. ThorpeHamlt Utting Stephen William, Hracondale
Steward Misses, so Bracondale Thorold Wm. Hazeldine, Melrose,Eaton cottage, Hracondale
Steward Mrs. W. 7 Chester place Thorn Charles, ~t. Giles road Vassar John, 8o Dereham road
Stewart William Waiter, 134 Queen's rd Thorn John Fitch, 79 Mill Hill road Vassar Miss, 36 Park lane
Stockings Alfred, 36 Victoria street Thorns Arthur, 135 Unthanks road Vince Mrs. 54 Queen's road
Stockings Matthew Bane, I The Cres- Thorns Frank, 4 Duke street Vincent Wm.llelleVue rise,Hellesdon rd
cent, Chapelfield Thorns Mrs. I9 Clarendon road Vyse William, 21 St. Philip's road
Stockings Wm. I<'redk.22 Newmarket rd Thorns Robert Elliott, 35 Exchange st '\'\'ade James Farmer, 151 Dereham rd
Stone Rev.GeorgeE.[WesleyanReform], ThornsRobt.Elliott,jnn.47Clarendon rd \\'ade William, 123 Queen's road
30 Wellington road Thorpe Henry, 9 Wellington road ·waite Thomas Robert John, 34 Essex st
Stone Rev. Tom M.A. [curate of Holy Thouless Hy. [lay vicar], Lower close \Vake James, I2I Unthanks road
Trinity, S. Heigham], 53 Park lane fhurgar Wm. Thomas, 42 Queen's rd Wallace Mrs. Upper close
Stone Mrs. 51 Heigham road 'Thurlow Ambrose, 191 Queen's road Wall er Miss,· Chapelfield grove
Storey John Custance, 58 Heigham rd Thurtell Miss, 55 Unthanks road Wallis Miss, 58 Denmark rd.Earlham rd
Stott William, 33 St. Stephen's square Thwaites Frederick, 38 Thorpe road, Waiter Alfred, 134A, Dereham road
Strangward Mrs. r8 Oxford slreet Thorpe Hamlet Want Fraderic, sen. t38 Dereham rd
Stratford Charles Lawson, 23 Bedford Tidman Fredk. 35 Bishops Bridge rd Want Frederie George, 136 Derehamrd
street, South Heigham Tidman Wm. Robt.33 BishopsBridge rd Want John Henry, 136A, Dereham road
Stratford William F.St.Mildred's house, Tillard John, Harford ho. Ipswich rd Ward Artlmr Ja.mes, 9 Bedford Cross
Clarendon road, Unthanks road Tillett Alfred William, 40 Victoria st street, South Hcigham
Stubbings James Henry, 79 Grove rd Tillett Edward Arthur, 28 Tombland Ward Henry Harry, 8 Victoria street
Stubbs Geo. r Cedar rd. Thorpe Hamlet Tillett Mrs. r68 Queen's road Ward William,Elmhurst, Grove avenue,
Stubings James, 4 Brunswick New road Tillett Mrs. J. II. The Shrubbery, St. St. Stephen's road
Sturgess Wm. Tompkins,35 Mt. Pleasant Step hen's road Waring Miss, I2 Victoria street
Snffiing Rev. Sydney Albert Dudley Tillett William Henry, Sprowston lodge \Varlters Waiter Scott, Grout's court,
[rector of St. Michael-at-Coslany ], St. Tilley Alfred, 17 5 Dereham road Magdalen street
:Michael's rectory, Dereham road Tilley Arthur, 89 Alexandra road WarnerWalterWait,BsWe. Pottergate st
532 NORWICH. NORFOI.. K. [KELLY'S

Warnes Mrs. & Miss, Lower close White Saml. 2 Osborne vils.Aylsham rd Winter John, 15 Trinity street
"\Varnes Mrs. 8 Town close \\'hiterod John, 5 Essex street Winter Oliver, 2 Clarendon road
Warren Francis George, 7 Oxford street Whit taker William, 48 St. Philip's road Winter Oliver Ernest, 62 Chapelfield rd
Warren John Button, 157 Dereham rd Whitty Henry Irwine M.A. (assistant Winter Thomas,g Carton rd.Bracondale
"\Varren Leonard George, 44 Aylsham rd master of Grammar school), St. Winteringbam Hobt. I8 Havelock road
Warren William Mamar, 58 Queen's rd Faith's lodge Witard Ephraim, Trafalgar house,
Waspe Miss, 39 St. Philip's road Whitty Thomas Ramson, Kimberley Aylsham road, Upper Hellesdon
"'aters-Leavins William, 29 Denmark house, Lower close WithersMrs. Heatbside rd.ThorpeHamlt
road, Earlham road Whyley William, 1Q4 Pottergate street · Withers Willi.tm Emms, 13 Bedford
Watling llenjamin Richard Gold, Priory Wicks Mrs. 3 Grove street north Rtreet, Sonth Heigham
cottage, St. Faith's lane Widduws Francis, 181 Queen's road Wumersley John, Clarence villa, Lower
\Vatson Charles Henry, 98 Dereham rd 1
\Viddows John, 15 Magdalen road Clarcnce road, Tborpe Hamlet
WatsonErnst.Ivens.32Prince ofWales rd Wigg Miss, 36 York street \Vomersley Joshua, 66 Thorpe road,
Watson Henry, g8 Dereham road Wigg Mrs. 33 Earlham road Thorpe Hamlet
Watson Henry M. D. I5 St. Giles road Wigg William Samuel, I2 Surrey road Wood Col. Henry C.B. 95 Thorpe road,
Watsun John, 6 Cathedral street south Wigger Mrs. 49 Bethel street Thorpe Hamlet
Watson Mrs. 54 Mount Pleasant Wiggett William, 38 Mount Pleasant Wood George Inkermann [organizing
WatsonMrs 79Rosary rd.ThorpeHamlet \Vightman Evelyn Thomas llrecknell, inspector of diocesan schools], The
Watson Mrs. 7 St. Bartholomew's close 27 Park lane Oakland, Old Catton
Watts Charles, 56 Queen's road \'VIlcox Mrs. 48 Earlham road Woodcock Miss, I4 Trinity street,
Watts Charles Jas.3r Prince of Wales rd Wild Edward, The Hawthorn, Christ- South Heigham
"'atts John Andrew, 72 Unthanks road church road, Eaton Woodhouse Bond' Jonathan, Beech
\Vatts William, 8 Southwell road Wild Sydney, 22 Brunswick road lodge, Unthanks road
Wayth Henry William, Mile End road \Vilde Augusta, 52 Grove road Woodhome BrertonGeo. 14 Grove road
"'ebberWm.8rRosary rd.ThorpeHamlet Wildee Mrs. Earlham rise Woodhonse Wm. 14 Chapelfield gardns
Vl'ebster Henjamin, Grove road \\'ilkin Arthur, St.Mary's ho. St.Mary's \Voodrow Joseph, 24 Untlmnks road
Wct.~ster William,rWestmoreland villas, Wilkin William, jun. 38 Havelock road Woodrow Miss, 33 Park lane
Thorpe road, 'fhorpe Hamlet Wilkins Harry, 132 Waterloo road Woods Alfd. IQ Essex st. Sth Heigham
Webster "''illiam Hucks, \Vuodbines, Wilklns John Walter, IQ Connaught rd Woods John, I6 Old Palace road
U nthanks road W ilkinsonEd wd. 89 Rosaryrd. Thrp. Hml t Wood!" William Alfred, r86 Dereham rd
Wedgwood Re,·. Josiah [vicar of St. Wilkinson Harry, 27 Earlham road Woods Wm. Henry, 83 Newmarket rd
Benedict's], 55 Heigham road Wilkinson Joseph Wm. 52 Heigham rd Woodward Edward Robert, 8 Grove
\Veeds Misses, 28 Aylsham road "''ilkinson .Mrs. 86 Newmarket road avenue, St. Stephen's road
WeggMayes,HomeDale, Christchurch rd W1lkinson Robert, 8 Clarence road, Woolbright Alfred Robert James, 82 &
Wegg William Richardson, 31 Trory Thorpe Hamlet 84 West Pottergate street
street, Unthanks road Willement .Martyn, 35 Denmark road, Woolrner Henry Geo. 46 Aylsham road
\Velford Rev. John [Primitive Metho- Earlham road Woolnough ·william, 26 Caernarvon rd
di~t J, 72 St. Stephen's road Willernent Miss, 56 York street . Woolsey .Mrs. 77 Thorpe road, 'fhorpe
Wells :\iiss, Rushmore villa, St. Leo- Willett Henry,Carlton lodge,Ipswich rd Hamlet
nard's road, 'l'horpe Hamlet Willett Louis E. Plumstead road W'orhy Robert, 3Q Queen's road
Wells Mrs. I Cambridge street Willey Miss, 39 Grove street west Wordingham Mrs. 143 Dereham road
Wells Mrs. 3Q Denmark rd. Earlham rd WilliamsArthr. 116Hall rd.Nw. Laknhm Worm Robert, Holly cottage, Stone
Wells Mrs. 23 St. Philip's road Williams Charles, 48 Prince of Wales rd road, Upper Helesdon
"''el!s Thomas, The Gem, Bracondale Williamson Mrs. 5 Alexandra road Wortley Mrs. 47 Bracondale
Wells Thomas, ~I York street Williamson Mrs. 9 Havelock road Wright Frank Harry, IQ John street
Wellsman Miss, 16 Clarendon road Willins Miss, 7 Essex street Wright Rev. Walter SamuelM.A. l vicar
Welsford William, 74 St. Step hen's rd W ilhns Mrs. II The Crescent,Chapclfld of Christ ChurchJ, Vicarage, New
Wenham Mrs. 20 Queen's road Willis Mrs. Southwellldg. Ipswich road Cat ton
West Albion, 49 Clarendon road Wilmott George, 75 York street Wright James Blomfield, Mile End
WestArthr.Birt,Aviemre.Chrstchrch.rd Wilson Rev. James M.A. St. Stephen's house, :K ewmarket road
WestHenj.Geo.73Rosaryrd.Thrpe.Hmlt ,-icarage, Brunswick road Wright James David ll.A. (head master
West Ernest Albion, 77 Pitt street Wilson Edwin, 5I Newmarket road Presbyterian Higher Grade school),
West George, Eaton vi!. Unthanks rd Wilson Jonathan Robt. I8 Aylsham rd 22 Magdalen street
We»ton Henr~· Gould, Rushmore villa, Wilson Miss, 55 Newmarket road Wright Miss, 33 Mount Pleasant
Thorpe Hamlet Wilson Mrs. IS Chapelfield road \\'right Miss, 8Q Queen's road
\Veston James, 8 Lakenham terrace "''ilson Mrs. 17 Havelock road Wright Miss, r St. Philip's road
\Veyer Jesse, 37 Victoria street "'ilson Mrs. 52 St. Benedict's street Wright Robt. Dennis C. 49 Earlham rd
Whaites Mrs. 34 Earlham road Wilson Mrs. 21 Tombland \Vright Thos. Henry, 10 Brunswick rd
Wheeler Ernest, 12 Valentine street, \\'ilson Thomas, 4 St. Mark's terrace, \'\-'right William Mu.>ket, 85 Thorpe
D.1reham road City road, New Lakcnham road, Thorpe Hamlet
"'heeler Francis Darkins M.A., LL.D. "''ilson \Vilfred Ernest Henry, 5 St. Yallup George, Ivy house, Ileigham gro
P<tragon house, St. liiles road Mark's vils. City rd. New Lakenham Yarrington Mi,;s, 12 The Crescent
"\'Vhincop George, 25 Victoria street Wilson \\'illiam, 3 Coslany street Y elf Harry Fleming, r I I De re ham road
Whit bread Fredk. Robt. 1 I Dank street Wilson William Fredenck, Airedale Young Arthur James, 30 Unthanks rd
White Albert Sharman, 14 Osborne house, Rosary road Young Mrs. 14 Brunswick road
villas, Aylsham road Wilton John, 28 Cambridge street Young Neil Charles, 79 1\ewmarket rd
Wh1te George, The Grange, Eatun Winkel John, 5 Dereham road Youngham Herbert, rs Grove st. nth
White Misses, 76 Chapelfield road Winter Ambrose, 87 West Pottergate st Youngman J ames \Villiam, Portland
WhiLe Mrs.28.tledford st.SouthHeigham Winter George, II7 Dereham road villa, 1\ ewmarket road
White Richard Wcntworth, Chester Winter Jarncs, 12 Oxford street Youngs John, Richmond hl. Bracondale
house, St. Giles road Winter Jas.Jn.IIeigham ho.Heigham rd

COM:\IERCIAL. Addison Renjamin, wheelwright, Magdalen street


Abbott Edward J. auctioneer, St. Peter's street, Mancroft Addison William, hair dresser, 67 Chapel street, Crook's pl
Abbott Henry Dyball, The Star P.H. Haymarket A die Elizabeth (Miss), confectioner, Foundry bridge, Prince
A bbott John, infants' shoe manufacturer, Pitt street & of Wales road
shopkeeper, Aylsham road Adie Frank, superintendent Soldiers' Home, Hosary road,
Abbs Charlotte (Mrs.), shopkeeper, 51 Chapel st. Crook's pl Thorpe Hamlet
Abbs lsaac, greengrocer, I37 Magdalen street Ager Geurge, bricklayer, II2 Calvert street
Abel James William, baker, 68 Magdalen street Aggas Robert James, Mitre tavern, Earlham road
AbelHichard, road contractor, 23 Quebec rd. Thorpe Hamlet Agricultural Hall (William Hunter, sec.), I Castle meadow
Abel Thomas, haulier, go Hall road, New Lakenharn Aimes Albert, jeweller, 3Q Timber Hill street
Abel Waiter, saddler, Cattle market Alden Charles Frederick, last maker, 27 Her street
Absolon Edward Manby, shopkeeper, II2 Heigham street Alden Edward Robert, baker, I27 Oak street
Acock William, grocer &c. 107 Dcreham road Alden Mark, shoe maker, I9 Adelaide street
Adams John Benjamin, travelling draper, 67 Dereham road Alderson Geo. beer retlr. & shopkpr. 9 Howard st. Grove rd
Ad cock&. Son, tobacco & cigar manufacturers; specialities, Alderson William Hy. bricklayer, 28 St. Andrew's Bridge st
"Maracaibo" cigars, "Sure Shot" ditto; "Blaek Prince" Alderton \'\'illiam, trimming warehouse, Swan lane
& "Standard" mixture tobaccos, Queen street, Tomb- Aldis Arthur Ed ward, shopkeeper, 66 "'ellington road
land ; branch, Back of the Inns Aldous & Co. picture frame makers, 2 Rampant Horse street
Adcock Edward Oberlin, nurseryman, Uplands, Eaton Aldollil William John, Steam Packet P.H. I9I, & earthen-
Adcock Henry, shopkeeper, 242 Heigham street ware dealer 2o6, King street

DIRECTORY.] NORFOLK. NORWICH. 533
Aldous John Talbot, draper, 99 Ber street r Ashton, Gre3n, Matthews & Co. (James Lawrence ~esbitt
.Aldred Charlotte (Mrs.), shopkeeper, 19 Elm hill Barnard, manager), s'ate, tile, brick, cement, drain pipe
Aldred Sarah Hudson (Mrs.), baker, 10 Stafford street & general building material merchants, Bank plain
Aldridge Edward, shopkeeper, 74 Ber street Ashworth John, baker &c. I Russell street, North Heigham
Aldridge William, shopkeeper, I6 Trafalgar street, New Asylum & School for the Blind, basket & mat manufacturers
Lakenham (Jn.Shave, sec. & supt.; Mrs. Shave, matrn. ), Magdalen st
Alexander Francis, Wild Man P.H. Bedford st. St. Andrew's Atherton Harry Edward, plumber, 99 St. George's Middle st
Alexander Geo. Hy. carpenter & joiner, Chapel st.Crook's pl Atherton Thomas, grocer & draper, 8o Magdalen street
Alexander Matilda (Mrs.), dress maker, 46 Cow gate street Atkins Frederick Waiter, shoe maker, 24 Lower Goat lane
Alexander Thomas, sewing machine agt. 22 Castle meadow Atkinson Elizh. (Mrs.), White Cottage P. H. 26 Philadelphia la
Algar Jabez, bnkher, 64 St. Stephen's street Atkinson Shuttleworth, draper, 17 Lawson rd. Magdalen rd
Alger Robert Henry, shopkeeper, 32 Magpie road Atkinson Thomas, rag & metal dealer, St . .Mary's plain
All Hallows Mis..~ion House (branch of Ditchingham) (Sister Atkinsou Thomas, Rosemary P.ll. I Rosemary lane
in charge), Palace plain · Atterbury Charlotte Ada (Miss),ladies' hair dr~'!r. 25The Walk
Allan Edward, British Lion P.H. Coburg street Attewell James, boot & shoe manufacturer, Philadelphia lane
Allan Henry Ernest, private tutor, 9 Palace plain Attoe John, furniture broker, 20 Wensum street
A!len & Daws, practical watch & clock makers & jewellers, Augood Charles Albert, wholesale & retail sugar boiler &
silversmiths & opticians, 34 London street confectioner (established I843), 30 Rupert street, South
Alien A. J. & C. nurserymen & fiori~ts, Dereham road Heigham & branch, I7 Palace street, Norwich, & opposite
Allen Arthnr, butcher, 6o Botolph street .Fishmarket steps, Saturdays only
Alien Bryant, dyer & cleaner, 8 Scales green Austen Edward, hair dresser, 35 London street
Alien Frederick, lime burner; lim~ supplied in large or small Austm George, greengrocer, 13A, Heigham street
q nantities, Dereham road Avey Thomas, wholesale & retail grocer & tea dealer (esta-
Alien Godfrey, photographer, Rampant Horse street blished I85o), I7 Ber street
Allen Henry, fishmonger, I93 King street Avis John, bricklayer, rr2 Belvoir str.,et
Alien John, Cupid & Bow P.H. 23 Palace plain Ay res IIannah (':'.1rs. ), reg. off. for servants,38 All Saints' grn
Allen Joseph, surgeon, I9 Tombland Ayres 'Williarn Henry, Sardinian tavern, 34 St. Stephen's st
Alien Robert, nurseryman, Wroxham Ayres William Spelman, commrcl. traveller, 40 Earlham rd
Alien B.obert, Trafford Arms P. H. Grove road Back & Co. wine & spirit merchants, 3 & 4 Haymarket;
All en Sarah (Miss), music teacher, 45 Calvert street White Lion street & Prince of \Vales road ; & at 28 Market
Allen Sarah Ann (Mrs.), fishmonger, I5 Fish market place & Midillegate street, Yarmouth
Allen Thomas (exors. of), millers, corn, cake, seed & coal Back Ernily (Mrs.), pork butcher, .SB Bethel street
merchants, Quay side ; & at Hardingham Back William Henry, solicitor, see Francis & Back
Alien William, grocer, 73 SL. Augustine's street Bacon Thomas & Co. grocers, I Pitt street
Alien \'Villiam, nurseryman, Mount Pleasant Bacon Anthony, Gardeners' Arms P.H WaterloJ road
Allen Williarn, printer, 5 Rising Sun lane Bacon George, baker, 48 Bethel street
Allison James, fishmonger, 26 Botolph street Bacon Henry, solicitor, see Sadd & Bacon
Allman Henry, shopkeeper, 17 Union street Bacon Jemima (Mrs.), upholstress, 9 St. Martin's lane
Allman Henry Francis, hoot & shoe manufacturer; uppers Bacon J osiah N. waterproof cover & sack manufr. 27 Charing
& boots of every description made to order, 8 Red Lion Bacon Robert, Barn tavern, & jobmaster ; pas~ horses, cabs,
street & eng:lish & foreign fruiterer, greengrocer &c. gigs, waggonettes &c. ; funerals furnished, I Dereham road
ro & I2 Red Lion street Bacon Thomas, grocer, 1 Pitt street
Allthorpe & Co. bill posters, Lady's lane Bagley William, builder, IO Elm hill
Ames J a ne (}irs. ), shopkeeper, Ber Street gate Bagsha-w G. & J. chemical manure manufacturers, bone
Ames Robert, wheelwright, Chapelfield loke crushers, saa merchants &c. ; head oftice & works, Mag-
Amies Renjamin, parish clerk of St. Mark's, r Hawes place, dalen gates; branch works, Haddiscoe
New Lakenham Ba_S{shaw G. & R. U. paper manufacturers, rag, skin &
Amies Harry, Hope P.H. St. Stephen's road metal merchants, game & poultry salesmen, pheasant,
Amies Henry, baker, I50 Heigham street, game, poultry & dog foori manufrs. & corn mers. St. Miles
Amies Stephen, sole sewer, 2IA, Mu~pole street Bagshaw Abraham George, fishmonger, 68 St. Stephen's st
Amis Lewis H. chief clerk at Norfolk Constabulary office, Bagshaw Jsph. rag, iron, metal & bottle mer. Magdalen st
County Police station, Castle meadow Bailey Amelia (Mrs.), Lamb inn, Old Haymarket
Amiss John, fly proprietor, St. Giles street Bailey Anthony, grocer, 172 Queen's road •
Amiss Robert., shnpkeeper, 22 Quay side Bailey Charles Jm;eph, collector of poor rates for No. :r dis-
Amiss Stephen Thirkettle, Ironmongers' Arms P. H. Lobster la trict, 45 Chapelfield road
Am1ss Walterl<'redk.hair drssr. & tobacconist,ro3 Dereham rd Bailey Elijah Thomas, carpenter, St. Benedict's alley
Anderson Britain Ueorge, Castle tavern, I Spitalfields Bailey Elizabeth (Mrs.), dress maker, 171 Queen's ro:~.d
Andreazzi Domenico, confectioner, Lower Goat lane Bailey George, shoe maker, 2 S:. Swithin's alley
Andrews Hros. wholesale & retail chemists, 34 ColPgate st Baker Charles, proprietor of public baths, 14 Bank street
Amlrews Ed ward, shoa maker, Cock yd. Upper St. Giles st Baker George, sl::.opkeeper, 85 Gladstone street
Andrews Elizth. (Mrs. ),Old Steam Packet P. H. Castle meadow Baker Sarah Ann lM rs. ), registry offiee for servant..'l, 14Bank st
Andrews George, Belle Vue ta,·ern, St. l'hilip's road Baker \\'illiam, Horse Shoes P.H. 2I Pdlace street
Andr<ms Geor,2.·e WalL plasterer, 87 York st. South Heigham Baldrey John, market gardener, Aylsham road, Upper
Andrews Henry, marine store dealer, 147 Her street Hellesdon & Duke's Palace wharf
Andrews Samuel, trarelling drap2r, 29 Chapelfielcl road Baldry Charles, dyer & cleaner, 67 Magdalen street
Andrews William, greengrocer, 48 St. Giles road Baldry Harriette (Miss), dairy, 59 Magdalen street
Annison Alfred, fishmonger, 77 Lower Westwick street Ilaldry Henry, Bak~rs' Arms P.H. & stone mason, 183
Annison William, fishmonger, 5 Fish market Heigham street
Archer Henry, furniture dealer, IS Ber street Baldry James, tobacconist, 57 -:\Iagdalen street
Aris John, clerical supervisor of inland revenue, Tombland Baldry Robert, land agent, auctioneer & vahwr, 4 Tombland
Armes Isaac, fried fish dealer, 74 Oak street Baldwin Edwin, merchant tailor & universal outfitter,
Armes John, The George & Dragon P.H. Haymarket hosier, glover, shirt maker & hatter, ro, I 1 & I2 White
Armes Philip, 1ish curer, .Fish market Lion street & 23 & 24 Back of the Inns
Armcs Philip, shopkeeper, 56 Barrack street BaldwinGeo. Beverley, WilliamlV. P. H.99 King's st. Crook's pl
Armes \'\'illiam, carter, Io8 Cowgate street Baldwin Rachael (:lEss), laundry, I8 Philadelphia lane
Armes \'\'illiam, Sussex Arms P.H. & fish curer, 40 & 42 St. Baldwin Robert, news agent, I3I St. Benedict's street
Augustine's street Bales Ernest Wm. saddle & harnes~ maker, 19 Magdalen st
Arnold James & Co. hosiers & glorers, 70 dt. Giles street & Bales Frederick, corn. travell~r, 41 Denmark rd. Earlham rd
silk manufacturers, Cherry lane, Pitt st rcet Bales James, cowkeeper, Mill lane, New Catton
Arnold A. H. brewer, maltster & wine & spirit merchant, Bales Waiter, whitesmith, 93 Pottergate street
St. Margaret's brewery Ball Frank Sales, baker, I6o Oak street
Arnup Ann (Mrs.), pork butcher, I4I Ber street Balls Geo. boot & shoe maker, N orthcote rd. Sprowston rd
Arthur Arthur, Engineers' tavern, St. Julian street Balls Jonas, whitesmith, Upper Goat lane
Arthurton Joseph, butcher, 58 Barrack street Balls Rebecca (Mrs.), wardrobe dealP.r, IT4 Tiukler's lane
Arthnrton H.obert John, Bcss of Bedlam P. H. & wheelwright, Balls William, baker, 180 Old Palace road
8o Oak street Balls William, grocer, r St. Augustine street, & 13 Water-
Artis Ann & Ellen (Misses), dress makers, 26 Distillery st loo road, N P.W Cat ton
Artis Benjamin, £rocer, 70 Oak street Balls William, shopkeeper, 95 Oak street
Artis Edwin, working jeweller, 18 Castle meadow Balls William, umbrJlla maker, 28 Magdalen street
Artis Sarah (Miss), dress maker, 29 l'ottergate Bandy William Henry, cab proprietor, 34 St. Stephen's sq
Artis Thomas, grocer & draper, 6o & 62 West Pottergate st Bane George, boot & shoe maker, 35 Peacock street
Ashfield Waiter, shopkeeper, 79~ King street Bangay George, Catherine Wheel P.H. 6I St. Augustine st
534 NORWICH. NORFOLK. [KELLY'S

Bangay Richard, cabinet maker, Museum court, St. An- Barton Hornor, shopkeeper, 35 Cowgate street
drew's Broad street Barton .Mary Ann (Mrs.), shopkeeper, Cava1ry st . .1\'Ionsehold
Banham William & Co. grocers & dealers in wines & spirits, Bartoh Samuel J. M, D., M.ch. physician, Surrey street
15 Haymarket Bartram Alice (Miss),tishmngr.g Trafalgarst.NewLakenham
Banham George Joseph, blacksmith, 7 Old Palace road Barwell & Sons, wine & spirit importers & mers . .St. Step hen's
Eanham Lydia (Mrs.), wardrobe dealer, 6o Ber street st. & 5r London st. ; & 19 Conduit st. Bond st. London w
Banks & Co. tailors, woollen drapers, hatters & shirt makers, Barwick Henry, baker, 78 Barrack street
69 London street & Bank plain Barwood, Son & Co. dairy, 55 St. Stephen's street
Banks Isaiah Fentham, watch maker, 64 Rose lane Barwood Benjamin, importer of foreign corn & corn & cake
Banks J oseph, restaurant, I5 Rampant Horse street merchant, St. Stephen's street & St. J ulian's wharf, King
Bannister Wm.apartmts. 23 & ~4 Clarence rd. ThorpeHamlet street; & East Norfolk roller mills, Horstead
Barbee John, slaie & have! maker, 57 Fishgate street Barwood Henry James, dairy, 40 St. Giles road
Barber Alice & Ellen (Misses), ladies' boarding & day school, Base A. (Mrs.), family boot & shoe maker, 20 London street
Gothic house, Chapelfield road Base Georgo, ironmonger, 51 Pitt street
Barber John Lee & Co. millers (steam), corn & seed mer- Base James, Farriers' Arms P.H. 7 Pottergatestreet
chants, St. Swithin's Steam mills, Lower Westwick street Base Joseph, fishmonger, 28 Lower Goat road
& Yarmouth; & oil mills, Lowestoft; & maltsters, at Rasey John, market gardener, Aylsham rd. Up. Hellesdon
Brand on Bassingthwaigbte Frederick Henry, grocer, & post otlice, 37
Barber Frederick, fishmonger, 32 St. Paul's plain West End street
Barber George, tailor, 22 Her street Bassingthwaight Wm. boot & shoemaker, 83 Up. St. Giles st
Barber George Arthur, Bakers' Arms P.H. & baker, St. Batchelor Alfred Williams H.C.L.,M.A,Clarendon House School
Leonards road, Thorpe Hamlet (boarding & day) for the sons of gentlemen; pupils pre~
Barber James, tailor, I4 Wymer street pared for university exams. & public schools, Unthanks
Barber James, William the FourLh P.H. I08 St. George's road. See advertisement
Middle street Batten Charles, general draper, 38 London street
Barber Jane (Miss), butcher, 54 St. Giles' road Bateman Sir Frederic M.D., J<'.R.C. P.Lond. physician, & senior
Barber Louil', coach builder, St. Martin's lane physician to the Norfolk & Norwich Hospital, Upper
Barber Robert, fishmonger, 37 Fishgate street St. Giles street
Barber ·waiter, boot maker, 47 Mill lane, New Catton Bates Charles Bothwell, clerical officer of inland revenue,
Barber William, baker, 89 Southwell road, New Lakenham Tom bland
Barclay Hugh Gurney, city treasurer, Bank plain Bates Joshua, fishmonger, I29 Magdalen street
Hardwell Henry, upholsterer, Queen street, Crook's place Hates Mrs. wardrobe dealer, Rosary road
Barfield Henry, grindery dealer, I46 Magdalen street Batson Charles, basket maker, I23 Barrack street
Barker Agnes (Miss), registry offices, 2 Timber Hill street Batter bee Waiter, tailor, 43 Magdalen street
Barker Albert, tailor, 2 Hrowne street, North Heigham Bavin & Daynes,solicitors,OpieHouse chmbrs,Castle meadow
Barker Artbur, hair dresser, I Quay side Bavin Benjamin (firm, Bavin & Daynes), solicitor & com-
Barker Caleb, land agent, Bank chambers missioner for oaths, Opie House chambers, Castle meadow
Barker George, cab proprietor, 19 Princes street Baxter & Co. (late Corrick & Baxter), wholesale & retail
Barker Georgc, pork butcher, 54 Bridge street, St. Gcorge's cabinet manufaeturer,:, upholsterers & house furnishers,
Barker Harry, Ribs of Beef P.H. 26 ~Wensum street I8 & 22 Colegate street
Barker John, dairy, 3 Unthanks road Baxter George, importer of wines, spirits & cigars, & ale
Barker Robert, Duke of Mar! borough P. H. 29 Fishgate street & porter merchant, 20 The Walk & Davey place
Barker Thomas, jobbing gardener, 83 Bel voir street Baxter Henry William, Peacock P.H. St. Stephen's plain
Barker Walter James, outfitter, 6 Davey place Bayes Robert, carpenter, 12 Kimberley street
Barker William John, wool merchant, St. George's Middle st Bayes Hobert Kempton, tailor, I5 Orford hill
Barley J. R. & Co. accountants & auditors, 8 White Lion st Bayley Archibald, wbitesmith, I7 Trory street
Barley Kate (Mrs.), milliner, 7 White Lion street Bayliss Laura Elizabeth (2\Iiss ), ladies' school, Lower close
Barley William James, gasfitter, 8r Unthanks road Bayne Arthur, watch maker, 12 St. Gregory's alley
Barnard, Bishop &. Barnards Limited, original Beales Chas. Jn. Golden Can P.H. 26 St. George's Middle st
inventors & manufacturers of machine made wire netting Beales Edward, miscellaneous dealer, 45 Botolpb street
& slow combustion stGves, carved wood mantelpieces &c. ; Beales Peter, Earl of Leicester P.H. Dereham road
all garden requisites; ranges, gates & fencing, engineers, Bear Richard, baker, 114 Adelaide street, Dereham road
iron founders & workers in wrought & cast iron& poultry Eeare & Sons, tanners, Heigham street '
& kennel appliances. Prize medals, London, 1851 & Beatley & Son, hatters & hosiers, 22 London street
r862; Vienna, 1873; Philadelphia, r876, three awards; Beaumont James, shoe maker, l'ottergate street
Paris, 1878, four awards; patronized by her 1\Iajesty the Beck Edmund & Sons, land & estate agents & valuers, City
Queen & by special appointment to H.R.H. the Prince of chambers, Prince of Wales road; & Chapel street, Lynn
Wales, Norfolk iron works, Norwich ; & 9I to 95 Queen Beck C. Smedley, architect & surveyor, 9 Grove road west
Victoria street, London E.C. Telegrams, "Barnards, Beck Daniel Herbcrt, White Horse P.H. Haymarket
Norwich" & "Barnards, London" Beckett Frederiek, boot & shoe maker, 19 Coslany street
Barnard Alexander, teacher of music, 57 Vauxhall street Beech Arthur Emmerson, nurseryman. florist & rose grower;
Barnard Alfred George, collector of poor rates, 5th district, cut flowers, wreaths, crosses, bouquets, greenhouse &
36 Thorpe road bedding plants, Bell Acre nursery, Dereham rd. See advt
Barnard Charles, french polisher, ro St. Lawrence lane Beecheno Charles James, manager Stamford, Spalding &
Barnard G. S. (:Mrs.), boarding house, 78 Prince ofWalesrd Boston Banking Co. Limited, Victoria chambers
Barnard George William Girling (firm, Cross, Barnard & Belding, Crisp & Co. Limited, wholesale grocers, manufac-
Cross), solr. & commissicmer for oaths, & deputy clerk turing confectioners & wine & spirit merchants, I .Magda-
to the guardians of Norwich Incorporation, Surrey street len-street & 14 Wensum street ·
Barnard J ames Lawrence N csbitt, manager to Messrs. Bell Ambrose Winter & Son, land & estate agents & valuers,
Ashton, Green, Matthcws & Co. Bank plain 31 Bedford street, London street
Barnard John, builder, I Peter's street, DPreharn road Bell Georgina (Mrs.), draper, 37 St. Augustine street
Barnard Sophia (Mrs.), coffee house, St. Mary's plain Bell JamP~'I Henry, Flying Dutchman P.H. Trafalgar street,
Barnes Alfred, agent for Barrow, Digby, Roundwood, New Lakenham
Alma, Pilsley, Low Stubben & Woollaton Collieries, 83 Belle Vue House School (James Charter B.A. principal),
Thorpe road, Tborpe Hamlet Eaton park, near Norwich. See advertisement
Barnes Emma A lice (Mrs. ),cardboard box makr.Rosemary la Bellin Marie (Mdlle. ), professor of french, 3 Bel voir street
Barnes Harriet (Mrs.),mrkt.gardener,Hall rd.KewLakenham Benest James Smyth A.M.I.C.E. civil engineer, Gruve house,
Barnes Harry, carpenter, 130 Cambridge street . Newmarket road; & 8o Coleman street, London EC
Barncs Henrietta (Mrs.), dress maker, 67 Heigham road Bennett Benj. shoe ma. I I Coach & Horses st_ Sth.Heigham
Barnes James Robert, builder, I Brunswick New road Bennett Henry, tailor, 44 St. Augustine street
Barnes John, iron founder, St. Miles foundry, Colegate street Bennctt Samuel, accountant, St. Peter's street, Mancroft
Harnes John Edwards, seed grower & merchant, The Bennett Sarah (Mrs.), shopkeeper, 102 Cowgate street
Great Eastern seed stores, 9 Exchange street Bensly & Bolingbrok~, solicitors, The Close
Barnes Wm. King's Head P.H. 49 St. George's Middle street BenslyWilliam Thomas LL.D. (firm, Bensly & Bolingbroke),
Barracks (for Cavalry) (J. McCulloeh, barrack sergeant), solicitor, notary public, commissioner for oat.hs & deputy
- Pocktborpe registrar of the diocese, bishop's secretary & chapt~r clerk,
Barrett Henry, farmer, Church farm, Lakenbam The Close
Barrett Hy. Wm. Trafalgar P.H. Trafalgar st. NewLakenbam Beresford Thomas, district superintendent to the United
Barrett John; King of Prussia P.H. Lakenham Kingdom Temperance & General Provident Institution,
Barrett William, Thorn tavern, Her street agent for the Railway Pas.<>engers' Assurance Co. Royal
BarronWalterRobt.Roebuck inn,Southwell rd.NewLakenhm Fire Insurance Co. & for Milner's fire proof safe, Bank
Barrow llenry, grocer, 62 St . .Stephen's street chambers ; & 32 ·wellesley road, Great Yarmouth
],)!RECTORY. J· NORFOLK. NORWICH. 535
:Bernasconi Mary (Mrs.), fishing tackle dealer, Foundry Blyth llorace, shopkeeper, 63 Bridge street, St. George's
bridge, Prince of Wales road Blyth Israel, Park tavern, Unthanks road
Berry Frederick, coal dealer, 16 Salford street, Union place Blyth John, boot & shoe maker, 24 Oak street
Berry George, brush manufacturer, 35 Calvert street Rlyth John, bricklayer, 2I John street
Berry George Herbert, confectioner, 8x Upper St. Giles st Blyth Josiah Timothy, brush maker, 90 Magdalen street
Berwick William, shopkeeper & brush maker, 33 Fishgate st Blyth Matthew, shopkeeper, 143 Cowgate street
Bessey John, pork butcher &c. I xo St. Benedict's street Blyth Richard, boot & shoe maker, 208 Heigllam street
Best Herbert, clerical supervisor inland revenue, Tombland Blyth William, Great Eastern hotel, Foundry bridge, Prince
Bethel Hospi tal(Sir Frederic Bateman M. D. visiting physician; of Wales road
James Fielding M D. resident medical officer; H. A. Pep- Blyth Wilham, watch maker, 34 All Saint8' green
per, master; Mrs. M. E. Pepper, matron; F. Horner, Blythe Edward, wood turner, Upper Goat lane
clerk), :Bethel street Boardman Edward & Son F.R.I.B.A. architects & surveyors
Betts Alfred, marine store dealer, 97 Heigham street & architects to the Norfolk & Norwich llospital, Queen st
Betts Arthur J. manufacturing joiner, Belvoir steam joinery Boast George, butcher, 55 Distillery street
works, Eel voir street. See advertisement Boast H.obert John, working jeweller, 53 St. Benedict's st
Betts Clara (Miss), fancy draper, 63 Trafalgar street, New Boatwright George, fishmonger, 6 Bridewell alley
Lakenham Boddy Anthony David, bricklayer, I8 Little Home street
Bett~ Elizabeth (Mrs.), dress ma. 6x St. George's Middle st Boden Peter, shopkeeper, 30 Pitt street
Betts George (late Cubitt), retail & agricultural chemist & Bolingbroke Leonard Geo. solicitr. see Bensly & Bolingbroke
druggist & agent for the West of England Fire & Life In- Bolingbroke Lewis Errington, solicitor & clerk to the income
surance Co. 25 The Walk & land tax commissioners of Norwich city, Castle cham-
Betts Henry, milliner & fancy draper, 4 Magdalen street bers, Opie street
Betts John, florist, Allen's lane, Newmarket road Bolton Curtis, baker & shopkeeper, I07 Newmarket street
Betts John Thomas, coffee rooms, 57 St. Augustine street Bolton George, painter, I .Chapelfield loke, Ber street
Betts Robert, shopkeeper, Magdalen road Bolton Thomas, draper, 15 Vraterloo road
Betts Thomas, teacher of music, 2I Paragon street Bond William & Son, civil & military tailors & habit makers,
Betts William, shopkeeper, 138 Heigham street 58 London street
Beverley & Burton, surgeons, 52 St. Giles street Bond Rt. Herne,linen drpr. Ber st. & 62 Bridge ~t. St. George's
Bexfield Richard, grocer, IO Trory street Bond William, photographer, I Sprowston rd. & Bank plain
Bickers ·william, cab proprietor, 68 York street Bond William Valentine, secondhand bookseller, 40 Bridge
Bidewell Charles, shopkeeper, 28 Dereham road street, St.. .Andrew's
Bignell Charles, Two Necked Swan P.H. Market place Bond William Wade, shopkeeper, Albert st. Thorpe Hamlet
Bignold Ed ward Samuel, solicitor, coroner for the city & Bonser E. & Son, tea tasters & coffee merchants & oriental
county of Norwich & for the liberty of the dean & warehouse & direct importers, The Walk, Market place
chapter & clerk to the Charity trustees, Lady's lane Boon Polly'fhirza(}iiss),dlr. in fancy goods,63St.Stephen's st
Bilham James Henry, greengrocP.r, I79 Rupert street Boot Riveters' & Fmishers' Trades Union (Jarnes Mason,
Bingham Caroline (Mrs.), shopkeeper, 240 Heigham street sec.), 57 Cal vert street
Bingham Frederick, butcher, 63 Ber street Booth .Alfd. & Co. hatters, 40 London st. & I I 5 St. Benedict's st
Bingham James Thomas, insurance agent, 22 Osborne Booty Edward, greengrocer, 54 Barrack street, St. James'
VIllas, Ay ]sham road Borking Thomas l'atrick, shopkeeper, 59 St. Benedict's st
Bird Eliza (Miss), dress maker, 54 Trinity street Borrett William,market gardener,Aylsham rd. Up. Hellesdon
Bird J<:liza (Mrs.), fruiterer, 7 5 St. Benedict's street Boston ·william, pawnbrnk:;r, 6 & TI Orford street
Bird Waiter E. sanitary engineer, plumber, glazier, painter, Dos well & Suns, wiue, spi1·il. & cor ..1 mers. I 8 Magdalen street
paperhanger & distempere.r, domestic, ecclesiastical & Boswell William, upholsterer, 48 London street
general house decorator, 20 Upper Snrrr.y street Boughen Smith, hosier, gl.over, batter, shirt maker &c. 10 &
Bird "\Yilliam, station master, Trowse Millgate I2 London street
Birt Alfred Richard, collector of inland revenue & distribu- Boughton Harry, fishmonger, xo Fish market
tor of stamps, Tom bland Boug-hton Samuel, hair dresser, 26 Fishgate street
Bishop John & Son, gasfitters, Redwell street Boulger Francis, dental surgeon, Dereha.m roaO.
Blackhurn Edward, tailor, 6 Exchange street Boulger J obn J oseph, dentist, 114 Bel voir street
Blackie & Son Limited (Charles Henry Watson, agent), Boulter Alfred, perambulator dealer, I35 Rupert street
publishers, 67 London street Boulton & Paul, horticultural builders, hot water engi-
Blackwood Samuel, Volunteer Stores P.H. Chapelfield road neers, iron founders, manufacturers of wire netting, iron
Blake .Arthur "\Villiam, watch rmtker, 8o Ber street buildings, poultry, kennel & stable appliances, iron gal-
Blake Esther (Miss), shopkeeper, I06 Bel voir street vanillers &c. ; fencing, hurdles & entrance gates, water &
Blake Henry M.A. (firm, Keith, Blake & Co.), solicitor, per- liquid manure carts, water barrows, garden chairs &c. Hose
petual commissioner & commissioner for oaths, The Lane works
Chantry, Theatre street Boulton I<'rances Elizabeth (Miss), china & glass dealer, 134
Blake Horace Lynn, Castle hotel, Castle meadow St. Benedict's street
Elake John, hair dre;;ser, 176 Old Palace road Boulton Rohert, furniture dealer, 142 Ber street
Blake Joseph, smith, Charing cross Bower Edward Dale, butcher, 70 Rupert street
Blake Robert, brick maker, Queen's road Bower Thomas, shoe maker, I8 \\'cstlegate street
Blake 'Valter, butcher, 16 Bridewell alley Bowhill & Co. leather rnerchants & boot & shoe manufac-
Rlake William, jun. chimney sweeper, St. Stephen's plain · turers, Swan lane & Bridewell alley
Blanchflower EdwinRt.Black Horse P.H.Finketst.Queen's rd Bowhill Obadiah Henry, family & military boot & shoe
Blanchflower Mary .Ann (Mrs.), Royal Exchange P.H. 38 maker, 65 London street
Julian street Bowles Jonas & Henry, timber merchants, Home street,
Bland Henry, Red Rose P.H. Back of the Inns North Heigham
Blazeby Horace Henry, solicitor, St. Peter's street, Mancroft Bowles Samuel, watch maker, I28 King street
Blazey John, city missionary, 12 Mancroft st. Dereham road Bowthorpe Diana (Mrs.), baker, 79 Queen st. Crook's place
Bliss .Eakson, baker, w8 Bull Close road Boyes Andrew, travelling draper, 2 Mancroft street
Bliss R. Lee, accountant, land, estate, house & emigration Boys' Home (branch of Norwich union) (Arthur Crook,
agent, appraiser, valuer, auditor, ship & insurance medical officer; Edwin Smith, master; Mrs. Mary .Ann
broker, business transfer agent & rent & debt collector, Smith, matron), St. Faith's lane
I2 Princes street. See advertisement Bradbury & Co. Limited, sewing machine makers (J. W.
lllofield Thomas Calthorpe M. A. barrister-at-law, recorder of Pond, manager), Exchange street
Ipswich & chancellor of the diocese of Norwich, 13 Upper Bradford James, beer retailer, 28 Coslany street
King street Bradford Willia.m, shopkeeper, 134 Heigham street
Blomtield Frederivk William, butcher, I & 3 Palace street Bradley Elizabeth (Mrs ), lodging house, 27 St Stephen's sq
Bloom Francis St.ephen & Son, horse hair manufrs. Oak st Bragg John, commercial traveller, 71 St. Philip's road
Bloomfield George, shopkeeper, 30 Union street Branch J nsepb, boot man ufr. 'Vi !Jet ts court, Ten Bell lane
Bloomfield George, Suffolk hotel, Market place Branch Philip, Lord Nelson P.H. Dereham road
Blower George, marine store dealer, 92 St. Benedict's street Brasnett \Villiam, coal merchant, 26 Charles st. Dereham rd
Blowers Arthur Philip, shopkeeper, St. John's street, Rose la Bream Jeremiah, sewer inspector to the Norwich corpora-
Blummer Charles, coffee house, 51 Oak street tion, 35 Orchard street
Blyth & Martin, milliners, 38 Vauxhall street Bream William, bricklayer,73 Nelson street,North Heigham
Blyth Alfred, shopkeeper, 133 Magdalen street Bream William, shopkeeper, IS West Pottergate street
Blyth Arthur Evan, sawing mills, Oak street Rrea.me John, coal dealer, Holls lane, Hall rd.~ewLakenham
Blyth Edward, Cabinet Makers' Arms P.H. & wood turner, Breed William, shopkeeper & last maker, 27 Pitt street
6 Red wall street Breeze Samuel,carriage builder; repairs of every description
Blytb Edwin Arthur, sawing mills, Oak street 11ndertaken & carried out under personal supervision ;
Blyth Ernest Egbert LL.D. solicitor, Castle chambrs. Opie st estimates given if required, St. Augustme's street
'
536 NORWICH. NORFOLK. [KELLY'S

Rreese Robert, saddle & harness maker, 26 Magdalen street Brown Samuel, grocer, I63 Magdalen street
Breeze Arthur Frostdyke, plumber, 61 Magdalen street Brown Samuel, The Sportsman P.H. 108 Barrack street
Brercton Richard, carpenter, 41 Eagle walk, Newmarket rd Brown Waiter, Wounded Hart P.H. St. Peter's st. Mancroft
Brett Jonathan & Sons, wholesale & retail cabinet makers Brown W alter Christopher, builder, New Lakenham
& upholsterers, complete house furnishers &c. 26 St. Brown William, boot & shoe maker, 32 Oak street
Benedict's street Brown William, whitesmith, 5 St. Andrew's hill
BrettFredk. PortlandArmsP. H.47Southwell rd. N ewLakenhm Brown Wm. Christr. Trowel & Hammer P.H. St. Step hen's rd
Erett Henry Peckover, tailor, 43 St. Peter's st. Dereham rd Hrowne Abram, tailor, 12 Hethel street
Hrott J<.hn Waiter, :\1arquis of Lothian P.H. Lothian street Browne Amelia (Mrs.), apartments, 3r Bethel street
Brett Reginald Daines, greengrocer, 33 Princes street Browne Arthur, plasterer, 45 Dereham road
Brctt Sarah (:\irs.), dress maker, 34 Union street Hrowne Caroline Rebecca (Mrs. ),dress mkr.98Chapelfield rd
Brett Wilham, Flower Pot P.H. & boat builder, Flower Pot Browne Charles Frederick, hair dresser, I3 Red Lion street
yard, Oak street Browne Charles Thomas, boot & shoe maker, 3 Hethel street
Hrett "\>\'illiam, shoe maker, 16 Peacock street llrowne Ernest \Villiam, boys' school, 34 Cambridge street
Brewster \\'illiam Alien, bricklayer, 21 St. Saviour's lane Browne Frederick, tailor, 9 Colegate street
Bridgman John Brooks L. D. s. R. c. rrel. surgeon dentist, 40 St. Brow ne Henry, Ten Bells P. H. 96 St. Benedict's street
Giles street Browne John, livery stables, St. Peter's street, Mancroft
Brigg George Samuel, fruiterer,67 Bridge street, St. George's Browne John Richard, cutler, 32 Timber Hill street
& Foundry bridge, Prince of Wales road Hrowne Leander Anstead, Shire Hall tavern & commercial
Briggs Andrew, horse collar maker, 64 Oak street inn & livery stables (dinners & parties provided for);
Briggs Edward Hugh John, watch maker, Bridewell alley plate & cutlery on hire, Castle hill
JJriggs \Valter Alexander, grocer, 35 Wingfield road & Browne Robert, Keel & Wherry P.H. 2q King- street
draper, 3 Barrack street Hrowne Susan (Mrs), Crooked Billet r.H. 12 Heigham st
Briggs William, shopkeeper, 30 Globe street, Union place Browne Waiter (Mrs.), dress maker, 4 \Villow lane
Brighten Charles George, baker & <~onfectioner, Eagle walk, Browne Waiter Frederick, surnyor, 4 I Exchange street
Newmarket road ; 5 Davey place & 74 St. Stephen's street Browne \\'alter Frcdk. jun.lithographer,Io8 St. Benedict's st
Brighten John Joseph, shopkeeper, 134 Old Palace road Brow ne William J ames, shopkeeper ,44 St. George's)liddle st
Brighton George (late T. L. Martin), umbrella & parasol Brundall William, Coach & Horses P.H. Red Lion street
manufacturer, 44 London street Brundell J oseph, Queen Victoria P. H. 53 Pottergate street
Brightwell Elizabeth (Mrs.), basket maker, 23 Charing cross Brundish Joseph,Queeu Victoria P.H.67Queen's st.Crook's pl
Brighty Rebecca (Mrs.), baker &c. 76 Northumberland Bryant Amelia (~:liss), dress maker, 19 Cah·ert slreet
street, North Heigham • Bryant George, shopkeeper, 63 St. Giles hill
Brighty Robert, shopkeeper, 4 Suffolk street Bryant Samuel, beer retailer, grocer & butcher, 139 & I4I
Hrighty Robert, wheelwright, i"t. Stephen's Back street Northumberland street, North lleigham
Britcher Charles, shopkeeper, Aylsha1n road Buck John,Golden Lion P.H. St. John street, Madder market
Britcher Edward Thos. Albert tavern, 57 Devonshire street Buckenha.m Wm. hair dresser & tohacconist,Prince ofWalP~~ rd
Britcher Henry Thomas, Pineapple P.H. 47 St. Martin's lane Buckingham J. & Sons, family boot & shoe manufacturers,
British Empire Mutual Life Assurance Co. Limited (John 27 London street
n. Sluman, distriet snpt.), 5 Opie st.reet. See advert Buckle Isaac, Red House P.H. Timber Hill street
British & Foreig-n Bible Society (Rev. Henry Starmer), 12 Hugg .Eliza (Mrs.), hosier, 7 St. Gregory's alley
Cedar road, Thorpe Hamlet & (Revs. C. W. Claridge Bull Ellen (Mrs.), apartments,48Thorpe road, ThorpeHamlet
& W. A. McAllan, secs.) dep6t, 2 Haymarket Bull George, painter, 40 St. Stephen's street
.British Gas Light Company Lim. (Frederick E. Linging, Hull Jessie Emma (Miss), dress maker,6 Cathedral st. north
engineer & manager; Clement George Frost, chief clerk; Bullard &Sons,brewers,maltsters & winfl & spirit merchants,
Arthur Preston, solicitor) ; office, St. Step hen street ; Anchor brewery, St. Miles bridge
works,Bishop's bridge & St. Martin's-at-Palace & Gas bill, Bullard .Edwin Matthias, chief clerk to county court, 12
'l'borpe Hamlet Castle meadow
Brizell A lice (Mrs.), milliner, so Sussex street Bullard Henry, horse dealer, 167 Bull Close ro'ld
Brock Katc & CarmanEiiza(:\Tisses),dress makers,I9Trory st Bullard Joshua, florist & greengrocer, 59 Vauxhall street
Brock John 'Villiam, baker, 144 Her street Hullard Richard, horse dealer, 37 Bishop's Bridge road
Brock Samuel Henry, shopkeeper, I8 Botolph street Bullen Benjamin, watch maker, Bridcwell alley
Brock Stephen, coal & sand dealer, Butlers yard, Lower Bullen Fredk. lodging house, I 8 The Crescent, Chapelfield rd
Westwick street & Eastern & Midlands Railway coal Bullen Henry, house decorator,29 William street, St.Giles hl
depot, Heigham street Bull en John Goward, carpenter, 70 N a pier street
Brock Thomas Henjamin Smith, tailor, St. Augustine's st Bullen William Redgrave, watch maker & jeweller, 47 Lon-
Brookes Henrv John, professor of music, 46 St. Giles h1ll don street ; boot & shoe maker, '49 London street; &
Brooks & Fisher, linen & woollen drapers, II Rupert street, draper, 33 & 35 Magdalen street
South Heigham Bullock Hannah (:\>Iiss), dress maker, 92 Devonshire street
Brooks & Co. boot repairers, 29 St. Andrew's Broad street & llultitude A. G. wholesale builders' ironmonger & manufac-
15A, 'Vhite Lion street turers' agent, I I Theatre strf~et
Brooks James Blyth, smith & wheelwright, II7 Pott.ergate st Hul wer \\'illiam .John, cab proprietor, Magdalen road
Brooks J oseph, inspector of nuisances, hackney carriages & Bunkell John, shopkeeper, 124 Philadelphia lane
common lodging houses, Fish market. Bunn Brothers, bricklayers, Julian street
Brooks Louisa Gate (Mrs.), Red Cow P.H. Cow hill Bunn Charles, jun. shopkeeper, Julian st. Chapelfield road
JJro:.>ks Thomas, coal merchant, Eastern & Midland Railway Hunn Frederick, shopkeeper, 108 King's rd. New Lakenham
coal depot, Hcigham street Bunn Henry, Whalebone P.H. St. Clement's hill, New Catton
Brooks \\'illiam, coal merchant,Eastern & Midlands Railway Bunn John Neighbour, dyer, 48 Old Palace road
coal depot, Heigham street & Barn road Bunn Robert, architect, 63 Wymer street, Dercham road
Brooks William Cooper, draper, 89 Cambridge street JJunn Thomas, shopkeeper, I7 \Vymer street
Broug-hton Joshua, coach smith, \Vright's yard, Her street Bunn \\'illiarn John, farmer, Harford Hall farm, Lakenham
Browes James, greengrocer, Io St. Gregory's alley Hunnett Ed ward llms.n.cantah, profc~sor of music &
Brown Frederick & Sons, maltsters, 25I King street gates organist of St. Peter Mancroft, of the Norfolk & Norwich
Brown Hy.Wm. & Sons,auctionrs.&fish salesmen,Fish mrkt musical festivals & to the corporation, Upper close
Brown R. & Co. manure manufrs. St. Benedict's Back lane Tiunting Arthur & Co. wholesale & retail linen & woollen
Brown Alexander, Orchard tavern, Heigham street drapers, silk mercers & general warehousemen, St.
Brown Alfred, chimney sweeper, 1o6 Tinkler's lane Step hen's corner
Brown Arthur, watch maker, IO Charles street Bunting Erimce (Miss), milliner, 37 Trinity street
Brown Charles, Royal Oak P.H. 132 Oak street Burch Frederick, shopkeeper, 3 Fishgate street
Brown Charles John, architect & surveyor & surveyor to the Burcham Henry, butcher, I20 King street
Norwich school board & to the dean & chapter of Norwich, Burgess Edward, general printer & publisher of the
Cathedral offices, The Close " Daylight" Newspaper; otlice & works, St. Giles street.
Brown Chas. Wm. fancy box mkr. Fellmongers yard, Oak st See advertisement
Brown Elizabeth (Mrs.), lodging house, Chapeltield gardens Buries Robert, commercial traveller, 14 Earlham road
Brown Emma (Mrs.), apartments, I I St. Stephen's square Burman James, basket maker, 81 Ber street
Brown Frederick John, York tavern, Castle meadow & hay & Burrage Charles, butcher, 65 Bridge street, St. George's
li- straw dealer, I53 Mag-dalen street Burrage Joseph, fishmonger, Io St. Paul's street
Brown John, baker & shopkeeper, 55 Philadelphia lane Hurrage Samuel, fishmonger, 2 Bull close
Brown John, boot & shoe manufr. Fellmongers yrd. Oak st Burrefl Emanuel, shopkeeper, 2 Derby street
Brown Maria (Mrs.), shopkeeper, 7 City street, Dereham rd Burrelllsaiah, beer retailer, 79 Lower \Vestwick street
Brown Richard, Eagle P.H. 110 Lower Westwick street Burrell James, fishmonger, 3 Fye Bridge street
Brown Robert, The Shuttles P.H. 20 Heigham street Burrell John, horse hair manufacturer, 49 Distillery street
Erown Robert William, confectioner, 8 Church st. St. Paul's Burrell John, shopkeeper, 20 Sussex street
DIRECTORY.] NORFOLK. NORWICH. 537
Burrell Robert George, baker, 96 Oak street Campling George Herbert & Son, dyers & cleaners, 58 Bridge
Burroughes Randall Ellis (firm, Fosters & Burroughes), street, St. George's & London street
solicitor,commissioner & perpetual commissioner,Bank pl Carnpling Alfred, hosier, 14 Castle street
Bnrrow Richard, watch maker, 16~ St. fltephen's street Campling Alice (Miss), shopkeeper, Magdalen raad
Burrow Sarah (Mrs.), watch & clock maker, 36 Magdalen st Campling Charles Joseph, music warehouse, 17 The Walk
Burrows Esthcr (:\'lrs. ),Adam & E'l"e P.H. Bishopsgate street Campling Ethel (Miss), dress maker, 47 Pitt street
Burrows Jabez, shopkeeper, 47 Peacock street Campling llorace, Eagle P. H. 30 West Pottergate street
Burrows J abez, umbrella maker, 61 St. G-ilcs hill Campling James, bookbinder, 5 Westlegate street
Burrows John Henry, Globe P.H. 37 Rotolph street Campling John, bacon curer, 83 Magtlalen street
Bnrrows Lewis, umbrella maker, 22 St. George's Middle st Campling Waiter, carver & gilder, 47 Pitt street
Burrows \Valter, baker, 29 Barrack street, St. James' Campling Wilham, grocer, 28 St. Paul's plain
Burrows \Villiam, coal merchant & deputy registrar of CamplingWm.SandringhamArrnsP.H. William st.St.Giles hi
births & deaths for Coslany sub-district, St. Clement's Campling William Abraham, fruiterer, Bridewell alley
alley, l\lagdalen street Campling W11liam Joseph, bptcher, 73 Dereham road
Burrows Wm. Edwd. relieving officer 2nd dist. Aylsham rd Candell John, cab proprietor, 189 Queen's road
Burson \Vm. Geo. h.udware dealer, Bridge st. St. George's Can ham Alfred, eating house, 6-t- King street
Burt David, tailor, 14 West Pottergate street Canham Frederick Albert George, insurance agent, 17
Burton & Clark, stock & share brokers, Queen street Helena road, Dereham road
Burton Edward, wine & spirit store, 17 White Lion strret Canham Laura (Miss),dress ma. 19 Harford st.SewLakenhm
Burton Fredk. Chas. professor of music, St. Step hen's road Canham Mary (Miss), milliner, 6 Vauxhall street
Burton George, c:upenter, 20 Cherry street, New Lakenham Cann J ames, shoe maker, 78 Ber street
Burton John, Vine P.H. 16 St. Benedict's street Cann Heuben, boot & shoe manufacturer, 22 Magdalen road
Burton John Henry, plumber, & post office, Thorpe road, Cannell & Sons, seed growers, Cattle market(saturdays only)
Thorpe Ilamlet Cannell Abraham, farmer & butcher, Sprowston road
Burton Robert John, travellir1g draper, 17 Dereham road Cannell Abraharn, jun. butcher, 67 Duke street
Burton Samuel Herbert M.n., H.S.Lond. surgeon & medical Cannell Edward, butcher, r Philadelphia lane, New Catton
officer of health to Ilenstead rural sanitary authority, 50 Cannell Elizabeth (Miss), apartments, 6 Unthanks road
St. Giles street . Cannell George, butcher, 44 Barrack street, St. James'
Burton Thomas, clerk of works for new Catholic cathedral, Cannell Isaac 1-Vebster, linen draper, n6 Ber street
86 Dereharn road Cannell Jarnes, shopkeeper, Eaton
Burton Thomas William, agricultural implement maker, Cannell Jesse, nurseryman, 223 Dcreham road
Cattle market (saturdays only) Cannell Mary Ann (Mrs.), news agent, 70 St. Giles hill
Burton William, bricklayer, 27 Soutbwell road Cannell Naomi (Miss), school, 30 All Saints' green
Burton \Villiam, furniture dealer, Rising Sun lane Capes Edward Wm. chimney sweeper, 21 St. Giles hill
Burton William George, tailor, 4 St. Stepheu's square Capon Edward Herbert, dentist, 33 St. Giles street
Burton-Fanning Frederick William M.n., M.R.C.P. physician, Capon Walter, hair dresser, 11 White Lion street
& physician to Nor folk & Norwich hospital & the Jenny Capps Matthew, Whip & Nag P.H. 3 Pitt street
Lind infirmary, 46 Prince of Wales road Carey Frederick, fishmonger, 121 Essex street
Bury George, furniture dealer, Hedwell street Carey George, fishmonger, Ber street
Bury Harry, baker, 2r6 Queen's road Carey J ames, Dolphin inn, boat builder & proprietorp
Bury Henry 1V'llliam, boot maker, 45 Rose lane Heigharn street & Little Buck yard, Oak st
Bury Thomas, provision dealer,43 Union st. South Heigham Carey Joseph Henry Ellis, hair dresser, 75 Oak street
Bush Rester (Mrs.), dress ma. 8 Norfolk st.Lower Heigbam Carey Rubert, shopkeeper, 15 Coslany street
Bush James, bricklayer, Union street CarlierAntoineGuillame,teacher of languagcs,6oUnthanks rd
Bush Mary Ann (Mrs.), shopkeeper, II9 ller street Carman Philip, tobacconist, r3 Heigham street
Bush William, Market tavern, Market lane Carroll Arthur John, hair dresser, r29 Ber street
Bushell Geo. Thompson & Co.grocers & bakers,24 Stafford st Carrow Works Dispensary (Jas.Feilding,med. officer),King st
Bushell Eliza (Mrs.), shopkeeper, 96 Barrack street Carter & Co. tobacconists, I r Fye Bridge street
Husholl Kato (Mrs.), shopkeeper, City street, Dereham road Carter Ambrosc, harness maker, 52 St. Augustine street
Bushell Thos. fishmngr. 24 St. Str-phen's st. &68A, Dereham rd Carter HannahEli7.abeth(Mrs.),cigar mer. 36 UattleMarket st
Bussey & Pitcher, grocers, 52 St. 1~tephen"s street Carter James, Stag P.H. III St. Benedict's street
Bussey Arthur, baker, 22 Distillery street Carter John, Quebec tavern, Quebec road, Thorpe Hamlet
Bussey Charles, grocer, I Palace plain Carter John, watch maker, 20 Golden Ball street
Bussey Thomas, cabinet maker, 28 Upper King street Carver William, boot & shoe maker, 37 All Saints' green
Butcher Elizabeth (Mrs.), marine store dealer, rr4 King st Case & Steward, importers of linseed, cotton, rape cakes,
Butcher Henry, cab proprietor, Lower close guano, salt &c. ; agents fur Lawes' manures, Duke's
Butcher Henry Charles, painter, 34 Julian street palace; & at South quay, Yarmouth & Town staithe.
Butcher Hy.Fk. Royal family & commercial hot~l, The Walk Loddon
Butcher John, fishmonger, IOI St. George's Middle street Case Walter Edward, Great Eastern wine vaults, 75 St.
Butcher William, coffee cavern, 142 & 144 Cowgate street Stephen's street
Butler Cecilia (Mrs.), shopkeeper, 6o Barrack street Casey William, coal merchant, Heigham street
Butler \.V m. Jarneson, insurance agt. supt. 20 Mnt. Pleasant Caston John, grocer, 137 St. Benedict's gate
Butterfant William George, wholesale tea dealer 9 Upper Catchpole James, Ship inn, 168 King street
market & gr0ccr, 2 Fye Bridge street Catholic Institute (W. A. Freeman, sec.), Willow lane
Buttifant George, hoot maker, 25 St. George's Middle street Catling Joseph Henjamin, grocer, & post offi~e, Carrow
Buttifant Thomas Henry, painter, 31 Magpie road Cattell Henry, florist, Park lane
Buttle Jane (Mrs.), fishmonger, 82 St: Benedict's street Cattermole Edward, district manager for the Singer Manu-
Bygrave Horace, commission agent, r5 Sprowston road facturing Co. for the counties of Cambridge, Norfolk,
Bygrave 1V'illiam, shopkeeper, 33 Palace street Suffolk, Huntingdon, Essex & Herts ; counting house, 16
Byles William Vipond, grocer, 9 Fye Bridge street Calvert street ; show rooms, 55 London street
Cadge William F.R.c.s.Eng. surgeon, & consulting surgeon to Cattermnll J oseph Ern est, picture fra1ne maker, see M or-
the Norfolk & Norwich hospital, 49 St. Giles street timer & Cattermull •
Cadywould John, shopkeeper, 28 Oak street Causton Priscilla (Mrs.), servants' registry office, 9 ·Prince-
Caley A. & Sun, manufacturers of aiirated & mineral waters of Wales road
& chocolate & cocoa manufrs . .Fleur-de-Lis works,Chapelfld Central Commercial Temperance Hotel (Anthony Edward
Caley I. '"· & Co. silk mercers & shawlmen to the Uueen Parsons, proprietor), Tombland
& H.R.H. the Princess of Wales & H.R.H. Princess Central Tobacco Company, White Lion street
Christian, court dress & mantle makers, milliners, haber- Cessford George, commission agent, 36 Aylsham road
dashers, hosiers, glovers & ladies' & children's under- Chamberlain Rebecca (Miss), pork butcher, 145 King street
clothing warehouse, furriers &c. 21 & 23 London street. Chamberlin & Smith, importers of wines & spirits & mer-
See advertisement chants, & agents for 1Vorthington's ales in casks & bottles,
Calver John Samuel, baker, 9 St. George's Middle street Exchange street. See advertisement
Calver Joshua, baker, 55 St. Benedict's street Chamherlm & Smith (late James C.bamberlin), manufac-
Calver M aria (Mrs.), boot & shoe dealer, I9 Somerleyton st turers of pheasants' & poultry food, dog food & meat.
Calver Maria (Mrs.), saddler & harness maker, 28 All Saints' biscuit for dogs &c. Exchange street. See advertisement.
green & Cattle market Chamberlin, Sons & Uo. carpet factors, complete house fur-
Calver :Martha French (Mrs.), Fanciers' Arms P. H. 140 Oak st nishers, upholsterers & bedding manufacturers, 3 Guild-
Calver Snsannah (Mrs.), shopkeeper, 194 King street hall hill. See advertisement
Calver Thomas, family boot & shoe maker; hunting & livery Cliarnberlin, Sons & Co. silk mercers, wholesale & retail,
boots &c. ; established 45 years, 10 St. Giles street linen & woollen drapers, wholesale clothiers & manchester
Calver William, dairyman, 9 St. Giles hill warehousemen, family mourning &c. Market pl. See advt
Camp Anne (Mrs.), dress maker, 38 Distillery street Charnberlin Edward, shopkeeper, 70 Grove road
638 NORWICH. NORFOLK. [ KELLY'S
Chamberlin's Restaurant (Chamber! in & Smith, proprietors), Clarke & Reeve, wharfingers, carriers & agents, Duke's palace,
Exchange street Coslany & King street wharves; & at Great Yarmouth
Chamberlin Thomas, shopkeeper, 17 Coslany street Clarke Alfred Boaz, shopkeeper, r5 Chapel st. Crook's place
Chamberlin Wm. musical instrument repairer, 27 Duke st Clarke Charles James, carver & gilder & wholesale & retail
Chambers Arthur John, architect, parish clerk of St. Giles', picture & show card frame manufacturer, I Charing cross
67 Betllel street . Clarke Charles William, corn dealer, 3 Dcreham road
Chambers Samuel Arthur, supt. Prudential Assurance Co. Clarke Eliza (Mrs.), wardrobe dealer, 5 Timber Hill street
Limited, Avenue road Clarke Harriet (~rs. ), music seller, Rising Sun lane
Champion & Co. Limited, vinegar & mustard manufac- Clarke Isaac, Victoria. P.H. Julian Back st. Chapelfield road
turers, Duke street. See advertisement Clarke James, shopkeeper, 268 Heigham street
Chandler Gco. grocer, Alcxandra stores, Prince of Wales rd Clarke John, beer retailer & shopkeeper, 249 King street
Chaplin Albert .Edward, sign writer, 74 Hull Close road Clarke John, fishmonger, 29 Heigham street
Chaplin Thomas, wool stapler, Muspole street, St. George's Clarke John, tailor, hatter & habit maker, 52 London street
Chaplin William, baker, 24 Coburg street Clarke :vratthew, teacher of music, 20 Suffolk street
Chaplin WilJiam Stephen, baker, 22 Grant st. Dereham rd CJarke Robert, cooper, 34 Garden street, Thorn lane
Chapman Charles & Albert, confectioners, 13 Tombland Clarke Robert, Lion & Castle P.H. Timber Hill street
Chapman Saml. & Son, builders, Rupert st. South Heigham Clarke Hobert,, jun. cooper, 13 Ber street
Chapman Fredk. Jsph. plumber, 3 Hall rd. New Lakenham Clarke Thomas, The Crown P.H. 29 Elm hill
Chap man J ames, general smith, King street Clarke William, road contractor & sand merchant, Ketts hill
Chapman Jamef', wardrobe dealer, 4+ Oak street Clarke William, White Horse P.H. ro St. Mary's alley
Chapman James, Wrestlers P.H. & brick &c. merchant, 37 Clarke Wm. Cubitt, fishmonger, 68 Bridge st. St. George's
Barrack street Clarke Wm. Hy. mechanical engineer, Surrey gro. Surreyrd
Chapman Jas. Lionel, Free Trade inn, St. Peter st. Mancroft Clarke William Hyde, plumber, 39 Devonshire street
Chapman Philip, Gardeners' Arms P.H. Tinkler's lane Clarkson George, butcher, 13 Philadelphia lane, New Catton
Chapman Samuel, butcher, g6 Upper St. G1les street Claxton & Co. skin, rag & metal merchants, furriers &
Ohapman William, shopkeeper, 8 Mountergate street licensed wholesale dealers in game, St. George's plain
Charter James H.A. principal of Belle Vue House school, Claxton Edwin, hair dresser, 31 Oak street
Eaton park. See advertisement Claxton James, shopkeeper, ro2 Oak street
Chal'e Henry, Mariner's tavern, 39 Mariner's lane Claxton William, boot maker, 33 Old Palace road
Chason Robt.Duke ofWellington P.H.Chapel st.Sth.Heigham Claxton William, but,cher, 144 Waterloo road
Chatten George, greengrocer, 42 Union street Claxton Wm. Hy. botanic dispensary, St. George's Bridge st
Chatten Saml. Corn Exchange P. H. 6r Bridge st. St. George's Claybyn Thomas Pratt,, carpenter & joiner, 122 Old Palace st
Chettleburgh William, Cricketers' Arms P.H. City road, Clayton Jarnes Alexander, fishmonger, 28 Waterloo road
~ ew Lakenham Clayton Wm. Crown & Anchor P.H. ro5 St. George's Middle st
Chiddick Frank James, Alexandra tavern, Gladstone street Clayton William, Jolly Dyers P.H. r6 Fishgate street
Child Thomas, fancy draper, 28 Bishops Bridge road Clement George H. H. surveyor of taxes (Norwich 2nd
Childerhouse WilJiam, town crier, 34 Princes street survey), Tomhland
Childs Henry, tailor, 7 Finket street Clements Elizabeth (Mrs.), Artichoke P.H. Magdalen road
Childs John R. stone & marble mason, I I Chapel Field road Clethcroe James, plumber, ro Raglan street
& Bank plain Clitheroe Ann (Mrs.), shopkeeper, 114 Ber street
Chilvers & Cocks, who. boot & shoe manufrs. Timber Hill st Clough Thomas Daniel, fishmonger, II3 Barrack street
Chilvers "\V. J. & Co. pianoforte makers, ro St. Stephen's st Clover Joseph Eglington, Surrey inn, Grove road
Chilvers John, Lord Nelson P.H. Nelson st. North Heigham Clowes & Nash, auctioneers, valuers, land, estate & house
Chilvers William, shopkeeper, 55 Albany road agents, agents to the Hand-in-Hand Life, Norwich Union
China Henry, beer retailer, 22 "\1armer's lane Fire, Essex & Suffolk Fire & Norwich & London Acci-
Chittock Arthur & Co. boot & shoe manufrs. 31 Calvert st dental Insurance Companies, emigration agents & passage
Chittock & Woods, solicitors, 17 Bank plain brokers to all part~ of the world ; a monthly register of
Chittock John Carsey, solicitor & commissioner to administer property to sell & let largely circulated; oflices, Bank
oaths (firm, Chittock & Woods), 17 Bank plain chambers
Christian George, baker, r6 Magdalen road Coady George, Villa Gardens P.H. Lakenham
Christian William, tailor, 70 Essex street Coaks I. H. & Co. solic-itors, Bank plain
Cbristie William, wholesale clothier, see Sterne & Christie Coaks Isaac Bngg D. L., J. P. (firm, Coaks I. B. & Co. ), solici-
Church of England Temperance Society (A. H. Goose, tor, commissioner to administer oaths in the Supreme
agent), Rampant Horse street court & perpetual commissioner ; sec. to the NorwiGh
Church of England Young Men's Society (patron, the Hight Corn Exchange Co. Limited; director of Norwich Union
Rev. the Lord Bishop of Norwich; pre~ident, Edward Fire & Life Insurance Societies & Norwich & London
\Vild esq. ; treasurer, Geoffrey Buxton esq. ; clerical Accident Society & General Hail Storm Society,Bank plain
secretaries, Rev. Canon Patteson & F. C. Davies; resi- Coan Stephen, boot & shoe maker, 23 Globe st. Union place
dent superintendent, W. J. Fortcy), Orford street Coates John Barnard, fish & game salesman, Fish market
Church Extension Association (branches), 45 St. Stephen's Cobb Edward, shopkeeper, Aylsham road
street & 8 Surrey street Cobb Herbert Head, tobacconist, 29 The Walk
Church Sunday School Institute (depot) (J. W. Hallam, Cobb John, shoe maker, 99 Newmarket street
agent), 16 London street Cobb Leggett Angustus Myhill, butcher, 56 Magdalen street
Churchman \Y. A. & A. C. tobacco manufacturers, Exchange Cobbald & Co. drapers, I I St. fltephen's street
street ; & at Ipswich Cobbald Thomas Archer, draper, silk mercer & funeral
Churchyard I. & Son, dress & silk goous manufacturers, St. furnisher, & family mourning, go London stre£;Jt
James' factory, Cowgate street Coby William, cab proprietor, Star yard, llaymarket
Churchyard Alice (Mrs.), pork butcher, SI Union street Cock George Thomas, manager to the National Provincial
Churchyard Georgc, hare skin & fur dresser, 71 Tinkler's la Bank of England Limited (branch), London streP-t
Churchyard John, dining rooms, rB Bridewell alley Cockrill Harry, commercial traveller, 8r St. Philip's road
Churchyard Rachael Amy (Mrs.), draper 12, & grocer & Cocks Christmas Edmund, brazier, 74 Trafalgar street, New
post office I r, Stafford stre~t Lakenham
City & Carrow Rowing Club, 233 King street Cocks Frederick, tailor, 23 Magdalcn street
City Engineer's, Surveyr.r's & Inspector's Office (Peter Pan! Cocks Thomas, tailor, 24 Timber Hill street
Marshall c.E. city engineer), Municipal offices Cocks William, tailor, 113 Cowgate street
Clabburn Edwin, plumber &c. 29 Pitt street Codling Arthnr John, private tutor, 13 Grove street west
Clahbnrn James William, solicitor & commissioner to ad- Codling Stephen, shopkeeper, ri Golden Ball street
minister oaths, 51 London street Coe Albcrt Edward, photographer & optician; spectacles &
Clapham Charles, shoe maker, ror Cambridge street eye glasses of every description, 32 London street
Clapham Ernest, rent collector, 72 Caernarvon road Cue Eliza J a ne (Miss), Plougll inn, Cattle market
Clapham Henry, baker, Bull close Coe Harriet (Miss),apartments,42 Thorpc rd.ThorpoHamlet
Clare James, grocer, g6 Bull close Coe Henry, butcher, 69 Wellington road
Claremont Constantine Cecil, surgeon, 42 Chapelfield road Coe Waiter, King's Arms P.H. Ber street
Clarendon House School (boarding & day) (Alfred W. Coen Albert Benjamin, photographer, 127 Dereham road
Batcbelor B.C.L., liLA. principal), Untbanks rd. See advt Cogman Herbert John, hosier, 91 Upper St. Giles street
Clark Maria & Catherine (Misses), ladies' school, Surrey Cogman John, builder, 17 Globe street, South Heigham
house, Surrey street Cogman Sarah (Miss), shopkeeper, !49 Ber street
Clark Alfred Jas. stock & share broker, see Burton & Clark Colborne Frederick, tailor, see Wegg & Colborne
Clark Elizabeth (Miss), dress maker, 69 Sussex street ' Colby & So.n, printers & bookbinders, 3 Upper King street
Clark Niven, insurance agent, 6o Rose lane Colby William, french polisher, 13 St. Gregory's alley
Clark R. E. (Mrs.), tobacconist, 231 Queen's road Coldham Henry, pork butcher, 8r St. Benedict's street
Clark Robert E. painter, 19 Paragon street Coldham John Henry, butcher, 23 St. George's Middle st
DIRECTORY.] NORFOLK. NORWICH. 539
Coldham Sophia (Mrs.), pork butcher, 66 St Benedict's st Cooper Charles C. shopkeeper, go Old Palace road
Cole Edward, Railway Stores P.H. Heigham street CooperCharlesCarver,Pope'sHead P.H.; good accommodation
Cole Herbert Henchman, solicitor & commissioner for for travellers, stabling, horses & traps to let ; fish auction
oaths, clerk & superintendent registrar of births, deaths mart, Upper nmrket .
& marriages to Blotield union, clerk to the Blofield, Cooper Emma (Mrs.), greengrocer, 7 Charing cross
Coltishall, Poringland & Strumpshaw united districts Cooper Frank Aspland, provision factor, Tombland
& Great Plumstead & Surlingham school boards, 67 Cooper George, grocer, 55 Rosary road, Thorpe Hamlet
London street Cooper Henry, news agent, 151 Cowgate street
Cole John A. bird preserver, 6 Castle meadow Cooper Henry, shopkeeper, 49 Heigham street & coal dealer,
Coleby & Co. leather merchants &c. Lower Westwick street r IJ Tinkler's lane
Coleman & Co. Limited, manufacturing chemists & wine Cooper Henry, The Mischief tavern, 44 Peacock street
merchants, Lower Westwick street; i:::lt. George's Middle Cooper James, Two Quarts P.H. 70 Bridge st. St. George's
street & Bank plain Cooper John, shoe maker, ro6 Cambridge street
Coleman's Brewery Co. Limited, brewers, Rosary rd. Thorpe Cooper John Berijamin, boot manufacturer, 29 Bethel st
Hamlet & Queen street Coopel' Josiah Henry Howlett, grocer, 62 King street
Coleman Frederick, shopkeeper, 34 Bull close Cooper Robed;, fishmonger, u6 King street
Coleman Frederick, tailor, 127A, Unthanks road Cooper Robert, shopkeeper, 21 St. Augustine street
Coleman Grace A. (Miss), matron to the Girls' Friendly Cooper Robert (firm, Cooper & Davies), solicitor & com-
Society Lodge, 25 St. Andrew's Broad street missioner to administer oaths, deputy clerk of the peace
Coleman Maria {~Trs.), Albert inn, 36 Ber street for the county of Norfolk & sec. to the Norwieh Water
Coles & Co. Limited, truss makers, 5 St. Stephen's road ·works Co. 58 London street
Coller R. & Sons, coal, coke, corn, cake & salt merchants; Cooper Robert, jun. draper, 42 Duke street
offices, St. Stephen gates; depots, Victoria & Trowse Cooper Robert A. manufacturing confectioner, s, 6 & 7
stations ; & at Attleborough ; Lynn; Aylsham; Watton ; Queen street & Albion works, King street
Buxton ; Dersingham ; Diss ; Hardingham ; Melton; Reep- Cooper Robert Henry, shopkeeper, 55 King street
ham; Thetford; Wolferton; Woodbridge & Wymondham Cooper Thomas William, pork butcher, 57 St. Benedict's st
Collett Alfred, shopkeeper, 55 HCigham street Cooper Waiter, cabinet maker & upholsterer, 18 Willow la
Collier H. & F. pheasant, game, dog & poultry food manu- Cooper William,. coal dealer, 70 Derby street
facturers, St. Augustine's gates, Aylsham road Cooper William, furniture dealer, 69 Barn road
Collier Benjamin, coffee house, 5 Duke street Cooper vVilliam Robert, solicitor & commissioner to ad-
Collier Lisa (:Ylrs. ), apartments, 92 Park lane minister oaths in the Supreme court, clerk to the city
Collier Rose Emma (Mrs.), baker, 32 Colegate street justices & clerk to the justices visiting private asylums,
· Collins & Shorten, boot & shoe manufacturers, 3 Davey Guildhall
place & india rubber & gutta p~rcha wareho. 12 Orford hill Cooper-Brown & Co. brewers & wine & spirit merchants,
Collins Alfred James, tobacconist, roA, St. Stephen's street Eaton brewery; & at Dereham & Stalham
Collins Edward Thomas, grocer, Swan lane Copeman & Cadg-e, solicitors (sat. only), 12 Rampant Horse
Collins Ellen (Miss), dress maker, see Swan & Collins street ; & at Loddon
Collins Howard James, sec. Norfolk & Norwich hospital, Copeman & Ladcll, solicitors, commissioners for oaths, &
St. Stephen's road agents to the Sun Fire & Life O!ftce, Little Orford street
Calls Janet (Miss), day school, 7 Alcxandra road Copeman & Sons, wholesale grocei"s & tea dealers, cheese &
Colman H. P. & Co. wholesale & furnishing ironmongers, butter factors & provision n1erchants, also agents for
coach & saddlers' ironmongers, oil, color, lead & cement Stoke Prior salt works, Castle street
merchants & paraffin lamp makers, Rampant Horse st Copernan Alfred, chimney sweeper, Park's yard, Ber street
Colrnan J. & J. mustard, starch, corn flour & laundry Copernan George William, firewood dealer, 14 Greyhound
blue manufacturers," Carrow works; & ro8 Cannon street, opening, Tinkler's lane .
London E c; prize medals awarded London, r85r & Copeman John Cole, solicitor, see Copeman & Lad ell
1862; Dublin, 1865; Paris, r867; Moscow (grand gold), Copeman William, Light Horseman l'.H. 130 Barrack street
1872; Vienna, 1873 ; Paris, 1878, 2 gold medals & cross Copeman William, Richmond Hill tavern, Ber Street gates
of the legion of honour Copperwheat Charles, Essex Arms P.H. Essex street
Colman J. A. & Co. engravers, 4 & 6 St. Anclrew's hill Copsey John Samuel, baker, II2 King street
Coman William Robert, boot maker, 50 Baker's road Corbyn Edwin, Walnut Tree Shades P.H. Old Post Office
Corner George, shoe manufacturer, Elm hill court, Market place
Commercial Union Assurance Company Limited (Sir Carder Octavius, pharmaceutical chemist, 3 r London st
Kenneth Kemp bart. district manager), Eastern branch. Cordran Robert, baker, I 33 Ber street
See advertisement Cord well Alfred, tailor, 40 Leicilster street
Compton Thomas .Toseph M.D. physician & surgeon, Ileigham Cord well William Albert, travelling draper, 12 Leicester st
Hall asylum, Old Palace road Cork & Son, nurseryrnen & florists, Brunswick road, New-
Convent of Sisters of Notre Dame, & boarding school for market road
young ladies, Surrey road Cork William, lodging house, 13 Chapelfield gardens
Cook A. W. brush maker, 7 Davey place Corke John, inland revenue officer, 5 St. Philip's road
Cook Henry,wheelwright,r Bailey's blclgs. West Pottergate st Corn Exchange (Isaac Geo. Hanham, bailiff), Exchange st
Cook Henry Edward, watch maker &c. Upper St. Giles st Corrick Benjamin, mustard & corn flour manufacturer,
Cook Henry Robert, commercial traveller, 15 Oxford street Mustard mills, Pitt street
Cook John, White Swan P.H. 154 Magdalen street Corrick Frederick,confectioner, 5 St. John st. Madder mrkt
Cook John Cyrus, boot & shoe warehouse, & post office, 67 Corrick Hannah (.YII"s.), hosier, 142 Heigham street
St. Aug11stine street Corrick .Jane (Mrs.), straw bonnet maker, r8 St. Giles' hill
Cook Mary Ann Elizh. (Miss), shoe wareho.6 White Lion st Corrick Martha (Miss), lodging house, 2 Cow hill
Cook Thomas, bricklayer, 54 Havelock road Corrick Sarah Ann (:\I1ss), lodging l1ouse, Cow hill
Gook Arthnr, l:lir Garnet vVolseley tavern, Market place Cossey Fredk. Somerset P.H. 57 Union st. South Heigham
CookeArthr.\Vm.musical instrument seller,98St.Benedict's st Cossey John, chemist & druggist & deputy registrar of
Cooke Charles Harrold, Mitre tavern, Briggs street births & deaths for West Wymer sub-district, 23 St.
Cooke George Frederick, solicitor, registrar & high bailiff of John's street, Madder market
county court & district registrar of H1gh Court of Justice, Cossey Robert, baker & shopkeeper, Mousehold street
12 Castle meadow Cossey t:lamuel, shopkeeper, 9 Oak street
Cooke George Robcrt, clerk to the guardians of St. Faith's Catching Chas. corn. traveller, 59 St. George's Middle street
union & superintendent registrar of births, deaths & Cotgrove Chas. Jas. coffee rooms, 72 St. Gcorge's Middle st
marriages, J{egister office, Bridge street, St. Andrews Cotterell George, grocer, 186 Oak street
Cooke Harold Ebenezer,Ropemaker'sArms P. H.Hellesdon rd Cot tom Francis, butcher, 225 Heigham st. & Market place
Cooke Henry, baker & shopkeeper, 54 Mancroft street Cotton Samuel, greengi"ocer, 9 Palace street
Cooke Henry John, brewers' traveller, 195 Dereham road Coulson Wil!iam Pye, shopkeeper, 77 Oak street
Cooke Henry Timothy, shopkeeper, Afghan pl. New Catton County Analyst (Francis Sutton F.C.s., F.r.c.); offices,
Cooke James, artists' colorman, Rampant Horse street London street
Cooke Robert Hammond, shopkeeper, 63A, Gladstone street County Constabulary (Paynton Pigott D.I". barrister-at-law,
Cooke Sidney Raymond, cab proprietor, Cathedral st. south chief constable; Haynes Sparrow Robinson, surgeon;
Cooke William Robert, hair dresser, 6 Cowgate street chief clerk, Lewis H. Amis; assistant clerk, John
& shopkeeper, 127 Magdalen street Lockett; detective inspector, Henry Rix) ; head quarters,
Cooper & Davies, solicitors, 58 London street County Police station
Cooper & Tidy, bird dealers, 38 Elm hill County Court (His Ho nor Ed win Plum er Price Q. c. judge;
Cooper Albert, fishmonger, 1 Clarke's yard, Heigham street George Frederick Cooke, registrar & high bailiff ; Ed win
Cooper Benjamin Wade, estate agent, valuer & auditor Matthias Bullard, chief clerk), 12 Castle meadow
Cooper Carlos, barrister-at-law, jud~e of borough court & County Treasurer's Office, Shire hall
recorder of King's Lynn, Orford hill Cousins Fras. Geo. boot & shoe maker, 34 St. Benedict's st
7
54.0 NORWICH. NORFOLK. (KELL'Y S
Cousins Joseph, shopkeeper, I I Coburg street Cullingford Horace, rag merchant., 15 Eotolph street
Couzens Charles Middleton, shopkpr.Eaglest.Newmarket rd Cullingford William Augustus, paper manufacturer, Palace.
Covell Frank Thomas Gifford, parish clerk of St. Gregory's, mills, Palace plain
St. Gregory's churchyard Cullington Charles, wood turner, 57 Cowgate street
Covell John, baker, 6 St. Gregory's alley Cullington Laura (Miss), dress mkr. 30 Prince of Wales rd
Cowell Frederick, smith, Unicorn yard, St. Stephen's street Cullington Mark Wm. rate collector for 4th dist. South well rd
Cowell Rt. Royal Standard P.H. Chapel st. South Heigham Cull urn Elizabeth (Mrs.), hardware dealer, ror Barrack st
Cowling James Eaton, butcher, 129 St. Benedict's street Cullum James, boot maker, I6 Distillery street
Cowling Joseph, baker, 6S Lower Westwick street Cullyer John, currier, 45 Duke street
Cox Brothers, provision dealers, 24 St. Benedict's street ; 37 Culyer Arthur, hair dresser, 12 St. Andrew's Bridge street
Magdalen street & 66 William street Cum by J ames, shoe maker, I 1 Oxford street
Cox Agnes Mary (Miss), day school, 37 Park lane Cunnell Charles Donald & Co. butchers, 4 St. Giles street
Cox Edward, grocer, 30, 32 & 34 Ber street Cunnell Charles, farmer & lime burner, Eaton ; res. 8
Cox George Henry, shopkeeper, 66 Lower Westwick street Newmarket road
Cox Henry, greengrocer, 2 King street, Crook's place Cunnington Brothers, timber merchants, Heigham street
Cox Joseph, grocer, 21 Union street Curl Brothers, wholesale & retail warehousemen & linen &
Cox Wil!Jam, rope & twine maker, 4 Scoles green woollen drapers, Rampant Horse street ; Little 0l'ford
Cozens Emma (Mrs.), Hen & Chickens P.H. St . .Mary's plain street ; 99 & 101 St. Benedict's st. ; & at Harleston
Cozens Mary Ann (Mrs.), dress maker, 58 Caernarvon road Curl Brothers, drapers, Ber street
Cozens Randall, hair dresser, Haymarket Curry Robert, saddler, 4 Red Lion street
Cozens William, baker, 3 Hcigham street Curson George, shopkeeper, 137 Philadelphia lane
Cozens-Hardy Sydney LL.B. solicitor, clerk to the school Curson Joseph, corn. traveller, 27 Denmark rd. Earlham rd
board & clerk to the charity trustees, Castle chm brs. Opie st Curtis Ann (Mrs.), stay & corset maker, 47 Somerleyton st
CracknellSyar Hy. plum ber&decora tor, Union st. Brunswick rd Cnrtis Benjamin, bricklayer, 102 Magpie road
Crancher John, Recruiting Sergeant P.H. Her street Curtis Charles Joscph, Eagle & Child P.H. Cattle market
Crane Frederick ·wm. boot & shoe maker, 72 Cowgate st Curtis George, builder & fishmonger, Rupert street
Crane James Arthur, shoeing smith, Tinkler's lane Curtis Joshua, bmlder, II3 Queen's road
Craske ~Iary Ann (Miss), upholstres.~, 17 Cow hill Cushing George, tailor &c. r 13 Gladstone street, Dereham
Creake Henry, tobacconist, 11 Oak street road ; ladies' jackets & ulsters, men's, youths' & boys'
Cremer Robert Rolfe, surgeon, 35 Princes street clothing made to order; gents' own material made up;
Crick Emily (Miss), dress maker, go Calvert street style, quality & fit guaranteed
Crick George, shopkeeper, 78 Uld Palace road Gushing Henry, shopkeeper, 5 Coslany street
Gripper Ellen (Mrs.), shopkpr. 52 Esdelle st. St. Augustine's Gushing 'William James, tailor, Lobster· lane
Crisp Susan (Mrs.), shopkeeper, :Magdalen road Cushion A.& W. timber merchants & importers of deals &c.
Crisp William, chimney sweeper, I I Finket street a large stock of oak, ash, elm &c. in planks & boards, St.
Critchfield Saml. professor of music, 3S Prince of Wales rd Benedict's mills, Barn road & at Balloon wharf
Critoph ·william Barnard, butcher, 6 Magdalen street Custance Robert Samuel, Rose P.H. 53 Oak street
Crockford William, Anchor P.H. Surrey street Cutmore George, General Windham P.H. 122 Cowgate st
Croft Henry, wheelwright, Vauxhall street Cut more Mary Ann ( :V1rs. ), baker, 94 Barraek street
Crook Arthur L.R.C.P.r.ond. surgeon, medical officer No. 4 Cutting Harry, pork butcher, 33 St. Paul's plain
district & boys' home, 53 Prince of Wales road Daines Edgar, corn. traveller, 109 Trinity st.SouthHeigham
Crook John, surgeon, 57 Cbapelfield road Daines Frank, shoe knife maker, Water lane, St. George's
Crook William Gustavus, public analyst & dispenser at Daines George, watch maker, 65 Dereham road
Norfolk & Norwich hospital, 25 All Saints' green Daines Isaac, boot sole sewer, Appleton's yard, St. George's
Croot Benjamin James, tailor, 30 Havelock road Middle street
Cropley James, shopkeeper, Fisher's lane Daines Jarnes, boot maker, 3 Old Palace road
Croplcy William Christopher, Bedford Arms P.H. Bedford Daines John, boot sole sewer, Turner's et. St. Benedict's st
street, St. Andrew's Daines Louisa (Mrs.), shopkeeper, r6 St. Saviour's lane
Croskill John, John Hull P.H. Union street Daines Robert, carpenter, Hall road, New Lakenham
Cross, Barnard & Cr,Jss, solicitors, Surrey street Dai nes Samuel George, shopkeeper, 103 Barrack street
Cross Charles Bedford, solicitor, see Cross, Barnard & Cross Dakin & Co. wholesale & retail tea, coffee & spice merchants,
Cross Henry, shopkeeper, IO Ber street 9 & r r Davey place
Cross James, farmer, Lowe;r Earlham Dambrock John, Jolly Butchers P;H. Ber street
Cross James, shopkeeper, 104 Ber street Dancock George, coffee rooms, 15 Golden Ball street
Cross John (firm, Cross, Barnard & Cross), solicitor & com- Daniel Waiter W. bookseller, rr Hack of the Inns
missioner for oaths, clerk to the guardians of Norwich Daniell Wm. Jeffery & Co. yeast mer. Hawkes yard, Oak st
IncorporatiOn & clerk to the assessment committee, Nor- Daniels Brothers, seed merchants & nurserymen, Royal
wich, Surrey street Norfolk seed establishment ; retail shops, r6, IS & 20
Crosse Reginald Edward M.R.c.s., L.R.C.P. house surgeon, Exchange street ; chief otlices, Bedford street; ware-
Norfolk & Norwich hospital, St. Stephen's road houses, Bedford street; nurseries, Town close,~ewmarket
Crosse Thomas William, surgeon & registrar of births & road & Seed farrns, Eatou
deaths for Mancroft sub-district & medical otliccr of Daniels Chas. shopkpr. 57 & 59 Suuthwell rd.New Lakenham
health to the urban sanitary authority, 45 St. Giles st Daniels Ueorge, bricklayer, So Pitt street
Crosskill & Son, machine cork manufacturers & Daniels John, beer retailer, Magdalen road
brewers' sundriesmen, cork sock merchants, mop makers Daniels Maria (Mrs.), fruiterer, n6 Magdalen street
&c. established r8ro, St. George's Bridge st. See advert Daniels Susannah (Miss), pork butcher, 77 St. Benedict's

st
Crosskill John, hair dresser, Golden Ball street Daniels Thomas, shopkeeper, 31 Palace street
Crosskill Wm. tinplate worker, \Vater lane, St. George 1s Daniels William, cattle dealer, Aylsham road
Crotch Frederick Joseph, news agent & bill poster, 13 St. Daniels William, Saracen's Head P.H. 24 Distillery street
George's Middle street & secondhand bookseller, so Danish Dairy Company, butter dealers, 5 Ha::srmarket
Bridge street, St. George's DarbyMaryElzh. (Mrs. ),NewBreweryP.H.9oLow. Westwick st
Crotch Waiter Geo. plasterer, 4 Lyndhurst vils.Magdalen rd Darby Robert, commercial traveller, 162 Dereham road
Crowe Frederick & Sons, printers, I I Pottergate street Darby Sarah(Mrs.), shopkeeper, ss Rupert street
Crowe John & Son, cabinet makers & upholsterers, Darby Susannah (-'lrs. ), shopkeeper, 41 Union street
carvers, gilders, paperhangers & decorators & furniture Darby William, basket maker, Lower Westwick street
depository, St. Stephen's street Darken Frank Harry, pianoforte ware rooms, 42 London st
Crowe Augustus Daniel, grocer, 128 Cowgate street Darley Henry William, boot & shoe maker, 74 Pitt street
Crowe F. B. house agent & valuer, St. Stephen's street Darrell Harrington \Vyndham M.D., c.M., L.R.C.P.Lond.
Cruikshank ·wm. Angel Gardens P.H. Angel rd.New Catton surgeon, medical officer 3rd district Norwich union, sur-
Cubitt, Brown & Carter, wine & spirit merchants & im- geon Norwich Lying-in Charity & deputy surgeon Nor-
porters & ale & stout merchants & bottlers, Magdalen st wich police, 35 Surrey street
Cubitt & Son, printers, IOI Pottergate street Dashwood Alfred John, gasfitter, 15 Pottergate street &
Cubitt & Sons, furniture dealers, Tombland York tavern, York street
CubittHy. bricklayer&nurseryman, 13Abernethy ter. Sussex st Dash wood George, market gardener, 93 Northumberland st
Cubitt Thomas, insurance agent, 2S St. Giles hill Davey & Co. grocers & agents for W. & A. Gilbey, wine &
Cudbird Thomas, carpenter, 6x Caernarvon road spirit merchants, ro6 & roB Ber street & 44 Botolph street
Cnllen Frederick Spencer, chemist, 7 Barrack street Davey John Alfred, draper, 240 Queen's road
Culley & Bullimore, public accountants, Queen street Davis A. & J. market gardeners, Ipswich road
Culley Henry Read, solicitor, commissioner & coroner for Davies George Christopher (firm, Cooper & Davies),solicitor,
the county (Norwich district), Bank street & deputy clerk to theN orfolk county council,s8 London st
Culley Jane (Mrs.), shopkeeper, Eagle street Davison Brothers, fruiterers, 101 Upper St. Giles street
Culley Samuel, city accountant, Municipal officea Davison Richard, Bakers' Arms P.H. Ber street!
DIRECTORY. J NORFOLK. NORWICH. 5U
Davy Jane (Miss), milliner, 88 Upper St. Giles street I Dimmpck George 'l'homasl printsell&, dealer in artists'
Daws Charles Waterhouse, watch maker, see Allen & Daws materials & best fancy goods, framing & gilding estab-
Daws Edwin, Shoulder of Mutton P.R. 54 St. Stephen's st lishment, Fine Art galleries, 66 London street
Daws Robert, carpenter, Doreham road Dingle Arthur, boot & shoe manufacturer, 32 Pottergate st
Dawson Daniel, hotpresser & finisher, 44 Colegate street Diocesan Female Training Institution for Schoolmistresses
Dawson George, brick maker, Lindley st. Now Lakenham (Rev. W. N. Ripley, treasurer; Rev. Thomas Archbold
Dawson George William, beer retailer, 6 Wymer street M.~. principal; Miss Billing, lady superintendent; Miss
Dawson Hester (Miss}, milliner, 54 Philadelphia lane J ames, head governess), St. George's plain
Dawson Jamos, shopkeeper, 2 Leicester street, York street District Registry of Her Majesty's High Court of Probate
Dawson Jane (Miss), draper, II9 Magdalen street (George Robert Harman, registrar; Henjamin Richard
Dawson John Daniel, currier, Golden Dog lane Gold Watling, chief clerk), Lower close
Dawson Jonathan, carcase butcher, Hellesdon road Dix Caroline (.Mrs.), shopkeeper, Albany road, Eaton
Dawson Martha (Miss), shopkeeper, Albert terrace, St. Dix Maria (Mrs.), Bricklayers' Arms P.R. 38 Bull close
Leonard's road, Thorpe Hamlet Dixon Hy. marine store dealer, 47 Union st. South Heigham
Dawson Robert Ralph, grocer, 17 Pitt street Dixon Irwin Edward, linen draper, 47 Magdalen street
Dawson Sarah (.Mrs.), news agent, 23 Red Lion street Dixon Joscph, tailor, 57 Duke street
Dawson Thomas, butcher, 104 Magdalen st. & 6o Hotolph st Dixon Thomas, watch maker & jeweller, 25 London street
Dawson \'\'alter Reuben, linen draper &grocer, g Heigham st Dobson Robert, shoe maker, 97 Unthanks road
Dawson \'\'illiam, shopkeeper, 67 King street, Crook's place Dodd Robert Philip, hay & straw dealer, Raglan street
Dawson \'\'illiam, shopkeeper, roo Lawson rd. New Catton Dodman \'\'alter Thomas, shopkeeper, 2 Norfolk street
Dawson William Thorndick, chemist, 76 Prince of Wales rd Dodson John, grocer & prO\'ision dealer, 28 London street;
Day Alfred, solicitor & commissioner for oaths, Up. Surrey st 13A, Dereham road & 45 Magdalen street
Day David, teacher of music, 6 Briggs street Donovan Hannah (Mrs.), dress maker, 8 Magdalen road
Day Donald Douglas F.R.c.s. surgeon, & assistant surgeon Dorman Edward, hair dresser, 82 Ber street
Norfolk & Norwich hospital, 4 Upper Surrey street Doughty's Hospital (Wm. Kett Finch, master), Calvert st
Day James, wheelwright, 28 Vauxhall st. Chapelfield road Doughty Ellen (Miss), dress maker, r Green Hills road
Day Robert, monumental mason, Station road Dougless William, shopkeeper, 125 Barrack street
Day Thomas, shoe maker, 21 Timber Hill street Dove John, blacksmith, White Hart yard, Ber street
Day William, greengrocer, 7 Timber Hill street Downe James, Bell commercial hotel (adjoining Cattle
Day William Hankes, surgeon, 3 Surrey street market), Orford hill ·
Daylight (Edward Burgess, printer, publisher & prQprietor; Downes Herbt. Rd. tailor, hatter, hosier & juvenile outfitter;
published sat.); works & office, St. Giles st. See advert also ladies' tailor & habit maker, 29 London st. & Swan la
Daynes Frederick Slater, wood dealer, Old Lakenham Downes James, greengrocer, Wellington lane & 74 Oak st
Daynes J ames, fishmonger, Old Palace road Downes Robert, fishmonger, 28 Lower Westwick street
Daynes James, shopkeeper, 74 l:larrack street Downing J. & Sons, builders & contractors,& manufacturers
Daynes James Varna, sole sewer, 22 Golden Dog lane of every description of joinery work, by special machinery,
Daynes John, hair dresser, 29 Rupert street & supply & lay encaustic tiles for floors of churches, balls,
Daynes John William Crook, solicitQr & commissioner for corridors, conservatories &c. &c. ; concrete floors &c.
oaths (firm, Havin & Daynes), Castle meadow Victoria street
Daynes Hobert William, Turkey Cock P.R. 40 Elm hill Dowson B. W. & Sons, corn merchanta, Exchange street
DaynesThos.HotPres;;ers'Arms P.H.&tinplate workr.170ak st Dowson Ed ward Christmas, Black Friar tavern, Bridge street,
Deacon James Joseph, Rose Valley tavern, Unthanks road St. George's
Deakin George, carpenter, Pottergate street Drag Hounds (G. Allen, huntsman), Mousehold
Deakin Joseph, greengrocer, 78 Mountergate street Drake Daniel, mineral water manufr. 49 St. Benedict's st
Dean & Chapter's Choristers' School (J. H. Hrockbank, Drake Elizh. (Mrs.), dress ma. 35 Grove rd. & 24 Surrey st
master), Upper close Drake Emma (Mrs.), shopkeeper, Rope walk, Hellesdon rd
Deane Francis, commercial traveller, 135 Dereham road Drake Francis, boot maker, 30 Coslany street
Death Arthur, painter, I I Old Palace road Drake Francis, jun. baker, & post office, Heigham causeway,
Death Elizabeth (Mrs.), shopkeeper, 45 Bishopsgate street 146 Devonshire street
Debbage James, china & glass dealer, 11 Palace street Drake George, shopkeeper, 32 Horns lane
Debbage William, Fountain P.R. 135 St. Benedict's street Drake Harry George, baker, 26 Heigham street
De Carle & Son, chemists & manufacturers of De Carle's Drake Louisa (Mrs.), shopkeeper, 65 Union st.Sth.Heigham
solid fruit juices, 9 St.Angustine's st. & 56 St.Stephen's st Drake Sophia (Mrs.), dress maker, 4 Cathedral street south
Deeks Elizabeth (Mrs.), confectioner, 40 St. Stephen's st Drake William, chimney sweeper, 101 Oak street
Delf Henry Wilson, shopkeeper, 64 Union street Drake William, Spread Eagle P.R. SI Sussex street
Delf James, cowkeeper, City road, New Lakenham Drake William Henry, grocer, n8 King street
Delph Henry, whitesmith, Golden Hall street Drane Christopber & Son, jobbing gardeners, 56 Park road
Delves Brothers, ironmongers, St. Andrew's Hall plain Drane Donald, auctioneer, 36 Castle meadow .,
Denham Ellen (Mrs.), milliner, 126 Waterloo road Drane Wallace Tuttle, grocer, tea & prov. dealer, 6 Grove st
Denmark Charlotte (Mrs.), Rainbow P.R. Old Palace road Draper Nehemiah, Redan tavern, Thorpe rd. Thorpe Hamlet
Denmark Hamlet William, baker, 17 Fishgate street Drew Henry, shopkeeper, 45 Lawson road, New Catton
Denmark Rebecca (Mrs.), dress maker, 76 Magdalen street Drewell Mary Ann (i\'Irs. ), apartments, 8 Theatre street
Dennes Charles Bevan, upholsterer, St. John's street, Madder Drinkwater !<'rank, artist, 37 St. Giles road
market Driver Charles, vinegar agent, Duke street
Dennington Charles, Surrey tavern, Surrey road Driver Waiter (Mrs.), fancy draper, 8 Back of the Inns
Dennington J osiah,greengrocer, 99 Rupert st. SouthHeigham Ducker Frederick, dairyman, 130 Alexandra road
Dennington Wait. market gardnr.Aylsham rd. Up.Hellesdon Ducker James Fostick, grocer, 34 Oak street
Dennis George, grocer, 87 Prince of Wales road Duffen Henry Edward, fancy draper, I I Dove street
Denny DonaldAnthony, farmr. St.Leonard's rd. ThorpeHamlt Duffield Charles, Wine Coopers' Arms P.R. 30 St. Mary's rd
Dent Aaron, greengrocer, 112 Lower West wick street Duncan Albert Kirk, wine & provision dealer, 62 St. Giles st
Dent Arthur Edwin Clare, governor of Her Majesty's Prison, Duncan Frederick, shopkeeper, 26 Mariner's lane
Mousehold heath Dunean William Walter, tailor, 142 Magdalen road
Dent Dowson, reliev-ing officer for North Hcigham district, Duncas Emanuel, carpenter, I Spencer st. Bull Close road
11 ::Vewmarket road Dunham Ed wd. Chas. bedding manufacturer, 9 Westlegate st
Dent Samuel Platten, tailor, 8 Gladstone street Dunham John, market gardener, Eaton park
Dcsborough Edward, Mile Cross inn, & butcher,Aylsham rd Dunmore Thomas H. corn & flour merC'hant & seed ware-
Des borough Rt. Heartsease P. a.l'lumstead rd. Thorpellamlet house, 124 St. Benedict's street
Devereux Edmund, painter &c. 18 St. George's Middle st Dunn George, Cellar House P.R. Eaton
Dewbery John, boot & shoe manufacturer, 12 Old Palace rd Dunthorne Charles, Seven Stars P.R. I I2 Barrack street
Dewiug Edward James, Green Hills P.H. 12 Green Hills rd Dunthorne Samuel, Magpie P.H. 34 Magpie road
De wing Richard, english timber merchant, Green hills, Dunn Isaac, boot & shoe manufact11rer, 28 & 30 Calvert st
Hellesdon road Durrant Harriet (Mrs.), wardrobe dealer, 93 St. George's
Dhonau Conrad, baker, 125 King street Middle street
Dickerson Agnes (Mrs. ),glove m a. St. John st.Madder market Durrant Matthew, cab proprietor, 22 Surrey street
Dickerson Watts, butcher, 85 Alexandra road Durrant Richard, shopkeeper, 113 Oak street
Diggens F. G. & Co. linen drapers, hosiers, haberdashers & Dyball Charles, tailor, I I St. Giles street
carpet warehousemen, Swan lane & Bedford street Dyball Judith (Miss), lodging house, 69 Hethel street
Diggens George & Sons, sack, bag & rope manufacturers, Dybell Mary (Miss), temperance hotel, 27 Castle hill
stack covers, genuine wagon & cart waterproof covers & Dye Alfred Jn. lamp & oil dealer, 2 Home st.North Heigham
mats & mattings, Bedford street, St. Andrew's Dye Elizabeth (Mrs.), Boiler Makers' Arms P.H. 57 King st
C. N. & S. 35
~42 NORWICH. NORFOLK. • • r [KELLY's

Dye IA.rthux< Sl'liter,·'l:hintager'of .f.he- Norwich Wine'O>:I 9~ Ellis Robert P, district-goods manager Great Eastern rail~
• Upper St. Giles lltreet ·, ' ,. · ' ,. 1 • <-way, Thorpe sta~ion t - • • •
Dye George, carpenter, 72 Essex street Ellis Williatn1 potato salesman, 66 St. George's Middle st
Dye George, tailor, .5'5 Princ)ll) of Wales rea'd Ellison John Stephen, tobacconist-, Market place & fancy
Dye Horaoo, shopkeeper, 79 Devonshire str~t reposiwry,"-t Dove stTeet _ • ' ' ·
Dyke Robert, herbalist, 6 Peacock street Ellison Robert, wood turner, St. Margaret's alley
Eade Sir Peter M. D. physician, & eon~nlting physician-to the Elmer Clmrles Curtisi pork butcher, 54 Magdalen street
Norfolk & Norwich hospital, Upper St. Giles street Elmer William. baker, 32 Vauxhall street
E'ade-'Thdmas Williarri, boot maker(III M3gpie road Elsegood William, shopkeeper, 4 St. John's street, Rose lane
Eagleton Arthur Joseph, sewing machine 11gent, IS Dove st Elvin Mary (Miss), dress maker, 4 St. Saviour's lane
Eagleton George, shopkeeper, I Chapel yard, Botolph street El win Fredk. Oxford Arms l'.H. 28 Oxford Bt. Sth. Heighatn
Earl Charles Wm. chimney sweeper, City st. Del'eham road Elwin Roberll A'!'thm•, baker, 25 Ketts hill ·
Earl Ja.mes, chimney sweep, ar St. George's Middle street Elwirt Samuel, shopkeeper, 42 Lawson road, Magdalen road
Earl John, picture frame maker, 82 Pitt street Ely Mary (Mrs.), news agent, 6 Red Lion street
Earle Mary Ann (Mrs.}, shopkeeper, Anchor st. Mousehold Emerson Charles George, solicitor, 12 Rampant Horse street
East Anglian Art Society (John Rrandram<Morgan esq: Emerson Matthew Sallitt, solicitor, 12 Rampant Horse street
president ; Jartles Reeve, hon. sec.), St. Andrew's Broad st Emms Harry Horace, Cricketers' Arms P. H. Red Lion street
East Anglian Han<l Book (P. Soman & Son, proprietors; Emms William, linen draper, 3 & 5 Lower Goat lane •
publishM annually), London street & Upper Goat lane 1 Emms William John, tailor & draper, 2I Pottergate street
East Anglian Soap Co. ·soap makers &c. Fishgate street t Empson Edward, boot maker, Chapel st. South Heigham
Eastangh George~ bee~ retailer 1 7 How~rd street, _Grove rd Empson Elizabeth (Miss), dress maker, ro Bracondale ·
Easter George, hbrlu1an to the Norwtch Free hbrary, St. England William, 1 coal dealer, Fye Bridge street & 29 Prince
Andrew's Broad street . of Wales road- -
Eastern Counties Advance & Investment A~sociation Lim. English & Son, general draper-s, 13 T~ondon street ·•
(W. F. M. Wilson, manager), 16 Castle meado~ I English & American ~hoe & Ueneral Machinery Co. Limited
Eastern Daily Press (Norfolk News Co1 Limited, publishers), (Mathias- Gooderham, manager), 24 Colegate street ·
5 & 7 Exchange street · • English Josepb, chemist & druggist, ro3 Upper St. Giles stl
Eastern Evening News (Norfolk News Co. Lim. publishers), English Lawrence Wn1·. solicitor, Castle chambers, Opie st
5 & 7 Exchange street • · • · Evans .Tames, builder & contractor, Nelson st. Dereham rd
Eastern & Midlands Railway Co. (William Frederic Stafford, Everett Frederick, ironmonger, 63 & 65 St. Step hen's street
··manager)·; city oHice, Haymarket · • Everet-1! Harry· Wa.llace, greengracer, 92 Magdalen street
Eastern Weekly Press (Norfolk News Co. Lim. publishers; E-vel'itt G-eorg-e, pianofmte tuner 1 8 Elm hill ,
published friday for saturday), 5 & 7 Exchange street· Everitt Henry Reeve, Solicitor, see Watson & Everitt
Eastgate Samuel, Alexandra P.H. 148 Old Palace road Eversley William Finder M.A., B.C.L. barrister·at-law. 13
Eastma.n's Lim.{A. Mann,salesman),butchers,8 Exchang-e st Upper King street · • • .., _.
Ea.!! to Charles, Pine Apple·tnn, & farmer, 'frowse Mlllgate FakeJob & Son, well sinkers & pump mas.Angel rd. N ewCattn
Easton Elizh. (Mrs.), shopkeeper, 35 Barrack st.. St. James' Farman Emily (Mrs.), pork butcher, 104 Cowgate streel!
Easton 'fhomas,carthanware dealer, 22 & 24 St. Aug-l\stine st Farquhar Hugh, military & ladies' tailor, I Orford bill
Easton William, l•'lowe!"-in.Hand P.H. 20 Pitt street Farrell Joseph, White Rose P.H. 109 Cowgate -street
Ea ton Village Club (F. Heath, hon. sec.), Ea ton '· Farrow Arthur, butcher, 67 King street
Ebbage Robert."~Teengrocer, 35 Chapel street, Crook's place Farrow GeoTge, hair dresser, 164 King street
Ecclestone John Hy. shopkeeper, 43 Hall rd. New Lakenham Farrow John Thomas, shopkeeper, 2 Ash by st. Queen's road
Economic Life Assurance Co. (Alfred Mottram, ngent), Farrow Maria (Mrs.), Paul Pry P.lf. St. Giles hill
Rank plain . - Farrow Oscar, St. Faith'stavern, Mountergate street;
Eddington Alexander, grocer, tea dealer & provision mer- Farrow Robert Money, grocer, 12-B Cambridge street
chant &o. 23 The Walk Farrow Wm. Joseph,saddler & harness maker,23 Haymarket
Edrich Robert Shepherd 1 agent for the Patriotic Assurance Fa sola Christopher ,dining & refreshment rooms, 59 London st
Co.; 'fbe Security Co. Limited & Norwich & London Faulkncr Frederick \Villiam, auctioneer, 10 Grove st. north
Accident Insurance Association, 35 Rose lane Featherstone Ann (Mrs . .), shopkeeper, & post office, Eaton
Edward '\Villiarn Charles, boot & shoe manufactureT, -67 Feavyer John, baker, \Vellington lane
St. Oeorge's Middle street · -- Feavyer William, baker, 27 Brunswick road
Edwards & Sew ell, boot & shoe manufr~. St. George's plain Feek Frances (Mrs.), preparatory school, 6 Elm hi11
Edwards Ann (Miss), furrier, I7 Castle meadow Feek Laura {MiS!ii), dress maker, Rupert-street
Edwards Arthur, boot & ~hoe manufr. 138 & qo Magpie rd Feeko James Hall, surveyor to the Norwich waterworks, 66
Edwards Edward, tailor, 21 Brunswick road Chapelfield road
Edwards Fredcrick, Grapes P.H 72 Colegate street Feest Richard, shopkeeper, 39 Lothian street
Edwards George, boot & shoe maker, 12 Wensum street Fell James, butcher, 77 Upper St, Giles street
Edwards George Robt. upholsterer, Bedford st. St. Andrew's Felstead Charlutte (Mrs.), furrier, 19 Castle meadow
Edwards Henry Forder, watch maker, IS St. Giles hill Fcltham SI. Southw.~JI Arms P.H. 57 Hall rd. New Lakenbam
Edwards James, baker, 19 Union street . Fenn Ann (Mrs.), grocer, 139 Magdalen street
Edwards Maria (Mrs.), wardrobe dealer, 62 Oak street Fenn Frederick Henry, painter, 2 Beaconsfield road
Edwards Matilda (Mrs.), hair dresser, IS H.ed Lion street Fenn Hannah Eliza (Mrs.), stay maker, 2I St. Peter's
Edwards Rosa (Mrs.), dress maker, 81 West End street street, Mancroft
Edwards Thomas, shopkeeper, 46 Pottergate street Fcrra William, boot & shoe maker, 32 St. Martin's lane
Edwards Wm. corn dealer 69, & confectioner 65, Botolph st Ferrington Arthur 1 Rampant Horse P.H. 3l Fishgate street
Edwards Wm. Albert, comme-rcial traveller, 18 Earlbam rd Fiddy & Smith, corn merchants & millers, 8t. Peter's
Ed-ards Williarn Daniel, wine & spirit merchant, street & 3 Rose lane; mills, Peafield; La.kenham ·
direct importer of Guinness' extra stout, agent for Fiddy Horace, shopkeeper, 53 Southwell rd, New Lakenham
1 Allsopp's & Bass' ales & Yonngs, Crawshay & Youngs' Fiddy Isaiah, furniture dealer 1 127 ·waterloo road
Norwich ales, 7 & 9 Castle street; private residence, 5 Fiddy Robert, White Hart P.H. St, Peter's street, Mancroft
Castle street, adjoining London street Fiddy Waiter, grocer,·IOI Her street
Eglen Frank Coldham, baker, 57 Oak street · · Fiddyment John, The Bull P.H. Bull close
Eglen Horace William, baker, 8 Wymer street Fiddymonft Daniel James, linen draper 1 Wensum street &
Eglington Julia (Miss), apartments, 3 Rig-by's et. St. Giles st Fyc Bridge street
Egmore A.nnie Matilda (Mrs.), shopkeepr. 72 Philadelphia la Field Frederick, wood carver, 2 Timber Hill street ~
Egmore Mary (Miss), preparatory school, 35 Trinity street, Field Martha (Miss), underclothing maker, see Rice &
South Heigham · Field (Misses) ·
Eke Mack, tailor, Magdalen road I Field William, jobbing garde!Ier, 56 Heigham road
Eke Waiter, wheelwright, 7A, Newmarket road · Fielding James M.D. surgeon & medical officer Bethel hospi-
Elgar Mary Ann (Mrs.), apartments, Ivy house, Rosary tal, 31 Bethel-street
road, Thorpe Hamlet · Fields Joseph,. shopkeeper1 21 St. Mary's plain -
Elgood Cubit, pork butcher, 81 Magdalen street • ' Filby Frederick George, shopkeeper, Helena rd. Dereham rd
El good Joseph, Duke of York P. H, Bishops Bridge road. Filby George, builder, 31 Connaught road
Elliott Rester (Mrs.), lodging house, 47 St. Giles hill Finch 8hadrach, chimney swe~per, 1 .St. Miles Church alley
Ell!s Ann. (M~ss ), lo?ging house,, 95 IJpper St. Giles street Fire Brigade & Engine House ( w1der superintendence of chief
Elhs BenJamm, frmterer, 5 Wh1te Lwn street constable of city police), Guildhall
Ellis Charles, pork butcher; 11 Heigham street j Firman George, beer merchant, see Fitt & Finnan
Ellis Edwd. fishmonger, l30 Pottergate st. & 74 St. Giles hl Firsll Day .School Coffee Cart Co. (George C. Cooper,
Ellis James, William the Fourth P.H. Telegraph lane, manager), 61 Heigham street
Thorpe Hamlet - ' • >- 1. • Fish George, shopkeepet', 43 MancroftJ street, Dereham road
Ellis Jas. W.a,lJ:er, Chet<ry 'J;.rei).P.H. Hall rd. New Lakenham Fish Henry, greengrocer, II St. Giles hill
Ellis Samurl 1 fruit & potato merchant, Market place Fish Lucy (Mrs.), shirt maker, 48 St. Giles hill
DIRECTORY. J NORFOLK. NORWICH.
' f • '
'
{

Fish Robert, baker, r6 Bethelstreet Foster. Charles Blackwell (firm, Fostet"S & Burroughes),
Fish Samuel, Black Chequers P.H. 133 Cowgate street solidtor & deputy coroner for Norfolk (Norwich distri'rt),
Fisher & Co. baking & egg powder manufacturers, Calvert ·Bank place . · ·
street, see advertisement ' Foster Francis Gostling (firm,· Fosters & Burroughes),
Fisher Francis, commercial traveller, 21 Bloomsbury place solctr. & perpetual comsnr. for taking acknowledgmeo,ts
Fisher George, currier & leather seller, 8 & 9 Church street of deeds by married women & for taking oaths, Bank pl
Fisher George Henry, picture frame maker, 84 St. Benedict's Foster George, currier, 33 Timber Hill street
street. & statione1·, 105 Dereham road Foster George Thomas, cabinet maker, 16 Magdalen road.
Fisher George Hubert, grindery &c. cealer, 20 West End st Foulger Arthnr Henry, George inn, 66 St. Stephen's street
Fisher James George, draper, see Brooks & Fisher Foulger Austin Wm. greengrocer, 41 Hall rd.New Lakenbam
Fisher John, Black Boys P.H. 30 Colegate street I<'oulger John, shopkeeper, 92 Magpie road · ,
Fisher John, plumber, 59 Heigham rood Foulser Richard, carpenter, 2 Knowsley road .
Fisher John, shoe maker, 94 Trinity street, South Heigham Foulsham James, watch maker, 74 Prince of Wales road
Fisher John, tobacconist, 35 Duke street Fountain William, apartments, 34 St. Giles hill
Fisher Louisa (Mrs.), grindery dealer, 71 King street Fowler Thomas, baker, 49 King street '
Fisher Rebecca (Miss), dress maker, 64 St. Giles street Fox & Nicholls, tailors, hatters & hosiers, I Haymarket,
f'isber Rhoda (Mrs.), wood turner, 84 Oak street Fox Edward, carpenter, 175 Heigham street
Fisher Richard, butcher, 136 Cowgate street Fox I<'rederick Secret, Lion inn, Cattle market
Fisher Robel't, wholesale grocer, Bridge street, St. George's Fox Hugh, wholesale London, Birmingham & Sheffield
Fisher William, beer retailer, 68 King street warehouseman, cutler & dealer in haberdashery & srp.aij
I<'isher William, wood turner, Station road wares, 21 Haymarket
Fisher Wm. Joshua, Queen Victoria P.H. III Adelaide street Fox James, carpenter, 4 Ashby street, Queen's road
Fisk Henrietta (Mrs.), shopkeeper, Mill rd. New Lakenham Fox Ja.mes Frederick, watch maker, 28 West Pottergate st
Fisk Julia (Miss), dress maker, Cedar road, Thorpe Hamlet Fox John Williamj tailor, 15 Theatre street
Fitch & Chambers, chemists, Market place Fox Mary (Mrs.), midwife, 5 Lime Tree cots. Heigham st
Fitch Charles, commercial trav. 26 Essex st.South Heigham Foxhall John, Bricklayers' Arms P.ll. 2 Union street
Fitt ·& l<'irma.n, beer merchants, Pitt street Foyson Robert Burrage, carpenter, 4 Rose lane
Fitt George &; Co. auctioneers, valuers, & land & estate Foyster George, greengrocer, 29 Magdalen street '·
agents, Redwell street Foyster William, wardrobe dealer, n Muspole street
Fitt Francis, confectioner, 6 Botolph street Framsham William James, baker, 51 Grove road
Fitt Frederick, Wine Cooper's Arms P.H. 13 Distillery st Francis & Back, solicitors, 22 St. Giles street
Fitt John Henry, Swan P.H. 79 Cowgate street Francis Edward Cubitt B.A. (firm, Francis & Back), solic~-
Fitt Stephen Wm. corn dealer & futniture remover, Ber st tor & commissioner for oaths, 22 St. Giles street
Fitt Susan (Mrs.), butcher, 112 Ber street Francis Phcebe (Mrs.), shopkeeper, Julian Back street
Fitt William, fishmonger, 37 Heigham street Francis Robert, pork butcher, 216 King street
Fitt William, greengrocer, 95 Magdalen street Francis Hobert, jun. Duke of Fife P.H. Thorn lane
Fitt William, wardwbe dealer, 56 Oak street Francis Thomas George, stationer, 44 St. Stephen's street
Fitt Willie Darby, furniture dealer, 71 Ber street Francis William, shoeing smith, St. Augustine's street
Flanagan James, commercial school, Stranger's hall, Madder- Fraser Donald, tobacconist & cigar importer, 7 The Walk
market Fraser Francis George, working jeweller, IO St. Andrew's hl
Flatt !<'rank Geo. ironmonger & furniture dlr. Magdalen st Frazer Charles (exors. of"), manufacturing joiners &
Flatt Waiter, shoe maker, 43 Rupert street, South Heigham sawing & planing mills & horticultural builders, City saw
Flatt William, shoe maker, 43 Rnpert street mills, Palace plain
Fletcher & Son, wholesale & retail & fancy stationers, letter- Fredman Joseph, watch maker, Briggs street
press, lithographiC & color printers, bookbinders & account Freeman Chas. Robt. commission agent, 75 Mill Hill road
book manufacturers, Castle works, Davey place Freeman Daniel, wardrobe dealer, 21 Charing cross
Fletcher's Time Table, Castle works, Davey place Freeman Daniel Charles, shopkeeper, Albert rd. Mousehol~
Fletcher James, confectnr. go St. Benedict's st. & 15 Rose la Freeman George, carpenter, 99 Queen street, Crook's place
Fletcher Samuel 1 hair dresser, 13 Palace plain Freeman John, cabinet maker, 17 Thorn lane
Fletton Brick Co. Limited, brick merchants, Station road Freeman John Gooch, tobacconist, 59 Botolph street
!<'lit wick & Co. mineral water importers, 6 Timber Hill st Freeman Sarah (Mrs.), baker,Chapel street, SouthHeigham
:Flood Henry, fishmonger, II5 Ber street Freeman Walter, hair dresser, 57 Ber street
l<'lorenco Henry, fishmonger, u8 Cowgate street Freeman William, Black Eagle P.H. 20 RupcrtJ street
Flounce Edward, fish dealer, 58 Oak street Freeman William, cabinet maker, Bedford st. St. Andrew's
Flowerdew Hannah (Mrs.), yeast maker, IIO St. George's Freeman William, cabinet maker, 57 Ber street
Middle street Freeman William, hair dresser, 26 Elm hill
Flowers Arthur William, butcher, 8 Aylsham road Freeman William, tailor, 10 Rising Sun lane
Flowers ]:<'rank Jas. printer, Holmes yard, Low. Westwick st Freeman William Philip Barnes, artist, 35 Upper King street
Flowers Henry, district secretary Manchester Union of Odd- Freestone Anthony, baker, 36 St. Augustine's street
fellows, 5 Lady's lane Freestone John James, baker, 55 Southwell road, New
l<'oad Andrew Baker, practical watchmaker, jeweller & Lakenham .
optician, 43 St. Stephen's street Freestone Sarah Ann (Mrs.), shopkpr. I 5 St. Augustine's st
Folk Edwa.rd, baker, 78 King's street, Crook's place Freestone William Warren, grindery dealer, 64 & 66 Mag-
Ford Joel, loan office, 47 Rose lane daleu street & 17 Colegate street; & boot & shoe maker, 47
Ford John, Dove P.H. 4!1 Barrack street, St. James St. Benedict's street
Ford John, jun. Marquis of Gran by P.H. & chimney sweeper, French Edward Jas. wardrobe dealer, ·1:26 St. Benedict's st
142 Barrack street French Elizh. (Mrs.), dining tooms, 7 St. Stephen'fl plain ,
Ford Robert, teacher of music, 54 Heigham road French Thomas, commercial traveller, 29 Haveloc'k road ·
Fordham Robert, shopkeeper, & post office, 69 Rupert Frere Bartle Henry Temple, barrist~r-at-law, Bank plain
street, South Heigham - Frewer Henry, shopkeeper, 35 Fishgate street
I<'orrester George. land & estate agent; offices, r Upper Frost Elizabeth ~Mrs.), greeng-rocer, Lower close
King street Frost Jas. general tool warehouse, St. John st. Maddermrkt
Forrester Jas. B. land & estate agent; offices, 1 U~. K'ing st Frv Frederick, coffee house, 120 St. Benedict's street
Forsdick Frederick, coal merchant, Grove road r Fryer Clara. (Miss), boot & shoe maker, Rising Sun lane
Forste.r Francis Alexander,chemistr·Magdalen road Fryer George (Mrs.), dress maker, 71 Edinburgh road
Forster Samuel Joseph, gl"ocel', 40 St. Giles hill Fryer Sarah (Mrs.), shopkeeper, 220 Queen's road
Forster W. Hill P..A.S.I. auctioneer, surveyor, valuer, estate Fulcher Henry, coal dealer, 34 Orchard street
~· & land agent, Norwich & Eastern Counties property
1
Fulcher Robert, White Rose P.H. St. Margaret's plain
register, Orford hill Fuller & Co. homooopathic chemists, Rampant Horse street
Forster Waiter, private lodging house, 7 Queen street Fuller Thomas & Waiter, florists, Nelson street, North
Forster William, dining rooms, 81 Prince of \\'ales road Heigharn · :
Forster Wm. furniture broker, 6 Hall rd. New Lakenham Fuller E. M. (Mrs.), milliner, 15 Prince of Wales road
Forster William, shopkeeper, 122 Bull Close road Fuller Harry, plumber, 13 Scoles green
Fosdick Fred H. coal owner & mer. Coal offices, Queen's rd Fuller Lydia (Mrs.), boot & shoe maker, 95 Cattle mal'ket
Foster's Parcel Express Company Limited (John de Caux, Fuller Mary Ann (Mrs.), Ipswich tavern, St. Stephen's plain
agent), Castle meadow Fuller Stephen, wholesale & retail boot & shoe upper &
Fosters & Burroughes, solicitors, Bank place gaiter manufacturer, leather & grindery merchant, out-
Foster Charles B.A. (firm, Fosters & Burroughes), solicitor fitter &c. 4 Her street . , ..
& clerk of thBJ peace for the county & to. the Norfolk Fuller Victoria (Mrs.), Bird-in-Hand P.:e:. 53 Barrackistreet
county couilCii, ~:)hire hall . n ~ 1 Funnell Sarah (Mrs.), shopkeeper, Heath rd.St:4ngustine·~
I '
C. N. & S, 35* )
544 XORWICH.

NO,RFQLK. [KELLY's
'
Furness John, solicitor, perpetual commissioner, commis· Gilbert Edward, paperhanger, 28 Barn road
sioner w administer oaths in the Supreme court & clerk Gilbert John Wilson, solicitor & clerk of the peaco for the
' to the guardians & superintendent registrar of Depwade city of Norwich, Upper King street
union, clerk to Gissing School Board, secretary to South Gilbert Michael George, coach axle maker, 19 Chapelfield rd
Norfolk Conservative Registration Association, St. Gilbert Rachel (Miss), haberdasher, 68 St. Giles hill
Stephen's chambers, St. Stepheu's street Gilbert Samuel James, furniture dealer, 66 St. Giles hill
Gaffer Thomas, shopkeeper, roo Ber street Gilbert William, Red Lion P.H. 21 Magdalen street
Gaffney Elizabeth (Mrs.), butcher, 50 Lower Westwick st Giles Thomas, shopkeeper, Quebec road, Thorpe Hamlet
Gale Christopher John, boot maker, St. Stephen's Church Gill Charles, plasterer, 85 Trinity street, South Heigham
lane, Rampant Horse street Gill John, carpenter, 92 Trinity street
Gale George Edmund, Champion P.H. IOI Chapelfield road Gill Mary (Miss), preparatory school, Lower close
Gale Richard, shoe makers' tool dealer, 49 Pottergate street Gill Thomas, builder, Bexfield buildings, Rupert street
Gale William, apartments, 10 Willow lane Gillingwater Ed ward, district inspect. G .E. Ry. St.Fa1th's la
Gale William, blacksmith, ·wade court, St. Stepheu's street Gilhngwater Elizh. (Ml"s. ),shopkeeper, 43 Chapel st.Crook's
Galey Waiter, tailor, All Saints' street Gillingwater James, The Express Train P.H. 63 Rose lane
Gallant & Co. coal & coke merchants, Eastern & Midlands Gilman & Son, solicitors, St. Giles street
Railway coal depot, Heigham street Gilman Charles Rackham (firm, Gilman & Son), solicitor,
Gallant Clement Rowland, timber merchant, Mousehold commissioner for oaths, & secretary to the General Hail-
saw mills, Thorpe Hamlet storm Insurance Societv •
& the Norwich & London Acci-
Gallant Joshua, whitesmith, St. Martin's lane dent Association, 41 St. Giles street
Gallant :;\lorris, coal & coke merchant, 57 York street Gilman Charles Storey, barrister-at-Jaw, & assistant secre-
Gallant Nathaniel Geo. shopkpr. Aylsham rd. Up. Hellesdon tary to the Norwich & London Accident Association, 41
Gallard Joseph Richard, surgeon, 51 Dereham road St. Giles street
Gallehawk Arthur, Garden House tavern, Garden road Gilmore Harriet Maria (Mrs.), beer retailer, 1 Heigham st
Gallpen Charles Gaunt, artistic & general printer, book- Girdlestone Henry, watch & clock maker, 38 Pitt street
binder, account book manufacturer, plans & maps Girdlestone Samuel, wardrobe dealer, 14 Ber street
mounted, 17 Bedford street, St. Andrew's Girdlestone Thomas Jacob, plasterer, 3 Raglan street ·
Galpin A. J. & Co. toy warehouse, 26 The Walk Girling J. & H. coal & salt merchants (N. C. Young, mana-
Gamble Robert, East End Retreat P.H. Thorpe road, ger) ; chief office, 67 London st. ; depot, Victoria station
Thorpe Hamlet Girling- Wm. Queen Adelaide P.H. Adelaide st. Dereham rd
Gamble Thos. pawnbroker & clothier, II9 St. Benedict's st Girls' Friendly Society (Miss Grace A. Coleman, matron), 25
Gant Richard Brooking, commercial traveller, 12 Essex st St. Andrew's Broad street) & (Miss Gertrude Utten
Gapes Waiter John, inspector of corn returns, Tombland Browne, diocesan sec. ; A. H. Goose, agent) Rampant
Gardiner Arthur, tobacconist, 51 St. Benedict's street Horse street
Gardiner William Drake, commission agt. 76 Cambridge st Girls' Hospital School (Miss L. Terry, matron), New
Gardiner William John, chemist & druggist, 3 St. Giles Lakenharn
street, & registrar of births & deaths, 6 Elm hill Girls' Orphan Home (Mrs. Jane E. Swann, matron),
Gardiner William Norman, relieving officer, 1st district, Chapelfield
13 Bishopgate street Girls' Training Home (MissK.Kemp,matron),13Ciarendon rd
Garland & Sons, linen drapers, silk mercers, hosiers & Gittings Francis, general dealer, 56 Lower Westwick street
glovers, 15 & 17 London street Gladstone (The) Club (J. H. Hatch & W. N. Ladell, secs.),
Garnham George, bookbinder, 63 Pottergate street St. Giles street
Garrard Jes5ie (Miss), dress maker, 52 Southwell road, Glendenning Cath.(Miss). fancy repository, 28 The Walk
New Lakenham , Globe ParcelExpressOffice(J.De Caux, agt. ), Castle meadow
Garrod James Henry & Son, coal merchants, Eastern & Goddard Jamcs, parish clerk of St. Stephen, Church lane,
Midlands Railway coal depot, Heigham street Rampant Horse street
Gascoyne Jas.Leonard,paperhanger,94 St.George'sMiddle st Goddard Sarah Ann (Mrs.), dairy, Rampant Horse street
Gascoyne Jonathan, painter, 140 Heigham street Goddard Wm. Geo. insurance agt. 68 Peacock st. & Bank st
Gates Charles Sydney, shopkeeper, r6 West End street Godsall William, The Beaufort P.H. Prince of Wales road
Gathercole Richard, baker, Carrow road, Thorpe Hamlet Gaff Herbert Johnson, butcher, 30 Magdalen street
Gaul Robert, boot & shoe manufacturer, 13 Sussex street Golding Albert, furniture broker, 6 Charing cross
Gavin & Banger, photographers, 85 Upper St. Giles street Golding Robert, butcher, St. Stephen's plain
Gay Edward, shoe maker, 15 Rupert street Goldsmith Charles, Rose P.H. Rose lane
Gay Samuel, printer, 34 St. Andrew's Bridge street Goldsmith Charles Samuel, fruiterer, 10 Queen street
Gayford Thomas, Lamb P.H. carpenter & wheelwright,Eaton Goldsmith Edward, shopkeeper, 18 West Pottergate street
Gayford William (Mrs.), dress maker, I I Ber street Goldsmith Jas. Wales, grocer, & post office,6o St.Stephen's st
Gayford William, gasfitter, 64 St. Giles hill Goldsworth Frederick, bricklayer, 77 Bishopgate street
Gaymer Robert, dairy, 57 St. Stephen's street Goldsworth Sarah (Mrs.), shopkeeper, 77 Bishopgate street
Gayton Henry, shopkeeper, 58 St. George's Middle street Gooch George Henry, slater, 27 St. Julian street
Gaze James Stephen, boot maker, 86 Trinity street - Gooch John, bricklayer, The Paddocks, Mousehold
Gazely Thomas John, baker, & post office, I Golding street Gooch Stephen, shopkeeper, 192 King street
Gedge Daniel, plumber &c. Wounded Hart lane, St. Peter's Gooeh W1lliam, boot & shoe maker, 53 London street
Gedge Robert, upholsterer, 8 Ashby street, Queen's road Goodchild Frederick, grocer, 52 Bethel street
Gee & Bennett, chair makers, Fisher's lane, Pottergate st Goodchild Herbert, solicitor & commissioner for oaths, 27
Gee Frederick, commercial traveller, 88 MiU Hill road Castle meadow _
General Hailstorm Insurance Society (established 1843) Goodings Wm. Hy. tinplate worker, 5 Golden Ball street
(Charles R. Gilman, sec.), 41 St. Giles street Goodnck James, shopkeeper, 33 Bishopgate street
George A.C.& Co. boot & shoe manufacturers, 2m,Muspole st GoodsonEmma( Miss), dress ma.18Carly le rd. NewLakenham
George Alice (Miss), fancy draper, Foundry bridge, Prince Goodson Robert, mantle warehouse, 10 Haymarket
of Wales road Goodwin John, boot maker, 7 Red Lion street
George Baron, flour, corn, seed & forage merchant; Goose Agas Henry, bookseller, stationer, printer, account
horses & traps on hire, 127 Cambridge street book maker &c. Rampant Horse street
George Harry, "The Ban Marche" drapery establishment, Goose Jacob, greengrocer, 40 West Pottergate street
millinery .k; dressmaking, St. Giles hill Goose John (Mrs.), lodging house, 26 Upper King street
George Robert, linen draper, 38 Ber street Gordon Frederick Wm. L.n.c.P.LOnd. surgeon, 10 Theatre st
George Walter Thomas, carpenter, 24 John street Goreham Christmas, tinplate worker, Lower Goat street
George William, jun. currier, Lord Howe's yard & shoe Goreham James, shopkeeper, II3 Heigham street
warehouse, 28 St. Benedict's street Goreham Joseph, Kett's Castle P.H. 29, & baker 45, Kett's
Gibbs Charles, builder & contractor, Essex street hill, Thorpe Hamlet
Gibbs Francis, tobacconist, 28 Ber street Goreham Wm. shopkeeper, 6g Devonshire st. & coal mer-
Gibson George, White Horse inn, Crook's pi. Chapelfield rd chant,Eastern & Midlands Railway coal depot, Heigham st
Gibson Harry, cowkeeper, 51 Belvoir street Goskar Harriet (Mrs.), teacher of music, 24 Wymer street
Gibson James, Old Barge inn, King street Gosling Stephen, pork butcher, 120 Pottergate s~reet
Gibson James, shopkeeper, 27 Oak street, St. Miles Gostling Williarn, shoe maker, 65 Rupert street
Gibson John, china & glass dealer, 6g Pitt street Gould Harry Pearce, chartered accountant & official
Gibson John Thomas, plumber, 87 Dereham road receiver in bankruptcy, 8 Upper King street
Gibson Robt. boot & shoe maker, 54 Union st. Sth. Heigham Gowing Abraham, Vine tavern, 7 Dove street
Gibson Wm. stationer,& post otfice,12 St. Andrew's Broad st Gowing Walt.Jn. grocer & baker,124Nelson st.Nth.Heigham
Gibson Wm. Robt. boot & shoe maker &c. 122 St. Benedict's st Gowling Geo. Lyn, corn dealer, Richmond hill, Bracondale
Gidney William & Son, artesian well borers, Lothian street Grand Robert, shopkeeper, 127 Armes st. North Heigham
Gidney Robert, confectioner, 87 Ber street Grant George, shopkeeper, 22 Grant street, Dereham road
Gidney Samuel, well, sinker, Brown's court, St:""Stephen's st Grant Waiter Henry, chemist, Sprowsron road, New Catton
I

DIRECTORY.) NORFOLK. NORWICH~ 545


•• IIale Henry, buncan Arms P.H. 49 Magdalen street
Graver Arthur, Duke's tavern P.li. 12 Tomblands
Graver George, greengrocer, 195 King street Hales John, carpenter, 86 York street
Graves William Thomas, Arabian House P.H. 72 Oak street Hales John Baseley Tooke (firm, Hansells & Halt~s), llolicitor
Gray Edward, linen draper, 18 Tombland notary public & proctor, deputy registrar of Norfolk arch-
Gray Everett, Golden Dog P.H. 34 Magdalen street deaconry, commissioner to administer oaths in the Su-
Gray John, hair dresse,r, 19 Rose lane preme court, Cathedral close
Gljly Roland Oliver, hll.ir dresser, 84 King street Hall Samuel & Son, builders, undertakers & contractors,
Great Eastern Railway Co. (George Kimm, district supt.; B Pottergate street
Robert Powley Ellis, district goods manager): offices, Hall William & Co. engravers, 8 Bethel street
'I'borpe station; parcels & booking office, Haymarket; H<tll Amelia (Miss), milliner, 9 Timber Hill street
refreshmnt. rooms (Robt. Cross, dist. mangr. ), Thorpe statu Hall Arthur Wm. stone & marble mason ; monuments,
Great Hospital (John Cox, master), Bishopgate tombs, head stones, chimney pieces &c.; inscriptions cut
Great Western Railway District Agent's Office (Ernest A. on stone, marble or granite, St. Augustine's monumental
Cooke, agent), Market place works, St. Augustine's street
Great head Ell en Maria (Miss ),ladies' school, 69 Pottergate st Hall Chas. Yeoman, Prince of Wales P.H. Prince of Wales rd
Greatwood Wm. Chapman, French Horn P.H. Bedford st Hall Edward, butcher, 43 Newmarket street
Greaves Elizabeth(Mrs. ),fruiterer,1_o; Bedford st. St.Andrew's Hall George, baker, Eaton
Green & Wright,who.grocers &c. 7 Up. King st.&Magdalen st Hall Henry Alfred, Crown & Angel P.H. & hair dresser, 41
Green Charles Cooper, commission agent, 33 Calvert street & 43 St. Stephen's street
Green Charles Edward, Bank tavern, Bank street Hall John, shopkeeper, 7 Trafalgar st. New Lakenham
Green George, Dial P.H. & jobmaster, livery & bait stables, Hall Jonathan, market gardener, Eaton park
131 Dereham road Hall Kate (Miss), milliner, 43 William street
Green George, hatter, hosier, glover, tailor & outfitter, llall Martin, beer retailer & miller (wind), Plumstead road
Rampant Horse street ; Red Lion street ; St. Beuediet's Hall William, greengrocer, 106 King street
street & Magdalen street; & Westgate, Ipswich Hall William, Wine Vaults P.n. Queen's st. Crook's place
Green Harriet (Miss), shopkeeper, 29 Adelaide street Hallam John William, bookseller, stationer, dealer in fancy
Green Harry Howard, accountant & yacht agent,32 Elm hill & leather goods, picture dealer, photographs framed &
Green Herbert John A. R. I. B. A. architect & diocesan sur- unframed; bibles, prayer & hymn books, birthday books,
veyor, 3 I Castle meadow poets' & devotional books in choice leather bindings, birth-
Green James Christmas, baker, no Waterloo road day & wedding cards, 16 London street
GreenMaryAnn(Mrs. ),shopkpr.2 Bexfld. bldngs.Sth.Heighm Hallett Mary M. (Miss), milliner, 3 Hriggs street
Green Michael, greengrocer, 138 Ber street Hallett Sarah (Miss), fancy repository, Bank plain
Green Robcrt By. Household, baker, 28 King's st. Crook's pl Halls & Co. tailors, 4 Exchange street
Greenacre Frederick, nurseryman, Dereham road Halls Herbert Henry, tailor, 13 St. Stephen's street
Greenacre Henry, saddler, I Gordon road, Queen's road Ham Catherine (Miss), dress ma. Thorpe rd. Thorpe Hamlet
Greenacre Joshua (Mrs.), nursery & florist,; wreaths & cut Ham 'rhos. J n. snpt. Prudential As,mrance Co. Ld. 34 Park la
flowers supplied at the shortest notice, Dereham road Harnmond W. & Co. boot & shoe manufrs. 7 Kimberley st
Greene Robert, watch maker, 18 Surrey street Hammond Henry, shopkeepe1", 29 St. Mary's plain
Greengrass John Bagg, wheelwright, West End street Hammond William Atmore, goods manager,Victoria station
Greeugrass Thomas, bricklayer, 49 Mariner's lane Hanbury Alice (Mrs.), teacher of music, 46 Mill Hill road
Gresham Life Assurance Society (W . .F. Stratford, local Hands & Sons; jewellers, 4 Castle street
sec.), Bank plain. See advertisement Hannaut Alfred, Pheasant Cock P.H. 244 Queen's road
Grief Ernest, shopkeeper, 78 Colegate street Hannant Emma (Miss), dining rooms, 40 St. Benedict's st
Griffin .John, dental surgeon, 38 Prince of Wales road ; & Hannant Nathaniel \Vm. baker, 92 Chapel st. Crook's place
Regent st. Yarmouth, on thursdays; consultations free; Hannant Robert George, butcher, 42 St. Benedict's street
gas administered daily. See advertisement Hannant William, baker, 9 Salford street, South Heigham
Griffith Henry & Son, plane manufacturers, Lower Goat lane llannentJ sph. Wm. market. gardener&farmer, 10GoldenDog la
Griiliths Jn. Robt. plane maker, Pottergate st. & Lw. Goat la Hausell Brothers, boot & shoe makers, 145 Ber street
Grigson Charles Hy. Bee Hive P.H. St. Peter's st. Mancroft Hansells & Hales, solicitors, Cathedral close ; & at Cromer
Grigson Rd. soktr. cornmr. to adminster oaths, Up. King st Hansell Alfred Jas. cabinet maker, Chatham st. Sussex st
Grimble William, carpenter, 47 Coach & Horses street Hansell Alfd.Jas.jun.cabinet ma.2 Portland pl.Goldsmith st
Grimmer Samuel & eo. wine& spirit merchants, & sole Hansell Edward Morgan, solieitor, see Hansells & Hales
agents for Truman, Ilanbury & Co.'s London stout & Hansell Peter Edw'ard (firm, Hansells & Hales), solicitor,
porter, St. Andrew's Broad street & Duke Street wharf; perpetual commissioner for taking aeknowledgments of
& at Great Yarmouth deeds by married women, commissioner to administer
Grimshaw John, cutler, Chapel street, Crook's place oaths in the Supreme court, clerk to the goverflors of King
Grimston Elizh. (Mrs. ),apartments, Cambridge ho. Tom bland Edward VI. school, managing director of the Norwich
Grint Arthur, hair dresser, I3I! King street branch of the North British & Mercantile Insurance Co. &
Griston Waiter Francis, grocer, 25 St. Augustine's street clerk to the Visiting Justices, Thorpe asylum, Cathedral
Grix William, dining rooms, 19 & 21 White Lion street close; & at Crorner
Groom George, dyer, 87 Trinity street, South Heigham Hansell Thomas, shopkeeper, 187 King street
Groom :Nlatilda Elizabeth (Mrs.), shopkeeper, 209 Queen's rd Hansell Waiter Edward, solicitor & notary public, see Han-
Groom Wil!iam, dyer, 62 Ber street sells & Hales
Grurnrnett Elizh. Mary (Mrs.), draper,66 Prince of Wales rd Hanton James, general smith, West End 1>treet
Gunn Robert & Son, coach makers, 82 King street Hanworth William, general furnisher, 9 Dereham road
Gunn Fredk. 'Vm. corn dealer, 70 King st. & Trafalgar st Harbord Sarah (Mrs.), laundress, 82 Camhridge street
Gunn Thomas Edwd. naturalist, 86 Upper St. Giles street Harcourt Alfred, watch maker, 7 Back of the Inns
Gunn Waiter, grocer & provision dealer, 73 St. Benedict's st Harconrt Rosworth \'Valter, dentist, 39 St. Giles street
Gunn ~'m. heraldic artist, St.Catherine's cottage, Snrrey rd Harcourt Ernest, drawing master, 26 Surrey street
Gunton Chas. A.who.ironmonger,36 Brid6e st. St.Andrew's Harcourt Henry. commercial traveller, 44 Wymer street
Gunton John Meadows, shirt maker,67 Pottergate street Harcourt James Arthur, teacher of music, 4 Queen's road
Gurney David, french polisher, 65 Chapel street, Crook's pl Harden Charles, baker & confectioner, 100 Upper St. Giles
Gurneys, Birkbecks, Barclay & Buxtun,bankers; head office, street & 14 Rt. Stephen's stl"eet
Bank. plain; draw on Barclay, Bevan, Tritton & Co. Hardiman John Henry, The Anchor inn, Hising Sun lane
London E c Hardiment Robert, tanner, fellrnonger & leather dresser, St.
Guy William M.D. surgeon, & public vaccinator for Norwich Martin' s-at-Oak
incorporation, 57 St. George's Middle street Harding Henry James, general carrier, railway, shipping &
Guyett Alfred, boot & shoe maker, 18 Wensum street commission agent, 31 King street. See ad\'ertisement
Guymer Herbert, h'\ir dresser, 32 Pitt street Hardingham Ernest Edward, grocer, Cricket Ground road,
Guyton Annie (Mrs.), apartments, 6 St. Step hen's square New Lakenham
Guyton l<'lorence Monmouth (Miss), dress ma. 31 St. Giles st Hardingham George, H.ed Lion P.H. I55 Magdalen street
Guyton Frederick, tailor, 7 Ten Bell lane Hardingham Henry, shoe maker, 15 St. John st. Rose lane
Hack worth Sarab Elizh. (Miss), pianoforte tchr. 18 Golding st Hardy Maria (Mrs.), shopkeeper, 55 Barrack street
Haddon Elizabeth (:\1rs. ), apartments, 2 Mill Hill road Hardyment Archibald Frost., china & glass dealer, St. Peter's
Hagg- Emma (Miss), dress maker, 30 Sussex street street, Mancroft
Hagg Noah, boot & shoe maker, I Sussex street Hare Alice (Mrs.), fishmonger, 7 Oak street
!Iaggith James, shoe maker, 2 Hall road, New Lakenham Hare George, cowkeeper, 1o6 Hall road, New Lakenham
Haines Robert, greengrocer, 166 Oak street Hare John, upholsterer, Fishgate street
Hainsworth Charles, fruiterer, 1 Rosary rd. Thorpe Hamlet Hare William, fish dealer, 41 Southwell rd. New Lakenham
Haldinstein P. & Son,shoe manufrs.& leather mers.Queen st Barker Jarnes, grocer, & post office, 40 Oak street
Hale Brothers, boot & shoe manufrs. Lower West wick street Harl Arthur, ironmonger, II3 Ber st.reet ·
Hale Charles, shoe maker, 96 King street BaTman Geo. wine k spirit merchant, 15 St. Andrew's hlll
~46 NORWICH.
- -
NORFOLK.
• (KELLY's
Harman George Robert, distric~ registrar of Probate court, Helps William, Cardiual's Cap ¥H. I-()4 St. :aenedict's streell
Lower close . ' Hemmell Johnson, Boar's Head P.H. Surrey street
Harme~ F. w. &. eo. manufacturjng elothiers, woollen, Hemmell William~ Norfolk chop house, Market place
- manchester, oradford & scotch warehousemen, hats, caps, Hempel William, fishmonger, I 54 Be:r street
. fancy hosiery &c. wholesale & shipping only 0 prize medal, Hepworth J. & Son Limited (Charles A. Toyn, manager),
Paris, 1889; St. Andrew's steam dothing k hosiery merchant tailors, boys' outfitters, hatters &c. 6 London st
works ; London warehouse, 3 Milk street, Cheapside E c Her Majesty's Prison (Arthur Edwin Clare Dent, govern~r 1
Harmer Charlotte (Mrs.), shopkeeper, 46 Goldsmith street, Haynes Sparrow Robimwn, surgeon~ Rev. Henry Morton
North Heigham Thomson H.4. chaplain; Miss Whyte, matron; W. E.
Harper Emily (Miss), milliner, 52 Bridge st. St. George's Burkinshaw & Robert Broom, chief warders), Mousehold
Harper Frank, watch maker & tobacconist, 1 I2 Dereham rd heath
Harper Haddon; Shakespeare P.H. Theatre street Herbert & Miller, linen drapers, 99 Upper St. Giles street
.Harper John, fishmonger, I William terrace, Heigham st Herring Benjamin, grocer, 63 Botolph street
Harper Ruth (Mrs.), furrier, 15 Newmarket road Herring Hy. St. Catherine's New inn, St. Catherine's plain
Harrell George, tailor, u Potterga.te street Heslop Thomas Hind Blumer A.H.I.C.E. county surveyor,
Harrington Misses, ladies' school, 31 Earlham road Upper King street
Harris Arthur, boot & shoe manufacturer, 3 Calvert street Hewett Charles Henry, pianoforte tuner, I William street,
Harris Jane (Mrs.), beer retailer, 30 Bishop's Bridge road St. Giles hill
Harris Reuben John, fishmonger, 223 Queen's road Hewett Edwin G. N. printer, St. John's, Maddermarkct
Harris Richard, cattle dealer, 78 Bracondale llewett Elizabeth (Mrs.), mill mer, 6o St. Giles street
Harris Stephen, Curriers' Arms P.H. St. Stephen's Back st Hewett Thomas, shopkeeper, 139 Eer street
Harris William, Gibraltar P.H. Heigham street Hewett William, shopkeeper, 17 Coach & Horses street
Harris William, grocer, I3 Oak street Hewitt John, Coopers' .Arms P.H. 24 Princes street
Harris William F.n.c.s. resident medical superintendent, Hewitt William, Norwich Arms P.H. Ber street
Norwich· City lunatic asylum, Hellesdon Hibbett Amos, stone mason, Chapelfield road "
Harrison Chas. Fredk. bricklayer & boat propr. Lower close Hickling Robert Geo. who. stationer, bookseller, publisher,
Harrison Frederick William, printer, Upper Goat lane prmter, bookbinder, paper bag & picture & show card frame
Harrison Henry, marine store dealer, 57 Ber street manufactr. Swan lane ; works, Bedford st. St. Andrew's
Harrison John, shoe maker, 77 Bet street Hicks George, fishmonger, I45 Magdalen street
llarrison Lewis, marine store dealer, Peacock street Hicks Leonard, fishmonger, I Cross lane, St. George's
Harrison William Isaac, Wellington P.H. Wellington lane High Emanuel William, Vine P.H. Upper St. Giles street
Harrod J. G. & Co. publishers, 10 Somerleyton street High George Harding, Duke of Connaught P.H. 72 Prince
Hart & Co. slaie & havelmanufacturers, Golden Dog lane of Wales road
Hart Arthur Robert, fancy repository, & post office, 85 High Joseph, grocer, 64 Dereham road
Upper St. Giles street High Samuel, apartments, 7 Johnson st. South Heigham
Hart George, pork butcher, 76 Ber street High William, )lusic House P.H. 167 King street
Hart Walter, sole sewer, Golden Dog lane Higham Rev. Charles William Richard M.A. association sec.
HartcupWilliam Thomas, solicitor & commissioner for oaths, Church Missionary Society, 24 Earlham road
& solicitor to the Norwich Union Life Insurance Society, Hill Dennis J. wholesale grocer, St. Peter's st. Mancroft
Surrey street Hill Horace, teacher of music, 23 St. Stephen's road
Hartley Michael, boot & shoe manufacturer, Foundry house, Hill John, bricklayer, 72 Derby street
Prince of Wales road Hill Samuel Garerd, solicitor, Opie street
Harvey Alfred James, builder, 47 Heigbam road Hill Waiter Bidwell, tailor, Io Princes street
Harvey Edward Ellis, Stanley Arms P.H. Bedford street, St. Hillen Alton William, solicitor, L"pper King street
Andrew's Billing Martha (Mrs.), Red Lion P.H. Eaton
Harvey Edward Palmer, dining rooms, Foundry bridge, Billing Samuel, Bull inn, St. Stephen's street
Prin~e of Wales road Hills & Underwood, vinegar makers, distillers, rectifiers &
Harvey Elijah, pork butcher, III Chapelfield road importers of foreign wines & spirits of all kinds, Prince of
Harvey Fanny (Mrs.), dress maker, 62 Rose lane Wales road; II Great Tower street E c & Bishopsgate
Harvey George, baker, 79 Ber street station, London E (only prize medal for vinegar awarded
Harvey Jas. Tbos. King's Head P.H. 93 Upper St. Giles st in 1851). See advertisement
Harvey John Edward, Locomotive tavP.rn, 51 Rupert street Hind Lucy (:.Wiss), dress maker, 12 Hall rd. New Lakcnham
Harvey Jonathan, Bushel P.H. 27 St. Augustine street Hinde Fras. & Sons, silk crape mnfrs. St. Mary's mill, Oak st
Harwood Joscph, chimney sweeper, 55 Chapel st. Crook's pl Hindes Henry & Son, rope makers, Red Lion street
Harwood Jsph. jun. chimney sweeper, Turner's sq. Rose la Hindes & Son, rope & twine makers, St. Martin's-at-Oak,
Harwood Samuel, chimney sweeper, 26 Ber street Hellesdon road
Hase Geo. boot ma. 23 Botolph st. & grocer, 98 Cowgate st Hindcs Christmas, shopkeeper, Hcllesdon road
Hase William, Windsor Castle P. H. 47 Barrack street Hindes Edmund James., estate agent, 37 Duke street
Hastelow Mary Ann (:Mrs.), china & glass dealer, 63 Prince Hindle William, Plasterers' Arms P.H. 41 Cowgate street
of Wales road Hinds Wm. rope & twine manufacturers, 86 St. Benedict's st
Hastings .Alfred, shopkeeper, 130 Oak street Hines Charles, ivory & hardwood turner, 19 Muspolestreet
Havers Charles & Sons, wholesale & furnishing ironmongers, Hines Edward, lathe manfctr. Griffin works, St. Margaret's
oil, color & glass merchants & general hardware factors, Hines Thomas, lathe maker, 13 Dove street
17 & 19 Charing cross Hinsbey Wm. Perseverance P.H. & baker, 35 Adelaide street
Havers Albert Charles, architect, Bank plain Hippen Robert, hair dresser, 21 Coburg street
Havers Daniel, solicitor, commissioner to administer oaths Hipper Charles, hair dresser, 5 Rosary road, Thorpe Hamlet
in the Supreme courts & perpetual commissioner. Queen Hipper Mary Elizh. (:\iiss), teacher of music, 12 Willow la
street; & at III London road north, Lowestoft Hipper Thomas, carter, I3S Philadelphia lane, New Catton
Havers Ellen (Miss), dyer, 36 Princes street Hipperson Albert, baker, r6 Magdalen street
Havers Frederick George, pawnbroker, 129 King street Hip person Isabella (Mrs.), Cinder Ovens P. H. & coal mer-
Havers Robert James, White Hart P.H. Ber street chant, King street
Havers \Villiam Henry, pawnbroker, 20 St. Benedict's street Hipperson James Henry, beer retailer, 40 West End street
Hawes David, dairyman, 126 King street Hird William, commercial traveller, 6o Earlham road
Hawes George Elliott, builder & contractor, Duke's palace Hitch man Robert, chief constable, superintenr1ent of the fire
!Iawes James, fried fish dealer, 133 Oak street brigade & inspector of explosives, drugs, food &c. Guildhall
Hawes John, shopkeeper, 72 Napier street Hobrough James & Son, steam & hand dredging, pile drivmg
Hawkins Frederick Hy. commercl. travllr. 24 Mt. Pleasant & lighterage contractors &c. Bishop bridge ; & Dockyard,
Haydon Waiter, bookbinder, Church street, Theatre street Thorpe St. Andrew. See advertisement
Hayes Herbert Jonathan, turner, 199 King street Hobrough Jas. Bishop's Bridge inn, Rosary rd. ThorpeHamlet
Hayhoe William, chemist, 128 Dereham road Holborn Charles & Co. royal decorators & illuminators by
Haylett Alfred, cattle dealer, 96 HaJl road, New Lakenham appointment to H.R.H. the Prince of
Hayward David, shoeing smith, I l Botolph street
Hayward Eliza (Mrs.), iron founder, Bull Close road Wales K.G. ; ball, wedding & general
Hayward Frederick Waiter, watch maker, 23 Upper King st route furnishers & fete contractors,
Hayward Hezekiah Stephen, agency inspector & surveyor
for Economic !<'ire Office L1mited, for Norfolk, Suffolk, marquee, tent & sail makers; also
Cambs. & Hunts, 23 Heigham road builders, plumbers, house painters,
Hazell Lydia (Mrs.), Wind Mill P.H. Ber street
decorators & contractors, Wensum
Hazel! Wm. Free Trade tavern, William st. St. Giles' hill
Hazell William, shopkeeper &c. 8o Connaught road street
Hazelwood James, Lock & Key P.H. Ber.street Holden Joseph, greengrocer, 102 Ber st-reet
Heazle Frederick, saddler, 102 Hall road, New Lakenham Holden William, cabinet maker, 101 Pottergate street
('.DIRECTORY.] .NORFOLK. .·NORWICH. 547
1Holl Alirecl.,.comme-J;Ci!:j.l ~ra~eller 1 I· Chapelfield road HowaTd Edward, blacllsmith, Newmarket road
Holl William Gurney, boot maker, 38 St. Step~en'a road 1 I Howard Edward, fishmonger, 54 St. Genrga's plaih
Holland Em m a. {Mrs.), pork. butcher, 35 S~. Stepben's totreet Howard Everett .frederick-, builder & oollectpr of poor rates,
Holland Henry, author4ed waterwqrks ~sanitary plumoor, :No. 3 district, 5 I Bishopgate 111treet r _1
1 , g1azier 1 h.;>UHe & .AWCPrative ·painter &Q. St..·,Ma.rtin-a~- ~o,ward. Grace (Mrs.); shopkeeper, 8g York street
Palace ~ - . , i How~rd Henry, fishmonger, {)x Fishgate street
Holland. Joh_n, saq~age,manufacturer. SJ+ Srephen'$ plain Howard H!lnry, fishmonger, 94 Magdalen street
1 Holll\.!14 Joseph. sadd\er & harness. n;taker.-46 Botolph street Jloward Jaco\> ~amuel, St~ord Arms ~.H. lleigham roa.d
Hollidge Henry, c9rn mercha1,1t, p8 Bar street & miller Howard James, builder, King street ' -· •
' {water), Old Lakenham mill . , Howard. Jas, Rose P,R. &. bird merchant, 5 St. Augnstine's st
Hnllidge William, Coaeh & Horses P. H. Coach & Horses Boward John, cab proprietor, I Scoles green r
street, South Heigham . l;:loward John Everett, baker, I Trafalgar st.New La.kenha.m
Ilollis John, florist, Fern nursery, L9wer Clarence roa~ Howard .Mipni~ (Mrs.), baker, sz Fishgate :street
Hollis Rqbel't, florist, St. Giles road Howard Nathaniel, builder; Bank street ,
Holmes & Sons Limited, engineers, mijl wrights~ iron & brass Howard Robert, smith, 3 Kingsley terrace,,New La.kenbam
founders, manl:\facturers of prize thrashing macl;lines, trac- Howard Robt. Jn. cotlector of market tolls, 7 Bloom.sburypl
ti-on, portable, compound & condensing steam engines & ~award Thomas, shopkeeper, zo & 12 Bull close
general agricultural implements, J,'rospect P~ace works, Howard William, baker, ,Magdaleu rojld, New Catton
Castle hill . . . Howard William Frederick, baker, gr Peacock street
Holmes Arthur, shoe m(l.ker, 27 Coai(h & Horses street ~oward William Frederick, carpenter, 7 Cathedral st. ntll
Holmes Edward, fishmonger, ;112 Oak street Ho ward Zaccheus, boot &; shoe manufacturer, g6 Calvert st
Holmes Edward (late Newman), watch maker, jeweller & Howe Edward, shopkeeper, 219 Queen's road
silversmith, 17 S~. Giles st. See advertisement Howe Frederick, b11tcher, 105 St. Benedict's street
Holmes Elizabeth (Mrs.),greeng-rocer, 36 Rupert street Howell Walter Chas.shopkeeper,66 Cherry st. New Lakenhm
Holmes James, fishmonger, 137 Eer street Howes A. & Son, tallow chandLers, Ber street
Holmes Jame$ William, carpenter & butcher, x;og Oak street Howes & Sons, carriage builders, saddlery & harness makers ;
Holmes John, builder, Red Lion street. See !}dvertisement 14 prize medals for superior workmanship, Cbapelfield
Holmes John, shopkeeper, 2;;1 Vauxhall street , . Howes Henry George, shopkeeper, 91 Barraek street·
Holmes Joshua Henry, chief inspector of weights & measures Howes Henry W, carriage & harness manufacturer, 18 & 22
& collector of cattle market tolls, Upper Goat lane Prince of Wales road .
· Holmes Joshua Henry, jun.baker, 21 West Pottergatestreet Howes Henry Wm. shopkeeper,25 Langley st.Nth. Heigham
Holmes Robert, corn merchant, St. Ann's wharf, King st Howes John Joseph, builder, 27 Pottergate street
Holmes \Villiam, shopkeeper, 4 St. Paul's street Howes Lily (Miss), bookseller, 82A, Upp~r St. Giles street
Holt Jeff, tobacconist, 70 Prince of Wales road Howes Thomas, carpenter, II~ Hall road, New Lakenham
Holt William, boot & shoe maker, 43 Calvert street Howes Thomas Benj. boot & shoe maker, 144 Heigham st
Home & Foreign Investment & .(\gency Co. Limited, City Howes Walter, shopkeeper, Cowgate street & coal dealer,
chambers, Prince of Wales road . Fishgate street ' ·
Home for Girls (sister in charge), Grey Friars lodge, King st llowes William, cycle works, manufacturers' agent & coach
Hood James, boot & shoe manufacturer, Elm hilL ironmonger, I3 Prince of Wales road
Hood Robert, shopkeeper, 58 Barrack street Howes William, dairyman, Mill lane, New Catton
Hook Benjamin, temperance hotel, 70 Rose lane Howlett W. & Son, musical instrument manufacturers &
Hook Benjamin Joseph, butcher, 46 St. Stephen's street importers, music sellers, theatre & concert ticket agents,
Hook Noah, corn dealer, 72 Union street 1 The Walk; & at Lowestoft
Hook Samuel Beckett, tailor, 5I St. George's plain , Howlett & White, harness curriers, leather merchants &
Hook Samuel John, tailor, Lower Goat lane wholesale & export boot & shoe manufacturers, St.
Hook Sal'ah (Mrs.), shopkeeper, 39 St. John's st. Rose la George's plain & Colegate street
Hook Williarn, coal dealer, Philadelphia lane Howlett Arthur Alfred, pastrycook, 59 St• .Augustine street
Hook William, leather merchant, 157 Ber street Howlett Emily Mary (Miss), preparatory school, The
Hook William, jun. coal dealer, Philadelphia lane Poplars, St. Giles road
Hooks Alfred, surveyor, 39 Essex street Howman George, hair dresser, 66 Barrack street
Hope Brothers, hosiers & glovers, 12 Gentlemen's walk Howson William, Wellington P.H. tB Muspole !!treet
Hornagold & Co. painters, St. Augustine street Hoydabl Peter Severin, The Livingstone Temperance com-
,Borne Robert, superintendent Refuge Assurance Oo. Lim. mercial hotel, Orford h1ll ; good stock room9 ; an omnibus
6 Essex street to & from the station
Horner Joseph Edward, shopkeeper, 28 Thorne lane Hubbard Agatha (Mrs.), stay maker, Weslegate street
Horner Miles, tobacconist, 166 Ber street Hubbard Alfred, builder, 25 Cambridge street
Hornor Charles & Son, estate agents & surveyors, Queen st Hubbard Cb.arle!;l Richard, beer retailer, Chapel st. Union pl
Hornor Chas. Jared,land & estate agt. 32 Prince of Wales rd Hub bard Robert, baker, 113 Ch!l.pelfiold road
Hornor l<'ras. land & estate agent, see Hornor Chas. & Son Ilubbard Susanna (Mrs.)., servants' registry office, 2 Little
Horsey Fredk. Jas. first suprvsr. of inland revenue, Tom bland Bethel street
Horstead Samuel, Cellar House P.H. rag King street Huddlestone William, grocer, 73 St. ~tephen's street
Horth Thomas, plumber &c. 31 Magdalen street Hudson Thomas Alfred, shopkeepar, 18 St. Mary't1 plain
Home & Foreign Investment & Agenc~· Co. Limited (Wm. Huggins John Emanue4 grocer, 23 Market lan~
Hazeldine Thorold, sec. & manager), City chambers, Huggins John Hora.ce, painter, Fisher's lane
Prince of Wales road Hugman Clara (Mrs.), shopkeeper, 260 King street
Homt£opathic Dispersary (E. B. Roche & W. Ross, medical Humphrey Aaron, hay dealer, Surrey road
officers; W. T. Livock, sec.), Guildhall chambers IIumphrey Elizh. Mary (Miss), furn. dlr. 88 St, Benedict's st
Homes Charles, shoe maker, 17 Surrey street Humphrey James, whip maker, 19 Timber Hill street· ·
Hotblack Brothers, wholesale clothiers, Calvert St. factory Humphrey Thos. Sarnl, watch mas.3o St.Andrew's Bridge st
Hotblaek John & Sons, boot & shoe manfrs. Mounterg<lte st Humphreys Maria (:'iliss), shopkeeper, 13 St. 8tepheu's rd
Roughen Benjamin, Light Honeman P.H. 4 Botolph street Hunt, SJn & Co. confectioners, St. Stephen's stre3t
Houghton George, dyer, 18 Pottergate street Hunt Alice Emma (Mrs.), coffee rooms, SJ Barn r()ad
Houghton Henry, boot & shoe manufacturer, 28 Colegate st Hunt Da.vid William, dairyman, 13 Rupert street
Houghton Lavina (Mrs.), Pun Cow P.H. 118 Barrack street Hunt George, bricklayer, Fingate street, Queen's road
Housega Isaac, White Lion P.H, 6 Palac~ plain Hunt Gertrude (Miss), dressmkr. 2 Theatre ootts. Theatre st
Hovell R. B. & Co. Limited, horsehair manufrs. Calvert st Hunt Henry Ebenezer, gas & hot water engineer, brass
Hovell Harriett (Miss), girls' day school, 14 Grove street finisher, locksmith & bell hanger & sole agent for the Sun
west, Unthanks road Carbon gas lights, 7I Bridge street, St. George's
Hovel! Richard, pianoforte tuner, Surrey grove Hunt Henry E. tobaeconist, 71;.., Bridge street, St. George's
Hovel! Richard Thomas, pianoforte tuner, 23 All Saints' grn Hunt John, butcher, 103 Bull Close road
Hovel! Saml. Jn. painter & decorator, Surrey gro. Surrey rd Hunt Mathew George, carpenter, Finkeb street
Hovel! ''Villiam Hextield, basket maker, 25 & 27 Bedford Hunt Stephen, dining rooms, 16 Golden lhll street
street, St. ,Andrew's ''V
Hunt alter, plumber, 77 Trinity street
Howard John & Sons, wood carvers, Bethel street Hunt ''Villiam, carpenter, 45 Rupert street
Iloward Arthur S. upholsterer, paperhanging warehouse, Hunt, William, secondhand bookseller, 7 Briggs s.treetr &
cabinet manufacturer, carver & gilder, furniture remover Little Orford street ,
. & window bhnd manufacturer. & undertaker, 75 Prince of I,Iunter William & Frederic Edward~ auctioneers~ valuel'S &
Wales road land & estate agents, St. Andrew's Hall plain ,
Howard Bithiah {Mrs.), grocer & baker, 47 Bishopsgate st Hunter Edward, tinplate worker, Wounded Hart lane
Howard Charles, baker, 12 Mill lane, New Catton Hunter James, commercial traveller, 47 Newmarket road
Howard Charles James, fishmonger, 17 Fye Bridge street Hunter Susan Wilson (Mrs.), apartments, 45 Elm biU.
Howard Daniel .Tames, baker, II4 Barrack str~t Hunter William Phillips, tailor, see Mitchell & Hunter

i548 . NORWICH. NORFOLK. (KELLY'S

Hupton Frances (Miss), ladies' day school, 46 Hall road, Jermy Edmund, Mancroft P.H. Mancroft street, Dereham rd
New Lakenham Jermy Elizabeth (Mrs.), shopkeeper, 3 St. Saviours alley
Hurn Daniel (patronized by His Royal Highness the Prince Jenny George, whip maker, 6 'Vestlegate street
of Wales), manufacturer of ropes, tWines, sacks, stack Jermy MaryAnn(Mrs. ),baker,22 Trafalgar st.New Lakenhm
cloths, sheep & lamb sheltering cloths, bed sackings, rot Jermyn Wm.carpenter,23 Coach&Horses st.South Heigham
& vermin proof sail & awning covers, aoor mats, cocoa Jessop William Edward, baker, All Saints street
matting, sheep, bird & rabbit netting, canvas & net Jessup Frederick William, watch maker, 8 Wensum street
hammocks, genuine waterproof wagon, cart, engine & Jessup George, station master G. E. railway, Thorpe station
drum covers, celebrated bell ropes for churches, patent de-son & Sons, timber,coal & slate merchants & sawingp
braided leather reins & window cords, bunting & flags of planing & moulding mills ; head office, Colcgatc street;
all nations, india rubber knee aprons, horse cloths, lawn coal offices, 103 Queen's road; & at South town, Ya:r-
tennis nets, agent for Cannon's Concentrated Size & Glue mouth & St. Neots, Plymouth
Powder ; w hclesale & retail warehouse, 14 Dove street ; Jex Henry, shopkeeper, 63 Cowgate street
works, Heigham & Tombland Jinks John, laundry, 193 Nelson street, N. Heigham
Hurn Denmark, boot manufacturer, 121 Magdalen street Johnson Samuel, Rainbow P.H. 185 King street
Hurn James, Queen P.H. Castle meadow Johnson "'alter, butcher, 23 Heigham street
Hurn John, builder & contractor, Surrey rd. & 53 Grove rd Johnson Waiter William, commercial traveller, Gothic cot-
Hurrell Edith (Mrs.), shopkeeper, Mill lane, New Catton tage, West Pottergate street
Hurrell William, boot & shoe manufacturer, 57 Sussex st Johnson William, greengrocer, n6 St. George's, Middle st
Hurstead James Goodwin, shopkeeper, 41 Trory st. Grove rd Johnson William, shopkeeper, 65 Napier street
Hnson Alfred, ironmonger, 75 Union street, South Heigham Johnson Wi!liam Christopher,Nelson P.H. & grocer, Bedfor~
Huson Daniel, grocer, 142 Dereham road street, St. Andrew's
Huson Edwd. Richd. brazier, 37 William st. St. Giles' hill Joice 'Villiam James, nurseryman, Newmarket road
Huson .Frank, grocer, 134 Waterloo road Jolley Samuel Henry, sewing machine agent, 53 Duke street:
Hussey & Son, nurserymen, Mile end, Eaton Jolly Arthur Jn.hay & straw dealer,Lion Inn yd. Cattle mrkt
Hutchin Alexander Harry, watch maker, 230 Queen's road Jolly John, King's Arms P.H. 22 Hall road, New Lakenham
Huton Catherine Fras. (Miss), teacher of music, 26 St. Giles hl Jones Walter William, carpenter, Rope walk, Hellesdon rd
Ilott W1lliam, linen draper, 54 Botolph street Jordan Henry, greengrocer, 20 St. Pauls plain
Inland Revenue Oflice (tax department, Joseph Miles & G. Joyce Richard, cab proprietor, Chapelficld Lake
H. H. Clemcnts, surveyors of taxes ; excise department, Juby James, shopkeeper, 25 Oak street
A. R. Birt, stamp distributor & collector; J. Aris & H. Judd Arthur, commercial traveller, 48 Mount Pleasant
Best, supervisors), Tombland Jude Emily (Mrs.), shopkeeper, 40 Ber street
Ireland E. R. & A. W. auctionrers, valuers & estate agents; Judges' Lodgings, Eaton hall, Eaton
weekly sales of cattle are he1d at Norwich & Reepham ; & Junior Institute ( C.E. Y. M.S.) (W. N ash, sec.), Princes st
fortnightly sales at Wymondham & Holt; offices, 5 Bank Juniper Robert Kerrison, coal merchant, 34 Fishgate street.
plain ; & at Guestwick, East Dereham Kahler Frederick Andrew, baker, 93 Ber street
Isaacson Samuel, tailor, 71A, Ber street Kahler Henry John, baker, 1 St. Julian street
Ives William Charles & Co. confectioners, 21 St. Giles st Kahler Henry William, baker, 23 Waterloo road
Ives Robert, chemist, 83 Ber street Kahler John Henry, baker, 65 Rose lane
Ives Thomas, butcher, 4 Fye Bridge street Kahlcr John Martin, baker, Lower close
Ives Waiter Henry, leather merchant, Dove street Kahler Richard 'rhos. baker & grocer, I Bishop's Bridge rei
Jackson Jane & Sarah (Misses), shopkeepers, 58 Lower Kane John, inland revenue officer, 41 Garden road
W estwick street Kcable William, farmer, Hall farm, Earlham
Jackson Frederic, fancy repository, 79 Upper St. Giles st Keane John, clerical officer of inland revenue, Tom bland
.Jackson Frederick, furniture broker, 8 Timber Hill street Keith, Blake & Co. solicitors & commissioners for adminis-
Jackson Frederick, shopkeeper, 63 St . .Martin's lane tering oaths in the Supreme court & agents to the-
Jackson George, grocer, 59 Colegate street, St. Miles' Norwich Union Fire & Law Union & Crown Fire & Life
Jackson John, teaeher of music, 33 Rose lant'l Assurance Companies, The Chantry, Theatre street; &.
Jackson William, pianoforte tuner, 54 St. Giles hill at Cromer
Jacobs John, shopkeeper, Lakenham Keith Frcderick Thomas (firm, Keith,Blake & Co. ), solicitor,
Jalland William, maltster, 41: Oak street commissioner for administering oaths in the Supreme
James Frederick, Grapes hotel, Upper St. Giles street court, The Chantry, Theatre street
Jarmy Harry Robert, Morning Star P.H. 54 Southwell road, Keith Thomas Hamilton, land agent, Winchester house.-
New Lakenham Prince of ·wales road
Jarrett Frederick Wm. boot & shoe manufacturer, Elm hill Kelf Charles, shopkeeper, Argyle street, King street
Jarrett John, butcher, 42 Cowgate street Kelf John, shopkeeper, gr Waterloo road
Jarrett Wright, The Club House tavern, Old Post Office Kelf Joseph, travelling draper, I I St. Peter's st. Dereharn rd:
court, Market place Kelf Waiter Gcorge, Morning Star P.H. 23 Pottergate street.
Jarrold & Sons, publishers, booksellers, stationers, printers, Kelf William, coal dealer, 49 Derby street
news agents & artists' colormen, 3 & 5 London street & Kelly Mary (Mrs.), apartments, 9 Earlham road
Exchange street · Kemp A. & F. hair dressers, wig makers, perfumers, ivory
Jarvis James, truck proprietor, 35 Coburg street & wood brush makers, sponge merchants, toilet soapo
Jary Alfrf'Ai, commission agent, 3 Wellington road makers & walking stick manufacturers, 6 Exchange
Jay Ellen (Miss), draper, 243 King street street; & 47 Fenchurch street, London E c
Jay Emma (Mrs.), boarding house, 105 Pottagate street Kemp Emma (Miss), umbrella maker, 20 Westlegate street.
Jay Robert, nurseryman, St. Faith's lane Kemp George James, baker, 70 Gladstone street
Jeary & Son, news agents & stationers, St. Peter's street Kemp Henry, commercial traveller, 8 Brunswick New road
Jeary Ephraim Christmas, tailor, Helcna. rd. Dereham road Kemp William, commission agent, 17 Alma ter. Aylsbam re}
Jeffries Joseph, agent to Sutton & Co. carriers; & at Yarmth Kemp William, grocer, 5 Carton road, New Lakenham
Jeffries Edmund, butcher, I I Tombland Kennett George Buttler, solicitor, notary public, town clerk
Jeffries George, gun maker, Orford hill & clerk to the urban sanitary authority, clerk to the visit-
Jeffries Lemon, The Plough P.H. 76 St. Benedict's street ing committee of the City Lunatic Asylum, clerk to the-
Jeffries Randall John, jun. gun & ammunition stores, River Yare commissioners & to the Mousehold Heath.
Golden Ball street conservators, Municipal offic-es
Jeffries Waiter Edgar, coach builder, All Saints' green Kenny Frederick, coffee houses, 13 Oak street
Jeffries William, cowkeeper, Upper Hellesdon Kent Alfred & Son, solicitors, solicitors to the Norfolk &.
Jeffries William, wheelwright, Wright's yard, Ber street Norwich Trades Association & solicitors to the Norwich
Jeffries William Henry, butcher, 23 St. Augustine strret 186, 194 & 230 Starr-Bowkett Building Societies, St.
Jellings Edward, fret worker & general wood turner, manu- Andrew's plain
facturer of white wood for artistic & decorative purposes, Kent Alfred (firm, Kent Alfred & Son), solicitor & commis-
plain & fancy brackets &c. kept in stock, toys, novelt:es sioner for oaths in Supreme court & perpetual commis-
&c. wholesale & retail, 8 Rampant Horse street, opposite sioner, St. Andrew's plain
St. Stephen's church Kent Ernest Alfred, solicitor (firm, Kent Alfred & Son), St.
Jenkins George, pianoforte tuner, g8 Trinity street Andrew's plain
Jenkinson Joseph, boot & shoe ma. 14 Globe st. Union place Kent Hy. Jas. horse collar maker & basket maker, Cow gate st
Jenny Lind Infirmary for Sick Children (F. W. Burton- Kent Henry James, jun. basket maker, 5 & Ir Fishgate st
Fanning, physician; Samuel Herbert Burton & G. R. Kerrison Eliza (Mrs.), lodging house keeper,25 Clarence rd.
Master, surgeons; Thomas Herbert Morse & Cecil J. Thorpe Hamlet
Muriel, assistant surgeons; Edmund Ree"l'e, bun. sec. ; Kerrison George, tailor, 64 Chapelfield road
Miss L. M. Wainwright., matron), Pottergate street Kerrison James, watch & clock maker, 14 Magdalen street.
Jenny Lind Steam Boat Co. Limited (F. W. Frewer, sec.); Kerry George Caythorpe, -estate agent &c. 8 Elm hill
office, 99 King street Kett & Sons, upholsterers, 54 St. Giles' street
DIRECTORY.] NORFOLK. NORWIC.Ef. 619
Kett William Woodhouse, furrier,13 Dove st.& 56 St.Giles' st Lane Elizh.(Mrs.), Queen Anne P.H.57 Colegate st. St. Miles'
Key Fredcrick Edward, tobacconist, r6 Vauxhall street Lane Herbert, Orchard tavern, Mountergate street
Key Samuel, baker, 222 lleigham street Lane James, Buff Coat P.H. 21 Cattle market
Keymer Philip, baker, 24 Cyprus street, New Lakenham Lanfear Thomas, tea agent, ro Castle 1neadow
Kidd George, tobacconist, 79 St. Benedict's street Langford Christiana (Miss), confectioner,so London street &
Kiddle Ell en (Mrs.), apartments, 8 5 Prince of Wales road 30 Prince of Wales road
Kimm Geo. district supt. Great Eastern railwy. Thorpe statn Langham John Charles, engineer, Muspole street
King J. & J. plumbers & decorators, Princes street Langley James, toy dealer, 14 Prince of Wales road
King Ann Last (Mrs.), registry office, 9 Theatre street Lark Christmas, greengrocer, 74 St. Benedict's street
King Austen, clothes dealer, 5 Oak street Lark William Youngman, Elephant & Castle P. H. 110, &
King Charles (Mrs.), milliner, 8 Briggs street shopkeeper r I 1, King street
King Eliza (Miss), shopkeeper, 24 St. George's Middle street Larke & Bennett, wholesale confectioners, drysalters, baking-
King George :\Iartin, baker, 21 Wensum street & egg powder manufacturers, & agents for McCall &
King Herbert Henry, Old Theatrt~ tavern, Bethel street Stephen's Glasgow Adelphi biscuits, St. George's baking-
King Horatio A. pharmaceutical chemist & optician, 38 powder works
Exchange street Larke Edgar Norman, pawnbroker, 3 Magdalen street
King John, linen draper, 2 & 4 Briggs street Larking Charles F.S.A.A. accountant, Commercial cham-
King John, The Vauxhall P.H. Vauxhall st. Chapelfield rd bers, Briggs street
King Raymond, fried fish shop, S9A, Waterloo road Larkman Charles, boot & shoe maker, 145 Cowgate street
King Susannah Eliza (:\'Iiss), refreshment rms. 66 London st Larkman George, shopkeeper, r3 Manchester st. Union pl
King Thomas Charles Rackham, builder, contractor, build- Larkman Mary Ann (Mrs.),furniture dlr.32 St. Benedict's st
ing material dealer, brick & tile merchant, church Larnder George, beer retailer, 64 Ber street
decorator, glass merchant, glass sil"Verer & embosser, Larner Ephraim, jobbing gardener, 41 Harford street,
lead, metal & oil & color merchant, painter, paperhanger, New La ken ham
decorator, sign writer & grainer, plate glass merchant, Larter Robert, shell fishmonger, I I St. Andrew's hill
plumber, glazier, gas & hot water fitter, putty maker, Lathan John, shopkeeper, 97 Oak street
pump maker, sanitary engineer & sanitary pipe merchant Laurence, Scott & Co. Limited (W. B. Sisling, sec.),
& sanitary earthenware dealer & ironmonger & cart grease electrical engineers, makers of the Norwich dynamos,
dealer, 12 & 24 Prince of Wales road. See advert shiplighters, motors, special dynamos & switchboards for
King Thomas Jermy, boot & shoe maker, 42 St. Giles' road the Scott-8isling system for private installations, Gothic
King William, butcher, 'rhe Butchery, Market place works
King Wm. Fredk. grindery dlr. 96 & 98 Lower Westwick st Lawn \Villiam Edward, Eldon Stores P.H. St. Peter's strc:!t
Kingsmill John Wm. news agent, 62 Colegat.e st. St. Miles' Lawn William Edward, jun. Waterloo P.H. Market place
Kirby Charles, hair dresser, sr Heigham street Lawrence George, basket maker, IQ2 St. Benedict's street
Kirk Isabella & Margaret (Misses), drapers & grocers, 14 Laws G. R. & Son, horse slaughterers, Telegraph lane,
Demnark road, Earlham road Thorpe Hamlet
Kirk Herbert Albert, carpenter, 21 Connaught road & Laws John, Prince of Wales P.H. 39 St. Augustine street
Wade's court, St. Stephen's street Laws H.achel (Mrs.), greengrocer, 33 St. Augustine street
Kirkby Elizabeth (Miss), dress maker, 140 Queen's road Laws Robert, Anchor inn, & furniture dealer, Silver road
Kirkby Samuel J. agent for William Mackenzie, bookseller Laws Robert, shopkeeper, 86 Barrack street
& publisher, 23 Prince of Wales road Leach John, oil, paint, lamp & paperhangings dealer &
Kitchen Jas. Edwd. M.H.c.v.s. vet. surgn. Cattle Market st general ironmonger, St. Stephen's street & 106 St. Bene-
Knight Henry, Half Moon P.H. Market place dict's street; & at Yarmouth
Knights Caroline (Miss), Mortimer's family & commercial Leamon Thos. corn merchant, 2 Cedar rd. Thurpe Hamlet
hotel, 34 St. Giles' street Learner Georgc, Black Horse P.II. 99 Heigham stre2t
Knights .~<:dward, Waterman tavern, King street Lebbell William, shoe maker, 3 St. Swithin's alley
Knights Frederick, baker & grocer, 15 Heigham street Lee Henry, baker, 63 Distillery street
Knights John Andcrson, Punch House P.H. Market place Lee Henry, commercial traveller, 24 Mill Hill road
Knights Mark, greengrocer, 76 William st. St. Giles' hill Lee John, general mer. & manufr. I6 Nelson st. Dereham rd
Knivett Edward, Reindeer P.H. & carter, IQ Dereham road Lee John, shorthand master, r6 Nelson street, Dereham rd
Knott Ann (Mrs.), Fox & Hounds P.H. Ber street Leech Benjamin Robert Moody, surveyor of taxes (Lynn
Knott William Thomas, furniture broker, so Dereham road survey), Tom bland
Knowles Brothers, butchers, 3 St. Stephen's street Leeds Alice (Miss), straw bonnet maker, 17 Brunswick road
Knowles William ·John, tobacconist, 5 Charing cross Le Fevre Edwin, engineer, 8t. Andrew's Broad street
Laecohee Frederick John, sbopkeepr. 36 Back st. Spitalfields Lefevre Wm. Foundry Bridge tavern, Mountergate street
Lacey Arthur .John M.S.A. architect & surveyor & diocesan Legge Henry (Mrs.), berlin & fancy repositry.xs The Walk
surveyor, 6 Upper King street Leggett Alice (Miss), shopkeeper, 73 Pitt street
Lacey Esau, baker, 93 Cowgate street Lcggett Horace Waiter, iron & brass founder, Baker's road
Lacey Horace, builder & contractor ; office, I I Upper King st LeGrice Joseph John, butcher, 2 Dereham road
Lacey James Wilkin, builder, merchant in bricks & tiles, Leman Thomas, hair dresser, 46 St. Giles road
glazed bricks, slates, cement, sanitary appliances, & dealer LeMare Mary (Miss), girls' school, 49 Unthanks road
in general building materials, Blackfriars wharf, St. Lemmon Arthur, baker, rrB St. Benedict's street
Andrew's. See advertisement Lemmon Horatio, fishmonger, I I St. Georgc's Midjle street
Lacey W11liam, baker, 22 Princes street Lemmon Joseph, King's Head P.H. I Barrack street
Lacon (Sir Edmund K.), Lacons, Youell & Co. bankers Lemmon William, estate agent, 102 Pottergate street
(branch of Yarmouth), The Walk, Market place; draw on Lemon Frederick, Kimberley Arms P. H. Kimberley street
Glyn, Mills, Currie & Co. London E c L'Estrange Harriet (Mrs.), bottle dealer, 25 Muspole street
Lacon E. & Sons, maltsters, King street L'Estrange Mary (Mrs.), apartments, 64 St. Giles street
Ladbrooke Esther Mary & Fanny Rachel (Misses), ladie~o;;' Level! Thomas, monumental mason, Magdalen road
school, Wakefield house, Thorpe road, Thorpe Hamlet Leveridge Robert L. builder & gate, ladtler & hurdle manu-
Ladd Georgc Henry & Co. leather factors & commission facturer; all kinds of gates made & to any size; pheasants'
agents, St. Andrew's Broad street coops; estimates given for quantities, 160 Dereham road.
Ladell Rd. Foulsharn,pastrycook & confectioner,22 The Walk See advertisement
Ladell Richard William, solicitor & commissioner for oaths Leveton Isa.ac, picture frame makr.6 St. Andrew's Bridge st
(firm, Copeman & Ladell), Little Orford street Levett .Alfred, Royal Exchange P.H. Market place
Ladell William N cthercote, solicitor, Little Or ford street Levine Joscph, jeweller, 4 St. Gregory's alley
Ladyman & Co. tea & coffee merchants, The Walk Levine Louis, pawnbroker, 19 Pottergate street
Lain Albert, commercial traveller, Elm hill Levine Reuben, boot & shoe maker, 71 Bridge street, St.
Lain Edward, bookseller, 37 Elm hill George's & furniture dealer, 29 Princes street
Lait John, pawnbroker, 2 Chapelfield road Lewis Fred (l\1rs. ), young ladies' boarding & day school, So
Lake George Robert, scripture reader, Hill house, Gas hill, Grove road
Thorpe Hamlet Lewis Wm. Stimpson,cab propr. IQ Cedar rd.Thorpe Hamlet
Lake Jonas, baker & grocer, & post office, 30 St. George's Liberal Registration Office (Fred Nash, agent),28 St.Giles st
Middle street Lickert & Sons, watch makers, St. Stephen's plain
Lake Jonas, 1ron founder, IIome street, Heigham street Liddiment John, shopkeeper, 34 Mariner's lane
Lake Martha (Mrs.), shopkeeper, 27 Elm hill Lilley & Skinner, wholesale boot & shoe manufacturers~
Lamb Leonard Thomas Clarke, tailor, 21 Victoria street North mill, Lower Westwick street
Lambert F. & Son, tea dlrs. & tobacconists, Lower Goat lane Limmer Agnes Louise (Miss), dress maker, 23 Princes st
Lambert George, tailor, Old Palace road . Limmer Emma (Mrs.), news agent, ro Bet bel street
Lambert 1\lartm, bicycle dep6t, 95 Unthanks road Linay Saml. & Co. sul.icitors, Church street, Theatre street
Lancum Thomas, clogger, 7 St. Mary's plain Linay Samuel (firm, Linay Samuel & Co. ), solicitor & com.-
Land Frederick, painter & decorator, 18 Rising Sun lane missioner for oaths, Church street, Theatre street '

'
.550 •
NO:P,WICB • NORFOLR.. ( KELLY's
,Lim;oln Alfred Gcorge, chimney sweeper, ID St. Giles' bill ' tiitbman Maria Marg~ret (Mrs.), lodging .house; ll3 Prinoe
Lincoln Caroline (.Miss), dress maker, 65 F...ssfjx street of Wales road
Lincoln Charles, ~hoe maker. !ZOO Heighaip str~t, Lyall Frederick, Nag's Head P.a. 33 Castle meadow
Lincoln Charles John, boot JilakeJ;", 6,i Pistjllery street Lydar:nore William, grocer, ro9 Unthanks road
Lincoln Fredk,.Saml.poot & shoe m~nfr,falaoo st. 'fomblanu Mabbott Caroline & Ma.rion (Misses), ~chool, 6o St.Philip's \'d
Lincoln Geo. greengrocer &c. 3 I William sli. St. Giles' hill M~bbQtt Chas, Hy. upholsterer, Brown's et. St. StepQ.en's st
Lincoln George Da,qling, chimney sweeper, 65 Magdalen at Mabbott Ja.mes 1 agent for ''Vheelf)r & Wilson's1 !Wlwing
Lincoln ,Har,riet Martha (Miss}.dre.$S makl'.I:34 Dereharn,:rd machines, 36 St, St~phen's street
Lincoln Henry Jas. Bakers' ArmsP.H. 45LowerWestwi~st Mabbutt Edward, St. Andrew'il Hall Stores P.H. 26 Str.
Lincoln Henry James, ~oyal Stand~rd P.a. Her street , 1' Andrew's Bridge street
Lincoln James, boot & shoe mauufacturer,:w6 Pottergate st McBride James, tobacconist, 15 Dove street
Lincoln JamesJ gasfitter, St., Margarct's plain McCulloch .Alexander, tobacconist, .18 Bishop's ~ridge rood:
Lincoln John, hosier, 5 St. Giles street McDowallJas. Thos. prewel'!J' trav,1gDenmark rd.IJ;arlbarn r~
Lincoln Leonard, carpenter & joiner, :r;3 Bishopsga~ street . McE wen David, seed & plantsman, & importer of continenta.l
Lincoln Lonisa (Miss), shopkeeper, 59 Distillery 13treet seeds & bulbs, 17 Red Lion street, St. Stephen'1.1
Lincoln Morris, baker, PJ;imrose place, Untbanks road , ~ • McEwen Samuel, travelling draper, 39 Calvert street
Lincoln Nathnl.chemist & druggist,96 Trinity st.Sth.Heighm Mace Thomas, baker, 132 Pottergate street. .
Lincoln Thurston William, chimney sweeper. x Due~ lape : Mac~ Walter, boot & shoe manufacturer. 70 & 72 St. Bene-
Lindsay Rebecca {Mrs.), pork butcher, 3 Charing cro•s dict's street & 66 St. George's Bridge street
Linford Rqbert & Son, watch & dock maker~, silversmiths, Mace Walt.er, h&tter, clothier & general ~raper, 70 & 72 St.
jewellers & opticians ( estab. over 50 years), Briggs street Benedict's street
Linford Elizabeth (Miss), dress maker, 128 Waterloo road · Mack James, Post Office tavern, Exchange street
Ling Ellen (Mrs.), dres!J maker, 5 Ten Bell lane • .Mackenzie Williarn (Samuel J. Kirkby, agent),publishCll &
Ling Mary Elizabeth & Joanna (Misses), ladies' school, 49 bookseller, 23 Prince of Wales road
Prince of Wales road Mackley Brothers, bird merchants & exporters, Aylsham rd
Linging Frederick E. M.I.C.E. engineer & manage~ to .Sritish M~ckley George Richard, Elm ta,'ern, Magdalen road,
Gas Light Co. Bishop's bridge . Mackley George William, surgeon-dentist, 53 St, Giles street
Lingley Harriet (:Mrs.), Duke of Sussex P.ll, 42 Botolph st Mackley Mary Ann (Mrs.), Queen Adelaide P.a. 57 Pitt st
List Walter, greengrocer, 7 St. Lawrence lane Mackley Thomas, furniture dealer, 6 Barn road
Little boy Arthur Lindley, dentist, 38 St. Giles street Mackley Thomas Joseph, surgeon-dentist, 74 Upper St.
Littlewood Edward, artist, 94 Dereham road Giles street; & at Brunswick hotel, Yarmouth, first
Little wood Elizh. (Mrs.), midwife, 17 G.ordon rd, Queen's rd thurs. in the month ; Bell hotel, Thetford, second thurs.
Livock & Son, tailors, hosiers, shirt makers & batters, 33 & in the month; Georg-e hotel, Watton, third thurs, in the
35 London street month; Crown hotel, Wells, last thurs. in the month & at
Lloyd Frederick, dyer, 6 Bethel street . Mr. Carr's, chemist, Fakenham, first thurs. \n the month
Lloyd Richard Owen, fancy box maker, 79 Dereham road Mackley Williarn, hair dresser, 2 Botolph street
Loades J oseph Robert, pianoforte tuner & repairer, 24 Bruns- McLean Amelia (Miss), dress maker, x8 St. Leonard's road,
wick road Thorpe Hamlet
Loads & Son, boot & Bhoe manufacturers, I Calvert street McMillan Anthony, commercial traveller, 25 Clarendon road
Lock Charles Henry Archibald, manager to the London & McQueen Wm. tailor & draper,99Pottergate st.& 4 Ten Bell la
Provincial Bank Limited, Old Haymarket Madgett John S. parish clerk of All Saints & St. John's,
Lock Hy. Waiter, corn, trav. 4 Osbot:ne viis. Aylsham road Maltsters' yard, All Saints' green .
Lock Samuel, Sons of CmnmerGe P.H. Thorn lane Madg-ett Stepheu, boot maker, II4 Alexandra road
Lock wood Robert, shopkeeper, 40 Cowgate street Maggs D. A. & J. (late Thomas Maggs, sen. ), saddle, harness
Lockwood Thomas, True Briton ;p.a. Long row, NewCatton & collar makers ; any quantity of new & secondhand
Lockwood William, shopkeeper, )}1agdalen roa~ & wheel· harness & saddlery always in stock; contracts taken, I I
wright, Waterloo road & 20 Castle hill ·
Loker Arthur, hair dresser 1 38 St. Benedict's street Magg-s Thomas, saddler, 2 Ber street
London & North Western Railway Receiving & Enquiry Maid's Head family & commerdal hotel & posting house
Office (George O.verend~ agent), Exchange street (Frank Louis Pomeroy, manager & part proprietor), near
London & Provincial Bank Limited (branch) ( Chas. Henry the Cathedral, Wensum st-reet
Archibald Lock, manager), Old Haymarket; draw on Major Jeanette, straw bonnet maker, SI Wingfield road
, head office, 7 Bank buildings & Glyn, Mills, Currie & Makens Robert & Sons, farmen, Church farm, Earlham
Co. London E c Makin Fredcrick Henry, tailor, 23 Gordon road, Queen'I! rd
Long Annie & Mary Ann (Misses), milliners,22 St.Giles' hill Making Edwin James, chemist, roB King street .
Long Ann Maria (Mrs.), wardrobe dealer &c. 38 Napier st Malden William, shopkeeper, 92 St. George's 1\Iiddle street
Long Henry Bathurst, Poplar Gardens P.H. Aylsham road Mallett & Co. horse hair cloth manufacturers, St. Miles
Long Waiter, Evening Gun P.H. 7 Rosary road Mallett George Edward, Duke of Connaught F. H. 50 Living-
Loom be Arthur Thomas, grocer, 52 Ber street stone street, Dereham road
Loom be I. S. wire worker, Golden Ball street Mallett Henry, news agent, 126 l'ottergate street
Loombe William, leather cutter, Sprowston road Mallett James, shopkeeper, 5 Tinklers lane
Loose James, furniture broker, 41 Magdalen street Mallett Richard Joshua, printer, 8 Red well street
Loose James Travers, earthenware dealer, 27 Magdalen st Mallett Robert, Norfolk tavern, Rupert st. South Heigham
Lord John Robert, coal factor & merchant, Eastern & Mid- l\lallctt Sarah (1\lrs. ), dress maker, 8 Cow gate street
lands depot, City station Mallows Charles, ornamental japanner, 23 St. Saviour's lane
Love George, J oily Maltsters P. H. 255 King street Mallows George, marquee proprietor, Westlegate street
Love George, shopkeeper, Mill lane, New Catton Manclarke George, furniture dealer, 29 Colegate street
Loveday George Samuel, rush collar & basket maker, g Mandleberg J. & Co. Lim. waterproof !Ilanfrs. I I London st
Peacock street & 40 Magdalen street Mann Brothers, infants' shoe manufacturers, r4oMagdalen rd
Loveday James, boot maker, 74 Magdalen street .Mann Arthur Nathaniel, pawnbroker, r & 3 All Saints' green
Lovick & Co. china & glass warehouse, St. Andrew'sBroad st Mann Henry, shopkeeper, 131 Ber street
Lovick Elizabeth (Mrs.), greengrocer, 126 Ber street Mann John, shopkeeper, 214 Queen's road
l.ovick George, french polisher, St. Margaret's alley Mann Joseph,market gardener,Aylsham rd. Upper Hellesden
Lovick Roofe, butcher, xo Botolph street Mann .Randell Edwd. coal dlr. 52 Livingstonc st.Dereham rd
Lovick Samuel Roofe, butcher & jobmaster, ro Botolph st Mann Samuel, poor's rate collector for second district,
Low Bros. hay, straw, corn, flour & pollards mers.xg Pitt st Grout's court, Magdalen street
Low Frcderick M.R.C. v.s. ve~erinary surgeon, & inspector Mann Thomas, Queen Victoria P.a. 51 Magdalen street
under the Contagious Diseases (Animals) Act, St. Giles Mann Thomas, shoe maker, 76 Rupert street
street & Pottergate street · Mann William, shopkeeper, 123 Oak street·
Lowe Arthur, chemist, St. Stephen's road & Thorpe road Mann William, shopkeeper, 21 Palace plain
Lowe George, carpenter, 43 Trinity street Mannings Daniel, inland revenue officer, 26 Queen's road
Lowe John, shopkeeper, 78 Oak street Manser \\'1lliam, watch maker, 54 l3er street
LowryEd wd.Dooley,second supervsr.of iul.revenue, Tomblnd Mansfield & Pummel!, fancy box makers, 20 Elm hill
Loynes George Samuel, grocer, 67 Bridge st. St. George'~ Mansfield Charles, shopkpr.43 South well rd.New Lakenham
Loynes Hannah (Mrs.), fishmonger, 40 St. Martin's lane Mansfield ',I'homas, shopkeeper,35 Cherry st.New Lakenbam
Lubbock Charlotte (Mrs.), shopkeeper, 3 Rising Sun lane Maris William, fruiterer~ 3 Dove street & 39 & 41 Duke
Lubbock Daniel, bricklayer, 3 Green Hills road street, ller street & Waterloo road, New Catton
Lucas Henry, butcher, 42 Spitalfields . . Market Collector's Office(Rbt. Howard,collector),Fishmarket
Lncas Thomas, 1\iounted Volunteer P.H. Bull Close road Markham Alfred, wardrobe dealer, 14 Barrack st. St. James
Luck Thomas Barry, boot ma. Haslips opening, Tinkler's la Markham Frederick William, inspector of weights &
Ludlow Frederick, upholsterer, 66 St. Giles street measures & collector of cattle market tolls, Upper Goat la
Lusher & Marsh, timber merchants, Bull Close road Marley Goorge, bookseller, 68 Prince of Wales road
Dm.ECTOllY.J NORFOLK .. NORWICH. 651
M&rris Al~rt William, baker, Quebec road, Thorpe Hamlet Middleton William Downs• .fishmonget, 56 Botolpb, street, .
MarrisArthurJohn, baker & beer retailer,36 'frory st.Grove rd Midland (The) Coal Co. (Alirei Scaife, manager), 65 Prince
Marri.s Henry, baker & shopkeeper, We$t End street or Wales road ; ~true~ loads Qf "'ny .sir.e & qu~lity of
Marris John, baker, xgo King street' . house or steam coal-d13livered to -any station at lowest
Ma.rris Waiter, Cock P.H. X5~ Adelaide st. Nurth Heigham current prices .
Marrison Benjamin, hair dresser, 3 St. Goorge's Middle st Midland Railway Co.'s Receiving Office (Percy Newcombe,
Manrison Harry, greengrocer, 86 Magdalen street agent), I6 .Bank street.
Marsh William, timbel' merchant, seEl Lusher & Marsh- Miles .lotlln Charles, purveyot: of home & foreign dairy
Marshal! Abraham, bricklayer, 24 Magpie road produce, whok..sale & retail, SI Prince of Wale~ road &
Marsh:Al} Anuie Dudley (Miss}, ladies' school, 8 Cedar road, Rose lane ; private residence, 8 ~ Thorpe ~;oa~ ; telegrams,
Thorpe Hamlet "Selim," Norwich . .
Marshall Fredk. Geo. GarQ.eners' Arms P.H.4 Timber Hill st MilesJsph.surveyor of taxes (Norwich J st Survey), Tom bland
Marshall Geo. nurseryman & market gardener, Waterloo rd Miles Thomas, bird dealer, 9 Coelany street ·
Marshall George, pail)ter, 69 St. Augustine's street Miles William, dairy, ~Golden Ball street
Marshal! Jn. Cha.s. shopkpr. 15 fhiladelphia la. New Cat ton Mille~ Edward, Tun!) ,P. H. All Saints' green
Marshall Peter Paul c.E. city engineer, architect & surveyor, Miller, Stovens & Son, solicitor:!, Bank chambers
Municipal offices . Miller & Co. tobacconists, 37 London street ,
Marshall Samuel, hardware dealer, Lawson rd. New Catton Miller Alfd. Hy. L.B..C.P, 1 L. ~.c.s.Eclin., i!Urgeon, 21 .t..ady's la
Marshall Thomas, boot & shoe maker, 36 Elm hiU Miller Francis Thomas, butcher; St. Catherine':i plain
Marshall William, fishmonger, 75 Chapel st. Crook's place, Miller Frederick, fruiterer, :17 Lower Goat Jane
Marsham Frederick. shopkeeper, 83 Chapel st. Crook's place Miller George, shopkeeper. 8 Waterloo road
Marsham Roqert,hair dresser,rs Bedford street,St.Andrew's Miller J ames, shopkeeper, I: Silver street
Marsham Wm.sh.opkpr. 22xNorthumberland st. Nth. Heigham Miller Louis Charles, solicitor (firm., Miller, Stevens & Son),
Marston A. & Sons, cork mers. 49 Bridge st. St. George's Bank chambers . .
Marston Alfred Abraham, Oxford Arms P.H. Red Lion st Miller Ma.ry ,A.nn (Mrs.), .shopkeeper, 182 Old Palace road
Mars ton Eli;.mbeth (Mrs.), re g. office for servants, IS Princes st Miller William, boot maker, 15 St. Lawrence lane
Martin Benj. A. & Son, boot & shoe manufs.8t.George's alley Milliment Sophia (Mrs), shopkeeper, 25 Coburg street
Martin Hannah, Emma & Alice (:Misses), ladies' school, 95 Mills & Reeve, solicitors & commissioners for oaths, 69
Pottergate street London street
Martin Andrew, milliner, 39 London street )lil\s Amy (Miss), fancy draper, 2 Tom'Jland
Martin James William, boot & shoe maker, ~I Magdalen st Mills Arthur, chimney sweeper, Cock yard, Up. S~.Giles st
Martin John, cab proprietor, 9 St. Paul's square Mills Edward, harness maker, 33 Vauxhall street
Martin Richard, boot maker, 38 St. Stephen's street Mills Frederick, pork butcher, 123 Ber street
Martin Thomas, shopkeeper, Stone street, Upper Hellesdon Mills Henry~ saddler, IO Rupert street
Martin William, Greyhound P,H. Tinkler's lane Mills H~nry,~atJ.Opkeeper, 63 Barn road
Martin William, shopkeeper, I5 Elm hill Mills Henry Jacob (firm, Mills & Reeve), solicitor & com-
Mason Benj.Geo. Peter, Staff of Life P.H.72 St.Augustine's st missionell f~r.q~th~ <teputy coroner for the city of Nor-
Mason George, basket maker, r6 Ber street wich & fa\' lhe Liberty of the Dean & Chapter & under
Mason Josiah, Robin Hood P.H. I08 Derebam road sheriff fo!' tbe c~uqty .of Nor folk & city of Norwich, 69
Mason Marion (Miss), dress maker, 21 Princes street . London fltr11et 1
Mason Rober~ Herbert, tailor, Castle meadow Mills J. Arthur (late Mealing & Mills), merqhant & maltl)ter,
Mason Waiter, beer retailer, 253 Northumberland street, King street ; & llt Coltishall
North Heigham Mills John, King's Head P.H. Castle street
Mason William, butcher, 28 Rupert street, South Heigha.m Mills LouiS'<~ (Mrs.), Derby .Arms P.H. 7 5 Derby street
Mason William, gasfitter, 13 Union street Mills Peter Herbert, cab proprietor, 3 Heales hldngs. Rose la
Massingham Robert Andrew, baker, 54 Old Palace road Mills Robt. JilS. l\l.li. surgeon, ,medical officer, 2nddist. Nor-
Master George Reginald, surgeon, St. Giles plain wich union, med,.officer & public vac. to 2nd dist. Honstead
Masters Godfery & Co. woollen drapers,haberdashers,hosiers, union, & j;urgeon to Norwich city police, 35 Surrey street
Manchester & general warehousemen, 19 London street Mill~ S. ~ealing :f.s.I. auctioneer, valuer, surveyor & land
Matchett Henry Daniel, who. boot maker, III Pottergate st 1!-gent 1 valn,ations made for probate, mortgage &c. ; a
Matthews Samuel & Son, surgeon accoucheurs, :x Raglan register kept of estates, farms & residences for sale or
street, Dereham road; & at London & Yarmouth hire, 1.7 Orford hill .
Matthews Elizabeth Ann (Mrs.), Clarence lla.rbour P.H. Mills Samuel, inspe-ctor of waterworks, Surrey street
Carrow road, Thorpe Hamlet Mills Silas Henry, grocer, St. Leonard's rd. Thorpe Hamlet
Matthews William Gibbs, fishmonger, 108 Pottergate street Mills Thomas, cowkecper, Telegraph lane, Thorpe Hamlet
& 32 St. Benedict's street Mills William, furniture dealer, 37 Palace street
Maude Major, patent medicine dealer, 121 Dereha.m road Milner's Safe Depot (Thomas Beresford), Bank chambers
May George, wholesale & retail grocer & wine merchant, 27 Mingay Fredk. Jas. french polisher, 6 Elm ter. Magdalen rd
Tb.e Walk; 71 & 73 Magdalen street; no Derehalll road, Minister John William, shopkeeper, 2 Silver street
172 Ber street & St. Gilcs road Minus Arthur, coach smith, II Calvertstreet
May Henry, tailor, 6 St. Andrew's hill 1 )'!inns Fred, shopkeeper, 21 Waterloo road
May Henry Walter, district superintendent Pearl Life Minns Henry, boot & shoe manufacturer, ~2 to 26 Muspole
Assurance Co. Limited, 70 Queen's road street & Castle street
May J otmes, hosier, 8 St. Giles street Minus James, boot n1aker, Wade's court, Bank street
l'flayes Arthnr Badcock, .shopkeeper, 67 Orchard street :Minus James, wood carver, I I Arthur street, Mariner's lane
Mayes George Robert, news agent, Orford hill Minns John William, London tavern, St. Andrew's hill
Mayes \Villiam, The Compasses P.H. Upper King street ~!inns Robert, butcher, II5 Ma.gdalen street
Mayfield William, cycle maker & agent & dealer in requisites, M inns William James, Queen's Arms P.H. 102 Magda.len st
Upper Goat lane. See advertisement Minter William, tailor, 52 Wingfield road
Mayhew William, insurance agent, 68 Unthanks road ~Iinton John, fishmongrr, 2 Tinkler's lane
Meachen Fredk. Geo. grocer, 27 Suffolk st. South Heigham Mirrington Eliza (Mrs.), baker, 40 Botolph street
Meadows Henry, tailor, ro Green Hills road Mitchell & Hunter, tailors, Exchange street
:Medlcr James, shopkeeper,25 Philadelphia lane,New Catton Mitchell Charles,oil cake, oil, corn, coal, seed, grease, manure
Meek Eleanor (Miss), dress maker, 21 Calvert street & general merchant & commission agent; deliveries at all
Meek Henry John, chair maker, 13 Rosemary lane staithcs & stations, 10 Valentine street, Dereham road
Melton George, market gardener, Eaton park Mitchell Florence (Miss), preparatory school, 4 SL\:Iary's rd
Merry Ellen (Miss), cooper, Lobster lane Mitchell James, Blue Bell P.H. Lower Goat lane
Merry Elizabeth (Mrs.), shopkeeper, 56 Magpie road Mitchell John, grocer, 74 Bridge street, St. George's
Merry Charles, baker, I City road, New Lakenham Mitchell John, Uross Keys P.H. 112 Magdalen street
Metcalf & Son, accountants &c. 56 St. Giles road Mitchell John, greengrocer, 26 Timber Hill street
Metcalf .John, printer, 13 Red Lwn street M1tchell Robert, basket maker, 8r Pitt street
Metcalfe Edward James, ticket writer, 98 Oak street Mitchley David, pork butcher, 23 Princes street
Mickleburgh Robert Ellis, coal dlr. Nelson st.NorthHeigham Mitson Samuel, Gate P.R. Dereham road
Middleton Charles, Jolly Hatters P.H. I23 Cowgate street Mobbs James, auctioneer, valuer, laud & estate agent &
Middleton Harry Robert, Royllol Oak P.H. 46 Upper King st accountant; valuations of furniture, :farming & other
Middleton James, fruiterer, 205 Queen's road stock, houses, land &o.. ·IDiJ.de for probate, bankruptcies,
Middleton Mark, Duke of Norfolk l'.H. Southwell road, assignments, transfers &o. ; public & private sales & pur-
New Lakenham chases effected t estates. land & houses let & hired ;
Middleton Matthew, baker, 56 Baker's road businesses bought & sold; partnerships arranged ; mort.
Middleton Noah, jobbing gardener, ro Cross Cherry street, gages & other advances negotiated; rents & debts collected;
New Lakenham , trusteeships in bau~ruptcy & .receiverships in chancery
Middleton Robert, tobacconist, 21 Dereham road undertaken, 4 Castle meadow
NORWICH. NORFOLK. r~rnLLY'S
-
Mobbs George, pianoforte tuner, 20 Caernarvon road Murton & Turner, agricultural implement makers, Cattle
Moll Robert, accountant, 45 Grove street west market (saturdays only)
Moll William, linen draper, St. Giles' street Murton Thomas, tinplate worker, 125 Magdalen street
Money Emily (Mrs.), grocer, IS Bethel street Musk John, baker, 33 Oak street
Moon Emma (Mrs.), boot,maker, 49 & sr ~t. Stephen's st Musk William John, Baker's Arms P.H. Mill hill, New Catton
Moon George, shopkeeper. 121 Barrack street Muskett Benjamin, shopkeeper, I20 Cambridge street
Moore Foster G. & Hon, mineral water manufacturers, Muskett Frederick William, baker, I48 Magdalen street
Wounded Hart la. St. Peter's st.& Tuck's court, St. Giles st Musselle Mary (Mrs.), apartments, 23 Dereham road
Moore & Co. wholesale haberdashers &c. 14 St. Giles street Mutimer George Herbert, dairyman, 19 St. Giles street
Moore Alfred, shopkeeper, 55 Union street Mutual Life Insurance Co. New York (David Lloyd, district
Moore Alfred Thomas, shoe maker, r6 Julian street manager), Victoria chambers, Bank plain. See advert
Moore Ambrose, livery stables, Theatre street Myhill Sarah (Mrs.), shopkeeper, Silver road
Moore Clement, boot:maker, 65 Cowgate street Nance Henry Chester L.R.C.P. Lond. surgeon, 57 Bethel st
Moore Francis David, shopkeeper, I I3 Adelaide street Narracott Valentine Luscombe, baker, I33 St. Benedict's st
Moore George Frederick, The Raven P.H. 1 St. Giles street Nash Albert Herne, house & estate agent & rent collector &
Moore Horace,Eastern Union Railway tav. St. Stephen's gates certified bailiff under the "Law of Distress Amendment
Moore Isaac, corn dealer, 6I Magpie road ~\et," 68 Magdalen road
Moore Isaac, hair dresser, 45 St. Giles hill Nash F'rederick, auctiuneer, valuer &c. see Clowes & Nash
Moore Jesse, shopkeeper, 21 Barrack street, St. James; & Nash Jacob, Fishmongers' Arms P.H. Market place
tobacconist, 19 Palace street Nash Robert, shopkeeper, 136 Magpie road
Moore John, assessor of fire losses, farmer, contractor & sand Nash Samuel, boot & shoe maker; so Ber street
& gravel merchant, Kett's hill N ash William S. wholesale stationer & printer, Charing cross
Moore John, shopkeeper, 5 Barrack street, St. James National Association for Employment of Reserve Soldiers
Moore Mary Ann (Mrs.), The Buck P.H. 139 Oak street {Capt. H. M. Kennedy, hon.sec.), Drill hall,Chapelfield rd
Moore Samuel William, farmer & contractor, Plumstead National & Norfolk Book SocietiP~'l' Depository, 16 London st
road, Thorpe Hamlet National Provincial Bank of England Lilnited (branch)
Moore Sarah (Mrs.), shopkeeper, 25 Bishops~ate street (George Thomas Cock, manager), London street; draw
Moore William, Beehive P.H. 30 St, Paul's plain on head office, r 12 Bishopsgate street within, London E c
Moore William, draper, 43 & 44 St. Benedict's street & National Society Prevention of Cruelty to Children (Theodore
Bridewell alley Philip Starke, sec.), 54 Chapelfield road
Morgan Benjamin Branford F.s.r. surveyor, land & estate National Telephone Co. LimiLed (Frederick Heath, local
agent & valuer, reviser of assessmento; to the Norwich manager), Exchange street
union, Bank chambers Nave Richard, wardrobe dealer, so Magdalen street
Morgans Brewery Co. Limited, brewers, wine & spirit mer- Naylor John, shopkeeper, 5 Church street, St. Paul's
chants & mineral water manufacturers, King Street Old Neal Thomas, jeweller, 3{ St. Augnstine street
brewery. See advertisement Neale Ellen Amelia (Miss),strawbonnet cleaner,xs Surreyst
Morley Edward, watchmaker, 7 Old Haymarket Neale James Frederick, grocer, St. Andrew's Hall plain
1\iorley Edwin, chimney sweeper, I Union street N eale Susannah (Mrs.), apartments, St. John's viis. Park la
Morley Georgina (Mrs.), midwife, 1 Union street Neale William, locksmith, Denmark road, New Catton
Morley Walter l\Iuskett, wholesale & retail china, glass & Neave William, Robin Hood P.H. Mousehold street
earthenware warehouse, 30 The Walk Neeve William, Red Lion P.H. 26 Coslany street
Morley William, Norfolk. Railway house P.H. Foundry Nelson & Co. general merchants & agents, mill furnishers &
• bridge, J>rince of Wales road dealers in machine belting, cotton waste, lubricating oils,
Morris Cropley, greengrocer, II3 Magdalen street glues, paints &c. 4 Bethel street
Morris Ellen (Mrs.), dress maker, so Wellington road Nelson Ann (Mrs.), Green Man P.H. King street
Morris Frederick James, Edinboro' Castle P.H. 8 Botolph st Nelson Charles, shopkeeper, 6o Devonshire street
Morris George, carriage manufacturer, inventor & patentee; Nelson Elizabeth (Mrs.), shopkeeper, I5 Rising Sun lane
inventor of the "Gem & Princes" carts, adjustable shaft Nelson Thomas, Two Brewers P. H. I 5 r Magdalen street
fittings, foot rest &c.; gold medals I. E. 1885 & Edinburgh Nelson William, beer retailer & baker, 45 Heigham street
1890, Lower Prince of Wales road ; works, ror Nelson William, hair dresser, 149 Magdalen street
Magdalen street Newby Edwin Ray, umbrella maker, Briggs street
Morris James Alfred, Cat & Fiddle P. H. I05 Magdalen street Newby William, New City P.H. 70 King's street, Crook's pl
Morris Sml. Prince of Denmark P.H.Denmark rd.New Catton Newcombe Percy, agt. to the Midland Railway Co.16Bank st
Morris Waiter William, largest cycle works in the provinces; Newham George, carpenter, Lime cottage, Aylsham road
depots for all the leading Coventry firms ; over 300 Newland John William, smith, Barrack street
machines in stock, Lower Prince of Wales road ; Yarmouth Newman Charles, coal & coke dealer, 83 King st. Crook's pl
depot, Jubilee cycle works, Lancaster road ; Lowestoft Newman Charles, Cherry Tree P.H. 43 Pitt street
depOt, London road. South Kirkley Newman Frederick, shopkeeper, 65 Norfolk st. Sth. Heigham
Morse Brothers, nurserymen, Eaton Newman Fredk. Jas. supt. of weighbridge, 4 Cattle market
Morse & Sons, fruit growers, Eaton N ewman Geo. photogrphr. Foundry bdge. Prince of Wales rd
Morse George, brewer, see Steward, Patteson, Finch & Co Newman George, shopkeeper, 3 Cross lane
Morse Berbert, pork butcher, 26 Adelaide street Newman Henry, contractor, Plumstead rd. Thorpe Hamlet
Morse Thomas Herbert F.R.C.S.Eng. surgeon, assistant sur- Newman Sp.rah (Mrs.), lodging house, 5 All Saints green
geon to the Jenny Lind infirmary & surgeon to the Nor- Ncwman John William, boarding house, 14 Princes street
wich dispen~ary, 10 Upper Surrey street J\' ewson John, grindery dealer, 28 Ileigham street
Morter Frederick, printer, IO Pottergate street Newton Alfred, fruiterer, 6r St. Stephen's street
Morter William, boot maker, SI Ber street Newton Ameli a (Mrs.), shopkpr.2 Lit.Arms st.Nth. Heigham
Mortimer & Cattermull, picture frame makers, 39 Botolph st Newton Sarah (Mrs.), shopkeeper, 30 St. Benedict's street
Motts John, shopkeeper, I23 Essex street Newton William, fruiterer, Swan lane
l\'Iotts John Henry, butcher, 117 Ber st.reet NichollsElizh. (Miss ),dress ma. 2Hillllouse rd. Thorpe Hamlet
Mounser \Villiam, cutler, 14 Timber Hill street Nicholls James, fried fish dealer, 46 Oak street
Mounser Wm. Robt. china & glass dealer, 94 St. Benedict's st Nichols Henry, hatter, 22 Lower Goat lane
Mower Henry, miller (steam & water), Trowse mills Nichols Josepb, travelling draper, ISO Dereham road
Moy Thomas Limited (Robert Stammers, manager), Nicholson Daniel Goddard, chemist, All Saints' street
coal, coke & general merchants & railway wagon builders, Nickalls & Sons, bellhangers, 14 Surrey street
3 Castle street & 97 Queen's road Nickalls Arthur, baker, 107 Oak street
Muirhead Jas. Waiter, teacher of music, 3 Upper Surrey st Nickalls George, Prince of Wales P.H. 96 Cowgate street
Mumford Bros. corn & seed merchants, 13 & 15 Duke st Nickalls John, china dealer, Little Orford street
Munday Thomas, wheelwright, I Afghan place, New Catton Nickalls Waiter, fishmonger, 125 St. Benedict's street
Munford l\Iary (Mrs.), pork butcher, 4 Tinkler's lane Niere Aurelio & Co. plaster modellers, I31 Magdalen street
Muriel Cecil Jeffery L.R.C.P. Lond. surgeon & surgeon to the Ninham Henry Christian, baking powder maker, Ber street
Workhouse, 2 Willow lane Nobb Edward William, fishmonger, 76 Barrack street
Muriel Charles Evans, surgeon, 36 St. Giles street Nobbs Edmund, greengrocer, 6o Oak street
Mnrnane Chas. Edwd. inland revenue officer, 8 Grove st.nth Nobbs Henry, beer retailer, 13 Coslany street
Murray James, tailor, 82 Calvert street Nobbs James, Ostrich inn, 3I Kett's hill, Thorpe Hamlet
Murray Rose Ann (Mrs.), boot machinist, 83 Pottergate st Nobbs Robert, shopkeeper, 37 Kett's hill
Murrell, Brighty & Co. coach builders &c. Pitt street Nobbs Wm. watch ma.& boot dP~ler,72 Bridgest.St.George's
Murrell Aliee (Mrs.), grindery dealer, 52 Botolph street Noble Charles, pork butcher, 9I Tinkler's lane
MurrellJames, Green Dragon P.H. Little London street Noble George Joseph, White House P.H. 12 Trafalgar street,
Murrell Jas. grocer & draper, 85 St. Peter's st. Dereham rd New Lakenham
Murrell William Matthew, The 'figer P.H. 47 Fishgate st Nockall Benjamin Laflin, registrar of births & deaths for"
Murton Robert, Albion P.H. Market place West Wymer sub-district, -69 Pottergate stteet
DIRECTORY.] NOR:FOLK. NORWICH. fi53
Nockens William, shopkeeper, 182 Oak street, Norwich. Norfolk Regiment-, 4th Volunteer Battalion (C. W • ..T.
Nockolds John, shoe manufacturer, 197 Queen's road Untbank, lieut.-col. ; Lieut. R. G. Hw1ter-Muskett, in-
Noonan Joseph, Britannia P.H. 73 Botulph street structor of musketry ; Capt. Otway M:ayne, adjut~nt; E.
Norfolk Archdeaconry Office (T. W. Hansell, notary public, J. Broughton, quartermaster ; Snrgeon-Capt. C. A. 0.
registrar; J. B. T. Bales, notary public, deputy regis- Owens M. D. ; Rev. J. Cholmeley M.A. & Rev. A. F. Smith
trar), Cathedral close LL.D. hon. chaplains; Yen. Archdeacon T. T. Perowne B. D.
Norfolk Chamber of Agriculture (James Brown Forrester, .actin~ chaplain) ; head quarters, Silver road
sec.), I Upper King street Norfolk 1st Volunteer Brigade (Eastern Division) Royal
Norfolk Chronicle Co. Limited (William Beaver, sec.), Artillery (2 & 3 position batteries) (Capt. Philip E. Back,
printers & account book manufacturers, 1-'la.rket place commanding No. 2 & Capt. J. A. Poock No.~; Surg.-Capt.
1'1 or folk Chronicle & Norwich Gazette (Norfolk Chronicle T. J. Compton M.D. medical officer; Rev. T. J. R. A.
Co. Limited, proprietors & publishers; Wjlliam Heaver, Slipper B.A. acting chaplain), Theatre street
sec.; published saturday), Market place. See advert Norgate & Son, wine & brandy importers &c. Surrey corner
Norfolk County Club (Capt. Geo. Clements, sec.),Up.Kingst Norman Bros. & Beard, organ builders, St. Stephen's gates,
Norfolk County Cricket Club (C. F. Taylor, sec.), St. Giles st Queen's road; & at Beccles
Norfolk County Football Association (Frederick S. Culley, Norman Robert Henry, shopkeeper, 67 Oak street
sec.), Queen street Norris Samuel, upholsterer & paperhanging warehouse,
Norfolk Daily Standard (Philip Soman & Son, publishers), Charing cross & St. John street
London street & Upper Goat lane North British & Mercantile Fire & Life Insurance Co.
N orfolkDairyFarrners' Association( The ),6oPrince of Wales' rd (~ orwich branch) (Peter Edward Hausell, managing
Norfolk Hotel, St. Giles street director), Upper close. See advertisement.
Norfolk News (Norfolk. News Co. Limited, publi:>hers; North Eliza (Mn.), wardrobe dealer, 53 Ber street
published saturday), 5 &·7 Exchange street North Heigham Drug Co. Limited, chemists, & agents for
Norfolk News Co. Lim.(Jas.Spelling,sec ), 5 & 7 Exchange st W. & A. G-ilbey, wine & spirit merchants, 59 Dereham
Norfolk & ~orwich Arch<£ological Society (Sir Francis G. road & 2 Magdalen street
M. Boileau hart. F.S.A. president; Rev. C. R. Manning North John Temple, tobacconist, g8 Magdalen street
M.A., F.R.A. (Diss) & Rev. \V. Hudson, M.A. hon. secs.; North William, builder, contractor & building material
John Quintan, assistant !!BC.), Guildhall hill merchant & dealer in all kinds of sanitary appliances,
Norfolk & Norwich Club (George B. Kennett, hon. sec.), St. Stephen's street
The Walk Norton E. & A. (Misses), baby linen warehouse, llriggs st
Norfolk & Norwich Eye Infirmary (Sir F. Bateman M.D. con- Norton Emma (Mrs.), beer retailer, Heigham street
sulting physician ; Haynes Sparrow Robinson & Samuel Norton Henry, boot & shoe manufacturer, 57 Fishgate st
Herbert Burton M.B. surgeons; Charles Evans Muriel, N orton Henry, tobacconist, 33 St. Stephen's street
assistant surgeon : Ed ward Balls, sec. ; Mrs. Rix, Norton Jas. Thos. coal mer. Corn exchange; & at Yarmouth
matron), Pottergate street Norton Jane (Miss), dress maker, IO Cathedral street north
Norfolk & Norwich Horticultural Society (His Royal High- Norton Robert, bricklayer, Essex street, South Heigham
ness the Prince of Wales, patron; John E. T. Pollard esq. Norton Rose (Miss), milliner, St. Benedict's gates
hon. sec.), London street Norwich Argus (Philip Soman & Son, publishers; published
Norfolk & Norwich Hospital (Sir Peter EadeM.D. consulting tuesday & saturday), London street & Upper Goat lane.
physician; Sir Frederic Bateman M.D. Samuel J. Barton See advertisement
M. D. & Fred W. Burton-Fanning M. B. physicians; William Norwich Art Circle (Charles Clowes, sec.), Queen street
Cadge & Thomas William Crosse, consulting surgeons; Norwich Auxiliary Religious Tract Society (Rev. W. A.
Charles WIIliams, Michael Beverley liLD. & Ilaynes M:cAllan, sec.) ; depot, 3 London street
Sparrow Robinson, surgeons; S. H. Burton & Donald D. Norwich Box Co. fancy box manufacturers, 40 Magdalen st
Day, assistant surgeons; Reginald Edward Crosse B. A., Norwich Cafe Co. Limited (S. Cozens-Hardy, sec. ; Capt.
L.R.C.P.Lond. house surgeon; Richard Wentworth White G. Clements, general manager); offices, Opie street;
L.D.S.R.C.S.Eng. dental surgeon; Rev. Precentor G. W. cafes, London, London street ; Victoria, St. Stephen's
Rarrett M.A. chaplain ; Howard J. Collins, sec. ; w. G. street; Wool pack, St. Martin's & 5 I Oak street, Guildhall
Crook, dispenser & analyst), St. Stephen's road cafe, Upper Market
Norfolk & Norwich Hotel Co. Limited, St. Giles street Norwich Cemetery (G. B. Kennett, clerk; Robert Holmes,
Norfolk & Norwich Kennel Club (Ernest Hines, sec.), 15 superintendent), Earlham road
St. Peter's street, Mancroft Norwich Central Conservative Registration Offices (Edward
Norfolk & Norwich Law Library (F. G. Booty, librarian), Robert Woodward, sec.), Market place
Guildhall hill, Market place Norwich Central Liberal Association (H. T. Nash, sec.),
Norfolk & Norwich Liberal Council (H. Lee Warner J.P. 28 St. Giles street
hon. sec.), 28 St. Giles street Norwich City Lunatic Asylum for Male & Female Pauper
Norfolk & Norwich Liberal Unionist Association (Right Hon. Lunatics (William HarrisM.R.C.P.Edin res. medical supt.),
Lord Suffield, president ; L. E. Bollingbrooke, sec.; V. R. Hellesdon
Narracott), 36 Prince of \Vales road Norwich Coal Co. coal merchants, Railway coal depot,
Norfolk & ~orwich Library (John Qtiinton, sec. & Hcigham street & 8 White Lion street
librarian & F. G. Booty, librarian), Guildhall hill Norwich Co-operative Boot & Shoe Manufacturing Society
Norfolk & Norwich Magdalen or l<'emale Home (Mrs. Sarah Limited (Benjamin Lee, sec.; John English, manager),
Rice, matron), York villa, Chapelfield road 32 St. George's Middle street
Norfolk & Norwich Museum (George C. Eaton esq. hon. Norwich Co-operative Society Limited (J. T. Gee, sec.), 58
sec. ; James Reeve, curator; John Quintan, assistant St. Stephen's street ; branch, 15 William street
sec.), St. Andrew's Broad street Norwich Cotton Mill Co. (J. L. Barber & Co. proprietors),
::Vorfolk & Norwich Musical Union (Samuel Neave Berry, St. Martin's Lane mills
hon. sec.), 17 Denmark road, Earlham road Norwich Grape Co. Limited (Joseph Corbetta, sec.), St.
Norfolk & Norwich Naturalists' Society (W. A. Nicholson, Augustine's factory .
hon. sec. ; John Quiruon, assistant sec. & librarian), Norwich Diocesan Church Defence Association (A. H.
Guildhall hill Goose, financial sec), Rampant Horse street
Norfolk & Norwich Savings Bank (Samuel Osborne, clerk; Norwich Diocesan Branch of the Church of England Tern-_
open mondays, wednesdays & saturdays from I I to 3 perance Society (Bishop of Norwich, president; John
o'clock), Haymarket Abbey, diocesan sec.), 50 Prince of Wales road
Norfolk & Norwich Staff of Hospital Trained Nurses (Miss Norwich Dispensary (T. W. Richardson, T. H. Morse,
Edith Watson, superintendent), Bethel street Donald D. Day, Cecil J. Muriel & Waiter S. Warlters,
~orfolk & Norwich Triennial Musical Festival (F. 0. Taylor, medical officers; Alexander R. Chamberlin, hon. sec.),
esq. hon. sec.), Old Bank buildings St. John's, Maddermarket
Norfolk Regiment (3rd Battalion) Norfolk Militia (Col. F. Norwich Electricity Co. Lim. (A. J. Clark, sec.), Queen st
W. Garnett, lieut.-col. commanding ; Capt. W. C. Tonge, Norwich Fish Market, Market place
adjutant ; Lieut. W. Halpin, quartermaster) (4th Norwich Free Library (George Easter, librarian), St.
battalion) (Col. T. \V. Hames, lient.-col. commanding; Andrew's Broad street
Capt. W. R. lnglis, adjutant; Lieut. R. J. Roche, Norwich Friendly Societies' Medical Institn1e (C. C. Clare-
quartermaster); Britannia barracks, Mouschold mont & William Leith, medical officers; John Williment,
Norfolk Regiment, Ist Volunteer Battalion (Hon. Col. sec.), Ivy house, Lady's lane
Algernon Cecil Dawson, commanding; Geoffrey F.Buxton, Norwich Gate House Choir (Hugh G. Barclay, hon. sec.;
major; Capt. H. J. W. Mackenzie Kennedy, adjutant ; Herbert Youngman, assistant sec)
P. N. Etheridge, quartermaster; Very Rev. William Norwich Government School of Science & Art (H. G. Bar-
Lefroy D. D. hon. chaplain ; for commanders of companies well. hon. sec. ; Waiter Scott, bead master), St. An-
seep. 5n); head quarters, Chapelfield road drew's Broad street
Norfolk Weekly Standard (Philip Soman & Son, publishers; Norwich High School for Girls (Miss L. Gadesden, head
. published saturdar), London st!Eet & Upper Goat lane mistress), Theatre sqnare
NORWICH. NORFOLK.
Norwich Grammar School {Edwa'rd the Sixth's) (Rev': E. F. Oldman Charles Albett, Whitefriars inn, 13 Whitefriars Ht ~
- Gilbard M.A. bead master; Edward Kirkman Man M.A. Olley Henjamin, tinplate worker, 66 St. Benedict's street, '
' sub-master.; for nther masters see list of schools), Up. close Olley Leonora (Mrs.), boot make:r, :14 St.- Giles hill P •
Norwich Homreopathic Dispensary (E. B. Rocbe & W. •Ross, Olley StRphen, shopkeeper, 145 Rupert street · ·· ~ .
hon. . medical officers; W. 'f. Livock, sec.), Guildhall ! Olley Wm. ·tin plate worker, Sll. Benedict's st. & Old Palace rd
• cba~bers, Ma~ket p~ace . . · • · I Onley Herbert, tobacc_onist, g8 Upper St. Giles street ·
Norwll:h Industnal Builders (J"ameil John Sm1th, sec.), 45 OI'ams & Tyce, bar non· & steel merchant!!, wholesale &
Prince's street retail ironmongers, saddlers' ironmongers & oil & color
Nondcb Libe.tal Club (L. Tittell, steward}, 21 The Walk merchants, 19 St. Peter's st: Mancroft, Davey p1.& Castle st
:Norwich L<lan Fund Society (James H. Chiddick, sec.), Orford William., cooper, Hongbt.on's yard, Ber street,
. Rridewell Alley Orris Edward, Coach & Horses P.H. 51 Bethel street.·
Norwich & London Accident Insuran<m Association (estab- Osborn & Son, tailors, breeches makers & ladies' tailors,
lished 1856) (C. R. G1lman, sec.; C. S. Gilman, assist- Bank plain 1 ',
ant sec.), St. Gilcs street r • Osborn Arthur, shopkeeper, 22 Peacock street 1 ' '
Norwich L:ying-in-Charity (T. W. G'rosse, consulting Osborne Edward, New Star P.H. 8 Quay side ,
accoucheur; Charles E1·ans Muriel, D. D. Day & G. F. Osborne Geo.Jubilee tavern,St.Leonard's rd. Thorpe Hamlet
Odhams, surgeon accoucheurs; H. W. Darrell & A. Osborne James, tobacconist, 37A, Upper King street
Crook, assistant surgeon accoucheurs; W. H. Cooper, Osborne Oscar, jun, painter, :2 St. Peter's st. Derehatn rd
. hon . .sec.; Miss Foreman, matron), Pottergate street Osborne Samuel, chief clerk t.o the Norfolk & Norwich
Norwich Masonic Association Limited (G. Kersey, sec.), 47 Savings bank, Haymarket ·
St. Giles street · Ostler John, paperhanger, 25 Norfolk street, South Heigharn
Norwich Mercury (Norwich Mercury Co, ; J. Fitzpatrick, Otty & Son, printers, Orford hill .
' sec.); published tues. & fri. 45 London st. See advert Ovens James, monumental mason, 129 Dereham road
Norwich MercurJ Co. (registered proprietors of the "Nor- Overbury & Steward, solicitors, King Street ho. Up. King st
wich Mercury" & "People's Weekly Journal"), 45 London Overbury Walter(tirm,Ovcrbury &Steward),solicitor,notary
street. See adve1tisement & proctor, r.egistrar of the archdeaconry of Norwich &
Norwich Middle SchooL(Edward the Sixth's), Thomas Rich. commissioner in the Supreme court, Upper King street
• mond Pinder LL.B. head master; Henry Oake B.A. Uni- Overend George, agent for the London &; North Western
versity Dublin, second master), Bridge st, St. Andrew's railway receiving & inquiry otlice, Exchange street
Norwich & Norfolk Bank, see Gurneys & Co Overton 1\'illiam, cooper, 3 Palace plain
Norwich & Norfolk Charity for Clergymen's Widows & Overl:<>n Yaxley, whitesmith, 12 Tinkler's lane
Children (Rev. George King, treasurer; Waiter Over- Owen Alfred, pawnbroker; 40 Colegate street
bury, Upper King street, registrar; T. F. Wright, land Ox bury Thos. Kerrison1 draper, 31 Adelaide st. Dereham rei
stewaTd), Bank street Page Brothers & Co. litho. printers, St. Stephen's Back st
Norwich & Norfolk Conservative Club (president, Charles Page John G. & Co. wholesale cabinet makers, St. Andrew's
R. Gilman e~q. J.P.; treasurer, J. J. Dawson Paul esq. Cabinet works '
J.P.; hon. sec. Thomas Henry Dunmore), St. Giles 1 PageS. D. &Sons Limited, brush makers, Haymarket
Norwich & Norfolk Female Friendly Society (Helen Lilian Page Arthur, greengrocer, 1 Hupert street . 1
lodge) (JamBs T. Tuck, see.), 25 l'rin£'es strP~t I Page Francis, William the Fourth P.H. Salford st. Union pl
Norwich & Norfolk Investment Corporation Limited (John Page John Braly, greengrocer, 10 Wtllis street
R. Barley, sec.), 13 Princ-e of Wales road Page Jn. Joseph Gray, upholsterer-&c. see Trevor,Page & Co
Norwich .k Norfolk. Medico-Chirurgical Society (John Page Louisa (Miss), dress makC'l', 55 Essex street '
Quintan, librarian), Guildhall hill Page Mary Ann (Mrs.), wardrobe dealer, 6 Union street
Norwich & Norfolk Temperance & General Permanent Page Robert, Cock tavern, 32 Upper King street
Benefit Building Society (Frederiek Samuel Culley & Page Samuel, watch maker~ :io .St. Gilcs' hill r h • ,• '
r Thomas l3ullimore, secs.), Queen street Paling William, shopkeeper, 144 Magdalen street 1 •
Norwich & Norfolk . Traders' Association (Thomas W. Palmer & Sons, bar iron merchants, wholesale & retail iron-
Smith, lllanager) 1 Opie street · mongers,' oil & col or men, gasfitters, bellhangen &i brass
Norwich Omnibus Co. Limited (Fredorick Samuel Oulley, workers; 6· Old Haymarket
·"'Sec.}~ offices, Queen street . Palmer'IhomasJoseph Mills, solicitor, Bank plain , I
Norwich Permanent Building &1ciety (J. T. Todd, sec.); Palmer Thomas & Wm.Rt. pill box mas. West Pottergate st
, officcs1 St. Andrews Broad street Palmer Alfred, antique furniture dealer, 14 Tombland
Norwich l'rovident Soeiety (Hy. Farmer, supt.), Fishgate st Palmer Edward, draper 13, & milliner 19, Dereham road
Norwich ~chool Board (Sydney Cozens-Hardy,clerk), Opie st PalmerEdwin,sexton to St.J ohn's,St.John st.Maddermarket
Norwich Steam Laundry & Baths Co. Limited (Frederick Palmer George, blacksmith, 41 Trafalgar st.New Lakenham
Samuel Culley, sec.), Queen street & {Edward Trew, Palmer Henry, cabinet maker, 58 Pottergate street
manager of laundry), Heigham street Palmer John, saddler & harness maker, 130 St. Benedict's st
Norwich Union Fire Insurance ~oc1ety (established 17~7) Palmer John, shopkeeper, 6 :-it. Lawrence lane
(Charles E. Hignold, sec.), Surrey street. See advert Palmer Marshall Alfred, boot tree & last maker, ro Westle-
Norwicb Union Life Assurance Society (established 18o8) gate street & butcher, Tirnber hill
(J. J. W. Deucber F.F.A., F.I.A. sec. & accountant), Palmer Mary (Miss), lodging bouse,4_') Prince of Wales road
Surrey street. See advertisement ·~ . Palmcr Richd.Lec, baker & groccr,l\-lagdalcn rd. New Catton
Norwich Vinegar & Distillery Co. Limited, Queen street l'almer Thomas, general smith, Timber Hill street
Norwich ·water Works Co. (John Ayris, manager; Robert Palmer William, wood carver, 58 Pottergate Etreet
Cooper, solicitor); office, Surrey street Palmer William Blanchflower,Nnrsery tavern, Nelson street,
Norwich Wine Co. (The) 1 importers of foreign wines & North Heigham
spirits & dealers in beer, 92 Upper St. Giles street Palmer William Jamcs, butcher, 37 Cattle Market street
Nover:re Hr.otbers; professors of dancing, Theatre square j & Pank A. & Son, gas, hot water & sanitary B11gineers, drain
at Dencside, Yarmouth & Lynn ,, 1 ' testers & sanitary plumbers, elect.ric bell, telephone & gas

Noverre':s Assembly Rooms (F. W. B. Noverre, proprietor), fitters, medi<Eva.l & general metal workers &. dealers in
Theatre square electric light & bell fittings, 8, 10 & 12 Bedford street
Noverre Frank William Biancbi, teacher of the violin, Pank James Henry1 blacksmith, Bull lane, St. Stephen's st
Theatre .square & at Lynn r Pank Jas. Joseph, blacksmitb-, Elephant & Castle yd.Kmg st
Noy Isaac, wheelwright, King street Papps John Joseph, Alma tavern, 92 Pottergate street
Nudd Elizabeth (Miss), dress maker, Magdalfm,road Parfitt.Alfred James, hair dresser, 25 Timber Hill street
Nndd Robert George, Three Tuns P.H. 6o King street Parish James, whitesmitb,• Perts yards, Pitt street
Nudd Walter Alfred (late Staey)~ bookseller, printer, pub- Parish William, ironmonger, 7r llot.olph street '·
lisher, stationer, bookbinder, engraver & proprietol' of Parish William, shopkeeper, 95 Lower Westwick street
City & County Book club, 2 Haymarket _. Park. Joseph & Sons, mohair & worsted spinnerS, St. Ed-
Nudds Fanny & Emily (Misses), milliners, 38Bethel street round's, St . .James' & Lakenhttm mills
Nunn Agnes (Miss), apartments, 18 Cow bill · Park William, Jolty Farmer P.H. Cattle market '
Nunn George T. market gardener, .Aylsham road Parker John & William, linen drapers, 8 Dereham road
Nnnn James, news agent. 63 Vauxhall street Parkel' Agnes (Mrs.), dressmtt. :;~ Carrow rd. Thorpe Hamlet
Nnrse Robert, carver & gilder & picture dealer,WhiteLion st Parker Albert William, teacher (1f music, 13 Oxford street
Nutball & Mason, pharmaceutical & operativechemists,Bank Par ken Arthur, Balloon 'P.H; 62 Lower West wick str~t
· plain; & at Red Lion street, Aylsham Parkel' David, city missionary, I4 Mancroft st. Dereham rd
Oakes Albert Edward, ~bopkeeperf 57 Heigham street ' Parker l<'rancis, tailor, RoJal Hotel street J
O'Brien Thomas, shopkeeper, 235 Northumberland street Parker James Ca.ley, mantle maker 1 62 London street
Odham Goorge Frederick L.R.C.P.Lond. surgeon & medical Parke;r Herbel't, eoal, corn·,J~mE!r1t & manure tnerchant, dry-
officer 7th district, 53 llethel street r salter &c. Poundry Bridge•wharff near Thorpe station &
Offord James Sha.rpen, dentist, 46 St. Giles street! Stand 87, Norwich Corn hall •
Oldman Charle~ 1 pork butcher1 24 Hall rd. New Lakenham Parker Thomas Bart.Iett1 baker1 2 Trory street 1 Uuthanks.rd
DIRECTORY. J NORFOLK. NORWICH. ~55

Parlett John Enrage, painter, 23 Trory street-· · Pilgrim Edwardl·brnsh maker~-~•10 Botolph meet·
:earr William Harvey• supt. Df·the water work11, Heigham st Pilgrim ·Henry James, inspector ·of weights &·measures-
Parsons Anthony Edward, Central commercial temperance (eastern division 1 -<.'0unty ef Not"folk), 12 Sussel!: street
, hotel, Tom bland . Pimm Charles, grocer,. 132 St. Benedict's st. •& 159 Ber st ·
Parsons Charles, cab propriet.or, 46 St. Stephen's road Pimm Sarah Elizabeth (Miss}, shopkeeper, 2 Goldsm~th·
Parsons John, cab proprietor, Bishopgate street street, North Heigham
Parsons Hobert, The Griffin P.H. 93 Barrack street.- Pinnix George,- ThtvVictory P.H. 47 Derebam road
Parsons William Duncan, Black Prince P.ll. Market place Piper Frank, district inspector Norwich & London Accident
Paston & Co. curriers & leather sellers, St. Giles' bill Insurance Association, 34 Grove street west
Paston Philip King, brush manufacturer, 169 Heigham st Piper Waiter James, watch. maker, 38 St. Giles hill
Past on Thomas, Bee Hive P. H. 18 Palace plain Pitch ell Mary (Mrs.), shopkpr. 2 King's rd. New Lakenham
Patteson Club (political) (Rb. F. Mallett, sec.), St. Saviour la Pitcher Charlotte (Mrs.), fancy draper, 48 St. Stephen's st
Patteson Henry Staniforth, brewer, see Steward, Patteson, Pitcher George Ham, bricklayer, 140 Devon!ihire street
Finch & Co . Pitcher John, grocer, see Bussey & Pitcher
Patteson Hy. T. S. brewer, see Steward, Patteson, Finch & Co Pitcher Mart ha (Mrs.), shopkeeper, King street
Paul Josepb Jn. Dawson,iron founder &c. see Boulton & Paul Pitcher Wm. Watling, carpenter, 4 Denmark rd. Earlham rd
Paul Mary Ann (Mrs.), Half Moon P.H. Dereham road Pitchers Sarah Ann (Yfrs. ), pork btchr. 127 St. Benedict's s1i
Paul Richard, ham & beef dealer, 2 Bridewell alley Pitman Maurice A. commercial traveller, 21 The Walk ·
Pauling Henry, baker, n Jnlian street, Chapelfield roact. Plane Richard, ham curer, 78 William street, St. Giles hill
Pauling John Frederick, baker-, 37 Napier street Plane 'William, Yarn Factory tavern, 152 Cowgate street
Payne Charles & Co. medimval metal workers, 5 Red well st Platfoot Samuel Fergus, baker, 136 Waterloo road
Payne Alfred, shopkeeper, 5 William ter. Heigham street Playford Alfred, baker, 33 St. Peter's street, Mancroft &
Payne George, shoo maker, 20 Rising Sun lane 15 Lower Goat lane
Payne Robert, wheelwright, Napier street Playford George, grocer, Brunswick road, Newmarket road
Payne Wilham Samuel, butcher, 32 Old Palace road Playford John Joseph, station master, Victoria station
Peacock James, Cock P.H. 78 Upper St. Giles street Playford William, Golden Ball P.H. Golden Ball street
Peacock Sarah (Mrs.), Black Horse P.II. St. Uiles' road Pleasants Hovee "'illiam, baker, ro Cowgate street
Pear John, bird preserver, 26 All Saints' green Pleasents Benjamin, shopkeeper & carpenter, 44 Silver- st
Pearee P. W .. & A. T. The Norwich & Eastern Counties lime, Plowrigbt John Cremer, Bear &.Staff P.H. Fisher's lane
London, Paris & Spanish whiting, compo, hearth stone, Plowright Samuel, pork butcher, 4 Wensum street
pipe clay, bath brick & home-made linseed oil, putty Plumbridge Joseph, shopkeeper, 162 Ber street
works &c. 40 King street & Hellesdon road . Plumby Thomas, hatter, 2 White Lion street
Pearce Henry, fishmunger, 51 King street Plumstead Samuel James, Sportsman P.H. Northumberland
Pearcc James, coffee house, 5 Dove street street, North Heigham '
Pearce James, shopkeeper, 22 Oak stree~ Plumstead Thomas, painter, 4 Severn's yard; Cowgate st
Pearce John Bond F.R.I.B.A.architect & surveyor, Up. King st Plumstead William1 Currier~· Arms P.H. 114 Essex street
Pearce Joshua, confectioner, n Coslany street Plumsted Charles, furniture bFoker, 53 Magdalen street
Pearce Percival, bricklayer & plasterer, 15 Goldsmith street, Plunkett Annie (Miss), dress maker, 14 Aylsham road
North Heigham Plunkett John, greengrocer, 48 Botolph street ··
Pearl Life Assurance Co. Limited, 70 Queen's road Plunkett Robert, shoe maker, 88 King street, Crook's place
:Pearson & Son, cutlers & truss makers, Bedford st.London st Podd Edmund, boot & shoe manufacturer, 62 Betbel street
Pearson Edward, plasterer, 3r Belvoir street Pointer Albert, eowkeeper, Locksland cottage, Aylsham rd
Pearson Francis, pork but.cher, 76 Old Palace road Pointer Edmund, pork butcher, 152 Magdalen street
Pearson Harriet (Mrs.), linen draper,3::J St. Andrew'sBroad st 1 Pointer George, pork butcher, 38 Oak street
Pearson Henry, grocer, 42 Upper King street Pointer John, beer retailer, 29 Union street
Pearson James, shopkeeper, 127 King street Pointer Mana (sirs.), lodging house, 9 St. John's st. Rose la
Pearson William, chair maker, r3r Cm~·gate street Pointer ~-illiaril:, cow keeper. Angel_road, N_ew Cat ton
Pearson William Charles, harness maker, 4r Waterloo road Poles W1lham, fishmonger, 87A, Phtladelph1a la. New Catton
Peck Charlotte (Mrs. ),shopkeeper, r6Hall rd.NewLakenham Pollard John Empson Toplis, solicitor, London street
Peed Charles, fishmonger, 79 Pitt street Pollock John M. R.C. v. s. veterinary surgeon, SS Chapelfield
Peek Robt (Mrs.), wardrobe dealer, ro6 St.George's Middle st ·road & shoeing .forge, O_a~ st. St. Mtles ~ Dereham road
Pegg Jame;;;, builder, Armes street, North Heigbam Pomeroy & Co. wme & sptnt merchants, V\ ensum street
Pegg Leonard Samuel, shopkeeper, 20 Queen's st. Crook's pl Pond Alfred, dairyman, 207 Heigbam street
Pegler Edwin S. jeweller, silversmith & watch maker, 41 & Pond Edward, shoe maker, 33 Chapel street, Crook's place
43 London street Pond Henry, builder, William street, St. Giles' road
Pendle David, coffee house, sS Magdalen street Pond James, baker & grocer, 2 Kett's bill
Penny Benjamin .Tames, shopkeeper, 89 Waterloo road . Pond James, boot & shoe maker; specialities for flat feet,
Pentney & Co. printers, 121 St Benedict's street weak ankles, bow legs & knock knees, as recommended by
Pentney James Chapman, chemist & druggist, 109 St. the faculty, 23 Castle meadow
Benedict's street Pond J ames, boot maker, 39 Union street
People's Weekly Journal (Norwich Mercury Co. publishers; Pond James, jn_n. shoe maker, 53 Caernarvon road
J. Fitzpatrick, sec.); published friday morning; 45 Pond Sa.rah (MiSs), dress maker, I Cherry lane
London street. See advertisement Pond Waiter, teacher of music, 14 Cross lane, St. George's
Pepper Henry Albert, master of the Bethel hospital,Bethel st Poock John Alfred, dentist, 22 Tom bland
Perfect & Co. wicker chair manufacturers, St. Stephen's st Poock Emma Sarab Constance (Miss), teacher of music, I
Perfect Alfred, original manufacturer & designer of the \Villow lane
Norwich wicker chair; established 1857; 30 & 32 King Pooley William 1 furniture dealer, 8 & ro Charing cross
street, Crook's place ~ Pooley William, Mill tavern, Mill hill, New Catton
Perfect Deborah (Miss), dress maker, rso Old Palace road Pope Edward, greengrocer, 137 King street
Perfect Henry, Guildhall Stores P.H. St. Giles street Porrett William, fishmonger, 76 St. Giles hill
Perowne James, fruiterer, 15 St. Stephen's street Porritt John L. oil-cake, coal, corn, salt, fish salt, oil &
Pert James, shoe manufacturer, 31 Pitt street grease merchant &c. 13 Newmarket road
Petch Henry, tea dealer, 30 St. (hies' hill Porter Benjamin Wm. haulier, 67 Rosary rd. Thorpe Hamlet
Petcb William Murrell, llorse Barracks P. H. Barrack street, Porter C. (Mrs.), brick merchant, builder & estate agent,
Pockthorpe I 13 Potter gate street
Pbillippo Arthur Leggett, shopkeeper, 25 William street, Porter C. Thompson, msnrance agent, 32 Caernarvon road
St. Giles' hill Porter George Thompson, insurance agent, 9 Red well street
Phillips Thomas, boot & shoe ma. 14 St. Andrew's Hall plain Porter Henry Soarles, builder, t 13 Pottergate street
Philo Joseph & Son, saddlers, Tombland Porter James, mahogany & deal merchant & bent timber
Phipps Cunstantine Waiter, boot mannfr. 98 Magdalen st merchant, St. George's Bridge wharf; & sawing, turning,
Pickford & Co. carriers, 43 Exchange street planing & moulding mills, St. Edmunds
l>igg Robert & Son, cabinet, upholstery, carpet & general Porter Thomas H. brick & lime works, Harford bridge,
furnishing warehouse; bassinette carriages, mail carts Ipswich road & 113 Pottergate street
&o, ; established r8oo 'i 57 London street Postle Cnbitt Siely, baker, '41 Mariner's lane
Pigg Arthur .William, butcher, 26 Devonshire street Postle Henry Waiter, tobacc:onist, Bride well alley
Pigg George Woolmer, painter &c. IS Colegate street Postle John, smith, 27 I<'ishgate street
Pigg Rohert, butcher, 140 Armes street, North Heigham Postle William, boot & shoe maker, 8 Lower Goat lane
Piggin James, shopkeeper, 40 Angel road, New Catton Postle William, Phren ill Cellars P.H. g6 Magdalen street
Pigott Paynton D.L. barrister-at-Jaw & chief constable' of Potter Douro Thomas, stone tnasoo, Lady's lane
c<)unty constabulary, County Polioo statn. Castle meadow Potter Edmund Wodehouse, Yineg;n maker, Cobnrg street
Pike John Greaves, confectioner, Red Lion street Potter Edmund Wodehouse, jun. stone mason,Coburgstreet
Pilch Arthn-r, carpenter, 17 Old Palace road Potter Frederick George, painter &c. 7 Dereham road
556 1'\0RWICH,; NORFOLK. [KELLY'.s
Potter Robert, Lame Dog P.H. 68 Queen's road Ransom George, tailor, 8 All Saints' green · '
Powell Abraham, corn. trav. 21 Bedford st. South Heigham Ransome James, parish clerk of St.Bartholomew's, Heigham,
Powell John, hair dresser. 89 St. Benedict's street 12 Northumberland st.reet, Dereham road
Powell Waiter, hair dresser, 26 St. Augustine street Ransomes, Sims & Jefferies Limited, agricultural implement
Powis Thomas, pork butcher, 10 Bridewell alley makers, Cattle market (saturdays only)
Powley J oseph, florist, 154 Philadelphia lane Ransou Joshua Farrar, timber, mahogany, deal & slate
Poynter Robert, Princess of Wales P.H. Rose lane . merchant, Montergate street & Strand, No. 8r Corn hall;
l'oyson Herbert, Cork Cutters' Arms P.H. 51 Bridge ~Jtreet, & at Southtown, Yarmouth & Southside, Lowestoft. See
St. George's advertisement
Pratt Alfred, Canterbury P.H. Napier street Rant Arthur, apartments, 2 Bedford Cross !lt. Sth. Heighm
Pra.tt Alice (Miss), boot & shoe maker, I Timber hill Rant Louisa (Miss), dress m!J,ker, 30 Northumberland st
Pratt Arthur, butcher, I32 Heigham street Ratcliffe Levi William, surveyor, see Wright & Ratcliffe
Pratt John, Hampshire Hog P.H. St. Swithin's alley Raven Edward, shopkeeper, 146 Ber street
Pratt John, cowkeeper, 87 Philadelphia lane Ray & Son, auctioneers, valuers & land & estate agents,
Pratt Mary Ann (Mrs.), shopkeeper, 18o Heigham street Upper King street
Pratt Sydney Brown, grocer, Ig8 Heigharn street Ray Charles, french polisher, Synagogue street
l'ratl William, boot & shoe maker, 61A, Bethel street Ray Henry, french polisher, Charing cross
Pratt Wm. Wortley, solicitor, Victoria chambers, Bank plain Rayment Jn.Wm. shopkpr.St. Leonard's rd. Thorpe Hamlet
Prentice Louisa (Mrs.), dress maker, 95 Trinity street Rayson Emily (Miss), shopkeeper, Julian Back street
Preston & Sous, solicitors, Bank plain Read Betsey (Mrs.), lodging house, 35 Prince of Wales road
Preston Arthur Waters (firm, Preston & Son), solicitor, per- Read Charles Henry, baker, 43 St. Uiles hill
petual commissioner & commissioner to administer oaths Read Christopher, shopkeeper, Silver road
in the Supreme court, clerk to Upton Drainage Cornmis- Read Daniel, Lord Nelson P.H. Trafalgar st. NewLakenham
Bitmers, Bank plain: & at Blofield Read Dennis, Cock inn, & cowkccper, Lakenham
Preston Maria (Mrs.), shopkeeper, 35 Northumberland Read Ed ward Howard, "hop keeper, St. J ulian's street
street, North Heigham Read Emma (Mrs.), Ea ton Cottage r.H. 6g Mount Pleasant
Preston William, chair maker, Sprowston road Read George, Moon & Stars P.H. Duke street
Price :Frank, draper, 78 Magdalen road Read George Beaumont, tailor, Orford street
Price Joseph, shopkeeper, 29 Oak street Read Geo. Gray, cab proprietor, 13 Rosary rd. ThorpeHamlet
Price Waiter Herbert, corn, seed, oil-cake, manure & coal Read James L. grocer, 99 Magdalen street
merchant, Duke's Palace wharf, Upper market & Strand, Read John, boot maker, 31 St. Peter's street, Dereham road
44 Com hall Read Joseph, watch maker, 37 St. Stephen's street
Priest E. Waiter & Co. paint, lead, glass & cement mer- Read Joseph John, plumber &c. 6 Pottergate street
chants, general commission & insurance agents, Guildhall Read Robert, shopkeeper, 30 Heigham street
chambers, St. Peter's street Read Robert, Star & Crown P.H. Timber Hill street
Priest Eleanor Nightingale (Miss), draper, 2A, Dcreham rd Read Thomas Matthews, maltstcr & merchant, Cannon
Prior .Ada ("Mrs.), shopkeeper, 58 Leicester street wharf, King street; & at 'l'ivetshall
Prior Leathes, solicitor, Tuck's court, St. Giles street Read William, fishmonger, 24 Wensum street
Private Lunat,ic .Asylum (Thomas J oseph Compton M.D.medi- Read William Arthur, bricklayer, 4 Derhy street
cal superintendent), Heigham hall, Old Palace road Reader Maria (Mrs.), laundress, 52 Trinity street
Probate Court (George Robcrt Haman, district registrar; Red grave Michael, tallow, corn & seed merchant, farmer &
Benjamin Richard Uold Watling, chief clerk), Lower close manufacturer of ground bait for fishing, Whitefriars bridge;
Provident Surgical .Appliance Society (branch) (Miss M. M. & butcher, Hall road, Lakenbam
Liithman, local sec.), 73 Prince of Wales road Rees Bros. stationers' sundryrnen,7 St. John's st.Maddrmrkt
Prudential Assurance Co. Lim. (Wm. Geo. Humble, district Reeve .Annie (Mrs.), dress maker, 29 St. Philip's road
superintendent), Bank plain . Reeve Charles, confectioner, 87 St. Benedict's street
Pullen & :Mase, house decorators, 8o Upper St. Giles street Reeve Edmnnd, solicitor & commissioner for oaths & sec.
Pullen Henry Thomas, painter, 5 Johnson st. Sth. Heigham for Jenny Lind hospital (firm, Mills & Reeve),69London st
Pummel! James, baker, r Ten Hell lane Reeve Edward G. hot water engineer, manufacturer of im-
Puncher \Yilliam, bookseller, 3 Prince of Wales road proved kitcheners, bellhanger &c. Duke st. & St. Giles st
Purchas Edward Bootley, surveyor of taxes (Yarmouth RceveHarriet(Mrs.),Queen of Hungaryr.H.85St.Bcnedict's st
survey); office, Tombland Heeve James, Steam Packet P.H. gz King street
ruxley Ellen Martha (Mrs ), Marquis of Granby P.H. 23 Reeve James Petchell, grindery dealer, 77 Orchard street
Bishopsgate street Reeve Robert, coal dealer, I West End street
· Pye James & Son, carpenters & builders, Chatham street, Reeve Robert, whitesmith, I8 Hall road, New Lakenham
Sussex street, St. Augustine's Reeve Simms William, barrister & recorder of Great Yar-
Pye Stacey, boot maker, 37 King street mouth, 35 St. Giles street
Pye William Magnes, grocer, 53 St. Augustine street Reeve Waiter Alfred, cabinet maker, upholsterer & complete
Pyke John, dairyman, 76 Upper St. Giles street house furnisher, 43 St. Giles street
Quick Charles, fishmonger, 19 Timber Hill street Reeve William, machinist, Wounded Hart lane, St. Peter's
Quinney Joseph, White Lion P.H. 128 St. Benedict's street Regimental District (9th) (Col. C. S. Perry, commanding;
Quintan Benjamin John, fruiterer, 33 St. Andrew's Broad Capt. W. C. Tonge, adjutant; Surgeon-Major A. Mor-
street & ~Iagdalen road phew M.s. ; Surgeon-Capt. C. L. Josling M.A.; Major C.
·Quintan Susannah (Mrs.), bookbinder, 37 Pottergate street J. Croft, station staff paymaster), Britannia barracks,
Raby Samuel, shopkeeper, I4I Oak street Mouse hold
Race Charles, insurance agent, 45 Clarendon road Reid Fredcrick, dairyman, Christchurch road
Rackham & Co. cattle medicine depot, IS St. Peter's street, RemblentsRobt.hoop&hurdle mkr. Aylsham rd. Up. Hellesdon
Mancroft Renshaw Selina ('Mrs. ),confectioner,44 Bridge st.St.George's
Rackham Hanworth Edmund Burr, solicitor, 1 Queen st Rescue Hospital (D. D. Day, hon. me d. ofticer ; Sister Har-
Rackham Thos. Chas. :Mastelli, solr. Tuck's crt. St. Giles st riett in charge), Caernarvon road
Rackham William Simon, solicitor & commissioner to ad- Restieaux Joseph James, registrar of marriages for the
minister oaths, see Coaks I. B. & Co district of Norwich, 2r Grove road, Lakenham
Rainbird Julia Elizabeth (Mrs.), shopkpr. 4 We.Pottergatc st Revell :Fanny Elizabeth (Mrs.), N a pier tavern, Castle meadow
Ramm Edward, shopkeeper, 33 West Pottergate street Revell John, tailor, 59 Rose lane
Ramm William, tailor, 21St John stree, Rose lane Revell William, house decorator, Queen street, Crook's place
Ramsay George, fishmonger, 64 Barrack street Revell William Thomas, sign writer, 67 St. Stephen's st
Ramsay Henry, corn, hay & straw dealer, Hishopgate street Reynolds Bernard, leather seller &c. 97 Dereham road
Ramsay John Joseph, fcllmonger, leather dresser & hide & Reynolds Chas. pork butcher, 2 r Trafalgar st.N ew Lakenham
skin merchant, Fellmonger's yard, Bishop bridge Reynolds George, market gardener, Ipswich road
Ramsay Sarah (Miss), dress ma. 40 Lindley st.New Laknhm Reynolds Laban John, boot & shoe maker, 36 Distillery st
Ramsbottom Francis, shopkeeper, 22 Cowgate street Reynolds Lorenzo Jazreel, shoe manufr. 49 Devonshire st
Randall Chas. Wm. & Co. boot & shoe factors, 16 Theatre st Reynolds Philippa (Miss), girls' day school, 20 Brunswick rd
Randall Emily (Mrs.), White Lion r.H. 135 Magdalen street Reynolds William Herbert, wheelwright, Heigham street
Randall George, shopkeeper, 23 Rose lane Rice & :Field (Misses), underclothing makers, 75 Belvoir st
Randall Henry, boot maker, 20 Union st. South Heigham Rice Edgar, sec. East Anglian branch of the Royal In-
Randall Samuel, clothier, hatter, hosier & shirt maker, 46 surance Go. Bank street
• St. Benedict's st. ; & at Yarmouth & Lowestoft. See advt Rice Obadiah Handford, builder, 29 Calvert street & house
Randell Frederick & Horace, agricultural implement makers, agent, 53 London street
Cattle market (saturdays only) Rice Jethro John, stationer, 16 Wensum street
Randell Samuel, clothier, 15 Ber st. & 3u, St. Stephen's st Rice John, general dealer, 38 St. Peter's st. North Heigham
Ransom Arthur, newsvendor, 5 City street, Dereham ro_Ld Richards Frederick, boot maker, 25 Eelvoir street
Ransom Denis, saddler, 34 Upper King street Ricbardson David, linen & woollen draper, 65 Vauxhall st
DIRECTORY.] NORFOLK. NORWICH. 551
Richardson Elizabeth (Mrs.), shopkpr. gHall rd. New Lakenhm Rose Sarah (Miss), catholic bookseller, St. John's Madder-
Richardson John, cabinet maker, Bedford st. St. Andrew's market
Richardson John Emmerson, coach bldr.St. Augustine's gate Rose Thomas, land & estate agent & valuer, 13 Bank street
Richardson John Muskett, boot maker, 28 Edinburgh road Rose William Robert, news agent &c. So St. Benedict's st
Richardson John Philip, superintendent British Workman's Hasher Wm. & Son, builders, Chestnut place, Palace plain
Assurance Co. 45 Pitt street Roshier Theophilus, relieving officer, 3rd district, Oak road,
Richardson Robert Goldspring, florist & market gardener, St. Clements
Eaton road . Russ Richard, shopkeeper, 141 Cowgate street
Richardson Thomas William M.R.c.s.,L.S.A. surgeon, member Ross Richard, shopkeeper, 176 Oak street
of the Norwich & Norfolk Chirnrgical Society, medical Rossi Theodore, jeweller, watch ma. & silversmith,Market pl
officer Norwich dispensary, Surg.-Capt. 8 Vol. med. staff Rounce William, wardrobe dealer, 12 Barrack st. St. James'
& medical officer Union workho.Henstead,35 Unthanks rd Rouse Fanny Lucretia(Miss),curiosity dlr.II St.Stephen'srd
Riches & Watts, engineers, Duke street Rout Francis, builder, St. Leonard's road, Thorpe Hamlet
Riches Caroline (Miss), dress maker, 101 Gladstone street Rout John, hardware dealer, n & 12 White Lion street &
RichesHannahCatherine(Miss ),music teacher ,32St. Giles hill 31 St. Step hen's street
Riches James Edgar, tailor, 19 Wensum street Rout John, market cafe, Market place & White Lion street
Riches Sarah Ann (Mrs.), Temperance hotel, 39 & 69 Rout Michael, Ship P. H. Gas hill, Thorpe Hamlet
:Prince of Wales road Rout Peter, Coachmakers' Arms P.H. 36 Betbel street
Riches William, draper, 100 Old Palace road Row & Taylor, chemists, 6 St. Stepben's street
Riches William Dunning, wheelwright, Barn road Row Charles, solicitor, 188 Dereham road
Rickwood Edward, shopkeeper, 6 Surrey road Rowland Henry, Black Horse P.H. 23 St. Gilcs street
Rickwood James, shopkeeper, 8 Angel road, New Catton Rowland Hy. nurseryman, St. Clement's hill, New Catton
Riley Charles William, butcher, 41 Armes st.NortbHeigham Rowley Charles, George the Fourth P. ff. 72 Ber street
Ringer Robert, gun & rifle manufacturer, Orford hill Rowling Mary (Mrs.), shopkeeper, & post office, 25 Hall
Hipley William Ernest, solicitor, 6 Tombland road, New Lakenham
Riseborough William Bird, market gardener, Dereham road Royal family & commercial hotel & posting house (for tariff
Risebrook Herbert Harbourd, shopkeeper, 13 Waterloo road apply to manageress), The Walk, Market place
Rivett Herbert, hair dresser, 7 Lower Goat lane Royal Insurance Co. (Fire & Life) (East Anglian branch,
Rix Charles, commercial traveller, 57 Mill Hill road Edgar Rice, sec.), Bank street
Hix John, Queen's Head P.H. & fishmonger, go Up. St.Giles st Royal National Life Boat Institution (Frederic Oddin
Rix Robert, shoe maker, 79 Pottergate street Taylor, bon. representative), 19 King street
Rix Robert Taylor, The Distillery P.H. Dereham road Rudd Robert Gray & Son, direct importers of foreign wines
Roberts Henry & .Albert, shoe makers, Grove road & brandies &c. general wine & spirit merchants ; office,
Roberts Thos. & Son, animal& bird preservers, 34Cattle market Market place (corner Exchar.gc street); vaults, Pottergate
Roberts Arthur Carson, barrister-at-law & assistant district street; Exchange street & Bedford street
auditor N urfolk district, Prince of Wales road Rudd .Arthur, teacher of music, 61 Duke street
Roberts Emma (Mrs.), lodging house, 88 Kmg street Rudd .Arthur James, fishing tackle dealer &c. 5+ London st
Roberts Henry, herbalist, 33 Chapelf:ield road Rudd Bernard, tailor, 16 St. Stephen's street
Roberts Henry Richard, herbalist, 19 St. George's, Middle st Rudd George, shopkeeper & furniture broker, 82 & 84
Roberts James, fishmonger, 44 St. Giles' road Trafalgar street, Lakenham
Ruberts Jesse, fishmonger, 15 Finket street Rudd Henry, shopkeeper, 48 Oak street
Roberts John, shopkeeper, 17 Heigham street Rudd Henry Kingston, professor of music, 55 St. Giles street
Roberts Richard, boot & shoe ma. I I St. John's,Maddrmrkt Rudd Thomas, ironmonger, & post office, 1 I Ber street
Roberts Thomas Howel Kyffin, district auditor Eastern & Rudd Waiter Randall, cotton & silk waste merchant & yarn
Midland Com1ties & Norfolk district, Prince of Wales rd & silk agent, Exchange street
Robertson & Colman, upholsterers, cabinet manufacturers Rudd William, clugger, so Oak street
& furniture removers, 3 Queen street Rudd William Baker, commercial t.raveller, 31 St. Pbilip's rd
Robertson Il. & Co. house furnishers, 21 St. John's street, Rudd William Henry, shopkeeper, 1 Derby street
Maddermarket Rudduck Thomas James, grocer, tea, coffee & provision
Robinson J ames & Co. chemists & druggists, 13 Orford bill dealer, Economic Supply stores, Exchange street
Robiuson, Master & Nance, surgeons, St. Giles' plain Rudling James, grocer, 55 & 57 Somerleyton street
Robinson Henry, shopkeeper, 30 Bethel street Rudling Waiter, Swiss Cottage P.H. Dereham road
Robinson Haynes Sparrow, surgeon, & surgeon to Her Rudling Waiter, tailor, 6 Green Hills road
Majesty's prison & to the Norfolk & Norwich Eye In- Rudrum John, pork butcher, 18 Elm bill
firmary, St. Giles plain Rudrum William, Unicorn inn, St. Stepben's street
Robinson James William, baker & beer retailer, Norfolk Rump Frederick, stone mason, 82 Essex street
street, South Heigham RumsbyWilliam, boot maker, 19 Stafford street
Robinson Waiter, Coach Maket"s' ArmR P.H. St. Stephen's rd Hush Charles Frederick, grocer, 29 Vauxhall ~treet
Roche E!eazer Birch M.R.C.s.Eng., L.R.C.P.LOnd. physician & Rushmer Arthur Sl. Lord Camden P.H. 15 Charing cross
surgeon ; hon. med. officer Norwich Homoeopathic Rushmer Charles William, fishmonger, Foundry bridge,
Dispensary & surgeon to the Orphans' Home, Chapel Prince of Wales road
Field, & the N urwich City Missions, 27 Surrey street Russell Ellen (Mrs.), apartments, 1 St. Step hen's square
Rodwell Jane (Mrs.), fishmonger, 14 Red Lion street Russell Samuel Hy. Bull inn & fly proprietor, 5 Magdalen st
Roe Arthur, furnishing warehouse, 68 Dereham road Russell Sarah (Mrs.), shopkeeper, 21 Betbel street
Roe Frank, cabinet maker, Chatham street, Sussex street Rust Caleb Henry,monumental & cemetery mason&sculptor;.
Roe George Edmund, carver, St. John's alley designs & estimates free of charge, 28 Prince of Wales
Roe John, tailor, 69 Dereham road road; workshops, corner of Mountergate street, Rose lane;.
Roe Mary Ann (Mrs.), confectioner, 99 Derebam road established upwards of 70 years
Roe NellieElizh. (Mi~s), confectioner, 16 St..Andrew'sBridge st Rust James Barrow, tailor, r7 Theatre street
Roe Waiter, baker, 102 Old Palace road Rust John, Bee Hive P.H. II3 St. Benedict's street
Rogers & Page, wholesale brush manufacturers, importers Ruymp Robert R. & Son, brick, tile, lime, cement & general'
& government contractors, St. George'a Middle street builders' merchants, Chalk hill, Thorpe Hamlet
Rogers Edwin White, inland revenue officer, Tombland Rye Geo. Freemasons' Arms P.H. 27 Hall rd. New Lakenbm
Rogers Elijah, shopkeeper, 22 Dereham road Sabberton Brothers, engineers, millwrights, iron & brass
Rogers Emily (Miss), dress maker, 2o6 Queen's road founders, boiler makers & general smiths, St. Martin's
Rogers George William, builder, 4 Victoria street Palace iron works
Rogers Moses, provision dealer, 40 Exchange street Sacker James, shoe maker, 16o Ber street
Roll Elizh.Ann (Mrs.),Bull & Butcher P.H. 131 Pottergate st Sadd & Bacon, solicitors, Theatre street
Roll Henry, George the Fourth P.H. 37 Chapel st. Crook's pl Sadd Herbert Sydney, livery stables, Westlegate street
Uoll Mary Ann (Mrs.), Earl of Cardigan P.H. 56 Orchard st Sadd James, shopkeeper, 37 Oak street
Rook Geo. bricklayer, Stonemason sq. St. George's Middle st Sadd James, tinman & brazier, 21 Heigham street
Roots Elizabeth (Mrs.), apartments, 1 Bishopsgate street Sadd Walter, shopkeeper, 108 Tinkler's lane
Rope James, Volunteer P.H. Earlham rise Sadd William, Greenland Fishery P.H. 30 Oak street
Rosary Cemetery (Theodore Thomas Rudd,superintendent), Sadd William James, King's Arms P.H. St. Martin's road
Rosary road, Thorpe Hamlet Sadd William John (firm, Sadd & Bacon), solicitor & com-
Rose George & Son, cork manufacturers, 19 St. Stephen's st missioner for oaths, Theatre street
Rose Charles Frederick, harness maker, 75 Ber street Sadler George, butcher, 6 Union street
Rose George, pork butcher, 82 Upper St. Giles street Sadler John, wardrobe dealer, St. Paul's opening
Rose Philip, miller (wind & steam) & baker, Aylsham road St. .Andrew's Hall (Thomas Gorrod, hall keeper), St.
Rose Robert, boot & shoe maker, 146 Heigha.m street Andrcw's plain
C. N. & S. 36
1
558 NORWICH •

NORFOLK. . [ KELLY S

St. George's Club & Home for Working Girls (Mrs. John Scriven Charles Herbert F.S.T. surveyor, land & estate agent
Gurney, hon. sec.), I7 St. George's Middle street & waluer, Bank plain, Norwich; Westwick house, West-
St. Peter's Mancroft Girls' Club (Mrs. Ma.ria.Press, matron), wick, Norwich & at Brome, Suffolk ·
52 Chapeltield road Seager Frank, hair dresser, 2I8 Queen's road
St. Quintin George Harvey Richard, baker, 93 King street Seager William, hair dresser, 20 Potterga.te
Ht. Quintin Richard Harv~y. grocer, 95 King street Seaman Alfd.NewCornExchange P.H.Bedford st.St.Andrew's
Sales Chas. tobacconist & !:,'Tindery dealer ,3 I St,Augustine's st Seaman Anthony, bllot & shoe manufacturer, I St. Paul's sq
Sales John, carter, Bull close Seaman Henry, Victoria vaults, I9 Lower Westwick street
Sa.lkind Saul, jun. watch maker, 51 Prince of Wales road Seaman John, builder, Pottergate street '
Salkind Theodore, watch maker, Dove street Seaman John, Little John P.H. 142 Northumberland street,
Sallows Henry, engraver, 13 Dove street · North Heigham t •
SalvatiDn Army Divisional Head Quarters, 57 Prince of Seaman Martba (Miss), day school, 6o Gladstone street
Wales road Searle Cbas. deputy registrar of marriages, 181 Dereham :rd
Sambell George, shirt maker, 102 Cbapelfield road Seed By. Goskar, wool merchant,Heathside rd. Thorpe Hamlet
Sampson Richard, pork butcher, 138 King street Seeley Fdk. hay &corn dlr. St. Augustine's gates,Aylsham rd
Sampson William, boot & shoe maker, 56 Bethel street Seggcr Fredk. Robt. boot & shoe manufacturer, 3 Calvert st
Sampson William Davey, post office, St. Leonards road Segger Josepb, hair dresser, 76 Pitt street
Thorpe Hamlet Self Brothers, brush & basket warehouse, I ·white Lion st
Samuel Benjamin, pawnbroker &c. 35 to 43 Timber hill Self Arthur Wellesley, Three Kings P.H. 64 St. Benedict's st
Sandall Thomas Edward, cowkeeper, Old Barge yard, Self Royal George & Walter Saml. gastitters &c. 15 Dove st
King street. r ., Rendall Alfd. boot & shoe m a. 10 Carrow rd. Thorpe Hamlet
Sands Robert, Goldstream P.H. 29 Brunswick road Rendall '\'alter, grocer, 4 Hfligham streflt
Sands William, boot & shoe manufacturer, 36 Palace street Sennitt Ebenezer Chas.. provisiOn dealer, 13 Lower Goat lane
Sant James, Lord Nelson P.H. Timber Hill street Seppings Edmund, butcher, ss Oak street
Sapey Thomas Lillystone, baker, 46 Pitt street . r Seppings Edward, butcher, 57 Dereham road
Sarsby James William, tripe dresser. 176 Oak street , , Seppings William, shopkeeper, 58 Ber street
Saul Thomas & Sons, importers of deals & timber, Stand 70, Sergent f'reorge Df'..eks, baker, 50 West Pottergate st'rP..et
Corn hall , Severn Alic6 (Miss), dress maker, 49 Duke street
Saul A. mahogany, deal, timber & slate merchant, cement, Sewell Charles. ham & beef dealer, Upper Goat lane
tiles, drain pipes, chimney pots &c. Adam & Eve gardens, Sexton l:I.&Sons,boot&shoe manfrs.Fisbgatest.&Magdalen st
Palace plain Sexton George, beer retailer, St. Mary's plain
Saul Henry, builder, King street & 83 Grove road Sexton Hflnry, fishmonger, 19 St. Mary's plain
Saul Henry William, butcher, 45 Ber st1·eet & Adelaide st Sexton Samuel, fruiterer, St. Peter street, Mancroft
Saul Sophia (Mrs.), bookseller, 15 White Lion street Sexton Samuel John, jeweller, II Pitt street
Saul William, english & foreign timber merchant; steam Sexwn Thos. Wm.fishmonger,45 King st.& so St.Stephen's st
bending & sawing for coach builders' & other trades; im- Shakespeare Alfred William B.A. boarding school for young
porter of american spokes, hubs, wheels &c.; boxes- & gentlemen, Rracondal&
packing cases made to order; note address, 88 Potter· Shalders Albert Walter Bloy, pawnbroker, Westlegate street
gate street Sharm1\llHarriet(Mrs. ),shopkeeper,27City rd.N ew Lakenham
Saunders Charles, butcher, see Stockings & Saunders Sharpin & tlons, millers (steam & water) & corn, cake & coal
Saunders Fmnces (Mrs.), dress maker, I3Y Cambridge st merchants, New mills, Lower Westwick street; & at
Saunders Hy. "\V m. boot & shoe maker, so St. Benedict's st Lenwade Station
Savage & Son, butchers & fruiterers, Prince of Wales road, 'Sharpe Mary Ann (Mrs.),. beer retailer, 38 Derbi street
61 Bridge street, St. Andrew's & St. Leonard's road I Sharpe WilliamHenry, cabinet maker, 7 St. Stephon's square
Savage Frederick,fruiterer 152, & butcher 154. Dereharn rd Shave William Palmer, brush manufacturer, Colegate !!treet
Savage George Robert, butcher 1 26 Bishops Bridge road I Shaw Clare, Old Friends P.H. Ber street
Savage James, dairyman, 3 Wensum street . Sbaw Henry, tailor & general outfitter, I1 Briggs street
Savage Thomas, butcher, IOI Dereham road Shead George Williarp, hosier, glover & laceman, 9 Londonst
Sayer .Alfred, shopkeeper, 53 Fishgate street 1 Shedden Samuel, draper, 19 Princes street
Sayer Christopher. Angel P.H. 154 Oak street Shepherd lsaac, cooper, New Catton ·
Sayer Daniel, boat builder, Oak street, Queen Caroline yard ' Sbepphard John Hill, parish clerk of Trinity church, 109
Sayer Epbraim, shopkeeper, 73 Ber street Rnpert street, South Heigham
Sayer George Shadrick, insurance agent, 78 Rose lane : Sheward William Parkeson, shopkeeper, I31 Waterloo road
Sayer Henry, shopkeeper, 75 St. George's Middle street ,1 I.Shields Frederick George, journa.list, 47 Old Palace road
Sayer John, butcher, 67 Heigham street Shildrake Frederick, pork butcher, 10 St. Saviour's lane
Sayer William Latimer, solicitor, see Coaks I. B. & Co • ShimmensChas.grocer&beerretlr.26Carrow rd.ThorpeHamlt
1

Scaife .Alfred, manager to the Midland Coal Company, 65 Sbipwreckerl Fishermen & Mariners' Royal Benevolent
Prince of Wales road 1 I Society (Athelstan Howard Taylor, hon. representative
Scales Richard, Rosfl tavern, St. Catherine's plain I for Norwich & district), rg King street
Scar le Charles, deputy registrar of marriages for Norwich, Short Joanna (Mrs.), lodging house, I7 St. Giles road
181 Dereham road 1 Shorten Robert, baker, 17 Rising Sun lane '
Scarles Brothers, builders & contractors, 14 Surrey road- · Shorten William Arthur, vaccination officer, Davey placs
Scarles William Thmi).a.s, carpenter, 2I Somerleyton street Shreeve Walter, lodging house, 29 Rose lane
!

Scarlett Bros. market gardeners, Hall road, New Lakenham Shrubsole William Lewis, portrait, photographic & landscape
Scarlett Josiah Clark, shopkeeper, Avenue road I artist~ patrons, H. M. the Queen & Their Royal l:Iigb-
Scarlett Samuel.Arthur, district superintendent Sceptre Life nesses the Prince & Princess .of Wales, Exchange Street
. Association Limited, 63 Stafford street . · corner & 5 Davey place
Scarnett John, general engineer, mill furnisher, lubricating, Sidney Charles, shopkeeper, 2 Clifton street, North Heigham
oil & grease merchant & manufacturer of india rubber Siely Ellen (Miss), ladies' underclothing warehouse, 21
goods, machine belting, engine packing, emery wheels, I Rampant Horse street ,
cotton. waste. sponge eloths, wrought ~ron shafting & · Silby Sarah Main (Mrs.), corset maker, 6 Briggs street
pulleys &c. &c . .12 & 14 Elm bill I Silcock Fredc. collector of poor rates, 6th district, Muspole st
Schmidt Oscar, designer, I4 Sussex street Sillett Nelson, Duke's Palace P.H. Duke street
Seofield George William, plasterer, 4I Newmarket street Sillis Thomas, news agent, 30 Lower Westwick streflt
Scofield Rebecca (Mrs.), shopkeeper, 4I Newmarket street. Simmons Elizabeth (Miss), dress maker, t1J Cow hi1l
Scott .Augustus Frederick, architect & surveyor, 24 Castle Simmons Robert, bricklayer, 17 Cow hill , ·
meadow; & Church street, Cromer Simpson El ward Palgrave, solicitor, & clerk to the guardians
Scott Charles, mattress maker, 58 Botolph street of Henstead union, to magistrates for Swainsthorpe &
Scott Edward, haulier, 150 Oak stree~ Taverllam divisions & to commissioners of taxes for Hen-
Scott Frederick James, grocer, 68 St . .Augustine's street stead district, Tombland
Scott George, boot repairer, 5 Hollis lane, Queen's road Simpson '&oboct Lilly. textile manufacturer, Golden Dog la
Scott John, Exhib~tion P.H. ~o Ber street Simpson Williarrt, fishmonger, 70 Union street
Scott Louisa Elizabeth (Miss), dress ma. 142 Old Palace rd Sinclair Fredk. shoe manufacturer, 70 St. George's Middle st
Scott Robert Bagge, artist, Bank plain Singer Manufacturing Co. Limited (Edward Cattermola,
Scott William, french polisher, 7 All Saints' green district manager); counting house, 16 Calvert street;
Scott William .: 'lhn, furniture dealer, Tim bcr Hill street show rooms, 55 London street 1 also at I 6o King street,
Scotter Harry Charles, Edinburgh P.H. 2 Pottergate street Great Yarmouth & 9 Norfolk street, Lynn
Scotter Henry Peter, Masonic tavern, 24 Elm hill Sistern Samuel. baker, 57 Rupert street, South Heigham
Scottish Widows' Fund Assurance Office (C. J. Hornor, Skelton.John & Son, cardigan jacket mfrs. St. James' tactorv
district sec.), Prince of Wales road Skelton Herber.t William, carpenter, St. Giles hill t
Scottow John Edward, shopkeeper, 29 Orchard street Skinner Edward, stationer, 8 Haymarket
'1coweo William, Rose tavern, 59 St. Stephen's street Skinner Frederick, laundry, 24 l'hiladelphia lanE'
DIRECTORY.] .NORFOLK. NORWICH. 559
Skinner Harry Bately, draper, 3 St. Augustine's street Snelling Thomas, fishmonger, 193 Ber street 'J~
Skipper George John & Frederick Wilemer, architects & Snelling Thomas, World 'sEnd P. H. World' sEnd la. Palace plmn
surveyors, Opie street Snelling William, tobacconist, ID Prince of Wales road
Skipper Robert & Co. tanners, 2 .Agricultural hall Snowden Alfred, shopkeeper, 15 Cherry st. New Lakenham
Skipper Charles, clothier, 32 St . .Andrew's Bridge street Society for Preserving Memorials of the Dead ( WilUam
Skipper George .Alfred, clothier, 78 St. Benedict's street Vincent, secretary), Belle Vue rise, Ilellesdon road
Skoyles E. & Co. wholesale clothiers, 54 Pottergate street Society for Promoting Christian Knowledge (Agas H. Goose,
Skoyles E. merchant tailor, outfitter &c. corner of Davey pl agent) ; depot, 19 Rampant Horse street
Skoyles Mary Kerrenhappuch (Miss), draper, 71 Dereham rd Soloman Teresa (Mrs.), dress maker, I St. Gregory's alle;y
Skoyles Wm. West End Retreat P.H. I Browne st.Nth.Heighm Solomon Alfred, watch maker, 42 Bcthel street
Slack Robert Hugh, smith, Heigh~m street Solomons Joseph, boot manufacturer, 157 .Magdalen street
Slade Charles, pork butcher, 12 St. Giles hill Soman Philip & Son, printers, bookbinders & lithographers,
Slaughter Samuel, shopkeeper, 4 Mill lane, New Catton London street; works, Upper Goat lane
.Slee J ames, district manager London, Edinburgh & Glasgow, Soman, Son & Co. boot & shoe manufacturers,Fishgate street
33 St. Giles road , Soman Samuel Solomon, upholsterer, 24 Norfolk street
Slipper William, packing case maker, Fishgate street Sommerville Emma (Mrs.), Crown P.H. 117 St. Benedict's st
Slonitz Leopold, teacher of languages, 28 Surrey street Sorg Alice (Mrs.), shopkeeper, 45 Norfolk street
Slonitz Madame, teacher of pianoforte, 28 Surrey street South Norfolk Conservative .Association (John Furness,
Sluman John B. insurance agent, I I Wellington road agent), St. Stephen's street
Smith & Carman, brewers, wine & spirit merchants & Southall J amcs & Co. manufacturers of boots, shoes, slippers,
brewers of non-intoxicating beers, St. George's brewery uppers &c. & leather merchants, Upper Market
-Smith & Sons, chemists & druggists, London st. & Market pl Southgate Henry, butcher, III Barrack street
Smith & Sons, wholesale druggists & manufacturers of the Southgate James, bricklayer, 197 King street
Norfolk Baking Powder & vinegarmkrs.46&48 Magdalen st Sowter treorge, boot &. shoe maker, 3S St. John's st. Rose la
Rmith Thos. & Sons, boot & shoe mfr1>.37 St.Andrew's Broad st Spain John Sedgewick L.D.S.R.C.s. Edin. dental surgeon, 34
Smith William & Son 1 corn & ~eed merchants & millers Prince of Vt'ales road; attends East Dereham on fridays
(steam), Castle hill; & at Dickleburgh, Scole Spalding Elizabeth & Amelia (Misses), milliners, rt St.
Smith Albert James, boot & shoe maker, 121 ller street Gregory's alley
1
Smith Arthur, travelling draper, 47 Elm hill · Spalding George, Red Lion P.H. '63 London street c:
Rmith Berijamin, commercial traveller, 3 Bishopsgate street Spalding Harry James, Bird-in-Hand P.H. 75 King street
Smith Benjamin, district superintendent Provident Associa• Spalding Jesse, shopkeeper, I2o Armes st. North Heigharri
tion of London, 76 Barn road Spalding John, french polisher & manufacturel.' of the 'cele-
Smith Renjamin, Nelson's Monument P.H. 66 King street brated composition for cleaning & polishing furniture &c. ;
Smith Edward, Crown P.H. Bridge street, St. Geors~'s workmen sent to all parts; manufactory, St.Andrew's hilt
Smith Edward, shopkeeper, 5 Trafalgar st. New Lakenham Spalding William Robert, dentist, rrg Dereham road
Smith Edward Howlett, jeweller, Rampant Horse street Spank Joseph John, gasfitter, 3 St. Stephen's Church lane
Smith Frederick, baker, 62 Dereham road Spanton Alfred Fras.Red Lion P.H.I8 St.Andrew's Bridge st
Smith Frederick, butcher, 61 Vauxhall street Sparks Mary Ann (Miss), baker, 2 Suffolk street
Smith Frederick, pork butcher, 62 Vauxhall st. Chapelfields Sparrow John William, solicitor, deputy coroner for the
Smith Frederick, shopkeeper, 22I Queen's road liberty of the Duke of Norfolk & registrar uf bdrdb.~h
1:-'mith-Frederick Eaton, plumber, 105 Belvoir street court, 12 Rampant Horse street
Smith George, coach maker, St. Stephen's road Spaul Alexander, cycle manufacturer, 22 Castle hill ;
Smith George, market gardener, Angel road, New Catton Spauls Daniel, confectioner, to Barrack street · J '-

Smith Georgs Eaton, painter, 45 Union street Spelling Rachael (Mrs.), King's Arms P.H. 5 llcthel streei
Smith James, tobacconist, 10 Exchange street Spelman Messrs. H. W. & C. auctiOneers, valuers & land
Smith James Christopber, brewer, St. J\.lary's alley agents, St. Giles' street; & at Great Yarmouth '
Smith James Samuel, builder, 24 City road, New Lakenham Spelman Henry, Trumpet inn, 72 St. Stephen's street 1
Smith John, baker, 36 St. John's street, Rose lane Spencer 'William, shopkeeper, 28 City street, Dereham toad
Smith John, china dealer, 12 Timber Hill street Spinks Frederick George, shopkeeper; 35 Napier street
Smith John Cook, fancy draper, Rank plain Spinks John, Black Horse P.H. 6 Wensum street '
Smith John Henry, hair dresser &c. ·32 Adelaide street Spinks Samuel, Elephant P.H. 6o Magdalen street ·c 1
Smith Juseph de Car le, wholesale druggist, see Smith & Sons Spinks Waiter, boot & shoe maker, 52 Chapel st. Crook's pl
Smith Jsph.de Carle,jun.wholesale druggist,scc Smith & Sons Spinks Wm.livery stables, Red Lion st.& 19 St. Stephen's gate
Smith Joseph William, baker, 2 Gordon road, Queen'111 road Spmks William, shoe maker, 12 Ten llclllane
Smith Mary Ann (Mrs.), Dun Cow P.H. 167 Oak street Spooner James, carpenter &c. 3 Waterloo road .
Smith Miller, wood engraver, I Exchange street Spowart William Ribton B.A., M.B., L.R.C.P.Irel. surg-eon &
Smith Philip, tobaccomst, 8 Magdalen street · medical officer, 8th district, Norwich union & medical
Smith Rachael (Mrs.), haberdasher, 30 Barn road officer & public vaccinator Ist district, Forehoe union, 37
Smith Robert, blacksmith, Blacksmiths' yard, Heigham st St. G1les street · '
Smith Robert, fishmonger, II Bedford street, St. Andrew's Spratt Maria (Mrs.), Carpenters' Arms P.H. Thorne lane
Smith Robert, fishmonger, 65 Tinkler's lane Springall Florenee Alberta (Mrs.), fancy draper, 87 Upper
.Smith Robert, furniture dealer, 15 Bishop Bridge road St. Giles street
Smith Robert, shopkeeper, 127 Her street Springall Orlando, shopkeeper,3o Southwell rd.NewLaknhm
Smith Rohert, shopkeeper, I Sunny hill, Lakenham Spurden Charles, boot & shoe maker, 3 King st. Crook's pi
Smith Robert George, tailor & habit maker, 9 Queen street Spurgeon Robert, watch maker, 58 St. Giles street
Smith Samuel, carpenter, Timber Hill street & 64 Hall road Spurgeon Wm. commercial traveller, 20 Brunswick New rd
Smith Silvanus, boot & shoe manufr. I2 & I4 Davy place Spurgeon Wm.shopkeeper, 29 TwentyOne row,NewLaknhm
Smith Thomas (Mrs.), apartments, 92 Chapelfield road Spurrell John Thomas, land agent & valuer, Bank plain
Smith Thomas Samuel, jeweller, I3 Red Lion street Squires George, Woolpack P.H. Golden Ball street
Smith· Thomas William, manager to Norwich & Norfolk Squires James, butcher, 124 llar street
Traders' Association, Opie street Squirrell & Utting, corn & cake merchants, St. Swithin's
Smith Waiter, fishmonger, Chapel street, Crook's place wharf, Lower Westwick street
Smith William, butcher, 26 Rupert street Stacy John Herbert :t.R.C. P. Edin. surgeon & medical
Smith William, haulier, 140 King street officer to No. 6 district, Norwich union & Ist district,
Smith William, ironmonger, 103 St. Benedict's street Henstead union, 39 Exchange street '
Smith William, shoe maker, 97 Cambridge street Staff William, Key & Castle P.H. 105 Oak street
Smith William, tinplate worker, go King street Staffs William, shopkeeper, II9 Cowgate street
Smith William Andrew, butcher, Magdalen road Starnf"ord, Spalding & Boston Banking Co. Lirn~
Smith Wm. Hy. wine merchant, see Chamberlin & Smith (Charles James Beecheno, manager), Victoria chambers,
Smith William Richard, baker, 5 Palace street Bank plain; draw on London & Westminster Bank Lim-
Smy Henry, pork butcher, 1 Golden Ball street ited, London E c
Smyth Wi!liam,ma.& repairer of musical instmnts.53 Pitt st Stamp Office (A. R. Birt, distributor), Tombland
Snelling J. G. & Soils, grocers, confectioners, wine mer- Stanforth Frederick, butcher, 2 Magdalen road
J
chants & fruiterets, tallow chandlers, &c. 23, 25, 29 & 31 Stangroom Samuel John, draper, 105 Bull Close road
Rampant Horse street Stangroom Stephen, tailor, St. Mary's alley
SneWng Abraham Walt.com. trav.24 Bedford st. Unthanks rd Stangroorn Waiter, shopkeeper, 122 Oak street
Snelling Elizabeth (MM.), midwife, 23 Magpie road Stangroom William, shopkeeper, IOS Lower Westwick street
Snelling James, grocer & beer retailer &c. 8o Waddington Stanley Alice (Mrs. ),stne. & mrble. masn. St. Catherine's plain
street, North lleigham & 130 Heigham street Stanley Joseph, stone & marble mason, St. Stephen's street
Snelling Samuel: florist, 121 Old Palace road Stannard Benjamin, yeast merchant, Little London street
I

l C. N. & S .. 36•
560 NORWICH. NORFOLK.
Stannard Eloise Harriett ("Miss), artist, St.Andrew's Hall pln Sutton Francis F.c.s. ,F. I.e. analytical chemist, public analyst
Stannard Harry Birkley, baker,Bedford street, St. Andrew's for the county of Norfolk & the borough of Great Yar-
Stannard James, jobbing gardener, II4 Old Palace road mouth, consulting chemist toN orfolk Chamber of Agricul-
Stannard John, corn chandler, 89 Magdalen street ture, County Analyst's office, London street
Stannard Louisa (Mrs. ),dress maker, 5 Surrey gro.Surrey rd Sutton J.H. (Mrs.), servants' registry office,3 St.Stephen's rd
Stannard Thomas, farmer, Eaton Sutton John Henry, aerated water maker, Elm hill
Stannard Walter, wholesale & retail upholsterer & bedding Sutton H.obert, picture frame maker, 82 Magdalen street
& mattress manufacturer, St. Andrew's Broad street Button Robert, wheelwright, Philadelphia lane
Star Tea Co. 29 St. Stephen's street & 17 Magdalen street Sutton Robt. Norman, picture frame maker, 69 Magdalen st.
Starke Theodore Philip, sec. to National Society for Preven- Swan Mabel & Collins Ellen (Misses), dress makers, n
tion of Cruelty to Children, 54 Chapel field road Cathedral street north
Starling Charles, hair dresser, 77 Cowgate street Swan Laundry Co Limited (Frederick Samuel Culley, sec.);
Starr-Bowkett Building Society (:Norwich 3rd) (Ernest offices, Queen street
Arthur Betts, sec.), Princes street; Norwich 4th (H. Swann Ellen Ruth (Miss), day school, 3 Caernarvon road '
Newhouse, sec.); F. w·. I<'rewer, sec. (xst); otll.ces,Bank st Swann George, fishmonger, 103 Tinkler's lane
Starr Scott Columbus,commercial traveller, 14Connaught rd Swann Harry Frederick, wood turner, St. Lauw,.,.rence lane
States Sarah (Mrs.), White Lion P.H. 73 Oak street Swanton John Thompson, news agent, 69 Coburg street
Stead & Simpson Limited, boot & shoe warehouse, 8 London Swash Robert, shopkeeper, 47 King street
street; Swan lane ; 29 Timber hill ; 44 St. Benedict's Symonds John M. greengrocer & carpenter, 22 Wensum st
street & 7 & 9 Magdalen street Symons &. Harrison, rag merchants, Duke street
Stebbing Henry, commission agent, 41 Havelock street Symons Samuel, furniture dealer, 6 Castle street
Stebbings Charles, furniture dealer, 68 Ber street Tallack Thomas Robinson, record searcher, 5 St. Giles ter-
Steel Mary Ann ("Miss), ladies' school, 36 Unthanks road race, Bethel street
Sterne & Christw, wholesale clothiers, Upper Goat lane Tancy & Co. photographers, 7 Prince of Wales road
Stevens Charles Frederick & Son, bra:t.iers & ironmongers, Tann Frank Herbert, wholesale upholsterer, 65 Pitt street
32 & 55 Magdalen street Tarbox Alfred James, dining rooms, x Fye Bridge street
Stevens & Clarke, ironmongers & agricultural engineers, Or- Tate W. &. Co. manufacturing confectioners, Portergate st
ford hl.& Red Lion st. ; wrks. Surrey gro. ; resi.33Surrey rd Tate Jas. confectioner, 5 Bridewell alley & 85 Magdalen st
Stevens Charles Frederick, West Pottergate Stores P.H. Tate Richard, bricklayer, 9 Calvert street
West Pottergate street Tattersall Wm. Henry, tea dealer, 31 St. Andrew's Broad st
Stevens Frank Horace, baker, 29 St. Giles street Taylor George &. Son, surgical mechanicians & truss makers,
Stevens Richard, lodging house, 8 Queen's road 97 Upper St. Giles' street
Stevens ·waiter George, commercial traveller, 78 Earlham rd Taylor & Gray, surveyors, 9 Upper King street
Stevens Waiter George (firm, Miller, Stevens & Son), so- Taylor I. 0. & Sons, solicitors, Old Bank bldgs. 19 Up. King st
licitor & solicitor to Norwich &. Norfolk Temperance Taylor Athelstan lloward, solicitor, see I. 0. Taylor & Sons
Building Society, commissioner for oaths, Bank chambers Taylor Carrie (Miss), confectioner, 21 Red Lion street
Stevens William Horace, printer, x Fish market Taylor Clement, solicitor, & acting under-sheriff for the
Stevenson Edward Henry, fancy repository, 5 Briggs street county, Orford place
Stevenson Eliza(Mrs. ), rgstry.office for srvnts. 9Castle mead w Taylor Edward, shopkeeper, Heigham street
Steward, Patteson, Finch & Co. brewers, wine & spirit mer- Taylor Edward James, baker, 47 Ber street
chants & manufacturers of aerated waters, Pockthorpe Taylor Frederic Oddin (firm, Taylor I. 0. & Sons), solicitor,
brewery; & at 65 North quay, Yarmouth; Factory lane, commissioner for affidavits in the Supreme court, steward
Colchester ; Norwich ale stores, Ipswich ; & Railway road, of manors, receiver of estates, solicitor to Norwich Union
Lynn. See advertisement Fire Insurance Society, agent to Edinburgh, Rock & Nor-
Steward Donald, brewer, see Steward, Patteson, Finch & Co wich Union Life Offices, registrar of marriages &c. &c. Old
Steward Harriet (Mrs.), London restaurant, 14 Haymarket Bank buildings, 19 Upper King street
Steward ltobert John, hosier, xoA, llridewell alley Taylor Garrett, farmer & estate agent, Trowse house; & at
Stewardson & Page, dress makers, 18 Grove road Witlingham &. Easton
Stewart E. W. & M. T. earthenware dealers, Surrey road Taylor George Henry, Suffolk Arms P.H. 119 Oak street
Stibbings Charles, shopkeeper, 126 Cowgate street Taylor Herbert, news agent, 122 Ber street
Stiles James, market gardener, 195 Northumberland street Tay lor Jas. Jacob, insur. agent, 7 N eville ter. Grove st. north
Stiles Samuel, Shakespeare P.H. 42 Colegate street Taylor John, shopkeeper, 37 Belvoir street
Stimpson I{arriet (Mrs.), pork butcher, 47 West End street Taylor John, tobacconist & news agent,xo9 Chapelfield road
Stockings & Saunders, butchers, 26 St. Stephen's street Taylor John Daniel, Britons' Arms P.H. 9 Elm hill
Stockings Alfred, accountant, auditor for the city of Nor- Taylor Joseph, plumber, 48 Napier street
wich & Conservati\·e Registration agent for East Norfolk Taylor Joseph Walt-er, hair dresser & news agent, 36 & 3&
& chief registration agent for the City of Norwich, St. Dereham road & 27 Rupert street
Stephen's chambers Tay lor Mary Ann (Miss), milliner, 25 Sussex street
Stockings Alfred, registrar of births & deaths, Caslany sub- Taylor Rhoda (Mrs.), shopkeeper, 95 Ber street
district, Colegate Taylor Richard, baker rn, & furniture dlr. no, Cowgate st
Stockings Matthew· Bane, grocer, St. Stephcn's street Taylor Richard, jun. baker, 45 Barrack street~
Stone George, shopkeeper, 37 Mariner's lane Taylor Sambrooke (Mrs.), stay & elastic bandage manu-
Stone Henry, tool dealer. 15 Magdalen street factory, laced stockings, knee caps, abdominal belts &
Stone Henry Joseph, grocer, I I Trafalgar st. New Lakenhm elastic supports in spinal deformities, 97 Upper St. Giles st
Stone William, pork butcher, 69 King street Taylor Samuel, beer retailer, II4 Oak street
Storey Edmund, boot & shoe manufacturer, 66 Pitt street Taylor Sidney Johnson, oculist, 44Prince of Wales road,
Stowers Ada (Mrs.), manure merchant, 72 Rose lane Taylor William, painter & glazier, 2rA, Muspole street
Stringer Henry, baker, Rosary road Taylor William James, Bird-in-Hand P.H. & shopkeeper,
Stubbs' Mercantile Offices, xo Davey place Mill lane, New Catton
Stubbs Alfred James, poulterer, Golden Ball street Teasel Edwin Frank, commercial traveller, r6x Dereham rd
Stubbs James, shopkeeper, ro Whitefriars street Technical Educational Committee, Norfolk County Council
Stubbs Robert Henry, The Cottage P.H. Silver road (Edward Pillow, organising sec.), Shire hall
Stubbs William, plasterer, Eagle street, Newmarket road Temple William Robert, shopkeeper, 91 Philadelphia lane
Sturgess & Towlson, engineers, Oak street Tenant Charles, hosier, 53 St. Giles street
Suddenn John, shopkeeper, 2 Paddock st. North Heigham Tench Fisher, shopkeeper, 30 Devonshire street
Suffolk William English, english & foreign timber &. ma- Tench James, boot & shoe maker, 62 Prince of Wales road
hogany merchant; timber yard, Thorn lane; wharf, Tench William, Jack of :Newbury P.H. 19 Fye Bridge street
Thorpe station ; res. 7 Newmarket road Theatre Royal (Frederick Morgan, lessee), Theatre street
Sullivan Arthur, wholesale confectioner, Bridge street, St. Theobald John & Son, hosiers, glovers &c. 7 London street
George's; 22 Benedict street & 13 "\Vensum street Theobald 1 .Johnson & Burton (late Piper, Theobald &
Sullivan Henry, shopkeeper, 57 Pottergate street Co. ), furnishing & general ironmongers, bellhangers,
Sullivan Samuel, Coach & Horses P.H. Thorpe road, Thorpe locksmiths, manufacturers in tin, iron & zinc, oil & color
Hamlet; & hair dresser, 55 London street merchants, x8 London street & 2 Castle st. See advert
Sumerling James, grocer, 4 Union street Theobald & Laws, hardware merchants, 13 St. John's street,
Sumner Mary Ann (Miss), milliner, 6o London street Maddermarket
Sursham Mary (Mrs.), shopkeeper, 70 St. Augustine street Thcobald George Edward, bailiff appointed under the" Law
Sutton I<'. & Co. manufacturing chemists, horse & cattle of Distress Amendment Act, x888," officer to the high
medicine manufacturers & dealers in chemical apparatus; sheriff of Norfolk & sheriff of Norwich & auctioneer &
offices, London street. See ad\'ertisement valuer, Castle meadow
Button & Co. carriers (Jsph.Jefferies, agt.); & at Yarmouth Theobald John, nurseryman, 42 Bishopsgate street
Sutton Edward Thomas, tailor, 143 Bcr street Thirkettlc Ann (Mrs.), stationer, x8 Vauxhall street
Button llarriet (Mrs.), midwife, 29 Willis street Thirkettle Charles l3outell, cutler, 2 Vauxhall street

DIRECTORY.] NORFOLK. NORWICH.-' 561
Thirkettle John Edward, dealer in bird9, 7 St. Giles hill Towlson Arthur Thomas,Stanle} P.H. & baker, Magdalen rd
Thirkettle William, blacksmith, Eaton Townsend George, seed grower & merchant ; warehouses,
Thirkettle William Jame.'l, boot maker, 25 St. Stephen's st Castle hill; &. Fordham, Soham, Cambridgeshire
Thirtle James Henry, grocer, 39 Barrack street, St. James' Townsend George William, gasfitter, 16 Elm hill
Thirtle John Thomas, commercial traveller, 19 Havelock rd Townsend Harry, draper, 17 St. ~tcphen's street
Thompson & Daines, whitesmiths, Water lane, St. George's Townshend & Harcourt, bookbinders, Market place
Thompson & Sons, japanncrs & wholesale tinplate workers, Townshend Albert Frederick, hosier, Briggs street
Rampant Horse street Townshend Henry Samuel, tobacconist, IS St. Giles' street
'l'hompson Charles Frederick, superintendent Prudential In- Townshend Joseph, beer retailer, 62 Botolph street, & fur-
surance Co.'s agents, 41 Mount Pleasant niture broker, 83 Pitt street
Thompson Charles J ames, dentist, 35 St. Andrew's Broad st Townshend Samuel Thos. carver & gilder, 13 Charing cross
Thompson Charles James, grocer, tea dealer, stationer & Treble Frederick, photographer, St. Andrew's Broad street
news agent, 62 Magdalen street Trevor, Page & Co. upholsterers, cabinet makers, carvers &
'Thompson Edward, cabinet maker, Turner's court, St. gilders, house decorators & carpet & paperhanging ware-
Benedict's street housemen, Exchange street ; manufactory, St. Andrew'a
Thompson Edward Charles, ironmonger & gasfitter, 11 Ex- Broad street
change street & Eastbourne place, Prince of Wales road Trew Edward, general manager to the Norwich Steam
Thompson Henry, pharmaceutical chemist & registrar of Laundry & Baths Co. Limited, ·Heigham street
births & deaths for Conisford sub-district, St. Step hen's st "rrimble Amelia (Mrs.), shopkeeper, 34 West Pottergate st
Thompson Henry Charles, sub-postmaster, Post office, 62 Trollope Esther(Miss),draper,J6Southwell rd.NewLakenham
Magdalen street Trowse Charles, wheelwright, l'itt street
Thompson James, King's Head P.II. 42 Magdalen street Trowse Charles Richard, carpenter. 37 Thorne lane
Thompson Robert, Baker's Arms P.H. 12 Palace plain Trowse Christopher, tailor, Ten Bell lane
Thompson Robert, boot maker, Denmark road, New Catton True Ann (Miss), milliner, I I St. Giles' road
Thompson Samuel, boot maker, 47 Orchard street Truman Elizabeth (Mrs.), lodging house, 23 Theatre street
Thompson Wm. beer retailer, x 10 King's rd. New Lakenhm Tuck Algernon Devereux, solicitor & commissioner for oaths,
'Thompson William, commercial traveller, 53 Cambridge st St. Giles street
'fhompson William, shopkeeper, 122 Oak street Tuck James Stannard, law stationer, xo Rampant Horse st
Thompson Wm. Christr. house decorator, 41 Chapelfield rd Tuck Jsph. grocer & baker, 77 Cambridge st. & xo Davey pl
Thorn Arthur, carter, Magdalen street Tuck William Anthony, Eagle tavern, 33 Newmarket road
Thorn Chas. coach bldr. St. Giles' gate & Prince of Wales rd Tuddenham Edward, tailor, Io6 Dereham road
Thorn Sophia (Mrs.), The Jolly Brewers P.H. 134Magdalen st Tuddenham Henry, tailor, 27 West End street
Thorn William, shopkeeper, 47 Botolph street Tuddenham Rohert, tailor, St. Margaret's plain
'fhorndick & Dawson Brothers, printers, 32 Princes street Tuddenham Wm.Frederick, ironmonger, 65 St. Stephen's st
Thorne Albert James, shopkeeper, Duncan's row, Market la Tuffield George Henry, Eight Ringers P.H. 14, & shop·
'!'horns Frank, weighing machine, scale & beer engine maker, keeper I 2, 0 ak street
41 Exchange street Tuffi.eld James, fish merchant, Fish market, Market place
Thorns Robert Elliott, wholesale & furnishing ironmonger, Tuffield James, Globe P.H. Globe street, South Heigham
iron bar & 01l & color merchant, 22 Exchange street; bar Turner Albert, coach builder, Palace street
iron warehouse, Maddermarket Turner Charles, coal agent, 44 Trinity st. South Heigham
Thornton Annie (Mrs.), dress maker, 12 Unthanks road Turner Henry, shopkeeper, 30 Trafalgar st. New Lakenham
Thorpe George & Williarn, boot makers, 234 Queen's road Turner John, coal agent, 45 Trinity street
Thorpe Benjamin Gaffer, hair dresser, 98 Tmkler's lane Turner Robert, corn dealer, 2 Wensum street
Thorpe Wm. boot & shoe maker, 9 City rd. New Lakenham Turner Samuel, shopkeeper, IS Distillery street
Thrower Alfred, King's Arms P.H. & horse trainer, Ber st Turner William, bout maker, 23 Palace street
Thrower Cornelius Stephen, shopkeeper, 53 Lothian street Turner William, Eagle P.H. St. Gregory's alley
Thrower Jane (Mrs.), tobacconist, 56 Ber street Turner William, shopkeeper, Westlegate street
Thurlow Elizh. (Mrs.), Tom bland Stores P.H. 7 Tombland Turner William, insurance agent, 29 Unthanks road
Thurston Robert, baker, 22 Elm hill Tuxford Brothers, printers, Bedford street, St. Andrew's
Thurston William, greengrocer, 49 Ber street Tuxford F. & A. manufacturers of trunks, chests, deal
Thwaites Elizabeth (Mrs.), confectioner, 8 Tombland boxes, portmanteaus, bags, sample cases, despatch boxes,
'Tiee Richard John, shopkeeper, 51 Marlborough road japanned deed boxes, air-tight dress trunks, & ladies'
Tidman R. & Sons, engineers & boilP.r makers, Bishop bridge travelling dress baskets, military & colonial outfitters,
Tidman John Augustus, Cellar House P.H. 72 Barrack street manufacturers of portable camp & barrack furniture, 3
Tidman Robt.King's Arms P.H. Bishop bridge,ThorpeHamlet Back of the Inns
Tidy Thomas, bird dealer, see Cooper & Tidy Tuxford Arthur, insurance & general agent, 2 The Grove,
'l'illett W. H. & Co. solicitors, St. Andrew's Broad street Chaplefield
Tillett Charles, pork butcher, 91 Rupert street Tuxford Frederick, stationer & bookseller, Bridewell alley
"fillett Charlotte (Mrs.), shopkeeper, 75 St. Augustine's st Twiddy Arthur William, furniture dealer, 122 King street
Tillett Edward Arthur, solicitor & commissioner to adminis- Twiddy Charles, painter &c. 32 Barn road & School lane,
ter oaths, 28 Tom bland St. Andrew's
Tillett James, butcher, 6 Fishgate street Tyce George, furniture dealer, 9 & I I Charing cross
Tillett James, shopkeeper, 75 St. Augustine's street Tyce Harry, bar iron & steel merchant, see Orams & Tyce
Tillett John, butcher, 49 Botolph street Tye Charles Henry, pork butcher, 67 Union street
~ri.llett John, shoe maker, 66 Vauxhall street Tye James, pork butcher, 5 St. Giles' hill
Tillett Leonard, builder, 46 Ber street Tyler J usiah, boot & shoe maker, 8 St. Step hen's street;
Tillett William, butcher, x Waterloo road, New Catton 21 Dove street; Davey place; I Lower Goat lane & 107
Tillett William, shoe manufacturer, 5 West Pottergate street St. Benedict's street
Tillett William Henry (firm, Tillett W. H. &. Co. ), solicitor, Tyrell Mark, carpenter, so Peacock street
commissioner for oaths, perpetual commissioner & Irish Tyrrell Brothers, builders, Whitefriars street
commissioner, St. Andrew's Hroad street Tyrrell Alfred, tinplate worker, 71 Barn road
"fillcy Susannah (Miss), dress maker, 14 Distillery street Tyrrell Alfred John, shopkeeper, x8r Heigham street
Tillott William, beer retailer, 12 Westlegate street Tyrrell George, Waggon & Horses P.H. 23 Coslany street
"Tilney Henry, cab proprietor, 2 Distillery street Underhill Frederick R. grocer, & agent for W. & A. Gilbey,
Tilney Sarah (Mrs.), shopkeeper, 54 St. Benedict's street wine & spirit merchants, 21 The Walk, Market place
Tinkler George Stephen, Denmark Arms P.H. & builder, 43 Underwood Fredk. Jas. vinegar ma. see llills & Underwood
Denmark road, Earlham road Underwood John, Lord John Russell P.II. 66 Dereham road
Todd Bros. (late William A. Todd), tailors, 6r London st United Kingdom Temperance & General Provident Institu-
Todd Waiter & Co. military tailors & habit makers, tion (Thos.Beresford, district supt.); office, Bank chmbrs
Queen street; & 2 Waterloo place, London s w Upton Sarah (Mrs.), fruiterer, 10 Lower Goat lane
Todd Arthur, shopkeeper, 28 Sal ford street, South Heigham U rbinsky Louis, photographer, Davey place
Todd Frederick, shopkeeper, 9 Barrack street Usherwood Egmont Augustus, portrait, landscape & archi-
Todd Mary Ann (Miss), upholstress, 40 Havelock road tectural photograpbr.Rembrandt stndio,St. Benedict'sgts
'.fodd Rebecca (Mrs.), Bull inn, 18 St. Paul's plain Utting Alfred George, insurance agent, 22 Oxford street
Todd Robert William, baker, 37 Tinkler's lane 1 Utting George, shopkeeper, 52 Mancroft st. Dereham road ·
Tomlinson & Markham, hatters, hosiers, glovers & under- Utting James, Queen Caroline P.H. 6x Oak street
takers (established 1750), Castle street. See advert I Utting Stephen Wm. corn & cake mer. see Squirrell & Utting
'!fompson & Daines, shoe knife makers, Wate 1la.St.Georges ; Utting Thomas, dining rooms, 9 Orford hill
Tompson Charles, paperhanger, 97 Adelaide <>treet Utting Walter, teacher of music, 54 St. Philip's road
Tooke Edward, grocer, "8 Green Hills road Vaccination Station (William Guy M. D. public vaccinator),
Toolcy Mary Ann (Mrs.), saddle & harness maker, 5 Upper 4 Chapelfield road
King street l Varney William, chair maker, Sim's yard, Oak street
56~ NORWICH.r l\ORFOLK/ (KELLY'31

Varl(el Horace, baker, 7 Her street- . Watering Jeremiah Ethetidge, Unthanks' Ami& P.H. New ..
Varvel William, butcher, 17 St. Stepben's road market street
Vaughan John, Crocodile l'.H. 27 Heigham street Watering Samuel, fishmonger, 39 St. .Stcphen's l!treet
Venimore James, carpenter, 145 Waterloo road Watering Selina (Miss), dress maker, 138 Hall road,
Vial James, blacksmith, Marquis of Granby yrd. Barrack st New Lakenham I
Vial James, lime burner, contr~t;or & farmer, Kett's hill Watering Zephaniah, shopkeeper, 42 Sussex stree1l - r
Victoria Hall (W, & F, E. Hunter, proprietors), St. ,Andrew's Waterloo Temperance Hotel (S. A. Riches, proprietress), 6g
Broad street Prince of Wales road
Yince llenry, wholesale cabinet maker & bedding manufr, Water!jon Hannah Maria(Mrs.),White L.ion P.H. WhiteLion st·
St. Juhan's steam cabinet works, King st. See advert Watkins Alfred, Wheatsheaf P.H. 14 J3etllel street
VQ1cent Hartholome~ Thoma,..,, bricklayer, Dereham road Watkinsort JarneS', greengrocer, 20 St. Andrew's Bridge st
Vincent George, fishmonger, I l l Magdalen street Watliog Alfred, shopkeeper, 117 Magdalen street
VinccJlt Henry, boot & shoe maker, 30 Muspole street Watling George, shopkeeper, ;134 Bull Close road
Vincent Samuel English, baker, St. Martin's end Watling James, carpenter, I5 St. Stephert's square
'Yi1,1,ter James Odell, coal merchant, Eastern & ;Midlands Watling James, engineer to Norwich fire brigadeo 1A, All
· Railway Coal depot, Heigham street Saints' green
Yokes Catherine (Mrs.), apartments, 96 Chapelfield road Watling Simon, Rifleman P.H. 5 Cross lane, St. George's
. Vollbrecht .Augustus, hair dresser, Lower Westwick street Watson & Everitt, solicitors, 32 Prince of Wales road
Volunteer Drill Hall, Chapelfield road Watson & Kirby, plumbers, Oak street
Volunteer Medical Staff Corps (8th Division) (Corn. officer, Watson Alfred Yeoman, steam plough owner, 83 Prince
Surgeon-Captain T. W. Richardson; surgeon, Waiter S. of Wales road
Walters; captain, Quartermaster F. Mills), Old Militia Watson Charles, baker, 53 Esdelle street, St . .Augustine's
barracks, Upper Surrey street Watson Charles Henry, agent for Blackie & ,Son Limited, 67
Vout Maria (Mrs.), apartments, IOI York street London street
Wade Francis John, hair dresser, 8 Bank street Watson Elisha, boot maker, 7fJ Belvoir street
Wade John Parr, cloth warehouseman, 3 Redwell street Watson Ernest Ivens LL.B.Lond.solicitor,see 'Vatson&Everitt
Wade Sarah (Mrs.), shopkeeper, 8 Westlegate street 1\'atson Geo. hay dealer, r4, & confectioner,r9 Golden Ball st.
·wade William, beer retailer, 91 King street Watson George Leonard, corn dealer, 6 Fye Bridge stree~
Wade Wm. carriage maker, Upper King street & Queen's rd Vl'atson Harriet (Mrs.), shopkeeper, 5 Rose lane
Wade. William, plasterer, 143 Rupert street Watson Henry, Oak Shades P.H. Lower Goat lane
Wagg Christopber, hair dresser, 43 Waterloo road Watson Henry M.D., c.M. surgeon & medical officer for No.
'Vainright & Sons, wholesale grocers, tea merchants, pro- 5 district of Norwich union, 15 St. Giles' road
vision & hop factors, wine & spirit merchants, St. Peter's Watson James Edward Henry, chemist, King street
street ; & at Tavern street & Great Coleman sb. Ipswich Watson Warner, grocer, 64 Prince of Wales road
Waite George Henry,commercial traveller, r6 Connaught rd I Watson Wi)liam Thomas, corn chandler, 85 Ber street
'Vaite Thomas Robert, tinplate worker, 8 White Lion street Watt& Jane Ellen Rcbccca Victoria & Harriett (Misses), day
,Wales Charles, shopkeeper, 145 Barrack streeL school, ro5 Unthanks road
Walford Frank, boot maker, 93 Magdalen street Watts Charles James, consulting engineer, City chambers,;
Walker Alfred, sawyer, Aylsbam road, Upper IIellesdon Prince of Wales road
Walker Cary (Mrs.), milliner, 14 Wellington road Watts Edgar Jesse, hair dresser, 6s! Magqalen street
Walker Alfred, house decorator,sign writer &c.7&25Bethel st 1i Watts Ellen (Mrs.), Free Trade P.H. Rose lane.
Walker Elizabeth (.Mrs.), furniture broker, 128 Ber street Watts George, blacksmith, 12 Barn road
Walker John, travelling draper, .52 Pottergate street Watts Mat>ia (Mrs.), Red Lion P.H. 79 Bishopgatestreet
Walker John, warehouseman, ;r56 Oak street J Watts \hlliamWiseman,Rose P.H.38 Rupert st.S.th.Heigham
Walker Walter William, baker, 40 Distillery street Wayling George Robert, baker, 3 Philadelphia lane
1\'allace Thomas, land & estate agent & . accountant, 53 Weaver Charles, shopkeeper, 6 Scales green '
London street Weavers & Sons,fishmongers & game dlrs.II & 12Fishmarket
Wailer Matilda (Mrs.), shopkeeper, 33 Peacock street . Webb William, rope & twine manufacturer, 143 Magdalen st.
Waller Orville May, hardware dealer, St. Paul's ope.o.ing Websdale Charles, grocer, 73 King street
Waller Waiter~ sbopkeepery I06 Oak street . Websdale Ernest, fishmonger, 133 King street
'Valmsley Henry Brown, joiner, Old Palace road Wet>sdale James, grocer, I35 King street
~'a) pole Samuel, boot & shoe maker, 4 Rampant Horse st \Vebster Benjamin, aerated water manufacturer, Grove road
W~~olpole William, Nightingale P.H. 2"> C'..olegate street & wool agent, Castle meadow ,
'Vant ;Frederic & Sons, monumental & general masons, Webster David, beer retailer, Eaton
monuments, head stones, tombs, crosses &c. in granite, , Webster George Henry, baker, 6o Rupert street
marble & stone, r38 ller~ham road. See advertisement. Webster James, currier, see Widdows & Wf)bster
Want Thomas, hair dresser, 3 Timber Hill street Webster.Jo!)bua, b~r retailer, 18 St. ~enedict's street
W~rd Eliza. & Martha .(Misses)l dress makers, 73 Denmark I Webster Leonora (Mrs.), ehopkecper, 19 ~ing st. Crook's p-
road,. Earlham rqad Webster William, llartholomew tavern, 27 Thorn lane
"';u(i Horace Edward, cab proprietor, 44 S~. Stephen's rd Webster William, lodging house, 25 Upper King street
Ward James, bird dealer, Peacock street , Webster William Robert, builder & contract.or 1 ljm:e burner-
Ward James, shopkeeper, ;22 Compass lltreet, Mariner's lane & brick maker, 33 Dereham road & Stoz~e Hilllillle works
Ward James; William the Fourth P.H. & chimney sweeper, Weddup Rebecca (Miss), dress maker, 24 All Saints~ green
15 Coburg street WeedsFredk.Wm.carver& gilder,rs Union st.SouthHeigham
Ward Jas. N orman,clerical officer of inland revenue, Tomblnd i Weerls Robert, Free Trade tavern, ~I St, Augus~ine'J> street,
"'~;rd Joseph Henry; cqwkeeper, Thorpe rd. Thorpe Hamlet Weeks Charles, shopkeeper, 53 flt. Leonard's road
W~rd Josiah, shopkeepet, 1251 Waterloo road Weeks Edmund, Rose P.H. 25 Thorn lane 11
Ward Mark, Pheasant Cock P.H. 3 Oak street Wegg & Colborne, tailors, 34 Exchange street
Ward Thomas William, boot & shoe ma. St. Margaret's alley Wegg Robert, builder, 49 St. George's plain If rr
Ward William, blacksmith, Quay side , Wegg William Richardson, tailor, see Wegg & Coloo:rne
Ward "'illiam, boot & sboe manufacturer, 50 Hotolph street Welby Patrick, Leopard P.H, 98 Bull Close r(lad .[
Ward William Edward, insurance agent, Io l''inket street Wellington ·Frank Frederick, timber merchant-~ imr--
Warlters Walter Scott L. R.C.lJ'.LOnd, surgeon, Grant's court, porter & exporter; sole agent for Irwin & Hassall ( U .S.A.).
~fagdalen street wholesale hardwood manufacturer, Whitefriars bridge &.
Warman Zachariah Wright, shopkeeper,6 Rampant Horso st 63 Fins bury pavement, London .Eo •
'Varminger Samuel, Jolly Maltsters P. H. 47 Cowgate street Wells Thos. & Co. hat & cap manufactrs. 19 St. Andrew's hi'
Wam~ George, Lily tavern, Ber street Wells Charles, Golden Lion P.H, 268 King street
Warne George Thos. boot & shoe warehouse, r68 Ber street WellsHarry,booksllr.&statnr.Alexandra ho.Prince ofWales rd
Warue Henry, commercial traveller, 74 St. Philip's road Wells Jermyn, commissio:Q. agent, 3'< Garden roaq
Warner Eliza (Miss), hardware dealer, Q Tinkler's lane ' Wells John, shopkeeper, 35 Thorn lane
7
" arner George William, j:wuse furnisher, 58 Rupert street Wells John Robert, corn & flour dealer, Rupert street
'Warner Richard, hair dresser, Royal Hotel street Wells William, Prince of Wales P.H. 48 St. .Benedict's street
Warner Walter, Currier's Arms P.H. 16 St. Gile.s street Wesley Deaconess Institute (The) (Rev. John Gould. supt.;
WarneJ; Walter Waite, grocer, 9 Whi~ Lion street · R. T. Dawson, treasurer;, Sister Hilda, sister in charge)~
Warr~n Elizabeth (Mrs.), shopkeeper, 104 Oak street Bowman house, South well road 1
Warren Leonard George, P.utcher, 28 Pitt street & 71 St. West John, bricklayer, 58 Chapel street, Crook's plaoo
Augulltine's gate . West Willillm Henry, scale maker, 41 Elm hill
Warren Martin Leonard, butcher, 108 Waterloo road Westlake G.eo. Fredk. commission agent, 1 Caernarvon road
Warren Reuben, carpenter, 54 Solllerleyton street Westwom] William Henry, fancy stationer, 2 Orford hill
W.assel" Henry Herrmann, tailor, 23 Princes street Weyer Jesse, shopkeeper, 172 Philadclphil\ lano
~atering George Barker, The Tuns P.H. St Giles gates Whall Alfred, p;auoforte tuner, r1 Valentine st. Derebam rd
\\ atering Jeremiah, grindery dlr. 13 Hall rd.N cw L'lkenham Whall Jeremiah, pianoforte teacher & tuner,35 Chapelfield rd
NO.RFOLK .. ~63

Whall William, ba~er, 144 Northumberland street Willett E. Nephew & CO.' dress goods manufrs. Colegate st
Whall William Powles, baker, 104 St. George's .Middle street Willey Royall George, gener11.l draper, 63 St, Augustine st
Wbayman Ann (Mrs.) & Son, bakers, 33 Adelaide street Williams & Co. upholsterers, 217 Queen's road · ·
Wheeler Eliza (Mrs.), school, 44 Distillery street Williams Arthur, school attendance officer, No. 4 district,
Wheeler Francis Darkins M.A. LL.D. boys' school, Paragon Hall toad, Lakenham ·
house, St. Giles' road Williams Charles F.R.c.s.Edin. surgeon & senior surgeon to
Wheeler Henry, s(l.nitary pl-qmber, painter, giazierj gas· the Norfolk & Norwich hospital & consulting surgeon to
fitter & decorator, f;agle street, Newmarket road - the aonnty lunatic asylum, 48 Prince of Wales road
Whines Percy George, Jolly S~inner P.H. 91 Oak street Williamson .Miss Anna., dress maker, 22 All Saints' green
Whitbread & Co. Limited, mall-sters, Synagogue street ' Williamson Dun<:an, teacher of shorthand, r8 Newmarket st
White Richard & Sons, dental surgeons, 26 St Giles street Williamson Edward Freeman (late Warner & Co. ) 1 general
& at 21 South quay, Great Yarmouth furnishing & hoilsehold ironmonger, brazier & copper-
White William & Son, silk goods mannfactrs. Golden Dog la smith, lamp & oil merchant, 7 St. Giles' street
White Elizabeth (.Mrs.), fishmonger, Aylsham road "\Villiamson William, shopkeeper, 13 Palace street
White Frank, market gardener, Ipswich road Williment James, builder & contractor &c. l: Gladstone
White George, currier &c. see Howlett & White street, Earlham road·. See advertisement
White George, fishmonger, 6r Rotolph street Will ins Emma Louise (.Mrs.) & Gill Katba.rine (Miss), pro-
White Henry Freeman L.D.s.Eng. dental surg&Jn, see White paratory school for boys, 43 Newmarket road
Richard&. Sons Willis Ambrose, shopkeeper, 9 Denmark road, New Catton
White James, shopkeeper, g8 Adelaide street · Willis David, tobacconist, 57 Bridge street, St. George'g
White Richard Wentwortb M.R.c.s. & LD.S.Eng. dental sur-' Willis Reuben, collector of Queen's taxes, 32 Elm hill
geon, see White Richard & Sons Wills George Thomas, tanner, 22 Heigham street
Whiting Henry,HopeBreweryP.H.& decorator,St.Saviour's la Willsea John James, baker, Timber Hill street
Whitmore Robert, plasterer, 8 Market lane Wilsea John, bootmaker, 24 Old Palace road
Whitmore Wm. Harry, milk seller ,3 Esdelle st. St. Augustine's W ilson Daniel, fishmonger, 3 Red Lion street
Whyley William, Excise tavern, Lower Goat lane Wilson David, grocer, 115 Oak street
Wick George, shoe maker, 2o Vauxhall street, Chapelfield rd Wilson Edmnnd, shopkeeper, 70 Alexandra road
"\Vickham Edward,Rosary tavern, Rosary rd. Thorpe Hamlet Wilson Edward, Globe inn, Globe lane
Wicks & Sons, wire workers, r8 Golden Ball street Wilson Edwin (late Cartwright), gun, rifle & pistol maker,
Yvicks John, Boatswain's Call P.H. S7 llotolph street 13 Rampant Horse street. See advertisement
Widdows & Webster,curriers&leather mers. 13&15Fye bridge Wilson George, carpenter, Gas hill, Thorpe Hamlet
Widdows Charles, City Arms P.H. & teacher of music, Wilson George, carpenter, Rose cottag-e, St. Leonard's road
St. Andrew's hill Wilson Ingle Scott, baker &c. 41 Goldsmith street
Widdows Francis, White Rose P.H. 77 Magdalen street Wilson Jonathan, hair dresser, 21 St. Giles ~treet
Wigg Edward John & Son, livery stables, Royal Hotel Wilson Jonathan Robert, cabinet maker, Muspole street
livery stables, Boar's Head livery stables & Golden Ball Wilson Orson Boswell, chemist, St. Catherine'S plains
street. See advertisement · · Wilson Richard, Windmill P.H. Aylsham rd. Up. Hellesdon
Wigg WilliamEvered,agricultural implement manufacturer, Wilson Thos. boat proprietor, Suffolk Arms y-ard, Oak st
Cattle market (saturdays only) Wilson Thomas, cork cutter, 72 St. Giles' hill '
1
Wiggett Joseph, wood turner, St. George's .Middle street Wilson Thomas, shopkeeper, 77 King street
Wiggett Jose ph, jun. Fleece P.H. llridewell alley Wilson Wm. Fdk. Mackenzie, accountant, 16 Castle meadow
Wilby Arthur, shopkeeper, 86 Nelson street, North Heigham Winfield William, Spear in Hand P.H. Vauxhall street
Wilby William, pork butcher, 37 South well rd. New Lakenhm Winter Edward, boot manufacturer, 61 Albany road
Wilch Frederick, baker, 2 William street, Horn's lane Winter George Arthur, Prospect House P.H. Aylsham road
Wilcox Mary (.Mrs.), Bull's Head P.H. Ber street Winter Henry Frith, shopkeeper, 91 Magdalen street
Wild Edward, County & City Supply Stores, family grocer Winter James, beer retailer, 79 Magdalen street
& provision factor, beer bottler & general merchant, agent Winter James, linen draper, s6 King street
for W. & A. Gilbey, wine & spirit merchant, u Old Hay- Winter Samuel, baker, 86 Pitt street
market & Lamb yard Winter Samuel, french polisher, 42 St. Martin's lane
Wilde Amis James, grocer, I Globe street, South Heigham Winter Samuel, paperhanger, 83 St. George's Middle street
Wilde Edwin :flerbert, baker, & post office, 78 Connaught rd Winter William, decorative painter & refreshment rooms,
Wilde Frederick, plumber, 3 Victoria street 23 & 25 Prince of Wales road
Wilde Joseph, Waggon & Horses PH. Tom bland Wiseman Alfrd·, chimney swpr. 19 Rupert st. South Heigham
Wilde Robt. James, beer retailer, 64 Lower ·westwick street Wiseman Frederick, butcher, 43 Hose lane
Wilde Stepben, White Rose P.H. xo Back of the Inns Wiseman George, Ship inn 106, & wardrobe ·dealer IOJ',
Wilden Mary(Mr;s. ), White Horse I'. H. m St. Andrcw'sBroad st Cow gate street
Wilding Charles, plumber, 27 St. Giles' street Wiseman Herbert Waiter, butcher, Upper King street
Wilding llenry, hair dresser & deputy registrar of births & Wiseman William, chimney sweeper, Fisher's lane
deaths for Conisford sub-district, St~ Stephen's plain . Witard Ephraim, miller (wind & steam) & corn & cake
· Wildman Elizabeth (Miss), dress maker, 46 Old Palace road merchant, Aylsham road, Upper Hellesdon .
Wilcy Henry Hall & Son, shopkeepers, 148 Cowgate street & Witard \Villiam, corn, flour & tea dealer & postmasteri
coal merchants, Eastern & .Midlands Railway Coal depot, Aylsham Roaq post office ·
Heigham street Withey John B.A. day school, 46 Wymer street
Wiley Frederick, greengrocer, 83 St. Benedict's street Wittrick Daniel, agent for Wesleyan & General Assurance
Wiley Maria (.Mrs.), confectioner, 5 Pitt street Society, 4 Nelson street, North Heigham .
Wiley Samuel Hall, sign writer, 4 .Mancroft st. Dereham rd Wodehouse Stephen, builder, 10 Palace plain ,
Wilkin Arthur, laundry, St. Martin lane Womersley 1-Vm. soliciwr & commissioner, Little Orford st
Wilkin Charles Josiah, grocer, 68 St. Augustine's street Wones George, carpenter, St. Giles' road
Wilkin William, builder, contractor, undertaker & steam Wood Edward, shopkeeper, II2 .Magpie road
joinery works, 5 & 6 Cow hill Wood Geo. family grocer&; wine & spirit mer. 46 London st
Wilkin William Thomas, Butchers' Arms P.H. Ber street Wood Kate (.Mrs.), Ara.bian Horse P.H. New Lakenharu
Wilkins Edwin John, collector of G.reat Yarmouth port & Wood Robert, shopkeeper, 141 Magdalen street
haven dues & water bailiff, Carrow bridge Woodcock John, Woolpack P.H. St. George's plain
Wilkms Samuel Robert, builder & contractor, Grapes hill, Woodcock Maria {~iiss). confectnr. 24 St. Andrew's Broad st
St. Giles & West Pottergate street . Woodhonse William, surgeon, & medical officer rst district,
1-Vilkinson P, & Son, leatheF merchant-s, saddlers & saddlers' 'Norwich wdon, 14 Chapelfield gardens
ironmongers & whip makers, 6 St. Giles' street Woodpeckers Sket<:h Club (Miss Nichols, president), 6A,
'\'Vilkinson George, Duke of Wellington P.H. St. St.ephen's st Timber Hill street
Wilkinson Laura {Mrs.), dress maker, 62 Distillery street Woodrow Thomas, baker, 34 .Muspole street
Wilkinson Peter, shopkeeper, 121 Oak street Woods & eo. engineers, manufacturers of general agri·
l'i'ilkinson Peter Joy, writer, grainer, sign painter, plumber, cultural, hydraulic & steam machinery, millwrights,
glazier & house decorator, Princes street wagon & cart builders, target makers &c. Norwich; & at
Wilkinson Susannah (Mrs.), Hope P.H. 64 Calvert street Stowmarket, Bury St. Edmunds, Ipswich, Newmarket &.
Wilkinson Thomas Baxter, sewing machine agent, 6o Bridge Sudbury
street, St. George's Woods .Alexander, music & musical instrument dealer, tuner
Wilkinson Thomas, shopkeeper, 100 St. Benedict's street & repairer, 20 Lower Goat lane & 14 Briggs str~t
Wilkinson William, coal merchant, 46 & 48 lleigham road; Woods Arthur James, stone, marble & mouumental mason,
wharf, Victoria station 48 Pitt street ·
Willatts Benjamin, manufacturer of every description of I Woods Arthur Starling, Bold Napier l'.H. Trafalgar street,
inside & outside window blinds (wholesale), 21 & 23 New Lakenham
Colegate street /Woods Beatrice Angeline (Miss), confectnr. 13 St.' Giles st
Willes Reuben, shopkeeper, 92 Sussex street Woods Charles, shopkeeper, 35 Waterloo road
5o4 NORWICH. NORFOLK. [KELLY'S

Woods Daniel William, inland revenue officer, Tombland Wright William, Royal Oak P.H. 64 St. Augustine street
Woods George, market gardener, Eaton road WurrThos.Garrod, bricklayer ,St. Leonard's rd. ThorpeHamlt
Woods James, shopkeeper, 67 Chapel street, Crook's place Wyatt Henry,hay & straw dlr.47Trafalgar st.NewLakenham
Woods John George, stationer, I Magdalen street Wyer Jesse, linen draper, 21 & 23 St. Stephen's street
Woods Matilda {Miss), dress maker, 38 Belvoir street Wynes Charles, Allies tavern, 5 Bedford st. South Heigham
Woods Robert, shopkeeper, n9 Barrack street Yallop Alfred, plumber, 13 Theatre st.reet
Woods Robert, shopkeeper, I3 Ber street Yallop Frederick, beer retailer, 49 West End street
Woods William Henry, solicitor & commissioner to admin- Yallop James, Golden Star P.H. & bird dealer, Duke street
ister oaths (firm, Chittock & Woods), 17 Bank plain Yallop Maria. (Miss), milliner, 13 Theatre street
Woodyard Mary Ann (Miss), confectioner, 6 Back of the Inns Yallop Robert, market gardener, Eaton road, Ipswich road
Woolestone James, Cricketers' Rest P.H. 207 Queen's road Yare & Bure Preservation Society (C. J. Greene, hon. sec.),
Woolsey Leonard George, cab proprietor, 46 Stafford street 37 Grove road
Woolston Mary Jane (Mrs.), shopkeeper & post office, Yarington J. de Carle (Miss), ladies' school, 12 The Cres-
67 Grove road cent, Chapelfield road
Working Girls' Club & Lodgings (Miss A. Frosdike, lady Yaxley Edward, boot & shoe manufacturer, 70 Dereham. rd
superintendent), 12 All Saints' green Yaxley George, boot & shoo manufacturer, 55 Dereham rd
Worledge John, Railway Arms P.H. 90 Oak street, & fish Yaxley Thomas, carter, 120 York street
curer, 7 Fish market Yaxley Tbos. sen. coal dealer, 15 Regent st. South Heigham
Worman William, coal merchant, 58 Earn road Yaxley William, King's Arms P.H. 38 Botolph street
Worminger Philip, Fortune of War P.H. 48 Calvert street Yeomans Arthur, sewing machine agent, 31 Duke street
Worrell Mary (Mrs.), wardrobe dealer, 2 Barn road Youell William, boot sole sewer, 32 Calvert street
Wortle.y Ann (Mrs.), apartments, 31 St. Stephen's square Youels Charlotte (Mrs.), market gardener, Lakenham
Wortley Henry Robert, baker, Silver road Young Men's Christian Association (George Holmes,
Wortley Newton, St. Paul's tavern P.H. 20 Cowgate street financial sec.), 48 St. Gile.o; street
Wortley William, tobacconist, 4 Davey place Young Men's Friendly Society (A. H. Goose, agent),
·worts George, engraver, 73 Pottergate street Rampant Horse street
Wren Rev. Alfred T. boys' school, Lime Tree road Young Women's Christian Association (Miss Colman, sec.),
Wright & Ratcliffe, land & engineering surveyors & plan St. Giles street
lithographers, Bank street Young Women's Club Room (Miss Martha Rump, matron),
Wright & Turner, importers of deals, timber staves & slates, 1 r Palace plain
english timber merchants, coffin boards, lath & reeds Young Frankland, baker, 52 St. Gilcs road
always in stock, Baltic wharf, Mountergate street Young Neil Charles, manager to J. & H. Girling, coal
Wright Charles, boat builder, Hobroughs lane, King street merchants ; offices, 67 London street
Wright Ephraim, shopkeeper, 37 Fishgate street Young Thomas, grocer, 107 Magdalen street
'\VrightHenrySherwood,carpenter,28 King's rd.NewLaknhm Young Wm. Ringwood,shopkeepr.&post office,6IHavelock rd
Wright Henry Valentine, shopkeeper, 71 Northumberland Youngman Charles, builder, Heath road, St. Augustine
street, .North Heigham Y oungman Charles, grocer, 53 Vauxhall street
Wright James E. wholesale grocer, see Green & Wright Youngs, Crawshay & Youngs, brewers, wine & spirit mer-
Wright Robert, plasterer, 85 Essex street, South Heigham chants, Crown brewery, King street; & at Diss
Wright Thomas, White Horse P.H. 84 Magdalen street Youngs & Son, builders, Chapelfield road
'\Vright Thomas William, shopkeeper, 53 St. George's plain Zipfel Charles, watch & clock maker, 159 Magdalen street
Wright William, coal merchant, II8 Cambridge street
OBY, see AsHBY.
ORMESBY ST. MARGARET (or GREAT ORMESBY) .J.P. The rectorial tithes are in the hands of the Ecclesias-
with ScRATBY, is a village and parish, about one mile from tical Commissioners on behalf of the Dean and Chapter of
the sea, with a station on the Eastern and Midlands railway, Norwich. The Wesleyan chapel, erected at a cost of £400,
5 miles north-by-west from Yarmouth, in the Eastern iB"a building in the Gothic style, and there is also a Primi-
division of the county, incorporated hundreds, petty ses- tive Methodist chapel. A detachment of the rst Norfolk
sional division and incorporation of East and West Flegg, Artillery Volunteers is stationed here. The poor of the par-
county court district of Great Yarmouth, rural deanery of ish receive six chaldrons of' coals yearly from Sir E. B. K.
Flegg and archdeaconry and diocese of Norwich. There Lacon hart. in consideration of a road and two pieces of
were formerly five churches in the united parishes, three of waste land which his family were allowed to inclose. The
which-viz. All Saints, at Scratby, Holy Trinity and St. Dowager Lady Lacon left a legacy of £r,ooo, the interest of
Peter's, between the two Ormesbys-have long been in which is applied to the relief of the poor of Ormesby St.
ruins. The parish church of Ormesby St. Margaret is an Margaret and Scratby. Ormesby House, the seat of Henry
ancient edifice, flint and and stone, in the Decorated style, Sidney Hammet Lacon esq. J.P. is a mansion in the Domes-
consisting of chancel, nave, north aisle, south porch, vestry tic Gothic style, standing in well-wooded grounds. Scratby
and a fine embattled western tower, surmounted by the Hall, the seat of Robert Arthur Watling esq. was formerly
• figures of four monks in lieu of pinnacles, and containing the seat of the Earl of Home. Ormesby Old Hal~, a build-
one bell: the church contains brasses and memorials to the ing of red brick, is the residence of John Christmas esq.
family of Clere, including Sir Robert Clere, ob. 1529 and the Charles Belgrave Lucas esq. J.P. is lord of the manor. The
Lady Alice Clere, aunt of Queen Anne Holeyn ; others to principal landowners are Sir Edmund Broughton Knowles
the Symonds family and the Homes, Earls of Home; a brass, 1Lacon bart. J.P. ; Robert Arthur ·watling esq. George Morris
erected in 1884, to Eliza Georgina (Hammet), wife of Sir Beck esq. J.P. and Mrs. Charles Mooro. The soil is mixed;
E. H. K. Lacon bart. d. 31 March, 1883 ; and to Eliza subsoil, sand and gravel. The chief crops are wheat, barley
Dixon (Beecroft), dowager Lady Lacon, d. 23 April, r865; and oats. The population of Ormesby St. Margaret (in-
and another, dated I884, to Mrs. Lacon: there is also a eluding Scratby) m 1891 was 1,202. The area of the two is
mural monument to Sir E. H. K. Lacon bart. M.P. d. 6 2,761 acres; rateable value, 1,"5,253·
Sept. 1888: and a memorial window to Charles M. Watling Parish Clerk Waiter Dcrry
R.N. d. r887: the church was enlarged in r867 by the ad- ' ' .
dition of a north aisle, the old pews and gallery were at the P., M. 0. & T. 0., S. B. & Annmty & Insura?ce Office.-
same time removed, the whole area seated with open oak Arthur Yallop, sub-postmaster. Lette~s arr1ve from Yar-
benches, and a pulpit and desk erected, at a cost of more mouth at 6.55 a.m. & 2.5 p.m. ; dispatched at r.so &
than £1,000; the chancel was also new roofed and restored,· 6.4o p.m _
and a new vestry built, at the expense of the late Sir. E. H. A School Board for the united district of Ormesby St.
K. Lacon bart. M.P. It now affords about 370 sittings, of 1 Margaret, with Scratby & Ormesby St. Michael, was
which 224 are free. The register dates from the year 1677· : formed I March, r875, Charles Diver, 23 King- street,
The living is a vicarage, consolidated with those of Scratby Great Yarmouth, clerk to the board; Samuel Simnett,
and Ormesby St. Michael, in the gift of the Dean and Chap- attendance officer
ter of Norwich, average tithe rent-charge £231, joint gross Board School, built in 1878 & 188r,and enlarged in r88g, for
yearly value £376, including 65 acres of glebe, with resi- 280 children; average attendance, 235; George Skingley,
dence, erected in 1867, and held since 1866 by the Rev. master .
Robert Singleton Blofeld M.A. of Trinity College, Cambridge, Railway Station, William Metcalf, station master
Carpenter Mrs Lacon Henry Sidney Hammet J.P.
PRIVATE RESIDENTS. Chri<~tmas John, Ormesby Old hall Ormesby house
Beck George Morris J.P. Ormesby lodge Gill Samuel, Hill house Mason John
Elake Garson Hy. Lovewell, The Elms Grimmer Mrs Palmer William Hurry
Blake Lovewell J P. The Elms Johnson John W. B Rising Thomas Alfred
Blofeld Rev.Robert Singleton M.A., J.P. Kidman Mrs. Fernside cottage Simnett Samuel
Vicarage Kirkup George Edward Smith Mrs
DIRECTORY.] NORFOLK. OULTON• 565
• .
Watling Robert .Arthur, Scratby hall Edmonds J oseph, farmer Rose Henry, grocer & draper
Woodman Robert M.D Far man & Simnett, carpenters Shrimplin Robert, builder
W oolston Mrs Ferrier Emma (Miss), day school Silcock Harry, butcher
COMMERCIAL. Flowerday Robert, market gardener Simnett Benjamin, boot maker
Agus William Gibbs, farmer & as.~stant Green Robert, farmer & pork butcher Simnett .Tames, boot maker
overseer & assessor of Queen's taxes Green Thomas (exors. of), farmers Simnett John, auctioneer
Ainslie J ames, beer retailer Green Harry, farmer, Scratby Smith Berney, farmer
Alien Hichard, butcher Hubbard Jn. farmer & market gardenr Smith Caroline (Mrs.), farmer
Benn Stephen, farm steward for Henry Hubbard William, farmer Smith John, farmer
Sidney Hemmet Lacon esq Johnson Edward, blacksmith Spurgeon Samuel, cab proprietor
Blanchflower William, grocer Kerrison Thomas William, boot maker Thain William, market gardener
Bradfield Thomas, land surveyor, regis- Kettle Jspb. market gardener, Scratby Thurtle Rt. Austick, farmr.Willow frm
trar of births & deaths for East l<'legg Leith Robert, bricklayer 'fungate Frank, farmer
sub-district Myhill William, Royal Oak P.H Tung-ate .Tames, cowkeeper, Scratby
Brown John .Tames, grocer Newman William, market gardener Wailer John Turpin, surgeon; res.
Carr J ames, farmer Nichols John, bout maker Flegg Burgh
Cory Robert, solicitor, clerk to the Nichols William (Mrs. ),farmer,Scratby Woodman Robert M.D. surgeon,& medi-
commissioners of taxes for East Nickerson Brothers, florists cal officer, East Flegg district &
& West l<legg & the Runham drainage Nickerson Charles, butcher workhouse, East & West Flegg in-
commissiOners Nickerson William, coal dealer corporation
Daniels Robert Abbot, farmer: Ollett Edward, baker W oolston John, jun. farmer & beer
Day Henry, miller (wind & steam) Page George, farmer retailer, Scratby
Derry John, blacksmith & wheelwright Page Richard Thomas, beer retailer Woolston Wesley, painter &c
Derry Thomas, blacksmith Pilgrim William, market gardener Wright Daniel, cowkeeper, Scratby
Derry Waiter, painter &c Read Henry, farmer, Scratby hall Yallop Arthur, shopkeeper, Post office
Dunt John, tailor Roberts Waiter, beer retailer Youngs Aaron, boot & shoe maker
Dyble .Tames, cowkeeper

ORMESBY ST. MICHAEL(or LITTLE ORMESBY) is gift of the Dean and Chapter of Norwich and held since
a pari..'lh, one mile west from Ormeshy station on the Eas1:€rn 1866 by the Rev. Robert Singleton Blofeld M.A. of Trinity
and Midlands railway, and about 6 miles north-north- College, Cambridge, J.P. who resides at Ormesby St. Mar-
west from Yarmouth, in the Eastern division of the county, garet. An estate in this parish, left by one of the Manning
incorporated hundreds, petty sessional division and incor- family, produces £4r t6s. yearly, for the repair of the fabric
poration of East and West Flegg, county court district of of the church, and for the benefit of the poor. Ormesby
Great Yarmouth, rural deanery of Flegg, archdeaconry and house is the property and residence of Frederic Kidman esq.
diocese of Norwich. The church of St. Michaelis a small Charles Belgrave Lucas esq. J.P. of Filby, is lord of the
building of stone, principally in the Early English style, con- manor. Sir Edmund Broughton Knowles Lacon hart. J.P.
sisting of chancel, nave and an embattled western tower Mrs. Hassett Haggard and Mrs. Worship are the principal
containing 3 bells : there are several monuments to the landowners. The chief crops are wheat, barley and oats.
"Cpcher and Manning families; in 1885-6 the church was re- The soil is light mixed; subsoil, gravel and clay. Here is
stored by subscription, and the chancel by the Ecclesiastical Ormesby Broad, about 100 acres in extent; it adjoins Rol-
Commissioners, at a cost of upwardiii of £1,000, when the lesby Broad. This parish comprises about r,ooo acres ;
roofs of the nave and chancel were renovated, the interior rateable value, £2,735; the population iu 1891 was 336.
reseated and paved, a new chancel arch and east window Pariih Clerk, Robert Westgate.
erected, and a stone pulpit, presented by Mrs. Worship as a
memorial to William Worship esq. and in 1892 a finely Letters through Yarmouth arrive about 7.30 a. m. WAI.L
carved oak reredos was erected to the memory of members Box, village, cleared at 5 p.m. WALL LETTER Box at the
of the Worship and Glasspole families: there are 120 sit- church, cleared at 5.30 p. m. The nearest money order
tings. The register dates from the year 1563. 'fhe living & telegraph office is at Ormesby St. Mugaret
is a vicarage, consolidated With those of Ormesby St. Mar- This place is included in the united School Board district of
garct and Scratby, average tithe rent-charge £304; joint Ormesby, founded in 1875· The children of this place
gross yearly value £376, including 6o acres of glehe, in the attend the school at Ormesby St. Margaret
Kid man Frederic,Ormesby house; & at Humphrey George SamuP-1, farmer Read Robert, farmer
Mautby King Brothers, florists &c Smith Samuel, pork butcher
Worship Mrs Lilly George, market gardener Richmond Samuel,farmer&beer retailer
Manship Isaac William, farmer Starling Edgar, upholsterer
COMMERCIAL. Manship Isaac William, jun. farmer Walpole William, market gardener
Brown Thomas, farmer Monsey Edward, beer retailer Yarmouth Water Works Co. (Thomas
Gaze George, carpenter Moore Isaac, farmer & market gardener Robinson,engineer; Benjamin Scarff,
Harris Richard, market gardener I Nichols Jeremiah, farmer &c foreman), Pumping station
OULTON is a parish and village 3! miles north-west! of money invested in the Funds. Oulton Hall, the seat of
from Aylsham station on the East Norfolk branch of the . Waiter Henry Bolton esq. J.P. is an ancient mansion, pleas-
Great Eastern railway, one mile north from Bluestone • antly situated, with a lawn in front and is nearly surrounded
1
station on the Eastern and Midlands railway and II west by thriving plantations. General William Earle Gascoyne
from North Walsham, in the Northern division of the county, j Lytton Bulwer J.P. of Quebec House, East Dereham, who is

South Erpingham hundred and petty sessional division, 1 lord of the manor, Constance, Marchioness of Lothian and
Aylsbam union and county court district, rural deanery of Waiter Henry Bolton esq. J.P. are chief landowners. The
1

'l

Ingworth and archdeaconry and diocese of Norwich. The soil is sandy; subsoil, sand and clay. The chief crops are
church of SS. Peter and Paul is a small but ancient edifice wheat, roots, barley and hay. The area is 1,828A. oR. 38P.;
of brick and stone, in the Early English style, consisting of rateable value, £2,109; the population in r881 was 379·
chancel, nave, south porch and an embattled western tower Parish Clerk Henry Kiddell.
containing one bell: there are xoo sittings. The register '
dates from the year 1700 . 'l'he living is a vicarage, gross PosT 0FFICE.-Robert Fair bairn, receiver. Letters through
yearly value £ 153, including 34 acres of glebe, in the gift of .Aylsham; deliveries commence 8.o a. m. ; dispatched 3·45
and held since 1s63 by the Rev. Frederick Hunt B.A. of p.m. week days only Aylsham is the nearest money
New Inn Hall, Oxford. Here is a Congregational chapel of order & telegraph office; Postal Orders are issued here,
ancient date, with a graveyard and a residence for the min- but not paid. WALL LE'l'TER Box at Pitman Arms, cleared
ister, together with si acres of ground attached: the chapel 4· 1 5 p.m. week days only
is endowed with a sum of £5 a year from a bequest of the National School (mixed), erected in 1848, for 86 children;
late Thomas Bell esq. a former owner of the Hall; there are average attendance, 70; Richard W. Nickalls, certificated
also sums of £3 IOS. and £2 17s. yearly, being the interest master; Mrs. Nickalls, assistant mistress
Bolton Waiter Henry J.P. Oulton hall Farrow John, farmer Poll J ames, shoe maker
Hunt Rev. Frederick B.A. Vicarage Gay William Ireland, farmer, Manor Poll J a ne (Mrs.), farmer
Roper George M.D. The Lodge farm & Wood farm Rice George, farmer, Church farm
Thackeray Rev. Benjamin [Cong] Keeler George, shoe maker & farmer Rounce William,gardener toJohnStuart
COMMERCIAL. , Keeler Thoma~, farmer Bolton esq
Butcher John, gamekeeper to John Kiddell Brothers, blacksmiths, wheel- Seaman Geo. farmer, Malt House farm
Stuart Bolton esq wrights & wagon builders Seaman Sarah (Mrs.},farmr. Greenfrm
Fairbairn H.t. draper & grocer, Post off Kiddell Ebenezer, beer retailer Shreeve John, farrner,Cherry Tree farm
Farrow James, farmer Lake Samuel Trueman, farmer Williams Waiter, Pitman Arms P.U:
lHJ6 . ..
Ll'I'l'LB OtJ'!E. N,O~JlOLK.. ,
LITTLE OUSE is an ecclesiastical parish, formed. in ScHOO\.S•:-
r866 by Order iiJ Council (ram detached and outlying pur- Boa~d (mixed), under the Littleport School. Boa'I'd, average
tions of the parishes of Hilgay, Feltwell St. Mary and St. a~t~~dance about so; John Samuel Fendick, fAaster
Nicholas, Littleport (Cambridge) and the entire parishes of Boardt Black Ho:rse lJrove (mixed), und~I." \he same board,
:Feltwell Anchor anq. Redmore, both formerly extra-para~ average attendance about 45; John $noath, master-
chial, and is 4i lllile1S north-north-east from Littleport sta- Feltwell ·Anchor, formerly extra-parochial, is now a
tion on the Ely an~ Lynn section o~ the Great ~astern rail- parish; ecclesiastically it belongs to the district of St. John,
way and locally, ~n Cambridgeshire, and 1.0 ~ . south-east Little Ouse, and is situated in the Fens, on the north bank
from Downham, m the So_uth Western diviSIOn of .. ~he of the Little Ouse, 7 miles west from Lakenheath. railway
coun_t~, rural ~ea:ne~y .ami dwcese. of Ely and the pecuhar · station on the Ely and 'fhetford section of the Great Eastern
arch_Idlacona! JUn~dic~w?- of th~ Bishop of Ely The Nor_folk railway, in the South Western division of t.he county,
port~ on ?f this papsh 18 m th~ Dow~h~I_D· and the Cambndge Grimshoe hundred, Thetford union and county court dis--
P?rti~m m the ~ly petty s~sswnal diVISIOn and co~mty c~urt trict. Captain Francis d' Arcy Wm. Clough Newcome, of
district. ~n Iron fpot-bJl~ge here crosses the river. fhe Feltwell Hall 1 is lord of the manor and the principal land-
c~urch of St: John, standm~ near the .soutll bank of ~he owner. The soil is peat; subsoil, clay; the chief crops are
Little Ouse rrver, about. 2 t?il~s above Its confluence w1th wheat, beans and oats. The area "is rb 2 acres : rateable
the Great Ouse, was bmlt m 1869? at th~ sole cos~ of ~he ·value £ 90 . the population in r88r was 47 .
late Rev. Canon E. B. Sparke. and IS a bmldmg of flmt w1th ' ' . . ,
stone dressings, in the Early English style, consisting of Letters thr~ugh Downham Market arn.ve. at 8 o'clock:
chancel, nave, vestry, organ chamber and a north-west Southery IS the nearest money order office
tower containing a clock and 3 bells :there are 250 sittings. A school board of 5 members was formed 2 Aug. r887 for
The register date1S from the year r868. The living is a the united district of Feltwell Anchor & Feltwell St...
vicarage, tithe rent-charge £160, net yearly value £229, in- Mary & St. Nicholas; E. N. Cole, Croxton, clerk to the
eluding 83 acres of glebe, with re1Sidence, in the gift of the board
Bishop of Ely, and held since x882 by the Rev. John Frede- Board School, erected in 188g, for 100 children; average
rick Taylor Morse B. A. of Corpus Christi college, Cambridge. attendance so; Billy Tunnicliffe, master
Here are two Primitive Methodist chapels. On the Cold
Harbour Drove there is a mission room, in which services Redmore, formerly extra-parochial, is now a parish,
are held by the vicar on Sunday evenings. The principii! but is attached ecclesiastically to the district of St. John,
landowners are Captain Francis d'Arcy Wm. Clough New- Little Ouse, and is on the south bank of that river, 3~ miles
come of Feltwell Hall; William Luddington esq. of Little- north from the Burnt Fen railway station Oh the Ely and
port, Cambridge; James Little Luddington esq. and Henry · Thetford section of the Great Eastern railway, in the South
Tansley Luddington esq. The soil is peat and sand ; sub- Western division of the county, petty sessional division of
soil, cljly and gravel. Chief crops; wheat, beans, oats and Downham Market, the half-hundred o~ Clackclose and Ely
roots. The area is 12 , 042 acres; and the population in I88r union and county court district; the place ~onsists of two
was 92 r. farms, a public-honse and a few cottages. The principal
Parish Clerk, John Rjvett. . landowners are William Luddington esq. of Littleport, Cam-
WALL LETTER l3ux.-Lcttcrs thro'Jgh Downham cleared at bridge; Harold Archer esq. of The Close, Ely ; and :\Iiss
4 p.m. Southery & Littleport are the nearest money Luddington. The area is 625A. 3R. 31P.; rateable value,
order offices ; no collection on sundays £359 ; the population in 1881 was 39·
W .AJ.r, LETTER Box, Brand Creek ; cleared at 4-45 p.m. & Letters through Downham & Mildenhall arrive at 8. The
on sundays at 10 a.m nearest money order & telegraph otlice is Southery
• Galley George, engine driver to .Burnt Theobald ~lorlcy, farmer
Little Ouse. Fen commissioners
Jones Rev. John Evan [curate] Gotobed Thomas, farmer Feltwell Anchor.
Morse Rev. John Frederick Taylor n.A. Osier Wm. wheelwright, Brand creek Feetham James, farmer, & Anchor P.H
Vicarage Peacock William Crabb, farmer Hallux John, beer retailer
PorterAlfd. Wm. wheelwright,.Brand crk
COMMERCIAL. Sallis William, farmer Redmore.
Bell Mary (Mrs.), farmer Stanford Luke, farmer Gillet William Rayner, farm bailiff to
Boyce Jethoro, Snip inn, Brand creek Starling Robert, farmer W, Luddington esq
Creek William, blacksmith~l::!rand creek Taylor Gillett, shopkeeper Mutt Jame1S, beer r-e~ailer
OUTWELL is a village and parish partly in Cambridge- ' of bread, distributed annually on the 6th of January ; the
shire, but principally in Norfolk, the navigable river Nene balance, after making the above deductions, is paid by the
passing through it, dividing tbo counties ; it is 6 miles trustees to the managers of the National and Infant schools.
west from Downham station on the Ely and Lynn section 1· Lynne's charity of 9A. OR. 7P. producing £23, is distributed
of the Great Eastern railway, 6 south-east trom Wisbech, in I in flour to poor persons resident in Outwell (Norfolk). A
the South Western division of the cqunty, hundred and sum of £wo, paid by the Great E<J.Stera Company for :rs
petty sessional division of Clackclose, union and county perches of laml taken from the Isle Side allotments, for the
court district of Wisbech, rural deanery of Fincham, arch- purposes of their tramway from Wisbech to Upwell, has.
deaconry of Norfolk and diocese of Norwich. The steam been re-invested in the purchase of IA. 2R. 15P. of arable
tramway from Wisbech to Upwell, belDnging to the Great land in Upwell. All these charities are controlled by a
Eastern railway Co. has a !!itation here. The church of St. schemCI of the Charity Commissioners, which ~ame :int()
Clement is a building of stone, in the Perpendicular style, force on the 31st January, r88o. Neat"' the church once
consisting of chancel, clerestoried nave, aisles, north porch stood a hermitage, dedicated to St~ Ghrist.opher. Outwell
and a western tower containing a. t:lock and 6 bells : the possesses a fire engine, which is manned by :volunteers and
interior has been repaired at a. cost of £2,200 and a. new supported by voluntary contributions; th,e keys of the
clock with chimes was erected in r887 : the church affords engine house are kept by Mr. William Stafford; Charles
350 sittings. The register dates from about I555· The Watson Townley esq; M.A., J.P. of I<'ulboul'n Manorj Cam-
li\·ing is a. 'rectory, average tithe rent-charge 1:482, net bririge, is lord of the manor, and, with H• H. Allenby, H.
yearly value £410, including 20 acres of glebe, with resi- Dawbarn and Arthur Wellesley Healey esq. of •• The
de nee, in the gift of the Bishop of Norwich and held since Rallies," High Street, Clapham; Surrey S. w, chie.f land-
I8go by the Rev. Arthur Simon Latter Ill. A, of Queen's Col- owners. The soil is loamy; the subsoii, clay, Tha chief
lege, Oxford, rural dean of Fincham, Western division, and crops are wheat, oats and potatoes. The population in r8g1
:r.P. Norfolk. llere are Wesleyan, Free Methodist and Pri- of the portion in Cambridgeshire was· 351 ~ areage, 552;
mitive Methodist chapels. .A, Working Men's Institute was rateable value, £1,352: the portion in Norfolk, population,
erected in r891 at a cost of £250. The charities consist of 882; acreage, 2,512; rateable value, £4,312.
the Town lands and Town Fen lands (now amalgamated) Se:xtort, William Overland. · ·
and Lynne's charity, left in 1816: the Town Fen Lands, or PosT, M. 0. & T. 0., S. B. & Insurance & Annuity Office.
Norfolk Side allotments of 12 acres, are letjn half-acres to -John Edward Brown, Teceiver. r Letters arrive from
the most deserving poorJ at rents of 30s. per half acre~ the Wisbech at 4·45 a.m. & r.4o p.m. ; dispatched at 9·35
Town Lands of nine acres are let upon the samA terms as a. m. & 8 p.m , 1

the Town Fen Lands: the remainder of the town lands con- On 8 Sept. 1883, part of this parish was made contributory
sists of 26A. oR. 5P. producing a gross rental of £69. The to Downham Market School Board, sending one member
income from these lands is disposeQ. of in the following ScHOOLS : - . ,
manner :-£ro to the repair of the fabric of the parish National (mixed), erected in 1854. for 190 children; aver-
ch!Irch; a. sum not exceeding £25 for general parochial age attendance, 137; Joshua Cooper, master '
purposes, which includes repairs to the engine house and Infants', built in :r865, for 100 children, average attend-
fire engine, and a sum sufficient to provide about so stone ance, 59 ; Mrs. Emily Cooper, infants' mistress
PRIVATE RK8IDENTS 1 ' I Latter Rev. Arthur Simon M.A., J.P., Moles Jeremiah
1
.Booth Mr.s [rector & rural dean], Rectory Sharpe Mrs. Charles •
DIRECTORY. J NORFOLK. OVINGTON. 561
COM¥ERCI.A.L. Green James, farmer • Rutter Joseph, boot maker
Alco"ck John Robert, beer retailer Hammond John, carpenter & wheelwght Saiut Robt. Saml. Bridge inn, & farmer
Barrett Walter Wm. grocer & draper Harrison William Taylor, farmer Sharp William, market gardener
Bond Henry, auctioneer, valuer & land Harvey John, farmer Shephard George, fanner
.surveyor, Fel'n cottage Hawkins Matthew, market gardener Shepherd Thomas, saddler
Booth William, farmer Hull Lewis M.R.c.v.s.L. vet. surgeon .Smith David John, blacksmith
Brown John Edward, grocer & draper, Horn But~rfield, farmer Smith Isaac, farmer
Post office Horn Thomas, beer retailer & farmer Smith John Rushby, farmer
Butler John, tailor Jackson James, poultry de!!.ler Smith Joseph, farmer
Chapman Geurge, butcher Jakens Geo. Edward, baker & flour dlr Smith Richard, watch repairer
Chtnery Thomas, fancy repository Kisby James, bill poster Smithee John, Plough l'.H
Clark Elizabeth (Mrs.), shopkeeper Lake Job, butcher & farmer Stafford William, farmer
Coates Harry, farmer May Alfred, Swan inn, & farmer Topp Frederick, Red Lion P.H
Con way & Martin, market gardeners Means Alfred, farmer Trower Josiah, grocer & draper
Coote Thomas & Sons, coal merchants Means Frederick, farmer Trower Hebecca Miriam(Miss),dress ma.
Copsey Barnard, farmer Means Naylor,1farmer Tuck Henry, jun. boot maker
Couisins Swift, farmer Means Niclwlas, carpenter & wheelwght Tuck J ubn, butcher
Cox Charles Pierce, baker Middlcton Henry, farmer Tuck Mary Jane (Mrs.), shopkeeper
Dack Philip, beer retailer Murfitt Charles, horse breaker Vincent Henry, chimney sweeper
Diggle Charles, farmer Overland William, painter &c Walker John, farmer
Do11blenay Henry, farmer Pearson .Tames, Crown P.H Walker William, farmer
Doubleday John, farmer Reeve Rubert Wolsey. auctioneer, Ward ,John, miller (wind)
DoublcdayWlt. thrashing machine ownr valuer, surveyor & house agent Watts Georga, shoe maker
Edwards Charles, farmer 0
Robb .Ed ward, carpenter & wheel 'ivright Wenn Charles, farmer ·
Golding John, bricklayer Robb John, rope & twine ma. & shopkpr Working Men's Institute (:Oavid John
Goodlee William, farmer Robb Samuel, sen. farmer Smith, sec)
Uoss William, peer retailer Russell James, farmer Wright Robert Thomas, saddler
Gray J oseph, farmer & thrashing . Rutter Gcqnan, butcher & shopkeeper Yallup William & Sharman, butchers
machine owner

' •
OVERSTRAND is a parish on the coast, 2 miles south- stands within this parish, in which also are the links of the-
east from Cromer stations on the Great Eastern and Eastern . Royal Cromer Golf Club. The village is much frequented
and Midlands railways arid 8 from North 'Walsham, in the in the summer as a seaside resort and bathing place; a large
Northern division of the county, North Erpingham hundred number of new houses have recently been built (1892), many
and petty sesswnal division, Erpingham union, county· of which are let as lodging houses. Lord Suffield K.C.B.,..
1

court district of Holt, rural deanery of Repps, archdeaconry P.c. is lord of the manor of Gimingbam Lancaster, and chief
of Nor folk and diocese of' Norwich. This parish is bounded landowner. The soil is a light heath; subsoil, gravel and
on the south by a range of hills and on the north by the sea, brick earth. The chief crops are wheat, turnips, barley and
and a part of it is known as "Beck Hythe." The old grass. The area is 438 acres of land i rateable value.
church was swallowed up by the sea in the reign of Richard £2,432; the population in r8gr was 443·
II. ~nd a new church, dedicated to St. :Martin, was there- Parish Clerk, John Green.
upon erected, but this is also now in ruins : Christ Church, PosT, M. 0. & T. 0., S. B. & .Annuity Office.-George-
erected and consecrated in r867, is an edifice of cut flint and Beck et, sub-postmaster. Letters arrive through Cromer
stone, in the Early English style, consistng of chancel, nave, at 8.30 a.m. & 12.30 p.m. ; dispatched at• 10.15 a.m. &.
north aisle, sbutb porch and a turret containing one bell : 6.15 p. tn. ; office open only for telegrams on Sundays from
there are 200 sittings. The register dates from the year 8 ti1l ro a.m
1558.' The living is a. rectory, average tithe rent-charge, WALL BoxEs : - ·
£6o, net yearly value £38, with r acre of glebe and resi- Near the church, cleared at ro.r5 a.m. & 6.15 p.m
dence, in the gift of John Henry Gurney esq ..1. P. of Kes- Suffield Park, cleared at 10.45 a.m. & 6.40 p. m -
wick Hall, and held since l871 by the Rev. Forster Geo. Belfry School (mixed), built by the late Miss Gurney, in
Simpson B.A. of St. Edmund Hall, Oxford, who is also r83o, for' 8o children~· average attendance, 66 ; th6
rector of Sidestrand. A sum of £7 yearly, derived from the school was endowed by Miss Gurney & tlM late Hudson-
poor's land, is distribnted in fuel. Crab, long-shore herring Gurney esq. with nearly £roo yearly; Matthew Lam-
and other fishmg are carried on. The Cromer lighthouse bert, master
[Names marked tbus • receive their letters Rogers Mrs England William, baker & confectioner,
direct from Cromer.] *Hust Benjamin, The Lodge refreshment rooms & furnished
J PRIVATE RESIDENTS.
'
Sedger George ~partments .
BarretJt Rev. George Slatyer [Cong] Simpson Rev.ForsterGeo. B.A. Rectory Farrow Rose (Mrs. ) 1 lodging house
Beverley Michael M.D. Overstrand cot Simpson Miss Green Ambrose & John, ponies & traps
*Broadhurst Henry J.P. Trent cot- *Smith Harry on hire, Cherry cottage
tage; & 4 Elm gardens, Brook green 'faylor Frederick Oddin Green John, carpenter
w; & ;19 Buckingham street w c & *Winter H. Gordon M.A. Suffield Park Green William, boot & shoe maker
Reform & .National Liberal clubs, school Jermy Reuben, lodging house
London s w Larwood John, boot & shoe maker
~OMMERCIA!.,
Eurtoo Samuel Herbert M.B • Matthews John, bricklayer.& road sur.,
*Clark Miss, 3 Suffield park *Beck Philip Daniel, lodging house, 5 vcyor (furnished apartments witi)
Dowson Frank Withers, Branksome Sutlield park. t J goOO- sea view)
Farquharson Rev. Arthur Theodore Becket George, grocer, draper & sub- Middleton Richard, rope maker& grocel'"
M.A. [rector of Gissing] , postma;;;ter Paul Herbert, lodging houso
*Fearn G€0rge, :;.z Suffield park · Benm 'William, lodging house Payne Herbert William; lodging house.
Flower Cyril M.F; The Cottage~ & Bowden Edward, lodging honse Payne Robert Henry, lodging house
Surl"ey house, 7 Marble arch w & Callow Ceeil, farmer, Hall farm I Reynolds Lawrence, lodging house
Reform, Brooks' & National Liber<~.l Church Herbert, lodging house *Riches George, brick & tile manufctr
clubs, London s w Church Thomas William, lodging ho Riseborough James, lodging house
Hotblack George *Clark IIannah (Miss), ladies' school, Roberts Ernest, lodging house
*Kent Alfred, 6 Suffield park , 3 tluffield park Savory Julm Howes, lodging houses"
Lincoln John Codling John, White Horse inn East lodge & Cliff cottage .,
Meadows Rev. Robert Ragland M.A. Covell Solomon, lodging house Sea.~o Edward, plumber & glazier
[officiating minister] Craske Thomas, carter ' *Winter H. Gordon M.A. preparatory
Millard Miss Dennis Edmund, lodging houm ' school for the public schools, Suffield
Parr Edwin Dennis- George, lodging house Park school
OVINGTON is a parish and village 1~ miles north-east nave and a western tower containing I be'lL there is a fine
from Watton station on tl.te Bury, 'I;hetford and Swaii- Norman door, and in the chancel is a piscina: there are
ham section of the Great Eastern railway, 8 south-east some traces remaining of the old dedication crosses, in the
from Swaffham and I I north-west from Attleborough, shape of square patches of plaster on the outec walls: the
in the South Western division of the county, hundred, petty church was repaired and re-seated in 1867 and affords xoo-
.sessional division and union of Wayla.nd, county court dis- sittings. The register dates from the year 1654. The
'trict of Attleborough and Watton, rural deanery of Breccles living is a rectory, average tithe rent-charge £312, gross
and archdeaconry and diocese of Norwich. The church of yearly value £304, net £246, including 22 acres of glebe.
St . .John the Evangelist is a small building of rubble stone, in the gift of Cambridge University, and held since·y883 by
mainly in the Decorated style, and consists of chancel and the Rev. Alexander Thomas Crisford M.A. of T:rinity
568 OVINGTON. NORFOLK. [ KELLY'S

College, Cambridge, rural dean of Breccles and Thetford, barley and roots. The parish contains 1,497 rateable acres;
and J.P. Norfolk. The Primitive Methodists have a place of rateable value, £1,935; the population in 1891 was 280.
worship here. The fuel allotment of 22 acres is let for Sexton, James Page.
£39 IOS. yearly. The manor of Ovington Bozomes belongs LETTER Box cleared at 6.40 p.m. week days, sundays 12
to the Umversity of Cambridge, and Capt. Sir Charles noon. Letters received through Thetford, via Watton,
Harvey Harvey bart. J.P. of Rainthorpe Hall, is lord uf which is the nearest money order & telegraph office,
Woodhouse manor. The principal landowners are Sir C. arrive at 7.40 a.m ·
Harvey Harvey hart. King's College, Cambridge, the Uni- National School (mixed), erected in 1870 for 70 children;
versity of Cambridge, and Mr. George Wright Denny. The average attendance, 56; Miss Elizabeth Emma Brooke,
soil is heavy; subsoil, clay. The chief crops are wheat, mistress
Crisford Rev. Alexander Thomas M.A. 1 ! Hunt James, farm bailiff to Mr. H. J. Stubbins Denny, farmer
J.P. [rector & rural dean], Rectory I W. Hunter, Kingrow[lettersthrough Stubbins George, blacksmith
Wright William I ShipdhamJ Sturman James, Cock P.H
coMMERCIAL. IKemp Fredk. Wm.miller(wind& steam) Warman John, farmer, Wood farm
Crisford William Alexander Pitts,farmr : Kemp
' .
Richard, farmer White William, farmer
Denny Geo. Wright,farmer & landowner Page Thomas, farmer & assist. overseer Womack Frederick Thomas, farmer,
Fickling Barnabas, farmer Stibbon John, Crown P.H College farm
OXBOROUGH is a parish, seated on the banks of a has 100 sittings: there is a resident priest. The loc:~.l
small stream running into the navigable Wissey, T~ miles charities amount to £130, the principal part of which is
Bouth·west from Swaffham station and 3~ east from Stoke derived from 86 acres, the estate of Thomas Hewar, who in
Ferry terminal station, on the Downham Market and Stoke 1619 left it in trust, two-thirds for the relief of poor
Ferry branch of the Great Eastern railway, in the South parishioners, and one-third for the repairs of the church and
Western division of the county, South Greenhoe hundred the maintenance of the school. In 1252 a market and fair
a.nd petty sessional division, Swaffham union and county were granted: the fair, now a pleasure fair, is still held on
court district, rural deanery of Cranwich south division, Easter Tuesday. Oxborough Hall, a castellated mansion of
arcbdeaconry of Norfolk and diocese of Norwich. Oxburgh the 15th century, entirely surrounded by a moat filled with
was a Roman station, and is also mentioned in the Domes- water, contains a few good paintings and some curious
day survey. The church of St. John the Evangelist is a tapestry, and is the seat of Sir Henry George Paston-
large building of stone in the Gothic style, consisting of Bedingfeld bart. D.L., J.P. who is lord of the manor and
chancel, nave, aisles, north and south porches, and an chief landowner. The soil is loam and clay, with a portion
embattled western tower with a remarkably lofty spire of fen land ; subsoil, chalk and clay. The chief crops are
rebuilt in 1877 (the previous one having been struck by wheat, barley and turnips. The area is 2,518 acres; rate-
lightning), and containing a clock and 6 bells: in the church able value, £2,163; the population in x8gr was 222.
is an altar-tomb under a marble Corinthian canopy, to Sir Sexton, Robert Reeve.
Henry Bedingfeld, knight-marshal and constable of the PosT OFFICE.-Mrs. Matilda Stacy, sub-postmistress. Let-
Tower under Queen Mary, ob. 1583: there are 225 sittings. ters through Stoke Ferry S.O. : arrive 7.30 a.m. dis-
The register dates from the year 1538. The living is a patched at 5.25 p.m. No collection on sunday. Stoke
rectory, with the vicarage of Foulden annexed, average Ferry is the nearest money order & telegraph office
tithe rent-charge £500, joint net yearly value £327, includ- SCHOOLS:-
ing 52 acres of glebe and residence, in the gift of Caius Free (boys & girls), erected in 1847, from Hewar's charity,
College, Cambridge, and held since 1885 by the Rev. for 50 children; average attendance, 30; Mrs. Elizabeth
William Henry Brown M.A. formerly fellow of that college. Marriott, mistress
The Catholic chapel of Our Lady and St. Margaret, built in Catholic (mixed), erected in r86o for So children; average
1835, is an edifice of rubble, consisting of nave only, and 1 attendance, 35; Miss Lucy Woods, mistress
Paston-Bedingfeld Sir llenry Geo. bart. llonnett Thomas, blacksmith Mitchell John Banham, farmer, 'Vhite
D.L., .r.P. Oxborough hall Cobbin Louisa (Miss), grocer House farm
Bodley Rev. William Hamilton M.A. Galloway Isaac, farm steward to Sir Stacy Matilda (Mrs.), dress maker,
[Catholic] Henry G. Paston-Bedingfeld bart Post office
Brown Rev. Wm. Henry M.A. Rectory Green Gates, farmer & cattle dealer Vine Robcrt, coal dealer
Bennett George, farmer Spooner William, gamekeeper White John, lledingfeld Arms P.H
OXNEAD is a parish pleasantly situated on the north The Pastons of Oxnead, who took their name from Paston
bank of the navigable river Bure, over which there is a in this county, were a most ancient Norfolk family. Sir
bridg-e of one arch, r mile north from Buxton station, on Robert Paston bart. of Paston, was created by Charles II.
the East Norfolk branch of the Great Eastern railway, IO (r9 Aug. r673), baron Paston, of Paston, and viscount
north from Norwich, and 3 south-east from Aylsham, in Yarmouth, and subsequently (30 July, 1679) Earl of Yar-
the Northern division of the county, South Erpingham bun- mouth; but the baronetcy as well as all the superior
dred and petty sessional division, Aylsham union and county honours became extinct in 1732, on the death of William,
court district, rural deanery of Ingworth and archdcaconry 2nd earl.
and diocese of Norwich. 'I' be church of St. Michael, situ- Oxnead Hall, erected by Clement Paston mentioned
ated in a retired spot, and almost entirely hidden By a above, and now occupied by Robert Charles Rising esq. is
thick surrounding of forest trees, is a small but ancient but a part of the ancient and noble mansion which formerly
building of flint in the Early English and Decorated styles, stood here, and which included a banqueting hall built for
consisting of chancel and nave under a single roof, north the entertainment of Charles II. and containing, it is said,
and south porches, and an embattled western tower con- the earliest sash windows known in England ; the existing
taining one bell ; the chancel has a stepped gable, and the portion is of red brick with stone dressings, in the pictur-
soutb purch is apparently of the time of Queen Anne: in esque Domestic style of the Tudor period, with mullioned
the church is a marble tomb, with alabaster effigy to windows, gabled porches, and slender octagonal capped
Clement Paston (ob. 1599), a naval commander of the reign turrets at the angles; it was the property and residence of
of Henry VIII. and subsequent monarchs, who distinguished the Earl of Yarmouth, lord lieutenant of Norfolk, in the
himself in an engagement with the French by capturing reign of Charles II. and was afterwards sold to Lord Anson,
their admiral, Baron de St. lllancheare, whom he detained and purchased by the late Sir Edward Stracey bart. in
a prisoner at Caistor until ransomed by 7,000 crowns; there r837, and is now the property of Sir Edward Paulet Stracey
is also a tomb to Lady Paston (nee Lindsay) : the corn- hart. of Rackheath Park in this county, who is lord of the
munion plate, all of silver-gilt, is remarkably large and manor and sole landowner: in the park are some ruins,
. valuable, resembling in size and shape the plate of Norwich consisting of three arched bays with a frieze above, in the
cathedral, and consists of two large flagons, a large offering Renaissance style. The soil is mixed; subsoil, clay and
dish, chalice, and paten, varying in date by the hall marks graveL The chief crops are wheat, roots, barley and hay.
from 1637-8 to 1687-8: the church was restored in 1891 at The area is 644 acres of fertile land; rateable value, £x,ms;
a cost of £go and affords over 100 sittings. The register the population in 18gr was 83.
dates from the year 1583. The living is a rectory, annexed Parish Clerk, Gcorge Spink.
to the vicarage of Buxton, average tithe rent-charge- Letters through Norwich arrive at 8.30 a. m. & 3 p.m.;
Buxton £98, Oxnead £137, joint net yearly value £340, in dispatched 12 a.m. & 4 p.m. Post office at Brampton.
the gift of Sir Edward Paulet Stracey hart. and held since Buxton is the nearest money order & telegraph office
18go by the Rev. Alured Elliot Black M.A. of Trinity The children of this place attend the schools at Brampton
College, Cambridge, who resides at Buxton. & Buxton
Browne Charles Edward, farmer & Bircham George, fanner RisingRobertChas.farmer,Oxnead hall
miller (water), North farm
OX WICK and PATTESLEY form a parish3~
miles
eouth from Fakenham Town station and 3 east from Rayn-
I ham Park station, both on the Eastern and Midland rail_
way, and 3! from Fakenham station and 3! south-west
DIRECTORY.] NORFOLK. PASTON. 569
from Ryburgh station, both on the Derebam and Wells are the principal landowners. The soil is chiefly a sti1I
section of the Great Eastern railway, in the Mid division of loam; subsoil, clay. The land is cultivated on the usual
the county, Launditch hundred, union and petty sessional fourcourse shift. The area is r,039 acres; rateable value,
division of Mitford and Launditch, county court district of with Pattesley, £1,243; the population in 1891 was 86.
East Dereham, rural deanery of North Brisley and Toftrees, Parish Clerk, Richard Dunger.
and archdeaconry and diocese of Norwich. The church of Letters are received through Fakenham. Wb1ssonsett is
All Saints is an ancient building of flint, in the Gothic style, I the nearest money order office & Fakenham is the nearest
consisting of chancel, nave, south porch, and a turret con- telegraph office
1
I
taining I bell: there are 86 sittings. The register dates The children of the parish attend the school at Colkirk
from the year 1538: there it also a list of rectors of the Pa ttesley (or P ASLEY) is a parish 3~ miles south from
parish from the year rgr8. The living is a rectory, con- Fakennam. The church of St. John the Baptist has long
solidated in r883 with Colkirk, average tithe rent-charge disappeared, but fragments of its walls may be seen at the
£536, joint net yearly value £432, including 81 acres of west end of the farmhouse in the occupation of Mr. George
glebe, in the gift of and held by the Rev. Walter Marsham Corke. The living is a rectory annexed to the vicarage of
Hoare M.A. of Exeter College, Oxford, rural dean of North Mattishall.
Brisley with Toftrees, who resides at Colkirk. The poor's Letters received through Fakenham. Whissonett is the
land of 5 acres produces £8 yearly. The Marquess Towns- nearest money order office. l''akenham is the nearest
bend, who is lord of the manor, George Bird, sen. esq. of telegraph office
Beckham Hall, and George Dixon esq. of Pudding Norton, The children of this place attend the school at Whissonsett
Corke George, farmer, Pattesley I Russell John, farmer 1 Smith Fredk.Edgar,farmer,Oxwick hall
PAI.LING is a small fishing village and parish on the lord of the manor and George Cubitt esq. is the principal
sea-coast, 4 miles north-east from Stalham station on the landower. 'l'he soil is good mixed; subsoil, clay. The
Eastern and Midlands railway, 10 east from Worstead station chief crops are wheat, oats and barley. The area is 830
on the North Walsham branch of the Great Eastern rail- acres of land and 75 of water; rateable value, £r,452 ; the
way, 18 north-east from Norwich, 12 east-by-south from population in 18gr was 395·
North Walsham, in the Eastern division of the county, Tun- Parish Clerk, John Miles.
stead and Happing petty sessional division, Happing bun- PosT OFFICE.-.Alfred Feather, receiver. Letters through
dred, Smallburgh union, North Walsham county court Stalham S.O. arrive at 9 a.m.; dispatched 1.45 p.m.
district, rural deanery of Waxham, Happing division, arch- There is no.sunday post. The nearest money order office
deaconry of Norfolk and diocese of Norwich. The church is at Hickling & telegraph office at Stalham
of St. Margaret is a small but ancient building of flint and
stone, consisting of chancel, nave, south porch and a low WALL LETTER Box cleared at 1.35 p.m
embattled western tower containing one bell: there are 200 Lifeboat Station {2 boats), Edward French, sec
sittings. The register dates from the year r6r6. The Coast Guard Station, William Larman, chief officer
living is a discharged vicarage, annexed to the rectory of A School Board of 5 members, formed I I March, 1875,
Waxham, average tithe rent-charge £g 23 , joint net yearly for the district of Palling & Waxbam; W. H. Cooke, Stal-
value £2 7 1, including 21 acres of glebe or augmentation ham, clerk to the board & attendance officer
land, with residence, and held since 1 341 by the Rev. Henry Board School (mixed), built in 1877, for qo children;
Ready B. A. of St. John's College, Cambridge, who resides at average attendance, 91; Edwin Weaver, master; Mrs.
Hickling. Here is a Primitive Methodist chapel, erected in Lily Weaver, assistant mistress
186o. The fuel allotment of 14 acres produces £26 yearly. CARRIERS TO YARMOUTH.-Albert Crowe, sat. to 'George &
Jacob Henry Tillett esq. of The Shrubberies, Norwich, is Dragon,' 6.30 a.m. returning at 8 p.m
French Edward Crowe Albert, carrier Mileham William, brick maker
Godfrey Rev. Clarence Polwhele M.A. Cubitt George, farmer & landowner, Morley Robert, miller (wind)
[curate] The Hall Pestell Waiter, fish curer
Johnson Randall Deary Thomas, butcher & shopkeeper Plummer Robert, farmer
COMMERCIAL. Ellis Ellen (Mrs.), blacksmith Postle Robert, carpeiJter
Barber Hudson, farmer Feather Alfred, grocer, Post office Riches James, supt. to commissioners
Beavers George, farmer Grice James. blacksmith of sewers for sea banks
Bishop Ben jam in, carpenter Grapes Simo.n, farmer I
Thompson William,farmer & landowner
Bishop Thomas, beer retailer Hales Richard, grocer & carpenter Wilkins Charles, farmer
Broom Samuel, Cock P.H Jones John, farmer Woodrow William, farmer
Brown John, boot maker J ones Richard, grocer
PANXWORTH is a parish and village, 4~ miles north: 57 acres of glebe and residence, in the gift of .Albemarle
from Brundall, 3 north from Lingwood station on the Nor- Cator esq. of Woodbastwick Hall, and held since 1848 by the
wich and Yarmouth section of the Great Eastern railway, Rev. Henry Peter Dunster M.A. of Hertford College, Oxford,
and 8 north-east from Norwich, in the Eastern division of . who resides at Woodbastwick. There is a Primitive Method-
the county, Blofield and Walsham petty sessional division, ist chapel.
! Miss J. Kerrison, of Ranworth Hall, who is
Walsham hundred, Blofield union, Norwich county court lady of the manor, and Henry Randal Burroughes esq. J.P.
district, rural deanery of Blofield and archdeaconry and of the Hall, Burlingham St. Peter, are the chief landowners.
diocese of Norwich; for civil purposes it is annexed to Ran- I The soil is a rich loam ; subsoil, marl. The chief crops are
worth. For upwards of 200 years previous to 1847 there wheat, barley and oats. The area is, with Ran worth, 2,438
was no church in the parish, a ruined tower alone marking the acres; combined rateable value, £2,797; the population in
spot where the old church had once stood; the tower was, 1891 was-Ranworth 291, l'anxworth 124.
however, repaired in 18471 and a. nave added, at the expense Sexton, Aaron Edward Ward.
of the late Mrs. H. W. Burroughes, and the church now con-
sists of nave, south porch and an embattled western tower Letters through Norwich arrive at 7 a. m. A WALL LETTER
containing one bell: there are sittings for 120 persons, no Box is cleared at 3·55 p.m. ; no sunday collection. South
being free. The register dates from the year 1847 . The Walsham is the nearest money order office & Woodbast-
living is a rectory, consolidated with the vicarage of Wood- wick is the nearest telegraph office
bastwick, average tithe rent-charge - Panxworth £108, The children of this parish attend the public elementary
Woodbastwick £no, joint net yearly value £302, including school at Ran worth
Bugg James, farm bailiff to G. W. D. Raithby Harriet (Mrs.), Red Lion inn WalkerW. D. & A. E. maltsters; offices,
Palmer-Kerrison esq Southgate Robert Albert, horse breaker Great Yarmouth & Bungay
Chapman James, jun. miller (steam) Walker David, farmer, Ilall farm Ward Aaron Edwd. shopkpr. & sexton
PAS TON is a parish on the sea-shore, 4 miles north-east the sculptor's diary:-" In 1629 I made a tomb for my lady
from North Walsham station on the Great Eastern and Paston, and sat it up at Paston, and was very extraor-
Eastern and Midlands railways and 9 south-east from dinarily entertained, and pay'd for it £340: "here also are in-
Cromer, in the Eastern division of the county, Tunstead and terred Sir Edmund Paston knt. ob. 1632; Clement Paston
Ilapping petty .sess~onal division, hundred of Tunstead, and Beatrice (de Somerton) b1s wife; William Pas ton,
Smallburgh union, North Walsham county court district, their son, justice of the Court of Common Pleas from 15
rural deanery of Waxham, Tunstead division, archdeaconry Oct. 1429, died in London 14 Aug. 11144• and lies buried
of Norfolk and diocese of Norwich. The church of St. Mar- in Norwich cathedral: the church has been restored: the
garet, situated on rising ground, is a building of stone, in the stained east window is a memorial to the late John Mack
Early Decorated style, consisting of chancel, south porch esq. of Paston Hall and WM erected in 1891 by his children:
and an embattled western tower containing 5 bells: in the an organ was placed in the church in 1890 at a cost of £x5o:
church is a fine monument, with recumbent effigy, by the church affords r8o sittings. The register dates from the
Nathaniel Stone, to Catherine (Knevet), wife of Sir Edmund year 1536. The living is a vicarage, average tithe rent-
Paston knt. of Paston, ob. 1628; the following appears in charge £1o6, gross yearly value £121, with 4 acres of glebe,
1.570 .P.ASTONL. NORFOLK. [KELLY's

in the gift of John Mack esq. and held since rB92 by the Rev. Henry VI. Edward IV. Richard III. and Henry VII. origin-
William North Andrews M.A. of Trinity College, Cambridge. ally published by Sir John Fenn in 1787-89, were reprinted
Here is a Primitive Methodist chapel. Sir W. Paston's by Charles Knight in r84o, and re-edited by Mr. James
charity of £r3 yearly is for clothing and fuel. John Mack Gairdner for the Arber series in 1872-5. The soil is mixed;
esq. of Pastun Hall, who is lord of the manor, and Thomas subsoil, sand and gravel. The chief crops are wheat, oats and
Purdy esq. are the principal landowners. The family of barley. The area is 1,318 acres of land; rateable value,
Paston, who took their name from this place, were descended £,2,143 ; the population in 1891 was 278.
from Wolstan, a knight who came from France with Henry Parish Clerk, William Hewitt.
I. and received a grant of lands here. Sir William Paston, Letters tht·ougb North Walsham arrive at 9.30 a. m. LET-
of Paston and Oxnead, was created a baronet, 8 June, 1642, TER Box cleared at 4.25 p.m. Mundesley is the nearest
and his son, Sir Robert, was raised to the peerage, 19 Aug. money order & telegraph office; there is no sunday post
1673, as Baron Paston, of Paston, and Viscount Yarmouth, A School Board of 5 members was formed compulsorily 24
and was advanced as Earl of Yarmouth, 30 Jnly, 1679, but May, 1875, for the united district of Paston & Eding-
all these honours became extinct on the death of Sir William, thorpe; J. S. Empson, North Walsham, clerk to the
second earl, in 1732. The famous collection of letters board; Robert La.ndymore, attendance officer. The
written by or to members of this family during the reigns of school is at Edingthorpe .
.AndrewsRev. William North M.A. [vicarJ Barcham Louisa (Mrs.), farmer Gray George, carpenter
Dixon Mrs Dixon James,Wherry inn, Austin bridge Hennessey John, grocer & draper
Mack John, Paston ball Fuller Adam George, farmer Purdy Thomas, farmer & landowner,
Purdy Thomas > Gray Elizabeth (Mrs.), grocer & draper Green farm • · ·
Barcham Thomas Edward 1\f.R.c.v.s. Gaze William, miller (wind & steam) Rudrum Martha(Mrs.),farmer & carter
veterinary surgeon & farmer, Stow bill

P ATTESLEY, see OXWICK.

:PENSTHORPE is a parish on the Wensum, 2 miles Cambridge, who resides at Lattiford House, Wincanton,
south-east from Fakenham stations on the Great Eastern and Somerset. Severai'Roman nrn~ and other relics have been
Eastern and Midland railways, in theN ortb Western division dug up here. ·Arthur Henry Stewart Elwes esq. ti.P. of
of the county, Gallow hpndred and petty sessional division, Congham House, Lynn, is lord of the mahor and sole land-
Walsingham union and county court,district,. rural deanery owner. The soil is mixed; subsoil, gravel and clay~ the land
of Burnham, arcbdeaconry of .Norfolk and diocese of Nor- is cultivated on the usual four-course shift. 'The ll.rea is 753
wich. The church hp,s ~ong since fallen into ruins, and the acres; rateable value, £8o2 ; the population in I8gr was 47· ·
1
remains now form a part of some farm buildings. The Letters through Fakenham, the nearest money ' order &tele-'
living is a sinecure rectory, average tithe rent-charge £r2o, graph office, arrive at 7.30 a. m.; mail cart pas~es at 5 p.m
net yearly value £,x5b, in the gift of trustees, and held since •

1:869 by the ~ev. Samuel pendy M.A. of Trinity College, The. children of this place attend the school at Fll.kenbam

Hamond Washington, farmer, Pensthorpe house 1, r
• '
FENTNEY is a village and scattered parish with a of the Holy Trinity and SS. Mary the Virgi~;~ and Mdrr.
station in the parish called Narborough on the Lynn and Magdalcne, founded by R. de Vaux, for cariollS of the order
Dereham section of the Great Eastern railway ; the village of St. Augustine; the fine gateway is still standing and be-
stands on the navfgable river Nar, and is 6~ miles north- tween it and the church is the shaft of an elegant waysid6
west-by-north from Swaffbam and 8~ south-east-by-east cross. In 1468 the Premonstratensian convent· of Worme-'
from Lynn, is in the North Western diviswn of the county, gay was annexed to this priory, the revenues of which at iti
hundred, petty sessional division and union of Freebridge dissolution were 'estimated at £170. Captain Tb~keray Hr
Lynn, county court district of Lynn, rural deanery of Lynn lord of the manor of Ashwood and owner of aboo:t ohe-
Freebridge and arcbdeaconry and diocese of Norwich. The fourth of the land ; there are no other large properties, but
Ketlam brook, rising irt Walton Wood, flows through this the estates of Anthony Hamond esq. D.L., J.P. M West Acre,
"Parish and falls into the Nar. The church of St. Mary and of Williaru Henry Household esq. of West Bilney Hall,
Magdalen is an ancient structure, mostly of flint, with run into this parish: many of the smaller properties are
later additions of stone in \rarious styles, and was enlarged copyhold, fine certain : nearly all the land is tithe free, The
from a small Norman chapel with an apse: it now consists soil is chiefly sand and gravel, but there is some hea~y lanB,
of chancel, nave, south porch and an embattled western The fonr-conrse system of farming 11revails; the drairlage
tower, containing one bell: there are sedilia, piscina and an and water supply are good. Area, 2,293 acres; rateable
aumbry, and the church affords x8o sittings. The register value, £2,466; the population in x8gx was 493·
<;l.ates from the :year. J73o. The living is a vicarage, gross l',.,rish Clerk, J ames Haverson.
yearly value £48, including 13 acres of glebe, with resi- PosT DFFICE.-Thomas Turner Waller, :receiver. Letters
dence, in the gift of the Rev. Edward Francis Edwards arrive from Swaffham at 8 a. m.; dispatched at 5.15 p.m.;
Hankinson M.A. of Bircham Newton, and held since r8go by no delivery on sundays. The nearest money order & tele-
the Rev. Jamcs George, of St. Bees, who is also vicar of graph office is at Narborougb
"Test Bilney. The Wesleyan chapel was built in r884, and
there is a small General Baptist chapel. The Town estate, National School (mixed), West Bilney, about midway be-
of so acres (including the Fuel allotment, adjoining the tween the churches, for 105 children ; average attend-
station), and other charities, producing about £75 yearly, ance, go ; Martin Lutber Martin, master;' Miss Susan
are under the management of the vicar and churchwardens Duncombe, mistress
and two trustees appointed by the Charity Commissioners. Railway Station (Narborough),Jas. C. Smith, station master
About 2 miles west of the church formerly stood the priory CARRIER TO LY~N.-William Hunter, tues. & sat r
.,
Batterbam James · ' \ Curry George, wheelwright Sare John, grocer
Coulton John James, Little Ketlam Hammond Rich11rd, blacksm1tb Smith Jeremiah, King William the
George Rev. James, Vicarage Haverson James, parish clerk Fourth P.H
Grummett Mrs Ilowlett Eli7,abeth (Mrs.), farmer, Storey William, Pentney Mill J.>.ll
"Marriott John Lewis,Narborough house Lower Foldgate farm fl Waller Thomas Turner,butchel' &shop-

COMMERCIAL. Hunter "William, farmer & carrier _ . keeper, Post office •


J,llanchflowe~ Wi,lliam. Th~ Crew.n & Paul Thomas, farmer, Ashwood Lodge · Watkins John, coal dealel" & farmer
Thistle P.H . & Abbey farms , 1

Wilson William, farmer, Church farr:n


Burton Charles, farm bailiff to John Riches Jeremiah, Rising Sun P.H Withers Thomas, farrier
Stratton esq Rodwell Robert, New inn Young Robert (Mrs.), farmer & farrier
NORTH PICKENHAM is a parish and village 1 in a ship; the east window is stained and there are two others:
valley, 3~ miles south-east from Swaffham and about r! the chancel retains a single pii!Cina : the pulpit is of oak,
west from Holme Hale station on the Bury, Tbetford and handsomely carved: there are 180 sittings. The register
Swaffham section of the Great Eastern railway, in the South dates from the year 1678. The living is a rectory, consoli-
Westerndivision of thecounty, Swaffbam union and county dated with that of Houghton-on-the-Hill, average tithe
court district, South Greenhoe hundred and petty sessional rent-charge £,38o, joint net yearly value £430, including
division, rural deanery of Crauwich north division, arch- 110 acres of glebe, in the gift of E. Champion esq. and held
deaconry of Norfolk and diocese of Norwich. The church of since r8gr by the Rev. Francis Beresford Champion B . .A.. of
St . .Andrew is a building of flint and stone, in the Decorated Jesus College, Cambridge. There was formerly a hermit-
style, consisting of chancel, north transept, nave~ .south age here, with a chapel dedicated to St. Paul. There is a
aisle, sonth porch and an embattled western tower contain- Primitive .Methodist chapel. The fuel allotment of 10 acres
ing a clock and one bell: the nave, aisle and chancel were produces £13 ss. net yearly. In the parish are two ancient
rebuilt in 1863 ~ the mosaic reredos is of Italian worltmau- barrows. Colonel Charles Mundy Applewhaite J.P. of South
DIRECTORY.] NORFOLK. GREAT PLUMSTEAD. 571
'Pickenham, is lord of ther martor and the principal land- Box cleared at 5·55 p.m.; on sundays at 10.20 a.m.
uwner. The soil is light loam; subsoil chalk. The chief Swaffham is the nearest money order & telegraph office
crops are wheat, barley and turnips. The area is r,sgo National School (mixed), erected in 1855, for IOO children;
acres; rateable value, £1,491 ; the population in 1891 was average attendance, so; Mrs. E. H. Blythe, mistress.
238. I The school is the property of Mrs. Wigston, of Thetford,
Parish Clerk, Thomas Neave. daughter of the late rector, to whom a rent of £2o
Letters from Swaffham by foot post arrive at 1 a.rn. WALL yearly is paid '
Champion Rev. Fran.cis Beresford B.A. Griffin Charles ~dward, farmer, The Rallison William, beer retailer
[rector], The Rectory Manor farm Tolman Wm. Henry, farmer & steam
Griffin Charles Edward Lindsey Edward Thomas G. farmer thrashing machine propr.Meadow fm
Lindsey Edward Thomas G Neave John, carpenter Withers Robert, farmer, Glebe farm
COMMERCIAL. Neave Thomas, parish clerk Woods Herbert Frederick, carpenter &
Barratt Edward, vermin killer Payne James, blacksmith wheelwright
Bowers George, shopkeeper Porter William, shopkeeper Woods William,Blue LionP.H. & farmer
SOUTH PICKENHAM is a parish, about 4 miles dence, in the gift of Colonel Charles Mundy Applewbaite
south-south-east from Swaffham station on the Great J.P. anfi held since r883 by the Rev. Bircham Houchen M.A.
Eastern railway and 3 south-west from Holme Hale station, of Sidney Sussex College, Cambridge, surrog-ate and J. P.
in the South Westel'n division of the county, South Green- Norfolk. Pickenham Hall, a handsome mansion, beautifully
hoe hundred and petty sessional division, Swaffham union situated in an extensive park, is the residence of Colonel
and county court district, rural deanery of Cranwich north Charles Mundy Applewhaite J.P. the lord of the manor and
division, archdeaconry of Norfolk and diocese of Norwich. sole landowner. The soil is sandy and light loam; subsoil,
The church of All Saints is a small building of stpne, in chalk. The chief ~raps are wheat, barley and pasture. The
the Early English style, consisting of chancel, nave, north area is r,83o acres; rateable value, £r,JI8; the population
porch and a round embattled western tower containing one in 1891 was 16g.
bell : there are several monuments to the Chute family, Parish Clerk, Robert Richardson.
dating from '1:140 to 1827, and memorial windows to E. T. .
Applewhaite esq. d. '1:8 71 , and to Mrs. Hay, d. I88r: 'the Letters from Swaffham by foot post arrive about .S a. m.
interior of the church was restored in I87o, and has 112 WALL Box cleared at 4·55 p.m.; sunday, g.go a.m.
sittings. The register dates from the year r6 93 . The Swaffham is the nearest money order & telegraph office
living is a rectory, average tithe rent-charge £2?-7, net Parochial School (mixed), erected in r875, for 40 children 1
yearly value £t83, including 53 acres of glebe, with resi- average attendance, 23; Mrs. Sara.h Hunter, mistress
Applewhaite Hanson, Pickenham hall Applewhaite Col. Charles Mundy J.P. Carston James, shopkeeper
liouchen Rev. Bircham M. A.. ;J.P. Pickenham hall · · Hubbard John, gamekeeper ,
[rector, surrogate, &: chaplain to the Barrell James, land stew;J.rd to Col. RichardsonRt. blacksmith &parish clerk,
SwaffhamUnion workhouse],Rectory Charles Mundy Applewhaite Tolman Wm.farmer,Watton Road farm
PLUMSTEAD (by IIOLT) is a parish about 4 miles caster, and held since T883 by the Rev. Herbert Wynell-
south-east from Halt station, 4 miles north from Corpusty Mayow. John Stanley Mutt esq. J.P. of Barningham Hall,
station, both on the Ea.'ltern and Midlands railway, and 8~ is lord of the manor and chief landowner. The soil is light';
south-west from Cromer, in the Northern division of the subsoil, various, marl, sand and gravel. The chief crops
county, Northt Erpingham hundred and Cromer petty are wheat, turnips, barley and some land in pasture. The
sessional division, Erpingham union, Holt county court dis- area is t.,272 acres; rateable value, £r ,0~2; the population in
trict, rural deanery of Repps, archdeaconry of Norfolk and I 891 was 170. · ' J
1
diocese of Norwich. The church of St.. Michael is an edifice Parish Clerk, John Lubbock. '
of flint in mixed styles, consisting of chancel, navE), ~orth 1
porch (used as vestry) and an embattled, western tower, PosT 0FFICE.-Mrs. Charlotte Goodwin, receiver. Letters
with pinnacles, containing one bell~ the organ was presented through Norwich via Hanworth arrive about 8 a. m.; dis·
in 1875; the church was thoroughly restored in 1 3 73 and patched at 2.30 p.m. 1 no post on sundays, The nearest
has ~ sittings, The register dates from the -year 1551 . money order office is at Aldborough & telegraph office
The living is a discharged rectory, with Matlaske annexed, is at Corpusty railway station
average tithe rent-charge £236, joint net yearly value j,"I84, This parish is under the Barningham United District School
including .so acres of glebe, in the gift of the Duchy of Lan- Board. The school house is in Matlaske parish

Potchett Mrs ' Newton Samuel, farm bailiff to Charles/ Shreeve Thomas, farmer, Heath farm
Waters Charles William, The Hall William Waters esq r Wales Edmund, shopkeeper
Wynell-Mayow Rev. Herbert [rector] Overton John Josiah, miller (wind) l Waters Charles William, farmer, The
EverettStephen,CherryTree P .H. &farmr & farmer Hall & Church farms
N ewstead John Eldeu, !armer Pull ·william, shoe maker . Woodhouse & Grout, farmers, Jericho
N ewstead Richard, carter Scarf Robert, well sinker & farmer 1

GREAT PL UMSTEAD is a village and parish, .5 Primitive Methodists have a place here in which they hold
miles east from Norwich, 2! east from Whittingham junc- Divine service. There is a fuel allotment of 29 acres, let at
tion on the Norwich and Yarmouth section and 2f south £4o yearly, The Earl of Rosebery P.c., LL.D. who is lord
from Salhouse station on the Norwich and Cromer branch of the manor, Rev. Charles Smvth •
Johnston H.A. of Plum•
of the Great Eastern railway, in the Eastern division of the stead Hall, William Birkbeck esq. J.P. of Thorpe High
county, Blofield and Walsham petty sessional division, House, Norwich, and Lieut.-Colonel Clement William
Blofield hundred and union, Norwich county court district, Joseph Unthank J.P. o~ Intwood Hall, are the principal
rural deanery -of Blofield and archdeaconry and diocese of landowners. The soil is mixed ; subsoil, loam, U'he cbief
Norwich. The church of St.. Mary, a ~tructure of flint in crops arc wheat and barley, The arelj. is 1,403 acres; rate-
the Perpendicular style, consisting of chancel, nave, south able value, £2,416 ; the population in r89r was 35a.
porch and a small western tower of brick containing 3 bells, Sexton, George Maidstone.
was restored in 1876 and the nave reseated in 1879 at the PosT 0FFICE.-Raymond Read, receiver. Letters arrive
expense of William Birkbeck esq. but in December, I89I, it from Norwich at 7·30 a.m.; dispatched at s.ro p.m.
was destroyed by fire and is now (1892) about to be re-- Thenearestmoneyorder&telegraphofficesareat:Blofield
built. The register dates from the year 1558. The living & Thorpe
is a vicarage. average tithe rent-charge £145, gross' yearly A School Board of 5 members was formed I December,
value £r8o, net £152, including 2I acres of glebe, with 1874; H. H. Cole, 67 London street', Norwich, clerk to
residence erected in r88o, in the gift of the Dean and Chap- the board
ter of Norwich, and held since "r88o by the Rev. John Board School. enlarged in I883 for 70 children; average at-
'I'homas Howard JI1".A. of Magdalen College, Oxford. The tendance, 57; Mrs. Wright, mistress
Bouchier - ; Great Plumstead hall Brown Robert, blacksmith Neave Henry, farmer, Hall farm
Cola Mrs Calke Thomas Lond, farmer Payne George, farm bailiff to W. c,
HarvardRobertAppletonCharles,Red ho EllisJohn, Hare inn Waters esq. Grove h011se
Howard Rev. John Thos. M.A. Vicarage George Robert, wheelwright Shreeve Benj. Roberts,marketgardener
Mussett William., Swan ton cottage Goddard John Marfrey, farmer Simmons Frances (Mrs. ).,.sh.oe maker
Harper Sarah (Miss), dress maker Tite James, market gardener
COMMERCIAL. Hicks James, market gardener Walker George, farmer
Baker Zachariah, market gardenel' King Robert, farmer Webb Maria (Mrs,), laundry
Bales Benjamin, farmer Long Samuel, daiiJ;man Wright Walker, printer
Brister Henry, shopkeeper Lovick William, blacksmith '
572 LITTLE PLUMSIEAD. NORFOLK. [K:ELLY's

LITTLE PL UMSTEAD is a village and parish, 5 the gift of John Penrice esq. and held since 1863 by the
miles east from Norwich, 4 east-by-north from Whitlingham Rev. Charles Berners Penrice M.A. of Trinity College, Cam-
junction station and 2} south from Salhouse station, both bridge. The poor have the rent (£4o) of an allotment of
on the Great Eastern railway, in the Eastern division of the 34 acres, also £5 from 2 acres. Plumstead Hall is the pro-
county, Blofield and Walsham petty sessional division, perty and residence of the Hev. Charles Smyth Johnston
Blofield hundred and union, Norwich county court district, B.A. and stands in a park of 8o acres. The Rev. C. S.
rural deanery of Blofield and archdeaconry and diocese of Johnston B.A. the Dean and Chapter of Norwich, John Pen-
Norwich. The church of SS. Protasius and Gervase is a rice esq. J.P., D.L. of Bramerton, and William Frederick
long low building of flint in the Perpendicular style, con- Green esq. are the principal landowners. The ~!Oil is mixed;
sisting of nave, south porch and a round western tower subsoil, clay. Here are brick and tile works belonging to
completely covered with ivy and containing one bell: the W. F. Green esq. The chief crops art> wheat and barley.
stained east window is a memorial to Philip and Sophia The area is 1,396 acres; rateable value, £2,266; the popu-
Stevens, and is dated r857; there is a large monument of lation in r 891 was 355·
marble erected by their ch1ldren to the memory of Thomas Parish Clerk, James Ives Lacey.
Penrice, d. r8r6, and llannah his wife, d. r829, and there Letters through Norwich arrive at 8.15 a.m. Blofield is the
are others to the Rev. William Leigb, rector, d. r8o8 ; the nt.>arest money order & telegraph office. LETTER Box
Rev. Paul Colombine D.D. rector from r8o8, d. 1821, and to near the church, is cleared at 5 p.m. & Box in centre of
his wife, d. r8r8, and to the Rev. John Leatherdale, rector, village 4·45 p.m
d. 1862: the chancel rails were erected by the parish in
thanksgiving for the recovery from illness of H.R.H. the There is a second LETTER Box near the "brick kilns," cleared
Prince of Wales in 1872 : there are 130 sittings. The regis- at 4 p.m
ter dates from the year I559· The living is a rectory, tithe National School (mixed), erected in 1864 & enlarged in 1881
rent-charge £458, average £356, net yearly value about for 120 children; average attendance, 70; Mr. Harris,
£3501 including 53 acres of glebe, with residence, in master
Johnston Rev. Charles Smyth B.A. Green William Frederick, brick, drain, Rushbrook Job, farm bailiff to Major
Plumstead hall tlle & pottery maker; & at Wroxham Penrice, The Hall farm
P ennce· R ev. Ch as. Berners M.A. R ectory N" &bLudham Stanford Jonathan, farmer
ll G h k
"l J
W 1 ey eremm · h c M h
ozens, "th anor ouse 1c o s eorge, s op
p o ll Ab ra b am, f armer eeper Thrower George, blacksmith
Wiley Jeremiah Cozens,farmr.Manor ho
E as t er G eorge, bl ac k sm1 n·ICe J ames, Bne · k K"l1 ns P.H
GREAT AND LITTLE PORING LAND are buted in coals amongst the poor, who have also an annuity
united parishes in the Southern division of the county, of 2os. bequeathed by J. and E. Skoyles. The Earl of Rose-
Swainsthorpe petty sessional division, Ilenstead union and bery P.C., LL.D. is lord of the manor. The principal land-
hundred, Norwich county court district, rural deanery of owners are William Black and George John Holmes esq. J.P.
Brooke western division, arch deaconry of Nor folk and dio- of Brooke Hall, and there are several small copy holders.
cese of Norwich. Great or East Poringland is on the road The soil is sand, gravel and clay; subsoil, gravel and clay.
from Norwich to Bungay, 4~ miles south-east from the The chief crops are wheat, oats, barley and turnips. The
former and 3i from Trowse Newton station on the Ipswich area of Great and Little Poringland is 1,740 acres; corn-
and Norwich section of the Great Eastern railway. The bined rateable value, £I,g88; the population in 1891
church of All Saints is an ancient edifice of flint in the Per- was 482.
pendicular and Decorated styles, consisting of chancel, nave, Sexton, Thomas Bard well.
south porch, north porch (now a vestry) and a round western Letters through Norwich arrive at 7 a. m. via Framingham
tower with octagonal belfry stage containing one bell: Earl. The nearest money order office is at Brooke &
during the period r86r-83 the church was repaired, a new nearest telegraph office at Trowse Newton. LETTER Box
south porch being added, and the east window, the upper cleared at 4.30 p. m
portion of which had been blocked up, was opened and the
tracery restored : a new chancel arch was also erected, A School Board of 7 members was formed compulsorily r6
carved oak pulpit, reading desk and lectern provided, and June, 1874, for the united district of Poringland, Arming-
the interior walls of the chancel refaced: the church was ball, Caistor St. Edmund, Fr'amingham Earl, Framingham
also reseated, the old carved oak benches with poppy heads Pigot, Markshall & Stoke Holy Cross ; Herbert H. Cole,
being restored, and it now affords 220 sittings, 120 being 67 London street, Norwich, clerk to the board: W.
free. The register dates from the year 1560. Th.e living is Cheney, Swardeston, attendance officer. The school for
a rectory, average tithe rent-charge £167, net yearly value the united district is at Framingham Earl
£147, including 17 acres of glebe with residence, in the gift Little (or West) Poringland is 6 miles south from
of Henry Birkbeck esq. J".P. of Stoke Holy Cross, and held Norwich. The living is a rectory, consolidated with that of
since 1892 by the Rev. George Wylde. At the Inclosure 30 Howe. George John Holmes esq. J.P. of Brooke Hall, is
acres were allotted to the parish, the rent of which is distri- lord of the manor and principal landowner.
Great Poringland. Freestone Horace,miller (wind & steam) Todd Samuel, White Hart P.H
Harris James, Swan inn, & cattle dealr Utting Henry, boot maker
Scott Miss, Poringland house Margitson Maria (Mrs.), plumber Utting John, cattle dealer
Wylde Rev. George, Rectory Mudd William, Dove P.H Whipps Cornelius Charles, shopkeeper,
Silcock Charles Morley, registrar of butcher & baker
COMMERCIAL. births & deaths, Henstead union Wilson William, coal dealer
Beverly Tobias, farmer, Church farm South William, market gardener
Beverly William, farmer Spruce John, farmer
Bird George Hilton, farmer Taylor Henry, builder & blacksmith Little Poringland.
Carver William, farmer Taylor Joseph, shoe maker Brown James, farmer
Critoph Joseph, grocer & corn dealer Thrower John, shopkeeper Shorten R.obert, farmer
Ellwood John, boot & shoe maker Todd John, farmer & beer retailer Tallowin Samuel, farmer
Ewing John, builder & plasterer Todd Leonard, butcher Utting Lucy (Mrs.), market gardener
POSTWICK is a village and parish, lying in a pretty The register dates from the year 1570. The living is a
vale, 2~ miles west from Brundall station and 2 east from rectory, average tithe rent-charge £373, net yearly value
Whitlingham junction station, both on the Norwich and £350, including about 47 acres of glebe, with residence, in
Yarmouth section of the Great Eastern railway, 4 east-by- the gift of the Earl of Rosebery P.c. and held since
south from Norwich, in the Eastern division of the county, 1887 by the Rev. James Williams Adams B.A. of Trinity
Blofield and Walsham petty sessional division, Blofield College, Dublin v.c. A sum of £r8 derived from land is
hundred and union, Norwich county court district, rural distributed yearly to the poor in fuel. The Earl of Rose-
de.anery of Blofield and archdeaconry and diocese of Nor- bery P.c., LL.D., F.S.A. is lord of the manor and owner of
wich. The navigable river Yare flows on the south of the nearly the whole parish. The soil is mixed. The chief
parish. The church of All Saints is an ancient building of crops are wheat, barley and turnips. The area is r,776
flint and stone, in the Perpendicular and Decorated styles, acres, including a detached marsh near Yarmouth of 346
and consists of chancel, nave, south porch and an embattled acres; rateable value, £3,169; the population in 1891
western tower of considerable height containing a clock and was 301.
3 bells: at the west end is a mural brass and a memorial Parish Sexton, Christopher Plummer.
window to Archiba.ld John, fourth Earl of Rosebery K.T., PosT 0FFICE.-Richard William Riches, sub-postmaster.
P.c., D.C.L. d. 4 March, 1868: the lych gate at the entrance Letters arrive from Norwich at 5 a.m.; dispatched at
to the churchyard was presented by Peter Hansell esq. in 6 p.m. The nearest money order & telegraph office is at
memory of the departed members of his family: the church Thorpe, 2! miles west
was restored in 1866, when the nave was new-roofed, and a School (mixed), erected with house for the mistress in 1867
vestry and organ chamber erected : in 1868 the nave was by the late Earl of Rosebery, for 65 children ; average
-eseated with open benches : and now affords 120 sittings. attendance, 46; Miss Langdon, mistress
PULHAM ST. MARY) 573
NORFOJ~K.
DIRECTORY.]
f MAGDALEN, j
Adams Rev.James\Villiams B. A. Rectory Appleton Jn. shopkpr. Irmr. & overseer Curtis Edmund James, gamekeeper o
Cross George, Post wick ball A ttoe William, farmer the Earl of Rosebery, Postwick heath
Patteson Hy. T. Staniforth, The Lodge Cross Charles, farmer, Postwick Heath Leader James, blacksmith
Spelman Henry, The Cottage farm Riches Richd. Wm. builder, Poet office
Waters Charles, The Grange Cross Geo.farmer & brick manufacturer Waters Charles, farmer, The Grange
POTTER-HEIGHAM is a parish and village with a wich, Edward John Boult esq. William James Balls esq. and
station on the Eastern and Midlands railway, n miles William Hubbard esq. The soil is mixed; subsoil, sand
north-west from Yarmouth and 15 north-east from Norwich, and clay. The chief orops are wheat, oats, barley and roots.
in the Eastern division of the county, Tunstcad and Hap- The area is 2,445 acres, 193 of which are comprised in the
ping petty sessional division, Happing hundred, Smallburgh large broads or ponds on the north side of the vale of the
union, Great Yarmouth county court district, rural deanery Bure, and which are navigable for wherries; rateable value,
of Waxham, Happing division, archdeaconry of Norfolk and £3,145; the population in 1891 was 475·
diocese of Norwich. The church of St. Nicholas is a build- Parish Clerk, Jame3 Chase.
ing of stone in the Gothic style, consisting of chancel, PosT 0FF1CE.-Samuel Pollard, sub-postmaster. Letters
clerestoried nave of four bays, aisles and a round western through Norwich, by mail cart, from Stalham, arrive at
tower with an embattled octagonal belfry stage containing 8.30 a. m. ; dispatched at 2.15 & 5· so p.m. The nearest
3 bells : the church was partly restored in 1875 at a cost of money order office is at Cattield & telegraph office is at
about £"6oo, and affords about 250 sittings. The register the railway station. Postal orders are issued here, but
of baptisms and buria.ls dates from the year 1537; mar- not paid. WALL LETTER Box, near Vicarage, cleared at
riages, 1538. The living is a vicarage, average tithe r~nt- 2.5 & 6.20 p.m.; WAI.L LETTER Box, near Falgate inn,
charge £170, net yearly value £171, including rr acres of cleared at r.so & 6.40 p.m. ; no collection on sundays
glebe, with residence, in the gift of the Bishop of Norwich, A School Board of 5 mcmbJrs was formed 9 February,
and held since r885 by the Rev. Henry Sykes. At the in- 1872; W. H. Cooke, Stalham, clerk to the board &
closure in 1803 nearly roo acres were allotted to the poor, attendance officer
the rent of which is now about £go yearly. The Bishop of Board School, with residence for master, built in 1846, at a
Norwich is lord of the manor. The chief landowners are cost of £400, for 120 children; average attendance, 100;
the trustees of the Bethel Hospital, Norwich, the Clergy- Henry Thomas Hardwick, master
men's Widows' Society, Frederick Thomas Keith, of Nor- Railway Station, Elijah Simmons, station master
Sykes Rev. Henry, Vicarage Bensley Mary Ann(Mrs. ), market grdnr Grapes Samuel S. carpenter
COMMERClAL. Bishop Ezra, farmer Greenacre William, marsh farmer
Applegate Charles, farmer Blaxall John (Mrs.), farmer Hartley John C. lodging ho. The Limes
Applegate Frederick, farmer Chase Chas. Fk. beer retlr. & shopkpr Hunt Reuben, farm bailiff to William
Applegate Georgc, reed merchant Chase George, boot maker Hubbard esq
Applegate George, jun. boat propr.; Chase Jas. hay dealr. & assist. overseer Lake Robert, coal carter
pleasure boats for hire & apartments, George James, farmer Mack George, farmer, Bethel farm
Rose cottage. See advertisement George William, blacksmith Myhill Edward, farmer
Bailey Henry, farmer George William Shephard, Falgate inn, Pollard :::lamuel, grocer, Post office
Balls William Jas. farmer & landowner & wheelwright Porritt William L. farmer & valuer
BeevorJas.frm.bailiff toThos.Slipper esq Grapes Charles, marsh man Youngs Alfred, farmer
PUDDING NOR TON is a small parish about r~ miles Edward Humphreys M. A. rector of Fakenham, has been
• south from Fakenham station on the Dereham and Wells curate-in-charge since 1890. Frederic Angustus Morse-
section of the Great Eastern railway, in the North Western Boycott esq. is lord of the manor and owner of the entire
division of the county, Gallow hundred and petty sessional! parish. The soil is chiefly a rich loam; subsoil, clay; pro-
division, Walsingham union and county court district, rural ducing excellent barley, wheat and green crops. The parish
deanery of North Brisley and Toftrees and archdeaconry I contains s..,_o statute acres; rateable value, £r,ool; the
1

and diocese of Norwich. The church of St. Margaret fell population in 1891 was 30.
into ruins many years ago, but portions of the tower and Letters through Fakenham, the nearest money order & tele-
other parts of the fabric are still standing. The living is a graph office
sinecure rectory, tithe rent-charge £10, in the gift of
:Frederic Augustus Morse-Boycot.t esq. : the Rev. Alfred The children of this place attend Colkirk school
Dixon George, farmer & landowner, Norton hall
PULHAM ST. MARY MAGDALEN (commonly and local papers, magazines and various games; it iti sup-
called PuLHAM MARKET) is a parish and small town with a ported by subscription, hon. members paying xos. yearly,
station on the Waveney Valley branch of the Great Eastern and ordinary members Is. 6d. per quarter. A small estate
railway, 15 miles south from Norwich, 4 north-by-west from here used to be held by cornage service or the blowing of a
Harleston and 104 from London, in the Southern division horn at the opening of the Manor Court . . The weekly mar-
of the county, Earsham hundred and petty sessional division, ket formerly held here on Wednesdays has removed to Har-
Depwade union, Harleston county court district, rural leston. There was also a cattle fair, now extinct. Leather
deanery of Redenhall, archdeaconry of Norfolk and diocese gloves are made here. Pulham Hall, once the residence of
of Norwich. The church of St. Mary Magdalen is an ancient a younger branch of the Percies, Earls of :Vorthumberland,
building of flint, with stone dressings, in the Perpendicular is now the property and residence of George Leggett esq.
and .l<~arly English styles, consisting of chancel, nave, aisles, The trustees of the late George Copeman esq. are lords of
north porch and an embattled western tower containing a the manor. The principal landowners are George Leggett
clock and 6 bells : there are piscime in the chancel and esq. Alfred Clayton Cole esq. of 64 Portland place, London
south aisle, and near the south door is a holy-water stoup : w. John Matthew Barnes esq. of .Morningthorpe, ·william
part of the roof at the east end of the nave is decorated with Nurse and William Baxter esq. The soil is heavy; subsoil,
paintings of angels, sacred monograms and other devices, clay. The chief crops are wheat, barley, peas and beans.
restored in 1873 : there are memorial windows to the Rev. The area is 2,984 acres; rateable value, £3,526; the popu-
William FrostB.A. ofThorpe-next-Norwich, d. 28 Dec. 1875, lation in 1891 was x,o89, including 165 officers and inmates
and to his widow, besides others to the Cole family; and in Depwade union workhouse.
the church contains various mural tablets and a number of Parish Clerk and Sexton, William Roope.
ancient and inscribed stones on the floor: in r873 the church PosT, M. 0. & T. 0., S. B. & Annuity & Insurance Office.-
was restored and a vestry, new font and pulpit added, and Henry William Churchyard, postmaster. Letters arrive
reseated with chairs, at a total cost of £1,8oo, and the through Harleston at 7.30 a. m. & 3 p.m. & dispatched at
decoration of the chancel has since been proceeded with, but 12.30 & 5.30 p.m. PILLAR LETTER Box, near the Rail-
is at present incomplete : 350 sittings. The register way station, cleared at S<JO p.m. ; sundays at 10.15 a. m
dates from the year 1538. The living is a rectory, tithes PUBLIC ESTABLISHMENTS:-
eommuted at £646 yearly, net yearly value £5oo, with Cemetery, Robert Borrett, clerk to the burial board
residence, in the gift of the Crown, and held since 1870 by Cemetery (Nonconformist), Coles green, Robert Borrett,
the Rev. Spencer Fellows, of Magdalene College, Cambridge, clerk to the burial board
and .LP. of Norfolk. There is a Wesleyan chapel and a Fire Engine Station, William Roope, superintendent
Primitive Methodist chapel at Colegate end. A cemetery of Police Station for Pulham Division of Norfolk Constabulary,
x acre, adjoining the churcjl, was consecrated May xst, 186o, Wm. Tuddenham, superintendent, 2 sergeants & x6 con-
and there is a cemetery of about half an acre for Noncon- stables
formists on Cole's Common, about ~~ miles from the National School (mixed), with master's residence, erected in
church: both are under the control of a Burial Board of x852, for 157 children; average attendance, 104; William
seven members. The village reading room, opened 1 Oct. Hesketh B. A. master
1882, has a small library, and is supplied with the London Railway Station, Waiter Henry Overy, station master

C. N. & S. 37
PULHAM ST. MARY}
574 { MA.GDALEN. NORFOLK. [KELLY's
DEPWADE UNION. leston ~ No. 7 district, Wellington Lake, Saxlingham ;
Board day at xo a. m. alrernate mondays at the Pulham No. 8 district, George Lowe M. B., c.M. Wymondham
workhouse. Superintendent Registrar, John Furness, Forncett grove,
The union comprises the following places :-Alburgh, Ash- Long Stratton
wellthorpe, Aslacton, Billingford, Brockdish, Bunwell, Registrars of Births & Deaths, Diss sub-district, G. Mann,
Burston, Carleton Rode, Deuton, Dickleburgh, Diss, Tivetshall St. Margaret; deputy, Ilenry Evans, Dickle-
Earsham, Forncett St. Mary, Forncett St. Peter, Fritton, burgh; Forncett sub-district, William Smith, Forncett
Fundenhall, Gissing, Great Moulton, Hapton, Hardwick, St. Peter; deputy, John Moore, Forncett St. Peter; Har-
Hempnall, Morningthorpe, Needham, Pulham St. Mary leston sub-district, B. Silcock, Starston; deputy, Charles
Magdalen, Pulham St. Mary the Virgin, Redenhall with Wood~, Harleston; Stratton sub-district, H. Starr, Long
Harleston, Rushall, Scale with Thorpe Parva & Frenze, Stratton; deputy, F. Starr, Long Stratton
Shelton, Shimpling, Starston, Stratton St. Mary, Stratton Registrars of Marriages, A. I. Lusher, Diss; deputy, J.
St. Michael, Tacolnestone, Tasburgh, Tharston, Thelveton Reeve, Diss ; William Smith, Forncett St. Peter ; deputy,
(or Thelton), Thorpe Abbots, Tibenham, Tivetshall St. John Moore, Forncett St. Peter; B. Silcock, Starston;
Margaret, Wacton & Wortwell; the population of the deputy, C. Woods, Harleston
union in rBgr was 23,293 ; area, 72,68r acres ; rateable The Workhouse, on the Norwich road, is. a structure of
value, £100,547 brick erected in 1836, & will hold 500 inmates, the aver-
Clerk to the Guardians & Assessment Committee, John age number m the house being 170; Rev. S. Fellows,
Jfurness, St. Stephen's chamhers, Norwich chaplain; C. A. 0. Owens III.D. medical officer ; George
Treasurer, Henry Birkoeck, at Messrs. Gurney's Bank, Diss Smith, master; Miss Ellen Caroline Brown, matron ; Miss
Relieving Officers-Eastern district, Boardman t3ilcock, Margaret Sullivan, schoolmistress
Starston; Western district, George Mann, Tivetshall St. RuRAL SANITARY AuTHORITY.
Margaret Meets at the Workhouse on alternate mondays at IO a.m.
Vaccination Officers, The Registrars of Births & Deaths Clerk, John Furness, St. Stephen's chambers, Norwich .
Medical Officers & Public Vaccinators, No. I district, Charles Treasurer, Henry Birkbeck, Gurney & Co.'s bank, Diss
Arthur Owen Owens M.D. Long Stratton; No. 2 district, Medical Officer of Health, John Candler, Harleston
George Herbert Whitaker, Bungay ; No. 3 district, Wil- Inspector of Nuisances, T. W. Garrood, Tasburgh
frcd Howard L.R.C.P.Edin. New Buckenham; No. 4 dis- ScnooL ATTENDANCE COMMITTEE.
trict, Job Nathaniel Legge Paulley L.R.C.P.Edin. Pulham Meets at the Workhouse on alternate mondays at to a.m.
Market~ No. 5 district, Frederick Edmund Hubbard Clerk, John Furness, St. Stephen's chambers, Norwich
L.R.C.P.Lond. Diss; No. 6 district, John Candler, Har- Attendance Officer, T. W. Gar-rood, Tasburgh
[Names marked • should be addressed Blackburn Mansell George, grocer Nurse William, farmer & landowner,
Wacton, Long Stratton.] & draper &c Gothic & Bridge farms
PRIVATE RESIDENTS, Bough ton George, glover & hair dresser OutlawJohnMaid well, butcher & farmer
Borrett Robert Boughton James, thatcher Overy Walter Henry, station master
Dolman Mrs Brown Daniel, farmer Palmer Charles,C'~rpenter&wheelwright
Eaton Rev. John Frederick [Wesleyan] Brown Richard, farmer, Colegate end Paulley Job Nathaniel Legge L.R.C.P.
Fellows Rev. Spencer M,A., J.P. Rectory Brown Susan (Mrs.), tailoress Edin. physician & surgeon, & medical
Field Miss Buckingham Hrbt. M. R. c. v.s. vet.surgn officer & public vaccinator, No. 4 di!!-
Goff Mrs Bullock Mary Ann (Miss), dress maker trict, Depwade union, Beech cottage
JenkinsRev.Thos.Leonal'd M.A..[cnrate] Cemetery (Robert Borrett, clerk to the Potter James, licensed hawker
Leggett George, Pulham hall burial board) Randall John, Queen's Head P. H
Leggett Mrs Cemetery (Nonconformist) (Robert Reading Room (Wm. Besketh, hon, sec)
Middleton Mrs. Lime Tree house Borrett, clerk to the burial board), Redgrave William, farmer
Moore Mrs Coles green Riches James Benj. leather glove maker
Nurse William, The Villa Churchyard Henry William, grocer & Rix Albert Edward, saddler
Paulley Job Nathaniel Legge, Beech cot draper & postmaster Roberts Thomas James, farmer & land-
Semmens Georgo Cook Henry, shopkeeper & builder owner, Bush green
Wailer John Crisp John, saddler Roope John, miller (wind & steam) &
West Mrs. The Lodge, Colegate end *Dade Frederick, blacksmith & farmer wood sawyer
Dolman Philip William, farmer Roope William, carpenter, parish clerk
COMMERCIAL. Easter Robert, farmer, North green & superintendent of fire engine statn
AndrewsStephenJn.farmer, Manor farm Eastern Counties' Building Society Rudling Joseph, watch maker
Bailey Alfred, carpenter (Robert Borrett, agent) Salter Jameo;~ & Mary Ann (Miss), frmrs
Bailey Edgar, shoe maker Friston Robel't Miles, fishmonger Skinner Samuel, farmer
Baker Charles, blacksmith *Fuller Edmund,farmer,Coles common Smith Harry George, master of work-
Barber James, thatcher Gaff Hadare:t..er Benj. tailor & draper house, Norwich road
Barnard Lazarus, farm bailiff to the GoldsmithHoraccHy.farmer,Bush green Smith James Wm. farmer, North green
Rev. Spencer Fellows M.A., J.P Gostling & Co. chemists & mineral Soanes George, farmer, North green
BarnesJn.Matthew,farmer & landowner water manufacturers Spicer Thomas, farmer, Bush green
Baxter James, farmer Gulston William, farmer, Colegate end Stannard John, farmer & dealer
Baxter William, yeoman Harris Alfred, butcher Stannard John, jun. coal dealer
Bean Benjamin, farmer Harris Charles, farmer & landowner Took Lazarus, beer retailer, Bush green
Bean William, farmer, Colegate end Hazell Charles, Crown P.H. & posting Tuddenham William, superintendent
Biggs Fredk. Wm. farmer, White house house, & coal & wholesale fish mer of police, Norwich road
Borrett Robert F.S.A. clerk to the corn- HowlettEdwd.jun.frmr. Colc!!common Vince John, ironmonger
missioners of taxes, accountant, auc- Howlett Jacob, farmer Wade Richard, cooper '
tioneer & valuer, clerk to the bnrhi.l Howlett William, fal'mer, Lands farm Waller George, baker & confectioner
board & to Tivetsball united district Hnbbard Stephen, farmer, Colegate end "\\'alpole George, farmer, Colescommon
school board & Burstow-with-Shimp- King Robert, farmer, Rookery farm Warn Frederick, tailor
ling united district school board, Lait Esther Lncretia (Miss), ladies' schl Whidby George, boot & shoe maker
assistant overseer & public auditor Leggett George, farmer, The Hall Wier Lydia (Mrs.), Falcon P.H
under Friendly Societies Act Mann Stanley Jn.farmer,Coles common Williams Tryphena (Mrs.), shopkeeper
PULHAM ST. MARY THE VIRGIN is a plea- windows: in r886-7 the church was thoroughly restored,
sant village and parish, with a station on the Waveney when a new roof was erected at a cost. of £goo, a vestry
Valley branch of the Great Eastern railway, 3 miles north- added, the western gallery removed and the tower arch
• west from Harleston, in the Southern division of the county, opened; the chancel screen, which is adorned with paintings
Depwade union, Earsham hundred and petty sessional divi- of saints, was carefully restored, decorated and re-gilt, and
sion, county court district of Harleston, rural deanery Df a new oak pulpit and lectP.rn erected, the whole being
Redenhall, archdeaconry of Norfolk and diocese of Norwich; carried out nnder the direction of Mr. T. Garner, architect,
a stream locally known as "The Beck" flows through the of London, at a total cost of £3,600; in the chancel are
parish into the river Waveney. The church of St. Mary is a double piscinre and sedilia and there is a piscina in the south
building of stone and flint, in the Perpendicular style, con- aisle: there are tablets to Thomas Inyon M.A. who died
sisting of chancel, nave, south aisle, vestry, south-west J.\.larch 20, i777• and :Vlargaretta Maria his wife; and to
porch and a lofty embattled western tower, containing a John Swann, surgeon, d. Aug. u, r792: the organ was
clock and 6 bells, which have been re-hung and room made presented by Miss Bond, in memory of her father the Rev.
for 2 more at a cost of £180: the exterior is ornamented Richard Bond M.A. late rector: there are 300 sittings. The
with various carved figures, and on the top .are five figures registers date from the year 1538. The living is a rectory,
curiously carved: some of the windows retain ancient yearly value from tithe rent-charge £497, average £4Bl,
stained glass, one dating from r38o and another called the with 32 acres of glebe and residence, in the gift of the
"Apostles'" window, from 1'420 1 besides five other stained Crown, and held since r885 by the Rev. William Henry
DIRECTORY.] NORFOLK. QUID EN HAM. b75
Cleaver M. A.. of Christ Church, Oxford. In 1253 Henry de John llotson esq. Mrs. Rutt~edge, the trustees of the late
Wengham, dean of St. Martin's-le-Grand,. was presented to Edward Futter aud Mr •. Fr!lnci.s Job Goodorham. The llOil
the rectory hy Henry Ill., and afterwards became Bishop of is mixed; subsoil, gra..vel and clay. The chief -crops ~re
London and Chancellor of England r Sir Simo~ de Walpole, wheat, barley, peas and beans. The are~ is 3,029, acr6,\l ;
chaplain to his brother Ralphde Walpole, Bishop of Norwich rateable value, £3,578; the population in 1891 was 831.
and Ely, was rector in 13or, and lies interred in the chancel Parish Clerk, Samuel Alexander.
here: in 1341 Richard de Northbrook, archdeacon of Suffolk, PoST, M. 0. & T. 0., s. B. & .Annuity & Insurance Office.-
was presented ; he was confirmed Bishop of London 1355, -Alfred Palmer, sub-postmaster. Letters received
but died of the plagne in 1361 ~Sir Thomas Howes, chaplain through Hal'4eston, arrive at 7 a.m. & 3 .30 p.m. ~for
to Sir John l''alstaff, was rector in 1465, and left a sum of callers only) 1 dispatch ell at 12 noon & 5. 3 5 p.m. ; sun-
money towards the repairing of the church 1 William May, days, dispatched at 10. 20 a. m 1
Chancellor of Ely and afterwards dean of St. Paul's, was ·
presented to Pulham in 1557 by the Bishop of London, PILLAR LETTER BoXEs, near the Baptist chapel, cleared at
being the last rector so presented. Here is a Baptist chapel 6.s p.m. week days; sundays 10.45 a. m. ; & Bush green,
.erected in 1843, with sittings for 400 persons, and a Sunday cleared at 4·50 p.m. week days & 9 a.m. on sundays
school and burial ground attached: there is a small Primi- Pennoyer's Free School (mixed), formerly the St. James
tive Methodist chapel at North green. The charities include Guild chapel, endowed in 1670 by W:illiam Pennoyer esq.
W. Pennoyer's of £5 yearly, paid out of a farm belonging with 1-15th the profits of the manor, for the master of
to the Governors of Christ's Hospital. The town lands are the parish school, but owing to the difficulty in finding
let to the poor in allotments of half an acre, at a. rant of ss. the exact amount, it was soms years ago exchanged· fur
each and the collective rents are applied to the maintenance 9 acres of land, on the South green 1 allotted at th8 in-
of the school and to other parochial purposes. The common closure to the lord of the manor, and now let for £x6
land has been inclosod under an Act of Parliament passed in yearly ; the school has been enlarged for 139 children ;
18 3 8. Here are the extensive maltings of Mr.llenryRobinson. average attendance. toS ;.. Albert Pleasants, master; Mrs.
The trustees of the late George Copeman esq. are lords of ~gnes Pl~ants, mistress . .
t.he manor. The principal landowners are Sir Hugh Edward Rmlway Statwn, George Harr1s, statwn master ,
Adair bart. D.L., J.P. of Flixton Hall, Bungay, the Gover- CARRIERS TO NORWICH.-Samuel Thomas Riches, sat. ;
nors of Christ's Hospital, Major Patten, R. A. Bevan esq. 1 William Brown, sat
PRIVATE RESIDENTS. Blomfield Waiter, shoe maker Leist Fanny (Miss), dress maker
Baxter James Bulton Arthur, farmer, North green Mayes Edward Amis, farmer
Bennett Col. Adrian, The Grange Bond Ellen (Mrs.) & Thomas Edward, Miller James, insurance agent
Bond Mrs. The llall farmers, The Hall MullengerWm. wheelwright&blacksmth
Buck Charles Kemp, Brook house Brown Charles Henry, saddler Nurse Wm.frmr.&landowner,North grn
Caton Miss Brown Daniel,jun. farmer & brick & tile Outlaw John Maid well, butcher; & at
Chaney Mrs. North green maker, Rookery farm, South green Pulham market
Cleaver Rev. WilliamHenry M.A.[rector], Brown William,shopkeeper,North green Page George, farmer, South green '
Rectory Caudwell J<:ber M.R.C.s., L. R c.P. sur-· PalmerAlfd.carpenter&shopkpr.Post off
Drew George geon (surgery): & at Harleston Park William, farmer
Futter Mrs Coleby Hannah (Mrs.),farmer,Hill farm Riches John, leather glove maker
Goldsmith Philip, The Laurels Day H.osina (Mrs.), shopkeeper H.ichesSamuel'l'hos. shopkeeper & carrier
Haldane Miss, Waveney cottage Doe Joseph, farmer, Asten's farm Robinson Henry, corn merchant &
Hazard William Henry Elsey Jetbro, farmer & pig &c. dealer maltster; & at Mellis Station, Suffolk
Hibburd Rev. Fredk.Clacy M.A.[curate] Fi;;h O,;born, King's Head P,H.& butcher Saunders Robert David,grocer & draper
Miller Miss !<'utter Edward (exors. of), farmers & Semmens Elijah, farmer
Molyneux M1s~ landowners, Dairy farm Smith John, Maid's Head P.H •er
Page Miss GoldsrnithArtb urW rn. farmr. North grn StewartJohn, farmer, Up. Vauncey's frm
Robinson Henry, Hill house Goldsmith Maria (Mrs. ),farmer & land- Tubby Charles, farmer, North green -
Saunders Mrs owner, .North green , 'rubbyCharlotte(Mrs.),farmr.Northgrn
Sullivan Mrs Gomlerbam Francis Job,farmer & land- Tuffs Henry, farmer, North green .
Trench Miss . owner, Crossingford farm 1 Tuyrrell Benjamin, beer retailer
COMMERCIAL. Gostling William, fishmonger Vipond Jeremiah, shoe maker
Adcoek Frederick, farmer. South green Goulder Henry, farmer, Church farm Whit bread John, farm steward to the
Adcock H.obert, farmer, Garlick street Hood George, miller (wind & steam) & govrnrs.of Christ's Hosptl.Home fri;D.
Adcock William, farmer coal & corn merchant White Anna (Miss), dress maker
Alexander Samuel, parish clerk Hubbard Albert, baker WbiteWm.carpentr.whlwrght.&glazier
Amies William, miller (wind & steam) Keeley George, farmer, Garlick street Wildey William, jobbing gardener
Baldry Robert, shopkeeper & pig &c. Leftley James, farmer Wood William, boot & shoe maker
dealer, North green Leftley William, farmer, Kiln farm Woodard Elizabeth (Mrs.), dress maker
Baldry William, farmer, North green Leist Ed~ard, farmer & coal dealer Youell Henry, bricklayer
Q U ARLES is a parish adjoining Holkham, about 4 miles is the chief landowner. The soil is a rich light loam, bn
K. G.
south-west from 'Vells station on the Great Eastern railway, marl and gravel: th~J whole is farmed by Mr. William
in the northern division of the county, Walsingham union, Hudson. The chief crops are wheat, barley, oats and
North Greenhoe hundred and petty sessional division and turnips. The area is 620 acres; rateable value, £685; the
Walsingham county court district, It had formerly a population in 1891 was 15.
church, but this was in ruins as long ago as 1570 ; some
traces of ruins, supposed to be remains of the church are Letter!;! received through Wells. Walsingham is the nearest
still discernible near Quarles farm. The Earl of Leicester money order & telegraph office
Hudson Wm. farmer; &at North Creake
.
QUIDENHAM is a picturesque village and parish (Keppel) eldest daughter of William Charles, fourth Earl
situated in a valley, I~ miles south from Eccles Road station of Albernarle, and wife of Sir James Macdonald bart.
and 5~ south from Attleborough station, both on the she died in 1824; and two others to the Holland family
Thetford and Norwich section of the Great Eastern railway, dated 1679 and 1700 : there is also a memorial window to
and IO north-east from Thetford, in the Mid division of the Augustllil Frederick, 5th Earl of Albemarle, d. 15 March,
county, county court district of Attleborough, Guilicross 1851; Frances (Steer) his countess, d. 16 May, 1869;
and Shropham petty sessional division, Guiltcross hundred William Charles, 4th Earl of Albemarle, d. 30 Oct. 1849 ;
and union, rural deanery of, Rockland, archdeaconry of ancl to Lady l\Iary (Keppel), wife of Samuel Charles Whit·
Norfolk and diocese of Norwich. The church of St. Andrew, bread esq. d. 20 Sept. 1884; the stained east window is a
standing on a slight elevation at a short distanc~ west from memorial to the Rev. the Hon. Edward Southwell Keppel
the Hall, is an edifice chiefly in the Early. English style, M. A. rector here and canon of Norwich, d. 1 Dec. 1884: the
consisting of chancel, nave of four bays, .llOuth aisle, north reredos was given in 1885 by the Lady Elizabeth Clements
transept and a western tower of flint and stone, round at and the altar cloth by the Earl of Leitrim; the brass eagle
the base with an octagonal belfry stage and spire contain- lectern was presented in r885 by the late Earl of Albemarle
. ing a clock and 6 bells; the tenor, weighing 16 cwt. in memory of Susan (Trotter) late countess of Albemarle,
was presented in r8gx by Lady Louisa Charteris and Mr. d. 3 Aug. r885; the organ was erected in r81l,7, at a C(}St of
and Lady Augusta Noel, as a meriwrial to General i,"370 : imbedded in the vestry wall are three Saxon pillars
George Thomas, 6th Earl of Albemarle, d. 1891 ' the which pl'obably formed part of the base of an ancient font :
south porch is Noromn, the chancel reta-ins a piscina and the church was reseated with open benches about IB57, and
triple sedilia : there is ~ marble tablet .to +,he Lady Sophia has xso sittings. The reJister dates from the year 1538.
"' 1 •
C, N. & S. 37•
576 QUIDENHAM. NORFOLK. (KELLY S
7

The living is a rectory, with that of Snetterroli annexed, mere of 7 acres affording excellent fishing. Lord Egerton
average tithe rent-charge £498, joint net yearly value £330, of Tatton, is lord of the manor and owner of the whole
including 126 acres of glebe, with residence, in the brift of parish. The soil is light; subsoil, marl and clay. The
Lord Egerton of Tatton, and held since 1883 by the Rev. chief crops are wheat, barley and oats. The area is r,r26
Edward Southwell Garnier M.A. of University College, acres; rateable value, £r,2o1; the population in I89r was
Oxford, and surrogate. The high r:lad from the church to I6r.
_Kenninghall, a mile in length, is lined with thorn and other Sexton, James Bunn.
trees, which form an unbroken canopied avenue for the
whole distance. Quidenham Hall, the residence of the PosT, M. 0. & T. 0., S. B. & Annuity&; Insurance Office.-
Right Hon. Viscount Bury M.P., D.L. is a. large mansion of Simeon Hazelwood, sub-postmaster. Letters through
red brick, with a portico on the eastern front, supported by Thetford arrive at 7·45 a. m. & 4.25 p.m.; dispatched at
four lofty circular columns; it stands in a well-timbered r.3o p.m. & 6.45 p.m.; sundays, I 1.30 a. m
park of 320 acres, in the midst of which is a. barrow, National School (mixed), for 45 children; average atten-
surrounded by lofty Scotch firs ; there is also in the park a dance, 39 ; Miss Alice Turner, mistress
Bury Viscount M.P., D.L., J.P. Gamier Rev. Edward Southwell M.A. Cole Rev. Ja.mes Henry B.A. [curate}
Quidenham hall; & 7 St. James' frector & surrogate for the diocese of Blofield Mrs. Kate, farmer, Hall farm
square, London s w Norwich], The Rectory Hazelwood Simeon,blacksmit'b,Post off

RACKHEATH, originally two parishes called GREAT College, Cambridge. Rackheath Hall, a splendid mansio!l,
and LITTLE RACKHEATH, but now a consolidated parish and enlarged and embellished by the late Sir Henry Josias
small village, is 2 miles west from Salthouse station, on the Stracey bart. stands in the centre of a well-wooded park @f
Norwich and Cromer branch of the Great Eastern railway, 250 acres, and is now the property of Sir Edward Paulet
and 4! miles north-east from Norwich, in the Eastern Stracey bart. who iA lord of the manor and prmcipalland-
division of the county, Taverham hundred and petty owner. Rackheath Park is the residence of Maurice Lindsay
sessional division, St. Faith's union, Norwich county court Coates esq. The soil is sand and gravel ; subsoil, sand~
district, rural deanery of Taverham and archdeaconry and The chief crops are wheat, barley and turnips. The are11.
diocese of Norwich. The church of All Saints, which stands is 2,009 acres ; rateable value, £2,642 ; the population iiil
in a meadow half a mile from the village, is a building of r891 was 324.
flint and stone in the Perpendicular style, consisting of Sexton, Mrs. Crane.
chancel, nave, south aisle, south porch and a western
tower containir1g 3 bells: the interior of the church was PosT OFFICE.-James Newstead, receiver. Letters arriv~
restored· and reseated with oak seats in 1886 at a cost of from Norwich at 6 a.m. ; dispatched at 5.25 p.m_
£ 340 ; and there are 120 sittings, 6o being free. The Sprowston is the nearest money order office, & the tele-
register dates from the year r66r, The living is a rectory, graph office is at Old Catton
average tithe rent-charge £346, gross yearly value £369, Public Elementary School (mixed), erected in r82o, for 90·
net £326, including 23 acres of glebe, with residence, in children; average attendance 57 ; the school is chiefly
the gift of Sir Edward Paulet Stracey bart. and held since supported by voluntary contributions; Thomas Henry-
r864 by the Rev. Thomas Harrison M.A. of Emmanuel Wood, master
CoatesMaurice Lindsay,Rackheath park Bough ton Chas.Green Man inn,& farmer Sutton Stephen, fanner, Church farm
Harrison Rev. Thomas M.A. [rector], Kemp William, farmer Tallowin Samuel, farmer '
Rectory N ewstead J ames, shoe maker, Post office Thrower James, blacksmith
Arnup William, market gardener Redgrave Michael, farmer

RANWORTH with Panxworth form together one is a small modern mansion with a lawn and extensive-
parish for civil purposes, although ecclesiastically distinct ; shrubberies, and overlooks Ranworth Broad, a stretch of
Ranworth is 5 miles east from Salhouse station, on the water covering 90 acres and connected with the river Bure_
Cromer branch, and 5~ north-east from Brundall station on The Priory, the residence of George Williarn Danby Palmer-
the Norwich and Yarmouth section of the Great Eastern Kerrison esq. J.P. is in the centre of the village, and was
railway, and 9 north-east from Norwich, is in the Eastern enlarged and restored in r879. The principal landowners.
division of the county, Blofield and Walsham petty sessional are Miss J. Kerrison, who is lady of the manor, and G. W.
division, Walsham hundred, Blofield union, Norwich county Danby Palmer-Kerrison esq. J.P. The soil is light mixed;_
court district, rural deanery of Blofield and archdeaconry subsoil, gravel and sand. The chief crops are wheat,
and diocese of Norwich. 'l'he church of St. Helen is a fine barley and oats. The area is 2,438 acres; rateable value,.
building of flint, in the Gothic style of the ISth century, with Panxworth, £2,797; the population in I89r was.
consisting of chancel, nave, south porch and an embattled Ramworth 291, Panxworth 124.
western tower containing 5 bells : there is a fine rood screen Parish Clerk, Smith Jermy.
painted with figures of apostles and saints, and the church Letters through Norwich arrive at 8. 30 a. m. South-
affords 250 sittings. The register dates from the year 155o. Walsham is the nearest money order office. 'l'he nearest.
The living is a vicarage, gross yearly value £200, including telegraph office is at Woodbastwick. WALL Box cleared
8 acres of glebe, with residence, in the gift of the Bishop of at 3· 25 p.m. ; no sunday collection
·Norwich, and held since r886 by the Rev. George Alfred Public Elementary School (mixed), formerly a chapel; it
Poole. Here is a large malting establishment belonging to holds 6o children; average attendance, 54; Miss Medora.
Messrs. W. D. and A. E. Walker, af Great Yarmouth and Morley, mistress
Bungay. Ran worth Hall, the residence of Miss J. Kerrison, CARRIER TO NoRWICH.-Harry Chapman, wed. & sat
Kerrison Miss C Poole Rev. George Alfred, The Vicarage Preston Frederick, farm bailiff toG. W.
I Kerrison Miss J. Ranworth hall Daynes Isaac, market gardener D. Palmer-Kerrison esq
Palmer-Kerrison Gcorge William Danby Starling Thomas James, Jolly Maltsters Walker W. D. & A. E. maltsters;
J. P. The Priory P.H. & blacksmith offices, Great Yarmouth & Bungay

I
RAVENING HAM is a parish and scattered village, the church was restored in r885 at the expense of the late
4 miles north-east of Beccles station on the Ipswich and Lady Bacon and Nicholas Henry Bacon esq. when it was
Yarmouth section, and 4 south-west from Reedham station reseated throughout in oak and a stained window inserted
on the Norwich and Lowestoft section of the Great Eastern by Lady Bacon : there are 250 sittings. The register dates
railway, 3i south-east from Loddon and 7 north-west from from the year r6rr. The living is a vicarage, average tithe
Bungay, in the Southern division of the county, Clavering rent-charge £166, fixed yearly stipend £ISO, in the gift of
hundred, Loddon and Clavering petty sessional division and Nicholas Henry Bacon esq. and held since 1891 by the Rev.
union, county court district of Bungay and Beecles, rural James Christopher Garnett, of Durham University. A
deanery of Brooke eastern division, archdeaconry of Norfolk vicarage house is now (r892) in course of erection, with 3
and diocese of Norwich. The church of St. Andrew, stand- acres of glebe. The impropriate tithes have been commuted
ing in the park, is a building of stone in the Perpendicular for £sr8 ros. 7d. yearly, and belong to Nicholas Henry
style, consisting of chancel, nave, south porch and a round Bacon esq. A college was founded here in 1350 by Sir John
embattled western tower, containing shells, the tenor being de Norwich, Vice-Admiral of England, for a master and
added in r885 : on the chancel walls are eight canopied secular priests and dedicated to t)S. Mary and Andrew; at
memorials to the Bacon family, including Sir Edmund its dissolution thl)re were 8 canons ; the tithes were granted
Bacon, 8th bart. d. Sept. I82o, and Anne (Proctor), his to Sir A. Denny, from whom the property descended to the
wife, d. 26 Aug. r8r3; Sir Edmund Bacon, gth bart. d. 30 Bacon family. Raveningham Hall, a mansion of red brick,
May, I864, and Mary Anne Elizabeth (Bacon), his wife, standing in a park of 200 acres, is the seat of Nicholas
d. 24 Oct. r82o; Sir Henry Hickman llacon, roth bart. d. Henry Bacon esq. J.P. who is lord ,of the manor. N. H.
14 Nov. r872, and Elizabeth (Beckett), his widow, d. I88s, Bacon esq. J.P. and Thomas Robert West esq. are the
and various other members of the family from 1828 to r882: principal landowners. The soil is mixed; subsoil, .brick
DIRECTORY.] NORFOLK .. REED HAM. 577
earth and sand. The chief crops are wheat, oats and barley. through Norwich, arrive at 7.15 a. m. & 3.25 p.m.;
The area is 2,393 acres; rateable value, £2,510; the popu- dispatched at 3.30 p.m. Norton is the nearest money
lation in 1891 was 30I. order office. The telegraph office is at Loddon
Parish Clerk, Henry Grice. Parochial School (mixed), .erected in 1855; Mrs. Annie-
PosT OFFICE.-Mrs. Elizabeth Cuddon, receiver. Letters Norman, mistress
BacanNicholasHy.J. P. Raveninghm. hall Benns George, marshman Farrow Edm und, farmer
Garnett Rev.James Christopher[ vicar], Blunderfield Francis, farmer, overseer GricePhilip,mill bill ma.&general smth
The Parsonage & churchwarden, College farm Mendham John, land steward to N. H.
'-''est Thomas Robert, The Sycamores Chapman Samuel, carpenter Bacon esq. Hall farm
COMMERCIAL. CosseyJn. ( exors. of) ,farmrs. The Cottage Read Robert Russell, fa,.,rr'"ner
~arwood Alfred, farm bailiff to T. R. Clutton Charles, farmer West Thos.Robt.farmer,TheSycamores
West esq. Hill house Farrow Benjamin, farmer White William, boot maker & farmer
'EAST RAYNHAM (or RAYNHAM ST. MARY) is a is a charity of £5 yearly, the gift of Lady Berkelcy, in 1617:
parish and pleasant village, I~ miles south from Raynham a sum of L6oo, left in July, I862, by the late rector, is
.P.ark etation on the Eastern and Midlands railway, and invested in Consols, and the interest is applied to edu-
.ahout 4 .,.iles south-west-by-south from Fakenham, in the cational purposes. Raynham Hall, the seat of the Marquess
North Western division of the county, Gallow hundred and Townshend J.P. occupying the site of an ancient moated hall,
.petty sessional division, Walsingham union and county court is a rectangular mansion of brick and stone, standing on an
district, rural deanery of North Brisley and Toftrees, arch- eminence, commanding a delightful view and surrounded
·deaconry and diocese of Norwich. The church of St. Mary, by an undulating park, extending over about 8oo acres: it
;rebuilt at an outlay of Ls,ooo, chiefly defrayed by the was built about 1630 for ~ir Roger Townshend hart. from
Marquess Townshend, and reopened in April, 1868, is a designs by the famous lnigo Jones, and contains some very
building of cut flints, with freestone dressings, in the Early valuable paintings, including the famous picture of "Beli-
_English and Decorated styles, and consists of chancel, nave, sarius," by Salvator Hosa, presented to the second Viscount
.aisles, porches and an embattled ;western tower with pin- by the Margrave of Brandenburgh, and portraits of Charles
nacles containing a clock and 3 bells: the whole structure is II. and the Princess Elizabeth, by Vandyke. The Marquess
embattled: in the tower is a stained window, presented by Townshend is sole landowner and lord of the manor. The
the late Sir Arthur Phayre K.c.s.I., C. H.; and in the north soil is of good quality. The land is cultivated on the usual
aisle is a small and peculiar brass, with effigy in academical four-course system. The cottages in the parish of Raynham
dress, to Robert Godfrey LL. B. a former rector,ob. 23 April, are all in good condition, the late Marquess having from
1522, and another brass to George, son of Roger Townshend time to time expended many thousand pounds in their
•esq. c. I500: the interior is seated throughout with open restoration. The parish contains 1,635 acres of land;
benches of carved oak and affords 300 sittings. The register rateable value, {,2,217; the population in 189I was 143.
dates from the year 162r. The living is a rectory, with Parish Clerk, Herbert Southgate.
that of West Raynham annexed, average tithe rent-charge LETTER Box cleared at 6.15 p.m. week days, 9 a.m. sun-
_£565, joint net yearly value, £649, including 153 acres of days. Letters through Fakenham, arrive at 8 a.m. ;
glebe, in the girt of the Marquass Townshend, and held since Fa ken ham is the nearest money order & telegraph office
ilE86 by the Rev. Samuel Francis Barber M.A. of Trinity The girls of this parish attend the school at West Raynham;
College, Cambridge, who resides at West Raynham. There the boys that at Helhoughton

!hall; & Brooks' club, London s w


I
Townshend Marquess J.P. Raynham Gayford Henry John, farmer, & land Burton M. (Mrs.), blacksmith
agent to the Marquess Townshend Tricker George Philip, farmer
'SOUTH RAYNHAM (or RAYNHAM ST. MARTIN) tithe rent-charge L291, average £221, joint net yearly value
is a scattered village and parish, 2 miles south from Rayn- L26o, including 53 acres of glebe, with residence, in the
ham Park station on the Eastern and Midlands railway and g-ift of the Marquess Townshend, and held since 1871 by the
about 5 miles south-west-by-south from Fakenham, in the Rev. George John Ridsdale M.A. of Magdalene College,
North Western division of the county, Gallow hundred and Cambridge. There is a dole of £3 6s. 8d. the gift of Lady
petty sessional division, Walsingham union and county Berkeley. The Marquess Townshend is lord of the manor
court district, rural deanery of North Brisley and Toftrees and sole landowner. The soil is mixed ; subsoil, brick earth
and archdeaconry and diocese of Norwich. The church of and marl. The land is cultivated on the usual four .. course
St Martin is an ancient building of stone in the Decorated shift. The area is r ,o2 5 acres ; rateable value, L I, 197 ; the
style, consisting of chancel, nave and an embattled western population in 1891 was 156.
tower containing one bell : the stained east window is a Parish Clerk, George Neale.
memorial to Mary, late wife of tile present vicar, and PosT 0FFICE.-Mrs. Jessie Mason, receiver. Letters re-
was erected in r88r by her children; another stained ceived through Fakenham, arrive at 8 a.m. & 6 p.m. ;
window in the nave is a memorial to De Rlaquiere Charles dispatched at 6 p.m. The nearest money order & tele-
'Townshend Ridsdale, a son of the vicar, who died in 1888: graph office is at East Rudham
there are 150 sittings. The register dates from the year 1740. The girls of this place attend school at West Raynham; the
'The living is a vicarage, annexed to that of Helhoughton, boys that at Helhoughton
Ridsdale Rev. GeorgeJohn M.A. Vicarage I MasonJ essie(Mrs. ),shopkeepr. Post office I Smith Mary (Mrs.), farmer
WEST RAYNHAM (or RAYNHAM ST. MARGARET) Whitaker LL.D. the celebrated topographer and antiquary,
is a parish, 2 miles south from Raynham Park station on the was born at the old rectory house here 8 June, 1759. The
Eastern and Midlands railway and 5 miles south-west from Marquess Townshend is lord of the manor and sole land-
Fakenham, in the North Western division of the county, owner. The soil is heavy and mixed; subsoil, brick earth
Gallow hundred and petty sessional division, 'Yalsingham and mar I. The land is cultivated on the usual four-course
union and county court district, rural deanery of North shift. The parish contains I,37o acres; rateable value,
Brisley and Toftrees and archdeaconry and diocese of Nor- Lr,7og; the population in 1891 was 3I4·
wich. The church of St. Margaret has been many years in Parish Clerk, Herbert Southgate.
ruins : the inhabitants attend the church of St. Mary, at
East Raynham. The living is a rectory, consolidated with PosT OFFICE.-Mrs. Mary Ann Scott, receiver. Letters
that of East Raynham, average tithe rent-charge L 565, received through Fakenham, arrive at B a.m. & 6 p.m. ;
joint net yearly value £6 4 g, including 153 acres of glebe, dispatched at 6 p.m. Postal orders are issued here, but
with residence, in the gift of the Marquess Townshend, and not paid. East Rudham is the nearest money order &
held sinee 1886 by the Rev. Samuel Francis Barber M.A. telegraph office
"Trinity College, Cambridge. There is a Wesleyan chapel School (girls & infants) for the district of East, West &
here. The charities include an annual dole of £3 6s. 8d. South Raynham & Helhoughton, erected by the Marquess
'l"eceived out of the estate of the Marquess Townshend; Townshend, in I8S4• for 8o girls & 40 infants ; average
'and a yearly sum of L6 14s. 8d. shared alternately attendance, go ; Miss Emily Tmdall, certificated mistress:
with Helhoughton parish. The Rev. Thomas Dunham the boys of this parish attend the school at Helhoughton
BarberRev.SamuelFrancis M.A.Rectory MilfordRt.GreyhoundP.H.&pork butchr' Scott Mary Ann (Mrs.), grocer &;
.Eutcher Arthur Richard, farmer Parker John, baker & farmer draper, & post office
Dyball.Alfd. agricultural implement ma Segon William, shoe maker SmithGeorgina(Miss),hutcher & farmer
REDENHALL, see HARLESTON.
-REED HAM is a parish and village, with a station on the hundred, Blofield union, Great Yarmouth county court
Norwich, ,Yarmouth and Lowestoft section of the Great district, rural deanery of Blofield and .archdeaconry and
Eastern railway, 8 miles south-west-by-west from Yarmouth, diocese of Norwich. There is a ferry here across the river
1 18 from London and 12 south-east from Norwich, on the Yare. The church of St. John the Baptist is a building of
iborders of Suffolk and in the Eastern division of the county, flint in the Gothic style, consisting of chancel with aisle,
lllofield and Walsham petty sessional division, Walsham nave, north porch and an embattled western tower with
5:7~ R$EDHAM, NORFOLK .. "[KELLY'S .

a- c~ock and 5 bells ~·~re are several in -the present building: John .William Rose esq. who i"
I?iqn~les, contaiiJing
memorials to. the Berney .family, including a' "tomb with :lord of the manor; and the trnstees of the late 6'-. D.
kneeling effigies to Henry Berney; ob. 15B41 ~nd two braBses: Herney esq. J.P., n.L. of Morton, are the ~hief landowners.
tbe ~~urch•affords 250 sittings. Th0 register of baptisms The soil is light, mixed; subsoil, sand and clay. The chief
and burials dates from the year 1758, marriages 1754. The crop!! are wheat, barley and oats. The area is 3,328 acres,
j
living is a rectory, with the vicarage of Freethorpe annexed, of which 2,163 are marsh or meadow and the remainder
tithe rent-charge £610, joint net yearly value £429. including arable; rateable value £6,047; the population in l89r
128 actes of glebe, with residence, in the gift of Colonel Hill was 858.
Mussenden Leathes, of Herringfleet Hall, near Lowestoft, Parish Clerk, Samuel Sales.
Suffolk, and held &ince 1870 by the Rev. Carteret Ilenty PosT, M. 0. & T. 0., S. B. & Annuity & Insurance
Loathes B.A. of St. John's College, Cambridge. Here is a Office. (Hail way Sub-Office. Letters should have R.S.O.
Primitive Methodist chapel. This place was one of the seats Norfolk addcd.)-Walter L. Brydges, sub-postmaster.
of the kings of East Anglia, and the scene of the murder of 'Letters delivered at 7 a.m.; dispatched at 1.10 p.m. &
Lothb.roch, or Lodbrok, the Dane. Here are flour and saw 6 p.m. & g.2o p. m. via Norwich
mills,. limekilns, a. foundry and brickficld. Reedham Old National School (mixed), ·erected with Tesidence for the
Hall, tP.e seat of John William Rose esq. is situated near the schoolmaster in 1871, at a cost of £ggo, & enlarged in
church. Reed ham Hall, now in the occupation of Gordon IBBI at a cost of £200, for 200 children; average attend-
Barratt esq. is built. on the site of an ancient castle, a ance, 120; Hallett W:illiam Murfitt, master
portion of the walls and the vaults of which are incorporated Railway Station, Arthur Mann, station master
PRIVATE RESIDENTS. Cooper Jeremiah, farmer , Mallett W{Jliam, fowl & cattle dealer
Barrntt Gordon, Reedham hall Dawson Jonathan,farrner & cattle dealr Murfitt Hallett Wi!liam, schoolmaster
Bowler Fredk. Edwd. Flordon cottage Denton William, Railway hotel Mutten Charles Jacob, Ship l'.H
Cossey Mrs Forder George,beer retailer & ferryman Perry William, Eagle tavern
Gaff John, The Laurels FrosdickHenry, wheelwright &carpenter Read Thomas Matthews, maltster
Grimsell George Gaff John, miller (wind) Sales James, shoe maker
Jary William Thomas, Hill house Goffen Edward, shoe maker Sewell Brothers, tailors & outfitters, &
Larke EdgarNorman, The Cottage Goffen James, lime burner agents for Liverpool & London &
Loathes Rev. Carteret Hy. B.A. Rectory Hall Charles, boat builder Globe Insurance Co
Loam Joseph Hall Margaret (Mrs.), Lord Nelson P.H Smith Samuel, grocer
Rosa John William, Reedham Old hall Hilling Mary (Mrs.), pork butcher Smith William; farmer & overseer
Sewell James Cooper Hindle John, iron & brass founder, Stone Alfred, farmer
Wcbster George agricultural implement maker, Stone Noah, farmer
COMMERCIAL. plumber, glazier & painter, general Sutton Benjamin, butcher
Barker Robert, blacksmith blacksmith & grocer Thaxter James, Berney Arms P.H
Barnes Richard, cowkeeper Jones Henry, Brickmakers' Arms P.H Wales lsaac John,english & foreign
Barratt Gordon, farmer, Reeolham hall King George, cattle dealer & grocer timber merchant, hoop & hurdle
Benns Philip, farmer Learner Westmore Edwin, farmer maker, steam saw mills, wherry
Burgess Robert, marshman Mallett · William, jun. flour, bread & owner & farmer & brick, tile & pipe
Cable Arthur, grocer & hair dresser cattle dealer, malt & hop merchant, manufr. at Freethorpe. See advert
Chester William, lodging house butcher & farmer Williams George, grocer
REEPHAM is a small town on the banks of the Eyn, a fellow and assistant tutor of that college. A Cemetery of
tributary of the Wensum, extending into the parishes of half an acre was formed in r85o for Reepham and Kerdist.on,
REEPHAM WITH KEHDISTON and HACKFORD and \VHITWBLL, . at a cost of £2oo, and is under the control of a Burial Board
with a station on the East Norfolk branch of the Great of four members. The charities are of £9 yearly value.
Eastern rail way and one at Whit well, I~ miles south from The police station is a structure of brick, with a magistrates'
the town, on the Eastern and Midlands railway, and is 7~ room and offices attached. In the market place is a Reading-
miles west-south-west from Aylsham 1 r26 from London and room with a Library of about I,ooo volumes. Captain
12 north-west from Norwich, in the Northern division of Timothy White, of Sall Park, is lord of the manor and the
the county, hundred and petty sessional division of Eynsford, principal landowner. The area of Reepham with Kerdiston
Aylsl)am union and county court district, rural deanery of is 2, 570 acres ; rateable value, £4, q8 ; the population in
Sparham and archdeaconry and diocese of .Norwich. The 188r was 527.
church of St. Mary the Virgin is an ancient structure of flint Hackford-next-Reepham is a parish, which in-
in the Decorated style, consisting of chancel, nave, aisles, eludes Reepham market place and town. The church.
south porch and an embattled tower on the south side, which stood in Reepham churchyard, was destroyed by fire
containing 2 bells : in the chancel is a brass with effigies and in 15.t 3 : the parishioners attend Whitwcll church. The
margin~l.inscription to. Sir. William de Kerdistnn, ob. 1391, living is a rectory, annexed to that of Whit well. Here are
a~d C_ecih~ (~rewes), h1s w1fe; and there are other brasses \Vesleyan, Methodist New Connexion and Primitive Method-
With mscriptwns onl.Y to Margaret Camplyn, 1527; John I ist chapels. The charities amount to £ 18 yearly. A
Jeckes~ 1577.; Mr. R1chard Heyward, r6o8 i an.d to the Rev.' Cemetery of one acre was formed in I856 for Hackford and
Fredenck l<Jel.d D. D. formerly rector of the pansh, ~ho Wi;\S Whitwell, at a cost of £ 200 , and is under the control of a
one of the rev1sers of the Old :restarnent: under an. arch m Burial Board of eight members. IIere is a large horse-
the north wall of the chancel1s the altar to~1b of S1r. Ro~er breaking establishment, carried on by Mr. WILliam Dyball.
de Kerdeston, ob. 1337: the effigy of the ~n~ght, which hcs The market is held on Wednesday for cattle, and a fair is
on a. bed of ston~s, w1th t.he legs cross~d, IS m a~mour, the held on June 2gth for stock and horses: a large stock sale
head covered w1th a bascm~t, from whi~h a cama1l descends is held fortnightly by Messrs. E. V. & A. W. Ireland in the
ov~r the shoulders: t~e kmght. wears a Jupon or su.rcoat and New Market sale ground. Hack ford Hall, 1i mile.s west, is
~ r1c)lly chased belt WI~h sword and. dagger~ the right hand the seat of Mrs. Collyer. The Ollands is the residence of
1s laid on the sword-h1lt .and the left arm IS thrown ac:oss John Anthony Ken drew esq. There are four manors. Mrs.
the body, the ha~d touchmg the pebbly bed near the rJght Geurge is lady of the manor of Hackford Market, and
shoulder: th~ s1des of. the tomb. are arcaded and have William John Sadd esq. of Norwich, lord of the other three.
sta~dmg effigies of relatives. and ch1ld:r:en as mourners: the Mrs. Collyer and Mrs. Blake-Humfrey, of Wroxham, are the
cunous bed of stones on whiCh t.he kmgh~ly fi~ure rests has principal landowners. The soil is sand and loam; subsoil,
bee:t;l the cause of. much perplexity to ant1quar1es, t_Jy whom clay and graveL The chief crops are barley, roots, wheat
vanons explan~tw~s have b~n offered: an eng:r:a~mg ,~f the and hay. The area is 1,8r6 acres; rateable value, {.2,927;
tomb ~ppear~ 1!1 Stothard s Monum~ntal Effigies, and the population in r88r was Bog.
there IS a s1m1lar tomb at Ingham, m thiS county: the
stained east window was given in 1867 by the late .Rev. Sir Kerdiston is a parish, I~ miles north-west. Captain
E. R. Jodrell bart. in memory of his mother, and there Timothy White, of Sail Park, who is lord of the manor, Mrs.
are five others in the chancel, the gift of Lady Jodrell, and Blake-Humfrey, of Wroxham, the trustees of the late John
a monument of Italian marble, erected in 188g, to the Parmenter Leeds esq. and J. J. Bishop esq. of Kerdiston,
memory of the Rev. Sir Edward Repps Jodrell hart. d. 12 are the principal landowners. The area is r,68o acres.
Nov. x882: the nave and chancel have been restored, at the The population in 1881 was 188.
expense of Lady Jodrell, by H. J. Green esq. architect,
Norwich : there are 250 sittings. The church of St. Michael, Whitwell is a parish to the south of H.eepham. The
Whitwell, stands in the same churchyard, as did also that of church of St. Michael, standing in Reepham churchyard,
Hackford until its destructiOn in J:543· The register ~ates i!'l a fine old structure of flint, with Bath stone dressings,
fro1ll t,be year 1538. The living is a rectory, with Ke.rdiston chiefly in the Perpendicular style, consisting of, chancel,
ann,exed, average tithe rent-charge £61o, joint net yearly nave, south porch and an embattled western tower in the
value £521, including 88 acres of glebe a.nd residence, in the Decorated style. with four pinnacles, and containin~ 6
gift of TPinity College. Cambridge, and held since 1864 by bells l there are 300 sittings. The register dates from the
tb~, Rev. Mich~Wt Marlow U mfreville Wilkinson M . .!. forr:qerly year 1584. , The living Jis a. vicarage; with the rectory of
DIRECTORY.] NORFOLK~ REEPHAM. 579
Hackfard 11.nnexed, joint iP'OSs .. yeaTly value [431• arising VOLUNT'RERS : - ·
from tithe rent-charge, with 14 acres of glebe and house; in · 3rd Volunteer Battalion Norfolk Regiment. (E. ·eo.),
the gift of and held since 1873 by the Rev. William Henry Capt. D' Arcy Collyer; wmmandant
Freeman M.A. of Caius College, Cambridge. The charities PUBLIC OF'J.'ICERS ~-
amount to £1~ 12s. yearly. Here is the tannery of Mr. Assistant Overseer & Collector of Taxes for Parishes of
Stephen Leeds. Whitwell Hall, the property of the Spring- Hackford & Reepham-cum-Kerdiston, William Hudson
field trustees, is the residence of Robert Boult esq. Mrs. Clerk to Commissioners of Taxes,D'ArcyBedingfeld Collyer,
Collyer, of Hackford Hall, who is lady of the manor, and Mr. Reepham
Stephen Leeds are the principal landowners. The soil is Inspector of Common Lodging Houses, Philip Palmer
sand and loam ; subsoil, clay and gravel. The chief crops Inland Revenue Officer, Joseph Robert Whitelaw
are wheat, roots, barley and hay. The area is I,5II acres ; Medical Officer, Great Witcbingham District, St. Faith's
rateable value, £2,393; the population in I88I was 426. Union, vacant .
Deputy Parish Clerks:- Medical Officers, Aylsham Union, rst District, Edward
St. Mary's, Reepham-cum-Kerdiston, Owen Goddard. Verdon Perry L.R.C.P.LOnd.; sth District, vacant
St. Michael's, Hackford-cum-Whitwell, Thomas Hawes. Registrar of Births & Deaths & Relieving & Vaccination
PosT, M. 0. & T. 0., S. B. & Annuity & Insurance Officer for the Eynsford District, Aylsham Union, Alfred
Office.-Miss Lydia A. Rudd, postmistress. Letters arrive William Seely
from Norwich at 5-45 a.m. & 2.55 p.m.; dispatched at
4·35 p.m. & 7.30 (local); the box closes at 4.20 p.m. but PLACES OF WORSHIP, with times of services:-
letters can be posted till4.30 p.m. on payment of Id. extra St. Mary's Church, Reepham-cum-Kerdiston, Rev. ~ichael
WALL Ll<,TTER BoxEs at Whitwell station & Reepham Moor MarlowUmfreville Wilkinson M.A.rector; II a.. m. 6.30 p.m
are cleared at 4 p.ni. daily, except sundays St. Michael's Church, Hackford & Whitwell, Rev. William
CoONTY MAGISTRATES FOR EYNSFORD PETTY SESSIONAL Henry :Freeman M.A. rector of Hackford & vicar of Whit-
DIVISION. well ; II a.m. 3 p.m
Wyrley-Birch Wyrley esq. D.L. Cromer, chairman Primitive Methodist, I0.45 a. m. 6.30 p.m
Browne Richard Charles esq. Elsing hall, Dcreham Wesleyan, Hackford, ID-45 a.m. 6.30 p.m
Custance Col. Sir Hambleton Francis K.C.B., D.L. Weston Wesleyan New Connexion, 10.45 a. m. 6.30 p.m
house, Norwich ScHooLs:-
Custance Lieut.-Col. Frederic Hambleton, Weston Longue- A School Board of 5 members was formed compulsorily,
ville, Norwich I3 April, 1876, & Booton was made contributory, 29
Gay James esq. B.A. Thurning hall, Dereham April, 1879, with I member; Rev. M. M. U. Wilkinson,
Hamond Charles Annesley esq. Twyford hall, Dereham chairman & clerk to the board; attendance officers,
Lombe Edward Hemy Evans esq. Bylaugh park, Dereham Booton district, H. C. Carman, Norwich; Reepham &
Lombe Rev. Henry Evans B. A. Bylaugh park, Dereham Kerdiston district, William Bcsford, Kerdiston & Thomas
Clerk to the Magistrates, D' Arcy Bedingfeld Collyer, Riches, Heepham
Hackford Board (St. Mary, Reepham), erected in 1847, for 70 boys
Petty Sessions held at the Police station, Dereham road, & girls & 40 infants ; average attendance, 47 boys &
every third monday at eleven a.m. The places in the ~irls & 36 infants; Mrs. Susan Goddard, mistress; Miss
division are :-Alderford, Bawdeswell, Billingford, Bin try, Edith Goddard, infants' mistress
Brandistone, By laugh. El sing, Fouls ham, Foxley, Guest- National (Hackford & Whitwell), now under the newly
wick, Guist, Hackford, Haveringland, Hindolveston, Ker- formed School Board, erected in I86o, for 185 children;
diston, Lyng, Morton, Rccpham, Ringland, Sal!, Spar- average attendance, boys & girls 135, infants 40 ; William
ham, Swanington, Tbemelthorpe, 'fburning, Twyford, Pitcher, master; Mrs. Pitcher, mistress; Miss Ellen
Weston, Whitwell, Witchingham (Great), Witchingham Mason, assistant mistress
(Little), Wood Dalling & Wood Norton A School Board of 5 members was formed 30 January, r89o,
PUBLIC ESTABLISHMENTS:- . for the united district. of Hackford & Whitwell ; William
County Police Station, Philip Palmer, inspector, & I Hudson, clerk to the board. The school & master's house
ccnstable is now (r892) being built on the Wbitwell road, to hold
Hackford & Whitwell Cemetery, William Hudson, clerk to 200 children
the burial board RAILWAY STATIONS:-
Reepham & Kerdiston Cemetery, vacant, clerk to the burial &epham (Great Eastern), Richard Alban William Sayer,
board station master
Reading Room & Library, Johnson Cripps, sec. & librarian Whitwell (Eastern & Midlands), Robert Charles Bamford,
Volunteer Fire Brigade, Hackford, Fk. Thos. Howard, 10upt station master

Volunteer Battalion (3rd) Norfolk Regi- Bullard & Sons, maltsters


Reepham. ment (E Co.) (Capt. D'Arcy Collyer, Burton Fredk. genrl. dealer, Market pl
Back Herbert Hatfield :r.LB.Lond commandant) Burton John C. printer & hair dresser
Bircham Samuel J.P. Moor house Clarke Charles C. M.R.c.v.s. vet. surgn
Brennan Miils, The Moor Hackford. Colli~on Arthur, builder & beer retailer
Eglington Mrs PRIVATE RESIDENTS. Collyer D' Arcy Bedingfeld B. .A., a. c. L.
Wilkinson Rev. Michael Marlow Um- solicitor, clerk to the magistrates & to
freville M.A. Rectory Collyer D'Arcy Bedingfeld B.A., s.c.L the commissioners of taxes, & corn~
Collyer Mrs. Hackford hall missioner for oaths
COMMERCIAL. Eglington Miss, The Limes Cripps Johnson, chemist & druggist &c
BackHerbt. Hatfield M.B. Lond.,M. R. c.s. George Mrs Dodwell Christopher, baker & shopkpr
En g. medical officer of health, Blofield
Kendrew John Anthony, The Ollands Dyball William, horse breaker & livery
union & med. oilicer & public vacein- Leeds Mrs. Church plain stable keeper
ator, 5th dist. Aylsham union & Gt. Leeds Mrs. Stephen, Dereham road Earl George, farmer
Witching ham dist. St. Faith's union Parke Mrs Eglington Samuel Sewell, farmer
Boddy Charlotte & Sarah Ann (The Perry Edward Verdon Evans Wm. Fredk. saddler, Towns end
Misses), farmers Roberson Henry, The Limes Fisher Georgc, grocer & draper
Hoon John, boot maker Sands Miss Fox & Son, bakers
Brownsell Thomas, farmer Sband Mrs . Frankland John, ironmonger
Buxton Tbomas,fishmngr. &c. The Moor Spencer John Redmond, Hack ford ho Gibbs Edward, ironmonger
Clarke Alfred Fuller, baker Spurrell William Goddard Owen, market gardener
Caller R. & Sons, coal, corn, cake & Whitelaw Joseph Robt. New land villas Gooch Robert Parker, veterinary sur-
salt merchants, Reepham station ; & geon, farmer & beer merchant
at Attleborough ; Diss & Norwich COMMERCIAL. Gurneys, Birkbecks,Barclay & Huxton,
Dcwing Thomas, shopkeeper, The Moor Alien Henry William, shoe maker bankers(JohnsonCripps,agent),closed
Gillingwater William, boot maker & Amiss John, wheelwright on sats.; draw on Harclay, Bevan &
shopkeeper, The Moor Attoe Thomas, wheelwright Co. Lombard street, London E c
Hardingham Christr. horse slaughterer
Jex IlenryWm.chimney swpr. The Moor
Austin Richard Watts, butcher
Barber Robert, watch maker
l
Hackford & Whitwell Cemetery (Wm.
Hudson, clerk to the burial board)
Reepham & Kerdiston Cemetery ( va- Blrcham Hannah (Mrs.), chemist & Hall John Ebenezer, saddler, Market pl
cant, clerk to the burial board) drug gist Ha wes Thomas, carpenter & joiner
Riches Thomas,scbool attendance officr Bircharn Thomas & Son, tailors & Hill Robert, fishmonget"
Rudd Lydia A. (Miss), post office woollen drapers, hatters & hosiers Ho ward Esther (Miss), dress maker
Sall Coal, Corn & Manure Co. Reepham Bircham Thomas, tailor Howard Frederick Thoma..q, carpenter
station (G. E. Railway) Boyle Allan, King's Arms hotel, corn- Howes Sl.LordNelson P.H.& blacksmith
Squirrell & Utting, corn & cake mer- mercial & family Hudson Frederick, boot maker
chants, Reepham station Brownseli Thomas, farmet Iludson William, boot maker
580 REEPHAM. NORFOLK. [E:ELLY's
Hudson ''Villiam, solicitors' clerk, ac- Pull Emily (Miss), dress maker Eglington Thomas (Mrs.), farmer
countant, assista.n t overseer&collector Rainbird James, basket & sieve maker George William, farmer
of taxes for parishes of Hackford & Reading Room & Library (Johnson Hickling John Shepheard, farmer
Reepham-cum-Kerdiston & bailiff of Cripps, sec. & librarian) TimbersChas.steward to J.J.Bishop esq
Manor Courts & clerk to the burial & Reeve Maria (Mrs.), laundress
school boards of Hackford & Whit- Roofe Maria (Mrs.), dress maker Whitwell.
well, & newspaper reporter Savory Alfred Coulsey, beer retailer Boult Robert, The Hall
King William George, Greyhound P.H. Seely Alfred William, relieving officer & Ebbetts Mrs. Ivy house
wheelwright & general smith registrar of births & deaths, Eyns- Fransem William
Leeds Elizabeth (Mrs.), farmer ford district, .Aylsham union Freeman Rev. William Henry M. A. [rec-
Miller .Arthur Frederiek, grocer Stimpson Benjamin, butcher tor of Hackford & vicar of Whit well],
Morris Robert, umbrella repairer Timbers Richard (Mrs.), laundress Whitwell vicarage
Munford Henry, George & Dragon P.H. Wilkin George William, butcher Leeds Siephen
& Eastern & Midland Railway receiv- Willimott Thomas, beer retailer
ing & inqmry office, cartage agent & Woods Mary (Mrs.), grocer &c COMMERCIAL.
furniture remover Wright James, Sun P.H Aaen John, Star P.H
Muttock George, farmer Wright John, house decorator Brown George, farmer
Page Edward, carpenter, farmer & Wright Sophia (Mrs.), fancy repository Bush William Arthur, farmer
beer retailer, Six Crossways Cole Benjamin, farmer
Pask William Alfred, tailor, woollen Kerdiston. Eglington Mark, farmer
draper, hatter & hosier Bishop J. J Holmes Robert, farmer
Peck Harry Charles, grocer, draper & Besford lsaac Corner, farmer Holmes Stcphcn, Fall Gate P.n
outfitter, & agent for W. & A. Gilbey, BesfordWilliam,farmer & school attend- Leeds Stephen, tanner & farmer
wine & spirit merchants, Market pl ance officer Neale Thomas, shopkeeper
Perry Edward Verdon L.R.C.P.Lond. Bishop Alfred, farmer Pye Samuel (Mrs.), shopkeeper
surgeon, & medical oilicer for 1st Bishop J. J. farmer & landowner Seely Henry, corn merchant
district, .Aylsham union Brown William, farmer . Wilkin WJlliam, butcher & general dlr
l'lummer Mary (.Miss), shopkeeper Eglington John Smith, farmer I WilkinWm.(Mrs.),pork btchr.&shopkpr
REPP.3, see NoRTHREPPS and SouTHREPPS.
REPPS-cum-BASTWICK is a parish and small Bounty and 18s. tithe rent-charge. Here is a small Primi-
village near the Hickling navigation, ~~ miles south-west tive Methodist chapel, erected in 1858. At the inclosure in
from Potter Heigham station on the Eastern and Midlands r8o8, 19 acres of marsh land were allotted to the poor.
railway, ro miles north-west from Yarmouth, in the Eastern The Hev. Henry Evans-Lombe B.A., J.P. of Bylaugh Park,
division of the county, incorporated hundreds, petty sessional who is lord of the manor, and George Morris Beck esq. J.P.
division and incorporation of East and West Flegg, county of Ormesby St. Margaret, and Mr. Julius Starling are the
court district of (ireat Yarmouth, rural deanery of Flegg principar landowners. The soil is mixed; subsoil, clay.
and archdeaconry and diocese of Norwich. The church of The chief crops are wheat, barley and oats. The area is
St. Peter, at Repps, is a small edifice of flint m the Early 1,229 acres; rateable value, £1,972; the population in
English style, consisting of chancel, nave and an embattled 1891 was 259. ·
western tower cylindrical at the base, with an octagonal BAsTWICK is a hamlet half a mile north: here was
upper stage and containing 3 bells: the church was partially formerly a church, now in ruins.
Testored in r881, and since ~horoughly restored at a total Parish Clerk, James Barber.
cost of L7co, and now affords 120 s1ttings. The register LETTER Box cleared at 4 p.m. Letters from Yarmouth
dates from the year 1617. The living is a vicarage, gross arrive at 9 a.m. The nearest money order & telegraph
yearly value L 159, including 4 acres of glebe, in the gift of office is at Mart ham
the governors of King Edward VI. Grammar School, Nor- A School Board of 5 members was formed compulsorily, 25
wich, and held since 1875 by the Rev. Henry Charles Ash May, 1875; Thomas W. Wright, clerk to the board;
liLA. of Worcester College, Oxford, who resides at Martham. Joshua Grimble, Repps, attendance officer
The impropriate tithes, commuted at £4oo, and 33 acres Board School (mixed), built in 1879, at a cost of £3oo, for
of glebe, are held by the patrons of the living, who pay the 40 children; average attendance, 34; Mrs. Emily
vicar a stipend of £150; .£"6 is received from Queen Anne's Grimble, mistress
Kid man Cubitt, Manor house Flowerdew George, wheelwright & grocr Mitchell James, farm steward to G. M·
COMMERCIAL. Haddon William, wheelwright Beck esq
Addy John, miller (wind & steam) Hannant John, cowkeeper Mousey W1lliam, fish dealer
Balls James, market gardener Johnson James, shopkeeper Neave Charles, general dealer
B<trber James, boot maker Kidman Cubitt, farmer, Manor house Starling Julius, farmer & landowner
Cater Benjamin, boot maker, Bastwick Kidman Harry, farmer, Bastwick · Thain Noah, blacksmith
Cossey George, White Hart inn Knights "\-Villiam, Bridge hotel I Wright Thomas W. market gardener

REYMERSTON is a parish and village about 1l miles duce £19 yearly; the charitirs amount to £8 12s. yearly,
south-west from Thuxton station on the Wymondham and and there is a fuel allotment of 15 acres, producing ·
Dereham section of the Great Eastern railway and 5 south 1.,·22. Robert Thornhaugh Gurdon esq. M.A., D.L., J.P. of
from Dercham, in the Mid division of the county, Mitford Letton Hall, who is lord of the manor, and John Press esq.
and Launditch petty sessional division and union, Dereham are the chief landowners. New Uall, .a modern mansion of
county court district, rural deanery of Hingham, Mitford brick, standing in grounds of 100 acres in extent, and the
division, archrleaconry of Norfolk and diocese of Norwich. property of John Press esq. is now unoccupied. The soil
The church of St. Peter is a structure of Hint in various is mixed ; subsoil, clay. The chief crops are wheat, barley
styles, dating from the close of the 12th century, and con- and turnips. The area is 1,599 acres ; rateable value,
sisting of chancel, nave, aisles, north porch and a western Lz,316; the population in 1891 was 287.
tower containing 5 bells : the east window is filled with very Sexton, James Goldhawke.
fine Flemish glass, and the communion rails are also old PosT OFFICF..-Stephen Lyndo, postmaster. Letters re-
Flemish work: there are 350 sittings, 200 being free. The ceived through .Attleborough. Box cleared at 5-IS p.m.
rer,ister dates from the year 1559. The living is a rectory, on week days & 10.15 a.m. on sundays. Hardingham is
average tithe rent-charge £349, net yearly value Lzog, in- the nearest monry order & Hingham the nearest telegraph
eluding 20 acres of glebe, with residence, in the gift of office
Robert Thornhaugh Gurdon esq. and held since 1874 National School (mixed), built in 18+4 by members of the
by the Rev. Richard Murray Gawne B. A. of Christ Church, Gurdon family, fur 6r children; average attendance, 51;
Oxford. The church lands comprise 12~ acres, and pro- Mrs. Sophia Kettle, mistress
Gawne Rev. Richd.Murray B. A. Rectory Goff Jesse, farmer, North Green farm Meachen James, farmer
COMMERCIAL. Goff John, farmer Mendham William, farmer
Cary John, farmer, & relieving officer Green William, bricklayer Mortlock John, farmer
for Mitford district of Mitford &Laun- Hall Aaron, farmer Patrick Richard, farmer
ditch union High Wm. farmer, Old hall,& Church frm Ransome Robert, blacksmith
Cary Louis, farmer Hood William, carpenter Spinks Williarn, farmer
Chamberlain Thomas, farmer Jessop Jarnes, carpenter Stimpson Thomas, farmer & butcher
Clarke Frederick, Black Horse P. H Lock Henry, farmer, Manor house Tufts James, beer retailer
Foulsham John, farmer Lyndo Stephen, shopkeeper, Post office
RIDDLESWORTH is a parish on the Little Ouse of the Great Eastern railway and 6 east from Thetford,
river and on the borders of Suffolk, 5 miles south from in the Mid division of tbe county, Guiltcross and
Harling Road station on the Thetford and Norwich section i Shropham petty sessional division, Guiltcross hundred
- •
DIRECTORY. J NORFOLK, GREAT RINGSTEAD. 581.
and union, Tbetford county court district, rural deanery and the residence of Frank Penn esq. Sir Thomas Thorn-
of Rockland, archdeaconry of Nor folk and diocese of hill bart. of Pakenham, Suffolk, is lord of the manor and
Norwich. The church of St. Peter is an ancient building sole landowner. The soil is light loam; subsoil, chalky.
of stone in the Early English style, consisting of chancel, The chief crops are barley and wheat. The area is 1,157
nave, south porch and an embattled western tower contain- acres; rateable value, £7S6; the population in 189t, 85.
ing one bell: there are ISO sittings, 120 being free. The Parish Clerk, William Tyler.
register dates from the year 1686. The living is a rectory,
consolidated -with those of Gasthorpe and Knettishall PosT OFFICE.-John Henderson, sub-postmaster. Letters
(Suffolk), average tithe rent-charge £ 26g, joint net yearly received from Thetford, through East Harling, arrive at
value £ 2 6o, including 6o acres nf glebe, with residence, in 7.30 a.m.; Sundays 10.20a.m. Box cleared at 4.30 p.m.;
the gift of Sir Thomas Thornhill bart. and held since 1g72 sundays 10. IS a. m. The nearest money order office is
by the Rev. John Robinson Wells, of St. Aidans. Riddles- at Hopton & telegraph office at Garboldisham. Postal
worth Hall, a fine mansion of white brick with stone dress- orders are issued here, but not paid
ings in the Italian style, standing in a well-wooded park of National School (mixed), to hold so children; average at-
I20 acres, is the property of Sir Thomas Thornhill bart. tendance, 3S ; Miss Kathleen Dalton, mistress
Dennis Edwin E. Hiddlesworth farm Dennis Edwin E. estate agent to Sir Rohhins George, head gamekeeper to
Penn Frank esq. Riddlesworth hall Thomas Thornhill hart. & insur. agut Frank Penn esq
HenQ.erson John, head gardener to
Wells Rev. John Robinson, Rectory Frank Penn esq. Post office
RIDLINGTON is a parish, 3~ miles north-by-east from the Earl of Kimberley K.G., P.C. and held since 1885 by the
Honing station on the Eastern and Midlands railway and 4~ Rev. William Crossland: there is no parsonage house.
miles east from North Walsham, 14south-eastfromCromcr, Mrs. Shepherd is la'iy of the manor. George Edward
in the Eastern division of the county, Tunstead and Happing Cubitt esq. of Honing, and George William Bush esq. of
petty sessional division, Tun stead hundred; Small burgh Walcott, are the principal landowners. The soil is various ;
union, North Walsham county court district, rural deanery subsoil, sand, gravel and clay. The chief crops are wheat,
of Waxham, llapping division, archdeaconry of Norfolk and oats and barley. The area is sooA. 3R. 13P. ; rateable value,
diocese of Norwich. The church of St. Peter is a building £1,093; the population in 1891 was 217.
of flint, consisting of chancel, nave, south porch and em- Sexton Abra.ham Newstead.
battled western tower, with figures of The Four Evangelists '
serving as pinnacles, and containing one bell; lamps were PosT 0FFH':E.-Charles Cole, receiver. Letters auive
presented in x88S by the rector: there is a memorial through North Walsham at 9 a.m.; dispatched at 4-15
window to John Webb Flavell, son of the Rev. John Webb p.m. Bacton is the nearest money order & telegraph
Flarell, rector from I 836 ; the church was restored in 1884 office
at a cost of £350, and has xso sitLings. The register dates A School Board of 5 members was formed compulsorily, 12
from the year ISS7· The living is a discharged rectory, November, 187s, for the united district of East Rushton
average tithe rent-charge £ Y so, net yearly value £119, & Ridlington. The school is at East Ruston, but some
including three-quarters of an acre of glebe, in the gift of children attend the schools at Witton & Happisburgh
Crossland Rev. Williarn [rector] Cole Charles, shopkeeper, Post office I Molineux William Pemberton, farmer
llobson Rev. William Muskett [vicar of Fields llenry, farmer & landowner Pratt James, farmer
East Ruston ], Ridlington Old rectory Goult John, farmer Sandell William, farmer
Barber Alfred, farmer Howes Robert, farmer Sexton Sarah (Mrs.), Plough P.H
Clements Mary Ann (Miss), shopkeeper
RING LAND is a parish pleasantly situated on the son), 4th baron Crarnond, to Elizabeth Daniel, of Norwich.
river Wensum, 2~ miles south from Attlebridge station The living is a vicarage, average tithe rent-charge £I3S. net
on the Eastern and Midlands railway and 7 north-west yearly value £86, including 24 acres of glebe and residence,
from Norwich, in the Northern division of the county, in the gift of the llishop of Norwich, and held since 1886 by
Eynsford hundred and petty sessional division, St ..Faith's I the Rev. Jean Laine Le Pelley M.A. of Caius College, Cam-
union, Norwich county court district, rural deanery of bridge. A Baptist chapel of red brick with stone dressings
Sparham and archdeacunry and diocese of Norwich. The was erected in 1889 for about 200 persons. There are some
church of St. Peter is a tine old building of flint and stone, local r.;harities. Lord Stafford, who is lord of the manor,
in the Gothic style of the I 5th century, consisting of and Mrs. Berney, of Morton-on-the-Hill, are chief land-
chancel, nave with clerestory, north and south aisles, owners. The soil is sandy ; subsoil, various. The chief
south porch and a lofty embattled western tower con- crops are wheat, oats, barley and turnips. The area is r,210
taining 5 bells: here is buried Angelica, second daughter acres; rateable value, £1,228; the population in 1891 was
of Thomas (Richardson), first baron Crarnond of Honing- 291.
ham; she died 5 Feb. 1716 : the nave roof, which is very Parish Clerk, John Coulden.
elaborate and richly groined, springs from sixteP.n shafts WALL LETTER Box.-Cieared at 4.30 p. m. week days only.
supported upon carved heads, between a series of finely- Letters through Norwich arrive at 7.30 a. m. Drayton
proportioned clerestory windows: the chancel was restored is the nr,arest money order office & Drayton Railway
in 188o and the church in 1887, when the flooring was station the nearest telegraph otiice
relaid, the interior rescated with b:mches, and part of the National School (mixed), partly supported by Mrs. Berner.
tower rebuilt, the whole costing about £r,8o:J: there are School-rooms were bwlt in 1873 by the late G. Duckett
178 sittings. The register dat-es from the year 1688, and Berney esq. for 120 children; avera6e attendance, 6o;
records the marriage ( 9 Feb. 1713-4) of Williarn (Hi chard- Mrs. Elsie Ell is, mistress
Le Pelley Rev. Jean Laine M.A. [vicar], lllytb Alfred, carpenter Medler Elijah, King of Prussia P. H
The Vicarage Fiegg Robert, carrier Ne\"e William, farmer
Platten Thomas [Baptist missioner] Gooderson William Robert, blacksmith Nichols William, bricklayer
Hubbard John, builder Plummer Colin, shopkeeper
CO:II111EHCIAL. Kidd Benjarnin, market gardener Plummer John, farmer, Low farm
A bel Mary Ann (Mrs.), farmer Medler Charles, general dealer Plummer John, Swan P.H
Alexander Wm. shopkeeper & boot ma Moy E1ward James, farm bailiff to Skeet Fre1erick, farmer, Pit farm
Allison William, laundry Mrs. G. Duckett Berney
BARRET RINGSTEAD (or RrNGSTEAD PARYA) is £193, joint gross yearly value l,6w, including 20 acres of
a decayed parish, with one farm, 2 miles south from Hun- glebe, in the gift of Hamon le Htrange esq. J.P., n.L. and
stanton station, in the North Western division of the held since 1890 by the Rev. IIerbert Dee1es Barrett R.A. of
county, Smithdon and Brothercross petty sessional di dsion, Magdalen Colle6e, Oxford, who resides at Hunstanton. The
Docking union, rural deanery of Hitcham, archdeaconry of farm, whlch is the property of Hamon le Strange esq. is
N orfol'• and diocese of Norwich. The church or chapel of now occupied by .Mr. William Charles Dodman, farmer,
St. Andrew no longer exists. The living is a rectory, united who resides at Hunstanton.
to the vicarage of Hunstanton, average tithe rent-charge
GREAT RINGSTEAD is a parish and village, 2} deaconry of Norfolk and diocese of Norwich. The village
miles north from Scdgeford station on the Hunstanton is situated near the German Ocean, and is supplied with
and West Norfolk section of the Great Eastern railway, 8 excellent water from wells sunk. to a great depth in the
west-by-south from Burnham Market, 2 from Hunstanton, chalk. There were formerly two parishes, vi:~:. St. Peter's,
x6 from Lynn and 14 from Wells, in the North ·western Great Ringstead and St. Andrew's, Little Ringstead, bnt in
division of the county, Smithdon hundred, Smithdon and 1771 the church of St. Peter, with the exception of its
Brothercross petty sessional division, Docking union, Lynn circular Norman tower, was pulled down and the parishes
county court district, rur.t.l deanery of Heacham, arch- consolidated. The church of St. An•.irew is an ancient
582 GRE.A T BlNGSTE.AD. NORFOLK. I
(KELLY'S
building of stone and flint, in the Gothic style, consisting of landowner.· • The 'soil is various ; subsoil, chalk, ~a vel and
chancel, nave, wuth porch and an: embattled western tower, sand. The chief crops are wheat 1 barley, tu-rnips and man-
with· pinnacles, containing a clock and one bell: it was golds, 'Wit.h a little gras~ .. 'fhe area is 2, 675 acres of land
enlarged in 1865 by the addition of a. north aisle, a.nd the and 795 of water; rateable value, _£2,8x6; the population
entire fabric restored at a cost of upwards of /,'g, 200: there in I 891 was 452. ·
are 325 sittings, 180 being free. The register dates from Rex:ton, Daniel Matsell.
the year 1538. The living is a rectory, average tithe rent- PosT & M. 0. 0., S. B. & Annuity & Insurance Office.-
charge £s66, net yearly value /,'620 (subject to a pension of Arthur Wales, sub-postmaster. London & other letters
£200 to the late incumbent), including 149 acres of glebe, through Lynn via Snettisham, arrive at 6.go a. m; dis-
with residence, in the gift of Hamon le Strange esq. and patched at 5.15 p.m. Sedgeford is the nearest telegraph
held since 1888 by the Rev. Arthur Wellesley Batson office
Mus.Bac. of St. Alban Hall, Oxford. Here is a Primitive National School (mixed), erected in 1852, for 90 children;
Methodist chapel, built in 1867. The charities are of £2 8s. average attendance, 65; Arthur Shepherd, master ; Miss
yearly value, and there is a fuel allotment of 54 acres, pro- Emily Ann Kelley, infants' mistress
ducing /,'26 yearly for coals. Ha.mon le Strange esq. J.P., CARRIERS TO LYNN.-Jobn Smith, tues. & sat. returning
D.L, of Hunstanton Hall, is lord. of the manor and chief tues. & sat
Ratson Rev. Arthur Wellesley Mus. nac. Crane John, jun. farmer & miller (wind) Large Robert, coal dealer
Rectory & assistant overseer .. Lewis William, farmer
Hare Richard William M. B., ch.M.Dub. Dodman Thos. beer retailer & shopkpr Margetts Stephen, farmer
. The Lodge Dowdy William, shne maker Riches Frederiek, baker & confectioner
Gatbercole William, blacksmith Robertson George Wilby (exors. of),
COMMERCIAL. Granger Robert, farmer, Neats Ling farmers, East End
Bartaby Christmass, wheelwright Hall Alfred, blacksmith Smith John, carrier
Bond Samuel, butcher Hare Richard William M. B., ch.M.DUb., Wale'lArthur,grocer & draper,Post office
Burlingham Thos. dairyman & farmer L.R.c.s Edin. surgeon, The Lodge Wharton Leonard Walter, farmer,
Clark Wm. Compasses inn, & brewer Hunn Jn. \Vm. farmer, Blue Stone frm ·Court Yard farm
Coleman George, hutcher Kitton Everard, farmer, Hall farm Wilson George, farmer
ROCKLAND ALL SAINTS and ROCKLANi> bridge. Here is a Primitive Methodist chapel. There is a
ST. ANDREW'S are small united parishes, 4i miles fuel allotment of 26 acres, let at about /,'20. The work-
west from Attleborough station on the Thetford and house of the Wayland union is in this parish; for particu-
Norwich section of the Ureat Eastern railway, in the Mid Jars of union, see Watton. Sir William Howyer-Smijth bart.
division of the county, Guiltcross and Shropharn petty who is lord of the manor, Robert Thornhaugh Gurdon esq.
sessional division, Shropham hundred, Way land union, D. L., J. P. of Let ton Hall, Gcorge Tyrrell-Tyrrcll csq.
Attleborough county court district, rural deanery of Rock- of Thetford, and Miss Hornbuckle, of 3 .Alexandra villas,
land, archdeaconry of Norfolk and diocese of Norwich. The Brighton, are the principal landowners. The soil is mixed;
church of St. Andrew has been in ruins for many years. subsoil, gravel. The chief crops are wheat and barley.
The church of All Saints is a small building of flint, con- The area, including Rockland St. Andrew's, is 1,623 acres;
sisting of chancel, nave, south porch and a western tower combined rateable value, /,'2, 120; the population in 1891
containing 2 bells: the Saxon nave is a fine specimen of was 394.
herringbone and ashlar work: the chancel is Early Per- Parish Clerk, James Cross.
pendicular: the font, a memorial to the late Mrs. E. A. M. PosT & M. 0. 0., S. B. & Annuity & Insurance Office.-
Hemsworth, d. 188o, and the reredos, erected in 1887, were George Alien, postmaster. LettersthroughAttleborough
both the gift of the rector: in the church is a unique cable arrive at 7 a. m.; dispatched at 7·5 p.m.; snnday, 12.20
stetch tombstone, said to be the oldest sepulchral slab in the p.m. The nearest telegraph office is at Attleborough
county: the church was restored in 186o, and has IIO A School Board of 7 members was formed compulsorily 27
sittings. The register dates from the year r6g8. The January, 1874, for the united district of Rockland All
living is a consolidated rectory, average tithe rent-charge Saints, Rockland St. Andrew's & Rockland St. Peter's;
£378, gross yearly value /,'440, including 32 acres of glebe, Charles Hovell Colman, clerk to the board. The childreTL
with residence, m the gift of the trustees of the late Rev. attend the school at Rockland St. Peter's
Addison Browne Hemsworth M.A. and held since r8gr by Police Station, Thomas Laws, constable
thP. Rev. Henry Williams M.A. of Christ's College, Cam- CARRIER TO NoRwrcH.-John Hayner, wed. & sat
Cammack Headley Drake Tyrrell Garner, farmer, Horn- Mann John Robt. farmer, Pound farm
Williams Rev. Hy.M.A. [rector],Rectory buckle farm ~eale Jn. wheelwright & furniture dlr
COMMERCIAL. Fisher Arthur, mole catcher Orford John, Jolly Dealers P.H
Allen George, tailor, Post office Fisher Herbert, farmer Rayner \~lilliam, basket maker
Allen Mary Ann (Mrs.), leather cutter Gathergood John (Mrs.), farmer Rayner William, boot maker
Burgess John llenjamin, grocer, draper Hood Alfd. Chas. & Geo. Wm. farmers Sexton Christmas, boot ma. & shopkpr
& boot & shoe warehouse HoucbenEdwn. WhiteHartP.H.& shoe ma Shepherd \Villi am, relieving officer &
Cator John, farmer Hudson Benjamin, farmer registrar of births, deaths & marriages
Chapman Samuel, farmer Leech James, farmer for Attleborough district
Col by James, farmer Lincoln John, miller (wind); & at Rock- Smith John, blacksmith
Crawford Samuel, farmer land St. Peter Ward Henry, coal dealer & farmer
Curson & Co. bakers Lister ~'illiarn, farmer Websdale I•'rancis, bricklayer
Donbleday George, farmer Lock Mary Ann (Mrs.), farmer Wilson George, master of workhouse
Downes William, farmer & overseer Manu John Eagling, farmer, Kirk hall
ROCKLAND ST. MARY is a parish and scattered £16 yearly. Here are brick fields, an iron foundry and
village, pleasantly situated, 6 miles south-east from Nor- market gardens. The Old Hall is the property of the
wich and 5 8outh-east from Trowse station on the Ipswich trustees of the late Robert S. E. Gilbert esq. of Ashhy Hall.
and Norwich section of the Great Eastern railway, in Sir Charles Henry Stuart Rich hart. of Levyls Dene, Merrow,
the Southern division of the county, Swainsthorpe Guildford, Surrey, is lord of the chief manor, and the prin-
petty sessional division, Henstead hundred and union, cipal landowners are John Hot black esq. J. P. and the trustees
Norwich county court district, rural deanery of Hrooke of the late Robert. S. E. Gilbert esq. The soil is mixed ;
western division, archdeaconry of Norfolk and diocese of subsoil, brick earth. The chief crops are wheat, barley and
Norwich. The ivy-covered ruins of the church of Rockland roots. The area is r,36o acres; rateable value, £2 1 361; the
St. Margaret's, or Little Rockland, stand a few feet ea.'it of population in 189r was 438. •
the existing church in the ~ame churchyard. The church Parish Clerk, Samuel Ward.
of St. Mary, standing on a height, is a small but ancient PosT 0FFICE.-John William.. Beeton, receiver. Letters
building of tlint, in the Gothic style, consisting o~ chancel, arrive from Norwich, through Framingham Earl, at 8.25
nave, south porch and an embattled western tower contain- a. m. ; dispatched at g. 15 p. m. The nearest money order
ing 3 bells: the nave is thatched : there are roo sittings. offices are at Blotield & Trowse & telegraph offices. at
The register dates from 1656, and for the first fifty years Trowse & Blunda!l
is written in Latin. The living is a rectory, average tithe A School Board, consisting of 5 members, was formed corn-
rent-charge £32r, net yearly value £26x, including 33 acres pulsorily 15 November, 1882, for the united district of
of glebe and residence, in the gift of John Hotblack esq. and Rockland St. Mary & Holverstone; George Rudd, clerk
held since r889 by the Rev. Philip William Blyth, of St. to the board
Bees. who is also rector of Hellington. Here is a Primitive Board School, rebuilt in 1887, for xoo children; average
Methodist chapel. The fuel allotment of 8 acres produces attendance, 81; John Phillips, master
Blyth Rev. Phillip William, Rectory
Hotblack John J.P. Normans
I coMMERCIAL.
Bailey Artbur, saddlel' & tax collector
I
Blake Isaac, market gardener
Hlake Robert, shopkeeper
DllmCTORY.J NORFOLK. ROUDHAMJ 583
Bla'ke Waiter, 'bricklayer . Goodrun & Green.y farmel"S Sayel' Henry,New i!ln, & ()()8} merchant
Coleman John, market gardener · J orda.n .John W eston; blacksmith & StanleyWm. Wade, brick&; tile maker
Diggins Robert, market gardener agricultural implement maker StroyanJn.& Thos.cattle diN. & farmrs
Farman Robert, thatcher & basket ma Lamb George, brewers' agent WhitmoreElijah, shpkpr .&mrkt. gardnr
Frost Giles, market gardener Parker Robert George, carpenter Yallop Mark, market gardener
Fuller Mark, carpenter Porter Willil\m, Star P.H
I
• •
ROCKLAND ST. PETER is a parish and village, 4i £rs yearly. Sir William Bowyer-Smijth bart. who. is lord
miles west-by-north from Attleborough station on the Tbet- of the manor, Mr. James Barnard and Mr. A. Muskett, are
ford and Norwich section of the Great Eastern railway, in the the principal landowners. The soil is various; subsoil,
South Western division of the county, Wayland petty ses- various. The chief crops are wheat, barley and oats. The
sionai division, Way land hundred and union, Attleborough parish contains r,oro acres; rateable value, £1,334; the
county court district, rural deanery of Rockland, arch- population in rBgr was 273.
deaconry of Norfolk and diocese of Norwich. The church Parish Clerk, John Neale.
of St. ·Peter is a small but ancient structure of liint, with LETTER Box cleared at 6.30 p. m. ; sundays 10.30 a.m.
stone dressings, consisting of a Late Perpendicular chancel, Letters through Attleborough. Letters arrive at 8 a.m.
nave, north porch and a round western tower containing one Attleborough is the neare!lt telegraph office & money order
bell: there are 200 sittings. The register dates from the office at Rockland St. Peter ·
year 1538. The living is a rectory, net yearly value from This parish is included in the Rockland United School Board
tithe rent-charge _{,215, including 24 acres of glebe, with District, formed compulsorily 27 January, 1874
residence, in the gift ofT. H. Rackham esq. and held since Board School, built in 1875, at a cost of abGut £4oo, for 120
188o by the Rev. James Atkinson Bulman-Fleming B.A. of children; average attendance, 85; Mrs. Ellen Downes,
Queens' College, Cambridge. Here is a Primitive Methodist I mistress
chapel, built in 1859. The fuel allotment of 15 acres is let at CARRIER TO :NoRWICH.-John Ra.yner, wed. & sat
[*Letters should be ad. dressed ·Seoulten, Barrett George, farmer Groom J ames, farmer
Watton S.O.] Brett George, Bell P.H Groom John, farmer
Bulman-Fleming Rev. James Atkinson Clarke John, shoe maker *Lincoln John, farmer & miller (wind);
B.A. Rectory Colman Thomas Hovell, farmer, Manor & at Rockland All Saints
Col man Thomas Ho veil (alderman c.c. ). House farm N obes Phi !lip, farmer
Manor house Dove John, baker & shopkeeper Ra.yner John, farmer & carrier
Downes J ames Dove W illiam, farmer Say er Arthur, farmer,registrar of birth;;:,
Dowson Rev.Geo.[Primitive Methodist] Downes George, builder deaths & marriages for Watton sub-
COMMERCIAL. Eh·in William, agricultural machinist district & sanitary inspector for Way-
Alden James, farmer Fielding James, farmer land Union rural sanitary authority
Antbony William, farmer Fincham Thomas, cattle dealer Sizeland William, farmer & shopkeeper
Barker Robert, Magpie P.H Fincham Thomas, jun. cattle dealer Whall Harriett (Mrs.), shopkeeper
ROLLESBY is a parish and village, 1~ miles south-west between Filby and Ormesby Broads. Charles P. S. Ensor csq.
from Martham station on the Eastern and Midlands railway, who is lord of the manor, John Christmas esq. of the Old
17 north-east from Norwich, 8 north-north-west from Yar- Hall, Ormesby, and the rector, are the principal landowners.
mouth, in the Eastern division of the county, incorporated Rollesby Hall is the residence of Ernest M. Connop esq. The
hundreds, petty sessional division and incorporation of East chief cro:>s :1re wheat, barley and oats. The area is r,587
and West Flegg, county court district of Great Yarmouth, acres, of v.hich 143 arc wool and water; rateable value,
rural deanery of Flegg and archdeaconry and diocese of _{,2,943; the population in r8gr was 570, including 75 officers
Norwich. The church of St. George, standing on rising and inmates in East and "\Vest Incorporation "'orkhouse.
ground, is an ancient building of stone in the Early English Parish Clerkj Waiter Miller.
style, consisting of chancel, clerestoried nave of four bays, PosT OFFICE.- Samuel Arthur Gibbs, receiver. Letters
aisles, north porch and an embattled western tower con- through Yarmouth arrive at 6.15 a.m. & dispatched at 6.5
taining 3 bells: the base of the tower is Norman: in the p.m. There is no sunday post. The nearest money order
chancel is a fine altar tomb, with recumbent effigy in stone, & telegraph offices are at Martham. Postal orders are
to Rose Claxton, ob. 1601 ; and a mural monument., with 14 issued, but not paid
kneeling figures, to Leonard Mapes, ob. x6rg: the chancel CmJNTY MAGISTRATES FOR EAST AND WEST FLEGG PF.'ITY
was restored and a stained east window erected in r875 by SESSIONAL DIVISION.
the rector, and in 1885 further restorations were effected Beck George Morris esq. The Lodge, Ormesby St.Margaret,
under the direction of Mr. Arthur S. IIewitt A.R.I.B.A. of Yarmouth (chairman)
Yarmouth, when the nave, aisles and porch were new-roofed, Blofeld Rev. Robert Singleton M.A. Vicarage, Ormesby,
new tracery fixed in the windows, the interior retloored and Yarmouth
reseated, a new font of stone and Purbeck marble set np, Daniel Thomas William esq. M.A. Thrigby hall, Yarmouth
and a memorial window erected to the late Licut.-Gen. Sarel Lacon Henry Sidney Hemmet esq. Ormesby ho. Yarmouth
c.B. some time governor of the Isle of Guernsey, at a cost Lnc~s Charles Belgrave esq. J<'ilhy house, Yarmouth
of £"85 : the tower was restored in r887: during the restora- Tacon Rev. Richard John M. A. Rectory, }{o!lesby
tion of r885 a niche in the porch, with some delicate tracery, Clerk to the Magistrates,Chas.Diver,23 King st.Yarmouth
two stoups and a hagioscope, were discovered: there are 280 Petty Sessions held at the workhouse every alternate tues-
sitting, all being free. The register dates from the year day, 12.30 p.m. The following places are within the petty
1558, and is in excellent preservation. The living is a rectory, sessional division :-Ash by, Hillock by, Burgh St. Mar-
average yearly value from tithe rent-charge £.49.1 1 with garet, Burgh St. Mary, Caister, Clippesby, East Somerton
residence, in the gift of the trustees of the late Charles Tacon Filby, Hems by, Martham, Mautby, Nowhere, Oby,
P.sq. and held since 1872 by the Rev. Richard John Tacon Ormcsby St. Margaret, Ormsby St. Michael, Rcpps-with-
M.A. of Corpus Christi college, Cambridge, J. P. There is a Bastwick, Rollesby, Runham, Scratby, Stokesby-wit.h-
Primitive Methodist chapel here, erected in r866. The fuel Herring by, Thurne, Thrigby, West Somerton & Winterton
allotment of 23 acres is let for £x8 yearly. The Union NationaLSchool (mixed),openedin 1844, & enlargedinx892,
Workhouse for East and West Flegg incorporation is situated fur roo children; average attendance, 69; Miss Maria
here ; for particulars of union see Yarmouth. Rollesby Martin, mistress
Broad, a picturesque sheet of water comprising 200 acres, lies CARRIER TO YARMOUTH.-George Shriev, daily
Christmas Charles Edmonds Benjamin, cowkeeper Mills Alfred, master of workhouse
Connop Ernest M. Rollesby hall Francis Harriet (Miss), market gardenr Rising Thomas, farmer
Edwards Mrs Frosdick Daniel, market gardener Riches Orlando, Horse & Groom inn
Ilderton H. S Frosdick James, market gardener Shriev Benjamin, pork butcher
Rising Mrs Gaze George, farmer Simnett William, market gardPner
Tacon Rev. Richd. Jn. M.A.,J.P. Rectory Gibbs SI. Arthr. blacksmith, Post office Took William, pork butcher
· COMMERCIAL. Hayton James, farm steward to Philip Turner Benjamin, market gardener
Baldry John, shopkeeper . D. Meadows esq Wright Samuel, general dealer
Boult Thos. Cubitt, farmer, Hall farm Hayton W"illiam, market g-<~.rdener Youngs Charles, market gardener
Coppin Robert, pork butcher Knights Edward, market gardener Youngs Frederick, market gardener
Oaniels George, farmer & cattle dealer Lowne David, market gardener
I
ROUDHAM is a parish lying in a vale, rf miles east district, rural deanery of Rockland, archdeaconry[of :Norfolk
from }{oudham Junction statjon on the Thetford and Nor- and diocese of Norwich. St. Andrew's church was long since
wich section of the Great Eastern railway, and 6 miles north- destroyed by fire, but the walls and windows and the greater
east from Thetford, in the Mid division of the county, Guilt- part of the ancient tower still remain: the inhabitants attend
cross and Shropham petty sessional division, hundred of Bridgham church. The living is a vicarage, gross yearly
Shropham, i:mion of Way land, Attleborough county court I value from tithe rent-charge£ 102, average £7o, with 1 acres
584 BOUDBAM. NORFOLK •. [ KETJ,y's

of glebe, in the gift of Miss Buxton, and held since 1884 by Letters received throughiThetford, arrive at 6.30 a.m. The
the Rev. Henry Wilfrid Blunt M.A. of Pembroke College, nearest money order & telegraph office is at East Ha.rling
Cambridge, who is also rector of and resides at Bridgham. WALL LETTER Box, at Harling Road station, cleared at
Miss Buxton, of Shad well Court, Rushford, is lady of the 8.10 p.m.; sundays 6.30 p.m '
manor and chief landowner. The soil is light loam; subsoil, Roudham Junction Station, William Fisk, station master
chalk and gravel. The chief crops are wheat, barley, turnips
and rye. The area is 2,300 acres; rateable value, £2,942; The children of this place attend the schools at Larling &
the populati<m in I8gi was I68. Bridgham ~-

Mornement Edward Brame William, Dolphin hotel, Harling Dent James, farm bailiff to Edwa.rd
Pattinson ChristopherGeo. l''erm house, Road station Mornement esq
Harling Road station Colman Thomas Banyard, corn mer- Mornement Edward, jun. thrashing
Br)·ant Richard & Son, corn merchants, chant, HarJing Road station ; & at machine proprietor
Harling Road station ; & at Eccles & East Harling mills Steggles John, farmer, noudham; & at
Kenninghall ; retail stores, Market Gough Jesse, maltster, HarlingRd.statn Larlingford
place, East Harling. See advert
.
ROUGHAM is a pleasant parish and village, 4 miles of the" Crucifixion:" the nave was restored in r867 and the
.south-east from Massingham station on the Eastern and chancel in 1876, and the church affords 230 sittings. The
Midlands railway, 8 north from Swaffham station on the register dates from the year 1783. The living is a vicarage,
Lynn and Dereham section of the Great Eastern railway, and average tithe rent-charge £rgr, net yearly valne £rg8, in-
10 south-west from Fakenham, in the Mid division of the cluding I acre of glebe, with residence, in the gift of the Lord
county, Mitford and Launditch petty sessional division, Laun- Chancellor, and held since 1891 by the Rev. John Grant
ditch hundred, Mitford union, Swaffham county court dis- Ferguson. There is a Primitive Methodist chapel, built in
trict, rural deanery of North Brisley and Toftrees, and arch- 1877. Charles ~orth esq. M.A., D.L., J.P. of Rougham Hall,
deaconry and diocese of Norwich. The church of St. Mary situated in a well-wooded park, is lord of the manor and
is a building of flint and stone, in the Early English style, principal landowner. The soil is brick earth and clay;
consisting of chancel with north aisle, nave, south porch and subsoil, brick earth. The chief crops are wheat and barley .
.an embattled western tower containing a clock and one bell : The area is 2,562 acres ; rateable value, £3,065 ; the popu-
there are several monuments and brasses to the North lation in 189r was 304.
family from 1710 to I788, and to the Yelverton family from Parish Clerk, Richard Ed win Thomas.
1404 to 1668, and in the chancel aisle is a f!oorstone, with
the arms of Yelverton impaling Richardson, to Sir William PosT, M. 0. & T. 0., S. B. & Annuity & Insurance Office.-
Yelverton bart. of Rougham, ob. 19 July, 1 6 4 8, and Ursula Richard Edwin Thomas, postmaster. Letters arrive from
his wife, daughter of Sir Thomas Hicbardson kt. Lord Chief Swaffham & are delivered at 7 a. m. & also arnve at 4-30
Justice of England, ob. 20 Mar. 1657, as also to Sir William p.m. & dispatched at 7.20 a. m. & 7.20 p.m
Yelverton bart. their only son, on whose death, IS Nov. r649, National School (mixed), for So children; average attend-
the title became extinct: over the west doorway is a carving ance, 6o ; Mrs. Emily Keetley, mistress
J<"erguson Rev. John Grant, Vicarage Durrant William, gamekeeper to H. E. Ringer Herbert Everett, farmer
North Chas. M.A.,D.L.,J. P. Rougham hall Ringer esq Roberts Allan, farm bailiff to H. E.
Ringer Herbert Everett Harris Robt.gamekeeper to C. North esq Ringer esq
COMMERCIAL. Howell Charles, farmer Scnlpher_ George, farmer
Batterby Frances (Mrs.), shopkeeper Leech Sarah Ann (Mrs.), Crown P.H Sculpher James, farmer
Bland Arthr. farm bailiff to C. North esq Loads Robt. sub-agent to C. North esq Sculpher Thomas, farmer
Chapman James, blacksmith Manning Susannah (Mrs.), shopkeeper Smith Charles, farmer, Wash Pit farm
Clark Henry, farmer Neville George, farmer Thomas Richard Edwin, stationer &
Gamble Henry, farmer Rawling Frederick, farmer painter, Post office

ROUGHTON is a village and parish, 3 miles north-west £I 1a year, together with two rent-charges of £4, make a
from Gun ton station on the Great Eastern railway, 7 north- total of £15, which sum is divided among the poor. Lord
west from North Walsharn, 3~ south from Crorner and 6~ Suffield is lord of the manor; the principal landowners are
north-east from Aylsbam, in the ~orthern division of the Lord Suffield K.C.B., P.C. the trustees of the late Benjamin
county, North Erpingham hundred and petty sessional Bond Bond-Cabbell esq. D.L., J.P. Robert William Ketton
division, North Walsbam county court district, Erpingham esq. J. P. of Felbrigg Hall, and Daniel Spurrell esq. of Bessing-
union, rural deanery of Repps, archdeaconry of Norfolk and ham Manor. The soil is light; subsoil, gravel. The chief
diocese of Norwich. The church of St. Mary is a building of crops are wheat, tnrnips, barley and grass. The area i!l
ilint, with stone dressings, in the Norman style, consisting 1,740 acres; rateable value, £1,777; the population in I8gi
of chancel, nave, aisles, north and south porches and a round was 461.
embattled western tower containing 3 bells : the east window Parish Clerk, Robert Hewitt.
js stained, and there is a memorial window to Miss Sarah PosT 0FFICE.-Jobn Moy, receiver. Letters received
.Joy, late of this parish, d. I 867 ; monuments to the Flaxman through Norwich, delivered at 7.20 a.m. & dispatched at
family from 176o, and a flat stone t{) the Hogan family, 4.20 p.m. The nearest money order & telegraph office is
dated 1727: the chan.. el was restored in 1864 at a cost of at Hanworth. Postal orders are issued, but not paid
about £goo, and the church affords 250 sittings. The
WALL LErTER Box, near the Mill, cleared at 3.40 p. m
rBgister dates from the year 1562. The living is a rectory,
average tithe rent-charge £226, net yearly value £r20, with Endowed Free School, rebuilt in 1871, & enlarged in I888,
32 acres of glebe, and residence, erected in r86g, in the gift with an income of £35 a year derived from 45 acres of
of the Bishop of Norwich, and held since 1891 by the Rev. land; the school will hold n8 children; average attend-
{)harles Edward Geneste Walsh. Here is a Primitive Metho- ance, 99; Samuel Ellis Baker, master; Mrs. Elizabeth
dist chapel. The charity lands consist of 7 acres, let for Baker, mistress
Walsh Rev. Charles Edward Geneste KettleBenjamin, jun. farmer Reynolds Joshua, farmer, Orchard frm
[rector], The Hectory Larwood Waiter William, carpenter Reynolds Robert, farm bailiff to E. D.
COliiMERCIAL. Learner James, New inn; comfortably Spurrell esq. of Bessingham manor,
Erand Robt. market gardnr. The Heath furnished apartments; good stables F'laxman's farm
Drane Donald, agent to T. H. L. B. & carriage house; & farmer Savage Hichard, farm steward to Mr.
Windham esq.ofHanwrth.hall,Mill ho Marling John, market gardener E. Green, of North Walsham
Fox Robert, blacksmith Monsey Benjamin, farmer Skipper Edmond, farmer
HewittRobert,shoe maker & parish clerk Plurnmer Jarnes,grocer,draper & farmer Turner Robert, carpenter
.Jordan John, carrer Press Brothers, millers (wind)
:ROXHAM is a parish on the rf'ver l\'issey, 2~ miles south- are traces of a moat, which anciently encompassed a house,
east from Downham, in the South Western division of the called "Walpole House," in this parish, near to which is a
county, Clackclose hundred and petty sessional division, pond with a paved bottom. Edward Roger Murray Pra.tt
Downham union and county court district, rural deanery of esq. D.A., J.P. of Ryston Hall, is lord of the manor and owns
Fincham, archdeaconry of Norfolk and diocese of Norwich. the whole of the parish. The soil is clay ; subsoil, sand and
The church of St. Michael now no longer exists. The living ragstone. The chief crops are wheat, barley and beans.
is a vicarage annexed with that of Ryston to the vicarage of The area is 591 acres, divided between three farms; rateable
Fordham May 29, 1877, average tithe-rent charge £r6I, value, £576; the population in I891 was 55·
joint net yearly value £232, including 32 acres of glebe, in Letters received through Downham, which is the nearest
the gift of the Dean and Chapter of Norwich, and held since money order & telegraph office
Iggo by the Rev. Gerrard Alexander Crookshank M.A. of
Trinity College, Dublin, who resides at Fordham. There The children of this place a trend the school at Fordham
Frdeman Samuel, farmer I Lisrer Francis, farmer I Woodward Goorge, farmer
DIRECTORY.] NORFOLK. EAST RUDHAM. .585
'ROYDON (near Diss) is a. village and parish on the Charles Hose of Cains College, Cambridge. The charities
bank of the Waveney and on the borders of Suffolk, a mile include the interest of £cpo, £2 :r5s. per Cents, left by Mrs.
and a half west from Diss station on the Ipswich and M. Blowers ; and Miss Susannah Frere's charity of £r4
Norwich section of the Great Eastern railway, in the South- yearly, which is divided between the repairs of the church
ern division of the county, Diss hundred, petty sessional and the poor. John Tudor Frere esq. B.A.., J.P. is lord of
division and county court district, Guiltcross union, rural the manors of Gissing Hall and of Roydon Hall with Tufts and
deanery of Redenhall, archdeaconry of Norfolk and diocese also chief landowner. Roydon Hall, the residence of Miss
uf Norwich. The church of St. Remigius is a structure of Frere and John Tudor Frere esq. is a mansion standing in
flint in the Perpendicular style, consisting of chancel, nave, extensive grounds, on the road from Diss to Thetford. Tbe
south aisle, north porch and a round embattleu tower, with soil is mixed; subsoil, chiefly gravel. The chief crops are
an octagonal belfry surmounted by pinnacles : the south wheat, barley, turnips and beet. The area is r,329 acres;
porch was built by the Rev. Temple Frere in memory of rateable value, £2,759; the population in I89r was 739·
Temple, his son, who was drowned at Cambridge while try- Sexton, Charles Scott.
ing to save the life of a fellow student: in the chancel are RECEIVING 0J<'Fim;.-Frederick Madgett, receiver. Letters
monuments to Richard E. Frere, lieut. 13th foot, who died received through Diss, .the nearest money order & tele-
in the Punjaub, India, r842 ; and to Susannah Frere, who graph office, arrive at 6. 45 a.m. Box cleared at 6.p
died at Malta: in the chancel are also three memorial win-
. th e c h urc h h as b een p.m. ; sundays, Io a.m
d ows to mem bers or t he same f ami 1y :
partly restored, and affords :r5o sittings. The register dates A School Board of 5 members was formed I6 s~ptember,
from the year I559· The living is a rectory, average 1872; Stephen Newson, Diss, clerk to the board; Henry
tithe rent-charge £346, gr_oss yearly value £350, including Everson, attendance officer
46 acres of glebe, with residence, in the gift of Jr·hrt Board (formerly Parochial) School, for roo children; average
Tudor Frere esq. and held since 1870 by the Rev, Thomas attendance, 86; Frederick Hann, master
Frere Miss, Roydon hall BurroughesFredk.miller(wind & steam) Porcher Frederick, shoe maker
Frere John Tudor B.A.., J.P. Roydon hall CarterSamuel,thrashing machine propr Reeve Arthur, blacksmith
Gwilt Mrs · Culling Frederiek, head gamekeeper to Rushbrooke Alban, farmer, Grove farm
Hose Rev. Thomas Charles, Rectory John Tudor Frere esq Seaman William, carpenter
Marsh Misses, Hoydon cottage Everett Ernest, farmer Spink Walter, farmer
Scott Frederick Gray Aurileus Earl, farmer Thurlow Arthur Eaton, bleacher & far-
COMMERCIAL. Madgett Frederick, shopkpr. Post office mer, Rose cottage
Amies Frederick, head gardener to John Mattholi Edward, carpenter Tippell Arthur, White Hart P.H
Tudor Frere esq Orford Alfred, farmer Todd Frederick H. land agent, The Old
Aldrich George, farmer Orford Harry, farmer, Bluepump farm Parsonage
Bloomfield James, general dealer Os borne Isaac, builder Websdale Clement, farmer
ROYDON (near Lynn) is a village and parish, 6 miles Theopbilus Howard, and held since :r891 by the Rev. Her-
east-north-east from Lynn, in the North Western division of bert Edward Thursby, who resides at Castle Rising ; the-
the county, Freebridge Lynn hundred, petty sessional divi- Rev. James Russell Milne I>LA. of Edinburgh University,
sion and union, Lynn county court district, rural deanery of has been curate in charge since 1882. The manor belongs
Lynn Free bridge and arch deaconry and diocese of Norwich. to the trustees of the late Hon. G. T. Howard, who are a)s()
The Grimston Road station on the Eastern and Midlands the principal landowners. The soil is mixed sand and clay;
railway is in this parish. The church of All Saints is a subsoil, clay and gravel. The chief crops are wheat, barley.
small edifice of rubble in the Norman style, consisting of turnips and clover. The area is 871 acres; rateable value,
chancel, nave, south porch and an embattled western tower £933 ; the population in 1891 was J:74·
containing one bell: there are two Norman doorways on Parish Clerk, John Bunnett.
the north and south sides respectively and four stained LETTER Box cleared at 5 p.m. Letters through Lynn, via
windows : in 1857 the church was rebuilt under the direction Hillington, arrive at 8.30 a·m. The nearest money order
of the late J. E. Street esq. R.A. and affords 150 sittings. & telegraph office is at Grimston
The register dates from the year I729 and there is also a
list of rectors from 1308. The living is a rectory, annexed National School (mixed), for 50 children; average attend-
to that of Castle Rising in 1665, average tithe-rent charge ance, 40; Miss Emily Cooper, mistress
£380, joint net yearly value £250, including 21 acres of Railway Station (Grimston road), John Frank Oliver, station
glebe, in the gift of the trustees of the late Hon. Greville master
Everard Mrs. Roydon lodge Bunting William, farmer & coal dealer Gates Mary Ann (Mrs.), farmer
Everard Raoul Charles Finch Elsden Carter Alfred, farm bailiff to Messrs Marshall John Geo. Plough P.H. & florist:
J.P. Roydon lodge W. & E. Marshal!, The Hall Panks William, bricklayer
Milne Rev. James Russell 11LA. [curate Catton Thomas, farmer Savage George, coal dealer
in charge] Cutler Ell en (Mrs.), farmer Smitll \Villiam, shoe maker
Dunham Susannah (Mrs.), Three Horse Stebbings Sarah (Mrs.), dress maker
COMMERCIAL. Shoes P.H Vinter J. 0. (of Cam bridge), coal mer-
Barrett Mary Ann (Mrs. ),g-rocer & drapr Fisher Christopher, farmer chant (William Saunders, agent) ;
Bunnett John, parish clerk Gates Gcorge, Union Jack P.H depot, Grimston Road station

EAST R UDHAM is a parish and village, on the Lynn abolished in 1876. Here are the ruins of Coxford or Cokes-
road, with a station on the Eastern and Midlands railway, ford Abbey, first founded by N. Cheney, before II44• for
7 miles west from Fakenharn, in the North Western division canons of the Augustinian order, and dedicated to St.
of the county, Gallow hundred and petty sessional division, Mary; and translated here by W. Cheney, temp. Henry Ill. ;
Docking union, Little 1Valsingham county court district, at the time of its dissolution there were nine canons, and the-
rural deanery of Burnham, archdeaconry of Norfolk and revenues were estimated at £r2r. The Marquess Towns-
diocese of Norwich. The church of St. Mary is a large bend, who is lord of the manor, and the Marquess of Chol-
building of flint in the Perpendicular style, consistin~ of mondeley are the principal landowners. The soil is mixed;
chancel, lofty clerestoried nave, aisles, south porch and an subsoil, principally chalk. The crops are generally on the-
embattled western tower containing 3 bells : the organ was four-coarse system. The area is 3,891: acres ; rateable value,.
erected about 1890, at a cost of £370: the church was re- £3,915; the population in :1891 was 735·
built in r873, at a cost of £2,500, and affords 500 sittings. Parish Clerk, Henry Ha wes.
The register dates from the year 1565. The living is a PosT, M. 0. & T. 0. & S. B.-James Martin Dewing, sub-
vicarage, with that of West Rudham annexed, average tithe postmaster. Letters arrive from Swaffham at 7 a.m. &-
rent-charge £426, joint net yearly value £390, with resi- 6.30 p.m. ; dispatched at 6 & 8 p. m
dence, in the gift of the Marquess Townshend, w bo is lay National School (mixed), with residence built in 185o by
impropriator, and held since 1886 by the Rev. Robert Woods subscription, at a cost of £8oo, & enlarged in 188.+, for
Wortley B. A. of Caius College, Cambridge. There are Primi- 200 children; average attendance, r6o; Richard Charle&
tive Methodist and Wesleyan chapels and Salvation Army Brooker, master
barracks. A reading room was erected in r887 by the Mar- Railway Station, Clement Agate Smith, station master
quess of Townshend and has 40 members. The rents of a fuel CARRIERS TO : - •
allotment of 20 acres are expended in coals, distributed to I<'A.KENHA.M-John Dann, thurs
the poor at Christmas: a sum of £5 was left by a Lady Berke- LYNN-John Dann, tues. & sat.; John Smith, sat.; r~
ley about the year I6r8 for the relief of the poor: in I868 turning same days
• Richard Dewing esq. of Carbrooke, devised 9 acres of land NORWICH-John Smith, every tues. returning thurs
in trust to the vicar for the time being; the rent is at present BROOMSTHORPE is a decayed parish one mile east from East
£15 yearly, of which £5 is expended in fuel and £ro given Rudham, containing one farm of 340 acres, in the occupation
to the National School. Two fairs formerly held here were of the lord of the manor ; the house is occupied by the Misses
586 EAST BUDH!~. NORFOLK. • [KELLY'S
Francis. Rateable value, £382; the population in r8g1 was esq. M.A.; 1. P. of Pinkney Hall and Thursford Hall, js lord
x6. There are traces of an old church. The inhabitants of the manor and chief landowner. The children attend the
attend East Rudham church. John Stonehewer Scott Chad school at East Rudham. .
Banner Henry Calthrop befew Horace, saddler Powell Richard, blacksmith .
Bower William J. T Drage & Son, corn, seed, wool, wine & Powell Robert, blacksmith
Drage Mrs spirit merchants; & at Fakenham Reading Room (Alfred Osborne, sec)
Drage Thomas Brooke Drew James, shoe maker Riches Finley, tailor & draper
Francis Misses, Broomsthorpe Green William Samuel, grocer, draper, Ringer Thomas Branford, farmer
Kitton William Henry wine & spirit mer. & furniture dealer Rolling George, carpenter •
Manby Alan Reeve M.D Gurneys, Birkbecks, Barolay & Huxton's Rolling William, carpenter
Mays Miss Bank (branch); open fridays IO till Rowell Herbert Ellis L.R.c.P.LOnd.,
Rowell Herbert Ellis 1 ; draw on Barclay. Bevan & Co. M.R.c.s.Eng. physician & surgeon
Savory Miss London E c Rudd Thomas, farmer
Wortley Rev. Robt. Woods B.A. Vicarage Hagan William, coal merchant Seeker Augustus, butcher
COMMERCIAL. Hamrnoml Wm.cartr. &horse slaughterer Sew ell Brothers, tailors
Arms Lionel, beer retailer & butcher Hawes Henry, parish clerk Shaul Henry, tailor
Bea'l'"er George, bricklayer Hendle Edward William, Crown corn- Smith, Kent & Co. coal merchants (John
Banner Henry Calthrop, farmer mercial hotel Marshall, agent), Railway station
Bower v.rilliamJ.'l'.M.R.c. v.s. veterinary Howard Thomas, pig jobber Smith Clement Agate, station master
surgeon (by appointment to H.R.H. Howett John, plumber & glazier Smith John, carrier
the Prince of Wales, Sandringham) Hudson Charles, Railway .hotel Stratton John, farmer, Coxford abbey
& farmer Huggins John, watch maker Stringer William, beer retailer
British & Foreign Bible Society (W. H. Jackson Frederick, carpenter Tipple Edward, shoe maker
Kitton, local agent) KingGeorge, baker & miller (wind) Tipple Elizabeth (Miss), grocer
Butcher Stagg, Rangers inn Manby Alan Reeve M.D. physician & Tipple John, carpenter
Coe Henry, chemist & druggist surgeon, & surgeon-apothecary to Twiddy John & Sons, wheelwrights &
Crisp Samuel, blacksmith & shopkeeper T.R.H. the Prince & Princess of smiths, agricultural implement
Dann John, beer retailer & carrier \Vales, Sandringham, & medical manufacturers & machinists
De win J ames Martin, stationer, grocer officer, Rudham dist. Docking union I Vinter J. 0. & Co. coal. merchants
& draper, Post office Osborne Alfd.plumber,glazier & decortr I (Matthew Wright, agt. ), Railway stn
WEST RUDHAM is a parish and village, 2~ miles Caius College, Cambridge, who resides at East Rudham·
south-west from East Rudham station on the Eastern and Here is a Methodist New Connexion chapel, erected in x864·
Midlands railway and 8 west from Fakenham, in the North The Marquess Townshend and the Marquess of Cholmon-
Western division of the county, Gallow hundred and petty deley are lords of the manor and chief landowners. The
sessional division, Docking union, Little Walsingham county soil is of mixed character; subsoil, chalk, marl a.nd clay.
court district, rural deanery of Burnham, archdeaconry of The crops are on the four-course shift. '!'he area is 2,835
Norfolk and diocese of Norwich. The church of St, Peter acres; rateable value, £2,759; the population in 1891 was
is an ancient building of flint in the Decorated style, con- 420.
sisting of chancel, nave, south aisle, south porch and a low Parish Clerk, Frederick Jackson.
western tower containing one bell : in r891 the church was Letters through Swaffham via East Rudham, which is the
thoroughly restored at a cost of £I,ooo, and now affords 230 nearest money order & telegraph office, arrive at 7 a.m.
sittings. The register dates from the year· 1563. The WALL LET'!' ER Box cleared week days & sun days at
living is a vicarage, annexed to East Rudham, average tithe 6. xo p.m
rent-charge £426, joint net yearly value £390. in the gift CARRIERS from East Rudham .
of the Marquess Townshend, who is lay impropriator, and The children of this place attend the school at · East
held since 1886 by the Rev. Robert Woods Wortley JtA. of Rudham '
Freuer William F.S.I Dawson Muses, farmer Morton John, farmer & landowner,
Morton John, The Hall Dodman George, chimney sweep The Hall
Savory Edmuna, The Grange Freuer William(fellow of the Surveyors' Payne Samuel, blacksmith
Institution), estate agent & valuer Powell Richard, blacksmith
COMMERCIAL. to Marquess of Cholmondeley & other Ringwood Charles, beer retailer ,.
Baldwin Charles, pork butcher landowners Royston Wm. Drage, farmer, Grove ho
Barrett William, farmer Howitt Mary (Mrs.), grocer & draper Savory Edmund, farmer, The Grange
Butcher Stagg, bricklayer Mayes William, carpenter Toll John, Duke's Head l?.H
Colman Thomas (Mrs.), shopkeeper Melton Robert, beer retailer Williamson James, shoe maker
NORTH RUNCTON is a parish and village, 2 miles of Somerville Arthur Gurney esq. J .P.is a white brick
south-west from Middleton station on the Great Eastern mansion, situated in pleasant grounds. Thoma~~ R. Whit-
railway and 3 south-south-east from Lynn, in the North taker esq. is lord of the manor. Reginald Gurney esq. of
Western division of the county, hundred, peHy sessional Newton, Bury St. Edmunds, William Gamble esq. and
division and union of l<'reebridge Lynn, Lynn county court Thomas R. Whittaker esq. are the chief landowners. The
district, rural deanery of Lynn Free bridge and archdeaconry soil is a good mixed one ; subsoil, principally clay. The
and diocese of Norwich. The church of All Saints is an chief crops are wheat, barley, beans and turnips. The area
edifice of carr stone and brick, in the Classic style, consisting
is 1,338A. 3R. I2P.; rateable value, £2,129; the population
of chancel, nave and a tower with pinnacles -and a small in 1891 was 285.
spire, containing 3 bells : the interior of the building was HARDWICK is a small hamlet, nearly 2 miles north-north-
entirely renovated in r887 under the direction of Mr. H. G. west from North Runcton church and I south from Lynn.
Green, architect, of Norwich, and affords 170 sittings, of Parish Clerk, Charles Storey.
which 40 are free. The·register dates from the year r563.
The living is a rectory, consolidated with that of Hard wick PosT 0FFICE.-George Barrett, receiver. Letters received
with Setch annexed, average tithe rent-charge £529, joint from Lyun, arrive at 6.40 a.m. & letter box cleared at 6
net yearly value £ 468, including 2 3 acres of glebe, with p.m.; sunday, arrive at 7 a. m.; dispatched at 12 noon.
residence, in the gift of Jsaac B. Coaks esq. and held West Winch is the nearest money order & Lynn the nearest
since r8g 2 by the Rev. Henry Wbitelock Turner M.A. of telegraph office. Postal orders are issued here, but not
Caius College, Cambridge: there are 13 acres of glebe, paid .
which produce £40 yearly, applied to the maintenance of National "School (mixed), opened in 1863, for 88 children;
the church. The charities amount to about £9 yearly, and average attendance, 70; Frederick William Giles, master;
are distributed to the poor in fuel. Runcton Hall, the seat 1 Miss Emma Dalton, mistress
North Rune ton. Gamble William, farmer & landowner, Storey George, builder,carpenter&joiner
Digby .Commander Henry Almarus Church & Manor farms Thurston Stephen, bricklayer
R.N., J.P. The Limes Grcenacre Henry, farmer Youngs John, farmer, Primrose farm
Gamble William, Church house Greenacre Robert, farmer
GurneySomervilleArth.J.P.Runcton hall Palgrave George, farmer Hardwick.
Ollard John Farmery, Manor house Richardson Anthony, blacksmith Smith Rev. Henry M.A. (H. M. in-
Turner Rev.Hy.Whitelock M.A. Rectory Robertson Edmuml Penny, farmer spector of schools)
Cooper Hugh, beer retailer & farmer StoreyChas. farmer,grocer&parish clerk Mason Claxton B. farmer
SOUTH RUNCTON is a village and parish on the the county, Clackclose hundred and petty sessional division.
;road to Lynn, 4 miles north-by-west from Down ham station Down ham union and county court district, rural deanery 10f
on the Ely and Lynn section of the Great Eastern railway Fincbam, archdeaoonry of Norfolk and diocese of Norwich.
and 7 south from Lynn, in the South Western division of The church of St. Andrew is a. small building of stone in the
DIRECTORY.] NORFOLK. EAST AND WEST RUNTON. 587
Norman style, consisting of chancel, nave and a. western fellows of Caius College, Cambridge, a~ lords of the manor
turret containing one bell: there is a fine Norman arch, and the principal landowners. The soil is light ; subsoil,
and a tablet to the Peel family : the east window is stained : gravel. The chief crops are whoot, barley and beans. The
the church was restored in I 87 5, and affords 160 sittings. area is B3r acres ; rateable value, [.9r~ ; the population in
The register dates from the year 1562. The living is a 1891 was 126.
rectory, consolidated with Holme and Wallington, joint Parish Clerk, John Reeve.
gross yearly value £650, tithe rent-charge £246, with 14 LETTER Box cleared at 6-4o p.m.; sundays II.Io a.m.
acres of glebe, in the gift of Edmund Peel esq. ;J. P., n.L. of Letter'J through Downham, the nearest money order &
Bryn-y-pys, eo. Flint, and WallingiAln Hall, and held since telegraph office
1866 by the Rev. Charles Greenwood Floyd M.A. of Christ This children of this parish attend the school at Holme-
Church, Oxford, who resides at Holme. The Master and next-Runcton
Alflatt Goodens, farmer
Chapman Ernest, farmer, Lanes farm
I Lambert William, farmer
Peacock Hor-ace Cambridge, farmer
ISampson William, farmer
Ward Joseph, beer retailer
RUNHALL is a scattered parish, 1 mile north from and held since 1890 by the Rev. Charles George Lynn-Fryer•
Hardingham station on the Wymondham and Dereham of St. Bee~ who resides at Coston. 'fhe commons were
section of the Great Eastern railway and 6 miles west- inclosed in 1B52, and 3 acres of land are let in allotments to
north-west from 'Vymondham, in the Mid division of the labourers. The Earl of Kimberley K.G., P.C. who is lord of
county, hundred, petty sessional division and union of Fore- the manor, and Thomas Rose esq. of North Walsham, are
hoe, county court district of Wymondham, rural deanery of the chief landowners. The soil is clayey; subsoil, brick
Hingham, Forehoe division, archdeaconry of Norfolk and earth. The chief crops are wheat, barley, turnips and hay.
diocese of Norwich: the river Yare forms the southern The area is 85o acres; rateable value, {.1,238; the popula-
boundary of the parish. The church of All Saints is a small tion in 189I was 187.
building of flint and stone in the Perpendicular style, con- Parish Clerk and Sexton, Jonathan Neve.
sisting of nave and a round western tower containing one
bell: the chancel was long since destroyed by fire: the Letters through Wymondham arrive at 8.30 a. m. LETTER
church was partially restored at an expense of £420 in Box cleared at 5·45 p.m. week days only. The nearest
x8 7 o, and has 1 30 sittings. The register dates from the money order office is at Harnbam Broom & telegraph
year 1697. The living is a vicarage, annexed to the rectory offices at Wymondham & Hingham .
of Custon, average tithe rent-charge [.7o, joint net yearly School (mixed), for this parish & that of Coston, erected by
value £10o, with 6 acres of glebe, in the alternate gift of the Lord Kimberley in x86I, at a cost of £>so, for 7 5 child-
Earl of Kimberley K.o., P.C. and the Bishop of Norwich, ren; average attendance, 38
Banham Wiiliam, farmer, Wood farm Coston & Runhall Cricket Club (Arthur Kerridge Charles, farmer
Brasnett I<'rederick George, miller Banham, hon. sec) Orton Thos. Black Horse P.li. & farmer
(steam & wind) & baker Duffield William, ~hopkeeper & hawker Pegnall Herbect, farmer
Claxton W1lliam, farmer Greenwood John, jun. farmer Wright Robert, farmer
Chtheroe William, farmer Hardy Charles, blacksmith · '
RUNHAM is a parish on the banks of the navigable which sum is distributed in coals. Thomas A.lfred Rising
Bure, 3 miles south-west from Ormesby station on the esq. of South quay, Yarmouth, is lord of the manor and
Eastern and Midlands railway,.about 6 miles north-west by William Fabb, J. Parvies, Robert Fellowes esq. J.P., D.L. of
the old road, but only 4-§- by the new road and the ferry, from Shotesham Park, Frederick William Waters esq. and Mrs.
Yarmouth, in the Eastern division of the county, incorpo- Read are the principal landowners. The soil is good mixed;
rated hundreds, petty sessional division and incorporation of subsoil, light clay. The chief crops are wheat, barley, oats,
East and West Flegg, county court district of Great Yar- hay &c. The area of the parish i!! 1,636 acres; rateable
mouth, rural deanery of Flegg and archdeaconry and diocese \'alue, £3,152 ; the population in 1891 was 295.
of Norwich. There is a ferry here called" Runham Swim" Sexton, George Palmer. ,
across the river Bnre. The church of SS. Peter and Paul Pos·r &,M. 0. 0., s. B. & Annuity & Insurance Office. ...:...John
is an ancient building of stone in the Early English style, Brown, postmaster. Letters arrive from Yarmouth 7 . 4 o
consisting of chancel, nave and an embattled western tower a. m. & are dispat.ched at 5 _20 p.m. The nearest telegraph
with four pinnacles, erected by a bequest made in xsoi, and office is at Ormesby
containing 3 bells: in 1855 it was restored, from designs by
Mr. w . .A. Morant, of Yarmouth: there are 200 sittings. A School Board of 5 members was formed compulsorily 19
The register dates from the year 1_;; 3 8. The living is a ~ovember, 188g, for the principal part of the parish &
vicarage, average tithe rent-charge .t, 2 u, net yearly value Thrigby; H. Chamberlain, 13 Queen street, Yarmouth,
£234, including 27 acres of glebe, with residence, in the clerk to the board ; William Fabb, of Runham, attendance
gift of the Bishop of Norwich, and held since 1868 by the officer
Rev. Francis Conway Steward M.A. of Emmanuel College, Board School for this parish & Thrigby, built, with teachers'
Cambridge. Here is a small Primitive Methodist chapel, residence, in r854, at a cost of £5I2; it will hold 70
• built in r868. There is I acre of land for poor widows and children; average attendance, 49 ; Mrs. Sarah Carpenter,
a poor'i! allotment of 27 acre~, let at about £41 yearly, 1 mistress
Fabb William Fabb John Charles, farmer, Rookery frm Smith Daniel, farmer, Manor & White
Read Mrs Hewitt Alfred, farmer Gate farms ; & at Filby
StewardRev.Fras.Conway M. A. Vicarage Howes Benjamin, market gardener Smith George, farmer
COMMERCIAL. Knights Ed ward, cow keeper Smith William, butcher
Barber James, farmer Newson John, carpenter Thaxter Robert, farmer & ferryman,
Brown John, shopkeeper, Post office Nichols Job, farmer Run ham Swim ferry ; & at Sonthtown
Browne Zacbariah, farmer Palmer Clement, blacksmith Thurtle Waiter, cattle dealer
Crow Robert, farmer Palmer Willia.m, Three Horse Shoes P.H

EAST and WEST RUNTON form a parish and Woodward Mills M.A. of Wadham College, Oxford, and rural
village on the sea coast, with a station at West Run ton on the dean of Repps, who resides at Aylmerton. There is a Primi-
Eastern and Midlands branch from Lynn and Norwich to tive Methodist chapel at East Runton, and also a ·Jwadipg
Cromer, about 2 miles west from Cromer stations on the Room with a library, The land belonging to the poor, given
Great Eastern and Eastern and Midlands rail ways, and n by unknown danors, comprises about 10 acres in Runton
from North Walsham, in the Northern division of the and about 20 acres in Holt, the rents of which, and of two
county, North Erpingharn hundred and petty sessional divi- cottages amounting in all to f.s6 yearly. are distributed
sion, Erpingham union, Holt county court district, rural chiefly in coals : the charity is now managed by trustees
deanery of Repps, archdeaconry of Norfolk and diocese of under a scheme framed by the Charity Commissioners in
Norwich. The church of the Holy Trinity is an ancient build- 1883; J. K. Frost, clerk to the trustees. The trustees
ing of flint, with stone dressings, in the Early English style, of the late Benjamin B. Bond-Cabbell esq. D.L., J.P. who are
consisting of chancel, nave, aisles, south porch and an em- lords of the manor, Sir Thomas Fnwell Buxton bart. D. L.,
battled western tower with pinnacles containing one bell: J. P. of Colne House, Cromer, Thomas Wyndham Cremer
there are some good stained windows: in 1886 the tower esq. B.A., J;.P. of Beeston Hall, and Frederick Howe Lindsay
and nave roof were restored, carved choir stalls placed in the Bacon Windharn esq. of Hanworth Hall, are the principal
chancel and a lych gate erected: there are 6oo sittings. landowners. The soil is light; subsoil, clay. The chief
The register dates from the year I743· The living is a dis- crops are wheat, turnips, barley and hay. The area is 1,~53
charged rectory, consolidated with that of .Aylmerton, acres of land; rateable value, {.2,o61 ; the population in
average tithe rent-charge £363, joint gross yearly value r89r was 6o1.
£382, including 62 acres of glebe, in the gift of Robert •
Williarn Ketton esq. and held since 1872 by the Rev, Wilham Parish Clerk, Francis Abbs.
588 EAST A:'\ D WEST RUNTON. NORFOLK.
PosT, M. 0. & T. 0., S. B. & Annuity & Insurance Office. late Sir Edward North Buxton hart.; & now supported by
-Thomas Puxley, postmaster. Letters arrive via Cromer Sir Thomas Fowelllluxton hart.; it was enlarged in 1858 &
at 8 a.m.; disputched at 4.30 p.m will hold 200 children; average attendance, 105; William
Albert Cole, master
WALL LETTER Box, \Vest Run ton, cleared at 4· 15 p. m Railway Station, West Runton, Benjamin Stone, station
National School (mixed & intants), erected in 1852 by the master
I<'ield Ellis Newstead, farmer, Beacons- Slater Williarn, shoe maker
East Runton. field lodge Thain Benjamin, blacksmith
Aldis Miss, Seaview house Field Nathaniel Newstead, farmer Todd William, Boat P.H
·Burton William, The Laurels Green Charles, jobbing gardener, & Wills Rose Elizabeth (Miss), milliner, 4
Frost James King, The Ivies lodging house, Victoria house Victoria terrace
Kenealy Edward Michael, 8 Victoria ter Green John, fisherman, 3 Victoria ter Wortley Roger James, farmer & brick
Wortley Roger Jame..'l, Runton Old hall Green Stephen, bricklaycr,2 Victoria ter & tile maker, Runton Old hall
Grimmer Alfred, lodging house Wright Jas. farm bailiff t.o Jas. Abbs
COMMEHCIAL. Kemp James, miller (wind), school esq. of The Woodlands, West Runton
Abhs Francis, farmer attendance officer for Aylmerton
Abbs George, flint & gravel merchant, school board district & clerk & attend- West Runton.
carter, & lodging house, Cliff house ance officer for West llcckham school Abbs James, The Woodlands
Abbs Robert Jas. lodging house,Flint ho board district; highway surveyor for Moore Rev. Lethbridge Charles Edward
Abbs Ruth (Miss), lodging ho. Cliff villa Felbrigg&Runton & assistant overseer M A. The Rivulet
Abbs William, farmer Love Alfred, fisherman, 5 Victoria ter Pank Edmund William
Banvil Henry, gamekeeper to Sir Thus. Love John, farmer Abbs Robert, farmer
I<'owell Buxton hart Marling Sarah (Mrs.), lodging house, I Abbs Thomas, farmer, Church farm
Rird William, wheelwright Victoria terrace Abbs Thomas, farmer, Pank's farm
Blogg Thomas, butcher 1
Martins Edmund, shopkeeper Edwards Samuel, farmer & carter
Bradfield Charles, jobbing gardener, 4 Martins Frederick, lodging house Knowles Matthew (exors. of), farmers
Victoria terrace Martins Thomas, shopkeeper & farmer Lyne Thomas, painter
Bnddrell James, White HorseP.H. & fish Martins William, lodging house Moy David, carter
_ merchant, & agent for the Great Puxley Thos.grocer & draper,Post office Pank Francis Farrow, lodging houses
Eastern Railway Co Reading Room & Library (William Pigott A. :M. (Miss), lodging ho. Seaview
Burton William, farmer Albert Cole sec), Skipper MarthaAnn (Mra. ), shopkeeper
Dennis George William, butcher Ransom Henry, farmer Smith Eliza (Mrs.), lime burner

R USHALL is a parish and small village about miles


2 bourne, near Canterbury, and held since 1866 by the Rev.
south from Pulham St.Mary station on the WaveneyValley Charles Gape M.A. of Corpus Christi College, Cambridge.
section of the Great Eastern railway, 3 west from Harleston Pheasant's charity, consisting of three tenements and 7
and 6 north-cast from Diss, in the Southern division of the acres of land, let in allotments to the poor, now produces
county, Earsham hundred and petty sessional division, £.13 3s. yearly, which sum is devoted to church expenses.
Depwade union, Harleston county court district., rural Rushall Hall, occupied by Mrs. M. Gleed, farmer, is entirely
deanery of Redenball, archdeaconry of Norfolk and diocese surrounded by a moat filled with water. The Hall farm, of
of Norwich. The church of St. Mary the Virgin is an edifice 200 acres, belongs to llethel Hospital, Norwich, and the
of flint with stone dre~sings, in the Early English and remainder of the land to small proprietors, who pay fee
Decorated styles, consisting of chancel, nave, south porch rents to the Duke of Norfolk K.G. as lord of the manor.
and a round 13th century western tower, with an octagonal The soil is mixed; subsoil, clay and gravel. The chief crops
belfry, containing one bell : the stairs leading to the ancient are wheat, barley, peas and beans. The area is I, 149~ acres ;
rood loft remain and are in a perfect state: the chancel, which rateable value, £I, 171 ; the population in I89r was 199.
has two remarkable lancet windows, has been thoroughly Parish Clerk, Henry N ewby.
restored and new-roofed at the expense of the Master and
fellows of Emmanuel College, Cambridge, who are the im- National School (mixed), erected in 18 58, with residence for
propriators ; the remainder of the church was restored in mistress, for so children ; average attendance 30;
1878 at a cost of £760: there are 106 sittings. The register mistress, yacant
dates from the year 1560. The living is a discharged vicar- Letters through Scole, arri\·e at 8. 30 a. m. The nearest
age: average tithe rent-charge £78; gross yearly value money order office is at at Dickleburgh & telegraph office
£ws; net £8o, including 69 acres of glebe, with residence, is at Pulham St. Mary. WALL LKITER Hox cleared at
in the gift of the Rev. William Tattersall H. A. of Bishops-
,
5.30 p.m. week days & ro a.m. sundays

Gape Rev. Charles M.A. Vicarage Daniels M aria (Mrs.), farmer N ichols George, farmer, Lodge farm
COMMEHCIAL. Gallant Thomas, carpenter, black- Riches George, farmer, Starveacre
Algar Ernest, wheelwright & farmer smith, & shopkeeper Saunders Benjamin,drill owner & dealer
Arnold Jane (Mrs. ),farmer, College farm Garrod B.obert, brick maker Shibley Robert, farmer •

Corke James, Half Moon inn Gleed Marion (Mrs.),farmr.Rushall hall Simmens Charles, farm bailiff to Mr.
Cunningbam Frederick, farm bailiff to Lawes Jas. Edward, shopkeepr. & dealr J. R. Miles
the trustees of the late Henry Culley
RUSHFORD is a parish on the Little Ouse, 4 miles chief crops are wheat, barley and rye. The area is 4,623
sout-h-east from Thetford, in the Mid division of the acres, inclusive of Great and Little Snarehill parish, besides
county, Guiltcross and Shropham petty sessional division, 1,495 in Suffolk; rateable value £1,398; the population in
Thetford union and county court district, hundreds of Guilt- r8gi was 189.
cross and Blackhourn, partly in Suffolk, rural deanery of SHADWELL is a hamlet in this parish, r~ miles south-east
Rockland, archdeaconry of Norfolk and diocese of Norwich from Rushford. Shad well Court, the seat of Miss Buxton, is
The church of St. John the Evangelist, formerly attached to a modern mansion in the Domestic Gothic style standing in
the college of St. John the Evangelist, dissolved in 1 54 1 • is the centre of a luxuriantly wooded park and takes its name
a building of flint, in the Decorated style ; the only portions from a celebrated spring near the house called "St. Chadd's
of the original church now existing are the nave and western· Well," and once much frequented by pilgrims. The hall
tower, containing a clock and 6 bells, but the adjoining is panelled and roofed with carved oak, and the other build-
remains of the collegiate buildings, occupied by the rector as ings, disposed round a court yard, include a clock tower :
a residence, are curious and interesting. The register dates in the house is a fine collection of stuffed birds, collected
from the year 1777· The living was formerly a donative, from the estate, some curious and valuable pictures, and a
exempt from episcopal jurisdiction, yearly value £1oo, but fine library contaming some rare books.
now united to the adjoining rectory of Brettenham, average
tithe rent-change £I55, joint gross yearly value £ 260 : net Parish Clerk, Philip Stearne.
£236, including 20 acres of glebe, in the gift of Miss Buxton, Letters through Thetford, the nearest money order & tele-
and held since 1885 by the Rev. Thomas Robinson B.A. of graph office, arri¥e at 8.30. PILLAR LETTER Box cleared
Wadbam College, Oxford, who resides, by permission of the at 5.30 p.m.; sundays, I0.30 a.m
patron, at Rushford College, there being no rectory house. School (mixed) for Rushford & Brettenham, built by the
MissBuxton is ladyof the manorandsolelandowner. There late Dowager Lady Buxton in 1872 & maintained chiefly
is a parochial library of 150 volumes, supported by Miss by the Buxton family; it will bold 6o children; averaga
Buxton. The soil is sandy; subsoil, chalk and gravel. The attendance, 36; Mrs. Mary Jane Hayward, mistress
Buxton Miss, Shadwell court Barker Caleb, valuer & land agent to Golding Benjamin, farmer
Robinson Rev. Thomas B. A. [incum- Miss Buxton; & at King street King Ernest, farm bailiff to Miss Buxton
bent], Rushford college Clarke Jas. head gardener toMissBuxton King Fredk. Wm. farmer, Ru.shford lo
DIRECTORY.] NORFOLK. ·GREAT RYBURGH. 589

Miss Buxton
1
Riekwood William, head gamekeeper to Sage Samuel, shopkeeper ·
Stearne Philip, bricklayer to the estate
I Taylor Waiter, blacksmith to Miss
Buxton, The Cottages
EAST R US TON is a parish and scattered village near at Ridlington. Richard Parson, the celebrated Greek scholar
"the sea coast, 3 miles north from Stalham station and 3 east and professor of Greek at Cambridge University, was born
from Honing station, both on the Eastern and Midlands here 25 Dec. 17S9, his father being then parish clerk. East
t•ailway, and s~ miles east from North Walsham, in the Rv.ston Hall is the residence of Ash Rudd esq. J.P. Messrs.
Eastern division of the county, Tunstead and Happing petty Keith, Blake & Co. of Norwich, are lords of the manor. The
sessional division, Rapping hundred, Smallburgh union, principal landowners are Ash Rudd esq. J.P. Charles Le Yeave
North Walsham county court district, rural deanery of and Henry Morse Taylor esq. J.P. of the Rookery, Dilham.
Waxham, Rapping division, archdeaconry of Norfolk and The soil is fine rich loam; subsoil, sand, gravel and clay. The
diocese of Norwich. The church of St. Mary is a building number of acres is 2,446, mostly in tillage, with the excep-
of flint with stone dressings, in the Perpendicular style, tion of 300 acres of common land, on which the poor pasture
consisting of chancel, nave, south aisle, !'Outh porch and an their cattle and cut fuel; rateable value, £4,044; the popu-
embattled western tower containing one bell : the panels of lation in 1891 was 645.
the chancel screen are embellished with paintings of St. Parish Clerk, Edward Gaze.
Greg_ory, ~t. Am~rose, St.' Augustine a~d St. Jerome: the PosT OFFICE.-Miss Anna Elizabeth Youngman receiver.
font IS enriched With carvmgs, representmg the symbols of L ·h h s lh s ·, ~ ' . d'
. t
the E vangel IS d to d · 88 4 b y "Mrs. Atth'll . etters t roug ta am . 0. arrn e at 9· 3_., a. m. , IS·
s han bwa.sd res
th re h 1n 1 t d · 1 , m
pa t h d t
c e a 3 p.m. ; th ere IS
· no sun d ay pos t . Sta lh am IS ·
memory of h e! ~s an : ~ C: ance1 was res ore m 188 7 the nearest money order & tele raph office
by the Ecclesmsttcal CommisSIOners at an outlay of nearly g
£4-oo: the church is about to be restored and the square A School Board o_f 5 ~em.bers was formed 12 ~ov:ember,
pews replaced by open benches. The register dates from the 1875, for the um~ed dlStrtct of East Ruston ~ ~1dlmgton;
year 1558. The living is a vicarage, net yearly value £ 29 6, T. W. Durrell, Dllham, clerk to the board; Wtlham Cook:~,
with 12 acres of glebe, in the gift of the Dean and Canons of Stalham, attendance officer
Windsor, and held since r881 by the Rev. William Muskett Board School (mixed), erected in 1879, for 150 children;
llobson, of St. Catharine's College, Cambridge, who resides average attendance, II6; Thomas Loop, master
Rudd Ash J.P. East Ruston hail Gaze Edward, boot maker Pye Robt. Butchers' ArmsP.H. & farmr
Rudd Mrs. H. East Rnston hall Gedge Albt. Charles, farmer & surveyor Riches Isaac, farmer & landowner
Thirst The Misses Gibbons Thomas, thatcher Riches Thomas, blacksmith
COMMERCIAL. Gooch Wm. thrashing ma·chine proprtr Sims James, farmer
Bacon Jn. farm bailiff to J.Batchelor esq Grimes James, shoe maker Southgate William ~ewstead, boot ma
Bell Charles, farmer Grimes William, farmer & landowner Spanton John, farmer
Bristow Alfred, miller (wind) & farmer Hewett Benjamin, farmer Turner R. G. & H. Brothers, millers
Cole Bartley, shopkeeper Lake George, Chequers P.H (wind & steam)
Cole John, farmer & carter Le Neave Charles, farmer & landowner Waterson George, farmer & laudowner
Durrell Maria (Mrs.), farmer Pes tell John, farmer Waterson Robert Gaze, farmer
Durrell William, farmer & landowner PlnmmerGeo.wheelwrgt.carpntr.&frmr ' Waterson William, tailor
Dyball Francis, farmer Plummer John, blacksmith , ·webster John, farmer & landowner
Frosdick William, farm steward to Ash Plummer William, farmer ·. Youngman Anna Elizabeth (Miss),
Hudd esq. J.P Pointer Charles, farmer grocer & draper, Post office
SOUTH RUSTON (or Sco-RusTON) is a parish r! mile gross yearly value £338, including r acre of glebe, in the
north from Coltishall station on the Wroxham and Aylsham gift of Mrs. Thomas Mack, of Tunstead Hall, and held since
branch of the Great Eastern railway, 8! miles north-east 1890 by the Rev. George Shepheard Ives B.A. of Jesus'
from Norwich and 5~ south from North Walsham, in the College, Cambridge, who resides at Tunstead. George
Eastern division of the county, Tunstead and Rapping petty Randall Johnson esq. M.A. of Heavitree, Exeter, is impro-
sessional division, Tunstead hundred, Small burgh union, priator of the great tithes. Lady Durrant, of Scottow Hall,
North ·walsham county court district, rural deanery of Scottow, who is lady of the manor, and Mr. Thomas H.
Waxham, Tunstead division, archdeaconry of Norfolk and Wells, are principal landowners. The soil is light; subsoil,
diocese of Norwich. The church of St. Michael is a small sand. The chief crops are wheat and barley. The area of
but ancient building of flint in the Decorated style, consist- the parish is 471 acres; rateable value, £763; the popula•
ing of chancel, nave and south porch, and formerly had a tion in 1891 was us.
tower, the ruins of which, covered with ivy, still remain:
there are 110 sittings. The register dates from the year Letters through Norwich, via Scottow, arrive at 10 a.m.
1678. The living is a chapelry, consolidated with the Coltishall is the nearest money order & telegraph office
vicarage of Tunstead, average tithe rent-charge £253, joint The children of this place attend the school at Tunstead
I
Daniels James, head gamekeeper to Neale George, shopkeeper
Thomas Mack esq Wells Charles, farmer
I Wells Thomas H. farmer & landowner

GREAT R YBURG H (or Ryburgh Magna, formerly gross yearly value £ s2o, including 3S9 acres of glebe, with
spelt "Riburrough" and "Riburgh ") is a village and residence, in the gift of Charles Mea burn Tatham esq. of
parish, on the west bank of the river Wensum, with a station Lincoln's Inn, and held since r8go by the Rev. Henry Fowler
on the Wymondham and Wells branch of the Great Eastern Baker B •.A. of Emmanuel College, Cambridge, and diocesan
railway, 134 miles from London and 4 south-east from inspector of schools for the district of North Brisley and
Fakenham, in the North Western division of the county, Toftrees. Here are W esleyan and Primitive Methodist
Gallow hundred and petty sessional division, Walsingham chapelB. There is an allotment of 29A. oR. 13P. for the
union and county court district, rural deanery of Nllrth benefit of the poor; Morse's charity, of £4 18s. 8d. yearly,
Brisley a.nd Toftrees and archdeaconry and diocese of Nor- is for blan~ets. The church land consists of BA. 2R. and is
wich. The church of St. Andrew is a cruciform building of let at £14 a year. Edward Cubitt Francis esq. of Stibbard,
flint, with some Saxon and Norman portions and insertions is lord of the manor, and the land is held by several owners.
of Perpendicular date, consisting of chancel, nave, transept, The soil is mixed ; subsoil, clay. The chief crops are
south porch and a western tower of Saxon date, round at wheat, barley and roots. The parish contains 1,170 statute
the base and octangular above, and containing 6 bells, acres; rateable value, £3,859; the population in 1891 was
presented in 18gr by the Smith family: the arcades are 628. By an order which came into operation March 25th,
~orman: the stained east window was added in 1863, and 1886, a detached part of this parish was amalgamated with
an organ erected in 1864: a memorial window was erected Stibbard.
in 1866 to Edward Tolver Gwyn esq. of Pensthorpe: and- Parish Clerk, Henry Brown.
several others and a brass eagle lectern were given in 1876 PosT, M. 0. & T. 0., S. B. & Annuity & Insurance Office.-
by members of the family of the Rev. George Edmund Miss Martha Ann Richardson, postmistress. Letters
Tat.ham M. A. rector 1859-84: the chancel contains a piscina arrive from Fakenham at 7.50 a. m. & 3.50 p.m. & are
on the north as well as the south side, and there is also a dispatched at 9.15 a.m. & 3·55 & 6.15 p.m
piscina and a.umbry in the north transept: the church was WALL LETI'ER BoxEs, Highfield corner, cleared at 7.20
restored in 186o at a cost of more than £1,000, and in 1891 a.m. & 4.40 p.m. & Railway station, cleared at g.25 a.m.
a south porch was added by her husband as a. memorial to & 4-35 p.m
Mrs. Anne Jacobs Smith: the church affords 308 sittings. National School (mixed), erected in 1872, for 200 children;
The register dates from the year 1547. The living is a average attendance, ISO; Albert Foster, master
rectory, with the vicarage of Little Ryhurgh annexed, joint. Railway station, George William Drewell, station master
Baker Rev. Henry FowlerB.A. [rector], Cooper Thomas Smith Herbert Edgar, Mill house
Rectory Salisbury William Southgate Mrs
Bell Mrs Smith Edgar, Mill house Ware George Stephen M. B. Manor house
C. N. & S. 38
590 GREAT RYBURGH. • NO:SFQLK~ - {KELLY'S
COMMERCIAL. Farmers' Foundry Co, Limited (The) Sm,ith F. & G.r Limited, maltsters~
Abbs Lewis,' bricklayer (Thomas Cooper, managing director), millers (steam & water) & cake &
Alc~ndra Coffee Rooms(Mrs.Elizabeth engineers, iron founders,' manufac- general merchants & farmers;.. & at.
Turner, manageress) turers & general agents East Dereham & Wells
Barrett Robert, tailor Hammond Abdal, clothes dealer SmithAlice(Mr~. ),farmer, Highfield frm
Bell John (MrS'. ), farmer & landowner Howe Richard, butcher Smith Charles, butcher & farmer
Brown Henry, boot maker & parish clerk Howe Samuel, beer retailer '' Stark George, grocer & draper
Colman Philip, Crown P.H Male Alfred, carpenter Symonds Thos. blacksmith & wheelwght.
Corner William Edward, clerk Mesney Michael & Son, coal merchants Uttin Samuel,Prudential insurance agt.
Daines Ellis, beer retailer & farmers Ware GeorgeStephen M.B.,B.s.surgeonp
Dilley J osepb, baker & farmer Ougbton William, grocer & draper Mlmorhouse
Eggleton Thomas, blacksmith r Pratt Robert, farmer Waters James, farmer
Green Edward Soames, grocer & drapr Rowland Wilson, farmer Woods John, farmer & landowner
Green Robert, farmer Rush Frederick, Boar P.H
LITTLE RYBURGH is a parish on the. banks of the Cambridge, and diocesan inspector of schools for the district.
river Wensum, near Ryburgh ~tation on the Great Eastern of North Brisley and Toftrees. Here is a Primitive Metho-
railway, 3 miles east-south-east from Fakenhaii,l, in the dist chapel. The rents of an allotment of 13 acres, let for
North Western division of the county, Gallow hundred and [10 yearly, are expended on fuel for the poor. Edward
petty sessional division, Walsingham unionandcountycourt Cubitt Francis esq. of Stibbard, is lord of the manor, and
district, rural deanery of Burnham, archdeaconry of Norfolk F. and G. Smith Limited and Mr. John Philip Francis are
and diocese of Norwich. A bridge of one arch, leading to the principal landowners. The soil is variouS'; subsoil, clay.
Ry'hnrgh station, crosses the rivet Wensurri at this point. The chief crops are wheat, barley and oats. The area is
The church of All Saints is now in ruins. · The registers 868 acres; ra.teable value, £931; the population in 189'1:
date from 1688, but are partly included in those bf~Great was 139. '
Ryburgh. The living is a vicarage, annexed to the rectory Postman arrives on foot at' 8.40 a. m. WALL LETTER Box
of Great Ryburgh, joint gross yearly v~lue £52o 1 including cleared at 9 a. m. & 5·45 p.m. Letters through Fakenham.
359 acres of glebe, with residence, in the gift of Charles The nearest money order &• telegraph office is at Great
Mea burn Tatham esq. of Lincoln's Inn, and held since 1890 Ryburgh .
by the Rev. Henry Fowler Baker B. A. of Emmanuel College, The children of this place attend the school at Gt. Ryburgh
Baldwin Edmund, boot maker Long James, farmer Platten Robert, farmer
Curson Robert William, Black Horse Long William, farmer Slegg William, farmer
P.H. & farmer Oughton Sophia (1\'Irs.), shopkeeper Watson William, farmer
RYSTON (or RISTON) is a parish 2miles east-by-south age, united with that of Roxham to the vicarage of Fordham
from Downham and three-quarters of a mile north from May 2gth, 1877, average tithe rent-charge £r6r, joint net
Ryston station (locally in the parish of Fordham) on the yearly value £230, including 32 acres of glebe, in the gift
Downharn and Stoke Ferry branch of the Great Eastern of the Dean and Chapter of Norwich, and held since 1890 by
railway, in the South Western division of the county, Clack~ the Rev. Gerrard Alexander Crookshank M. A. of Trinity
cLose petty sessional division and hundred, union and county College, Dublin, who resides at J<'ordham. • In this parish
court district of Downham, rural deanery of Fincham, arch- and abont 300 yards south of Ryston Hall, stands Ket's Oak,
deaconry of Norfolk and diocese of Norwich. The church or "the Oak of Reformation," under which Robert Ket, the
of St. Michael is a small buildjng of stone, consisting of leader of the Norfolk insurgents in 1549, sat and administered
chancel, nave, south porch and a western tower, restored in ! justice, and Coniers, the chaplain of the rebels, read prayers
x858 by Edward Roger Pratt esq. and containing one bell: t and preached. Ryston Hall, which underwent considerable
in tbe church are several handsome monuments to the Pratt . improvement in 1867, is the scat of Edward Roger Murray
family, including one with an effigy of white marble to Anne Pratt esq. B. A., J.P. who is lord of the manor and owns the
(Monyns), wife of Sir Roger Pratt kt. d. 1707; most of the whole parish: the park extends over about 300 acres. The
windi)WS are stained : the church was reseated with oak soil is of a mixed quality : subsoil, clay and sand, Th&
benches in 1862, and in 1868 the plaster ceiling of the chief crops are wheat and barley. The area is 59~ acres;
c~umcel was taken down and the original roof, 500 years old, rateable value of Ryston, £8o2; the population of Ryston
disdos ~d and restored, as well as two lepers' windows, an in 1891 was 46. .
aumbry and a very beautiful piscina, all discovered during Parish Clerk Henrv Robinson
the progress of the restoration ; two curious windows in the ' • '
porch were also renovated, the whole work being carried Letters received through Downham, which is the nearest.
out at the cost of E. R. Pratt esq. : there arc 100 sittings. money order & telegraph office
The register dates from the year 1687. The living is a vicar- The children of this parish attend the school at Ford ham
Pratt Ed ward Roger Murray B. A., J.P. Gross George, head gamekeeper to E, Turner Henry William, farmer, & road
Ryston hall; & Brooks' club, St. R. M. Pratt esq surveyer for Ryston
, t t L d · Newell Charles, gardener to E. R. M. '
J ames s ree , on on s w · ' Pratt esq

SAHAM TONEY is a village and parish 2 miles north- 48 acres of glebe, with residence, in the gift of New College,
west from Watton station on the Bury, Thetford and Oxford, and held since 1892 by the Rev. Ambrose ShortM.A.
Swaffham section of the Great Eastern railway, 9 south-west and late fellow of New College, Oxford. The advowson, which
from East Dereham and 8 south-east from Swaffham, in the anciently belonged to the monks of Ronen, was seized by
South Western division of the county, Wayland hundred Henry V, during the war with France, and subsequently
and petty sessional division, Swaffham union apd county presented by Henry VI. to New College, Oxford. Humphrey
court district, rnral deanery of Breccles and arcbdeaconry Prideau:x;, dean of Norwich, author of ''The Connection of
and diocese of Norwich. The Wissey brook flows along the the Old and New Testament with the history of the Jews
south of the parish, and forms part of the boundary on and Neighbouring Nations," and other works, was rector
that side. The church of St. George is a handsome edifice here in 1686. Thero are Wesleyan,- Primitive Methodist
oi ilin.t in the Perpendicular style, consisting of chancel, and Free Methodist chapels. There are seven almshouses,
~ave of five bays with clerestory, aisles, vestry, south porch four for widows and three for old and respectable married
and an embattled western tower, with pinnacles, containing couples; Hunt's charity of £22 yearly is given in calico and
a clock and 6 bells : over the south porch is a parvise : a fine flannel to poor parishioners ; the fuel allotment of 86 acres
oak screen, gilt, separates the nave and chanc~l: in the is let for about .£8o yearly, which sum is distributed in
north and south walls of the chancel and south .wall of the coals. Near the centre of the village is a mere of 13 acres,
nave are piscinre : the font is of Bath stone and has a carved well stocked with fish~ eels of a peculiar form are caught
oak cover, dated 1632, and surmounted by a pelican in her here and black bass are bred in the mere. Roman pottery
piety: the church is for the most part seated with oak and other antiquities have at various times been found iu
benches of the 16th century, some of which have carved the parish. The trustees of' Elijah Crozier Bailey esq. are
poppy beads and figures of lions ; there are others of later lords of the manor of Saham Toney ; the rector of the rectorial
date also carved: the stained east window was the gift of manor, and the Rev. William Shuckforth ~rigson M.A. vicar
the Rev. W. H. Parker Ill.A. rector from 1833, who restored of Pelynt, Cornwall, of the manors of Howards, Harveys and
the whole building at a considerable expense in 1864 r there Pages. The chief landowners are Mrs. Perkins, the trustees-
are ·brasses to Edward Goffe, of Threxton, 1612, Anna of the Misses Mann, Captain Sir Charles Harvey Harvey bart.
Sandhill, 1576, and to '\Villiam Hooper Parker, 1876, and J.P. of Rainthorpe Jfall, J. H. Gurney esq. Joseph Trueman
several memorial windows, including one to the late John Mills esq . .1 P •• D~L. of Clermont Lodge, Watton, George
Castendieck esq. : the church affords 500 sittings. The Robert Clarke esq~ the Rev. W. S. Grigson M.A. and Arthur
register dates from the year 1547. The living is a rectory, William Partridge esq. The soil is chalk and clay; sub-
t.ithe rent-charge ,£1, 122, net _yearly value £r,o35, including I soil, clay. The chief crops are wheat, barley and turnips.
DIRECTORY. J NORFOLK., S.ALL. 591 -
The area is 4o097acres; Tateable value, £5,633 ; the popula- century & endowed with £3o yearly & ·a master's house,
tion in 1891 was 1,159. , for boys of the parishes of Saham Toney, Threxton &
Parish Clerk, Richard Tolman. Watton; the school will hold 70 boys ;average attendance,
PosT OFFICE.-Miss Martha Fickling, receiver. Letters re- 64; Benja.min Platt, master .,
ceived through Watton S.O. at 7 a. m.; dispatched at 6.30 National (girls & infants), for 100 . children ; average
p.m. week days & u.15 a.m. sundays Watton is the attendance, 78; Miss Mary Susan Higgins, mistress
nearest money order & telegraph office. Postal orders Infants', for 40 children; average attendance, 32; Miss
are issued here, but not paid Thompsou, mistress
ScaooLs :~ CARRIER TO NoRWICH-James Cornell, every tues.., return-
National (Endowed), erected towards the close of the 17th ing on wed • ·
[Names marked th~s•receive letters through Bristow Robert, miller (wind) & baker Macro Henry, farmer
- Bhlpdha.m.] Bullen Joseph, butcher, dealer & farmer Makins Henry, farmer
PRIVATE RESIDENTS. Bullen Robert, Bell inn, & carpenter Matthews William, master of Saham
Albrecht John Louis, Broom hill Cornell James, shopkpr.carrier&farmer Middle Class school
Brasnett Thomas John, West house Curston Lewis, boot & shoe maker Newton Alfred, poultry dealer
Ruttolph William Kiddle, Whitehall Disdle William, carpenter Newton Charles, farmer & dealer &
Dixon Herbert Fickling Arthur, farmer . assistant overseer
French Charles Fickling George, butcher Newtoniiarry,ChequersP.B:.&prk.btchr
George Edward Robert, Church farm Fickling George, higgler Newton Thomas, beer retailer
George Mrs. White house Fickling James, higglcr Newton William1 higgler
Matthews W1lliam F1ckling John, farmer ' Newton William Feakes, farmer
Naylor Thomas, Saham cottage Fickling Julia (Miss), farmer, {.ow frm .Partridge Arthur William, land agent
Perk ins Mrs. Saham hall Fickling Martha (Miss), shpkpr.Post off Robinson Edma.n,frmr. Woodbottom fm
Rudd Mrs Goff Harry, farm bailiff to J. H. Saham Middle Class School (William
Short Rev. Ambrose M.A. Rectory Gurney esq. Park farm Matthews, master)
COMMERCIAL. Gray Wm. travelling tea dealer & farmr *Smith Edward, farmer, Weight farm
Adcock Robert, farm bailiff to Mr. G. Hardy Erighten,farmr.& brick & tile ma Stacey William, cooper
R. Clark, Church farm *Haylock Henry, farmer, The Grove *Symonds Edward, farmer, School frm
Armiger l''rancis, beer retailer Hunt Edward, beer retailer Thurston Jeremiah, farmer & dealer
Ashley William, miller (wind) Jary Richard, shopkeeper TolmanAlfd. Jas. farmr.LimeKiln frm
Ayers John, nurseryman, seedsman & Jennings Thomas, wheelwright Tolman Richd.blacksmith & whitesmth
shopkeeper Lewis John, White Horse P.H. & butchr We.tson Charles, beer retailer
Bald win John, shopkeeper MaceHenryThomas,plnmber,painter&c We.teon George, beer retailer
Brancham Isaac, blacksmith Mace Robert, miller (wind) Webb John, farmer
Brett lsaac, steward to Mrs. Perkins Mace William, carpenter Wheals Ernest, shopkeeper ·
ST. FAITH'S, see HoRsHAV ST. FAITH's.
SALHOUSE (SALEIIOUSE or SALLOWES) is a village and is also a yearly snm of 1os. paid by E. F. Ward esq. for one
parish near the river Hure, with a station one mile south- acre of land on Mousehold Heath, and similarly expended;
west from the village on the East Norfolk branch of the the town lands of 24A. 4R. 2P. produce about £30 yearly,
Great Eastern railway, 6 miles north-east from Norwich, in which is expended in fuel. At a distance of two miles from
the Eastern division of the county, Taverham hundred and the railway station are two broads of 20 acres in extent.
petty sessional division, St. Faith's union, Norwich county Salhouse Hall, the seat of Edward Foote Ward esq. M. A. is a
court district, rural deanery of Taverham and archdeaconry castellated brick mansion of the Elizabethan period, plea-
• and diocese of Norwich. The church {)f All Saints is a santly situated in a large and well-wooded lawn, and con-
building of flint with stone dressings chiefly in the Gothic taining a. fine collection of paintings and works of art.
style of the 13th century, consisting of chancel, nave, north William Henry 'l'rafford esq. J.P. who is lord of the manor,
aisle, south porch and an embattled western tower, erected Sir Edward Paulet Stracey hart. of Rackheath Park, Ed ward
in the 15th century and containing 2 bells and a sanctus Foote Ward esq. M.A. Albemarle Cator esq. B.A., n.L., J.P.
bell: there are several mural tablets to the family of Ward, of Woodbastwick Hall, Edward South well Trafford esq. J.P.
formerly of Walcot, including one in the chancel to Richard of Wroxham Hall, and Major John Penrice D.L., l.P. of
Ward, Iieut. -col. East Norfolk militia and officer of dragoons, Rramerton, are the principal landowners. The soil is of a
d. 1799, and others of his family, 1784-182r; to Henry and light, mixed character; subsoil, mar!, The chief crops are ,
Richard Dalrymple, d. 1784; and to Robert Ward esq. d. wheat, barley, turnips and hay. The area is 2,o6o acres;
1843, and his wife Lydia, d. 1839 : the church retains an rateable value, £2,610; the population in r8gr was 639-
huur glass stand and two ancient stone coffins: it was re- 1
stored and a south porch built in r88r, and has r]osittings. PosT & M. 0. 0., S. E. & Annuity & Insurance Office.-
The register dates from the year 1568. The living is a Henry William Amis, sub-postmaster. ' Letters arrive
vicarage, consolidated with that of Wroxham, average tithe from Norwich at 7.30 a. m.; dispatched at 4.25 p.rri.
rent-charge ,~","248, joint yearly valu~ £240, including 14 The nearest telegraph office is at Woodbastwick
acres of glebe, with residence, in the gift of William Henry WALL LETTER Box cleared at 4 , p.m. ; sundays, 9 . 35 a..m
Trafford esq. J.P. and held since r87o by the Rev. Thomas 5
Francis Roddington M.A. of St. Peter's College, Cambridge. National School (mixed), erected in 1845 & since twice en-
There are two Baptist chapels and a Wesleyan chapel. larged, for 121 children; average attendance, roo; Mr.
Charities :-Mr. Edward Metyer, in 1712, left£2 ros. yearly, & Mrs. Hornby, master & mistress
which is distributed every Easter Monday in bread; there Railway Station, James Rowe, station master
Betts Mrs. Hall farm Howlett Harcourt, cattle dealer Sutton Ed ward,farmer, Yew Tree lodge
.Uoddington Hev. Thos.Frs. M. A. Vicarag~ Howlett Horace, miller (wind & steam), Sutton John, farmer & cattle dealer &
Browne Mrs. Erooksbank cottage corn & coal merchant & farmer surveyor of highways
Campling JohnRushbrook,Rose cottage (Thomas Frank Read, manager) ; & Thrower Albert, farmer
l\'ard Edward Foote M.A. Salhouse hall Salhouse station; & Wroxham roller Thrower Samuel, farmer
COMMERCIAr.. flour mills, Hoveton St. John Thrower Walter, farmer, Hospital farm
Amis HenryWm.grocer&sub-postmastr & Horning. See advertisement Thynne Chas. carpenter & wheelwright
Rlackburn Robert, Bell inn Howlett Horatio, farmer Tooley William, farmer
Hrowne Noah, poultry dealer Jeffries RobertHall,farmer,OldHall frm Wacey Mark, farmer
Dowsing George, shoe maker Mayor Joshua, farmer, Broad farm Wiley Thomas Hall, butcher & shopkpr
Farman Henry Suffield, baker& grocer Read Thomas Frank, assistant overseer Winter George, coal dealer
Farman Joseph, basket maker &thrashing machincprpr.Willow bnk Winter James, wheelwright &c
Fraser Robert, shoe maker Rice Harriet (Mrs.), King's Head P.H Woodcock Joshua,frmr.&mrkt.gardenr
Herwin George, farmer Rose John, blacksmith Woodcock Robert, farmer
Hewett Jo.hn, thatcher Rose Thomas, pork butcher Wright George, farmer & bricklayer
llipkin Sidney James, grocer Sewell Timothy, farmer Wright Robert, shoe maker
SALL is a village and parish, r~ miles north from Reepham of flint in the Perpendicular style, consisting of chancel,
sta.tion on the East Norfolk branch of the Great Eastern nave of six bays, aisles, north and south porches with par·
railway and 6 south-west from Aylsham, in the Northern vises and turrets, and a lofty embattled western tower, with
division of the county, Eynsford hundred and petty sessional pinnacles, containing 6 bells= there are several ancient
division, Aylsham union and county court district, rural brasses, including one with effigies to Thomas Roose, 1441,
deanery of Spar ham and arch deaconry and diocese of Nor- and Catherine his wife, with figures of 8 sons and 4 daugh-
wich. The church of SS. Peter and Paul is a noble building ters standing on brackets by their parents; another to .John
C. N. & B. 38•
592 SALL. NORFOLK. [KELLY'S

Funtevn, 1453, and his wives .Alice, Joan and Agnes, with held since 1847 by the Rev. Charles Earle Marsh M.A. of
3 children, only two effigies of wives and the inscription of that college. Sall House, now unoccupied, is a large
a scroll now remaining ; and a third, with an effigy in a mansion of brick, standing in the midst of a park of over
shroud, to John Brigge, 141 s, and brass inscriptions to Simon 200 acres, thickly studded with oak and other trees.
Roleyn, chaplain, 1482; Thomas llagham, chaplain, 1483; Brig_-General William Earle Gascoyne Lytton-Bulwer· J.P.
Margaret Cawke, 1486; Margaret Ryghtwys, 1500; John of (Juebec House, Dereham, who is lord of the manor of
Ryghtwys, 1504; William Funteyn, r5o5, and Margaret, Salkirkhall, and Capt. Timothy White are the principal land-
his wife ; Henry Hoddys, 1532 ; and Simon Grene and owners; Mr. Benjamin Stimpson, of Morton-on-the-Hill,
Helwisa, his wife ; there is also a palimpsest brass with and Mr. E. C. Francis are also landowners here. The soil
inscription to "G-eoffrey Melman, the reverse showing the is sand and loam; subsoil, clay and gravel. The chief crops
head of a lady with braided hair, resting on a cushion, are wheat, roots, barley and hay. The area is r,8o2A. 3R.
apparently Flemish work; two other inscriptions com- 15P.; rateable value, £ 2,6o8 ; the population in r891 was
memorate Peter and Margaret Crome and Catherine Good ; 192.
the brass of Geoffrey Boleyn, 1440, Alice his wife and ro Parish Clerk, William Seely Gladden.
children is said to be now lost; there also remains a monu-
ment to Erasmus Earle, 1 695 : the chancel was restored by LETTER Box cleared at 3.30 p.m. Letters through Norwich.
the Rev. Charles Earle Marsh M.A. in 1ss 7 : the church Reepham is the nearest money order & telegraph office
affords soo sittings. The register dates from the year 1559. School (mixed), built in r864, by the late Rev. Sir E. R.
The living is a rectory, average tithe rent-charge £430, Jodrell hart. for 6o children; average attendance, 30;
~ gro&'l yearly value £6oo, including 30 acres of giP-be, with the school i11 supported by voluntary contributions; MistJ
residence, in the gift of Pembroke College, Cambridge, and Mary Jane Lomas, mistress
Marsh Rev. Chas. Earle M.A. Rectory Ireland Hoory John,farmer,Stinton hall Savage William, poultry dealer
Derisley George, White Horse P.H. Seely James & llarnabas Leman, Wells John, farm bailiff to George
farmer & grocer farmers, Gate House farm Seaman esq
SAT.THOUSE is' a. parish near the seashore, 4 miles 188$ by the Rev. Charles Ernest Lowe M.A. of St. Edmund
north from Holt station on the Eastern and Midlands rail- Hall, Oxford, who resides at Kelling. Here is a Free
way, ro east from Cromer and 12 west from Wells, in the Methodist chapel, erected in r89r, and a Primitive Methodist
Northern division of th~ county, Holt hundred, petty sessional chapel. At the in closure in 1781 the poor received three
division and county court district, Erpingham union, rural allotments, comprising 349 acres, for fuel and pasturage ;
deanery of Holt and archdeacunry and diocese of Norwich. one of these, comprising 122 acres, was part of Kelling corn-
The surface of this parish is undulating, and the higher mon. On the extreme east of the heath, adjoining Kelling
grounds command fine sea views: about soo acres of marsh, parish, is an earthwork, which may be roughly described as
belonging to this and the adjoining parishes of Cley and a raised bank, much in the form of an old-fashioned figure
Kelling, were in x8sr drained and embanked, but about of 6, about 35 paces in diameter, with a mound in the
1B63 the banks were broken and have not since been centre, perhaps 6 or 8 feet higher than the embankment:
repaired; 339 acres belong to this parish and the remainder the entrance, as at Beeston, is on the north side, towards
to the other two parishes before mentioned. The church the sea. Onesiphorus Randall esq. who is lord of the
of St. Nicholas is a large and lofty building of flint, with manor, the trustees of the late William Pnrdy esq. W. Davy
stone dressings, in the Perpendicular style, consisting of esq. and Mrs. Johnson are the chief landowners. The soil
chaneel, clerestoried nave, aisles, north and south porches, is chiefly light; subsoil, marl. The chief crops are wheat,
vestry and an embattled western tower containing one bell: barley, turnips and grass. The area is 1,559 acres of land
tbe church was reseated in x887 and several of the old oak and 55 of water; rateable value, £1 1 136; the population in
benches with poppy heads still remain: the stone font is 1891 was 215.
adorned with shields bearing the emblems of the Passion Parish Clerk, Henry Lewis;
and Evangelistic symbols: a stained window was placed at PosT 0FFICE.-Henry Lewis, receiver. Letters received
the east end of the south aisle in 1878: there are roo through Halt R.S.O. about 9.30 a. m. & dispatched at 3.30
sittings. The register dates from the year 1538. The livmg p.m. Cley-next-the-Sea is the nearest money order k
is a discharged rectory, annexed to that of Kelling, tithe telegraph office
rent-charge £520 (Kelling £300, Salthouse £220), average This parish is attached to the Weybourne United District
£375. joint net yearly value £310, with r6 acres of glebe School Board, formed compulsm·i!y q May, 1875
and residence, in the gift of Jobn Savory esq. and held since The children of this place attend the Board school at Kelling
Johnson Mrs. Manor house Hancock Samuel, baker 1 Lynn Robert, farmer
Owen Robert Hudson Hampton, farmer Mallett Henry, insurance agent
Jarvis David, miller (wind) Page Frank, farmer
COMMERCIAL. Jarvis Georgina (Miss), shopkeeper Pane James, blacksmith
Brown James, Dun Cow P.n Lewis Henry, shopkeeper & assistant Spence Wm. carpenter & wheelwright
Dack Matthew, boot maker overseer, Post office
SANDRINGHAM is a village and parish, 1! miles eagle lectern was selected and presented by H.R.H. the
cast from Wolferton station on the Lynn and Hunstanton Princess of Wales in commemoration of the recovery of the
sectionoftheGreatEasternrailwayand7~north-by-eastfrom Prince of Wales from his serious illness in 1871-2: in the
Lynn, in the North Western division of the county, Free- nave are suspended the old colours of the Norfolk regiment
bridge Lynn hundred, petty sessional division and union, (9th Foot), and here also are memorial brasses to the late
Lynn county court district, rural deanery of Lynn Free- i rector and to Mr. Edmund Beck, late estate agent to H.R.H.
bridge and archdP..aconry and diocese of Norwich. The the Prince of Wales: the church was restored in 1857 by
church of St. Mary Magdalene, standing in the grounds of Lady Harriet Cowper and again in 1890 by H.R.H. the
Sandringham House, is a small but beautiful structure in Prince of Wales, when the transepts were added and the
the Perpendicular style, consisting of chancel, nave, transepts, roof renewed in oak : it now affords about xoo sittings. In
battlemented south porch and an embattled western tower, the churchyard, near the east end of the church, is the
with pinnacles, containing one bell : in the chancel are memo- grave of the infant Prince Alexander, above which is a slab
rials to H.R.H. Princess Alice (Grand Duchess of Hesse), and cross of white marble, with an inscription. The regis-
d. 14 Dec. 1878; to H.R.H. the Duke of Albany K.G. d. at ter dates from the year 1557. The living is a rectory, with
Cannes 27 Mar. r884, and to H.I.M. Frederick Ill. German that of Babingley and the vicarage of Appleton and rectory
Emperor, d. 15 June, 1888 ; here also are two panels of of West Newton annexed, average tithe rent-charge £271,
terra-cotta, representing "The Taking Down from the joint gross yearly value £363, including 37 acres of glebe,
Cross" and "The Lifting Up of the Brazen Serpent in the with residence, in the gift of H.R.H. the Prince of Wales
Wilderness," and three stained windows erected to H.R.H. K.G. and held since 1878 by the Rev. Frederick Alfred John
.Alexander John Charles Albert, infan~ son of T.R.H. the Hervey M.A .. of Trinity College, Cambridge, who is also
Prince and Princess of Wales, d. 7 .April, 1871, and to Lieut.- domestic chaplain to the Prince of Wales, chaplain in ordi-
Col. George IIenry Grey, equerry to the Prince of Wales, d. nary to Her Majesty the Queen and hon. canon of Nor-
I I Dec. 1874: there are other memorial windows to the late wich .
.Frederick Waymouth Gibbs esq. c.B., Q.c. 1 M.A. formerly Bricks are made in the parish, and carr stone is obtained,
tutor to the Prince of Wales, d. 1892 ; to the Rev. William both of which have been used in the construction of cottages
Lake Onslow M.A., F.R.A.S. formerly naval instructor to on the estate.
Admiral H.R.H. the Duke of Edinburgh K.G. and sometime The parishes of Sandringham, Wolferton, Babingley, West
rector here, d. 30 .Aug. 1877; and to the Rev. George Newton and parts of Appleton and Dersingham, containing
Browne Moxon, also a former rector: the stained windows between 7 1 000 and 8,ooo acres, were purchased by H.R.H.
in the south transept were the gift of Her Majesty the Queen the Prince of Wales from the Hon. C. S. Cowper for about
a.nd H.R.H. the Duke of Edinburgh K.G. and there are £220,000. Sandringham House, the seat of Field-Marshal
others filled with rich Munich glass: the organ and pulpit H.R.H. the Prince of Wales K.G. was erected in 1870, the
were given by H.R.H. the Prince of Wales and the brass old house being then entirely removed : the new mansion is
DIRECTORY. J NORFOLK. ~AXLINGBAM-NETHERGATE. 593
of brick with Ketton stone dressings, in the Elizabethan works were erected in 1878 and a good supply is obtained
style, from designs by Mr. 'A. J. Ilumbert, architect, of from a chalk spring in Den Beck Wood, the yield of which
London ; the main part of the building, with the offices, varies from I5,ooo to I5o,ooo gallons in the 24 hours; the
forming a parallelogram of about 450 feet by 70 feet, with a I level of this spring is 92 feet above Ordnance datum, and
stone portico, or covered carriage entrance, on the eastern I the water is conveyed through stoneware pipes to the pump-
front: the west side includes the dining and drawing rooms, ing station, where it is softened by Clarke's procesg to about
with libraries adjoining, and on the south side between the 6 degrees and stored in an octagonal tank of cast iron, con-
house and offices a spacious ball room was erected in the structed within a water tower at a height from the ground
summer of I883, from the designs of R. W. Edis p_c;q. F.S.A. of about 6o feet and holding 32,000 gallons, and from t_his
architect, of London; a corridor connects the ball room tank the Hall, stables and gardens are supplied. There is
with the remaining portion of the house, and behind it are also a dairy, which includes a tea-room used by the Princess
telegraph and post offices: the general style is Eliza- of Wales, and 8 stud farm for the rearing of hackneys and
bethan, freely treated, the ceilings both of the corridor and hunters. H.R.H. the Prince of Wales is lord of the manor
the ball room being elaborately panelled in the style of the and sole landowner. The soil is heath, peat and sand, with
r6th century: on the rst Nov. r89r, a disastrous fire clay in parts, with a subsoil of the same; the farm (east
occurred, by which the central portion of the roof of the end of the parish), light soil, with subsoil of chalk. The
house was completely destroyed, but the whole has since crops, wheat, barley, turnips and seeds, on the four-course
been renewed in a more substantial style: the flower system. The area is 1,331 acres; rateable value, £1,216;
gardens and pleasure grounds, though not very extensive, the population in 189I was 191.
are tastefully laid out and interspersed with everg'"eens Parish Clerk, William Temple.
and venerable oaks ; there are also some pieces of water : Letters through Lynn, via Dersingham. The latter is the-
the kitchen garden is I5 acres in extent, seven acres of nearest money order & telegraph office. PILLAR LETl'EB
which are within the walls, and form a parallelogram with Box, opposite the Norwich gates, cleared at 6 p. m
an oval at each end and a convenient carriage drive around: There is a PoST, M. 0. & T. 0. at the Hall, for the exclusive.
the stables are spacious and will hold about forty horses: use of H.R. H. the Prince of Wales & the household.-
tbe park is stocked with deer and the estate abounds with William Mann, receiver. Letters arrive through Lynn
game, including blackcock: the entrance gates are fine at 5 a.m. & I p.m. & are dispatched at 11 a.m. 6.30 & 8
specimens of modern English iron-work and were presented p.m
to the prince by the county on his marriage in .1863. Water The children of this place attend the school at West Newton
Wales Field Marshal H.R.H. The Probyn Genl. Sir Dighton Macnaghten Beck Frank, agent to H.R.H. The Prince
v.c., K.C.S.I., C. B. Park house; & I of Wales, Sandringham estate office
Prince of K.G., K. T., K. P., P.C. Sand- Buckingham gate, London s w Cross Artbur, organist
ringham house; & Marlborough Hervey Rev. I<'redk. Alfred John M. A. JacksonCharlesHenry,bead gamekeeper
house, St. James', London s w [chaplain in ordinary to the Queen Mackellar Archibald, bead gardener
& hon. canon of Norwich], Rectory" ·walker Edmund, stud groom
SANTON is 8 parish, on the north side of the Little Ouse register dates from the year 1770. The living is a rectory,
and on the Suffolk border, 3~ miles north-west from Thet- average tithe rent-charge £6o, net yearly value £ ror, in
ford, and 3 east from Brandon station of the Ely and Norwich the gift of William Dalziel Mackenzie esq. and held since
section of the Great Eastern railway, in the South Western r887 by the Rev. Michael Augustus Gathercole M.A. of
division of the county, Grimshoe hundred and petty sessional Sidney Sussex College, CambridgA, who is also vicar of
division, Thetford union and county court district, Cranwich Santon Downham, Suffolk, where he resides. William
rural deanery, south division, archdeaconry of Norfolk and Dalziel Mackenzie esq. M. A., J.P. of Croxton Park and Fawley
diocese of Norwich. The church of St. Helen is a small Court, Henley-on-Thames, is lord of the manor and sole
building of flint in the Gothic style, consisting of chancel, landowner. The soil is sandy; subsoil, chalk. The chief
nave, north porch and an embd.ttled western tower, square crops are rye and turnips. The area is r,5o8 acres; rate-
at the base, with an octagonal belfry contaming one bell: it able value, £1,412; the population in 1891 was 37·
was rebuilt in 1628 from the ruins of a larger church by Parish Clerk, Robert Wilson.
Thomas Bancroft, as recorded on a black slab on the floor of Nearest LETTER Box is at Santon Downham, Suffolk.
the nave : the chancel, including the timber roof, screens Letters through Brandon, the nearest money order & tcle-
and floor tiles, originally formed the south transept of West graph office
Tofts church, rebuilt in x858, when the old materials were The children of this place attend the school at Santon
brought here: there are 70 sittings, 62 being free. The Down ham
Dickerson Richard, gamekeeper to
D. Mackenzie esq
w.l W. D. Mackenzie esq
I
Lockwood James, head gamekeeper to Addison John, farmer
·
SAXLINGHAM is a parish, about 3~ miles west from including 26 acres of glebe, with residence, in the girt of
Halt station and 5 miles north-west from Melton Constable Charles Swinfen Eady esq. of I I New square, Lincoln's
station, both on the Easterq and Midlands railway, and 7~ Inn w c, and held since 1892 by the Rev. A!bert Arthur
east from "'alsingbam station on the Wymondham and Eady M. A. of Worcester College, Oxford. Captain White,
Wells section of the Great Eastern railway, in the Northern of London, is lord of the manor and chief landowner. The
division of the county, Halt hundred, petty sessional division soil is light loam, partly on a chalk formation, and farmed
and county court district, Walsingham union, rural deanery on the customary four-course Norfolk system. The area is
of Holt and archdeaconry and diocese of Norwich. The 1,498 acres; rateable value, £x,so6; the population in 189I
church of St. Margaret is an ancient cruciforrn building of was I39·
flint with stone dressings in the Perpendicular style, con- Parish Clerk, Edward Hopper.
sisting of chancel, nave, transept, south porch and a western
tower containing one bell : in a niche is an effigy of the Letters through Bolt R.S.O. arrive about 9.15 a.m.; no
lady of Sir Cbristopher Heydon, who died in 1593, and there post on sundays. WALL LETTER Box cleared at 4.50 p.m.
is also a. mural tablet to the Rev. Sbeldon Jodrell, 40 years The nearest money order & teiBgJ:aph office is at Cley
rector here, d. 1855 : the church affords 150 sittings. The The parish is under the F"ield Dalling United District School
register dates from the year 1558. The living is a rectory, board, formed compulsorily 22 June, 1875, the school
tithe rent-charge £426, gross yearly value £6gg, net £659, being at Field Dalling
Eady Rev. Albert Arthur M.A. Rectory· Mack Henry Cubitt, farmer Middleton George, shopkeeper
Green Wm. farmer; & at Sbarrington Massingham Edward, blacksmith; & Southgate Frederick, farmer
Hammond Anne (Miss), farmer at l''1Bld Dalling
SAX LING HAM- NETHERGATE is a pleasant 1 The living is a rectory, consolidated with that of Saxling-
village and parish, 2~ miles east from Flordon statiOn on 1 bam-Tborpe, joint tithe rent-charge £8os, net yearly value
the Ipswich and Norwich section of the Great Eastern rail- £"6oo, including 27 acres of glebe, with residence, in the
way and 7 south from Norwich, in the Southern division of gift of Mrs. Pitt, of Lopbam, Norfolk, and held since I868
the county, Swainstborpe petty sessional division, Henstead I by the Rev. George King M.A. formerly fellow of Corpus
hundred and union, Norwich county court district, ruralj Cbristi college, Cambridge, and hon. canon of Norwich and
deanery of Brooke, western division, archdeaconry of Nor- surrogate. John Steward esq. of the Manor House, East
folk and diocese of Norwich. The church of St. Mary is a Carlton, is lord of the manor and the Steward family and
fine building of flint in the Decorated style, consisting of Robcrt Fellowes esq. are the chief landowners. The soil is
chancel, nave, south porch and a western tower with pin- various; subsoil, clay. The crops are wheat, barley, beans
nacles containing a clock and 6 bells: in 1867 the church and turnips. The area is 1,618 acres; rateable value,
was thoroughly restored, the nave considerably enlarged, a £2,68.1 ; the population in r891 was 565.
vestry added and a stained window placed in the tower : Parish Clerk, l''rederick Read.
several of the other windows are also stained, and the church
affords 300 sittings. The register dates from the year 1556. Po~T OFFICE.-Tbomas Simmons, sub-postmaster. Letters
594 SAXLI~GHAM-~ETHERGATE. NORFOLK. (KELLY's

are received from Norwich at 6.30 a.m.; dispatched at Miss Margaret Osborne, mistress; Miss Emily Cushing
5·35 p.m.; a bag arrives at s.so p.m. delivery to callers infants' mistress
only. The nearest money order office is at Hempnall, & Police Station, John Robertson, constable
Long Stratton the nearest telegraph office CARRIERS TO NORWICH.-Ephraim Dade, wed. & sat. &
, . . Leggatt passes through from Hempnall, wed. & sat. &
School (mued), for r3o children; average attendance, roo; Brown passes through from Pulham Mary, sat · ·
Ba-rnard George W. G. Saxlingham Cudden John, thatcher & mole catcher Noble Williatn, farmer
lodge·[Ietters through LongS~rattonj Dade Ephraim, carrier Pechey Frederick, grocer & draper
Feltham Frederick ·nade Ozias, farmer · ' Potter Elisha George, farmer, Wood-
King Rev. George M.A. Rectory Dowson William, fruit dealer house farm & Manor farm
Lake Wellington W. M.R.C.S.Eng. Ems James, farmer Read Frederick, carpenter, builder,
(surgeon-captain Militia Medical English Benjamin, beer retailer parish clerk & collector of taxes
Staff Corps) English George, farmer Read John, carpenter
COMMERCIAL. Flint Samuel, thatcher Riches William, farmer
Aldis George, shoe maker Funnell George, baker Sayer Henry, rat catcher
Aldis lsaac, blacksmith Gath Lydia (Mrs.), beer retailer Smith Henry, beer retailer j
Baldry Rrchard, grocer Hewett Richard, beer retailer Smith George, farmer
Barnham Alfred Charles, carpenter Ho ward James, farmer Tibbenham Henry, beer retailer
[letter; through Long Stratton] Knivett Robert, market gardener Wilson Frederick, bricklayer & farmer
Buck James, carpenter & well sinker Lake Wellington M.R.c.s.Eng. surgeon, Wilson Robert, fruit & fowl dealer
J3unn Charles, shoe maker member of the Norwich & Norfolk Wilson Philip, jun. butcher & dealer
Bush William, wheelwright • Chirurgical Society & medical officer, Wiseman Edward, market gardener
Cobb Philip, grocer Depwade & Henstead unions, Hill ho Wiseman Henry, farmer
Crane John, pig dealer Moore .Anthony, Carriers' Arms P.H Wiseman John,_ fruit mercha.nt
SAXLINGHAM-THORPE is a parish on the river Carlton, is lord of the manor. George Feltham esq. and
Taas and adjoins Saxlingham-Nethergate; the principal the Steward family are the chief landowners. The soil is
part is situated on the Norwich road, about 1i miles north- various; subsoil, clay. The chief crops are wheat, barley,
east from Flordon station on the Ipswich and Norwich sec- beans and turnips. The area is 454 acres; rateable value,
twn of the GreatEa..'ltern railway and 7 south from Norwich, 1.-,"J8I; the population in 1891 was 120. In 1882, by a Local
in the Southern division of the county, Swainsthorpe petty Government Order, portions of this parish were added to
sessional division, Henstead hundred and union, Norwich Saxlingham-Nethergate and part of that parish added to
county court district, rural deanery of Brooke, western this, so as to form a more regular boundary.
division, archdeaconry of Norfolk and diocese of Norwich. Letters from Norwich through Saxlingham-Nethergate,
The church of St. Mary is in ruins.• The register dates arrive at 6. ro a.m. Hempnall is the nearest money order
fr?m the year 156?. The living is a rectory, ~onsolidat~d office & Long Stratton the nearest telegra h office ,
Wlth that of Saxlmgham-Nethorgate. There IS a Baptist P
chapel here. John Steward esq. of the Manor House, East The children attend the school at Sa:xlingham-Nethergate
1

Charlish Joseph, West End P.H Miles John W. miller (steam & water) Want 'Robert, blacksmith [letters
Feltbam George Barnahas, farmer & farmer & landowner through Long Stratton]
Knights John, shoe maker Tooley William, farmer Whiting John, farmer
Lincoln Henry B. farmer Watts John, shoe maker Wolton Joseph, farmer
MeekMary.Ann & Maria(Misses),farmrs
SAXTHORPE is a parish and small village, on the bridge, and held since 1889 by the Rev. John William
- north bank of the Bure, with a station at Corpusty, the ad- Walker M. A. of that college. An iron foundry and agricul-
joining village, on the Eastern and Midlands railway, 6 miles tural implement manufactory, established here in 1800, "is
north-west from Aylsham, in the Northern division of the now carried on by Mr. Ezra Cornish, and gives employment
county, South Erpingham hundred and petty sessional divi- to a number of the inhabitants. Brig.-Gen. William Earle
sion, Aylsbam union and county court district, rural deanery Gascoyne Lytton-Bulwer J.P. of Quebec House, Dereham, is
of lngworth and archdeaconry and diocese of Norwich. The lord of the manors of Hall and Mickle Hall. The Earl of
-church of St . .Andrew, which stands on rising ground, a Or ford, the trustees of the late Frederick Barnard Astley esq.
little north of the river Bure, is a large building of flint, in and William Dixon esq. are the chief landowners. The soil
the Decorated style oJ the beginning of the 1_5th century, is sandy; subsoil, sand and gravel. The crops are wheat,
.consisting of chancel, nave, aisles, south porch and an em- roots, barley and bay. The area is 2 0 II3 acres; rateable
battled western tower containing one bell: the east window value, £2,197; the population in r881 was 331.
is stained, and there are memorial windows to the sister of Parish Clerk, Henry Platten.
the Rev. Samuel Ashby, vicar from r84o, rl. 1856, and to
the Rev. James Harrison WatsonM.A. vicar r879-89, d. r889: Pos·r & M. 0. 0., S. B. & Annuity & Insurance Office.-
tbe church is now ( 13 92 ) in course of restoration, the repairs Robert James Ottaway, postmaster. Letters through
<>f the chancel being undertaken by Pembroke College, Cam- Norwich, delivered 9 a.m.; dispatched 2.40 p.m. Cor-
bridge: there are 3 oo sittings. The register dates from the pusty station is the nearest telegraph office
year I559• The living is a vicarage, average tithe rent. This parish is included in the Corpusty Un"ited School Board
charge £6g, net yearly value £150, including '47 acres of district, formed compulsorily 21 June, 1875, & the children
glebe, with residence, in the gift of Pembroke College, Cam- attend the school at Corpusty
Davison Mrs Carr Robert, shoe maker Harrison James, shoe maker
Dixon Abel Walter, The Hall Cornish Ezra, farmer & agricultural Jones George, farmer
Eke Miss implement maker OttawayRobt. Jas. grocer &drpr.Pust off
Walker Rev. John Wm. M. A. Vicarage Dixon William & Georgc, farmers Perry Richard Thomas, farmer
COMMERCIAL. Fowell William, farmer Rix Benjamin Wm. farmer, Big farm
Brown John, farmer Garwood Walt. Wm.farmer,Church frm Utting Edward, farmer
Carr Horace, farmer Gibbons William, butcher Whistler James,farmer
SCARNING is a village and parish on the road from a piscina, and in the chantry chapel, now used as a vestry,
East Dereham to Swaffham, about 2 miles east from Wend. is another piscina and an aumbry : the church was com-
ling station on the Lynn and Dereham section of the Great pletely restored in 1859, and has 450 sittings. The register
Eastern railway and about 2~ miles west from Dereham, dates from the year 1538. The living is a rectory, average
in the Mid division of the county, Launditch hundred, tithe rent-charge £377, net yearlyvalue £216, including 14
Mitford and Launditch petty sessional thvision and union, acres of glebe, with residence, in the gift of the Rev. Henry
Dereham county court district, rural deanery of South Evans-Lombe B. A. and held since 1879 by the Rev. Augustus
Brisley and archdeaconry and diocese of Norwich. The Jessopp n.n. of St. John's College, Cambridge. Here is a
church of SS. Peter and Paul is a fine building of stone, in Primitive Methodist chapel. The charities for distribution
the Gothic style of the middle of the 15th century, and con- amount to £22 yearly,and there is a fuel allotment of 14 acres.
sists of chancel, nave, chantry chapel, south porch and a The Rev. Henry Evans-Lombe B.A. of Rylaugh Park, who is
massive embattled tower, containing a clock and 5 bells: the lord of the manor, Capt. Henry Smith Adlington .f.P. of
stained east window, erected in r845, is a memorial to the Holme Hale Hall, Miss Barker and Sir Lawrence John Jones
Rev. Philip Du Val Aufrere, late rector, and his second wife, bart. J. P. of Cranmer Hall, are the principal landowners.
and there are other stained windows : the rood screen ii\ The soil is clay and loam; subsoil, clay. The chief crops
still in a very high state of preservation, retaming its original are wheat, barley and turnips. The parish comprises 3,470
gilding and colours in a comparatively fresh condition, and acres; rateable value, £5,386; the population in 1891 was
on the east side at the south corner of the screen is a small 682.
sanctus bell in its oribrinal oak frame: the chancel retains Sexton, George Andrews ..
DIRECTORY.] NORFOLK. SCOTTOW. 595
Pos'l' 0FFICE.-William Holliday, receiver. Letters through cooptative & 4 representative ;· attadred to the school are
East Dereham, dispatched at 6. ro p. m. : delivered at 7. 30 from 10 to :t:S scholarships of £z each, awarded by the
a. m. The nearest money order & telegraph office is .at governors on the results of the annual examination :
Dereham the endowment now (1892) produces an income of £r8o
Free School, founded in 1604 by William Secka.r & en- yearly, the master receiving a yearly salary of £r8o,
dowed with 86 acres of land, to which an allotment of together with a house & garden & three acres of land;
16A. 2R. 3P. was added at tbe inclosure in 1776; a. new the sohool will bold r6o children 1 average attendance• H2:
school-room, with a house for the master, were erected in Edwu.rd, 1st Baron Thurlow & lord ehancellor 1778-92,
185o, at a cost of £9oo, & in 1885 the buildinga were & several other eminent men were educated here during
enlarged by the erection of a. class-room for 40 infants ; the masterships of the Rev. W. Potter & the Rev. St. John
since r883 the school bas been administered under a new Priest ; William Carter, certificated master; Mrs. Sophia
scheme, by a goveming body of 8 persons, of whom 4 are Carter, mistress
13ayes Mrs Burton James, farmer Riches William Thomas, farmer
Brown Mrs Bnsh Charles, farmer, Paffy green Sharman Peter John,farmer,Park farm
Cooper Mrs Codling William, cooper Seeker :vlary Ann (Mrs.),. basket &
Edwards Frederic Corke Susanna Ann (.Miss), farmer sieve maker
..Jessopp Bev, Augustus n.n. Rectory J<'rost Charles, farmer, Broadway Sbillin~r William, farmev _
Payne Capt. Rd.Lloyd,Scarning grange God win Henry, farmer SmithRichd.Geo.Edgar,frmt".Daffy grn
Pitt John Ballard, Grove house Hammond Robert, New inn Stibbard James, farmer, Broadway ,
. COMMERCIAL, Hart George, farmer Stimpson Myrus, farmer & cattl.e dt:aler
.Allison John, farmer Holliday Solomon, farmer, Daffy green Stubbings William, farmer
Andrews George, farmer Jarred Robert, farmer Thody John, .shopkeeper
Atkins 'William, carpenter KempFrdk.frmr.Dereham Church frm Tuck William, Black Horse !'.a·
Barber John, farmer Norman Wiliam, farmer, Daffy green Wade Frederick, farmer, Church farm
Beeston Henry, carpenter Oakley Mark, horse slaughterer Wake John, farmer & dealer
Bell Thomas, farmer Pitt John Ballard F. R.C. s. Eng. surgeon, Warner James, farmer,
Baddy William Walker, coach builder & Grove house Warner Robert, farmer, Daffy green
wheelwright Rogers Emma (~Irs.). Three Corn- Wilson Waiter, farmer, Manor hou~·
Bone Hunnoi!k, farmer, Old hall passes P.H
.SCOLE (or OsMONDESTON) is a. pleasant village on the acres of land; rateable value, including Thorpe Parva and
ba.nk of tile river Waveney. on tile borders of Suffolk, and Frenze, £2,492; the population in 1891 was 673.
with Frenze and Thorpe Parva forms a parish for civil pur- Thorpe Parva, formerly a small parish, is 3 mileS"
poses, 2 m1les east from Dissstation on the Ipswich and Nor- east of Diss station on the Great Eastern railway, and is
wich section of the Great Eastern railway, in the Southern annexed to the parish of Scole for pqor law purposes only.
-division of the county, Diss hundred, petty sessional division Ecclesiastically, it is annexed to the p:1.rish of Diss, Of t.he
.and county court district, Depwa.de union, rural deanery of ancient church of St. Mary a part of the tower is the only
Redenhall, archdeaconry of Norfolk and diocese of Norwich. portion of the church now standing: the inhabitants attend
The church of St. Andrew is an ancient building of flint in the church at Billingford, and the registers are included in
the E<trly English style, consisting of chancel, nave, south those of B1llingford. George Holt Wilson esq. J.P., D.L. of
aisle, south porch and an embattled western tower, con- Kldgrave Hall, is lord of the manor and chief landownm·.'
taining :r bell : the church was thoroughly restored and re- PosT, M. 0. & T. 0., S. B. & Annuity & Insurance Office.-
seated in 1874, and has 250 sittings. The register dates George Scutts, postmaster, Seole inn. London mails
from the year 1693. The living is a rectory, tithe rent- arrive at 3-lS a.m. ~ & 6.30 p.m. The letters are dis-
charge £255, average £rg6, net yearly value £rBs, includ- patched by cart to Ilarleston, Bunga.y, Bye & ~ttle­
ing 26! acres of glebe and residence, in the gift of Lady borough, & to Hoxne, Oakley, B rome, Diek1eburgh,
Bateman, and held since 1875 by the Rev. l<'rederick Page Mellis & Brockdish by foot post. The town & district
Roberts M.~. St. John'~ College, Cambridge. Scole Lodge, delivery commences at 7 a.m. & x.rs & 6.45 p.tn.; let·
the residence of Frederick Crawshay esq. is pleasantly situ- ters are dispatched at Io a..m, & 9-JS p.m, & to Diss&
ated in this parish, on the Norwich road. Lady Hateman, of neighbourhood 5 p.m.; Sunday dispatch at g.15 p.m.
Brome Hall, Suffolk, and of Shobden Court, Herefo~·dshire, is only ; telegraph from 8 a. m_ till 8 p. m. week daya &
lady of the manor. The principal landowners are William from 8 till ro a.m. sunday~ . {
Curteis esq. LL.D., J.P. Frederick Crawshay esq. Edwarcl Parochial School (mixed), built in I 853 & enlatged in r87,2,
lvlann esq. and Lord Henniker D.L., J. P. and Francis Taylor for 160 children ; average attendance, 130; Ricbards
esq. M. P. The soil is mixed ; subsoil, clay and gravel. The Wm. Clar ke, master i Mrs. Mary Clarke, infant/ mistress
chief crops
. are wheat and barley: The parish contains 821 CARRIER TO NoRWICH.-Chenery, from Diss, wed. & sat
Campbell Tomline, Scole villa Burrell Fredk.Prudential assurance agt Nice Frederick, farmer , ''
<Josterton Mrs. Scole house Button William, assistant overseer & l'eake Willia.m, farmer )
Crawshay Frederick, Scale lodge . insurance ag;mt Pettitt Alfred, grocer & rod memhant
Crawshay Richard WoodJ.P.Scolelodge Clark Edward Thomas, beer retailer Powley Joseph, baker & grocer
Curteis William C.LL.D.,J.P. Shrubbery Debenham Jonathan, wheelwright&bldr Pretty George, bricklayer J

Guest Thomas M,;J,rtin, Sunny side GoodrickGeo.&Son, builders& brick mas Rayner Sidney, carpentei' l

.Jackson Mrs. Oak villa Green Frank, King's Head P.H Rogers Henry, butcher
LangleyGeo. Richard,Osmondestone ho Harold George, linen draper . Rose Edgar, boot & shoe maker
RobertsRev.Frederick Page M.A. Rectory Ho wells Harry, basket maker- Scutts George, postmaster, Scole inn
.Shildrick John, The Old rectory · lluggins James, boot & shoe maker Thrower William, vermin destroyer
COMMERCIAL. Jackson William, grocer & draper WomackHerbert W. farmr. ThorpePa11va
.Boulton George, farmer Ling Sidney, White Hart P.u.& plumber Woodcock John Frederick, Greyhound
Brewester John Henry, grocer Mallows George, shoe maker P.H. & blacksmith
l3rowuing William. butcher Mutimer Ephraim, farmer •
SCORUSTON, see RusTON SouTH.
SCOTTOW is a parish and scattered village, part of Norwich, and held since 189o by the Rev. George Bradley
which is on the high road. from North Walsham to Nor- StreetenM. A. of Queen's College, Oxford. The impropriated
wich, 2 mile~ south-west from Worstcad station OJl the rectori'll tithes of Scottow were commu 1ed for £5oa and an
Cromer branch, and 2 north-west from Coltishall station on allotmen1i of 2IA. 2R. r6r. wa!l awarded to the poor at the
~he East Norfolk 11ection of the Great Eastern railway, 4 inclosure in 1831. The Durrant Lodge of Odd Fellows, Man-
south from North Walsham and 10 north-east from Nor- chester Unity, has a meeting hall here nea.r the Hors&. Shoe
wich, in the Eastern division of the county, South Erping- inn, erected in r844 by Sir Henry Durraut bart. Scottow
ham hundred and petty sessional division, Aylsham union Hall, the seat uf Lady Durrant, is a mansion with two wings,
and county court district, rural deanery of Ingworth and and stands in an extensive and well-wooded park. The
archdeaconry and diocese of Norwich. The church of All trustees of the late Sir Henry Josias Durrant hart. are lords
Saints is a building of tlint, in the Early English and Per- of the manor and chief landowners. The soil of this
pendicular styles, consisting of chancel, nave, aisles, south neighbourhood is rich and well cultivated ; th.e subsoil,
porch and a lofty embattled western tower containing 5 principally brick earth. The number of acres is 2 1 0JI ;
bells: the organ was presented by the late Sir H. T. E. rateable value, £3,627; the population in I88r was 430.
Durrant hart. in r844, and there is a fine stained east win- '
dow : the church affords ~so sittings. The register dates Parish Clerk, William Good wins. J

from the year I558. The living is a vicarage, tithe rent-


• charge £zzo, average £r75 gross yearly value £rg6, with PosT OFFICE.-Thomas Bentham, receiver. Letters arrive
14 acres of glebe and residence, in the gift of the Bishop of by mail cart from Norwich at 6 a. m. & fr()m North
'
596 SCOTTOW. NORFOLK. [KELLY's

Walsham at 5 p.m. & are dispatched to Norwich at 5 p.m. Sir H. T. Estridge Durrant hart. for 90 children; average
& North Walsham at 6 a. m. The nearest money order & attendance, 51 ; Miss Charlotte Horrex, mistress
telegraph office is at Coltishall. Postal orders are issued CARRIER TO'NOBWICH.-Edward Bailey, from North Wals-
here, but not paid ham, three times weekly. Josiah Hunt, from Swanton
Parochial School (mixed), erected in :x859, on land given by Abbot, on wed. & sat
Durrant Lady, Scottow hall Bird Robert, steward to Lady Durrant Gibbons '\'Villiam, Three Horse Shoes
Streeten Rev.Geo.Bradley M.A.Vicarage Bullamore Ephraim, farmer l'.H. & farmer
coMMERCIAL. Chastney Benj. farmer, Rookery farm Jacobs Richard, shoe maker
Allen William, farmer Loyal Durrant Lodge, Manchester Unity Rump Samuel, blacksmith
Betts John Smith, farmer of Odd Fellows (Robert Gray, sec) Stamp Ezra, boot maker
Betts ·waiter, farmer Emery George, farmer, Manor farm Watts Henry, farmer
Betts William, farmer Flowerday William, sl1ne maker Wilson John, farmer
Bird John, farmer GoodwinsWilliam,machinist& carpenter
SCOULTON is a parish and village on the road from miles in circumference, the property of John '\Veyland esq.
Watton to- Norwich, 4 miles east from Watton station on surrounding a swampy island, which is the breeding place
the Bury, Thetford and Swaffham section of the Great of innumerable numbers of the black-headed or laughing
Eastern railway and 6 north-west from Attleborough, in gull ; these birds congregate here in March and retire in
the South Western Division of the county, hundred, petty August, and their eggs are considered very delicious. John
sessional division and union of Wayland, county court dis- Weyland esq. J.P., D.L., of Woodeaton, near Oxford, who is
trict of Attleborough and Watton, rural deanery of Breccles lord of the manor, the trustees of the late Henry D'Esterre
and archdeaconry and diocese of Norwich. The church of Hemsworth esq. Edward May Dewing esq. J.P. of Bury St.
the Holy Trinity is an ancient building of flint, in the Early Edmunds, and Mrs. E. Clarkc, of Wymondham, are the
English style, consisting of chancel, nave, aisles, south principal landowners. The soil is mixed; subsoil, gravel
porch and a western tower with octagonal belfry, contain- and clay. The chief crops are wheat and barley and roots.
ing 3 bells: the chancel retains a piscina: in 1885 the in- The parish contains 2,193 acres ; rateable value, £2,446 ; in
terior of the church was renovated and the steps to the 189r the population was 343· •
rood loft opened: there are 250 sittings, 170 being free. Parish Clerk, John Cross Tuts.
The register dates from the year 1550, but is very imperfect.
The living is a discharged rectory, tithe rent-charge £ 4 so, PosT 0FFICE.-Henry Robert 'fyrell, receiver. Letters
average £34 2, gross yearly value £ 400, net £ 350 , includ- through Wattson S.O. arrive at 9 a. m. ; dispatched at 4.30
ing 53 acres of glebe, with residence, in the gift of John p.m. No delivery or dispatch on sundays. The nearest
Weyland esq. and held since 188 3 by the Rev. Henry Robert money order & telegraph offices are at Hingham by Attle-
Arthur Johnson M. A. of Magdalene College, Cambridge, and borough & Watton
;J,P. for Norfolk and Leicester. The fuel allotment of 39 National School (mixed), erected in 1840, for go children;
acres is let for £3o yearly. llere is a fine sheet of water ~~ average attendance, 65 ; Mrs. Priscilla Stallworthy, mist
Hoare Gerald E Brown Alfred, gamekeeper to A. J. Drake John, farmer
Johnson Rev. Henry Robert Arthur Mullholland esq Eagling Anthony, farmer
M.A., J.P. Rectory Bunn Herbert S. farmer, Tolgate NurseJeffery,Daye'sArmsP.H.&farmer-
COMMERCIAL. Clarke Abner, shoe maker Oldfield George, farmer, Hall farm
Banham Isaac, blacksmith Durrant Charles Pollard, farmer, Aber- Pease John, shoe maker
Brasnett Thomas Rowing, farmer, Wey- gavenny farm & :Melsop farm TyrrellHenry Robert,shpkpr.Post office
land farm
SCULTHORPE is a scattered village and parish on the Hay Upcher of Trinity College, Cambridge. Here is a
H.A.
river Wensum, about 2 miles north-west from Fakenham Primitive Methodist chapel and a Baptist meeting room, a
stations on the Great Eastern and Eastern and Midlands parish room and a reading room for working men. There
railways, in the North Western division of the county, are four almshouses for indigent persons, the gift, in the
Gallow hundred and petty sessional division, Walsingham year 1686, of I<'rancis Beck ham, and rebuilt and enlarged by
union and county court district, rural deanery of Burnham, Catherine Maria, Lady Jones, of Cranmer Hall, in 1859.
archdeaconry of Norfolk and diocese of Norwich. The The poor have £1o yearly for fuel. In the parish are water
church of All Saints is a building of stone, in the Early corn mills, agricultural implement works and a brass and
English style, consisting of chancel, nave, aisles and a fine iron foundry. Cranmer Hall, the seat of Sir Lawrence
embattled tower, with pinnacles, on the south side, contain- John Jones bart. M.A., J.P. is a large and handsome mansion.
ing 3 bells: the base of the tower forms the main entrance standing in a well-wooded park. Sir Lawrence John Jones
to the church: several of the windows are stained, an.d bart. who is lord of the !Jlanor, Lord Hastings and Charles
there is a brass with kneeling effigy to Henry Unton, Scott Chad esq. M.A., J.P. of 16 Campden Hill gate, Kens-
" cirographorius " (receiver of fines) of the Court of ington, London, are the chief landowners. The soil is a.
Common Pleas, oil. 1470; another to John Humpton, ob. light loam; subsoil, clay. The chief crops are wheat,
1521, and Elizabeth his wife and 8 children; and one barley and roots. The area is 2,055 acres; rateable value.
to John Stebyrd and Margaret, his wife, of the 15th £3,110; the population in 1891 was 507.
century, with an inscription and a shield bearing a hammer Sexton, George Groom.
surmounted by a crown and the letters J.S. : the font PosT 0FFICE.-Mrs. Mary Ann Warner, receiver. Letters
is of Norman date, and is richly carved: the church was arrive at 7 a.m. dispatched at 5 p.m. Letters through
enlarged and thoroughly restored in 186o, at the joint Fakenham, which is the nearest money order & telegraph
expense of the Rev. Herbert Walsingham J ones M. A. late office
rector 1859-89, and his brother, the late ~ir Willoughby WALL LETTER Box cleared at 5.15 p.m. week days only
Jones hart. and affords 300 sittings. The register corn- ScHOOLS:-
mcnces in the year 1561. The living is a rectory, average National (mixed), erected in 1840, for 100 children;
yearly value arising from tithe rent-charge £417, with 72 average attendance, 52; Waiter Geo. Hedgethorne, mast
acres of glebe, and residence, in the gift of Sir Lawrence Infants', erected in 1865; average attendance, 24; Miss
John Jones bart. and held since 1889 by the Rev. James Edith Woodhouse, mistress

Horsley Charles, The Grove Garrod William, farmer Norman Herbert, baker
Jones Sir Lawrence John bart. M.A.,J.P. Gibbon Thomas, boot & shoe maker Sculthorpe I<'riendly Society (Edmund
Cranmer hall Green Wm. Bishop, farmer ,Manor house Owen, sec)
Upcher Rev. James Hay M.A. Rectory Harris Richard, farmer, The Grange SendallEdward,nurseryman&seedsman
COMMERCIAL. Horsley Charles & Son, farmers; & at Sewter Wm.Parke,grocer& beer retailer-
Bird Edward, blacksmith Fakenham Mills & Wendling SmithRobert John, beer retlr.& coal mer-
Blackett Mary Ann (Mrs.), agricultural Olley Frederick, farm bailiff to Sir L. J. Tuck Robert, baker
machinist& implement manufacturer, Jones bart Tyrrell William, beer retailer
Eagle iron works Owen James, jun. farmer & thrashing WarnerMary.Ann (Mrs. ),grocer,Post off
Bone William, boot & shoe maker machine proprietor WinnJ as. garaener to Sir L. J. J ones hart;
SEDG EFORD is a parish and village, with a station an ancient building of stone and flint, in the Gothic style,
1

three quarters of a mile north from the village, on the Hun- consisting of chancel, nave, aisles, north and south porches,.
stanton and West Norfolk (Great Eastern) junction railway, transept and a round tower with octagonal belfry stage.
13 miles north-north-east from Lynn and 10 south-west containing 3 bells : in the tower is a memorial window~
from Burnham Market, in the North W'estern division of the with inscribed brass plate underneath, ereeted by some of
county, Smithdon hundred, Smithdon and Brothercross the parishioners in 1864, to Martha, wife of. C. F. Neville-
petty sessional division, Docking union, Lynn county court Rolfe esq.of Heacllam Hall, who died at Naples. 22 Jan. :~,.863:
district, rural deanery of Heacham, archdeaconry of there are other memorial windows to C. F. Neville-Rolfe esq .
.Norf9lk and d~ocese of Norwich. The church of St. Mary is d. 1869: the church was repaired and reseated about. 184:~ •

DIRECTORY.] NORFOLK. SH.ARRIN G TON. 597
and was restored in 1882 at a cost of about £2,200, and now stanton Hall, E. Green and John Davy esqrs. are chief Land-
affords 320 sittings. The register dates from the year 156o. owners. The soil is of a chalky nature ; the subsoil,
The living is a vicarage united to the sinecure rectory of principally chalk. The chief crops are wheat, barley,
Southmere, or Summerfield, average tithe rent-charge turnips, mangolds and grass. The area is 4,1 8o acres ;
£495, net yearly value £390, including 9 acres of glebe, rateable value, £4,154; the population in 1891 was 6g1.
with residence, in the gift of the Dean and Chapter of Nor- EATON, anciently called GNATYNGDON, or Nettingt.on, I
wich and the Provost and Fellows of Eton College alternately, mile south-west, is a hamlet consisting only of three farms.
and held, the vicarage since 1857 and the rectory since r874, Sexton, Robert Forster. ·
by the Rev. Jamcs Ambrose Ogle M.A. of Brazenose College, PosT, M. 0. & T. 0., S. B. & Annuity & Insurance
Oxford. Here is a Wesleyan chapel, built in 183o, and a Office.-Ambrose H. Skerry, sub-postmaster. London
Primitive Methodist chapel, erected in 1861. Rolfe's charity & other letters are received through Lynn, via Snet-
of £16 yearly for clothing, and £20 yearly, the rent of the tisham, arrive at 6.15 a.m.; box closes at 5·45 p.m.
fuel allotment of 9 acres, is expended in coals for the sundays included
poor. In the parish is a corn mill, a sand pit and a chalk National School (mixed), built in r838, for 174 children;
quarry. Sedgeford Ilallis the residence of Waiter Freeman average attendance, 130; R. B. Forster, master
Hunt esq. lLA., J.P. The Ecclesiastical Commissioners, Railway Station, William !<'red Bower, station master
who are lords of the manor, Eustace Neville-Rolfe esq. l.P. CARRIER.-John Mutt, to the 'Green Dragon,' Lynn, every
of Heacham Hall, Hamon le Strange esq. D.L., J.P. of Run- tues
Hunt Walter :Freeman M.A., J.P. Sedge- Curl Thomas, farmer PlattenGeorgeWalker,assistant overseer
ford hall DewingErnestNewman,g-rocer & draper Raines George, shoe maker
r
Middlemist Rev. Fras. Jn. M.A. curate] Farthing William, The Plough P.H Richardson & Son, wheelwrights
Ogie Rev. James Ambrose M. A. Vicarage Frary Charles, farmer, Eaton Rix Benjamin, shoe maker
Turner Mrs Grange Matthew Herring, farmer Skerry Ambrose Humphrey, beer
Ya:xley Miss Hines Nathaniel, market gardener & retailer, Post office
horse clipper Taylor Henry, pig dealer &c
COMMERCIAL. Kendall James, Buck inn, & blacksmith Taylor Obadiah, basket & chair manu-
AnthonyJohnNicholas,farmer,West hall Lambert & Sqns, grocers & drapers facturer, sieve & beehive maker &
Binks Herbert, baker LeggettThoinasJas. baker&miller(wind) wire worker ; beehives of any descrip-
Binks Hudson Ed ward, furniture dealer Mott John, carrier tion made to order
Brooke Leonard, farmer,Magazine farm Mott Thomas, King "William inn Turner Matthew, shoe maker
Brown William, farmer, East hall PattingaleThoma.~,shopkpr.& news agnt Williams Edward, blacksmith
Crisp William, carpenter & joiner Platten George, farmer
SEETHING is a pleasant village and parish, 5 miles and held since r88r by the Rev. Charles Hocking Hicks. The
north from Bungay station on the "\\'ayeney Valley section of charities amount to £ t6 yearly. Viscount Canterbury, who
the Great Eastern railway, and 9 south from Norwich, in is lord of the manor, William Crickmore esq. and Captain
the Southern division of the county, Loddon hundred, Lod- Robert B. Clarke, of Stuston, Suffolk, are the chief land-
don and Clavering petty sessional division and union, county owners. The soil is mixed ; subsoil, sand and clay. The
court district of Bungay and Beccles, rural deanery of chief crops are wheat, roots and barley. The area is r,63oA.
Brooke, eastern division, archdeaconry of Norfolk and 1R. 12P.; rateable value, £2,015 ; the population in 188r
diocese of Norwich. The church of St. Margaret is a small, was 392.
but ancient building of flint and stone, in the Norman style, Parish Clerk, John Drake, jun.
consisting of chancel, nave, south porch and a round PosT OFFICE.-Last Loynes, receiver. Letters through
western tower containing 3 bells: the nave is thatched and Norwich, via Brooke, arrive at 7 _45 a. m. ; dispatched at
the chancel slated: there are 200 sittings. The register 4 _15 p.m. week days only. Brooke is the nearest money
dates from the year 1556. The living is a vicarage, with order office & telegraph office at Loddon
that of Mundbam annexed, joint average yearly value
arising from tithe rent-charge £ 202 , with residence, in the National School (mixed), for 120 children; average attend-
gift of the trustees of the Great Hospital, Norwich, who are ance, So; Mrs. Pye, mistress
impropriators of the great tithes, commuted at £458 yearly, CARRIER TO NoRWICH.-John Drake, jun. wed. & sat
Crickmore William Briggs Edward John, market gardener Lawrence John, shopkeeper
Gillett Cyrus Clarke John, blacksmith Lovick Henry Edward, carpenter
Hicks Rev. Charles Hocking, Vicarage Cossey George, machine thrasher Lovick William, carpenter
Thompson Miss Crickmore Wm.landowner& estate agent Loynes Last, shopkeeper, Post office
Drake John, farmer & market gardener Potter Ernest, farmer, Church farm
COMMERCIAL. Drake John, jun. carrier Thrower Charles, shoe maker
BallsFisher,farmer,butcher&cattledealr Fristone H.obert (Mrs.), farmer Tidnam Wm. wheelwright & shopkeeper
Barber Robert, market gardener Garrard Jesse, Garden House P.H Winter John, cattle dealer
Barmby John, farmer Hammond Waiter George, farmer Winter Wilham, farmer
Beverley Thomas William, farmer Juby Edgar, farmer
SET CH (or SETCHEY MAGNA) is a parish on the road from Rev. Henry Whitelock Turner M. A. of Caius College, Cam-
Lynn to Downham, 4 miles south from Lynn, in the North bridge, who resides at North Runcton. Setch is comprised
Western division of the county, hundred, petty sessional in the manor of North Runcton. Henry Hoff esq. of
divtsion and union of .Freebridge Lynn, Lynn county court "\\'ormegay, William Bardell esq. of Lynn, the governors of
district, rural deanery of Lynn Free bridge, and archdeaconry Framlingham Hospital and John Morton esq of West Rud-
and diocese of Norwich. The river Nar separates this parish ham, are the principal landowners. The soil is gravel, sand
from the parish of Wormegay. The chapel, erected in and clay; subsoil, sand and gravel. The chief crops are
1844 by the late Daniel Gurney esq. J.P. is a small edifice of wheat, barley and turnips. The area is 707 acres ; rateable
Carr stone and brick, consisting of nave only, with a bell value, £r,o87; the population in 1891 was 105.
cote containing one bell: it is fitted with stalls, and has
sittings for 75 persons. The living is a rectory annexed to WALL LETTER Box cleared at 5.30 p.m.; sunday 11.30 a.m.
that of North Runcton and Hardwick, average tithe rent- Letters arrive from Lynn at 7.30 a. m. & are: dispatched
charge £529, joiut net yearly value £ 468, including 23 acres at 5.30 p.m. The nearest money order & telegraph office
of glebe, with residence, in the gift of Isaac B. Coaks esq. of is at Lynn
Farm hill, Thorpe Hamlet, and held since 189~ by the The children of this place attend the school at North Runcton
Watson William
Alien Richard,Lynn Arms P.H.& farmer coal merchant
I
Brooks Edmund, Bull P.H. & farmer & Long Charles Vince, groc.-er & draper
Newell John, cowkeeper
Curtis Charles, pig dealer Lemmon William Henry, farmer Seals Edward, farmer
SHARRINGTON is a parish and village, about 3~ miles excellent preservation, to Christopher Daubeney, his wife
west-south-west from Holt station and 3 north from Melton Phillippa, five sons and three daughters, 1587; and others to
Constable station, both on the Eastern and Midlands railway, John Botolff, 1486; John Sharington, 1498; and Thomas
8 east from Walsingham and 8 north-east from Fakenham, Dawbeney, 1527: the chancel was restored in 188o: there
in the Northern division of the county, Holt hundred and are 1:04 sittings, so being free. The register dates from
petty sessional division, Walsingham union and county court the year 1672. The livmg is a discharged rectory, tithe
district, rural deanery of Holt and archdeaconry and diocese rent-charge £302, average £228, net yearly value 1:156~
of Norwich. The church of All Saints is an edifice of tiint with 1 acre of glebe, and residence, in the gift of C. Swinfen
with stone dressings, in the Early English style, consisting of Eady esq. of Londob, and held since 1874 by the Rev_
chancel, nave, vestry and a. western tower containing one Charles Brumell M.A. oi St. John's College, Cambridge.
bell, dated 1715: the lower part of the tower forms a porch: The Wesleyan chapel was erected in 1866. Near thP. church
there were formerly north and south aisles : portions of the stand the base and part of the shaft of a stone cross. The
ancient carved benches still remain, and there are brasses in charities, amounting to /,i x6s. 4d. yearly, are for clothing.
5~~ · SH.dRRI~GTON. NORFOLK. (KELLY's

Capt. Timothy White, of London, is lord of the manor and 1 Letters through Dereham, via Briningham, by foot-"post,
chief landowner. The soil is marl ; subsoil, graveL The arrive at 8 a.m. WALL LETTER Box, Cross roads, cleared
chief crops are wheat and barley. The parish comprises 4.30 p.m. Halt is the nearest money order & telegraph
863 acres ; rateable value, £r, 167 ; thA population in I Bgx office
was 204. This parish is under the Briningham united district school
Parish Clerk (1l.cting), John Sands. board; the school house is at Brinton li
Brumcll Rev. Charles M.A. Rectory Gidney James, farmer, Church farm Lakey George, farmer "
T Green William, farmer, Hall farm Mitchell William, Swan inn, & farmer
I '
COMMERCIAL. Hall James, farmer Phillippo Baker B. Chequers P.H
Clark Mary Ann (Mrs.),machineowner Jacobs John, farm bailiff to Mr. S.l"ells Spencer John, harness maker
Ellisop. William, hawker Key Edw~J,rd Stirges, bricklayer · f'urner Charles, fa~mer ,
SHET.FANGER is a village and parish, situated on a heavy; subsoil, clay. The chief crops are wheat, barley,
height, 3~ miles north-west from Diss station and 3 west oats, peas and beans.· The area is 1,678 acres: rateable
from Burston station, both on the Ipswich and Norwich value, £2,160; the population in x8gr was 308.
section of the Great Eastern railway, in the Southern Two valuable mineral springs have been discovered here
division of the county, Diss hundred, petty sessional b y A. c , F arrm
· gt on esq. M.R.c.s.E.: th e wa t er, w h"rch b as
division and county court district, Gniltcross union, rural been analysed by Professor A ttfield, of London, Professor
deanery of Redenhall, archdeaconry of Norfolk and diocese Tichborne, of Dublin, and F .. Sutton esq. of NorWich, is
()f Norwich. All Sfl.ints church is an ancient building of chalybeate and saline, and its temperature indicates the
source to be at a depth of about a quarter of a mile~ con·
lfiint, in the Perpendicular style, consisting of chancel, nave.,
a curious wooden north porch and an embattled western nected with these springs -is a drinking fountain,! and a
tower containing 5 bells: the church was restored in 1865, plunge bath has also been constructed: the water, depttived
and in 1876 the east window was filled with stained glass as by a. simple process of its mineral constituents, forms a
a memorial to the late .A. Smith esq. : there are 150 sittings, pure non-medicinal table water, and is bottled and exported.
xoo being free. The register dates from the year 1685. The Parish Clerk, William Welton~
living is a. rectory, average tithe rent-charge £422, net
yearly value £ 373 , including 35 acres of glebe, with resi- PosT 0FFICE.-George Youells, receiver. Letters received
dence, in the gift of Albert Blakelock esq. of Sheffield,and held through Diss at 7.20 a. m. ; dispatched at 5.40 p.m. ; on
since r86s by the Re\T. Clement Ogle Blakelock M.A.. of Corpus sun day at r I .40 a.m. Diss is the nearest money order &
Christi college, Cambridge. There are Baptist and Wes- telegraph office. Postal orders are issued here, but not
leyan chapels here. Franklin and Dade's charity lands are paid
:now let in allotments, producing (in r8gi) £20 ISS. which is School (mixed), erected in 1865 by Albert Smith esq. for So
applied for the relief of the poor. The Duke of Norfolk children ; average attendance, 46 ; & is under Govern-
K.G. is lord of the manor and chief landowner. The soil is ment inspection; Miss Sarah Gilby, mistress
.Baker Edward, sen 1 Edwards John Bassingthwaite, farmer Norfolk Spa Co. (Anthony Charles
~lakelock Rev.ClementOgle M.A..Rectry Ellis Charles, farmer, The Lodge Farrington, proprietor). See advert
Farrington .AnthonyCharlesM.R.c,s.Eng Elsey Phillip, farmer Porcher Harry, farmer
COMMERCIAL. Fisher Joseph King, Crown P.H Rolfe Horace, farmer
Baker Edward, jun. farmer Flogdell Joseph, farmer Rout George, Cross Keys P.ll
Chaplin Edward, carpenter Lanham Nelson, farmer Sanders Henry, farmer & shopkeeper
Chapman Thos. farmer, Shelfanger hall Layn John, wheelwright Shulver James (exors, of), farmers
Clarke James, blacksmith & shopkeeper Littl£>proud Waiter, baker Spurdens Robert, farmer
Cobb Stimson, shoe maker Pearce• Arthur, carpenter Youells George, tailor, Post office
SHELTON is a parish and village, 5 miles south-east from of glebe, with residence, in the gift of FredericU Bacon Frank
.Forncett Junction station on the Ipswich and Norwich esq. and held since 188r by the Rev. Charles Blomfield
section of the Great Eastern railway, 5 north-west from Smith. She! ton Hall, formerly the seat of the family of that
Harleston ·and 12 south from Norwich, in the Southern name, is an ancient mansion surrounded by a moat, and is
division of the county, Depwade hundred, petty sessional now used as a farm house. C. R. Hawkins esq. is the chief
division and union, Harleston county court district, rural landowner. Commander Thomas Holmes R.N. 1 ~- P. of
deanery of Depwade, archdeaconry of Norfolk and diocese Morningthorpe Manor, is lord of the manor; Frederick
of Norwich. The church of St. Mary is an ancient structure Bacon Frank esq. M.A., J.P., D. L. of Camps all Hall, Doncas-
of red brick with stone dressings, in the Perpendicular style, ter, Beaumont Wilson Jolly esq. of Shrub lands, Albemarle
consisting of chancel, nave, aisles, south porch and an em- road, Norwich, the trustees of the late Os born Springfield
battled western tower of flint containing one bell: at the esq. ·and the Rev. Thorn ton .Sutton Shaw M.A. of Bedingfield
east end are three stained windows, and an altar tomb of rectory, Eye, Suffolk, are also landowners. The land is
black and white marble with kneeling effigies to Sir Robert fertile and the soil heavy; subsoil, chiefly clay.. The chief
Hougbton knt. his son and two wives, but undated : there crops are wheat, barley, oats, peas and beans. The area is
are also three stone altar tombs, with arms and inscrip- r,~g2 acres; rateable value, £r,338; the population in x8gr
-tions, to the Shelton family, who formerly resided at the W1l.s 202.
Hall: the brass altar cross was presented in memory of l'arish Clerk, Esau Reeder.
Stephen Paul E:o.gleheart M.A. drowned on the coast of Letters through Long Stratton, which is the nearest m,oney
Africa, 29 May, .1885 ~ the font is aneient and is carved with order & telegraph office, arrive at 7-45 a. m ,
eurious figures : in th!l roof of the church are great numbers A School Board of 5 members for the united district of
<lf bees which have swarmed here for over 100 years: in Shelton & Hard wick was formed compulsorily go Jan.
I882 the church was restored and reseated and a reading I874; J. Furness, St. Stephen's chambers, .Norwich, clerk
desk and lectern provided, J~,t a cost of £2oo: there are 200 to the board; Boardman Silcock, Alburgh, attendance
sittings. 'l'he register dates from rs6o. The living is a officer I
rectory, consolidated with that of Hard wick, average tithe l3uard School (formerly National), for 70 children; average
rent-charge £487, joint net value £298, including 30 acres attendance, 50; Miss Lavinia. Bosper, mistress
Smith Rev. Charles Blomfield, Rectory Cann Ann (Mrs.), farmer · Masterson Sarah (Mrs.), shopkeeper
Chaplin William, farmer & cattle Neave George, farmer
COMMERCIAT.. dealer, Shelton hall Nobbs Mary (Mrs.), farmer
Baxter Frederick James, farmer Clarke \Vm.farrner&survyr.of highways Sharman Robert, farmer
Baxter Ezaniah, farmer Ladbrook James, pork butcher Thrower Corneliug, farmer
Eurgess Tbos. wheelwright & carpenter Ling Abraham, farmer Youngs James, farmer
.Burgess Waiter, blacksmith LingAbraham,jun.farmer,OakTree frm
.
SHEREFORD (or SHERINGFORD) is a parish on the river dated with the vicarage of Toftrees, by an Order in Council,
Wensum, about 2 miles west from Fakenham Town station, dated Nov. r88r, average tithe rent-char~;e £280, joint
on the Eastern and Midlands railway, and 3 west from gross yearly value £4oo, net £323, including 92 acres of
Fakenham station, on the Wymondham and Wells section glebe, with residence at Toftrees, in the gift of the Marquess
of the Great Eastern railway, in the North Western division Townshend, and held since r8go by the Hev. John Robert
of the county, Gallow hundred and petty sessional division, Blayney Owen M. A. of Queen's College, Oxford. The Mar-
Walsingham union anri county court district, rural deanery quess Townshend is lord of the manor and sole landowner.
of North Brisley and Toftrees, and archdeaconry and diocese The soil is various ; subsoil, principally sand. The chief
()f Norwich. The church of St. Nicholas is a plain building crops are wheat, barley and rootg._ • The area is 842 acres;
of flint, in the Norman and Early Enghsh styles, consistmg rateable value, £933: the population in l:Bgr was 96.
of chancel, nave and a round western tower of early date "'
containing one bell: there are 70 sittings. The register oexton, James Ducker
dates from the year r72r. The living is a. rectory,· consoli- Letters through Fakenham, the nearest money arder & tele-
DIRECTORY. J · NORFOLK • SHERINGHAM • 599
graph office, arrive at 7· 15 a. m. WALL Box, cleared average attendance, 40 ; for the parishes of Dunton-cum.
-at 3.20 p.m Doughton, Toftrees & Shereford ; Mrs. Mary Ann Becks,
Board School (mixed), erected in 1873 1 for 52 children; mistress
.
wheelwnght & blacksmith ·
I .
I
Becks Rich:ard George, c?ach builder, Riches George, farmer, South Mill frm RichesRichd.Goodwyn,frmr.Manor fm

SHERINGHAM is a parish extending to the sea shore, fishing. The Church Mission chapel, connected with the
and comprising the villages of UPPER and LowER SHE RING- church of All Saints, was erected in 1842, by the Upcher
HAM, with a station on the Eastern and Midlands branch family, to whom it still belongs, and is a plain square
railway from Lynn and Norwich, via Holt, 4 miles east- edifice of brick with stone dressings, affording about soo
north-east from Holt, 14 north-north-west from . North sittings. The Free Methodist chapel, built in r85o, will
Walsham, 142 from London and 4 from Cromer by rail; seat about 400 persons; the Primitive Methodist chapel,
in the Northern division of the county, North Erpingbam buiLt in r882, has also 400 sittings, and there are Salvation
hundred and petty sessional division, Erpingham union, Army barracks, seating 200 persons. The cliffs in this
Halt county court district, rural deanery of Repps, arch- neighbourhood are being constantly undermined by the sea,
deaconry of Norfolk and diocese of Norwich. The surround- and in 1852 a large portion of land was entirely carried
ing scenery, richly diversified with woodland, is in some away. There is a coast-guard station here, north-west of
parts beautifully picturesque: the village uf Upper Sher- the village ; the guard consisting of a chief officer and 4·men,
ingham is supplied with excellent water, conveyed by pipes with a suitable boat honse and rocket apparatus {No. 323).
from q, constant spring to a large reservoir, formed in 1814 In 1857 the Hon. Mrs. Upcber presented a life boat- to the
by the late Abbot Upcber esq. The church of .All Saints, parish; in 1864 a new one from the National Lifeboat In-
in Upper Sheringham, is a. building of flint, with stone stitution was given by Miss Duncan, of Bath, in memory of
dressings, in the Early and Later English styles, consisting her uncle and father, Pbilip Bury Duncan D.C.L.t M.A.. and
of chancel, clerestoried nave, aisles, south porch and a lofty John Shute Duncan esq. D.C.L., M. A. of Oxford, but in 1886
embattled western tower, containing 6 bells, the rood this was superseded by auother called the "William
screen and loft remain: in the chancel is a monument of Bennett," also supplied by the National Lifeboat Institu-
white marble to Abbot Upcher esq. d. x8r9; a slab inscribed tion. The Sheringham Golf Club was formed in 1891 ;
to ""'alter Mar low, canon of ~otley, and sometime rector, the links, laid out by Mr. Tom Dunn in 8eptember, 1891, are
ob. 1451 ; and memorial windows to the Hon. Mrs. Charlotte situated on the cliffs at a height of more than 200 feet above
Upcher, d. 1857, and to Miss Upcher, daughter of the late the sea. The course is the longest 9 hole course in the
· Henry Ramey Upcher esq. d. r863; there is a brass to John kingdom, and is kept in perfect condition, and tbe ladies'
Hook, ob. 1513, and Magdalene his wife, and ono in the· links are exceptionally large and good; there is a comma-
pavement near the south porch to Thoma!l Burgess, ob. 1540 : dious club house near the ''home hole."
1

,
and a monument to Thomas Heath, who was robbed and Sheringham Hall, the seat of Mrs. Upcher, is a mansion
murdered 4 Feb. 1635: the communion plate includes of white brick, situated in a well-wooded park and com-
a chalice of the r6th century: there are about 400 sittings. manding extensive sea views. . llenry Morris Upcher esq.
The register dates from the year 1670. The living is a F.z.s., J.P. who is lord of the manor, and Thomas Wyndham
vicarage, gross yearly value £8r, wit.h 10 acres of glebe, Cremer esq. B. A. of Beeston Hall, are the chief landowners.
with residence, built in r868 1 in the gift of the Bishop of The soil is light; subsoil, gravel. The crops are wheat,
Norwich, and held since r89r by the Rev. John Sheldon turnips, barley and grass. The area is 2,181 acres of land;
Barford M.A. of St. Catberine's College, Cambridge. The rateable value, £3-920; the population in :1891 was 11 490.
fuel allotment of 34 a~~es is cut by the poor, who have also PoST OFFICE, Upper Sheringham.-Miss Mary Lown,
£19 yearly from c_hantJes. . . re0eiver. Letters through Cram er, arrive at 8. 40 a. m.
Lower Shenngham, situated b~tween cl;ffs, nearly & 12 noon; dispatched at 10 _30 a.m. & 3.4 0 p.m. The
!oo feet a _hove the beach, and about x! m !le ~ram Upper Sher- nearest money order & telegraph office is at Lower Sher-
mgham, IS now much frequented as a seaside resort, and on ingham. Postal orders are issued here but not paid
account of the increasing numbers of visitors a large number p M 0 &T 0 S B & A 't & 'r Offi
of private lodging houses have been erected, and a fine osT, · · . · ·• · · nn~t Y nsurance . ce,
hotel has been opened between the railway station and Lower Shermgbam.-Mrs . . E!Jza Barcharn, receiver.
the golf links; in 1g91 a scheme of main drainage was Lette~rs ~hrough Cromer, arrive at 8 & 11.30 a.m. & 6
carried out by the Sheringham Development Company p.m. • dispatched at 11 • 10 a.m., 3-4° & 7- 10 p.m .
Limited, under the superintendence of w. Marriott esg. WALL LETTER Box near Dunstable Arms, Cromer road ,
C.E. the sewage being carried into the sea to the east of the clear~d 3-5°, P-~ . _
village at an angle of about 45 degrees from the cliff. The Coast Guard Statwn, Thomas DaviS Pratt, chlBf officer
village is supplied with gas and water by the Sheringham ScHOOLS : - " ··
Gas and Water Company Limited, formed in r88g; the School (mixed), for about 200 children; average atten-
watcr is derived from natural springs rising in the hills, dance, 125; Edward Graham Savage, master ; Mrs.
one mile south, and is collected in a reservoir and conveyed E. G. Savage, mistress
thence in pipes~ the gas works were established in 1892. School (infants') (Beeston), built in 1875, for the children
This place is also a considerable fishing station, having both of Sberingham & Beeston Regis; it will hold 90 in-
about 250 boats employed in the herring, cod, skate, plaice, fants ; average attendance, 89; Miss Alice Parnell,
crab, lobster and whelk fisheries; great quantities of all mistress
these different kinds are sent to- Norwich and London; Railway Station (Lower Sheringham), Eastern & Midlands,
about 7 or 8 of the boats are large and fitted for deep sea · Alexander Limeburn, station mast~r ·
Upper Sheringham. L::Jwer Sheringham. Bishop Wtlliam, fisherman, & lodging
Barford Rev.John Sheldon M. A. VicarageBirrellAugustme B.A .• ~.P.; & 3 a Lower house, New road
Critoph Robert Sloane st.s w; & 3 New sq.London w c Bishop William C. fishmonger
Pigott Misses, The Old house Boxhall Thomas Boxhall Rubert James & Thomas
Upcher Henry Morris F.z.s., J.P. Sher- Eden Capt. Rodney (late Duke of Corn- William, boat builders &wheelwrights
ingbam ball; & Feltwell, Brandon wall's Light Infantry) Brighten Richard, lodging house, Beech
Upcher Mrs. Sheringham hall Gilliat Rev. Edward M:.A. Bracken How house, & shopkeeper 1

Hindley Rev. William Tal bot M. A. Brown & Cook, solicitors


-coMMERCIAL. [vicar of St. Barnabas, Holloway ], Burrell Wm. llolmes, chemist, & agent
Barcham Eliza (Mrs.), grocer & draper Summerholm for W. & A. Gilbey, wine & spirit
Chastney William, tailor Marriott William, Kylemore merchants, Station road
Critoph Robert John, farmer Pigott Thomas Digby, The Mo Churchyard & Sons, grocers & drapers;
CubittJames, Temperance hotel,&farmr Read J. J. Belvedere & at Cromer & Costessey
Dennis John, painter Sumpter Walter John Ernely Clark Charles West, hair dresser
Dyball Jonatban, shopkeeper Cook J. Harold, solicitor (firm,Brown &
Lambert William, shoe maker COMMERCIAL. Cook) .
Loads John, farm bailiff to Henry A bel James, lodging ho.Alexandra villa Cooper Charlotte (Mrs.), dress maker
Morris Upcher esq Almonds F. C. (Miss), preparatory Cooper Edwin Carter, grocer & wine &
Lawn Mary (Miss), post office school, Fair haven spirit merchant ·
Pigott Robert, farmer, Ivyfarm Baker Charles Thus. ironmonger&c.; & CooperJames, twine spinner
Slipper Waiter Geo. corn dlr. & farmer at Holt & Fakenham. See advert Cooper Robert, fisherman, & lodging
Steward James Robert, farmer Barcbam Benj. lodging houSe, Fern ho house, Christopher house
Thursby Louisa Uatherine (Miss), regis- Harcham Eliza (Mrs.), grocer & draper, Cooper Wm. lodging house,Greta house
trar of births & deaths for Cromer Post office Cox Christopber, fish curer, & lodging
sub-district Battrick John, wheelwright house, Dorothy house
Warby John William, miller (wind) Bishop Richard John, fisherman, & Cox David,lodging house, & fisherman,
Youngman Henry, plumber & glazier lodging house, Jessamine house Rosslyn villa •
7
600 ~HERI.NGH.AM. NORFOLK. [KELLY S
Cox Frederick, grocer & draper Johnson Robert, fisherman, &; lodging ' Sheringham Golf Club (Ilenry Broad-
Cox George, lodging house,&fisherman, house, Melrose house burst esq. treasurer ; Rev. A.
Hampden house Leeder Robert, baker Hamilton Upcher, captain; Capt.
Cox Herbert, greengrocer Limeburn Alex. lodg. ho. Roseneath vil Rodney Eden, hon. sec. ; Charles
Cox Richard, lodging house,Hendon ho Little, Cox & West, coal & fish mers Strickland, sec)
CoxRobertL.lodging ho.Norfolk cottage Little William, fish merchant Sheringham Hotel & Mansion (Charles
Craske Bros. fish merchants Long David, lodg. ho. Ebenezer cottage Strickland, manager)
CraskeChristopher,fisherman, & lodg. ho Long John, fisherman, & lodging house, Shibley Albt. lodging ho. Albemarle ho
Craske John, lodging ho. Admiral villa Laurel house Slipper Matthew Arthur, Lobster inn
Craske Rebecca (Mrs.), lodging house, Love George, tailor & hair dresser Smith Charles, twine spinner
Station road Lown Hen!"y, carpenter & boat builder Smith Harry, family grocer, tea dealer
Craske William Cutler, shopkeeper Mace Stephen, lodging ho. Windsor ho & provision merchant, draper &
DennisChas.lodg.ho. Oxford ho. &butchr Mallett Ann Rebecca (Mrs.), tea dealer hosier &c. Supply stores
Dennis George William, butcher,& lodg- Martins Jacob, fisherman, & lodgiiJg Starling\Vltr.carpntr.buildr.&contractr
ing house, Rose house house, Beeston house Steward John, market gardener
Dennis Harriet (Mrs.), lodging house, Middleton & Son, furnishing & general Steward :::lamuel, lodg. ho. llamilton cot
Balmoral house ironmongers, smiths, oil & color men Sumpter Waiter John Erneley L.R.C.F.
Dennis Robert, Dunstable Arms P.H (established 1841) Lond., M.R.C.S.Eng., L.S.A.LOnd.~
Dumble William, fisherman, & lodging Middleton John Henry, fisherman, & Fellow Med. Socy. Lond. surgeon &
house, Bristol house lodging house, Clee cottage admiralty surgeon
Emery Lewis, boat builder Moore Susan (Miss), lodging houses, Swallow Richard, Railway hotel; good
Fenn Robert, lodging house, Bloom villa Fair Haven, West Cliff house & Golf lo accommodation & stabling
Francis J ames, ironmonger Mortimer Frank, lodging house Thirtle M. A. E. & L. (Misses), lodging
GaskinEllen(Mrs. ),lodg.ho.Mortimer vl Nightingale & Son, coal merchants house, Melbourne house
Gr-dveling Robert,lodging ho.Claphm. vil Nightingale Joseph, assistant overseer Tice Richard, boot & shoe maker
GrayElizh.(Mrs. ),lodgng. ho. Victoria ho & assessor & collector of taxes & col- Vinter J. 0. coal merchant (Little, Cox
Gray Rowland Earle, coffee rooms & lector to the Gas & Water Co. Lim & West, agents)
lodging house Norfolk Dairy Farmers' Association Warby John William, baker, corn
Grice Bros. fish merchants (John Pike, manager) chandler & coal merchant, & lodging
GriceChristopher, fisherman, & lodging Olley Eli7..abeth (Mrs.), Windha.m Arms house, Warby house; & miller (wind),
house, Mill lane P.H. & posting establishment Upper Sheringham
Grice Geo. lodging ho. Marlborough ho Pank Sarah (Mrs.), grocer & draper Wells John Philip, fisherman, & lodging
Grice Jas. lodging house, Leicester viis Pegg Robert, fisherman, & lodging house, Elim house
Groom James, twine spmner house, Bestick house West Hy.lodg.ho. &fisherman,Hope ho
GroutCrissy(Miss ),dressmaker, Reed ho Pike Edwd.lodging ho. Brighten house West Joshua Henry, lodging house,
Gurneys, Birkbecks, Barclay & Buxton, Price E. M. (Mrs.), lodg. ho. Cedar Yil Lavender cottage
bankers lbranch) (open tuesdays & Price William, sergeant-instructor of West Joshua Henry, jun. fisherman, &
fridays, 11 till2.3o) (W. J. Thrower, volunteers lodging house, Myrtle house
manager); draw on Barclay, Bevan Reeve J.H. baker (Geo. Barris, mangr~ West Robt. sen.lodging ha. Bellevue ho
& Co. London E c Reynolds & Wes11, fish curers West Robert, jun. lodging house, &
Hardingham George, fisherman, & lodg- Reynolds James, farmer fisherman, Edinburgh house
ing house, Stream cottage Reynolds James, jun. farmer West William, fisherman, & lodging
Hearn Henry, lodging ho. Heath house Reynolds John Henry, fisherman, & house, Providence house
Holsey Charles, Crown P.H. wholesale lodging house, Breydon house West William Christmas, fisherman, &
& retail fish merchant. & apartments Reynolds M. E. (Mrs.), restaurant lodging house, Os borne house
Ives Edward, lodging house, Glencoe Reynolds William, twine spinner West William Thomas, lodging house,
Ives George, butcher, & lodging house, Robson George, watch & clock maker Sunnyside cottage
Gordon house Scatter Matthew, fisherman & lodging Weston IJames William, builder, &
Johnson Benjamin, jun. builder, & house, Bradford house lodging house, Leicester villa
furnished apartments, Holloway ho Shepherd John, fisherman, & lodging Wilson Robert, twine spinner
J ohnson J ames, fisherman, & lodging house, Vigilant house Wilton Mary (Mrs.), lodging house,
house, Totteridge house Sheringham Coal Co. coal merchants Cambridge house
Johnson James Grice, fisherman, & Sheringham Gas & Water Co. Limited Woodhouse Robert, fisherman, & lodg-
lodging house, Lily cottage (J. Nightingale, collector) ing house, Albion house
SHERNBORNE (or SHARNBOURNE) is a village and dale M. A. of St. John's College, Cambridge, who is also
parish, 3 miles east from Snettisham and 3 from Der- vicar of Fring. There is a fuel allotment of 14 acres for
singham station, both on the Hunstanton and West Norfolk the poor of the parish. The Master and fellows of
section of the Great Eastern railway, and II~ north-east- Emmanuel College, Cambridge, who are lords of the manor,
by-north from Lynn, in the North Western division of the and the trustees of the late Henry James Hamilton Cold-
county, Smithdon hundred, Smithdon and Brothercross barn esq. of Anmer Hall, are the principal landowners.
petty sessional division, Docking union, C.ynn county court The soil is rather light ; the subsoil, chalky. The chief
district, rural deanery of Heacham, Norfolk archdeaconry crops are wheat, barley and turnips. The area is 1,300
and Norwich diocese. The church of SS. Peter and Paul, acres; rateable value, £gS8; the population in 1891 was 146.
stated to have been the second church founded in East Parish Clerk, Samuel Ransom.
Anglia by St. Felix its Apostle, is a structure of flint with Letters from Lynn, via Ingoldisthorpe. Snettisham is the
stone dressings in the Early English style and consists of a nearest money order & telegraph offioe. There is a
small nave with a western turret., containing one bell: the PILLAR Box cleared daily (sundays excepted) at 5.20 p.m ..
ancient font is much admired: there are 70 sitticgs. The A School Board of 5 members was formed 14 June, 1875 ;
register dates from the year 1747. The living is a vicarage, Rev. T. Tweeddale, chairman & hon. clerk to the board
average yearly value from tithe rent-charge J:ss, with 67~ Board School, built in 1876, for this parish & the adjoining
acres of glebe, and residence, in the gift of the Bishop of district of Snettisham Red Barn ; it will hold 41 children~
Norwich, and held since 1872 by the Rev. Thomas Tweed- average attendance, 32; Miss Arme Gadsby, mistress
I
Tweeddale Rev.Thos. M.A. The Vicarage Hooks George, Bull P.H. & farmer
BullardRichard,farmer,Shernborne hall
I Lewis Henry, farmer, Cold ham farm

SHIMPLING is a scattered village and parish, half a the Rev. Jeffery Watson Millard M. A. of Worcester College,
mile east from Burston station on the Ipswich and Norwich Oxford. Jerom Murch esq. J.P., D.L. of Cranwells, near
section of the Great Eastern railway, 3l north-east from Bath, is lord of the manor. Charles Chase esq. of Walcot
Diss, and g8~ from London, in the Southern division of the Hall, Diss, William J. 0. Holmes, of Strumpshaw Hall,
county, Diss hundred, petty sessional division and county Norwich, Miss Mann's trustees, and the trustees of Miss
court district, Depwade union, rural deanery of Redenhall, Taylor are the chief landowners. The soil is heavy·; sub-
archdeaconry of Norfolk and diocese of Norwich. The soil, clay. The chief crops are wheat, barley, peas and
church of St. George is a building of flint, in the Perpendi- beans. The area is 769 acres; rateable value, £976; the
cular style, consisting of chancel, nave, north porch and a population in 1891 was 168.
round westem tower, with octagonal belfry and a small Parish Clerk, George Catchpole.
wooden spire, and containing 4 bells : the porch has been Letters through Scolc, the nearest telegraph office, arrive
rebuilt out of the rent of one acre of land, left for this pur- at 8 a. m. ; the nearest money order office is at Dickleburgh.
pose: the windows retain many fragments of ancient stained PILLAR LETTER Box cleared on week days at 5·45 p.m. ;
glass: there are 200 sittings. The register dates from the sundays at 10 a.m
year 1539. The living is a rectory, average tithe rent- This place is included in the Burston United School Board
charge £175, net yearly value £199, including 31 acres of district, formed in 1874; & the children attend th~
glebe, with residence, in the gift of Jl.nd held since 1854 by Board school there


DIRECTORY.] NORFOLK. · SHIPDHAM • 601

Millard Rev.JefferyWatson M.A.Rectory Brundle William, horse slaughterer Todd William, beer retailer
Robinson Edward Womack Catchpole Louisa (Miss), shopkeeper Warnes Samuel, fanner & cattle dealer,
Robinson Samuel Arthur Ford George, farmer Shimpling place
Bolton ArLhur Valentine, frmr. The Hall Ling Zephaniah, blacksmith '
SHINGHAM is a very small parish, 6 miles north-east Mary and St. John were united by Order in Council, dated
from Stoke Ferry terminal station on the Great Eastern 3oth December, 1878,.average tithe rent-charge 1:309, joint
railway, and 4~ miles south-west from Swaffham, in the gross yearly value £348, including II6 acres oi glebe, in the
South Western division of the county, South Greenhoe petty alternate gift of the Lord Chancellor and Joshua Fielding
sessional division, hundred of Clackclose, union and county esq. the former having the right of the next presentation,
court district of Swaffham, rural deanery of Fincham, arch- and held since 1888 by the Rev. Charles Somes Saxton M. A.
deaconry of Norfolk and diocese of Norwich. The church of of Magdalene College, Cambridge, who resides at Beecham-
St. Botolph is an ancient building of flint and stone, con- well. Joshua Fielden esq . .T.P., D.L. of Beechamwell Hall,
sisting of chancel and nave only: the south doorway is a is lord of the manor and sole landowner. The soil is light
good and well-preserved specimen of Early Norman: there and sandy; subsoil, chalk and gravel. The chief crops are
is no tower: and the single bell now standing on the floor at wheat, barley and turnips. Tbe area is 93.5 acres; rateable
the west end of the nave, is inscribed "Thomas Newman, value, £412; the population in 1891 was 46.
made me, 1738:" the chancel, which retains an interesting LE"Lrlm Box cleared at _10 p.m; sundays 10. 10 a. m
piscina, was new-roofed with slates in 1878: the nave is 5
thatched: the church has not now been used for a number of Letters through Swaffham arrive at 8.30 a. m. Beecham-
years owing to its dilapidated condition. The register dates well is the nearest money order office k Swaffham is the
from the year 1762. The living is a rectory, with that of nearest telegraph office
Beechamwell All Saints annexed, to which Beechamwell St. The children of this place attend the school at Beechamwell

[curate of St: Mary's, Beechamwell]


I
Bosanquet Rev. Reginald Albert B.A. Kenny Frederick, farm bailiff to J.
Fielden esq. J.P., D.L .
I
SHIPDHAM is a large and well-built village and parish, r A market was established here in the reign of Henry Ill. by
4 miles south-west from Yaxham station on the Wymond- one of the Bishops of Ely, who built a hall for the purpose;
ham and Dereham section of the Great Eastern railway and but the market has long been obsolete. The Town hall was
5 south-by-west from Dereham, in the Mid division of the built in 1875 as a Temperance hall. The Town estate now
county, Mitford hundred, .Mitford and Launditch petty (r892) produces about £3o yearly, which is distributed
sessional division and union, Dereham county court district, among the poor. The fuel allotments, awarded in 18og,
rural deanery of Hingham, Mitford division, archdeaconry comprises about 126 acres, producing £100 a year, which is
of Norfolk and diocese of Norwich. The church of All distributed among the poor in coals : there is also a sum of
Saints is a spacious edifice of flint with stone facings in the £4 ss. for the poor derived from other charities. The chief
Early English style, consisting of chancel, nave, aisles, south landowners are Eton College, King's College, Cambridge,
porch and an embattled western tower surmounted by a Vl'illiam George Benjamin Barker esq. and Robert Thorn-
wooden cupola snd spire, and containing a clock and 5 bells: haugh Gurdon esq. M. A., J.P., D.L. of Letton Hall. The
over the porch is a parvise containing a collection of rare soil is loam and clay ; subsoil, gravel and clay. The chief
books, chiefly on theology, bequeathed by a former rector: crops are wheat, barley and turnips. This parish is of con-
this church possesses one of the finest original wooden lee- siderable extent, covering the space of 5 miles from north-
terns in the county, of unusual design and great beauty; the east to south-west. The area is 4,560 acres; rateable value,
shaft, which rises from a base of three members, resting on [7,410; the population in 1891 was 1,471.
lions sejant, is triangular, and consists of three buttresses, Parish Clerk, William Henry Tench.
the angles between which are ornamented from the base PosT, M. 0. & T. 0. & S. B. &. Annuity & Insurance Office.
upwards with a series of quatre-foils: the desk is of a double -James William Douse, postmaster. Letters arrive by
form, very richly carved: there are two stained windows, mail cart from Thetford at 5· IS a.DI. & through Watton
one being a memorial to a former rector: the church was S.O. at 2.45 p.m.; delivered at 7 a. m. Letters are dis-
extensively altered in 1845, and in 1884-7 was thoroughly patched at 7.30 p.m
restored, new-roofed and entirely reseated ;. in 188g and go This parish was made contributory to East Dereham school
the exterior of the church, with the exception of the tower, board 28th April, 1881, sending 2 members
was carefully renovated : there are sBo sittings. The Public Elementary Endowed School, built in 17491 & en.
register dates from the year 1558. The living is a rectory, dowed with a farm of 46A. 3R. IBP. now (1892) let for
tithe rent-charge £1,240, average [944, net yearly value £75 a year, devised by T. Bullock esq. in t83So for the
about £Boo, including 42 acres of glebe, with residence, in support of a master to teach reading, writing & arithmetic
the gift of the Rev. George Deans Dundas Watt M.A. of 7 gratis to all the poor of the parish: the school house with
Kimberley terrace, Great Yarmouth, and held since 1885 residence was erected in 1864 by Mary Bullock, a grand-
by the Hev. George Augustus Frederick Quentin M.A. of St. niece of the founder of this benefaction, at a cost of up-
John's College, Oxford. There are Congregational, Wesleyan wards of £1,000 & enlarged in 187S for 240 children;
and Primitive Methodist chapels. There is a public cemetery average attendance, 2o6 ; Henry Hutchinson, master
of 2 acres, with a chapel, opened in 1879, and controlled by CARRIER TO NORWICH.-Alfred Carr, wed. & sat. returning
a Burial Board consisting of 9 members formed in 1877· same days
PRIVATE RESIDENTS. Carter George, Old George P.H Hart Charles, carpenter
Batterham Miss Cemetery (William Henry Tench, clerk Hayhoe William, farmer
Cock John to the burial board) Hearn Robert James, shoe maker
Cox Joseph Chapman William, beer retailer Holman Charles, shoe maker
Giles Rev. George [Congregational] I Chenery William, Royal Standard P.R Hunter Henry, pork butcher
Godwin Henry, Shrub house i Clarke P"rancis (Mrs.), farmer Hutson Thomas, Waggon & Horses P.H
Goldsmith John 1 Coleman John, farmer Jenness Wm. wheelwright & coach bldr
Goring Charles Harvey, The Hall j Cordy George, farmer, Grange farm Jolly Robt. shoe maker & leather seller
Milner James I Cushing (George) & Browne, builders, Keeler Lucy (Mrs.), farmer
Quentin Rev. George Augustus I contractors & undertakers Lee Absolom George, baker
Frederick M.A. [rector], Rectory Curson John, farmer Lincoln George, farmer & landowner
Saunders John Thompson Curson John, jun. farmer Lingwood John, farmer & cattle dealer
•rench William Henry Cutting Horace John, shopkeeper Massey Samuel Timoth"Y, baker
Watson Isaac Deeker Thomas, fanner Martin William, White Horse P.H. &
COMMERCIAL. Douse James William, assistant over- plumber, painter & blacksmith
Abbey William, farmer seer, Post office Middleton William, farmer
Alpe Edmund, farmer FarrinArthurThomas,butcher & farmer Milk Alfred (Mrs.), farmer
Austin llannah (Mrs.), dress maker Fysh Herbert William, watch & clock Milner James L.R.C.P.Edin. surgeon,
Bald win Robt. farmer & machine owner maker & repairer medical officer & pub he vaccinator,
Bales James & Son, wheelwrights
Bassum William, farmer
Brown Charles, saddler
Gayton Fuller, vermin destroyer
Goldsmith John, registered vet. surgeon
Goring Charles Harvey, farmer
I Shipdham district, Mitford & Lann-
ditch union & Bradenham district of
Swaffham union
Bro~ne Arnold, builder, see Cushing Goss John, builder, statuary mason, Minns William, farmer ~
(George) & Browne brick maker & farmer Morris Eliza (Miss), young iadies'
Brunnings John, beer retailer Grimmer Charles,grocer,draper,&wine, boarding & day school
Bnllen Bros. grocers & drapers spirit & coal & corn merchant Newton Matthew, farmer
Butcher Mary Ann (Mrs.), furnished Groom James, grocer & draper Newton Thomas, farmer
apartments Groom Lewis William, grocer, draper Osborne Charles, farmer & landowner
Butler William saddler & farmer Page George, farmer
Carr Alfred, farmer & carrier Hart Arthur, Dog inn Page James, farmer
602 SHIPDHAM. NORI:OLK. [KELLY'S
Pestell William, blacksmith Spooner Robert, Cricket Players P.H Ward William, farmer & eattle dealer,
Phillips Thomas, farmer Stagg Philip, The Ringers inn High House farm [letters are received
Rivett William, farmer & castrator Tash James, farmer through East Dare ham J
Rix Walter, farmer Tash Robert, farmer Watling William, horse dealer
Roberson Charle..<~, beer retailer Taylor John, farmer Watson James, basket maker
Rose Edmund, wheelwright & farmer Tench William Henry, registrar of birtb11 Watson Wesley, tailor .
Saunders Silvester, butcher & farmer & deaths,Shipdham sub-district, clerk Whitred 'Robert, hurdle maker
Seaman William, farmer, Old ball to the burial board & parish clerk "Woodcock William, farmer
Skipper Daniel, King's Head P.H Tennant Matthew, bricklayer Wyett Alberb Ernest, baker
Skipper l''rederick, harness maker Thacker Matthew. Crown P.H Wyett Elijah, baker
Skoulding Wm. Geo.chemist&seedsman Vince William, Plough P.H. & tailor Youngs Rt. Swan P.H. & machine owner
Spelman George Henry, boot maker Watling Frederick, boot maker ·
'
SHOTESHAM ALL SAINTS (or UIGH SHOTESHAM) East Greenwich Hospital, called the Norfolk Hospital, under
is a village and parish 3 miles south-east from Swainstborpe the charity of Henry Howard, Earl of Northampton, left in
station on the Ipswich and Norwich section of the Great the reign of James I. but a new scheme for the administra-
Eastern railway, and 6 souLh frdrn Norwich, in the Southern tion of this charity having been framed by the Charity
division of the county, ~wainsthorpe petty sessional Commissioners, a hospital was erected here in 1885 for 8 poor
division, Henstead hundred and union, Norwich county men, each of whom receives 12s. a week, with allowance
court district, rural deanery of Brooke western division, for washing, light and fuel, and 6 others residing in the
archdeaconry of Norfolk and diocese of Norwich. The parish receive ros. weekly; in default of candidates from
church of All Saints is a building of flint, in the Perpendicu- Shotesham, vacancies may be filled from Castle Rising and
'a.r style, consisting of chancel, nave, south porch and an Rnngay. Robert Fellowf'-B esq. J.P. and D.L. of Shotesham
embattled western tower containing 5 bells: there are 150 Park, is lord of the manor and chief landowner. The soil is
sittings. The register dates from the year 1538. The living sand and clay: subsoil; sand, gravel and clay. The chief
is a vicarage with that of Shotesham St. Mary annexed, crops are wheat, oats, barley and turnips. The area is
average tithe-rent-cb.arge £443• joint gross yearly value 1,642 acres; rateable value, £2,258 ; tho population in 1891
£483, including 74~ acres of glebe, and residence, in the was 363.
gift of Robert Fellowes esq. and held since 1838 by the Rev. Parish Clerk, Charles White.
Charles Fellowes B. A. o(St, John's College, Cambridge, who PosT OFFICE.-Henry William Kahler, sub-postmaster.
is also rector of Mantby and .r.P. Norfolk. A Free Methodist Letters arrive by mail cart from Norwich at 7 a.m.; dis-
chapel was erected here in 1879. .The charities include a patched at 5.20 p.m. The nearest money order office is
sum of £nxJ left by D. Brown in r884, the interest to be at Hempnall & telegraph office at Long Stratton
given away to the poor on tho first Sunday in each new year, National School (mixed), built in 1874 by Robert Fellowes
also a sum of £4 15s. a year left for the poor by T, Bransby esq. for 130 children; average attendance, 100; Mrs.
in .1730, and £3 left in 1711 by Eliza Bayspool for Mary Ann White, mistress; Miss Adela Hemnall, infants'
schooling six poor children, besides £4 12s. for the poor. mistress
This parish, together with that of Shotesham St_ Mary, had CARRIERS TO NORWICH.-George Fennell & Waiter Gooch,
formerly the privilege of sending eight poor people to the wed. & sat
Fellowes Rev. Charles B.A., J.P. Vicarage Fennell George, carrier Mitchell Abigail (Mrs.), shopkeeper
Merry Francis William Gooch Waiter, carrier - Parfitt Robert, butcher & farmer
Hazell Geoffrey Charles, farmer Sayer Jamcs, vermin destroyer
COMMERCIAL. Hazell Harriett (Mrs.), Crown P.H Webb Robt. builder,contractor&bricklyr
Boyce George,plumber,painter & glazier Houghton Chas.Christr. Duke'sHead inn White Charles William, farmer
Brown Henry, agent for Robert Fellowes Johnson John, shopkeeper "WhitingSaml. market gardener & farmer
esq. D.L., J.P Kahler Hy .Wm.grocer&drapr. Post office Wicks George Robert, shopkeeper
Bullen&Mitchell,wheelwrights&carpntrs Martins George, beer retailer Wilson Philip, grocer & draper
Dunt Robert, blacksmith Merry Francis William, surgeon
SHOTESHAM ST. MARY (or Low SHOTESHA.M) Charles Fellowes B. A.. of St. John's College, Cambridge, who
comprises the parishes of St. Mary, St. Martin and St. is also rector of Mautby and J.P. Norfolk. The poor of this
Botolph, is 2 miles south-east from Swainsthorpe station on place share in some of the charities belonging to Shotesham
the Ipswich and Norwich .section of the Great Eastern All Saints, £4 yearly having been left by T. Bransby in
railway and 6 miles south from Norwich, in the Southern 1730, £2o yearly by Eliza Bayspool, in 17II, and £so by
division of the county, Swainsthorpe petty sessional division, Miss A. Fellowes in 1817 to be invested iu £3 per. Cent
Hcnstead hundred and union, Norwich county court district, Stock. Shotesham Park is the beautiful seat of Robert
rural deanery of Brooke western division, archdeaconry of Fellowes esq. J.P., D.L. lo:rd of the manor and principal,
Norfolk and diocese of Norwich. The churches of St. landowner; the mansion, a modern building of white brick,
Martin and t:-lt. Botolph have been in ruins for several stands in a park of about 400 acres, well wooded, and
centuries. The church of St. Mary is a small building of traversed by the river Tas. The old hall, still standing, is
flint, in the Perpendicular style, consisting of chancel, nave, now a farm house. The soil is of a good mixed description;
south porch and a western tower with pinnacles, containing subsoil, clay and loam. The chief crops are wheat, oats,
I bell; the church was restored in 1881, at tho cost of barley and turnips. The area is x,go5 acres; rateable
Uobert Fellowes esq. and affords 120 sittings. Tbe register value, £2,705; the population in 1891 was 236.
dates from the year 1687. The benefice of St. Botolpb was Parish Clerk, WiUiam White.
united to the vicarage of St. Mary soon after the Reforma.
tion and subsequently the united living, together with the Letters from Norwich, through Shotesham All Saints, arrive
rectory of St. Martin, were annexed to Shotesham All at 7.30 a.m. Hempnall is the nearest money order office
Saints; average tithe rent-charge £443, joint gross yearly &_telegraph office is at Long Stratton
value £483, including 74~ acres of glebe, in the gift of The children of this place attend the school at Shotesham
Robert Fellowes esq. and held since 1838 by the Rev. All Saints
Fellowes Charles Arthur, White house Beck William Moore, head gardener Reynolds William, farm bailiff to Robert
Fellowes Robt. D.L., J.P. Shotesham pk Hazell Charles, farmer, Old hall Fellowes esq
Crane William, corn miller (water & King George, ·gamekeeper to Robert Twite Alfred, bricklayer
steam) & merchant, Shotesham mill; Fellowes esq Winter Henry Disbrowe, farmer
& farmer, Old Church farm Mitchell William, carpenter

SHOULDHAM is a parish and pleasant village, 5 miles priator, and died 14 Nov. 18Bo: there are 200 sittings. The
south-east from Magdalen Road junction station on the Ely register dates from the year 1656. The living is a vicarage,
and Lynn section of the Great Eastern railway, 6 north-east consolidated with that of Shouldbam Thorpe, average tithe
from Downham and 9 south from Lynn, in the South- rent- charge £75, joint net yearly value£ 270, including 4 acres
Western division of the county, Clackclose hundred and of glebe, with residence, in the gift of Thomas Leigh Hare esq.
petty sessional division, Downham union and county court and held since 1850 by the Rev. William Maxey Alien M.A..
district, rural deanery of Finch am, arch deaconry of Norfolk of Christ s College, Cambridge, and surrogate. There are Wes-
a.ncl diocese of Norwich. The church of All Saints is a leyan and Primitive Methodist chapels. The charities are of
building-vf flint and stone, in the Early English, Decorated £35 yearly value,derived from poor's land and fuel allotment;
and Perpendicular styles, consisting of chancel, south tran- this sum has, however, been absorbed in a drainage scheme,
sept, n1.ve, south porch and an embattled western tower and the tax on the land is so high that no rent will be avail-
containing 6 bells : there is a marble monument to Thomas able till 1940. Two fairs for cattle are held yearly, on Sep-
.Alien 83q. d. x841 : the church was restored and re-seated tember 19th and October IIth. Thomas Leigh Hare esq.
in 1870, the chancel being at the same time rebuilt by the M.P., IJ.L. of Stow Hall, near Downham, is lord of the
late S r Thomas Hare hart. who was patron and lay impro- manor, and Arthur Gordon Catton-Watson esq. of Reigate,
DIRECTOR X'.] NORFOLK. SIDES'IRAND. 603
Sunreyl and Miss Springett, of Ripon, are the principal patched at 10 a.m. The nearest telegraph office is at
landowners. The soil is loam and clay ; subsoil, chalk. The Downham
chief crops are wheat, barley, roots a!ld turnips. The area National School (mixed), built in x866 & enlarged in 1872,
is 3,888 acres; rateable value, £3,o6o; the population in for 200 children; average attendance, 102 ; Miss Hannab.
x8gt wa~ 524. Pickersgill, mistress
Parish Clerk, John Wa.ller. CARRIERS To : -
Pos'l' & M. 0~ Q .. , 8. B. & Annuity & Insurance Office.- DowNHAM-Fountain pikett, fri
Arthur Hipperson, receiver. Letters arrive from Down~ LYNN-Frederick Preston, tues. & sat. ; Fountain Piket.t,
ham at 8 a.m. ; dispatched at 5·45 p.m. ; sunday, dis~ tues. & sat ,
Alien Rev. William Maxey M.A. [vicar Dane Robert, bricklayer Lemmon Charles, farmer, Colts hall
& surrogate], Vicarage Drake Oliver George, blacksmith · Musson Wm. Edward Coul!!on L.R.C.P.
Green James, Melrose house Dye Frederick, grocer & draper Land. surgeon
Lemmon Charles, Colts hall Dye Harry, carpenter Pikett Daniel, butcher
Musson William Edward Coulson Easton Wm. Jn. saddler & harness ma Pikett Fountain, carrier
Watson William Rdwards William, farmer, Abbey Pointer William, jun. butcher
. COMMERCIAL. ' Fendley James, Rampant Horse P.H. & Pointer William, sen. farmer
Blackburn John James, butcher bricklayer Pollard John Henry, baker & farmer
Bowen Robert, butcher & shopkeeper Gilbert Ilenry, Chequers P.H PrestonCharlotte(Mrs.),King'sArms P.H
Carter Robert,farmer & machine owner, Green James, farmer, Silverwell farm Preston Edmund, butcher & shopkeeper
Heath farm Green Jame..'!, oilman Preston Frederick, carrier & overseer
Cliftoh Daniel, miller (wind), farmer & Hawes Harriet (Miss), Victory P.H Starke John, farmer
tax collector Hipperson Arthnr, grocer, draper & Stecles Robert, wheelwright
Coe Henry, higgler postmaster Trundle Henry, farmer
Cross George Frederick, surgeon Hovells Robert, shoe maker Witherington Archer,- machine owner
SHOULDHAM THORPE is a parish and straggling held since 1850 by the Rev. William Maxey Allen M.A. of
village, 4 miles south-east from Magdalen Road junction ·Christ's College, Cambridge, and surrogate. There are
station on the Ely and Lynn section of the Great Eastern Primitive Methodist and Methodist New Connexion chapels.
railway, 5 north-east from Downham and g south from Lyon, In the parish are brick and tile works. The charities
in the l:!outh-Western division of the county, Clackclose amount to £go yearly value. Thomas Leigh Hare esq. M.P .•
hundred and petty sessional division, Downham union and D. I •. is lord of the manor and principal landowner. The soil
county court district, rm-al deanery of Fincham, archdea- is rich loam ; subsoil, clay and sand. The chief crops are
conry of Norfolk and diocese of Norwich. The church of wheat, barley, mangolds and turnips. The area is 1,430
the Virgin Mary is a small building of stone, in the Norman, acres; rateable value, £r,s66; the population in 189r was
Decorated and Perpendicular styles, consisting of chancel, 241. ·
nave and an open western turret containing 2 bells: the PosT 0FFICE.-Samuel Dane, receiver. Letters from Down-+
ancient tower fell in 1730: there are 130 sittings. The ham arrive at 8 a. m. ; dispatched at 6.Io p.m. & on sun-
register dates from the year rsss. The living is a vicarage, days at IO a.m. The nearest money order office is at
'annexed to that ~f. Shouldham All Saints, av~rage _tithe Shouldham & telegraph office at Downham
rent-charge £75• JOint net yearly value £270, mcludmg 4
acres of glebe, in the gift of Thomas Leigh Hare esq. M.P. and. The children of this place attend the school at Shouldham
Alflatt Goodens, brick maker & farmer, Easter Thomas, farmer 1 Gamble John, farmer & landowncrp
Fodderstone gap Flatt · William Henry Townley, Two 1 Manor house
Bowen George, shoe maker Brewers P.H. & builder, contractor, 1 Lancaster George, farm bailiff to John
Rrackenbury William Thorpe, farmer blacksmith, wheelwright, agricultural j Gamble esq •
Britton John, farmer & machine owner machinist, farmer & assistant over- Muffett Maria (Miss), poultry dealer
Creed Alfred, Gate P.H. & shoe maker seer, Fodderstonc gap Pollard Robert Thomas, miller (wind)
Dane Sl. builder & contractor, Post office Go ss J on a than, farmer
SHROPHAM is a parish, 3 miles north-west from Eccles Methodist chapel, built in x884. The rent of 35A. IR. 39P.
Hoad and 3 north from llarling Road stations, both on the left in trust to the vicar, churchwardens and overseers for
Tlletford and .Norwieh section, and 3 south-east from Stow tlle poor, is applied in relief of the poor .,_tes, and the pro~
Bcdon station on tho Thetford and Swaffham line of the ceeds of the fuel allotment of sB acres, now (1892) amount~
Ureat Eastern railway, 5 south-west from Attleborough and ing to £37 ros. are distributed annually among the poor in
10 north-east from Thetford, in the Mid division of the coals. Shropham Hall, the residence of Charles Trnston
county, Wayland union, Guiltcross and Shropham petty Master esq. is a beautiful modern mansion, standing in a.
sessional division, hundred of Shtopham, county court dis- park of so acres. The trustees of the Hemswortb family
trict of Attleborougb and Watton, rural deanery of Rock- who are lords of the first manor, and the trustees of the
land, archdeaconry of Norfolk and diocese of Norwich. This Great Hospital, Norwich, who are lords of the other manors.
village gives its name to the hundred, and was formerly a are also the principal landowners. The so~l is var1ous ; sub~
town of some importance. The church of St. Peter is a soil, various. The chief crops are wheat., barley and oats.
plain building of flint with stone dressings, in the Perpen- The area is 2,678 acres ; rateable value, _£2,456; the popu-
dicular style, consisting of chancel, nave, north aisle, south lation in 18gx was 340.
porch and an embattled western tower containing a clock Parish Clerk, George Hunt.
and 5 bells : the east window is partly filled with stained
glass: the north aisle was restored in x86 7 , and there are PosT OFFICE.-Charles Dack, receiver. Letters arrive
250 sittings. The register dates from the year :r 723 . The through Thetford at 7· IS a. m. ; dispatched at 6.45 p.m. ;
living is a. vicarage, average tithe rent-charge £ 211 , net sunday, 10.40 a. m·. ~reat Hockham is the nea_rest money
yearly value £r 3 I, including 45! acres of glebe, in the gift order ~ telegraph office. Postal orders are Issued, but
of the triU!tees of the Great Hospital, Norwich, and held · not paid
since 1886 by the Rev. George William Watson M. A. of National School (mixed), erected in 1868, for SB children;
Corpus Christi college, Cambridge. There is a Primitive 1 average attendance, 45; Mrs. Sarah Dack, mistress
Master Charles Truston, Shror,hJ.m hall Barrett Albert, farmer Grcgory Thomas, blacksmith
Thotpe Rev. William Smyth B. A. [in- Dack Charles, shoe maker & assistant Halls John, farmer
cumbent of Breckles & Tompson] overseer1 Post office Harvey Arthur, fa...,rmmer
Watson Rev. George 'Vm. M.A. [vicar] Davey Robert Reeve,farmer&veterinary Hunt George, bricklayer
COMMERCIAL. surgeon, Mill farm La.cey John, farmer
Allen & Nobbs, grocers Eke Everit, Three Horse Shoes P.H. Mann !<'airman Jsph. farmer, Manor ho
Alien George, White Horse P.H & blacksmith Rackham Frank, farmer, Church farm
Barker John, farmer, Grange farm Goddard Edward, farmer Sayer John, corn miller (wind & steam)
SIDESTRAND (or SYDERSTRAND) is a parish on the south porch and a. western tower, circular at the base and
coast, 3 miles south-east from Cromer stations on the Great octagonal above, and containing 3 bells: the stained east
Eastern and Eastern and Midlands railways, and 7 north window is a memorial to the late John Gurney Hoare csq.
from North Walsham, in the Northern division of the d. 1875, and to Caroline his wife, d. 1878 : the tower of the
county, North Erpingham hundred and petty sessional old church still stands near the edge of the cliff, over which
division, Erpingham union, North Walsham county court part of the churchyard wall has fallen, owing to the slipping
district, rural deanery of Repps, archdeaconry of Nor folk down of the face of the cliff. The register dates from the
and diocese of Norwich. The church of St. Michael, rebuilt year 1558. The living is a rectory, average tithe rent-
by S. G. Hoare esq. M.P. and consecrated in 18Bx, is an edi- charge £8o, net yearly value £74,including 3i acres of glebe. •
fice in the Early English style, constructed in part with the in the gift of the Duchy of Lancaster and Samuel Hoare esq.
materials of the old church, and consists of chancel, nave, M.P. alternately, and held since 1871 by the Rev. Fors~er
604 SIDESTRAND. NORFOLK. [KELLY'S
George Simpson B.A. of St. Edmund Hall, Oxford, who is also ' turnips, barley and grass. The area is 445 acres of land ;
rector of aud resides at Overstrand: the Rev. Robert Rag- rateable value, /.,"6r2 ; the population ii1 x88x was 158.
land Meadows M. A. is curate, and also resides at Overstrand. Parish Clerk, William Henden.
The St. Michael's Heading Room has a library of 300 volumes, WALL LETTER Box cleared at 9.40 a. m. & 5.40 p.m. Letters
and is supported by Mrs. S. Hmn·e. Samuel Hoare esq. through Cromer arrive at 9 a.m. & 12.30 p.m. The
M.A., M.P., J.P. of Cliff House, Cromer, is lord of the manor neare..'lt money order & telegraph office is at Overstrand
and the principal landowner. The soil is light heath; sub- The children of this place attend the Overstrand & Triming-
soil, brick earth and gravel. The chief crops are wheat, ham scb.ools
Edwards Major Henry Herbert (Royal HendenWilliam,manufacturing chemist "St. Michael's Reading Room & Library
Body Guard; late Royal Welsh I<'usi- (pigments expressly prepared for (William Henden, sec)
Eers), The Highlands coloring & vulcanizing india rubber), Starling John Henry, farmer
Balls Robert Marshall, farmer St. Michael's works Underdown Waiter Lewis, steward to S.
Hewitt John, farmer, & furnished apart- Lee Harriot (Mrs.), farmer Hoare esq. Church farm (furnished
ments · MooreElizabeth(Mrs. ),farmr.Grove frm apartments overlooking the sea)
SIZELAND (or SinAND) is a village and parish, the gift of and held since 1868 by the Rev. William Willes
bounded on the north by the river Chet, 5 miles south from Hobson B.A. of St. John's College, Cambridge. The parish
Buckenham station on theN orwich and Lowestoft section of lies in two manors, viz. those of Charles and Brooke ; Lord
the Great Eastern railway, 1} west from Loddon and ro Berners, who is lord of the former, and Viscount Canterbury,
south-east from Norwich, in the Southern division of the lord of the latter, Wilson Gilbert esq. and Capt. Robert B.
county, Loddon hundred and Loddon and Clavering petty Clarke, of Stuston, Suffolk, are the principal landowners.
sessional division and union, Norwich county court district, The soil is light mixed; subsoil, sand, gravel and clay. The
rural deanery of Brooke, western division, archdeaconry of chief crops are wheat, oats and barley. The area is 466
Norfolk and diocese of Norwich. The church of St. Mary ill acres, rated at /.,"450; the population in r88r was 71.
a small but ancient edifice of stone, with a thatched roof, Parish Clerk, Christopher Spalding.
and consists of chancel, nave and a square wooden tower
. containing one bell, and affords Bo sittings: adjoining the Letters through Norwich, via Brooke. Loddon is the nearest
church are some ruins of a chapel formerly attached to the money order & telegraph office
church. The register dates from the year r584. The living This place is included in the Loddon United School Board
is a rectory, average tithe rent-charge /.,"ro1, gross yearly district, formed in r88o; the children attend the school
value £143, including 18 acres of glebe, with residence, in there
Hobson Rev. William Willes B. A. [rector] Blunderfield Henry Page, farmer Warmoll Alfred, farm bailiff to William
Baldry Robert, farm bailiff to Wilson Cook John, farmer Carver esq
Gilbert esq. Sizeland lodge Kiddle Joseph William, farmer
SKEYTON is a scattered parish, 3~ miles east from of Downing College, Cambridge. There are Wesleyan and
Buxton-Lammas station on the East Norfolk section of the Wesleyan Reform chapels. The rector is lord of the manor
Great Eastern railway, 11 north from Norwich and4south- of Skeyton, and Genrge Leggett esq. of Pulham Hall,
west from North \Yalsham, in the Northern division of the Pulham St. Mary Magdalen, lord of the manor of Whitwell
county, South Erpingham hundred and petty sessional divi- Hall. The Rev. I<'rancis William Jex-Blake M.A. of Swanton
sion, Aylsham union and county court district, rural deanery Hall, Godfrey Burr esq. the trustees of the late John Moore,
of Ingworth, archdeaconry and diocese of N orwicb. The and George Leggett esq. are the principallandowners. The
church of All Saints, standing on an eminence, is a building soil is mixed; subsoil, sand and gravel. The chief crops
of flint with stone dressings, in the Gothic style, consisting are wheat, oats and barley. The area is 1,264 acres; rate-
of chancel, nave, south porch and a low western tower con- able value, £r,943; the population in 1891 was 277.
taining one bell : a new east window was placed in the Parish Clerk, Henry Bird.
church in r887 at a \cost of about /.,"r4o: there are 185 sit-
tings. The register dates from the year 1796. The living Letters received from Norwich, via Swanton Abbott, arrive
is a rectory, tithe rent-charge L 343 , average 1.," 266, net yea::-ly at 7.30 a.m. The nearest money order & telegraph offices
value £2oo approximately, including 9i acres of glebe and are at Buxton-Lammas & North Walsham
residence, in the gift of the trustees of the late Sir Edward National School (mixed), erected in 185o, for 110 children;
Henry Gervase Stracey hart. J.P. of Plumstead Hall, and average attendance, 70; Miss Jaretta Margaret Daug-
beld since r882 by the Rev. Robert Edward Gaye M.A. herty, mistress
Burr Lawrence Hubbard Thomas, Black Horse P.H Peggs Christmas, shopkeeper
GayeRev.Rt.Edwd.M.A. trector],Rectry Hylton Keziah (Mrs.), farmer Pilgrim James, shoe maker
Lacey John Lake Charles, farmer Pilgrim James, jun. cattle dealer
Littlewood Charles John, Whit well hall Littlewood Charles John, farmer, Pitcher James, shopkeeper
Whitwell hall Pratt H.obert, grocer
COMMERCIAL, N ewland George, farmer Rump James, farmer
Beck Isaac, farmer Nixon Charles, farmer Slaughter Isaac, brick, tile & drain
Burr Lawrence, farmer & landowner Page William, farmer, highway sur- pipe maker
Farrow John, farmer veyor & assistant overseer Spinks John, Goat P.H
SLOLEY is a village and parish not far from the Norwich 1 year r681, and is in excellent preservation. The living is a
and North Walsha.m high road, r mile south from Worstead discharged rectory, average tithe rent-charge £r9o, net
station on the Cromer branch of the Great Eastern railway, yearly value £2oo, including 24 acres of glebe, in the gift of
and 5 south from North Walsham, in the Eastern division of James Sewell Neville esq. and held since 1891 by the Rev.
the county, Tunstead and Happing petty sessional division, Thomas South Jagg M.A. of Christ's College, Cambridge.
Tunstead hundred, Smallburgh union, North Walsham A sum of £3o, the rent of 21 acres of land, is distributed
county court district, rural deanery of Waxham Tunstead among the poor. 'l'he chief part of the land belongs to
division, arcbdeaconry of Norfolk and diocese of Norwich.· James Sewell Neville esq. ll.A., l.P. of Sloley House, who is
The church of St. Bartholomew is an ancient building of also lord of the manor. The soil is mixed; subsoil, sand
flint, in the Early English style, consisting of chancel, nave, and gravel. The chief crops are wheat, turnips, hay and
aisles, south porch and a western tower containing one barley. The area is 718 acres; rateable value, /.,"1,234;
bell: the stone font bears representations of The Seven the population in 1891 was 270.
Sacraments of the Catholic Church : in the chancel is a Parish Clerk, Samuel Cole.
monument to the Rev. William Gunn B. D. 57 years rector, LETTER Box cleared at 2.30 p.m. Letters through Norwich,
and another to the Rev. Benjamin Cubitt M. A. 11 years via Coltishall, arrive at 7.30 a. m. Worstead is the nearest
rector, d. 25 April, 1852 : there is a memorial to the Rev. money order & telegraph office
James White M.A. 35 years rector, d. 9 March, x885: the School (mixed), built in 1874 by the Rev. James White M.A.
church was thoroughly repaired in r84r, at a cost of about late rector, for So children; average attendance, 6r; Miss
£8oo, and has 250 sittings. The register dates from the Ada Earnshaw, mistress
Jagg Rev. Thomas South M~. [rector] Burton Walter, Maid's Head P.H Ribbands William, farmer [letters
Kerrison :Miss Cole Samuel, shoe maker & parish clerk through Worstead]
Ne'rille James Sewell B.A.,J.P. Sloley ho Flowerday James, farmer Rounce Thomas, vermin destroyer
COMMERCIAL. Newman William, farmer Spanton Margaret (Mrs.), shopkeeper
Andrews Robert, shopkeeper N ockolds Thomas, pig dealer Steward William, farmer
August William, farmer Pointer George, market gardener Suffiing William, thatcher
Bambridge Robert, carpenter Rayner l{obert Alfred, blacksmith 'fingey George, farmer, Hall farm

union, 3 miles from Worstead station on the North Walsham


I
SMALLBURGH is a village and parish and head of a branch of the Great Eastern railway, 2! south-west from
Stalham station on the Eastern and Midlands railway, and
DIRECTORY. J NORFOLK. . SNETTERTON. 605
si south-east from North Walsham, on the navigable river ton, Edingthorpe, Felmingham, Happisbtugb,Hempstead-
Ant, which is crossed by Wayford Bridge, connecting this with-Eccles, Hickling, Honing, Horning, Horsey-next-the-
parish with Stalham, in the Eastern division of the county, Sea, Hoveton St. John, Hoveton St. Peter, Ingham,
hundred and petty sessional division of Tunstead and Rap- lrstead, Lessingham, Ludham, Neatishead, North Wal-
ping, North Walsbam county court district, rural deanery sham, Palling-near-the-Sea, Paston, Potter Heigham,
of Waxham Tunstead division, archdeaconry of Norfolk and Ridlington, Sco-Ruston, Sloley, Smallbnrgh, Stalham,
diocese of Norwich. The church of St. Peter, approached Sutton, Swafield, Tnnstead, Walcott, Waxham,Westwickt
from the Yarmouth road through an avenue of trees, is a Witton, Worstead. The population of the union in 189I
.small but ancient building of flint., brick and stone, consist- was 17,643; area, 66,859 acres; rateable value, £103,429
ing of chancel, nave, south porch and a western bell cot, Clerk to the Guardians & Assessment & School Attendance
.containing one bell: the chancel was restored by the present Committees, Fairfax Davies, North Walsham
rector in the year 1885, under the direction of Mr. H. J. Treasurer, Henry .Birkbeck, Norwich
Green, architect, of Norwich : the church affords 300 sit- Relieving & Vaccination Officers, Rapping district, Lewis
tings. The register dates from the year 1562. The living Myhill, Ingham; Tnnstead district, Geo. Ward, Worstead
is a rectory, average tithe rent-charge £318, net yearly Medical Olllcers (who are also public vaccinators, except A.
value £288, including 28 acres of glebe and residence, in Crisp), Horsey district, Anthony Crisp, Martham; Lud-
the gift of the Bishop of Norwich, and held since 1881 by ham district, James Alexander Gordon, Ludham; North
the Rev. Henry Thomas Griffith B.A. of Pembroke College, Walsham district, Augustus Charles Morton, North Wal-
Oxford. There are Reformed Wesleyan and Primitive sham; Smallb~h district, Alexander Walker Knox,
Methodist chapels. The fuel allotment is 43 acres in extent. Smallburgh; Stalham district, Norman Hendrie Walker
"There are two manors in this parish; Sir Henry Jacob M.B. Stalham
Preston bart. J. P. of Hill Hou.'ie, N orthrepps, is lord of the Public Vaccinator, Horsey district, J. A. Cordon, Ludham
manor of Smallburgh, and the trustees of the late John Sea- Superintendent Registrar, Fairfax Davies, North Walsham;
man Postle lords of the manor of Smallburgh Catts with deputy, Henry R. Barnard, North W alsham
Prusbntts, and principal landowners. The soil is a rich Registrars of Births & Deaths, Ludham sub-district, J. A.
1oam ; subsoil, sand, clay and gravel. The chief crops are Gordon, Ludham; Smallburgh sub-district, Alexander
wheat, oats and barley. The area is 1,247 acres; rateable Walker Knox, Smallburgh; Stalham sub-district, Lewis
value, £2,244; the population in r8gr was 444, including Myhill, Ingham; deputy, Thomas A. Daniells, Stalham ;
72 officers and inmates in~the workhouse. North Walsham sub-district, George Ward, Worstead;
Parish Clerk, B1mjamin Lambert deputy, Thomas B. Ward, Worstead ·
PosT 0FFICE.-Edward Gibson, receiver. Letters received Registrars of Marriages, Henry Andrews, Stalham; deputy,
from Norwich at 6 a.m.; dispatched at 4·5 p.m. week John Batchelor, Stalham; Frederick Gregory, North
days & sundays. The nearest money order & telegraph Walsham; deputy, Samuel Peeke, North Walsham
office is at Worstead. Postal orders are issued, but not Workhouse, a building of brick, built to hold 8oo inmates,
paid Wm. Cooper, master; Rev. John Bartholomew Vale M.A.
'COUNTY MAGISTRATES FOR TUNSTEAD & IJAPPING PETTY chaplain; Alexander Walker Knox, medical officer; Mrs.
SESSIONAL DIVISION, ACTING AT SM.~LLBURGH. Cooper, matron ; Miss Hannah Money, schoolmistress
Cubitt Edward George esq. Honing hall, Norwich RuRAL SANITARY AuTHORITY.
Neville James Sewell esq. Sloley house, Norwich Meets at the Union House, Smallburgh, if necessary, at each
Preston Sir Henry Jacob, bart. Hill house, Northrepps fortnightly meeting (tues.) of the Guardians at 10.30 a. m
Rudd .Ash esq. East Ruston, Norwich Clerk, Fairfax Davies, North Walsham
.Slipper Thomas esq. The Hall, Bradestone Treasurer, Henry Birkbeck, Norwich
Taylor Henry Morse esq. The Rookeries, Dilham, Norwich Medical Officer of Health, Hugh Taylor, of Coltishall
Clerk, J. S. Empson, North WaL.,ham Inspector of Nuisances, John Hall, Horning
Petty sessions are held here every alternate tuesday at the ScHoor, ATTENDANCE CoMMITTEE.
Poor's House, at I I a.m. For list of places in the divi- Meets monthly at Union House, Small burgh, on tuesday,
sion, see North W alsham at ro.3o a. m.
SxALLBURGH UNION. Clerk, Fairfax Davies
Board day, every alternate tuesday, at the workhouse, .Attendance Officers, Lewis Myhill, Ingham & George
at ro.3o a. m. Ward, Worstead
The following places are in Smallburgh union :-Ashman- National School (mixed), erected in 1855, for 70 children;
haugh, Bacton, Barton Turf, Becston St. Lau:rence, Brad- average attendance, 59 ; Miss Elizabeth Sanders, mistress
field, llrunstead, Catfield, Crostwight, Dilham, East Rus- CARRIER TO NoRWICH-John Barber, wed. & sat
Griffith Rev. Henry Thos. B. A. Rectory Gibson Edward, post office 1 Long Eliza (Mrs.), beer ret. & shopkpr
Knox Alexander Walker M.D Hall Arthur, butcher Long James, Crown P.H
McFarland William James M.R.C.S. & Harmer Benjamin, farmer McFarland William James M.R.c.s. &
L.R.C.P.Edin Harmer Joseph, farmer L.R.c.P.Edin. physician & surgeon
Jones Edward, beer retailer Postle John Seaman, farmer & land-
COMMERCIAL. Knights Henry, beer retailer & carter owner, The Hall
Baldwin Robert, bricklayer & brick ma Knox Alexander Walker M.D. surgeon, Silcock Joseph, farmer, Broad farm
Bristow John, plumber & glazier & medical officer of the workhouse, Snelling George Samuel, boot maker
Durrell Frank William, farmer medical officer & public vaccinator & Stearman Walter Marler,grocer, draper
Edwards Robert, carpenter regtstrar of births & deaths, Small- & general outfitter
Empson George, blacksmith & farmer burgh district, Smallburgh union Tuck Samuel Primrose, wheelwright
I<'isk William, vermin destroyer Lambert Charles, farmer Yax:ley Mary .Ann (Mrs.), shopkeeper
GREAT and LITTLE SNAREHILL (formerly brick, r~
miles east of Thetford, stands in a fine park, and
extra-parochial) form a parish on the south and east of Thet- is the residence of George Evans esq. Miss Bux:ton, of
ford, in the Southern division of the county, Guiltcross hun- Shad well Court, Rushford, is lady of the manor and sole
dred, Thetford union and county court district, and Guilt- landowner. The soil is sandy ; subsoil, chalky. The chief
cross and Shropham petty sessional division, on the borders crops are wheat, rye, barley and turnips. The acrl'-age is
of Suffolk. There are many large tumuli in the neighbour- included in Rnshford parish; rateable value, £764; the
hood, supposed to indicate the site of a battle-field, where population in rB9r was 54·
St. Edmund, King of the East Angles, was defeated and Letters through Thetford, the nearest money order & tela-
taken prisoner by the Danes under Ivar, who caused him to graph office, arrive at 7.30 a.m. by messenger
be fastened to a. tree and shot to death with arrows, 2oth This parish is included in Thetford United School Board
November, 870. Snarehill House, a modern mansion of district, & the children attend Thetford school
Evans George, Snare hill house
Coote Henry, second gamekeeper
I
Haysman George, head gamekeeper to Watson Thomas, farm bailiff to Messrs.
George Evans esq James Cronshey & Sons
SNETTERTON is a parish and irregular village, 2 nave, aisles, north and south porches and a western tower
miles north from Eccles Road station on the Thetford and containing 4 bells: the chancel, nave and aisles are Perpen-
N orwich section of the Great Eastern railway and 5 south- dicular and the porches Early English : the east window is
west from Attlcborough, in the Mid division of the county, stained and there is also a stained window at the west end,
Guiltcross and Shropham petty sessional division, Shrop- the gift of James Heeve esq. and a memorial window, erected
ham hundred, Wayland union, Attleborough county court at a cost of £xoo, to the Rev. the Hon. Edward Southwell
district, rural deanery of Rockland, archdeaconry of Nor- Keppel M.A. late rector and canon of Norwich, d. I Dec.
folk and diocese of Norwich. Here was anciently a church r884: the nave is divided from the chancel by a carved
dedicated to St. Andrew. The church of All Saints is a screen, painted and gilt: the church was thoroughly restored
structure of flint with stone dressings, consisting of chancel, at the sole expense of the late rector about 1857 and afforc·a
C, N. & s. 39

606 SNETTERTON. . NORFOLK.
200 sittings. The registe!' dates from the year 1669. The manor, and Sir Hugh Reeve BeeT"or bart. :M.B. ol King's
living itr a rectory, consolidated with that of Qaidenbam, College Chambers, London w c, are the principal landowners.
average tithe.rent.charge £498, joint net yearly value £317• The soil is various; subsoil, various. The chief crops are
including 124 acres of glebe, with, re;;idence, in the gift of wheat, barley and oats. The area is 2,189 acres : rateable
the Earl of Albemarlo P.c .• K.C.M.G. and held since 1883 by value, i,"r,517; the population in 1891 was 208.
the Hev. Edward Southwell Garnier M.A. of University Parish Clerk, William IIanton.
College, . Oxford, who resides at Quidenham ; the Rev.
Waiter Greswell B.A. of Keeble College, Oxford, has been Letters through Thetford; arrive at 7· 15 a. m. LETTER Box
curate in charge since 1888. 'l'here iil a Parish room, built near the church, cleared at 6.so p. m.; sunday, 10.35 a. m.
by the present rector in r88S at a cost of about £ 12 o. The East Harling is the nearest money.order & telegraph office
poor receive £3 a year from the Hall farm, left by an un. Voluntary School (mixed), built in 1826, for 45 children;
known donor. Lord Egerton of Tatton, who is lord of the average attendance, 39; Mrs. f:!aunders, mistress
'
Greswell Rev. Waiter :B.A, rcurate in Carter Edward David, shopkeeper Matthews- William, farm bailiff to
chargel Crook Daniel, builder, contractor & Arthur Gayford esq
Barker William, farmer wheelwright Saunders Frederick, farmer
. Brighton William, farmer . Day Harry, farm bailiff to Lord Eger- Smith GeorgeEdwd.farmr.& landownr
lJur)ingham George, farm bailiff toR. ton of Tatton j Webster William,beer retlr, & overseer
:Nott.idge esq. Edwards Francis, carpenter
SNETTISHAM is a village and parish on the coast road encasing the ·wash embankments ; the artificial rock-work
between Hunstanton and Lynn, with a station on the Lynn at Sandringham and other places was also constrncted with
and Hunstanton section of the Great Eastern railway, half stone from this place. Many objects of antiqnity, including
a mile south-west from the village, which is I I miles north· a number of celts, have been found here at different periods.
north-east from Lynn and roBl from London, in the North The Old Hall, the property of Sir Edward Green bart.
Western division of the county, Smithdon hundred, Smith· J. P. is a spacious mansion of brick in the Elizabethan style.
don and Brothercross petty sessional division, Docking The Xew Hall on Ken Hill, erected for Sir Edward Green
union, Lynn county · court district, rural deanery of hart. from the designs of Mr. J. J. Stevenson, architect, of
Heacham, archdeaconry of Norfolk and diocese of Norwich. London, is a mansion of carr stone, l!llrrounded by a park,
The church of St. Mary is a large and handsome building and commanding extensive views over the Wash, Lincoln-
of stone and tiint in the Perpendicular !'tyle, cono;;isting of shire, and the Sandringham woods. Hamon le Strange
· nave, aisles, south transept, west porch and an embattled esq. J.P. of Hunst.anton Hall, is lord of the manor and Sir
tower, originally central, but now, owing to the top of the Edward Green hart. J'.P. is the chief landowner. The soil
chancel, at the east end; it has a lofty spire, which may be is various, but chiefly of a good mixed character; subsoil,
seen for miles around and forms a land·mark for vessels at principally chalk. The chief crops are wheat, barley, tur-
sea, and contains 5 bells : the chancel is in ruins, and only nips and rnangolr1s. The area is 5,593 acres of land; rate-
a small portion covered with ivy is now standing: the prin- able value, £9,146; the population tn 1891 was 1,316.
cipal entrance is through the fineJy.groined west porch, SoUTHGATE is a hamlet, three quarters of a mile south-
above which is a window with tracery in the florid Gothic west from the church.
style, a.dorned with richly stained glass, chiefly the gift of Parish Clerk, John Bishop.
Mrs. Dor:\ Hill, and there are seveml memorial windows :
the curious font was restored in 1857, and the monuments PosT, M. O. & T. 0., S. B. & Annuity & Insurance Office.-
include one, with effigy, to Sir Wymond Carye, ob. I6I2; a Henry Ewer, postmaster. Letters from Lynn by mail
brass, with effigies, to John Cremer, ob. I6Io, Anne, his cart, arrive at 6.30 & ro.4oa.m.; dispatched at 10.40 a.m.
wife, and seven children ; and a brass effigy of a female, c. & 6 P· m. Money orders are granted & paid from 9 a. m.
I500 : below the transept are the vaults of the le Strange till 6 p. ~- The office is open on ~undays from 8 a.m. till
'family, by whom this part of the church is kept in repair:' IO a. m.' but the letter box remams Open
the church was restored in 1856 at a cost of £I,2oo, and· ScHOOLS:-
has 500 sittings: the churehyard was enlarged, and the I Hall's Grammar School, founded by Anthony Hall in t7oS
added portion consecrated, in r879. The register of mar. i & re·organized in '!875, is capable of holding so boarders;
. riages dates from 1754; burials and baptisms, from 1760. 1 formerly a certain number of foundationers were main-
• The 'living is a vicarage, average yearly value from tithe i tained, but under the new scheme this is abolished ; the
rent·charge, £83, with 73 acres of glebe and residence, in the : school is now governed by ro governors ; the Rev. Fred-
gift of and held since 1878 by the Rev. Henry Hugh Bridg· r erick William Henry Palmer M.A. of Lincoln College,
water M.A. of Magdalene College, Cambridge. Here are I Oxford, is the head m~steti
Wesleyan and Primitive Methodist chapels.. There is a. fuel! A School Board of s members was formed 20 Aug. 1873;
allotment of 17 acres. A Public Hall was erected in r89o ; William Thomas Brown, clerk to the board
it will hold 300 persons, ancl is let for concerts &c. A Board School (mixed & infants), erected in 1875 at a cost
statuw fair for hiring servants is held on the 12th of October. (including site) of over £2,000, for 150 boys & girls & 75
In the parish are chalk-pits, lime. kilns and three quarries infants; average attendance, I 35 boys & girls & 6o in-
of carr stone, two of which, of considerable depth, are owned fants : it is a handsome building of carr stone with Bath
and worked by Mr. G. Lawson; pebble stones and pieces of stone dressings ; a suitable house for the master adjoins
wood are frequently found embedded 30 feet from the sur. the school; Thomas Alfred Knight, master; Miss Adelina
face m the carr stone, which, on being taken from its bed, Ryding, mistress
is soft, but acquires great hardness when exposed to the air, Hail way 8tation, James Welham Rowe, station master
and is much used for building purposes; and great quanti-[ CARRIERS TO LYNN.-William Patrick & John Smith pass
ties have also been used by the. Estuary Company for through tues. thurs. & sat
Sayer Miss, Snnnyside 1 Folker Robert, shopkeeper
PRIVATE RESIDENTS. Spurgeon George, Buckingham villa French William, butcher & farmer
Barnard Miss, Park house Utting William Alfred, l'enrose villa Fromow William John, baker
Bridgwater Rev. Henry Hugh M.A. Wagg Mrs Gant Edward Herbert, Royal hotel
Vi(j:ara.ge White Miss Goodwin John Dennis, boot maker
Brown Leonard Campbell, Roselea COMMERCIAL. Gregory Catherine (Miss), shopkeeper
·Crisp Mrs. Stephen, Beech cottage Belding John,. baker Gutteridge Robert, pork butcher
Coldham Miss Benstead Mary Ann (Mrs.), baker Hall's Grammar School ·(Rev~ Fredk.
J Dalglish Robert Pullock Hosie Bray Benjamin, farmer, Southgate Wm. Hy. Palmer M.A. head master)
Eaton Capt. Frederick, The Snuggery Buck Herbert,Hose&CrownP.H.& farmr Hopkins John White L.R.C.P.Edin.,
. Francklan Mrs. Snettisham lodge BurrelJ James 'Crisp, beer :retailer L.F.P.s.olas. physician & sqr~eon, &
Green SirEd ward bart. .r. P. Ker. hill; Cbilvers & Sons, builders medical officer & public vaccinator,
& Ca.rlton club, London s w Clarke Robert, bird & animal preserver Snettisham district, Docking union,
· Green Edward Lycett J. P. Ken hill Corbyn George E. draper; hosier, I The Grange ·
Hamond Large William, Park villa hatter, outfitter, tailor, grocer, pto- HotchingWm. beer retailer&shopkeeper
Hopkins John White, The Grange vision & wine merchant · I Howlett Charles, hair dresser, per-
Lambert Miss, Hope house DalglishRobert Pullock Hosie,vet. surgn fum!'lr, stationer &c '
Lancaster William, White house Daw Geo. Ashley, butcher & cattle dlr Irwin Thomas Saville, chemist
Morton Major, Snettisham lodge Dodman William, chimney sweeper Johnson Mary (Miss), ladies' school,
. Page Mrs. The Cottage . Elyard Thomas, shoe maker The HolJies
Pslmer Rev. Frederick William Henry EwerD.&M.F,stationery&fancy repsitry Kendall Frederick, blacksmith'
H. A. (head master of Hall's Grammar Ewer Henry, stationer & postmaster Lack Austin, carpenter
school) Ewer M.Fanny (Miss), teacher of music, Lambert James & Sons, grocers, drapers
Rix William,. Hill side Chesnut house & ironmongers
Roughton Rev. Quintus B.A. [curate] Ewer William John, teacher of music Lambert Charles, farmer
DIRECTORY.] NORFOLK. EAST SO MER TON. 601
Lawson George & Son, saddlers & har- Matsell John, builder Snclling John Dunn, shopkeeper •
ness makers by appointments to Mattock Edwin Albert, grocer & draper Softley Thomas, beer retailer
H.R.H. the Prince of Wales & H.R.H. Meek J uhn & Sons, basket makers Tregunna John, beer retailer
the Princess of ""ales, machine band, Meek Herbert Albcrt, china & glass dlr Turner Charles, Compasses inn, & ·coal
rope & twine makers, oil, tar & Meek John Henry, baker & lime merchant
grease merchants Overton William George, watch & Twiudy John, boot maker
Lawson George, carr stone merchant & clock· maker, jeweller & optician ; Walker Waiter J. farmer, Octagon ho
quarry owner. 8ee advertisement jewellery of every deseription repaired Whitmore Charles, painter & plumber
Lemmon George, farmer, Hall farm clcctro plating gilding & engraving Woodbine Charles, boot maker
Lewis Henry, butcher & farmer Parsons James, farmer, The Beach Wright Richard, registrar of births &
Linford Fredk. painter & paperhanger ParsonsMary(Mrs. ),Plough inn,Sthgate deaths & vaccination officer for No. 2
Linford Susan (Mrs.), baker Pooley William, farmer Snettisham sub-district, & relieving
Margetts lly. plumber & paperhanger Potter John Tee, blacksmith officer for Western district, Docking
Marriott John & Robert, maltsters & Public Hall (George E. Corbyn,hon.sec) union, Victoria villa ·
merchants &c. Southgate; & at Lynn Pull William, dealer Wright William, miller (water)
Matsell Francis, wheelwright
GREAT SNORING is a parish and village on the river ist chapel. The charities comprise Pearson's, the rental of
Stdikey and on the road from Fakcnham to Wells, and about about 7 acres of land, now ( 1892) producing £14 yearly for
1 3~ miles north-by-east from Fakenham station on the Great bread, and Alvis's of £ <; 15s. per ann. Messrs. Paine and
Eastern and Eastern and Midlands railways and 2 south Brettell, of Chertsey, Surrey, who are lords of the manor,
from Walsingham station on the Dereham and Wells section the Rev, James Lee-Warner M.A. rector of BeckleJ", Rye,
of the Great Eastern railway, in the Northern division of Sussex, and Henry Lee-Warner esq . .J.P. of Walsingham
the county. Nort.h Greenhoe hundred and petty sessional Abbey, and Joseph Stonehewer Scott-Ch11d esq. M.A., J.P. of
division, Walsingham union and county court district, rural Thursford Hall, are the principal landowners. The soil is
. deanery of Walsingham, and archdeaconry and diocese of mixed; subsoil, clay. The land is cultivated on the usual
Norwich. The church of St. Mary the Virgin is an ancient four-course system. The area is 1,645 acres: rateable
building of flint and stone in the Decorated style, consisting value, £2,633; the population in r891 was 543, inclusive of
of chancel, nave, south aisle, south porch and a fine em- the 135 officers and inmates of the Walsingham Union
battled western tower containing one bell : the interior House.
retains some stone stalls, several monuments, and a mur<~.l Parish Clerk, John Francis.
tablet to the Rev. Christopher Stannard B.D. rector from PosT 0FFICE.-l<'rederick Cook, receiver. Letters are re-
1831 : there are 200 sittings. The register dates from the ceived through Fakenham at 8.20 a.m. Box: closed at
-year rs6o. , The living is a rectory with that of Thursford 4.20 p.m. The nearest money order & telegraph office is
annexed, joint average yearly value from tithe rent- at Walsingham
charge, £654, with 16 acres of glebe, and residence at each Walsingham Union House, a structure of brick, was erected
place, in the gift of St. John's College, Cambridge, and held. in r837 and will hold 300 inmates; Rev. Edward Haver-
since 1851 by the Rev. George Henry Marsh B.D. formerly sham Wball M.A. (curate in charge, Great Snori,ng),
fellow of that.college. The Rev. Edward Haversham Whall chaplain; .Frederick William Hart Bayes, medical officer;
M. A. of Emmanuel College, Cambridge, has been curate in Isaac Priest, ma.<Jter; Mrs. Mary Priest, matron; Miss
charge since r89r, and resides at the rectory. 'fhe rectory Kate Rohson, industrial trainer & assistant matron; the
house, a fine specimen of ornamental brickwork, was built boys attend the school at Great Snoring & the girls that.
by Sir Ralph Shelton kt. and considerably enlarged. and at Thursford
beautified by the present rector in 1853 and its elaborate Church of England School (mixed), erected in 1859, for 100
south front in part restored. There is a Primitive Method- children; average attendance, 75; Harry Green, master
Whall Rev. Edward H<tversham !LA. Bushell William & Son, machine makrs Massingham Edward, farmer
[curate in charge], The Rectory Cook Frederick, shopkeeper & wheel- Perowne .Benjamin Cubitt, farmer &
COMMERCIAL. wright, Post office brick maker (brick works at l3arney)
Adams Matilda (Mrs.), shopkeeper & Cook William, wheelwright Ramm John, blacksmith
miller ( wmd) Docking Clement, baker & miller (wind) South gate Eliza (Mrs.), Tuns P.B. &
Bushell J. & Sons, engineers & machin~ Gamble Henry, farmer · cooch builder
makers Green Harry, assistant overseer & Southgate George, miller (wind)
Bushell.Joseph,school attendance officer schoolmaster Southgate \\'alter, farmer
~ for Fakenham district, Walsingham Hall Robt.Charles,farmr. WinePark frm Tuck Wm. Unicorn P.H.& horse breakr
union,& thrashing machine proprietor Howlett James, shopkeeper
LITTLE SNORING is a parish on the road from 1 Hastings, and held since 1882 by the Rev. William Martin
Fakenham to Wells, about 3 miles north-cast from Faken- • n.A. of Trinity College, Cambridge, and rural dean of Wal-
ham station on the Great Eastern and Eastern and :Midlands singham, who is also vicar of West Barsham, and resides at
railways, in the North Western di1'iswn of the county, Gal- East Barsham. Here is a Primitive Methodist cbapel. The
low hundred and petty sessional division, Walsingham union poor have the rent of 8A. 3R. SP. of land, now (1892) let in
· and county court district, rural deanery of Burnham, arch- half-acre allotments at£2 per acre, ar,d also 17 acres on which
deaconry and diocese of .Norwich. The church of St. Andrew to cut for fuel. Lord Hastings, who is lord of the manor,
is an edifice in the Transition Norman and later styles, con»ist- Joseph Stone hewer Scott Chad esq. M.A., J.P. of Thursford
ing of chancel, nave, south porch and a detached round tower Hall, and Messrs. H. B. Beane and Son, are the chief land-
the west end containing one bell : the porch is of very at owners. The soil is various ; subsoil, clay. The land is
curious Transition Norman· character, with a stilted horse- cultivated on the usual four-course system. The area js
shoe arch, within which is a pointed arch ornamented _1,528 acres; rateable value, £r,8os; the population in 1891
with zigzag work and under this again a round-headed door- was 26o.
way, with nook shafts and sculptured capitals : the font is Parish Clerk, James Harvey.
Late Norman, and auorned with carved foliage: there are 'LETTER Box cleared at 4.30 p.m. Letters received througb
200 sittings. The register dates from the year 1559. The Fakenham, which is the nearest money order & telegraph
living is a rectory, annexed to the vicarage of East Bar- office, arrive- at 8 a. m
sham, average tithe rent-charge £so6, joint gross yearly National School (mixed), built in 1865, for 100 children;
value £630, including 66 acres of glebe, in the gift of Lord average attendance, 65; Arthll!" Wm. Baldwin, mast.er
Guilliam Rev. Samuel Thorn F.R.G.S. Beane Henry Barnard & Son, farmers, Harvey James, ncii r. Ji'"
[curate in charge], The Rectory Manor house Jarvis Mark, flour dealel"'
COMMERCIAL. Green George, baker &; shopkeeper Parker Thomas, shoe maket
Armes Tbomas 1 farm bailiff to the Gidney Charles. gamekeeper to E. B. Rayner William, Green Man P. H I
exors. -of Mrs. S. Savory Sparke esq 1 Sberringbam Edward, farmer
Ban yard W1lliam, coal dealer Hall James, farmer~ Jex:~s farm 1 SymondsThos. blacksmith&wbeelwright

EAST SO MER TON LS a parish near the coas•, 2 miles walls, now covered with ivy, are still standing, and tbere )s
north from Hemsby station and 2 miles east-south-east from a large tree growing in the midst; the inhabitants attend
Martham station, both on the Eastern and Midlands rail Winterton church. The register dates from ~he year 1717.
way, about 8~ miles north-by-west from Yarmouth, in the The li\·ing is a chapelry, annexed t.o the -rect.ory .of Winter-
Eastern division of the county, incorporated hundreds, petty ton, aver.~ge tithe rent-charge £41z, joint gross yearly value
sessi.onal division and incorporation of East and West Flegg, j £445. incltJding 30 acres gf glebe, with re<~idence, in the
county court district of Yarmouth, rural deanery of Flegg 1 gift of trustees~ and held since x8go by the Rev. Will\alll
and a:t:ehdeaconry an.d diocese of Norwich. The church of 1Arthur Gr~ B.A. of Ox:furd University. who resides 11t
St, ~ary pa.s ,b~en for many :years in ruins, the towe~ and, Wjn;erto~~,. Durnley Hall, now occupied pySamn~ ~ightip-
C. N. & S. . 39.
~608 EAST SOMERTON. NORFOLK. (KELLY's
. . . .
gale esq. is a mansion surrounded by beautiful gardens, Letters through Yarmouth. The n ~a rest money order office
plantations and a lawn, and belongs to F. William Charsley is at Winterton & telegraph office at Martham
esq. who is also the sole landowner. The soil is light mixed;
subsoil, sand, gravel and clay. The chief crops are the This place is included in the United School Board district of
usual cereals and roots. The area is 798 acres; rateable Winterton, formed compulsorily 2 March, 1875; & the
value,£ I, 130; the population in 1891 was 62. children attend the school there
Nightingale Samuel, Burnley hall
Varley Benjamin, blacksmith
I
Parry Wil!iam, farmer & landowner,
Manor farm
Worts Frank, farmer, Bloodhills farm

WEST SO MER TON is a parish, 1} miles north-east Henry II. by Ralph or Ranulph de GranYille, Chief Justiciar
from Martham station on the Eastern and Midlands rail- of England n8o-go. Human bones have occasionally been
way, and about 9 miles north-by-west from Yarmouth, in found on the Hall estate, and a stone jug and a skeleton
the Eastern division of the county, incorporated hundreds, were dug up in 1844 near the churchyard. Hales, the Nor-
petty sessional division and incorporation of East and West folk giant, was born and buried in this parish; his height
Flegg, Yarmouth county court district, rural deanery of as stated on his tomb was 7 feet 6 inches. Somerton Hall,
Flegg and archdeaconry and diocese of Norwich. The the old manor house of Somerton-cum-Butley, and now the
church of St. Mary is a building of stone, with a thatched seat of Bernard James Cuddon-Fletcher esq. J.P. stands on
roof, in the Early English and Perpendicular styles, con- an eminence, and commands views of the German ocean both
sisting of chancel, nave, north porch and a west.ern tower, to the north and east: some portions of the h~, which
with a circular basement and octagonal belfry stage con- has been much enlarged, are of considerable age. B. J.
taining one bell: the church was repaired in 1867, when a Cuddon-P'letcher esq. who is lord of the manor, Captain
mural pamting of "The Day of Judgment,'' about 12 feet Bird, the trustees of the late Robert Rising esq. and F.
long, was discovered between the windows on the south William Charsley esq. are the principal landowners. The
wall of the nave, and other wall paintings were subsequently soil is a fine rich loam; subsoil, generally brick earth, inter-
discovered on the north wall of the nave, representing "The sected with veins of sand. The marsh land in this parish
Entry into Jerusalem," "The Flagellation," "The Resurrec- has been thoroughly drained by a Commission of Sewers
tion," and a figure of St. Christopher : these paintings date under the Local Drainage .Act of 1861 ; a large portion of
from the period 1327-77, and have been carefully preserved: the land so drained belongs to and is farmed by B. J. Cud-
in 1878 a very interesting Early English painting of ~·The don-Fletcher esq. The chief crops are wheat, oats, barley
Virgin and Child," executed on a narrow thick piece of deal, &c. The area is 1,130 acres; rateable value, £1,892; the
and suggested to have been part of a rood screen, was found population in 18gx was 253.
under the floor of the pulpit: the church has been partially Parish Clerk, George Howes.
restored at a cost of £Boo, under the supervision of Mr. J. PosT 0FFICE.-"\\'illiam Blackburn, receiver. Letters re-
T. Bottle, architect, vf Yarmouth, and affords 180 sittings. ceived from Yarmouth at 7.15 a. m. & dispatched at 5.30
The register dates from the year 1736. The living is a p.m. The nearest money order & telegraph office is at
-rectory, average tithe rent-charge £150, net yearly value Martham. Postal orders are issued here, but not paid
£120, in the gift of Sir Thomas Fraser Grove bart. M.P. of This place is included in the United School Board district of
Ferne, Wilts, and held since 1867 by the Rev. Joseph Budd. Winterton, formed compulsorily 2 March, 1875; the
Here was once an hospital for lepers, founded in the reign of children attend the school there & at Martham
Bradshaw :Mrs Braddock Daniel George \Yilson,farmer Bales \'Villiam, farmer
Budd Rev. Joseph [rector] & fruit grower Howes Albert, farmer
Cuddon-Fletcher Bernard James (J.P. Braddock Wilson, farmer Howes Benjamin, assistant overseer
for Norfolk & Argyleshire (Dunans) Garwood Arthur, farmer liowes George,blacksmith&wheelwrght
& barrister-at-law), Somerton hall Hales Edward, carter Thain Dionysius, farmer &c
COMMERCIAL. Hales Robert, carter ' Thurtle Thomas, Lion P.H
.Annison Daniel, farmer Hales Thomas, farmer : Worts Frank, farmer, Bloodhills
Blackburn Wm. boot maker, Post office i
SOUTHBERGH is a parish and village, 3~ miles south- is a rectory, annexed with Letton to the rectory of Cran-
west from Thuxton station on the Wyrnondham and Dere- worth, average tithe rent-charge £541, net yearly value
ham section of the Great Eastern railway, and 8 south from £307, including 38 acres of glebe, in the gift of Robert
Dereham, in the Mid division of the county, Mitford bun- Thornhaugh G-urdon esq. M.A., D.L., J.P. and held since
dred, Mitford and Laundikh petty sessional division and 1874 by the Rev. Thomas Parry Garnier M. A. and late
union, Dereham county court district, rural deanery of fellow of All Souls College, Oxford, rural dean of Hingham
llingham Mitford division, archdeaconry of Norfolk and Mitford division and hon. canon of Norwich, who resides at
diocese of Norwich. The church of St. Andrew is a build- CranwL•rth. There is a reading room, built about 1876.
ing of flint with stone dressings, in the Early English style, The fuel allotment of 13 acres is let at £2o yearly. Robert
consisting of chancel, nave, south porch and an embattled Thornhaugh Gurdon esq. M.A., D.L., J.P. of Letton Hall,
western tower with spire containing 2 bells: the chancel who is lord of the manor, and John Weyland esq. D.L.,
dates from about 1290 and the nave from 1320: there is a J.P. of Woodeaton, Oxford, are the principal landowners.
monument to Brampton Gurdon esq. M.P. for Sudbury, who The soil is mixed ; subsoil, gravel. The chief crops are
commanded the Suffolk horse at the battle of Naseby, wheat, barley, oats and roots. The area is 1,216 acres;
I 4th June, 1645, and died in r669, to Mary (Polsted) his' rateable value, £ x,635 ; the population in 1Bgr was 230.
wife, d. 1679, and to Muriel Gurdon his mother, daughter Parish Clerk, Edward Rivett.
of Martin Sedley esq. of :\Iorley: the church underwent a PosT 0FFICE.-Edward Rivett, recei\·er. Box cleared at
thorough restoration in the years 1878-x882,1under the direc- 5 p.m. ; sundays, ro.s a. m. Letters through Watton
tion of Mr. J . .A. Reeve, architect and diocesan surveyor, at S.O. 7.40 a. m. snndays & daily. Ilingham is the nearest
a cost approaching £5,000, the greater part of which was money order & telegraph office. Postal orders are issued
contributed by members of the Gurdon family : the tower here, but not paid
and spire were completed as a memorial to the Hon. Mrs. The children of this place attend the school at Cranworth
Henrietta Gurdon, who died May 28th, 188o: there are 250 for the united parishes of "Southbergh, Cranworth &
sittings. The register dates from the year rssB. The living Let ton
Bradshaw Rev.Charles Jas.M.A.[curat..e] Bowen William, farmer Johnson Ezekiel, farmer
COMMERCIAL. Cullyer William, farmer Luke Robert, farmer
Ballison William, farmer Darby James, King's Head P.H Middleton Michael, thatcher
Barnard Alfred, farmer Eagling John Daynes, farmer Milk Ishmael, farmer
Barnard William Francis, farmer Fuller Frederick, farmer, Willow farm Rivett Edward, wheelwright, Post office
Barnard William John, farmer Hart James, farmer Rose John Wilson, shoe maker
Barron Rubert, farmer Howard Frederick,shoe maker& farmer
SOUTHERY is a village and parish on the river Ouse, consisting of chancel, nave, south aisle and a western tower
5 miles north-east from Littleport station and 4 south-east containing a clock and one bell: the stained east window was
from Hilgay station on the Lynn and Ely section of the J presented by Mr. Robert Say le, of Cambridge; and there
Great Eastern railway, 4 south from Ryston station on the are other stained windows, presented by Mr. Dove, of Bris-
Downham and Stoke Ferry branch of the same line, and 7 tol: the church affords 500 sittings. The register dates
south from Downham, in the South Western division of the from the year qo6. The living is a rectory, average tithe
county, Clackclose hundred and petty sessional division, rent-charge £495, gross yearly value £685, including 104
Downham union and county court district, rural deanery of i acres of glebe, with residence, in the gift of the Rev. Edmund
Fincham, archdeaconry of Norfolk and diocese of Norwich. 1 Hall M.A. reator of Myland, Colchester, and held sinre 1855
The church of St. Mary, erected in 1858, is an edifice of rag- I by the Rev. Archibald £neas Julius M.A. of St. John's
stone with Bath stone dressings, in the Early English style, I College, Cambridge. Here are Wesleyan and Particular
DIRECTORY.] NORFOLK. SOUTHWOOD. 600
Baptist chapels. An Institute, with a library of soovolumes, ham at 7-40 a. m.; dispatched at 6.10 p.m. ; & on sundays
was opened in I876. Chauncy Arthur Taylor e..."Q.. J.P. who I0.20 a.m. WALL Box, Southery ferry, cleared 6 p.m.;
is lord of the manor, John Wootton esq. and several others, sunday IO.IS a.m
are the principal landowners. The sml is of a. varied de- A School Board of 5 members was formed I I July, 1874, with
scription, one part being strong clay land, but the greater Methwold made contributory, Io January, I879, with I
portion is a light black soil; subsoil. principally good clay. member; Harry Wayman, Downham, clerk to the board;
The chief crops are wheat, beans, flax and roots. The area Joseph Osier, attendance officer
is 3,695 acres, the greater part of which is fen; rateable Board School (mixed & infants), with master's house,
value, £s,2oi ; t.he population in I8gi was I, 122 ; the latter erected in I876, for 220 children ; average attendance. 150;
comprising I87 "Port&rs," 56 "Osiers," and 42 "Bells." William Challenger, master; Mrs. Marina Challenger,
Parish Clerk, G11orge Henry Cattermole. mistress; Miss Kate Annie Porter, infants' mistress
PosT, M. 0. & T. 0., S. B. & Annuity & Insurance Office.- CARRIERS.-Porter Thomas, to Ely, m on. & thurs. return-
Barley Page Porter, receiver. Letters arrive from Down- ing same days ; to Downham, on fri
Julius Rev. Archibald ..tEne>~s M.A. Gillbey George, shopkeeper Porter Barley Page. grocer, Post office
Rectory Harris Thomas, m1ller (wind) Porter Benjamin, shopkeeper
PeakeRev.VincentWilliam M.A.[curate] Ilartley George, Ferry Boat inn, & Porter David Osler, farmer
Porter Henry shoe maker . Porter Gregory, building surveyor
Russell David Holman John, farmer Porterisaac, beer agt.&c.Southery ferry
Samson Samuel Holman Thomas, poultry dealer Porter Job, farmer, Little London
COMMEHCIAL. Howlett Lydia(M.rs. ),farmer,Ferry frm Porter John, shoe maker
Attlesey Wm. & Son, blacksmiths, shoe- Institute & Library (Gregory Porter, Porter John, ·white Bell P.H
ing smiths & agricultural machinists librarian) Porter Richard, beer retailer
Attlesey George,harness mkr.& shopkpr Jolly Thomas. baker Porter Thomas, carrier
llarrett Elijah, wheelwright Jones George, farmer Porter Wm. boot maker, Little London
Barrow William, carpenter Lack William, coal dealer Porter William Elmer, farmer
Barton .John Albert, grocer & draper Legge Alfred, higgler Proctor William, farmer, Little London
Bellllenry, grocer & draper . Legge Levi, horse slaughterer Reed Daniel, beer retailer
Brighton George, machine owner Martin Joseph, farmer Reeve Robert George, miller (wind)
Brighton James, butcher Osler George, shopkeeper & farmer Smith Edward (exors. of), farmers
Buckenham George, beer retailer Osier GeorgeThomas, butcher &corn dlr Thompson Williarn,farmer,ColdHarbour
Buckenham Thomas, ch1mney sweeper I Osier Joseph, plumber & glazier Thormelly Joseph, The Anvil P.H
Clark William, farm bailiff to Charles 1 Osier Mary Ann (Mrs.), dress maker WalkerGregory ,beer retailr.Lit.London
Robinson esq 1 Osier Robert, baker Walker William, farmer
Corney David, farmer I Osler Sarah (Miss), dress maker \Vard Abraham, general dealer
Cragg William, butcher i Osier Thomas, cattle dealer Whitehead & Smith, farmers
Feltwell James, shopkeeper 'Peacock Jn.Luddington,frmr.Manor ho Woods John, beer retailer
Flack James, poultry dealer Place William, shoe maker Wootton Ellen (:Miss), dress maker
Fox Martha(Mrs.),Crown & Anchor P.H Porter & Son, builders "Wootton John, farmer & landowner
Galley Thomas, engineer to Feltwellj Porter Alfred, plumber & glazier Wyer John George, farmer
New Fen district commissioners
SOUTHREPPS is a parish and village, 5 miles north- ' Tuesday fortnight after Whit-Sunday. Lord Suffield, who
wes~ from North Walsham and 5 south-east from Cromer, is lord of the manor, and Sir Thomas Fowell Buxton bart.
I mile north from Gun ton station on the East Norfolk branch are the principal landowners. The soil is mixed ; subsoil, .
of the Great Eastern rail way, in theN orthern division of the gravel and sand. The chief crops are wheat, turnips, grass
county, Erpingham union, North Walsham county court and barley. The area is 2,081 acres; rateable value, £3,334;
district, North Erpingham hundred and petty sessional the population in I88I was 831.
I
division, rural deanery of Repps, archdeaconry of Norfolk Parish Clerk, James Steward.
and diocese of Norwich. The church of SL. J ames is a PosT, M. 0. 0., S. B. & Annuity & Insurance Office, Upper
building of flint, in the Decorated and Perpendicular styles, street--Lee Amis Fox, postmaster. Letters through
consisting of chancel, nave, south porch and a lofty em- Norwich arrive at 7·45 a. m. & 3.10 p.m.; sundays, 7·45
battled western tower containing 5 bells: two stained win- a.m.; dispatched at u.45 a.m. & 5 p.m. The nearest
dows have been placed here on the south side, one by Arch- telegraph office is at Gunton railway station
deacon Glover, the other by Mr. J. Carter : the chancel was
restored by the rector in 1875: there are 700sittings. The PosT OFFICE, Lower street.-Ja.mes Spurrell IJlumbly,
register dates from the year 1558. The living is a rectory, receiver. Arrivals & dispatches as above
tithe rent-charge £6z8, net yearly value £429, including 7 This parish is included in Soutlll'epps United District school
acres of glebe, w1th house, in the gift of the Duchy of Lan- board
caster, and held since I892 by the Rev. the Hon. John Har- Board School (mixed.), erected in IBJs, for 260 children ;
bord M.A. of Magda.lene College, Cambridge. The Wesleya.n average attendance, t8o; William E. Amies, master;
chapel here was erected in I845 ; the Primitive Methodist Miss Eleanur Soanes, infants' mistress
chapel was erected in 1864. .A cattle fair is held on the Gunton B.ailway Station, JameR Atkins, station master
Cooper Rev. Joseph [curate] Drury Chapman, baker llt iarmer Kimm Robert Daniel, registrar of births
Dunning W'illiam Dunning William,farmer & horse dealer · & deaths & relieving & vaccination
HarbordRev.TheHon.JohnM.A.Rectory Foulger Robert, shoe maker officer for South Repps district, Erp-
Sharpen :Mr.-L Chesnut cottage Fox Lee Amis, farmer & blacksmith, ingham union,&collector to guardians
T~J11ple Isaac Post otl'tce Painter Tabitba (Mrs.), farmer
COMMERCIAL. Gibbons Robert, vermin killer Paul George, shopkeeper
Baker Charles, shoe maker Golden James, shopkeeper PlumblyJames Spnrrell,farmer, & supt.
Baker George, farmer, The Darns Harrison George, farmer, The Dams registrar of Erpingham union &
Barber Fred. (.Mrs.), grocer & draper Harrison John, saddler registrar of marriages, Post office,
Bartram William, farmer llarrison Williarn, jobbing gardener Lower street
Bayes Richard, grocer Hewitt Henry, farmer & job & post Rogers George Ellis, Vernon Arms P.H
Bensley Thomas, tailor master, assistant overseer, collector Sharpen Hedley, veterinary surgeon
Bird Thomas Edward, butcher of taxes & school attendance officer Spurgeon Thomas, butcher
Black burn John, farm bailiff to Mr. Hewitt John, farmer Starling Lewis Samuel. farmPr
Georgo H. Plumbly Hicks Charles Solomon, New inn, & Storey John, carpenter
Howen James, grocer cabinet maker, & furnished apart- Temple James, shoe maker
Cubitt George, fanner ment to let Temple William, deputy supt. registrar
Daniels Thomas William, builder & con- HowesJohnHenry,farmer & landowner, of Erpingham union & dep. registrar
tractor, carpenter, wheelwright & lleechlands of marru>ges
blacksmith & shoeing & general smith Kirchen W11liatp, farmer, Pitt farm Woods Henry, cattle dealer
Dobson William, The Crown l'.H Knights John, market gardener Woods Robert, cattle dealer
SOUTHWOOD is a parish, about 1 mile north from chancel, nave, north porl!h and a plain square tower con-
Cantley station on the Norwich and Loweswft section of the taining one bell, is now in ruins. The inhabitants att1md
Great Eastern railway, and 9 wP.st from Yarmouth, in the divine service at Limpenhoe. The register dates from the
Eastern division of the county, Blofield and Walsham petty year I675- The living i!l a discharged rectory, consolidated
sessional division, hundred and union of Blofield, Yarmouth with that of Limpenhoe, average tithe rent-charge £210,
county court district, rural deanery of Blofield and arch- joint net yP..arly valne £IS6, including IO acres of glebe, in
deaconry and diocese of Norwich. The church of St. the gift of and held since 1871 by the Rev. Theodore Henry
Edmund, a building of flint in the Gothic style, consisting of Crossman Day B.A. of Caius College, Cambridge, and surro
610 ~OUTHWOOD. NORFOLK. [ KELLY'S

gate, who resides at LimpeMhoe vicarage. . The .charities operation March 25, 1884, ·!!- detached part of this parish
amount to £4 yearly. H. R. Nevile esq. is lord of the was amalgamated with Limpenhoe. ·
manor and chief landowner. The soil is light mixed; sub- Parish Clerk, William l''owler Hall.
soil, sand and gravel. The chief crops are wheat, barley Letters through Reed ham R. S.O. which is the nearest money
and oats. • The area is 481 acres ; rateable value, £732 ; the order & telegraph office ·
popuJation in I88I was 44· By an order which came into The children of this place attend the school at Limpenhoe

KeyWilliamWesley,farmeJ;&cattledealr l Riches Henry Bacon, farmer,Hall farm 1
SP ARHAM is a village and parish on the river Wensum Primitive Methodist and Free Methodist chapels. The
and the road from Norwich to Fakenham, 2 miles north- charities include one of £4 yearly and 21 acres allotted to
west from Lenwade station on the Eastern and Midlands the poor for cutting fuel. The reetor is lord of the rectory
railway, I2 miles north-west from Norwich and 8 north- manor. The Earl of Leicester K.G., L.L. is lord of the manors
east from Dereham, in the Northern division of the county, of Stewkey Hall, Sparham Hall and Mautebys Hall, and
Eynsford hundred and petty sessional division, Mitford and principal landowner. The soil is mixed and heavy; subsoil,
Launditch union, East Derebam county court district, rural sand and gravel; clay, brick earth and marl being also found
deanery of Sparham and archdeaconry and diocese of Nor- in many places. The chief crops are barley, wheat, roots
wich. The church of the Vir~in Mary·is a building of flint, and hay. The area is 1,770 acres; rateable value, £1,653;
with stone dressings, in the Early English and Perpendicular the population in 189r was 265.
styles, consisting of chancel, nave, aisles, south porch and Parish Clerk, William Cole.
an embattled western tower with pinnacles containing 3 PosT OF..,'ICE.-Richard Parker Cooper, receiver. Letters
bells : there is a very interesting screen ; some good benches through Norwich, arrive at 8.15 a. m. & are dispatched at
of ancient design, with traceried backs ; a pre-Reformation 3.25 p.m. on week days only. The nearest money order
pulpit and a traceried south door : the church was partially office is at Great Witchingham & telegraph office at
restored in x889, and affords 300 sittings. The register Lenwade railway station
dates from the year 1573. The living is a rectory, average Parish School (mixed), erected in 1852, fur 35 children;
yearly value from tithe rent-charge £365, with 91 acres of average attendance, 28; Miss Annie Palmer, certificated
glebe and residence, in the gift of the Rev. Henry E'·ans- mistress
Lombe B. A. and held since 1840 by the Rev. Thomas Star- CARRIEns.-Palmer passes through from Foulsham to Nor-
ling N orga te B. A. of Caius College, Cambridge. There are wich wed. & sat
Cremer John Edmund, Sparham house ICooper Richard Parker, grocer, draperHindry Alfred, farmer
N orgate Rev. 'fhos.Starling B.A.Rectory &c. Post office Ireson William, beer retailer
Yonge Rev. George M.A. [curate] ForbyGeorge Winter,farmer & overseer Mi!latt William, blacksmith
COMMERCIAL, Greenwood Matthew, farmer Nelson Thomas George, farmer
Clark Samuel, farmer Grief Robert, farmer 1Savory Mary (Mrs.), farmer
Cole William, Green Man P.H Hall John, farmer
SPIXWORTH is a village and parish, 4 miles north· from tithe rent-charge £273, with 7 acres of glebe and
west from Salhouse station on the Cromer branch of the residence, in the gift of the trustees of the late Rev. Robert
Great Eastern railway, and about 4 miles north from Nor- Longe M. A. and held since r88g by the H.ev. Walter Beaumont
wich, in the Eastern division of the county, Taverham hun- Gurney Whitchurch B. A. of Magdalene College, Cambridge.
dred and petty sessional division, St. Faith's union, Norwich Spixworth Hall, the property and residence of Robert Bacon
county court district, rural deanery of Taverham and arch- Longe esq. J.P. lord of the manor and principal landowner,
deaconry and diocese of Norwich. The church of St. Peter is a handsome mansion of red brick, situated a quarter of a
is a plain structure of rubble, in the Early English style, mile south-west of the church, in a well-wooded park. The
consisting of chancel, nave, south aisle, north and south soil is gravel and sand ; subsoil, sand. The chief crops are
porches and a small embattled tower at the south-west wheat, barley, turnips and hay. The area is r,224 acres;
a;ngle containing 2 bells : the church was re-seated in 1872, rateable value, £1,627; the population in I8gr was 72.
and has several monuments to the Peck and Longe families, Parish Clerk, John Buck.
including a splendid marble monument in the chancel,
with recumbent effigies, erected in 16 35 , to William and Letters through Norwich arrive at 7 a.m. Horsham St.
Alicia Peck: there are Bo sittings. The register dates from I<'aith's is the nearest money order & telegraph office
the year 1551. The living is a rectory, average yearly value The children of this place attend the school at Crostwick

Gurney B. A. Rectory
I
"Wbitchurch Rev. Waiter Beaumont Longe Robert Bacon J.P. Spixworth hall
Barrett "'illiam, farmer
I
Graver William, blacksmith

SPORLE-with-PALGRAVE is a village and parish, chapel, erected in I873· The charities are of the annual
2~ miles north-east from Swaffham station on the Lynn and value of £92 ros. and include £15 yearly, left by Richard
Dereham section of the Great Eastern railway, m the South Fisher in 16o8 for education, and £77 ros. rent of the town
""estern division of the county, South Greenhoe hundred land of gr acres, allotted to the poor for cutting fuel. Here
and petty sessional division, Swaffham union and county was once a Benedictine priory, founded in the reign of Henry
court district, rural deanery of Cranwich, north division, II. as a cell to the abbey of Saumur, and dedicated to St.
archdeaconry of Norfolk and diocese of Norwich. The church Mary. The Master, brethren and sisters of St. Katharine's
of St. Mary the Virgin is a large and handsome building of Hospital, Regent's Park, London, are the principal land-
stone, in the Early English and Decorated styles, consisting owners. The soil is various, with a subsoil of clay and marI.
of chancel, clerestoried nave of four bays, aisles and an em- The chief crops are wheat, barley, turnips and some pasture.
battled western tower wilih pinnacles containing a clock and The area is 4, r68 acres; rateable value, £4,995 ; the popu-
3 bells : there are eight stained windows : in the south aisle lation in 1891 was 650.
is a 'piscina and a fresco of the early 15th century, represent- Parish Clerk, John Areher.
ing the legend of St. Katherine of Alexandria: the church PosT 0FFICE.-Charles Wright, postmaster. Letters by
has been restored at different periods, and affords 250 mail cart from Swafiham, received at 5.20 a.m. & dis.
sittings. The register dates from the year r563. The living patched at 7.2op.m.; sundaysat 2.rop.m. Swaffhamis
of Sporle is a vicarage, with the rectory of Little Palgrave the nearest money order & telegraph office. Postal
annexed, average tithe rent-charge of Little Palgrave £gi, orders are issued here, but not paid
joint net yearly value £170, in the gift of Eton College, and
held since 1845 by the Rev. Thomas Jones M.A. of Jesus National School (mixed), built in 184I, for I40 children;
College, Oxford. There was formerly a church at Little average attendance, 95 ; William George Bilby, master;
Pal grave, but it has long since gone to decay. Here is a Miss Elizabeth Bilby, mistress
Primitive Methodist chapel, built in 1862, and a Baptist CARRIEn.-Archibald Elliot, to Swaffham, tues. & sat
Hardy Edward William, Woolferton ho
• Simmons Charles, higgler
Fox Robert, boot & shoe maker
Jones Rev. Thomas M.A. [vicar] Green King, higgler Smith Robert, attendance & inquiry
Kerrison Mr8 Green William, farmer officer to Swaffham rural attendance
Pyle Mrs Grummett J ames,carpen ter&undertakr cornrni ttee & sanitary inspector to
COM:ii!ERCIAL. GrummettElizh. (Mrs. ),grocer & draper Swaffham rural sanitary authority
AllinghamPercySidney,grocer& cual dlr KerrisonWalt.Hy.miller(wind & steam) WellsDennis(Mrs. ),farmer, Gt. Palgrave
Archer Thomas, Hare & Hounds P.H Larwood James, farmer White William, farm bailiff to Richard
.Hell George, shopkeeper Matthews Thomas (exors. of), farmers, Dusgate esq
Bennington Benjamin, blacksmith & Palgrave hall Winearls Matthias, beer retailer
agricultural implement maker Mattbews Thomas, farmer, The Priory Worf Charles, wheelwright
Fiddy Thomas Beverley, farmer •
Ne wdickAndrew Palmer ,grocer&draper Worf George, Cheq_uers :P.H
Fish pole Jeremiah, bricklayer Quadling William, farmer
DIRECTORY.] NORFOLK. STALHAM. 611
SPROWSTON isanextensiveparishandverystraggling the parish. Sprowston Hall, the seat of Mrs. Gurney, re-
village, 2 mites north from Norwich, in the Ea.st.ern division built. in r8Br. is a fine mansion of red brick, pleasantly I
of the county, Taverham hundred and petty sessional divi- situated on the WroYham road. The trustees of th& late
sion, St. Faith's union, Norwich county court district, rural Joha Gurney esq. who are lords of the manor, William
deanery of Taverham and archdeaconry and dioces~ of Nor- Hardy Cozens-Hardy .esq. J.P. of Letheringsett Hall, Sir
wich. The church of SS. Mary and Margaret is an ancient Edward Paulet Stracey hart~ of Rackheath Park, and Gil-
edifica or flint and stone, consisting of chancel, nave, aisles bert Hardinge Stracey esq. D.L., .J. P. are the chief land-
and an embattled western tower of brick, wi~h pinnacles owners. The soil of this parish is extremely light; subsoil,
and containing 3 bells: the monuments include four, now generally gravel, with patches of clay at varying depths,
much dilapidated, to the Corbet family, dating from 1559 to from which excellent bricks are made. The chief crops are
r6q; others to the Micklethwaits, 1805; one to the Morse wheat, oats, barley and turnips and market garden producru
family, 1842, and several mural tablets, including one in the the area is 2,576 acres; rateable value, £·6,o73 ; tha popll·
chancel to Sir Thomas Adams hart. lord mayor of London lation in 1891 was 2,165.
in 164:;, d. 24 Feb. I667 : the stained east window was Parish Clerk, Frederick Andrews.
given by Mra. Rushmore in 1867: the chancel was restored PosT & M. 0. 0., s. B. & Annuity & Insurance Office.-
in 189o by the Ecclesiastical Commissioners: there are 300 Henry Burrage, receiver. Letters arrive from Norwich at
sittings. Tbe resrister dates from the year 1727. The livmg 4 _45 a. m. & are dispatched at 6 p.m. The nearest .tale-
is a vicarage, net yearly value £254, including 17~ acres of graph office is at Old Catton ·
glebe, with residence, erected in r882, in the gift of the Dean
and Chapter of Norwich, and held since !891 by the Rev. LETTER Box, near Bull P.H. cleared at 5·55 p.m.; sunday,.
James Wickham M.A. of St. John's College, Oxford. The 5·55 p.m
church of St. Cuthbert, erected in 1885, as a chapel of ease LETTER Box, North Walsham road, cleared at 9.15 a.m.
to that of SS. Mary and Margaret, is an edifice of brick with 12. 15, 3.25, 6.xs k 8. xs p. m. ; sundays, 6.15 a.rn. & 8.15
stone facings, in the Lancet style, consisting of nave only p.m ·
and a bell cote for one bell: it was built at a cost of about National School (mixed), erected in r86o by Mrs. Arkwright,
_£2,300, of which upwards of £r,6oo and the site were given & enlarged in 1873 by the late John Gurney esq. & again
by the late John Gurney esq. : there are 360 sittings. Here in I 885 & 1891 ; it will now hold 36o children ; average
is a Primitive Methodist chapel. A sum of £30 yearly is attendance, 28o ; Robert John Ad(;()Ck, master ; Mrs. Jane
expended in fuel for the poor. There are two corn mills in M. Adcock, mistress .
[Marked thud *letters are delivered from j Baldwin William, shopkeeper Johnson Thomas, registrar of births &
· Cat ton]· Bii!! hop Charles Waiter, baker deaths for Sprowston sub-district &
PRIVATE RESIDENTS. Blake Robert W. brick maker' relieving,vaccina.tion & school attend·
Blake Ro bert Wiffen North Walsham rd 1 Booty Ed wd. bricklayer ,Nth. W a Ish m. rd a nee officer, Eastern dist. St. Faith's
.llloy Thomas ' j Brock Henry Benjamin, miller (steam) union, Constitution place
Brown Joseph Benjamin 1
Hurrage Henry, baker, Po~t office *Land John, beer retailer
Butcher Wa.lter "Vitton Burrows Thomas John, bnck maker Mason James, Black Horse P.H
Butler Thomas North Walsham road Burrows "'m. Brickmakers' Arms P.H *Mason John, brick maker ·
Calver Miss ' \ Cattun William, market gardener Minns George E. shopkeeper
Corbett11 Joseph, North Walsham road ! Causton_ John, city missionary, Con- · Moore John, farmer
Courthope Rev. Arthur H. M.A. [curate st1tut10n place Morris Mark, brick maker
to SS. Mary & Margaret] Chapman James, Blue Boar P.H *Morris Rebecca (Mrs.), beer retailer
Cozens-Hardy Theobald J.P. Oak lodge Cleveland Rebe('ca (:Mrs.), laundry Nash Alfred, shopkeeper
East.on Isaac Cozens-Hardy Theobald, farmer Nevill Frederick, market gardener
Gale William Crompton Charles, market" gardener, Newman Matthew, shopkeeper·
Gurney Mrs. Sprowston hall _North Walsham road Norfolk & Suffolk Yacht Club (J. B.
GuytonRobertFirth,North Walsham rd D1xon Joseph, farmer Brown, sec)
King HenryThomas North Walsham rd 1 Easton John, corn dealer *Orsborn Robert, bricklayer l
*Lanfear Thomas ' Edwards Horace, lime burner & mer- Riches Waiter, Constitution inn j
Moore James chant, dealer in rough & faced flints, Risebrook Harriett (Mrs.), shopkeeper •
N eedham John, Constitution place r.eeds! ~and, gravel, stone &c Rump Theophilus, assistant overseer
Page Mrs. North vValsham road Elhs W1lham, boot manufacturer Scott Harriett (Miss), shopkeeper
Rackham George Charles ~yerett John, farmer Scott Robert, shoe maker
Risino- Miss North Walsham road hsher John, butcher Seaman Lee, cattle dealer
Rous: Jess; Cantrell Franeis Harriett (Mrs.). poulterer Sidney Frederick, carpenter
Smith Thomas, Constitution place Fr.og-got Ad~ ~Miss), ladies' school Slight James, farmer
Smith Thomas, jun. The Hermitage *Geo_rge ~1lbam, b~tcher *Sloper Susan (Mrs.), laundry·
Stracev Gilbert Hardinge n. L., ;r_ P. Gowmg George Dav1d, farmer *Smith Matthew Wm. Royal Oak P.H
Sprowston lodge Graver & Bacon, brick makers Thompson Christianna Esther (Mrs. ) 1
Thenbald George Edward ~r~v,er Wm. thrashing machine propr shopkeeper
Tillett William Henry Sprowston lodge Griffin John, market gardener Tilney Samuel, brick maker
Veale Mrs. North WaLsham road Harmer Agnes (Miss), dress maker, · Westley Robert, carpenter i
Wick ham Hev. J ames M. A. [vicar J N o_rth "':alsham road . . Whall Frederick, carpenter
Willis R~uben, North Walsham road HarriSon"'m.Albert, fionr,miller(wmd) Whiting Henry Arthur, grocer
High Herbert, shopkeeper Yaxley Thomas, wheelwright, carpen·
COMMERCIAL, Hooper William, market gardener ter, general & shoeing smith
Alien & Rose, brick makers *Hubbard William, market gardener Yellop Henry, f!l.rmer
Allen John, Norfolk Arms P.H King George, higgler
ST ALHAM is a parish and market town, pleasantly erected, and a stained window inserted by the vicar to his
situated on tne high road from North Walsham to Yar• sister, Catherine Neville White, and his mother, Charlotte
mouth, near the navigable Ant, with a station on the East- White: in 1889 a carved oak reredos was erected:' there is
ern and Midlands railway, Ii miles from Wayford bridge, 8 a brass to the Riches family, dated x62+, and another, with
miles south-east from North Walsham, 16 11orth-west from figures of a civilian and his wife, circa 14601 the ·finely-
Yarmouth and rs miles north·east from Norwich, in the carved octagonal font, with representations of the Apostles
Eastern division of the county, 'l'unstead and Rapping petty 'lnd the Baptism and Crucifixion of our Sa\-iour, has been
sessional division, Rapping hundred, Smallburgh union, restored: there are 350 sittings, 200 being free. The :r-egis-
Walsham county court district, rural deanery of Waxham, ter dates from the year 1560. The living is a vicarage,
Ilapping division, archdeaconry of Norfolk and diocese of average tithe rent-charge £150, net yearly value £r54, in-
N orwich. The church of St. Mary is a fine structure of flint eluding 34 acres of glebe, with residence, in the gift of
with stone dressings, consisting of chancel, clerestoried nave, James Sewcll Nel'illc esq. and held since 1852 by the Rev.
aisles, south porch and a western tower, which has been in- Joseph Neville White B.A. of Corpus Christi .college, Cam•
jured by lightning and contains one bell: the chaneel was bridge. The Baptist chapel, erected in r884, at a cost, in-
reconstructed in 1827, and in x886 its roof was raised to the eluding site, of £2,000, is an edifice of brick, seating 450
original pitch, the walls, floors and windows en\irely re- persons, and has a Sunday scheol adjoining; the organ cost
stored and the east window filled with stained glass, at the about £200: there is also a small Wesleyan chapel. The
sole expense of the lay rector, George Randall Johnson esq. Corn Hall, built by a company in xBss. is no longer used as
M. A.. of Heavitree, Exeter: in I854 the na\Te and aisles were such, ,owing to the abolition of the market f.ormerly held
repaired and the church reseated at a cost of £115 1 in 1864 here on Tuesdays. but is still available <tor concerts and
an organ was erected and choir stalls placed in the chancel : meetings and also serves as a reading room. The Police
in r872 the south porch was rebuilt, new floors laid down Station is used a.s an occJ.sional courthouse. The river Ant
and the windows in the aisles renovated, at a total cost of affords facilities for landing coal, corn, malt and all kinds of
£395: in 1886 the roof of the nave was relaid, a new vestry mercl;landise; Stalham and Button Broads form a sheet of
612 SIALHAM. NORFOLK. 0

water eonnected with this river, throo-quarters of a. mile The chief crops are wheat, oats and barley, roots and beans.
from south-west to north-aast and one mile from west to The area is 1,792 acres; rateable value, £4,099; the popu-
east: it is mostly overgrown with reeds, but there are two lation in 1891 was 867.
channels, one to Stalham and the other to Sutton. The Parish Clerk, George Stimpson.
poor'sAallotment,
t f 80 of ( over
G 72 acres,
Ill )awarded
· 1 under the Inclo- PosT, M . 0 . & T . 0 ., S . B . & AnnUity
· & I nsurance Office
sure c o r 7 47 enrge · • lS et year1Y to severa1 (tlub-Office. Letters should have S.O. Norfolk added).-
tenants, and the rents are now (1892) distributed in money Mrs. Emily Cattermoul, sub-postmistress. Letters re-
to such poor p~>.rsons as have g11.ined a settlement here under ceived from Norwich by mail cart & by train from Yar-
the 34th section of "The Divided Parishes and Poor Law mouth ; deliveries. commence at 7 a.m. & 3 p.m. ; dis-
Amendment Act, 1876" (39 and 40 Vict. c. 61) : a sum of patched at 4 . 10 & 6. 15 p.m. On sundays they are not
£ xo, left by John Riches in 1626, was invested in house delivered, but may be called for from 7 to 10 a. m. ; dis-
property, subsequently sold for £8o, and the money re-in- patched at _20 p.m
vested in the form of a loan towards the erection of the 4
Smallburgh workhouse: in 1870, the enactments of the Police Station, Charles Willmott, inspector & 5 constables
Local Government Board having effected a change in the PuBLIC OFFICERS:-
mode of electing the guardians, this sum was transferred to Admiralty Surgeon & .Agent, Norman Hendrie Walker-
the vicar and churchwardens for the time being, and by M.B., C.M
them invested in Consols, the interest of which now amounts Medical Officer & Public Vaccinator, Stalham district~
to £2 78. 8d.: in 1634 Thomas Smythe, of Stalham, be- Smallburgh union, Norman Hf)ndrie Walker M.B., C.M
queathed an annual sum of £5, invested in certain proper- Assistant Overseer & Surveyor & Collector of Taxes ..
ties in the parish, now (x8g2) producing £26 yearly, out of Robert Joseph Perfitt
which a sum of 13s. 4 d. is paid every year to the vicar : Registrar of Marriages, Smallburgh district, Henry An-
these two benefactions constitute the "Donation Charity," drews ; deputy, John Batchelor
and are at the entire disposal of the vicar 11.nd churchwar- A School Board of 5 members was formed compulsorily 26-
dens for the time beiug, for the benefit of the aged and de- November, 1875, for the united district of Stalham &
serving poor : in 17x8 Mrs. Cathcrine Smith left six acres of Brumstead ; J. Meale, clerk to the board ; William Henry
land, called" The Long Closes," for tbe use and benefit of Cooke, Stalham, attendance officer
the vicar for the time being, subject to a half-yearly pay- Board School (mixed), opened in June, 1878 & enlarged in
ment of Ss. at Christmas and 8s. at Easter, for the purchase 1887, for 159 children ; average attendance, 143; Charles,
of bread for the poor, and of 4 s. to the parish clerk for keep- <_Jartmale, ~aster; Mrs. Ro~annah Mary Cartma!e, mist
ing clean her monument in the chancel of the church. The Railway StatiOn (Eastern & M1dlands), SI. Bull, statwn mast
parish consists of two manors: the trustees of Robert Cooke I CoNVEYANCE TO:-
esq. are lords of the manor of Linford and Wilds, and NORWICH-Leatherdale's coach, from Maid's Head inn, to
George Randal Johnson esq. is lord of the manor of Stalham Royal hotel, on mon. wed. & sat. at 8 a. m. returning same.
Hall and chief impropriator of the rectorial tithes, which days at 4·45 p.m
amount to £363, and are divided amongst eight impropria- WATER CONVEYANCE to & from Yarmouth, from Mrs. Sarah.
tors. The principal landowners are James Sewell N eYille I Burton's wharf
esq. B.A., J.P. of Sloley, the trustees of Robert Cooke esq. CARRIER TO NoRWICH.-George Stimpson, to 'Waggon k
and George Randal Johnson esq. of Heavitree, Exeter. The Horses,' Tombland, every wed. & sat. & returns the same;
soil is fine strong land ; subsoil. brick earth, sand and gravel. day at 4 p.m
PRIVATE RESIDENTS. Cattermoul Emily (Mrs.), grocer, Lubbock Wm. sedge horse collar maker-
Bates Miss, The Laurels draper & stationer, Post office Lynes William, nurseryman & market;;
Coleman John Abraham Coffee &Dining Uooms(Thos. Seago,pro) gardener, Hose cottage, St. John's rd'
Daniels Thomas Abbott Cooke Ann Elizabeth (Mrs.), dress Meale Joshua, grocer
Davison Daniel, Ebenezer cottage maker, Brumstead road Miles Robert, watch & clock maker
Gaze Charles Cooke Edward, farmer, The Hall MooreRobertHy. basket mkr. TheStaithe.
Gibbs George, St. John's road Cooke Harriett (l\Iiss), dress maker, Morfey John Smith, Maid's Head P.H
Hook Miss, St. John's road High street Nichols Alma, ironmonger & dealer in
Hunting George Crane Cooke Henry, farmer fishing tackle suitable for the Broads,.
Jay Mrs Cooke Robert, coal merchant Walton house
Lingwood Miss Cooke WilliamHenry,school attendance North NorfolkBoot Co.boot & shoe mkrs.
Middleton Robert, Sunnyside officer for the Ludham, Potterham, Peggs Sophia (Miss), girls' school
l'estell Mrs. High street Lessingham, Palling, Stalham, East Perfitt Robert Joseph, stone, marble&:
Reynolds The Misses Ruston & Horn ing school boards & granite mason, assistant overseer,.
Savory William, Hawley house clerk to the first four, St. John's rd surveyor & collector of taxes
Tuck Mrs. St. John's road Cooper-Brown & Co. wine & spirit Porter Albert Edwd. watch mkr.High st
Walker Norman Hendrie M.B., c.M merchants & brewers; & at Eaton Potter George, baker
Webb Miss brewery, Norwich & Dereham Press Brothers, coal merchants &:
White Rev. Joseph Neville B.A.Vicaragc Corn Hall (Wm. S. Andrewes, keeper) maltsters, Wayford bridge; &atBacton
Woods Rev.EdwardBurchellB.A.lBapt], Cox Robert, fishmonger Wood staithe & mill & Railway
Chetwynd house Daniels Thomas Abbott, manager of station, North Walsham ; Gunton ;
Messrs. Gurney & Co.'s Bank & agent Cromer; Roughton & Gt. Yarmouth
COMMERCIAL. for the Alliance Fire & Life Office Riches Charles Henry, boot maker
Alcock William, jun. builder & under- Drake William, baker & confectioner Riches Emma (Mrs.), apartments
taker, Staithe road • \ Draper Williarn Richea,iron& brass Hust William, engineer & millwright
Alcock William, builder founder, agricultural implement ma. Salmon John, sedge horse collar maker
Allcock George Edward, saddler & bar- & agent & gen.smith,St. Mary's wrks Salmon John, jun. collar maker & beer
ness maker Easton Alfred, butcher retailer, The Green
Andrews Henry, registrar of marriages Fox William, farmer, Green farm Salm(ln Wm. farmer, Chapeltield farm
for the Small burgh district GalesWalt. Pollard, boot mkr. Thet5taithe Sa ul J ames, boot maker, Small burgh rd.
Barcham John, insurance agt.Staithe rd Garrett Edward, jun. Swan family & Saunders William,boot makr. TheGreen.
Batchelor .John, builder & contrac- commercial hotel & posting house; Savory William & Son, cabinet makers.
tor & brick & tile manufacturer, & livery& bait stables& lock-up coach ho & ironmongers
deputy registrar of marriages for Gaze William, farmer, The Green Savory William, jun. pianoforte tuner
-Small burgh district & agent for the Gurneys, Birkbeck, Barcl~y, Buxtons & .Seago Henry, pork butcher
Accident Insurance Co. Limited; & Orde, bankers (Thomas Abbott Seago Thomas, wholesale & retail tea,
at Yarmouth Daniels, manager); draw on Barclay, dealer, grocer & provision merchant,.
Bates .Jarnea Le Frank, coach bldr Bevan & Co. London E c coffee & dining rooms, boot, shoe &.
Bilby Frederick Lewis, butcher Henarnan Arthur, family grocer, outfitting establishment
Billham Daniel, basket maker tea dealer, & draper, dress, millinery, Silcock Boardman Charles, farmer
Bill ham Ephraim, tailor mantle & mourning warehouse Spanton Arthur Humphrey, plumberc
Billham Gaze, saddler & harness maker Howleti; Jonathan, auctioneer & valuer & glazier
Billham Robt. basketmakr.St.John'srd Hunting George Crane M.n.c.v.s.L. 8pantonRobt. Victor,plumber, painter
Brad bury Robert, chemist & stationer veterinary surgeon & china, glass & earthenware dealer &.
Bristow Alfred, miller (wind & steam) Juby Thomas, cattle dealer bicycle agent
Burton Harry, brick & tile manufac- Keeler George, basket maker Stimpson George, farmer & parish clerk
turer & corn me-.chant, The Staithe Leatherdale Wm. coach & fly proprietor Stimpson Robert, farmer
Burton .John, wholesale & retail Legg Mark Hugh,Railway hotel,family, Teasel Josiah, boatwright ; boats of all!.
ironmonger & oil mercht. The Stai.the commercial & posting house descriptions for sale or hire
Bnrton Sarah (Mrs.), coal & corn mer. London Edward, hawker, The Green Turner Walt. bldr. & wbeelwright,Greell
& miller (wind) & c~rrie:r by w"ter London James, bl"ck§mitll WiUmot Charles, inspector of police
DIRECTORY.] NORFOLK. STARSTON. 613
Walker Norman llendrie M.B., c.M. vaccinator, Stalham district, Small- Woods Herbert & George, butchers
physician & surgeon, admiralty sur- burgh union Woods J ames, linen draper & tailor
geon & agent, surgeon to the Trinity WithersErnest,insurance agt.Staithe rd Woolsron Wm. farmer, \\'ayfordbridge
Corporation & medical officer &public Withers Rbt.insurance agent,Staitherd W ortley George, farmer
STANl!'IELD is a parish, 3~ miles west from North a fuel allotment of 8 acres for the poor, let for £I5 ros_
Elmham station on the Dereham and Wells SP.ction of the The trustees of the late John David Hay-Hill esq. of Gres-
Great Eastern railway and 6 north-west-by-north from senhall, are lords of the manor ; William Thomas Collison
Dereham, in the Mid division of the county, Launditch esq . .J.l'. of Bilney Hall and Great Yarmouth. and John
hundred, Mitford and Launditch petty sessional division William Davy esq . .J.P. are the chief landowners. The soil
and union, Dereha.m county court district, rural deanery of is mixed; subsoil, various. The crops are wheat, barley
South Brisley and arch deaconry and diocese of Norwich. and roots. The area is 903 acres; rateable value,£ 1,241;
The church of St. Margarct is a structure of flint with stone the population in 1891 was 175.
dressings, in the Perpendicular and Early English styles, Sexton, George Purely.
consisting of chancel, nave, south porch and an embattled
western tower with pinnacles, containing 4 bells : a new Letters through Dereham, arrive at 7.40 a.m. Whissonsett
east window was erected in 1864: there are 100 sittings. is the nearest money order office & the telegraph office is
The register dates from the year 1558. The living is a rec- at Litcharn. PILLAR LETTER Box cleared at 5.50 p.m.;
tory, gross yearly value £36o, net £300, with 20 acres of sundays at 10.25 a.m
glebe and residence, in the gift of and held since 1864 by the The children of this place attend the Board school at Mile-
Rev. Evan Lewis Davies M.A. of Trinity College, Cambridge. ham, to which this parish is a contributory district, send-
A Primitive Methodist chapel was built in 1879. There is ing 2 members
Davies Rev. Evan Lewis M.A. Rectory Dady Austin, baker Middleton Elijah, farmer
COMMERCIAL. Dickason Charles, farmer Nelson John, miller (wind)
Beilby Waiter, farmer, Ling farm Fryett William, farmer, Dandy farm Nicholson William, farmer
Blyth Hebron, Maid's Head P.H Gapp Stephen, farmer, Manor farm Purely George, farmer
Buck Martin, farmer Keeler Robert, shopkeeper Renyer Rowland, farmer, Low common
Button William, farmer, High green Middleton Elizabeth (Mrs.), farmer, Winter Walter, farmer, Htll farm
Cooper William, farmer, High green High green
STANFORD is a parish and village on the road from average tithe rent-charge £ II5, net yearly value £us,
Branclon to Watton and on the south bank of the river including 16 acres of glebe, in the gift of the Bishop of
Wissey, 6 miles south-west from Watton station, Thetford Norwich, and held since 1887 by the Rev. ~amuel Harries.
and Swaffham section, and 6 north-east from Brandon of St. Aidans. Lord Walsingham is lord of the manor and
station on the Ely and Thetford section of the Great Eastern principal landowner. The soil is light and sandy; subsoil.
railway and 9 south from Swaffham, in the South Western marl and chalk, with clay in places. The chief crops are
division of the county, hundred and petty sessional division barley, oats, rye and turnips and a little wheat. The area
of Grimshoe, union and county court district of Swaffham, is 2,665 acres, formerly a rabbit warren ; rateable value,
rural deanery of Cranwich, south division, archdeaconry of £gs6; the population in 1891 was 156.
Norfolk and dwcese of Norwich. The church of All Saints, Parish Clerk, James Quadling.
a short distance east of the village, is a structure of flint, in
the Early English style, consisting of chancel, nave, aisles, LETTER Box cleared at 7.10 a.m. & 6.30 p.m.; no delivery
north porch and a western tower with a circular lower stage or dispatch on sundays. Letters through Brandon arrive
and octagonal belfry and containing a clock and one bell: at 7.30 a. m. Mundford is the nearest money order &
the church was enlarged in 1852 at a cost of £7oo, when telegraph office
the north aisle and chancel, then in ruin!, were rebuilt and School (mixed), erected by the late & supported by the
the interior reseated : it now affords go sittings. The present Lord Walsingham ; it will hold 40 children ; aver-
register dates from the year 1754. The living is a vicarage, age attendance, 40; .Miss Clara Cook, mistress
Harries Rev. Samuel [vicar] Brown George, farm bailiff to Lord Oldfield Robert, Cock inn
Addison William, farm bailiff to Mr. Walsingham Spinks George, farmer, Water end
Ilubbard Claxton, Mousehole Coates Charles, shopkeeper
STANHOE is a parish and village, with a station 1! Wright left 3 acres of land, which the present rector has
miles north, on the HunsEanton section of the Great Eastern exchanged for 4~ acres of glebe, the proceeds of which are
railway, 4 south-south-west from Burnham Market and to be applied to putting children to school. There are
120 by rail from London, in the North Western division of remains her~ of au ancient cross, and in Chapelfield are
the county, Srnithdon hundred, Smithdon and Brothercross traces of the buildings of a religtous house. Stanhoe Hall,
petty sessional division, Docking union, Little Walsingham the prop~rt,y of Henry Calthrop Hollway-Calthrop esq_
county court district, rural deanery of Heacham, arch- J.P. now occupied by Edward John l:<'ellowes J.P. is a
deaconry of Norfolk and diocese of Norwich. The church of mansion of brick, enlarged in 1879, and surrounded by
All Saints is a building of flint in the Early English and well-wooded grounds. Mrs. Seymonr, of Barwick House,
Decorated styles, consisting of chancel, nave, aisles, south who is lady of the manor, and Henry Calthrop Hallway-
porch and an embattled tower at the south-west angle, Calthrop csq. J.P. who is lord of the manor of Marshes, are
containing one bell : the entrance is through the base of the principal landowners. The soil is good mixed ; the
the tower: the stone font and oak altar-rail, pulpit and subsoil is chalk and marl. The chief crops are wheat,
reading deBk were erected in 1853, as a memorial to Daniel barley, oats, turnips and mangolds. The area is 1,443
Everard, formerly rector of this parish and of Burnham acres ; rateable value, £1,882 ; the population in 1891 was
Thorpe, and his wife: the stained east window was erected 444·
in April, 1879, and one on the north side of the chancel in Parish Clerk, William Smith.
1887: the church was restored in 1855 and is seated with open PosT 0FFICE.-Robert Allen, sub-postmaster. London &:.
benches, affording 250 sittings. The register dates from the other letters received from Lynn at 6.30 a. m. ; dispatched
yoor 1558. The living is a rectory, with the vicarage of at 5.20 p.m. ; sundays, dispatched 2.15 p.m. Docking is
Bar wick annexed, tithe rent-charge £383, average i_,37o, the nearest money order & telegraph office. Postal orders
joint net yearly value £303, including 19 acres of glebe, with are issued here, but not paid
residence erected in 1861, in the gift of Mrs. Seymour, and Sta.nhoe & Barwick National ~chool (mixed), erected in 1854,
held since 1884 by the Rev. Henry Earle Bulwer M.A. of for 100 children; average attendance, 85; Miss F.a.nny E_
Pembroke College, Cambridge. There is a Wesleyan chapel Hawker, mistress
and a meeting room for Primitive Methodists. Mr. John Rail way Station, Moses Elliott, station master
Bulwer Rev. Henry Ear le M.A. Rectory Bennett Arthur Thomas, general grocer G-oodman Martha (Mrs.), blacksmith
Fellowes Edward John .J.P. Sta.nhoe hall & draper, hosier, glover & haber- Johnson John, shopkeeper
Hollway-Calthrop Henry Calthrop J.P dasher; family mourning; funerals Linge John, The Crown P.H
Tarbuck Rev. James [curate uf Bag- furnished; & at Docking Martin Thomas & Edward, farmers
· thorpe], The Cabin Chapman Thomas, farmer, Station frm Matthews Robert, farmer, The Grange i
Toynbee Paget M.A. Stanhoe grange Cook Dennis, farmer & at Bircham Newtou
COKMERCIAL. Drake Josiah, pork butcher &e Rowe John, farmer
AllenRobt.bootma.&shopkpr.Postoffice Emerson John, farmer & Norfolk Hero Wood Waiter, baker
Bell William, farmer inn & posting house
STARSTON is a parish and small village pleasantly sional division, Depwade union, Harleston county cour~
situated in a valley, 1~ miles north-by-west from Harleston district, rural deanery of Redenhall, archdt>aconry of Nor-
station on the Waveney Valley br<~.nch of the Great Eastern folk and diocese of Norwich; a stream, locally known as the
railway and 18 mile.:~ south from Norwich, in the Southern "Beck," flows through the parish and falls into the rivei"
division of the county, Earsham hundred and petty ses- Waveney. The church of ~t. Margaret, standing on a hill
614 SfABSTON. NORFOLK. [KELLY's

above the village, is a building of flint with stone dressings, of £7o and a donation of £25 from a parishioner,- realized
in the Early Decorated style, with some remains of Norman the sum of £375, which was invested in the purchase of
work, and consists of chancel, nave, nmth aisle, ~nuth porch land, the rent of which is divided annuallya.mong the poor,
and an emb~ttled western tower containing 5 bells: in the partly in clothing and partly in fuel, excepting a sum of
church is a monument, with kneeling effigy, to Hartholomew £"4, which is applied towards the support of the National
Cotton, clerk of briefs in the Star Chamber, ob. 21 June, school: in 1871 the Rev. Samuel 'fitlow, of Norwich; left
1613 : the organ wa.s erected in 1878, at the expense of the £8oo in trust to the rectors of Redenhall and Starston, the
present rector, and the lych gate by Mrs. Hopper in 1883: interest to be devoted to the apprenticing of boys, in the
in the chancel are memorial windows to Richard Caries proportion of four-fifths to the former parish and the '
Hopper, son of the late Archdeacon Hopper, d. 31 Jan. 1855; remaining fifth to the latter. Starston Place, the seat of
and to Elizabeth "\'Vhitear, d. 14 May, 1848: near the en- Alfred Taylor esq. J.P. is a mansion standing on an eminence
trance is a small brass to William Baggott gent. d. 4 Nov. near the church and surrounded by extensive grounds. '
xs8o, and there are tablets to Thomas Arrowsmith M.A. 30 Starston Hall, the property of John San croft Holmes esq.
years rector, d. 28 March, 1729; Robert Ferrier esq. d. 12 of Gawdy Hall, occupied as a farmhouse by Mr. Daniel
Dec. 1767; Lieut.-Gen. Wm. Spencer, d. 2';1 Aug. 1829, and Isaac Da.nby, is an ancient building of red brick in the
other members of his family ; and the Rev. W illiam Whitear Elizabethan style, stanqing in pleasant grounds and par~ly ·
M..A.. 23 years rector, d. 10 Dec. 1826; and a brass to the surrounded by a moat ; it has been restored and much
late Ven. Augustus M. Hopper, Archdeacon of Norwich and improved by the present owner. William Machell esq. of
32 years rect6r, d. 7 Jan. 1878: the silver chalice, dated xs67, Hnpe Cottage, Bath road, Hounslow, is lord of the manor
was presented in 1742 by Mrs. Catherine Sancroft, great- of Gunshaws, which is partly in this parish and partly in
niece of Archbishop Sancroft, by whom it wa.s used for the that of Needham. Alfred Taylor esq. J.P. John Sancroft
administration of holy communion to non-jurors at Fres- llolmes esq. M.A., J.P., D.L. of Gawdy llall, Mrs. Hopper,
singfield, after his removal from the see of Canterbury in Sir Hugh Edward Adair hart. D.L., J.P. of :Flixton Hall,
r69r: the north aisle was !ldded and the church thoroughly Suffolk, Frederick Bacon Frank esq. M. A. of Earlham Hall,
restored in 1870, at a cost of nearly £1,ooo, and it now and William Manning esq. are the principal landowners:
affords 250 sittings: in r8gr the churchyard was enlarged the land is all freehold. The soil is mixed ; subsoil, gravel
by the addition of a piece of adjoining land, presented by and clay. The chief crops are wheat, barley, beans, tur-
Alfred Taylor esq. J. P. The register dates from the year nips and pasture. The area is 2,168A. 30P. ; rateable value,
I558, and is in a perfect condition. 'fhe living is a rectory, /.,"2,600; the population in 1891 waS 516.
average tithe rent-charge £504, net yearly value £430, Parish Clerk, Edwin Bailey.
includmg 22 acres of glebe, with residence, in the gift of
St. J obn's College, Cambridge, on the nomination of the PosT 0FFICE.-Mrs. Emma Barber, postmistress. Letters
present rector, and held since x887 by the Rev. Edmund through Harleston arrive at 6.30 a. m. ; dispatched 6.15
Caries Hopper M.A. of that college. The rectory house was p.m. ; sundays, I I a. m. Harleston is the nearest money
partially rebuilt by Richard Anguise, rector of this parish order & telegraph o±Hee
in 1637 and ejected in 1644. In x865 1 under the sanction National School (mixed), erected in r839 & since enlarged,
of the Charity Commissioners, several pieces of scattered for IIO children ; average attendance, 6o; Miss Hard-
charity land were sold, which, together with Davies' charity wick, mistress
Edwards Mrs ' Chapman Walter, shoe maker Riches William, farmer, Manor farm
Hopper Rev.Edmund Caries M.A.Rectry Constable William, blacksmith Sampson Arthur Huhert, carpenter,
Hopper Mrs. Grove hill l Danby Daniel lsaac, farmer & land- builder & ecclesiastical wood carver
Johnson David r owner & assist. overseer, Starston hall Silcock Hoardman, relieving & vaccina-
Spooner William Day Albert, shoe maker tion officer,Eastern district &registrar
Taylor Alfred J.P. Starston Place 1 Elmar John, farmer of births,deaths&marriages,Harleston
Taylor Miss, Conifer hill EverettJsph. frmr.HundredPound barn district, Depwade union & school at-
COMMl<;RCIAL. Green George, farmer, Yew TrPe farm tendance officer, Shelton school board
Algar George, jun. farmer &, cattle Kerrison:VlaryAnn(Miss),frmr.&lndwnr Skinner Charles, farmer
dealer, Brick Kiln farm I Lubbock Edward, head gardener to Skinner James, farmer
Bales William, land steward to Alfred I Alfred Taylor esq. J .P Skinner William, farmer, Bleach farm
Taylor esq. J. P Middleton Elijah, sen. farmer SmiLh George, farmer
BG\lls Charles, farmer, White House frm Palmer John Richd. farmer, Beck hall Tuboy Jas. farmer,uillow's Willows frm
Barber George, grocer Phillips Herbert William, insurance agt Ward Henry George, farmer
Barker Thomas, farmer & landowner Puttock James, farmer White Henry, Gate P.H

Chaney Edmund,farmer,Skinner's farm Reeve Solomon, thatcher

STIBBARD is a parish, 2 miles east from Ryburgh £x 6s. 8d. is distributed yearly to the poor in coals. Sen-
station on the Dereham and Wells section of the Great nowe Hall, the seat of Bernard Le Neve Foster esq. J.P. is
Eastern railway and about 4 south-east from Fakenham, about 2 miles south-east of Ryburgh station, and stands in
in the North Western division of the county, Gallow the midst of a picturesque park and woocllands of nearly
hundred nnd petty sessional division, W alsingham union 300 acres, through which flows the river Wensum. Bernard
and county court district, rural deanery of Burnham, arch- Le N eve Foster esq. J. P. J a.mes Emery esq. Edward Cubitt
deaconry of 1\"orfolk and diocese of Norwich. By an order :Francis esq. who is lord of the manor, the trustees of
which came into operation March 25, >r886, a detached part William Francis esq. Lord Hastings and F. and G. Smith
of Great Ryburgh was amalgamated with this parish. The Limited are the principal landowners. The soil is chiefly
church of All Saints is an ancient building of stone in the heavy; subsoil, brick earth and clay. The land is cultivated
Decorated style, consisting of chancel, nave, south porch, on the usual four-course shift. The area is x,6o7 acres ;·
north aisle and a western tower containing one bell : it was rateable value, £2,195; the population in 1891 was 436~
restored in x86x, and has 300 sittings. The register dates Parish Clerk, Robert Myhill.
from the year 1733· The living is a rectory,, average tithe PosT 0FFICE.-Walter Norgate, receiver. Letters arrive
rent-charge £372, net yearly valqe £369, including 23 through Dereham, via Guist, at 7 a. m. ; & are dispatched
acres of glebe, with residence, in the gift of the Misses All- at 5.20 p.m. The nearest money order office is at Guist &
nut, and held since 1875 by the Rev. Thomas Allnqtt R.D. telegraph office is at Great Ryburgh. Postal orders are
of St. Catharine's College, Cambridge. Here is a Wesleyan issued bere, but not paid
chapel. A yearly sum of £46, the rent of 23 acres of land, National School (mixed), erected in x8s8, for 130 children;
is applied to the relief of the poor. Pearce's charity of · average attendance, 70; Mrs. E. J. Symonds, mistress
Allnutt Rev. Thomas B. D. Rectory I Eggleton James, beer retailer N eale Robert, blacksmith
Bartle Miss ~ Eggleton John,King'sArmsP.H.&farmer NorgateWaltr.grocer&draper,Post office
Cross Mrs. Ivy house r EmeryJas.farmer&landowner,Moor end Robotham John, farmer
Foster BernardLeNeveJ.P.Sennowe hall! Gilbert William George, head gardener Robotham Joseph, shoe maker
Francis Edward Cubitt to B. Le Neve Foster esq. J.l' Seaman & Gibbs, farmers
COMMERCIAL. Hutoberson William, baker Symonds James, builder
Beane Henry, farmer, Catches farm Jex Robert, farmer Symonds Jonathan, farmer
llell M. S. & E. (Misses), farmers King & Co. brick & tile makers " Symonds Thos. wheelwrignt & carpentr
Boulter & Son, grocers & drapers Male Robert, bricklayer & plasterer Wade Benjamin, brazier
Carman David, shopkeeper :Myhill Robert, wheelwright Wade Joseph, farmer & t-attle dealer
Eggleton James, blacksmith 1

STIFFKEY is a parish and village, near the North Sea, and county court district, rural deanery of Walsingham and
about 3~ miles east from Wells station on the Great Eastern archdeaconry and diocese of Norwich. The church of St.
railway, m the North division of the connty, North Green- John the Baptist is an ancient edifice in the Decorated, and
hoe hundred and petty sessional division, ''Valsingham union Perpendicular styles, consisting of chancel, nave, north
DIRECTORY. J NORFOLK 0 STvKE FERRY.. 615
porah and an embattled western tower containinl one bell : castellated mansion, with massive circular towers at the
the chancel, rt>-%ored in 1848, contains a piscina, and there angles, a.nd considerable remains still .exist.' The Marqnegs
is a bl'll.ss to Margaret Bramche, ob. 1479: tho church was Townshend is lord of the manor and abief landowner. The
thoroughly restored in I879. and affords 2()()- sittings ; the soil is light; subsoil, chalky. The chief crops are turnips,
church of St. Mary, which formerly stood in the same wheat and barley. The. area is 2,227 acres of land and
churchyard, and the ruins of which remained until 1883, 1,685 of water; rateable value, £2,327; the population in
had entirely disappeared before r887. The register dates 1891 was 450. ·
from the year 1548. The living of St. John and St. Mary Parish Clerk, James NewsLead.
is a rectory, consolidated with that of Morston, average PosT OFFICM.-Miss Matilda Mann, receiver.. Letters
tithe rent charge, Stiffkey £3o8, Morston £213, joint received from Wells at 8.25 a. m,; dispatched at 3.40
gross yearly value £521, with 56 acres of glebe and p.m. The nearest money order & ~elegraph office is at
residence, in the gift of the Marquess Townshend, and held Wells. Postal orders are issued here, but not paid
since x883 by the Rev. Eugene Sweny M. A. of Trinity School (mixed), erected in 1844, fur 134 children; average
College, Dublin. On Warborough Hill are remains of attendrmce, no; James Augustus Blake, master; Mrs.
entrenchments; and at Camping Hill, a mile to the east, is Et.uma Hlake, mistress; Miss Mabel Jane Lewis. assist-
a green }moll, supposed to have been also entrenched. Stiff- ant mistress
key Hall, originally erected by Sir Nicholas Bacon, keeper CAR-RIER TO NORWlCH.-William Hall, from his residence,
of the Privy Seal tq Queen Elizabeth, was formerly a large every thurs. returning fri 1

Bland Thomas, Warborough house Cracknell Alice (Mrs.), grocer & draper Pearson Edward, Townshend Arms P. R·
Sweny Rev. Eugene M.A. Hectory Crafer William Henry, farmer & bricklayer
COMMERCIAL. Frankling James, Red Lion P.H. & bakr Wall James Robert, miller (wind) &
Barnes Thomas, farm bailiff to MajorJ. Green James, master mariner Victoria P.H
E. Groom, Vale house Green Nathaniel, mariner Wisker Frederick, blacksmith
Carter George William, grocer, draper Jary William, shoe maker Wordingham Albert, carpenter
& carpenter Mallett John Massingham, butcher; & · ' '
CaseJas.farmr.TheHall; &atCockthorpe at Wells & Blakeney
STOCKTON is a village and parish, 3 miles north-west by the Rev. Edwin Tearle, of Corpus Christi College, Cam-
from Beccles junction station on the Ipswich and Yarmouth bridge. The town estate consists of two cottages and 48
section of the Great Eastern railway and 4 north-east from acre!'! of land, now let for £65 yearly, which sum is applied
Bungay, in the Southern division of the county, Cla;,ering to educational purpose.'!, the repair of the church and the
hundred, Loddon and Clavering petty sessional division and relief of the poor. Capt. Waiter Fitzgerald Kerrich, of
union, Beccles county court district, rural deanery of Brooke Geldeston Hall, who holds the manor, and William Browne
eastern division, archdeaconry of~orfolk and diocese of Nor- Easter esq. are'chref landowners. The soil is mixed clay
wich. The church of St. Michael is a small edifice of flint and sand ; subsoil, clay. The chief crops are wheat, barley,
in the Early English style, restored in r88o and consisting beans and peas. The area is r,o51 acres; rated at £1,148 ;
of chancel, nave, south porch and a round western tower, the population in l!88r was n6.
with short spire, containing 5 bells : in r8go a stained east Parish Clerk, William Mitchell.
window was inserted at the sole cost of the rector : · · '
there are 8o sittings. The register dates from the year LETTER Box cleared at 3·30 Letters through Bungay
rs6x. The living is a rectory, tithe rent-charge £ 257 , arrive at c}3o. The nearest money ·order & telegraph
average £rg6, net yearly value [,r88, including 34 acres of office is at Geldstone · l
glebe, with residence built in 1879, in the gift of the Rev. For educa.tional purposes this parish is u.uited ·with Kirby
Alfred Bond B.A. of Powick, Won:ester, and held since r878 Cane & GeldestOI!
. Tearle Rev. Edwin, Rectory Easter William Browne, farmer & land- Lawn James, shopkeeper & shoe maker
Attoe William, Black Boy P.H owner, Stockton hall , Read William, market gardener
Boggis Joseph, farmer & overseer Garrood Frdk. farmr. Stockton Old hall Soanes J ames, market gardene~
Brister James, farmer Harrod Robert, farmer Tills Charles, market gardener
Fairhead Robert, blacksmith 1
rr 1
STODY is a parish and village, pict\lresquely situated in yearly vallJ.e £245, with residence and 46 acres of land, in
a dell, and watered by a rivulet running into the river the g1ft of CQnstance Marchioness of Lothian, and held since
Glaven, about 2 miles north-east from :Jlelton Constable 188x by the Rev, Hugh Scales Fullagar M.A. of Caius
station on the Eastern and Midlands railway, 3l west-by- College, Cambridge, who resides at Hunworth. Constance
south from Holt, in the Northern division of the county, Marchioness of Lothian is lady of the manor and principal
Ilolt hundred, petty sessional division and county court landowner. The soil is light; subsoil, gravel and cpalk.
district, Erpingharn union, rural deanery of Holt and arch- The chief crops are wheat, turnips, barley and grass, The
deaconry and diocese of :\ orwich. The church of St. Mary area is r,277 acres ; rateable value, £-1,096 ; the population
is a cruciform building of flint in the Perpendicular style, in 1881 was 130. By an order which came into operation
consisting of chancel, nave, transepts, south porch, and a March 25th, 1884, two detached parts of this parish were
round embattled western tower containinz one bell : the amalgamated with Briston.
font is large and its octagonal basin is supported by small Sexton, Edward Peck.
pillars resting on a stone base : in the chancel is a mural
monument to the Rev. Josiah Webb :Flavell, rector of thi.'!l Letters through Dereham by foot post from Briningharn
parish, with Hunworth from 1 April, 1 a01 , for 47 years, arrive about 7· 15 a. m. The nearest money order & tele·
who died in 1 848 : there are 150 sittings. The register graph office is at Melton Constabl~ ... W ALI, LETTER Box
dates from the year 166r. The living is a rectory, with that cleared at 4·45 p.m
of Hun worth annexed, tithe rent-charge £2~7, joint net The school for this parish is at Hunworth
Emery John Hill Uraveling Thomas, jun. carpenter 1 SlaughterDanl.farm bailiff to.Mrs.Smith
Robins Miss Mack William, William IV. P.H Smith Herbert Lee, farmer, Stody hall
Fairbairn Robert, forester for Mar- Page Robert, gamekeeper to the Mar- Smith Thos. (Mrs.), farmer, Stody hall
chiouess of Lothian chioness of Lothian Waller Arthur James, Horsa Shoes P.U:
Graveling Thomas, sen. carpenter Sands Thomas, farmer, Brecks farm 1

STOKE FERRY is a parish and small town on the surrogate. The small tithes are commuted to the Crown at
river Wissey, at the junction of roads from Thetford and £192 18s. yearly, and the great tithes to the Norwich Union
Brandon to Downham, and is the terminus of the Downham Fire Insurance Company at £.247· Here are Wesleyan and
and Stoke Ferry branch from the Ely and Lynn section of Free Methodist chapels. A fair for horses and cattle is held
the Great Eastern railway, 7 miles east-south-east from on December 6th, and one for hiring servants on the
Downham Market, 14 south-east from Lynn and 87 from Thursday before Old :Michaelmas; considerable business is
London, in the South Western division of the county, done at the wharf in corn, coals and malt. Messrs. Paine
Clackclose hundred and petty sessional division, Downham and Hrettell, solicitors, of Chertsey; Surrey, at"e lords o[ the
union and county court district, rural deanery of Fincham, manor. Anthony Horrex Roger Micklefield esq. Charles
archdeaconry of Norfolk and diocese of Norwich. The Hader esq. Miss Johnson, Edward Etheridge esq . .Bradtield
church of All Saints, restored in 1848, is a building of stone Etheridge esq. and the vicar, are the principal landowners.
in the Ea.rly English style, consisting of chancel and nave The area is 2,059 acres~ rateable value, £3,726; the popu-
and a western turret containing a clock and one bell : there lation in x8gr was 724. By an order which came into
are 300 sittings. The register dates from the year 1703. operation March 25th, 1884, detached parts of Wereham and
The living is a vicarage, net yearly value £rso, including 11 Wretton were amalgamated with this parish. J
acres of glebe, in the gift of the Lord Chancellor, and held Sexton, Frederick Cross. · _
since r858 by the Rev. John McG-ill, of St. Bees, who is a PosT, M. 0. & T. 0., S. B. & Annuity & Insuran~ Offica
616 STOJ(E FERRY. :KORFOLK. [KELLY'S
(Sub-Office. Letters should have S.O. Norfolk added).- parishes of Stoke Ferry & Wratton, now combined with
John Mee, sub-postmaster. Letters received at 4·45 the Board School, for IOO boys & So girls & infants; average
o..m. & :12.35 p.m. ; dispatched at n a.m. & 7 p.m. ; attendance, 120 boys, girls & infants; Charles Wm. Brown,
&; on snndays 7 p.m master; Miss Alice Wellam, mistress; Miss Nelly Carter,
A School Board of 5 members was formed compulsorily 24 infants' mistress
April, 1875; Frederic Spinks, Downham, clerk to the Railway Statwn, Albert James Baglev, station master
board & attendance officer J

:Free School, erected & endowed in I819 by the late James CARRIER TO LYNN.-B. Salmon, tues. thurs. & sat. return-
Bradfield esq. for the education of 25 poor boys, from the ing same days, & Brandon, fri
l'RIVATE RESIDENTS. Cross Wm. beer retailer & bricklayer Pollard Harriet (Mrs.), baker
Bader Charles, Fenhouse Eggett Benjamin, builder & contractor Pollard Martha Kezia (Mrs.), grocer
Buckenham William Alfred Elderkin \\illiam, Duke's Head corn- Powell Chas. wheelwright & carpenter
Etheridge Bradfield mercial hotel & posting house Riches Pymer, farmer
Etheridge Edward English Alfred James, ladies' & gent's. Riches William, carpenter
Farrer Miss tailor; first class workmanship & fit I RolfeHannab(Mrs.),china &glass dealer
Ferraby Mrs guaranteed Rumbolds Thomas William, Crown
Flatt Mrs English Robert, boot maker commercial & family hotel ; good
Flatt William Etheridge E. & H. maltsters, corn, seed, accommodation for commercial
Hargraves George Frederick hop, wool, wine, spirit & ale & porter travellers & others; posting in all its
Harold Mrs. I Bridge road merchants; & at King street, Lynn branches
Harwin Henry, Dell cottage Firth James, cooper Salmon Benjamin, carrier & farmer
Horn Mrs Fox William, naturalist, taxidermist & Scales John, agent for Sceptre Life
Jaggard William Williams furrier. See advertisement Association Limited
Johnsrm Miss, Stoke Ferry hall Gostling Frederick .John, butcher Steele Henry Frederick L.R.C.P.LOnd.
McGill Rev. John [vicar & surrogate] & dealer surgeon, & medical officer & public
Micklefield Anthony Horrex Roger Harold Harry William, photographer vaccinator, Stoke Ferry district,
Pryer John Harvey R.Thompson,tailor&shopkeeper Downham union, & Oxboro' district,
Robert JWv. Thos. Nicholas [Wesleyan J Hewso11 Henry, general dealer Swaffham union, & registrar of births
Steele Henry Frederick Hewson John, saddler & deaths for Fincham sub-district
Steele Mrs Hogge (George) & Seppings, ale stores Stevens John, cowkeeper
Winfield Fred. Charles, Main street Johnson Alfred, blacksmith Tingey Ann (Mrs.), seedswoman
COMMERCIAL, Johnson Robert Whybrea, tailor & Watson George, deputy registra~ of
Bagley Albert James, station master woollen draper births & deaths for Fincham sub-dist
Barnes Frederick, grocer &c Larner Henry, blacksmith White Alfred, boot maker
Bennett James Smith, carpenter Lock Mary Ann (Mrs.), Bell P.H Williamson Sarah (Mrs.), Bull P.II
Brock Jeremiah, fishmonger . Margarson Edward, veterinary surgeon Wilson William, shopkeeper
Case Benjamin, plumber Micklefield Augustus E. R. M.A. clerk Winfield Fred. Charles, maltster, corn,
Cater Elizabeth (Mrs.), baker to Wretton school board coal & cake merchant & wharfinger,
Chadwick John, harness maker Newsam Wm. Hy. chemist & stationer & agent for Life Association of Scut-
Cook John, farmer Nix John, miller (wind) land, The Bridge; & at Whittington
Cross Frederick, boot maker Nunn James, beer retailer
STOKE HOLY CROSS is a parish and village, miles parish. The fuel allotment consists of 13 acres I rood, now
2
east from Swainsthorpe station on the Ipswich and Norwich let for£ 14 a year. Stoke Hall, the seat of Henry Birkbeck
section of the Great Eastern railway and 5 south from Nor- esq. J.P. is a spacious man~ion of brick, standing on an
wich, in the Southern division of the county, Swainsthorpe eminence in a well-wooded park. RobertFellowes esq. D. I~.,
petty sessional division, Henstead hundred and union, Nor- J.P. of Shotesham Park, who is lord of the manor, Henry
wich county court district, rural deanery of Brooke western Birkbeck esq. and Fortescue Waiter Kellett Long esq. B. A.
division, archdeaconry of Norfolk and diocese of Norwich, of Dunston Hall, are the chief landowners. The soil is
situated on the Taas. The church of the Holy Cross is a light and sandy; subsoil, various. The chief crops are
building of flint in the Perpendicular style, consisting of wheat, oats, barley and turnips. The area is I,637 acres;
cba.ncel, nave, south porch, vestry, organ chamber, and an rateable value, £2,422; the population in 189I was 394·
embattled western tower containing 3 bells, dated 1639: the Parish Clerk, \Vilham Pratt Horne.
east window is a memorial to Mrs. Crozier Bailey, 1873, and PosT 0FFICE.-William Pratt Horne, receiver. Letters
there are several others: the church was thoroughly arrive from Norwich at _ a. m. by mail cart; dis-
5 45
restored in 1879, and has 200 sittings. The register dates patched at 6. 10 p. m. Mulbarton is the nearest money
from the year 1538. The living is a vicarage, average tithe order office & Trowse the nearest telegraph office. Postal
rent-charge £160, net yearly ¥alue £170, including 6 acres orders are issued here, but not paid
of glebe, with residence erected in 1838, in the gift of
the Dean and Chapter of Norwich, and held since 188 4 This place is included- in the United School Board district of
by the Rev. Edward James Harper M. A. of Pembroke Poringland, formed compulsorily 16 June, :1874
College, Oxford. Here is a home for twelve orphan girls, Board School (mixed), erected in 1876 & enlarged in 1887.
established by Henry Birkbeck esq. J.P. Major-Gen. Sir in connection with the Central School at Framingham
Robert Harvey in 1844 left £1oo, the interest to be given Earl, for So children; average attendance, 68; Miss
away yearly to poor widows of army pensioners in this Eliza Dowding, mistress
Birkbeck Henry J.P. Stoke hall BuckRobert,RedLionP.H.&wheelwright Leggett Gcorge, builder & bricklayer
Clarke Samuel, The Cedars Dix James (Mrs.), farmer Markbam Frank, boot & shoe maker
Durrant James Dunn Matthew, Rummer inn MyhillAlfred,bailiff for J. W.Youngman
Harper Rev.Edwd.Jas.M.A.'fheVicarage Edwards George, farmer, & bailiff for esq
Reeve Henry Henry Birkbeck esq. J.P Pitts Samuel, farmer
Gaze Arthur William, farmer R.ackham Henry, farmer
COMMERCIAL. Gowing Lorinea Sarah (Mrs.), farmer Sanderson Henry, farmer
Beverly William, miller (water) Hawes David market gardener Webster William, farmer
Brooks John, farmer Home for Orphan Girls (Mrs. Emma Wharton Waiter, farmer
Brown Eliza M. (Mrs.), shopkeeper Smith, matron) Whitmore William, market gardener
STOKES:BY-with-HERRINGBY is a parish and Steyning Beard esq. of Down House, Rottingdean, Sussex.
village, on the north bank of the river Bure, 2~ miles west and held since I875 by the Rev. John Alexander Dolan JILA.
from Acle station on the Norwich and Yarmouth section of of Trinity College, Dublin. Here are Primitive Methodist
the Great Eastern railway, via the ferry over the r:ver and ·wesleyan chapels. The poor's land of 20 acres and 2
Bure, and 9 miles north-west from Yarmouth, in the East- roods of marsh is for feeding cows. Hillboro' Hall, the seat
ern division of the county, incorporated hundred, petty of Frederick William Waters esq. is a fine modern mansion
se~ional division and incorporation of East and West Flegg, of red brick, surrounded by well laid out grounds of about
county court district of Great Yarmouth, rural deanery of 30 acres. . Ba7.ett Michael Haggard esq. B. A. of 2 Paper
Flegg and archdeaconry and diocese of Norwich. The buildings, Temple, London E c, who is lord of the manor,
church of St. Andrew is an ancient edifice of flint and stone and W. Daniel esq. and Frederick William Waters csq. are
in the Early English style, consisting of chancel, nave, south the principal landowners. The soil is good mixed; subsoil,
porch and an embattled tower containing one bell: there gravel, sand and brick earth. The chief crops are wheat,
are I22 sittings. The register dates from the year I56o, barley and oats. The area is 2, ng acres; rateable value,
and is in good preservation. The living is a rectory, tithe £3.380; the population in 189I was 370·
rent-charge £522, average £396, net yearly value £404, in-
cluding 46 acres of glebe with residence, in the gift of Parish Clerk, George Harrington.
DIRECTORY .J NORFOLK. STOW BARDOLPH. 617
PosT O:~<'FlCE.--George Harrington, postmaster.-Letters A School Boad of 5 m3mbers was formed. compulsorily t2
received from Yarmouth at 8.30 a. m. & are dispatched July, 1875; H. Ch.amberlain, 13 Queen street, Yarmouth,
at 4.50 p.m. The nearest money order office is at Run- clerk to the board
ham & telegraph office at Acle, but for Herrin~by, Board S::hool (mixed), built in 1876, at a cost of £x,ooo, for
Ormesby is the nearest relegraph office. Postal orders! 70 children; average attendance, 75; George William
are issued here, but not paid I Willett, master
Dolan Rev.John Alexander :r.r.A. Rectory Frosdick Benjamm, blacksmith Smith Charles, shopkeeper
Waters FredenckWilliam,Hillboro' hall Harrington George, postmaster Smith William, farm bailiff to T. W.
Holmes Edward, farm bailiff to P. M. Daniel esq
COMMERCIAL. Kett esq Thurtle Elijah, Ferry Hou~e P.H
Drake James, shopkeeper Knights Ambrose Frosdic, farmer Trett Edward E. miller (steam & wind)
Fowler William, carpenter Palmer Albert, market gardener Wellingham Edward E. steward for
Frosdick James, shopkeeper Palmer John, farmer, Glebe farm I<'. W. Waters esq
STOW BARDOLPH is a village and parish, 1! miles Methodist and Free Methodist chapels. The charities are of
south-east fr-Jm Stow Bridge station on tha Ely and Lynn [169 xos. yearly value, and there are 6 almshouses, erected
section of the Great Eastern railway and 2 from Downham, and endowed in 1603 by Sir Ralph Hare K.B. for 6 poor per-
in the South Western division of the county, Clackclose sons, being either natives of or residents for ro years in the
hundred and petty sessional division, Down ham union and parish ; thi~ charity is now supported by Thomas Leigh Hare
county court district, rural deanery of Fincham, arch- esq. M.P., D.L., J.P. A large cattle fair is held here on the
deaconry of ~orfolk and diocese of Norwich. Stow Bridge Stturday after Wbitsuntide. Stow Hall, the se~t of Tt1omas
is about 2 miles west-north-west of the church. The ri\•er Leigh Hare esq. M. P., D.L., J. P. who is lord of the m'l.nor, was
Ouse passes through the parish. The church of the Holy originally purchased in 1553 by Sir Nicholas Hare knt. re-
Trinity is a small building of ragstone in the De~ora.ted built in 1589 by NICholai Hare esq. his grandson, at a cost
style, consisting of cham;el, n'ol.ve, north porch and an em- of £4o,ooo, and again rebuilt in 1873 by the late Sir
b'l.ttled western tower containing a cluck and 8 bells : at the Thomas Hare bart. and is a mansion in the Elizabethan
east end of the chancel is a low side window: a stone font style, standing in a beautiful park, with extensive pleasure
with a handsome oak canopy was presented in 1874 by the grounds attached. The principal landowners are T. L. Hare
vicar: attached to the church, on the north side, is a esq. M. P. Mr. Charles Edwards, Miss Jones, Joseph Morton
spacious mortuary chapel, built by Nicholas Hare esq. uf esq. and Mr. John Judd. The soil is p~at and gravel; sub-
Stow Bardolph, who died in rsgr, and containing several soil, clay. The chief crops are wheat, oats and potatoes,
highly-finished monuments to the Hare family, including and some flax is grown. By the Divided Parishes Act 633
one to Sir Ralph Hare, created a knight of the Bath at the acres of lani were transferred from Downham ~LI.rket to
coronation of James I. ob. An g. 1623; another to Sir H.alph this parish, and by the same Act 488A. 2 R. 3P. were trans-
Hare, 1st bart. M. P. Nor folk, ob. Feb. r671; his second wife, ferred from Stow to Down ham; the total acreage is now
Eli~abeth (Chapman), ob. r683; and John, his son, ob. 6,172; rateable val:Ie, £7,804; the population in r891 was
r672; a monument of marble, with reclining effigy, to Sir I,)I8.
Thomas Hare, 2nd bart. M.P. Norf. ob. 1 Jan. 1693, erected Parish Clerk. David Charlton.
by his wife, Elizabeth (Dash wood), in 1749, and a wax effigy, PosT OFFICE, Stow Bridge.-Mri!. ~hry Howlett, receiver.
dressed in the costume of the period, of Sarah, his youngest Letters received from Down ham at 7 a. m. ; dispatched at
daughter, f'b. 1744, inclosed in an oaken case; another 6.25 p.m. & on sundays 10.40 a. m. The nearest money
marble monument, with reclining effigy, to Susm, dau.~hter order & telegraph office is at Downham. Postal orders
of Sir Tbomas Hare, 4th hart. ob. 1741, and to Sir Thomas are issued here, but not p.1.id
himself, ob. 21 Feb. 176o, and a memorial to his widow PosT 0FF!CE.-Thomas Bdl, receiver. Letters arrive at
Elizabeth (Newby), ob. 1773; -there are other moauments 6.30 a. m. ; dispatched at 7 p.m. & on sunday II. 15 a. m
to Sir George Hare, 5th and last bart. of the original crea- WALL LETTER Box, Barroway Drove, cleared at ro a.m.
tion, ob. 18 Mar. 1764; Sir Thomas (Leigh) Hare, rst bart. (week days only)
d. 12 Feb. 1834; Mary ( Geary ), his 1st wife, d. t8or ; hi!l ScHOOLS : -
second wife, the hon. Anne Elizabeth (Graves), d. 11 Sep A School Board of 5 members was formed compulsorily ro
1823, and to his daughter Elizabeth Anne, d. 1868; there is March, 1877, for the united district of Stow Bardolph &
also a splendidly-carved marble monument, inlaid with Wimbotsham; E. S. Copeman, Downham, clerk to the
brass, to Sir Thomas Ilare, 2nd bart.of the second creation, board; Samuel Carter, Westhead road, Stow Bridge,
and capt. 2nd Life Guards, d. 14 Nov. 188o; and Grace attendance officer
Angelina Norman (Vaughan). his wife, d. r6 Jan. 1879: the Stow Hridge Board School, formerly St. Paul's National
church was restored in r8so, and has 170 sittings. The school, situated un the Westhead road, was erected in
register dates from the year rsss. The living is a dis- I872, at the sole expense of the late Sir Thomas Hare
charged vicarage, with the redory of Wimbotsham annexed, bart. for 185 children; average attendance, 100; it has
average tithe rent-charge £426, joint net yearly value£240. been licensed for public worship; John Boden, mCJ.ster;
including 25 acres of glebe, with residence, in the gift of Miss Catherine Walling, assistant mistress
Thomas Leigh Hare esq. M.P. and held since r869 by the Rlw. Hoard School, Barroway Drove (mixed), built in 188o, fur
Edward E1·erard Blencowe B.A. of St. Alban Hall, Oxford. 8o children; averag8 attendance, 70; John Horwill
The great tithes, belonging to Thomas Leigh Hare esq. M. P. Walling, master
are commuted at £320 a year. Here are Baptist, Primitive Railway Station (Stow Bridge), Jn. Goddard, station maste
Blencowe Rev. Edward Everard Jl.A. EdwardsCharles, farmer,Westerbyfrm JonesGeo.frmr.&s3ed mer.Stowbridge
Vicarage Filby Ed wd. farmer ; & at WimboLsham Judd J olm, farmer, Ba.rdolph fen
Hare Thomas Lcigh M.P.,D.L.,J.P. Stow Filby John, farmer Knott William Henry, farmer
hall; Guards',Carlton & Marlborough Flatman Charles, farmer, Stow bridge Lack Thos. harness maker, Stow bridge
clubs, London Flatman George, farmer, Stow bridge Lewis Francis, farmer, Barroway drove
Heffer Miss Goode .John, Black Horse P.H. Barro- Lewis Frank, farmer, Barroway drove
Howlett Mrs. Stow bridge way drove Lewis Robert, farmer, Barro1'1'ay drove
Hutson Waiter Goodens Robert, farmer, Stow bridge Lewis William, farmar, Barroway drove
Morton Joseph Goodens Thomas, cowkpr. Stow bridge Lockwood Charles, wheelwright
COM~IERCIAL. I Griggs William,Crown P.H.Stow bridge Lock wood John, wheelwright, Stow bdg
AlboroughCharles,grocer &c. Stow brdg Grounds John, farmer, Barroway drove Mason Thomas Reeve, beer retailer,
Alflatt Goodens & Son, builders GunnsChristopher,shopkpr.Stow bridge Stow bridge
Ambrose James Ward, beer retailer, Hammond William, blacksmith, agri- Morton William, farmer, Fences farm
Barroway drove cultural machine & implement agent, Morton Joseph, farmer & landowner,
Asplin Peter, farmer, Stow bridge Stow bridge Newbridge farm
Heart Charles & Co. corn, coal & seed Haynes Robert,blacksmith,Stow bridge Murfet John Thus. farmer, Church f!'IIl
merchants, Stow bridge Hill Willson, farmer, Barroway drove Nicholls Hy. boot maker, Stow bridge
Beart William, farmer, Westhead farm Hootou John, farmer Nixon William, farmer
Bell Thomas, blacksmith HootonRobt.jun.farmr.Barrowar drove North George, farmer, Barroway drove
Hurt Thomas, farmer, Barroway drove Hopkin Wm. Wells, farmer, Home frm ParkinsonJsph.eowkpr.Barroway drove
Bussens William, land steward to Horn Thomas, Crooked Chimney P.H. Pearce Robert, cowkpr.Barroway drove
Thomas Leigh Hare esq. M. P Middle level Pearce Robert, Eel Pie inn, Westhead rd
Capp Robert, wheelwright, Stow bridge Ho\lt'ard Joseph, cow keeper Proctor Wm. Kemp, frmr. Bardolph fen
Carter Samuel, farmer, Stow bridge Howlett Mary (Mrs.), grocer, Post Reeve Wm.Thos.millerEwind),Stow bdg
Coates Henry, farmer office, Stow bridge Rolfe Edward, farmer, Stow bridge
Cooper Robert, beer retailer & farmer, Hudson Frederick, farmer, Park farm Rolfe Fradk. William, farmer, Stow brdg
Stow bridge Hntson Waiter, farmer Rolfe Jl)seph, farmer, BJ.rroway droYe
Digby Frederic,farmer, Barroway drove Johnson James, farmer,Bn-roway drove RoUe El '~beth (Mrs.), farmer
Duffield Walter,agent forPrudentialLife Johnson John Henry, beer retailer Rolfe William, farmer, Stow bridge
618 STOW BARDOLPH. NORP'OLK.
Savage Alfred, beer retailer & farmer Shipp William, roal dealr. Stow bridge Thorpe Albert, tarmer, Barroway drove
, Savage John, farmer,. Stow bridge Smithee John, beer retailer · Thorpe Arthur,l'.owkpr.Rarrowa.y drove
Sayle Harr~- ,HareA1 ms inn, & plumber, Stimp11on 8amuel, co~ keeper Thorpe Robert. farmer,Barrowa.y drove
glazier, surveyor, assessor & collector Sntton Jesse Patrick, shopkeeper, Bar- ThorpeTownshend,frmr.Barroway drve
of taxes, assistant overseer for Stow n•~-ay drove Veni Abraham,farmer, Barroway drove
Bardolph & Wimbotsham Thompson Wm. shopkeeper, Westhead Wray Charles, wheelwright,Stow bridge
STOW-:BEDON is a small parish with a station 1~ miles for bread, and the fuel allotment produces £14 15s. :yearlr.
north-we..e:t from the village church, on the Bury, Thetford Stow-Bedon Mere is about 23 acres in extent. Robert
and Swaffham section of the Great Eastern railway, 4 south Thornhaugh Gnrdon esq. M.A. of Letton Hall, Shipd-
from Watton and 7 west from Attleborough, in the South ham, who is lord of the manor, Lord Walsingham and Mr.
Western division of the county, Wayland hundred, petty George Smith Corley are the chief landowners. ·The soil
sessional division and union, Attleborough and \\'atton is mixed ; subsoil, clay and gravel. The chief crops are
county court district, rural deanery of Breccles and arch- wheat., barley, oats and turnips. The area is 1,692 acres;
deaconry and dioc·ese of Norwich. The church l)f St. rateable value, £·1,874; the population in 1891 was 320.
Botolph is an edifice chiefly in the Perpendicular style, con- Parish Clerk, Jarnes \\'ebster.
sisting of chancel, nave, western porch and a turret 19 feet
in height and containing one bell: on the north side of the LETIER Box cleared at 5.30 p.m.; sunday, 1:0.30 a.m.
I~etters through Attleborough arrive at 8.30 a.m. The
churcb are two small Early Decorated windows, and in the
north wall of the chancel two lancets filled with stained glass nearest money order & telegraph offices are at \\'atton
taken from Hildersharn church, Cambridge: the east win- & Attleborough
dow is Early English : the nave is divided from the chancel STATIO~ LETIER Box cleared w-eek-days at 5· 15 p.m. ; sun-
by a handsome carved oak St.Teen: the south wall of the chan- days, 10.30 a. m
cel retains a piscina: in r887 a western porch of flint with Bath A School Board of 5 members was formed compulsorily 7
stone dressings was erected at a cost of £35: the church June, 1876; H. F. Grigson, Watton S.O. clerk to the
was thoroughly restored and enlarged in 1852, and has 232 board
sittings, 92 being free : near the south wall of the chancel
are three tombs bearing fioriated crosses. The register dates Board School (formerly national), erected in 1853 & trans-
from the year 1722 . The living is a rectory, average 1.:'.1.66, ferreu on the formation of the School board at a pepper-
tithe rent-charge 1,"33 6, net yearly value £ 2 8o, includmg 12 corn rent, for 6o ehildrcn; average attendance, 55 ; Mrs.
acres of glebe and a small farm at Shipdham, with residence, Charlotte Foston, mistress; Miss Kate Foston, assistant
in the gift of and held since 1892 by the Rev. William mistress
Ran kin Dunlop El well. Ray's charity of£ 1 xos. 9d. yearly IS Railway Station, Samuel Jackson Rice, station master
Elwell Rev. William Rankin Dunlup, 1 Corley Geo. Smith, farmer & landowner' Knights Solomon, farmer
Rectory Crawford Stephcn, farmer J LittleproudThomas,coal,corn&seed mer
Harwin John, Stow cottage DennisMaryAnn(Mrs.) & John, farmers, Long John & Herbert, coal dealers
COMMERCIAL. Mere farm Lung J ames, blacksmith & letter carrier
Adams Thomas, farmer Dexter Frederick, mason & shopkeeper Muteham William, beer retailer
Bennett Robert, White Horse P. H Drake Ph1lip, (armer Os born Ann (Mrs.), shopkeeper
1
Bullen Charles, farmer, 'Heath Goddard Julia Anna (Miss), Mill inn Prewer James, farmer
ColmanThomasii.coal & corn merchant, Harvey Arthur, farmer, dealer &c \'1-'ebsterJames,carpenter & parish clerk
The Station· 1 Kerridge Waiter, farmer, The Whews Wellingham John Joseph, farmer, Hail
STRADSETT ls a village and pansh on the road from wich, and held since 1891 by the Rev. Andrew Pryde, of St.
Downham to Swaffham, 4 miles north-east from Downham Bees, who resides at Crimplesham. Under the Inclo•ure
!Station on the Ely and Lynn sectionoftheGreatEastern Act, a sum of not less than £5, or more than·£ro,
railway, in the South Weswrn division of the county, Clack- is to be laid out in coals yearly for the benefit of the
close hundred and petty sessional division, Downham union poor. Stradsett Hall, a large and ancient mansion, standing
and county court district, rural deanery of Fincham, arch- in an extensive park, which contains a lake of 2r! acres,
deaconry of Norfolk and Norwich diocese. The church of abounding with fish, is the property of Sir Alfred lfhornas
St. Mary is a stuccoed building in the Early English style, Bagge bart. commdr. R.N. of Crimplesham Hall, who is
consisting of chancel, nave, south porch and an embattled lord of the manor, lay impropnator and principal· land-
western tower with pinnacles containing 3 bells: the stained owner: it is now occupied by John Barff Charlesworth esq.
east window, presentoo by the late Thomas Philip Bagge The soil is of a mixed and excellent quality; subsoil, drift,
esq. was maue at Amsterdam in 1543 : in the church are a clay and green sand. The chief crops are wheat, barley &c.
number of monuments to the Bagge family, dating from The area is 1,3 r8 acres; rateable value, £ r,622 ; the popu-
1827 to 1891 : in 1867 the interior was considerably im- lation in x8gr was 122.
proved by the remo,,al of the western gallery and the open- Parish Clerk, John Burgess.
ing of the Early English arch of the tower: in 1891 the PosT 0FFICE.-Edwin Duckling, .receiver. Letters from
church was thoroughly restored and redecorated by Sir Downham arrive at 6.55 a.m. & 2.10 p.m. & dispatched
Alfred Thomas Hagge bart. commdr. R.N, D.L., J.P. Lady at 3·30 p.m: & 6.15 p.m. week days & at 10 a.m. on suh-
Bagge and members of the family, and affords 250 sittings~ days. The nearest money order office is at Fincham &
The register dates from the. year r 559· The living, lately a telegraph office at Downham
discharged vicarage, united to that of Crimplesham in 1878, The children of this place attend the school at Crimple..'lham
average tithe rent-charge j,-218, joint :net yea.rly value £270, {:ARRIE(( TO LYNN.-Salmon passes through, to & from
including 25 acres of g-lebe, in the gift of the Bishop of Nor- Stoke Ferry, tues. & sat
Charlesworth John Barff, Stradsett hall! Dane Elijah, blacksmith Humphrey John, farmer
Pond Charles j Ducklin Abner, farmer Morley George, Fuldgate inn·
Cottam James Charnley, farmer Ducklin David, farmer
' '
LONG STRATTON, anciently called "Estratuna," offic~rs in the Royal Mail Steam Packet service as a me-
and formerly a market town, on the high road from I ps- morial to 'Valford Henry Barton, who died of yellow fever in
wich to Norwich, comprises the parishes of STRATTO~ :::iT. the West Indies, Nov. u th, 1866, and on the north
MARY and STRATTO~ ST. MICIIAEL, 2 miles east from side of the chancel is a handsome marble monument, with
Forncett junction station on the Ipswich and Norwich recumbent effigies, to Sir Edmund Reve, Justice of the
section of the Great Eastern railway, I~ south-by-west from Common Pleas, ob. 27 March, 1647, and to his lady, ob.
Norwi'ch and 105~ from London, in ~he Southern division of r657 :. there is also an altar tomb, which formerly had
the county, Depwade hundred, petty sessional division and brasses, to John de Swaffham Bu:beck, rector here at the
union, Harleston county court district,. rural deanery of earlier part of the 15th century ; and tablets to Thomas Rev-e
Depwade, archdeaconry of Norfolk and dioce....e of Norwich. esq. ob. I Oct. 1663, the Rev. Charles Carver M.A .. a former
The church of St. Ma.ry is a larl?e building of flint with stoue rector, d. ~~March. 1794, and several moder.n memorials to
dressings, in the Qothic style of the l4th century, consi~ting the, Hurroughes family : the chancel retains .double sedilia
of chancel, clerestoried ~ve, aisles, vestry, south porch and and a piscina and there is a piscina in the south aisle : the
a round embattled western tower with a small spire rand benches, which have been renewed, have finely carved poppy
containing a clock and 5 bells, the 3rd of which was given heads, replaced from the old benches : in the vestry is pre-
by Sir J op~ Sturmin about 1340: ·the lower part of the served an interesting example of th.e so-called ; '·Sexton's
tower is a oentury or mm;e (Carlier than the rest of the Wheel," similar· to that in Yaxley church, Suffolk; it con-
church: t~e nave and north ~isle "J'ere built by Sir Roger sists vf a pair of wheels or circular di8CS, 2 feet 8 inc4es in
• de B,o11rne ,about tl330; the east lfindow1 is filled with frag- diameter, cut out of sheet iron and placed on anas:iioso as to
' ments- of ancient stained glass,· gathered from 'various revolve either way ; to the axis is attached on each side a
churches, and on the south side of t)le chancel are two 11mall piece. of iron, united to a handle outside the cir-eumfer~nce or
stained windows, qne of which was erected by his brother the wheels, and by which they were held up; on the face of

D;lRECTORY.] NORFOLK. LONG STR!TTON• 619
.
circumference are marked the six days in the year sacred to PoST, M. 0. & T. 0., S. B. & Annuity & Insurance Office.-
the Virgin, and at each of these points is a small bole, from Henry Starr, postmaster. Letters from London, (/Ql-
which a short piece of string hangs loose ; any pious person chester, Ipswich, Scole & all parts are delivered at 7 a. m.
, wishing to keep "the Lady's Past," a species of penance, & rlispatched at. II.45 a.m. & 8.50 p.m.; also a m1rl-day
kept once a week for seven years, would apply to the sexton mail arriving at I.2o p.m ..; delivered at 1.30 p.m. Box
at the church, who thereupon put the wheels in rapid mo- closes at 11.50 a.m. & 8.25 p.m. but letters can be posted
tion, and whichever string the applicant succeeded in catch- until 8.45 p.m. with an extra half-penny stamp
ing determined the day on which the fast was to be regu- PILLAR LETTER Box, near Mr. Pridgeon's, cleared at 8 a. m.
larly observed : there are 323 sittings. The register dates & 7·5 p.m. week days; sundays, 8 a.m
from the year I547- The living is a rector~·. average tithe WALL Lt<:I:TER Box, near Mr. Leeder's mill, cleared at 6.45
rent-charge £322, net yearly value £293, including 39 acres
p.m. week days only
of glebe and residence, in the gift of Caius College, Cam-
bridge, and held since r884 by the Rev. Henry Brown M.A. CoUNTY MAGISTRATES FOR DEPWADE PETTY SESSIO~AL
late scholar of that college, and canon of Cumbrae. Here is DIVISION.
a Congregational chapel, erected in I84o, with ISO sittings.
Charities :-Nicholas Porter left by will dated 9 Sept. I 578 , Boileau Sir Francis George Manning ham hart. B.A., F.S.A.,
,a pottage and orchard, the latter since exchanged for some D. L. Ketteringham hall, 'Vy~nondham
glebe land, the whole now producing £S 4-S· yearly; John Harvcy Major Sir Charles hart. Ramthorpe hall, Long
Reve left April 7th, r687, £I 6s. yearly for the poor, out of Stratton
a messuage called "Swan meadow;" Elizabeth Bayspool Bignold Charles Arthur Bathurst esq. D.L. Reymerstone
, left £r 6s. yearly out of a farm at Wacton, occupied by lodge, Norwich
William Le Grys, which is given to the poor monthl:v m Corbould-Warren Rev. John Warren LL.M. Old Hall, Ta-
bread. In 1773 several Roman urns were found here in a colncston, ~·r.mondham
gravel pit, at a depth of six feet below the surface. Strat• llolmes Henry I uke e~q. "\Vacton, Long S~ratton
ton Manor House, the property of tbe trustees of the late Holm~s Commander fhomas R.N. Mormngthorpe manor,
C<;~l. Rand all Robert Burroughes J. P. who are lords of the Long S_tratton ,
manor and principal landowners, is at present the residence j La ~ontame James Stephen Edward esq. facolneston hall,
of Alfred Douglas-llamilton esq. The soil is mixed ; sub· ~ ymondham . . . ,
soil clay. The chief crops are wheat barley and beans. Wilson Re-v. 'Vtlham Gneve M.A. Rectory, Fornceti ·St.
Th e' ~uea JS
· . 1 ' r ·. h . Peter, Long Stratton ·
r,.p4 acres, rateable va ue, ~,2,233, t e popu- Cl k t 'I · t t Th Eel d p L St tt
IatiQn in 1 g 91 was 6I6. · , er o "' agis ra es; os. mun age, ong ra on
, W~ol) GREEN is a hamlet, one mile south-east. Petty Sessions are held every alternate tuesday at 1~ a. m.
Parish Clerk, John Herbert Rivett. in the Justice Room, erected by the late John Hotson esq.
The following places are included in the division :-Ash-
Stratton St. Michael is Io miles south from Nor- wellthorpe, Aslaeton, Bunwell, Carleton Rode, F'orncett
wich. The church of St. Michael, an edifice of flint, with St. Mary, Forncett St, Peter, Fritton, Fundenhall, Rap-
stone dressings, in the Early English style, consists of chan- ton, H;ucl wick, Hempnall, Morningthorpe, Moulton St.
eel, nave, south porch and a low western tower with small Michael, Shclton, Stratton St. Mary, Stratton St ..Mi-
woodeu spire containing one bell : the chancel retains a pis- chael, Tacolneston, Tasburgh, Tharston, T1benham,
cina and the stairs formerly leading to the rood loft still re- ''Vacton
main : there are two small stained windows in the chancel
and one in the tower, the latter being a. memorial to the late PuBuc 0FI<'ICERS : -
Henry Nicholas Uwyn, d. 1 gg 4 : there are rso sittings. Assessor & Collector of Income & Land Taxes, Edwin G.
The register dates from the year ISS8. The living is a rec- White
tory, with that of St. Peter (the church of which formerly Clerk to Commissioners of Taxes & Superintendent Reg1s-
.stoi1d in this parish) annexed, tithe rent-charge £ 350 , trar of Depwade Union, John Furness, Forncett grove
average £ 292 , joint net yearly value £aso, including resi- Medical Ottic~r & Public Vaccinator,rst, District & Medical
dence and 2 6 acres of glebe, in the gift of New College, Officer \\" orkhouse, Depwade Union, Charles Arthur
Oxford, and held since r8go by the Rev. Waiter Yonge Owen Owens M.D
Drake M.A. of that college. Here are Wesleyan and Primi- Registrar of Births & Deaths for the Stratton sub-district,
tive Methodist chapels. The rent of 7~ acres of land is ap- Henry Starr; deputy, Frederic Starr
propriated to church repairs. The trustees of the late Col. National School (mixed), erectec,l in r8so & new class room
Randall _Hohert Hurroughes J.P. are lords of the manors of & cloak room added in I887, for 130 children; average
Welhams and Reezes. The Rev. Richard Hamond Gwyn attendance, I 14; George Hutchinson, master; Mrs.
M.A. rector of Soutbrepps, John Furness esq. and the trustees Ueorge Hutchinson, assistant ,mistress; Miss :Mary
vf the _late J. Hotson esq. are the principal landowners. The Hutcpinson, infants' mistress ·
soil is mixed; subsoil, mostly clay. The chief crops are CAHHTERS TO NoRWICH.-Wm. Chenery, from Diss, wed.
wheat, barley and beans. The area is r ,055 acres ; rateable & sat. ; Trudgill, from Eye, fri. returning on sat. ;
value, £1,400; the population in r8gr was 249. tlamuel Riches, from Pulham Mary, wed. & sat. ~Alfred
Pari!!h Clerk, John Bowen. Leech, from his own house, Long Stratton, mou. wed. &
The school is now combined with that of StrattDn St. 1\fary. sat. ; William Cooper, from Long Stratton, mon. wed. &
-Letters to be addressed " Long Str.J.tton" sat. all returning same days

Stratton St. Mary. I Deeks Charles, ~hoe maker Page Thomas Edmund, solicitor & com-
I Dunham Robert, farmer ' · missioner for oaths, k- -clerk to the
Brown Hev. Henry l\I.A. [rector, canon : Dye Daniel & Sons, -farmers justices for the division of Depwade;
of the Cathedral church of Cumbrae, i FoulgerJohn,grocer,draper& bricklayer & at Royal betel, Norwieh, on sat
1 Argyle in the Isles], Rectory FoulgerWilliamGeo.carpenter & builder Par kerJ. Caley, ladies'wrdrb. dlr. &clothr
Copeman Mrs. Netherton honse Foulsham William, plumber & glazier PerfittAlborough Wm. marble&stne.msn
Douglas-Hamilton Alfred, Manor house . Gee William, farmer, Crow Green farm Pidgeon Joseph, farmer
Hotson Miss, The Limes ,1 GilbertRobert,rnilhvtight&brassfoundr Pot.ter Hy.N a than, saddler & harness ma.
Owens Charles Arthur Owen M.D Uirling Fredk. John,earpenter & builder Potter N a than, grocer & tea dealer
Page 'fhomas Edmnnd Grice Thomas, farmer Potter Thomas Richard,solicitors' clerk,
Perfitt Johil Locke ' Urimble Ann (Mrs.), shopkeeper· assistant overseer & organist, TheOak s
·Smith Mrs Gurney, Birkbeck, Barclay & Buxton, Powell Cha.rles John, farmer, Hall farm
bankers (branch Gurney & Co.), Pymer William, baker
COMMERCIAL. attendance thursd(\yl! from 1 to 3 Haven Benjamin, farmer
Adams Walter, boot maker o'clock; draw on Barclay,Bevan & Co. Reeve llenj. blacksmith & wheelwright
Aldis William, horse breaker & clipper London E c ReeveGeorge, painter, plum her & glazier
Barij.es George, baker Jolly Willia1n, wholesale & retail grocer, Rivett John Herbert, parish clerk
Barnes Robert Thomas, horse draper & leather cutter Robinson IEaac L. grocer & draper
slaughterer, Wood green , King James, coal merchant Hod well WilliamJ oseph,Mta te carpenter
Brewster Emily (Mrs.), dress maker ' Knights GeorgeWilliam,grooer & draper Sales Francis, Swan commercial hotel
-.J3rewster James B. gun maker Lansdell Albert, blacksmith Sheldrake Samuel, vermin destroyer
llrookes William, tailor 1 Leech Alfred, carrie~ 1 StarrFrederic,deputy registrar of births
Charlish Williamj butcher; farmer &, Maile Willia.m W. insurance agent & death& for Stratton sub-district
cattle dealer; & at Forncett St. Peters Osborne Hannah & Mary Ann (Misses), StarrHenry,grocer & draper,& registrar
rClarke Charles, boot maker . millinets & dress tnakers of birth.s &. P.eaths for i;ltratton eub-
Cook Alfred, bricklay~r , Owens Charles-' Artbur Owen M.D. .di.strict, Post offic~ 1 1
Cooper .William, carrier physici!ln & surgeon, medical officer 'rhurr6U Charles, .Angel inn
~Copping William, carpenter · j & public vaccmator,rst dist.& medical Timbers Jo\m, ~er retailer
·Cnnningham Robert, watch & clock ma officer workuouse, Depwade union Tooley Jeremiah, farmer, Wood green
620 · LOXG STRArrON. . NORFOLK.
Turner John, watch maker • Drake Rev. WalterYonge M.A. Rectory Pidgeon J n. Howlett,millel"(wind)&bakr
Turner William, Queen's Head P.H Potter Joseph Rix George, builder
UttingHenry,farmer,StrattonWood grn Rudlipg Jonathan, cooper
Wade James, bricklayer COMMERCIAL. Stringer Benjamin, farm bailiff to the

Warnes Benjamin, coal dealer Benstead John, farmer & valuer trustees of the late John Hot~on esq
Warnes Louisa (Mrs.), butcher Betts William, farmer White Edwin G. & Co. wool merchants,
Weller James Mills,chemist & druggist Bowen John, parish clerk saddlers & harness makers, & agents
& wine merchant Doe William, carpenter for all the leading agricultural imple-
Wright Albert William, farmer Futter Jonathan, poultry dealer ment makers & for Burnard & Algers
Youngs Alfred, farmer,Lime Tree farm Hearn William, boot maker manures ; & at Eye, Suffolk
YoungsWm. agricultural machine ownr Humphreys Will iam, basket ma. &cooper White Edwin G. assessor & collector of
Keable Francis A. boot maker income & land taxes
Stratton St. Michael. Leeder Archibald, farmer&miller( wind) Whit rod Thomas Henry, tailor
Benstead John Mears William, glover & hair dresser

STRATTON STRAWLESS is a village and parish rent-charge £,269, net yearly value £,262, including 30
r! miles south-west from Buxton Lammas station on the acres of glebe and residence, in the gift of Mrs. Marsham,
East Norfolk section of the Great Eastern railway, 7 miles widow of Rev. Henry Philip Marsham B.C.L. and held since
north from Norwich and 4l south from Aylsham, in the I872 by the Rev. Henry Horace Matchett M.A. of Emmanuel
Northern division of the county, South Erpingham hundred College, Cambridge. The poor's land consists of about 28
and petty sessional division, Aylsham union and county acres, situate in the parish of Marsham, which lets for £21
court district, rural deanery of Ingworth and archdeaconry net yearly. Stratton Strawless Hall, the seat of Lieut.-Col.
and diocese of Norwich. The church of St. Margaret is a Edward George Keppel J.P. who is lord of the manor and
building of stone, in the Perpendicular style, consisting of chief landowner, is a large modern mansion, standing in a
chancel, nave, south porch and an embattled western tower pleasant park, near the Norwich road. The manor was
containing 6 bells, tuned in I887 and rehung in x888 at the held by the Marsham family since the time of Edward I.
cost of ~1ss Helen Gordon Matchett, and there is a chiming R. Marsham esq. F.R.s. who died in I797• at the advanced
apparatus, given by the rector and his family in June, 1887: age of go, was a celebrated naturalist, and planted many of
the church retains some portions of stained glass and various the flourishing trees around the Hall. :Mrs . .Marsham, of
monuments, as well as an altar-tomb of black marble, with Rippon Hall, Hevingham, is also a landowner here. The soil
effigy in a shroud, reclining on a pillow, to T . .Marsham, is sand and gravel; subsoil, brick earth. The chief crops
above are figures of two angels, sounding trumpets, and in are wheat, barley and turnips. The area is I,6o8 acres;
an alcove beneath are carvings in marble of various em- rateable value, £r,62o; the population in 1891 was 141.
blems of mortality ; near this tomb are four effigies in Parish Clerk, John llircham.
marble to Henry Marsham, his wife, son and daughter; in Letters through Norwich, arrive at g.3o a.m. The nearest
x883 the pulpit, lectern and reading desk were added, the money order & telegraph office is at Buxton j PILLAR.
chancel was restored by subscription and the flooring partly LETTER Box cleared at 3·45 p.m.; on sundays at 8.30
relaid at the expense of Mr. Alfred E. Powell: an organ a. m
has also been erected: there are I So sittings. The register The School is now incorporated with Hainford National
dates from the year 1562. The living is a rectory, tithe school
Keppel Lieut.-Col. Edward George J.P. Bowman Benjamin, farmer,Grove farm GermyEdwd.gamekpr.toLt.-Col.Keppel
Stratton Straw less hall Clarke Robert (Mrs.), shopkeeper Powell Alfd.Edward,farmr.The Beeches
Matchett Hev. Henry Horace M.A., R.N. EllisWilliam, farmer, Park farm,Heath Surgent Robert, farmer
Rectory EYans Matthew, gardener to Lieut. -Col. Watson James, farmer, Heath farm
COMMERCIAL. Keppel Watson John, head woodman to Lieut.-
Benton Matthew, farmer Fiddy John, carpenter & wheelwright Col. Keppel
BentonMatthew,farmer, WoodsEnd frn1 !<'utter John, hurdle maker

STRUMPSHA W is a parish and village x£ miles north and held since x8gi by the Rev. Alfred John Barton B. A.of
from Buckenham station on the Norwich and Lowestoft St. Peter's College, Cambridge. A charity, consisting of one
section, and 1~ east from Brundall junction station on the coomb of merchantable wheat, was left some time since by
Norwich and Yarmouth secticm of the Great Eastern rail- a Mr. Black, and is distributed at the church porch by the
way, I west from Lingwood and Bl east from Norwich, rector and parish officers for the time being; there is also
in the Eastern division of the county, Blofield and Walsham a poor's allotment, the rent of which is distributed in fuel.
petty sessional division, Blofield hundred and union, Nor- The Hall, the seat ofWilliam James Owen Holmes esq. F.R.S.,
wich county court district, rural deanery of Blofield and J.P. is a modern building, in a small but finely timbered
archdeaconry and diocese of Norwich. The church of St. park, about a mile from Bnckenham station. R. H. Neville
Peter is an edifice of flint, part.ly in the Early English style, esq. is lord of the manor; the principal landowners are
consisting of chancP.l, nave, north porch and a fine em- William Jamcs Owen Holmcs esq. Thomas Atkins ~sq. and
battled western tower with pinnacles containing 3 bells: Edward Barnes esq. The soil is good mixed; subsoil,
the chancel, restored and re-seated in 1848, retains a piscina gravel and brick earth. The chief crops are the usual
and sedilia., and has several stained windows and memorials, cereals and roots. The area is I,331 acres; rateable value,
to Thomas Tuck, d. I834; Mary Tuck, d. I835 ; to the wife £2,246; the population in 189I was 386.
and son of the Rev. William Nelson, a former rector of this Parish Clerk, Waiter Alexander.
parish, and to Capt. E. J. Whit bread, 65th ( xst Battalion PosT OFFICF:. - William Harrison, receiver. Letters
York and Lancaster) Regiment, son of the Rev. Edmund through Norwich by foot post from North Burlingham,
~alter Whit bread M.A. late rector (1853-9I), who served in arrive at 7· 15 a. m.; dispatched at 4· 10 p.m. The near-
the l\Iaori wars of I86o-I, and was accidentally kille-l by a est money order office is at lllofield & telegraph office
fall from his horse: the painted rood screen remains, and at Brundall
there are several brasses: the church, which is now (I892) A School Board of 5 members was formed May 19, 1873, for
about to be restored, affords 200 sittings. The register the united district of Strumpshaw, Bradeston & Brundall;
dates from about the year 1562. The living is a rectory, H. H. Cole, 67 London street, Norwich, clerk to the board
with that of Bradeston annexed, average tithe rent-charge Board School (mixed), erected in 1874 for the three
£396, joint gross yearly value £,4go, including 6o acres of parishes, to hold 100 children; average attendance, 75 ;
glebe, with residence, in the gift of Waiter M. Barton esq. Mrs. Hogg, mistress
Barcham Mrs. Braudon house ' Barnes Edward, farmer & landowner Johnson Thomas, cowkeeper
Barton Rev. Alfred John Il.A. [rector], Broom John, pork butcher Oakley William, farm bailrffto W. J. C.
Rectory Broom Mary Ann (Mrs.), Goat inn !Iolmes esq
Edwards Mrs. Fir cottage Burred William, cow keeper Pyle Elizh. (Mrs.), farmer & landowner
Flowers Henry Goff Edward, cowkeeper Rope George R. market gardener
HolmesWm.Jas.OwenF.R.S.,J.P.TheHall Goff Frederick .Johnson, miller (wind) Rose George, painter
COMMERCIAL. Harrison William, jun. pork butcher & Simmons Robert, coal dealer
Atkins Thomas, farmer & landowner shopkeeper, Post office Spooner Sarah (Mrs.), Shoulder of
Alien Thomas Holtom, surveyor of Harrison William, sen. farmer Mutton P.H. & carpenter
highways to county council Hylton Joseph, shopkeeper Thrower Robert, blacksmith

STURSTON is a parish and village 6 miles south-west I hundred and petty sessional diTi.sion of Grimshoe, rural
from Watton station on the Bury, Thetford and Swaffham deanery of Cranwich, south division, archdeaconry of Nor-
section of the Great Eastern railway, 6 from Thetford and folk and diocese of Norwich. The church of the Holy Cross
8 north-east from Brandon, in the South Western division IS now in ruins. The living is a perpetual curacy, gross
of the county, union and county cour1; district of Thetford, yearly \'aloe arising from 22 acres of glebe £2o, in the gift
DIRECTORY.] NORFOLK. SUTTON. 621
of Lord Walsingham, an.i held since 1875 by the Rev. I sheep walks. The area is about 2,000 acres; rateable value,
Er nest Hastings Swann M.~. of Trinity College, Dublin, who I £784; the population in x89I was 78.
is vicar of and resides at ToLtington. Lo.rd Wal~ill:gh~m is' Letters through Watton S.O. The nearest money order &
lord of the ma~or and sole lando~ner. fhe ~otl Is hght, telegraph otlice is at Mundford R.S.O
With marl and m places clay subsml. The chief crops are
wheat, barley, rye and turnips, with some pasture land and The children of this place attend the school at Tottington
Ulark: Harnabas, farmer, Waterloo farm 1 I<'latt George, under bailiff to Lord Walsingham
.SUFFIELD is a parish about x! miles north from Fel- the Rev. Arthur Rice Gwyn M".A. of Oriel College, Oxford.
zningham station on the Eastern and Midlands railway, 4 There are two charities, producing about £35 yearly. Lord
miles north-west from Aylsham and 3t north-west from Suffield P.c. is lord of the manor and sole landowner. The soil
North Walsham, in the Northern division of the county, is mixed; subsoil, clay and gravel. The chief crops are
b.undred and petty sessional division of North Erpingham, wheat, oats and barley. The area is 1,447 acres; rateable
union of Erpingham, North Walsham county court. district, value, £2,098 I5s.; the population in I881 was 2o6.
rural deanery of Repps, arch deaconry of Norfolk and diocese Parish Clerk, Hohert Flowerday.
of Norwich. The church of St. Margaret is a structure of LETI'ER Box cleared at 3.20 p.m. Letters through Aylsham
:flint with stone facings, in the Gothic style, consisting of arrive at 9 a. m. Hanworth is ~he nearest money order &
chancel, nave, aisles, south porch and western tower con- telegraph office
taining 5 bells: the church was thoroughly restored in 1879, This parish was made contributory to the United School
and the handsome screen in r88o: there are 200 sittings. Hoard of .P'elmingham, 16 Nov. 1875, sending I member.
The register dates from the year 1558. The living is a The children attend the school at Felmingham
~ectory, average £2&), tithe rent-charge [33 I, net yearly Charity School, founded & endowed by the Harbord family
value about £215, including 12 a~res of glebe, with resi- in 1816 with [21 yearly, for 20 poor girls; Mrs. Jones,
dance, in the gift of Lord Sutlield, and held since I892 by mistress
Gwyn Rev. Arthur Rice M.A. Rectory Dyball George, farmer Howes Robert, blacksmith & machinist
.Amies John, shopkeeper Farrow Hannah (Mrs.), farmer Wortley Robert, farmer, Suffield hall;
Bugden John Henry, farmer, Elm farm Hicks Thomas, farmer & Coleby
SURLINGHAM is a village and parish in the vale of 1888 by the Rev. John Gallienne Bichard, of St. Aidan's.
the navigable Yare, surrounded by marshes, ~~miles south Here is a Wesleyan chapel. The fuel allotment of 23 acres
of Hrundall station on the Norwich and Yarmouth section is let for about £12 yearly. In the parish is a broad of 70
·of the Great Eastern railway, 6 miles east from Norwich acres and there are also brick fields. The chief landowners
and xi from Postwick by ferry, in the Southern diviswn of are Robert Pratt esq. of Hill House, Sir Charles Henry
the county, Swainsthorpe petty sessional division, Henstead Stuart Rich bart. of Levyls Dene, Merrow, Guildford,
hunrlredand union, Norwich county court district, rural Surrey, and Samuel Harnes esq. who is lord of the manor.
-deanery of Brooke, western division, archdeaconry of Nor- The soil is mixed; subsoil, gravel. The chief crops are
folk and diocese of Norwich. Of the ancient church of St. wheat, barley &c. The area is I,767 acres; rateable value,
Saviour only the tower and part of the walls, covered with £2,510; the population in 189I was 409.
ivy, now remain. The church of St. Mary is a small but Sexton, George Yeoman.
anci~n~ building of flint and s~one, in the Gothic style, PosT OFFICE.-Richard Osbornc, sub-postmaster. Letters
consistmg of chancel, na\'e, aisles, south porch and a through Norwich arrive bv foot post from Trowse at 8.3o
western tower, round at the base With an octagonal belfry, · d' t h d t - Th t d
containing 4 bells: the south porch was rebuilt in 1859 : a~. ;_ I:1:J. ~ ~d ~ t 4 p.m. h ~ n~ares d ~oney or er
there are 200 sittings. The register, the early part of which 0
ce IS a 0
e e1egrap 0 ce rnn a .
is kept in Latin, dates from the reign of Queen .Elizabeth .. A Sch?ol Board of 5 members was formed compulsoril~ 26
The living is a vicarage, with that of St. Saviour annexed, April, 1875; H. H. Cole, 67 London street, Norwich,
average tithe rent-charge [9::J, joint gross yearly value clerk to the boar_d .
£w7, with 3! acres of glebe and residence, in the gift of the Board School (miXe_d), t~ hold 100 _children; average
trustees of the late Rev. William Reynolds Collett M.A. on attendance, 69 ; Miss Edith Large, mistress
the nomination of the Bishop of ::'forwich, and held since CARRIER TO NoRWlCH.-Leonard Aldis, wed. & sat
Bichard Rev. John Gallienne [vicar], Chap man Jas. farmer& assessor of taxes N ichols Richard, market gardener
1

The Vicarage Chenery David, shopkeeper & butcher Nobbs Eliza (Mrs. ),farmcr,Church frm
Pratt Robert, Hill house Drane Walter, farmer OsborneRchd. black.smth.Sub-Post office
Rudd Miss Everitt Benjamin, miller (wind) Parker Waiter, farmer
Rudd William Harrison Fisher George, Coldham Hall P.H Plane John, Ferry House P.H
Starling Mrs. Walton cottage Fiske James, florist, market gardener & Purdy Richard, carpenter & builder,
COMMERCIAL. nurseryman, Bixlcy villa Brickmakcrs' Arms P.H
Aldis Leonard, carrier Fox Frerlerick, farmer Reynolds Charles, boot & shoe maker
llarnes Samuel, farmer, landowner & Gibbs & Reynolds, boat builders Smith Randall, farmer
brick & tile merchant Hayes Samuel, farmer Tuck Robert, farmer
Eetts John, farmer . Moore William, farmer Wildee Soames,farmer, Lessingham ho
SUSTEAD is a parish, 6 miles north-west from Gunton old Hall, built in 1663, and now the property of Richard
station on the Cromer branch of the Great Eastern rail- James Spurrell esq. of Thurgarton, is a gabled structure of
way, 4§- south-by-west from Cromer and 8~ from North red brick, still standing near the road, but in a dilapidated
Walsham, in the Northern division of the county, North condition. Robert William Ketton esq. J.P. of Felbrigg•
Erpingham hundred and petty sessional division, Erping- Hall, is lord of the manor. Robert William Ketton esq.
ham union, Holt county court district, rural deanery of Richard James Spurrell esq. of Thurgarton Hall, and
Repps, archdeaconry of Norfolk and diocese of Norwich. Frederick Howe Lindsay Bacon Windham esq. of Hanw.orth
The church of SS. Peter and Paul is a small building of flmt, Hall, are the principal landowners. The soil is light; sub-
chiefly in the Decorated and Perpendicular styles, consisting soil, gravel. The chief crops are wheat, turnips, barley and
of chancel, nave, south porch and a round embattled grass. The area is 522 acres, chiefly arable; rateable value,
western tower containing one bell: there arc sittings for L786; the population in 1881 was u6.
abuut 100 persons. The register dates from the year 1558. LETTER llox cleared at 3·35 p.m. Letters received through
The living is a vicarage, average tithe rent-charge £13, Norwich, via Hanworth, at 8.IS a.m.; dispatched at 3.30
gross yearly value [33, including I I acres of glebe in the p.m. Gresham is the nearest money order office
parish of Great Witchingham, in the gift of Robert William CARRIER TO NoRWICH.-William Tice on wed. & sat. pass-
Ketton esq. and held since 1886 by the Rev. Charles Holt ing through Thurgarton & Alborough to 'Woulpack,' St.
Ensell B.A. Trinity College, Dublin, who is also rector of George's
Bessingham. Here is a Primitive Methodis1J chapel. The The children of this place attend the school at Aylmerton
Ensell Rev. Charles Holt B.A. [vicar J
Dutlield Francis, farmer
IOs borne William. farmer
Tice William, carrier
J Tice Robert blacksmith & farmer
.
SUTTON is a. pleasant village and parish, about a mile of Norfolk and diocese of Norwich. The church of St.
, from both Catfield and Stalham stations on the Eastern and ~'Iichael is an ancient building of flint and stone in the Per-
Midlands railway, 16 miles north-west from Yarmouth, 10 pendicular style, consisting of chancel, nave, south aisle,south
south-east from North Walsham and I6 north-east from porch and an embattled western tower containing 3 bells:
.Norwich, in the Eastern division of the county, Tunstead the church, for many years in a very dilapidated state, was
and Rapping petty sessional division, hundred of Eapping, restored in 1848 and new-roofed and the windows renovated
Smallburgh union, North Walsham county court district, in I89x at a cost of £3oo: there are ISO sittings. The
rurai deauery of \Vaxham, Happing division, archdeaconry register dates from the year 1576. The living is a rectory,
C. N. & S. 4.0
622 BUTTON. NORFOLK. [KELLY's
average tithe rent.charge £253, net yearly value £244, in- are wheat, oats and barley. The area is 1,383 acres; rate-
cluding 14 acres of glebe, with residence, in the gift of the able value, £2,365; the population in 1891 was 358.
MarqullS!J of Abergave.nny K.G. and hPld sincil :~88L by the By the Divided Parishes Act, a detached part of Hickling
'Rev. George Holloway M.A. of Trinity College, Dublin. was amalgamated with this parish in 1885.
Here is a Primiti•e Methodist chapel. There are 6o acres Parish Clerk, John Rea ne.
of land abounding with reeds and sed!!e, which are cut and
used by the poor for basket and horse-<.'Oilar lllakin!!'. An PosT 0FFICE.-Mrs. Alice Mace, receiver. Letters throu~h
ancien~ British shield iQ good preservation, found hero June Stalham S.O. which is the nearest money order office,
7 • i£8 7 5, during the construction of a dyke for drainage arrive at 7 a. m. ; no post on sundays. The nearest tele-
purposes, is now in the possession of Francis Clowes esq. graph oilice is at Stalham & money order office at Hick-
F. M. Keith esq. is lord of the manor and Francis Clowes ling. Letter Box cleared at 3.30 p.m
esq. and Mr. Thomas Worts are the principal landowners. National School (mixed), for 6o children; average attend-
The subsoil is sand, gravel and brick earth. The chief crops ance, 53 ; Miss Belinda BoJdy, mistress
Rensley Mrs. Brewery house Clarke Charles, farmer, Staithe Powley Robert, farmer
r.Burrett Arthur Clark Richard, farmer, Pool house Slipper Edward, farmer, Bray's farm
Clowes Francis, The Hall C{)llins James, vermin destroyer Southgate Edward, Windmill inn, &
Holloway Rev. George M. A. Rectory Gales Waiter, shoe maker horse breaker .
f,\Vorts Thomal'l Flowerdav Ed ward, assistant overseer Southe-ateRchd. boat builder, TheStaitbe
t'OMMERCIAL. Mace Alice( )'lrs. ),grocr.& drapr. Post off I Ward ~William, Catherine Wheel P.H
Abigail 'Villiam, pork butcher Osborne .Edward,farm bailiff to Francis "'orts Thomas, miller (wind), farmer,
Bell. John, grocer & draper Clowes esq. Old House farm maltster, corn n~orchant & brick &
, Rowers Edward, farmer Paine Benjamm, millwright & engineer tile maker, Sutton mill
Burton Sarah (Mrs.), farmer Platten John Robert, White Horse P.H

.!
'

S \V A F F H A ~1 .
8WAFFHAM is a market and union town, parish and head of Smith M.A. of Caius College, Cambridge, and rural dean of
a county court district, with a station on the Lynn and North Cranwich. '
Dereham section of the Great Eastern railway, whit:h is also The church mission-room at the North Pool, built in 1874,
the junction of a branch passing through Watton to Thet- was the gift of a lady parishioner. There are Baptist, Wes-
ford, 113 miles from London by rail way and g6 by road, 14~ leyan Methodist and Primitive Methodist chapels and Salva-
south-east from Lynn, 12 west from Dereham, 28 west tion Army barracks. ,
from Norwich and 23 north-west from Wymondham, in the The Corn Hall, in the .Market place, a handsome building,
South "'estern di,·ision of the county. South Greenhoe erected in 1858 by a company of shareholders, to whom it
hundred and petty sessional division, rural deanery of still belongs, i!l now (1892) let to a guarantee company, and
Cranwich, no,rthern division, archdeaconry of Norfolk and used for public meetings and entertainments, and is also
diocese of Norwich. The town is pleasantly situated on a used as an armoury by the G company of the 3rd Volunteer
rising ground, in a fine open country, 210 feet above sea Battalion Norfolk Regiment, formed in 186o, and now
level. The inhabitants enjoy peculiar privilege~, the town baying 98 efficient members.
being an ancient demesne. The Assembly Room~, in the Market place, were erected
The town is not incorporated, but is governed by a local in r817.
board of nine ~Uembers formed under the Public Health Act, The Victoria Cottage Hospital was established 1in May,
':~840. The town is lighted with gas from works in the Lynn I8fl8, and is maintained by voluntary cuntribntions.
road, established in 1:84o, and belonging to a company. The Here :1re iron foundrie"l, 2 banks, a subscription library
Swaffham. water works, the property of a limited company, and reading room and a magazine club.
were opened September 16th, 1867, and the water supply is The Local Board Fire llrigade consists of 3 men and a
obtained from a well 18o feet deep. superintendent ; the engine house is in Market place.
The church of SS. Peter and Paul, said to have been built A monument and drinking fountain were erected by sub-
in 1474, is a cruciform structure of flint in the Perpendi- scription in 1882 in the Market place, in honour of the late
cular style, consisting of chancel, clerestoried nave of seven Sir William Bagge bart. M.l'. for West Norfolk, d. 12 Feb.
bays, aisles. transepts, south porch and an embattled 188o. There is a small market every Saturday.
western tower dating from r:;m, with a graceful spire and The cross on the Market hill was rebuilt in 1783, by
containing a clock and 8 bells: the exterior of the tower is Horatio, 1st Earl of Orford, and consists of eight stone
adorned with several shields charged with the emblems of columns supporting a dome surmounted by a figure of
the saints to whom the church was dedicated: the north Ceres. Annual fairs are held the second Wednesday in May,
aisle js stated in the Swaffham "Black Book" (a terrier the third Wednesday in July and the first ·Wednesday in
dating from 1454) to have been built by John Chapman, November, for cattle and sheep.
and his device, carved in certain parts of the building, pro- The charities are numerous. The town estate, including
bably gave rise to the tale of his being a pedlar, but is more the heath, inclosed in 1863, produce.~ the yearly sum of
likely a quaint re bus on the name of Chapman: the north l 130, of which five-ninths is for the use of the poor, tw<>
-transept is the chapel of the Holy Trinity and the south ninths for the repairs of the fabric of the church, one-ninth
transept that of the Blessed Virgin Mary, but is otherwise for the support of the church services and one-ninth for
known as Blake's Chauntry, and here the archdeacon's town improvements. £2 is derived from the camping land.
couTt is held; attached to the south aisle is a small projec- There is also the interest of about £1,2r2, invested in the
tion, anciently the chapel of Corpus Christi: among the £2i per Cent. Consols, which is expended in coals for the
monuments is one to John Botwright n.n. sc..-enth master of poor and in assisting girls into household service.
Corpus Christi college or Bene't College, Cambridge, some On the north-west side of the town about 2,370 acres of
time rector here, proc·tor of the university and chaplain common land were inclosed in 1868, under the direction of
to King Henry VI. i and another to Catherine Steward, the Jnclosure Commissioners. North-west of the town is a
daughter and heiress of Thomas Paine of Castle Acre, and piece of land called "Goodluck's Close," a corruption of
wife of V.'illiam Steward of Ely ; she died in "~59°: there Guthlac's Stow. A priory of the Cistercian order was
are also several brasses and many stones fro~ wh1c~ th,e founded here by Alan, son of Godfrey de Swaffham, in the
brasses
h b have hbeen
· h taken· away: over the vestry a pr10st sf
d ISl"h [re·1gn o f 11 en ry II . an d d e d'1ca t e d t o St.. G u thla c ., 1·t "as
. a
c am er, w Ic contams some arm?ur an a 1 :ary 0 cell to the Pri()ry of Castle Acre and was used as a house
valuable books : the ·church was partially
d d restored
h !I
m. 1853 f or p1.1gruns
· t
o ,., · h
na1s1ng am. I n tl1e ne1g
· hb our h ooc1 are
an d f urth er restoratiOns were ma o an t e e-a enes re- C t! A p · d 0 b h H n
moved in I 677, a new organ being erected at th~ same time; as. e ere nory an x oroug a ·
the reredos was presented by Herbert Day esq. in r88I: in "R1chard Horace Hamond, commander R.N., J.P. aJ!d
1888-9 the roof of the nave was thoroughly restored at a I_homas Hamo~d esq. ar~ lords of the ma~or; the rector~al
cost of £ r,25o, under the superintendence of Mr. \V. 0. t~thes are now m possessi?n of the Eccl~si~Jcal Commis-
Milne architect of London : the stained east window was swners, commuted sum i, I, 143· The prmCipal landowners
beqne~tbed by 'the late Miss Ella Marse, and there are are Richard Horace Han;tond, comman~er R.N. Thomas
several others: there are about 700 sittings, most of which Hamond .esq. Mrs. Fountame and John ~eyland esq. J.P.,
are appropriated. The parish register datR~ from the year n.L. of "oodeaton, near Oxford.
1::{57· The living is a vicarage, gross yearly value from The area is 7,5.50 acres; rateable value, £r4, ..p8; af!d the
f,ithe rent-charge £422, average £4II, besides 36 acres of
glebe and residence, in the gift of the Bishop of Norwich,
and held since 1890 by the Rev. Granville Vincent Vie;kers
Ipopulation in 189r was 3,636, including 45 officers and in-
mates in the workhouse.
Parish Clerk and Sexton, James Wilson.
DIRECTORY.] NORFOI.. K. SW.. FFH.AM. 623
Official Establishments. Local Institutions &c.
PosT, M. 0. & T. 0., S. B. & Annuity & Insurance Office, ton-on-the-Hill, Igburgh, East Lexham, Langford, West
Market place.-Postmaster (vacant) Lexham, Narham, Narburgh, Narford, Necton, Newton-
Letters arrive from London per mail cart, via Brandon by-Castle Acre, Oxborough, North Pickenham, South
station, at 3 a.m. daily & at 1.20 & 6.40 p.m. per rail Pickenham, Rougham, Saham '.foney, Shingham, South-
(except sundays), & are dispatched thereto at ra.:JS a. m. acre, Sporle-with-Palgrave, Stanford, Swaffham, Tbrex-
& 4-35 p.m. per rail & 9.25 p.m. per mail cart, via ton & West Acre. This court is under the jurisdiction of
Brandon the Lynn county court for bankruptcy ; H. l'. Gould,
Deliveries, 7 a. m. 2.30 & 7 p. m. Partial collection on sunday Norwich, official receiver
Box closes for London at ro.15 a.m. 4.20 & 9 p.m.; Nor- Certified Bailiff appointed under the " Law of Distress
wich, 12-40 & 4.20 p.m. ; Lynn, 4.20 p.m. ; Dereham, Amendment Act," John Green, Market place
8.15 p.m. & local villages 1.30 p.m Corn Hall, Market place, John Chatton, keeper
Letters also dispatched to Castle Acre, Houghton, Roug- County Police Station, Robert Short, superintendent ; 2 ser-
ham, Rudham, Massingham, Weasenham &c. by mail geants & 13 constables ·
cart, at 4-4.') a. m. & received per return mail at 8.20 p.m Inland Revenue Office, !•'rank Kilburn, Station st. officer .
.Are also dispatched to Litcham, per mail cart, at 5 a. m. & Local Board l<'ire Engine Station, Market place, Henry
return mail at 7·45 p.m. ; sundays at 2.30 p.m Howard, superintendent ,t-; 3 men
Also by mounted messengers to Cockley-Cley, Shingham, Public Weighbridge, Market plaee, Thomas Sands
Beechamwell, North & South Pickenham, Necton, Nar- Shire Hall, Pickenham raod, E. Lowe, keeper
borough & Pentney at 6 a.m. & return at 7 p.m Victoria Cottage Hospital, Sporle road, :Miss Isabella Geld-
Day mail from Weasenham, Rougham & Castle Acre, arrives hart, matron
10.15 a. m.; returns 2 p.m VoLUNTEERs.
Day mail from Litcham, Great & Little Dunham, arrives 3rd Volunteer Battalion Norfolk Regiment (G Company);
2.13 p.m.; returns 3.42 p.m armoury, Qorn hall; Captain Algernon Charles Fountaine,
WALL LETTER BoxEs.-Station street, cleared at ro a.m. 12 commanding officer ; Augustus V\'illiam ·Thomas, Alan
noon, 4 & 7-50 p.m. ; sunday, 2.25 p.m. : London street, W. Houchen, lieutenants ; William Gilbert McOonald,
cleared at ro a.m. 12 noon, 4 & 7.50 p.m. ; sunday, I I sergeant major & drill instructor
a.m. : Railway station, cleared at 10 a.m. 12 noon, 4
& 7.50 p.m. ; no collection on sunday: Lynn street, SwAFFHAM UNION.
cleared at ro a. m. I 2 noon, 4 & 7. so p. m. ; no colJection Board day alternate mondays at I I a. m. at the ·workhouse:
on sunday The union comprises the following 33 parishes :-Ashill,
LocAL BoARD. Beechamwell, Bodney, lluckenham 'fofts (or Buckenham
Office, Castleacre street. Parva), Caldecote, Cockley-Cley, Colveston, Didlington,
Board day, first wednesday in every month at 7 p.m. East Bradenham, Foulden, Gooderstone, Great Crossing..
MH:MBERS. ham, Hilborough, Ilolme Hale, Houghton-on-the-Hill,
Lee- Warner Henry J.P. The Paddocks, chairman Igburgb, Langford, Little Cressingham, Narburgh, Nar•
Bell Frederick l{obinson, Market place ford, Necton, Newton-by-Castle Acre, North Pickenham,
Bunting George, Market place Oxborough, Saham Toney, Shingham, South Pickenham,
Case Frederick, Manor farm South Acre, Sporle-with-Palgrave,. Sianford, Swaffham7
Fuller J a.mes, .N ecton road Threxton & West llradenham; the population of the
M:antripp Joseph Sterry, London street union in 1891 was 12,393; area 81,200 acres; rateable
Morse Gilbert, London street value, £77,245 ·
Plowright Edward John, Market place Clerk to the Guardians & Assessment Committee, Hobe.rt
Winter Alfred John, Lydney house Sawell, Mangate street, Swaffbam
Clerk, William G. Winearls, Swaffham Treasurer, Somerville Arthur Gumey, Lynn
Treasurer, A. Gurney Relieving & Vaccination Officer for the Union, George
Medical Officer of Health, August us William Thomas J,, R.C. P. ·walker, Mangate street, Swaffham
Edin. Castleacre street Medical Officers & Public Vaccinators, East Bradenham
Surveyor, Inspector of Nuisances & Collector, Henry Giles, district, James Milner L.R.C.P.Edin. Shipdham; Igburgh
Watton road district, Frederick William Joy L.R.C.P.Edin. Northwold;
Ox borough district, Henry Frederick SLeele L. R.C.P. Loud.
County Magistrates for the Petty Sessional Stoke Ferry; Saham Toney district, Thomas Arthur
. Division of South Greenhoe. Alexander L.R.C.P.Irel. Watton; Sporle district, Frederic
Haggard William Meybohm Rider esq. LL,B.,·D.L. llraden- John Thomas; Swaffham; Swaffham district, Robert
ham hall, Thetford, chairman Buchanan Marriott, Swaffham
Adlington Capt. Henry Smitb, Holme Hale hall, Thetford Superintendent Registrar, Robert Sewell, Mangate street,
Applewhaite Col. Chas. Mundy, Pit;kenham hall, Swaffham Swaffham; deputy, Waiter Mead, Workhouse
Fielden Joshua esq. D.L. lleechamweli hall, Swaffham Registrar of Births & Deaths, Swaffham sub-district,
Fountaine Algernon Chas. esq. D.t. Narford hall, Swaffham Augustus William Thomas L.R.C.P.Edin. Castleacre street,
Haggard William Henry Doveton esq Swaffbam; deputy, Edward H. Thomas, Castleacre street.
Hamond Capt. Richard Horace R.N. Manor house, Swaffham Registrar of Marriages, John Maurice Barber • Mangate
Houchen Rev. Bircham M.A. Rectory, South Pickenham, street, Swaffham; deputy, Ernest Edwin .King, London st.
Swaffham The Workhouse, in the Watton road, outside the town,
Lee-·warner Henry M.A., D.L. The Paddot;ks, Swaffham erected in 1836, is a spacious edifice of brick, standing in
Martin Joseph Critchley esq. Narborough hall, Swaffham an enclosure of 4 acres of land, & is capable of holding 300
Mason Robert llarvey esq. D.L. Necton hall, Swaffham inmates~ the infirmary is a detached building available
Mills Joseph Trueman esq. D.L. Clermont Watton S.O for 20 patients : there is also a burial ground ; ·waiter
Clerk to the Magistrates, Robert Sewell, Mangate street Merd, ma.'!ter; Rev. Bircham Houchen M.A. chaplain ~
Petty sessions are held at the Shire hall every alternate Frederick John Thomas, medical otlicer; Mrs. Martha
monday at I I a.m. The places within the di!ltrict are Mead, matron
Beechamwell, Bodney, Caldecote, Cockley-Cley, Didling· . RURAL SANITARY AUTHORITY.
ton, East Bradenharn, Foulden, Gooderstone, Great Cress-
ingham, Hilborough, Holme Hale, Houghton-on-the-Hill, Meets at the V\•orkhouse on every alternate monday, after
Little Cressingham, Narburgh, Narford, Necton, Newton- the termination of guardians' business.
by-Castle Acre, North 'Pickenham, Oxborough, Shing· Clerk, Robert Sewell, Mangate street, Swaffham
ham, South Pickenham, Southacre, Sporle-with-Palgrave, Treasurer, S. A. Gurney, Lynn
Medical Officer of Health, Henry Geo. Foster, Attleborough
Swaffham & West Brad en ham Inspector of NuisanC'es, Robcrt Smith, Sporle
Public Establishments.
Assembly Rooms, Market place, Edward Lowe, proprietor SCHOOL ATTENDANCE COMMITTEE. •
County Court, His Honor Edwin Plumer Price Q.C. judge; Meets at the Workhouse on every aiternate monday, after
Alfred John Winter, registrar & high bailiff; John the termination of guardians' business.
Green, sub-bailiff. The court is held at the Shire hall. Clerk, Robert Sewell
Swaffham county court district comprises the following Attendance & Inquiry Officer, Robert Smith, Sporle
places :-Asbill, Beechamwell, Bodney, East llradenham,
West Bradenham, Buckenham Tofts, Caldecote, Castle Public Officers.
Acre, Cockley-Cley, Colveston, Great Cressingham, Little Clerk to the Commissioners of Taxes for both Hundreds of
Crossing ham, Great I)unham, Didlington, Lit. tie Dunham, South Greenboe & Grimshoe & to the Assessment Com-
Foulden, Gwu..:rstone, Hilborough, Holme Hale, Hough- mittee, Robert Sewell, Mangate street

C. N. & S. 40*
624 SWAFFHAM. -NORFOLK. [ KELLY's
Clerk to the Swaffham Town Trustees, William Good National, Campingland, erected in 1838, for 630 children•
Winearls, Swaffham including the infants' school in Pickenham road; average
Collector of Market Tolls, Hezekiah Myall, London street at.tendance, 150 boys, 120 girls & 164 infants; William
·Collector of Poor's Rate, Thomas Green, Norwich road Pheasant, master; Mrs. Charlotte Pheasant, mistress ;
Inspector of "\\"eights & Measures, H. Williamson, Lynn Miss Marian Jane Spires, infants' mistress
-Town Crier, James Hancock Barratt, Mangate street
Places of Worship. Railway Stations.
SS. Peter & Paul's Church, Rev. Granville V. V. Smith M.A. Great Eastern Railway, Austin Christopher Sainty, station
vicar; services, :u a.m. 3.30 & 7 p.m. & week days wed. master
& fri. at 11.45 a. m. & wed. evenings in the winter months Omnibus to & from Railway station from George commer-
· at 8 p.m cial hotel to meet every train
Baptist, Rev. Joseph Wilkins
Primitive Methodist, Rev. John Pickwell Carriers.
Wesleyan, Rev. William J. Pearce BRF.CHAMWRLL-Robert 'Vatts, from 'White Hart,' mon.
Schools. thurs. & sat
A Free School in the Campingland was founded in 1724 by CASTLE ACRE-Nichols, from White Hart lane, daily & Israel
Nicbolas Hamond & i~ endowed with £22 yearly; Charles Turner, from Railway station, daily
John Drury, master · NECTON-Mrs. Fanny Jarvis, from 'WhiteHart,'sat. &wed
PRIVATE RESIDENTS. Smith Robert, White Hart lane Clark Edward & Son, agricultural en-
Aldiss Mrs. York ho. White Hart lane Southwell William Castell,The Retreat, gineers & steam thrashing machine
Avann Rev. Arthur Alfred B.A. [curate Prince of Wales road proprietors, Prince of Wales road
of Cockley Cley ], Mangate street Thomas Augustus 'Villiam L.R.C.P. Clark George Robert, farmer, The
Balding Miss, Pickenham road Edin. Valley field Wood farm, "Yorth Pickenham road
Betts James, \\'atton road Tholllas Frederic John, Castleacre st Clarke William, carter, London sireet
Bloom Mrs. \\'atton road Trekearne George Rees, London street Coe Edward Alfred, hay & corn dealer,
Bunting Ueorge, Marcon ho. Market pl Utting Miss, 12 Providence terrace Providence terrace
Carter The Misses, Sporle road Weston William Frederick, London st Coe William John, printer & bookseller,
Clark Miss, Watton road Wilkins Rev. Joseph [Baptist], 3 Provi- & subscription library, M~rket place
Clark Miss, Western ho. Market place dence terrace Complin Abraham Young, boot & shoe
Clark Thomas W1lliam, Pool road Wilson The Misses, Beech cottage maker, London street
Coe Mrs. Hobert, I Providence terraca "\\rmearls William Good, Castleacre st Cooke Fdk. Wm. butcher, Castleacre st
Coe William Rogers, London street Winter Alfred John, Lydney house Cooper George, builder, Lynn street
Cooper Wilham, 5 Providence terrace W oolverton Frank S. Market place Cork Hobert, tailor, see Powley & Cork
Cowell Rev.John Edward B.A. [curate], COMMERCIAL. Corn Hall (Jn.Chatton,kpr.),Market pl
London street Aldiss John, draper, Market place Cory Mar~ha (Mrs.), baker, Lynn st
Cross Joseph, 6 Providence terrace Allen Jane (Mrs.), shopkeeper, Castle- County Court( His Honor Edwin Plumer
Day Herbert William, Dalton house, acre street Price Q.c.judge; Alfred John Winter,
Castleacre street Alpe Fredk.wine &spirit mer. London st registrar & high bailiff ; John Green,
Day The Misses, Market place AlpeJas.saddler& harness ma.Market pl sub-bailiff)
Drury Charles John (master of the Anthony Thomas Henry, farmer, Great County Poliee Station (Rbt.Short, supt)
Grammar school), Campingland Friars Thorns, Lynn road Craft Pbili p, tailor, Lynn road
Dutchman Miss, Holly lodge, London st Armes John James, hair dresser & Cross Jabez G. painter & glazier,Back la
EJD.erson Robert Nelson, :Mangate st tobacconist, London street Crown Inn Estate Co. (Sydney M<tt-
Everett .Frederic, Station street Arnold & Son, drapers, grocers & wine thews, sec,), London street
Finch Jacob, Market place merchants, Market place Culling James George,plumber&glazier,
Forster Mrs. Market plaee Aspland James, tin plate worker & iron- & manager to the Swaffham Water
Giles Henry, Watton road monger, White Hart lane Works Co. Limited, Pro;idence ter
Goggs Leonard Russell, London street Assembly Rooms (Edward Lowe, pro- Dawes Jn. Norfolk Hero P.H. Station st
Goggs Mrs. London street prietor), Market place Dawson Albert, tailor, Watton road
Greeves Mrs. London street Atboe Newman Hubert, professor of Dent John Alfd. grOCT. & drpr.Ash close
Hamond Capt. Richard Horace R.N., music & organist of the parish church, DickcrsonGcorge, beer retailer& farmer,
l.P. Manor house London street Market place
Hamond Mrs. Manor house Atkins Wm. Arthr.insur. agt. Lynn st Dodds Robert, saddler, Ash close
Hannant Charles Henry, Point house, Avis Jn. tailor, Crown yard, Market pi Dutchman Henry,farmer, West Acre rd
Castleacre street BannerThomas,stone mason,London st Elvin'fhomas Willoug h by ,coach builder,
Hannant Herbt. Jas. 4 Providence ter Barber John Maurice, registrar of London street
llayden Waiter John, The Bank marriages, Mangate street EmersonRobt. X elson,surgn. Mangate st
Hook John, Montpelier ho. Market. pl Barker George William, fishmonger & Everett Frederick, corn merchant, see
Howorth Mrs. White lodge game dealer, Market place Vynne & Everett
Jeffery Charles, London street Barnes William, corn & bay dealer & Everritt Robert Brooks, hair dresser,
Johnson Frank, London street baker, Mangate street Church lane
Judson Benjamin Robert Glyddon, 3 llarrett James Hancock, town crier, Fanthorpe Henry, hawker, The Sham-
Providence terrace Mangate street bles, Market place
Lack Mrs. Station street Barratt Soth, tailor, Market place Fayers Thomas, baker, Market place
Lee-Warner Hy. M.A.,J.P. The Paddoeks Bell Frederick Robinson, analytical & Fenn Charles Clark,boot & shoe maker,
Lindsey Mrs. Lynn street dispensing chemist 14 Ash elose
Lindsey Thomas, Shrubland house Blanchflower Albt. boot ma. London st ~'inch Jacob & Henry Young, mer-
Ling Samuel, Ashclose house Bone William, clock & watch maker & chants & farmers, Market place
Lowe Edward, Stanley house jeweller, Market place Fuller James, farmer, Cupid's Bower
Long Stephen, London street Brett Chas. markt.grdnr.Wbite Hart la farm, Necton road
Marriott RobertBuchanan,Castleacre st Brett Peter, beer retailer, Ash close Gainsbury Waiter Youngs, gardener to
Montague The Misses, Pickenham road Brown Brothers, bakers, London street Charles Palmer esq. London street
Morse Frederick, London street Buckle Ann (Miss), dress maker, Man- Garner Lydia (Miss), beer ret. Lynn rd
Morse Gilbert, London street gate street GarrodFras. SpreadEagleP.H. London st
Oakes Richard, Thorn ton bo. London st llnnting George & Co.~grocers, drapers Gas \\'orks (William Plowright, sec.),
Page John Wm. The Bank, Market pi & outfitters, Market place Lynn road
Pal mer Charles, The Hollies, London st Burroughs George, glass & earthenw3.re Gibson Henry J. tailor & clothier,
Palmer Mrs. Market place & hardware dealer, Mangate street Market place
Palmcr Mrs. Wood side, Mangate st Burton Eliza (Mrs.), beer ret.Market pi Giles Henry, surveyor & inspector of
Pearce Rev. William J. [Wesleyan], 7 Carr Elizabeth Hannah (Mrs.), watch nuisances & collector to the local
Providence terrace maker & jeweller, Market place board, 'Vattnn road
Pickwell Rev. John [Primitive Method- Carter Thomas, carpenter, Lynn street Goggs Leonard Russell, classical &
istj, 9 Providenee terrace Case Frederick, Vliterinary surgeon, mathematical school( boarding&day ),
Plowright Edward John, Market place M.R.c.v.s.Lond. inspector under the Market place. See advertisement
Plowright William, Market place privy" council for the Hundreds of Gooderson William, White Hart P.H.
Preston William, Pool road South Greenhoe & Wayland, & farm- London street
Rix Frederick Ely, London street er, Manor farm Goold Thomas, horse dealer, Station st
Sewell Robert, Mangate street Chatton John, furniture dlr. Market pi Gould William, printer, bookseller,
Smith Rev. Granville Vincent Vickers Christopherson Fred, pharmaceutical stationer, bookbinder, music seller &
M.A. [vicar], The Vicarage chemist & mineral water manufac- dealer in toys & fancy goods, Market pl
Smith Mrs. London street turer, Market place Graves William, shopkeeper, London st
DIRECTORY.] NORFOLK. SW.AFFH.AM. 625
Green George, grocer, London street KilburnFnk. inlnd.revenue off.Station st PitcherWilliam&Son,painters,plumbers ·
Green John, boot maker, & sub-bailiff King Erne.st Edwin, deputy registrar of & glaziers, Lynn street
to the county court, Market place mar~iages, London street Plowright & Sons, ironmongers, iron
Green Robert Vincent, whitesmitb, Lack Wtlliam,saddlor & harnes3 maker, founders & agricultural implement
White Lion yard, Ca.stleacre street & agent for the Royal Exchange In- makers, Market place
Green Ruth Elizabeth (Mrs.), dress & surance Office, Market place Plumb Elizabeth (Mrs.), fancy & wool
mantle maker & milliner, Market pl Lacons, Youell & Co. (nranch), bankers repository, Market place
Green Samuel Kerridge, butcher (Chas. (Frank S. Woo\verton, manager), Plumb John, bricklayer & well sinker,
W. Kerridge, manager), Station Market place; draw on Glyn, Mills, Lynn street
street; & at Cawston Currie & Co. London PlumbLouisa(Miss),dr.,ss m'I..Market pl
Green Thomas, nurseryman, & collector Lambert Charles Thomas, sieve & has- Plumb Robert, wheelwright & coach
of taxes & assist.'overseer,N orwich rd ket maker & beer retailer, Market pi builder, Prince of Wales road
Greengrass Dyerson, black1-1mitb & iron- LaneArth. grocr. &bard ware dlr. Lynn st Plumb Wait. baker&confectioner,Lynn st
monger, White Hart lane Lane Wm. pork butcher & grcr.Lynn st Powley & Cork, tailors, Market place
Gurneys, Birkbeck, Barclay, Buxton & Large Charles Henry, solicitor, & agent Powley Agnes (Mrs.), milliner & dress
Cresswell .(branch), bankers (John for the Guardian Fire & Life & Nor- maker, Market place .
William Page, manager), closed at I wich & London Accident Office, Powley James, tailor, London street
o'clock on tuesdays, Market place ; Castleacre street Powley Thos.farmer,Mill farm,Sporle rd
draw on Barclay, Bevan & Co. Lon- Larwood EdgarGeo.farmer,Norwich rd Preston William, miller (wind), corn,
donE c Larwood John, farmer, North Pool frm cake, coal & tnanure Inerchant, Sta-
Hall Arthur Henry, grocer, London st Larwood Jn. jun. farmer, Grange farm tion st.; Railway station & Pool lane
Hall Sarah(Mrs.),wardrobe dlr.Lynn st Lindsey Harry, grocer, Market place PriceJenveyJ.Liberal registration agent,
Hannant & Son,grocers, drapers & pro- 'Lingwood Wm. umbrella maker & cane London street
vi~ion merchants,& agent."! forW.& A. worker, Ash closs Public Weighbridge (Thomas Sands),
Gilbev, wine & spirit mers. & agents Loveless Sarah· (Mrs.), apartments, Market place
for Whitbread's bottled ales & stout Station street Purse John, beer retailer, Lynn street
& Worthington's ales in cask Lowe Ed ward,lesse3 of Assembly rooms Randall& Co. fancy repository & registry
Harper Henry, cabinet ma. London st & keeper of the Shire hall, Stanley offic~ for servants, Market place
Hassack \Villiam, boot & shoe maker, house, Lundon street Randall George Thomas, George hotel,
Maddison yard, Castleacre street Lunn Edmund Robert, baker & con- Mangate street
Hawes Charles Pollard, manager for fectioner, .Ash close Reyuolds George, watch maker & to-
John & Robert Marriott, maltsters & . Mack & Scholetield (Misses), ladies' bacconist, London street
merchants, 7 Providence terrace I boarding & day school, London street Ripper Benjamin, shoe maker, Lynn st
Hawker Henry E. wine & spirit mer- Magazine Club (William Gonld, pro-
1

RobinsonDavid,coal merchnt. London st


chant, London street prietor), Market place Robinson Ueorge, game dlr. Market' pl
Head Rohert, bill poster & contractor Mallon Richard, contractor & timber Robinson John, jobmaster, Crown yard,
for every description of hoarding merchant, Station works Market place
placards in the town, Mangate street! Mantripp J!>ph.Sterry, grocr. London st Rolfe Robert, farm bailiff to H. Tallent
HeadRobt.chimney sweeper,Mangatest: Margarson Edward M.R.c.v.s. veteri- esq. Snailspit farm
Heyhoe Geo. cattle dealer,Castleacre st ' nary surgeon, :Market place Rolfe Williarn,pianoforte & harmomum
Hey hoe Jabez, butcher, Lynn street Marriott J obn & Robert, maltster5 & warehouse, Mangate street
Heyhoe John, builder & stone mason, mers. H.ailway station; & at Lynn Rose John, Railway tavern & posting
London street Marriott Robert Buchanan, surgeon, house, Station street
lleyhoe Robert, auctioneer, land agent, med. off. & public vaccinator, Swaff- Rowe Edward, plumber, London street
valuer & ISurveyor & agent for the ham distriet, Castleacre street Rowe Frederick, beer retailer, Lynn rd
Mutual Life, the Virtue Life & Lon- Matthews Sydney, solicitor, London st Ruffles Henrv,•
boot & shoe maker, The
don General Plate Glass Insurance Mead \Valter, master of the workhouse Shambles, Market place
Cos. London street & deputy superintendent registrar Sadler Ch'l.rles, builder & stone mason,
Heyhoe Robert, plumber, painter & Mears James, carter, Northwell pool Station terrace
glazier, London street Medlock Hy. baker & corn dlr. Lynn st Salisbury Conservative Club (Edward
HeyhoeWilliamM.(Mrs.),coaeh builder, Medlock Maria (Mrs.), baker & beer John Plowright, sec.), Market place ,
Station street retailer, London street SaudsThomas,GreyhoundP.H. Market pl
Hopkins Ellen (Mrs.), plumber,painter Morgan Sarah (Mrs.), lodg.bo. Lynn st Sainty Austin Christopher, station
& glazier, Lynn street Morse & Woods, brewers, maltsters & master, G. E. railway
Howard Harry, saddler & harness wine & spirit merchants, White Hart Savage James, hair dresser, Market pl
maker, I.ynn street lane & Market place ; & at Crown Savage William,boot maker,Mangate st
Howes James, Red Lion P.H. Market pl street, Lowestoft Sayer Mary (Mrs.), cowkeeper, Prince
Ho~es Phccbe (Mrs.), boot&shoe dealer, Moy Bessie Caroline(Miss),drese maker, of Wales road
Market place Lynn street Seaman Samuel, butcher, Market place
Howlett Samuel, builder, Ash close MuffettAifred,joiner&builder,London st Selfe Walt.Warner,beer retlr.London st
Hudson John,jobbing gardener,Back la MuffettJane(Miss),dress ma.Mangate st Sowell Robert, solicitor, commissioner
Hudson Jn. tmv. draper, Castleacre st Murrell Wm. beer retailer, London st to administer oaths, clerk to the
Hunter Edward, beer retailer, Pool rd MyallHezekiah,pork butcher & collector magistrates of South G-reenhoe &
Impson Joshua Frederick, contractor, of market tolls, London street (i-rimshoe, the con1missioners of taxes •
surveyor, builder & dealer in building Nelson Rt.mrkt.gardenr.Northwell pool of both hundreds & union, rural sani-
materials, brick & drain pipe mer- Nelson Waiter, pork butcher, London st tary authority & to the guardians &
chant, & agent for the North British Nickols Robert Dunthorne, boot & shoe school attendance & assessment com-
& Mercantile Fire & Life & Guardian maker, Market place mittees & superintendent registrar &
Plate Glass Insur. Cos. Castleacre st Offord Lydia (Mrs. ),shopkpr. Market pl deputy clerk of the peace & agent for
Jackson Augusta (Mrs.), dress maker, Offord Thomas, seedsman & florist, the London Assurance Corporation
Back lane Market place & London street Office, Mangate street
J ackson Robert, wheel wright,London st OvertonAlfd. Ueo. cabinet ma. )Jar ket pl Shire Hall ( Ed ward Lowe, keeper),
Jacob Geo. farmer, Carol bo.Watton rd Overton Henry Young, tailor, Lynnst Pickenham road
Jacob George, jun. farmer, Copper hall OvertonMary\Mrs.),shopkpr.Church la Short Robert, supt. of police, Polic--e statu
Jarvis Chas. Wm. basket ma.Market pl Owen Matilda (Miss), pork butcher, 17 Smith Alfred, farmec, Little l''riars
Jeffery Charles & Co. merchant.<; & Ash close Thorns, Lynn road
maltsters, London street /!>. Rail way Packer Ann(Miss), ladies' schl. London st Smith Charles, boot maker, .Market pl
station; & at King street, Lynn Page John William,manager of Gurneys SmithHannattDa wson ,gro. Castleacre st
Jeffries George, builder, contractor & & Co.'s Bank & agent for the Atlas, Smith Robert, engineer & iron & bras 1!1
lime burner, Lynn street & the Law, Union & Crown Insurance founder, White Hart lane
Jobnson Thomas & Son, gun & rifle Cos. Market place Smith Robert., draper, London street
manufacturers, Market place Patters on Jas. travelling drpr .Station st Smith Thomas, pianoforte maker &
Johnson Ann (Mrs.), coal dlr.Ash close Payne ·wmiam, blacksmith, Albert ter tuner, London street
Johnson l.<'rederiek, artist & naturalist, Pearce Mary (Mrs.),shopkpr.Watton rd Smith Walt. butcher& farmer,Market pl
Castleacre street Perk ins Jas. painter&glazier, Tumbler hl Smith. William, beer retailer, London
Jobnson · Richard Alexander, White PcrkinsThomas,bcer retlr. WbitcHart la street & b~acksmitb, Hack lane
Lion P.H. & gun maker, Castleacre st Petch Willie,grocer&outfitter,London st Stratton I<'rederick, farmer & ~gricul­
Jolley Henry, gardener to H. W. Day Philo Albert Edward, china dealer & tural machinist, London street
esq_ Castleacre street leather seller, London street Swaffham IndnstrialCo-operativeSociety
Kemble Benjamin, market gardener & Pilch Thomas Augustine, King's ArllU! (WilbamTemple., managel"),London st
farmer, Norwich road P.H. Market place Swaffbam Water Works Co. Limited
Kendle Thos. coaldlr.& carter, Lyun rd Pitcher William, beer retailer, Lynn st (Wm. 'G. Winearls, sec.),Castleacre st
626 SWAFFHAM. NORFOLK. (KELLY'S
Taylor Jabez, baker, Castleacre street Victoria Cottage Hospital (The) (Miss Exchange Co. & Public Rooms Co.
Thomas Augustus William r•. R.C. P. Bdin. Isabella Geldart, matron),Sporle road clerk to the town trustees & clerk to
physician & surgeon, medical officer Vynne& Everett,cake merchants, Station local board of health
of health, Swaffham urban sanitary street ; & Athenreum buildings, Lynn Winter Alfred John, solicitor, registrar
authority & registrar of births & Walker Ann Elizabeth (Mrs.), Temper- & high bailiff of the county court,
deaths for Swaffham union, Castle- ance commercial hotel & dining commissioner for oaths, steward of
acre street rooms, Market place the manor of Swaffham & agent for
Thomas Edward H. deputy registrar of Walker George, relieving & vaccination the Norwieh Union Fire & Life Insur-
births & deaths for Swaffham sub- officer for Swaffham union,Ma.ngte.st ance Office, Market place
district, Castleacre street Walker William, chimney sweeper, Mad- WoolvertonFrank S.manager of Lacons,
Thomas Frederic John, surgeon,& medi- dison's yard, Castleacre street Youell&Co. 's bank(branch),Market pl
cal officer & public vaccinator, Sporle Walpole Arthur, basket ma. Market pl Worrell Sophia (Mrs.), confectioner,
district, Swaffham union & medical Ward \\'alter, bu tcher,London street Castleacre street
officer to the workhouse,Castleacre st WarrenThomasHenry,auctioneer & land Yeomans Mary Ann(Miss),dress maker,
Thurgood James, cooper, London street agent,Ca..'ltleacre st. ;&atEastDereham Lynn street
Tricker James, shopkeeper, London st "-'heals Charles, furnished apartments, Yeomaus Robert Barnard, boot & shoe
Tuffs True, market gardener & seeds- Castleacre street maker, Lynn street
man, London street Wheals Zipporah (Mrs.), Swan inn, Youell & Co.'s bank (branch), Market pl
Twaites Anna (Mrs.), dress maker, Castleacre street Young Charles Valentine, boot maker,
Church lane Williamson H. inspector of weights & Market place
Volunteer Battalion ( 3rd) Norfolk Hegi- measures, Lynn road Young Geo.joiner & builder, Tumbler hl
ment (G Company) (Captain A. C. Winearls William Good,solicitor & corn- Young Men's Institute (George Harry
Fountaine, commanding; WIIliam mil'!sioner for oaths & for taking ac- Bunting, sec.), Corn hall
Gilbert McDonald, sergeant-major & knowledgrnents of married women, Youngs William, beer retailer & coal &
drill instructor), Armoury, Corn hall secretary to the water works, to Corn coke dealer, Lynn street
SW AFIELD is a parish and pleasant village, 2 miles the Rev. Frederick Simpson Thew M.A. of Cavendish College,
north from North Walsham, where there are stations on the Cambridge. The rent of the farm occupied by Mr. Walter
East Norfolk section of Great Eastern and on the Eastern Henry B.enacre is re!'lerved for the benefit of the Clergy
and Midlands railways, connected with that town by a bridge Widows' Fund. Lord Suftield P.C. and the Master and fellows
over the North Vl-'alsham and Dilham canal, is 16 miles or St. Peter's College, Cambridge, are the lords of the two
north from Norwich, in the Eastern division of the county, manors. Peter El win Wrench esq. and Mrs. Dolphin are
Tunstead and Rapping petty sessional division, Tunstead the principal landowners. The soil is mixed; subsoil, clay
hundred, Smallburgh union, North Walsham county court and gravel. The chief crops are wheat, oats and barley.
district, rural deanery of Waxham, Tunstead division, arch- The area is 8r4A. 2R. 33P.; rateable value, £1,244; the popu-
deaconry of Norfolk and diocese of Norwich. The church of lation in I891 was 183.
St . .Nicholas is an ancient building of flint, in the Perpendicu- Parish Clerk William Larke.
lar style, consisting of chancel, nave, south porch and an '
embattled western tower containing 4 bells: there are ISO LBTTE~ Box cleared at 8. IS a.m. & .5·5 p.m. Letters
sittings. The register dates from the year r66o. The living recetVed through North Walsham, _whiCh IS the nearest
is a discharged rectory, average tithe rent-charge £ISO, net money order & telegraph office, arrive at 7-30 a. m
yearly value£ I26, with 7 acres of glebe and residence, in National School (mixed), erected in I852, for 70 children ;
the gift of the Duchy of Lancaster, and held since r886 by average attendance, 6o; Miss Marion Cherry, mistress
Dolphin Mrs. Thomas Clcments Alfred, pork butcher Page Charlotte (Mrs.), miller (water) &
Gaze Mrs. Swafield house Cubitt & Walker,coal & corn merchants farmer
Matthews Mrs &c. ; & at Cromer & North Walsham Stolworthy James, Duke's Head P.H
Renacre Waiter Henry, The Beeches Hewitt Elizabeth (Mrs.), shopkeeper Waters George, farm steward to Mr.
Thew Rev. Fredk. Simpson M. A. Rectory RenacreWalt.Henry,farmer,TheBeeches George A. Plumbly
'Bulley William, blacksmith
SWAINSTHORPE is a village and parish and head 1 Bateman Sir Frederic St. Giles' plain, Norwich
M. D.
of a petty sessional division, with a station on the Ipswich , Birkbeck Henry esq. Stoke hall, Stoke Holy cross, Norwich
and Norwich section of the Great Eastern railway, Iog;f 'Boileau Sir Francis George Manning-ham bart. B.A., F.S.A.,
miles from London and 5 south-by-west from Norwich, in D.L. Ketteringham park, Wymondham
the Southern di,,ision of the county, hundred of Humble- Boileau Maurice C. esq. Ketteringham park
yard, Henstead union, Norwich county court district, rural' Column Jeremiah Jas. esq. M.P., D.L. Carrow ho. Norwich
deanery of Humbleyard, arch deaconry of Norfolk and diocese l''ellowes Rev. Charles M.A. Shotesham Rectory, Norwich
of Norwich. The church of St. Mary, formerly existing .Fellowes Robert esq. D.L. Shotesham park, Norwich
here, has entirely disappeared. The church of St. Peter is Gurney John Henry esq. Keswick hall, Norwich •
an ancient building of flint with stone facings, in various Hotblack John esq. St. Faiths house, Norwich
styles dating from 1300 to ISOO, and consisting of chancel, Penrice Maj. John D.L. The Lodge, Bramerton, Norwich
nave, north aisle, south porch and an octagonal embattled Unthanks Lieut.-Col. Clement Wm. Joseph, Intwood hall,
western tower, containing 4 bells: there is a curious monu- Norwich
ment to John Dearsley esq. d. 1765, and a brass to Gilbert Clerk to the Magistrates, Elward Palgrave Simpson,
Havers, ob. 1628: the church was thoroughly restored in Tombland, Norwich
x885, when the fine Perpendicular roof an~ No~an font Petty Sessions are held at the Workhouse the first & third
were ca~efully restored; a new cary'ed pulpit, readmg desk fridays in every month, at 11 a.rn. The following places
and ch01r stalls of oak er~ted, the aisle and chancel re floored are included in the petty sessional division :-Arminghall,
and the south porch reb~tl~, at a total co~t of about £1,400: Bixley, Bracon Ash, Bramerton, Caistor St. Edmund's,
the church affords _I$0 SI~tmgs. The reg~ster dates from the Colney, Cringleford, Dunston, East Carlton, Flordon,
r,ear 1558. The hvmg IS ~ rectory, with that of .~ewton l<'ramingham Earl, Framlingham Pigot, Ilethel, Hether-
Flotman annexed, a_verag~ tithe rent-charge £460, ]~mt net sett, Holverstone, Intwood, Keswick, Ketteringham,Kirby
yearly value £435, mcludmg 68 acres of glebe and residence, Bedon Markshall Me! ton l\'laO"na Melton Parva Mul-
in the gift of and held since I_884 by the Rev. Ernest bartod, Newton Fl~tman, Poringla~d, Rockland St.'Mary,
He!lry Kellett Long M.A. of Ch~Ist ~hurch, O~ford, who Saxlingham Netbergate, Saxlingham Thorpe, Shotcsham
resides at ~ewton Flotrna~. .Ben]amm Bennett ~n 1879 left All Saints, Shotesham St. Mary & St. Martin, Stoke Holy
£~oo, the ~nterest ~be distributed to the poor m ,coal and Cross, Surlingham, Swainsthorpe, Swardeston, Trowse
bread, dnrmg the wmter months of each year. Fortescue Newton Whitlingham & Wreningham
Waiter Kellett Long esq. of Dunston Hall, is lord of the '
manor and principal landowner. The soil is light and
sandy ; subsoil, chalk and gravelly." The chief crops are HENSTEAD UNION.
wheat, oats, barley and turnips. The ·~rea is 821 acres ;
rateable value, £1,525; the population ~n 18gr was 275, Board day, 10.30 a.m. tuesdays, alternately, at Swains-
including 83 officers and inmates in Henstead Union Work- thorpe workhouse.
house. The union comprises the following places :-Arminghall,
PoST 0FFICE.-Thomas James Andrews, receiver. Letters Bixley, Bracon Ash, Bramerton, Caister St. Edmund's,
received through Norwich, via Stok-& Holy Cross, arrive at Colney, Cringleford, Dunston, Earl Framingham, East
7.30 a. m.; dispatched at 5 p.m. The neare.<~t money order Carlton, Flordon, Framingham Pigot, Hethel, Hethersett,
office is at Mulbarton & telegraph ot1!ce at Ea ton · Holverstone, Jntwood, Keswick, Ketteringham, Kirby
. . -• Bedon, Markshall, Melton Magna, Melton Parva, Mul-
CoUNTY MAGISTRATES FOR SWA,IIfSTJ.{t'mPE PETTY barton, Newton Flotman, Poringland Great (or East),
8ESSIONA~..QitVISION.· Poringland Little (or West), Rockland St. :Mary, Saxling-
Barclay Hugh Gurney esq; Colney hall ham Nethergate, Saxlingham Thorpe, Shotesham All
DIRECTORY.] NOHFOLK. SW ANT ON .ABBOT. 627
Saint!'!, Shotesham St. Ma.ry & St. Martin, Stoke Holy Registrar of Marriages, Albert Edward William Bacon,
CrnSi!, Surlingham, Swainsthorpe, Swardeston, Trowse, Swardeston; deputy, William Cheney, Swardeston
(or Trowse ~ewton) 7 Whttlingham & Wreningham; the The Workhouse of the Henstead Union, in this parish,
population of the union in 1891 was 10,834 ; area, erected in ~836, is a plain structure of red brick, available
43,358 acres ; rateable valuej £73,780 for 250 inmates; James S. Sanders, master; Rev. Fred-
Clerk to the Guardians & Assessment Committee, E. P. erick Cavell Th.A. K.C.L. chaplam; T. W. Richardson,
Simpson, Tom bland, Norwich medical officer; Mrs. Eliza Sanders, matron
Treasurer, Henry Birkbeck, Norwich RURAL SANITARY AUTHORITY.
Relic1ving & Vaccination Officers, Henstead district, Frederick Meets at Workhouse on 2nd board meeting of each month
William Lansdell, Framingham Pigot; Humbleyard dis- at II.30 a.m.
trict, Albert Edward William Bacon, Swardeston Clerk, E. P. Simpson, Tornbland, Norwich
Medical Officers & Public Vaccinators, No. I district, John Treasurer, Henry Birkbeck, Norwich
Herbert Stacey L.R.C.P.Edin. 39 Exchange street, Nor- Medical Otncer of Health, S. H. Burton, Norwich
wich; No. 2 district, Robert James Mills M.B., C. M. 35 Inspector of Nuisanecs, James Hall, Swardeston
Surrey street, Norwich; No. 3 district, George Lowe M.D., ScHOOL ATTENDANCE CoMMITTEE.
c. M. Wymondham; No. 4 district, William Wellington Meets at Workhouse on xst board meeting of each month
Lake, Saxlingham Nethergate at 11.30 a.m.
Superintendent Registrar, James S. Sanderss, Swainsthorpe; Clerk, E. P. Simpson
deputy, Alfred Ban ham, Mulbarton Attendance Officer, William Cheney, Swardoston
Registrars of Births & Deaths, Henstead sub-district, Charles Railway Station, William Herbert Canham, station master
Morley Si! cock, Poringland ; deputy,H. Taylor, Poring land; ~ational School (mixed), erected in 1874, for so children ;
Hnmbleyard sub-district, Albert Eel ward Williaru Bacon, average attendance, 49; Miss Courtenia Martha Harmer,
~wardeston; deputy, William Cheney, Swardeston mistress
Algar J abez, Violet bank Brown James, coal merehant Ringer Arthur Denny (Mrs.), farmer,
Long Miss Catchpole William, wheelwright Church farm
. COMMERCIAIJ. Mutimer George, farmer, Rookery farm Sanders J ames S. supt. registrar of Hen-
A ndrewsThomasJ as. shopkpr. Post office MutimerGeo. Hy.frrnr. Swainsthrpe. hall stead union&master of the workhouse
Eranford Richard, Dun Cow P.H.farmer Mutimer Herbert Wil!iam, farmer, Scott John, brick & tile maker
& butcher Malt House farm Utting William, shopkeeper
Brown Anthony, blacksmith & farmer

SW ANINGTON is a parish and scattered village. 3~ ancient oak carving, tapestry and several stained windows:
miles south from Cawston station on the East Norfolk the carved oak includes an elaborately wrought chimney•
branch of the Great Eastern railway, 1 mile north from piece which formerly adorned the house of William Rogers
Attlebridge station on the Eastern and Midlands railway, 7 esq. mayor of Norwich in 1543 and 1548 and M.P. for Nor-
south-west from Aylsham, I2 north-east from East Dere· wich in 1541: it bears several shields, on one of which
ham and 10 north-west from Norwich, in the Northern appears his merchant's mark, impaling the arms of the
division of the county, Eynsford hundred and petty sessional Grocers' Company; others display the arms of the Mercers'
division, St. Faith's union, Aylsham county court district, Company and the Merchant Adventurers and those of the
rural deanery of Sparham and archdeaconry and diocese of Steward family : there are also boldly carved figures of
~ orwich. The church of St. Margaret is a building of flint warriors, mounted and on foot. Mrs. Hastings Parker, who
with stone dressings, in the Early English and Perpendicular is lady of the manor, .Magdalene College, Cambridge, John F.
styles, consisting of chancel, nave, aisles, south porch and an Rogers esq. and the trustees of the Rev. Frederick Hildyard
embattled western tower containing 3 bells: there are 274 lii.A. are the principal landowners. The soil is sand and
sittings, 6o being free. The register dates from the year loam: subsoil, clay and gravel. The chief crops are wheat,
ISg8. The li\'ing is a rectory, average yearly value from roots, barley and hay. The area, including common, is
tithe rent-charge,£ 310, with 14 acres of glebe and residence, 1,433 acres ; rateable value, £ r,592; the population in x8g.1
in the gift of the Master and fellows of Trinity Hall, Cam- was 330.
bridge, and held since 1892 by the Rev. George Barnes At- Parish Clerk, George Lincoln.
kinson M.A. of that Hall. Here is a Primitive Methodist
chapel. The charities amount to £t7 yearly. Robert Ket, PosT OFFICE, Alderford Bridge.-Robcrt Munford, receiver.
a tanner, of Wymondham, who raised an insurrection in Letters through Norwich; delivery commences at 7 a. m.
· IS49• in the reign of Edward VI. against the inclosure of 5·5· p.m. (for callers only); dispatched s p.m. daily, sun•
commons and parks and the exactions of the nobility and days included. Great Witchingham is the nearest money
gentry, was taken prisoner in this parish, after the defeat of order & Lenwade railway station the neare,;t telegraph
his followers in Aug. of that year, by the Earl of Warwick, office. WALL Lli.'TTBR Box, opposite the Rectory, cleared
and subsequently hanged, with his brother, in Nov. or at 4.25 p.m. week days only
Dec. at Norwich Castle. Swanington Lawn, the seat of National School (mixed), erected in r864, for 63 children:
John F. Rogers esq. is a picturesque mansion, nearly sur- average attendance, 46; Miss Julia Bullen, certificated
rounded by trees and contains many beautiful specimens of mistress
Atkinson Rev. Geo. Ea rues M.A. Rectorv

Grimer John Leist, farmer, Hall farm Rouse '-''alter, carpenter
Rogcrs John F. Swanington Lawn Lovick John Wright, blacksmith Smith James, grocer &c
COJIIMERCI AL. Lovick John, thatcher Smith William, shoe maker
Bunting Anthony & Edward, farmers Lubbock Jn. Black Horse P.H. & farmer Spinks Thomas, butcher&; cattle dealer
Cooper Richard Parker, shopkeeper Munford Robert, farmer, Post office Tommas Thomas, mason & bricklayer
Gladden John Miller, farmer Pye Louisa (Miss), grocer & draper
.
SWANT ON ABBOT is a parish on the road from j allotted to the poor for cuttmg fuel: another portion of
Norwich to North Walsham, 2~ miles west from Worstead allotted land is now let and the rent appropnated to the
station on the Cromer branch of the Great Eastern railway, purchase of coals for the poor. Swanton Hall, a mansion
1 I north-by-east from Norwich and 3 south-south-west from pleasantly situated and standing in a well-wooded lawn, is
North Walsham, in the Eastern division of the county, South the seat of Mrs. Jex-Blake. William Forster esq. of Blick-
Erpingham hundred and petty sessional division, Aylsharn ling, is lord of the manor. The principal landowners are the
union and county court district, rural deanery of Ingworth Rev. Francis William Jex-Blake M.A.. Mrs. Petre ::~.nd the
and archdeaconry and diocese of Norwich. The church of Rev. Charles Thomas Jex-Blake M.A. rector of Lyng. The
St. Michael, situated on an eminence, is an ancient building soil is mixed; subsoil, gravel and clay. The chief crops
of flint, in the Early Decorated style, consisting of chancel, are wheat, oats and barley. The area is I, II3 acres ; rate-
nave, south porch and a western tower containing one bell: able ,-alue, £1,809; the population in 1891 was 46:a.
there is a memorial brass in good preservation to Stephen de Sexton, Robert Gray~
Multon ob. 1477: the church affords 225 sitLings. The PosT OFFICE.-Lewis Hook, receiver. Letters received
register dates from the year I538. The living is a rectory, through Norwich at 7 a. m. ; di;~patched at 4· IS p.m. The
average tithe rent-charge £207, net yearly value i)43o in- nearest money order & telegraph office is at Worstead.
cluding 10 acres of glebe and residenc~, erected in I 86s, in Postal orders are issued here, but not paid
the gift of the Rev. Francis William Jex-Blake M. A. of Swan-
ton Hall, and held since 1884 by the Hev. Edward Edwards A School Board of 5 members was formed 23 September,
Montford M.A. of Corpus Christi College, Cambridge. Here 1874; Rev, E. E. Montford M.A. rector, is hon. clerk to
are ''Vcsleyan, Wesleyan Reform, and Swedenborgian chapels. the board ; William Doughty, attendance officer
Ann Steward left a pightle of land to the poor ; and also SA. Board School tmixed), erected in x871, for 7S children;
24P. of land, the rent to be applied in repairing the chancel average attendance, so; Miss Jane E. Barlow, mistress
of the cQurch. Twenty-five acres of common land were CARRIER TO Noawrcn (twice a week), Josiah Hunt
628 SW.A:YTON .ABBOT. NORFOLK. [KELLY'S
Jex-Blake Mrs. Swanton hall DoughtyWm.frmr.&schl.attndnce.officr Hunt Josiah, carrier
Jex-Blake Rev. Francis William M.A.. Fisk Robert, vermin killer Jobson William, grocer & draper
Swanton hall Flatman William, farmer Knights John, builder
:Montford Rev. Edward Edwards M.A.. Flaxman Jas. Lacey, Weavers' Arms P.H Phillippo Thomas, farmer
Rectory Goose Thomas, farmer & shopkeeper Pooley George Cook, farmer
Gray Robert, butcher Reading Room (John Spink, hon. sec)•
COMMERCIAL. Green ''Villiam, farmer Richardson Isaac, grocer & provision dlr-
Blackburn George, farmer Hook John, carpenter & wheelwright Rump James, blacksmith
Chapman Philip, farmer Hook Lewis, shopkeeper, P6st office Spink John, farmer & assistant overseer-
Critoph John, shopkeeper & baker Hook Robert, carpenter Thurst James (Mrs.), farmer
Daniels Jonathan, farmer Hudson Thomas, farmer & carter Trivett Jonathan, Jolly Farmers P.H
Davison William, carpenter Hunt Benjamin, miller (wind & steam) Watts Christmas, tailor
Dennis Robert, farmer _Hunt Herbert, baker Welden .Samuel, farmer
S V.'ANT ON MORLEY is a village and parish on the other to the relief of necessitous and deserving inhabitants
south bank of the river Wensum, 2! miles from. North of the parish of Swanton :Morley, with special con!iideration
Elmham station on the Dereham and Wells section of the for the poorest, most aged and most impotent; this charity
Great Eastern railway, and 4 north-east from Dereham, in is managed by a body of trustees, and the arable lands are
the Mid division of the county, Launditch hundred, Mitford let in allotments, under the recent Allotments Act. Free-
and Launditch petty sessional division and union, Dereham man's charity of £1 IS. yearly, secured by £so m Consols,.
county court district, rural deanery of South Brisley and is distributed by the churchwardens in bread on Easter-
archdeaconry and diocese of Norwich. The church of All Monday, to the poor of the parish. Small's charity, which
Saints, erected at the cost of William, 3rd Baron Morley, consists of an annual rent-charge of £won lands in Eye
in or about 1379, is a building of tlint in the Later Perpen- Park, is applied to the education of the children of the poor,
dicular style, consisting of chancel, nave, aisles, south porch, as directed by will. The ancient castle of the Lords Morley
vestry (added in 1878) and a .lofty embattled western was situated on the banks of the river Wensum, opposite.
tower with pinnacles containing a clock and s bells: the the present site of Hylaugh Park, but only portions of the
chancel roof of oak has once been a fine work: the doors are foundations and cellars now remain. The Rev. llenry
reproductions in deal of the ancient carved oak doors: the Evans-Lombe H.A., J.P. of Bylaugh Park, is the principal
aisle windows were restored from 1878 to 1891 : there are landowner and lord of the manor. The soil is loam and
300 sittings. The register dates from the year IS5I. The clay; subsoil, clay. The chief crops are wheat, barley and
living is a rectory, with the chapelry of Worthing annexed, turnips. The area is 2,714 acres; rateable value, £4,205 ~
average yearly value from tithe rent-charge £8II, with 23 the population in 1891 was 667.
acres of glebe and residence, in the gift of the Rev. Henry Parish Clerk, James Hickleton.
Evans Lombe H. A. and held_ si?-ce 1863 by the ~ev. Edward, PosT & M. 0. 0., s. B. & Annuity & Insurance Office.~
!--ombe B.A.. of_ c?~PUS Chnstl_ college, Cambndge.. There George Mitchell, receiver. Letters from London & all
IS a small Primitive Methodist chapel, erected m _186~. parts received from East Dereham at 7 . 20 a.m. ; dis-
Th~ tow~ lands, of 51 ac~es, produce £6;; yearly, which IS patched at S·S 4 p.m. The nearest tele"raph office is at.
assigned m equal proportwns to the repairs of the church North Elmham "'
and the relief of the poor. The other charities include
Barrett's charity, derived from about 40 acres of arable and PILLAR LETTER Box, .Mill street, cleared at 5·4S p. m. ;
pasture land, the profits of which are applied as directed by sun days, B.4s a. m
decr~e of Court of Chancery and subsequently by direction National School (mixed), erected in 1852, for 160 children;
of the Charity Commissioners, one moiety being assigned to average attendance, 140 ; James Lewton-Hrain, master;
the rep:.1irs of the· church (excluding the chancel), and the Mrs. Clara Lewton-Brain, mistress
Lombe Rev. Edward B.A. Rectory Hurry John, Angel P.H Rowing Albert, farmer
Lucas Mrs. Beech cottage Jarrett John, shoe maker Rowing James, farmer & cattle dealer~
Murrell Mrs Johnson Frederick, farmer Woodgate
PooleRev. Ernest Davies M.A.. [curate], Large Robert, cattle dealer & farmer Russell Henry John, Paper Makers'
Mill cottage Lucas Thomas Burton, farmer Arms P.H
Springall Charles Milk George, farmer, Mill farm Savory Arthur John, farmer, Castle &.
Springall Joseph, Greengate house Mitchell George, grocer & draper, & Park farms
COMMERCIAL. post office Smith James, shoe maker
Dawson William, Dial inn ParkerGeorgeHowing,farmer,,Voodgate Springall J oseph & Son, builders & frmrs;
Fox Alfred, blacksmith PyeWalter,farmr.&landownr. Woodgate Trollop George, beer retailer
Guiding Thomas, pork butcher Hiches Wm.Horace,!armer, Field house Verdon James, shoe maker
Harold George, farmer Rix George, shopkeeper & farmer Webb Charles, farmer, Hill house
Hilton William, miller (wind) & baker
SWANTON NOVERS is a village and parish 2 miles chapel. The parish reading room was built in 1888, at the
south-west from .Melton Constable station on the Eastern sole expense of C. Atkinson esq. and is well furnished with.
and Midlands railway, 7~ east from Fakenham station on a bagatelle table and various other games, and with.
the Dereham and Wells section of the Great Eastern railway, papers and periodicals. Swanton House, the seat of Charles
and 6 south-west from Holt, in the Xortl!ern division of the Atkinson esq. is a modern building, pleasantly situated near
county, Holt hundred and petty sessional division, Walsing- the high road from Holt to Dereham. The poor's allot-
ham union and county court district, rural deanery of Holt ment produces £.7 yearly, which sum is distributed in coal.
and archdeaconry and diocese of Norwich. The church of The Atkinson Trust consists of a sum of £7oo, given in
St. Edmund is a plain building of flint, in the Perpendicular 1BB7 by C. Atkinson esq. and invested in Consols, the interest
style, consisting of chancel, nave, north aisle, south poreh to be equally divided ; one half for the benefit of the church~
and an embattled western tower rebuilt in 1821 and and the other in supplying the poor with coal. Lord
containing one bell : the interior is seated with oak benches, Hastings, who is lord of the manor, and Charles Atkinson
and in the chancel is a mural monument to John Dew esq. esq. are the landowners. The soil is mixed ; subsoil, clay
d. 1832: the church, with the exception of the tower, was and brick earth. Here is a stratum of clay, of which bricks
partially rebuilt, restored and reseated in 18Bx under the and coarse earthenware are made. The crops are wheat,
direction of Mr. Edwin Dolby, architect, of Abingdon, at a oats and barley. The area is r,3r5 acres; rateable value,.
cost of £1,200, Charles Atkinson esq. of Swanton House, £1,382; the population in 1891 was 293.
being the largest contributor: standards for candles have Parish Clerk, John Mussett.
recently been presented (rB92) by Charles Atkinson esq.: Letters through Dereham by messenger fro_m Briningham
there are 180 sittings. The register dates from the year arrive about 8 a.m. The PosTING Box is at the "-"est
x66B. The living is a discharged rectory, average tithe Park gate, cleared at 6. IS p.m. ; no sunday post. Melton
rent-charge £ IJS, net yearly value £ HJO, including 13~ Constable is the nearest money order & telegraph office
acres of glebe, with residence, in the gift of Lord Hastings, School (mixed), built in 1874, & enlarged in 1889 at the
and held since 1884 by the Hev.GeorgeWilkinsonRolfe B.A. expense of C. Atkinson esq. for So children; average
of Christ Church, Oxford. There is a Free )lethodist attendance, SS; Miss Smalls, mistress
Atkinson Charles, Swanton house Codling Thomas gamekeeper to Chas. Hunt Chas. gamekpr. to Lord Hastings
Kendal Mrs Atkinson esq May Jane Elizh. (Mrs.), grocer & draper
Rolfe Rev. Geo. Wilkinson H. A. Rectory Codling William, blacksmith May Samuel, sen. pig dealer
COMMERCIAL. Cooper James, general dealer Mussett Charlotte (Miss), beer retailer-
Atkinson Charles, landowner & farmer, Daw!!On James, farmer . Patrick Arthur, boot maker
Swanton house Dewing Samuel, head gardener to Pointer William, farmer
llardell Edward Cross, farmer Charles Atkinson esq Sands Robert, farmer, Hall farm
Bell William, B(lll inn Gidney Hobert, farmer Yarham Robert, grocer & draper:-
Clare Wm.Geo.carpenter & wheelwright
DIRI!:CTORY. J NORFOLK. TACOLNESTON. 629
15WARDESTON is a village and parish on the road the Rev. William Fellowes M.A. John Steward esq. of East
from Norwich to New Buckenham, 2 miles north-west from Carlton Manor and John Henry Gurney esq. of Northrepps
Swainsthorpe station on the Ipswich and Norwich section Hall, are lords of the manor. John Steward esq. and G. W.
of the Great Eastern railway, and 4 south-south-west from Danby Palmer-Kerrison esq. of Ranworth Priory, are the
Norwich, in the Southern division of \the county, Swains- 1 chief landowners. The soil is sandy and flints; subsoil,
thorpe petty sessional division, Humbleyard hundred, Hen- I mixed. ~he chief crops are wheat, oats, barley and turnips.
stead union, Norwich county court district, rural deanery Th~ area ts 933 acres; rateable value, £x,B55 i the popula-
of Humbleyard, archdeaconry of Norfolk and diocese of tion in 1891 was 401.
Norwich. The church of St. Mary the Virgin is a small Parish Clerk, George Fairman.
building of flint, in the Early English style, consisting of PosT 0FFICE.-Paul Hemnell, receiver. Letters received
chancel, nave, south porch and an embattle:! western from Norwich at 7.20 a. m. & dispatched at 5-30 p.m. by
tower containing 3 bells: in the church is a fine screen, foot post. The nearest money order office is at Mulbarton
some stained glass and several monuments : there are 120 & telegraph office is at Eaton _
sittings. The re~,rister dates from the year 1538. The living A School Board of 5 members was formed compulsortly 25
is:;a vicarage, average tithe rent-charge £102, net yearly Feb. 1875; G. B. Feltham, vice-chairman & ban. clerk to
value £143, including 6o acres of glebe and residence, in the board; William Cheney, attendance officer
the gift of John Steward esq. and held since x863 by the Board School (mixed), erected in 1877 at a cost of £goo,
Rev. Frederick Cavell T.A. of King's College, London. There for 6o children; average attendance, 75; Thomas Taylor,
is a Wesleyan chapel here. Mangreen Hall is the seat of master
Blewitt The Misses Davy John, blacksmith King Arthur, farmer, Swardeston hall
Cavell Rev. Frederick T.A.K.C.L. FairmanJohn,market gardner & farmer King Jane (Mrs.), farmer
[vicar, & chaplain of Henstead union], Feltham George Barnabas, farmer Laley George, butcher
Vicarage Ford \Valter, rnarket gardener Lusher William, market gardener
Fellowes Rev. Wm. lf.A. Mangreen hall Hall Charles, farmer Mead George, boot maker
COMMERCIAL. Hall Daniel, farmr. bldr. & wheelwrght Rix Henry, shopkeeper
Bacon Albert Edward William, reliev- Hall James, inspector of nuisances for Taylor Herbert James, shopkeeper
ing officer for Henstead union Hcnstead rural sanitary authority Thrower Robert, boot & shoe maker
Betts Thomas, farmer, Mangreen farm Hemnell Paul,market gardener,Post off Turner Edward, Dog inn
Browne James Smith, builder King Alfred, butcher Whittaker Charles, farmer
Cannell Juha (Mrs.), market gardener

SYDERSTONE is a parish and small compact \·illage dist chapels. This is said to have been the birthplace, c.
on the high road from Docking to Fakenham, 6 miles south- 1525, of Amy, daughter of Sir John Robsart, and wife from
east from Docking station and 4t south-east from Stanhoe 4 June, 1549, of Robert Dudley, Earl of Leicester; she died
station, bothou the Hunstanton and West Norfolk section of under suspicious circumstances at Cumnor Place, near
the Great Eastern railway, and 6 north-west from Faken- Oxford, 8 Sept. 1560, and was interred with stately funeral
ham, in the North· Western division of the county, Gallow rites in a vault below the choir of the church of St. Mary
hundred and petty sessional division, Docking union, the Virgin, Oxford, on Sunday, 22 Sept. 1560. The
Walsingham county court district, rural deanery of Burn- Marquess of Cholmondeley is lord of the manor and chief
ham, archdeaconry of Norfolk and diocese of Norwich. landowner. The soil is loam and sand; subsoil, chalk.
The church of St. Mary is a small structure of flint, in the The chief crops are wheat, barley, oats, turnips and
Decorated style, consisting of chancel, nave, south porch and mangold-wurtzel. The area is 2,520 acres; rateable value.
a round western tower containing one bell : the church £2,137; and the population in 1891 was 463.
formerly had aisles, but these were taken down about Parish Clerk, George Dawes.
1784 ; the south side is partly covered with i-vy: tht~re are PosT 0FFICE.-Walter llenry Willimont, sub-postmaster.
300 sittings. The register dates from the year 1584. The Letters are received through Fakenham at 8.20 a. m. & are
living is a rectory, tithe rent-charge £575, average £427, dispatched at 3.40 p.m. East Rudham is the nearest
net yearly income £520, with so acres of glebe and resi- money order & telegraph oflice. Postal orders are issued
dence, in the gift of the Marquess of Cholmondeley, and here, hut not paid
held since 1879 by the Rev. William Whitelegge, of Trinity National School (mixed), erected in 1820, for 160 children~
College, Dublin. Here are Wesleyan and Primitive Metho- . average attendance, roo; George Harrison, master

Hunt Mrs Fox Abram Thomas, Buck P.H Riches George, blacksmith
Whitelegge Rev. William, Rectory Gayford Edward John, farmer I Tayton William & J.<'rederick Johnson,.
Glasswell RJCbard, hoot maker farmers, Vi'hite hall
COMMERCIAL. Groom Frederick, Lynn Arms P.H W11liamson William, baker& grocer
Dawes Gcorgc & Son, nursery & seeds Hatper Nathaniel, carpenter & builder Willimont Waiter Henry, grocer, tea
men, florists & farmers Harper Welsh, bricklayer dealer, draper & outfitter, Post oflice
Dawes William, farmer Hurn Robert, butcher

TACOLNESTON is a village and parish, 3 miles north- also a widows' charity, which provides IS.3d. per week for
west from J.<'orncett junction station on the Ipswich and Nor- six poor widows. Tacolneston Hall, the property of Sir-
wich section and aboutr ~~ miles south from Ashwellthorpe .Francis George Manningham Boileau hart. D.L., J.P. of
station on the \Vymondham and Forncett branch of the Ketteringham Park, and now the residence of James
Great Eastern railway, 5 south-east from Wymondham SLephen Edward La Fontaine esq. J. P. is an ancient and
and 10~ south-west from Xorwich, in the Southern division picturesque mansion of red brick, erected in the reign of
of the county, Depwade hundred, petty sessional division Queen Anne ; it has been greatly enlarged by the present
and union, Wymondham county court district, rural owner, and stands in a well-wooded park of 100 acres,
deanery of Depwade, arehdeaconry of Norfolk and dioeese separated from the garden by an ancient moat. The princi-
of Norwich. The church of All Saints is an ancient build- pallandowners are Sir Francis George Manningham Boileau
ing of flint and stone, in the Early English and later styles, hart. who is lord of the manors of Dovedale and of Williams,
consisting of chancel, nave, south aisle, south porch and a and the Rev. John Warren Corbould-Warren LL.M., J.P.
western tower containing 5 bells : the chancel was restored rector, who resides at the Old Hall. The soil is clay; sub-
in 1875, and retains a piscina and sedilia, and there is also soil, clay. The chief products are wheat, barley and root
a piscina in the south aisle ; part of the old screen, finely crops. Area, 1,580 acres; rateable value, £2,085; the
painted and carved, remains, and there is a fine old population in 1891 was 276.
Jacobean pulpit of oak, richly carved, and an ancient font Parish Clerk, George Gray.
on a cruciform base: there are tablets to William Knipe, d.
1760 and Anne his wife, d. 1762; Edmund Knipe, d. 1736; PosT 0FFWE.-Mrs. Sarah Tann, receiver. Letters through
Thomas Knipe Gobbett and Jane his wife, d. 1762; the Rev. Wymondham, arrive at 8.30 a.m. & dispatched at 6 p.m.
John Warren, d. 1824; Elizabeth Catherine, d. 1855; and Forncett End is the nearest money order office & tele-
to the Rev. William Corbonld ·warren, d. x858, and Anne graph office at Wymondham
his wife, d. 1864; and a brass to Florence Marion, third Church of England School (mixed), erected in 1876, for
daughter of the present rectal', d. 25 April, x881 : the xoo children; average attendance, 57; Miss llelen Bush.
church affords 300 sittings. The register dates from the mistress
year 1653- The living is a rectory, average tithe rent-
charge £422, net yearly value about £soo, including 29 CARRIERS TO NORWICH:-
acres of glebe, in the gift of and held since 1869 by the Rev. Williams passes through from 1Forncett St. Peter, mon
John \Val"ren Corbould-Warren LL.M. of Downing College, wed. & sat. returning same days
Cambridge, .T.P. for Norfolk. The charities include a sum George Filby, from New Buckenham, wed. & sat
{)f i,'28 yearly, which is distributed to the poor in coals, and 1 James Breeze, from Bun well, wed. & sat
630 TACOLNESTO~.. NORFOLK. [KELLY'M
Barrow Mrs. Rectory house Briggs Rayner, bhcksmit.h Pell Alfred, head gardener to J ~ S. E~
Corbould-Warren Rev. John Warren Clarke Rt.Gayford,frmr.HydePark frm La Fontaine esq
r.L. M.,.r. P.[ rectr. ], TacolnestonOld hall
Dye James Willia.m, shoe maker Smith Robert, farmer
La Fontaine Jarnes StephenEdward J. P. Fox John, coal dealer. Spratt James, farmer
'facolneston ball; & 112 Cromwell Bales Robt. carpenter, wheel wrt.&farmr Spratt Robert, farmer, Lake's farm
road, South Kensington & Junior Humphreys George, bricklayer Tann Sarah (Mrs.), shopkeeper,Post off
Carlton club, London s w Lluyd George, shoe maker Tay !or Thomas, gamekeeper to J. S. E.
Lloyd James, farmer La Fontaine esq
COMMERCIAL. Lord James, farmer lVade Richard, farmflr & horse breeder
Alexander Rayner, corn &c. chandler Ludkin George,. farmer & farm steward to J. S.E.La Fontaine
Arnold N oah, shopkeeper Ludkin John, thrashing machine owner esq. Manor farm
Arnold William, carpenter&wheelwrig ht Newman Caroline (Mrs.), saddler Wnght Wm.l'oppy,farmer,Cheney lane
T ASBURG H is a village and parish on the river Taas, dist chapel and a meeting house for the Society of Friends.
1~ miles south-east from Flordon station on the Ipswich and The charities amount to £30 yearly, and there is also a sum
Norwich section of the Great Eastern railway, and 8 south of £14 a year, the rent of a fuel allotment. Tasburgh Hall.
from Norwich, in the Southern division of the county, Dep- the property and residence of Philip Berney Ficklin esq. is a
wade hundred, petty sessional division and union, Harleston red brick building in the late Jacobean style, and stands in
county court distnct, rural deanery of Depwade, arch- well-timbered grounds, bounded on one side by the river
deaconry of Norfolk and diocese of Norwich. This village Taas; it has been much enlarged and improved by the
derives its name from the river Taas, anciflntly ''Taus," on present owner and contains some very tine old oak panelling,
which tbe Romans had a station, called Ad Taurn, now re- I chimney pieces and antique furniture. Reginald Preston
presented by an entrenchment of 24 acres in extent, situ-! Jermy Gwyn esq. is lord of the manor. Major Sir Charles
ated on a high hill. The church of St. Mary the Virgin is ~ Harvey hart. J.P. of Rainthorpe Hall, Flordon, Mr. Artbur
a structure of flint with stone dressings, in the Decorated ' Betts and John Furness esq. are the principal landowners.
style, consisting of chancel, nave, north porch and an ancient The soil is various; subsoil, clay. The chief crops are wheat,
round western tower containing 4 bells : the chancel retains barley and beans. The area is 884 acres; rateable value,
a piscina, and there is an ancient font : several brasses of £r,266; in 1891 the parish contained 423 inhabitants.
the 16th century also remain, and a fine altar tomb to the Parish Clerk, Daniel Hurgess.
Baxter family: there are 200 sittings. The register dates PosT 0FFICE.-George Kirby, receiveJl. Letters by foot
from the year 1558. The living is a rectory, average yearly post from Long Strat.ton, arrive about 7.30 a. m.; dis-
value from tithe rent-charge £2rq, with 2 acres of glebe patched at 6 p.m. week days; sundays 10.40 a.m. Long
and residence, in the gift of the trustees of Isaac Jerrny o;q. Stratton is the nearest money order & telegraph office
and held since 1837 by the Rev. Henry .Edmund Preston M. A~ ~ational School (mixed), erected in r84-4, for 100 children;
of Queen~· College, Cambridge. Here is a Primitive Motho- average attendam:e, 70; Miss Clara Orrnsby, mistress
Cogswell Rev. Thos. Smith Th. A.K.C.L. Burgess Daniel, parish clerk, & bead Rackham Alfred, farmer & dealer
[curate J gardener to Major Sir Charles llarvey H.ixJ ohn, farmer&overseer ,TheManor ho
Ficklin Philip Berney, Tasburgh hall bart. J.P Rix Robert, carpenter & wheelwright
Garrood Mrs. The Pheasantries Couzens Abel, beer ret.&market gardenr Rump Samuel Albcrt, blacksmith
Hunter l''rederic Edward Dann William, Hors~shoE's P.H Say Joshua, shopkeeper
PrestonRev.HenryEdmund M.A.Rectory Dickerson George, thatcher Sayer Daniel, vermin destroyer
Grice John, farmer Sendall Edward, farmer
COMMERCIAL. Harrison \Villiam Henry, farmer Sheading George, shoe maker
Balls Phillp, farmer Kirby George, shopkeeper, Post office Slater .Frederick, head gamekeeper to
Eetts Arthur, farmer & landowner, KirbyJsph.jun.hawkr.&shopkpr.&farmr :Major Sir Charles Harvey bart. J.P
The Elms Lammas EdwinHcnry, travelling draper Smith George, farmer
:Blomfield Louisa (Mrs.), miller (steam & tea dealer, Grove cottage WaitsHarriet(Mrs. ),farmr.MaltHo.frtn
& water) & farmer Meadows Robert, Bird-in-Hand P.H Want John, beer retailer & -carpenter
:Briggs W illiam, shoe maker M uskett J oseph Charles, shopkeeper \Varmoll Ed ward, farmer, Tasburg h ho
Buckingham Nicholas,farmer, Hill farm Quantrell George, farmer, Lodge farm Wright Robert, bricklayer ·
TATTERFORD is a parish about 4 miles west-south- so acres of glebe, with residence, in the gift of and held since
west from Fakenham station on the Dereham and Wells r8gr by the Rev. Ralph William Inigo Jones .H.A. of Cam-
section of the Great Eastern railway, and three quarters of bridge University. Drury's charity of £1 ws. yearly is for
a mile north-west from Raynham Park station on the fuel. Pinkney Hall is the residence of Joseph Stonehewer
Eastern and Midlands railway, in the North "''estern divi- Scott-Chad esq. M.A., J.P. who is lord of the manor and
sion of the county, Gallow hundred and petty sessional chief landowner. The soil is sand, loam and peat ; subsoil,
division, Walsingham union and county court district, rural clay. The crops are wheat, barlPy, roots and grass. The
deanery of Burnham, archdcaconry of Norfolk and diocese parish contaim 950 acres ; ra.teable value, £ r ,055 ; the
of Norwich. The church of St. Margaret, rebuilt in r862, population in 1891 was 92.
is an edifice of flint, in the Early English style, consisting ' Parish Clerk, Wi!liam Langley.
only of chancel and nave, with one bell: there are 200 LETTER Box cleared at 4·45 p.m. week days only. Letters
sittings. The register dates from the year 1589. The living received through Swaffham, via Rougham. East Rudham
is a rectory, with that of Tattersett annexed, average tithe is the nearest money order & telegraph office
rent-charge £521, joint gross yearly value £586, including ·The children of this place attend the school at Tattersett
Scott-Chad Joseph Stonehewer M.A., Jones Rev. Ralph William lnigo B.A. l\liddleton James, farmer
J.P. Pinkney hall; & Thursford hall, The Rectory ' Sands Thomas, farmer
llriningham S.O
TATTERSETT (or GATRSEND) is a parish and small. acres of glebe, in the gift of and held since r891 by the Rev.
village on the bank of the Tat rivulet and on the road from Ralph William Inigo Jones B.A. of Cambridge University,
Fakenham to Lynn, 2 miles north-west from Raynham who resides at Tatterford. The charities amount to £4
Park station on the Eastern and Midlands railway and 6 ·yearly. Joseph Stonehewer Scott-Chad esq. M. A., J. P. of
west from I<'akenham, in the North Western division Pinkney Hall, is lord of the manor and sole landowner.
of the county, Gallow hundred and petty sessional division, The soil is various, but rich and productive; the subsoil is
\\-'alsingham union and county court district, rural deanery gravel. The crops are wheat, barley, turnips, mangold·
of Burnham, archdeaconry of Norfolk and diocese of Nor- wurtzel and grass. The area is 1,756 acres; rateable value,
wich. The church of All Saints is a small but ancient £1,908; the population in 1891 was. I6o.
building of flint, in the Perpendicular. style, consisting of Parish Clerk, Jacob Walker.
chancel, nave, south porch and an embattled western tower PosT OFFICE.-Jacob Walker, receiver. Letters through
containing one bell: there are 100 sittings. 'fhe register Fakenham, arrive at 9 a.m.; dispatched at 4 p.m. The
dates from the year 1:568. The living is a rectory, united nearest money order & telegraph office is at East Rudham
to the adjoining rectory of 'I'atterford, average tithe rent- School,· erected in r8s8, for 8o children; ave:rage attend-
charge £521, joint gross yearly value £s86, including so ance, 37; Miss Rosa. Cox, mistress
Bailey James, gamekeep11r to J.S.Scott- BreretonHerbert&Jn.frmrs. Brazen hall ColmanJn. steward toJ.S.Scott-Chad esq
Chad esq Brereton Charles, farmer Walker Jacob, shopkeeper, & post office
:BayfordHenry, beer retailer&blacksmith ·
t.
TAVERHAM is a pleasant village and parish, from which St. Faith's union, Norwich county court district, rural
the hundred takes its name, on the river \Vensum, r} miles deanery of Tavecham and archdeaconry and diocese of
west from Drayton station on the Eastern and Midlands Norwich. The church of St. Edmund is a thatched build-
railway, about 6 north-west from Norwich, in the Eastern ing of flint with stone dressings, consisting of chancel, nave,
division of the county, Taverham petty sessional division, aisle, south porch and a round Saxon tower with octagonal
DIRECTORY.) ;NORFOLK. TERRINGTON ST. CLEMENT, 631
belfry containing one bell : the organ was presented by Mrs. ! acres in extent, and affords picturesque views, it is the
Mickletbwait, and there is a very handsome font: the church ' property of Henry Sharnborne .Nathaniel Micklethwait esq ..
wab thoroughly rest.ored and re-seated in x86x, at the sole who is lord of the manor and chief landowner, but is now
expense of the late Rev. John Nathaniel Micklethwait M.A. occupied by William Waring esq. J.P. The soil is sandy;
sometime of Taverham Hall, who also, in 1873, erected a subsoil, sar.d, gravel and clay. The chief crops are wheat,
memorial window to his mother, Lady Charlotte Mickle- oats, barley and turnips. The parish,contains 2,o69 acres;
thwait: there are 150 sittings. The register dates from tho rateable value, £2,409; the population in 1891 was 222.
year 1713. The living is a rectory, average tithe rent-charge Parish Clerk, Waiter Mickleburgh.
£250, net yearly value £250, including 42 acres of glebe, Po~T OFFICE.~Miss Minna Bowery, receiver. Letters from
with residence, in the alternate gift of the Bishop of Norwich Norwich, via Drayton, arrive at 6.30 a. m. ; dispatched at
and H. S. N. Micklethwait esq. and held since ;r888 by tile 5·5 p.m. Drayton is the nearest money order office. 'fhe
Rev. ThomasArchboldM.A. of St. John's College, Cambridge. nearest telegraph office is at Drayton railway ~>tation.
The extensive paper-mill of Messrs. J. H. Waiter and Co.. WALL LETTER .Hox, School, cleared at 5· ro p.m. ; no
employs upwards of roo hands. Taverham Hall, rebuilt in Sunday collection .
r858, irr the Elizabethan style, by the late Rev. J. N . .Mickle- :Vational School (mixed), erecred in r85r, with residence for
thwait M. A. is a mansion of red brick with white stone the mistress, for so children; average attendance, 36;
facings, standing in a well-wooded park upwards of 300 Miss Elizabeth Sarah Rutter, mistress
Arch bold Rev. Thomas M.A. [rector of Adcock Henry French, farmer, Church Eke Robert, blacksmith
Taverham & principal of Norwich & farm Symond Arthur, farm bailiff to H. S.
Ely Diocesan Training College for Cole Charles, wheelwright N. Micklethwait esq. llall farm
Schoolmistresses], Rectory Howard Robert, head gamekeeper to Waiter J. H. & Co. paper manu ..
Waring Wiiliam J.P. Taverham hall & William Waring esq facturers
43 Harrington gardens, London s w .
TERRINGTON ST. CLEMENT is a village and T. T. Upwood are the lords of Lovell's ' manor. C. A. Ben-
extensive parish, with a station on the Bourn and Lynn tinck esq. Mrs. Frances Walker, of Alma Lodge, Sir W. H. B.
joint railway, 5 miles west from Lynn by the ferry and 6~ ffolkes bart. J.P., D.L. Thomas Batman Marriott esq. of Clair
by road, and 10 north-east from Wisbech, in the North View, Ipswich, and David Ward esq. of Hamond Lodge, are
Western division of the county, hundred and petty sessional the principal landowners; and there arc also several small
division of Freebridge Marshland, union of Wisbech, county freeholders. The soil is Loamy, and the subsoil clay and silt.
court district of Lynn, rural deanery of Lynn .Marshland The chief crops are wheat, oats, beans, peas and barley.
and archdeaconry and 'diocese of NorwlC.·h. The church of The parish contains 9,4ro acres of land and 227 acres of out
St. Clement, originally built about 1380, is a spacious cruci- salts; rateable value, £16,483 ; the population in r891 was
form structure of freestone, in the Perpendicular style, con- 2,o28. By a Local Government Order a portion of Terring-
sisting of chancel, clerestoried nave, aisles, transept, south ton St. John, known as New Common Marsh, was amalga-
porch and on the north-west a massi,·e detached embattled mated with this parish in 1885.
tower, with pinnacles, containing a clock and 6 bells: carved Sexton, Salathiel Winterton. .
oak stalls have been added to the chancel; the organ, erected PosT, M. 0. & T. 0., S. B. & Annuity & Insurance Office.-
in 1879 at a cost of about 2oo guineas, was the gift of the John yrancis l''ysb, sub-postmaster. Letters arrive from
late Rev. Thomas Thorogood Upwood M.A. sometime rector Lynn at 7.30 a. m. & r.45 p.m. & are dispatched at 9.30
of Clenchwarton, and vicar of this parish, d. 27 April, 1868: a.m. & 6.15 p.m. .Money orders are issued & paid &
the north and south aisles and the west front have sinee been savings bank business transacted from 8 a. m. to 6 p.m
restored at a cost of £3.000: the font has a lofty tabernade WALL LETTER BoxEs, Orange farm, cleared at S-55 p.m.;
cover, the panels of which are painted with representations Railway station, cleared at s.so p.m. ; Little London,
of the Baptism and Temptation of Our Lord: there are cleared at 5.15 p.m
marble tablets to the Ascham (1704), Edwards (1733 and COUNTY MAGISTRATES FOR FREEBRIDGE :\IARSHLAND
1747), Bentinck (181J-84), Upwood (1868), Goode (r843), . PETTY SESSIONA~ DIVISION.
Morphew (1845) and Hamond (1738) families: in the tran- Bagge Thomas Edward esq. M.A., D.L. Gaywood hall, Lynn
septs are old wooden framed panels containing the Lord's Davies Rev. Frederick B.A. Vicarage, Wiggenhall St • .Mary
prayer and the Belief, both dated r635; and in the chancel .Magdalen, near Lynn .
are memorial windows to the Rev. T. T. Upwood M.A. to English Artb.ur William esq. \Valsoken house, 'Wisbech
Jane his wife, d. 14 Oct. 1858, and Jane his daughter, wife Helsham Gnstavns esq. St. .Mary's hall, near Lynn '
of Captain Mark Edward Currie, d. 28 Jan. I 86o: the church Metcalfe J<'redc . .Morehouse esq. Inglethorpe hall,near Wisbech
was repaired, new roofed and the lofty pinnacles restored in Ollard William Ludlam esq . .Musticott ho. Walsoken, Wisbech
1829 ; t2e vestry was rebuilt and the chancel restored in r879 Parsons William Baldock esq. Aylmer hall, Tilney St.
at a cost of £2,200, defrayed by the late Dr. J. H. Lightfoot, Lawrence, Lynn .,
Bishop of Durham (I 879-90): there are 8oo sittings. The Seccombe John Thomas M.D., F.R.A.f!. Terrington lodge,
churchyard was enlarged by the addition of an acre of laud near Lynn
about r88g. The register dates from the year 1598. The Clerks to the Magistrates, F. & E. H. Jackson, \Visbech
hving is a vicarage, average tithe rent-charge .£-344, net Petty Sessions are held at the Court house at 11 a. m. every
yearly value £364, with 4 acres of glebe and residence, in 1st & 3rd monday, except on Bank holidays, & also except
the gift of the Crown, and held since 1876 by the Rev . .Marl- September, then on the last monday: The following places
borough Crosse B. A. of Trinity College, Dublin. Professor are included in the petty sessional di.vision :-Clench wartou,
Hort, of Cambridge, is the impropriator of the tithes. St. Emneth, North Lynn St. Edmunds, Terrington St. Cle-
James' Mission room, in the Marsh, erected in r883 at a cost ment, Terrington St. John, Tilney All Saints, Tilney-cum-
of £120, is a building of corrugated iron, seating about 70 Islington, Tilney St. Lawrence, Walpole St. Andrew,
persons, and used also as a day school: there is also a Mission Walpole St. Peter, Walsoken, West. Ly~n, West Walton,
room called St. Augustine's, Wesleyan and J<'ree Methodist Wiggenhall St. German, Wiggenhall St. Mary Magdalen,
chapels, and a Primitive Methodist chapel built in r86o; Wiggenhall St. Mary the Virgin, Wiggcnball St. Peter &
attached to the Wesleyan chap~l is a Sunday school, ere-cted Wingland
in r885, at a cost of £4oo, for 300 children. The charities Coast Guard Station, George Dyson, boatman in charge
are of the yearly value of £ ro. Orange Farm was the Police Station, Charles Parr, superintendent; I sergeant &
residence of Baron Feagle, a Netherlands refugee, who enter- 13 constables I .
tained the Prince of Orange here during the French invasion ScHOOLS:- ,.
of Holland, from which circumstance the house obtained its National (boys), erected in r86r, for r8o boys; average
name. Waiter Terrington LL.D. and John Colton, Arch- attendance, n6; Richard \\'illiam Bryant, master; (girls
bishop of Armagh (1382-1404) were both born herein the & infants) opened in 1875 & enlarged in 1892, for 170
14th century. In 1844, on the removal of part of the Roman children; average attendance, 170; Miss Elizabeth Hard-
bank, several Roman coins were found. Hamond Lodge, wick, girls' mistress; Miss Honor Turner, infants' mistress
restored in r8ro by the late Sir Andrew Snape Hamond hart. Nat10nal, now (1892) being erected in St. James' district,
Capt. R.N. is a mansion in the Tudor style, standing in a about 3 miles north-east from the church, for 8o children,
park sheltered by plantations, and now the residence and who at present attend at St. James' Mission room;
property of David Ward esq. There are four manoril in this average attendance, 35; Mrs. Elizh, .Mitehell, mistress
parish ; Charles Aldenburgh Bentinck esq. of lndio, Bovey CARRIERS TO:- ·
Tracy, Devon, is lord of the manor of Terrington; Sir LYNN-Mrs. Jane Minns, tues. thurs. & sat. ; J. Deans,
William Hovell Brown ffolkes bart. J.P., D.L. of Hillington tues. & fri. & James Storey, tues ·
Hall, is lord of Howard's manor; Mrs. Frances Walker is 1VISBECH-J. Deans, wed. & sat. & Jas. Storey, thurs. & sat
lady of Branch's manor, and the trustees of the late Rev. Railway Station, John Bolton, station master
PRIVATE RKSIDBNTS. Crosse Rev. MarlboroughB.A. Vicarage Seccon::.be John Thomas M.D., J.P.,
.Ashton Rev. John W. [curate] Gayford Freder1ck, Lovell's cottage F.R.A.s. Terriogton lodge
Bates Mrs. Orange farm Johnson Mrs. Wesley place Walker Mrs. Frances-, .Alma lodge
Belton Samuel, Ongar hill Upwood Miss, Lovell's hall Ward David, Hamond lodge

7
632 TERRINGTON ST. CLEMENT. NORFOLK. [KELL'Y S

Ward William David, Hamond lodge Goodson Joseph, farmer Ofley Hy. & Wm. farmers, Orange row
·wniteman William, Smeeth [letters via Goodson Thomas William, farmer Offiey Wm.Jas.farmer,BeaconHill farm
Emneth] Haddon John Thomas, farmer, Fen Overton John, miller (wind) & baker
COMMERCIAL. [letters via Middle Drove] Palmer Richard, fal"mer, Marsh
Alexander Benjamin, farmer, Marsh Hakeman & Empringham, farmers, Parr Charles, superintendent of police
Anderson Benjamin, beer retailer Balaclava farm, The Marsh Patrick George, farmer
AndrewsBros.thrashingmachine owners Harrison Esther (Mrs.),farmer,Hay ~ru Peek Christopher, miller (wind)
Andrews Wm. Wright,farrier&beer retlr Hawes Robert, blacksmith Perkin William, beer retailer, Smeet.h
Banham William, farmer Herring John Jonathan, market gardnr [letters via Emneth]
Bates Daniel, boot & shoe maker High Robert, beer retailer & grocer Plumb Wm. Edwd. & Thomas, farmers
Bays Charles, blacksmith, Marsh Holah Joseph & George, farmers, Horse Pointer Esther (Mrs.), farmer, Hay grn
Bellamy Henry Thomas, butcher Shoe Hole farm, Marsh Pratt Ernest, auctioneer, valuer &
llelton Samuel, farmer, Ongar hill Howling Francis& Robt. machineownrs land agent &c.; & at Tuesday Market
Bettinson George Young, farmer ,Pierre- Howling Richard, jun. New inn place, Lynn (tues. only). See advert
pont farm ; & wool broker &c.at Lynn Howling William F. beer retailer & Pratt Robert, farmer, ('_.entral Wingland
BirdJoseph, farmer,Smeeth [letters via tb rashing machine owner Prior Geo. Thos. farm r. Wing land grange
Emneth] Hubbard Charles, farmer, Hay green Purt James, horse breaker & trainer
Bird Robert, farmer Hunter Josiah, farmer & cattle dealer, Randall John, farmer
Block Edward, farmer, Marsh Hickathrift farm, Smeeth [letters via Redington John, boot maker
Block Frederick, farmer, Marsh Emneth] Ringer James, boot maker
Bolton John, station master IngramJn. Thos.farmer,TheTower farm Rudley Benjamin, Dun Cow P.H
Boltz Jane (Mrs.), market gardener Jackson Hezekiah, farmer, Lovell's frm Rungay Ellen (Mrs.), beer retailer, Fen
BowersHannah (Miss ),farmr. South grn Jarvis Samuel & William,bakers,grocers [letters via Middle Dro\'"e J
Breeze Christopher, insurance agent & confectioners Rush Michael, farmer
Briggs Henry, blacksmith Jessop Valentine, farmer Rye Edmund, watch maker
Bryant Richard William, land surveyor Jewson Mary (Mrs.), grocer, Hay green Seaking-s John, farmer
& schoolmaster Jewson 'V alter James, grocer & draper Seccombe John Thomas M.D. surgeon,
Butter Sarah Ann (Mrs.), farmer Johnson James,farmer,Common marsh medical officer of 4th & 5th districts,
Capps Frederick, beer retailer J ohnson 'Villi am, farmer, Bentinck farm Wisbech union&to the GreatN orthern
Carter John, poultry dealer, Hay green Josh lsaac, farmer Railway, Lynn district, Terrington lo
Cave William, farmer, Manor farm Kerkham Joseph Chapman & Hugh, 1
Sheldrake Jas.KingWi!liamP.H.&farmer
Cawthorne Edward, coal merchant farmers, The Laurels 1
Shephard John, baker
Clark Wil!iam, painter &c Kerkham Hugh, farmer, Rhoon fal"m 1 Simpkins John, cowkeeper, Hay green
Cobb John Thomas, farmer, Hay green KingCharles,market gardener & farmer, Sirnpsun James, coal merchant
CocklcGeo.farmer& land agent,Hay grn Smithfield gardens Slaite William James, farrier & farmer
Conservative Club (David Ward esq. King Robt. shoe maker & farmer, Marsh Sleight Robt.& Thos.carpenters&joiners
president; Robert Flatt, hon. sec) Kirman John, Angel P.H Snodgrass Donald & John, farmers
Crampton, Russell & Co. fruit farmers, Lane James, coal dealer Steward George, farmer, Hay green
Sutton road LaneJohnWm.Railwaytavern,&farmer Storey James, farmer & carrier
Creasy Matthew, farmer Large Wuliam, Bentinck Arms P.H Studd John Robert, grocer & draper
CrooteThos.&Robt.cattle dlrs.& farmers LawsonThos.&Robt.farmers,TheChase Tagg James Wm. farmer, Gre~n marsh
Durrant James Smith, builder Lawson Graham, bmlder & wheel- Taylor David, farmer, Marsh
Easton John, harness maker wright, see Mountseer & Lawson 'I"aylor Joseph Edwd. farmer, Button rd
Edwards John, beer retailer, Marsh Leather James & Joseph,farmers,Marsh I Taylor Thomas, farmer, Fen [letters
EdwardsJames,straw dealer,Hay green Liberal Association (John Wright, presi- ~ via Middle Drove]
Edwards \VIlliam, farmer dent; Stephen Featherstone,hon. sec) 'Thurlow William, Jolly Farmers P.H
Ellis John, grocP-r & draper Little John Wilson, blacksmith Tipple Geo. ginger beer manufacturer
Ellnor William, farmer, Fen [letters LockStephn.farmer&landownr.Hay grn , Tuffs Josiah Alhert, grazier, Vine house
via Middle Drove] Long Frederick, butcher I 'ruffs Uriah, poultry dealer
Empringham James, farmer & cattle Long Mary (Mrs.), milliner & dress ma Wales Wilham. farmer, Little London
dealer, Baladava farm Mallett Farmer, farmer, Kew Marsh \\Talker John, farmer, Church farm
Faulkner John Thos. farmer, Wingland Mallett Waiter, beer retailer & painter _Ward William Robert David, solicitor, &
Faulkner Joseph, farmer, Wingland Marchbanks Robert Wm. fa.rmer,Marsh vestry clerk to Terrington & solicitor
Flatman Robert, farmer Markham John Thomas, butcher to Marsh land Tramroads Co. Hamond
l:<'latt Robert, assistant overseer for Ter- Mason G. Henry, farmer, Hay green , lodge; & at Lynn
rington St. Clement & Tilm7 St. Mendham Robert, farmer, Admiral's ' Warnes Charlotte (Mrs.),farmer,Marsh
Lawrence & collector of taxes, & bun. farm, Marsh Warnes \Villiam James, farmer, Marsh
sec. to the Conservative club Miles Ja.mes, farmer, ~\Ia.rsh 'Vatson George, coal merchant & farmr
FordhamRobert, miller (wind & steam), Millington William, boot maker 1 Watts James, farmer, Hay green
farmer &corn merchant,Orange farm Minns Jane (Mrs.), carrier Wharfe Robt. blacksmith,Northgate cot
Funnell Robert, farmer ~Iitchell Charles Freeman, grocer Williamson Jotm & William, farmers
FyshJ ohnFrancis,grocer & drpr. Post off Money George, farmer, Elm house "\\'illiamson John, farmer, Marsh
Gagen Michael,farmer,Lovell'sHall frm Moore Robert, shoe maker \Vils0n John, beer retailer, Hay green
Gent George, farmer, Marsh Moulton George, farmer, Marsh , \Vinterton Sc1lathiel, sexton
Gent William, farmer, Marsh Mountseer & Lawson, builders & wheel- i \Vright John, blacksmith
Gilbert James, farmer wrights Wright John, boot maker
Girdlestone Thomas, plumber & glazier Neve Walter, Coach & Horses P.H \Vright John Newcome, farmer
Goodley Arthur, farmer, Fen Nicholas Frant:is, farmer, :\Iarsh 1 "'right William, dairyman, Hay green
Goodson Alfred, farmer, Marsh I

TERRINGTON ST. JOHN is o. village and parish and held sinee 1885 by the Rev. Robert Fredcrick Cory n.A.
situated on the Wisbech road, 3 miles south from Terrington of Sidney Sussex College, Cambridge. Here is a Free
St. Clement's station on the Bourn and Lynn junction Methodist chapel, erected in 1845· The charities amount to
railway, 6~ miles south-west from Lynn and about the same about £32 a yf".ar, derived from the poor's land of 13 acres.
distance from Wisbech, in theN orth \Vestern division of the There is also an endowment from 25 acres of land of about
county, hundred and petty sessional division of Freebridge £30 a year, which is applied to the repairs of the church,
Marshland, union of \Visbech, county court district of Lynn, and four almshouses for four widows, endowed with four
rural deanery of Lynn Marshland and archdeaconry and acres of land for the purchase of coals. Sir Wi!liam Hovell
diocese of Norwich. The church of St. John, on the north Brown ffulkes bart. D.L., J.P. of Hillington Hall, who is lord
side of the parish, was built at "Peyke's Cross" in 1423 1 of the manor, Messrs. Samuel Stuckdale, James Johnson,
under a licence granted by the Bishop of Ely and made the trustees of William lngram, William Edward Page,
parochial by the Archbishop of Canterbury in 1530, it is a William Benjamin Johnson esq. and Thomas Ed. llagge esq.
building of stone, in the Early English style, consisting of D.L., J. P. Gaywood Hall, and Mr. James Holland, are the
chancel, nave, aisles, south porch and an embattled western chief landowners. The soil is clay and loam ; subsoil, gault
tower, with pinnacles, containing 6 bells: the tower stands and clay. The chief crops are wheat, peas, oats, beans,
about 15 feet from the church, but is connected with it by coleseed, mustard, roots and grass. The parish contains
a building called" the PriP~'it's house:" there are two stained 2,320A. 3R. 34P. of land; rateable value, £4,287 ; the popu-
windows: the church was repaired in 1853. at a cost of lation in r8gx was 603. By a Local Government Order a.
£15o, and affords 378 sittings. The register dates from the detached part of this parish, known as New Common Marsh,
year 1536. The living is a vicarage, average tithe rent- was amalgamated with 'ferrington St. Clement in 1885.
charge /.,"r6o, net yearly value [,I57, including 5 acres of
glebe, with residence, built in 1845• in the gift of the Crown, Sexton, Joseph Winterton, senior.·

DIRECTORY.] NORFOLK. TH..ARSTON. 633
PosT & M. 0. 0., S. B. & Annuity & Insurance Office.- Registrar of Births & Deaths for Terrington Sub-District,
James Reeve, receiver. Letters arrive from Lynn at 7-45 Assistant Overseer & Collector of Tithe, John Thos. Egarr
a. m. & are dispatched at 5· ro p.m. The nearest telegraph SCHOOLS:-
office is at Terrington St. Clement A School Boaad of 5 members was formed compulsorily 6
Aug. 18Bo; John Kiddle, clerk to the board & attendance
WALL LE'ITER BoxEs, Church gates, cleared at 4·45 p.m. & otli.cer
Fen end, cleared at 4-35 p. m Hoard School (mixed), erected in 1883, for 110 children;
PUBLIC OFFICERS : - average attendance, go; William Colin Lucas, maswr;
Chief Constable for the Hundred of Freebridge Marshland, Mrs. Isabella Lucas, mistress
Charles Parr, Terrington St. Clement CARRIERS TO:- .
Collectors of Smeeth & Fen Drainage Rates, F. & E. H. LYNN-James Storey, tues. ; Mrs. Mallett, tues. & sat. ;
Jackson George Edmund Blomfield, tues. fri. & sat
Medical Officer, 6th District Wisbech Union, Michael James WrsBECH-James Storey, thurs. & sat. ; George Edmund
Egarr L.F.P.s.Glas Blomfield, thurs
Cory ~ev. Robert Fredk. B.A. Vicarage Egarr Michael James L.F.P.s.Glas. sur- Johnson George,cowkeeper, Whitehouse
Egarr Michael James geon, & medical offic-er, 6th district, Johnson James, farmer & landowner,
Gathergood Benj. Wm. Summerville ho Wisbech union Belgrave house
Gathergood John Everett Edward, baker Johnson William Eenjamin, farmer &
Johuson James, Helgrave house Gamble Robert, farmer, Fen end landowner, Fen end
Gamble William, farmer Judd Arthr. Valentine, farmer, Fen end
COMMERCIAL. Gamble William Henry, grocer, Fen end Kiddle John, wheelwright, clerk to the
Alexander William, boot & shoe maker Gathergood Benjamin William M.R.c.s. school board &school attendance officr
Ba~er Thomas Henry, farmer Lond. surgeon, Summerville house Linfred John William, farmer, Smeeth
Betney Thomas, farmer Gathergood John, surgeon house, Marshland
Bunting Thomas, farmer Goodman Henry, blacksmith Marsden Charles, farmer
Cammack John Thomas, farmer Hall Thomas, farmer, Fen end Neep Mary (Mrs.), farmer
Carr Samuel, blacksmith Harris James, farmer Nelson Robert, Rose & Crown P.H
Carter James, machine owner, Fen end Ha wes Arth.grocr. &blacksmith,Fen end Nelson William, grocer
Carter Snsan (Mrs.), grocer Hawes Edward, blacksmith & engineer Reeve James, grocr. &drapr. Post office
Clayton William, farmer Herbert Joseph, farmer, Fen end Riches William, farmer, Church farm
Cousins Davirl., farmer Holland J ames, farmer & landowner Saunders Robert, beer retailer, Fen end
Cox Joseph, saddler & harness maker Horn William Taylor, blacksmith Stevens John, farmer & machine owner
Cranefield Philip, farmer Hubbard Edith (Mrs.), Woolpack P.H. Thorp John, beer retailer, Fen end
Dodman Thomas, flour dealer & farmer Wilson John, miller (wind & steam)
Egarr John Thomas, registrar of births lngram Robert & ·william, farmers & Winterton Joseph, sen. sexton
& deaths for Terrington sub-district, landowners, Myrtle house Yell Michael, farmer, Smeeth
assistant. overseer & collector of tithe J ewson George, butcher
TESTERTON is a parish about 2 miles west from an extensive prospect, erected by the late P. M. Case esq.
Ryburgh station, on the Dereham and Wells section of the and now in the occupation of Mr. Ja.mes Philip Case, farmflr, •
Great Eastern railway, and 3 south-east-by-south from is the property of Frederick Augustus Morse-lloycott esq. of ·
Fakenham, in the North Western division of the county, 84 Earl's Court road, London s w, who is lord of the manor
Gallow hundred and petty sessional division, Walsingham and sole landowner. The soil is loamy, producing good
union and county court district, rural deanery of North crops of wheat, barley, oats and green crops generally. The
Brisley and Toftrecs, and archdcaconry and diocese of Nor- parish contains 613 acres ; rateable value, £617; the popu-
wich. The church of St. H.emigius, which fell into ruins lation in 1891 was 24.
many years since, has almost entirely disappeared, a portion I

of the tower alone now remaining: the mhabitants attend Letters through Fakenham, arrive at 7-30 a.m. & 5-IS p.m.
Colkirk church. The living is a sinecure rectory, gross when also letters are collected. The nearest money order
yearly value, £r3, in the gift of Frederick Augustus Morse- & telegraph office is Great Ryburgh
lloycott esq. 'l'esterton House, a fine mansion, commanding The children of this place attend the school at Colkirk.
Case James, Philip, farmer, Testerton house
THARSTON is a village and scattered parish I mile aYerage tithe rent-charge £225, net yearly value.£ 196, in-
north-east from Forncett junction station on the Ipswich cluding 6 acres of glebe, with residence, in the gift of the
and Norwich section of the Great Eastern railway, and ro Bishop of Norwich, and held since 1874 by the Hev. Samuel
miles south-by-west from Norwich, in the Southern division Cutler Hooley. Thomas Clabburn's charity of £4 rss. 4d.
of the county, Depwade hundred, petty sessional division yearly, being the interest on £2oo, left in 18r6, is for fuel,
and union, Harleston county court district, rural deanery of and the fuel allotment of 8 acres produces .£ r8 yearly;
Depwade, archdeaconry of Norfolk and diocese of Norwich. there is also a sum of .£ 2 15s. derived from 2 acres of land
The church of St. Mary the Virgin is a small edifice of flint called •• N ellands' Pightle," which is for bread ; Sir Robert
with stone dressings, consisting of chancel, nave, north John Harvey K.C.B. by deed dated 1843, left £100 in (then)
porch and an embattled western tower, with small pinnacles £3 per Cents, the interest to be given yearly to poor widows
at the angles, containing 4 bells: in the chancel is a piscina : and single women over 6o years of age ; 1\-laria. Fuller's
there are monuments and tablets to John ~'oolmer esq. ob. charity of £5 ros. yearly is for warm clothing, to be given
YSg8, and Alice his wife, and other members of their family; at the discretion of the vicar and churchwardens. In a field
Thomas Woode, ob. 1763; Robert Woode, son of Sir Robert on a farm in this parish, now occupied by Mr. H. Clamp, is
Woodc, ob. 1623, and other members of that family: in the a remarkable oak tree, eight yards in circumference, and
chancel is a monument, with figures of two soldiers standing supposed to be over 500 years old. Tharston Hall, an
with reversed arms, to the late General Sir Robert John ancient red brick mansion in the Elizabethan style, is the
Harvey K.C.H., K.T.s., K.C.B.A. d. 18 June, r86o, and to residence of William Gowing esq. Major Sir Charles Harvey
Charlotte Mary his wife, d. 1869: on the south side of the bart. J. P. of Rainthorpe Hall, Flordon, is lord of the manor
chancel is a stained window, presented by Julia (Harvey), and principal landowner. The soil is various; subsoil, clay.
wife of Peter Wells esq. in memory of her brother, Sir The chief crops are wheat, barley and beans. The parish
Robert John Harvey Harvey hart. M.P. d. 19 July, 1870, contains 1,572 acres; rateable value, £2,324; the population
and to Lady Henrietta Augusta his wife, daughter of Robert, in 1891 was 288.
7th Earl of Cavan: the nave was thoroughly restored and Parish Clerk, Thomas Wright.
re-seated with open benches in 188I, and in 1886 the porch Letters by foot post through Long Stratton, which is the
and tower were restored : the church affords 178 sittings. nearest money order & telegraph office, arrive at 6. 30 a.m
in the churchyard is a mausoleum of red brick, erected in PILLAR LETTER Box, near the church, cleared at 6.30 p. m
1835 by the late General Sir Robert John Harvey K.C.n. The National School (mixed), erected in 1875, for 120 children ;
regisrer dates from the year 1558. The living is a vicarage, average atwndance, 36; Miss Phrebe Turner, mistress
Gowing William, The Hall Everett Henry, farmer Matthews George, Queen's Head P.H. &
Hooley Rev. Samuel Cutler, Vicarage Fuller Chas. farmer & collector of taxes coal dealer
Go wing Fredk. farmer, The Model farm Minister John, farmer
COMMERCIAL. Gowing George, farmer, Picton farm Phillippo Alfred Thomas, farmer &
Beckett Rachel (Miss), farmer 1 Gowing William, farmer, Hall farm miller (wind & water)
Bush James, farrner Hewett Henry, market gardener Poll George, farmer
Clamp Henry, farmer & builder Lincoln Gilbert, farmer Rodwell William Joseph, carpenter,
Duffield Wm.Gallant,frmr.&lime burnr Lloyd Henry, machine owner builder & shopkeeper
Elliott Hannah & Susan(Misses),farmers Lloyd Robert, farmer Seaman John, farmer
- .
634 TBARSTON~ NORFOLK. (KELLYS
Smith Charles, blacksmith
Smith Harriet (M:rs.), shopkeeper
IStimpson Denis, farmer
Thurtle Waiter, Chequers P.H
jWright Thomas, carpenter & sbopkeepr

THEL VET ON (or THELTON) is a. village and parish 21.. sittings. The register dates from the year 1538. The living
miles north-east from Diss station on the Ipswich anJ is a rectory, average tithe rent-charge £222, net yearly
Norwich section of the Great Eastern railway, in the value £r67, including 7l acres of glebe, with residence, in
Southern division of the county, Diss hundred, petty the gift of the Lord Chancellor, and held since 1886 by the
se~sional di\·ision and county -court district, Depwade union, Rev. Marcus Ernest 'VJI!iam Johnson Th.A. of King's Cnllege,
rural deanery of Hedcnhall, arcbdeaconry of .Norfolk and London. Thelveton Hall is the property and occasional resi-
diocJse of Norwieh. The church of St. Andrew is a small dence of Edward Manu esq. J.P. who is lord of the manor and
and plain building of rubble, in the Perpendicular style, principal landowner. The soil is heavy; subsoil, clay. The
consisting of chancel, nan, south porch of brick and a chief crops are wheat and barley. The area is I, I.p acres;
western belfry containing one bell: in 1873 the church was rateable value, £I, 174; the population in IBgx was 196.
partly restored at the expense of the late Thomas M~nn esq. Parish Clerk, Robert Tal bot.
and in 1879 a reredos of marble and mosaics was erected by Letters through Scole, the nearest money order & telegraph
the late Thomas Manu esq. in memory of J ames Manu esq. otlice, arrive at 7 a. m
of Winfarthing: the chancel was restored in x888,at the cost PrLLAR LET'rEa Box, cleared at 7 a. m. & 7.15 p.m. week
of the Mann family, in memory of the before mentioned days & at 7 a. m. sundays
Thomas Mann esq. • the font, a work of the 16th century, is Day School, erected with mistress's houMe by the late T.
adorned with figures of the Twelve Apostles, beautifully Mann esq. for 50 children; average attendance, 46; Mrs.
carved and irr a good state of preservation: there are 150 Annie Harold, mistress
Beecher Frank, The Grange Symonds George, Manor house Symonds George, farmer & thrashing
M ann Edward J. P. Thelveton hall Chilvers Enoch, carpenter machine proprietor, Manor farm
Johnson Rev. Marcus Ernest Wm. Theo. Mills Robert, farm bailiff to Edward Symonds John, farmer
Assoc. K.c. L. [rector], The Rectory Mann esq
;
THEMELTHORPE is a village and parish, one mile 132 acres of glebe, in the gift of Lord Hastings, and held since
from the Guestw1ek station on the .Eastern and Midlands rail- 1871 by the Rev. Robert Reeve RackhamB.A.of Corpus Christi
way, 2~ miles east from Foulsh2m station on the East Norfolk colle~e, Cambridge, and surrogate, who resides at Bin try.
branch of the Great Eastern rail way, 9 north-east ft·om De re- Lord Hastings is lord of the manor, Rtephen Leeds, esq. Whit-
ham,in the Northern division of the county, Eynsford hundred well, and tbe trustees of the late Mr. John Jarvis are the land-
and petty sessional division, Aylsham union and county court owners. The soil is loam; subsoil, clay and brick earth.
district, rural deanery of Spar ham and archdeaconry and The chief crops are wheat, roots, barley and hay. The area is
diocese of Norwich. The church of St. An drew is a small 652 acreM; rateable value,£825; the population in 1881 was 72.
and ancient puilding of flint, consisting or chancel, nave, Parish Clerk, Edmund Yarham.
south porch and an embattled western tower, with pinnacles, ' Letters through Dereham, delivered 9 a. m. Fouls ham is
containing one bell: it was thoroughly restored in r873, and the nearest rnoney order & telegraph office
affords 100 sittings. The register dates from tile year r664. This parish was made contributory to Foulsham School
The living is a rectory, consolidated with Bintry or Bintree, board 25 June, 1875, sending 2 members ; & the children
average tithe rent-charge £402, ne~ yearly \'alue £358, with I attend the Board school there
Butler Ellen (Mrs.), farmer
Cooper William Parker, farmer
I !<'airman Thomas, farm bailiff to S. Hubbard Thomas, farmer
Leeds esq. of Whitwell Yarham Edmund, farmer
Fisher Clare, farmer & butcher , · 1 Hub bard Mark Wm. Fox & Hounds P. H

'rliE~rFOHD.
'fHETFOJm is an ancient borough, market town and muni-J window is a memorial to the Rev. ·williarn Collett M.J.. late
cipal borough, and the head of a union and county court rector; the west window is also stained and there are several
district,_ wi~h junction_ statio~s, rebuilt in 1890, on the Great others : the tomb of Sir Richard Fulmerstone knt. a bene-
1\

Eastern rail way, and IS 7 mtles east-south-east from Bran- . factor to the town and founder of the Grammar School and
don, 12 from Bury St. Edmunds, 23 from Ely, 31! south- of the preachership in this church, was some years since
west from Norwich, 2o! south-east from Wymondham, 28 removed, and the parts containing the inscription were
south-south-east from Lynn, 78 north-east from London by placed against the south wall of the na1'e: the font is·
road and 95:f by rail, in the South ·western division of the Norman: the church was restored in 1866, and in 1878 the
· county, in the petty sessional diyisiun of Grimshoe, rural nave was new roofed at a cost of £soo: there are about 400
deanery of Thetford and archdeaconry and diocese of Nor- sittings. The register dat-es from the year 1653. The
wich: a small part of the borough lies in Suffolk, the living is a rectory, gross yearly value £83, including 33
counties being divided by the Little Ouse, which here joins acres of glebe, in the gift of trustees, and held since 1891
the Thet, and both rivers are crossed by a cast-iron bridge, by the Rev. Frederick John Cronshey M.A. of Corpus Christi
erected by the corporation in 1829, and the Little Ouse is [ College, Cambridge, who is also preacher on the School and
na'\'igable by barg-es from Lynn to Thctford, by which coal Hospital Foundation.
and timber are imported, and corn, malt and wool exported. St. Cuthbert's church, near the Market place, is a struc-
The town was incorporated by Queen Eli7~beth in 1573, ture of flint in the Lat~ Perpendicular style, consisting of
and again about 1683 by Charles II., but in 1692 this charter chancel, nave, aisles, south porch and a belfry containing 3
was annulled, and the original charter restored by a decree bells: the chancel is separated from the nave by a beautiful.
in Chancery; the corporation now consists of a mayor, oak scree!).: the church was almost entirely rebuilt in 1852,
recorder, four aldermen and 12 councillors. The "Local and has 300 sittings. The register dates from the year
Government Act, 1858" (21 and 22 Vict. c. 98), was adopted 1672. The living is a vicarage, average tithe rent-charge
by the borough, 15 June, 1866 1 and the corporation act £22, net yearly value £25 Ss. 10d. including 39 aeres of
as the urban sanitary authority. The borough has a corn- glebe, with residence, in the gift of the Bishop of Norwich~
mission of the peace and separate court of quarter sessions. and held since 1888 by the Rev. William Glenton l\Ialim
The town is lighted with gas by a private company and snp- B.A. of Durham University, who is also rector of
plied with water from works the property of the corporation, Kilverstone.
the supply being derived from a well 182 feet deep in Mum- St. Peter's, White Hart street, is a building of cut flint,
ford Road, on tue north-west of the town. The l>orough in the Decorated style, consisting of chancel, nave, aisles,
formerly returned two members to . Parliament; by the north porc:h and an embattled western tower with pinnacles,
"Representation of the ~'eople Act, r867," it was to have I rebuilt in 1789, and containing an illuminated clock 11nd
returned one, but the one member was lost on the passing 8 bells given in 1791 by Lord Petre, and re-hung in 1875 at
of the "Representation of the People (Scotland) Act, 1868." a cost of £4o: there are 440 sittings. The register dates
The town, which from 1075 to 1094 was the head of the see from the year 1642. The living is a rectory, average tithe
of the East Angles, and form~rly had twenty churches, now rent-charge £48, gross yearly value £10o, net £84, includ-
consists of three parishes :-St . .Mary, St. Peter and St. ing 30 acres of glebe, in the gift of the Rev. Alfred Marshall
Cuthbert. · M.A. vicar of Feckenham, and held since IBgo by the Rev.
The church of St. Mary, on the Suffolk side of the ri,·er, John Phillips Watts, of the University of London and chap-
is a large and handsome structure of flint with stone dress- lain to the Thetford union.
ings, in the Norman and Perpendicular styles, consisting of The Catholic church, in the London -road, dedicated to
chancel, nave, south porch and a lofty embattled western St. Mary, and erected in 1826, is a plain building of flint
tower with pinnaclrs, conta;ning 6 bells: the stained C!lSt and stone, consisting of chancel and south porch.
DIR£CTOR Y. J NORFOLK~ THETFORD.
~ere is a Baptist chapel with _So sitting~; ~ongre~ti'?~al, J . At the eastern part of the town are a few tenements occu-
seatmg. 450; Wesleyan, affordmg 450 SJttmgs; PrlmJtlve p1ed by the poor, on the site of Harbord Hospital, so called
Methodist chapel, renovated in 1891 at a cost of £140 and from its having been endowed by Sir Charles Harbord for
seating 5~ persons, and a Friends' meeting-house, which, 99 years, which tima expired many years ago, and there is
however, IS seldom used. a Hospital for the aged poor in Bury road. In St. Mary's
'rhe Cemetery, on the London road, laid out in 1 354 , parish are also four almshouses, founded in 1610 by Sir
occupies about 3 acres of land, and has two mortuary Ric~ard F~1lmer~ton kt. and built chiefly of flint, with
chapels: it is under the c:mtrol of a Burial Board of I8 ant1que brJCk chnnneys. In the north-west part of the
members. town are four well-built almshouscs, erected in x885 by
The G m_"ldh_a 11 , w l1ere t'ne quar te r sesswns
· f th b 11 George Tyrrell-Tyrrell esq and Mrs. Sarah Rebecca Tyrrell,
or e _oruug 1 for the a ed oor of Thetford.
are held, IS m the centre of the town, overlookmg the g p
Market place. The Odd .Fellows' ball, near the Market . In the parish of ~t. Mary, and on the Suffolk side of the
place, erected in x8 9 1 at a cost of £I,soo, will seat 700 river, aretheremamsofthemonas~ryoftheHoly~ei_Julchre
persons and includes a gallery for xoo persons. The and the Sa~red Cross, founded m I I39 by Wllham de
Mechanics' Institution, erected in 1887, at a cost of £68o, Warrenne, Earl of ''Varre~J!Je and Surr~y, for canons of the
from designs by Mr~Edward Boardman, architect, of Nor-, Holy Cross. The porters _gate remams as also a ~art of
wich, has a library of 2,500 \""Olumes. i the ch~r~h, now conver~ed mto a bar~ ; another ~?~IOn of
"Id" f tl" t d to d . the bmldmgs, now a residence called the Canons, lS occu-
Th e G ao l , a b m mg o m an s ne, en 1arge m I 8 I 6 , · d b F , · R" h d s tt
I,

hut used only as a police station since 1833, was sold in ' p•e Y rancJs IC ar . u on esq. . .
1891 to the Norfolk county ('ouncil. I Of _the other monast_eriCs formerly ex1st~ng he_re may be
In the town is a hrewery an extensive tanner:v and fell- I mentiOned the followmg : - I . The Clumac prwry of SS.
rnongery, brick and lime kiins, water and steam flour mills, Mary and Andrew, fonnde~ in. 1 ro4 by Hoger Bigod, as _a
1

rnaltings and bone crushing, manure and chemical works; cell to the Abbey of Cluny m 110 ornumdy: by a rul~ of this
Messrs. Charles Burrell and Sons Limited extensive iron order 18 poor persons were fed every day at the prwry : the
foundry and agricultural implement manufa~tory and steam Perpendicular gatehouse remain~: at its dissolution there
engine works, occupy the site of old St. Nicholas church, were IS ~onks, and revenues ~t1mated at £312~ 2. The
and employ about 32 0 bands: there is also a manufactory !lenedictme nunnery of SS. George and Gregory, fmmd~d
of papier mache goods. m 1176 by the Abbot of Bury, for nuns from Lm~; on Its
The market is held on Saturday for fish, meat and vege- surrender there were 10 nuns, and revenues est1mated at
tables. £so yearly. 3· The convent of SS. Mary and John, for
Charities: those belonging to St. Peter's parish :ue :-rst, canons of t~e Aug_ustinian .~r~er, fou~ded by Geoffrey d_e
under the scheme of the Charity Commissioners a sum I Favarches m the t1mo of William I.; It had revenues estx-
amounting to about £8 17 s. 2 d. is handed over to th~ Rector mated at_ £391. 4· The Colleg~- of SS. Mary and Ba~tholo­
and Churchwardens annually to be distributed in bread ~ew, Bailey End, founded by Gilbert de Pyckenham m the
amongst the deserving poor of the parish. A bequest under tJme of Edward I.
the Eden andWodehouse Charity of £r 6s. 8d. is also devoted 'fhetfurd was a Roman station. At the eastern extremity
to a like purpose : this is distributed amongst about iso of the town is Castle Hill, a mound upwards of I,ooo feet in
persons, who receive from I to 3 loaves each, according to circumference at the base and roo feet in height, and the
number in family, on three different occasions during the top, overlooking an immense tract of country, is crowned
winter at intervals of a fortnight. 2nd, by the award of by five stately trees. The surrounding country contains
the Commissioners under the Land Enclosures Act, about several •' barrows.'' •
34 acres of enclosed land was allotted to this parish for the The King's Honse, standing on an eminence in King street,
benefit of the poor; the trustees being the Re~tor, Church- is a mansion of flint and brick, and acquired its name from
wardens and Overseers : this is let periodically and now having formerly been the property, ami by repute, th~ resi-
brings in about 1.,27 yearly, which snm i:; distributed dence of Queen Elizabeth and James I. by whom it was
in coals to about 150 persons. The charity of Sir Joseph given to Sir Philip Wodebouse knt. of Kimberley: above
Williamson kt. M. P. consisted originallr of £ 2,ooo, left by the entrance are the royal arms : there is a lawn in front of
will in I701, was valued in 1891 at£Io,82o 7s. 2d. in Consols, the honse, and attached •
are beautiful gardens: it is now
producing a yearly revenue of about 1.,"297, which is applied occupwd by Richard Wigston esq.
in apprenticing boys and girls of the town and m the mam-
tenance of the Boys' and Girls' Grammar Schools and the The Rookery is the residence of Major George Augustus
support of the Hospital. There are miscellaneous charities l\'larsham D.L., J.P.
of about £3o yearly income. Smith's Charity :-This is a The principal landowner!! are "\\'illiam Dalziel Macken;de
bequest of an eccentric character who once used to tramp the esq. M.A., J.P. who is lord of the manor, Miss Buxton, of
country soliciting charity, but who at the time of his death Shad well Court, and Thomas Shelford Bid well esq.
was an alderman of the City of London: he devised land in The area is-St. Cuthbert's parish, 3o6 acres ; rateable
various parts of the country to be held in trust, and the value,£4,671; St. Mary's, 4,622; rateable valu.e, £3,823; St.
income distributed amongst various towns in different parts Peter's, 2.370; rateable value, £7,905; combined rateable
of the country where be had been well received. Thetford value of the borough, i.,"I6,4oo.
is one of these towns, and a sum varying from £25 to The population in r8g1 was-St. Cnthbert's parish, 1,764
£23 is annually remitted to the Churchwardens and Over- in Norfolk and 75 in Suffolk; St. Mary's, I,I45 in ~orfolk
seers of the three parishes of St. Peter, St. Mary and and I 14 officers and inmates in the workhouse; & St. Peter's.
St. Cuthbert. The amount is distributed in great coats I,224: total, 4,247, which comprise the municipal borough.
or grey cloth to 7 or 8 men, selected by the trustees from Paris:1 Clerks. -St. Cuthbcrt's, Prosper Wilson ; St.
each parish. Peter's, vacant ~ St. Mary's, John Johnson. J
Official Establishments, Local Institutions &c.
PosT, M. 0. & 'f. 0., S. B. & Annuity & Insurance Office, Money orders are granted & paid from 9 a.m. till 6 p.m.;
Market place.-Harry Howard, postmaster. Letters on Saturdays 9 a.m. till8 p.m. Telegraph business, week
arrive from London delivered at 7 a.m days, 8 a. m. to 8 p.m. ; sundays, 8 a. m. to ro a.m
PILLAR LETTER Box, :{lridge street, cleared week days at
LETTER MAlL, 10.40 a.m. 4.50 & 10 p.m.; sundays at IO p.m
Norwich, Norfolk & Suffolk, 10.45 a. m. (registered 10.35
~'At.L LETTE;R BoxEs, Thetford Railway Station, cleared at
a.m.); London day mail Brandon, Cambridge & abroad,
11.45 a. m. (registered 11.35 a.m); Norwich & the North 12 a.m. & 2.45, 5-45 & 9 p.m.; no collection on snn-
Midlands, Scotland & Ireland, 2. 15 a. m. (registered 2. rs days; Ford street, cleared at 9· 15 p.m. week days ; St.
a.m.) ; late day mail from London & to Norwich, 5 p. m. Mary's, cleared 9.25 p.m.; Station road, cleared 11.20
(registered 4.50 p.m.); night mail all parts & abroad, w a. m. & 9-5 p.m
' & 10.45 p.m. (registered 9 p.m) Corporation.
x891-g2.
1\iAILS ARRIVAL.
MAYOR-Councillor Charles Burrell esq.
Norwich, Norfolk & Suffolk, 10.4) a.m. ; London, Brandon,
Cambridge & abroad, 11.45 a. m. ; Norwich, Norfolk & DEPUTY MAYOR-Councillor Robert George Burrell esq.
Suffolk, 2.15 p. m.; London, Cambridge & Norwich 5 p.m.; RECORD£R-Charles Edward Maiden esq. M.A. 2 Harcourt
night mails all parts, 9 p.m:; arrival of mails all parts, 7 buildings, Temple, London E c
a.m.; day mails, 10.20 a. m. & 12.30 noon; late day mail, ALDERMEN.
6.3op.m ·
!William West Frost tWm. Han·ey Jillin~a
PARCEL MAILS. · ~Edward Frost tWilliam Pechey
All parts, 7 a. m.•: uay mail, 12.30 noon :rlate day mail, 6.30 :.>Iarke<l thus t retire in 189Z.
p.m. ; on sundays one delivery at 7 a.m .Marke:l thus ! retire in 1895.
636 THETFORD. NORFOLK. [ KELLY's

CoUNCILLORS. Weeting .All Saints, West Tofts, East Wretham & West
tCa.sh Abram tSmith John Ancterbury Wretham. The population of the union in 1891 was
*Oldman Stephen, sen tGuest Henry 17,253; rateable value, £98,041 ; area, 120,733 acres
tDiwh Alfred tCronshey Arthur Gayford Clerk to the Guardian!:l & Assessment Committee, Ed ward
*PapA Robert tOldman Stephen, jun Noah Cole, St. Mary's terrace, Bury road, Thetford
* Burrell Robert George *Bond George Edward Treasurer, Henry Birkbeck esq. jun. Norwich
tBurrell Charles, jun I
tHarris E
Marked thus t retire in 1892.
Collectors to the Guardians,Relieving & Vaccination Officers,
Methwold district, Herbert "William Whitta, Hrandon ;
Marked thus! retire in 1893. Thetford district, William Warren, Raymond street
Marked thus o retire in 1894. Collectors of Poor's Rates, Hockwold-cum-Wilton, Henry
.Auditors, George Gathercole, St. N1cholas street & George Bell, Hockwold-cum-Wilton; Methwold, William Coates,
Lain Banyard, Croxton road Methwold; Northwold, Frederick Fuller, Northwold ;
OFFICERS OF THE CORPORATION & URBAN SANITARY Hrandon, Fuller Rolfe, Brandon ; Feltwell, Miss .Anna
AUTHORITY. Spencer, Feltwell; Thetford St. Peter, George Henry
Reynolds, jun. Thetford ; Thetford St. Cuthbert, Robert
Town Clerk & Clerk to the Urban Sanitary .Authority, John Hall jun. Thetford; Thetford St. Mary, Robert Livick,
Houchen, jun. London road Thetford
Treasurer, Henry Birkbeck, jun. banker, Norwich Medical Officers, Rrandon district, C. M. Fegen L.R.C.P.
Clerk of the Peace, John Honchen, London road Edin. Brand on; Croxton district, .Alfred Harris 111:. B.
Medical Officer of Health, .Frederick William Joy L.R.C.P. Thetford ; Hepworth & Hopton districts, Wallace Pethe-
Edin. N orthwold rick r •. R.C.P.J.ond. Ilopton; Honington d:strict, John
Coroner, Odden Frederick Read, Mildenhall; deputy, Geo. Seymonr Gelston L.K.Q.C.P.rrel. Ixworth; Methwold
0. Read, White Hart street district, Ernest George .Archer, Felt well ; N orthwold dis-
Borough Surveyor, Charles Baker, Castle street trict, Fredk. Wm. Joy L.R.C.P.Edin. Northwold; Thet-
Inspector under the Contagious Diseases (Animal~') Act, ford district, Allan G laisyer M inns 1.. R.C. P.Lond. 10 White
Richard Howard M.R.c.v.s. King street Hart street, Thetford
Sanitary Inspector & Collector of Rates, Charles Farrow, 6 Public Vaccinators, same as medical officers, except Thetford
White Hart street district, Alfred Harris M.B. Thetford
Town Crier, Robert.I Balls, St. Giles lane Superintendent Registrar, Edward Noah Cole, St. Mary's

terrace, Bury road, Thetford; deputy, Richard Howard,
Borough Magistrates. 12 King street, Thetford
The Mayor. Registrars of Births, Deaths & Marriages, Methwold sub-
Burrell Charles, jun. The Shrublands district, Herbert William Whitta, Brandon; deputy,
Cronshey James esq. Tanner street Alfred .Arthur Davies, Brandon; Thetford sub-district,
Fison Cornell Henry, Ford place Thomas Smith, 14 King street, Thetford ; dt>puty,William
Jillings William Harvey, The Nunnery Cole, Norwich road, Thetford
Marsham Major George .Augustus, 'l'he Rookery The Workhouse in Bury road is a struct1.1re of brick, erected
Pechey William, Bury road in 1836, and capable of holding 250 inmates, & has a
Clerk, George Odden Read, White Hart street chapel adjoining ; Ueorge Leaton, master; Rev. John
Petty Sessions for the borough are held at the Guildhall on Phillip:;; Watts, chaplain; Allan G. Minns L.R.C.P.LOnd.
monday at ro a.m. medical officer; Mrs. Jane Leaton, matron; Miss Ellen
Special ·court House under Summary Jurisdiction Act- P. Wilson, industrial trainer
The Gaol. RURAL SANITARY AUTHORITY.
Meets at Workhouse on alternate fridays at 12.15
Public Establishments. Clerk, Edward Noah Cole, St. Mary'ster. Buryrd.Thetford
Cemetery, London road, Charles Farrow, clerk & registrar Treasurer, Henry Rirkbeck, jun. Norwich
to the Burial Board; ·wm. Saunders, London road, keeper Medical Ollicer of Health, F. W. Joy M. D. Northwold
County Court, Guildhall, Market place, His Honor Edwiu Inspector of .Xuisances, Richard Howard M.R.c.v.s. r2 King
Plumer Price Q.C. judge ; John Hcuchen, jun. ragistrar street, Thetford
& high bailiff; Charles "\Villiam Bartram, clerk to the · ScHOOL ATTENDANCE COMIIIITTEE.
registrar ; George Henry Reynolds, jun. under bailiff. Meets at Workhouse on alternate fridays at 12. 15.
Office, London road, hours ro to 4, except saturday, then Clerk, Edward Noah Cole, St. Mary's ter. Bury rd. Thetford
ro to r. A County Court is held here bi-monthly: the Attendance Officer, Richard Ho ward, 12 King st. Thetford
district comprises the following places :-Barnham, Bar- · p bli Offi
ningham, Brandon, Brettenham, Coney Weston, Cran- . . u c cers.
wich, Croxton, Euston, Fakenham, I<'eltwell, Gasthorpe,, Cert~fymg Factory ~urgeon, Pembroke Robet·t Joseph Bunch
Hepworth, Hockwold-cum-Wilton, Honington, Hopton, l\Imns 111. D. rg Kmg street
Knettishall Kilverstone L,·nford Market Weston Meth- Clerk to the Commissioners of Taxes for Borough, George
' ' J , ' •
wold Mundford Northwold Riddlesworth Rushford Odden Read, Whtte Hart street
'
Snarehill, Santon,' Santon Downham,
' ' Sturston,'cle~k to Chant~
Sapiston, · · Trustees ~ to the Grammar
, school & Hos-
Thelnetham, Thetford, ·west Tufts, Weeting, East Wret- pital Foun_datiOn, Fred~rtek V. Houchen, London road .
ham & West Wretham. Bankrupwy jurisdiction of Thet- ! Clerk & Regtstrar to Bunal Board, Charles Farrow, 6 White
ford court transferred to Norwich, r 883 ; official receiver Hart street, , . . . .
in bankruptcy, Edward Gould, Queen street, Norwich Clerk to the_t-)urgeons VIsttmg Committee, George Odden
Certified Bailiffs appointed under " The Law of Distress Read, Wh1te Hart, st~eet .. .
Amendment .Act," Stephen Oldman, seu. 45 Earle street, Collector of Queen s faxes, ~ Ilham Henry Leggatt, 13
~~ & Joseph J. Bamham, Methwold Rayr~ond street .
County Police Station, Old .Market street, Henry D. Simp- Supervisor of Inland Revenue, Robert Page, Kmg street
:::.son, sergeant & 3 constables
Fire Brigade, Cage lane, Robert Hall, captain & 19 men Places of Worship, with times of services.
Inland Revenue Ofli.ce, King street, Robert Pape, supervisor St. Mary's Church, Bury road (Suffolk), Uev. Frederick
John Cronshey M.A. rector ; 8 & l i a. m. & 4 & 6. 30 p. m.
VOLUNTEERS.
wed. & fri. 11.30 a.m.; saints days, 11 a.m.; 519 seats
4th~ Volunteer Battalion Norfolk Regiment (G Co.), Guild-
St. Peter's Church, Rev. John Phillips Watts, rector ; I I
hall, Capt. James Furguson, commandant; Otway
a.m. & 6.30 p.m.; wed. 7.30 p.m.; 430 seats
Manye, lieut.-commanding; Sergt. Lewis .Asbhurst, drill St. Cuthbert's Church, Rev. "William lilenton Malim B.A.
instructor
vicar; 11 a. m. & 6.30 p.m.; 256 seaLs
THETFORD UNION.
St. Mary Catholic, London road, Rev. Geoffrey Brennan,
Board days, alternate frida.ys at 12.15 noon, at the Workhouse priest; holy communion 8.30 a.m. ; mass ro.3o a.m. ;
The Union comprises the following places :-Barnham devotion & benediction 6.30 p.m. ; daily mass 8.30 a.m.;
(Suffolk), Barningham (Suffolk), Brandon (partly in devotion on thurs. 7.30 p.m
Suffolk), Brettenham, Coney Weston (Suffolk), Cranwich, Baptist, King street, I I a. m. & 6.30 p.m.; mon. 7.30 p.m
Croxton, East Wretham, Euston (Suffolk), Fakenham with Congregational, Earles street, Rev. Philip Henry Davis;
Rymer (Suffolk), Feltwell Anchor, Feltwell Fen Farms, 11 a.m. & 6.30 p.m.; wed. 7-30 p.m
Feltwell St. Mary & St. Nicholas, Great & Little Snarehill, Primitive Methodist, Guildhall street, Rev. Mathew Stacy
Hepworth (Suffolk), Hockwold-cnm-Wilton, Honington Cushing; 10.30 a.m. & 6.30 p.m.; mon. 7.30 p.m
(Suffolk), IIopton (8uffolk), Kilverstone, Knettishall Wesleyan, Tanners street, Rev. Charles Thomas; 10.30 a. m.
(Suffolk), Lynford, Market Weston (Suffolk), Methwold, & 6.30 p.m. ; tues. 7.30 p.m
Mundford, Northwold, Rushford (partly in Suffolk), San-
ton,Santon Downham (Suffolk), Sapiston (Suffolk), Sturs- Schools.
ton, Thelnetham (Suffolk), Thetford St. Cuthbert, Thet- rhe Grammar school was founded in 1566 by Sir Richard
ford St. )Iary (partly in Suffolk), Thetford St. Peter, Fulmerstone (knighted in xs6o at Berwick by the Duke of
DIRECTORY.] NORFOLK. THETFORD. 637
~orfolk),& incorporated by Act of Parliament in 16II; the A School Board of 7 members was formed compulsorily 21
buildings occupy the site of Trinity church, once the cathe- Dec. 1875, for the united districts of Thetford, Great &
dral church, some of the arches of which still remain. In Little Snarehill & Kilverstone; G. 0. RPad, White Hart""
1879 the Charity Commissioners formulated a new scheme street, clerk to the board; Charles Farrow, 6 White Hart
for the go¥ernment of the school, when the premises were street, attendance officer; the board meets at the school
almost wholly rebuilt, provision beinJ" made for 8o boys ; the first thursday in every month at Io a.m
since that date a covered gymnasium has been adde<f, & a Board School, Norwich road, erected in 1878-9 & opened on
chemical laboratory is now (I 892) in course of erection. the xst of May, 1879, for 750 children; a\'erage attend-
Attached to the school are three Foundation Scholarships ance, 203 boys, 176 girls, 189 infants; Frank Russell,
& six Free Scholarships, & provision is made in the scheme master; Miss Groom, mistress; Miss Edith Wagg, in-
for one Fulmerstone Scholarship of £6o a year, tenable fants' mistress
for three years at any university. The hea[J master's Catholic School, London road, for 39 chiluren; 1\Irs. l\Iary
residence, situated on the opposite side of London road Corner, mistress
& erected in 1879, is a large building faced with flint and Conveyance.
red brick, & is available for 20 boarders ; the school is Great Eastern Hailway, to London & all parts, Joseph But-
managed by a body of 12 governors; head master, Rev. ters, station master
Benjamin Reed B. A. London, National Medallist in Science Thetford Bridge Station,Turner Lake Bunting,station mast
The Girls' Grammar School, in the London road, was Omnibuses & fiys from the llell hotel to the rail way station
erected in r887, at a cost of £3,500, defrayed out of the to meet every train
funds of Sir J. Williamson's Charity, from designs by Anchor & Red Lion hotel~ busses meet all trains
Mr. J. Osborne Smith, architect, of London, & is at Carriers.
present available for so girls, with a boarding house for EuRY-Charlcs Hammond, from his house in King street,
5 boarders ; .Miss Perkins, late of N ewnham College, wed. & sat
Cambridge, head mistress FAKENHAM-Frank Loveless, from' Green Dragon,' sat
PRIVATE RESIDENTS. Forster B.ev. James, Earles street Pechey "William, Bury road ,
Alborough Mrs. The White house, Nor- Foulger George, 39 Earles street Perkins Miss (head mistress of Girls
wich road Frost Ed ward, Tanner street j Grammar school)
Anderson Mrs. 20 White Hart street Guest Henry, Earles street Priest Bernard Copeman, 30 Castle st
Bartram Charles William, .Magdalen st Harris Alfred M.B., c.M. Market place Priest Miss, 30 Castle stref.t
BeddowsJsph. Lamb cottage,N orwich rd Harrison Thomas ilolmes, 7 Bridge st Priest Mrs. 30 Castle street
Bid well Thomas Shelford, Ford street Houchen John, London road Read George Odden, White Hart street
Brennan Rev. Geoffrey [Catholic], St. Houchen John, jun. London road Reed Rev. Benjamin B.A. [head mastet'
Mary's presbytery, London road Howard Harry, Well street Grammar school & curate of St.
Burrell Chas. St. Mary's house, Bury rd Jillings William Harvey, The Nunnery Mary], London road
Rurrell Charles, jnn. Shrnbhmds Johnson John, The Abbey Reynolds Charles Henry, The Paddock
Bnrrell Fdk. Jn, St. Mary's ho. Bury rd Jolly Miss, Raymond street I Rutterford Dimbrose, St. Mary's road
Burrelll\Irs. 9 Bridge street Joslin Georgc, London road Simpson Henry D. The Police station ...
Burrell Robert George, Minstergate st Kimm Thomas Carter, Guildhall street Smart Mrs . .Yorman cottage, Tanner st
Carley Miss, Holly house, London rd Legga.tt William Henry, 13 Raymond st Smith Geo.Wm.Gothicho.OldMarket st
Carter John Robert, Brewery grange Maekenzie The Misses, Bury road Smith John Ancterbury, Earles street
Claxton Hubbard, Croxton road Malim Rev. William Glenton B. A. [vicar Smith Mrs. King street
Colby James, Bridge street of St. Cuthbcrt's & rector of Kilver- Sowels William Edward, Bridge street
Cooke Miss, Alexander house, Bridge st stone], Norwich road Sntton Fras. Rd.The CanonA,London rd
Cronshey Rev. Frederick John M.A. Mactaggart Mrs. The Springs Thomas Rev. Charles [Wesleyan], The
[vicar of St. Mary's ], White Hart st Marsham Major George Augustus n.L., Manse, King street
Cronshey Arthr. Gavford, White Hartst J.P. The Rookery . Tilley Robert, White Hart street
Cronshey Jamcs, Tanner street Millington Frederick Handel, Mill house Tilley Mrs. Bury road
Cronshey James Henry, Raymond st Minns Allan Glaisyer, 10 White Hart st Tyrrell-Tyrrell Georgc, White Hart st
CummingsGeo. Bushall,New rd.Statn.rd Minns Pembroke Robert Joseph Bunch Walpole Mrs. Guildhall street
Curson '\\'alter, Bury road M.D. 19 King street Watts Rev. John Phillips [rector of St.
Cushing Rev. :Mathew Stacy [Primitive Munns Miss, Station road Peter's & chaplain of Thetford work
Methodist], Watton Road terrace, Old man Step hen, 45 Earles street house], Vicarage, St. Nicholas street
Croxton road Oldman Stephen, jun. 53 Earles street Webb Henry, 45 Bury road
1

Davis Rev. Philip Henry [Congrega- Oldman William James, Earles street Webster Rev. Francis [Primitive Meth-
1

tional], St. Mary's terrace, Bury road Palmer Mrs. 9 White Hart street odist], Guildhall street
1

Drew Mrs. Station road Pape Robert, Grove lane Wigston Richard, King's house, King st
1
Ed wards TheMisses,Manor ho. Tanner st Pechey Robert, 39 Magdalen street Winder John Crisp Benj. Old Market st
i

Fison Cornell Henry J.P. Ford place Pechey Samuel, 8 Well street York Miss, Sun Flower cottage
I

Fison :\Iiss, King street


'
COMMERCIAl,. Bogu.'l Charles, carpenter, New road, Station road
Addison John, general hardwareman,Great Magdalen street Bond G. Edward, gun & ritle manufacturer & patentee of
Ainsworth John, coal agent, Castle st. & Thetford stations the invisiblecartridge: these are loaded, by a new method,
Alecock William, tinman, 24 St.. Giles' lane which insures superior pattern, penetration &c. not to be
Allatson Henry William, watch & clock maker, Guildhall st obtained by cartridges loaded in the ordinary manner,
Allison Robert, pork butcher, Castle street Castle street
Arbon James, beer retailer, Minstergate street Bond George Alfred, butcher ; hams & bacon dried ; also
Archer Berichia, boot maker, 8o Magdalen street pony & traps to let at lowest prices, 32 Magdalen street
Ashnrst Sergt. Louis, drill instructor to G Co.4th Vol.Batt. Bond Harriet Elizh. (.Mrs.), machinist, 18 White Hart street
Norfolk Regiment, London road Boughton Waiter, builder & contractor, house decorator,
Ashwell Elizabeth;Mrs.),dress & mantle maker,Gnildhall st china & glass warehouseman, picture frame maker &
llaker Arthur, engine fitter, New road, Station road artist in photography, King street
Baker Charles, borough surveyor, Castle street Boulton William Arthnr, inland revenue officer, St. Mary's
Balls George Banham, baker & confectioner, 5 Bridge street terrace, Rnry road
Balls Robert, town crier & bill poster, St. Giles' lane Bradshaw Thomas, basket, sieve & hamper maker; repairs
Bambridge Wm. shopkeeper & carpenter, Magdalcn street neatly executed; k general dealer &c. Guildhall street &
Barker Caleb, auctioneer, King street Raymond street
Bartram Charles William, chief clerk to the county court, Brett George, tailor, Guildhall street
Magdalen street Brock Henry, wheelwright, 15 Raymond street
Barney George, beer retailer, Old Market street Brown & Colby, general ironmongers, Bridge street ; & at
Barrett Philip Charles, organist & choirmaster, 14 King st Yarmouth
Beales Frederick Wilham & Co. family & wholesale butchers, Brown George, ironmonger, I I & 13 King street
41- cattle dealers &c. established a century, 1 Bridge street Browne Robert, plumber, glazier & paper hanger, 21 \Vhite
Beales Robert, Trowel & Hammer P. H. Bury road Hart street
Bid-ell & Sutton, brewers & maltsters, Old Market st. Bunn James Carrington, engine turner, Earles street
& The Bell hotel ; omnibuses meet all trains ; King street Bunting Turner Lake, station master, Thetford Bridge :ltatn
& Bridge street. See advertisement Burrell Charles & Sons Limited, engineers ; steam road
Bilham George V. fishmonger, rabbit dealer & fruit dealer, rollers, St. N icholas works
so Earles street Burrell's Hiring Co. Lim. agricultural implement manufrs.
Black & Green, grocers, King street (Robert Geo. Burrell,managing director),St.Nicholas wrks

C. N, & S, 41
1
638 THETFORDo NORFOLK: [KELLY 8
Burrell Elizabeth Sophia (Miss), educational establishment 1 Gooch Elizabeth (Miss), shopkeeper, St. Nicholas street
for the daughters of gentlemen, 9 Bridge street Gooch William, baker, St. Nicholas street
Burt John, rope maker, St. Mary's road Grammar School (boys') (Rev. Benj. Reed B. A. head master)
Butters Joseph, station maste.r, Great Eastern railway Grammar School (girls') (Miss Perkins, head mistress)
Bye James M. rabbit merchant & mariner; contractor to Green Henry, steam & lithographic printer, stationer, book
hotels, clubs &c. 17 Raymond street binder, bookseller, leather & fancy goods repository ;
Campkin Harry, White Hart inn, & tailor, White Hart street subscription library, newspapers regularly supplied, note
Carr Edward, tailor, Eury road paper (plain or relief), King street. See advertisement
Carr Frederick Daniel, cabinet maker & agent to Liverpool Gunstone David, wheelwright, carpenter & painter, Castle st
Victoria Legal Friendly Society, Earles street Gunstone David, greP.ngrocer, Magdalen street
Carr George William, watch maker, Earles street Gunstone Thomas, boot maker, 9 Raymond street
Carter John, beer retailer, Painter street Gurneys, Birkbecks, Barclay & Buxton (braach), bankers,
Carter Robert John, consulting engineer, St. Nicholas street (William Edward Bowels; manager), Bridge street; draw
CR.Sh Abram, Green Dragon P.H. Market street on Barclay, Bevan & Co. London E c
Castle Henry, beer retailer, Market place Hall Robert, stone mason ; special prices quoted for all
Catchpole Owen A. watch maker & jeweller,3 White Hart st descriptions of stone work for building purposes ; monu.
~metery (Chartes Farrow, clerk & registrar to the burial ments, tombs, tablets, gravestones, chimney pieces &c.
boat-d; William Saunders, keeper), London road neatly executed in stone, marble, or granite on the most
Chamberlain Fuller, shoeing smith, 6 St. Nicholas street reasonable terms; established over 30 years, Castle street.
Chenery Anna (Miss), dress & mantle maker, 49 Earles st See advertisement
Clark George, gardener to C. Burrell esq. 27 Bury road Hall William, shopkeeper, Station road
Clarke Gardner, fishmonger & rabbit dealer, 67 Castle st Hammond Charles, bay dealer, King street & furniture re-
Clarke John William (late Carley), printer & stationer, mover, St. Giles' lane
bookbinder & bookseller, printing & bookbinding at mode- Harris Alfred M. B., c.~r. surgeon & medical officer Croxton
rate charges, King street. See advertisement district & public vaccinator Croxton & Thetford districts,
Clarke William, prniter, New road, Station road Thetford union, Market place
Clarke William, tinman, brazier, coppersmith, gasfitter &c. Harris Edwin, insurance agent, 10 Norwich road
&c. ; terms, lowest prices, Station road & Croxton road Harris Harriet (Mrs.), watch maker, King street
Claxton Frank, game dealer, Station road Hearn Kate (Miss), dress maker, Magdalen street
Claxton Hub bard, game & rabbit dealer & farmer, Croxton He?ge Sa~h Louisa (Mrs.), hair dresser & fishing tackle
rd. ; & at Mousehall farm & Little Lodge farm,Downham aealer, Kmg street
Cole Edward Noah, clerk to Thetford union, to rural sani- Henley George, collector of gas rates, Raymond street
tary authority, school attendance & assessment corn- Hildyard William, chemist & drug-gist, Bridge street
mittees & superintendent registrar,St.Mary's ter.Buryrd Holden & Boyce, berliu wool repository; agents toP, & P.
Cole William, butcher, 9 Norwich road Campbell of Perth, King street
Cole William, dep.-registrar of births, deaths & marriages, Holden Samuel, builder & contractor, Station road
Thetford sub-district Hooks George, beer retailer, Nether row ·
Coller R. & Sons, corn, coal, cake & seed merchants Houchen & Houchen, solicitors, clerks to Wissey drainage,
(JohnAinsworth, ag-ent), Station road & Castle street; & board of Feltwell, London road; & at Mildenhall
at Attleborough; Diss & Norwich Houchen Frederick Vautier (firm, Houchen & Houchen),
Collins Henry, shoe maker, Pike lane solicitor, & clerk to Thetford Charity trustees & to
Co-operative Stores Limited (Charles Farrow, sec.), Guild- Grammar School, Hospital &c.; & agent to the Norwich
hall Street bakery, St. Nicholas stmet Union Insurance Co. London road; & at Mildenhall
County Court, Guildhall (His Honor Edward Plnmer Price . Houchen John solicitor & clerk of the peace for Thetford,
Q.C. judge; John Houchen, jun. registrar & high bailiff); 1 London road
office, London road · I Houchen John, jun. (firm, Iloucben & Houchen), solicitor,
Cronshey James & Sons, corn, cake & coal merchants, malt- I town clerk & clerk to the urban sanitary a,uthority, & to
sters & manufacturers of artificial manures,· Water Mill I the 1\'Iethwold drainage board, registrar & high bailiff of
lane & Croxton road county court, & agent to the Union Assurance Co. Lim,
Curson Walter & Co. gun flint manufacturers, Bury road London road
Cuthbert :Frederick, nurseryman, 12 Raymond street Iloward Harry, postmaster, Market place
Davey Charles, shopkeeper & boot maker, 40 Castle street Ho ward Richard M.R.C. v.s. veterinary surgeon & smith, &
Davey Henry, boot maker, 54 Magdalen street inspector of nuisances to rural sanitary authority, in-
Davey Robert., coffee rooms, Well street specLor under the Contagious Diseases (Animals) Act &
Dickerson William, pork butcher & carpenter, Guildhall st deputy superintendent registrar, 12 King street
Diver Mathews, tinman & brazier, Old Market street Hub!:Jard Charles, farmer, St. Mary's road •
Dixon Herbert Robert, coal & coke merchant, Great Eastern Hubbard Frederick Thomas, butcher & farmer; the best
Railway station & Prospect villas, Station road meat supplied at most reasonable charges, St. Giles' lane,
Dixon Jas. Railway tavern,& horse & traps to let,Station rd King street
Doran Edward, tobacconist, Magdalen street I Hubbard Richard, boot maker, 21 Melford Bridge road
Doran Frederick Wm. draftsman, New road, Station road Huggins Charles, family butcher, Market place
Drew Herbert, engine fitter, New road, Station road Humphreys Harriett (:Mrs.),laundress, St. :Mary's road
Drewery George, shopkeeper & marine store dealer, 40 Hunniball George William, news & commission agent,
Me!ford Bridge road M1i"gdalen street
Ellis Joseph, beer retailer, St. Nicholas street Hunt Alfred, boot maker, St. Nicholas street
Farrow Alfred, practic'll tailor; specialities in uniforms & Ince Thomas, pork butcher; only the best meat supplied at
liveries, Magdalen street the lowest possible price for cash, Guildhall street
Farrow Charles, sanitary inspector & clerk & registrar to Inland Revenue Office (Robert Pape, supervisor), King st
the burial board, collector of rates, school board attend- J ackson John, builder, contractor & lime burner,Croxton rd
ance officer & newspaper reporter, & agent to the Co• Jessop George, paperhanger. glazier, painter & plumber,
operative Insurance Co. Limited, Manchester, 6 White 28 Castle street
Hart street Jillings William Harvey, miller (water), Water Mill lane ;
Fison James & Sons, maltsters. corn, ·eoal 1 linseed, rape, & farmer, The Nunnery
cotton, linseed cake, bone, dust, coprohte, grass seed & Jobnson John, land agent to William D. Mackenzie esq, &
wool merchants; manufacturers of oil of vitriol, turnip & farmer, Abbey farm
corn manures & superphosphate of lime, Bridge street ; & Kempton Henry Albert, baker, Raymond street
at East Dereham & Lynn Kent Robert, rabbit C..ealer, 2 Melfurd Bridge road
Fowell Henry, shopkeeper, draper & tea dealer, 43 Earles st King Ezckiah, blacksmith, & King's Head P.II. White Har~ st
Fox William Thomas, beer retailer, King !!treet Kingdon .Edward, undertaker, cabinet maker, carpenter,
Franknall William Thomas, greengrocer & beer retailer, St. paperhanger &c. Brewery grange
Nicholas street Kingdon Mary Ann (Mrs.), boarding ho. Brewery grange
Frost Edward, tanner, currier, wood merchant & fell· Kingdon Maud (Miss), laundry, Brewery lodge
monger, Tanner street & 7 White Hart street Knights Ephraim, Chequers P.H. & butcher, King street
Fuller John, beer retailer, Raymond street Knight Richard, marine store dealer, Magdalen street
Gayford Jane (Mrs.), laundress, Guildhall street Lambert Daniel, baker, Old Market street •
Gill Alfred Arthur, fruiterer & florist, King street Lambert Thomas, agent to Prudential Assurance Co. Lim.
Gill Robert, whitesmitb, 6 Raymond street 20 St. Giles' lane
Gill Robert, jun. gasfitter, Croxton road Lambert William, coach builder; light vehicles built to
Gill William, fishmonger, Guildhall street ·order ; repairs executed, Station road. See advertisement
Goddard Henry, fruiterer & fisb. merchant, 3 Magdalen st Land John, warehouseman, Raymond street ,
Goddard Jn. fishmonger; & pony & trap on hire,9 Earles st Lane Alfred, gardener to James Fison esq. Gardener's cot-
Gooch ~lfred, boot maker, 4 & 6 Well street tage, Old Market sLreet
DIRECTORY.] NORFOLK. THETFORD.

Lane .James N. practical tailor & outfitter; five Porter Henry, shopkeeper, 6 St. Mary's road
years with Messrs. Binnie & Craggs, ~~ Old Bond Pulfer George, baker, 8 H.aymond street
street w ; & 5 Rue Cambon, Paris ; special attention Pye Emma (Miss), shopkeeper, 47 Castle street
given to ladies' tatloring; families waited on at Pye Henrietta Margaret (Mrs.), Red Lion hotel; good ac-
their homes; all gl;J.rments made on the premises under commodation for commercials & families at moderate
personal supervision, Station road charges ; pony traps & waggonettes to let on hire ; Mar-
Large Robert, boot & shoe maker, Old Market street ket place. See advertisement
Leggatt Wm. Hy. collector of Queen's taxes, 13 Raymond st Read 0. I<'. & G. solicitors, White Hart street
Levick Robert, rate collector, Magdalen street Read George Odden (firm, Read 0. F. & G.), solicitor, clerk
Liberal Club (F. Millington, sec.), held at Temperance hotel, to school board, tax commissioners, surgeons' visiting
Well street committee, borough magistrates & deputy coroner for the
Ling Jane (Miss), dress maker, 6 Tanner street borough, agent for the British Law Jhre Insurance &
Linwood Charlotte (Mrs.), general posting & job master, Commercial Union & Health & Corporation Insurance Co.
hearses, mourning coaches & funeral equipages, cab, fly & Limited, White Hart street
'bus proprietors, livery stable keeper & furniture remover, Read Odden Frederick (firm, Read 0. F. & G.), solicitor,
Bell hotel yard & Bridge street White Hart street
Lister Benjamin, The Castle P.H. & wood dealer, Castle st ReynoldsUeo. Hy.sen. tobacconist& fishing tackle dlr. Bridge st
Lister Harry, agent to Prudential .Assurance Co. Limited, Reynolds George Henry, jun. .Anchor Commercial & Family
Guildhall street hotel; 4 minutes' walk from rail way station ; first-class
Lucas Robert, painter & plumber, house decorator, paper- accommodation ; 'busses meet all trains; boat proprietor,
hanger &c. ; orders executed by experienced workmen ; assistant overseer & rate collector for the parish of St.
estimates given, Guildhall street Peter, Bridge street. See advertisement
Lusher Thomas, brewer, maltster & spirit merchant, 2 St. Richer Robert, Star inn, Bury road
Nicholas street & Cages lane Ripper George, milk seller, St. Mary's road
Mackley Thomas Joseph, dentist, attends from Norwich the Rush Edward, farmer & dait-yman, Vine cot. St. Nicholas st
2nd & 4th thursday in the month, at the Bell hotel Sakins Elizabeth (Mrs.), straw bonnet maker, 14 St. Giles' la
Maclaren Duncan, tailor, King street Salmon George Steward, beer retailer, Guildhall street
Mann James, baker, 12 Porter's place Salter Mary .Anne (Mrs.), baker & shopkeeper, I I Castle st
Marshall William, baker & corn factor, Magdalen street Saunders .Alice (Mrs.), dress ma. Cemetery lo. London rd
Marshallsay Richard Jeaues, chemist, & agent to Northern Scott .Alfred & Jas. linen & woollen drapers, r6 & r8 King st
.Assurance Co. Limited, King street Selvage Wm. Horace, iron turner, Manor ho. Raymond st
Mayes William, miller (steam)&. farmer, London road Sewell John, hair cutter, Well street
Mays John, engine fitter, New road, Station road Shackell John, boot maker, 44 Magdalen street
Mechanics'Institute (Charles Hartram & Wm. Hy. Leggatt), Sharp Bros. monumental & marble masons, Ford place &
secs.), Guildhall King street
Minus .Allan Glaisyer L.n.c.P.Lond. surgeon, medical officer Sharpe Henry, The Dolphin P.H. Old Market street 1'
to Workhouse, & to Thetford district of the Thetford union, Shaw Robert James, nurseryman, Norwich road
& agent to the Liverpool Legal Friendly l:lociety, & agent Simmons Theophilus, milk seller, Suffolk cots. St. Mary's rd
to the Rock office, &c. &c. 10 White Hart street Smith James I<'arrow, baker & shopkeeper, Magdalen street
Minns Pembroke Robert .Joseph Bunch lli:.D.,

Smith Thomas, registrar of births, deaths & marriages for
M.R.C.S.Eng. physician & surgeon, certifying, surgeon Thetford sub-district, I4 King street
under the Factory & \Vorkshops Act, & surgeon to the Southgate Christina (Mrs.), dress maker, 22 St. Giles' lane
Great Eastern Railway Company, rg King street Sowels William Ed ward, manager to Messrs. Gurneys,..
Missen Jane .Agnes (:VIiss), ladies' school, Market place Birkbecks, Barclay & Buxton, bankers, Bridge street
Mothersole Leonard, beer retailer, Station road Spencer John, beer retailer & bricklayer, Earles street
Mulles Harry, boot & shoe maker, King street Spooner Samuel, tailor & outfitter, hatter, hosier; speciality,
Neale Sarah Ann (Miss), teacher of music, 58 Castle street liveries & gamekeepers' clothing; organist & choir master,
Newbury Emma (Mrs.), shopkeeper, Old Market street SL. Peter's ; agent for John t!mith, of Leicester, dyer,.,
Newby David, naturalist, Magdalen street 10 Bridge street. See advertisement
Newby William, higgler, Castle street Spruce John, beer retailer, Magdalen street
Newell Harry, confectioner & fruiterer, King street Stamp Office (Harry Howard, distributor), Post office,
Newton Thomas, beer retailer, Castle street Market place ·
Nicholls Charles, Spread E<>..gle P.H. Old Market place Stearne Robt. boot & shoe maker & shopkeeper, 37 Bury rd
Nickerson George, timber merchant, Castle street Swann George, cooper & shopkeeper, Guildhall street
Oakes, Hevan & Co. bankers (John Houchen, jun. manager), Swann Sunnah (Mrs.), milliner & tea agent, Guildhall st
London road; draw on Barclay, Bevan, Tritton & Co. Taylor Jernima (Mrs.), poultry dealer & pork butcher, q
London E c White Hart street
Old man Step hen, sen. auctioneer & agent to the County Fire Thetford Gas Co. ( William Ed ward Sowels, sec. ; George
& Provident Life & sec. to the Thetford Building Society, Henley, collector), Bury road
4 5 Earles street Thetford Water Works (Charles Farrow, collector), White
Old man Stephen, jun. corn & seed merchant, 41 Earles st Hart street
Oldman \Vm. Jas. corn & seed mers. Steam mills, Earles st Thetford & Watton Times (H. Green, publisher; published
Osborne .Alfred, saddler, Guildhall street friday), King street
Osborne Charles, carpenter, New road, Station road Thetford Working Men's Conservative .Association (G. 0.
Palmer Alfred & Son, coach builders; repairs executed ; Read esq. hon. sec.), King street . ·
carriages let with option of purchase, or on hire, ex- Thorpe .Alfred, chemist & druggist, & ale & stout merchant
changed, bought or sold on commission, London road. & general agent & china, glass & earthenware dealer, 2 &
See advertisement 3 Market place
Palmar Edwin, engineer & agent for Messrs. Ransome, Thorpe .Alfred (Mrs.), registry office, 243 Market place
Howard, Bentall & many others, London road Thrower .Ann (Mrs.), shopkeeper, Norwich road
Palmer Harry, baker; wholesale biscuits & rusks; Dr. Thurstou James, boot & shoe maker, Raymond street
Allinson's wholemeal bread ; angel, simnel, madcira, Toombs Charles, hair dresser & beer retailer, Castle street
cocoanut & balmoral cakes, fresh daily; contract to Towers Micnael, paperhanger, New road, Station road
hotels, clubs &c. Guildhall street. See advertisement Tunney & Ditch, sadd!ers & harness makers, wholesale· &
Palmer Robert, Temperance hotel ; good accommodation for retail rope & twine manufacturers, horse clothing, whips,
travellers; terms moderate; pony & trap to let, Well st bits, spurs, brushes &c. 8 Bridge street
Pape Robert, supervisor of inland revenue, King street Turner Edward, farm bailiff to Ueorge Goslin esq. Yiillla
Parrott William, rabbit dealer, Box cottage, Castle street Turner John, general dealer, New road, Station road
Patent Pulp Manufacturing Co. Limited, papier mil.che Vickery William Charles, Bridge tavern, Melford bridge
goods manufacturers (F. H. Millington, manager); prize Volunteer Battalion (4th)~orfolkRegiment(G Co.)(Capt.Jas.
medals, Calcutta x884, London r884, Adelaide I887, Mill Fergusson, commandant: Otway Mauye, lieutenant ;
lane; telegrams, " Millington, Thetford" Sergeant Louis Ashurst, drill instructor), Guildhall
Pears Charles, plumber, New road, Station road Wade .Arthur, baker & confectioner &c. ; families waited on
Peck- Edward & Son, stone masons, rs Bridge street daily ; cakes made to order; contractor to tea parties,
Peck William George, commission agent, Ivy cot. Bury rd hotels, clubs &c. ; also pony & trap on hire or contract,
I'ett & Son, drapers & grocers, I White Hart street 36 Painter street & St. Nicholas street. See advert
Plattfoot Henry, chimney sweeper, Porter's place Wade .Arthur, tobacconist, St. Nicholas street
Plummer Robert, assistant superintendent of the Prudential Wagg William, blacksmith, New road, Station road
.Assurance Co. Limited, White Hart street Ward Frank, boiler maker, Lamb cottage, Norwich road
Porter Charlotte (Mrs.), laundress, St. Mary's road Warman Henry, furnishing ironmonger, I Wells street
C N. & S. 41.
7
640 THETFORD. NORFOLK. [KELLY S

Warren William, relieving & vaccination officer & collector Wilby Philip, Ark P.H. & farmer, Norwich road
to guardians Thetford district, Raymond street Willson Perros Peter, butcher, Station road
Webster Harry, grocer, draper, hosier, haberdasher, glover, Woods Louisa A. (Miss), berlin wool & fancy repository, 5
milliner & furnishing undertaker, & agent for W. & A. I White Hart street, 6 doors from Bell hotel
Gilbey, wine k, spirit merchants, also agent to Commercial ' Woods Waiter John, millwright & agricultural machinist;
Union Fire & Life Offices, Market house, King street orders & repairs punctually attended to ; charges most
West William, farmer, Guildhall street 1 moderate, St. Nicholas street & Painter street. See advt
Whistler James Bradley, baker, corn chandler & dealer in 'Vrentsom John, farmer, Bury road
i

game, tobacco & cigars; established upwards of 6oyears, Wright Alfred, boot, maker, Guildhall street
I

28 King street. See advertisement ·I' ''\'right William, blacksmith, St. Mary's road
Whithead Laura (Miss), dress maker, Guildhall street
THOMPSON (or TOMPSON) is a parish, 3 miles south 1 chapel here, erected in 186o. A reading room and Iilirn.ry
from Watton and a mile west from Stow-Bedon station on was built in r89o by Lord Walsingham. 'lhe town
the Bury, Thetford and Swaffham section of the Great lands produce .£31 yearly, which sum is divided between the
Eastern railway and Io west from Attleborough, in the church and the poor. In the time of Edward I. a small
South Western division of the county, hundred, petty chantry was established here by the then lord of Tompson;.
sessional di~·ision and union of Wayland, 'Vatton and Attle- Sir Thomas de Shardelow, fifty years later, bestowed upon
borough county court district, rural deanery of Breccles and it a chantry house, called ''Tompson's College," an estate and
l!lrchdcaconry and diocese of Norwich. The church of St. the advowson of the living. The College Farm, now in the
Martin, standing close to the road, is a building of rubble, in occupation of Mr. A. J. Cackett, still marks the site of the
the Early English style, dating from about 1300, and con- ancient residence of the chantry priests. Lord Walsingham,
sists of chancel, nave, south porch, transept and an em· who is lord of the manor, and the trustees of the late Henry:
battled western tower containing a clm:k and 3 bells; the D'Esterre Hemsworth esq. are the principal landowners.
chancel retains three sedilia and a piscina, and its windows The soil is light, wit.h a clay or black gravel subsoil. The
have beautiful tracery, but are now half blocked up; the chief crops are wheat, barley and oats. There is some heath
south chapel, which also retains a piscina, appears to have land used as a cattle run and sheep walk, and a mere called
been built about 1450 as a chantry and place of interment "Tompson Water." The area is 2,890 acres; rateable value,.
for the founder, Sir Thomas de Shardelow and his family: _£2,368; the population in r8g1 was 358.
the nave is fitted with oak benches, which have well-carved Parish Clerk, Abraham Leggate.
poppy heads, every one being of a different pattern; a
carved oak screen divides the chancel and nave: in the PosT 0FFICE.-Mrs. Elizabeth Nunn, receiver. Letters
church is a modern painting, representing Joseph's brethren through Watton S.O. arpive at 7.30 a. m.; dispatched an.
announcing his death to Jacob: the stone font has an 5.40 p.m.; sundays at 10 a.m. Watton is t.he nearest.
octagonal carved basin: there is a tablet to 'Valter Tooke, money order & telegraph office. Postal orders are issued
1802, and in the churchyard are the rums of a north chapel here, but not paid
or vestry. The register dates from the year 1538. The National School (mixed), erected in 1874 by Lord Walsing-
living is a. vicarage, gross yearly value .£49 1 arising from 20 ham & maintained by him & by an annual grant of i,"Io
acres of glebe, in the gift of the trustees of the late Henry from the Hemsworth trustees ; the school will hold 100
D'Esterre Hemsworth esq. and held since 186o by the Rev. children ; average attendance, 54 ; Miss Sarah Violet
William Smyth Thorpe R.A. of Wadham College, Oxford, Tyler, mistress. In 1886 a residence was erected for the:
who resides at Shropharn. There is a Primitive Methodist schoolmistress by Lord Walsingham
COMMERCIAL. Durrant Israel, farmer, Red Barn farm Leggate Abraham, farmer
Betts William, jun. shopkeeper Eagleton James, farm bailiff to Mr. N:unn Thomas, blacksmith
Blake Frederick,Chequers P.H.& saddler James Whalebelly Reading Room & Library
Brown James, farmer, Hillfield farm Foresters' Lodge (Court St. George) Wade John, farmer, The Green
CackettArthurJ esse, farmer, College frm (Robert Quan trill, 'sec.; J ames Crane, Watts John, farmer & miller (wind}
Chase Henry, farmer, Church farm treasurer), Chequers inn Whatling Frank John, shopkeeper
Crook Robert, farmer Land Edmund (exors. of), farmers, Williams Frederick, tailor
Drake Charles, farmer Butters Hall farm
THORN AGE is a parish and village on the road from 27th of Henry VIII. between the king and the Bishop of'
Halt to Dereham, 2~ miles north from Melton Constable Norwich, when it was granted July I, 1537, by the kingp
station on the Eastern and Midlands railway, 2~ south-west- together with the advowson, to Sir William Butts kt. l\I.D.
by-west from Halt, 12 west from Cromer and 10 east from his chief physician, and father of Sir William Butts kt.
Fakenham, in the Northern division of the county, Holt whose tomb is in the church; and in that family it con-
hundred, petty sessional division and county court district, tinued till Ann, only daughter and heiress of Edmund Butts
Erpingham union, rural deanery of Holt and archdeaconry esq. brought it by marriage to Sir Nicholas Bacon bart. son
and diocese of Norwich. The church of All Saints is a and heir of Sir Nicholas Bacon, lord keeper of the great
small and plain building of flint with stone dressings, seal, and it was held by the Bacon family till about 1710,
chiefly in the Early English style, consisting of chancel, when the estate was sold by Sir Edmund Bacon bart. to Sir
north porch and an embattled western tower containing one J acob Astley bart. of Melton, ancestor of Lord HastingsP
bell: there is an ancient oak table and a monument, with who is the present lord of the manor and chief landowner_ .
effigies and shields of arms, to Sir William Butts kt. ob. Courts leet and baron are held once a year. The soil i,;
3 Sept. 1583, and to his wife; and a stone to Lady Heigharn, mixed ; subsoil, clay. The chief crops are wheat and bar•
dated 1590: the communion plate includes a cup dated !ley. The area is 1,266 acres, rateable value, i,"1,713; tbe
1456, given by John Butts and Margaret his wife: there are population in r8gr ''"as 335·
16o sittings. The register dates from the year,156I. The Parish Clerk, Philip Palmer.
living is a rectory, with Brinton annexed, joint average PosT 0Fio"ICE.-Alfred Abram, sub-postmaster. Letter re-
tithe rent-charge £386, gross yearly value l:458, including ceived through Derebarn, arrive about 6.30 a.m. delivery
56 acres of glebe with residencr, in the gift of Lord commences 7 a.m. ; dispatched, 5.50 p.m. No sunday
Hastings, and held since r863 by the Rev. Charles John post. Melton Constable is the nearest money order &
Brereton B.A. of St. John's College, Cambridge. At the telegraph office. Postal orders are issued here, but not
survey, William lleaufoe was lord of the manor, and held it paid. WALL LETTER Box near the church cleared at
in right of his church or see, then at Thetford; and Ayl- 5· 20 p.m
mar, Bishop of Elmham, possessed it by the same right, in This parish is under Briningham United District School
King Edward the Confessor's reign ( 1047), as a manor. In Board. The school is at Brinton
the 35th of Henry III. (1251) Walter, Bishop of Norwich, CAnRIERS.-Hall, from Stiffkey to Norwich, thurs. return-
lord of Thornage, had a charter of free warren: the manor ing fri. ; Graveling to Norwich, thurs. returning fri. ; &
remained with the see till the exchange of land made in the to Blakeney, sat.
Brattrick Mrs I Broom Samuel, farm bailiff to Henry Dobson John, farmer & c-attle dealer
Brereton Rev. Chas. John B.A. Rectory Sheringham esq. [letters through Graveling Jacob, farmer & carrier
Sheringham Henry, Thornagc hall Holt R.S.O] Ives Celia (Mrs.), baker & grocer
Sheringham Valentine Dennis, The Villa Chestney Robert, general dealer &_ MooreFrances( Miss ),dress maker&dra pr
[letters through Holt R.S. 0] farmer, Little Thornage [letters N eale Francis, flour dealer •
COMMERCIAL. through Halt R.S.OJ Pointen Ernest George, farmer
Abram Alfred, ironmonger & shopkeepr Chilvers Albt.Alexander,Black Boys P.H Raby Rubert & Sum, butchers & farmers
Buttram Frederick Alexander, miller Clare Wm. Samuel, bricklayer & farmer Sewell James, farmer, Hill House farm
(water) & farmer Cousins Richard, shoe maker Sheringham Hy. farmer, Thornage hall
· THORNHAM is a parish and village on the German Great Eastern railway and 20 north-east from Lynn, in the
ocean and on the coast road from Wells to Lynn, 5 miles North Western diviswn of the county, Smithdon hundred,
east-north-east from Hnnstanton terminal station on the Smithdon and Brothercros.s petty sessional division, Docking
DIRECTORY.] .NORFOLK. THORPE. 641
union, Little 'Valsingham county court district, rural of which are applied to the repairs of the church. Here is a
deanery of Heacham, archdeaconry of Norfolk and diocese limekiln, and bricks are made in the parish. Thornham
of Norwich. The church of All Saints is a spacious structure Hall is the residence of George Ileading esq. and The
of flint in the Decorated style, consisting of chancel, lofty Cottage of Mrs. Ames-Lyde, who is lady of the manor and
nave with clcrestory, aisles, -a large south porch with chief landowner. The soil is partly loam and chalk; sub-
chamber above, small vestry and an unfinished tower at the soil, brick earth and chalk. The crops are wheat, barley,
west end containing one bell: the nave is seated with massive oats, turnips, beans and mangold-wurtzel. The area is
oaken benches; the pulpit is also of oak and bears the date 2, r6o acres of land and 780 of water ; rateable value,
163r: the lower portion of the rsth century rood screen £3,603 ; the population in r8gr was 626.
remains, and has sixteen panels with painted figures, nearly Sexton, W1lliam Howard.
obliterated, of David, several of the Prophets, SS. Paul, PosT, M. 0. & T. 0., S. H. & Annuity & Insurance Office.-
.Harba.ra, and Mary Magdalene and Lazarus: the chancel John Edwards, sub-postmaster. Letters are received
retains a piscina, and was restored in 1877, at a cost of through Lynn by mail cart, delivered at 7· S a.m. Box
£2, Boo, defrayed by Capt. Ames-Lyde and the Ecclesiastical cleared at 4.so p. m
Commissioners: there are soo sittings. The register dates Church of England School (mixed), erected in I8S8, by the
from the year 1716. The living is a vicarage, average tithe late William Hugge esq. for 160 children ; average attend-
rent-charge £190, net yearly value £195, with 8 acres of ance, Iro; William Henry Elsum, master; Miss Emily
:glebe and residence, in the gift of the Bishop of ::'i orwich, Barringer, infants' mist res~ : the parish has also the right
.and held since 1876 by. the Rev. Edward Ewen M. A. of St. of sending 4 children to Brancaster free school
J'eter's College, Cambridge. There are Wesleyan and CARRIERS TO:-
Primitive Methodist chapels and a parish room belonging HEACHAM, HuNSTANTON, SNETTI'SHAM, & other places be-
to the church. The charities for distribution to the poor tween THORNHAM & LYNN-Hobert Allen, tues. & fri
amount to £30 yearly, besides about 29 acres of land re- BRANCASTER & BRANCASTER STAITH-Robert Allen, mon.
servecl fur fuel, and there are also 8 acres of land, the rents wed. & sat
Ames-Lyde Mrs. Thornham cottage Eagle Thomas, tinman & bra.-.ier Nurse John D.supt. registrar of births,
Bunting Miss Flegg Isaac, Oak: inn, & saddler & har- deaths & marriages for the district of
.Ewen Rev. Edward M.A. Vicarage ness maker Docking & assistant overseer & collec-
Heading George, Thornham hall Green JohnSaml.farmer,Malthousefrm tor of highway accounts & ecclesias-
J olmson Miss, Beech house Green William, shoe maker tical tithe
Nurse John Daniel Haines Thomas, butcher Renaut Edward & Samuel, farmers
COMMERCIAL. Heading Geo. frmr. Hall & Manor farms H.enaut Thomas, grocer & draper
Alien Rubert, carrier Helsduri Henry William, butcher Sadler Elizabeth (Mrs.), beer retailer
J3rooke William "\Valter, farmer Howard John George,carpenter&joiner, Savage Frederick, Chequers inn; wild
Bunting Thomas, butcher builder, painter & decorator; esti- fowl shooters & sea side visitors can
Callaby Francis, bricklayer mates on application have comfortable apartments; also
Crane Edward,carpenter & wheelwright lloward William, shopkeeper good stabling& commercial accommo-
Crane Jsph. King's Head inn, & farmer Johnson James, grocer & draper dation ; terms reasonable
.Crane Thomas, miller (wind) & baker Jones Thomas William, farmer Seapey George, farmer
Duckcr Williarn, grocer, draper, Lewis Frederick, baker Tay lor John, grocer
ironmonger, earthenware dealer, Lincoln James, shoe ntaker Tipple Robert, carpenter
clothier & general warehouseman Powell J ames, blacksmith Yaxley Edward, blacksmith
'THORPE (next HADDISCOE) is a village and parish, 2~ r882 by the Rev. David Benjamin Morley Th.A. of King's
miles south-west from Haddiscoe station on the Norwich College, London. Sir Hambleton Francis Custance K.C.B. of
.and Lowestoft section of the Great Eastern railway, 5 east Weston, Norwich and 12 John street, Berkelcy square w, who
.from Loddon, ro south-west from Yarmouth, in the Southern is lord of the manor, and the Earl of Onslow are the prin-
division of the county, Clavering hundred, Loddon and cipal landowners. The soil is mixed; subsoil, sand, gravel
Clavering petty sessional division and union, county court and clay. The chief crops are wheat, oats and barley. The
.district of Bungay and Beccles, rural deanery of Brooke area, one-third being marsh land, is 8I6A. oR. 27P. ; rated
<eastern division, archdeaconry of N urfulk and diocese of at £891 ; the populatwn in 1891 was 74·
Norwich. The church of St. Matthias is a small thatched •
building of fiint in the Norman style, consisting of chancel, Letters through Norwich, via Loddon, arrive at 8. rs. LETTER
na\·e, south porch and a round embattled western tower Box cleared at 2.40 p.m. The nearest money order office
containing 2 bells: the chancel was rebuilt in 1838 : there is at Norton Subcourse & telegraph office at Loddon
.are 8o sittings. The register dates from the year I6S3· The
Jiving is a discharged rectory, average tithe rent-charge The parish is included in Thurlton United School Board dis-
.£12s, net yearly value £r21, including IS acres of glebe, trict, formed in 187S, and the children 'attend the Board
with residence, in the gift of Lord Calthorpe, and held since school there
l\lorley Rev. David Benj. Th.A.K.C. L. Leach Francis, farmer Shardalow Edward, farmer & miller
Rectory Rushmer John, cowkeeper (wind) & poor's rate collector
13lunderfield Francis, basket maker Rushmer Robert, farmer Smith William, farmer
Disney Frederick, miller (wind)
THORPE next Norwich (or THORPE ST. ANDREw) is a reading room. The parochial Cemetery, about half a mile
:Picturesque village and parish on the road to Yarmouth and south of the village, comprises 2 acres of ground, half of
-on the north bank of the river Yare, and 2 miles east from which is for the use of the County Lunatic Asylum, and
Norwich, with a station called" \Vhitlingham junction," on there is a mortuary chapel. The fuel allotment of 57 acres
the Great Eastern railway, at which point the Yarmouth produces abuut£75 yearly, and charities of about 1,"8 yearly
.and Lowestoft branches join the Cromcr line, in the Eastern are distributed. The old Hall, or Manor house, formerly a
.division of the county, lllofield and Walsham petty sessional country seat of the Bishops of Norwich, stands at the
division, Blofield hundred and union, Norwich county court entrance of the village, and adjoining are the remains of a
.district, rural deanery of Rlofield and archdeaconry and chapel, now converted to secular uses. Thorpe High house
.diocese of Norwich. Part of Thorpe parish, called "Thorpe is the residence ofWilliamBirkbeck esq.J. P.; Holly lodge, of the
Hamlet," is within the county of the city of "Xorwich, which Hon. Mrs. Hurroughes; Sunny hill, of Geoffrey Fowell Buxton
.~ee. The old parish chur"h of St. Andrew was dismantled esq. ; Thorpe lodge, of Mrs. Dalrymple, and Thorpe hall, of
.and disused by faculty, and now forms a picturesque ruin, Major Frank Astley Cubitt J.P. William Hirkbeck esq.
but many old monuments still remain on the ruined walls, J.P. who is lord of the manor, and the Earl of Rosebery :P.c.,
others having been removed into the porch of the new tower, LL.D., F.R.s. are the chief landowners. The soil is sandy
one of which is to Peter Vertigans esq. ob. 1700. The new and gravel; subsoil, chalk and limestone. The area is 1,849
church of St. Andrew, erected in 1866 near the old church, acres; rateable value £9,32r; the population of the civil
is a building of flint with freestone dressings, in the Decor- parish in 1891 was 2,ocn, including 780 inmates and official~t·
ated style, consisting of chancel, nave, south aisle, porches, of the County Lunatic Asylum.
and a tower at the south-west angle containing a clock with
chimes and 8 bells, and surmounted by a spire, ISO feet in Parish Clerk, William Firman.
.•
height, completed in 18S3: there are 416 sittings. The PosT, M. 0. & T. 0., S. B. & Annuity & Insurance Office.-
register dates from the year 1642. The living is a rectory, Frederick W. N able, sub-postmaster. Letters arrive by
11verage tithe rent-charge £463, net yearly value £236, in- mail cart from Norwich at 4.30 a.m. & by foot messenger
eluding 24 acres of glebe, with residence, enlarged in 1867, at 3.30 p.m.; dispatched at 12.20 p.m. 6.10 p.m. &
~n the gift of William Birkbeck esq. and held since 1867 by 7·55 p.m
the Rev. John Patteson lr.A. of Corpus Christi college,
Cambridge, rural dean of Blofield and honorary canon of WALL LETTER Box, nearer Norwich, cleared at 12.2s & 8.5
N orwicb. There iJ a mission room in the village and also a p.m. ; sundays, 6. IS p.m
642 THORPE. NORFOLK. [KELLY'S

SCHOOLS : - beds in all : the auxiliary asylum, in red brick, was opened
National (girls), erected in r855, & enlarged in 1874, for in r88o, & contains four large wards with 280 beds,
r6o children ; average attendance, r ro; Miss Mary Ann chiefly for chronic cases ; there arc thus Boo beds in the
Cooper, mistress whole asylum : the asylum being a county establishment
Boys', endowed from the Brundall & Caxton estates & De is managed by the asylum committee of the Norfolk
Vere's charity, built in r84r, & enlarged in 1874, to County Council, of which Louis Buxton e8q. is the c!J.air-
accommodate roo boys; average attendance, 65; \Villiam man & Peter Hansell esq. the clerk :the committee meets
Barker, master at the asylum on the first thursday in each month. The
THE CouNTY LUNATIC AsYLUM. asylum staff consists of the medical superintendent,
"TheNor folk County Lunatic Asylum, one mile south-east of David George Thomson M.D., c.M. ; senior assistant
the village & erected in r8r4, consists of two princ:ipal medical officer, John Spence Law M.B., C.M.; junior
ranges of buildings; the old or main asylum on the south assistant medical officer, Richard Patrick Ryan L.R. c. P.
side of the road & the new or auxiliary asylum on the Ire!. ; chaplain, Rev. Edward Rain ; steward, Mr. John
other side: the main asylum in white brick has undergone · B. l'ounteney; matron, ::VIiss Mary Hamer; head attendantt
extensive structural alterations to adapt it for modern James Hulse
requirements ; it contains about 15 wards for the reception
& treatment of .the various forms of mental disease, 520 Railway Station, George Sadler Chissell, station master
PRIVATE RESIDENTS. Paterson Mrs. Dunollie Crow Davy, gardener
Alien J. llowes Patteson Rev. John M.A. [rector & rural Dale Robert, cowkeeper
Bacon James Ernest, River bank dean], Rectory Elston Jamcs John, grocer
Barber Edward Henry Piggott John Henry, Sunnyside cottage EppsHerbert,commercial tra v. Ston c cot
Beare Samuel Prater, The Oaks Pitts Wm. Christopher, r Brookland ter Field Stephen, sen. boat builder
Berry Arthur J. Lime Tree cottage Pountney John B. The Ayslum Firman William, carpenter
Birk beck William J. P. Thorpe High ho Ryan Richard Patrick L.R.C.P.rrel. The Francis Thomas Alfred, shoe maker
Burroughes The Hon. Mrs. Holly lodge Ay slum Frewers Charles, milk dealer
Buxton Geoffrey I<'owell J.P. Sunny hill Serivan Charles Herbert, Covey house Gower Mary Ann (Mrs.), shopkeeper
· Cheeseright Thomas, Hollywood house Skelton John, The Homestead Greenacre Jame.s Hubbard, Cremorne
Chittock John Carsey, Point house Smith William Henry, Riverside Gardens P.H
Clabburn James William, Guild house Soman .Asher, Rose cottage Harper Catherine (Mrs.), Buck P.H
Clarke Alfred James, The Gables Stockings Mark I<'. Surrey house Hart J. & Son, boat & yacht owners
Cubitt Maj. Frank AstleyJ.P. Tborpe hall Sturgeon Charles George, Oak cottage Howard Samuel A. bricklayer & grocer
Dale William J TaylorAthelstan Howard,PineBanks twr Lancaster John, Red Lion P.H
Dalrymple Mrs. Thorpe lodge Taylor Bernard John Howard Odin,Pine Lowne George Rope, Griffin P.H. &.
Damant J.\{rs. Lammas Banks tower pleasure gardens
Ellingham Frank Henry, The Willows Thomson David Gco. M.-D., C. M. Asylum Moore Samm~l, farmpr
Everett Geo. Joseph, 3 llrookland ter · Thurston Mrs. Fern cottage · Noble Fredk. Wailer, statnr. Post office
Fiske Henry, Bleak house Wainwright Samuel, :Manor house Parker W. J. & E. J. drapers
Fitt George, Shamrock villa Willett Louis Edward, Plnmstead road Perfitt John, farm bailiff to G. F.
Foster Charles Wills Miss Buxton esq
Girling William Moore,Fir Tree cottage Sabberton Charles (Mrs.), apartmentst
COM~ERCIAL.
GouJd Harry Pearce, Walpole house River view
Hands WiJiiam, 2 Brookland terrace Bell Edmund, market gardener Sabberton Elizabeth Eastor (Mrs.),
Herring Capt. H .. L. Old Rectory Brindcd Robert John, bricklayer engineer, The Foundry
Herring Mrs. sen. Thorpe house BrownJ a mesHy .insurance agt. TheN oak Shardelow Benjamin, plumber &c
Herring Lieut. -Col. William, Thorpe ho Burton Thomas, grocer & wheelwright Smith George, boot & shoe maker
Hills William Charles M.D. The Cottage Rnrton Rohert, plumber South Freclerick, cab owner
Jarrold Mrs. Belle Vue house Cemetery (Parochial) ( William Firman, Spoon er John, boot & shoe maker
Jarrold William, Roxlcy parish clerk) Waters John, pork butcher
Kett Henry, The Ileeches ChartonHy.Guiton, Thorpe GardensP.H Waterton Wl tr.Ed md.farrnr.Pl umstd. rd
Larkman Henry, sen Chissell George Sadler, station master Watson Thomas Edward, King's Head
Law John Spence M. B. ,c.M. The .Asylum Clarke Robert, shopkeeper P.H. & pleasure gardens
Mann Capt. H. T. W. Vine cottage CrabbeSarah(Mrs. ),drapr.Brooklnd. ter Woodcock Joseph, tailor & upholsterer
Newbegin George James Cross Georgc, brick manufacturer
THORPE ABBOTTS is a village and parish on the of Crowe Hall, Stutton, Suffolk, and held since 1876 by the
banks of the '\\'aveney, taking its suffix from the abbots of Rev. Edmond James Gaussen B. A. of Trinity College, Dublin.
Bury St. Edmunds, who formerly held the land; it is 4~ miles The poor have £-5 yearly in fuel. Edmund William Holland
east from Diss station on the Ipswich and Norwich section esq. M. A. of Bcnhall Lodge, Saxmundham, Suffolk, is lord of
of the Great Eastern railway, in the Southern division of the the manor and principal landowner. The greater part of the
county, Earsham hundred and petty sessional division, union cottage property in this parish has been purchased by the
of Depwadc, Harlcston county court district, rural deanery Rt. Hon. Sir Edward Kay P.C. Lord Justice of Appeal, whose
of Redenhall, arch deaconry of Norfolk and diocese of Nor- estate lies partly in this parish and partly in the adjoining
wich. The church of All Saints is a building of flint in the pariE>h of Brockdish, and by whom a deep well has been sunk
Perpendicular style, consisting of chancel, nave, south porch and a pump erected in the centre of the village at a cost of
and a western tower, round at the base and octa~onal above : £ roo. The soil is heavy and light lands, mixed ; subsoil,
the east window is a memorial to the Rev. William Wallace, clay and gravel. The chief crops are wheat, barley and
a former rector, and there is another to the late John Lan- roots, in usual proportions. The area is 1,x53 acres; rate-
chester King: in 1889 a tablet of white marble was erected able value, £r,204; the population in r8g1 was 240. By an
to Lady Kay by her husband : the church was restored and Order which came into operation March 25th, rB85, a de-
new roofed in 1888 at a cost of about /,;220, and affords r4o tached part of Brockdish was amalgamated with this parish.
sittings : new iron gates have been erected in the church- Sexton, Frederick Chilver.
yard, which is surrounded with trees. The register dates PILLAR LETTER Box, cleared week days at 6.45 p.m. ; sun-
from the year rs6o, and is in a good state of preservation. days at 10.30 a. m. Letters through ScolP., which is the
The living is a rectory, average tithe rent-charge £2~8, net nearest money order & telegraph office, arrive at 7 a. m
yearly value £242, including 17 acres of glebe, with residence, Parochial School (mixed), erected in 1862, for 6o children ;
in the gift of Cot James Colquhonn Revell Reade B.A., J.P. average attendance, 36; Miss Mary Brumstcad, mistress
Elsden Edward B. Thorpe Abbotts hall Chilver M aria (Mrs.), shopkeeper
1
Mark Thomas, farmer
Gaussen Rev. Edmond Jas. B.A.Rectory Cunningham Frederick, farmer Manning William, farm bailiff to Lord
Dehcnham Fanny (Mrs.), shopkeeper Justice Kay
COMMERCIAL. De ben ham Harry, blacksmith Smith Henry, farmer
Alexander David, miller (wind) I ElsdenEdwd.B.frmr.ThorpeAbbotts hall! Valiant William, Lion P.H. & bricklayer
Chenery '\\'illiam, carpenter I Hart John, farmer I
'
THORPE MARKET is a parish and Yillage on the Repps, archdeaconry of Norfolk and diocese of :Norwich. The
road from Norwich to Cromer, I~ miles east-by-north from church of St. Margaret is a modern building of flint with
Gun ton station on the East Norfolk section of the Great stone facings, in the Decorated style, consisting of nave,
Eastern railway, 7 north-east from Aylsham, 4! south- south porch and a western tower, with pinnacles, but has
east from Cromer and 4~ north-west from North Walsham, no bells: the church was entirely restored in 1796 by the
in the Northern division of the county, North Erpingham late Lord Suffield, an.d affords 130 sittings. The register
hundred and petty sessional division, Erpingham union, dates from the year 1723. The living is a vicarage, annexed
North Walsham county court district, rural deanery of, to the rectory of Antingham, tithe rent-charge £395 1 aver-
DIRECTORY.] NORFOLK. THURLTON. 643
age £359, joint net yearly value £330, including 42 acres Parish Clerk, vacant.
of glebe, in the gift of and held since I 889 by the Rev.
Arthur Charles Davies B.A. of St. John's College, Cambridge, PosT OFFICE.~:\:Iiss Sarah Cushion, receiver. Letters
who resides at Antingham. Here are four almshouses, through North Walsham arrive at 10 a.m. Box cleared
founded in 16 71 by Sir J. Rant, for four poor widows. Lord at 3.30 p.m. Southrepps is the nearest money order office
Suffield is lord of the manor and the chief landowner. The & the nearest telegraph office at Gunton railway station
soil is mixed, sand and gravel; subsoil, gravel and marl. for dispatch & Hanworth for delivery of telegrams
The chief crops are wheat, oats, barley and beans. The area This parish is contributory to the Antingbam & South Hepps
is 1,189 acres ; rateable value, £r,s88 ; the population in school board. The children attend the Board school at
1891 was 18s. Antingham
Buck Richard, shopkeeper I Golding Elizabeth (Mrs.), market grdnr Slaughter John, Suffield Arms P.H.
Cushion Sarah(Miss),beer rctlr.Post off I Knight Richard, farmer [letters through South Repps]
Earl George, shoe maker Mays Charles, farmer Wiggett William, bricklayer
· THORPE PAR V A, see ScaLE.
THREXTON is a parish 2~ miles west from Watton dates from the year 1730. The living is a rectory, average
station on the Bury, Thetford and Swaffham section of the tithe rent-charge £130, gross yearly value £174, net £8o,
Great Eastern railway, and 8 north-west from Swaffham, in with residence, in the gift of the Bishop of Norwich, and
the South Western division of the county, Wayland hundred held since 1889 by the Rev. Eldred Gyril Williams Th.Assoc.
and petty sessional division, Swaffham union and county of King's College, London. There was formerly a Rornan
court district, rural deanery of Breccles and archdeaconry I camp in the vicinity of the church, and a great number of
and diocese of Norwich. A tributary of the Wissey rises in coins and other Roman antiquities have been found here,
Seoul ton mere and flows tu the north of the parish, forming many of which are in the collection of Thomas Allday Barton
part of the northern boundary. The church of All Saints esq. of Threxton House, a well-built modern mansion, stand-
is a building of flint, in mixed styles, consisting of chancel, ing in its own grounds, at a short distance from the high
nave, north aisle, south port:h and a round western tower road. Thomas Allday Barton esq. who is lord of the manor,
containing one bell: the roof is in five bays, and has ear>ed, and Joseph Trueman Mills es-q. D.L., J.P of ClermontLodge'
mouldings and bosses ; the splays of the arches are covered Little Cressingham, are the landowners. The soil is mixed:
with elegant arabesques: the soained east window is a subsoil, gravel, chalk and clay. The chief crops are wheat,
memorial to Thomas and Hannah Barton ( 186s); and there barley, oats and turnips. The parish contains 1,047 acres;
is one on the north side which has been filled with ancient rateable value, £912; the population in 1891 was 94·
glass by the Rev. Angustus Sutton, of West Tofts, and there Sexton, George Reynolds Dewing.
are also other stained windows : the chancel and nave are
divided by a handsome carved oak screen; and the benches LETTER Box cleared at 6;30 p.m_.; ~undays, 11.30 a.m .
are of solid oak, with carved poppy-heads: the Jacobean Letters through Wat.ton S. ~- whiCh IS the nearest money
pulpit and desk were the gift, in 16I3, of Ed. Goffe, a resident order & telegraph office, arnve at 7 a.m
in the parish, and founder of the school at Saham and alms- The infant children of this place attend Little Cressingham
houses at ·watton: the church has been completely restored school & the elder ones that at Watton, but the parish has
since 1865, chiefly at the cost of the late T. E. W. Barton the right of sending one boy to the school at Saham,
esq. of Threxton House, and has so sittings. The register founded by Ed. Goffe, above mentioned
Barton Thomas Allday, Threxton house j Hoggett James, estate bricklayer to J., Stacey Charles, steward to T. A.
Williams Rev. Eldred Cyril Th.A.K.C. I T. Mills esq I Barton esq
:Rectory
THRIGBY is a parish 4 miles south-west from Ormespy facings, on the site of an ancient mansion, stands in extensive
station on the Eastern and Midlands rail way, 7 north-west grounds containing many fine old t1·ees, and a fine and an~
from Yarmouth, and about 2 from the navigable Bure, in cient yew fence of considerable length, about 4 yards in
the Eastern division of the county, incorporated hundreds, ~hickness and 9 feet high. T. W. Daniel esq. is lord of the
petty sessional division and incorporation of East and West manor and owner of the land, with the exception of one
Flegg, county court district of Great Yarmouth, rural farm, whiCh belongs to the trustees of Warne's charity. The
deanery of Flegg and archdeacunry aml dioces~ of N urwich. soil is mixed; subsoil, gravel. The chief crops are wheat,
The church of .St. Mary is an ancient building of stone and barley and oats. The area is 575 acres ; 'l'ateable value,
flint, consisting of chancel, nave, ~outh porch and an em- £1,016; the population in 1891 Was SI.
battled western tower, about so feet high, containing one Sexton, Robert Walpole.
bell: there are 6o sittings. The register dates from the year
I$6 2 • The living is a rectory, average tithe rent-charge Letters from Yarmouth arrive about 7 a.m. The nearest
,£16 2 , gross yearly value £ 171 , including 6~ acres of glebe, money order office is at Filby, & telegraph office at
with residence, in the gift ofT. W. Daniel esq. and held since Ormesby St. Margaret
1862 by the Rev. John Williarn Clapcott H. A. of Lincoln This place is included in the United School Board district of
College, Oxford. Thrigby Hall, the seat of Thomas William I, Runham, formed compulsorily 19 November, 1879, & the
Daniel esq. M.A., J. P. rebuilt in 1876 of white brick with stone children attend school there
Clapcott Rev. John Wm. B.A. Rectory I Daniel Thos. Wm.M.A.,J. P. Thrigby hall! Skinner J ohn,farmcr, Corporation farm
THURGARTON is a parish 5 miles west-by-north of the manor. The principal landowner"i are Frederick
from Gun ton station on the Cromer branch of the Great East- Howe Lindsay Bacon Windham esq. of Hanworth Hall,
ern railway, about 6 north from Aylsham, 5~ south-by-west Richard James Spurrcll csq. and Herbert Cook csq.
from Cromer and 8 from North Walsham, in the Northern Thurgarton Hall, the seat of H.ichard James Spurrell esq.
division of the county, North Erpingham hundred and has been in the possession of the Spurrell family for nearly
petty sessional division, Erpingham union, Holt county 3SO years, and was rebuilt in the Tudor style in 1733. The
court district, rural deanery of Repps and archdeaconry surface is fiat, and the soil a. good loamy earth. The chief
and diocese of Norwich. The church of All Saints is a crops are· wheat, turnips, barley and grass. The area
building of flint, in the Decorated style, consisting of is 961 acres; rateable value, £r,61S; the population in 1891
chancel, nave, south porch and a. belfry containing 2 bells: was 234.
there are 2rv sittmgs. The register dates from the year Letters through Norwich, via Hanworth, arrive at a a.m. ;
1526. The living is a rectory, average titte rent-charr5e dispatched at 3.30 p.m. The nearest money order &
£r78, gross yearly value £203, with 11 acres of glebe and telegraph office is at Aldborough. LETTER Box cleared
residence, in the gift of the Bishop of Norwich, and held at 3.2s p.m
since 1876 by the Rev. William Francis Jex-Blake H.A. of The children of this place attend the school at Aldborough
Cains College, Cambridge. The poor have £r 6s. per year, CARRIER TO NORWWH.-William John Tice, from Sustead
left by John Bacon in 1732. The Bishop of .Norwich is lord to 'Woolpack,' St. George's, passes through, wed. & sat
Jex-Blake Rev. William Francis B. A. Chapman George, farmer, Manor farm Money John, boot & shoe maker
[rector], Rectory Cook Herbert,farmer &hme burner; & Peart .John, bricklayer
Johnson Rev. George Macness Lrector at Thwaite All Saints Pitcher Robert, cooper
of Barningham Parv3], The Lodge Gray George, miller (wind) R(lper Henry, shopkeeper

Spurrell RicbardJames,Thurgartonhall Jones George Peter, farmer Spurrell John" Henry, saddler
COMMERCIAL. King- Frederick, jobbing gardener Temple William, farmer
Balls Thomas, farmer Le Neve Robert Sutton, farmer Turner Robert, 'l'be Bull inn
Bone & Co. grocers a. drapers Middleton James, farmer
THURLTON is a parish a.nd village 4 miles west from 1north from Beccles, in the Southern division of the cvunty,
Haddiscoe station on the Norwich and Lowestoft section of I Clavering hundred, Loddon and Clavering petty sessional
the Great. Eastern railway, 4 east from Loddon and n division and union, county court district of Bungay and
7
644 THURLTON. NORFOLK. [ KELLY S
Beccles, rural deanery of Brooke easlern division, arch- I Arthur Ern<ISt Powell esq. is lord of the manor, and Mr.
deaconry of Norfolk and diocese of Norwich. The church 'John Elliot Sayer and the University of Cambridge are the
of All Saints is a small but ancient thatched edifice, in the principal landowners. The sml is mixed ; subsoil, sand,
Early English style, consisting of chancel, nave, north porch ·.gravel and clay. The chief crops are wheat, oats and
and a western tower containing 5 bells: the chancel was . barley. The area is r,170 acres, rated at £r,632; the
restored in 1859: there is a very fine carved oak screen, and population in r88x was 419.
!

some ancient monuments to the Denny famil! : the church Parish Clerk, George Melton.
affords 250 sittings. The register dates from the year 1558. Letters through Norwich, via. Loddon, arrive at 8 a. m.
The living is a rectory, tithe rent-charge £2I r, average The nearest money order office is at; N orton Subcourse, &
£r68, gross yearly value £236, including 25 acres of glebe, telegraph office at Loddon
with residence, in the gift of the Norwich Charity trustees, A School Board of 5 mmnhers was formed compulsorily 27
ami held since r8gx by the Rev. Barnard Gooch Smith ~I.A. July, 1875, for the united district of Thurlton & Thorpe-
of t:-lt. Peter's College, Cambridge, and surrogate. Here is next-Haddiscoe; E. Cadge, Loddon, clerk to the board
a Wesleyan chapel, erected in r856. The old parish school Board School (mixed), erected in 1876, at a cost of £-I,200,
is now used as a club and reading room and for various for 72 children; average attendance, 8o; Miss Emma
parochial purposes. The parish land comprises 3A. IR. 26P. Anne Cowes, mistress
Bexfield Thomas· James Drury Reginald, farmer, Manor farm Morl Arthur, White Horse inn
Bond Gregory Easter John, shopkeeper Pope William David, market gardener
Mattbews Mrs Flint John, coal merchant Purland William, cowkeeper
Smith Rev. Barnard Gooch M.A. [rector Grint Eleanor (Miss), shopkeeper Reeve John, shoe maker
& surrogate], Rectory Grint Waiter John, blac:ksmith Rushme~ Henry, farmer & overseer
COMMERCIAL. Harrison Deboralt (Miss), cowkeeper Rushmer Jarnes (Mrs.), cowkeeper
Baldry Samuel, market gardener Ives Wm. veterinary surgeon & farmer Rushmer Jas.Shardalow,frmr.Link frm
llrabben Elizabeth (Mrs.), farmer Knights George, shoe maker Rush mer \Villiam, farmer & overseer
Burroughes Henry Randall, marshman Knights George William, farmer Sayer John Elliot, farmer & landowner
& landowner Knights Robert, farmer Sayer William, farmer & landowner
Club & Reading Room Lake Margaret (Mrs.), shopkeeper Smith Charles, White Hart inn
Crisp Stephen, market gardener Leeder Palmer, farmer Tibbenham Annc (Miss), shopkeeper
Curtis Robert Flaxman, boot maker Minister Charles, boot maker Tibbenbam Richard, Queen's Head P.R
Disney Stephen Nicholls, miller (steam Minister Wi!liam, boot maker Wharton Albert, farmer, Thurlton hall
& wind)

THURNE (or Tmmm) is a parish and small village on 1887 at a cost of £8o. A Reading and Coffee Room was
the navigable rivers Bure and Thurne, 4 miles west from built in r886 by Mr. Sherwnod Page, of Boundary liouse,
Martham station on the Eastern and Midlands railway, 5 Oby. for the use of the young men of the parish. The
north from Acle station on the Acle and Yarmouth hrancb poor's land of 16 acres, awarded at the enclosure, now lets
of the Great Eastern railway, r6 miles north-east from for about£ 12, and there are also 20 acres on which the
.Norwich and I I north-west from Yarmouth, in the Eastern poor may graze cattle by paying a yearly sum; the money
division of the county, incorporated hundreds, petty thus raised ts distributed in coals. John Wiseman esq. of
i

~sessional divisioH and incorporation of East and West Flegg, Ashby-cum-Oby, who is lord of the manor, Samuel Night-
Great Yarmouth county court district, rural deanery oi · ingale esq. of North quay, Yarmouth, Mrs. Riche~, of
"Flegg- and archdeaconry and diocese of Norwich. The South wood, and Simon Greenacre esq. of Acle, are the
I

church of St. Edmund the King and Martyr is an ancient principal landowners. The soil is mixed; subsoil, clay.
structure of rubble and flint, in the Early English style with The chief crops are wheat, barley, hay, turnips and roots.
stone quoins, ~onsisting of chaneel, uaYe, north porch and The area is 66o acres; rateable value, £r,207; the popula-
an embattled western tower containing one bell, said to date tion in r89r was r88.
from the 14th cent. : there are 120 sittings. The register Parish Clerk Henry H Howes
dates from the year 1559. The living is a rectory, consoli- . ' . · . ·
dated with those of Ashby and Oby average early value Natwnal Scho?l (m1xed), bmlt by t~e then rector, th_e Rev.
from tithe rent-charge £533• with '23 acres Jr glebe and
residence at Oby, in the gift of the Bishop of Norwich, and
~~- _Bo!to~,_m r845, &, enl~rged m_ r873. by ~ubhc. sub-
scr:pt~on_, rt n?w h_olds 6o ch1ldren, average aLtendance,
held since 189~ by the Rev. William ft'rancis Dixon B. A. of 4°' "\\ tlham B1rtwtstle, master
St. John's College, Cambridge, who resides at Oby. Dr. PosT 0FFICE.-Mrs. Ann Roll, receiver. Letters through
Christopher vVordsworth, master of Trinity College, Cam- Yarmouth, arrive at 9.30 a. m. ; dispatched 3.30 p.m. ;
bridge, was rector here from r8o4 to r8o6. Here is a there is no sunday post. The nearest mouey order &
Primitive Methodist chapel, erected in r852 and enlarged in telegraph ofl\ce is at Martham
Bessey Charles, gamekeeper to J. Cooke Robert, farm steward to Samuel Howes Hezekiah, wheelwright
W1seman esq ~ightingale esq Howes Samuel, blacksmith
Betts .John, ~hopkeeper Graver William, Lion inn Reading & Coffee Room (S. Page, sec)
B<)verley \'Villiam, farmer Greenacre Henry, farmer Reeve "'illiam, farmer
Grapes Charles, shopkeeper
THURNING is a parish of scattered houses 2 miles Thurning Hall, the seat of Jarnes Gay esq. H.A., J.P. is a
north-by-east from Guestwick station and 2~ east from mansion standing on rising ground, surrounded by trees,
Corpusty stations, both on the Eastern and Midlands rail- and commands a very fine. view: the river Thurn, which
way, si? north from Reepham station on the East Norfolk flows through the park, expands into a lake within it.
branch of the Great Eastern railway, and 7~ north-west Some curious flint hatchet-heads and other remains have
from Aylsham, in the Northern di,,ision of the county, been dug up in the grounds of the Hall. Hrii'".-Gen.
Eynsford hundred and petty sessional division, Aylsham William Earle Gascoyne Lytton Bulwer J.P. of Quebec
union and county court district, rural deanery of Sparham House, Dereham, is lord of the manor. James Gay esq.
and archdeaconry and diocese of Norwich. The church of R.A., J.P. owns all the land except one fann, which belongs
St. An drew is a building of flint, in the Perpendicular style, to Lord Hastings. The soil is mixed ; subsoil, clay and
consisting of nave, north aisle, south porch and an em- sand. The chief crops are wheat, roots, barley and ha~·.
battled western tower containing a clock and one bell; the The area is 1,56oA. 2R. 29P.; rateable value, £r,743; in
clock was presented by the Rev. John Fenwick B. D. in r867 : 189r the population was r6o.
there are 18o sittings. The register dates from the year Parish Clerk, Robert Ladell.
171 5· The living is a rectory, average tithe rent-charge LETTER Box cleared 4·5 p.m. week days; sundays ro a. m.
£28r, net yearly value £26r, including 28~ acres of glebe Letters through Dereham, arrive at 8 a.m. The nearest
and residence, in the gift of the Master and fellows of money order office is at Briston, & telegraph office at
Corpus Christi college, Cambridge, and held since r8go by Hindolveston station, 2 miles
the Rev. Robert Rust Meadows n.A.. of that college. The children of this parish attend the school at Briston
Gay James B.A., .J.P. Thurning hall 'Carr Robert, farmer Poynton Edward, blacksmith
Meadows Rev.Robert Rust H. A. [rector], Faircloth Frederick, farmer, & agent to Sexton John, foreman miller to William
Rectory J. Gay esq Peg~. of Hindolveston, Thurning mill
Aldous Frederick, head gardener to Frost William, farmer, Church farm [letters via Hriston J
James Gay esq Hall Henry, farmer Southgate Charles. farmer
Hrownsell Rohert, farmer Ilipkins Ben jam in, shopkeeper Tann Ed ward, farmer
THURSFORD is a parish and village with a station on union and county court district, rural deanery of Walsing--
. the Eastern and Midlands railway, 5 miles north-east from ham and archdeaconry and diocese of Norwich. The-church
Fakenham, in the Northern division of the ('Ounty 1 North of St. Andrew, standing in the park and approached from the
Greenboe hundred and petty sessional division, Walsingbam Hall by an avenue of oaks, is an ancient building of stone

I
DIRECTORY.] NORFOLK. THW AITE ALL SAINTS. 645
in the Early English style, consisting of chancel, nave, and Ward ; tbe former also left 1os. for a sermon to be
aisles, north porch and an ancient embattled tower contain- preached on Easter Tuesday annually. Thursford Hall, a
ing one bell: there are tablets to Charles Guybon, d. 1760, fine Elizabethan mansion, and the seat of Joscph Stonehewer
'Thomas Sherringbam, d. 1754, Susannah Sherringham, d. Scott-Chad esq. M.A., J.P. lord of the manor, and chief
1758, and Francis Stevens, d. 1790: a cenotaph to George landowner, stands at the foot of a sloping lawn, a short
William Chad, sometime envoy extraordinary and minister distance from the main road leading to J<'akenham and has
plenipotentiary to Dresden and afterwards to Columbia, undergone extensive alteration, including the addition of a
d. 18..._9, and a handsome font, presented by Mrs. Chad in new wing and the restoration of the exterior: the park,
1865: the church was restored in 1872, and affords ISO although not extensive, is well wooded: Edward B. Sparkes
sittings. The register dates from the year 1692. The esq. J.P. of Gunthorpe Hall, IS also a landowner in this
living is rectory, consolidated with t.hat of Great Snoring, parish. The soil is mixed; subsoil, clay and gravel. The
joint average yearly value from tithe rent-charge £6S4o with crops are on the four-course system. The area is 1,3so
16 acres of glebe and residence at each place, in the gift of acres; rateable value,[, 1,788; the population in 1891 was 241.
St. John's College, Cambridge, and held since I8SI by the Parish Clerk, 'Villiam Wilkerson.
Rev. George Henry Marsh RD. formerly fellow of that PosT OFFICE, The Green.-Allen Bertie Stedman, receiver.
College, who is non-resident: the Rev. William Slater Letters through Brimngham S.O. arrive at 9 a.m.: dis-
Crowdy M.A. of Lincoln College, Oxford, has been curate in patched at 3-4S p.m. The nearest money order & telegraph
~barge since r87r. A Cemetery of half an acre was formed office is at Walsingham
in 1877 at the sole expense of Joseph Stonehewer Scott-Chad WALL LETTER Box, Crawfish, cleared at 4 p.m. week days
esq. M.A., J.P. and is under the control of a Burial Board of only
-five members. The poor bad about 20 acres of land National School (mixed), erected in r88o, for 7S children;
allotted to them at the inclosure of the common: they also average attendance, 52 ; Miss Marian Gross, mistress
have two annuities of 2os. each, left them by Messrs. Curzon Railway Station, F. G. Utting, master
.Scott-Chad Jose ph Stonehewer M.A.,J. P. ' Hill Waiter & Edwin, farmers Parker Nicholas, Crawfish P.H. & black-
Thursford hall ; & Pinkney ball, Hill Robert, farmer
1
smith ; & at Barney
Tatterford · IIoward John, coal dealer & farmer Plumbly Thomas Williarn, farmer
Crowdy Rev. ·wm. Slater llf.A. [curate] Howes Samuel, farmer Phillips W. L. & Son, grocers & drapers
COMMERCIAL. Jarvis Lrmis, blacksmith (A. H. Stedman, manager)
Cem~tery (William Wilkerson, clerk to Land Henry, farmer Scales George, farmer
burial board) Moy Mary Ann (Mrs.), farmer Vergerson Alfred, lime burner
Gonld Richard, bricklayer N eal Arthur, farmer, Pewitt
T HURT ON is a village and parish 4 miles south-west consists of 6 acres, let at £3 yearly; the poor have also 2os
from Buckenham station on the Norwich and Lowestoft yearly, left by Thomas tipooner in 1630. A quantity of
.section of the Great Eastern railway, 7~ south-east from Nor- Roman coins were found here in 1707· Sir Reginald William
wich and 3 north-west from Loddon, in the Southern Proctor-Beauchamp hart. D. L., J. P. of Langley Park, is lord
-di\·ision of Lhe county, Loddon hundred, Loddon and Claver- of the manor and chief landowner. The soil is light mixed;
ing petty sessional division and union, Norwich county court subsoil, sand and gravel. The chief crops are wheat, oats"
district, rural deanerv of Hrooke western division, arch- and barley. The area of the parish is 77I acres; rateable
deaconry of Norfolk arid diocese of Norwich. The church of value, £934; the population in 1881 was 199.
St. Ethelbert is an ancient structure of flint, with thatched Parish Sexton, Oliver Ellis.
_roof, in the Early English style, consisting of chancel, nave,
.south porch and an embattled western tower containing 3 PosT 0FFICE.-Mrs. Leverett, receiver. Letters arriv-e
bells: the east window is stained: it was restored in 1889 from Norwich at 6 a. m. & dispatched at 4.30 p.m. daily .
.at a cost of [, 26o, and now affords 100 sittings. The register The nearest money order office is at Burgh Apton & tele-
.dates from the year rs6o. The living, which is in sequestra- graph office at Loddon
tion, is a perpetual curacy, yearly value £7S, including 7 National School (mixed), with residence, erected in 1868,
acres of glebe, in the gift of Sir R. W. Proctor-Beauchamp chiefly at the cost of the late Sir T. W. B. Proctor-Beau-
hart. : the Rev. Hobert Thomas Whitmarsh, rectory of champ hart. for ISO children; average attendance, 8o;
,Ashby, has been curate since 1888. The fuel allotment Miss Susannah Ward, mistress
COMMERCIAL. Ellis William, agricultural engineer, I Nursey Henry, farmer
·Atmore Jeremiah, shopkeeper machinist,wheelwright,builder &c. & Sayer William, nurseryman
Bickers Samuel, Red Lion P. H.& farmer agent for the leading implement mkrs Waterson Richard, shopkeeper
Dawson \-\'illiam, plumber & glazier George Isaac, George & Dragon P.H. & Widdup Henry, shopkeeper
Douglas CharlesStuart,farmer,TheHall cattle dealer Wright Samuel, farmer
Ellis Thomas, farmer i Gunns Horace, market gardener
THUXTON (or THURSTON) is a scattered parish on the 'Norwich, and held since 1846 by the Rev. Henry ~·right
Tiver Yare with a station on the Wymondham and Dereham M.A. of St. Catharine's College, Cambridg-e. The Earl of
section of the Great Eastern railway, 120 miles from London Kimberley K.G. who is lurd of the manor of Thuxton Hall,
and 5~ south-by-east from Dereham, in the Mid division of and the Rev. Henry Evans-Lombe B.A., J.P. of Bylaugh
the county, Mitford hundred, Mitford and Launditch petty Park, lord of the manor of 'l'huxton Waces, are the chief
sessional division and union, Dereham county court dist.riet, landowners, and Francis Oddin Taylor esq. John Coleman
rural deanery of Hingharn MitJord division, archdeaconry esq. of Brandon Parv-a and Robert Abbot of the Rookery are
of Norfolk and dio~ese of Norwich. The church of St. Paul also landowners here. The soil is mixed, some portions
is a small edifice of flint with stone dressings, in the Early heavy; subsoil, principally clay. The crops are wheat,
and Later English styles, consisting of chancel, nave, barley and roots. The area is 1,797 acres ; rateable value,
north porch, and a low western tower with a square base £1,797; the population in 1891 was 88.
and octagonal belfry containing one bell : three brasses, Parish Clerk, Richard Seaman.
recovered by G. A. Carthew esq. and R. Fitch esq. F.S.A.
were replaced in the chancel in r868. and are inscribed Letters through Attleborough; arrive at 8.30 a. m. Hing-
to "John Futter, of Thuxston, gentellman," ob. TS 72 ; Mary ham is the nearest money order & Mattishall the nearest
(Sefiowle), second wife to Gregory Pagrave, ob. 157 8; and to telPgraph office, but there are receiving houses in the
Katherin (Pigeon), tllird wife of Grcgory Pagrave, ob. 159 6: adjacent parishes of Reymerston & Garvestone
there are go sittings. The registers date from IS38. The This place is included in Garvestone United School Board
living is a rectory: average tithe rent-char:?e £197, net district, formed cmnpulsorily 27 May, 187 s, & the children
yearly value £145, with If acres of glebe and residence, attend the Board school there
in the gift of Frederick Oddin T~.ylor esq. of Upper Close, H.ailway Station, Charles Wilby, station master
Wright Rev. Henry M.A. Rectory Holman Palmer, farmer Tay10r I<'ranc1s Oddm, farmer & land-
Abbot Robert, farmer & landowner, Palmer Alfreti William, farmer owner, 'fhnxton lligh house
The Rookery Smith Robert, farmer Ward Philip, higgler
Allenden John, farmer, Heath
THWAITE ALL SAINTS is a village and parish 5 pm·poses by an order March 25th, 1884, but for ecclesiastical
miles north from Aylsham station on the East Norfolk purposes remains a separate parish. The church of All
branch of the Great Eastern railway, 4! from Aylsham Saints is a small building of flint in the Early English style,
Town station on the Eastern and Midlands railway, and 7 consisting of chancel, nave, south aisle, south porch and a
south-east from North Walsham, in the Northern diYision round western tower containing one bell : the south aisle,
Qf the county, South Erpingham hundred and petty sessional formerly a chapel dedicated to St. John the Baptist, retains
division, Aylsham union and county court district, rural a piscina: the altar was removed by the commission of King
deanery of Ingworth north division, and archdeaconry and Edward VI. In 18go the church was thoroughly repaired
diocese of Norwich. This parish was joined to Alby for civil and reseated with open benches, and now affords 120 sittings.
646 THWAITE .ALL SAINTS. NORFOLK. [KELLY'S
The register dates from the year 1562. The living is a area is 676 acres ; rateable value, £1,014; the population
rectory, average tithe rent-charge £152, net yearly value, in 1891 was IIO.
£126, including 7 acres of glebe, with residence, in the gift Parish Clerk, John Sistern.
of the Bishop of Norwich and held since I877 by the Hev. Letters through Norwich via Hanwortb., which is the
Newnham George Philpott. The Earl of Orford is lord of nearest money order office; arrive at 7.30 a. m. & 5
the manor of Sommerton, the ]~ishop of Norwich lord of the p.m. dispatched at 4 p.m
manor of Skeytou in this parish; Herbert Cook esq. and &hool, erected, with sunday school & teacher's house, in
Messrs. Jonas Walpole and Son, of Erpingham, are the prin- I835 by the late Mro;. Lydia Baret at a cost of £soo; the
cipal landowners. The soil is mixed ; subsoil, brick earth. sehool will hold 75 children; average attendance, 45, in-
The chief crops are wheat, turnips, barley and grass. The eluding the children of .Alby; Miss Jessie Carroway, mist
Cook Herbert, The White house Philpott Rev.NewnhamGeorge,Rcctory Cook Herbert, farmer & landowner,The
Farmar Major Charles (agent to the Durrant Robert, shopkeeper & farmer White House ; & at Thurgarton
Earl of Orford), Thwaite hall
THW AITE ST. MARY is a village and parish 4 in two manors, viz., Sizeland and Brooke; Lady Berners
miles north from Bungay station on the Waveney Valley owns the former and Viscount Canterbury is lord of the
section of the Great Eastern railway, and 12 south-east latter. The trustees of the late Sir W. F. Fowle-Midclleton,
from Norwich, in the Southern division of the county, \Villiam Carr esq. of Hall Farm, Ditchingham, the Rev.
Loddon hundred and Loddon and Clavering petty sessional William Ford Thursby LL.B., J.P. rector of Burgh Apton,
division and union, Beccles and Bun gay county court district, and Miss Gamble are the chief· landowners. 'l'he soil is
rural deanery of Brooke eastern division, archdeaconry of heavy clay; the subsoil, clay. The crops are wheat, bar-
Norfolk and diocese of Norwich. The church of St. Mary lley, beans and hay. The area of the parish is 676 acres,
is a .sr~all edifice of flint and bric_k in the Norman style, I rated at £748; the population in I88r was 120.
cons1stmg of chancel and nave, with thatched roof, and a W I L B 1 d t L tt th h
-western tower containing~ bells: there is a Norman door-. tLL ETT~~ ox c ~are a 4 pdm. & te~ ers h r~g
way~ with semi-circular head: the church was restored and ni_J-gayt ' e neares money or er egrap 0 ce,
re-seated in I86r, and has 85 sittings. The register dates arrive a 9 a.rn
from the year 1537. The living is a rectory, tithe rent- National School (mixed), erected in I87o for 37 c.:hildren;
charge£ 179, net yearly Vf!.lue .L,'2o4, including 26~ acres of average attendance, 22 ; Miss Elizabeth Mackcrcll,
glebe, with good residence, built in I868. This parish lies i mistress
Paul Mrs Falgate George, land steward to Rev. B~lward Samuel, farmer
I

Barber Emma ()1iss), shopkeeper W. F. Thursby, of Burgh Apton, · Mmns James, farmer
Tltwaite hall Root Ellis, farmer
TIBENHAM (or TYBENHAM) is a village and parish 2 M.A. of Pembroke Cullege, Cambridge, and surrogate, Here
miles west from Tivetsha\1 Jnnetion station on the Ipswich is a Primitive Methodist chapel. The church estate, situ-
and Norwich section t>f the Great Eastern railway and 9 ated in the parish of Winfarthing, now (r8g2) produces l,-40
south-east from Attleborough, in the Southern division of yearly; the estate is vested in trustees, and six almshouses
the county, Depwade hundred, petty sessional division and have been erected out of the surplus rents. Here were
union, Wymondham county court district, rural deanery of formerly three gilds, with a common gildhall ; the gild lands
Depwade, archdeaconry of Norfolk and diocese of N orw1ch. were seized at the Dissolution in 156o by the Crown,
The church of All Saints is a structure of flint and stone in which held them until 16og. The chief landowners are Miss
the Decorated and Perpendicular styles, consisting of chancel, Buxton, of Shadwell Court., and Mrs. Petre, of Westwick
nave of four bays, south aisle, with an eastern chapel dedi- House, who are owners of the manors. The soil and sub-
cated to St. Nic.:holas (r528-r572) and a fine embattled soil are clay. The chief crops are wheat, barley, beans and
western tower with the symbols of the Evangelists at each peas. The area io;; 3,253 acres; rateable value, £3,487; the
corner as pinnacles, and containing 6 bells : in St. Nicholas' parish contained in r8gi 628 inhabitants.
chapel is a piscina and brasses to ancestors of the Buxton Sexton, George Manser.
family : the pulpit is Jacobean: the chancel retains a piscina PosT 0FFICE.-Miss Maria ·west, sub-postmistress. Let-
and sed ilia, and in the south aisle is a pew erected by faculty ters through Long Stratton arrive at 8.30 a m. ; dispatched
granted by .Archbishop Land, for the use of the Ruxton at 5 p.m. The nearest money order & telegraph office
family : the church plate includes a chalice, and a flagon is at New Buckenham. Postal orders are issued here, but
presented by the late Dowager Lady Buxton: the church not paid
was restored in r87g, and affords 300 sittings, ISO of which A School Board of 5 members was formed 25 .May, 1875; J.
are free. The register dates from the year 1560. The Furness, St. Stephen's chambers, Norwich, clerk to the
Jiving is a vicarage, average tithe rent-charge £251, net board·
yearly value £ Ig8, including- 22 acres of glebe. with resi- Board School (mixed), erected in 1876 at a cost of£ r, roo,
dence, built in I 8 8o, in the gift of the Bishop of Norwich, I 30 children on roll; average attendance, I03 ; Henry
and held since I863 by the Rev. Thomas William 'fhompson Beswick, master
Thompson Rev. Thomas William M.A. Catchpole Thomas, farmer Moss George, Boot P.rr
[vicar & surrogate], Vicarage Colchester George, farmer Moss Simian, farmer
COMMERCIAL. 1 Colchester John, farmer Ribbons Edward, fa1mer
.Aldous John, farmer, Channonz hall , Cook James Edward, farmer Self George, farmer
Ayres William, farmer i Cook \Vrn. Francis, farmer, Old hall Self Joseph Mitson, farmer
Balls Ellis, farmer 1 Clli!hing James, farmer Thrower John, blacksmith
Barrett Robert, farmer 1
Cushing William, farmer Trudgill Dennis, carpenter
Betts William, farmer Day Robert, Greyhound P.H Turner John, farmer
Blyth Edward, farmer Dordery Hale .Edmund, farmer Turner John, jun. farmer
Bond Barnard, farmer Everett George, blacksmith Turner Thomas, farmer
Brewster William, farmer Glover Robert, farm bailiff to Beverley Turner William, tailor
Briggs Samuel, farmer Leeds esq Warren ·waiter, pork butcher
Brown Frederick, farmer Kirk P. L. (Mrs.), farmer
0
West M aria (:~1iss ), grocer, Post office
Bullwer John, farmer Lester William, farmer Westgate lieorge, farmer
Burton Alfred Burton,farmer,Hill farm Manser George, shoe maker & shopkpr
TILNEY ALL SAINTS is a parish and village I 'Tilney St. Lawrence annexed; average tithe rent-charge
mile from Clenchwarton station (which is within the pansh) £233, joint. gross yearly value .l333, including 6o acres of
on the Bourn and Lynn branch of the Great Northern and glebe, with residence, in the gift of the Masters and Fellows
Midland joint railway and 5 miles west-south-we!lt from of Pembroke College, Cambridge, and held since I8gi by the
Lynn, in the North Western division of the county, hundred Rev. John Henry Newnum M. A. formerly scholar of that
and petty sessional division of Frecbridge Marshland, union college, and diocesan inspector of schools for the deanery of
of Wisbecb, Lynn county court district, rural deanery of Lynn Marshland. There is a \Vesleyan chapel, erected in
Lynn Marshland and archdeaconry and diocese of Norwich. 1843. The parish charities produce about £25 yearly; the
The church of .All Saints is a spacious edifice of Barnack church charities, for the maintenance of the fabric and for
stone, in the Transition N fJrman and later styles, consisting current expenses, produce about£ 22 yearly. The Islington
of chancel, nave, aisles, south porch, and an embattled Lodge Estate, reclaimed from the river Ouse in 182r, ex-
western tower, with pinnacles and spire, containing 6 bells tends into this parish, and is the property of William
and a clock with Cambridge chimes, erected in r8gx at a Derisley Harding esq. of Islington, in this county. Mrs.
cost of£ J25 as a memorial to the Rev Samuel John Phillips Love, of Cloughkeefy Old Castle, Ireland; William Edward
M.A. vicar 1878-gi : there are 300 sittings. The register Baker esq. ; Mr. Robert Green, of the Manor Farm ; Thomas
dates from the year I$38, The living is a vicarage, with Edward .Uagga esq. D.~,, J.P. of Gaywood Hall; Sir William
DIRECTORY.) NORFOLK. TITCHWELL. 647
Hovell Browne ffolkes hart D.L., l.'P. of Hillington Hall; the money order office is at Terrington St. John & telegraph
trustees of Horace Marriott esq. and Watson Failes esq. of office at Terrington St. Clement. Postal orders are
Tilney St. Lawrence, are the principal landowners. The issued here, but not paid
soil is loam and silt; subsoil, clay. The chief crops are National School (mixed), with residence for the master,
wheat, beans, oats, peas and roots. The parish contains erected in 1845 at a cost of £.soo, for 92 children; aYerage
2,750 acres of land; rateable value, £4,570; the population attendance, 78 ; Mrs. Wyatt, bead mistress
in 1891 was 515- Railway Station, Clenchwarton, Zachariah Goodalc, S~ation
Parish Clerk, William Dann. master
PosT OFFWE.-George Minns. receiver. Letters arrn-e from CARRIERS TO LYNN.-Bailey, tues. & sat. ; Bunting, tues. &
Lynn at 7 a. m.; dispatched at 5.50 p.m. ; sundays, fri. ; Fayers, tues. & sat.; Drew, tues.; Blomtield, tues.
arrive at 8 a. m. ; dispatched at 11.10 a. m. The nearest & fri
tNames of residents marked • should be Goodale Zachariah, station master, Minns Charles Robert, farmer
addressed Terrington St. Clement.] Clenchwarton station Minns George, grocer, Post -office
Howes Mrs. The Firs Green Francis, far:ner Minns William, butcher & grazier
Newnum Rev. John Henry M.A. [vicar, Green Rohert, farmer & landowner, Quantrill John, farm bailiff to Mr.
& diocesan inspector of schools for the Manor farm William Newling
deanery of LynnMarshlandJ,Vicarage Green Walter, farmer RaynerRbt.farm bailiff toChristr.Failes
Green \Villiam, farmer Robinson George, farmer, Ken-wick
COMMERCIAL. Gregory Stephen,farmer & auctioneer ; Robinson Leonard, farmer
RakeF Wm.Edward,farmer & landownr & at Tuesday Market place, Lynn Robinson William, fish hawker
Bird John, farmer (tuesdays only) *Savage J onathan,farmer,LittleLonU:ou
Boon Samuel, farmer *Harrison Benjamin,frmr.LittleLondon Smith Joseph, cowkeeper
l3riggs John, farmer Hendry Edmund, baker Tyler James, jun. blacksmith
Claxton Wm. shoe maker & shopkeeper Johnson William Forth, wheelwright Ward Thomas, Ship P.H. & farmer
Dann Wiliiam, Bell P.H. blacksmith & Langley John, farmer Watling Francis Simmons, bee' retailer
parish clerk *Large Leonard John, farmer & s~pkpr & pig dealer
*Driver James, bricklayer •
Linferd John, sen. farmer *Whait Charles, farmer, Little London
Fayer Ann (Mrs.), carrier Mason William, farmer, Marshland fen Wing James, farmer, Marshland fen
Fendick Charles, Shore Boat P.H [letters via Middle Drove] [letters vii't Midtlle Drove]
TILNEY-CUM-ISLINGTON, see IsLINGTON.
TILNEY ST. LAWRENCE is a parish and village Lady Jane Grey; in 1577 be was appointed to the bishopric
3miles south from Terrington station on the Bourn and Lynn of London, which he held till his death, 3rd June, 1594,
branch of the Midland and Great Northern joint railway, .Aylmer Hall is occupied by \\'llliam l3aldock Parsons esq.
and 6~ south-west from Lynn, in the North \Vestern division J.P. Edward llugh Jackson esq. of North Brink, Wisbech,
of the county, hundred and petty sessional division of Free- is lord of the manor. Sir William Hovell Browne ffolkes
bridge -:\1arshland, union of Wisbech, Lynn county court hart. D.L., J.P.; W. B. Parsons esq. J.P. of .Aylmer Hall;
district, rural deanery of Lynn Marshland and archdeaconry Thomas Edward l3agge esq. n.L., J.P. of Gaywood Hall;
and dwcese of Norwich. The church of St. Lawrence is an John J ohnson esq. ; John l{obert Roofc esq. of Middleton;
edifice of stone and br·ick, in the Early English style, con- Mrs. Starr and Watson Failes esq. of Tilney St. Lawrence,
sisting of chancel, nave, transepts, south porch and an are the principal landowners. The soil is loamy; subsoil,
embattled western tower, with spire, containin~ one bell : clay. The chief crops are wheat, beans, peas and oats. The
the organ, formerly in Waltharn Abbey church, was pur- area is 3.377A. 2lt. 13P.; rateable value, £5,979; tile popu-
chased at a cost of £II5 and placed here in 1879: the lation in 1891 was 728.
church was restored in r8-l6 at the cost of Miss Mary .Mann, Parish Clerk, Joseph Hallowell.
of Lynn, and has 250 sittings. The register dates from PosT 0FFICE.-George Thomas Bennett, receiver. Letters
the year 16r8. The living is a vicarage, annexed to Tilney through Lynn, arrive at 7.20 a. m. ; dispatched at 5.30
.All Saints, average tithe rent-charge £233, joint gross p.m.; sundays, arrive at 9 a.m.; dispatched at 10-45
yearly value £333, including 6o acres of glebe, in the gift of a.m. The nearest money order office is at Terrington St.
Pembroke College, Cambridge, and held since 1891 by the John & telegraph office at Terringtou St. Clement. Postal
Rev. John Henrv Newnum M.A. and late scholar of that orders are issued here, but not paid
college, and Diocesan inspector of schools for the deanery of .A School Board of 5 members was formed I r December,
Lynn Marshland, who resides at Tilney All Saints. Here is 1871 ; Frederick William Taylor, clerk to the board &
a Primit.ive Methodist chapel. Stallet's charity of /.,2 yearly attendance officer
is given to the poor under the direction of the church- Board School (mixed), opened in 1874, for 140 children;
wardens. John Aylmer D. D. born at .Alyrner Hall in this average attendance, 140; Robert Yair, master; Mrs.
parish in 1521, was chaplain to Henry Grey, Duke of V air, mistress; Miss Mary Elizabeth Girdlestone, infants'
Suffolk K.G. and was tutor to his daughter, the unfortunate mistress
Beckett Joseph, Ivy house Esgate William, miller (wind) 1
Macro Stephen, Coach & Horses P.H.
Goodrick William Robert Failes Frederick, farmer blacksmith & farmer
' .
Johnson John Failes Matthew, jun. farmer 1 Manchester Umty of Oddfellows (John
Jghnson Mrs Failes Watson, farmP.r, The Limes : Kitteringham, local sec)
Parsons William Baldock esq. J.P . .Ay!- Failes \Villiam, farmer ; Mason Edward, Victory inn, & builder
mer hall Farrow Thomas, farm bailiff to John , :Mason James, f:irmer, Fen end
Starr .Mrs Robert Roofe esq 1
Mason John, wool merchant
Woods Alma Gathergood Mitchell, farmer 1 Merrison James, farmer, Lord's bridge
COMMERCIAL. Gathergood Robt. farmer & bricklayer' Newsham Henry, farm bailiff to Mr.
Askew John, farmer, Smeeth [letters Gathergood Saml. (exors. of), farmers ! Stephen Gregory,of Tilney All Saints
via Middle Grove] Green .Ann (Mrs.), shopkeeper I Oldroyd Richard, farmer
.Alexander John, boot maker Hallowell Joseph, parish clerk Oglesby Richard, hawker
.Austin Charles, fa!'mer Hawes William, farmer Parsons W11liam Raldock J .P. farmer &
Beales Jn. thrashing machine manager Hill Robert, market gardener landowner, Aylmer hall
Rennett Geo. Thos. grocer, Post office Holah George& Joseph,farmP-rs,Fen end, Pollyn Thos. Lavender,farmer,Fcn end
Bird Henry, farmer, Fen end Johnson l:lenjamin, agent to the Pru- Pollyn \Villiam, farmer, Fen end
1

Bland Joshua, carpenter, Fen end dential .Assurance Co. Limited 1 Reeder Henry & Sons, bricklayers
Bodger Edward John, shopkeeper Johnson John Sugars, builder & wheel- Roofe Josiah, farmer & landowner
Burrell Henry, grocer & draper wright & machinery agent Southwell Richard,miller(wind)&baker
Clare Abraham, farmer Johnl'on John, farmer& landowner Stacey Isaac, miller (wind), Fen end
Clarke James, farmer Johnson Thomas, blacksmith Staples James, farmer
·Clayton Daniel, miller (wind) Johnson \\'illiam I<"orth, carpenter Sutterby Richard, farmer, Fen end
Cooper James, farmer Joyce Richard, farmer 1

' Taylor Frederick \Villiam, clerk to the


Dix John, Plough l'.H. & coal merchant, Kitteringham Edward, farmer I school board & school attendance
Fen end Kitteringham John, blacksmith officer & farmer
Drew Thomas Griffin, Buck inn Kitteringham Robt. Wilson, wheelwrght Taylor Thomas, farmer, Ivy farm
Duncan John, farmer I LeeJames, farmer & sheep dresser I Wing Robert, beer retlr.& mole catcher
Esgate . John, farmer & thrashing j Macdonald William, farmer 1
YoungsJn.Jacob,farmer&market grdnr
ma('hme owner I

TITCHWELL is a parish and village near the German railway and north-east from Lynn, in the .North Western
21
ocean and on the coast road from Lynn to Wells, 5~ miles division of the county, Smithdon hundred, Smithdon and
west-by-north from l3urnham Market station on the Hun~ Brothercross petty sessional divisiop, Docking union, Little
1 ~nton and West Norfolk section 'Of the Great Eastern \\'alsingham county court district, rural deanery llf _Reach am,
648 TITCHWELL. NORFOLK. [KELLY's
arch deaconry of Nor folk and diocese of Norwich. The Fellows of Magdalen College, Oxford, are lords of the manor
church of St. Mary is an ancient building of ftin t, in the and John Dodman esq. is the chief landowner. The soil on
Perpendicular style, consisting of chancel, nave, south the upper side of the parish is of a light chalky nature, and
porch and a round Norman tower at the west end, with short strong, bordering on the coast; subsoil, chalk. The crops
spire of wood covered with lead, ornamented at the apex are wheat, barley, turnips, mangolds and beans. The area
with a crown of thorns surmounted by a cross: the tower is I ,452 acres of land and 175 water ; rateable value, £1,47 5;
contains one bell, and there are 120 sittings. The register the population in ~891 was ro6. In 1786 about 300 acres of
dates from the year 1558 and there are a few transcribed salt marsh were gained from the sea by embankment,
-entries as far back as 1464. The living is a rectory, average Pansh Clerk, Robert Nurse.
tithe rent-charge £3r2, net yearly value i,"23o, including 20 PosT 0FFICE.-Mrs. Margaret Young, postmistress. Letters
acres of glebe, with residence, in the gift of Eton College received through Lynn, arrive by mail cart at 7.ro a.m.&
and held since 1859 by the Hev. Edward Seymour Stacker are dispatched at 4-45 p.m. Hranchesier is the nearest
M.A. of the University of Durham. There are charities of money order & telegraph. office, Postal orders are
about £ n yearly value, and 8~ acres of church land, let for issued here, but not paid
.the repairs of the church. At the east end of the village is The children of this place attend the Free School at Bran-
the shaft of an ancient cross, supposed to have been a station chester, to which this parish has the right of sending four
.on the way to Walsingham Abbey. The President and boys
Stocker Rev. Edward Seymour lll.A, Ringer & Son, farmers ~ Young Margaret (Mrs.), shopkeeper &c.
The Rectory Savory Arthur Edmund, farmer Post office
Godfrey Joseph, farmer Temple James, Three Horseshoes inn
TITTLESHALL-cum-GODWICK is a parish and yearly value £8m, including 53 acres of glebe, with
village 5 miles north from Dunham station on the Lynu and residence, in the gift of the Earl of Leicester K.G., L.L. and
Dereharp section of the Great Eastern railway, and 6 south- held since 189r by the Rev. Robert Mowbray Tillard M. A.
tly-west from J:<'akenham, in the Mid division of the county, of Trinity College, Cambridge. There are Baptist and
Mitford and Launditch petty sessional division, Launditch Primitive Methodist chapels. A subscription library and
tJ.undred, Mitford union, East Dereham county court district, reading-room was established in 1863, and has now (1892)
rural deanery of North Brisley and Toftrees and archdeaconry so members. A sum of £16, the rent of 40 acres, is dis-
and diocese of Norwich. The church of t:lt. Mary is an tributed yearly to the poor in coals. The parish contains
ancient edifice of flint in the Gothic style, consisting of 3,364 acres, forming the manors of Greynstones or Caley,
chancel, nave, south porch and an embattled western tower Coxford, God wick Hall, Peek Hall and New Hall and part
-containing a clock and 4 bells: in the chancel are several of the manors of Whissonsett and Bnrghwood Hall, which
monuments to the Coke family, including one of black and nearly all belong to the Earl of Leicester. The soil is light
twhite marble, with life-size recumbent effigy, to Sir Edward loam and clay; subsoil, clay. The chief crops are wheat,
-<Joke, Lord Chief Justice of the King's Bench, ob. 3rd Sept. barley and turnips. The rateable value is £3,057; the
~634, and behind this a monument, with effigies of herself population in 1891 was 478.
and eight children, to Bridget (Paston), his first wife, ob. lionwrcK, which consists of only one farm, one mile north
1598; on the opposite side is a handsome monument to Sir from Tittleshall, was anciently a separate parish. ·The
Thomas Coke K. H. of Holkham, first Earl of Leicester of that church, of which only the tower remains, has been long in
·family, d. 20 April, 1759, and to his only son Edward, ruins.
Viscount Coke, d. 1753; there is also a splendid monument Parish Clerk, James Francis.
1

-to Jane (Dutton), first wife of Thomas William, first Earl of PosT 0FFJCI<~.-Oliver Charles Chapman, postmaster. Let-
Leicester, of the Roberts (afterwards Coke) family; she ters from Swaffham through Litcham arrive at 7·35 a.m.
died in r8o5: there are memorial windows to the Rev. the & 7· 15 p.m.; dispatched at 8.40 a. m. & 5.30 p.m. The
Hon. Kenelm Henry Digby, late rector, 1835-91 ; to Caroline nearest money order & telegraph office is at Litcham.
'(Sheppard), his wife, d. 12 Dec. x866, and to Lucy Georgiana, , Postal orders are issued here, but not paid
his daughter, d. 3 Jan. 1877: in 1891 the nave was new; National School (mixed), erected in 1B4o, for 100 children;
Toofed : the church affords 320 sittings. The register dates Infants', erected in r863, for 40 children ; joint average
irom the year 1538. The living is a rectory, with that of attendance, 87; CharlP~~ John Cook, master
Welling ham annexed, average tithe rent-charge 1."720, gross I CARRIER.-Wm. Stapleton Palmer, to Dereham & Lynn, fri
.I<' orby John ChapmanOiiverCharles,grocer &draper, Pay ne Robt.Bacon,draper,grocr.&farmr
Tillard Rev. Robert Mow bray M.A. Post office Roberson William Charles, Ostrich P.H.
[rector], The Rectory Cook Charles John, baker & blacksmith
Hazell John Garrard, miller (wind) Roberson John, butcher
COJIDlERCIAL. HooksMitchell, wheelwright& carpenter Sidell Thomas, blacksmith
Betts Alfred Williarn, farmer Johnson Benjamin Bran ford, farmer, Sizeland Sarah .d.nn (Mrs.), farmer
Boddy John, builder & contractor &c. ; Godwick hall Subscription Library & Reading Room
& at Harpley Middlege William, shoe maker (Rev. R. M. Tillard M.A. president)
~'Branford W omack, farmer, God wick hall Moulton James Wm. boot & shoe maker Travis Thomas, farmer, Wicken
llurcham Frances (Mrs.), farmer Palmer William Stapletun, carrier Webster Henry, butcher & beer retailer
TIVETSHALL ST. MARGARET is a village and attached; and there is a Wesleyan chapel, built in r86o.
parish with a junction station of the \Yaveney Valley branch The fuel allotment of 6 acres produces about £ro yearly.
with the main line of the Great Eastern railway, 100 miles Here are very extensive maltings, the property of Thomas
from London and 5~ north-north-east from Diss, in the Matthews Read esq. of Norwich, whose works are ne!l.r the
Southern division of the county, hundred and petty ses- railway, with which they are connected by a siding. In
-sional division of Diss, union of Depwade, county court this parish is a magnifh;ent oak called "Thwaites' Tree,"
-district of Harleston, rural deanery of Redenhall, arch- measuring above seven yards in circumference. John
deaconry of ~orfolk and diocese of Norwich. The church Hotson esq. of Stratton St. Mary, who is lord of the manor,
of St . .Margaret is a small but ancient edifice of flint with the Rev. George Montgomery Norris M.A. rector of South
-stone dressings, in the Early English style, consisting of Cove, H. E. Hurroug-hes esq. and W. H. Garrod esq. are
chancel, nave, south porch and an embattled western tower the chief landowners. The soil is heavy; subsoil, clay. The
-containing 5 bells: the nave has a beautifully carved oak chief crops are wheat, barley, peas and beans. The area is
roof and is separated from the chancel by a handsome r,634 acres ; rateable value, 1:2,598 ; the population in 1891
Elizabethan screen : the chancel is thatched: there are qo was 368.
sittings. The register dates from the year r673. The Parish Clerk, Herbert Vyse.
living is a rectory, annexed to Tivetshall St. Mary, jomt Letters through Scole arrive at 9 a.m. PILLAR LETTER
average yearly value from tithe rent-charge £731, in- Box, near the Star inn, cleared at 5-45 p.m. on week
eluding 28 acres or glebe and residence, in the gift of Lord days & 10 a.m. on sundays; & one at the railway station
Orford, and held since 1874 by the Rev. Henry Symonds cleared at 5.40 p.m. & sundays at 9.30 a. m. The nearest
"M.A. of Hertford College, Oxford, who resides at Ttvetshall money order & telegraph office is at Pulham Market
St. Mary. A small property in the hands of trustees is Railway Station, John Bescoby Rirkett, station master
applied to the repairs of the church and the expenses at- This parish is included in Tivetshall United School Board
tendant upon public worship. The Society of Friends have district, formed compulsorily 26 May, 1875• & the children
-a meeting house here, erected in 1812, with a burial ground attend the Board school at Tivetshall St. :Mary
Bishop Rev.Everett James M.A. [curate] Davey Edward, coal merchant & grocer 1 Harris Harry, pig &c. dealer
furdy Miss Denney Alfred W. blacksmith Harris James, farmer & pig &c. dealer
COMMERCIAL. Elmer Jesse, farmer, Beck Green farm Harvey George, farmer
Aldous Jn. manure agt. Railway station Fenn John Friday. Railway hotel & Ingram James, farm bailiff to W. H.
Brown Frederick, farmer posting house Garrod esq. The Hall
Coe Joseph, shoe maker Fisher Robert King, farmer KempHenryHolmes,chemist& drnggist
DIRECTORY. J NORFOLK. WEST TOFTS. 649
11ann George, relieving officer for the Nichols Ziba, farmer Sendall Charles & John, farmers
Western district & registrar of births Phillipo John, farmer Snelling Henry, butcher
& deaths for Diss sub-district, Dep- Read Thomas Matthews, maltster, corn Vyse John George, grocer & fa.rmet"
wade union & coal mer. ; & at King st. Norwich Watling Samuel, farm bailiff to Lewis
Moore John, Star P.n 1 Self George, miller (wind) & farmer \ Jarvis esq
Mullenger William, farmer I
TIVETSHALL ST. MAR Y is a village and parish r Hotson esq. of Stratton St. Mary is lord of the manor. The
on the high road from London tu Norwich, about I~ mrles principal landowners are the Sawbridge trustees, Jonathan
south from the Tivetshall St. Margaret junction station on Boyce esq. and Sir Kenneth Hagar Kemp hart. of Mergate
the Great Eastern railway, and 5~ miles north-north-east Hall, Bracon Ash. The soil is heavy; subsoil, clay. The
from Diss, in the Southern division of the connty, Diss chief crops are wheat, barley, peas and beans. The parish
hundred and petty sessional division, Depwade union, contains r, 125 acres; rateable value, ;(;r,296; the popula-
Harleston county court district, rural deanery of Redenhall, tion in I8gi was 303.
archdeaconry of Norfolk and diocese of Norwreh. The Parish Clerk, John Boyce.
church of St. Mary is an ancient building of flint and stone, PosT 0FFICE.-Robert Harvey, postmaster. Letters arrive
in the Early English and Perpendicular styles, consistin~ through ~cole at 8 a. m. ; dispatched at 6. IO p.m. ; sun-
of large chancel, nave, south porch and a western tower days, dispatched at ro. 15 a. m. The nearest money order-
containing 4 bells: the chancel is Early English, and much office is at l'ulham St. :\Iary Magdalen; the nearest
later than the tower: there are 300 sittings. The register telegraph office is at Pulham for delivery & Tivetshali
dates from the year 1672. The living is a rectory, annexed to junction station for collection of telegrams. Postal orders
that of Tivetshall St. Margaret, joint average yearly value are issued here, but not paid
from tithe rent-charge £73T, including 28 acres of glebe, A School Board of 5 members was formed compulsonly 26
with residence, in the gift of Lord Orford, and held since May, 1875, for Tivetshall United District; R. Borrett,
r874 by the Rev. Henry Symonds M.A. of Hertford College, Pulham Market, clerk to the board ; T. W. Garrood~
Oxford. The fuel allotment of 3 acres is let at £6 Tasburgh, school attendance officer
yearly; there is also about. half an acre of land, called Hoard School, built in 1876, with house attached for the
"Saints yard," let for 34s. yearly, qs. of whieh is given to master, at a cost of £Boo, & enlarged in 1886 at a cost of
the poor in coal, and the remainder to the church; the poor £n~o, for II5 children; average attendance, go; Fredk_
have also I3S. 4d. yearly from Lee Neve's charity. John · Haimes, master; Mrs. Florence Haimes, mistress
Dix Alfred 1 IIarveyRobert,carpenter& wheelwright, Reeves Herbert William, blacksmith
Symonds Rev. Henry M.A. Rectory Post office Robertson John, farmer & landowner
COliMERCIAL. Hubhard John, farmer Self Christopher, farmer, Mardel farm
Bartram James, farmer Lain Robert, farmer Shibley Henry, Ram P.H. & farmer
Bensley Cat h. (Mrs.), farmer & shopkpr Lain William, farmer Skoulding William, clock cleaner &c

Bond Hobert, farmer, Croft house Moore Jacob, farmer Snelling Collin, thatcher
BoyceJ n. farmer&parish clerk, TheGrove Nichols Elijah, shoe maker 1
SuttonHannah( Mrs.), farmer & shopkpr
Browu Richd. thrashing machine owner , Norman George, farmer Wilby George, market gardener
Edwards James, shopkeeper 1 I

TOFT MONKS is a parish and village I~


miles from I Colman esq. of Toft Monks House, Alfred ·winter esq. Am-
Aldeby station on the lp;;wich and Lowestoft seeLiun of the I brose John Read Palmer esq. J. P. of Haddiscoe Hall, Thomas.
Great Eastern railway, 4 north-east from Beccles and 6 I Robert West esq. of Raveningham, and the Provost and
south-east from Loddon, in the Southern division of the fellows of King's College, Cambridge, are the chief land-
county, Clavering hundred, Loddon and Clavering petty owners; the latter are lordsof the manor and impropriators.
sessional division and union, county court district of of two-thirds of the tithes. The soil is mixed heavy and.
Bungay and Beccles, rural deanery of Hrooke, eastern light laud ; subsoil, clay. The chief crops are wheat,
division, archdcaconry of Norfolk and diocese of Norwich. barley, beans, peas and roots. The area is 2,238 acres, oi
The church of St. Margaret is a building of flint in the which 6oo acres are marsh and 76 woods and plantations ~
Decorated style, consisting of chancel, nave, south porch rated at ;{;2,7r6; the population in 189I was 397·
and a western octagonal embattled tower containing Parish Clerk, George Snowling.
3 bells: the interior was restored and. reseated in 1873 PosT & M. 0. OFFICE & s. B.-Robert Tripp Sharman, sub-
at a. cost of £220: the church plate mcl?-d~ a chalice postmaster. Letters arrive from Bec.cles at 7.20& II a.m.;
of _srlver, dated I567: there are roo srtt.m_g~. .The dispatched at I 2 . 5 5 & 5 . 30 p.m. The nearest telegraph
regrster dates from the year I558. The hvmg rs a office is at Beccles
rectory, consolidated with that of Haddiscoc, average tithe
rent-charge L325, joint net yearly value £350, including A School Board of 5 members was formed compulsorily I
30 acres of glebe, in the gift of King's College, Cambridge, July, I873, for the united district of Toft Monks & Had-
and held since 1877 by the Rev. Arthur Wace B. A .. late discoe; H. T. Smith, Toft Monks, clerk to the board &.
tJCholar of that college, who resides at the rectory, Had- attendance officer
discoe. The town estate comprises three small tene- Board School, for both parishes, built in 1870 at a cost of
ments, a garden and I rA. 3R. now let for £42 yearly, of £r,ooo, for 150 children; average attendance, II5;
which sum £ro is applied to church purposes and the Herbert Campbell A.C.P. master; Mrs. Martha Camp-
remainder is distributed in coals among the poor. Caleb bell, mistress
Christian Lieut. J ames B. n. N Hipkin George, farmer, Priory farm Sayer John Read, registrar of births &
Colman Caleb, Toft Monks house Knights Thomas, farmer deaths & vaecination officer for .Aldeby
Freeland Lieut. -Col. Russell G. TheElms Land & Smith, grocers, drapers & district & relieving officer, Wood farm
Harrison Charles A. Windle house general outfitters Smith Henry Thomas, inspector of nui-
COMMERCIAL. Long Charles, White Lion P.H sances for Loddon & Clavering union,
Benns George, butcher Maddle William, farmer & landowner & clerk to school board & attendance
Broek J oseph, carpenter RackhamJonathan,shoe maker & grocer officer
Cuddon John, farm steward to Thomas Sharman Robert Tripp, ~or folk iron Ward William, farm bailiff to A. J.
Frcston West esq works, poor's rate & tax collector, Palmer esq ·
CurtisJames,shopkeeper ,Maypole green blacksmith & engineer, agent for West Thos.Freston,farmer,Thatched hry
Forder Rebecca (Mrs.), carpenter Phamix Fire Office & general agent, 'Vinter Alfred, farmer & landowner,
Fnller John, farmer & landowner Post office Toft Monks hall
WEST TOFTS is a parish and village 5 miles north- and the whole of the windows are stained: in the chapel on
east from Brandon station on the Ely and Thetford section the south side of the chancel are the tombs of Sir Richard
of the Great Eastern railway, in the South Western division Sutton, 2nd bart. d. I3 Nov. I855, and Elizabeth (Burton),
of the county, Grimshoe hundred and petty sessional divi- his wife, d. 184I : in a chapel in the north aisle is a
sion, Thetford union and county court district, rural deanery memorial to Emma Helena (Sherlock), wife of Sir John
of Cranwich, sonth division, archdeaconry of Norfolk and Sutton, 3rd hart. d. Jan. I845: there are brasses to Emily
diocese of Norwich. The church of St. Mary is a building Mary (Sutton), wife of Lord Arthur Edwin Hill-Trevor
of flint, with stone dressings, in the Early Decorated style, (created Baron Trevor in x88o), d. 24 Jan. x855, and to her
consisting of chancel with south chapel, nave, south tran- sister, Sophia Louisa {Sutton), wife of Col. Samuel William
sept, north aisle and a western tower, with lead-covered Clowes M.P. d. 18 Feb. 1853; and monuments to the Part-
spire, containing a clock and 8 bells : the transept, north ridges, formerly of Buckenham House, 1733-6o; the brass
aisle and porch have been rebuilt, and the interior of the eagle lectern and altar furniture are memorials to the late
church restored and elaborately decorated ; it has two Rev . .August us Sutton M. A. prebendary of Lincoln and rector
finely carved screens, that in the chancel being richly gilt, here 1849-85: there arc 180 sittings. The register dates

650 WEST TOP'TS. NORFOLK.
from the year I733· The living is a rectory, average yearly '3,044 acres; rateable value, £r,r6s; the population in
value from tithe rent- charge [142, with 4 acres of glebe r88r was r66.
and residence, in the gift of trustees, and held since 1891 by Parish Clerk, John Reeder.
the Rev. Charles Edward Drew M.A. of St John's College, I L B d t"" & L tt tl h
C am b l'l"dge. M rs. L yne- Ste p h ens, of L yn ror dH a 11 , w h o IS
- 1
ETTER oxceare a '"-30a.m. 7p.m. e ers 1roug
M df d R 8 0 h' h · th t d &
lady of the manor, and William Amhurst Tyssen Amherst te~n orh ffi · · "': IC t lS e ~eares money or er
esq. J.P. of Didlington Hall, are the chief landowners. egrap 0 ce, arnve a 7 a.m. 7 p.m
The soil is mixed, clay and sand; subsoil, gravel and chalk. National School (mixed), for 72 children; average atten-
The chief crops are rye, barley and turnips. The area is dance, so ; Miss P. Elizabeth Mott, mistress
Drew Rev. Charles Edward M. A. Rectory I Palmer Peter, farmer, Hall farm I Sayer Thomas, beer retailer & carpenter
TOFTREES is a parish about 2~ miles south-west from value £400, net £323, including 92 acres of glebe, with
Fakenham sLation on the Wymondham and Wells section of residence, in the gift of the Marquess Townshend, and held
the Great Eastern rail way, and r~ miles south-west from since 18go by the Rev. John Robert Blayney Owen M. A. of
Fakenham Town station on the Eastern and Midlands rail- Queen's Cullegc, Oxford. The Marquess Townshend is the
way, in the North Western division of the county, Gallow sole landowner and lord of the manor. The soil is various.
hundred and petty sessional division, Walsingbam union The chief crops are wheat, barley, oats and turnips. The
and county court district, rural deanery of North Hrisley area is I 1 163A. IR. 26P.; rateable value, [1,475; the popn-
and Toftrees and archdeaconry and diocese of Norwich. lation in r8gr was 97·
The church of All Saints is an ancient edifice of stone in the Parish Clerk, Benjamin Emmerson.
Decorated style, consisting of chancel, nave, south porch
and a low unfinished tower containing one bell: the west LETTER Box cleared at 6.so a.m. & 6.so p.m. ; sundays
window is stained and there is a font of Norman date: the ro.so a. m. Letters through Fakenham, the nearest
church affords 100 sittings. The register commences in the money order & telegraph office ·
·year 1760. The living is a vicarage, consolidated with the This place is included in Dunton-cum-Doughton United
rectory of Shereford by Order in Council dated November, School Board district, compulsorily formed 16 July. r873.
188r, avera.ge tithe rent-charge [28o, joint gross yearly The children attend the Shereford Hoard school
Bale l'3aac,
Case Edward, Toftrees hall
I Owen Rev. John Robert Blayney M. A. Butcher Fred Osbornc,farmer,Manor ho
The Vicarage
TOPCROFT is a scattered village and parish 6 miles Bishop of Lincoln, r6g1-4, and subsequently Archbishop of
south-east from Flordon station on the Ipswich and Norwich Canterbury, was some time reetor here in the reign of
section of the Great Eastern railway, and 6 north-west from Charles I. but was deprived of his living during the Protec.
Bungay, in the Southern division of the county, Loddon torate and, dying in r67r, was buried in the chancel. Here
hundred, Loddon and Clavering petty sessional division and is a Congregational chapel, also used as a British school,
. union, county court district of l3ungay, rural deanery of The poor's land, with 3 acres left by R. Goodwyn in r659,
Brooke, eastern division, archdeaconry of Norfolk and consists of 4A. 2R. now let at £8 ros. a year, which sum is
diocese of Norwich. The church of St. Margaret is an distributed in coals to the poor at Christmas. llenry Edwin
ancient edifice of flint and brick with stone dressings, in the Garrod csq. Diss, is lord of the manor of Topcroft-cum-
Perpendicular style, consisting of chancel, nave, south aisle, Denton. Alfred Massey esq. of The Grove, Cringleford,
south porch and an embattled western tower, round at the George Unwin esq. and Samuel Newton Delf esq. are the
base and octagonal above, and containing 3 bells : in the principal landowners. The soil is heavy; subsoil, marl.
south aisle is a piscina, and there are the remains of the The chief crops are wheat, barley, beans and peas. The
stairs leading to the rood loft; outside the porch is a stoup : area is r,874A. 3R. 28P.; rateable value, £2,145 ; the popu-
there are several marble tablets, with arms, to the Smyth lation in rB9r was 344·
family, formerly owners of the Hall, 1743-r8o8; and other Verger, George Moates.
tablets to Thomas Cooke esq. n.t.. , J.P. d. 1747; Benjamin PosT OFFlCE.-William Cook Pooley, receiver. Letters
Frost M. A. formerly rector here, d. 10 Jan. 1764; and to received from Bungay by foot post at 9 a. m. ; dispatched
Richard 'Wilton, d. r637: the church was rebuilt in 1712, at 4 p.m. No deli,·ery on sundays. llungay is the
and restored and reseat.ed in r86r at a cost of £750, and in nearest money order & telegraph office. Postal orders
r876 the chancel was restored by a grant from Queen Anne's are issued here, but not paid
Bounty: there are 260 sittings. The register dates from
the year 1560. The living is a rectory, average tithe rent- PILLAR LETTER Box, near the "Huntsman & Hounds,"
charge £255, net yearly value £177, including 49 acres of cleared 3.30 p.m
glebe, with residence, in the gift of the Bishop of Norwich, British School (mixed), held in the Congregational chapel,
and held since r88o by the Rev. John George Rowe M,A, enlarged in r88r, for rro children; average attendance,
Cantuar, and J.P. Norfolk. The father of Thomas Tenison, 86 ; Miss Winifred Maud Thomas, mistress
Delf Samuel Newton, Longwood house Cunningham George, farmer Moates George, verger
Rowe Rev. John George M.A., J.P. Delf Samuel Newton, farmer & land- Mobbs Harry, bricklayer & farmer
[rector], Rectory owner, Longwood house Moss William, farmer
Unwin George, Topcroft hall Ellis Thomas, farmer, Manor farm Penn Isaac,farmer & assistant overseer,
COrtlMERCIAL. Emmerson Thomas, farmer Trees farm
Andrews Susannah (Mrs.), Swan P.H. Feavearyear Charles, farmer Pooley Wm. Cook, grocer, Post office
& butcher Green Jonathan, farmer Rushmore Henry, blacksmith
Andrews William George, blacksmith Honeywood Waiter, shoe maker Tidman Charles, farm bailiff to Alfred
& Huntsman & Hounds P.H Laskey Henry, miller (wind) Massey esq
Bentley John, carpenter Lewell James, shoe maker Took George, farmer
Bond Hobert, farmer & cattle dealer Ling George, farmer Unwin George, farmer & landowner,
Catchpole William, farmer, Manor frm Ling Robert, farmer Topcroft hall
Chase John, farmer, Street farm Loynes John, shopkeeper Wright William, farmer & cattle dealer
.
TOTTENHILL is a parish and village 2 miles east from including 20 acres of glebe, with residence, in the gift of the
Magdalen Road junction station on the Ely and Lynn Bishop of Norwich, and held since 1890 by the Rev. Samuel
section of the Great Eastern railway, 6 north from Down- Theodore Leupolt M.A. of Caius College, Cambridge. A
ham and 6 south from Lynn, in the South Western division new vicarage house is now {1892) being erected by a grant
of the county, Clackclose hundred and petty sessional of £ r ,soo from the Ecclesiastical Commissioners. Here is
division, Downham union and county court district, rural a Primitive Methodist chapel, erected in 1881. The poor's
dc11nery of Fincham, archdeaconry of Nor folk and diocese land of 16 acres (now occupied by ~:lr. William Boon, jun.)
of Norwich. The church of St. Botolph, situated about a produces £32 yearly for fuel; Davis's charity of £2 12s.
mile south-east from the village, and originally belongmg to yearly is for bread for poor widows. George Coote esq. of
the hamlet of \Vestbnggs, is a small building of stone in the Chilton Lodge, Sudbury, who is lord of the manor, William
Early English style, consisting of chancel, nave and an em- Boon esq. the trustees of J. R. Mills esq. William Gilson
battled western tower containing one bell: the chancel was Hoff esq. of Holland House, East Winch, Albert Edward
restored in r864 by the Ecclesiastical Commissioners, under Birch, of Watlington Hall, William Cater esq. of .Fincham
the direction of Mr. Ewan Christian, architect, and in r877 and William Wade Langley esq. are the principal land-
the chancel arch was renewed from a design by Mr. Lauric, owners. 'l'he soil is sand, gravel and clay ; subsoil, the
of Downham : a portion of a well-carved oak bench end was same. The chief crops are wheat, barley, turnips and
found in the church in I 863, inscribed "Thomas Dux, Ex.'' clm·er. The area is 1,448A. oR. 30P. ; rateable value,
and is now in the possession of the vicar: there are 150 £1,925; the population in 1891 was 344·
sitting-s. The register dates from the year r679. The
living is a vicarage, united in 1871 to that of Wormegay, WESTBRIGGs is a hamlet, properly in Wormegay parisht
average tithe rent-charge £rs, joint net yearly value-£274, but iocluded in this parish on account of its ancient church
DIRECTORY.] NORFOLK. TROWSE NEWTOS'. 651
having been appropriated to the enlarged hamlet and actual cleared at 5.40 p.m. ; sundays, arrive at 7. 4 5 a. m.; dis-
village of Tottenhill. patched at ro.55 a.m. Postal orders are issued here.
Parish Clerk and Sexton, - Duffield. West Winch is the nearest money order office & St.
PosT 0FFICEr-George W. Butter, receiver. Letters re- Germans, Lynn, the nearest telegraph office
ceived through Lynn, arrive at 7·45 a.m.; LETTER Box The children of this parish attend the school at \Vormegay
Boyes Frank, Oakwood house Franklin George, blacksmith Rodwell John Paton, miller (wind &
Leupolt H.ev. Samuel Theodore M. A. Langley William Wade, farmer & land- steam) & baker
The Vicarage owner, East hall Rainsford Frank, inland revenue officer
Thompson Miss, The Oakwood Lemon William, beer retailer Swinerton William,farmer,The Grange
Baker Robert, grocer Palmer Frederick James, farmer & cat- Warren Hiram, farmer, Meadow farm
Boon William, farmer & - landowner,
Manor farm
tle dealer, Dairy farm .
Palmer Lewis, farmer & cattle dealer,
Watkins Charles, farmer
Wix John, Dray & Horses P. H.& farmer
- Bowen Wesley, shoe maker & shopkpr Brickkiln farm Youngs Charles, wheelwright
Dracass Thomas William, tailor
TOTTINGTON is a village and parish 3~ miles east interior of the church restored in r886, and it now affords
from Stow-Bedon station, 4 miles south-west from Watton 200 sittings. The register dates from the year 1711. The
station, both on the Bury, Thetford and Swaffham section living is a vicarage, average tithe rent-charge £46, net
of the Great Eastern railway, 8 north from Thetford and 12 yearly value £52, including I I acres of glebe, with residence.
west from Attleborough, in the South Western division of in the gift of Lord Walsingham, and held since 1875 by the
the cow1ty, hundred, petty sessional division and union of Re,·. Ernest Hastings Swann M. A. of Trinity College, Dublin.
Wayland, county court district of Watton and Attleborough, who is also perpetual cura.te of Sturston. The great tithes
rural deanery of Breccles and archdeaconry and diocese of of Tottington are held in trust for the Chigwell Grammar
Norwich. The church of St. Andrew is a large and ancient school, Essex. Lord Walsingham is lord of the manor and
edifice of flint in the Early English style, consisting of sole landowner. The soil is of a sandy character, with clay
chancel, nave with clerestory, aisles, south porch and an and marl subsoil, and is studded with plantations of various
embattled western tower containing 6 bells: the nave is I ages and acreage. The chief crops are wheat and barley.
seated throughout with ancient oak benches, on the back of The area is 3,292 acres; rateable value, £1,955; the popu-
one of which is carved, "to the memory of Thomas Sutton lation in 1891 was 287.
and his wife, 1636: " the windows are remarkable for their Parish Clerk, Robert Quantrill.
beautiful tracery: in the south wall of the chancel are PosT 0FFICE.-Robert Herring, sub-postmaster. Letters
piscina and sedilia, and there is a piscina in the north aisle: through Watton S.O. arrive at 8.30 a. m. ; dispatched at
a stone bearing the Mortimer arms, found in the clerestory 5.15 p.m. & 8.30 p.m; snnday 9.30 a.m. Watton is the
wall in r886, has been placed on the wall of the south aisle: nearest money order & telegraph office. Postal orders are
the screen, finely carved, is very ancient, and there is a well- issued here, but not paid
-preserved brass with effigies of a kneeling female and child National School (mixed), erected in 1849, for 70 children;
to Margaret Pory, 1598: the nave was new roofed and the average attendance, 6r : Miss Amelia M. Crawford, mist
SwannRev.ErnertHastingsM.A. Vicarage Elvin John, farmer Macro Frederick James, fishmonger
Chilvers John & Son, wheelwrights & Flatt Alfred, fishmonger Merton Poultry Farm (Alexander Dono-
blacksmiths HcrringRbt.grocer&shoe ma.Post office van, manager), Eastmere
Chilvers Robert, farmer Keymer Israel,estate bricklayer to Lord Oldfield Henry, farmer
Donovan Alexander, manager of Merton Walsingham Pitts Philip, farmer
Poultry farm Leeder Richard, pork butcher & dealer
TRIMINGHAM is a parish and small village on the absorbed being glebe and further incursions took place in
sea coast, 3 miles north-east from Gunton station on the r 89r-2 and the groynes constructed by Thomas I<'owell
East Norfolk branch of the Great Eastern railway, 5 miles Buxton esq. along the beach at his own expense to prevent
south-east from Cromer and 6 north from North Walsham, the recurrence of these encroachments have also been
in the Northern division of the county, hundred and petty washed away. Lord Suffield K.C.B., P.C. is lord of the
sessional division of North Erpingham, union of Erpingham, manor. Thomas Fowell Ruxton esq. of Easneye, Ware,
North Walsham county court district, rural deanery of Repps, Herts, is the principal landowner. The soil is mixed;
archdeaconry of Nor folk and diocese of~ orwich. The church subsoil, clay and gravel. The chief crops aro wheat, oats
of St. John is an ancient structure of flint, in the Perpen- and harley. The area is 483 acre3 of land. and 145 of fore
dicular style, consisting of chancel, nave, south porch and a shore; rateable value, £785; the population in r8gx was ·
low western tower containing one bell ; a fine carved oak 197·

screen separates the chancel from the nave: the church was Parish Clerk, Edward Allard.
restored in 1859 at a cost of £r,5oo and affords 200 sittings. PosT & 1\LO.O., S.B. & Annuity & Insurance Officc.-James
The register dates from the year 1748. The living is a Rand ell, postmaster. Letters through North Walsham,
rectory, average tithe rent-charge [.r11, net yearly value arrive at 9 a. m. & are dispatched at 3.50 p.m. The near-
£98, including 3 acres of glebe, with residence, in the gift est. telegraph office is at :vrundesley
of the Duchy of Lancaster, and held since 1886 by the Rev. National Hchool (mixed), erected in 1847, for 6o children;
William Tatlock M.A. Cantuar. The parish has been much average attendance, 5041 the school is supported by T. F.
diminished by the encroachments of the sea and since 1840 Huxton esq. ; Miss Charlotte Tuck, mistress
two farrn houses have heen washed away: there were CARRIER.-William Olley, to North Walsham, every wed.
several landslips during the year r868, part of the land then fri. & sat
Bullamore John Blower Michael, shopkeeper Randell James, blacksmith, Post office
Tatlock Rev. William M.A. Rectory Copeman James, bricklayer Read Edward, farmer
Allard Francis, farmer Dmmis James, Crown & Anchor hotel Redmond Patrick, apartments
Bates Samuel (exors. of), farmer Green James, boot maker Wright Abraham George, farmer
Beckett Robert, farmer, The Grange Olley William, carrier
TROWSE NEWTON is a parish and village on the gational chapel, erected in r87o, with Sunday schools
River Yare, near its junction with the W'ensum, with a adjoining. Cooper's charity of £3 rgs. yearly is for fuel.
station on the Great Eastern rail way, 1! miles south-east- Messrs. J. and J. Col man, of Norwich, are lords of the
by-south from Norwich, in the Southern division of the manor and chief landowners. The soil is gravel and clay;
county, Swainstt.orpe petty sessional division, Henstead subsoil, gravel and clay. The chief crops are wheat, oats
hundred and union, Norwich county court district, rural and barley. The area is x, 164 acres; rateable value £3,839;
deanery of Brooke, western division, archdeaconry of the population in 1891 was 795·
Norfolk and diocese of Norwich. Part of Trowse Newton,
calle.d Trowse Milgate, is within the county of the city of PosT, M.O. & T.O., S.B. & Annuity & Insurance Office.-
Norwich (which see). The church of St. Andrew is a small George Henry Barham, receiver. Letters are received
building of flint, in the Perpendicular style, consisting of from Norwich at4.45 a. m. & 2 ·45 p.m. & are dispatched
chancel, nave, south porch and an embattled western tower thereto at 12.35, 6 & 7.30 P· m
containing a clock and one bell : the chancel was restored in A School Board of 5 members was formed compulsorily
1879: there are roo sittings. The register dates from the 30 March, I874• with Bixley as a contributory parish with
year 1569. The living is a vicarage, annexed to Lakenham, 2 members; S. C. Hardy, Castle chambers, Norwich, cler~
tithe rent-charge, Trowse £178, Lakenham £148, joint gross to the board; John Marshall, attendance officer
yearly value £281, including I I acres of glebe, in the gift of
the Dean and Chapter of Norwich, and held since r86o by Board School (mixed & infants), erected in 1874, for 250
the Rev .Alfred Pownall M.A. of St. Catharine's College, children; average attendance, 190 ; Artbur Tuck, master;
Cambridge, who resides at Lakenham. Here is a Congre• Mrs. Annie Meadows, infants' mistress
652 TROWSE NEWTON. NORFOLK. [KELLY's
PRIVATE RESIDENTS. COMMERCIAL. Giles Henry, estate manager Crown
Point mansion
Fulton Rev. John [Congregational] Baker George, overseer & tax collector, Harris Gcorge, farmer
Murrell Miss, Chapel house 5 Crown Point villas Humphreys Francis, farm bai:iff to Mr.
Perry Col. Charles S.( oflicer command- Baker Jamett, corn dealer S. Warr;e;, Rocke l5 Old ha!!
ing No. 9 Regimental dist.), Trowse Barham Gco. H. carpenter, Post office Manor House Cafe (Jn. Marshal!, mgr)
Old hall Betts Edward, butcher Hose Charles, shopkeeper
Rosling Henry, The Homestead Brand Wm. George, Royal Oak P.H Thurlow Thomas Blake, shopkeeper
Smith Wm.ll. miller, Crown Point viis Ewing Henry, general smith Watson John, Crown Point tavern
Taylor Garratt, Trowse house Fowler William, butchP.r Watts .Alfred Edwin, shopkeeper
-TRUNCH is a parish ann village, 2~miles east from Gun- Wesleyan and Primitive Methodist chapels. Wart's charity
ton station on theCromer branch of theGreat Eastern railway of £I is for clothing. Lord Sutlield and the rector are lords •
and 3 miles north from North Walsham station, in theN orth- of the manor. Walter Cremer Primrose, Alfred Primrose~
ern division of the county, North Erpingham hundred and Timo~hy C. Blancht1ower and Thomas B. Bidwell esqr-i. and
petty sessional division, Erpingham union, North Walsham Sir Thomas Fowell Buxton bart. are the chief landowners~
countycourtdistrict,ruraldeaneryofRepps, arahdeaconryof the family of Primrose has resided here since the 15th
Norfolk and diocese of Norwich. The cb.urch of St. Botolph, century. The soil is mixed; sub'3oil, sand and gravel. Tb.e
which stands in the centre of the village, is a building of chief crops are wheat, oats and barley. The area is 1,644
stone, partly in the Early Decorated and Perpendicular acres; rateable value, £2,351 ; the population in 1 B) r was
styles, consisting of chancel, nave, aisles, north porch and a 433·
western tower containing 3 bells : there is also a font, with Sexton, John Hall.
carved canopy, a fine screen and a roof of oak very richly PosT & M. 0. 0., S. B. & Annuity & Insurance Office.-
carved: t.he chancel was thoroughly repaired in r88r: there Benjamin Buck, postmaster. Letters arri,·e from North
are 250 sittings. The register dates from the year 1558. Walsham at 7.20 a. m. & dispatched at 4. 20 p.m. The
The living IS a rectory, tithe rent-charge £412, average nearest telegraph office is at Mundesley
£313, net yearly value £-:J,oo, including 2r acres of glebe National School (mixed), erected in r853, for 72 children;
and residence, in the gift of St. Catharine's College, Cam- average attendance, 6o ; Miss Edith Bates, mistress
bridge, and held since r882 by the Hev. William Frederick CARRrER TO NORWICH.-Bensley, to' White Horse,' Hay-
Kirnm M.A. formerly fellow of that college. There are market, tues. & fri. returning wed. & sat
Bid well Thomas Blaxland Buck Benjamin, shopkeeper, Post office Primrose B. N. (Mrs. ),brewer & maltster
Dix Misses Buck Robert, farmer Primrose Henry, farmer, White house
Greenhill John Russell Bullen .Alfred, wheelwright&well sinker Primrose Waiter Cremer, farmer &
Kimm Rev.Willtam Fredk.M.A.Rectory Bullien Hannah tMrs.), farmer landowner, Ivy house
Primrose .Alfred, The Limes Ducker George Maris, farmer Riches Isaac, hair dresser
Primrose Henry, White house Frary John, vermin killer Self William, bricklayer
Primrose Mrs Fuller Josiah, shopkeeper Spurgeon William, butcher
Primrose Waiter Cremer, Ivy house Fuller Mary Ann (Miss), dress maker Steward John, blacksmith
COMMERCIAL. Gall William, Crown P.H Sutton Frederick, shoe maker
Amiss George Burton, New inn Gibbons William, wheelwright Thompson James, farmer
Baker Henry, market gardener Hewitt Jobn, brick manufacturer Wegg Richard, butcher
Bid well Thomas Blaxland, farmer & May Henry Bugden, farmer Wilson Robert, market gardener
landowner Primrose .Alfred, farmer & landowner, Wright Loriner (Mrs.), farmer
Blyth William, farmer The Limes
EAST TUDDENHAM is a village and parish, 5 rents of which four cottages have been built as free resi-
miles north-east. from Thuxton station on the Great Eastern deuces for indigent persons; four other cottages are also let
railway and 6 from Dereham East, in the Mid division of to the poor; the fuel allotment of 25 acres produces at
the county, Mitford and Launditch petty sessional division, present £26 ros. per annum, which sum is distributed to
Mitford union, Derehamcounty court district, rural deanery the poor in coals, and there are other charities of £5 ros.
of Hingham Forehoe division, archdeaconry of Norfolk and annually for bread and books_ Capt. the Hon. Ailwyn
diocese of Norwich. The church of All Saints is a structure Edward Felluwes M.P., J.P. of Honiugharn Hall, is lord of
of flint with stone facings in mixed styles, consisting of the manor and chief landowner. The soil is of a mixed
chancel, nave, south porch and an embattled western tower nature ; subsoil, clay and brick earth_ The chief crops are
with pinnacles: the tower and porch are Norman, the nave wheat, barley, turnips and hay. The area. is 2,o6g acres;
and chancel Perpendicular: one of the windows, representing rateable value, £2,703; the population in r8gr was 474-
various scenes in the Life of Our Lord, was painted by the Pansh Clerk, Waiter Neave.
widow of the Very Rev. Edward Mellish, dean of Hereford, PosT OFFICE.-James Neave, sub-postmaster_ Letters-
and formerly vicar here, d. 1830: and there is a memorial through East Derebam arnve at g_ 30 a.m.; dispatched at
window to the Rev. Thomas Lyon Fellowes M.A. rector 5 _15 p.m.; Sundays, arrive at 9 a.m.; dispatched at
1867-8I: in the chancel is a mutilated effigy: a tesselated 10 a. m. The nearest money order otlice is at Hockering
pavement was presented to the church in I878 by the Rev. & telegraph office at Mattishall. Postal orders are issued
W. C. Ward, for many years cu~te of the parish: there here, but not paid
are 230 sittings. The register dates from the year r56I.
The hving is a vicarage, annexed to that of Honingham, National School (mixed), for the use of this & the adjoining
average tithe rent-charge, £ 4 8 5 , joint net yearly value parish of Honingham, & holding 160 children; average
£ 322 , including 102 acres of glebe, with residence, in the gift attendance, 130; \Villiam Wright, master; & two assistant
of Capt. the Hon . .Ailwyn Edward Fellowes M. P. and held mistresses
since 1892 by the Rev. Herbert James Bodington ~LA. of CARRIERS TO NoRWICH.-Henry Blyth & William Barrett,
Queen's College, Oxford. Here is a Free Methodist chapel, wed. & sat. through Colton; William Howes, from Mattis-
erected in 1890, and seating Too persons. There are r6 hall, passes through on wed. & sat. ; Alfred Carr, from
acres of land, left in the 16th century by John Proo, from. the Shipdham to Norwich, wed. & sat
BodingtonRev.Herbert Jas.M.A. [vicar] Bird Charles Harvey, farmer 1 Fisher Joscph, farmer
COMMERCIAL. Blyth Henry, carrier & farmer I Moore William "'oodhouse, Bull inn
.Armes Daniel, farmer & overseer Blyth William, wheelwright Neave James, grocer & draper, Post off
Arthurton Frederiek, farmer Childs Eliza Esther (Mrs.), farmer . Neave John Gooch, farmer
.Arthurton Thomas, farmer Cockett William, farmer Palm er Susannah ()frs. ), shopkeeper
Bales Mary .Ann (Mrs.), farmer Corner Elijah, wheelwright Richmond Edward, jun. farmer
BarnardMatthew, New Inn P.H Cranness William, boot & shoe maker : Richmond Edward, sen. farmer
Barrett William, boot maker Curson Edward, farmer , Sendell John, beer retailer
1

Basey Horatio, farmer Curson Elijah, farmer I Stimpson Arthur, farmer ·


Hayfield George, farmer Dann Stephen, farmer 1 Sutton John William, farmer
NORTH TUDDENHAM is a scattered village and J an embattled western tower containing one bell: the lower
parish on the river Tud, extending from 2~ to 5 miles east part of an ancient carved oak screen, the panels of which
from Dereham station on the Great Eastern railway, in the are painted with figures of saints, still remains and there is
Mid division of the county, Mitford hundred, Mitford and a piscina in the south wall of the nave, and monuments to
Launditch petty sessional division and :union, Dereham the Skippe, Howlett and Shelford families, the first of whom
county court distriet, rural deanery of Hingham, Mitford were lords of the manor and principal landowners in this
division, archdeaconry of Norfolk and diocese of Norwich. parish: all the windows are stained : the ch!l.ncel and nave
The church of St. Mary is a building of Hint in the Perpen- were restored and reseatedin r868; in 1884 a new reredos of
dicular style, consisting of chancel, nave, north porch and Caen stone, adorned with a central cross and symbols of the

DIRECTORY.] NORFOLK. TUTTINGTON. 653
four Evangelists, was erected, and in 1885 the interior was and Richard Charles Browne esq. J. P. of Elsing Hall, are the
decorated: there are 220 sittings. The register dates from chief landowners. The soil is mixed and gravel ; subsoil,
the year xs6o. The living is a rectory, tithe rent-charge cum- mixed and clay. The crops are chiefly barley, wheat and
muted at £7oo, net yearly value £486, including 65 acres roots. The area is 2,270 acres; rateable value, £3,040; the
of glebe, with residence, in the gift of and held since x851 by population in 1891 was 314.
the Rev. Robert BarryM.A. of St. John's College, Cambridge. Sexton, Stephen Ncwell.
Here is a Primitive Methodist chapel, erected in 1833 and LETTER Box cleared at 6.10 p.m. ; Sundays, 11 a.m.
enlarged in 1841. The charities produce £so yearly for Letters received through East Dereham. Hockermg is the
hread and clothing, and there is a fuel allotment of 24 acres nearest money order & Matti'lhall the nearest telegraph
f(jr the poor. Messrs. Winter and I<'rancis, Norwich, are office
lords of the manor. The rector;Charles Heyhoe Wigg esq. School (mixed), bpilt in 1871, at the cost of the rector, by
the trustees of the late G. Duckett Berney esq. J. P., D.L. of whom it is also supported, for about 70 children ; average
Morton, George Taylor esq. of Mattishall, John Vincent esq. attendance, 36; Miss Elizabeth Deacon, mistress
Harry Rev. Robert M.A. Rectory Jenney John, Fox & Goose P.H Rudd Robert, blacksmith
COMMERCIAL. Jenney Jn. jun.farmer,Elsing Rd.farm Shickle James, farmer, Pound farm
Allendon Elijah, farmer Jenney William, farmer Smith Horace Arthur, rate & tax collet!."
Bowes William, market gardener King John, farmer Smith Thomas, farmer & landowner
Chapman James, farmer Mack James, farmer & landowner Tennant William, farm bailiff to Mr.
Cobb James, farmer Mack James Waiter, farmer Thomas Cranmer, Mid .Yorfolk dairy
Dunthorne Matthew, farmer .Yelson Wrn Goldsmith, The Lodge P.H Tooley Harriett (Miss), farmer
Edwards Edward, farmer Outlaw John, shopkeeper Vincent John, farmer & landowner,
Hind William, farmer & landowner Pigg Elijah, farmer Street farm
Jenney Henry, farmer Rix Herbert, miller (wind), & farmer Wilson John, carpenter & wheelwright
TUNST ALL is a parish on the river Bure, 2 miles held since r885 by the Rev. Harry Dallimore, who is also
south-east from Acle station on the Norwich and Yarmouth: vicar of Halvergate. Algernon Charles Fountaine esq. J".P.,
branch of the Great Eastern railway, and 8 west from i D.L. of Narford Hall, who is lord of the manor, Edward
Yarmouth, in the Eastern division of the county, Blofield Hoult esq. Sir Edward Paulet Stracey hart. of Hackheath
1
and \Valsharn petty sessional division, Walsham hundred, 1 Park, and the trustees of the late S. Batley, are the chief
Blofield union, Great Yarmouth county court district, rural landowners. The soil is mixed; subsoil, sand and clay.
deanery of Blofield and archdeaconry and diocese of Nor- The chief crops are wheat, barley and oats. The area is
wich. The church of SS. Peter and Paul is a building of r,612 acres; rateable value, £2,340; the population in 1891
flint, but the tower and nave are in ruins : the chancel, was 131.
which is the only portion of the structure now available for Sexton James Read.
divine service, was renovated in 1853, and has an open '
turret containing one bell : there are 70 sittings. The Letters through Norwich received at 9 a. m. Acle is the
register dates from the year 1577 . The living is a vicarage, nearest money order & telegraph office. The nearest post
tithe rent-charge [38, and gross yearly value £66, including box is at Halvergate
31 acres of glebe, in the gift of the Bishop of Norwich, and The children of this place attend the school at IIalvergate
Arnup George, marshman More Robert John, farmer, Church fm Waters Henry, farmer
Hates George John, Staithe farm Powley Joseph (Mrs.), wherry owner Young Scurrell, marsh farmer
Brinded Thomas, Stracey Arms P.H Read James, post office
TUNSTEAD is a parish and village, 2~ miles south from Shepheard Ives H. A. of Jesus College, Cambridge. The poor
Worstead station, 2! north-east from Wroxham station, have the benefit of several charities and the rent of some
both on the Norwich and Cromer branch of the Great allotments.I Thomas Mack esq. J.P. of Furbough, co.
Eastern railway, ro north-east from Norwich and 6 south-. Galway, who is lord of the manor, George Randall Jobnson
east frOin North \Valsham, in the hundred of its name, j esq. of Heavitree, Exeter, who is chief impropriator of the
Eastern division of the county, Tunstead and Rapping petty, great tithes, Randall James Johnson esq. and t[ustees of
8essional division, Small burgh union, North Walsham county I the late John Seaman Postlc csq. of Small burgh Hall, are the
court district, rural deanery of Waxham, Tunstead divi-1 principal landowners. '!'he soil is mixed ; subsoil, sand,
sion, archdeaconry of Norfolk and diocese of Norwich. The gravel and clay. The chief crops are wheat, oats and
church of St, Mary is a large and ancient building of flint ~ barley. The number of acrPll is 2,259; rateable value,
and stone in the Perpendicular style, consisting of chancel, : £3,947; the population in r89.r was 437·
· nave, aisles, south porch and a lofty embattled western Sexton, Thomas Hunt.
tower containing 8 bells : there is a beautiful screen, and LETTER BoxEs, of which there are three, cleared as follows:
I

over the altar is a platform or loft, about 30 feet by 5 feet, Anchor street, 3 p. m. ; Church wall, 3.30 p.m. ; Market
where it is supposed miracle plays were once performed: street, 4 p.m. Letters through Norwich, via Scottow,
the church was restored in 1863, and has 450 sittings. The arrive at 9· 15 a.m. The nearest money order & telegraph
register dates from the year 1678. The living is a dis- office is at ScJttow
charged vicarage, with the vicarage of South Ruston an- School (mixed), erected in 1851, for 96 children; average
nexed, average tithe rent-charge £253, net yearly value attendance, 74; Miss Ellamine Bell, mistress
£257, with 1 acre of glRbe and residence, in the gift of CARRIER TO Nouwrcu.-John Barber, wed. & sat. return-
Thomas Mack esq. and held since 1890 by the Rev. George ing same day
Ives Rev. Geo. Shepheard B.A. Vicarage Gayford Frederick, farmer, The Hall Roper John, farmer
COMMERCIAL. Gower Joseph, blacksmith Sharp Benjamin, shopkeeper
Appleton Ishmael, licensed hawker Harmer James, farmer Spanton Robert, farmer
Bambridge Leonard, wheelwright LeNeve Wm. Sutton, farmer, Old farm Tills Robert, blacksmith
.Barber John, farmer & carrier Marler (Miss Mary Gedge) & Coe (Mrs. Watson Thomas, farm bailiff to the
Bowman Jonathan, farmer Rebecca), drapers exors. of Mr. John Mase
Cable George, farmer Marler Thomas, Horse & Groom P.H Wilkins John, farmer
Daniels James, farmer Norgate Charles, farmer Wright Edward, shoe maker
Drury Phillippo, farmer Norgate Isaac, farmer Youngman John, horse trainer
Felstead William, farmer
TUTTINGTON is a village and parish on the river Ant, average tithe rent-charge £139, net yearly value £140, in-
2 miles east from Aylsbam station on the Great Eastern eluding 24 acres of glebe, with residence, iu the gift of the
railway, 12 north from Norwich, in the Northern division of Bishop of Norwich, and held since 1890 by the Rev. Augnstus
the county, South Erpingham hundred and petty sessional James Steed M.A. of Durham University. There is a Re-
division, Aylsham union and county court district, rural formed Wesleyan chapel, erected and endowed in 1859 by
deanery of Ingworth and archdeaconry and diocese of Nor- Mr. R. M. Sutton. The trustees of the late John Seaman
wich. The church of SS. Peter and Paul, built in 1450, is an Postle esq. are lords of the manor. The Master and fellows
ancient structure of flint with stone dressings, in the Per- I of Caius College, Cambridge, trustees of late J. S. Postle,
pendicular style, consisting of chancel, nave, south porch of Smallburgh, and William Forster esq. of Blickling, are
and a round western tower with small spire, containing one the principal landowners. The soil is generally rich and
bell : the church was restored in 1884 at a cost of about fertile, and the subsoil good brick earth. The chief crops
£soo, and affords 120 sittings: the foundations of a chapel, are wheat, oats and barley. The area is 840 acres; rateable
supposed to have been erected about A.D. r2oo, have been value, i,'x,397; the population in 1891 was 174.
discovered in a field north of the church. The register
dates from about the year I544· The living is a vicarage, Parish Clerk, William Spink.
c. x. & ~. -12
(54 TUTTINGTON • NORFOLK. (KELLY S
1

PosT O~;FIC:E.~Willi;un Vutter, receiver. Letters through office is at Aylsham. Postal orders are i.ssued here, bu'-
Aylsbam are delivered at 8. IS .a. m. & dispatched at 4 p.m. not paid
on week days only. The nearest money order & telegraph The children of this place attend the school at Skeyton
Steed Rev. Augustus Jas.M.A.Vicarage Case William, farmer, Tuttington hall Kybird Joseph, blacksmith & farmer-
COMMERCIAL. Dyke James, farmer Page Robert, farmer
Beck William, farm bailiff to John Emmerson Robert, farmer Rivett John, Ship inn
Soame esq Futter Wm. farmer & grocer, Post off Sexton George, farmer · 1
Carman Frederi1.•k Edward, farmer I Greenacre Thomas, grocer Soame John, farmer
TWYFORD is a parish, I mile from Foulsham station Christi college, Cambridge. 'l'he fuel allotment of to acres
on the Great Eastern railway, 7~ miles south-east from produces £II S'~· Twyford Hall, the property of Mrs. Packe~
Fakenham and 9 north-east from Derehani, in the Northern but now occupied by Charles Annesley Hamond esq . .T.P.
division of the county, Eynsford hundred and petty sessional is a mansion of red brick, pleasantly situated in an exten-
divi~ion, Mitford and Launditch union, Dereham county sivc and well-timbered lawn. Mrs. Packe, who is lady of
court district, rural deanery of Sparham and archdeaconry the manor, and D. B. Preston esq. are the chief landowners.
and diocese of Norwich. The church of St. Nicholas is a The soil is light mixed, some portions heavy; subsoil, clay
small edifi~e of flint in the Early English style, consisting of and gravel. The chief crops are wheat, barley and turnips.
chan('el, nave, north porch and a low western tower of brick The area is 529 acres; rateable value, £8os; the population
containing one bell : there are roo sittings. The register in I89r was 92. •
dates from the year I553· The living is a rectory, with the Parish Clerk Charles Joyce
vicarage of Guist annexed, average tithe rent-rent charge ' ·
£258, joint gross yearly value £ 27 6, net £rso, including 3 8 LETTER Box, cleared at 6.ro p. m.; sundays at I0.20 a. m.
acres of glebe, in the alternate gift of the present rector and Letters through East Dereham arrive at 8 a. m. Th&
the trustees of the late William Norris esq. and held nearest money order & telegraph office is at I<'onlsham
since r86I by the Rev. John Norris SpurgeonB.A. of Corpus The children of this place attend the school at Gui.'it
Baker Misses, The Grange l I
Spurgeon Rev.John Norris B.A.[rector] Nicholson Edward, farmer
HamondChas.AnnesleyJ.P.Twyford ball 'Vatson Mrs. The Rookery Seaman George, farmer
UPTON is a parish and village, 2 miles north from Acle year I558. The living is a vicarage, tithe rent-charge £r75.
station on the Norwich and Yarmouth section of the Great average £I33• net yearly value about £zso, including 22
Eastern railway, 12 north-east from ~orwich, I I west from acres of glebe, with residence, in the gift of the Bishop of
Yarmouth and 2 north from Acle, in the Eastern division of Norwich, an:l held sinco r886 by the Rev. Percival Oakley
the county, Blofield and 'Valsham petty sessional division, Hill, who is also sequestrator of the vicarage of Hembling-
Walsham hundred, Blofield union, Norwich county court ton. The vicarage house was erected in I887, towards the cost
district, rural deanery of Blofield and archdeaconry and of which the Ecclesiastical Commissioners granted £r,soo.,
diocese of Norwich. For civil purposes the parish is united Here is a Primitive Methodist chapel, rebuilt in I89I, and
to Fishley. The ehurch of St. Margaret, which occupies seating about 175 persons. The trustees of the late John
the site of an earlier Norman structure erected in II7I, is a ·waters esq. who are lords of the manor, and trustees of the
building of stone in the Perpendicular style, consisting of late G. H. Vansittart esq. are the chief landowners. The
chancel, cle_restoried nave of four bays, aisles, south porch soil is mixed; subsoil, sand and clay. The chief crops are
and a belfry, erected within the ruined tower and contain- wheat, oats and barley. The area is r,693 acres; rateable
mg one bell, which for two centuries hung i!'l a shed at the value, with Fishley, £3,047; the population in 189I was
east end of the church: the rood screen remains and its 512, with Fishley 530.
panels are painted with figures of St. Augustine, St. Jerome, Sexton, Moses High.
St_ Uregory the Great, St. Ambrose, St. Ethelreda, St. PosT 0FFICE.-Enoch Youngs, receiver. Letters through
Helem, St. Joanna of Valois and St. Agatha; and there is a Norwich arrive at 8 a. m. & dispatched at 4 p.m. There
fine font: the chancel was throughly restored in r879 by the is no sunday post. Acle is the nearest money order
Ecclesiastical Commissioners, and the nave and aisles in telegraph office .
1885, from plans by Mr. A. S. Hewitt A.R.I.B.A. of Great National School (mixed), erected in r872, for 130 children;
Yarmouth, at a cost of £ r, I26 : the porch was restored and average attendance, 102; Miss Eliza Harwood, mistress
the nave reseated in x888, at a cost of about £230, and a CARRIERS TO : -
carved stone pulpit was presented by the Rev. p_ 0_ Hill, YARMOUTH-George Betts,on sat. ; returning same day
vicar, in memory of his father, the late Rev. J. 0. Hill M.A. : No&wicn-William Lambert, mon. wed. & sat. ; return-
the church affords 300 sittings. The register dates from the ing same day
Hillltev. Percival Oakley, Vicarage Cubitt Wm. Partridge, assist. overseer Parker Jarnes B. bnilder & contractor
Littlewood James, sen Farman Alban, basket ma. & thatcher Smith Cb.arles Bert, farmer
Porter James Gaze Eliza (Mrs.), farmer Smith Leonard, shopkeeper
COMMERCIAL. Howard William, farmer Tills John, blacksmith
Alien John, boot & shoe maker Howes William, farmer Turner George, fanner
Betts George, carrier Kirk James John, travelling draper Watts Benjamin, farmer
Bctts Gcorge, sen. farmer Lambert William, Cock inn, & carrier Willgress Benjamin, farmer
Broom John (Mrs.), farmer, Hall farm 'Langbam Abner, blacksmith Willgress Frederick, market gardener
Brown Michael, farmer I Littlewood James, farmer Willgress James, carpenter
Bnrton George, beer retailer Mingey Robert Geo. market gardener Wright George, White Horse P.H
Chapman Jeremiah, wheelwright Munford Samuel, farmer Youngs Enoch, shopkeeper, Post office
UPWELL, formerly a market town, is now a Jarge to Jane (Coltropp) wife of Linulphus Bell esq. ob. 15 Feb.
village and very extensive parish, situated on either side of 1621_; there are 547 sittings. The register dates from the
the river Nene and partly in Cambridgeshire, with a year 1650. The living is a rectory, gross yearly value
terminal station on a steam tramway from Wisbecb, opened £3,o.58, including 3 acres of glebe, with residence, in the
in Sept. I884, and is 4 miles south from Emneth station and gift of Charles Watson Townley esq. and held since r87o by
6~ south-east from Wisbech station, both on the Great the Rev. John Heauvoir Dalison M.A., J.P. of Merton College,
Eastern railway, in the South Western division of the county, Oxford. Here is a Baptist chapel, built in I844, with 350
petty sessional division of Clackclose, partly in the hundred sittings; there is also a Wesleyan and a Primitive Methodist
of Wisbech, in the Isle of Ely, a large portion being also in chapel, each seating 150 persons. The Almshouses, erected
the hundred of Clackclose (Norf.), union and county court by the late James Lee, in I819, are for five poor widows.
district of Wisbech, rural deanery of Fincham, archdeaconry The Public Hall, erected by a limited company, will hold
of Norfolk and diocese of Norwich. By the Divided Parishes soo persons : there is also an Odd Fellows' Lodge (Man-
Act detached portions of this parish were amalgamated with ohestP.r Unity), the meetings of which are held fortnightly
"'elney in r884, and at the same time a detached part of on Wednesdays. The Clmrch Institute ()CCupies the old
Welncy was added to this parish. The following relates National school. A fire engine was presented to the parish
only to the portion inN orfolk: the Cambridgeshire portion by the late Mr. James Lee, and is .manned by volunteers.
of this parish is given in Kelly's Directory of that county, of Fairs are held here on June 29th and 3oth. The Ecclesias-
which Christ Church, a separate ecclesiastical parish, forms tical Commissioners are lords of the manor of Wisbech
part. The church of St. Peter is a large building of stone Barton, which extends into this parish, and Charles Watson
in the Perpendicular style, with some traces of Early Townley esq. M.A., ;J.P. of Fulbourn Manor, Cambridge, is
Norman, and consists of chancel, nave with clerestory, lord of the manor of Beaupre Hall. The principal land-
aisles, north porch and an embattled western tower, with owners arc Charles Watson Townley esq. M.A., J.P. George
octagonal belfry containing a clock and 6 bells: in I888 the Croft Huddleston esq. Tristram Frederick Croft Huddle-
chancel was restored and fitted with choir stalls~ the east stun esq. M.A. of Cambridge, Jackson Hunt esq. M.A. of 23
window is stained, and in the chancel wall is a brass dated Montagu square, London w, the trustees of the late Rev.
x62I, with kneeling figues of eight males and five females, John Fen wick B. D., .r.P. the representatives of the late
DIREGrORY.J NORFOLK. UPWELL. 655
Hanslip Palmer esq. John Cabread Jones esq. of Stonca p.m. in the summer months & at 5.30 in the winter. The
Grange, Wimblington, Cambs, Thomas Wright esq. Mrs. nearest telegraph office is at Outwell
Gambier, Major Randle Jackson, of The Priory, St. Andrews, PosT OFFICE, Three Holes Bridge.-William Walton Caw,.
N.B., James Gay esq. and Dr. Charles Orton. The soil is thorn, receiver. Letters arrive at 5· r5 a. m. & are dis-
loamy, in many parts highly fertile, and the subsoil clay. patched at 7.20 p.m. Postal orders are issued here, but
The crops are wheat, potatoes, peas, beans and oats, with not paid
other produce. The area is r6,454 acres; rateable value of WALL LET.,..'"~'I'E"R Box, Lake's End, cleared 5 p.m. No collec-
Norfolk portion £rg,r82; the population of the entire parish tion on sundays
in r89r was-in Norfolk, 2,IOJ; Cambridgeshire, r,387. PUBLIC OFFICERS:-
Sexton, William Haddon. Collector of Income Tax & Poor Rates, Assistant Over-
Nordelph, or Northdelph, is a fine hamlet, 4 miles west seer & Surveyor of Highways, A. J. Elworthy
from Downham and about the same distance from Upwcll Medical Officer & Public Vaccinator for uth & 12th
village, and is the converging point of five different parishes, districts, Wisbech union & 2nd district, Downham
viz. Downham, Denver, Upwell, Outwell and Stow Bar- union, Harry Pearson Gilbert L.R.C.P.Edin
dolph: the hamlet is intersected by the river Nene, over Registrar of Births & Deaths for Upwell Sub-District,
which there is an iron bridge. Holy Trinity church, erected Edward James Hngh Waurlby
by the Rev. William Gale Townley M.A. in 1865 , as a chapel Town Crier, Public Hall Keeper & School Attendance
of ease to the parish church, is an edifice of brick in the Officer, Henry 'Vest Hartley
Early English style, consisting of chancel, nave, vestry, . BOARD ScHOOLS:- . .
south porch and a turret containing one bell: the east A School Board of 5 members was f?:~ed compulsortly,
window is stained and there are 250 sittings. The Rev. I I December, I874! for Upwell dtstnct,_ & there are
SamueL Lee Coverley B.A. and Th.A. of University College, s?hools at ~he followmg plac~s :-Upwell VtLlage (Norfolk
Dublin, has been curate in charge. since r877· There are stde), Chrtst Church, Lak~ s End & Nordelph; James
Wesleyan and Reformed Wesleyan chapels. Webber_, clerk to the board, Ilenry West Hartley, attend-
. . ance officer
THRE_E HOLES lS 2 m1lcs south, and has a Primitive Upwell St. Peter's, erected in 1 s77 , for 3 2 7 children;
Methodtst chapel. average attendance, 64 boys, 6o girls & 57 infants;
PosT, M. 0. & T. 0., S. B. & Annuity & Insurance Office, William Harris, head master; !Jrs. Maria Harris, head
Upwell.-James Henry Inman, postmaster. Letters mistress; Mrs. Mary Jane Turner, infants' mist.ress
arrive from Wisbech at 4.50 a. m. & r.ss p. m. ; dispatched Lake's End, erected in r877, for 90 children ; average
at 9.30 a.m. & 7.50 p.m. Sunday letters arrive at 5·53 attendance, 6r; Percival Hidyard, master; Mrs. Edith
a. m.; diSpatched at 8. r5 p.m. Money orders are granted Ridyard, mistress
& paid from 9 a. m. to 6 p.m. Telegraph office open Nordelph, erected 1879, for 95 children; average attend-
from 8 a.m. to 8 p.m. week days & from 8 to ro a.m. ance, 65; Miss Helen Law, mistress; Ida Berry, assistant
Sundays mistress
PosT & M. 0. 0., S. B. & Annuity & Insurance Office, CARRIERS.-Lee, from· Tip's End, viii. Christchurch &
Nordelph.-Mrs. Ellen Ann Chapman, receiver. Letters Upwell to Wisbech, tues. & sat.; Boyce, from Welney,
through Downham, arrive at 7 a. m.; dispatched at 6.20 via Lake's End & Three Holes, tues. thurs. & sat

Upwell. Melton George Watton, farmer Everson Egbert, wheelwright


Batts Rev. Arthur Charles [Baptist] Milk Benjamin Notson, farmer I<'ailes James, farmer
Chapman Charles, Walnut Tree house Mulley James, boot & shoe maker I Green James William, farmer
Dalison Rev. John Beauvoir M.A., J.P. Murfin Charles, farm bailiff to John • Hardy Harry, blacksmith
· Rectory Cabread Joncs esq Morton Joseph, farmer
Eiger Miss Murrell Walby, Red Hart P.H Palmer Henry, farmer
McGloch Mrs Naylor George, farmer I Prior Benjarnin, farmer
'Fhistleton J arnes Thomas Oliver Jane (Mrs.), baker Stevens Abraham, grocer & draper
Truman William, Brackenburgh Overland Charles, Rose & Crown P.H Whittome George Counsel, farmer
Overland William, beer retailer
COMMERCIAL. Pleasants Henry, boot & shoe maker
Baker James Morton, blacksmith
Nordelph.
Plumb Rt. Mmson, artificial manure agt
Beckett John, farmer Rogers William, farmer 1 [Letters through Downham.]
Balding John Bowker, grocer Rowell Samuel, Black Horse P.H Coverley Rev. Samuel Lee B.A., Th.A.
Bowers John, farmer & market gardener Sear! Stephen, farmer · [curate in charge]
Bowers Thomas, farmer Searl Mary Ann (Mrs.), shopkeeper Booth Nathan
Bradley William, farmer Shepb~>rd Samuel, farmer Nix Thomas, Neatmoor hall
Coote Thomas & Son, coal merchants Shepherd Thomas, saddler Tuck Williarn
Cox William, farmer Stevens Rebecca (Miss), dress maker West Wllliam
Dales Joseph, coal merchant Stevens & Son, grocers
Deptford John, farmer & carrier Sutton James, bricklayer COMMERCIAL.
Elv'yn John, farmer Sutton Richard, bricklayer A~herton John, grocer & draper
El worthy & Son, auctioneers & builders, Swann George, farmer Bailey Richard Flour, farmer
& at Wisbech
El worthy Charles, farmer & landowner
'V
Tombleson m. carpenter & wheelwt Bates John, farmer
Booth N a than, farmer & landowner
Turner Alfred, farmer
Esgate John (Mrs.), farmer Turner James Billney, farmer Chapman Ellen Ann (Mrs.), grocer,
Everson Edgar, fruit salesman Turner William, farmer draper & postmistress
Filby George William, carpenter Upwell Public Hall Co. Limited (Wm. Chapman John, baker & butcher
Fillenham John, tailor W elchman, clerk) Evans William, coach, cart, van &
Fort.h Thomas, miller (wind) Vawser Frederick, farmer waggon builder & wheelwright
Frusher Alfred, farmer, Pingle farm Walker Joseph, farmer Flegg Sarah (Mrs.), beer retailer
. f,:~:~~~ ~~~~~~:~~~~;;ner Warby James, farmer
Warby John, farmer
Hart John, beer retailer
Hnmphrey William, farmer
Goodman fly. carpenter & wheelwright Warby William, steam thrashing ma- Jones George, farmer
Goodyear George, farmer chine owner Markham Thomas, carpenter
Green Frederick Billet, farmer Ward Freder!ck, beer retailer Nix Thomas, farmer, Neatmoor hall
Hartley Henry West, town crier, bill Ward Susan (Mrs.), butcher Pepper William, machine owner
poster, public hall keeper & school Waudby Edward James Hugh,registrar Proctor Joscph, farmer, East farm
attendance officer of births & deaths for Up well sub-dist Rayner Benjamin, blacksmith & agri-
Hurnberston George, Five Bells Wehher Joseph, miller (wind) cultural machinist
commercial hotel & posting house Webber William Haddon, bricklayer Robert.o:;on George, Chequers P.H
Hunt John Thos. Huddleston Arms P.H Welbourn William, farmer Scott James, farmer
Inman Arthur Wilcock, grocer White Thomas, farmer Scott Jesse, farmer
James John (:;"\<lrs.), farmer White William, butcher Scott Reuben, farmer
James William, farmer Wiles John, farmer Sharrnan Thomas, boot maker
Jarvis 'Wilby Watson, carpenter Smith William, farmer
Lawrence Joseph, beer retailer Lake's End. Tuck Frederick J ames, farmer
Lawton Charles, farmer [Letters should be addressed Lake'B End, Tuck Henry, farmer
May Job, beer retailer Wisbech.] West William, farmer, Old farm
Means Abraham, jnn. farmer Bennett Hy. Robt. Ship inn, & farmer Whyatt Wm. boot maker & shopkeeper
Melton George Henry, farmer Hettles John William, Lord Nelson P.H Wootton Joseph, farmer; & at Denver

• C. N. & S• 42*
656 UPWELL. NORFOLK. [KELLV"s

Duffen David, farmer Searle Stephen, farmer


Three Holes. Duffen Thomas, farmer Tombleson John, blacksmith
[Letters should be addressed Three Holes, Hartley John Edward, farmer Tombleson Wm. carpenter & wheelwht
Wisbech.] Ilartley William, farmer Trower Charles, farmer
.Bettinson J oseph, farmer Hooke Waiter, farmer Trower Waiter, farmer
Bettinson Robert, farmer Jakes Jane (Mrs.), Chequers P.H Turner Alfred, farmer
Bowles Thomas, butcher & baker Knight John, farmer Turner John, farmer
Cawthorn Wm. Walton,grocer & draper Mclton George, farmer Wakefield Robert, farmer
Cawthorn William, farmer Scott George, farmer Warby Mnrrell, beer retailer
Covell William, farmer Scott John, farmer Wilson James, beer retailer
Dalton Samuel Henry, wheelwright Searle Robert, farmer

WABOURNE (or WEYBOURNE; the latter is the modern' College, London, who is !llso rector of and resides at Beeston
spelling) is a parish and village, picturesquely situated in a Regis. In the reign of King John, Sir Ralph Meinilwaring,
hollow half-a-mile from the sea, about 4 miles north-east then holder of the manor, married Amicia-, daughter of
from Holt station on the Eastern and Midlands railway, 9 Hugh de Meschines, surnamed "Keveliok," 3rd Earl of
west f.rom Cromer and I4 east from Wells, in the Northern Chester: this Ralph, who was Chief Justice of Chester,
division of the county, Erpingham union and Holt petty appears to have founded here a priory for Augustine canons
sessional division and county court district. The parish is as a cell to Westacre, and dedicated to St. :Mary and All
bounded on the east, south and west by R range of sand I Saints, the cloisters of which were on the north side of the
hills, two hundred feet above sea level, covered alternately ' Saxon church and the priory church at the east end of it;
by plantations, furze and heather, Telegraph Hill, the although the priory was subsequently enlarged and again
highest point, being 269ft. above the sea level. Here the reduced before the Reformation, it never appears to have
range of cliffs forming a barrier to the North Sea for a been a hoqse of any great consequence, and is valued in
part of the coast of North Norfolk come to an end, and Speed at £28 7s. 2d. Here is a coastguard station. Wa-
the salt marshes beginning at this point, are continued to I borne Hall, the seat of Robert Horace Walpole esq. is a
Hunstanton. The coast Jine has now a very small curve, I mansion of red brick, pleasantly situated on an eminence
owing to the encroachments of the sea ; but there is no commanding extensive view~ of the sea and surrounding
doubt that it formerly had a greater outward curve form- hills. The Earl of Orford, who is lord of the manor, and
ing an Open bay or roadstead called "Walborno Hope," Willia.m Johnson Jennis Balding esq. and Wm. Thos. Bird
where medireval coasting vessels, to avoid the sands and esq. are the principal landowners. The soil is very variable ;
shoals to the west, steered out to sea to make the Humber subsoil, sand, gravel and clay. The chief crops are wheat,
or east coast of Yorkshire. Of the ancient church, reputed barley, turnips and grass. The parish contains I,6oo
to date from the Saxon period, part of the tower and the acres, of which I,l68 are arable, pasture and meadow, and
west end are still standing. The church of All Saints is an the remainder heath and woodland and 8o of water; rate-
edifice of flint with stone dressings, in the Early Norman able value, £r,907; the population in I891 was 287.
and Decorated styles, consisting o! chancel, nave of two Parish Clerk, William Cooke.
bays, north aisle, south porch and an embattled western PosT OFFICE.-George David .John Spink, sub-postmaster.
tower: the church was restored and new roofed with oak Letters arrive from Holt R.S.O. at 8.20 a. m.; box closes
in 1888, under the superintendence of Mr. H. J. Green, 4· 10 p.m. ; no sunday post. Lower Sherringham is the
architect, of Norwich, and the aisle of the ancient' build- nearest money order & telegraph office. Postal orders are
ing has been partly restored, at a cost of over £1,000, issued here, but not paid
and added to the present structure : th!lre are about 250 Coastguard Station. James Crickard, officer
sittings. The register dates from the year 1727. The 1
The Wabourne United School Board district comprises the
living is a donative, average yearly value from tithe rent- parishes of Wabourne, Kelling & Salthouse, was formed
charge £38, in the gift of the Earl of Orford, and held in I875 & consists of 7 members: the school is at Kelling;
since I87S by the Rev. William Bosworth Th.A. of King's Henry Lewis Salthouse, clerk & attendance officer
Balding William Johnson Jennis Cletheroe Thomas "\Villiam, builder, Nott Walter, farmer
Clarke Mrs contractor, wheelwright & agricul- Otty Williarn, coal dealer
Hamond Mrs. Robert, sen tural implement manufacturer & Risborough John, blacksmith
Monement The Misses, Wabourne cot brick, tile & slate merchant Sadler William, shoe maker
Monement William Balding Cooper Arthur, baker Spink George David John, earthenware
Walpole Robert Horace R.N, J.P. Wa- Crickard James, coastguard officer dealer, furniture broker, provision
borne hall; & 37 Green street, Park Dady William, jun. butcher merchant, draper & general ware-
lane, London w Dady William Henry, farmer houseman, Post office
COMMERCIAL. Digby John, coal dealer &c Starling Waiter, shopkeeper
Alien William, machine owner Dixon William, farmer, Abbey farm Wabourne Coffee & Reading Rooms
Holding William J ohnson J ennis, brewer Farrow Lewis, Crown & Anchor P. H (Mrs. Sarah Grice, keeper)
& maltster Hudson Mark, Ship P.H Youngman Jas. farmer & miller (wind)
W ACT ON is a pleasant village and parish, I mile south- acres of glebe and residence, in the gift of Mrs. E. T.
east from Forncett Junction station on the Ipswich and Chadwick, and held since 188r by the Rev. Edward Taylor
Norwich section of the Great Eastern railway, rf south- Chadwick. The Wesleyan chapel is a small wooden build-
west from Long Stratton and 8 north-west from Harleston, ing. In 1711 Mrs. Elizabeth Baspoole left £2 12s. yearly,
in the Southern division of the county, Depwade hundred, payable out of a farm now (I892) in the occupation of Mrs.
petty sessional division and union, Harleston county court William Le Grys, to be given to the poor of this parish who
district, rural deanery of Depwade, archdeaconry of Nor- attend church, which is distributed monthly in bread. The
folk and diocese of Norwich. The church of All Saints is Duke of Nor folk K. G. is lord of the manor. The principal
a fine building of flint with stone dressings, in the Decor- landowners are the trwtees of the late Col. Randall Robert
ated style of the ISth century, consisting of chancel, Burronghes J. P. of Long Stratton Manor, the trustees of
nave and a low round western tower containing 3 bells: in Charles "\Valford esq. and Major Henry Tuke Holmes J.P. of
the chancel are sedilia and a piscina, and there are remains Wacton House. The soil is clay; subsoil, clay. The chief
of the doorway and stairs leading to the rood loft : new crops are wheat, barley and beans. The area is 1, ros
candelabra have been presented by Mrs. Chadwick : there acres, including a large common; rateable value, £1,340;
are·tablets to John Pilborough gent. d. 1772, and to Mary, the population in 189I was 240.
wife of the Rev. William Baker, rector of Hedenham, and Under the Divided Parishes ~et, r88 2, a portion of Long
eldest daughter of the Rev. John Soley, formerly rector of Stratton has been added to this parish.
this parish, d. I74r : on the south wall is an ancient brass Sexton, Robert Dye.
to John Knyvett de Ashwouldthorpe, ob. 1623 : the font is
ornamented with carving: in I88S the church was restored Letters arrive from Long Stratton about 6.30 a. m. & 6.r5
and a new roof erected at a cost of £8o, defrayed by the p.m. Long Strntton is the nearest money order & tele-
rector: there are ISO sittings. The register dates from graph office. PILLAR LRTTER Hox cleared at 7 a. m, &
the year 156o. The living is a rectory, with the sinecure 6.30 p.m. week days; sundays, 7 a. m
rectory of Wacton Parva annexed, tithe rent-charge £312, School (mixed), free, erected in 1872, for so children;
average £,245, joint gross yearly value £,229, including 31 average attendance, 47; Miss Clara Goard, mistress
Chad wick Rev. Edward Taylor, Rectory Butler Robert, miller (wind), Common Smith Geo. Duke's Head P.H. & carpntr
Holmes Major Hy. Tuke J.P. Wacton ho Le Grys Thomas, farmer, Common Snelling Frank, farmer
Tilbrook George Laban Le Grys Wm. (Mrs.), farmer,Hill farm Snelling James Gage, farmer
Mann John, farmer, Wacton hall Tripp Laura Louisa (Miss), shopkeeper
COMMERCIAL. Peck Ed wd. farmer & assistant overseer W estonHarriet(Mrs. ), frmr. Wacton grn
Alexander Dennis, farmer Peck James, farmer & landowner
DIRECTORY.] NORFOLK. W.ALPOLE ST. PETER • 651

W ALCOTT is a parish and village on the coast, 6 miles from the year 1558. The living is a vicarage, annexed to
east from North Walsham station on the Cromer branch of that of Happisburgh in r884, average tithe rent-charge
the Great Eastern railway and 4 north-east from Honing £175, joint net yearly value £296, in the gift of the Bishop
station on the Eastern and Midlands railway, in the Eastern of Norwich, and held since r887 by the H.ev. James Slater
i

division of the county, Tunstead and Rapping petty sessional M.A. of Queens' College, Cambridge, who resides at Happis-
1

division, Rapping hundred, Smallburgh union, North burgh. James Palmer esq. is lord of the manor, William
1

Walsham county court district, rural deanery of Waxham, Werm esq. Mrs. John Bush and George William Bush esq.
Happing division, arch deaconry of Norfolk and diocese of are the chief landowners. The soil is strong and rich ; sub-
Norwich. The church of All Saints is a plain but ancient soil, clay and gravel. The chief crops are wheat, oats and
building of tl.int, in the Perpendicular style, consisting of barley. The area is 685 acres of land and so foreshore ;
chancel, nave, southporchand an embattled western tower rateable value, £1,330~ the population in 1891 was 104.
containing 3 bells: a carved oak screen separates the nave Parish Clerk, William Payne.
from the chancel : three windows on the north side were PosT OFFIC~. - William Flowerdew, receiver. Let.ters
inserted in 1857 by the Rev. Horatio Nelson William Comyn, through Stalham S.O. arrive at 8.30 a. m. & dispatched at
late vicar: the nave, tower and bells were restored in 1877, 2.20 p.m. The nearest money order office is at Happis-
and the -chancel has been restored by the Ecclesiastical burgh & Bacton is the nearest telegraph office
Commissioners: there are 200 sittings. The register dates The children of this place attend the school at Happisburgh
PRIVATE RESIDENTS. COMMERCIAL. Love John, farmer
Baldwin Thomas Bush George William, farmer & land- l'almer James, farmer
Bush Mrs. John, The Chimneys owner, Rookery Palmer James, jun. coal merchant
Bush George William, The Rookery Flowerdew Willia.m, wheelwright & Palmer John, farmer & maltster
Werm William, sen shopkeeper, Post office Purdy George, farmer
Wenn William, jun. Walcott hall Gibbons Jn.Lighthouse inn,&blacksmth Wenn Wm. jun. farmer, Walcott hall
WALLINGTON-with-THORPLAND form one since 1866 by the Rev. Charles Greenwood Floyd M.A. of
parish, 3 miles north from Downham, 2 east from Stow Christ Church, Oxford, who resides at Holme. Wallington
Bridge station on the Ely and Lynn section of the Great Hall, the property of Edmund Peel esq. D.L., J.P. lord of
Eastern railway, in the South Western division of the county, the manor and principal landowner, and now occupied by
Clackclose hundred and petty sessional division, Downham Harry Wayman esq. is an ancient mansion with good gar-
union and county court district, rural deanery of Fincham, dens and an extensive park of 150 acres. The soil is gravel;
arch deaconry of Norfolk and diocese of :Norwich. There subsoil, clay. The chief crops are wheat, barley and roots.
were formerly two churches in this parish, that of St. Mar- The area is r,46o acres; rateable value, £r,392; the popu-
garet, Wallington, is now in ruins, and the church of St. lation in 1891 was 54·
Thomas's, Thorpland, has entuely disappeared. The living Letters through Down ham, the nearest money order & tele-
is a rectory, consolidated with those of South Runcton and graph office, arrive at 8 a.m
Holme, joint gross yearly value £6so, including 22~ acres of The children of this place attend the school at Holme-next-
glebe, in the gift of Edmund Peel esq. D.L., J.P. and held Runcton
Wayman H~rry, Wallington hall
Heading George, farmer, Thorpland
I Hopkin William Wells, farmer Stibbon Henry, cowkeeper, Thorpland

W ALPOLE ST. ANDREW is a village and parish, the English monarch, King John, in 1216, lost his treasure
with a station, r~ miles north-east from the village, on a and the baggage of his army in attempting to cross the
branch of the Great Northern and Midland joint railway, 9 Wash. Edward Hugh Jackson esq. of North Brink, Wis-
miles west-by-south from Lynn and 7 north-by-east from bech, is lord of the manors of Walpole Colville, Walpole
Wisbech, in the North Western division of the county, bun- Coleraine and Walpole Eldred; the principal landowners
dred and petty sessional division of l<'reebridge 1\Iarshland, are the Crown, John Boon esq. and Mrs. Charles Hoon.
union and county court district of Wisbech, rural deanery The soil is clay and loam. The chief crops are wheat and
of Lynn Mar~hland, and archdcaconry and diocese of Nor- beans. The area is 2,364 acres of land and r, 130 water;
wich. In r886, by a Local Government Order, a detached rateable value, l,4,68r ; the population in r8g1 was 630,
part of this parish was amalgamated with Walpole St. Peter, CRoss KEYS is a hamlet about a quarter of a mile from
and detached parts of Walpole St. Peter added to this the railway station and 2 miles north from the village.
parish. The church of St . .Andrew is a spacious edifice of The mission church of St. Helcn, erected in r88r at a cost
brick and stone, in the Early Perpendicular style, consisting of about £8oo, is an edifice of red brick and stone, consist-
of chancel, nave, aisles, south porch and an embattled ing of small chancel, nave, north porch and a western turret
western tower containing 5 bells : in the south aisle hangs a containing one bell: there arc sittings for 1 _10 persons. Here
large picture, by an Italian master, brought from Italy by is also a Primitive Methodist chapel, erected in r86 9 .
one of the Lords Coleraine; on the south side of the chancel
arch is an elegant stone bracket and within one of the but- PosT & M. 0. 0 .• S. B. & Annuity & Insurance Office.-
tresses of the tower is a curious cell for which no object CA.n Folthorpe Delamore, receiver. Letters arrive from Wis-
be assigned: the church affords 300 sittings. The register bech at 8.30 a.m. & are dispatched at 5· 30 p.m. The
dates from the year 1730 only, the earlier entries are in cor- telegraph office is at the rail way station. Letters for
porated with those of Walpole St. Peter. The living is a Cross Keys arrive through Lynn. LET'l'EH Box cleared
vicarage, average yearly value from tithe rent-charge at 5·45 p.m
£-173, in the gift of the trustees of the late .Joseph Phipps SCHOOLS:- •
Townsend esq. and held since x863 by the Rev. Demetrius A School Board of 5 members was formed compulsorily 23
Panaghis Calliphronas M.A. of Trinity College, Cambridge, July, 1878 ; W. Welchman, Wisbech, clerk to the board;
by whom a vicarage house has been purchased afld pre- Robert Miller Donaldson, attendance officer
sented to the living and who resides at Melton, near Wood- Board (girls), Walpole St. Andrew, erected in 1841, for
bridge. The Dole lands, of 85 acres, together with 22 houses, 100 girls ; average attendance, 59; Miss Carolina Maria
produce about £rso yearly, which sum is wholly applied to Cross, mistress
the relief of the poor. In r862 the Charity Commissioners Cross Keys (mixed), for go children; average attendance,
erected almshouses here for three poor widows, each of 71 : Mrs. Kirkham, mistress
whom receives 4s. 6d. a week and two tons of coal annually. Railway Station (Midland&. Great Northern), Alfred Reuben
It was in the immediate neighbourhood of this place that Robbins, station master
Walpole St. An drew. Delamore Folthorpe, boot & shoe mak,er, Cross Keys. •
Post office
Boon Mrs. Charles Donaldson RobertMillor, school attend- [Letters through Lynn.]
Donaldson Donald ance officer Couisins George, Cross Keys P.H
Pearce Rev. William [curate in charge] Follen Hy. farmer & landowner, Marsh Curson Thomas, beer retailer
Fuller John, farmer Eastland John, farmer & landowner,
COMMERCIAL.
Giddens Charles William, farmer Walpole house
Armstrong John, King John inn Hubbard Richard, farmer, Fen Handley Charles, farmer
Bailey John, beer retailer & farmer Ingram James, farmer Meadows James, farmer
Barnes William Henry, carpenter Ingram Joseph, Plough P.H. & farmer Pitcher Edward, boot maker
Bishop Walter, blacksmith Ingram William, farmer Plumb Thomas, farmer
Boon John, farmer & landowner, Market Long William Walter, shopkeeper Ridlington & Son, ~oal dealers
lane Oughton Horace,carpntr.& wheelwright Rylett Henry, farmer
Crowden William, farmer Palmer William, farmer Savage l<'rancis, farmer
Cullen Christopher, beer retailer Savage Robert, farmer Steward Robert, farmer & shopkeeper
WALPOLE ST. PETER is a village and extensive from Lynn, in the North Western division of the county,
parish, 3 miles south from Walpole station on the Midland hundred and petty sessional division of Freebridge Marsh-
and Great Northern joint railway and 8 miles south-west land, union and county court district of Wisbech, rural
1
6-'8 WALI'OLI ST. P.I£TI:B..

[DLL1' 1
deanery of Lynn l\Iarshland and archdeaA:onry and diocese of lands of 41 acres is distributed in money. "The sea-wall,"
Norwich. In 1886, by a Local Government Order, detached built by the Romans and called "the Roman Bank,"
parts of this parish were amalgamated with Walpole St. crosses this parish, and antiquities have been found in it.
Andrew and a detached part of that parish added to this. Edward Hugh Jackson esq. of North Brink, Wisbech, is
The church of St. Peter is a building of stone in the Early lord of the manors of Walpole Colville, Walpole Coleraine
English and Decorated styles, consisting of chancel, cleres- and Walpole Eldred. Edward Trafford esq. and Joseph
toried nave, aisles, south porch and an embattled western Phipps Townsend esq. of Downhills, Tottenham, Middlesex,
tower containing a clock and 6 bells : there is an ancient are the principal landowners. The soil is strong clay; Rub-
screen and some very fine carved oak benches ; the fronts soil, strong clay. The chief crops -are oats, wheat, beans
of the book boards and panels of the screen are decorated and barley. The area is 6,982 acres; rateable value,
with paintings of the time of Henry VI. representing saints £n,674; the population in r89r was 1,12r.
under canopies and over tho entrance to the rood loft si airs Parish Clerk, Charles Boon.
are paintings of the Virgin and St. John the Evang-elist: the PosT OFFICE, Highway. - George Reeve, postmaster.
easternmost part of the chancel is approached by a flight Letters through Wisbech arrive at 7· r5 a. m. & 6.20 p.m.;
of ten steps, rendered necessary on account of the construe- dispatched at 6.30 p.m. The nearest money order office
tion of a vaulted way below the chancel, as a continuation of is at Terrington St. John & telegraph office at Walpole
the footpath through the churchyard : there are 8oo sittings. railway station. Postal orders are issued here, but not
The register dates from the year I559· The living is a paid
rectory with the cha_pelry of St. Edmund annexed, average PILLAR LETTER Box, Church End, cleared at 6.10 p.m. on
tithe rent-charge, .£904, net yearly value £507, including week days only
14 acres of glebe, with residooce, in the gift of the Crown, ScHOOLS : -
and held since '1891 by the Rev. tCharles Mac"Michae\ H. A. The Free School for the parishes of Walpole St. And,rew &
of Trinity College, Cambridge. The church of St. Edmund, Walpole St Peter was founded in 1705 by Anthony Cur-
at Walpole Highway, is a structure in the Norman style, ton, who also endowed it with 6o acres of land; the
erected at a cost of about £r,6oo, and consists of chancel, school will now hold 120 boys; average attendance, 75;
nave, south porch and a turret containing 2 bells: the four Thumas Arnold, master
chancel windows are stained, and the church affords r8o Fen School (mixed), for 70 children, average attendance,
sittings. There are ~Wesleyan and Primitive Methodist 68 ; Miss Rosa Pemberton Harris, mistress
chapels here. The late Miss Shanley, of Terrington St. Board School, Highway, ereded in 1879, for 120 children ;
John, in 1872, erected six almshouses for six poor women, average attendance, 64; .Alfred John Pear, master; Mrs.
~ each of whom receives ss. weekly. The rent of the Dole Mary Ann l'ear, mistress
Alexander David Henry, Newton hall Foster Johnson, farmer, East drove Newton Charles, sen. farmer
MacMichael Rev. Charles B. A. [rector] Giddens Richard, farmer, Hill house Newton Charles, jun. butcher
Whalley Rev. Herbert [curate] Giddens William, farmer Nobbs Thos. Hy. farmer & coal dealer
COMMERCIAL. Goodale William, horse slaughterer Oglesby Richard, farmer, Eastfield
Allen Henry, blaA:ksmith & farmer, Goodley Thomas, Wheatsheaf P.H. Fen Oughton Horace, farmer
Churt;h end Harrison John Thomas, Old Bell P.H Oughton William, shoe maker
Alexander David Henry, farmer & land- Herring Jn. ThoR. blacksmith, Highway Pattin Thomas, cow keeper
• owner, .Newton hall Hill Henry, farmer Peck Jn. Black Horse P.H. Church end
Baker Emma (Mrs.), beer retlr. Smeeth Holah John, farmer Powers "\'Villiam, farmer, Old Marsh
Barnes Berry, farmer Hopper David,frmr. & surveyor of roads Pycroft Alexander, farmer
Hart Benjamin, beer retailer Horn William, farmer, Highway Reeve George, draper & grocer, Post
Bird William, farmer, Fen Horspole John, farmer, East drove office, Highway
Brooks John, cowkeeper Hubbard Henry, farmer, Fen Russell Daniel England, farmer & land-
Brownlow John, farmer Humphrey Arthur, surveyor, account- owner, Highway
Burgess "\Villiam, farmer ant, & assistant overseer & rate & col- Russell Ueo. England,farmr. West drove
Hurham Mary (Mrs.), farmer lector for the parishes of Walpole St. ShnrpGeo.carpentr.&wheelwrt.Highwy
Burton William, farmer, West drove Andrew & Walpole St. Peter Sharp Samuel, bricklayer
Carnell \Villiam,cowkeeper,Church end Hurst John, baker & shopkpr. Highway Taylor William, farmer, Walpole bank
Claxton James, farmer, Highway Ingram Jamcs, farmer, New Mctrsh Thorp George, wheelwright, Highway
Clayton Charles, butcher, Church end Johnson Samuel, farmer, Church end Thorp John, farmer
Collins Samuel, farmer Large Jewson, farmer Tuck "\Vm. Chapman, farmer, Highway
Collison George, bricklayer Large Robert, thrashing machine propr Ward Benjamin, beer retailer
Cook George, farmer Linder John, brit;klayer Ward Everett, shopkeeper
Cooke Joscph Marshal!, farmer Markham Thomas, farmer, Highway West Thomas, farmer, Marsh
Cooper James & Son, millers (wind & Marston John Thomas, plumber & Whitno Saml. thrashing machine owner
1

steam), Highway painter, Highway Winkley John, farmer


Cox Arthur, farmer, Fen Mason James, farmer Winterton William, auctioneer, valuer,
Coy Daniel, farmer, Fen end Meadows George, farmer, Market lane land & estate agent, farmer, & regis-
Cozens Edward, farmer, Church end Merrishaw Henry, wheelwright trar of births & deaths for the Wal-
Cranfield James, tailor, Highway Miller Samuel Sheppard, butcher pole sub-district, East New field; & at
Creasey Thomas, farmer, Fence bank Miller Sarah (Mrs.), beer retlr. Island Wisbech
Cullen James, farmer, West drove Morton William, bricklayer Woods Alma, brewer & mineral water
Did well George, farmer Munson Richard Charles, farmer, St. manufacturer, Highway
Did well Sarah (Mrs.), farmer Peter's lodge Woods Hobert, farmer, Church end
Ferring William, Rose & Crown P.H Naylor William, wheelwright Wright John Henry, harness maker
French David. farmer, Old March 'Neep Thos. Hy. & Fras. Denman,farmrs
NORTH WALSHAM is a market town and parish,; succession of arches, buttresses and pinnacles in four tiers,
pleasantly situated on an eminence between theriversAnt and i the whole surmounted by a pelican: the Decorated east
Bure, with stations on the GreatEastern and Eastern and Mid- window, together with a reredos of .Caen stone elaborately
1

lands railways, 14± miles from Norwich, 25 north-west from carved and enriched with shafts of Rosso marble and inlaid
1

Yarmouth and 128 from London, in the Eastern division of I maTbles, communion table of carved oak, embroidered
the county, Tunstead and Rapping petty sessional division, i velvet cover and gas standards, were all presented in 1874
Smallburgh union, North Erpingham hundred, North. by W. Forster esq. of Aylsham: the fabric walls of the
Walsham county court district, rural deanery of Waxham, i church were thoroughly restored in r862; in 1874 Mrs.
Tunstead division, archdeaconry of Norfolk and diocese of, Martin Shepheard, the lay impropriator, provided the
Norwich. It is paved and lighted with gas by a company, and chancel with a new roof of English oak, covered with lead,
i

supplied with water from pumps and deep wells. A Local! at a cost of £5ro: in 1875 an organ was erected at a cost
Government district was constituted here in r875 and the of £520, and in 188r the remainder of the church was en-
1

town is governed by a Local Board of Health of 12 members. tirely new roofed at a cost of £2,8oo: during the last 25
The Dilham and North Walsham canal passes through and years, ending about r888, a sum of £g,ooo has been ex-
terminates at Antingham. The cnurch of St. Nicholas is an pended on the church, which now affords r,ooo sittings,
ancient building of flint and stone, in the Early Perpendi- 5oo being free. The register dates from the year I557·
cular style, consisting of chancel with aisles, nave, aisles, The living is a vicarage, with the rectory of Antingham .St.
south porch, and the remains of a massive tower once, with Margaret annexed, average tithe rent-charge £353, joint
spire, 147 feet in height, but in ruins since 1724, and now. gross yearly value £36o, including 2 acres of glebe, with
containing only 2 bells: the spandrels of the entrance arch ·. residence, in the gift of the Bishop of Norwich, and held
bear the arms of John of Gaunt, duke of Lancaster (r34o- since r874 by the Rev. John Smith Owen M.A., LL.l>. of
99), and of St. Benet's Abbey: on the north side of the Trinity College, Dublin, rural dean of Waxhamf 1'unstead
ehancel is a monument to Sir William Paston kt. of Paston, division, and surrogate. The Church Rooms, formerly a
' ob. 'I6o8 : the font has a cover of carved oak, rising in a 1 theatre, are used for parochial meetings and for the Church
DIBEOTOIY.] NORFOLK. NOltTB WA.LSHAM. 659
Sunday Scllool. There are Congregational, Wesleyan 1 and On sunday there is only one delivery by postman which
Primitive Methodist chapels. The Congregational chapel, commences at 7 a.m
built in 1857, at a cost of about £I,ooo, is a structure of PosT OFFWE, White Horse common.-George Buck, re-
flint with stone facings, in the Gothic style, and has 400 ceiver. Letters arrive at 7·5 a.m. & dispatched 5-I5 p.m
sittings, and an orgiJ.ll was erected in 1875 at a cost of £-300.
The Cemetery, Mundesley road, is 2 acres, 2 roods in ex- CouNTY MAGISTRATES I<'OR TussTEAD & flAPPING P..ETTY
tent, and was formed in 1856 at a cost of about £6oo ; 1t SESSlONAL Drvrsro:-<, acting for North Walsham.
has two mortua.ry chapels and caretaker's lodge ; it is under Harbord the Hon. Harbord, Ileathfield House, Norwich,
the control of a. burial board of 9 members. The Corn Hall chairman
in Bank Lake, built in 1848 at a cost of £goo, and now the Wodehouse Lord, Witton park, North Walsham
property of Mr. J. H. Reeve, is used for public meet,ings, Cubitt Edward George esq. Honing hall, Norwich
concerts &c.; it is fitted with a large platform and will seat Nevill James Sewell esq. B. A. Sloley house, Norwich
soo persons. The Temperance Hall in Hall lane will seat Robinson Henry Matthew Cooper esq. M.A. Knapton house~
about 200. Here are extensive agricultural implement North Walsham
works. .An agrieultural show is held here biennially, alter- Clerk to the Magistrates, J. S. Empson
nately with Aylsham. Tho market is held on Thursday, Petty ~essions are held at the King's Arms, North Walsham,
and is chiefly for corn ; auction sales for cattle &c. are held at ro.3o a.m. & at the Smallburgh Poor's house, every
on the same day. The rental of an allotment of 34 acres, alternate tuesday, at I I a.m. The following places are
amounting to £6o yearly, is distributed to the poor in included in the petty s:~ssional division :-Tunstead divi-
coals. .A submarine cable repeater station has recently sion-Asbmanhaugh, Bacton, ll'l.rton Turf, Beeston St..
boon established here by the English and German Govern- Lawrence, Bradficld, Crostwight, Dilham, Ediuthorpe,
.rnents jointly, for the purpose of giving additional telegraphic Felmingham, Honincr, Horning, Hoveton St. John, Hove-
communication between London and Berlin, Hamburg, ton St. Peter, Irstead, Neatishead, North Walsham, Pas-
l<'rankfort-on-Maine and Vienna. The cable leaves the ton, Ridlington, Sco' Ruston, Sloley, Smallburgh,
English shore at Bacton, 5 miles distant. The market Swafield, Tunstead, Westwick, Witton & \Vorstead. Hap-
-cross, built by Bishop Thirlby in the reign of Edward VI. ping division-Brunstead, Catfield, East Ruston, Happis-
was repaired by Bishop Redman in r69o, and again re- burgll, Hempstead-cum-Ecclcs, Hickling, Horsey,
.stored in l8S6 and 1882. On North Walsham Heath, Ingham, Lessingham, Ludham, Palling, Potter IIeigham,
beside the road to Norwich, is a stone cross, said to mark Stalham, Sutton, \Valcott & Waxham
the spot where in 13Br the rebels, headed by John Leitester, LocAL BoARD.
a dyer of Norwich, were defeated by Henry de Spencer, Board room, Office of Clerk.
the warlike Bishop of Norwich. The White Horse Spa Meetings held the last friday in each month.
and Blue Bell commons, to the north-east of the town, were
inclosed about the year r83o, and many houses have since MEMBERS.
been built upon them. The Oaks is the residence of John Cornish Robinson, chairman Owen Rev. John Smith M.A.,
Wilkinson esq. The Eccle,iastical Commissioners are the Bullimore William LL.D
lords of the manor, and Lord Ruffield p.c. Mrs. Petre, of West- Combe Frederick Orloff Press Edward
wick House, John W ilkinson esq. and W. M. Rider Haggard M.n.,c.M Scott Benjamin
-csq. are the chief landowners. The parish comprises au Dyball John Smith G-eorge William
area of 4,252 acres; rateable value, £r3,479 ; and in r89r IIowes Edward John Wilkinson John
t>he population was 3,612. Howes Robert 1 Wilson William
Parish Clerk, Edward Dix. ~ . Clerk, J. S. Empson
PosT, M. 0. & T. 0., S. B. & .Annuity & Insurance Office.- Treasurer, Henry Birkbeck, banker, North Walsham
James Ward Walter, postmaster Medical Officer of Health, Augustus Charles Morton.
M.R_c.s.Eng. Yarmouth road
RouRs OF BasrNEss-For sale of stamps &c. week days, Surveyor, Inspector & Collector, Edwin Joseph Simpson,
7 a.m. to 8 p.m. ; sundays. 8 to ro a.m. For money
Orient villa, Mundeslcy road
order, savings bank business, issue of licence~, inland
revenue stamps &c. week days, 9 a.m. to 6 p_m. For PUBLIC Ei:lTABLISHMENTS : -
sale of postal orders, week days, 7 a.m. to 8 p. m. For Cemetery, Mundesley road, John Wilkinson, Nelson street,
payment of ditto, week days, 9 a.m. to 8 p.m. For clerk to the burial board; Robert Wesby, caretaker
telegraph business, week days, 8 a.m. to 8 P-m. ; sun- Corn Hall, James H. Reeve, proprietor
days. 8 to ro a. m County Court, King's Arms hotel, every other month;
His Honor Edward Plurner Price Q.C. judge: John
!DISPATCH OF LETTER MAILS.
Wilkinson, registrar & high bailiff; Joseph Bean & John .
For North Walsham & all parts within North Walsham Webster, assistant bailif!'s. The County Court district
delivery, 6.30 a. m. (extra ~d. stamp, 6.35 a. m.; registered
co:nprises the following places:-. Antingham, .Ashman-
until 8 p.m. previous evening); Norwich & Eastern haugh, Bacton, Barton Turf, Reeston Rt. Lawrence,
Counties, 7.50 a.m. (extra ~d. stamp, 7·55 a.m. ; regis- Bradiield, Brumstead, Catfield, Crostwight, Dilham,
tered until 7.30 a.m.); London & London forward, 9-45 Eccles-by-the-Sca, Edingthorpe, Felmingham, Giming-
.a.m. (extra ~d. stamp, 9.50 a.m.; registered until g.rs ham; Uunton, Ilanwortb, Happisburgh, Hempstead,
a.m.); London & all parts, 12.25 p.m. (extra ~d. stamp, Hickling, Honing, Hoveton St. John, Hoveton St. Peter,
I2.25 p.m.; registered until noon); Mundesley & Knap- Ingham, Irstead, Knapton, Lessingham, Mundesley,
1on, 2.5a p.m. (extra ~d. stamp, 2.55 p. m. ; registered Neatishead, N orthrepps, Palling, Paston, Ridlington,
until 2.20 p.m.); London & all parts, 2.50 p.m. (extra
Rough ton, Ruston (East), Sco' Ruston, Sidestrand, Sloley,
.~d. stamp, 3 p.m. ; registered until 2.30 p.m.); Norwich
Smallburgh, Soutbrepps, Stalham, fluffield, Sutton,
.& district, 4 p.m. (extra.~d. stamp, 4·5 p.m.; rczistered
Swafield, Thorpe Market, Trimingbam, Trunch, Tun-
until 3.30 p.~.); Ipswich & Eastern Counties, via Nor- stead, Walcott, Waxham, Westwick, Witton & Worstead
wich, 5.40 p.m. (extra ~d. stamp, 5·'l5 p.m.; registered Certified Bailiff appointed under the "Law of Distress
until 5·10 p.m.); London & all parts, 7-45 p.m. (extra Amendment Act," John Webster
~:I. st.a.rnp, 7·5S p.m. ; registered until 7.15 p.m)
County Polic11 Station, Vicarage street, Henry 'Voolnough,
PARCEL MAILS. superintendent, & two constables
For London & all parts, 7·55 & 12.25 p.m.; Mundesley & Temperance Hall, Hall street
Knapton, 2.50 p.m.; London & all parts, 12.50 p.m.; Volunteer Fire llrigade, New road, Edwin Joseph Simp•
~orwich & district, 4 p.m.; Ipswich & Eastern Counties, son, superintendent, & 1 I men
via Norwich, 5.4-o p.m. ; London & all parts, 7·45 p. m VoLUNTEERS:-
()n sundays a lett.er mail for London & all parts is dis- 3rd Volunteer Battalion Norfolk Regiment (L Co,), Lieut.
patched ·at 4 p.m · Augustus Charles Morton, commandant
ARRIVAL OF LETTER MA.TLS.-Delivery commences- PUBLIC OFFICERS : -
From London & all parts, by postman & to callers, 7 a. m. Certifying Factory Surgeon, Fredcrick Orloff Combe H.D .•
London, N. S, & \V. of England & Scotland, by postman c_M_ Holly llouse
& to callers, 10.15 a.m. )lundesley & Knapton, by Clerk to the Governors of Sir William Paston's School,
postman, 2.45 p.m.; to callers, 12.15 p.m. London &~all John Wilkinson, Nelson street
parts, by postman & to callers, 2-45 p.m. Xorwieh & dis- Clerk to Commissioners of 'l'axes, J. S. Empson
trict & places within the North Walsham delivery, by Inspector under the Explosives & Petroleum .Acts, Henry
postman & to callers, 6 p. m Woolnough, Police Station, Vicarage street
PARCEL MAILS. Collector of Rates & Taxes, Edwin Joseph Simpson, Orient
From London & all parts, by postman & to callers, 7 a. m. villa, Mundeslcv•
road
Mundesley & Knapton, by postman, 2.45 p.m. ; to callers, Inland Revenue Officer, Fredk. Schneider, 2 Denmark ter
I2- 15 p.m. ·London & all parts, by postman & to callers, Medical Officer & Public Vaccinator, North Walsham
2-45 p.m. London & all parts, by postman & to callers, District, Smallburgh Union, .Angustus Charles Mortorl~
6 p.m M.R c.s.Eng. Yarmouth road
660 NORTH W ALSHAM. NORFOI~K. [KELLY's

Medical Officer & Public Vaccinator, South Repps District, late Endowed School Commission, & the school bmldings
Erpingham Union, John Shepherd B.A., L.R.C.P.LOnd. have been completely repaired & a sanatorium erected, &
Cromer road in 1 892 a large laboratory was erected for 20 boys : there
Registrar of Marriages for the Smallhurgh District, are several foundation scholarships, the holders of which

Peeke, Market street =-


Frederick Gregory, Market street; deputy, Samuel

Superintendent Registrar of Smallburgh Union, Fairfax


are exempt from school fees : the Rev. Henry Wimble
M.A. of Queen's College, Oxford, head master; John
Keble Hudson B. A. second master; Eugene E. Hennessy
Davies, Church street; deputy, Henry Riches Barnard B.A. third master ; J. A. Laloe, fourth master; Mons.
Town Crier, Robert Wesby, Mundesley road Carlier, French & German master; Horace Hill, Mus.D.
PLACES OF WoRSHIP, with times of services:- Cantab. music master; E. Minus, drawing master;
St. Nicholas Church, Rev. John Smith Owen M.A., LT,.n. Sergeant-Major Gibbons, drill master
vicar; Rev. Henry Goodman Johnsou M. A. curate; A School Board of 5 members was formed here 21 March.
I I a.m. 3 p.m. & 7 p.m 187I: Benjamin Scott, Cromer road, clerk to the board
Church Mission Room, White Horse common, served by & attendance officer
the mother church; 7 p.m Board Schools, erected in 1874• at a cost of£ 3, soo, for 230
Congregational, Hev. Charles Goffe, 10.30 a. m. & · 6. 30 boys, 180 girls & 200 infants ; averagP. attendance, r8o
p.m. ; rnon. 7.30 p.m boys, r I9 girls & 150 infants; Ed ward Snell, master ;
Primitive Methodist, Rev. John Buck, 10.30 a.m. 2.30 & Miss Agatha W. Hubbard, mistress ; Miss Sarah Landerp
6.30 p.m infants' mistress
Wesleyan, Rev. George Killick Osborn, 10,30 a.m. & 6.30 NEWSPAPER.-Tbe Cromer & North Walsham Post-P~
p.m. ; wed. 7.30 p.m Roman & Son, proprietors & publishers; every friday ;
ScHooLs:- Conservative; Hl. ; King's Arms street
The Free Grammar School, founded & endowed in z6o6, by RAILWAY STATIONS:-
Sir William Paston, for 40 sons of the inhabitants of the Great Eastern, Hobert Taylor, station master
hundreds of Tunstead, Happing, North Erpingham & East Eastern & Midlands, George Henry Pepper, station master
& West Flcgg, is situated at the entrance of the town from OMNIBUS (R. W. Palmer, proprietor) from G. E. Ry. station
Norwich, & was rebuilt in 1765: the great Lord Nelson, twice daily during the summer months between North
Archbishop Tenison & other eminent men, were educated Walsbam, Mundesley, Trimingham, Overstrand& Cromer
here : a good library, left by the Rev. Richard Berney, or vice versa
was placed, by his desire, in the school, for the students & CARIHERS TO : -
clergy of this neighbourhood. The income, amounting to NORWICH-Edward Bailey, from Antingham road t(>
£270 yearly, is derived from217 acres of land. A scheme 'Wagon & Horses,' Tom bland, every mon. wed. & sat.
for the management of the school was approved by the at 8, returning 4 p.m. same days

Hudson John Keble B.A. (second Wilkinson Miss, Nelson street


PRIVATE RESIDENTS. master), Grammar school Wilson Arthur Robert, King's Arms st .
Amies Mrs. Norwich road Ives Ernest Ferdinand,Denmark terrace Wilson Mrs. 6 Denmark terrace
Atkinson John, New road Jefferson George Fredk. :Mundesley rd Wilson William, Beech grove
Barcham Robert Samuel M.R.c.v.s. Jobnson Rev. Henry Goodman M.A. Wimblc Rev. Henry M.A. (head master),.
Norwich road [curate], Grammar School road Grammar school
Bean Joscph, Aylsham road Knight Miss Aylsham road Wright John Henry, Norwich road
Blanchflower Timothy Coleman, "\Vell- Ladell Mrs. Ivy cottage, Aylsham st COMMERCIAL.
ingtonia villa, Mundesley road Laloe J. A. (fourth master), Grammar Allen Thmnas Laxton, Temperance
Booty Ro bert Thomas, Norwich road School road hotel ; good commercial accommo-
Eouttell Thomas, ilacton road Larter Miss, Grammar School road dation ; well-aired beds; moderate
Brett William, Mundesley road Loads William Henry, Kyneton villas, chargPs, Market place
Browne Miss, Cromer road M undesley road Allured & Co. clothiers, Market place
Bry1.nt Horace, Market place Marjorall'l. Henry, Mundesley road Amiss David Mackenzie, printer, Mar-
Buck Rev. John [Primitive Methodist], Martin Charles, Kyneton villas, Mun- ket street
Aylsham road desley road Amies William, sen. farmer, White
Burton Charles Henry, Empson house Martins Mrs. Aylsbam

road Horse common
Burton Mrs. Robert, Bacton road Maynard Edwd. Chas. King's Arms st Amies William Thomas, farmer, "\'\'hite
Burton Thomas, The Lodge Millard Miss, Aylsbam road Horse common
Burton Thomas William, Mundesley rd Moon The Misses, Bacton road Anglo-Gennan Cable (Repeater) Sta-
Bush Robt. David, White Horse common Morton Augustus Charles M.R.C.S.Eng., tion (John Albert Weatherill, clerk
Chapman Arthur E. Mundesley road L.S.A.Lond. Yarmouth road in charge), Mundcslcy road
Cobon Mrs. The Laurels, Yarmouth rd Neave Mrs. Melbourne house Armes Frederick George, hair dresser
Coe Mrs. Bacton road Osborn Rev. George Killick [Wes- & tobacconist, Market place
Corn be Fredk. Orloff M.D., c.M. Holly ho leyan l, Eactrm road Bailey Edward, beer retailer & carrierp
Cooper Rev. Thomas Jennings B.A. Owen Rev. John Smith li£.A., LL.D. Cromer road
Norwich road [vicar, rural dean of Waxham Tun- Bailey George William, chemist & drug-
Cornish Robinson, Tudor house, Gram- stead division & surrogate], Vicarage gist, Market place
mar School road Page Mrs. Norwich road Bailey Thomas Chas. saddler, Church st.
Coy William Thomas, Market place Painter Miss, Grammar School road Baker Edward, fancy repos. Market pl
Cremer Mrs. Grammar School road Pallett Waiter William, Cromer road Barber Horace Adolphus, farmer, White
Cross Mrs. Bacton road Peggs Samuel, Mnndesley road Horse common
Cubitt Mrs. Montana house Press Ed ward, Spa common .Barcham & Son, auctioneers, Market
Davies Fairfax, Scarborough hill Randcll Frank, Kyneton villas, Mun- place & Park lane
Denney Edwin James, White house, desley road Barcham Hobert Samuel M.R.C.v.s. vet-
Yarmouth road Randell Frederick, Market place erinary surgeon, Norwich road
Dennis Robert, Royston house • Randell Horace, Grammar School road Barnard Henry Riches, accountant &
Dixon John, Brentnall house Reeve Jarnes By. Grammar School road dep.supt. registrar,Smallburgh unioa
Dunning William, jnn. Yarmouth road Robins William, Norwich road Barnes Arthur Petchell, greengrocer &
Durrant John, Erpingham house Scott Benjamin, Cromer road dealer in game, Market place
Earl Mrs. Bacton road Shepheard John B.A., J.P. Cromer road Barnes Geo. beer ret. Mundesley road
Empson Josiah Sa.dler, The Limeg Shepheard Mrs. The Lawn Bates John, Cross Keys P.H. Market pl;
Fairman Mrs. Norwich road Shepherd J ames John, Norwich road Bean Geo. pork butcher, Church plain
Fennel! Mrs. Holme lea, Norwich road Shipley Mrs. Fernleigh, Cromer road Bennett Mary Ann (Mrs.),dress maker~
Fish Mr.c. Grammar School road Simpson Edwin Joseph, Orient villa, Grammar School road
Fisher Misses, King's Arms street Mundesley road Bennett William, Cock inn, North st
Fuller Charles Ghristmas, Montana ho Smith George William, Bank house Bensley James, tailor, :Market street
Garratt Houghton, Market place Smith Stephen, Mundesley road Bircham Mordecai William, miller
GaymerJohn,llirchwood, Yarmouth rd Stapleton Edward M. Mundesley road (wind & steam), New mills, Cromer-
Gee Albert~ Vicarage street Storey Mrs. Brunswick house road ; & coal mer. E. & M. !Station
Gee George, Nelson street Tooke Miss, Norwich road Blyth Jonas Norman, Lord Nelson P.H.
Gilham Miss, Mundesley road Vincent Mrs. Vicarage street & pork butcher, Nelson street
Gaffe Rev. Charles [Congregational], Walker Geo. The Laurels, Yarmouthrd Brand C. & Co. photographic artists,.
Mundesley road Waiter James Ward, Market street StatiOn road; & at Norwich
Gotto William, Norwich road Waters William, Norwich road Brown J 0hn, coal dealer, Nelson stYee• •
Harvey Albert, New road ·weatherill John Albert, Norwich road Bryant Horace, manager of London &
Hennessy Eugene E.B.A.(third master), Webster Nathan Hell, The Terrace Provincial Bank Lim. Market plaee
Grammar school Wilkinson John, The Oaks Buck Henry, wheelwright, Preference-pi
DIRECTORY.] NOHFOLK. NORTH W .ALSHAM. 661
Buck Richard, wheelwright, IIall lane Empson J. S. solicitor, perpetual com- Loads James,.Anchor P.H. Spa common
Buck Thomas, wheelwright, White missioner & commissioner for oaths, London Hannah (Miss), draper &
Horse common clerk to justices & commissioners of milliner, Market place
Bullimore William & Son, tailors & taxes, clerk to local board & to the Long Fras. boot & shoe ma. Market p1
drapers, Market place Paston (U. D.) school board Loveless Robert .Alger,grocer,Market pi
Bun ton George, greengrocer, Nelson st Farman Hobert, basket maker & Ludbrook Charles Clifford, district
Burton CharlesHenry, butcher,Marktpl. thatcher, .Aylsham road superintendent for the Prudential
Bnrton Edward, cattle dealer & farmer, Farrow William, blacksmith, Hall lane .Assurance Co. Norwich road
Hamlet house Fitt Harriet (Mrs.), fancy repository, MaceGeo.shopkpr. WhiteHorse commn
Burton Jas. Hy. farmr. White Horse rd Market place Mace Horace, cabinet ma. Market place
Hurton Thomas, farmer, The Lodge Foster William Robert, draper & mil- McLean Jane (Mrs.), bookseller,
Burton Thomas William, agricultural liner, Market place stationer, & photographer & mineral
implement manufacturer & ironmon- Frost Thomas, farmer, Holgate water manufacturer, Market place
ger, Market place Galley Henry, grocer, Vicarage street Marler Ellen & .Alice (Misses), prepara-
Cemetery (John Wilkinson, clerk to Garratt Houghton, manager of Lacons, tory school for boyll, Cromer road
burial board), Mundesley road Youell & Co.'s llank, Market place Miles Frank Fredk. watch ma.Market p1
Claxton Wm. shopkeeper, Nelson st;reet Gedge James, farmer, White Horse corn .Miller John G. hair dresser & tobac-
Clements Charles, bookseller & sta- Gee George & Sons, coach builders, conist, Market place
tioner, Market place; & at Aylsham Vicarage street M or ton .August us Charles M. R.c.s. En g. t
Coe Hy.Wm.plumbr. & glazr.Bacton rd Gold'ln Wm.Saml. jun. farmer, Tungate L s.A.Lond. surgeon, medical oliicel."
Coldham George, farmer, Yarmouth rd Gray Mary Ann (Mrs.), White Swan of health to urban sanita-ry authority
Collins John, boot maker, New road P.H. Church street & medical officer & public vaccinator,
Combe Frederick Orloff M. n., C. M. phy- Green Edward & Sons, farmers&timber North Walsham district, Smallburgh
sician & surgeon, & certifying surgeon merchants, sawing mill proprietors union, Yarmouth road
under the Factory Acts, Holly house & brick & tile manufrs . .Aylsham rd Mundesley-on-Sea ·water Works Co.
Cooke Jane & Maria (Misses), ladies' Gregory Frederick, grocer, provision & Limited (J. S. Empson, solicitor &.
school, North street wine & spirit merchant, & registrar sec.), Grammar School road
Cooke John, bill poster, Vicarage street of marriages for the Smallburgh dis- ~ea! James, Bull inn, King's .Arms st
Cooper George William, miller (wind & trict, Market street Neal James, farmer, Holgate
steam) & farmer, Bacton road Gurneys, Hirkbecks, Barclay & Buxton, Neave Matthew (exors. of), farmers &
Cooper \V m. Geo. ironmongr.Market st bankers (W. T. Coy, manager), landowners, Melbourne house
Copeman John Breeze, grocer, & agent Market place; draw on Barclay, Nelson Robert, tailor, Market place
for W. & .A. Gilbey, wine & spirit Bevan & Co. London E c NichollsWm.insurance agent,Pk ton tel."
merchants, Market place llaggith George, hom;e decorator, North Walsham Gas Light & Coke Co.
Cork Murrell, carpenter &c. Mun- paperhanger, plumber, glazier & Limited (John Dixon, sec. & mana-
desley road writer & grainer, King's .Arms street ger) ; regd. office, Hrentnall house.
Corn Hall (Jas. H. Reeve, proprietor), & North street Vicarage street; works, Nelson st
Bank Loke Haggith Jas. chimney sweeper, Back st North Walsham & Dilharn Canal ( Ed wd.
Cornish&Gaymer, ecclesiastical builders Haggith Wm. tailor, Mitre Tavern yard Press, proprietor)
wood & stone carvers & general con- Hammond George, farmer, Lingate Norwich & Norfolk Branch Bank, see
tractors, Millfield works; & 7 John Hannant Edward, Dog inn, Church st Gurneys & Co .
street, Adelphi, London w c Har\·ey &Son,eahinet makers, Market st Ockelford Frederic,Angel family & com-
County Court (His Honor Edward Hathway Jas. timber mer. E. & M. stn mercial hotel & posting ho. Market s~
Plumer Price Q.C. judge; John Wil- Healey Arthur, coal merchant & florist, Osbornc Charles, Buck inn, Church st
kinson, registrar&high bailiff; Joseph Grammar Scbool road Overment Jas. dairyman, Little London
Bean & John Webster, assistant Helsdon Thomas, farmer, The Heath Palmer Robert, butcher, Market street
bailiffs) Hewitt James (Mrs.), fancy repository, Palmer Robert Walpole, Black Sw<Ln
Coy William Thoma~ manager of Gur- .Market place hotel & posting house
neys & Co.'s Bank, Market place Hewitt William, baker, Vicarage street Pank Wm. leather cutter, Church plain
Craske John, wheelwright, North st Hewitt \'Villiam, tailor, Cromer road Paston Grammar School (Rev. Henry
Cromer & North Walllham Post (The) Hindry (Mrs.), private girls' school, Wimble M. A. head master)
( P. So man & Sons, proprietors & The Terrace Pcckc Samuel, boot & shoe maker, &
publishers; published friday ), King's IIolmes George, confectionr. Market pl deputy registrar of marriages for-
.Arms street; & at Cromer. See Hornor Henry, plumber, painter & Small burgh district, Market street
advertisement ~lazier, Grammar School road Pepper George Henry, station master,
Cubitt & Son, linen & woollen drapers Howes Edward John, farmer, Rookery E. & M. Station road
& grocers, Market place farm, Mundesley road Perfect Henry, wine & spint merchant.
Cubitt & Walker, coal & corn mer- Howes Robert, grocer & wine & spirit King's Arms hotel & posting house ;
chants & millers (steam & water); & merchant, & sole agent for M organ & branch stores, High street, Cromer
at Worstead, Swinfield & Cromer . Co.'s family ales, Market street; & Pert J. & Sons, boot wareho. Market pl
Cutting Francis, Wheelwrights' .Arms farmer, Lingate farm Pilgrim Cornish, brewer &c. Vicarage st
P. H. "''bite Horse common Howlett Jas. boot & shoe ma. Market pl Pilgrim William, timber dealer, New rd
Davies Fairfax, solicitor, clerk to guar- Kemp George, monumental mason, Plumbly Herbert, auctioneer & c<l.ttle
dians of Small burgh union & superin- Grammar School roau sales1nan, Yarmouth road; & at.
tendent registrar, Church street Knowlcs William, cooper, Spa common Fclmingham
Day James, greengrocer, The Butchery Lacey Saml. licensed hawker,Hacton rd l'lummer Robert, watch ma. Market pi
Deekins .Alfred, baker, Market street Lacon (Sir Edmund B. K. bart. ), PostleClement, tinplte. wrkr .Norwich rd
Deekins Robert, marine store dealer, Lacons, Yonell & Co. (branch), Postle Fred. \Villiam, baker, Bacton rd
Vicarage street bankers (Houghton Garratt, mana- Powley Benj. Feathers P.H. Market st
Denncy Edwin James, pharmaceutical ger), Market place; draw on Glyn, Press Brothers, millers (steam, wind &
chemist., printer & stationer, Market pl Mills, Cm·rie & Co. London E c water), maltsters, cake, corn, coal,
Dixon John, secretary & manager of Lankester Mary .Ann (Mrs.), dress seed & manure merchants, llactort
North Walsham gasworks& organist maker, Nelson street WooclStaithe&mill & Railway station;
of parish church & press corres- Lawrence Elizabeth (Mrs.), shopkeeper, & at Gun ton ; Cromer ; Roughton;
pondent, Brentnall house Church plain Stalham & Great Yarmouth
Dunning William, jnn. farmer & dealer Lee Benj. cattle dealer, Little London Press Edward, farmer, Muckle Hill frm
in horses, Yarmouth road Leman Celia (Miss), tobacconist, Priest Zachariah Wm. grocer, Nelson st
Durran tEmma( Mrs. ), saddler ,Mar kct st Market street Rae Miss, private girls' school, 5
Dyball Jn. earthen ware dlr. Market pl Le Neve Wrn. Sutt.on, farmer, 'fungate Denmark terrace, Mundesley road
Dyball Waiter, cattle dlr. Mundesleyrd Lewes John .Arnold, farmer, Marsh- Randell Frederick & Horace, wholesale
Dyke Daniel, machinist, The Heath gate house & retail furnishing & general iron-
East Nor folk Conservative Registration Literary Society (Edwin Joseph Simp- mongers, bar iron & brass founders
.Association (J. S. Empson, agent), son, sec.), 2 The Terrace & agricultural implement makers.
Grammar School road Loades John, stationer, news agent & Market place & St. Nicholas iron
Eastoe George Henry, builder & con- music seller, Church street • works; & at Cromer & Norwich
tractor, Becclcs house, Mundesley rd Loads William & Son, drapers & boot Reeve James H. barley buyer, cake.
Eastoe Richard, builder, Hacton road & shoe manufacturers, Market place corn, salt, seed & manure merchant,
Edwards Edward George, carpenter, London & Provincial Bank Limited G. E. Railway station; & proprietor
Nelson street (Horace Bryant, manager), Market of Corn hall; agent for Worthingtorl
Edwards Fredk. Wm. grocer, Market pl place ; draw on head office, 7 Bank & Co.'s Hurton ale & imported l'ilsen
Ellis Eliz'lbeth (Mrs.), White Horse P.H. buildings & Glyn, Mills & C.,, Lon- beer (JaC{)bs) ; & Crower station
White Horse common don BC (G. E R)
662 ~ORTH W .ALSH.AM. NORFOLK. [KELLY'S

Richardson George, shopkeeper, Hall la Spink Samuel, fish dealer, Vicarage st ~ WhittakerWm.Thos.farmr.Bradfield :uq
Ricnardson James, travelling draper, Springall Sarah(Mrs. ),statnr.Market st! Whittleton Thos. E. butcher, Market p\
King's Arms street Stead & Simpson Limited, boot ware- 'Wilkinson John, solicitor & cgmmis-
Rump .Arthur Dyball, pork butcher, house, Market place sioner to administer oaths, clerk to
poulterer & dealer in game, Market st Storey Edward (Mrs.), farmer & land- the burial board & clerk to the gover•
Rump George, beer retailer & black- owner, Brunswick house nors of Sir William Paston's school, &
smith, Mitre yard Sutton William, chemist, Market place registrar of county court, ;Nelson st
SavingsBank(Geo. Wm.Smith,actuary; Taylor Robert, station master G. E.R. Wilkinson Thomas, sewing machine
attenda.nce,mondays 12 to I),Bank ho Norwich road agent, Vicarage sLreet
Schneider Frederick, inland revenue TaylorRobt. travelling drapr.Cromerrd , Willer Fredk. horse slaughterer,Dog yd
officer, 2 Denmark terrace Temperance Hall ( .Albert Walker, hon. Williamson J oseph, basket ma. Butchery
I

Scott James, jobmaster, Nelson street sec.), Hall lane Wil:son Williarn, builder & contractor,
Scott Robert, jun. fish dealer, Spa corn Thurtle John, farmer, Little London King's .Arms street & farmer & brick
Self Benjamin, beer retailer, Bacton rd 'l'imbers.Arth.earthenwre.dlr.Marketpl & tile manufacturer, Spa common &
Self John, farmer, White Horse corn Timbers :teremiah Aldcn, wine & spirit at Mundesley
Sewell Thomas, butcher, Market place merchant, Norwich road Woolnough Henry, superintendent of
Sewell William, shopkeeper, Spa corn Utting John, farmer, White Horse corn police & inspector under the Explo,
Shcphcard John M.R.c.s.Eng., L.R.C.P. Volunteer Battalion (3rd) Norfolk stves & PetroleumActs,Pollcestation,
Lond., E. A. surgeon, & medical officer Regiment (L Co.) (Lieut . .Augustus Vicarage street
& public vaccinator for South Repps Charles Morton, commanding) Wright Emma & Maria (Misses), dress
distt. of Erpingham union,Cromer rd Walker .Aihert, grocer, Market place makers & milliners, GrammarSchlrd
Sheringham Joshua, comm1ssion agent, \Valker George, corn merchant &c. Wright George Henry, accountant &
Bacton road see Cubitt & Walker teacher of shorthand, King's .ArQis st
Simpson Edwin Joseph, rate & tax col- Walter James Ward, postmaster Wright Susan (Miss),dressma.Lowerst
lector, surveyor, inspector & collector Watling Robt. horse breakr. Aylsham rd Wright William Walter, pork butcher
to local board, Orient villa, Mundes- Watson John, Mitre P.H. Mitre yard & ham & bacon curer, Nelson street
ley road; & saddler & harness maker, Watts .Fred. (~Irs. ), dress rna.Nelson st Yarmouth, Norfolk & Suffolk Bank, see
Bank street Webster Nathan Bell, dentist, The Tcr Lacons, Youell & Co
Siz~r John, Blue Bell P.H. & fish curer, Webster William, boot ma.Aylsham rd Youngman John, grocer, Church street;
Blue Bell common Wesby James Samuel Jermy, wheel- & farmer, Yarmouth road 1
Slapp Christmas, farmer, The Heath wright, Ship yard Youngman Richard, miller (wind),
Smith George William, farmer & Wesby Robert, bill poster, town crier & Yarmouth road
actuary of savings bank; office, Bank keeper of cemetery, Mundesley road Youngman William Christopher, con-
house; & grocer, Church street Whitehead Arthur, umbrella maker, fectioner &c. Cromer road
Smith '\Villiam, baker, Nelson street Nelson street
SOUTH WALSHAM consists of two parishes, viz. St. charity of £22 yearly is for apprenticing boys from South
Mary and St. Lawrence, and is 3~ miles north from Ling- Walsham. A bequest to thP- poor of these two parishes, left
wood station on the Norwich and Yarmouth section of the by the widow of the Rev. John Toplis, rector here from r824o
Great Eastern railway, ro north-east from Norwich, in the now (I8g2) amounts to £16 gs. 10d. annually: the poor's
Eastern division of the county, hundred of Walsham, allotment of 44 acres produces £14 yearly; and in 1889 the
Blofield and '\Valsham petty sessional division, union of late 'Mr. Harbord left £25oas trust fund, bringing in£6 7s. 3d.
Blofield, county court district of Norwich, rural deanery of annually for poor widows of the two parishes. Here are
l:llofield and archdeaconry and diocese of Norwich. The two broads of 49 acres, the property of H. R. Burroughes
church of St. Mary is an ancient edifice of flint and rubble,' esq. J.P. of Burlingham Hall, and Maj. R. ll. H. Jary J.P. of
in the Gothic style of the I4th and 15th centuries, consist- I Bitteswell Hall, Leic. Henry H.andal Burroughes esq. of
ing of chancel, nave, aisles, south porch and an embattled I Burlingham Hall, and the rector are lords of the manor.
western tower containing 5 bells: there are 330 sittings. ~H. R. Burroughes esq. J.P. and Major Robert Herbert Heath
The register dates from the year 1550. The church of St. I Jary J.P. are the chief landowners. The soil is good mixed:
Lawrence was burnt down in I827, but .the chancel was re- ! subsoil, chalk, stone, sand and clay. The chief crops are
paired and reopened in 1832 and has 200 sittings: the turnips and cereals. The area of the two parishes is g,og5
I

tower, in part ruinous, is now divided down the centre and' acres; rateable value, of St. Mary's, £2,055; St. Lawrence,
the balf that still remains is embattled and surmounted by . £2,941 ; the population in 1891 was 336 St. Mary's and 254
3 pinnacles: there is one bell, dated 161 r, at present hung ! St. Lawrence.
at one end of the church. The register dates from the year Parish Clerk, William Kerrison.
i

1550. The living is a rectory, with thll vicarage of Wal- PosT & M. 0. 0., 8. B. & Annuity & Insurance Office.-
1

sham St. Mary annexed by Order in Council Oct. r8go, Edward Alexander, sub- postmaster. Letters arrive
average tithe rent-charge £514, joint net yearly value through Norwich at 7.30 a.rn.; dispatched at 3·35 p.m.
£sg8, including 92~ acres of glebe with residence, in the Woodbastwick is the nearest telegraph office
gift of Queens' College, Cambridge, and held since 1858 by National School (mixed), erected in 186.') & enlarged in 1873
the Rev. George Cox Pollard M.A. formerly fellow of that & r8gr, for 124 children; average attendance, 81; Miss
College. Here is a Primitive .Methodist chapel. Harrold's Alice Lang:ham, mistress
St. Mary's. Porter Fuller, farmer
. k
P ra tt F re d enc ·· CO'MMERCIAT,.
Harbord 'Villiam , grocer
Simpson Rev. Jame 3 B. A. The Lodge Rix Spencer, merchant. See advertise- Beck Georgc Henry, shopkeeper
ment facing Norfolk Map Bet.ts George, farmer

COMMERCIAL. Rix William, saddler Brown Michael, farmer
Alexander Renjamin, shoe maker Spanton Jonathan Neave, carpenter & Clamp Thomas, buteher
Alexander Edward, grocer, Post office wheelwright Curtis ·waiter, Ship inn
Blake Bcnj. draper, grocer & outfitter Starling James, blacksmith Daniels Robert .Abbot, farmcr,Manor ho
Chapman James, farmer, Hill farm Tuddenham William Press,wheclwright I Evans E. & B. builders, contractors &
Debbage Robert, coal dealer Turner William, boot & shoe maker carpenters. See advertisement
Gowen Isaac, corn & coal merchant Wiskin .Austin, genera.l dealer Evans James, builder & contractor
Hilton ·william, farmer Grapes Benjamin, farmer
Jarmany John, King's .Arms P.H St. Lawrence. Jarmany '\Villiam, bricklayer
JonesRt.Thurtle,farrnr.LowTown frm Moore John Dyball, Glebe cottage KidmanRobert Rising,·farmer
Kerrison William, cowkeeper Pollard Rev. George Cox M.A. Rectory Thrower Henry James, blacksmith
WALSINGHAM (or LITTLE WALSINOHAM) is a union alabaster monument to Sir Henry Sidncy and Dame Jano
town and head of a county court district and parish on the his wife, dated 16r2, and tablets to the Rev. James Lee+
Stiffkey river, with a station on the Dereham and Wells Warner M.,A.. d. 1834, the Rev. George Henry Lee-Warner
branch of the Great Eastern rail way, 5 miles south-east-by- M.A. d. 1839, and others of this family: here also is the en-
east from Wells, 5~ north-by-east from Fakenham, 27 trance to the rood staircase: there is also a carved screen
north-west from Norwich and 113 from London, in the and a piscina : the font, now much mutilated, is one of the
Northern division of the county, North Greenhoe hundred finest examples of Perpendicular fonts in England, and a
and petty sessional division, rural deanery of, Walsingha.m restored model of it is exhibited in the Mediawal Court of
and archdeaconry and diocese of Norwich. The parish the Crystal Palace, Sydenham: it consists of an octagonal
church of St. Mary is a noble cruciform building of stone, basin with richly-sculptured panels, representing the Seven
in the Perpendicular style, consisting of a long chancel, nave Sacraments of the Catholic Church and the Crucifixion,
with clerestory, aisles, transepts, south and west porches supported on a shaft enriched with figures of the Four
and an embattled western tower with a slender spire and Evangelis~s and other saints, the whole standing upon a
containing a clock and 5 bells : the south transept forms an pediment of three steps in the form of a Maltese cross : the
organ chamber: in the north transept is a magnificent church was partially restored in 1861 at a cost of £1,700:
DIRECTORY.] NORFOJ,K. WALSINGHA.M. 663
in 1890 the organ was rebuilt and enlarged at a cost of Groom )!ajar John Edmund, Berry hall, Walsingham R.S.O
£350, defrayed by Henry Lee-Warner esq. J.P.: there are Lee- Warner Hy. esq. Walsingham abbey, Walsingham R.S. 0
519 sittings. The register commences in 1558. The living Rippingall Florance Thomas Stephen esq. Manor cottage,
is a vicarage, with that of Honghton-in-the-Dale annexed, Langham, Dereham
average tithe rent-charge £ ro2, joint net yearly value£. 170, VVaters William George esq. M.A. 7 Mansfield street, Port-
with 31 acres of glebe and residence, in the gift of Henry Lee- land place, London w
Warner esq. J.P. and held since r889 by the Rev. Henry Clerk to the Magistrates, Geo. Anthony Watson, High st
Arthur Wansbrough M.A. of ~t. John's College, Oxford. Petty sessioii.S are held at the Shire ball the first monday in
The Vicarage house, erected in 1839 and since enlarged, the month at I I a. m. The following places are 4ncluded
stands in about three acres of well-wooded and ornamental in the petty sessional division :-Barney, Dinham, Cock-
grounds, partly in the parish of Old Walsingham. There is tborpe, Egmere, Field Dalling, Hindringham, Holkham,
a Wesleyan chapel, built in 1796, and a Primitive Methodist Houghton-in-the-Dale, Quarles, Snoring (Great), Stiffkey,
chapel. The Working Men's Club, founded in 1889, incor- Thursford, Walsingham (Great), Walsingharn (Little),
porates the reading rooms, establighed in 1866, and is sup- Warham All Saints, Warham St. Mary, Wclls-next-t.he-
plied with London and provincial newspapers and periodicals. Sea & Wfghtou ,
In the village are eight almshouses, and various legacies PuBLIC EsTABLISIIMESTS : -
amounting to about£ 230 a year have been left for the reliefCounty Police Station, Bridewell street, Thomas Murrell,
·of the poor: a chariLy founded by Lady Mary Townshend superintendent, with 2 constables
for apprenticing orphans now amounts to £3o yearly, and County Court, His Honor Edwin Plumer Price Q.C. judge;
is di.Strtbuted by 12 trustees, comprising the vicars of Old
Gcorge Anthony Watson, registrar & high bailiff; H. P.
and New Walsingham, the guardians of the poor of New Gould, Queen street, Norwich, bankruptcy official re-
Walsingham ( ex-ofiicio) and others: the fuel allotment pro- ceiver; Richard Cowburn, chief clerk; John Banson,
duces £25 yearly: the interest of £so, left in 1738, is dis- bailiff. A county court is held in the months of July &
tributed in bread to 24 poor persons, and a charity of £10o, August at W'alsingham & the remaining mouths at Faken-
left in r827, produces £3 yearly, which is divided amongst ham. The district comprises the following places: Ale-
four poor widows of labouring men: a sum of [.2 was also thorpe, Hale, Rarney 1 Bars ham (East), Barsham (North),
left by Philip Brown in 163H, to be paid to the minister, on Barsham (West), Binham, Hriningham, Barwick, Bircham
condition that he preached a commemoration sermon once a (Great), Hircham ~Pwton, Bircham Tofts, Brancaster,
year. The market has been discontinued, but a fair is held Bagthorpe, Harmer, Broomsthorpe, Burnham West<Jate,
on the second Monday after Whit Monday, and statute fairs Burnharn Sutton, Burnharn Norton, Burnharn Thorpe,
on the Fridays before and after Michaelmas Day. There are Rurnham Overy, Hnrnham Deep dale, Cockthorpe, Creake
ruins here of a house of Franciscans or grey friars, founded (North), Creake (South), Dunton, Docking, Egrnere,
by Elizabeth de Burgh, Countess of Clare, in 1346, and dedi- Fakenham, Field Dalling, Fulmodestone-with-Croxton~
cated to St. Mary. A hospital for lepers, founded in 1492 Fring, Gunthorpe, Helhoughton, Hempton, Hindring-
by R. l'igot, occupied the site of the present police station,
ham, Holkham, Houghton-in-the-Dale, Houghton (New),
which is also the site of the Old Bridewell. Here also waa Kettlestone- Painswain, Pensthor~, Pudding Norton,
anciently a priory of Augustine cano;ns, founded by Edwy Qnarles, Raynham (East), Raynham (South), Raynham
the Clerk in Io61, and refounded in u6o by Geoffrey de (West), Ryburgh (Great), Ryburgh (Little), Rudham
J<'avranches on the site of a small chapel erected by his (East), Rudham (West). Sculthorpe, Sharrington, Shore-
mother in rogo in honour of the Virgin .Mary, similar in ford, Snoring (Great), Snorin~r (Little), Stibbard, Stiffkey,
design to the Sancta Ca!'a of Nazareth : it waa a most noted Sunderland, Swan ton N overs, Syderstone, Stanhoe, Tatter-
place of pilgrimage, and not only the kings and queens of sett, Te~terton, Th ursford, 'l'oftrees, 'l'atterford, Thorn-
England, but distinguished foreigners of all Europe resorted ham, Titchwell, Waterden, Walsingham (Great), ·wal-
hither to pay their devotions at the famous shrine of Our singham (Little), Warham, Wells-next-the-Sea, Wighton
Lady of Walsingham, guided by the ".Milky Way," which & Little Wells
is even now sumetirnes spoken of as "The Walsingham Certified Bailiffs appointed under the "Law of Distre<>s
4'/olay:" the last regal devotee was Henry VIII. who in the Amendment Act," John Bans on, High street, & Robert
second year of his reign walked hither barefoot from the John Turner, Holt road, Fakenham
village of Barsham ; a little later, however, he caused the
image of Our Lady of Walsingham to be removed and burnt WALSINGHAM UNION'.
at Chelsea: the ruins of this once wealthy establishment, Board day, alternate wednesdays from 10 to 1 p.m. at the
which exhibit every style of English Gothic, now consist of union house.
The Union comprises the following places :-Alethorpc, Bale
the western gateway. of the preeinct, of Early Perpendicular
date, with a small figure of a porter looking out of a or llathley, 13arney, Binham, Blakeney, Briningham,
window i a part of t-he Late Decorated east end of the Brinton, Cockthorpe, Dunton-cum-Doughton, East Bars-
church, consisting of a window frame with niches at the ham, East Raynham (or Raynham St. Mary), Egmere,
side, c. 1390, a Norman arch leading to a stone bath, and Fakenham (or Fakenham Lancaster), Field Dalling,
also some fine lancet arches and part of the Early Decorated Fulmodestone-cmn-Croxton, Great Ryburgh, Great
refectory, comprising the west and four other windows and Snoring, Great Walsingham, Gunthorpe, Belhougl)ton,
a readin~ pulpit, approached by stone steps in the wall : on Hempton, Hindringham, Holkham, Houghton-in-the
the north side is the gatehouse of the knight, which tradi- Dale, Kcttlestone, Langham, Little Ryburgh, Little
tion says expanded to receive him when, pursued by his Snoring, Little Walsingham, Melton Constable, Morston,
enemies, he invoked the aid of Our Lady of Walsingham : North .Bars ham, Pensthorpe, Pudding N orton, Quarles
there also remain two wells called the "Wishing Wells," Farm, Saxlingham, Scnlthorpe, Sharrington, Shereford,
from the legend that persons drinking their waters will ob- South Rainham (or Rainham St. Martin), Stibbard, Stiff-
tain any wish made when they do so : the church was 252 key, Swan ton N avers, Tatterford, Tattersett, Testerton,
feet in lengt.h. Walsingharn Abbey, a large and ancient Thursford, Toftrees, Warham (All Saints), Warham (St.
building standing in a well-wooded park, is now the seat of Mary), Wells-next-the-Sea, West Barsham, WestRainharn
llcnry Lee-Warner esq. J.P. ; the beautiful grounds, by the (or Rainham St. Margaret), Wighton & Wiveton. The
permission of the owner, are open to the public, on applica- population of the union in 1891 was 19,895 ; area, 90,677
tion at the lodge, every Wednesday. Henry Lee-Warner acres ; rateable value, £ II8,7oo
esq. is lord of the manor and owner of all the land in the Clerk to t.he Guardians & Assessment Committee, William
parish, which comprises an area of 952 acres; rateable Merrick Rumbelow, Bridge street, Fakenham
value, £3,090; the population in 1891 was 936. Treasurer, Somerville Arthur Gurney, King's Lynn
Parish Clerk, Robert May. Relieving & Vaccination Officers, Fakenham distriGt, Albert
PosT, M. 0. & T. 0., S. B. & Annuity & Insurance Office George Utting, Market place, Fakenham; Wells district,
(Railway Sub-Office. Letters should have R.S.O. :Norfolk John W. Watts, H1gh street, Walsingham
added).-Frederick William Abram, postmaster. Office Collector of Poor Rates, Thos. Johnson, High st.Walsingham
Medical Officers & Public Vaccinators, Bla.keney district,
open 8 a. m. to 8 p.m.; sundays, 8 to 10 a. m. l''or money
orders & savings bank business, 9 a. m. to 6 p.m. For John Truscott Skrimshire M. D. Holt; Fakenham district,
telegrams, 8 a. m. to 8 p. m. ; sun days, 8 to rt> a. m. Francis Coomber L.R.C.P.Lond. Fakenbam; Rainharn
Delivery commences at 7 a.m. 2.40 & 6.30 p.m. ; snn- district, Frederick Carden Brodie M. B. Fakenham; Union
days, 7 a. m. LETTER Box closes at 9.50 a. m. 6.5 & g.3o house district, Frederick William Hart Bayes, High street,
p.m. ; sundays, 6.5 & 9.30 p.m · Walsingham ; Wells district, Alfred.William Fox Whit-
lock L. R.C. P.Edin. Wells
CouNTY MAGISTRATES FOR NoRTH G.REENHOE PETTY Superintendent Registrar, William Merrick Rumbelow,
SESSIONAL DIVISION. Bridge street, Fakonharn; deputy, William Daniel Sidney,
Scott-Chad Joseph Stonehewer esq. M.A. Thursford hall, Fakenham
Dereham, chairman Registrar of Births & Deaths, Fakenharn sub-district, Albe-rt
Leicester Ea.rl of K.G. (lord-lieut. ), Holkham hall, Wells George Utting, :Market place, Fakenha.m ; depnty 1 Regi-
Davey John George Ellis esq. Longlands, Holkham, Wells nald Utting, Queen's road, Fakenham ~ Walsingham sub-
Feilden Col. Henry Wemyss F.o.s., F.z.s. West house, Wells district, John W. Watts, -High street, Walsinghaml;
7
664 WALSINGH.A:M. NORFOLK. [ KELLY S

deputy, Charles W. Watts, High street, Walsingham; Clerk to Commissioners of Taxes, George Anthony Watson,
Wells sub-district, Alft·ed William Fox Wbitlock, Wells; High street
deputy, William C. Freezer, Wells Clerk & Attendance Officer to Barsham & Great Walsing-
Registrars of Marriages, R. J. Sidney, Hill terrace, Faken- ham School Hoards, Richard Cowburn, High street
ham; deputy, George Bales, Sculthorpe road, Fakenham; Clerk to the Grammar School & Chanty Trustees, Richard
J. W. Watts, Walsingham; deputy, Charles W. Watts, Cowburn, High street
High street, Walsingham; William C. Freezer, Wells Town Crier, William Pegg
Workhouse, built in 1838, to hold 350 inmates, Isaac Priest, ScHOOLs:-
master; Rev. Edward Haversham Whall M. A. chaplain; The Free Grammar School was founded in 1639, in accord-
FrederiCk William Hart Bayes M.R.c.s. me<iical officer; ance with directions left by Richard Bond; the present
Mrs. Mary Priest, matron buildings were erected in 1871 & indude a head master's
RURAL SANITARY AUTHORITY.
house adjoining the school, which is now conducted ac-
Meets at the Workhouse, Great Snoring, every board day carding to a scheme drawn up by the Court of Chancery
at I I a.m. · in x86x : it was endowed with a sum of money with
Clerk, William Merrick Rumbelow, Bridge st. Fakenham which a farm was purchased, situated at Great Snoring,
Treasurer, Somerville Arthur Gurney, King's Lynn £
Medical Officer of Health, Francis Coomber L.R.C.P.Lond. now (r8g2) let at a yearly rent of 103: there are now
Norwich road, Fakenham only I I boys, half of these being foundationers: the school
is governed by a body of trustees; Mr. Hichard Cow burn,
InRpector of Nuisances, Charles Swann, Fakenham clerk to the trustees; head master, ,'V. Shaw Hayler F.E.I.S
SCHOOL ATTENDANCE COMMITTEE.
Meets at the Workhouse, Great Snoring, on alternate board National, Market place, erected in 183o, for r8o boys & girls
& 8o infants; average attendance, 133 boys & girls &
days at 11 a.m. so infants; Thomas William Knights, master; Miss Hurn,
Clerk, William Merrick Rum below, Bridge street, Fakenham mistress; Mrs. Frankling, infants' mistress
Attendance Officers, Joseph Bushell, Great Snoring, Wal-
singbam district; Saml. Fox, Binham, Fakenham district Railway Station, William Smith 1\latson, station master
PuBLIC 0J<'FICERS : - CAHRu:rt TO NORWICH.-Thomas Williams' van, from the
Assessor & Collector of Taxes, Thomas Johnson, High street 'Bull,' every wed. returning on fri
PRIVATE RESIDENTS. Codman Jas. plumber & paintr.High st :Murrell Thomas, superintendent of
Adcock Mrs. H. Shire Hall terrace Codman James (Mrs.), dress maker & police, Bride well street
Adcock W. llrooke, Knight street milliner, High street Parker Jn. Robt. watch ma. Knight st
Bayes Frederick William Hart, High st Cornisb. Geo. carpenter, Shire Hall ter Pegg William, town crier
Brooke Miss, High street County Court (His Honor Edwin Purdy Ann (Mrs.), painter, High st
Chamberlain Mrs. Shire Hall terrace Plumer Price Q.C. judge; George Rawston Henry, The Crown P.H. &
Claxton Augustus James, High street Anthony Watson, registrar & high builder, contractor, wheelwright,
Cornish Mrs. High street bailiff) lime burner & general smith, Guild st
Cowbnrn Richa~d, High street CowburnHarry,cornrnission agt.High st Rawston Henry, jun. farmr.Bridewell st
Curson Thomas, Market place Cowburn Richard, chief clerk to the Rawston Williarn, carpenter & v.heel-
England Miss, Knight street county court & clerk to the trustees of wright, ''V ells road
Hayler William Shaw F.E. I.s. (head the free grammar school & to Bar- Read win Allison Augustine, saddler,
master of grammar schl. ), Market pl sham & Great Walsingham school High street
Hill Miss, MarkEJt place boards & school attendance officer, ScottRobert, wheelwright & blacksmith,
Isaacson Mrs Market place High street Bridewell street
Lee-Warner Rev. John [vicar of Old Curson Margaret Mary & Elizabeth Smith Henry, boot maker, Bridewell st
Walsingham], Knight street (Misses), grocers & drapers, High st Smith Rose E1izabetb (Miss), baker &
Lee-Wartter Hy.J.P.Walsingham abbey Cnrson Alfred John, grocer & draper, confectioner, High street
Smith \'Villiarn Hartlett, Holt street High street Smith Williarn Bartlett, solicitor, per-
~tibbard Mrs. Egmere road Dagless James, builder, contractor, petual commissioner & commissional'
Tattersall Mrs. High street house decorator & funeral furnisher, for oaths, Holt street
Waiters Misses, Vicarage Guild street Stanford Jn. Wells, tailor & drpr. High st
Wansbrongh Rev. Henry Arthur M.A. Drake Frerierick, butcher, \'Vells road Stearman Jas. grocer & draper,IIigh st
[vicar] Edwards Fredk. beer retailer, High st Todd William Charles, whitesmith &
Wild Henry, Knight street Faircloth Robert, butcher, High street bellhanger, Bridewell street
Wild Thomas, Knight street Free Grammar School (William Shaw ToffLs Thomas, butcher, High street
Hayler F.E.I.S. head master), Walker Thomas, blacksmith, Guild st.
COMMERCIAL. Market place & shopkeeper, Knight street
Abbey Gate Coffee House Co. Limited Graves Walter,Robin Hood P.H.Guild st Watson Arthur, harness maker,High st
(Thomas Wild, hon. sec. ),High street Hardie James, landscape gardener, Watson. George Anthony, solicitor, &
Abram Frederick \Villiam, chemist & Knight street registrar of the county court, clerk to
druggist, Post office, High street H:.rris Frederick, gardener to Henry J. the magistrates & commissioner of
Archer Alfred, coal & coke merchant & Lee-Warner esq. Abbey garr1ens taxes, High street
farmer, Falcon house Hill Hannah (Mrs.), King's Head P.H. Watts Charles W. deputy registrar of
Back George, grocer & draper, High st. & coal merchant, Cokers hill births, deaths & marriages, Walsmg-
& Market place Howell Fredk.Edwct. farmr. Bride well st ham sub-district, High street
Baldwin Henry, farmer Howell James, farmer, Egmere road WattsCharltte.(Mrs.),dress ma.High st.
Banson John, auctioneer & valuer & Ho well Robert, bill poster, High street Watts Eliza (Mrs.), glass & china ware-
house & estate agent & sheriff's oflicer, Hughes Thomas, Black Lion family & house, High street
High street commercial hotel, first-class accom- Wat.ts John Wesley, relieving officer,
Banson Susan (Mrs.), stationer & fancy modation for visitors & commercials Wells district; vaccination officer,
repository, High street at moderate charges; posting in all Wells & Walsingham districts; &
Barnes John (Mrs.), butcher, High st its branches; farmer & hay & corn registrar of births & deaths for
.Bayes Frederick William Hart, surgeon, merchant, Market place Walsingham sub-district & registrar
& medical officer & public vaccinator Ives Fredk. Buil inn, Shire Hall plain of marriages, High street
of Union House district & medical JohnsonThomas,bootmaker,&assistant 'Wild & Son, coal, corn & manure mer-
officer of workhouse, Walsingham overseer & collector of taxes, High st chants, Knight street
union, High street Kemp James, hair dresser, High street Williamson Henry, beer retailer, High st
Beck Wm. baker & confctnr. Market pi Knowles Samuel, farm bailiff to Henry Woodcock & Toffts, butchers, High st
Bishop John & Henry, fishmongers, Lee-Warner esq Woodcock Henry, boot ma. Knight st
Egmere road Land Joseph, butcher, Bridewell street Woodcock John, basket ma. Knight st
Bishop Emmanuel, shopkpr. Market pl Lewis Sarah (Mrs.), laundress, Shire Woodcock William, butcher, High st
Blunderfield Jabez Richard,· grocer & Hall plain Working Men's Club (E. A . .Banson,
draper, High street Magness John, bricklayer & chimney hon. sec.), High street
Bush John, grocer & draper, High st sweeper, Cokers hill Wright & Co. ironmongers & oil & calor
Callaby Jn. coal mer. (D. Seaman, agt) I Matson William Smith, station master men, Shire Hall terrace
Cod man S!h'!annalt (Miss) & Morton, May & Watson, earthenware dealers & WrightJohn,jlm. baker & corn chandler,
furniture & curiosity dealers,High st J fancy repository, High street High street
OLD or GREAT WALSINGHAM a parish and
IS
village on the Skiffkey river, I mile north-east from Wal-
I north of St. Peter's,has almost entirely disappeared, but its
ruins are still traceable in a field adjoiningWestgate House,
singham station on the Great Eastern railway, in the occupied by Mr. John Howell. The church of St. Peter is
Northern division of the count-y, North Greenhoe hundred an ancient building of flint and rubble with stone dressing!',
and petty sessional division, Walsingham county court dis- · in the Decorated style, consisting of nave with clerestory,
trict and union. Thechureh of All Saints, which stood a little aisles, south porch, vestry and a western tower containing 3
DIRECTORY.] NORF'OLK. WALSOKEN. 665
bells : the pulpit dates from r613 : there is a piscina at the barley, oats and turnips. The area is 2,170 acres ; rateable
east end of each aisle: in 1870 a vestry was erected at the value, £3,378; the population in 189r was 422.
expense of the Rev. John Lee-Warner: the church affords Parish Clerk, William Platten.
300 sittings. The register dates from the year 1564. ,The Letters via Walsingham R.S.O. which is the nearest money
liv'ing is a donative, gross yearly value £7o, including 2 order & telegraph office, arrive 7.30 &.m. WALL LE'rrER
acres of glebe, in the gift of Henry Lee-Warner e.~q. J. P. and Box, collected at 5-35 p.m.; sunday at II.3o a. m
held since 1846 by the Rev. John Lee-Warner, of St. Bees, A School Board of 5 members was formed compulsorily 15
who resides at Knight street, Walsingham. Roman March, 1s75; R. Cowburn, High street, Walsingham,
antiquities, chiefly nrns and sepulchral remains, have been clerk to the board & attendance officer
found here. Mr. J. J. Cornish's iron foundry and agricnl- Board School (mixed), built in 18 75 at a cost of £?oo, for 90
tural implement works are situated here and employ a large children; average attendance, 79 ; Williarn Grant, master;
staff of workmen. Henry Lee-Warner esq. J.P. of Walsing-
ham Abbey, is lord of the manor and chief landowner. Mrs. Grant, mistress
There are 44 allotments of one-eighth of an acre each. The UARRIER via New Walsingham from Wells to Norwich, every
soil is mixed ; subsoil, mar!. The chief crops are wheat, wed.; returning fri
Groom MajorJn.Edmund J.P.Berry hall Doughty William, Half Moon P.H Salter John, farmer, Hill house
Salter John, Hill house Fisher Elizabeth M. (Miss), farmer, Sewell Celia Ann (Mrs.), farmer
COMMERCIAL. Edgar house Tuck Robert, blacksmith
Armiger Edwin (Mrs.), shopkeeper Howell John, farmer, Westgate house Tuck Samuel, shopkeeper
Cornish Jabe~ James, iron founder, Howell Robert., hawker Wright John & George, millers (steam
engineer, agricultural implement Lewis Peter, Three Tuns P.H. & smith & wind), bakers & farmers
maker & agent & farmer; branches, Lown Edward, farmer Wright John Bailey, shopkeeper
Fakenham & Wells. See advert
W ALSOKEN is a parish and village adjoining Wisbech, crops are wheat, peas, potatoes and market garden produce.
from which it is separated by a canal; the part adjacent to Walsoken is the centre of a great fruit-growing district, the
Wishech is called NEw WALSOKEN, and has extended very principal fruits grown being gooseberries, apples,pears,plums,
much during the last few years; it is about a quarter of a strawberries and raspberries. The area is 4,656 acres;
mile from Wisbech stations on the Midland and Great rateable value, £n,826; the population in 1891 was 2,771.
Eastern railways and 3 miles from Emneth station on the Parish C!erk, John Munson.
latter system, in the North Western division of the county, PosT & M. 0. 0., S. B. & Annuity & Insurance Office, 28
hundred and petty sessional division of Freebridge Marsh- Norwich road, New Walsoken.-Mrs. Tryphena Hazell,
land, union and county court district of Wisbech, rural receiver. Letters through Wisbech, which is the nearest
deanery of Lynn Marshland and archdeaconry and diocese telegraph office, dispatched at 2.15 & 10.25 a. m. & 2.5,
of Norwich, and is governed by a Local Board of Health of 5.15 & 8.40 p.m. (week days only)
6 members, also constituted a Burial Board, 29 Aug. 1882.
PosT OFFICE, Old Walsoken.-J ohn Hartley, receiver.
The church of All Saints, situated a little off the high road,
is a large and ancient building in the Norman style, consist- Letters through Wisbech arrive at 7 a.m. & 1.15 p.m.;
ing of chancel with aisles, nave, aisles and an embattled dispatched at 7 a. m. & r. 15 & 7.25 p.m. The nearest
western tower with spire containing 6 bells: the tower and money order office is at. New Walsoken & the nearest tele-
west doorway are Decorated with Geometrical work ; cross- graph office is at Wisbech. Postal orders are issued here,
ing the aisles are fine screens of the 15th century retaining but not paid
traces of colour and gilding, which is also found on the nave LocAL BoARD.
roof : in the chancel is a memorial window to Richard Board room, Norwich road; board day, monthly, at the
Young esq. M.P. for :r>lorth Cambridgeshire in 1865: one clerk's office
acre of glebe land was added to the churchyard in 1883, and Clerk, Francis Jackson, 18 Lower Hill street, Wisbech
the whole placed under the control of a Burial Board of 6 Treasurer, Alexander Peckover, Wisbecl1
members. The register dates from the year 1558. The Medical Officer of Health, Harry Groom B.A., M.D. Wisbech
living is a rectory, average yearly value from tithe rent- Surveyor, James Kerridge, 102 Norwich road
charge £954, with 30 acres of glebe and residence, in the Inspector of Nuisances, James Kerridge, 102 Norwich road
gift of trustees, and held since 1871 by the Rev. John Young, Collector, Tom E. Robbins, I Duke street
who is also a surrogate for the diocese. Here is a Primi-
tive Methodist chapel. A cemetery was formed in 1882 ; ScrrooLs : -
I
it is governed by the Local Board acting as a Burial A School Board of 5 members was formed here com-
pulsorily, 26 Nov. 1875; William Welchman, Wisbech,
Board. The charities amount to £57, which is distributed
)'"early by the trustees. Walsoken House is the residence of clerk to the board; Daniel Peck, 72 Norwich road, attend-
Arthur William English esq. J.P. Frederic Morehouse ance officer
Metcalfe esq. J. P., D.L. of Inglethorpe Hall, Emneth, is lord Board (mixed) (formerly National), erected in 1856 & en-
of the manor ofWalsoken Metcalfe; William Goddard Jack- larged in 1892, for 141 children; average attendance,rog;
son esq . .J.P. of Duddington, Northants, is lord of the manor Bryan William Pywell, master
of Walsoken Popenhoe; and Francis Jackson esq. of South Board, Norwich road, New Walsoken, erected in 1878, for
Brink, Wisbech, and Edward Hugh Jackson esq. of North 125 boys, 125 girls & 110 infants ; average attendances,
Brink, Wisbech, lords of the manor of Walsoken Coleraine. II8 boys, 120 girls & 102 infants; Harry Davis, master;
The other principal landowners are John Cockett esq. The Mrs. Annie Davis, mistress; Miss Starsmore, infants'
Chesnuts, New Walsoken, Eli Vassar esq. New Walsoken, mistress
Dr. Bellamy, St. John's College, Cambridge, and Edward Emneth Railway Station (Great Eastern), Frank Allen,
Trafford esq. The soil is loam; subsoil, clay. The chief 1
station master
Carse James Richard, shopkeeper Leach Francis & Sons, millers (wind &
Walsoken. Cemetery (Francis Jackson, Wisbech, steam)
Bath Richard, Osborne house clerk to tbe burial board) Long William, shoe maker
Baxter Mrs. The Limes Cockett Arthur, fruit grower & farmer Mancrief Frederick, farmer
Cockett Thomas, Chapnall house Cockett John, jun. farmer, Burratt ho Mancrief Frederick, jun. farmer
English Arthur Wm. J.P. Walsoken ho Cockett Thomas, fruit & seed grower & Pacey Alfred, market gardener
Grimnier Mrs farmer, Chapnall house Rome William, farmer
Ollard Wm. Ludlam J.P. Musticott ho Coe John, agricultural implement ma. Scott Bnrman, brickmaker
Young Rev. John, Rectory cart& van builder, & genl. blacksmith Simpole George, cattle dealer

Cook John, farmer Simpole Jonathan, cattle dealer
COMMERCIAL. England William, market gardener Sleight George, farmer
Albin William, butcher Foster Martha (Mrs.), farmer Stancer John Thomas, beer retailer ,
Baker William, cowkeeper Frusher Christopher, farmer Tansley Thomas, farmer
Bath Richard, fruit grower Giddens John, farmer Thickpenny William, farmer, Fen
Batterham John, farmer Goodale Benjamin, wholesale potato dlr Took William, farmer '
Batter ham John, jun. farmer Goodley Lewis, farmer, Smeeth Tuck Thomas, market gardener
Baxter Robert, skin buyer, bone grinder, Green Thomas, cowkeeper Vasser Eli, farmer & landowner
manure merchant & licensed horse Green William Warth, farmer Ward Geo. (Mrs.), nurseryman & florist
slaughterer Hall Edward, market gardener White Arthur, shopkeeper
Beakley John, farmer Harrold Henry, sheep dresser ·wiles Martin, farmer, Popenhoe house
Beakley .John Thomas, Bell P.H Hart Mallad, farmer Wortb. John, market gardener
Bedford William, shoe maker Hartley Jn. shopkpr.& baker,Post office
Berry Mary (Mrs.), cowkeeper Hem George, jnn. farmer, Smeeth • New Walsoken .
Bett.inson John Thomas, farmer,Smeeth Jackson John, Railway inn, & farmer PRIVATE RESIDENTS.
Britten J ames, beer retailer Kearman William, market gardener Andrew Mrs. Nelson street
666 WALSOKEN. NORFOLK.
BaldingAlfredJohn Wm.103 Norwich rd Chapman Wm. butcher, 15 Norwich rd Mancrief Thomas Aubrey, cowkeeper,
Beales Thomas, 73 Norwich road Cockett Henry, fruit, potato & seed 21 Jump's walk
Bond Rev. William Heddon [Methodist grower & merchant · Mason Hezekiah, market gardener, fq
Free Church], 99 Norwich road Cockett John, fruit & seed gTOWer & Norwich road
Ccckett Alfred, The Mount, Norwich rd merchant & landowner Massen Edward, boot ma. 14 Norwich rd
Cockett Hy. The Chesnnts, Norwich rd Cope George, tailor, 20 Norwich road Miller George William, nurseryman,
Cockett John, The Chesnnts, Norwich rd CrossChas. market gardnr. x6N Ol'wich rd seeds man & florist, 42 Norwich road'
Dales Robert, 43 Norwich road Cuthbert Sarah (Mrs.), feather dyer, Miller J on a than, market gardener,
Earby Mrs. 71 Norwich road 39 Norwich road Ramnoth road
Goodall Rev. Charles [Primitive Meth- Day Alice (Mrs.), milliner & dress I Miller Samuel Edwd. market gardener,
odist], 82 Norwich road maker, 104 Norwich l'oad Ramnoth road
R'art James, xoo Norwich road Day Sl. carpntr. 13 Prince st. & Duke st Miller Western, stone mason, 8 Ram·
Height Robert, 40 Norwich road DockingGeo.greengrocer,IIrNorwichrd noth road
Hudson Herbert, Edina cot. Norwich rd Drew William, builder, Marsh walk Moules Smith, farmer, West of Nene
Jbberson Mrs. 77 Norwich road Earl Mark, cowkeeper, 18 Marsh walk Nurse Ellen(Mrs.),shpkpr.2Norwich rd
Kemp Charles, Vme cot. Norwich road EasonRbt.Wm.coaeh bldr.33Norwich rd Nurse Joh.n Wm. tailor, 2 Norwich rd
Kcrridgc James, 102 Norwkh road · Eldred James,blacksmith,r3Norwich rd Oswin Wm. boot maker, 1 Norwich rd
Mason John, 83 Norwich road Feast Joseph, farmer, Prince street Palmer Wm. builder, 12 Marsh walk
Nicholls Joseph, 48A, Norwich road Godfrey Ezery (Mrs.), shopkeeper, 17 Pape Robert, cabinet maker & shop-
Nuzum Mrs. 32 Norwich road Norwich road keeper, 20 Norwich road
Patrick Miss, 8 r Norwich road Godfrey Thomas Scrimshaw, baker, Pearman Wm. builder, I08 Norwich rd
rrggs The Misses, IS George street 109 Norwich road Peck Daniel, school attendance officer,
Hae .Tames, The Orchard IIamment Herhert, builder,Norwich rd 72 Norwich road
Reader John, 38 Norwich road Hamment Jeremiah, bldr. 23 George st I Ramsdale George Y\-'atts, grocer &
Southwell Alfd. Acacia ho. Norwich rd Hart & Sons, steam roller millers & dr:~per, 37 Norwich road
l:ltaveley Albin William, 97 Norwich rd cattle condiment makers, corn mer- Rawlings Frederick, painter & decor-
'l'hurston Miss, 31 Norwich road chants & flour dealers, Duke street ator, Jumps walk
Vassar Eli, 47 Norwich road Hazell Tryphena (Mrs.), shopkeeper, Robbins Tom Emett, assistant overseer
Vassar'Philip, 46 Norwich road Post office, 28 Norwich road & rate collector forWalsoken & ·west
Williams Hy. Griffith, So Norwich road Hewitt John William, cabinet maker, Walton & inspector for the Wisbech
• COMMERCIAL. Io Norwich road Union rural sanitary authority, :r
Adarnson Ellen (Mrs.), milliner &c. Hewitt Thomas, potato mer. 7 Prince st Duke street
35 Duke street Hill & Son, nurserymen, seedsmen & Scott Chas. cabinet ma. 19 Jumps walk
Bailey John, shoe maker, 94 Norwich rd florists, 13 Norwich road See George Thurston, baker & corn
Beagle Thomas, coal dealer, 7 George st Hooton Chas.fishmonger, nsNorwich rd dealer, I I Norwich road
Deuton Sarah Ann (Mrs.), milliner & Huggins Francis, shopkeeper & black- Simpson Joseph, dyer, xos Norwich rd
dress maker, 84 Norwich road smith, rr2 Norwich road Smith Wm. cam. trav. 76 Norwich rd
BlanchardJohn,shopkeeper,1sGeorge st Kenney l:lusan (Mrs.), market gardener, Swann Alfred, tailor, 21 Duke street
Elythe Sarah (Mrs.), tailoress, 23 Nor- Norwich road Teed Jn. Robt. butcher, 26 Norwich rd
wich road Kerridge James & Son, architects & Thick broom Thomas, market gardener,
Booth Fk.Wm.shopkpr.n6Norwich rd surveyors, 102 Norwich road · Ramnothroad
Boyden Christr. shopkpr. 17 George st Kcrridge James, inspector of nuisances Timby Geo. butcher, 12 Norwich road
Briggs Lucy (Mrs.), straw bonnet & surveyor to local board & clerk to 'l'rott Maria (Mrs.), registry office for
maker, 28 Norwich road school board, 102 Norwich road governesses, helps, housekeepers &
Brown William, grocer, 18 Norwich rd Kiddle Richard, carpenter, 7 Napier ter · domestic servants, 106 Norwich road
Carlisle William, master mariner, 48 King Sarah Ann (Mrs.), baker, 87 Val'sar Eli, briek maker, farmer& land-
Norwich road . Norwich road owner, 47 Norwich road
Cawdell Rosamond (Miss), milliner & Knott Emily (Mrs.), wardrobe dealer, Walker Jn. market gardener, 7 Duke st
dress ma. & shopkpr. 3 Norwich road 20 Napier terrace Watt Alex. beer retailr. 8s Norwich rd
Chapman Nathan, market gardener Lankfer Edwin Redshaw, plumber, 5 \~"eggRd.RoyalExchangeP.HNorwich rd
Cheetham John Thomas, baker, 107 Norwich road Wilby Alfd. fishmongr. 113 Norwich rd
Norwich road Lecture Hall, Norwich road Wyc Herbert, reporter, 51 Norwich rd
EAST W ALTON is a parish and village, 2f miles north Trinity College, Dublin. The poor's land of 6 acres, being
from Narborough station on the Lynn and Dereham section intermixed with the lands of A. Hamond esq. has led to
of the Great Eastern railway, 7 north-west from Swaffham the payment by .Mr. Hamond of a rent of 13s. per acre,
and 9 east from Lynn, in the North Western division of the and the gross rental is distributed in bread, delivered at the
county, Lynn Freebridge hundred, petty sessional division houses of certain inhabitants. G. Francis Callibut, in xsog,
and union, Lynn county· court distril!t, rural deanery of left 33 acres of land at Grimston, the rent of which, after
Lynn Freebridge and archdeaconry and diocese of Norwich. payment of all rates and taxes, is yearly di~tributed in
Tlte church of St. Mary is an ancient building of stone in money, equally divided between the poor of Hillingtou and
the Perpendicular style, consisting of chancel, nave and East Walton, at the discretion of the incumbent and church-
south porch, and a round embattled western tower of Nor- wardens of each parish. St. Andrew's chapel, formerly
man date, containing one bell: in tha church are several attached to West Acre Abbey, is in ruins. Anthony
marble .. ledgers, with inscriptions and impaled shields and Hamond esq. D.L., J.P. of West Acre, is lord of the manor
supporters, to the noble family of Richardson of Honing ham, and chief landowner, The soil is a very light sand. The
including William,4th Baron Cramond M.A.camb. d. 7 March, chief crops are wheat, barley and turnips. The area is
1719; Elizabeth (Barkham), his first ;wife, d. 2B Sept. 1712, 2,643 acres; rateable value, i.,I,5I7; the population in 1891
and Elizabeth (Daniel), his second wife, d. 8 Dec. 1722; was 174.
also to William, sth Earon Cramond, who died at Catton, .{'arish Clerk, James Burton.
28 July, 1735, when the title is supposed to have become Letters through Lynn arrive at 8 a.m. Gayton is the
extinct, but it bas been several times claimed, though not nearest money order & telegraph office
officially : there are rso sittings. The register dates from
the year 1 s6o. The living is a. vicarage annexed to the rec~ WALL LETTER Box cleared at 4·4S p.m.; sundays, 10.3s a. m
tory of Gayton 'l'horpe, average tithe rent-charge £135, National School (mixed), for the parishes of Gayton Thorpe
joint net yearly value £337, including half an acre of glebe, & East Walton, erected in 1875, for 70 children; average
with residence, in the gift of Anthony Hamond esq. and held attendance, 30; the school is partly supported by Anthony
since x886 by the Rev. John Robert Crawford M.A. of Hamond esq. ; Mrs. Annie Stott, mistress

Crawford Rev. John Robert Brown Robert, gamekeeper to Charles Loa.des William, smith & wheelwright
M.A. Ed. Gooch esq Potter Frederick, farm bailiff to .Mrs.
[vicar], Vicarage
Wellingham Mrs. East Walton abbey Kemp Alfred John, Greyhound P.H. & Wellingham
farmer Wilson George, shopkeeper
WEST W ALTON is a parish and village, on the river deanery of Lynn Marshland anrl archdeaconry and diocese
Nene, which here divides this county from Cambridgeshire, of Norwich. There is a ferry here across the river Nene. The
I mile east from Ferry station on the Peterborough and church of St. Ma.ry, built about 1240, is an edifice of Barnack
Lynn section of the Midland railway and 5 Jlliles from stone in the Early English style, consisting of chancel, nave,
Smee~h Road station ou the March and Lynn section of the aisles, fine south porch and a detached tower. standing
Great Eastern railway, 3 north-east from Wisbech and 12 about 70 feet from the church and forming a grand entrance
south-west from Lynn, in theN orth Western division of the to the churchyard ; it contains 5 bells, and is believed to
county, Freebridge Marshland hundred and J:oetty sessional have originally had a lead-covered spire; the west and
div sion, union and county court district of Wisbech, rural north doorways are ornamented with carved work ; the

DIRECTORY.] NORFOLK. WARHAM ST. MA.RY. 667
church, which i~ still very much in need of repair, a.fftr ls Parish Clerk, John Copeman.

200 sittings. The register dates from the year 1576. The Pos-r OFFICE (Church End).-George Webster Cnrson, re-
living is a consolidated rectory, in the gift of the Lord ceiver. Letters arrive from Wisbech at 7.30 a.m. & 1.30
Chancellor, average yearly value from tithe rent-charge p.m. ; dispatched at r.4o & 6.30 p.m. Postal orders am
£ z,o46, w1bh 2 acres of glebe, and held since 'I873 by the issued here, but not paid
Hev. Waiter Elliott Browne, of London University. The
mission church of St. Paul, situated I~ miles from the PosT OFFICE (Fen End).-Zadtariah Handley, receiver.
cl1urch, at the Fen end, consists of chancel, nave and Letters arrive through Wisbech at 7 a.m. & 1.5 p.m.;
Y(!Stries, and a bell-cot containing one bell ; divine service is dispatched at 'I. 10 & 6.30 p.m. The nearest money order
conducted llere by the rector and the Rev. VV. B. Punsfer, & telegraph office is at Wisbech. WALL LETTER Box,
v:car of Islington. There is a Baptist chapel at the !<'en end, Church End, cleared at 6 p.m. & Inglcborough, 5.30 p. m.
a:1d a Primitive Methodist chapel at the Church end 9f the week days only
parish. The poor's estate, of 26 acres, produces £1 15 ScHooLs:-
~·early, which sum is distributed in money. Edward Hugh National (mixed), Church End, built in I84o, for r2o
J,LCkson esq. of North Brink, Wishech, is lord of the manors children; average attendance, 68; Joseph Driver, master;
of Wl"st Walton Coleraine, West Walton-cum-Membris and Mrs. Sarah Driver, infants' mistress
West Walton Colville. The principal landowners are Edward National (mixed), Fen End, built for Bo children; average
William Trafford esq. J.P. of llrundallllouse, and William attendance, 17 ; Miss Mary Louise · Gromitt, mistress ;
Henry Trafford esq. J.P. of Wroxham Hall, Joseph Johnson these schools are endowed with [22 yearly, arising from
esq. and Edward Southwell Trafford esq. J.P. of Wroxham the dividends of Dale's charity, the trustees being th~
Hall. The soil is loam ; subsoil, clay • The chief crops are rector & churchwardens
wheat, peas, beans and potatoes; there is also much pasture
land. The area is 5,223 acres; rateable value, £9,037; the RAILWAY STATIONS;-
population in 1891 was 904. Great Eastern (Smeeth Road), Fras. Hopkins, station mast.
DIXON'S END is in this parish, and SMEETH and I<'EN END Midland (Ferry) (West of Nene), Gcorge Fro_;gatt, station
extend into it. master
llrowne Rev. Waiter Elliott [rector] Grimmer & Webb, builders, contrac- Johnson Joseph, farmer, Priory farm
COMMERCIAL. tors, wheelwrights & cart & van King George, blacksmith, Smeeth
Alexander William Edrnund, boot builders &c. Fen end Leach John, farmer, Fen end
maker & shopkeeper Hall Georgc, farmer, Fen end Monies David, farmer
Baker ·wal ter, beer retailer, Smeeth llall James, cattle dealer Oakley Levi, baker, Fen end
Barrows Frank, farmer Hall William, Queen of TrumpS·P.H Porter Peregrine, farmer, Fen end
Batterham Jsph. farmer&market grdnr Handley Clement, butcher Pratt Robert, junw farmer
Benton George, shoe maker Handley Thomas, farmer, Fen end Pratt Waiter, farmer, Hill House farm
Brashier John, farmer Handley Zachariah, butcher & farmer, Shipley John, farmer
Buck John, thrashing machine owner Post office, Fen end · Smith Arthur, Ferry Boat P.H. West of·
ll uttery J oseph, beer retailer Harrold Samuel, plough & agricultural Nene
Clare William, market gardener implement maker & blacksmith, & Smith James, farmer, Fen end
Cooke John, farmer, Fen end repairer of & agent for all kinds of Smith John, farmer, Fen end
Cooke William, farmer, Fen end agricultural machines, Church end Sutterby Daniel, miller (wind) & far-
Curson Gco. Webster, shpkpr. Post off Herbert Joseph, farmer, Fen end mer, Fen end
Drew Robert, farmer, Smeeth Herring J oscph, blacksmith & shop- Taylor Edwin, farmer, Fen end
Edgoose Benj. farmr. Honington house keeper, Fen end Thompson William, farmer, Fen end
Edgoose James, market gardener Horsley Robert, bricklayer Tombleson Rt. Moden, farmer, Fen end
Edgoose Patience (Mrs.), farmer Horspole John, beer retailer, Fen end Vawser & Whittorne, farrners, Marsh-
Edgoose Stanton, beer ret. :Walton dam Houlden Henry, farmer, Church end land fen
Farrow Thomas, farmer, West of Nene Hubbard Wm. Henry, farmer, Fen end Vincent Edward, farmer
Fisher Benjamin, farmer, Fen Hudson Augustine, butcher Walpole Robert, farmer
Flint Thomas, farmer Hnmphrey John, farmer, Smeeth Ward John, farmer, West of Nene
Frost John, beer :retailer, Fen end Humphrey Joseph, farmer & collector Wright Eenj. carpenter & wheelwright
Gathergood Robt. beer retailer, Fen end of drainage rates, Fen end Young William, farmer & land
Goodley Frederick, farmer, Fen Hunter Josiah, farmer, Fen measurer, Fen end
G reeves Emanuel, farmer, West of~ ene Ingram George, farmer
W ARHAM ALL SAINTS is a parish, near the sea rectory, with that of Warham St . .Mary annexed, tithe rent-
shore, 2 miles south-by-east from Wells station on the Great charge £.62o, joint gross yearly value £628, including 24~
Eastern railway, and 3~ north from Walsingham, in the acres of glebe, with residence, in the gift of the Earl of
Northern division of the county, North Greenhoe hundred Leicester, and held since 1874 by the Rev. Charles Tilton
and petty sessional division, Walsingham union and county Digby M. A. of Corpus Christ1 college, Oxford, who resides at
court district, rural deanery of Walsingham and arch- Warham St. Mary. A Primitive Yfethodist chapel was
deaconry and diocese of Norwich. The church of All Saints erected here in 1872. The Earl of Leicester K.G., L.L. is
is a building of flint, somewhat in the Decorated style, but lord of the manor of Warham Ducus and Hales and the
with Perpendicular windows, and consists of chancel, nave, chief landowner. The soil is light; subsoil, chalky. The
transepts, south porch and a small western bell gable with chief crops are wheat, barley and turnips. The area is 1,174
one bell: the church was formerly a much larger edifice ; acres of land and 6oo of water ; rateable value, about
portions of a massive tower still remain, and the arches of · £1,120; the population in 1891 was 267.
the arcades dividing the nave and former aisles may be Sexton, John Rush. )
traced in the north and south walls of the present building: PosT 0FFtCE.-William Whitaker, postmaster. Letters re.
there are two brasses, a small one of peculiar character to ceived through Wells, the nearest money order & telegraph
William Rokewode esq. ob. 1474; and one, dated 165o, to office; delivery at 7.30 a. m. ; collection at 4.30 p.m.
some members of the Framlingham family : the church was No collection on sun day
restored, re-seated and a fine carved oak pulpit added in Parochial School (mixed), erected at the expense of Canon
1877, at a total cost of £r,2oo: there are 200 sittmgs. Collyer, late rector, in 1869, for 6o children; average at-
The register dates from the year 1558. The living is a tendance, 45; Miss Ida Annie Shimmins, mistress
Loynes Edward Bunting Rawston Robt. Friar, Three Horseshoes Tuck lsaac Willia.m, shopkeeper
Cozens John, farmer P.H'. & carpenter \Vhittakcr William, wheelwright
Moore Tbos. Wm. farmer, Chalk farm Ringwood Richard, baker & shopkeeper
W ARHA M ST. MARY is a parish and pretty village, respectively dated 1628 and 1769: in a small chapel north of
near the sea shore, adjoining Warham All Saints, 2~ miles the chancel is the vault of the Turner family : there are
south-by-east from Wells, 4 miles north of Walsingham, in 100 sittings. The register dates from the year 1565. The
the Northern division of the county, North Greenhoe bun- living is a rectory, annexed to that of Warham All Saints.
dred tmd petty sessional division, Walsingham union and Near the Stifl:"key rivulet are the remains of a fortified camp,
c!Junty court district, rural deanery of Walsingham and with a triple fosse, and covering an area of 9 acres. Here
archdeaconry and diocese of ~orwich. The church of St. are also the ruins of a large hall, once the residence of the
Mary the Virgin, anciently existing here, has disappeared, Turner family, former proprietors of the manor; the house
ahd its site is now unknown. The church of ~t. Mary was purchased from the Turners and dismantled by the
Magdalene is a small building of flint, in the Early English late Earl of Leicester, who erected a farmhouse near its site.
Transition style, with some details of the Perpendicular The Earl of Leicester K.G., L.L. is lord of the manor and sole
period, and consists of chancel, nave, south porch and an landowner. 'fhe land is of a rich, loamy nature, producing
embattled western tower containing one bell : the chancel excellent crops of wheat, oats and barley, and green crops
windows and one in the nave are stained ; two of these are generally; the subsoil is partly on the chalk formation. The
668 WARHAM ST. MARY. NORFOLK.- (KELLY'S

area is 2,056 acres of land and r,oro of water; rateable the nearest money order & telegraph office, arrive at 7.50
value, £r,585; the population in 189r was 73· a.m
Sext<>n, John Rush. The children of this parish attend the school at Warham All
LETTER Box cleared at 4.30 p.m. Letters through Wells, Saints
Digby Rev. Chas. Tilton M.A. Rectory Nelson Edward, farmer Symonds Edmund, gamekeeper to the
Groom Horace Alfred, Nort.hgate hall Savory Thomas ·william, farmer, Grove Earl of Leicester K.G
Cubitt John, farm bailiff to Major J. E. farm Tuck Isaac, blacksmith
Groom, N orthgat~ hall
W ATERDEN is a parish 4 miles west-by-south from including 18 acres of glebe, with residence, in the gift of the
Walsingham station on the Derebam and Wells section of Earl of Leicester K.G. and held since 1888 by the Rev.
the G-reat Eastern railway, 5 south-east from Burnbam William Fitzgerald Gambicr Sandwith B.A. of Christ
Market and 5 north-west from Fakenham, in the North Church, Oxford, who is also vicar of IIolkham. The land is
Western division of the county, Brothercross hundred, wholly comprised in one farm, now occupied by Mr. Edwo.rd
Smithdon and Brothercross petty sessional division, Dock- Blomfield Hamond, and there are a few cottage.'!. The Earl
ing union, Walsingham county court district, rural deanery of Leicester K.G., L.L. is the sole landowner and lord of the
of Burnham, archdeaconry of Norfolk and diocese of Nor- manor. The soil is a rich loam, producing excellent crops
wich. The church of All Saints, almost entirely concealed of wheat, barley and green crops generally; subsoil, chiefly
by trees, is now a small edifice of flint, in the Early English gravel, very little marl. The area is 763 acres ; rateable
style, consisting of chancel, nave and north porch : it is, value, £868 ; the population in 1891 was 32.
however, only a portion of an earlier and larger structure Sexton, John Wright.
and the arcades of a south aisle and some remains of a tower Letters through Walsingham R.S.O. arrive at ga.m. South
can still be traced. The register dates from the year 1730. Creake is the nearest money order & Walsingham the
The living is a rectory, with that of Egmere annexed, a,·er- nearest telegraph office
age tithe rent-charge £168, joint gross yearly value £186, The children of this place attend the school at South Creake
Hamond Edward Blomfield, farmer
W ATLINGTON is a parish and village on the east side Heading esq. of 1Thorpland, are the principal landowners.
of the Great Ouse river, with a junction station called . The soil is mostly gravel and silt ; subsoil, gault and clay.
"Magdalen R.flad," on the Lynn and Ely section of the Great : The chief crops arc wheat, beans and oats. The area is
Eastern railway, 6 miles south from Lynn, in the South · 1,709 acres; rateable value, £3,675; the population in 1891
Western division of the county, Clackclose hundred and was 579·
petty sessional division, Downham union and county court · Parish Clerk & Sexton, Mayes Page.
district, rural deanery of Fincham, archdeaconry of Norfolk PosT 0FFICE.-George Benjamin Riches, receiver. Letters
and diocese of Norwich. The church of SS. Peter and Paul arrive from Downham at 8 a. m.; dispatched at 5-55
is a building of rubble, brick and carr stone, in the Perpen- p.m.; sundays, arrive at 8 a. m.; dispatched at 10 a.m.
dicular style, consisting of chancel, nave, aisles, south porch The nearest money order & telegraph office is a Wiggen-
and an embattled western tower with small spire and con- hall St. Germans. Postal orders are issued here, but not
taining 3 bells: there are 250 sittings. The register dates paid
from the year 1570. The living is a rectory, tithe corn- WALL LETTER Box, at 1\'[agdalen Road station, cleared at
muted at £491, net yearly value £420, including 21 acres 5.15 p.m.; sundays at II.15 a.m
of glebe, with reside11ce, in the gift of Gilbert Barker esq. A School Board of 5 members was formed 17 July, r875;
and held since 186o by the Rev. George Llewellyn Barker T. L. Reed, Downham, clerk to the board; William Kid-
Ill. A. of Christ's College, Cambridge. Here is a Wesleyan man, attendance officer
chapel, erected in 1858, and a Primitive :Methodist chapel. Board School (mixed), built in r878, for 120 children; aver-
The charities amount to £-IO yearly. The parish land of 2 age attendance, 92; Peter Lightfoot, master; Mrs. Jane
acres, situated in Tottenhill, is now let for £6 ss. yearly, Lightfoot, mistress
which sum is distributed in money at Christmas. Albert Police Station, Samuel Jam~s Huggins, constable
Edward Henry Birch esq. Augustus Cresswell Cresswell Railway Station, Frederie Hillier, station master
esq. of 3 Little St. James street, London s w John Morton CARRIERS TO LYNN.-Richard Spratt, tues. & sat. & Ann
esq. of West Rudham, Edmund Crowe esq. and George Cason, tues. & !!at
PRIVATE RESIDENTS. Cbilds Susannah (Miss), dress maker 1 Lambert Henry, market gardener
Barker Rev. Geo.Llewellyn M.A.Rectory Chilvers John, Queen's Head P.H. & Meek James, grocer, draper & farmer
Birch Albert Edwd. Hy. Watlington hall cattle dealer & farmer Moughton John, beer retailer & cattle
Birch :Mrs. Watlington hall Chilvers William, carpenter dealer, Magdalen road
Bird Josiah, Watlington house Cooper Charles, farmer Petchel!Wm.horse breaker,Magdalen rd
Downer Henry, Magdalen road Failes Eliza (Mrs.), cowkeeper Plowright James Jackson, brick, tile,
Langley Mrs. Park cottage Featherby Arthur, carpenter pipe & flower pot manufacturer &
Lawson Thomas Cornelius Featherby James, glazier & painter builders' merchant &c. ; works,Mag-
Pinnock Mrs Fendley Jane (Miss), dress maker dalen road; office, 3 Tower place,
Procter Thomas Fendley William, coal merchant Lynn. See advertisement
Tooley Mrs Franklin Geo. beerr~tailer & blacksmth Riches George Benjarnin, shoeing
Wood John Gathergood Juseph,farmer,Polver farm & general smith & agricultural imple-
Young Rev. Frank Drake Grummitt John, farmer, Home farm mcnt maker & dealer in secondhand
Hanslip William, boot maker machinery,implements &c. Post office
COMMERCIAL. Heading Frank, miller (wind), corn Skerritt James H. grocer & draper
Baker Nicholas, Angel P. H. & bricklayer merchant, baker & farmer Smith Henry, basket maker
Balls Chas. pig &c. dealer, Magdalen rd Heading Robert, farmer Spratt Richard, carrier
Halls George, farmer & cattle dealer, Hilton Thomas & Sons, market gardnrs Spratt William, farmer
Magdalen road Johnson Ernest H. road surveyor, Stephenson Thomas, farmer
Barker Stephen, farmer, Magdalen rd Marshland district, Norfolk county Tann James, farmer
Benstood John, baker council Thompson James, chief engineer
Bishop Dinah (Mrs.), farmer Kidman George, cattle salesman Turner Alfred, grocer & draper
Bowden Thomas, market gardener Kidman Wm. school attendance officer Wood Edwartl James Knowles, grocer
Carter William, beer retailer Lawson Thomas Cornelius, sur~eon, & & butcher
Carter William, farmer, Magdalen road medical officer & public vaccinator, ·wood John, school attendance officer
Cason Ann (Mrs.), carrier Wiggenhall district, Downham union for Magdalen
Cbilds James, shoe maker Lack William, saddler I
W ATTON is a parish and small market town with a dedicated to St. Giles, is a structure of flint in the Norman
station on the Thetford and Watton branch of the Great and Gothic styles, consisting of chancel, clerestoried nave,
Eastern railway and is ro miles south from Dereham and 10 aisles, organ chamber, vestry, north and west porches, and
south-east from Swaffham, 2I west-by-south from Norwich 1 a western tower, round at the base, with an octagonal belfry
and g6 from London, in the South Western division of the containing 3 bells: there are piscime in the chancel and
county, Wayland hundred, petty sessional division and south aisle, and the former retains a lepers' window: the
union, Attleborough county court district, rural deanery of font is of Caen stone and has an oaken cover: a curious old
Breckles, and archdeaconry and diocese of Norwich. The poor-box is preserved, bearing the date of 1552: there are
town chiefly consists of one wide street, and is lighted with monuments to the families of Wodehouse 1720: Raby 1794;
gas from works the property of the Watton Gas Light and Hicks 1743-1BI3; TeJlet 1755-70; Young I7]0-I8oS: and
Coke Co. Limited. The water supply is derived from the to the Rev. Peter Barker Seott, d. I8II: six of the windows
town pump and ponds. The church of St. Mary, originally are stained, two of which were presented by the Rev. W. C.
DIRECTORY.] NORFOLK. WATTON. 669
Hodgson, a former vicar: the church was restored in r852, founded in r6r2 by Edward Gaffe, who endowed them with
when the floor was lowered to its original level, an oak screen, a yearly rent-charge of £5; they were rebuilt in 1820 by R.
pulpit and lectern erected, a vestry built and the interior Harvey esq. Alrnshouses were also built by Mr. Edward
re-seated: in r887 the vestry was converted into an organ- Stevens, formerly of Watton, who in r84o conveyed t.hem
chamber, a new organ built and a carved oak reredos fixed, to trust.ees for the benefit of four poor married couples of
both the reredos and the chancel being enriched with sub- the ages of sixty years, who have resided in the parish for
jects from designs by Mr. Thomas Waters, a local artist: in not less than thirty years. The local charities are now ad-
the south aisle is a reading-desk of oak, finely carved: there ministered under a scheme framed in 187o by the Charity
are 480 sittings. The churchyard was enlarged and conse- Commissioners : by this scheme the "Poor's Allotment
crated in r89x. The register dates from tbe year IS39- The Charity," consisting of certain land in the parish, allotted
living is a discharged vicarage, average tithe rent-charge under the Watton Inclosure Act of 1802 and amounting to
£I44• net yearly value £r66, with 11 acres of glebe an'l about 6oA. IR. 28P. and let with the buildings thereon for
residence, in the gift of Joseph Trueman Mills es4_. and held £90 a year, is held by the lord of the manor, the vicar,
since 1890 by the Rev. William Bcrtram Russell Calcy M.A. churchwardens and overseers and two others, in trust for
·of Pembroke College, Cambridge. There are Congrega- the benefit of such poor and deserving inhabitants of Watton
tional, Primitive Methodist and Wesleyan chapels here, and as they may from time to time !'elect: the income of the
a burial ground for Nonconformists adjoining the church- charities is usually expended in the purchase of coals and
yard, from which it is separated by a gravel path. A parish I bread, but the trustees have power also to supply the deserv-
room was erected in r89r, at a cost of £70. JThe Wayland ing poor with clothes, bedding, medical and other aid in
Hall, standing in the Market place and erected in r8s3, is an sickness, and with pecuniary aid in special cases. "The
edifice of brick and stone, in the Late Perpendicular style, Church Lands Charity," consisting of certain land in the
from the designs of Mr. C. Lamb, architect, and comprises parish belonging to the church, amounting to about r2A.
a corn hall, magistrates' rooms, library and committee IR. 26P. with the buildings thereon, and now (1892) let for
rooms. In 1204 a writ was issued to inquire whether the £36 a year, was settled upon the vicar and churchwardens
market, granted to John de Vaux, who held the manor of in trust to apply the income towards providing for the main-
·watton Hall, was not prejudicial to the market of Saham, tenance, repairs and insurance agaim:t fire of the parish
and it being found to be so, the writ was recalled; but church, and towards defraying the other expenses usually
Oliver de Vaux, at the end of the same year, obtained a new provided for by a church-rate, or legally payable thereout.
charter, under which a market was to be held every \Ved- On the south side of the town is Wayland (or Wailing) Wood,
nesday, and it still continues to be held on the same day. the property of Lord Walsingham, and confidently believed
A town pump was erected at the west end of the town in by the country poople tn have been the scene of the murder
r887, and there is a clock tower, the bell in which is used as 1 of" Tbe Babes in the Wood" by their cruel uncle: a carved
an alarm in case of fire: on the tower is a qua~nt rebus, ex- mantelshelf displaying the story, belonging to an ancient
pressive of the name of the town. The County Police mansion in this wood, probably ~ave rise to the tradition,
Station, at the junction of the :Vorwich and Thetford roads, which is in a measure corroborated by the old ballad entitled
was built in 1Bs6, and has attached an inspector and one "The Two Children in the Wood; or, The :Vorfolk Gentle-
constable. The Wayland Fire Brigade, formed in August, - man's Last Will and Testament," found in " Bishop Percy's
189o, consists of a captain and I I men; the fire station is at Reliques of Ancient English Poetry." Joseph Trueman
the Wayland Hall; the engine is a 16 manual byShand and Mills esq. D.L., J.P. of Little Cressingham, is lord of the
Mason and has a good supply of hose: it is maintained by manor of Watt{)n Hall, and the manor of Rockholls belongs
voluntary contributions. Messrs. Gurneys and Co. of Nor- to John Edmund Alexander esq. The principal landowners
wicb, have a branch bank and the National Provincial Bank are Lord Wa.lsingham J. P. Sir Charles Harvey bart. of Rain·
of England have an agency here. There are two small iron thorpe Hall, Joseph Trueman Mills esq. D L., J.P. Frederick
foundries. The" George "and the "Crown" are the prin- Lake esq. and others. The area is x,80] acres; rateable
cipal hotels. A public recreation ground of 2 acres, situated value, £7,182; the population in 1891 was 1 ,365.
near ~he Gas works, was given to the town by the late Mrs.
Harvey. In the town are almshouses for four poor widows, Deputy Parish Clerk, James Wright.
Official Establishments, Local Institutions &c.
PosT, M. 0. & T. 0., S. ll. & Annuity & Insurance Office. Treasurer, Henry Birkbeck, Xorwich
(Sub-office. Letters should have S. 0. Norfolk added.)- Relieving Officer, Watton & Attleborough districts, William
William Stoveld Stace, postmaster. Letters arrive at Shepherd, Rocklands
4.30 a.m. & from London 1 p.m.; dispatched to London Vaccinatir,m Officers, The Registrars of Births & Deat,hs
& Norwich 1 I. r6 a. m. (box closes xo. so a. m.) & parcels Medical Officers & Public Vaccinators, Attleborough district,
to Cambridge 10.50 a. m. ; dispatched to Thetford at 8. ro Carteret George Ellis L.R.C.P.Edin. Attleboro'; Watton
p.m. (box closes 8 p. m.) ; Sundays, box closes 6 p.m. ; district, Henry Mallins M. B., M.eh. Watton
letters dispatched 6.15 p.m Superintendent Registrar, Henry Francis Grigson, Watton
WALL LETTER Box, Gas house, cleared at 6. so p. m Registrars of Births, Deaths & Marriages, Attleborough
\~'ALL LETTBR Box, Watton green, cleared at 6 p.m. week sub-district, William Shepherd, Rocklands ; deputy. J. B.
days only Burgess, Rocklands ; Watton sub-district, Arthur Sayer,
COUNTY MAGISTRATES FOR W AYLAND PETTY SESSIONAL Rockland ~t. Peter; deputy, W. H. Tyrrell, Scoulton
DIVISION. The Workhouse, at Rockland All Saints, is a structure of
Walsingham Lord D.L., M.A., F.R.S. Merton hall, Tbetford, brick, available for 299 inmates; Rev. James Atkinson
chairman Bnlman l<'leming, chaplain; Carteret George Ell is L. R.c. P.
Crisford Hev. AlexanderThos. M.A. Rectory, Ovington, Thetfrd Edin. medical officer; G. Wilson, mast-er; Mrs. M.
Hemsworth Augustus Noel Camp bell esq.Flaxrnour, Cas ton, .A. Wilson, matron
Attleborough RURAL SANITARY AUTHORITY.
Johnson Rev. Henry Robert Arthnr M.A. Rectory, Scoulton, Meets at Board-room, Rocklands.
Watton S.O Clerk, Henry Francis Grigson, Watton
Mills Joseph Trueman C!'q. D.L. Clermont lodge, Thetford Treasurer, Henry Hirkbeck, Norwich
Clerk to the Magistrates, Richard Robinson Medical Otlicer of Health, Henry Geo. Foster, Attleborough
Petty Sessions are held at the Wayland hall on the first Inspector of Nuisances, Arthur Sayer, Rockland St. Peter-
wednesday in every month at I I a.m. ; the following ScHooL ATTENDANCE CoMMITTEE.
places are included in the petty sessional division : - Meets at Board-room, Rocklands, monthly, at I I o'clock_
Ashill, Brecklcs, Carbrooke, Caston, Little Ellingham, Clerk, Henry l<'rancis Grigson, ·watton
liriston, Merton, Ovington, Rockland f::lt. Peter, Saham Attendance Officer, Williarn Shepherd, Rocklands
Toney, Scoulton, Stow Bedon, Thompson, Threxton,
Tottington & Watton PUBLIC ESTABLISHMENTS:-
WAYLAND UNION. A county court district, called the Watton & Attleborough,.
Board day, every alternate monday at 10 a. m. at the union formed in 1887, is held every alternate month with Attic-
The Union comprises the following places :-Attleborough, borough; His Honor Edwin Plnmer Price Q.c. judge;
Besthurpe, Breckles, Carbrooke, Caston, Great Elling- George Martin Hall, Attleborough, registrar and high
ham, Griston, Hargham, Hockham, Illington, Larling, bailiff; Waiter James, clerk & bailiff. The district com-
Little Ellingham, Merton, Ovington, Rockland All Saints prises the following places :-Attleborough, Ban ham.
& St. Andrew, Rockland St. Peter, Roudham, Scoulton, Hesthorpe, Breckles, Bridgham, Buckenham New, Buck-
Shropham, Snetterton, Stow Bedon, Thompson, Totting- enham Old, Ca.rbrooke, Caston, Eccles, Ellingham Great,
ton & Watton. The population of the union in xBgr was Ellingham Little. Griston, Hargham, Harling East,
ro,sos ; area, 5r,o63 acres; rateable value, £68,979· Harling West, Hockham Great & Little, Illin_5ton, Ken-
Clerk to the Guardians & Assessment Committee, Henry ninghall, Larling, Merton, Ovington, Quidenham, Rock-
Francis Grigson, ·watton lands All Saints, St. Andrew's & St. Peter's, Roudham,
C. N. & S. 43
670 WATTO~. NORFOLK. (KELLY'S
Scoulton, Shropham, Snetterton, Stow Bedon, Thompson, Inspector of Weights & Measures, Superintendent Wright,
Tottington, Watton & Wilby. East Harling
Certified Bailiff appointed under the "Law of Distress Surveyor to Watton District to Norfolk County Council,
Amendment Act,'' Waiter Joha Amis, Attleborough J osiah Haynes ·
·county Police Station, John Knights,inspector & I constable SCHOOLS:-
Reading Room, Robert Martin, sec · National (mixed), built in 1819 by William Robinson esq.
Stamp Office, William Stoveld Stace, distributor rebuilt in 1842 & since enlarged; it will now hold 244
Wayland Fire Brigade, Robert Waters, captain & 1 r men children; average attendance, 140; Charles Lintott,
Wayland Hall, James Wright, keeper master; Mrs. Emily Lintott, mistress. Six boys of
Watton are entitled to free instruction at Saham school
PUBLIC OFFICERS:~ Infants', erected in 1876, for about 6o children ; average
Clerk to the Commissioners of Taxes, Richard Robinson attendance, 46; Mrs. Caroline Bicker, mistress
Assistant Overseer, Collector of Poor's Rate & Queen's RAILWAY STATION.-William Cann, station master'
Taxes, Edward Harvey CARRIERS TO NORWICH.-James Cornell, tues. returning on
Inland Revenue Officer, Charles Playfair wed. ; William Knott, wed. & sat. returning same day

Alexander Thomas Arthur L.R.C.P. & Gurneys, Birkbecks, Barclay&Buxton,


PRIVATE RESIDENTS. L. R. c.s. T. & L.M.rrel. physician, sur- bankers (branch of Norwich)( William
Adcock Robert, West End honse geon,& medical officer & public vacci- Thomas Sayer, agent); draw on Bar-
.A.lexander John Edmund, Gladstone nator,SahamToney district,Swaffham cla:v, Bevan & Co. London E c
villa union, Clematis house Hall William, traveUing draper
Alexander Thomas Arthur, Clematis ho Baldwin - , beer retailer Hanner James, fishmonger
Barker Miss Bales Henry, boot maker & insurance Hardwick flarah Ann (1\Irs.), lodgings
Barker 'Villiam, East house agent Harvey Edward, assistant overseer,
Barton Miss, Sunnyside Banham Alexander, auctioneer, valuer sec. to theWalsingham Lodge of Odd~
Beets Mrs. Dereham road & estate agent & agent to Manchester fellows, clerk to poor's charities &
Blomfield Bernard ·wmiam, Beech wood Fire Insut'ance Co. Norwich road collector of poor's rates & income tax
llrasnett Miss Barber John, upholsterer & cabinet ma Haynes Josiah, surveyor for Watton
Buckle Miss, Thetford road Barker John, cycle depot & tinplate district to Norfolk county council
Caley Rev. William Bertram Russell worker Holmes Richard Guilliard, George com-
M.A. Vicarage Blomfield Bernard William M.B.C. v.s., mercial family hotel & posting house,
Cornwall William F.E.V.M.A. vet. surgeon, Beechwood wine, spirit & beer merchant
Dunnett Herbert John Boughen George, cooper Houchen Alan 'Willis, solicitor, see
Punnett Daniel Bradfield Charles, harness maker Winter & Houchen
Durrant Mrs f Brunton William, tailor & beer retailer Howlett Thomas Shepherd, corn &
Eagleton John, Dereham road · ' BuckenhamElizabeth(Mrs.),dress makr coal merchant
1
Edwards Rev. Arthur William [Primi- Buckle John, corn dealer & coal mer Hunton William, iron & brass founder
tive Methodist], Dereham road llutcherGeorge,ironmonger& furniture, & agricultural implement maker
Elsegood William china & earthenware dealer Hurrell Elizh.(Mrs.),furnished aprtrnts
Frost Thomas Crawshay Button Ishmael, sawyer Jacobs George, Crown commercial &
Gompertz Mrs. Dereham road Button Robert, wheelwright & carpenter family hotel, farmer & horse dealer
Goodrick Horatio Button Samuel, jun. dealer Jessup Jeremiah, market gardener
Gowing J ames \Varden, Norwich road . Buxton Henry, tin plate worker J ohnson Walt. vermin killer, Brand on rd
Gowing Stephen S. B. Dillwyn cottage · Caddy James, tailor Julnes Arthur '\'alter, marine store
Grigson Henry F Cann William & Co. brewers & spirit dealer & coal merchant
1

Grimwood Mrs. Neaton cottage merchants (Herbert Carley ·watson, Kendall William, grocer & draper, boot,
Harvey Edwa.rd, West End villas mangr.),Wymondham brewery stores shoe & generaloutfittingestablishmnt
llaynes Josiah Cann William, stat.ion master Kettle Emma Jane (Mrs.), laundress
Hewitt Miss Chapman Charles, shoe maker Knights Susan (:\:lrs. ), laundress
Hodges Charles Chapman Robert, beer retailer Knott Charles, coal dealer
Howarci Miss, Sunnyside Chase George, butcher & farmer 1
Knott Mark, dealer, Watton green
Jacobs Gcorgc Clark James, foreman ::arpentcr Lake William, coal dealer
Knopwood Mrs Coller R. & Sons, c.:orn, coal, cake & seed Langford Lionel, ironmonger &c
Land Miss, Merton road merchants; & atAttleborough; Diss; I Leggett Hannah (Miss), dress maker
Lehhell John Thetford & Norwich · Leggett Louisa (Mrs.), laundress
Lintott Charles, West End terrace Cooke Francis Harry, watch maker & Leggett Wm. beer ret. & pork butcher
Mallins Henry n.A., JII.B jeweller Literary Institute (Robert Martin, sec)
l\Iinns George County Court (His Honor Edwin Mackley Thomas Joseph, surgeon-den-
Rae Matthew Plumer Price Q. c. judge ; George tist; attends from Norwich the third
Hobinson Frederick, Willow house Martin Hall, registrar) thurs. in the month at the George hotl
Robinson Richard, Willow house . Curl Mary (Mrs.), boarding school Mallins Henry B. A., M.B., M.ch. sur-
Hudland Henry John, Ncaton villa Currey Emily (:\Irs. ), apartments geon, & medical officer & public vac-
Salmon Miss Drew Henry, shoe maker cinator to the Watton district of
Savage Rev. Alfred Albert [Congrega- Drew William, manager of gas works Wayland union
tional], West End villas Dunnett Daniel, grocer & draper Martin Robert & Son, corn, cake & seed
Sayer William Thomas, Bank house Durraut Geu. Cubit, draper & grocer merchants, commission agents &
Smith John, Merton road Edwards John, stationer & fancy re- land surveyors
Snare Miss ,_ pository Meek Wm.& Son, saddlers& harness mas
Stacc James, Norwich road Elsegood William, butcher Minus Peter, tailor
Stace William Stoveld Fickling Jeremiah, farmer & dealer, Mizen Eliza (Mrs.), laundress
Taylor Henry, West house Brandon road Morley "'illiam, farmer & landowner
Taylor Mrs. Thetford road . Foresters (Court Industry) (Thos.Crow- Myhill William, farmer, Watton green
Thompson John Hicks foot, sec.), held at George hotel National Provincial Bank of England
Vincent Lacey Andrews Gant Douglas Ambrose,ba.ker&confctnr (agency) (East Derebam branch)
Watson Herbert C Garner Frederick, coach builder & (Edwyn William 'Mawer Cowtan,
Watson Joseph, Neaton wheelwright manager); open every wednesday
Whalebelly John Garner James, baker from 3 till 5; draw on head offiee,
Whalebelly William Garner James, blacksmith II2 Bishopsgate within, London R c
Woods Mrs. Rokcles hall Goddard John, furnishing & general Oddfcllows (Loyal Walsingham Lodge)
ironmonger, hot water engineer, (Edward llarvey, sec.), George hotel
COMMERCIAL. smith &c Payne Thomas, King's Arms P. H
Adcock & Sons, builders & contractors, Goodrick Horatio, iron founder, wheel- Payne Waiter John, baker, Thetford rd
undertakers, stone & marble masons wright &c Pechey Thomas Pollard, chemist, drug-
& builders' merchants Grcengrass Georgc William, castrator gist & dentist; agent for G. E. Bond,
Adcock Elizabeth Augusta (Mrs.), Grigson Henry Francis, clerk to guar- gun maker, Thetford & agent to the
watch & clock maker dians, rural sanitary authority & Royal Fire & Life & Scottish Accident
.Adcock Frederick, watch maker & school attendance & assessment corn- Insurance Cos
· jeweller mit,tees & supt. registr.u of Way land Pettitt Arthur Henry,dairyman & cream
Adcock Herbert, grocer & provision dlr union & sec to the Gas. Co. & to the cheese manufacturer, Thetford road
Adcock James, carpenter Wayland Habitation of the Primrose Playfair Charles, inland revenue officer
Adcock Thomas Edwin, agent to Ocean League Rae Matthew, tailor & outfitter
& General Accident Assurance Co Grimes J ames, boot maker Reed Ann (Mrs.), earthenware dealer
DIRECTORY.] NOHFOLK. WEASENHAM ST. PETER • 671

Reeve Henry, beer retailer & basket ma Siggins Sarah (Mrs.), laundress, Dere- Waters & Sons, builders & decorators,
Reeve Herbt.Harry,saddler&harness ma ham road sanitary engineers & ecclesiastical
Rice George Stephen, farmer Siggins llenry, plumber & painter workmen
Robinson & Sons, solicitors Smith James, upholsterer Watson Mary (Mrs.), lodging house
1,
Robinson Frederiek, solicitor,· see Spanton Sarah (Miss), lodgings Watton Gas Light & Coke Co. Limited
Robinson & Sons Stace & Harvey, printers & book- (Henry F. Grigson, sec)
Robinson Richard (firm, Robinson & binders Watton String Band (The) (Edwin
Sons), solicitor & commissioner to ad- Stace William Stoveld, postmaster, Fyson 'foombs, bandmaster)
minister oaths, clerk to the magis- bookseller & stationer &c Wayland Agricultural Exhibition, Cot-
trates & to commissioners of taxes Standley James, tailor tageGarden & PoultryShow(L. A. Vin-
Rowe John, tailor & hosier Stebbing Charles, painter & beer cent, treasurer & Hy. F.Grigson, sec)
Salmon J. & Co. boot & shoe fac- retailer Wayland Fire Brigade !Robert Waters,
tors &c 'fennant Thomas, Live & Let Live P.H. capt. ; W. 'f. Sayer, hon. treasurer)
SampleSarahAnn(Mrs.),GreenMan P.H & carpenter Wayland Habitation of the Primrose
Sayer Maria (Miss), dress maker 'fhurston Hannah (Miss), dress maker League (The) (Henry F. Grigson,sec)
Sayer William, leather merchant, High 'foombs Edwin Fyson, hair dresser Wayland Hall Co. (Henry F. Grigson.
street & farmer, Wick farm Vincent Lacey Andrews,chemist&drug- sec. ; James Wri>;ht, hall keeper)
Semmence William, Jolly Farmers P.H. gist ; agent for Greene's Bury ales & Welcher John, Bull P.H
& rnineral water manufactr. wooden stout, Bass's & Ind & Coupe's Bur- Whalebelly James, butcher & farmer
bowl turner & timber merchant , ton ales & for W. & A. Gilbey, wine Whalebelly Robert, butcher
Sharp Richard, stone & marble mason, & spirit merchants, & Royal Farmers' Winter & Houchen, solicitors
builder & contractor & dealer in all & General .Assurance Society; & at Wright James, boot maker, hall keeper
kinds of building materials Hingham & bill poster
Short Samuel, baker & confectioner Ward Frederick, boot & shoe maker Wright Richard Wm. Railway hotel ·

W AXHAM is a parish and village on the sea-coast, 5 the Rev. Henry Ready B,A. of St. John's College, Cambridge,
miles east from Stalham station on the Eastern and Midlands who resides. at Hickling. Mr. George Randal Jobnson, f
railway and 14 north-west from Yarmouth, in the Eastern Heavitree, Exeter, is lord of the manor, and John Christ-
division of the county, Tunstead and Rapping petty sessional mas, of the Old Hall, Ormesby St. Margaret, Mrs. Seago
division, Rapping hundred, Smallburgh union, North Wal- and Thomas Salmon Bush esq. of Edingthorpe, are the
sham county court district, rural deanery of Waxham principal landowners. The soil is a good mixed; subsoil,
Rapping division, archdeaconry of Norfolk and dioc·ese of clay. The chief crops are wheat, oats and barley. This
Norwich. Little Waxham, formerly annexed to this parish, was formerly a large parish, but has been reduced by the
was, by a Local Government Order, dated March 25, r885, encroachments of the ocean to r,962 acres of land and 125 of
amalgamated with Horsey. The church of St. John is an water; rateable value, £r,62r; the population in r8gx was
ancient building of stone and flint, with a thatched roof, II I,
consisting of nave, south porch and a western tower; the Parish Clerk, William Sadler.
chancel is in ruins and there are no bells : the church affords Letters through Norwich, Stalham is the nearest money
about Y30 sittings. The register dates from the year 1713. order & telegraph office
The living is a rectory, annexed to that of Palling, average Waxham is included in Palling United School Board district,
tithe rent-charge £323, joint net yearly value £27r, includ- formed xr March, 1875, & the children attend the Board
ing 21 acres of glebe and resrdence, and held since 1841 by school there
Clarke Daniel, farmer
Gedge John, farmer
I
Harvey Henry, farmer I Harvey Henry, jun. farmer

w A YBOURNE, sco WABOURNE.


WEASENHAM ALL SAINTS (or UPPER WEASEN- I £287, joint gross yearly value £337, including 34 acreS'
HAM) is a village and parish, 3 miles south-east from f:ast I glebe, in the gift of and held since 1878 by the Rev. Straton
Rudham station on the Eastern and Midlands railway, 8 i Charles Campbell M. A. of Corpus Christi college, Cambridge,
north from Swaffham, 8 south-west-by-south from Faken- who resides at Weasenham St. Peter's. Here is a ·Primitive
barn and 12 south-west from Dereham, in the Mid division Methodist chapel. There is a fuel allotment of about 20
of the county, Mitford and Launditch petty sessional division, acres. Weasenham Hall, the residence of Henry Humphrey
I

Launditch hundred, Mitford union, Dereham county court ; esq. is a substantial mansion, situated in a small but well-
district, rural deanery of North Brisley and 'foftrees and wooded park. The Earl of Leicester K.G. is lord of the
1

archdeaconry and diocese of Norwich. The church of All manor and prihcipallandowner. The soil is brick earth and
1

Saints is a small edifice of flint and stone, in the Early Eng- clay; subsoil, brick earth.
1

The chief crops are wheat,


lish style, consisting of chancel, nave, north aisle, south barley, hay and turnips. The area is 1,948 acres; rateable
1

porch and on the south side the lower stage of a tower, value, £2, III ; the population in 1891 was 324.
vn which has been erected a belfry of red brick, containing Parish Clerk, Henry Sutton.
one bell: the front of. the porti?n remaini?g reta_ins a Gothic Letters through Swaffham, arrive at 8. 30 a. m. Rougham
a~ch, ~ow filled up wtth ~ed brrckwork, wtth a mche on each is the nearest money order & telegraph office
~rde: In the churchyard h"i marble monument, finely carved, . . . . .
to Richard Jackson esq. of this parish, d. 11 Jan. !768, and i Natwnal School (mixed), er_ected Ill I85~· for rso chr:dren,
his wife, d. 9 Oct. 1757: there are I33 ~sittings. The regis- ~vera~e .atten~ance, Ioo' James Smrth, master, Mrs.
ter dates from the year r568. The living is a vicarage, with nn Smrth, mistress
\Veasenham St. Peter annexed, average tithe rent-charge CARRIER.-John Cbapman, to Fakenham, on thurs
Everington William Cubitt Thomas, farm steward to llenry Knock W11liam, shoe maker & shopkpr
Humphrey Henry, Weasenham hall Overman esq. Upper house Middleton William Clarenee, farmer,
Middleton Wm. Clarence, Tythe house Ewer \Villiam,Ostrich P.H.& blacksmth 'fythe house
Chapman John, shopkeeper Hillen Susan (Mrs.), shopkeeper VVebb Robert, farmer
WEASENHAM ST. PETER (or LowER WEASEN· residence, in the gift of and held since r878 by the Rev.
HAM) is a parish 2~ miles south-east from East Rudham fltraton Charles Campbell M.A. of Corpus Christi College,
station on the Eastern and Midlands railway, 9 north from Cambridge. Wilson's charity amounts to £2 13s. yearly :
Swaffham and 7 south-west-by-south from Fakenham, in the Town estate has been sold and the proceeds invested in
the Mid division of the county, Mitford and Launditch petty the funds. The Earl of Leicester K.G., L.L. is lord of the
sessional division, Launditch hundred, Mitford union, Dere- manor and chief landed proprietor. The soil is brick earth
ham county court district, rural deanery of North Brisley and day; subsoil, brick earth. The chief crops are wheat,
and Toftrees andarchdeaconryanddiocese of Norwich. The barley, hay and turnips. The area is 1,397 acres; rateable
church of St. Peter is a building of flint and stone, in the value, £1,737 ss. ; the population in 1891 was 270,
Early English and Perpendicular styles, consisting of chan- Parish Clerk Henry Sutton
eel, nave, south aisle, north porch and a low embattled . ', '
western tower with pinnacles containing one bell : the font 1 PosT C?FFICE.-fhomas Deadman,_ sub-postmaster. Letters
is dated r6o7 : the church was restored in 1 g70 , by the recmved ~hrough Swaffham, arr1ve at. 6 a. m.; sundays the
family of the vicar, at a cost of about £2,ooo, and affords same; di.Spa~ch~d at 6 p.m. The nearest money o~der &
137 sittings. The register dates fmm the year 1581. The telegraph office ~sat Rougham. Postal orders are Issued
living is a vicarage, annexed to that of Weasenham All here, but not pard
Saints, average tithe rent-charge £287, St. Peter's £151, joint The children of this place attend the school at WelBenha~
gross yearly value £377, including 34 acres of glebe and All Saints •

c. ?J. & B. 43*


672 W~d.SE~HAM ST. PETER. NORFOLK. [KELLY'S
Campbell Rev. Straton Charles H.A. 1 Artis John Hovell, baker 1 Moore Harry, vermin killer
Vicarage Deadman Thos.grocer & draper,post off Overman Elizh.(Mrs.),farmr.Manor ho
Kendle Robert John, The Lodge Dyball Thomas, iron & brass founder & Overman Henry, farmer, Kipton house
Overman Henry, Kipton house agricultural implement maker ~idell William, blacksmith
Overman Mrs. Manor house Joplm Barbara (Mrs.),Fox&Hounds P.H
WEETING-with-BROMEHILL form one parish, posed, the remains of a British village, but ancient flint
on the navigable river Little Ouse and the borders of Suffolk, quarries, the pits having evidently been worked, and no
in the South Western division of the county, union and dot1bt in prehistoric timeg, for some such purpose. In the
county court district of Thetford, hundred and petty ses- flint quarries at Bromehill numerous flint implements of the
sional division of Grimshoe, rural deanery of Cranwich, earliest type, similar to the well-known St. Acheul specimens,
south division, archdeaconry of Nor folk and diocese of Nor- have been found, with the bones of extinct species of animals.
wich. Brandon station on the Great Eastern railway is Here are the remains of a casLle, built in the IIth century,
within the parish of Weeting. There were anciently two by William de Warrenne, Earl of 'Varrenne and Surrey, and
churches here, but that of All Saints was demolished in the son-in-law of the Conqueror: the Warrennes were succeedei
x8th century by the falling in of the tower, and its ruins here by the family of de la Plaix. The priory of Bromehill,
still remain in the park. The existing church of St. Mary or Bromwell, was founded here by Sir II. de la Plaiz, in the
is a small building of flint in the Decorated style, consisting time of King John, for canons of the order St. Augustine.
of chancel, nave, north aisle, south porch and a round em- and dedicated to SS. Mary and Thomas the Martyr : it was
battled tower containing 2 bells: there are 250 sittings. The eventually granted to Cardinal 'Volsey and was intended by
register dates from the year 1558. The livings form a con- him as part of the endowment for his college at Ipswich, but
soliclated rectory, average tithe rent-charge £383, joint net was afterwards given to Christ's College, Cambridge, and the
yearly value £38o, including 124 acres of glebe, with resi- estate now belongs to William Angerstein esq. D.L., J.P. wh~
deuce, in the gift of Caius College, Cambridge, and held since is lor<;i of the manor and sole landowner ; his seat, Weeting
x88g by the Rev. John Stuart Jackson M.A. and late fellow Hall, is a handsome mansion of white brick, in the Italiau
of that College. The Dcvil's Dyke borders the parish for style, standing in an extensive park and surrounded by plan-
about 3 miles on the north-west and there is an ancient tations. The soil is light and sandy; subsoil, chalk and
mound or vallum of earth extending from the Ouse to Did- sand. The chief crops are wheat, barley and turnips. The
lington. In the parish, situated in a wild and desolate area is 6,187 acres; rateable value, £4,278; the population
locality, are" Grimes graves," of which a scientific examina- in x8g1 was 278.
tion was made in 1870 by the Rev. Canon Greenwell F.S.A. Parish Clerk, John Newton.
of Durham ; the" graves," of which there are more than a l'osT OFFICE.-George Steel, receiver. Letters arrive by
hundred, arc circular in form, and contained large quantities mail cart from Brandon at 3 a. m. & 12. xo p.m. ; delivery
of animal bones, including horns of the red and the roe deer, at 7 a. m. ; dispatched at 10.15 a. m. & 8.40 p.m. The
the teeth of a small ox, goats, swine and dog, and various nearest money order & telegraph office is at Brandon
implements of a primitive character, found at depths vary- School (mixed), supported by William Angerstein esq. : it.
ing from ten to thirty-five feet below the surface: the learned will hold So children ; average attendance, 57 ; Charles
explorer decided that these graves are not, as had been sup- Richard Allison, master ; Mrs. Allison, mistress
Angerstein 'Vm. D.L., J.P. Weeting hall Jackson Rev. John Stuart M. A. [rector], Luck Edgar, farm steward to William
Angerstein William J. Nettleship J.P. Rectory Angerstein esq. Hall farm
W eeting hall Cl ark Ed ward, farm steward to William Steel Ellcn (Mrs.), blacksmith
Musgrave esq. Fengate farm
WELBORNE is a village and parish 3~ miles north- sides at NDI"wich, and held since 1890 by the Rev. George
north-east from Hardingham station on the Wymondham Robert Winter M.A. of Brasenose College, Oxford, and Hon.
and Wells section of the Great Eastern railway, and 6~ Canon of Norwich. At the time of the ir;.closure of the
south-east from llereham, in the Mid division of the county, commons, 3! acres of land was allotted to trustees for the
J<'orehoe hundred, petty sessional division and union, Wy- poor inhabitants of the parish of Welborne, legally settled
mondham county court district, rural deanery of Hingham, therein ; it now let.s for £8 15s. a year, which sum is dis-
Forehoe division, archdeaconry of Nor folk anu diocese of tributed in money. John Dring esq. is chief owner of the
:Norwich. The church of A.ll Saints is a structure of flint, land, which is freehold. The soil is mixed; subsoil, brick
dating from about 128o, in the Early English style, with earth and clay. There is a good brick yard, manufacturing
Decorated windows and a south porch of Perpendicular brrcks, pavements and drain pipes. The chief crops are
date; it consists of chancel, with vestry and organ chamber, wheat, barley and roots. The area is 732 acres; rateable
nave, south porch and a round western tower containing one value, £1,300; the population in 1891 was 155.
bell: the chancel, with its adjuncts, was erected in 1874-6, Parish Clerk, James Green.
in place of the previous fabric erected in 1671 : there are rso Letters are received through Dereham at 9 a. m. PILLAR
sittings. The register dates from the year 1695. The living LETTER Box cleared at 5 p.m.; sundays at 10 a.m. The
is a rectory, tithe rent-charge ,£"225, net yearly value £265, nearest money order & telegraph office is at Mattishall
including 42 acres of glebe, with residence, erected in 1846, National School (mixed), erected in 1847 1 for 63 children;
in the gift of the H.cv. John Barham Johnson M.A. who re- average attendance, 30; Mrs. Neve, mistress
Leeds Henry Green Thomas, farmer Lemon Martha (Mrs.), shopkeeper
Winter Rev. Gem:geRobertM.A. [rector Green Thomas Lindsey, farn1er Lusher John, farmer
& hon. canon of NorwichJ, Rectory Green William Kerridge, farmer Neve Arthur, wheelwright
COMMERCIAL. Howard John, farmer .Neve Francis William, manager to
Barnard Fredcrick, farm bailiff to John I Hubbard George, farmer executors of Francis Smalls
Dring esq King John, pig dealer Smalls Francis (executors of), brick
Doy John, blacksmith Land William, farmer makers & farmers
Green Richard, farmer Leggett Horace Wait. TheHorseShoesP .B Smalls Sarah (Mrs.), shopkeeper
WELLING HAM is a parish 6 miles north from Frans- Mowbray Tillard M.A. of Trinity College, Cambridge, who
ham station on the Lynn and Dereham sectwn and 6 south- resides at Tittleshall. The Poor's land of 37 acres produces
5outh west from Fakenham station on the Wymondham and £19 yearly, which is distrrbuted in coal. The Earl of
Wells section of the Great Eastern railway, in the Mid divi- Leicester K.G. who is lord of the manor, and George Gay·
sion of the county, Launditch hundred, Mitford and Laun- ford esq. are the principal landowners. The soil is various ;
ditch union and petty sessional division, Dereham county subsoil, day and gravel. The chief crops are wheat, barley
court district, rural deanery of North Brisley and Toftrees and turnips. The area is 1,056 acres; rateable value, £943 ;
and archdeaconry and diocese of .Norwich. The church of and the population in 1891 was 110.
St. Andrew is a small and plain building of flint, in the Parish Clerk, Thomas Tann.
Early English style, consisting of chancel, nave, south porch
and a low embattled western tower containing one bell: Letters through Swaffham, the nearest money order &
there are xso sittings. The registerfdates from the year 1739 telegraph office, arrive at 8. I5 a. m
The living is a rectory, annexed to that of Tittlesl1all-cum- School (infants), erected in 1847, for 30 children; average
God wick, average tithe rent-charge£ 720, joint gross yearly attendance, 15; Miss Martha Sidell, mistress. Th6
value£ r,463, including 6rl acres of glebe, in the gift of the elder children of this parish attend school at Tittleshall-
- Earl of Leicester, and held since 18gr by the Rev. Hobert cum-Godwick
Gayfo, d George, farmer & landowner Sidell Thomas, Plough P.H.&blacksmith Withers James, wheelwright
Rivett James, farmer
WELLS-NEXT-THE-SEA is a coast town and~ Grecnhoe hundred and petty sessional division, Walsingham
parish 1'"ith a station on the Great Eastern railway, 10 miles union and county court district, rural deanery of Walsing-
north from Fakenham, 32 north-west from Norwich and n8 ham and archdeaconry and diocese of Norwich. The town
from London, in the North division of the county, North is not incorporated, but is governed by a body of Improve-


DIRECTORY .J NORFOLK. WELLS-NEXT-THE-SEA. 673
ment Commissioners appointed in 1844 under the New the public. The Oddfellows' Hall, erected in :r885, at a cost
Parishes Act (7th and 8th nf Victoria, c 94) and consisting of £x,2oo, is a spacious edifice of red brick, in which concerts,
of 14 members. The Commissioners also act as the Port theatrical and other entertainments and public meetings are
and Urban Sanitary Authority. The Customs Port was held. The trade of the town is chiefly in barley, linseed
appointed (6 Dec. 1853) to extend frum Sandhole Gap to cake, corn, coals, timber, salt, manure and malt, the latter
t)parrow Gap, but in 188o (Nov. 19) it was merged in the being supplied in large quantities to the celebrated Burton
Port of Lynn. In pursuance of the Act above-mentioned and Dublin breweries. There are fisheries for oysters and
gas works were erected in Park road, the old streets and mussels and malt houses, rope walks, machine -works and
roads improved and a stone quay, 250 yards in len~-,rth, was corn mills. There are two branch banks and a newspaper
built under the Act of 1853: the improvements generally is published in the town. The principal hotels are the
have cost £23,000. The tide rises on the bar 20 feet, and " Crown," the " U lobe" and " Rail way hotel," and there are
about 12 feet in the harbour, which can be entered by numerous private lodging houses. A market established in
vessels of 150 tons. The old church of St. Nicholas was 1888 for the sale of cattle, sheep, pigs and horses is held
:almost entirely destroyed by fire caused by lightning during every alternate munday from nth January, r8g2, by Mr.
a storm on the ;3rd of August, 1879, but has since been G. S. Andrews, and is well attended. A fair is held every
completely restored or rebuilt on the former plan, at a cost Shrove Tuesday, on the Buttlands. A life boat, called the
<Jf £7 ,ooo, under the direction of Mr. Herbert Green, archi- " Eliza A dams," after the donor's wife, was presented to
tect, of Norwich, the stones, where possible, being exactly the town and supported by voluntary contributions: this
replaced : the church was re-opened 13 April, r883, and boat, during the gale of October 29th, r88o, was capsized
consists, as before, of chancel with aisles and vestry, nave, after the crew had rescued one ship's crew and were re-
aisles, south porch and an embattled western tower con- turning to save a second, when ten of the men were
taining a clock, placed in 1887, and a new peal of 8 bells, dro .vued: a new boat, prcwided in exchange by the National
given by the late Mr. H. R. Rump, of ·wells, and hung in Life Boat Institution, was launched July ro, 1882, by Miss
-x8go: a new font was erected in 1885: the chancel retains Cparlotte :Nichols, but in 1889 this was superseded by
a doorway, the mouldings of which exhibit fine carving, and another, named the "Baltic," and fitted with all the latest
above it is a brass to Thomas Bradley, rector, ob. 1499 : improvements. The charities, am.ounting to about £300
here also is a memorial window to the father of a former yearly, are now distributed in accordance with a scheme of
rector, dated I8Io, but very slightly damaged by the tire: the Charity Commissioners, d:tted July, 1876, and are as
the new roofs are of oak, embellished, as before, with figures follows :-Rev. Mungo Moray's charity, producing £:r8
<Jf angels and other carved work: the embattled south porch yearly from an estate at Bale; Christopher Ringer's charity,
was rebmlt, the nave reseated, a new organ provided, and 8 a farm house, with buildings, three cottages and 88 acres of
new bells hung with a bequest of £2,000 by Mr. H. R. land in Bassingham and Barningham, sold to J. T. Matt
Rump, surgeon, of Wells, who died in 1887: the church esq. of the latter place, for £6,ooo, which sum was invested
affords 6oo sittings: an old oak chest, dated 1635, and kept in Consols, and the income thereby considerably increased;
in the vestry, was preserved. In 1862 a new churchyard of Ann Tidd's charity of £5 annually, arising out of land in
about an acre and a half near the church was laid out and en- Wells, now in the possession of the Earl of Leicester K.G. ;
-trance gates erected. The register dates rom the year 1548. William Branch Elliott's charity, consisting of £338 New £3
The living is a rectory, average tithe rent-charge £418, net per Cent. Annuities, and the fuel allotment, a piece of land
yearly value £587, including 176 acres of glebe, with resi- in 'V ells, allotted under the " Inclosnre Act" in 1813, and
deuce, in the gift of Mrs. Filling, and held since 1886 by now let to the Earl of Leicester for £"3o a year. One third
the Rev. John Edward Player, who is a surrogate. Here is of the net yearly income of these charities is applied to
a Congregational chapel, built in 1816, with sittings for 700 I educational purposes, and the remainder distributed in giftlil
persons, and a Sunday school erected in 1891 ; a Wesleyan of clothes, food, fuel and medicines to poor persons not in
chapel, built in 1787, and seating soo; and a Primitive . receipt of regular parochial relief. The permanent body of
Methodist chapel, built in r8g1, at a cost of £1,ooo, and seat- charity trustees under the Act consists of the rector and
ing 350 persons, the old chapel now used as 11. Sunday churchwardens, and the chairman of the School Board for
school. The Custom House is on the quay. An embank- the time being, ex officio, and eight others: Georg~ S.
ment 1 mile in length runs parallel with the channel from Andrews is clerk to the trustees. The Misses Haycock, of
the quay to the beach, the top of which being level and Clifton, in 1885 gave £5oo to be invested in Consols, the in-
gravelled affords a beautiful promenade, with a carriage come to be distributed annually among the poor who have
drive at its base: at the beach end of this embankment a attained the age of 64 years. The Earl of Leicester K.G.,L.L. is
rustic cottage and stables have been erected and here re- lord of the manor and principal landowner. The soil is very
freshments can be obtained. The boating and bathing light; subsoil, chalky. The chief crops are barley, wheat
facilities are excellent: there are lofty sand hills facing the and turnips. The area of the parish is 2,690 acres of land
1

1
:Sea, and a firm, sandy beach. The drives in the neighbour- and 1,820 of water ; rateable value, £8,378; the population
• hood are very attractive, especially that in Holkham Park, I in 1Bg1 was 2,549 .
which, by the kindness of the Earl of Leicester, is open tot Parish Clerk, John Tillson.

Official Establishments, Local Institutions &c .


.
PosT, M. 0. & T. 0., S. B. & Annuity & Insurance Office, I MEMBERS.
Staitbe street.-Francis B. Southgate, postmaster
Chairman chosen annually.
HOURS OF ATTENDANCE : - Herbert Angustus Dewing John Loynes
For sale of stamps, post cards, stamped & registered en- George Everitt Jonathan Thompson Mack
velopes, sale of postal orders & registration of letters & Col. Hy. Wemyss Feilden ;J.P Rev. John Edward Player
delivery of letters to callers, week days, 7 a.m. to 8 p. m.; Ambrose Goddard John Plowman
sundays, 8 to 10 a.m. For money order, savings bank, Maj. John Edmund Groom J.P Arthur James Ramm
insurance & annuity business, payment of postal ordl'rs William Hall Robert Russell Rump
.& issue of inland revenue licences, week days, 9 a.m. to 6 Thomas Lord George Frederic Smith
p.m. Telegraph business, week days, 8 a.m. to 8 p.m. ;
:Sundays, 8 to 10 a. m. Letters are delivered at, week days, Clerk, Edward Bunting Loynes, Buttlands
Treasurer, Robert Nicholas Hamond, Fakenham
7 a.m. to 3 p.m. ; sundayii, 7 a.m
Medical Officer of Health, Frederick Long, Burnt street
Sun-eyor & Inspector of Nuisances, James William Rich-
DISPATCH OF MAILS. ford, Church street, W'ells
Collector, Francis n. Southgate, Staithe street
London, Norwich, Yarmouth, Lowestoft, 9.40 a.m. (extra
· ~d. stamp, 9·45 a.m.; registered, 9·35 a.m.); North PUBLIC ESTABLISH:MENTS : -
mail, 1.30 p.m. (extra !d. stamp, 1.45 p.m.; registered, Assembly & Concert Rooms, Oddfellows' hall, Charles
1.45 p.f\1.); London & all parts, 5.rs .. p.m. (extra ~d. "\\'right, hall keeper
stamp, 5.40 p.m.; registered, 5.40 p.m.); Sundays, 5.15 Coast Guard (Wells district), Lieut. George A. Sayee R.N.
p.m divisional officer; Richard Parker, chief boatman in
WALL LETTER BoxEs : charge
Church street, clearP.d at 6.30 a.m. 9.10 a.m. 1.10 p.m. & Custom House, George Packer, officer
5· 10 p.m. Freeman st. at 8 & 9· ro a.m. 1.15 p. m. & 5 p.m Oddfellows' Hall, Cbarles Wright, hall keeper
Stamp Office, Post office

IMPROVEMENT CoMMISSIONERS. PUBLIC OFFICERS : -


Admiralty Surgeon & Agent, Alfred William Fox Whitlock
Port & Urban Sanitary Authority. L.H.C.P. & s.l!:din. Marsh house
Offices, Buttlands. Board day, first monday in the month, Assessor & Collector of Taxes, Wm. Edmund Miller
at Crown hotel. Assistant Overseer, William C. l<'ree3er, Huttlands
NORFOLK. [.1.1LLY S
1

Clerk to Charity Trustees, Harbour Commissioners & to Primitive Methodist, Theatre road, Rev. Henry Bennett;
the Permanent Life Boat Relief Committee, George S. 2.30 & 6 p.m.; tues. 7 p.m
Andrews, Buttlands ' Wesleyan, New road; 10.30 a..m. & 6 p.m.; thurs. 7 p.m
Harbour Master, William Temple, Staithe street A Schoollloard of 5 members was formed compulsorily 22
Lloyd's Agent, Francis B. Southgate, Staithe street . March, 1873- The Board meet at Buttlands 2nd monday
Medical Officer, Wells district, Walsingham Union, Alfred in each month at 4 p.m. Edward B. Loynes, clerk to ths
William Fox Whitlock L.H.C.P. & L.R.c.s.Edin. Marsh ho board: John Tillson, High street, attendance officer
Registrar of Births & Deaths for the Wells Sub-district of
the Walsingham· union, Alfred William Fox Whitlock Science & Art classes are held at the Board School on mon.
L.R.C.P. & L.R.c.s. Edin. Marsh house; deputy, William wed. & fri. 7.30 p.m. ; sat. 2.30 p.m. Drawing classes
C. Freezer, Buttlands for elementary teachers are also held here; Frederick M.
Registrar of Marriages, William C. Freezer, Buttlands Rushmore, master~ Arthur W. Narborougb,· assistant ;
Stamp Distributor, F. H. Southgate, Staithe street E. L. Gales, sec. ; there are about roo students
Sub-Commissioners of Pilots, Francis Southgate & Francis Board School, built in 1837, enlarged in 1876 & again in
B. Southgate 1885, for 500 children; average attendance, 145 boys, 147
Town Crier, Charles Dickinson, sen. Freeman street girls & 130 infants ; Samuel Lewton, master; Miss Phceb~
PLACES OF WoHSHIP, with times of sen·ices : - Rayfield, mistress ; Miss Herman Taylor, infants' mist
Bt. NICholas Church, Rev. John Edward Player, rector; Railway Station, George Cecil Paynter, station master
Rev. William Pinder Went LL.B. curate; :u a. m. & 6.30
p.m.; fri. 7.30 p.m Cartage .Agent for G. E. Railway, Robert Spicer, Buttlamls
Congregational, Buttlands, Rev. Walter David Hayward, CARRIER TO NORWICH.-Thomas W'illiams, from bts house~
minister; 10.45 a. m. & 6.30 p.m. ; weds. 7.30 p.m Luggar yard, wednesday morning, returning friday night.
PRIVATE RESIDENTS. Andrews George Samuel, clerk to the Drake William Mendall, pork butcher &
Andrews George Samuel, Butt lands charity trustees & harbour commis- provision dealer, High street
Ra.t,terby John, Butt lands sioners & clerk to the permanent life Drury Waiter Henry,letterpress & lit r.o-
Bennett Rev. Hemy LPrimitive Metho- boat relief committee, Butt lands graphic printer, bookbinder,stationm·
dist], Sea View cottages, Freeman st Applegate Robert, tailor, High street &c.; estimates furnished for every
· Bensley Mrs. Pleasant place Applegate Thus. boot& shoe m a. Glebe rd description of printing, Station road
Bunn Robcrt, Church street Arnold John Clifford, fishmonger, Drury Wm. carpenter, Tinker's cornc!"
Bunting Anthony, Butt lands .Freeman street Dunn John, boatman, Freeman street
Cadamy Charles, Butt lands Arthurton Robert, baker, East end Durrant John, Sun P.H. Quay
Cornish William, Glebe house Assembly & Concert Rooms (Charles Easton John, butcher, Staithe street
Davidson James Alexander, Butt lands Wright, hall keeper),Oddfellows' hall Edwards William, master mariner,.
Dewing Herbert Augustus, Mill house Baker Robt. Leeder, linen drpr. Staithe st Milton house, High street
Downing Mrs. Butt lands Bell Saml. Ablett,gro. &drpr. Freeman st Ely Anthony, coal dealer, High street
Elsdon Mrs. Pleasant place Betts Mary Ann (Mrs.), Duke's Head Everitt George, maltster & merchant.,
Everitt George, llutt lands P.H. lligh street Staithe street & Quay
l<'eilden Colonel Henry Wemyss F. G. s., Brightmer Frederick, music dealer & Everitt John, The Vine P.H. High st
F.z.s., J.P. West house teacher, Station road Fisher Charles, baker, Church plain
.t<'ishf:mrne Misses, East End house Bunting Anthony, grocer, Staithe st Flaxman Thomas, boot repairer,High st
Fryer The Misses, Park Road villa Bunting Norton, coal dealer, Burnt st :Fre'ezer William C. assistant overseer~
Gales Edwin Lesley, Bank house Bnrcham John, Fleece l'.H. & black- registrar of marriages & deputy regis-
Garwood Miss, Butt lands smith, Quay trar of births & deaths for Wells.,
Goddard Ambrose, Quay Burgess Richard, Ostrich inn, Burnt st Butt lands
Gooch Samuel, Church plain Burton Samuel ,pork butcher,Station rd Frost Frank, Lord Nelson P.H. Quay
Griffin Frederick, Freeman street Cadamy Ambrose, farmer, lime burner, Gales Edwin Lesley, fiorist,nurserymaa
IIan William, Manor farm shopkeeper&blacksmith,Church plain & grape grower ; foreign & domestic-
Hammond Mrs. The Normans Cadamy Henry Valentine,frmr.Burnt st fruits; orders by post receive prompt.
Hastings William Thomas, Park road Carman John, beer retailer, Park road attention, Bank House nursery
Haycock Joseph John, The Manse CawdronEdwd.Chs. watch rna.Staithe st Gas Works (Francis B. Southgate,.
Hayward Rev. Waiter David [Congre- Cawdron Louisa (Miss), dress maker, collector), Park road
gational], llutt lands . Staithe street Gibbons "'alter, gamekeeper to th11
Hewitt William, Theatre road Cawdron Robt. Chas. watch ma. High st Earl of Leicester, Greenway lane
Judd Charles Daniel, Theatre road Clark John, King's Arms P.H. & rabbit Glaze brook Anne (Mrs.), Crown family
Leggatt Misses, Church plain merchant, Freeman street & commercial hotel, Butt lands •
Long Frederick, Burnt street Claxton J ames Parker,shopkeeper, Quay Gooch Samuel Jas. farmer,Church plaitl
Loose Miss, High street Cocks Eliza (Mrs. ),shopkeeper, East end Green Mark, farmer & dairy, Burnt st
Loynes John, Hlenheim ho. West end Codman Susannah (Miss) & Morton, Green Wm. (Mrs. ),furnitr.dlr. Staithe st.
Loynes Mrs. Butt lands furniture&ct1 riosity dealers,Station rd Grey Marian(Mrs. ),refreshment rooms~
Matson Edward John, Glebe road Coe Robert, farmer, Warham road Staithe street
Middleton Edmund Plane J.P. High st Cook The Misses, fancy repos. Staithe st Grnmmett George, saddler llr; harness
Moore Mrs. Butt lands Cornish Jabez James, agricultural im- maker, ~taithe street
Newton Thomas Chas. Oulton cottage plement maker & agent, Glebe foun- Gurling William, Prince of "\Vales l'.ll"'
PI a yer Rev. J n.E d wd. [rector J, TheRectry dry ; depi'•t at Fakenham ; office & Sta1the street
Plowman. The Misses, Freeman street works, North Norfolk iron works, Gurneys, Birkbecks, Barclay & Buxton
Rackham George, Staithe street Walsingham. See advertisement bankers (Wells branch) {Thomas.
Ralling Arthur Williarn, Staithe street Crafer Mary (Mrs.), grocer & confec- Readwm, agent), High street; draw
Readwin Thomas, High street tioner, High street on Barclay, Bevan & Co. London E c
Rump Robert Russell, Staithe street Crawford J ames, Nor folk Freeholders' Hagon Frdk. Sml. hairdresser, High st
Rushmore Frerlerick M. Church street P. H. East end Hall Willia.m, farmer, Manor farm
Rust Alfred, Lion yard Crawford Robt. shell fish mer. East end Hall Wm. farmer & dairyman,Burnt st.
Rust Thornas Parker, Bolts close Crawford Wm. shell fish mer. East end Harris Thomas, draper, High street
Savory Miss, Butt lands Cropley James, boot maker, Theat.re rd Hay Geo. (Mrs.), lodg. ho. Pleasant pl
Savory Thorna.s James, Maassasoit Curson John, shopkeeper, Freeman st Hendry Henry, boatman, Freeman st
Sayee Lieut. George A. R.N. (inspecting Darby George Samuel, Globe family & Hibbard Susannah (Mrs.), shopkeeper,
officer of Coast Guard), Butt lands commercial hotel & posting house, Freeman street
Smith George Frederic, Staithe street Butt lands Hinson Lucy (MISs), dressma. Burnt st.
Smith Mrs. The Rectory Davidson J arnes Alexander, wine& spirit Hinson Thomas, builder & contractor ;
Southgate Francis, Butt lands merchant, coal merehant & dealer in estimates given, Theatre road
Spicer Robert, Butt lands guns& sporting ammunition,Statn. rd Howard James, shell fish mer'. East end
Tyrell Henry Thomas, Station road Dawson Amelia {Mrs.), slwpkeeper, Hudson Thomas \Villiam,Sailors' Home
Whitlock Alfred Wm. Fox, Marsh ho Freeman street P.H. :f'reeman street
Williamson George llea,·er, Croft's yard Dawson Martha (Miss), baker, High st Isaacks Nathaniel, chimney sweeper,
Woods Mrs. Butt lands DeathJn. Robt.rope&twine ma.Butt lnds Carton cottage, East end ,
Wyatt Mr.s. Church plain Ueeks W1lliam, tailor & draper, Quay: Isaacks Nathnl. shell fish mer. Easi end
COMMERCIAL, Dewing Herbert August us, miller (wind Isaacks \Vrn. rope & twine ma. East end
Able Richard, baker, Station road & steam) & merchant, New road Jackson Rachcl (Mrs.), Royal Standard
Adcock Thos. greengrocer, Staithe st Dickinson Charles, jun. fishmonger & P. H. & butcher, .East end
Allison John, sack maker, High street bill poster, Freeman street Jarvis Charles,grocer&provision dealer,
Andrews George Samuel, auctioneer, Dickinson Charles, sen. town crier,Free- & agent for W. & A. Gilbey, wine &
valuer & estate agent, Butt lands man street spirit merchants, High street
DIUC'IQRY.J NORFOL:K. WELLS-~EXT-Ttl~rS~4,. 67/5
Ja.rrett Thos. ship smith, Standard rd Parker Richard, coast guard, chief boat- · Smith Richard, pilot, Theatre yard
Jary Herbert \Vm. boot maker, High st man in charge, Theatre road Smith Robert~ shellfish mer. East end
Kew Thos.Ju. mstr.marinr.Standard rd Parker William, carpenter & wheel- Smith Thomas, ehellfish mer. East end
King John, supt. to Prudential Assur- wright, Burnt street Smith William, inspector of permanent
ance Co. Ltd. Butt lands · Paynter George Cecil, station master way, Stanley cottage
Kirk Jn.EightRingers P.H.Church plain PlattinHoward,plmbr.&pantr. Staithe st Southgate Edward Coleman Burnham,
Land James, haker, Quay Plattin Thomas, builder, contractor & butcher, Staithe street & West end
Land James, jun. baker, Staithe street builders' material dealer ; estimates Southgate Francis B. Lloyd's agent,
Langley Richd. Waggon & Horses P.H. given, Glebe road collector for Improvement Commis-
Church street Plowman Mary A. (Mrs.), confectioner, sioners & post master & stamp distri-
Langley Thomas, blacksmith, Church st Station rol1d butor, Staithe street
Leggett Robert Thomas, grocer, draper Plowman John, builder, decorato-r, Southgate Sampson, butcher, Quay
& clothier, fancy dealer & provision timber merchant, cabinet maker, Spinks Henry Richard, builder & iron~
merchant, Staithe street upholsterer & general furnishing monger, Freeman street
Leggett Thos. boot & shoe m a. Staithe st warehouse, architect, surveyor & SpoonerRobert,hawker, Thurgurs ya.rd,
London & Provincial Bank Limited valuer; established 70 years, High st Church street
(sub-agency) (Robert R. Rump, Plowman Sarah Matsall (Miss), baker, Stanford Herbt.grcr.& outfitr.Staithe st
manager), Staithe street ; draw on Staithe street Stearman Mary Ann (Miss), dress
head office, 7 Bank buildings E c & PurdyJohn Surgeon, butcher,Staithe st maker, High street
Glyn, Mills & Co. London E c Rack ham George, linen & woollen Stroughair Eliza (Mrs.), tancy reposi-
Long Frederick L.R.C.P. Lond. surgeon draper, Siaithe street tory, Staithe street
& medical officer of health for Wells Ralling Arthur William, family grocer, Temple Rt. master mariner, Freeman st
urban & port sanitary authority, tea dealer, provision & wine & spirit Temple Wm. harbour master,Staitbe st
Burnt street merchant & patent medicines, agent Thornpson Dann Thomas, butcher &
Loose Henry, Anchor P.H. Freeman st for Allsopp & Sons' Bnrton ales ; game dealer, Butt lands
LordThos.farmr.&miller(wind),Park rd E. Green & Sons' Bury ales & stout, Thurgur Anna & Mary Ann (Misses),
Love Sara.h(Mrs. ),dairy&corn chandler, Whitbread&Co.ales&c.&MaxGregor's earthenware dealer, Staithe street
Freeman street Carlowitz, 8ta.ithe street Thurgur James, general dealer, High st
Loynes EdwardBunting, solicitor, com- Ramm Arthur James, butcher & cattle Tillson John, tailor; & parish clerk &
missiOner for oaths, & clerk to im- dealer, High street school attendance officer for the Wal-
provement commissioners & school Ramm John Plumb, Hed LionP.H.Quay singham union & Wells school board,
board, Butt lands ; & at Fakenham Ramm Mary (Mrs.), shopkeepr.Highst H1gh street
Mack John & Jonathan Thompson, Randall Harriet (Mrs.), Railway Corn- Tuckl\fatthew,grocer& baker, Church st
linen & woollen drapers, hatters & mercial hotel ; two minutes from the Tungate Jas. boot & shoe ma.Station rd
milliners, High street station, New road Tyzack Edward, hair dresser & tobacco-
Mack Jane Elizabeth (Mrs.), stationer R.ansome Robert, grocer, :Freeman st nist, High street
& fancy repository, lligh street Raspberry Matthew, thatcher, Burnt st Wabon William, tinplate worker &
Mackley Thomas Joscph, surgeon den- Reed William, hawker, High street general dealer, High street
tist ; attends from Norwich the last H.eid ArchibaldFrederick,photographer, Walden Wm.mole & rat catcher,Rurnt st
tburs.in the month at theCrown hotel Staithe street Waller William, coal dealer, Church st
Mallett John Ma.'lsingham, butcher, Rennett Samuel Hinson, carpenter & Warren John, bricklayer, Burnt street·
Quay ; & at Stiffkey wheelwright, Church street Watson Wm. beer retailer, East end
\ Mann Wm. F. E. general & furnishing Hennett Thomas,carpenter, wheelwright Wells Herald (E. L. Gales, proprietor;
ironmonger, bar iron, oil, calor, fire & pump maker, Theatre road published monthly), Rank house
brick & lead merchant, High street Reynolds Robert, boot ma. Staithe st Wells Sarah (Mrs.), shopkpr. Staithe st
Marriott John & Robert, maltstcrs & Richford James William, news agent & Whitaker Frederick, shipwright & boat
merchants &c. Quay; & at Lynn prntr.&inspector of nuisances, High st builder, East end
Martin Robert, tailor, Church plain Richmond Daniel, Queen Adelaide P.H. Whitlock Alfred William Fox L.R.C.P.,
Massey Mary (:\1rs.), grocer, Station rd Freeman street L.R.C.S.Edin. surgeon, & medical offi-
Matsell Wm. Thos.saddler,Church plain Rix Elizh. (Mrs.), shopkpr. Freeman ~t cer & registrar of births & deaths,
Miller William Edmund, agricultural Rump Robert Russell, chemist & drug- Wells district, Walsingham union,
implement agent ; assessor & collector gist, Staithe street admiralty surgeon & agent & surgeon
of taxes for the united parishes of Rushmore Frederick M. (of the Royal to G. E. Rly. Prov. Soc. Marsh house
Cockt.horpe, Stiffkey, Warham (All College of Science),master of Science Wick Job, beer retailer, Church marsh
Saints), War ham (St.Mary ),Holkham & Art school, & drawing classes, ·wilson Robert, Ship P.H. Freeman st
& Wells Church street Williams Thomas, carrier, Luggar yard
MortimerCharlesRichard, watch maker,· Rust Thos. Parker, surgeon, Bolts ciose Woodrow Charles, boot & shoe maker,
Staithe street Seppings John, butcher, Theatre road Freeman street
Mortis Robert, Bowling Green P.H. & Science & Art Classes (Frederiek M. Woods William Christopher, coal mer~
pork butcher, Church street Rushmore, master; Arthur "\\'. chant, Freeman street
N ewsouHarriet (.Mrs.), statnr.Staithe st N arborough assistant ; E. L. Gales, Wooltorton Samuel Robert, confectioner
N ewson Robt. Leeder,carpntr. Staithe st sec.). Board School & tea rooms & bill poster, High st
Newton Thomas Charles, coal & coke Smith F.&G. Limited,maltsters & mers. Wright Charles, sec. to the Oddfellows'
merchant ; prices on application,Quay Quay; & at Dereham &Ryburgh Society & hall keeper, Theatre road
Oddfellows' Hall(Chas. Wright,hall kpr) Smith James, master mariner,Sea View Wright lsaac Chas. butcher, Freeman st
Old man Rt. master mariner, Staitbe st cottages, Freeman street Young Wm. John, baker, Freeman st

Packer George,custom ho. officer, Quay
WELNEY is a parish in Downham union, partly in this county and partly in Cambridgeshire. Particulars are
given in Kelly's Directory of Cambridgeshire.
WENDLING is a village and parish with a station on was colonized from Langley abbey, in this county, and at
the Lynn & Dereham section of the Great Eastern railway, its dissolution there were six canons, and revenues esb-
I2Ii miles from London and 4 west from Dereham, in the mated at £55; there are now no remains, the ruins and
Mid division of the county, Launditch hundred, Mitford foundations having been used some years since for the re-
and Launditch petty sessional division and union, Dereham pau of the roads. John Ma.rgarson esq. who is lord of the
county court district, rural deanery of South Brisley and manor, Cornel Henry Fison, of Ford place, Thetford, and
archdeaconry and diocese of Norwich. The church of SS. William llubbard esq. of Dereham, are the principal land-
Peter and Paul is a small building of flint with stone dress- owners. The soil is mixed; subsoil, clay. The chief crops
ings, in the Early English style, consisting of chancel, nave, are wheat, barley and turnips. The area is 1,436 acres :
south porch and a western tower containing 3 bells : there rateable value, £2,078 ; the population in 1891 was 393·
are 100 sittings. The register dates from the year 1558. Parish Clerk, Timothy Burton.
The living is a rectory, annexed to that of Longham, PosT 0FFICE.-William Johnson, receiver. J,etters through
average tithe rent-charge £23, joint net yearly value £ I I 5, Dereham, arrive at 7· 30 ; dispatched at 5·30. Little
with 6o acres of glebe, in the gift of the Lord Chancellor, Fra.nsham is the nearest money order office & Gressen-
and held since 1891 by the Rev. Louis Henry Ransom M.A. hall the nearest telegraph office. Postal orders are
of Pembroke College, Cambridge, who resides at Longham. issued here, but not paid
Here is a Primitive Methodist chapel, built in 1877. The A School Board of 5 members was formed compulsorily 16
charities for distribution amount to £24 yearly and there March. 187 5 ; Abraham Bartle, clerk to the board
is a fuel allotment of 9 acres producing £n, which sum is Board School (mixed), built in 1875, at a cost of about
expended in coals for the poor. Here was once an abbey, L1-8o, for 70 children; average attendance, 63 ;· Miss
founded by Sir W. de \Vendling, clerk, before 1267, for Clara llebblethwaite, mistress
PrO£monstratensian canons and dedicated to St. Mary: it Railway Station, Alexander Muir Jfay, station master

676 WENDLING. NORFOLK. (KELLY'S
Hamilton George T. E. Wendling hall Green William, carpenter Margarson John, fa1·mer & landowner
COMMERCIAL. Haines Barney, farmer Miles Jacob, boot maker
Archer Frederick, butcher & farmer Horseley Charles & Son, millers & corn, Mnnday William, Railway tavern, &
Bartle Abraham, farmer & clerk to seed & coal merchants ; & at Scul- farmer, Church farm
School Board, Honeypot farm thorpe & Fakenham Partrick William, farmer
Blades John, baker James Robert, heer retailer Stanford Pbilip Frederick, farmer
Brown Rt. farm bailiff to Mr. Jn. Wake Johnson William, thrashing machine Walker William, farmer, .Abbey fa,.,rnm1
Empson Matthew, Rose Cottage P.H proprietor, Post office Walker Uobert, blacksmith
Gibson John, grocer & draper Lovett Wm. Creed, manager to Charles Warmer Charles, farmer
Greaves George, farmer Horseley & Son Wilson Barnard, farmer, Grange farm
WEREHAM is a parish and village on the road from Hall 5s the residence of Oldman Carter esq. & Wereham
Lynn to Brandon, I~ miles north-west from Stoke Ferry Manor house, gf George Read esq. J.P. IIenry Edwards
terminal station on the Great Eastern railway and 5 miles Paine esq. solicitor, Chertsey, Surrey, is lord of the manor.
east from Downham, in the South Western division of the Sidney Sussex College, the Rev. Robert Phelps n.n. master
county, Clackclose hundred and petty sessional division, of Sidney Sussex College; t;ir Henry George Paston-Bed-
Downham union and county court district, rural deanery of ingfield bart. n.L., J.P. of Oxborough Hall; Thomas Thorn-
_Fincham, archdeaconry of Norfolk and diocese of Norwich. ton esq. of Cavenham House; Hugh Aylmer esq. of Dere-
The church of St. Margaret, erected in the 13th century, is ham Abbey; Oldman Carter esq .A. Kernp esq. Richard
a small and plain building of flint and stone, consisting of Harwin esq. of Boughton; John Houchen esq. of Thctford;
chancel, nave, aisles and an embattled western tower with James Scott esq. and Mrs. Law are the principal land-
pinnacles, containing a clock, presented by the late Rev. owners. The soil is a mixed loam ; subsoil, in some parts
Augnstus Sntton, of West Tofts: there are mural tablets gravel, and in others sand and clay. 'l'he chief crops are
to the families of Heaton (1779), Mason (1852), Houchen wheat, barley and turnips. The area is 2,231 acres; rate-
(r852-75), Royle (r834), and Adamson (1762-1800): the able value, £3,272; the population in r89r was 554·
nave was reseated, the church thoroughly restored and a Under the Divided Parishes Act detached parts of this
stone pulpit erected in 1866, at a cost of about £7oo: there parish were amalgamated with Stoke I<'erry in March,
are 230 sittings. The register dates from the year I558. The IB84.
living is a vicarage, with that of "\Vretton annexed, joint net Parish Clerk, Thomas Lavender.
yearly value i, 136, including sr acres of glebe, in the gift of PosT 0FFICE.-Harrison Lyndoe, receiver. Letters received
1he Bishop of Norwich, and held since 1884 by the Rev. from Stoke Ferry 8.0. at 6.45 a.m. & dispatched at 6
Richard )'Iassey M.A. of St. Alban Hall, Oxford, who resides p.m. The nearest money order & telegraph office is at
at Wretton. The small tithes are commuted to the impropria- Stoke Ferry. Postal orders are issued here, but not paid
1ors and patrons at £290 10s. yearly, and the great tithes to .A School Board of 5 members was formed r6 May, r874;
the Norwich Life Insurance Office at £253 12s. Here is a F. Spinks, clerk to the board
Wesleyan chapel. The charities amount to £4o yearly value. Board School, erected in 1876, for 120 children; average at-
In the centre of the parish is a large pond, supplied by a fine tendance, 100; Henry Mortimer, master; Mrs. Sarah
spring of water called "St. Margaret's Well." Wereham .Ann Mortimer, mistress; Miss Jane Goring, assist. mist
Carter Oldman, Wcreham hall Durrant Lucy (Miss), George & Dragon Mee William, farmer
Martin David William P. H Merrison Robert, farmer, Winnold ho
Mason Mrs. White house Freeman John Henry, farmer Mills James, bricklayer
Read George J.P. Manor house Freeman William, farmer Patrick Alfred, tinman & shopkeeper
Tbornton Thomas, Cavenham house Fretwell Arthur, pork butcher Pilgrim Charles, higgler
Winter Frederick Fryer Cornelius, wheelwright, builder, Pilgrim John, wheelwright & farmer
COMMERCIAL. contractor & timber merchant RedingtonBath-sheba(Mrs.),Crown P.H
Aikman James, farmer Goring George James, farmer Roberts Frederick Samuel, cattle dealer
Earker Arthur, farmer Hens by W"illiam, beer retailer Roberts James, butcher
Beeton Edmund, poulterer Holdgate Henry, baker Spruce Williarn, miller (wind) & baker
J~ccton William, Nag's Head P.II Hudson Charles, pork butcher & assis- Thornton Thos. farmer, Cavenham ho
CarterOldman,Iandownr.Wereham hall tant overseer Wright Henry, market gardener
Cross Arthur, cattle dealer & farmer Hudson John ( exors.of),grocer & draper Wright James, blacksmith & agricul-
Cross James, farmer Martin John David, grocer & draper tural machinist

WESTFIELD is a parish, 2 miles south from Derebam burgh. The Primitive Methodist chapel here was built in
and I west from Yaxham station on the Wymondham and 1876. There is a fuel allotment of 7 acres, 1he rents of
Derebam section of the Great Eastern railway, in the Mid which provide coal for the poor. The trustees of Sir William
division of the county, Mitford hundred, Mitford and Robert Clayton bart. are lords of the manor. The trustees
Launditch petty sessional division and union, Dereham of the late James Worrall esq. J. F. Smith esq. and Edward
county court district, rnral deanery of Hingham, Mitford Robert Grigson esq. of Watton, are the principal land-
division, archdeaconry of Norfolk and diocese of Norwich. owners. The soil is loam and clay; subsoil, clay. The crops
The church of St . .Andrew is a small building of flint in the are good malting barley and wheat. The area is 569 acres;
Early English style, consisting of nave and a low western rateable value, £995; the population in 1891 was n9.
tower, containing one bell : there are go sittings. The Letters through Dereham arrive 8.15 a.m. Yaxham is the
register dates from the year 17o6. The living is a rectory, nearest money order office, post & telegraph office
annexed to that of Whinburgh, average tithe rent-charge
£238, joint net yearly value £250, including 43i acres of This place is included in the United School Board district of
glebe, in the gift of the tru~tees of the late Mrs. Grigson, Whinburgh & Westfield, formed compulsorily r6 Feb-
and held since 1883 by the Rev. Edward Grigson B.A. of ruary, I875 ; the children attend the Board school at
Corpus Christi college, Cambridge, who resides at Whin- Whin burgh
Riches Waiter Bush Robert, farmer Deeker Thomas, farmer
COMMERCIAL. Channel John, Unicorn P .H Goff J esse, farmer •
Burton Brightmer, farmer Cook James, farmer Stagg .Ellen (Mrs.), beer retailer
Bush Beckham,carpenter &wheelwright
WEST ON LONG VILLE is a parish and widely scat- r66o. 'The living is a discharged rectory, average tithe rent-
tered village, If miles south-east from Lenwade station on charge [514, gross yearly value £616, including 51 acres of
the Eastern and Midlands railway and about 9 north-west glebe and residence, in the gift of the Warden and fellows of
from Norwich, in the Northern division of the county, New College, Oxford, and held since I87o by the Rev.
Eynsford hundred and petty sessional division, St. Faith's Charles Cadwallader Egerton M. A. late fellow of that college.
union, Norwich county court district, rural deanery of Spar- There is a Free Methodist chapel here. In this parish is an
ham and arcbdeaconry and diocese of Norwich. The church extensive trout hatching and rearing establishment, belong-
of All Saints is an ancient building of t1int in the Decorated ing to Lieut. -Col Frederic Ham bleton Custance J. P. Lord
and Pcrpendi<'ular styles, consisting of chancel, nave, aisles, Stafford is lord of the manor. Weston House, a beautiful
south porch and embattled western tower containing 5 bells: mansion standing in a park near the river Wensum, is the
there are three stone sed ilia of elegant design in the chancel, seat of Col. Sir Hamblcton Francis Custance K.C.B., D.L.,
and some remains of ancient stained glass: a large and an- J.P. who is the chief landowner. The soil is mixed; subsoil,
cient altar-stone or slab, marked with the nsual five crosses clay and mar!. The chief crops are wheat, roots, barley, and
and formerly in the nave, was in r88o, on the restoration of hay. The area is 2,749A. IR. 24P.; rateable value, £3,442·;
the cha,ncel, removed and placed under the altar-table: the population in 18gr was 389.
there is also a very interesting rood-screen, dating from Parish Clerk, William Woods. •
early in the 15th century : the church affords about 230
sittings, 140 being free. The register dates from the year Letter3 frJm Norwich, via Attlebridge. PILLAR LETTER
DIRECTORY.] NORFOLK. WHIN BURGH. 677

Lenwade
I
Box, near the church, cleared at 4-30 p.m. on week days I National School (mixed), for So poor children; average at-
only. The nearest money order & telegraph office is at tendance, 59 ; Mrs. William Chapman, mistress
CARRIER TO NoRWICH.-William Pratt, wed. & sat
Custance Col. Sir Hambleton Francis Clark Charles, blacksmith Minister Erlward, estate carpenter to
K.C.B., D.L., J.P. Weston house Corner Wm. Jas. farmer, Church farm Col. Sir H. F. Custance K.C.B
Custance Lieut.-Col. Frederic Hamble- Faux George Grounds, tailor Reynolds Henry, farm bailiff to Col. Sir
ton .:r.P. ; & 12 John street, Mayfair, Gooch Geo. Fredk. vet. surgn. & farmer H. F. Custance K.C.B
London w Gray Henry, farmer Richardson Henry, head gamekeeper to
Egerton Rev. Charles Cadwallader M. A. Grey James, grocer, draper, &c Col. Sir H. F. Custance K.C.B
Rectory Harvey ''Villiam, farmer, Green farm , Richmond Frederick, farmer
1
COMMERCIAL. Hook James,iron founder & agricultural Richmond John, farmer
Baker Charles, beer retailer & carpenter implement manufacturer & agent Richmond Thomas, farmer
.Hates Ann (:Mrs.), day school Hub bard John, estate carpenter to Mrs. Salisbury Charles, farmer
Bates Robert, Eagle P.H Berney, of Mort<Jn hall Woods Thomas, head gardener to Col.
Bates William, farmer Milk James Paync, farmer Sir H. F. Custance K.C.B
WESTWICK is a parish and scattered village, on the Christi college, Cambridge. The Home here for waifs and
road from Norwich to North Walsham, 2! miles south from strays was erected in 1884 by Mrs. Petre, by whom it is
North Walsham and I west from Worstead station on the entirely supported, and it now (1892) contains 10 children.
North Walsham branch of the Great Eastern railway, in the Westwick House, the scat of Mrs. Petre, who is lady of the
Eastern division of the county, Tunstead and .flapping petty manor and chief landowner, is a white !iltuccoed mansion,
sessioTial division, Tunstead hundred, Srnallburgh union, built in the reign of Queen Anne, and standing in a noble
North Walsham county court district, rural deanery of park; not far from the house is a look-out, about go feet
Waxham, Tunstead division, archdeaconry of Norfolk and high, commanding a good view of the sea-coast. The soil
diocese of Norwich. The church of St. Botolph is a building is mixed; subsoil, clay and gravel. The chief crops are
of stone in the Decorated and Perpendicular styles, consist- wheat, oats and barley. The area is 1,043 acres of wood
ing of chancel, nave, aisles, south porch and an embattled and arable; rateable value, £1,334 ; the population in 1891
western tower with pinnacles and containing one bell: there was 190.
is a richly-carved screen, and several monuments to the Parish Clerk, William Sidell.
Berney and Petre families: the church was entirely repaired
and the ancient work and ornaments restored by J. Petre PosT 0FFICE.-Mrs. Mary Sidell, receiver. Letters through
esq. in I84S: there are 200 sittings. The register dates Norwich arrive at 5-35 a. m.; dispatched at 4·45 p.m.
from the year 16 42 . The living is a rectory, average tithe Worstead is the nearest money order & telegraph office
rent-charge £132, net yearly value £117, including 19 acres School, erected in 1866 by the late Capt. Pctrc, & now sup-
of glebe, with residence, in the gift of Mrs. Petre, and held ported in part by Mrs. Petre; it will hold so children;
since 1873 by the Rev. Henry John Coleman M.A. of Corpus average attendance, 33; .Miss Ellen Green, mistress
Coleman Hev. Henry John M.A. Rectory D ucker Richard, farmer Lynes John, farmer
Petre Mrs. Westwick house Home for Waifs & Strays (Miss Mary Palgrave John, wheelwright
Cross Thomas Alfred, farmer, seeds- Ann Macnalley, matron), Pound ho Phillipo Lcwis, farmer, Lodge farm
man & coal merchant; & at Worstead Lacey John, farmer Rush John, farm bailiff to Mrs. Petre
WHEAT ACRE ALL SAINTS is a small village 1 of glebe, with residence, in the gift of Caius College, Cam-
and parish, r! miles south-east from Aldeby station on the bridge, and held since r885 by the Rev. Robert Browne
Ipswich and Yarmouth section of the Great Eastern rail- Slipper M.A. of that college, and surrogate. The poor's land
way, 4~ north-east from Beccles and 13 south-west from consists of 8A. 3R. let for about £10 8s. yearly, which sum
Yarmouth, in the Southern division of the county, Cla\"ering is distributed in coals amongst the poor. Sir Edward Birk-
hundred, Loddon and Clavering petty sessional division and beck hart. of Horstead Hall, is lord of the manor and prin-
union, Bungay and Beccles county court districts, rural cipal landowner. The soil is mixed, one half being marsh
deanery of Brooke, eastern division, arch deaconry of Norfolk land; subsoil, marl, sand and a little clay. The chief crops
and diocese of Norwich. The church of All Saints is an an- are wheat, turnips, barley and hay. The area is I,Y63
cient structure of flint in the Perpendicular style, consisting acres; rateable value, £r,250; the population in 1891 was
of chancel, nave, south porch and an embattled western 164.
tower containing one bell : the chancel, which retains a pis- Letter11 through Beccles, the nearest money order & tele-
cina, is separated frorn the nave by a carved screen, and the graph office, arrive at 8.30 a.m
chancel arch is decorated with carved roses: there is an an-
cient font: the church was rest<Jred in 1885 at a cost of A School Board of 5 members was formed compulsorily 12
£7oo, the work in the chancel being carried out at the ex- Feb. 1875, for the united district of Wheatacre & Burgh
pense of the late rector : in 1886 the church was re-seated, St. Peter, with Aldeby made contributory 23 April, 1875•
and a new oak pulpit lectern and reading desk erected at a with two members; J. C. Copeman, Loddon, clerk to the
cost of £13 5 : there are 100 sittings. The register dates board
from the year 1559. The living is a rectory, average tithe Board School, built in 1879, for 120 children; average at-
rent-charge £r83, net yearly value £218, including 73 acres tendance, 85; Miss Alice Cope, mistress
Slipper Rev. Robert Browne M.A. [rec- Elliott & Garrood, engineers & general" ChastonEliz:abeth(Mrs.),WhiteLionP.H
tor & surrogate], The Rectory machinists Nash Samuel, farmer, The Hall
l3anns Samuel, builder & farmer
WHINBURGH(or WHINBERGH) is a village and parish, charities are of £10 yearly value, including a fuel allotment
~~miles south from Yaxham· station on the Wymondham of 5 acres which is let for £8. The trustees of Sir William
a;;,d Wells section of the Great Eastern railway and 3i south Robert Clayton hart. are lords of the manor. The trustees
from Dereham, in the Mid division of the county, Mitford of the late James Worrall esq. John Marcon esq. J.P. and
hundred, Mitford and Launditch petty sessional division John Press esq. are the principal landowners. The land,
and union, East Dereham county court district, rural some of which is heavy, grows wheat and good malting
deanery of Hingham, Mitford division, archdeaconry of barley; subsoil, principally clay. The area is 1,241 acres;
Norfolk and diocese of Norwich. The church of St. Mary rateable value, £2,072; the population in 189I was 245.
is a structure of flint in the Early English style, consisting Parish Clerk, John Jordan.
of chancel, nave, south porch and low western tower con- PILLAR Box.-Hours of collection, 5 . 30 p.m; no collection
taining 2 bells: the chancel, which retains a piscina, was on sundays. Letters through East Derebam arrive at
restored in 1889 to its original proportions and a new east _
7 45 a. m. & 5 _30 p.m. Yaxham is the nearest money
window inserted: two memorial windows were placed in order & telegraph office
I88o to the Hev. William Grigson, rector I 843-77: there
are 130 sittings. The register dates from the year 1703 . A School Board of 5 members was formed compulsorily 16
The living is a rectory, with that of Westfield annexed, February, 1875, for the united district of Whinburgh &
average tithe rent-charge £ 23 s, joint net yearly value :l 2 so, Westfield; R. Grigson, Upper King street, Norwich, clerk
including 43~ acres of glebe, with residence, in the gift of to the board ; Charles Stewart, attendance officer
the trustees of the late Mrs. Grigson, and held by the Rev. Board School (mixed), erected in 1875, at a cost of £goo,
Edward Grigson B.A.. of Corpus Christi college, Cambridge. for 59 children; average attendance, 49; Miss A. Ander-
There is a Primitive ~ethodist chapel, built in 1879. The son, mistress
Grigson Rev. Edward B.A. Rectory Cook Robert, carpenter Smith Thomas, carpenter
COMMERCIAl.. Cowles Arthur, Three Horse Shoes P.H Vincent Daveney, farmer, Old hall
Ashby Wm. The Carpenters' Arms P.H Howard George, farmer Vincent Thomas, farmer, New hall
Bantoft Chas. Henry, farmer, Park farm Johnson James, shopkeeper VincentWilliam,farmer, The Manor frm
Baxter William, farmer Orton John, farmer
678 WHISSONSETr. NORFOLK.. •

WHISSONSETT is a parish, about 5 miles south from 16s. 8d. which sum is distributed in bread to the poor of the
Fakenham station on the Wymondbam and Wells section of parish. Rural sports are held here on Whit Wednesday.
the Great Eastern railway, in the Mid division of the county, Messrs. Winter and Francis are joint lords of the manor. The
Mitford and Laundikh petty sessional division, Launditch other land in the parish is the property of a number of small
hundred, Mitford union, Dereham cour:ty court district, owners. The soil is mixed; subsoil, gravel. The land is
rural deanery of North Brisley and Toftrees, and arch- tilled on the usual four-course shift. The area is 1,344
deacr:mry and diocese of Norwich. The church of St. Mary acres; rateable value, £2,163; the population in 1891 was
the Virgin is a building of flint and stone in the Early 577· ·
English style, consisting of chancel, nave, vestry and an Parish Clerk, James Neale Thing.
embattled western tower with pinnacles, containing a clock PosT & M. 0. 0., S. B. & .Annuity & Insurance Office-
and 4 bells: a stone pulpit and screen were presented in James N ea le Thing, receiver. Letters arrive from Dere-
1870 by the present rector: the chancel retains good sedilia ham at 8 a.m. & are dispatched at 5.15 p. m. on week days
and a piscina, and t~re is an ancient font: in the church are only. The nearest telegraph office is at Litcham
memorials to the families of Guybon, Bozoun and llopton : ScHOOLS : -
the east window is a memorial to Mrs. Douglas Lane, and .A School Board of 5 members was formed compulsorily 9
there are three other stained windows: the chancel and DecPmber, 1873, for the united district of Whissonsett &
interior of the church were restored in 1873, and afford 250 Horningtoft; Alfred Stangroom, clerk to the board; James
sittings. The register dates from the year 1700. The Ncale Thing, attendance officer
living is a. rectory, consolidated with that of Horningtoft, Board School (mixed), erected in 1868, for 120 children;
average tit be rent-charge £5o1, joint gross yearly value average attendance, 90; James William Brown, master
£734• including 93 acres of glebe and residence, in the gift Infants', for 6o children; average attendance, 40; .Mrs. A.
of Captain Douglas Lane, and held since :r865 by the Rev. E. Brown, mistress ·
Francis Charles de Lona Lane M.A. Cantuar. Here are Police Station, Fredcrick Whitehand, constable
Wesleyan and Primitive Methodist chapels. Nicholas Dun- CARRIF.R TO FAKENHAM.-James Neale Thing, to the Bull
ham, in 159I, left a yearly rent-charge now amounting to inn, tues. thurs. & sat. returnmg same days
Finn Harry Popki~s, Rose cottage Drury Richard .Alfred, farmer 1
Skinner William, grocer & draper
Lane Rev. Francis Charles de Lona M. A. Dunger Elijah, farmer Stangroom .Alf. draper, grocer, chemist
Rectory Finch .Josiah Harvey,King's Head P.H.& & clerk to the school board
Ringer Mrs. The Ilall builder Stratton George Henry, Swan commer-
Yaxley Mrs Fox William, farmer, Hamrow farm cial inn (good stabling ; pony & trap
Hall John, farmer for hire). & farmer
COMMERCIAL. Jarred William, farmer, Hamrow house Taylor William, blacksmith
Barker Henry, farmer Lacey John, butcher Tennant John, farmer
Barker Jane (Mrs.), butcher Makins John, farmer Thing James :Neale, tailor, parish clerk,
Barker Maria (Mrs. ),Bell P.H. & farmer Minister Arthur James, baker, farmer school attendance h.officer & carrier,
BarkerRobert, farmer & miller {wind) Post office
Basham Charles, farmer Nelson Arthur, boot & shoe maker Watts Samuel, saddler &c
BrownEdmundFox,builder&contractor, Payne .Arthnr, blacksmith Williamson Robert, dealer
blacksmith, wheelwright & painter Ringer Isabel (Mrs.), farmer & land- Wright John, brick maker
Cooper Jane (Mrs.~, baker owuer, The Hall
WHITLINGHAM is a parish, overlooking the river of the manor. Messrs.· J. and J. Colman, of Norwich, are the
Yare, 3! miles east from the Market place, Norwich, and 2 principal landowners. The soil is clay and sand ; subsoil.
west from Trowse station on the Great Eastern railway, in clay. The chief crops are wheat and barley. The area is
the Southern division of the county, Swainsthorpe petty 542 acres; rateable value, £754; the population in 1891
sessional division, Hcnstead hundred and union, Norwich was 57·
county court district, rural deanery of llrooke western Letters through Norwich. Trowse is the nearest money
division, archdeaconry of Norfolk and diocese of Norwich. order & telegraph office
The church of St. Andrew is now a ruin, within the walls of
which are several stately trees : the circular tower, the The children of this place attend the school at Trowse
greater part of which remains, is ornamented with four full- Newton
sized statues. 'I' he Dean and Chapter of Norwich are lords Railway Station, George Sadler Chissell, station master
Mattbews John, steward to Mr. Garrett Taylor, Wbitlingham hall I Taylor Garrett, farmer & estate agent
WHITTINGTON is a hamlet of the parish of North- £250, with residence, in the gift of the representatives of the
l!'old, at the junction of the roads from Lynn, Brandon and late Mrs. Norman, and held since 1875 by the Rev. William
Thetford, and was formed into an ecclesiastical parish July Thwaites. Here is an extensive malthousc belonging to
:w, 1874 : the village is 2~ miles north-west from North- Messrs. Whitbread, the brewers, of London. The principal
wold, close by the Stoke Ferry terminal station, and 9~ landowners are James Maher esq. of Lynn, and George
miles north-west from Brandon station, both on the Great Frederick Hargraves esq. of Saham Toncy. The soil is
Eastern railway, in the South Western divisioh of the county, various; subsoil, chalk and clay. The chief crops are wheat.
Grimshoe hundred and petty ses.<;ional division, Thetford barley and oats. The population in 1881 was 249.
union and county court distnct, Cranwich rural deanery Parish Clerk, William l'earson.
south division, Norfolk archdeaconry and Norwich diocese. PILLAR LETTER Box cleared 7.10 p.m. Letters are delivered
Christ church, erected in 1874-5 at the sole expense of the from Stoke Ferry 8.0. 7.30 a.m. Stoke Ferry is the
late Mrs. Norman, in memory of her husband, the Rev. nearest money order & telegraph office
Charles Manners Richard Norman, rector of Northwold Endowed School, formerly a Dissenting chapel, was en-
from 1833, is a building of flint with stone dressings, in dowed by the late Mrs. N ctrman within vested stock in
the Gothic style, consisting of nave, . west porch and a £3 per cent. Consols, producing £6o yearly, & with a.
western turret containing one bell: there are 300 sittings. small piece of land which brings in £3 yearly; the school
The register dates from the year 1875. The livmg is a will ·bold 70 children; a\·erage attendance, 34; Miss
vicarage, average tithe rent-charge £38, gross yearly value Thwaites, mistress
Cumher!and Mrs Bonas Dalton, Bell inn Greenacre Thomas, farmer
Podmore William Fison James & Sons, maltsters &c. ; & Reeson Robert, coal dealer & farmer
Thwaites Rev. William, Vicarage at Lyun; Thetford & Dereham Rudland Jane (Mrs.), grocer
Chaplin John Bennet, manager for Greenacre George, farmer Websdale Frederick, farmer
Messrs. Whitbread Grccnacre Harry, farmer Whitbread & Co. maltsters
WHITWELL, see REEPHAM.
WICKHAMPTON is a parish, 2~ miles north from lady, who are supposed to have founded the church A.D.
Reedham junction station on the Norwich and Yarmouth 1272 :> on the north wall of the nave are remains of paintings
section of the Great Eastern railway, 8 south-west from of the early 15th century ,representing an allegorical hunting
Yarmouth and 15 south-east from Norwich, in the Eastern scene with figures of nobles and skeletons, known as'' Les
division of the county, Blofield and Walsham petty sessional Trois Vifs et Les Trois Morts ;" over the north door is a
divtsion, Walsham hundred, Blofield union, Yarmouth figure of St. Christopher carrying the infant Christ over a
county court district. rnral deanery of Blotield and arch- river, and representations of the seven acts of mercy: the
deaconry and diocese of ~orwich. The church of St. Andrew carved pulpit is of Elizabethan date: on the apex of the
is an ancient building of flint in the Early English, Early gable of the porch is a small rood in stone, supported by the
Decorated and Perpendicular styles, consisting of chancel, figures of St. Mary and St. John: the church has been
nave, south porch and an embattled western tower with repaired under the direction of Mr. R. M. Phipson, diocesan
pinnacles, containing one bell: in the church is an ancient surveyor, at a cost of £g6o, and affords 12o sittings. The
altar-tomb with effigies, to Sir Willia.m Gerbygge and his register dates from the year 1561. The living is a rectory,
DIRECTORY.] NORFOLK. WIGGENH.ALL ST. GERMANS, 679
average tithe rent-charge £148, net yearly value£ 142, in- good mixed; subsoil, mixed. The chief crops are wheat,
eluding 18 acres of glebe, with residence, in the gift of oats and barley. Tile area is 1,636 acres; rateable value
William Brown esq. of Richmond terrace, Barns bury, Lon- £2,359 ; the population in 1891 was II6. lly an order which
don, and held since 1889 by the Rev, Joseph Kaye, of St. came into operation March 25, 1884, a detached part of
Bees, who is also curate in charge of All Saints', Freethorpe. Blofield was amalgamated with this parish.
Here is a Wesleyan chapel. Robert Fellowes esq. D.L., J.P. Parish Clerk, George Youngs.
of Shotesham Park, is lord of the manor, and Henry Randal WALL LETTER Box cleared at 2.40 p.m. sundays excepted,
llurroughes esq. of Burlingham Hall, Joseph Houchen Kerry Letter through Norwich arrive at 9 a. m. Reedharn is the
esq. John Williarn Rose esq. of Old Hall, Reedham, u.nd nearest money order & telegraph office
Spencer Walpole esqrs. are the chief landowners. The soil is The children of this place attend the school at Freethorpe
Kaye Rev. Joseph, Rectory I
Minister James, cowkeeper
KerryJosephHouchen,frmr.Church frm Riches John Arthur, farmer
I
Youngs Ellen (Miss),cowkeeper
Youngs George,cowkeeper •

WICKLEWOOD is a parish and village, 1 mile south : duces £6 yearly, which is given to the poor in coals. The
from Kimberley station on the Wymondham and Wells sec-1 Union S"ouse for the Incorporation of Forehoe, in this parish,.
tion of the Great Eastern railway and 3 west-by-north built irl'1777, is available for 450 inmates, but the average
I

from Wymondham, in the Mid division of the county, Fore- number is about 120 (for particulars of the union see Wy-
hoe hundred, petty sessional division and union, Wymond- mondharn). The Earl of Kimberley K.G., P.C. IS lord of the
barn county court district, rural deanery of Hingham, manor of WICklewood, and the patrons of the living are the
Forehoe division, arch deaconry of Norfolk and diocese of lords of the manor of Wicklewood Ampnors. The principal
Norwich, The church of All Saints is a large and well-lmilt landowners are the Earl of Kimberley, the Rev. William
edifice of flint in the Perpendicular style, consisting of Dack Daniel M . .A. of Wyrnondham, Mr. W, M. Rose and Mr.
chancel, nave and an embattled tower on the south side con- Thomas Chaplin. The soil is clayey; subsoil, brick earth.
taining one bell; the lower stage of the tower forms a porch: The chief crops are wheat, barley, turnips and hay. The
in the first floor is a fireplace and a small oven at the side area is 1,6ox acres; rateable value, £2,789; and the popu-
in the wall, and .on the second floor another small fireplace: lation in 189r was 686, including 123 in the .Forehoe Umon
in the floor of the nave is an ancient but undated brass to house.
John Dufeld, and there at'e monuments to Bartholomew Parish Clerk, Harry Buck.
Stone, 1708, and Elizabeth his wife, 1722; Thomas Colman LETTER Box cleat'ed at 6.45 p.m. week days only, l..etters
esq. a considerable merchant and sheriff of the city of through Wymondham by foot post, via, Crownthorpe,
Norwich, d. 1799; Bartholomew Ht'y, d. 178o, and Eliza- arrive at 7.30 a.m. Wymondham is the nearest money
beth Dry, eldest daughter of Bartholomew Stone, d. 1743: order & telegraph office
the steps leading to the rood loft remain, and the h ·ads of A School Beard of 7 members was formed compulsorily 20
the benches exhibit some excellent carving: there are 200 April, 1875, for the united d1strict of \Vicklewood, Crown-
sittings. The register dates from the year 1585. The living thorpe & Hackford; William Partridge Smith, clerk to
is a vicarage, average tithe rent-charge £357, net yearly the board & attendance officer
value £.345, including 27 acres of glebe, with residence, in Board School for the 3 parishes, erected in 1878 at· a cost of
the gift of trustee~, and held since 1854 by the Rev. William £1,387 15s. for 165 children ; average attendance, 123 :
Acton B. A. of Balliol College, Oxford. Here are two Primi- Fredk. Geo. IIarris, master; Mrs. Maria Harris, mistress
tive Methodist chapels. The fuel allotment of 12 acres pro- Police Station, James Hel!llbling, constable
Acton Rev. William B.A. Vicarage Coll).an Edmund Smith, poultry dealer Smith Robert, miller (wind)
Livock Mrs &c. High common Smith William Partridge, farmer, &
Rudledge The Misses Doe George, farmer, High common clerk & attendance officer to the
COMMERCIAL. Doughty James,miller (wind) & farmer Wicklewood school boarcl, Green
Attoe Carnaby, farmer Goodings George, farmer, Green Turner Jarnes, farmer
Baker Henry, farmer, Mere Goodings Robert, farmer, The Green Turner John, farmer, High common
Barcham John Robert, butcher Head John, farmer, High Oak Tuttle Samuel, vermin destroyer
Blake Sarah Anne (Mrs.), shopkeeper Hurrell Jonathan, shopkeeper "'atling Charles,farmer, Boarded-Gates
Breeze Genrge, farmer, Low street ·" Kett William, tailor Watson Thomas, hoot & shoe maker ,
1
Breeze Jas. The Wild Man P.H.& farmer Long Samuel, beer retailer \'\Tatts Alfred, shoe maker
BrowesFredcrick,grocer,draper & baker MannWilliam,shopkeepcr&beer retailer Weston Edward, boot & shoe maker
Buck Sarah Ann (Mrs.), beer retailer & Miller Samuel, fat'mer, Church farm Weston George, shoe maker
shopkeeper, Morley road Pearce Wm. farmer & coal dlr.High Oak Wigby John & William, dealers
Buck William, blacksmith, Morleyroad QuantrillDiladavary (Mrs.),shopkeeper Wigby Obadiah, wheelwright
Carr William, blacksmith Read Alfred, farmer Wilkinson Thomas West, farmer,Green
Chenery Wm. whcclwrt.smith & beer ret Read Benjamin, farmer Woodcock Phoobe (Mrs.), shopkeeper
Cook William Fredk. farmer, The Green Rolfe J ames( exors. of),farmrs. Hall farm Youngman John Turner, farmer
W!CKMERE is a village and parish, 5 miles north from j J.P. Norfolk. There is a Primitive Methodist chapel here_
Aylsham stations on the Gre~t Eastern and Eastern and The Earl of Orford is lord of the manor and chief landowner.
Midlands railways, 7 south-east from Holt and 9 west from The soil is a good loam ; subsoil, brick earth. The chief
North Walsham, in the Northern division of the county, crops are wheat, turnips, barley and grass. The area is
South Erpingham hundred and petty sessional division, 973A. 1R. 14P. ; rateable value, £1,585 : the population in
Aylsham union and county court district, rural deanery of was 189r was 236.
Ingworth and archdeaconry and d10cese of Norwich. The Parish Clerk, Thomas Lambert.
church of St. An drew is a large and ancient building of flint, Letters through Norwich, by messenger, from Ha.nworth.
chiefly in the Early English style, consisting of chancel, arrive about 9 a. m. ; return at 3.30 p.m. week days only.
clerestoried nave, aisles, south porch and a round embattled Aid borough is the nearest money order & telegraph office.
western tower containing one bell: there are 250 sittings. LETTER Box cleared at 3· ro p. m
The register dates from the year 1559. The living is a rec- A School Board of 7 members was formed compulsorily 15
tory. consolidated in 1737 with that of ·wolterton, average July, 188o, for the united district of Wickmere,Calthorpe,
tithe rent-charge £329, joint gross yearly value £485, in- & Wolterton; R. Howlett, Aylsham, clerk to the bot:rd-:
eluding 3_~ acres of glebe, with residence, in the gift of the E. J. Bird, Aylsbam, attendar.ce officer
Earl of Orford, and held since 1855 by the Rev. Robcrt Board School (mixed), built in 1883, for 90 children; aver-
"rilliam Eeauchamp IILA. of Christ's College, Cambridge, age attendance, about 65 ; Miss Janet Brown, mistress
Beauchamp Rev. Rober~ Williarn M.A., Hall Robert, blacksmith SlaughterSamuel,farm baili:£!1.9 George
J.P. Rectory Lee William George, farmer Gunton esq
Gillam Stephen, farmer Porrett George Rose, farmer
WIGGENHALL ST. GERMANS is a village and nacles and containing 4 bells: the church was restored in
parish, on either side of the river Ouse, 3 miles north-vrest 1872, at a cost of £I,wo, and the interior of the tower was
from Magdalen Road station on the Ely and Lynn section of restored and the bells re-hung in r882 : there are 250 sit-
the Great Eastern railway, and 4 south from Lynn, in the tings. The register dates from the year 166o. The living
North Western division of the county, hundred and petty is a discharged vicarage, tithe rent-charge £374• average
sessional div1sion of Freebridge Marshland, union of Down- £285, net yearly value £26o, including 8 acres of g-lebe and
ham, county court district of Lynn, rural deanery of Lynn residence, in the gift of the Dean and Chapter of Norwich,
Marshland and archdeaconry and diocese of Norwich. The and held since 1871 by the Rev, Alfred Legge M •.A. of St.
Ouse is here crossed by a wooden bridge, thoroughly re- Peter's College, Cambridge, who is also "f"icar of Wiggenhall
pain-ed in 1874. The church of· St. Ger-man, ~n the east St. Peter. The Eeclesiastical Commissioners are the lay
side of the river, is a.n ancient edifice of rubble in the. Per- rectors, and own 28 acres of glebe and also take £4o of the
pen,dicular style, consisting of chancel, nave, aisles, south rectorial tithes. There are Wesleyan and Primitive Method-
porch and an embattled western tower of stone, with pin- ist chapels, and a Methodist New Connexiou chapel, erectecl
680 WIGGENHALL ST. GERMANS. NORFOLK. [KELLY'S

in 185o. The charities consist of {.1 ss. yearly, derived PosT, M. 0. & T. 0., S. B. & Annuity & Insurance Office.-
from the bridge tolls, and 6s. Bd. left by an unknown donor. Mrs. Ann Mary Samson, receiver. Letters arrive from
The four Wiggenhalls, included in the manor of Fitton, are Lynn at 7.20 a.m. & 5-45 p.m.; dispatched at 5·45 p.m.;
in a great part below the high-water level of the Great sundays, arrive at 7.20 a.m. ; dispatched at 11.5o a.m
Ouse, which is confined by strong banks : the Middle Level A School Board of 7 members was formed 16 October, 1 g75,
sluice, constructed in 1877 for draining the Fens of the for the united district of Wiggenball St. Germans, Wig-
Middle Level district, is in this parish. The Hall is the resi- genhall St. Mary the Virgin, & Wiggenhall St. Peter ; E.
deuce of Mrs. Barker. Gustavus Helsham esq. J. P. of St. Beloe, Lynn, clerk to the board
Mary's Hall, Wiggenhall St. Mary, is lord of the manor and
principal landowner. The soil is a rich alluvial deposit; Board School, erected in 1877, on land given by Gustavus
subsoil, clay. The chief crops are wheat, beans and oats. Helsham esq. J. P. for the three ·wiggenhall parishes, to
The area is 1,2 19 acres, of which I,o3 1 are on the west side hold 175 children; average attendance, 120; James
of th~ river; rateable value, £z,667; the populatwn in 1gg 1 Whiteley, master; Mrs. Lavinia Whit.clcy, mistress
was 542. CARRIER TO LYNN.-Blade, of St. Magdalen, passes through
Parish Clerk and Sexton, David Carter. here tues. thurs. & sat
Barker Mrs. The Hall Clarke Sarah (:Yirs. ), grocer Loads John, market gardener
Easter William, Rosedale house Cook William, shoe maker Long William, baker
Failes Mrs. Fit ton ball Cossons J oseph Eishop,market gardener Manchester Unity of Oddfellows (John
Legge Rev. Alfred M.A. Vicarage & farmer Spencer, of Setch, local sec)
COMMF.RCIAL. Crawford Peter John, market gardener Morley Ern est Hy.miller( wind) & baker
Alien Richard, farmer & proprietor of Durrant Robert Smith, bricklayer Oldroyde Joseph, farmer
thrashing machinery Dye Elizh. (Mrs.), Three Horseshoes P.H Samson J oseph Oscar, grocer & draper,
Bailes George, Black Horse P.H Elmer Robert, shopkeeper china & earthenware dealer & boot &
Bnrett Ed ward, Chequers P.H Garner Jacob, shopkeeper shoe warehouseman
BentleyJohn,farmer & market gardener Grimes Henry, coal merchant Scott Thomas WiUiam, butcher
Blomfield Thomas William, farmer Groome John, blacksmith Self William, Foresters' Arms P.H
Bridges George, blacksmith & grocer, llilton Thomas, market gardener Smith Henry Edward, farmer, Rose cot
. St. Mary's end Howard John, butcher Starling Michael, farmer
Carter Charles, builder & joiner,Crown Hubbard Enos Alfred, boot maker Trollope Alfred, Three Tuns P.H
& Anchor P.H Hunter Joseph, farmer Tyler James, carpenter
Carter .David, parish clerk & sexton LeveringtonRobt. beer ret.Lord's bridge Wilkinson Jeremiah, farmer
Chenery Henry, market gardener Lewis Charles, wheelwright Wolsey Charles, market gardener
Clarke Jeremiah, farmer Loads George, bricklayer

WIGGENHALL ST. MARY MAGDALEN is esq. The land is all freehold. The principal landowners are
a village and parish, on the west side of the Great Ouse, Thomas Leigh Hare esq. M.P. of Stow Hall, Downham,
three quarters of a. mile west from Magdalen Road station Edmund E. Peel esq. of Bryn-y-pys, Overton, Flintshire,
on the Ely and Lynn section of the Great Eastern railway, trustees of the late James Henry Fish, Rev. T. E. Flatten,
7 miles south from Lynn and 6 north from Downham, in of Hindringham, Mr. Richard Smith, of Gayton, and Mr.
the North Western division of the county, hundred and petty Green Waltham, of Pinchbeck, Spalding. The soil is clay
sessional division of Freebridge Marshland, Lynn county or fen; subsoil, clay, with a little silt. The chief crops are
eourt district, union of Downham, rural deanery of Lynn wheat, oats and beans. Three quarters of the parish are
Marshland and archdeaconry and diocese of Norwich. The fen, and drained by a steam engine of 40-horse power. The
church of St. Mary Magdalen is an ancient structure of area is 4,114 acres of land and 134 of water; rateable
brick and rubble, in the Perpendicular style, consisting of value, £5,584; the population in 1891 was 678.
chancel, nave, aisles, south porch, and an embattled western ::::lexton, James Embling.
tower .containing 6 bells : the nave was new roofed and a PosT 0FFICE.-William Matthew Narborough, receiver.
blocked window opened and filled with stained glass in 188o: Letters through Lynn, arrive at 8 a. m. & 2.30 p.m. ; dis-
the church affords 300 sittings. The register dates from patched at 5.25 p.m. Wiggenhall St. Germans is the
tbe year 1562. The living is a vicarage, average t1the rent- nearest money order & telegraph office. ·Postal orders
charge £192, gross yearly value £2r7, including 3~ acres of are issued here, but not paid
glebe, with residence, in the gift of Henry English esq. and
held since 1865 by the Rev. Frederick Davies M.A. of Caius WALL LETTER Box, near the Primitive chapel, cleared at
College, Cambridge, J. P. There is a Baptist chapel, erected 5-rsp.m
in r84o and enlarged in r886, and a Primitive Methodist A School Hoard of 5 members was formed 25 April, 1874;
chapel, built in I 862. Crabb, or Crab house Abbey, anciently W. 1\'I. Narborough, clerk to the board ; attendance officer,
situated here, was founded in n8r by the convent of Rain- John Woods, Watlington
barn, for nuns of Fontevrault, and dedicated to SS. Mary Board School (mixed), erected in :r875, for 160 children;
Magdalen, John the Evangelist, Thomas and Peter; at its average attendance, 103; George Henry Carter, master;
dissolution there were 7 nuns, and revenues estimated at Miss Ella. Garrood, assistant mistress
£24: the house is now the residence of Edward Rowell CARRIER TO LYNN.-Blade, tues. thur. & sat
Butterwick Mrs GidneyWm.Lodes Head P.H.&blcksmth Petchell Fredk.J ohn, veterinary surgeon
Davies Rev. Fredk. M.A., J.P. Vicarage Gillison Sarah (Mrs.), farmer Riches John, farmer
].<'lowers Mrs Gledbill James, master mariner Riches William, Cock P. H
Riches Mrs Green Matthew, butcher & grocer Robertson Henry, farmer
Green Matthew, sheep dresser Robertson Robert, farmer
COMMERCIAL. Griffin Charles Stradsett, farmer, Par- Rolfe Frederick William, farmer
Able Henry, butcher sonage farm RoUe Joseph, Vine & Ivy P.H. [letters
Barker John, farmer Ground William, farm bailiff to Mr. via Stow, Downham]
Benefer John, fisherman Green Waltham Rowell Edward, farmer, Cra.bb's abbey
Blade John, carrier Harvey George, blacksmith & grocer [letters via Stow, Downbam]
Brighton Clotina (Miss), dress maker Harvey Thomas, Dolphin P.H Savage Henry, beer retailer
Brown Henry, tailor Holmcs William, cowkeeper Seals Elizabeth (Mrs.), farmer [letters
Eurgess William James, farmer, auc- Horn Don, farmer via Stow, Downha.m]
tioneer & valuer; & at Cattle market, J udd John Thomas, farmer Searle William, farmer
Lynn (tues. only) Lake William, farm bailiff to Mr. Sharpe William, farmer
Cable Charles, farmer Oxley Palmer 1
Stibbon James, farmer, Low Side farm
Carter Arthur Hy. farmr. Holly Ho.frm Merrison Richard, farmer Tash William, farmer
Carter Charles, butcher Narborough Thomas, shoe maker Taylor James, shoe maker
Clarke George \Valter Garner, farmer, Narborough William Matthew, land Theobald Wm. carpenter & wheelwright
Orchard house surveyor & clerk to the school board, Tiffen Robert, farmer
Earle Charles, fisherman Post office Tiffen William, farmer [letters via
Easter Thomas, farmer Parkins William, farm bailiff to Mrs. Stow, Down ham J
Embling George, farmer Sarah Gillison Whisler Thos.markt.gardenr. & coal dlr
Embling James, sexton & shoe maker Pilgrim Stephen Garner, beer retailer Wilson Samuel & John, farmers
Fea.therby Waiter, plumber & coal dealer
WIGGENHALL ST. MARY THE VIRGIN Ely and Lynn section of the Great Eastern railway and 4
is a parish, partly on the west side of the Great Ouse, bnt south-west-by-south from Lynn, in the North Western divi-
including the hamlet of SADDLEHOW on the east side of the sion of the county, hundred and petty sessional division of
river, 4 miles north-west from Magdalen Road station on the Freebridge Marsh land, county court district of Lynn, union
DIREC fORY.] NORFOLK. WIGHTON. 681
of Downham, rural deanery of Lynn Marshland and arch- manor from the time of Richard I. till the year 1624, when
deaconry and diocese of Norwich. The church of St. Mary the family became extinct : the manor then passed to the
is an ancient edifice or stone and brick in the Perpendicular Berners family, and in 1727 was sold to Sir Robcrt Brown~,
style, consisting of chancel, nave, aisles, south porch and an of Westminster, sometime British consul at Venice, who was
embattled western tower, with pinnacles, containing 6 bells, created a baronet in 1731-2 (5 Geo. II.) and was also pay-
two of which have been recast : in the chancel is an altar- master of his Maje"ty's works and M. P. for Ilchester, Star-
tomb of alabaster, with effigies of a man in armour, his wife fordshire in 1734: Sir Robert, dying 5 Oct. 176o, without
and child, and there are also memorials to the Kervile and male issue, devised the estate to his wife Margaret, from
llerners families: during alterations, made about r87o, whom the estate passed through several members of the
numerous lead coffins of the Berners family were found in Helsham family to its present owner, who has partially re-
good condition: the organ was presented by G. Helsham stored the Hall, and generally improved the demesne. Gus-
esq. J.P. ; the benches in the south aisle, which have been tavus Helsham esq. J.P. is lord of the manor and principal
restored, are of oak and very finely carved, and there is also landowner ; Horace Spelman Marriott esq. William Deres-
a brass lectern : the church has bP.en repaire::l since r869, Iey Harding esq. of Islington, in this county, and Messrs ..
and affords 140 sittings, 95 being free. The register dates Harrison Brothers, of Manchester, are also landowners. The
from the year 1655. The living is a vicarage, average tithe SfJil is rich alluvial deposit reclaimed from the sea; sub-
rent-charge £7o, net yearly value £-n9, including 2 acres of soil, the same. Owing to the richness of the soil, fruit
glebe, with residence, in the gift of the Lord Chancellor, and growing and market gardening is carried on here to a con-
held since r891 by the Hev. Henry James Halls L.Th. of Hat- siderable extent. The chief crops are wheat, beans, oats and
field Hall, Durham. The Wesleyan chapel at Saddlebow peas. The parish contains 2,815 acres of land; rateable
was erected in r886. Some part of the Islington Lodge es- 1 value, £4,292; the population in r891 was 305.

tate, reclaimed from the river Ouse tn r82r, and purchased Sexton, Frederick Collins.
by the present owner from the Eau Brink Commissioners in Letters throug-h Lynn arrive at 8.30 a. m. Wiggenball St.
r85o, is in this parish; it extends for nearly two miles and Germans is the nearest money order & telegraph office
affords excellent pasture. St. Mary's Hall, the seat of WALL LETTER BoxES cleared at 5.25 p.m.; sundays, II.I5
Gustavus Helsham esq. J.P. is a mansion erected at different a.m. ; Saddlcbow, cleared at 6.15 p.m.; sundays at 12.15
periods, the centre having been originally the embattled p.m
gatehouse of a more ancient hall or manor-house, of brick, This parish is included in the Wiggenhall United School
probably erected by the family of Kervile, or Capraville, in Board district, formed 16 October, 1875; the children at-
the reign of Henry VII. The Kerviles were lords of the tend the Board school a.t St. Germans
Halls Rev. Henry James L.Th. [vicar], Eggett Richard & William, farmers, Pitcher William, market gardener &
Vicarage Fallow Pipe farm, Saddlebow farmer, Saddlebow
Helsbam Gustavus J.P. St. Mary's hall Evans Williaru, fanner Radford Alfred, farmer & cattle dealer,
Marsters Charles, Saddlebow Goodale John, farmer Saddlebow
Spratt Mrs. The Lodge Greeves Emanuel, farmer, Home farm i Samson Joseph, Bull inn, Saddlebow
COMMERCIAL. [letters via Islington] · Sands Wm. & Thos. farmrs. Saddlebow
Barwick Henry, farmer, Saddlebow Harrison Brothers, market gardeners & Scott George Waiter, market gardener,
Batterham William, farmer, Saddlebow fruit growers, Fruit farm Saddlebow
Beeson HenryMartin,farmcr,Saddlcbow Hastings Arthur Albert, market gar- Smith Samuel, farmer
Brown Charles, farmer, The Grange dener, Saddlebow Hpratt James, farmer
Collins Frederick, sexton Kent William, cowkeeper Spratt Robert, farmer, Eaubrink hall
Cushing Wm. mrkt. gardenr. Saddle bow Marsters Charles, farmer, Saddlebow Wilson Daniel & Arthur, farmers &
Darkin William, cowkeeper Marston James, farmer landowners, Saddlebow
EagletonRobt. Waller,farmr. Saddle bow Oldroyde Frederick, farmer

WIGGENHALL ST. PETER is a par1sh, 2 miles the minister and churchwardens should appoint. Gustavus
north-west from Magdalen Road station on the Ely and Helsham esq. J.P. of St. Mary's Hall, Wiggenhall St. Mary,
Lynn section of the Great Eastern railway and 4~ south· is lord is the manor. George Gold Sadler P~~q. J. P. of Lynn,
south-west from Lynn, in the North Western division of the Mrs. Marriott, Mrs. Royle, of Crown r0ad, Yarmouth, the
county, hundred and petty sessional division of Freebridge trustees of Jarman Pattrick esq. and T. L. Read esq. of
Marshland, union and county court district of Downham, Downham Market, are the chief landowners. The soil is
rural deanery of Lynn Marshland and archdeaconry and clay and silty loam; subsoil, clay and silt. The chief
diocese of Norwich. The church of St. Peter is an ancient crops are wheat, oats and bean>~. The area is 944 acres ;
structure of brick and stone in the Perpendicular style, con-. about 6oo acres are on the west, and the remainder, with
sisting of chancel and nave and an embattled western tower the church and most of the houses, on the east side of the
with pinnacles containing one bell : the south aisle was de- river Ouse; rateable value, £,r,410; the population of the
molished in 1840: there are 140 sittings. The register dates parish in 1891 was 135.
from the year 1695. The living is a vicarage, average tithe Parish Clerk, William Carter.
rent-charge £9r, gross yearly value £,92, net £,63, including Letters through Lynn arrive at 7.30 a. m. & 6 p.m. Wig.
1 acre of glebe and residence, in the gift of the Lord Chan- genhall St. Germans is the nearest money order & tele-
cellor, and held since 1892 by the Rev. Alfred Legge M.A. of graph office. \V ALL LETTER Hox cleared at 5.40 p. m. ;
St. Peter's College, Cambridge, who is also vicar of Wiggen- sundays at 11.40 a. m
hall St. Germans, where he resides. John King Hall, who This parish is included in the Wiggenhall United School
died 18so, and was for a period exceeding so years, lay im- Board district, formed r6 Oct. 1875, a.nd the children
propriator of this parish, bequeathed to his executors the attend the Board school at Wiggenhall St. Germans
sum of £5 yearly, to be applied at Christmas time to the CARR£ER TO LYNN.-lllade, of St. Magdalen, passes through
benefit of such poor persons legally settled in this parish, as here, tues. tburs. & sat
Balls John, farmer Hall Richard, farmer & cattle dealer, J ackson Thomas Alfred, farmer
Baxter John, farmer
Carter William, parish clerk
I Haunted House farm
Hastings Robert Wiseman & Son,
Jackson William Hilling, farmer
Moughton James,farmr. & road surveyr
Hammond Henry, fanner I florists & market gardeners Vine James, farmer
WIGHTON is a parish and village on the road from charge £, I77, net yearly value £2o8, including r8 acres of
Wells to Fakenham, 2 miles north from Walsingham station glebe and residence, in the gift of the Dean and Chapter of
on the Dereham and Wells section of the Great Eastern Norwich, and held since 1883 by the Rev. John Henry
ra.ilway and 3 south-by-east from Wells, in the Northern Rushworth Pilling iii.A. of Merton College, Oxford.- Traces
division of the county, North Greenhoe hundred and petty of an ancient chapel exist on land now in the occupation of
sessional division, Walsingham union and county court dis- Mr. Charles Powell. The Primitive Methodist chapel was
trict, rural deanery of Walsingham and archdeaconry and erected in 1871. There are ,charities to the amount of [91
diocese of Norwich. The church of All Saints is a large yearly. At Crabbe's Castle, about 1~ miles west of the
edifice in the Perpendicular style, consisting of chancel, nave village, are some remains of ancient entrenchments: several
with clerestory, aisles, south porch and an embattled western Roman coins and other relics have been found there_ The
tower containing one bell: the fourteen windows of the na\·e Earl of Leicester K.G., L. L. is lord of the manor and prin-
have stained centres, representing the twelve Apostles and cipallandowner. The soil is light; subsoil, gravel. The
St. Paul and llarnabas respectively: on the south side of crops are on the four-course system. The parish contains
the chancel arch is an almost p3rfect rood staircase : the 2,932 acres; rateable t"alue, £3,050; in 1891 the population
chancel retains a piscina and at the north door is a. holy was 491.
water stoup: the ancient font is in a fine state of pre- Parish Clerk, Richard Cook.
servation: the church was restored in r886 at a cost of PosT OFFICE (Rail way Sub-Office. Letters should have
£,_r:,oo, and affords 220 sittings. The register dates from H..S.O, .Yorfolk, added).-Thomas Thompson, receiver.
the year r66o. The living is a vicarage, average tithe rent- LetA.ers arrive at 6.10 a. m.; dispatched at 6 p.m.; same
7
682 WIGHTON. NORFOLK. [KELLY S

on sundays. Walsingham is the nearest money order & in 1872, for «j6 children, & enlarged in r888 to hold 130:
telegraph oflice. Postal orders are issued here, but not paid average attendance, roo; Cornelius Wood, master; Miss
National School (mixed), with house for the master, erected Ethel Clare Wood, mistress
Pilling Rev. John llenry Rushworth Groom Willie, Gibraltar P.H Purdy Samuel, stock dealer & farmer
M.A. Vicarage Hudson Peter, farmer & miller (wind) Riches William, butcher
. Lusher James, baker Temple Daniel, boot maker & hoer ret
COMMERCIAL. Moyse Barzillai, Red Lion P.H Thompson Thomas, grocer, Post office
Andrews Fredk. ·wm. baker & farmer Potter Samuel, farmer & landowner Tuck Robert, blacksmith
.Andrews Laban, farmer, Grove farm Powell Charles, farmer, Wheycurd & Wright William Edward, shopkeeper
Grimmer John, carpenter Copy's Green farms
WIL:BY is a village and parish, I mile east from Eccles acre esq. and held since 1886 by the Rev. Francis Charles
Road station on the Thetford and Norwich section of the Birch B.A. of Pembroke College, Cambridge. Here is a
Great Eastern railway and 4 miles south from Attlcborough, Primitive Methodist chapel, erected in 1851. Sir Hugh
in the Mid division of the county, Guiltcross and Shrop- Reeve Beevor hart. M.B. of King's College chambers, London,
ham petty sessional division, Guiltcross union, Shropham who is lord of the manor and Lord Egerton of Tatton are
hundred, Attleborough county court district, rural deanery the chief landowners. The soil is mixed; subsoil, various.
of Rockland, archdeaconry of Norfolk and diocese of Nor- The chief crops are wheat, barley and oats. The area of
wich. The church of All Saints is an ancient building of the parish is I,4oo acres; rateable value, £I ,257 ; the
tiint chiefly in the Early English style, consistmg of chancel, population in I891 was 104.
nave, Norman south porch and an embattled western tower Deputy Parish Clerk. H.obert Hall.
containing 5 bells: there are 120 sittings. The register Letters through Attleborough; the nearest money order &
dates from the year I541. The living is a rectory, with that. telegraph oillce is at Qmdenham; arrive a!; 8 a.m. PILLAR
of Hargham annexed, joint net yearly valuo £320, including LETTER Box in the village cleared at 6.30 p.m
49 acres of glebe, with residence, in the gift of John Good- The children of this parish attend the school at Eccles
~irch Rev. Francis Chas. R.~. Rectory j Hardy Charles, farmer,Rcd House farm [ Lewin Chas.Sutton,farmer, Wilby house
Colman Samuel, farmer, Wdby }lall ·
WILTON, see HocKwOLD.
WIM:BOTSHAM is a village and parish on t.he road to sides at Stow Bardolph. There are Wesleyan and Primitiv~
Lynn and on the river Ouse, I mile north from Downham Methodist chapels. The fuel allotment produces between
station on the Ely and Lynn section of the Great Eastern £30 and £40 yearly, which sum is distributed to the poor in
railway, in the South Western division of the county, Clack- coals. Thomas Leigh Hare esq. M.P., D.L., J.P. of St{)w Hall,
dose hundred and petty sessional division, Downham union is lord· of the manor and chief landowner. The soil is clay
and county court district, rural deanery of Fincham, arch- and sand ; subsoil, clay and sandstone. The cllief crops are
deaconry of Norfolk and diocese of Norwich. The church of wheat and barley. Under the Divided Parishes Act the area
8t. Mary, situated on rising ground, is a building of stone, is I,Sro acres, part of the parish having been amalgamated
orginally Norman, consisting of apsidal chancel, nave, north with llownham .Market in r884; rateable value, £2,477;
porch and an embattled western tower with pinnacles the population in I8gr was 73·
containing 3 bells : the north and south doorways are SALTRR'S LonE is a hamlet.
line examples of Norman work: in I8.S4 the church was PosT 0FFICE.-John Parchan Mann, receiver. Letters
restored, the chancel being entirely rebuilt by the Rev. arrive from Downham Market at 6.50 a.m. & dispatched
George llenry Dashwood M. A. then rector: there are 2oo at 7 ·p.m. ; sunday, dispatched 12 noon. llownham is
sittings. The register dates from the year I562. The liv- the nearest money order & telegraph office
ing is a rectory annexed to the vicarage of Stow Bardolph; This parish is in the United School Board district of Stow
:average tithe rent-charge £426, joint net yearly value £240, Bardolph, formed compnlsorily IO March, 1877
including 25 acres of glebe, in the gift of Thomas Leigh Board School (mixed), erected in r86g, for I90 children;
Hare esq. M.P., D.L. and held since 1869 by the Rev. Edward average attendance, 120; John H.andall, master; Miss
Everard Blf'ncowe B.A. of St. Alban Hall, Oxford, who re- Florence Baxter, infants' mistress
Goulder William, Hill house Fendick William, shopkeeper Mann John Parchan, shopkpr.Post offwe
Price Uev_ lly. Courtenay B.A. [curate] Filby Edward, farmer Martin John, butcher
COMMERCLA.L. Filby John, farmer Pond Herbert, carpenter
Alflatt James Henry, builder Goodrum \Villiam, agent for the Pru- Rose Samuel, beer retailer
Bell Robert, farmer dential Life Insurance Co Sherwood Edward, blacksmith
Bush Gcorgc, cowkeeper Hyncr William John, agent for the Snasdell Henry Jackson, shoe maker
Carter Ephraim, florist, Lynn road Rock Life Assurance Co. Broom hill Utting John, farmer
Cook Arthur, boot maker Knight Arthur, farmer, Lower farm Wales Robert, horse & cattle dealer
Onrrant Edwin S. farmer Lee George, baker & miller (wind) Whiterid James, Chequers P.H
EAST WINCH is a village and parish on the Swaffham charge £I4o, net yearly value £15o, including 23 acres of
road, with a station on the Lynn and Dereham section of glebe, with residence, m the gift of Edmund Kent esq. and
the Great Eastern railway, 5~ miles south-east-by-east from held since 1872 by the Rev. Edward John Alvis M.A. of
Lynn, in the North \Vestern division of the county, hundred, Christ's College, Cambridge. The charities derived from
petty sessional division and union of Freebridge Lynn, the church and town lands amount to £so yearly, which
Lynn county court district, rural deanery of Lynn Free- sum is applied under a scheme of the Charity Commissioners,
bridge, and archdeaconry and diocese of Norwich. The half to the repairs and expenses connected with the church
church of All Saints, situated on high ground, is an ancient and the other half to the relief of the poor. There are also
and lofty structure of carr stone and flint with stone dress- two small yearly charities, Morse's of £2 gs. 4d. and Hopes
ings, in the Perpendicular style, consisting of chancel, nave, of Ios. Edmund Kent esq. who is lord of the manor,
aisles, south porch and an embattled western tower with Morse's trustees, Miss narnard, G. Mills, J. Slater and
pinnacles containing one bell : it was new roofed and Thomas Aikin Rae esqs. are the principal landowners.
thoroughly restored in 1875• from designs by the late Sir The soil is varied; subsoil, carr stone and clay. The princi-
Gilbert Scott R.A. and.an organ chamber built at the south- pal crops are wheat, barley and turnips. The area is 2,388
east angle of the south aisle and chancel, upon the site of an acres; rateable value, £2,595 ; the population in 1891 was
ancient mortuary chapel of the Ilowards, Dukes of Norfolk : 367. .The common contains So acres.
in the east wall of the organ chamber is a brass tablet, Parish Clerk, James Newman.
recording the burial in 1309, of Sir William Howard kt. PosT, M. 0. & T. 0., S. B. & Annuity & Insurance Office.-
Justice of the Common Pleas, and of ten other members of Renry Marsh, receiver. Letters arrive from Lynn at 7· 18
the Howard family, to the year qoo: the oak pulpit was a.m. & I p. m.; dispatched at 1.5 & 5.30 p.m.; sundays
presented in I876 as a memorial to the late Mr. Jacob Curl, arrive at 8.17 a.m. & dispatched II.S p.m
and the stained east window erected in 1877 is a memorial WALL LETTER Box, Railway station, cleared at 12.45 &
to Edmnnd Kent esq. and there is one other : there are 3-25 p.m
tablets in the church to the members of the Kent, Curl and National School (mixed), erected in 1842, for 62 children;
Forster families, and a monument to William Barnes J.P. average attendance, 55 ; Miss Mildred Chosson, mistress
ob. 1657, and to another member of this family, I 670: there Railway Station, 'frevett Read Nas~ station master
are- 350 sittings, 230 being free. The register dates from CARRIERS TO LYNN.-Dye, mon. & thurs. & Hunter, tues.
the year 1678. The living is a vicarage, average tithe rent- & sat
.Alvis Rev. Edward John M.A. Vicarage Rae Thomas Aikin Asker James, farm bailiff to Edward
Bolton William Henry Coffin (late R-A) COMMERCIAL. William Betts esq. Grancourt farm
Huff William Gilson, Holland house Arter Robert, farm steward to Edward Bullimore George,Carpenters' Arms P.H
Kent Edmund, The Hall Lewis esq Clark Joseph, farmer
DIRECTORY. J NORFOLK. CENTRAL WINGLAND.
Curtis Mary (Miss), blacksmith ' Marsh Henry, shopkeeper, & registrar Newman James, parish clerk
Durrant Cb.arles, bricklayer of births & deaths for the Middleton Rae Thomas Aikin, farmer & landowner
James John, Maid's Head P.H sub-district, Freebridge Lynn union, Reeve Scarlet, Crown P.H
Lane Robert, builder Post office Smallbone Jn. coal mer. Railway station
Laws William, cattle dealer Marshall Robert, farm steward to Smith Charle11, farmer
Lewis Edward, farmer, Station & Hall Michael Gayen esq Smith John Alfred, farmer
farms Nash Trevett Read, station master Wilson Uriah, pork butcher
WEST WINCH is a village and parish 3 miles south tithe rent-charge £257, gross yearly value £339• with :29
from Lynn, in the North Western division of the county, acres of glebe and residence, in the gift of the Lord
hundred, petty sessional division and union of Freebridge Chancellor, and held since 1846 by the Rev. George Eller
Lynn, Lynn county court district, rural deanery of Lynn M.A. of Queens' College, Cambridge. Here is a Wesleyan
Freebridge and archdeaconry and diocese of Norwich. The chapel and a Primitive Methodist chapel, erected in 1874.
river Nar runs through the western side of the parish. The The lands belonging to the poor of West Winch yield a
church of St. Mary is an ancient building of flint and rubble, rental of about £35• which is chiefly expended in coals.
in the Early English and Perpendicular styles, consisting of The Marquess of Cholmondeley, who is lord of the manor,
chancel, with a vestry or sacristy on the north side, nave, and Thomas R. Whitaker esq. are chief landowners. The
south aisle, a curious south porch and an embattled western soil is mostly gravel and sand. The crops are wheat,
tower of four storeys with pinnacles and containing a clock barle.v and turnips. The area is 970 acres; rateable value,
and 3 bells: the stained east window was inserted in 1887 £2,6o4; the population in x891 was 421.
as a memorial to John and Harriot Lancaster by their son Parish Clerk, William Fayer.
and daughter; on the tower are tbe arms of the Chol- PosT & M. 0. 0., S. B. & .Annuity & Insurance Office.-
mondeley family : the rents of the church lands are applied Miss Mary Ann Winch, receiver. Letters through Lynn
to the repair of the fabric and ornamentation of the church, arrive at 7.15 a. m. & are dispatched at 6.10 p.m.;
and are amply sufficient for this purpose: there are 250 sunday, arrive 7· 15 a. m. & dispatched 11.55 noon. Lynn
sittings, go being free. The register dates from the year is the nearest telegraph office
1559, and are perfect with the exception of the register of National School (mixed), erected in 1837 & enlarged in
marriages 1623 to 1640, and that of burials 1649 to 1653, 1874, for So children; average attendance, 56; Miss
which have been torn out. The living IS a rectory, average Charlotte Bocking, mistress
Brutton Mrs Brooks Ernest, farmer: Gore John, farmer
Clarke William Thomas, Holly lodge Brooks Thos. wheelwright & carpenter Guyton James, brick maker
Duncan Alexander, Swiss cottage Clarke William Thos. farmer, Holly ldg llodgson Thomas, farmer
Eller Rev. George M.A. Rectory Cooper Thomas, farmer Kerrison Herbert Charles, miller (wind
Howes Mrs. Ruby lodge Couldham William, jobbing gardener & steam) & baker
Leake Herbert Anderson Davis James, market gardener Lerrmgton William (Mrs.), farmer
Little Harry L. Manor house Drew James, farmer Lincoln William, Sportsman P.H
Redhead Mrs. Church honse Dunn Thomas, farmer Little Harry L. frmr. Manor House frm
Springall Thomas Elyard Herbert, farmer, The Poplars Marshall John Thomas, builder
Wake Edward, Fern house Frost Henry, farmer Nichols John, farmer
Woodhouse George, Swiss cottage Frost John, jun. farmer Smith Leonard Claxton, farmer
COMllERCIAL. · Frost John, sen. farmer Warren Isaac, Chequers P.H
Baxter David Charles, agent to the Fuller Henry, farmer
1 West,'Vinch Labourers' Friendly Society
Refuge Assurance Company Limited j Fuller Wil~iam, Cock P.H. & blacksmith (Marquess of Cbolmondeloy, pres)
Bowler & Winch, linen drapers Godfrey George, farmer
WINFARTHING is a pleasant village and parish 3 monks, who found it to possess such virtues that they placed
miles north-west from Burston statiOn on the Ipswich and it in a shrine, to which many superstitious folk from far and
Xorwich section of the Great Eastern railway, and 4 north near came and offered gifts. The Lodge Farm, now in the
from Diss, in the Southern division of the county, Diss occupation of Mr. Henry Palmer, and on which are two oak
hundred, petty sessional division and county court district, trees of extraordinary dimensions, is a portion of a deer
Guiltcross union, rural deanery of Redenball, archdeaconry park of 1,ooo acres, inclosed by Philip Earl of Arundel and
of .Norfolk and diocese of Norwich. The church of St. Mary Surrey in 1604. The manor, anciently held by the Crown,
the Virgin is an ancient building of flint, in the Perpendicular was given by Henry VIII. to Sir William Montchesny.
style, consisting of chancel, nave, south aisle and an em- Lord Egerton of Tatton, who is now lord of the manor, the
battled western tower containing 5 bells: the interior is trustees of Richard ~akilwaine Phipson esq. Thomas lletts
plain, with an oak roof, there are five stained windows; in esq. and' James Ma.nn _esq. of Kensington, London, are the
1889 a new organ was erected, and there is an oak chest of chief landowners, and there are several smaller freeholders.
the 16th century, in which are kept many old and valuable The soil is heavy; subsoil, mostly clay. The chief crops are
deeds relating to the church property; the church was wheat, barley, clover, beans and peas. The area is 2,583
partially restored in 1873 by the Rev. E. Keppel, late rector, acres; rateable value, £3,784; the population in 1881 was
and affords 400 sittings. The register dates from the year 604 in 1891, 543·
1614. The living is a rectory, average tithe rent-charge. Parish Clerk, James Morley.
£434, net yearly value £3o5, including 30 acres of glebe PosT 0FFICE.-Miss Mary Howlett, receiver.
1

Letters
with residence, in the gift of Lord Egerton of Tatton, and arrive from Diss at. 8.20 a.m.; dispatched at 5.30 p.m. ;
held since 1883 by the Rev. George Keppel B.A. of Corpus Sundays, 8 a.m.; dispatched 11.30 a.m. There is a dis-
Christi College, Cambridge. There are Wesleyan and patch every night per mail cart on payment of Id. extra
Primitive Methoclist chapels. The fnel allotment of 40 postage at 9.30 p.m. The nearest money order & tele-
acres produces £so yearly and the Town's land of 45 acres graph office is at Banham. Postal orders are issued here,
about £8o yearly, of which sum £40 is applied to the support but not paid
of the school, the remainder being expended for coals for Parochial School (mixed), erected in 1854 on glebe land, by
the church and bread for the poor. There is an old tradition funds raised by the Rev. J. Bourne & partly supported,
here respecting a sword called "the Good Sword of Win- as mentioned above, for 8o children; average attendance
farthing," said to have belonged to a thief who had taken 73; John W. Sinclair, master
sanctuary, and afterwards to have been preserved by the · CARRIER TO Diss.-John Munford, tues. & fri
Keppel Rev. George B.A. Rectory Hart Tacon, landowner, farmer, cake, Reynolds William, farmer
COMMERCrAL. coal, manure & seed merchant Roper Edward, farmer
Banham George, bricklayer Havers John, Old Oak P.H Salter Robert, boot maker
Betts Thomas, landowner, farmer & Holmes David, bricklayer Saunders Henry, farmer
cattle dealer, Park farm Howlett "\'Villiam, farmer Scarfe Clara (Mrs.), farmer
Capes Frederick, farmer Lansdell Jeremiah, farmer Sharman Charles, farmer, Church farm
Catchpole Elizabeth (Mrs.), farmer Markham Stephen, farmer Smith Robert, farmer
Catchpole John, farmer Morlcy Edward, farmer Snelling Robert, Fighting Cocks P.H
Cbenery George, farmer Moreley James, farmer Spurdens Batson, tailor & farmer
Coleman George, farmer Mortlock Westhall John, farmer Warnes Robert, farmer
Driver Robert, wheelwright Newstead John, shopkeeper Witton Ann (Miss), shopkeeper
Filby Edmund,landowner & farmer Palmer Henry, fanner, Lodge farm Witton Joseph, farmer
Forster Frederick, plumber &c Phils Aarou, farmer Woodrow Geo. miller (wind & steam)
Gardner James, shopkeeper & butcher Phamix John, farmer Wragg Henry, farmer
Garrard Alien, farmer Pigney William, farmer Youngman Louisa (Mrs.}, farmer
Harper John, grocer Reeve William, thatcher ·
CENTRAL WING LAND is a parish partly in Norfolk, but mostly in Lincolnshire:' particulars are given in
Kelly's Directory of Lincolnshire.
684 WI~TERTON. NORFOLK. [KELLY'~
WINTERTON is a parish and fishing village, Imile Earl of Winterton, who is lord of the manor, F. William
north from Hemsbv station on the Eastern and Midlands Charsley esq. and Mrs. Hume are the chief landowners. The
railway, and about" 8 miles north-by-west from Yarmouth soil is light ; subsoil, gravel and sand. The chief crops are
and 21 from Norwich, in the Eastern division of the wheat, oats and barley. The parish comprises 1,295 acres
county, incorporated hundreds, petty sessional division and of land, exclusive of 220 acres of sea-beach and warren ;
incorporation of East and West Flegg, county court district rateable value, £1,527; the population in 1891 was 715.
of Great Yarmouth, rural deanery of Flegg and arch- Sexton, William Pestle.
deaconry and diocese of Norwich. The church of the Holy WINTERTON NEss, one of the chief promtmtorJes on the
Trinity and All Saints, built in the early part of the 14th east _coast, and a most dangerous part of the coast, is
century, is an edifice of stone, consisting of ehancel, nave, within this parish. The Trinity Board, in 185o, at the
aisles, south porch with parvise, and a fine embattled western request of the late Joseph Hume esq. M.P. the financial
tower, 127 feet high, with pinnacles, between which there reformer, placed a buoy on it. The coast generally is at
are in all eight figures, and it contains 6 bells : the tower, this point very dangerous to shipping ; in ancient times the
whiCh commands a fine sea view, was restored in r883 :
right to wreckage was appurtenant to the manor, and was
there are tablets to Joseph Hume M.P. d. 20 Feb. 1855, and
at one time a cause of dispute between the Abbot of St.
his son, Joseph Burnley Hume, d. 1871; the church was
Benet's-at-Holme and the prior of Norwich. .A letter on
thoroughly restored in 1878, under the direction of Mr.
this subject from "William Peacock, steward to Sir John
Herbert G-reen, architect, of Norwich, and chiefly at the
cost of Mrs. Burnley Hume, in memory of her husband, Paxton, then lord of the manor, dated 19 Nov. 1477, is
William Burnley Hume esq. who resided at the Hill House, included in the Paston letters.
and it now affords 400 sittings .. The registers, including PosT & M. 0. 0., S. B. & Annuity & Insurance Office.-
those of East Somerton, date from the year 1717 . The Mrs. Ann Bullock, sub-postmistress. Letters from
living is a rectory, with the chapelry of East Somerton Yarmouth, arrive at 7.15 a.m.; dispatched at 5.10 p.m.
annexed; average tithe rent-charge£ 412 , gross yearly value Hemsby railway station is the nearest telegraph office
£ 4 45, including 30 acres of glebe, with residem:e, in the Coast Guard Station, Samuel Alexander, chief boatman in
gift of and held since 1890 by the Rev. William Artbur charge
Green B.A. of Oxford University. Here is a Primitive Lighthouse, John Henry Watson, keeper
Methodist chapel, built in 1876. Here is a coast-guard ScHOOLS:-
station. In 1859 a surf boat was placed here by the National A School Board of 7 members was formed compulsorily 2
Life Boat Institution, and a sailing life boat in 188r; March, 1875, for the United District of Winterton & East
Edward Robert Boult is honorary secretary. The lighthou'le & West Somerton; .Albert Smith, 23 King street, Yar-
here, situated on elevated ground, is nearly 70 feet in height mouth, clerk to board ; Benjamin Howes, attendance
and is illuminated by a. prismatic reflector. .About 150 officer, West Somerton
fish~rmen are employed in the herring and mackerel fisheries. Board School, built in 1849 & enlarged in 1877, for 250
\\'interton had a market and fair, which have long been children; average attendance, 200; Harry lngrarn,
obsolete. Hill House is the scat of Mrs. Hume, and .has master; Mrs. Elizabeth Ingram, mistress
very fine ranges of hot-houses and conservatories. This j CARRIERS TO YARMOUTH.-llenry Smith, mon. wed. fn. &
place gives the title of Earl to the Tumour family. The sat.; William Bowgen
Abbott Edwin i lloult Edwd.. Rt. farmer,Winterton hall Johnson Thomas William, farmer
Braikenridge George John, Manor cot Brown Elias, ma1·ket gardener King James, Three Mariners P.H
Green Rev. William Arthur B.A.Rectory Brown Maurice, grocer & carpenter Larner George, bricklayer
Hume Mrs. Hill house Empson James, farmer l'ratt Albert John, grocer & draper
·waters Samuel Empson James, jun, farmer Smith Henry, carrier
Wilton Mrs. Church cottage GeorgeAbigale (Mrs.), shopkeeper Starling .Austic Wallace, miller (wind)
George Frederick Isaiah, grocer &c Starling George Davey, miller (wind)
COMMERCIAL. George Henry, shopkeeper & farmer
.Ab bott Ed win, artist Goffin Robert, grocer Waite James, Fisherman's Return P.H
Bowgen William, carrier He"l'!i.tt James, baker
GREAT WITCHING HAM is a village and parish, rights and privileges belonging to the church, the poor and
I! miles north from Lenwade station on the Eastern and the inhabitants generally. Witchingham Hall, the seat of
Midlands railway, 9 miles north-east from East Dereham, Viscount Canterbury D.L., J.P. the principal landowner, is
9 south-west from Aylsbam, in theN orthern division of the a large mansion of brick, surrounded by a park and woods,
county, Eynsford hundred and petty sessional division, St. but is now ( 1892) unoccupied. The Warden and Scholars
Faith's umon, Aylsham county court district, rural deanery of New College, Oxford, are the impropriators of the great
of Sparbam and archdeaconry and diocese of Norwich. The tithes and lords of the manor. The soil is sand and loam;
river Wensurn flows on the north of the parish. The church J subsoil, clay and gravel. The chief crops are wheat, roots,
of St. Mary is an ancient edifice of flint, in the Perpendicular barley and hay. The area is 2,245 acres; rateable value,
style, consisting of chancel, nave, aisles, south porch and £3,685 ; the population in 1891 was 558.
an embattled western tower containing 2 bells : the font is LE, wADE is a hamlet on the "\\' ensum over which there
anc!ent and richly carved : there are ~5? s~tting~. The I is a bridge of three ar~hes, with a station on the Eastern
regist~r dates ~ram the year 1539: The. hv1~g IS a VIcarage, and Midlands railway, r mile south of the church. .All
consolidated with the rectory of Little Witclungham, average Saints' Mission church erected in 1888 in connection with
tit~e rent-c_harge 1.:379, joint net yearly value £395, with St. Mary's, at a cost of £6oo, is an edifice of red brick and
r~sidence, m the gift of ~ew C~llege, Oxford, and held will seat 120 persons.
smce 1866 by the Rev . .Nicolas 1 arker Gepp B. A. of that Parish Clerk Arthnr Gaskins.
college. There are Primitive Methodist and Free Methodist ' . .
chapels here. An allotment of 25A. 3R. IIP. of common PosT ~ ~· 0. 0., S. B. ~ Annmty & I~~nran~ Office .. -
land is for the benefit of poor parishioners legally settled BenJamm Ho~lett, receiver. Letters VIa Norwil'h, arnve
here and being resident occupiers of land or tenements in 6.50 a.m.; ~Isp.atched at 4 p.m. :week days only. The
the parish. The church land of 15A. roP. is for the repair telegraph ofllce IS at Lenwade statwn
of the parish church. John Norris' charity of £r2 is for the WALL LETTER Box, at Vicarage, cleared at 3.30 p.m
education of 12 poor children: Oliver Le Neve's charity of National School (mixed), erected about 1827 for 140 chil-
2S. (derived from the rents of certain lauds in Wood Dal- dren: average attendance, 125; .Arthur E. Wager A.C.P.
ling) is for bread to be distributed every Sunday among the master
poor, and 6s. yearly on Christmas day: a donation from Lenwade Station, W. J. Marritt, master
New College, Oxford, of 4 coombs of peas is distributed on CARRIERS TO NoRWICH,-Others pass through from various
Ash Wednesday to poor inhabitants. There are also other places

Great Witchingham. Wyand Benjamin Edmonds, farmer · Crane William, blacksmith


. Farman Samuel, basket ma. & thatcher
Gepp Rev. Nicolas Parker B. A. [vicar 1 Lenwade. Fuller Chas. dealer in live poultry &c
Brooke Wm. farmer, Clay Hall farm Dunt John Graves George, Bridge inn
Dann William, farmer, River farm l''ellowcs Mrs. White house Gray William, cattle dealer
Dove George, farmer Sayer H.obert, Mill house Harvey George E. grocer, draper, baker
Harvey J oseph, farmer, England's farm & boot & shoe dealer
Hickling John Shepheard, farmer COMMERCIAL. Howlett Benj. shopkeeper, Post office
HowesRobert,miller (water),Eade's frm .Andrews James, shoe maker Page Henry, bricklayer
Snelling Robert, farmer Arthurton Henry, harness maker &c Pummell Thomas, pork butcher
Stimpson Benj. jun. farmr.Church frm Harrett George, shopkeeper Sayer John J. miller (water), Lenwade
Wiseman Geoffrey, farm bailiff to Bates Ebcnezcr, King's Head P.H mill ; & at Elsing mill
Stephen Leeds esq llro\\ n George, builder & farmer Smith l<'rederick (.Mrs.), shopkeeper
DIRECTORY.] NORFOLK. WIVETON. 685
Sharpin S. & Sons, corn, cake & seed Waters Robert & Richard, carriage Vinter J. 0. coal merchant
mers. Lenwade statn. ; & at Norwich makers & wheelwrights Young Charles, coal dealer
Tommas Elizabeth (Mrs.), bricklayer

LITTLE WITCHINGHAM IS a parish 2~ miles acres of glebe, in the gift of New College, Oxford, and held
south-east from Reepham station on the East Norfolk since 1886 by the Rev. Nicolalil Parker G-epp R.A. of that
section of the Great Eastern ra.ilway, 7~ south-west from college. Little Witchingham Hall, the residence of Mr. J.
Aylsham, 1! north-by-east from Lenwade station on the N. R. Ray, who farms nearly the whole parish, is a square'"
1

Eastern and Midlands railway, and 10 north-west from I mansion of brick, almost surrounded by a thriving planta-J
Norwich, in the Northern division of the county, Ey.nsford tion. John Henry Gurney esq. J.P. of Keswick Hall, and
hundred and petty sessional division, St. Faith's union, the trustees of Norman's Charity school, Norwich, are chief
Aylsham county court district, rural deanery of Sparham landowners. The soil is mixed ; subsoil, clay and graYel.
and archdeaconry and diocese of Norwich. The church The chief crops are wheat, roots, barley and hay. The
of St. I<'aith is a plain building of stone, consisting or area is 726A. oR. 5P. ; rateable value, £997; the popuhtion
chancel, nave, .south aisle and an embattled western tower in 1891 was 78.
containing one bell: there are 50 sittings. The register dates Letters received through Norwich. The nearest money
from the year 1565. The living is a rectory, consolidated order & telegraph office is at Lenwade
with the vicarage of Great Witchingham, average tithe rent- The children of this parish attend the school at Great
charge £379, joint net yearly value £395, including- 52 Witching ham
Ray J. N. R. farmer, Little Witchingham hall
WITTON, near North Walsham, is a parish, 4 miles for keepin~ his monument in repair, the latter sum, if not
north-east from North "\Valsham station, on the Great East- required for the monument, to be given to some poor family.
ern and Eastern and Midlands railways, in the Eastern Witton Park is the propertv of the Earl of Kimberley K.G.
division of the county, Tunstead and Happing petty sessional aud the residen-:-e of Lord Wodehouse J. P. ; the house, begun·
dh·ision, Tunstead hundred, Smallburgh union, county by the late John Norris esq. is a noble mansion of white
court district of North Walsham, rural deanery of Waxham, brick standing in the centre of a beautiful park surrounded
Tunstead division, archdeaconry of Norfolk and diocese of by plantations and on an eminence commanding a view of
Norwich. The church of St. Margarct is a building of flint, the sea. The Earl of Kimberley K.G., P.c. is lord of the
in the Early English style, consisting of chancel, nave, south manor and chief landowner. The soil is light mixed; sub-
aisle, south porch and a round embattled western tower soil, sand, gravel and clay. The chief crops are wheat, oats
containing one bell : the chancel was restored in 187 5 by the and barley. The area is 1, 704 acr~s ; rateable value, .£ 2,22~;
Ecclesiastical Commissioners: there are 200 sittings. The the population in r8gr was 233.
register dates from the year 1558, and is in perfect preserva- Parish Sexton, George Pryor.
tion. The living is a vicarage, average tithe rent-charge LRTTER Box cleared at 3.30 p.m. Letters through North •
£156, net yearly value£ r26, including 12 acres of glebe with Walsham arrive at 10 a. m. The nearest money order
residence, in the gift of the Bishop of Norwich, and held & telegraph office is at Bacton
since r846 by the H.ev. .J:<'rancis Procter lii.A. formerly fellow National School (mixed), erected in 1834 by the late Vtdy
and assistant tutor of St. Catharine's College, Cambridge. Wodehouse, for 40 children; average attendance, 40; the
Here is a Primitive Methodist chapel, built in r877· John ~ehool has an endowment of £ro, left by John Norris esq. ;
Norris, in 1777, left £w ros. a year to the vicar and £3 3s. Miss Susanah Buxton, certificated mistress
Wodehouse Lord J.P. Witton park Cole Robert, shoe maker 1Marshall William, farmer
Procter Rev. Francis M.A. Vicarage Cubitt llPrnard, farmer, Park farm Monsey William, farmer
Andrews Jonathan, miller (wind) Harmer William, farmer Turner Elizabeth (~rs. ), farmer
Brady Edward, farmer Hollis Waiter, shoe maker Youngman George, farmer
Cobon George, farmer, Old hall
WITTON, near Norwich, is a village and parish, 2 miles living is a rectory, consolidated with that of Brundall, aver-
north from Brundall junction station on the Norwich and I age tithe rent-charge £292, net yearly value £314, including
Yarmouth and Lowestoft sections of the Great Eastern : 21 acres of glebe, with residence, in the gift of and held
railway and 5 east from ~urwich, in the Eastern division of j since 1854 by the Rev. James Spurgeon Green M.A. of
the county, Blotield and Walsham petty sessional division, ! Christ's College, Cambridge. William Henry Trafford D.L. ·
R!ofield hundred and union, Norwich county court district, :of Brundall House, who is lord of the manor, and Jeremiah
rural deanery of Blolield and arcbdeaconry and diocese of Cozens Wiley esq. of Little Plumstead, are the principaL
1

Norwich. The church of St. Margaret is a small buildmg !landowners. The soil is mixed; subsoil clay. The chief
of flint in the Early English and Decorated styles, consisting I crops are wheat, barley and turnips. The area is 576 acres;
of chancel, nave, south porch and a small round western rateable value, £1,011; the population in r891 was I33·
tower containing one bell; the stained west window is a Parish Clerk, Rohert Maidstone.
memorial to Mrs. Maria Penrice, and is dated :~867: the PosT 0FFICE.-William &timpson, receiver. Letters through
stained east window was inserted by the present rector, who Norwich arrive at 5 a. m. & delivered at 7 a. m. & 5-35
also rebuilt the chancel in rB_s7: and there are other memor- p.m. for callers only; dispatched at 5·3.S p.m. The
ial windows and a mural tablet to Major Culley, who served nearest money order & telegraph office is at Blofield ;
with distinction in 17 actions, and died in 1884, and to his messages can also be sent & received at Brundall station
wife: the interior is seated with open oak benches, affording 'I'he children of this parish attend the school at Little
86 sittings. The register dates from the year 1571. The - Plumstead
Green Rev. Jas. Spurgeon M'. A. Rectory Culley Geo. Scot t,farmer, YewTree farm Mack Elizabeth(Mrs. ), frmr. Wi tton hall
Mack Mrs. Witton hall Trett James, farm bailiff to Jeremiah Wright Thomas, laundry
Pcnrice Miss, Witton house C. Wiley csq J

WIVETON (or WIVERTON) is a parish, near the sea- the late B. Bond Cabbell esq. and held since 1888 by the Rev.
1

coast, on the river Glaven, 4~ miles north-west-by-north Henry Norman Dalmaine M.A. of Queen's College, Cam-
1

from Holt stations on the Eastern and Midlands railway, and bridge. Ralph Greenaway, in 1529, devised property, now
I

about ~ mile west-by-south from Cley, in the Northern consisti.ng of the rectorial tithes of Briston, with a barn and
division of the county, Holt hundred, petty sessional division · a rood of land, and £r, 141 rrs. Consols, now producing an
1

and county court district, Walsingharn union, rural deanery income of about £450 yearly, one-sixth of which is applied
of Holt and archdeaconry and diocese of .1\"orwich. The to the repairs of the church, the remainder being devoted
church of St. Mary is a building of fiint with stone dressings, I to the weekly distribution of bread, clothing and money
chiefly in the Perpendicular style, and consists of chancel, I among the poor. Wiveton Hall is the seat of William Henry
clerestoried nave, aisles, north and south porches and an . Gifford Buck esq. and contains some fine carved oak panel-
embattled western tower containing 6 bells: there are brasses Jling .. Lord Calthorpe and Sir Alfred Jodi·ell hart. D. L., J.Pi
to George Brigge, late of Letheringsett, ob. 1597, and Anne, I of Bay field Hall, who are lords of the manor, and William
his wife, with etfigies and shields of arms, and an inscription , Henry Gifford Buck esq. are the chief landowners. The soil
on brass of the bequests to the parish by Ranlf Grenewey, I is mixed; subsoil, chalk. The chief crops are on the four-
citizen and alderman of London, ob. 1558, with merchants' course system. The area is 1,504 acres ; rateable value,
mark and shield of arms of the Grocers' Company; other £1,368; the population in 1891 was 220.
brasses of William Bisshop, priest, ob. 1512, and of a skeleton 1 Sexton, William Black wood.
in a shroud, c. 15<4-o, have been either wholly or partially re- I Letters received from Dereham, through Holt; arrive at 8.30
moved: the church affords 220 sittings. The register dates a. m. WALL LETTER Box cleared at 4.20 p.m. week days
from the year r _s58. 'I'he living is a discharged rectory, only. Cley-next-the-Sea is the nearest money order &
average tithe rent-charge £r67, net yearly value £185, with telegraph office
37 acres of glebe and residence, in the gift of the trustees of The children of this place attend the ~chool at Blakeney

C. N. & B. 41
686 WIVETON. NORFOLK. [KELLY's

Alien Philip Withers Mrs. The Cottage Nash Benjamin, farmer


Buck Wm. Hen. Gifford, Wiveton hall Coe Elizabeth (Mrs.), shopkeeper Wiveton Charity ( Ralph Green way's)
D'Almaine ,Rev. Henry Norman M.A. Fiske Samuel, Bell P.H (Robins Cooke, Glandford, agent to
Rectory GrimesCornelius&John, market gardnrs the trustees)
Hudson Misses Hudson Ernest, fanner, Church farm

WOLFERTON is a parish and small village on the sea- architect, of London, when the fine nave roof was carefully
coast, with a station on the Lynn and IIunstanton section of renovated, new roofs placed on the aisles and chancel, an
the Great Eastern Railway, 105 miles from London and 7 organ chamber and new organ built, the font re-set, the nave
north-by-east from Lynn, in the North Western division of seated with oak benches, the screens and rood and the steps
the county, Freebridge Lynn hundred, petty sessional leading to the latter repaired, and a very handsome stone
division and union, Lynn county court district, rural dean- pulpit erected, the gift of H.R.H. the Prince of Wales: dur-
ery of Lynn Freebridge and archdeaconry and diocese of ing the progress of the works in the interior of the church
Norwich. A building of carr stone and brick, containing some interesting remains of mural decoration, in red, yellow
waiting rooms with a covered platform, has been erected at and black, were discovered over the chancel arch, and have
the station for the use of T.R.H. the Prince and Princess of been carefully preserved; in the centre, where all traces of the
Wales and family, this being the nearest station to Sand- old work had disappeared, a" Majesty" has been added by
ringham. The church of St. Peter is a large edifice of carr Messrs. Heaton, Butler and Bayne : the church affords 200
stone, rebuilt after a fire which appears to have occurred sittings. The register dates from the year r 56o. The living
before 1486; but some parts of the building indicate the is a rectory, average tithe rent-charge£ 172, net yearly value
existence of a church of considerable size in the early part of £83, including 22 acres of glebe and residence, in the gift of
the 13th century: it is chiefly in the Decorated style and the Bishop of Norwich, and held since r883 by the Rev. John
consists of chancel, clerestoried nave, aisles, large south Francis .Mitchell B.A. of Trinity College, Cambridge, and
porch and an embattled western tower containing one large hon. chaplain to Her Ma,jesty the Queen and H.R. H. the
bell and a sanctus bell: the chancel retains three sedilia and ! Prince of Wales. H.R.H. the Prince of ·wales is lord of the
a piscina, and has stalls, partly ancient : the rood-screen, a manor and sole landowner. The soil is light, except the
work of late date, has a coved grained cornice: the clerestory . marsh land, which is stiff; subsoil, sand and carr stone on
of the nave is Perpendicular, and the magnificent oak roof · the higher land, with clay in the marsh, generally farmed
1

is of the same date: each of the aisles has a chapel at its • on the four-course shift. The area is 2,744 acres; rateable
eastern end, inclosed by screen work; that of the north ; value, £-3,620; the population in 1891 was 218.
chapel is late, but the screens inclosing the south chapel i Parish Clerk William Hudson.
belong to the middle of the 14th century and are unique for • '
the beauty and richness of the design and for the maste~ly I PosT. 0FFlCE.-Abraham Clax~on, postmaster. Letters
-character of its execution: the south porch was restored in i arrtve from Lynn at 7 a. m. i dtspatc~ed ~t 6.40 P·~· The
r868 and the interior was reseated and partially repaired by · nearest money or~er & telegraph office~~ at Dersmgham.
the Hon. Spencer Cowper: in 1 377 the sacristy was rebuilt, Postal orders are 1ssued here, but not pa1d
the east windows restored and the chancel re-arranged at a School (mixed & infants), built in 1877 & enlarged in r887
cost of over £2oo, defrayed by the Rev. W. W. Dickinson, for 120 children; average attendance, 35 ; a new house
late rector : in x886 the church was completely restored by for the master hRs been added by H.R.H. the Prince of
H.R.H. the Prince of Wales, at a cost of over £6,ooo, under Wales; J. W. Siggens, master
the direction of Sir A. W. Blomfield M.A., A.R.A., F.S.A. 1 Railway Station, Henry Leonard Saward, station master

ffolkes Geo. Howe Browne J.P. Manor ho Caller R. & Sons, corn, cake, seed & j. Gayford George William, cake, coal,
Mitchell Rev. John Francis B.A. [hon. coal merchants; & at Attleborough; salt & grease merchant &c. & insur-
chaplain to Her MajeRty the Queen Diss; Thetford & Norwich 1 ance agent, solicits orders for
& H.R.H. Prince of Wales], Rectory Dickie William, manager of stud farm "Waterloo Pure Round Linseed
Bassham Luke, clerk in estate oflice, for H.R.H. the Prince of Wales Cakes" & "The Waterloo Round
Sandringham Hudson James, farm bailiff to H.R.H. Cakes"
Claxton Abraham, coal agent & shop- the Prince of Wales, Church fal"m Siggens J. W. organist & choir master
keeper, Post office · Rix Frederick Wm. farmer, Marsh farm

WOLTERTON is a parish, 4 miles north-west from begun in 1727, after the destruction of the old Hall by fire,
Aylsham Town station and 3 miles north-east from Corpusty and completed in 1741 under the superintendence of Mr.
station, both on the Eastern and Midlands railway, and 9 Thomas Ripley, architect : it is at present unoccupied .
.'!Outh-west from Cromer, in the Northern division of the The Earl of Orford is lord of the manor and principal land•
county, South Erpingham hundred and petty sessional ownel". The soil is a good loam ; subsoil, brick earth. The
division, Aylsham union and county court district, rural chief crops are wheat, barley, turnips and grass. The area is
deanery of Ingworth and archdeaconry and diocese of Nor- 722 acres; rateable value, £1,078 ; the population in x88x
wich. A short distance north-east from the Hall are the was 47-
ruins of the ancient church of St. Margaret, little of which Itteringham is the nearest LETTER Box. Letters through
~xcept the tower, now remains. The inhabitants attend the Aylsham, which is the nearest money order office; Aid-
church at Wickmere. The living is a rectory, consolidated borough is the nearest telegraph office
with Lhat of Wickmere. The poor have 36s. yearly from This place is included in the Wickmere United School Board
Seamier's charity. The greater part of the parish is corn- district, formed compulsorily 15 July, 188o
prised in the extensive park attached to Wolterton Hall, the The children of this place attend the schools at Wickmere &
property of the Earl of Orford : the present mansion was Itteringham
Cubitt Robert John, farmer, Manning- Davison William, head gat"dener to the Williamson Henry, gamekeeper to the
ton Hall farm Earl of Orford Earl of Orford
Shepheard Robert, farmer

WOODBASTWICK is a village, pleasantly situated gift of Albemarle Cator esq. and held since I 848 by the Rev.
near the river Bure, 2t miles north-east from Salhouse Henry Peter Dunster M.A. of Magdalen Hall, Oxford. There
station on the Cromer branch of the Great Eastern railway is an ancient endowment of about 7 acres of land for the
and 8 north-east from Norwich, in the Eastern division of poor of the parish. Woodbastwick Hall; the seat of Albe-
the county, Blofield and Walsham petty sessional division, marle Cator esq. B. A., D.L., J.P. who is lord of the manor and
Walsham hundred, Blofield union, Norwich county court sole landowner, was burnt down in December, 1882: the
district, rural deanery of Blofield and archdeaconry and new Hall, completed in August, 1889, is a splendid mansion
diocese of Norwich. The church of SS. Fabian and Sebastian, of red brick with stone dressings in the Elizabethan styiP,
standing in the centre of the village, is a building of flint standing upon a different site on higher ground in the 1 ark,
1rith stone dressings and a thatched roof, in the Decorated and commands extensive views of the river Rure and
style, consisting of chancel, nave, south porch and an ern- several broads : the interior contains a number of valuable
battled western tower with pinnacles, containing 2 bells: pictures and objeGts of art: attached to the Hall is a private
the stained east window is a memorial to John and llertie c)lapel: the Hall and stables are fitted throughout with the
Cator, d. x859, and there are a number of other stained electric light, and in the park are a herd of white polled
windows, several of which are memorials: the church was cattle. The soil is mixed ; subsoil, brick earth. The chief
restored il). 1878-9 under the direction of the late Sir G. crops are wheat, barley and oats. The area is 2,157 acres;
Gilbert Scott R.A. at a cost to the patron of £s,ooo, and rateable valne, .{2,439; the population in 1891 was 264.
affords r8o sittings. The register dates from the year 1558.
Parish Clerk, William Fryer.
The living is a vicarage, with the rectory of Panxwort.h
annexed, average tithe rent-charge £228, joint net yearly I PosT & T. 0.-Reuben Green, sub-postmaster. Letters
Talue £3o2, including 57 aerlis of glebe and residence, in the through Norwich arrive at 7-45 a, m. ; dispatched at 3·45
DIRECTORY. J NORFOLK.

WOODRISING. SB7t
p.m. Salhouse is the nearest money order office. Postal . Cator esq. for 45 children; average attendance, 36; Miss
orders are issued here, but not paid Alice Calver, .mistress
Sational School (mixed), built in r88r, at the expense of A.
Cat.or Albemarle B.A., D.L., J.P. Wood- Fowler Howard Harris William, farmer, Heath farm
bastwick hall ; & Beckenham Place, Barnard Waiter, head gamekeeper Roofe William Elden, shoeing & gen-
Kent; Trewsbury, Cireucester; & 83 Coe Joseph, farmer eral smith & agricultural implement

Eaton square s w & Carlton club, Goulder Samuel, farmer, Street farm .repairer
London s w Greig Thomas Burt, estate agent to A. Todman Thomas James, head gardener
Cator John B.A., J.P. Woodbastwick Cator esq to A. Cator esq. B.A
ball; & 83 Ea ton square, London s w Green Reuben, estate carpenter,Post off Winter Robert, tailor & fowl dealer
Dunster Rev. Hy. Peter :M.A. Vicarage
WOOD DALLING is a parish and village, 2~
miles their attendance upon God and His Ordinance." The late
south-by-west from Corpusty station, about the same dis- Lord lY<~lling and Bulwer, the distinguished diplomat and
tance north-east from Guest wick station, both on the Eastern writer, and ambassador to the Ottoman Porte I858-65, took
and ~Iidlands railway, and 7 west from Aylsham, in the his title from this parish: he died May 23, r872. Brig .•
Northern division of the county, Eynsford hundred and Gen. William Earle Gascoyne Lytton Bulwer J.P. of Quebec
petty sessional division, Aylsham union and county court House, J)p,reham, and Heydon Hall, is lord of the manor and
district, rural deanery of Sparham and archdeaconry and chief landowner. The soil is sand and loam; subsoil, clay
diocese of Norwich. The church of St. An drew is a large and gravel. The chief crops aro wheat, roots, barley and
and well-bmlt edifice of flint, in the Perpendicular style, hay. The area is 2,444 acres ; rateable value, £3,214 ; the
consisting of chancel, nave, aisles, north porch and an em- population in rBgr was 473·
battled western tower containing 5 bells : there are several Parish Clerk, George Neale.
memorial brasses and slabs to the Bulwer and Fleetwood PosT 0FFICE.-Mrs. Elizabeth Churchman, receiver. Letters
families: the church was restored in r867 and has 300 sittings, through Norwich, via Reepham, delivered at 8.25 a.m.;
150 being free. The register dates from the year 1653. dispatched at 2.45 p.m. The nearest money order office
The living is a vicarage, gross yearly value, arising from is at Saxthorpe & telegraph. otfice at Corpusty railway
tithe modus and 57 acres of glebe, £117, with residence, in station ·
the gift of Trinity Hall, Cambridge, and held since r888 by WALL LETTER Box, Church road, cleared 3 p.m. week days
• the Rev. George Hew Butler M.A. of Trinity Hall, Cambridge. only .
A parish mission room was built by the vicar in r Bgo. There A School Hoard of 5 members was formed 5 October, r882 ;
are also Congregational and Primitive Methodist chapels and H. J. Mills, 5 Bank street, Norwich, clerk to the board
Salvation Army Barracks. Bulwer's charity of £6 ros. Board School (mixed), erected in r85r, for go children;
yearly, was left to be r;listributed in monthly sums to such of average attendance, 6o ; William Albert Warren, certifi-
the poor "as shall be most in want, and most regular in cated master; Mrs. Warren, sewing mistress
Butler Rev. George Hew M.A. [vicar], Fisher John, farmer Newstead Benjamin, steward to Bri~.­
The Vicarage Francis Philip & Cubitt, farmers Gen. W. E. G. Lytton Bulwer l.P
COMMERCIAl.. Gibbons William Richard, Plough P.H Pegg James, carpenter
BussensJas Jolly Farmers P.H.&butcher Grapes Sarah Ann (Mrs.), shopkeeper Stringer Charles, farm bailiff to Robert-
Bussens Rohert, farmer Leaken Phrebe Ann (Miss), farmer Ives esq. l.P. of Calthorpe
Churchman Elizh.(Mrs. ),grocer, Post off Margeson Barnee, farmer Ward Esther (Mrs.), shopkeeper
Clark Alfred, farmer Moul Elizabeth (Mrs.), farmer Ward Waiter, carpenter
Clark IIerbert Geortre, farmer Neale Charles, farmer Ward William llenry, blacksmith
Cowell Arthur, carpenter :Xeale George, farmer Wilson Elizabeth (Mrs.), blacksmith
Eke l\Iartha (Mrs.), farmer ~eale George, shoe maker

WOOD NOR TON is a par1sh, 2 miles south-west from the rates and for fuel. The rents of the fuel allotment, con-
Ilindolveston station on the Eastern and l\fidlands rmlway, taining r8~ acres, let for £2Q yearly, awardad at the in-
6 east-by-south from Fakenham and 8 sonth-west from Holt, closure of r8r3, and of half an acre of other land, are given
in the Northern division of the county, Eynsford hundred to the poor in coals. Norton Hall, at present unoccupied, is
and petty sessional division, Aylsham union and county the property of William Edward Norris esq. J.P. The Dean
court district, rural deanery of Sparham, and archdeaconry and Chapter of Christ Church, Oxford, are lords of the
and diocese of Norwich. The church of All Saints is a manor and chief landowner;;. Lord Hastings, the trustees
plain building of flint in the Early English style, cvnsisting of Mrs. Gill and William Edward Norris esq. J.P. are also
of chancel, nave, south porch and an embattled western landowners here. The soil is mixed ; subsoil, clay and
tower of flint and brick, containing one bell: in the church marl. The chief crops are wheat, roots, barley and hay.
are memorials to several former rectors: the building was The parish contains 1,726 acres ; rateable value, £2,275 ;
thoroughly restored and reseated in r88r, at a cost of nearly the population in r88r was 284.
£r,coo, and affords 200 sittings. The register dates from Parish Clerk, William Wright.
the year 1722. The living is a rectory, tithe rent-charge PosT OFFICE. -Frederick Bidewell,receiver. Letters throng he
£446, average £327, net yearly value £26r, with 6o acres of Dereham, arrive at 6.45 a. m. ; dispatched at 5-45 p.m.
glebe and residence, in the gift of the Dean and Chapter of Guist is the nearest money order office & Foulsham the
Christ Church, Oxford, and held since 1884 by the Rev. nearest telegraph office ·
Henry Chittenden H.ogers M.A. of that house. Here is a Church of England School (mixed), built in 1875· for 70
Primitive Methodist chapel. The rents of the old workhouse children ; average attendance, so; Miss Inez Trollope,
and of 14t acres of town land are assigned to the relief of mistress
Norris William Edward J.P 1 Doughty William Gill, shoe maker Mitchell William, farmer
RogersRev.Hy.ChittendenM.A.Rectory i Drewell James, farmer Mitchell William James, wheelwright
COMMERClAL. 1 Gidney John, farm bailiff to William Russell William, Horseshoes P.H
Bell Robert, farmer 1 Ed ward N orris esq Wilson Thomas, farmer, Church farm
Bidewell Fredk.grocer & draper, Po:st off Harrison John Southgate, farmer Wright William, bricklayer
Jlutler John William, farmer Long John, miller (wind) Wright William, tailor
Dack Robert, Sun P.H. & blacksmith Mitchell John, farmer Yarham James, farmer, Raw hall
WOODRISING is a village and parish on the river Sir I•'rancis Crane, knighted at Coventry 4th Sept. 1617 ; he
Blackwater, 5 miles west from Hardingham station on the was chancellor of the order of the Garter and died at Pans,
Wymondham and Wells section, 6 north-east from Watton 26th June, 1636 : Christopher Sutton D. D. who flourished as
station on the Bury, Thetford and Swaffham section of the an author about 1600, was incumbent hel'e in the reign
Great Eastern railway and 8 south from East Dereham, in of James I. : the church was thoroughly restored in 1888
the Mid division of the county, Mitford and Lannditch and now affords sittings. The register dates from the
petty sessional division, Mitford hundred and union, East year 1562. The living is a rectory, tithe rent-charge £255,
Dereham county court district, rural deanery of Hingham, present yearly value £rg6, net £r82, with 17 acres of glebe
Mitford division, archdeaconry of Norfolk and diocese of and residence, in the gift of John Weyland esq. and held
Norwich. The church of St. Nicholas is a small building, since 1887 by the Rev. John Lacy Miller, of St. Aidans.
in the Perpendicular style, consisting of chancel, nave aud Mowting's dole is a small annual payment to poor widows.
south porch: the tower has for a long period been in ruins: Woodrising Ilall, the property of John Weyland esq. is now
in the chancel is an ancient monument, with a recumbent occu.pied by A. J. Mulholland esq. Sir Francis Crane kt.
figure in armour, supposed to represent Sir Robert South- mentioned above, who purchased this lordship from Sir
well, a former lord of this manor; and a flat monument to Thomas Southwell kt. in the early part of the 17th century~
C. N. & S. 44 =If:
688 WOOD RISING. NORFOLK. [KELLY'S

introduced into England the manufacture of tapestry and and sole landowner. The soil is mixed ; subsoil, clay and
with the help of £2,000 granted by James I. towards the gravel. The chief crops are wheat, barley and turnips.
end of his reign established a factory at Mortlake, in Surrey, The parish consists of x.364 acres ; rateable value, £1,399 ;.
where much of the finest tapestry which still survives in the population in x8gr was go.
onr principal country mansions was made; but the work Parish Clerk, Charles Smith.
came to an end with the civil war: Sir Francis also gave
£5 00 towards the rebuilding of ~t. Paul's Cathedral, and Letters through Thetford arrive at 8 a. m. Hingham is the.
added four knights to the order of military knights of nearest money order & telegraph office
Windsor, instituted by Edward III. John Weyland esq. School (mixed), supported by Lady Catherine Weyland;.
D.L., .J.P. of Woodeaton, near Oxford, is lord of the manor Miss E. Rose, mistress
Miller Rev. John Lacy, Rectory
Mulholland Alfred J. Old hall
I Staines William Walden, farmer Vassar Charles Christmas, farmer •

WOODTON is a village and parish, 4 miles north-west. Primitive Methodist chapel. The church lands of roA. IR_
from Ditchingham station on the Waveney Valley sec- and situated in Brooke parish, &re now let for a yearly rent.~
tion of the Great Eastern railway, Io south-east from of £rr, which sum is applied to the repairs of the church::.
Norwich and 5 north-west from Bungay, in the South- there are also 26A. 3R. of Land for the relief of the poor in..
ern division of the county, Loddon. hundred, Lodd,on this parish, now let for £ro: Henry Moyse, in IJ05••
and Clavering petty sessional division and union, county devised 20 acres of Land in Geldestone and a house, barn and
court district of Bungay, rural deanery of Hrooke, stable, now let for £35 yearly, which is distributed at the-
eastern division, archdeaconry of Norfolk and diocese of church in bread and coals: the poor have also two other-
Norwich. The church of All Saints is an ancient building yearly allowances, amounting to r6s. Robert Fellowes esq.
of rubble and tiint in the Early English style, consisting of of Shotesham Park, is Lord of the manor and tbe principal
chancel, nave, north porch (serving as a vestry), south landowner. The soil is mixed; subsoil, sand, gravel and
porch and au embattled western tower, circular at the base, clay. The chief crops are wheat, barley and roots. The-
with au octagonal belfry, containing a fine peal of 6 bells, area is 2,124 acres; rateable value, £2,244; the population.
renovated and re-hung in r889, at a cost of £'40: in tl'le in r89r was 445·
church is a marble effigy of Anne, wife of Robert Suckling Parish Clerk, Henry Gooch.
esq. ob. r653: the church was restored in r878-9, when it Letters through Bungay, which is the nearest money order
was new roofed, reseated, a south porch added, the Norman & telegraph office, arrive at 8.30 a. m. Box closes at 4.25 ·
fonli of Pur beck marble renovated and placed in a recess at p. m. ; sunday at 11 a.m
the entrance of the church and the whole re-floored: there A School Board of 5 members was formed compulsorily I'f-
are 250 sittings. The register dates from the year 1538. October, 1875; R. Waldegrave Packer, jun. Chedgrave,
Th3 living is a rectory, net yearly value £439, including 24 clerk to the board; Herbert Tidnam, attendance officer
acres of glebe and residence, in the gift of King's College, Board School (mixed), built in 1876, at a cost of£ r,r:xm, for-
Cambridge, and held since 1875 by the Rev. l<'rederick roo children; average attendance, 71 ; Mark Teadman~
Edward Long M.A. late fellow of that college. Here is a master; Mrs. Mark Teadman, mistress
Long Rev. I<'redk. Edward M. A. Rectory BultonJohn,shopkeeper&assist.overseer Peckett Jn.farmer&overseer, Manor frm
Simpsrin Mrs Eastoe Charles, farmer Penn William farmer
Tidnam Jame.s, Woodton lodge Easton Isaac, farmer, Manor farm Hiches George, shopkeeper
COMMERCIAL. Everett Thomas Aldis, shopkeaper & Royal John Richard, grocer & draper
Baldwin Benjamin, bricklayer miller (wind) Tidnam James, farmer, Woodton lodge.
Baldwin Charles, bricklayer & farmer Everrett George, steward to Robert Tidnam William, carriage builder
Beckett Barnabas, farmer Fellowes esq Vincent David, King's Head P.H
lleckett Salim, carpenter Gooch IIenry, blacksmith & parish clerk Webb Alfred, hurdle maker
Blythe Joseph, farmer Hadingham Jn. Tumble Down Dick P.H W oolnough 'William, farmer •
Burgess Ed ward & Benjamin, farmers Harvey George, harness maker
NORTH WOOTTON is a village and parish overlook-· purposes, was expended by the rector in 1883, with the per-
ing the Wash, with a station ou the Lynn and Hunstanton mission of the Charity Commissioners, in the erection of a.
section of the Great Eastern railway, 3~ miles north from good reading room and in the conveyance of water into the
Lynn, in the North Western division of the county, Free- village. During the years I858, I866 and r86J, about I,500
bridge Lyrm hundred, petty sessional division and union, acres of land were inclosed and reclaimed by the Estuary
Lynn county court district, rural deanery of Lynn Free- Company, and this enterprise IS still proceeding. The
bridge and archdeaconry and diocese of Norwich. The trustees of the late lion. G. J. IIoward are lords of the
church of All Saints is a structure of rubble, with Bath manor and chief landowners. The soil is sand and stiff
stone quoins, in the Early English style, consisting of loam; subsoil, various. The crops are wheat, barley,
chancel, nave, south porch and an embattled western tower turnips, mangold-wurtzel, beans and grass. The area is
containing one bell: the stained east window is a memorial 2,441 acres; rateable value, £3,226; the population in 1891
to the Hon. Mary, widow of Col. Hon. Fnlke Greville was 268.
Howard, d. 19 Oct. r877, and there are also three stained Parish Clerk, Austin Brown.
windows, inserted in r883 as memorials to the Rev. William Letters through Lynn arrive at 8.30 a. m. The nearest money
Wilcox Clarke M.A. formerly rector of this parish and rural order office Gaywood & Lynn telegraph office. Postal
dean : there are 150 sittings. The register dates from the orders can be obtained 11t Castle Rising. ''V ALL LETTER.
yeat '1:654· The living is a rectory, average tithe rent- Box cleared at 6.25 p. m. sun days excepted
charge £r78, gross yearly value £r94, including 12 acres of National School (mixed), erected in r865, for 6o children;
glebe, with good residence, in the gift of the representatives average attendance, 48 ; the school is endowed· with £2o
of the Ho~;~.. G. J. Howard, and held since r88r by the Rev. . tithe rent-charge left by the Hon. Mrs. Howard on con·
Henry Edward Suckling M.A. of Caius College, Cambridge. dition that the principle~ of the Church of England are
The charities of about £w yearly value derived from tithe alway!l to be taught; Miss Emily Alden Bray, mistress &
rent-charge, were left by the Hon. Jllhry Greville Howard. Miss Agnes Mary Plowright, assistant mistress
A sum of£ 150, left by Hon. Mrs. Howard for charitable Railway Station, Dennis Metclafe, station master
SucklingH.ev. lly~ EdwardM.A.Rectory Gamble James, gamekeeper to- the Royston Richard (exors. of), farJl!.ers 7
COMMERCIAL. Duke of Fife K..T., P.C Manor farm
Blake John, blacksmith Gay & Wilson, sand merchants & Shipp James, farmer
Brown Austin, parish clerk farmers [letters via Leziate J Thorpe Philip, Red Cat P.H
Fulcher Mary (Miss), dress maker Rolfe Sarah (Miss), shopkeeper Towler Henry, beer retailer

Gay Thomas, farmer Royston August us, farmer, Home farm
SOUTH WOOTTON is a parish. and village near the south side of the chancel are three sedilia of stone, a piscina,
road from Lynn to Hunstanton, one mile south from North and au altar-tomb to Sir James Thomas Winde kt. dated
Wootton station on the Lynn and Hunstanton section of the r6or ; on the north side is a mausoleum of the Hamond
Great Eastern railway, 2~ north-by-east from Lynn, in the family : the font is Norman: there are I So sittings, 40 being
North Western division of the county, Freebridge Lynn free. The register dates from the year 1556. The living is
petty sessional division and union, Lynn county court dis- a discharged rectory, average tithe rent,-charge £213, net
trict, I'ural deanery of Lynn l<'reebridge and archdeaconry yearly value £159, including 6 acres of glebe, with resi-
and diocese of Norwich. The parish is bounded on the dence, in the gift of the Lord Chancellor, and held since
west by the Lynn Channel or the Wash. The church of St. 1862 by the Rev. Francis Parnell Gilbert llf.A. of Jesus Col-
· Mary is an ancient cruciform structure of brick in the Early lege, Cambridge. The Et>tuary Company are still engaged
English and Decorated styles, consisting of chancel, nave, in inclosing the sea frontage of North and South Wootton;
transepts, south porch and a.n embattled western tower, in- Castle Rising and Wolferlon. The trustees of the Late
jured by lightning in r88r, and containing 3 bells: on the Arthur Ramsden esq. J.P. of Stoneness, Asburst, Kent, who
DIRECTORY.] NORFOLK. WORSTEAD • 689
..are lords of the manor, and Anthony Hamond esq. D.L.,J.P. PosT 0FFICE.-Matthew Marsters, sub-postmaster. London
.of West Acre High House, are the principal landowners. The & other letters. through Lynn, arrive at 4.25 a. m. & are
soil is in some parts gravelly and in others clay; the low dispatched at 7-5 p.m. Lynn is the nearest telegraph
lands are protect~d from the sea by an embankment. The 1 office & Gaywood the nearest money order office. Postal
chief crops are wheat, barley, oats and turnips. The parish orders are issued here, but not paid
comprises r,og6 acres; rateable value, £x,831; the popula- National School (mixed), erected in r862, at a cost of £170,
twn in 1891 was 152. for 6o children ; average attendance, 27; Miss S. E. Earl>•
Parish Clerk and Sexton, Matthew Marsrers. I mistress
"Blomfield Alfred Hardy John, farmer Pinchen Edward, pig dealer
Carritt Charles Holmes John, coal dealer Pinchen Lewis, pig dealer
Gilbert Rev. Francis Parnell M. A. Kirby James, market gardener Staple ion William,The SwanP.H.&farmr
Rectory Marstcrs Matthew, parish clerk & sex- Walker Alfred, farmer
Peek George ton, Post office Warnes William, farmer
COMMERCIAL. Martin Edward, dairyman Worby Aaron, gamekeeper to the Du
Blomfield Edward, farmer, Manor farm Panks Henry, bricklayer of Fife K.T., P.C
WORMEGAY (or WERMIGEY) is a village and parish on dissolution had revenues estimared at £170. Here also was
the formerly navigable river Nar, 4 miles east from Magda- a castle, anciently the residence of the Lords Bardolf, who
Jen Road junction station on the Ely and Lynn section of the acquired this lordship through the marriage, in the 12th
Great Eastern railway and 7 south-south-east from Lynn, century, of Beatrix, daughter and heir of William de War-
in the South Wesrern division of the county, Clackclose bun- renne, with Doun Bardolf; the fortress was demolished in
dred and petty sessional division, Downham union and 1408 by Henry IV. but its site can still be traced. Henry
-county court district, rural deanery of Fincham, arch- Lee-Warner esq. J.P. of Walsingham Abbey, who is lord of
deaconry of Norfolk and diocese of Norwich. The church the manor, Robert Henry Household esq. of West Bilney
of St. Michael is a small and low but ancient thatched Hall, John James Coulton esq. of Little Ketlam, Pentney,
building of flint in the Early English style, consisting of William Boon esq. of Tottcnhill and Curties' trustees are the
..chancel and nave and a small embattled western tower con- principal landowners, but there are many small properties.
t.aining one bell: the church, which affords 100 sittings, is The soil is various, peat and loam; subsoil, sand and gravel.
now (x8g2) condemned as unsafe. The register dates from The chief crops are wheat, oats, barley, turnips and clover.
the year I.')6I. The living is a vicarage, unired in 1871 with The area is 2,785 acres ; rateable value, £2,337; the popu·
that of Tottenhill, average tithe rent-charge £15, joint net · lation in 1891 was 431.
yearly value i;274, inc~uding ~o acres of. glebe, with r~si- At SETCH BRIDGE is the extensive brewery and maltings
dence, erec~ed m r8g2, m the glft of the B1shop of NorwiCh, of Messrs. George Hogge and Seppings .
.and held smce 1890 by the Rev. Samuel Theodore Leupolt Parish Clerk Hammond Neal.
.lii.A. of Caius College, Oxford, who resides at Tottenhill. '
Here is a Primitive Methodist chapel, erected in 1862, which PosT OFFICE.-Mrs. Catherine Emma Nurse, receiver.
has a Sunday school attached. The fuel allotment of 21 Letters through Lynn arrive at 8.xo a.m.; Letter Box
acres produces £28 I5S. yearly. The remains of a very cleared at5.25 p.m.; sundays at 10.50 a.m. East Winch
-ancient cross have been replaced on the village green by Mr. is the nearest money order & telegraph office
William Gilson Iloff. There was anciently a priory here, National School (mixed), for the parishes of Wormegay &
founded m the time of Henry II. by Reginald de Warrenne, Tottenhill, erected in 1839, for 160 children; average
-<Jf Castle Acre, for monks of the Premonstratensian order, attendance, 120; Miss Eliza Warden, mistress
and dedicated to SS. Mary, John the Evangelist and the CARRIERS TO LYNN.-Watk.ins, tues. & sat. & Thurston,
Holy Ghost ; in 1468 it became a cell to Pentney, and at its tues. & fri
.Blunt Rev.WilliamRussellB.A.[curate], Bray Henry, farmer, Bridge farm Hearn Edward, beer retailer
The Manor house Fish William, Red Lion P.H Mellows Matthew, farmer
Gomm Frank F. Sctch bridge Flood Frederick, blacksmith Neal Hammond, parish clerk & boot ma.
Henslowe Mrs. Gamble John, Crown P.H. & carpenter Nurse David, farmer
:Seppings James, Wormegay grange & assistant overseer Nurse Robert, farmer
COMMERCIAL. Gore Jasper, farmer Short Thomas, shopkeeper & farmer
Batrerbee George, farm bailiff to H. Hoff Henry, farmer & landowner Smith Thomas, farmer
Lee-Warner esq. J.P. Park farm Hogge (George) & Seppings, brewers, Thurston James, beer retailer, farmer
Jlennett John, cattle dealer maltsrers & spirit merchants, Hetch & carrier
flussens John W"illiam, registrar of Bridge brewery ; & at King street, Traurer Charles Dryland, cigar mer-
births & deaths & relieving officer Lynn (tues. only) ; & at Stoke Ferry, chant, Setch bridge
for Wiggenhall sub-distnct llrandon Watkins William, grocer & carrier
WORSTEAD (anciently called WoRSTEDE) is a parish bread. The late Rev. Henry Wharton left the rent of 22
and town, pleasn:. tly situated on gradually rising ground acres of land in Shotesham for the repair of the church.
near a stream, 1'\<th a station on the North ''Valsham branch This parish, in remote times, was a manufacturing and im-
"'f the Great Eastern railway, 8 miles north-east from Ayls- portant market town and the original seat of the manufac-
ham and 3 so· ~.h-by-east from North Walsham, in the ture of worsted stuffs, to which It gives its name, but this
Eastern divisi<' of the county, Tunstead and Rapping petty industry is now confined to Norwich and neighbourhood. A
~ssional division, Tunstead hundred, Smallburgh union, fair is annually held on the 12th and 13th of May, for cattle.
North Walsham county court district, rural deanery of In the reign of Edward the Confessor the lordship belonged,
Waxham, Tunstead division, archdeaconry of Norfolk and as the gift of Kmg Cnut, to the Abbey of St. Bene't-of-
diocese of Norwich. The church of St. Mary is a building Holme, near Horning: the manor was then held of the
of freestonc and flint in the Gothic style, consisting of chan-abbot by Robert, an officer, whose son, Odo, assumed the
cel, nave, aisles, south porch and an embattled western name of De Worstede or Worsted. On the dissolution of the
tower with four pinnacles, containing a clock and 6 bells : abbey, 27 Hen. Vlll. (1535-6), the manor belonging to it,
the font is hexagonal, each face being finely sculptured: with the rectory and the patronage of the vicarage, were
the organ was erected in 1879 at a cost of £250: there were granted to the Dean and Chapter of Norwich, by w horn it is
originally nine chapels, two of which were dedicated respect- at present held. Worsread House, the seat of Colonel
ively to the Virgin and St. John the Baptist; and of these theWilliam John Rous, is a fine mansion of red brick, standing
former was restored by the late vicar in 1878, in memory in a noble park of about 300 acres, which contains a lake
of his father: two remarkable double screens divide the covering 8± acres. The Dean and Chaprer of ~ orwich and
chapels from the aisles: the chancel was thoroughly re- Mrs. Postle, of Smallburgh, are lords of the chief manor,
stored in 1891, and the church affords soo sittings. The but the parish includes not less than 20 manors, prin-
register dates from the year 1558. The living is a vicarage, cipally belonging to the Dean and Chapter of Norwich and
average tithe rent-charge £205, gross yearly value about Col. Rous: trustees of the late John Seaman Postle esq.
£270, with four acres of glebe and residence, in the gift of Col. W. J. Rous, of Worstead House, Mrs. Petre, of West-
the Dean and Chapter of Norwich, and held since 1888 by wick House, and Henry Morse Taylor esq. J.P. of the Rook-
the Rev. Art.hur James Back M.A. of Caius College, Cam- ery, Dilham, are the principal landowners. The soil is
bridge. The Baptist chapel, on Meeting House hill, was mixed ; subsoil, sand and gravel. The chief crops are wheat,
erected in 1829 m place of an older building : in r886 it was oat.s and barley. The area is 2,6o3 acres; rateable value,
reseated at a cost of about £300, and will now seat 500 per- £4,159; the population in 1891 was 819.
Bona: connected with this chapel is a burial ground, par-
sonage and school house, as well as almshouses for twelve LYNGATE, three-quarrers of a mile north-east, BENGATE,
.poor members of the congregation, built and endowed by three-quarters of a mile north, BROCKLEY, one mile west,
Mr. Samuel Chapman, of Norwich. There is also a. Prim- WITHERGATE, half a mile north-west, and BRIGGATE, I,i:
itive Methodist chapel. A small charity is distributed miles north-east, are hamlets.
weekly to 25 poor parishioners, each receiving one loaf of Parish Clerk, David Blower.
-
7
690 WORSTE.AD • NORFOLK. [KELLY S
.
PosT, M. 0. & T. 0., S. B. & .Annuity&Insurance Office.- National School (mixed), built in 1844, for about 150
Jamcs Benjamin Copping, receiver. Letters arrive from children : average attcndan~e, I 17 ; Miss Dyball, mistress
Norwich at 6.45 a.m. & 2.25 p.m. & are dispatched at Railway Station, Frederick William Avery, station master
9-45 a. m. & 4 p.m. week days & sundays 4 p. m. CARRIERS TO NORWICH.-James S. BurrelJ, sat. returning
LETTER Box, Briggate, cleared at 3-35 p.m. on week days same day; Abigail, of Bacton, passes through tues. & fri.
only returning same days
Back Rev . .Arthur James M.A. Vicarage Cross Thomas Alfred, coal mer- Hindry John Thomas, blacksmith
Burnand Geo. l3erger, Holly Grove ho chant, farmer & seeds man & Holmes Wm. market gardnr. Withergate
Jackson Rev, John [Baptist], Meeting- assistant overseer~ & at Westwick Leach Henry, King's llead P.H
house hill Cross William, butcher & farmer Mussett George, grocer
Rons CoL William John, Worstead bo Cubitt & Walker, millers (steam & Newton William Engall, farmer
Wright Robert Mace, Nelson house water) &c. ; & at Cromer; Swafield Page John, shoe maker, Meeting hiU
& North Walsham Ward George, relieving offic-er & regis-
COMMERCIAL. Davison Austin Hy. butcher & shopkpr trar of births&; deaths for Xorth Wal-
.Amies Robert, farmer Fiddy Isaac Wm. New inn, & carpenter sham sub-district
:Burrell James Swan, carrier Gibbs Robert, blacksmith Waters Jn. White Horse P.II. Briggate
Clarke William, wheelwright Grimes James, shoe maker Watson Sarah (Mrs.), pork hutcher
Copping James Benjamin, grocer & Grimes Samuel, baker Watts Christmas Henry, tailor
draper, Post; office Hales John, farmer, Briggate Welden Matthew Daniel, farmer &
Cross & Suffling, grocers Hannant Matilda (Mrs.), shopkeeper, builder, Bunns farm
Cross Charlotte (Mrs.), farmer Meeting House hill Wick John, farmer, Meeting hill
Cross Frederick William, farmer Hardy William Jsph. farmer, Briggate Wright Henry, landowner & farmer,
Cross Robt. market gardener & florist, Hewitt John, landowner & farmer, The Sandhill farm
Lyngate aottage Grange ''V
right James Thomas, farmer,Bengate.
WORTHING is a village and parish near the North of Bylaugh Park, is lord of the manor and chief landowner
Elm ham station on the Wymondham and Wells section of Gooch's charity of£ 1 I os. yearly is distributed. The town
the Great Eastern railway, 4~ miles north from Dere- lands of between 8 and 9 acres were devised "for the
ham, in the Mid division of the county, Launditch hundred, maintenanee and repair of the fabric of the parish church,
Mitford and Launditch petty sessional division, Mitford inclusive of tower and steeple:" any surplus income arising
union, Dercham county court district, rural deanery of from this source is applied as directed by the G'harity Corn-
South Brislcy, arch deaconry and diocese of Norwich, situated ' missioners to the relief of the deserving and necessitous in-
on the Wensum. The church of St. Margaret is a small habitants of the parish. The soil is light loam; snhsoil,
building of flint in the Perpendicular style, consisting of gra,·el and clay. The chief crops are wheat, barley and tur-
nave, south porch and a low round western tower containing nips. The area is 6go acres ; rateable value, £I, 167 ; the
one bell1 there are roo sittings. The register dates from population in 1891 was 148.
the year 1563. The living_~ a chapelry, annexed to the rec- Parish Clerk, James Neal.
tory of Swanton Morley, JOlllt average yearly value from
tithe rent-charge £8II 1 with 23 acres of glebe, in the gift of LETTER Box cleared at 6.10 p.m. Letters through East
the Rev. Henry Evans-Lombe B. A. and held since 1 s6 3 by Dcreham arrive at 7· 15 a. m. Elm ham is the nearest
the Rev. Edward Lombe B.A. of Corpus Christi college, money order & telegraph office
Cambridge, and rural dean of South Brisley, who resides at The children of this place attend the National school at
Swanton Morley. The Rev. Henry Evans-Lombe B. A., J. P. Swan ton Morley ·
Merrison Mrs. A. E. B Golden Isaiah, Tanners' Arms P.H Mayes John, farmer
Earl George, higgler Leeds William, farmer Phillippo- Ja-mes, tanner, fel1monger.
Ell.ton William, farmer Loads John, The Swan P.H. & black- wool merchant, skin dresser & farmer
Uolden Alfred, shopkeepe.r smith & farmer & landowner
WORTWELL is a parish on the borders of Suffolk and Margaret Clerke in rs85; 20S. :rearly left by Thomas Fuller
I

on the river Waveney, 1! miles east from Harleston and ex- in 17r2, which is distributed in bread; and £2 yearly, left
1

tending to Homersfield station on the Waveney Valley j by.an unknown donor, charged on land now belonging to the
branch of the Great Eastern railway, in the Southern di,'i- i trustees of Mrs. Elizabeth Barton. John Sancroft Holmes
sion of the county, Earsham hundred and petty sessional' esq. Z.LA., J.P. of Gawdy Hall, who is lord of the manor, the
division, Depwade union, lla.rleston county court district ; trustees of Osmond Springfield csq. and Capt. Doughty are
it is ecclesiastically united to Redenhall, the parish church of the chief landowners. The soil is very various, consisting of
St. Mary, Hedenhall, being partly withm the bounds of light, heavy and marshy lands; subsoil, gravel and clay.
Wortwell parish. Here is a Congregational chapel, erected The chief crops are wheat, barley, peas and beans. 'fhe area
in I773 1 with 300 sittings: attached is a burial ground and is I, 114 acres; rateable value, £1,392; the population in
minister's house, endowed with £40 a year: there is also a I89I was 477·
Baptist chapel, built in _1822. '!'he town estate !~f 30 acres PosT OFFICE.- Mrs. Rebecca Green, receiver. L 3 tters
lets fo~ £25 yearly, wh1?h sum IS7 devoted to char:~table and through Ilarleston arrive at 7 a.m. & dispatched at 6.rs
educatw~al purposes. fhe poor s allotment consists of one p.m. Harleston is the nearest money order & telcaraph
equal m01ety of 13A. IR. 2oP. awarded under the Inclosures 0
ttice "'
Act of the 41st George ITI. to the poor of Wortwell and Al-
burgh, and now let for [52 a year, which is distributed in National School (mixed), erected for wo children; average
coals: the poor have also 6s. 8d. yearly rent-charge, left by attendance, 8_5; Miss Rosa Green, mistress
Fitch Rev. Henry Colson M.A. [curate] 1 Flegg James; Bell P.H. & shopkeeper j Rayner James, jun. carpenter
Rackbam Rev. Frederic George [Con- Gibbons John, farmer Rayner Robert, farmer
gregationalJ, 'fhe Manse Goodwin George. thatcher Rayner Samuel, butcher
Whitear Miss, Ivy Wood lodge Goulder Phillip,farmer & miller( water), Scales Caroline (Mrs..), cow keeper
Wortwell hall Scotchmer John, shoe maker
COMMERCIAL. Gower Frederick, plumber & glazier , Self Samuel, cowkeeper
Baker Eli, bricklayer Gower Maria (Mrs.), shopkeeper , Shepherd Daniel, shoe maker
1
Ball William, farmer Gower Robcrt Edwin, painter Swann Charles, agent to the Prudential
Borrett James, carpenter Jordan Frauces (Miss), shopkeeper Insurance Co
Bush Arthur Henry, farmer Keeble Francis James, market gardener Valiant Samuel, Dove P.H
Calver Rohert, shopkeeper Keeley James, farmer, Church farm Vyse Josep_h, hay tru~ser
Coils Johp, bhck!;mith Mark well Henry, basket maker i Youngs Ehzabeth (M1ss), farmer
1

Copeman Charles, cowkecper Oily '''m. Nathan, farmer, Wash farm · Youngs Sharman, farmr. Pear Tree cot
Dove Frederick, fal"mer Palmer George, charcoal burner '
WRAMPLINGHAM is a village and parish, 3~ miles the south side f>f the chancel are two memorial windows,
north from Wymondham Junction station on the Great erected in 1887, to the Rev. Joseph Johnson Blick RA. 9i
Eastern railway, in the Mid division of the county, Forehoe years rector of this parish, d I3 July, I885; the massive
hundred, petty sessional division and nnion, Wyinondham brass alt,ar eross was also the gift of the parishioners to his
county court district, "rural deanery of Hingham, Forehoe memory: the chanc-el was restored in r863, new roofed and
division,: archdeaeonry of Norfolk an<J. diocese of Norwich. a new east window inserted: the church was completely
The church of SS. Peter and l'aul is a small but ancient restored in 1872 at a cost of£~. when a north aisle was
edifice. m the Transition, Early English and Decorated added ; and there are now ISO sittings. The register dates
styles, consisting of chancef, nave, south porch and a, round from the year 1566. The living is a. rectory, average tithe
western tower with octagonal embattled belfry, containing rent-charge £2o4, net yearly value £238, includinEr 34
3 bells: the organ was erected in x882 at a cust of £no~ on acres vf glebe, with residence, in the gift of tbe Rev. Henry
DIRECTORY.] NORFOLK. WEST WRETHAM. 691
Philip Marsham B.C.L. of Rippon Hall, Hevingham, and House, Wymondham. The soil is various; subsoil same.
held since 18B.s by the Rev. Edward Frederic Cavalier M.A. The chief crops are wheat. The-parish comprises 856 acres;
of St. John's College, Cambridge. Tho rents of the town rateable value, £1,356; the population in l:892 was l72,
lands, amounting to abont £I3 yearly, are applied to the Sexton &c. Frederick Blyth.
payment of church expenses. Wramplingham Hall, the
property of William Cann esq. J. P. of Cavick House, PILLAR LETTER Box, cleared at 6.15 p.m. week days only.
Wymondham, but at present unoccupied, stands in a Letters through Wymondbam, which is the nearest money
spacious lawn, well wooded. The principal landowners are order & telegraph office, arrive about 8 a.m
the Rev. Henry .Eva.ns-Lombe B.A., J.P. of llylaugh Park, National School (mixed), erected in I864, for so children;
lord of the manor, and William Cann esq. J.P. of Cavick average attendance, 26;, (vacant)
Cavalier Rev. Edward Frederic M.A. Dann John, carpenter & builder Ringer Urban, farmer
Rectory Greene Lewis Frederick, pork butcher Riseborough Oscar, farmer, Glebe farm
Twaites Mrs. Riversdale Jermyn Vincent, miller (water),Wram- Symonds Samuel, farm bailiff to W.
COMMERCIAL. plingham flour & rice mills Cann esq. J.P
Bales Jonathan, farmer Mousey Charles, farmer Thompson Simon, farmer
Chapman John, King's Head P.H. & Nor g-ate Frederick John, flltrmer Thompson William, farmer
blacksmith Pettit Josepb, farmer Wigby Stephen, farm~ ·
Cunningham J ames, farmer

WRENINGHAM is a scattered village and parish, ad- ists. There are 20 acres of land, allotted at the Inclosure
joining .Ashwellthorpe station on the Wymondham and Forn- for the poor of this parish not in receipt of parochial relief,
cett branch of the Great Eastern railway pnd 3~ miles east and the rent is distributed in coals between Michaelmas and
from Wymondham and 8 south-west from Norwich, in the Christmas. Baroness llerners is lady of the manor. Thomas
Southern division of the county, Swainsthorpe petty ses- W. Dring esq. of Marsh, Lutton, Lines, Sir Henry Thomas
sional division, hundred of Humbleyard, union of Henstead, Tyrwhitt hart. J.P. of Stanley Hall, AsLley Abbotts, Bridg-
county court district of Wymondham, rural deanery of north, Salop, and John William Bullimore esq. are the
Humbleyard, and archdeaconry of Norfolk and diocese of principal landowners. The soil is loamy; subsoil, clay.
Norwich. The church of All Saints is a small but ancient The chief crops are wheat, barley, turnips and wurtzel.
building of flint and stone, in the Perpendicular style, con- The area is 1,528 acres; rateable value, £2,556; the popu-
sisting of chancel, nave, transept, south porch and an em- htion in 1891 was 435·
battled western tower containing 4 bells: the tower fell in Parish Clerk, David Saundcrs.
1852, but was rebuilt and the church thoroughly restored, PosT & M. 0. 0., S. ll. & Annuity & Insurance Office.-
new rcofed and the north transept added in the following John Kersey, postmaster. Letters through Wymondham,
year at a cost of about £700: in 1884 a new oak pulpit and arrive at 9 a.m. ; dispatched at s.so p.m. Telegraph
reading desk were erected and carved finials added to the office at Wymondham. PILLAR LETTER Box, near the
pews at the sole cost of the rector : there are I77 sittingi'. Mill, cleared at s. 20 p. m. week days only
The register dates from the year 1687. The living is a National School (mixed), erected for roo children; average
rectory, consolidated with Ashwellthorpe, joint average tithe attendance, g6 ; Miss May Hindes, mistress
rent-charge £579• joint gross yearly value £62I, including CARRIERS TO NoRWICH:-
85 acres of glebe, with residence, in the gift of the Baroness Williams, passes through from Forncett St.. Peter, mon.
Berners, and held since I853 by the Rev. Arthur Wilson wed. & sat. returning same days
Upcher IILA. of Trinity College, Cambridge. Here is a small George Filby, from New Buckenham, wed. & sat
chapel used by the Congregationalists and Primitive Method- James Breeze, from Bunwell, wed. & sat
Bush Miss, Rose cottage Bullimore John William, farmer & land- Long William, farmer & landowner
Day Matthew owner, Hill house Potter John, blacksmith
Upcher Rev.Arthur Wilson M. A. Rectory llush Daniel & Mary Ann (Miss),farmrs Quant.rell Alfred, builder & farmer
COMMERCIAL. Catch}>ole James, farmer Hatcliffe Sophia (Mrs.), shopkeeper,
Andrews Harry, miller (steam & wind) Day Robt. Dennis, grocr.drapr.& printr Top row
Aves Jn.Bird-in-Hand P.H.& sheep drssr Fish William, fishmonger Rnshbrooke Thomas Lane, farmer
Bell Anna Mary (Miss), dress maker Ireland John, farmer Sayer Charles, farm bailiff to T. W.
Bell Robert, butter & egg dealer Kersey John, tailor & assistant overseer, Dring esq
Blaxall Arthur A. insurance agent Post office Welton John, vermin destroyer
Bloom George,earpenter, High common Lane Samuel, wood man Welton Samuel, farmer
Bothway Henry, farmer, Tho Poplars Lawn George, market gardener Wiseman .Anna (Miss), laundress
Brighten Robert, butcher & farmer Long Dennis William,farmer,Fir grove Wright James, pork butcher, Top row

EAST WRETHAM is a parish with a station I mile acres of glebe and residence, in the gift of Sydney Morris
from the church, on the Bury, Thetford and Swaffham sec- esq. J.P. and held since 185o by the Rev. James Park
tion of the Great Eastern railway, in the Mid division of the Whalley B. A. of University College, Oxford. Sydney Morris
county, Guiltcross and Shropham petty sessional division, esq. J.P. of West Wretham Hall, is lord of the manor and
Thetford union and county court district, Shropham hun- sole landowner. The soil is sandy; subsoil, chalky. The
dred, rural deanery of Rockland, archdeaconry of Norfolk chief crops are wheat, barley and oats. The area of East
aud diocese of Norwich. The church of St. Ethelbert, and West Wretham is 6,442 acres; rateable value of East
entirely rebuilt in the year I 865, is an edifice of flint Wretham, £r,289; the population in I891 was I90.
in the Norman and Decorated styles, consisting of chancel, Sexton, Ja.mes Bunn.
nave, north aisle, south porch and a western tower with STONE BRID6E is a hamlet a :mlle east of the church and
saddleback roof containing one bell : the south doorway is 6 miles north-east from Thetford.
Norman and the east end of the chancel is adorned with
mural paintings: the stone font has a lofty canopy of oak, PosT, M. 0. & T. 0., S. B. & Annuity & Insurance Office.-
carved and decorated :there are 230 sittings : in the church- Robert Adams, receiver. Letters arrive through Thetford
yard stands a sculptured cross of Aberdeen granite, erected at 7.40 a. m. ; dispatched at 5-45 p.m
as a memorial to members of the Birch family. The regis- WALL LETTER Box cleared at 5 p.m
ter dates from the year 1748. 'fhe living consists of the con- School (mixed), built in 18Gs, for 65 children ; average
solidated rectories of East and West Wretham, average attendance, 52; Miss Clara Watson, mistress
tithe rent-charge .£"4-oo, net yearly value £236, with I2 Railway Station, Thomas Bedford, station master
Whalley Rev. James Park B. A. Rectory I Daynes Edward, farm bailiff to Sydney I Tillott William, Dog & Partridge P.H,
Whalley Rev.Pryor Buxton M. A. Rectory
Adams Rt. grcr.Post office,Stone bridge
IMorris esq. Manor farm I
Stone bridge

WEST WRETHAM is a parish 2 ml!es west from Wret- manor and sole landowner. Hill Mere and :Mickle Mere are
ham station on the Bury, 'l'hetford and Swaffham section of both in Wretham Park. The soil is sandy; subsoil, chalky·
the Great Eastern rail way and 6 north-east from Thetford, The chief crops are wheat, barley and oats. The area is in-
in the Mid division of the county, Guiltcross and Shropham eluded with East Wretham; rateable value, £1,276 2s. 6d.;
petty sessional division, 'l'hetford union and county court the population in I891 was 194.
district, Shropham bundred, rural deanery of Rockland, FouurnRE, 2l miles south-west from Wretham station, is
archdeaoonry of Norfolk and diocese of Norwich. The i this p· · h
ancient church of St. Lawrence is now in ruins. 'fhe living n ans · .
is consolidated with that of East Wretham. Wretham Hall, letters from Thetford. East Wretham LS the nearest money
an elegant mansion standing in a well-wooded park of 6oo order & telegraph office
acres, is the seat of Sydney Morris J.P. who is lord of the J The children of this place attend the school at East Wretham
7
692 WEST WRETHAM. [KELLY S
- George George, farm bailiff to Sydney Hitchcock Arthur, steward to Sydney
Morris Sydney J.P. Wretham hall Morris esq. The Dairy Morris esq
Banks Jonathan, gamekeeper to Sydney Godson John S. estate agent to Sydney Stevenson Robert,farmer, The Laundry
Morris esq Morris esq. West Wretham house

WRETTON is a village and parish on the river Wissey, average yearly rental of £8, which sum is distributed in
one mile west from Stoke ¥erry terminal station of a money annually on St. Thomas' day. Henry Edwards
branch of the Great Eastem railway from Denver (near Paine esq. solicitor, of Chertsey, Surrey, is lord of the
Downham) on the Ely and Lynn section and 6~ south-east manors of Ca\'enham and Iron Hall. Anthony Horrex
from Downham, in the South Western division of the Roger Micklefield esq. of Stoke Ferry, and Charles Bader
county, Clackclose hundred and petty sessional division, esq. of !<'en House, ~toke Ferry, are the principal land-
Downham union and county court district, rural deanery of owners. The soil is mostly black sand ; subsoil, red sand
Fincham, archdeaconry of Norfolk and diocese of Norwich. and peat. The chief crops are wheat, barley, turnips &c.
The church of All ~aints is a building of flint in the Perpen- The area is 1,154 acres; rateable value, £1,463; the popu-
dicular style, consisting of chancel, nave, south aisle, south lation in 1891 was 322.
porch and an embattled western tower w1th quoins of free By the Divided Parishes Act detached parts of this parish
stone, and containing 2 bells : it was restored and re-roofed were amalgamated with Stoke Ferry in March, r884. •
in I 863, and affords 200 sittings. The register dates from
the year 1693. The livmg is a vicarage, annexed to that of Parish Clerk, John Carter.
Wereham, joint net yearly value £136, including 51 acres of Letters through Brandon, via Stoke Ferry, which is the
glebe, in the gift of the Bishop of Norwich, and held since nearest money order & telegraph office. WALL LETTER
r885 by the Rev. Richard Massey M.A. of St. Alban Box collected at 6.10 p. m. & on Sundays at II. ro a. m
Hall, Oxford. Colonel Leach is the impropriator of the A School Board of 5 members was formed 12 February,
tithes, which are commuted at £256. Here is a Primitive 1876; Augustus Edward Hoger Micklefield M.A. Stoke
Methodist chapel. Six acres of land were left to the poor Ferry, clerk to the board
- "by Miss Jane Forby, and at the inclosure about 20 acres of Board School (mixed), erected in 1876, for 70 children;
fen land were allotted to the poor, producing together an average attendance, 44 ; Mrs. Pollie Rickard, mistress
Massey Rev. Richard M.A. [vicar] Hewing Henry, beer retailer · Rickard "\\'alter, sen. farmer
COMMERCIAL. Johnson Frederick, farm bailiff to Rickard 'Valter, jun. shoe maker
Bowers William, poulterer Charles Bader esq Tingey Henry, sen. cattle dealer
Clark Beales, coal dealer Pond Sarah (Miss), shopkeeper Tingey Henry, jun. cattle dealer
Fletcher John Wright, farmer Riches Henry, wheelwright j White Geo. Thos. butcher & shopkeeper
Goate Jacob, beer retailer

WROXHAM is a village and parish on the Stalham ments belonging to Mr. William Frederick Green, of this
road and on the south bank of the Bure, with a station on parish. Wroxham Hall, a noble mansion, with large gar-
the East Norfolk section of the Great Eastern railway, which dens and plantations and commanding an extensive and pic-
is also the junction of the branch to Aylsham and Cromer, lmresque view, is the seat of Edward South well Trafford esq.
7 miles north-east from Norwich, in the Eastern division of J.P. W. H. Trafford esq. D. r. as lord of the manor, possesses
the county, Taverham hundred and petty sessional division, the right of fishery in the river Bnre, from the old tower on
St. Faith's union, Norwich county court district, rural Belaugh Marshes to Poll Ash Ditch, together with the royal
deanery of Taverham and archdcaconry and diocese of grant of free warren and free chase over all the lands of the
Norwich. Wroxham broad, formed by the river Bure, manor. _<\.djoining Wroxham Broad is "\\'roxham House, the
covers upwards of 100 acres, and is well stocked with seat of Peter Edward Hansell esq. in the midst of a well-
various kinds of fish : the river is here crossed by a bridge wooded park, and affording a pleasant prospect of the Wrox-
of one arch, leading to Hoveton St. John and to the railway ham Broad, of which Robert Harvey .Mason esq. D.L., J.P.
station. The church of St. Mary the Virgin, standing on a of Necton Hall, is the principal proprietor. E. S. Trafford
knoll, is a building of flint, with stone dressings, probably esq. "\\'. H. 'frafford esq. who is lord of the manor, Robert
of the 14th century, with a clerestory added in the r6th Harvey Mason esq. and Wllliam Frederick Green esq. are
century, but it replaced a much earlier church of which the the principal landowners. Good red bricks are made here.
handsome south porch remains: the present edifice consists The soil is mixed ; subsoil, sand. The chief crops are
of chancel, clcrcstoried nave, aisles, south porch and a lofty wheat, barley, turnips and hay. The parish comprises
embattled western tower with pinnacles, containing 6 bells : r,489pcres; rateable value, £2,279; the population in 1891
the east and west windows are stained, and in the chancel was 415.
is a memorial window erected in 1882 by Colonel T. E. Sexton, Charles Bush_
Green to his parents : there are se\·eral mural tablets, in-
'VROXHAllr PosT, M. 0. &, T. 0., S. B. & Annuity & Insurance
cluding one to Capt. George Collyer R.E. killed at the storm- Office is in the parish of Hoveton St. John ; but there is
ing of San Sebastian, 31 Aug. 1813, and others to the Hev. I
also a post office in this parish (Lower Wroxham).-John
John Humfrey, d. 1847, and Robert Blake-Humfrey, d. George Chamberlin, receiver. Letters through Norwich,
1889: the church affords 300 sittings, 200 being unappro- :
arrive at 8 a.m. & 3·15 p.m.; dispatched at 12.15 & 5-15
priated : in the churchyard is a large mausoleum, erected I
p.m
by the late Mrs. Southwell to her husband, Sigismund
Trafford Southwell esq. d. 1827. The register dates from A School Board of 5 members was formed compulsorily 12
the year 1558, but more than a century ago the church was February 1875, & Hoveton St. John was made contribu-
broken open and the registers for some forty years ab- tory 21 May, I875, with two members; R. Gregson,
stracted . . The living is a vicarage, with that of Salhouse L""pper King street, Norwich, clerk to the board~ Samuel
annexed, average yearly value from tithe rent-charge £ 24s, Waters, Vfroxham, attendance officer
with 14 acres of glebe, and residence, in the gift of W. H. Board School (mixed), built in 1876, at a cost of £1,200,
'frafford esq. and held since 1870 by the Rev. Thomas for roo children; average attendance, 8o; Alfred Davies,
Francis Boddington llf.A. of St. Peter's College, Cambridge, 1 master
who resides at ~alhouse. Here are large malting establish- Railway Station, Francis Cowland Underhill, station master

PRIVATE RESIDENTS. Smith George river & ten from Wroxham Gt. Broad
Burke Rev. Michael Vernon [Catholic Taylor Charles Ell is John, farmer
chaplain to E. S. Trafford esq. ;J.P.], Taylor Hugh, Avenue house Green William Frederick, merchant,
River house Thorns Robert Elliott, Bure side maltster & landowner, Wroxham;
Cooke Harry Arthur Trafford Edward South well J. P. Wrox- brick, drain pipe, tile & pottery
Crowe Frederick Bowen ham hall & 19 Prince's gt. London s w maker atLittle Plumstead & Ludham
Crowe H.obert Utting Chas. Spelman, River Side cots Hall Henry Tudor, shoe maker
Dvball

Miss, The Mount COMMERCIAL . Knapp William, vermin destroyer
Gibbs Mrs Chamberlin John George, shopkeeper, Loynes John, boat builder
GreenLieut. -Col. Thos. Ed wd. TheLimes Post office, Lower Wroxham Marshall Arthur Watling, grocer &
·Green William Fredk. Wroxham grange Chapman Arth. Hy. assistant overseer provision dealer & wood carver
Hansell Peter Edward, Wroxham house Clethero Robert, farmer, Dairy farm Pull Charles, gamekeeper to E. S.
Howlett Horace, Hill house C'JOllins Robert & Son, yacht, steam Trafford esq
Jay Mrs. Rose cottage launch&rowing boat builders ; yachts, Stevenson Henry, blacksmith
McMinn I<'redk. Alex. Staithe-way villa wherries & rowing boats let on hire Taylor Hugh L.R.<J.P.Edin. surgeon
Pegg George Christmas by the day or week ; every accommo- Taylor Thomas, farm bailiff to E. S.
Preston Geo. Edward, The Broadhouse dation for storing yachts Trafford esq. Home farm
Preston The Misses, The Broad house Fisher Thomas, Castle hatel & posting Thrower Ambrose, blacksmith
.Siely Mrs house. three minutes' walk from the Waters t:lamuel, tailor
DIRECTORY.] KORFOLK. WYMONDBAM. '693
WYMONDHAM IS a small market town and parish, on the cross are various carved devices, representing different
and the head of a county court district, with a station on the articles of turnery, which originally formed one of the staple
main line of the Great Eastern railway, which is also the branches of the trade of this place. The market, on Friday,
·junction of the branch from Forncett through Dereham to is unimportant and little business is now transact411d. Three
Wells, 99 miles by road and 115~ by rail from London, 9~ fairs are held annually, on the 14th of February, May 17th for
south-west-by-west from Norwich, 20 north from Thetford cattle, and on October the 12th for pleasure. Here is an ex-
and I I south-east from East Dereham, in the Mid division tensive brewery, belonging to Messrs. William Cann and Co. ;
of the county, l<'orehoe hundred, petty sessional division and the large brush manufactory of Messrs. S D. Page and Sons
union, rural deanery of Hingham, Forehoe division, arch- Limited, of Norwich; the saw mills and turnery works
deaconry of Nor folk and diocese of Norwich : the parish is of Robert Semmence and Sons ; the extensive granaries
arranged for civil purposes in six divisions, viz. Wattle- belonging to Messrs. J. Standlcy and Sons and the boot and
field, i::luton, Silfield, Downham, Market Str-eet and Town shoe factory of Messrs. P. Haldinstein and Son, of Norwich.
Green: the t~>wn occupies an ele1•ated site at the junction of The Young Men's Society, formed in Nov. 189r, occupies
the Bays and Tiffey rivers and is lighted with gas from works premises in the Market place, consisting of gymnasium,
near the Fairland, the property of a company formed in r 848: reading and game rooms and a smoke room : the manage-
the water supply is deri1·ed from wells. The church of St. ment is in the hands of a committee of six members; the
Mary the Vir-gin, formerly the church of the abbey of SS. present number of members ( x8g2) being 120. The Loyal
Mary and Alban, is a noble edifice of flint with stone dress- Aginconrt Lodge of Odclfellows, of the A ttleborough District.,
ings, consisting now only of the central octagonal tower (at No. 314, Manchester Unity, has at present (x8g2) 202
present forming the eastern termination of the structure), members and a capital of j,"4, 174; Prov. C. S. of Attle-
a clerestoried nave of nine bays, aisles, north porch and a borough district, Robert V. Reyner : connected with it is a
. stately wester-n tower, 142 feet in height, built in 1410-70, juvenile lodge, having 58 members and a capital of £44-
with octagonal buttress turrets at the angles, and contain- The Ancient Order of Foresters, Court Loyal " Windham "
ing a striking clock and 5 bells: the transepts and the choir lodge, No. 2,904, has 35~ members. The Wymondham
( 6o by 30 fL. ), with a lady chapel on the north side, are Canary Breeding- Society hold an annual exhibition in the
e•ther in ruins or have wholly disappeared, but the gable Town Hall. The local charities for the benefit of the poor
end of the chapter house still remains: the nave retains its include the Town Lands Charity : the charity property,
original Norman structure, and has a noble Perpendicular under a new scheme framed by the Charity Commissioner~,
clerestory and a superb ceiling: the north aisle, which is the is now administered under the name of the '' Wvrnondham

wider of the two, is also Per-pendicular, with a fine roof re- Grammar School Foundation,'' by 11 governors, 6 being
paired in 1845 : the south aisle was rebuilt m the late Per- representative and .5 eo-optative governors: the income
pendicular period : the choir, with its adjacent chapel, amounts to ahont [250 yearly, out of which £6o is paid to
formed the conventual church, the nave and north aisle the master of the Fr-ee Grammar School, l,"so as a pension
having been assigned in 1349 to the parishioners, who on to the late master, £r5 to the clerk, £12 r6s. 6d, for
account of disputes which aro~e as to the respective rights apprenticing one or more boys of the parish and £7 6s. is
of the reg-ular and secular clergy to ring the bells, erected applied to the relief of the poor of the hamlet of Suton and
the western tower : there is a finely carved font, and three to the repairs of Grammar School, master's house and other
tabernacled arches in terra cotta, of 15th cent. date, buildings. A sum of about /..,-6o a year, derived from the
perhaps intended for sedilia : the portion of the building fuel allotments of 53 acres, is expended in the purchase of
now used as a chancel was restor-ed about 1868 by the coals, whic.;h are sold to the poor at reduced prices and
Ecclesiastical Commissioners: there are memorials in the delivered at their homes. The Benedictine abbey of SS.
church to the Seaborns family, 1689-91 ; Thomas King, 55 Mary and .Alban was founded here before no], by William
years clerk and sexton, ob. 1 68o ; Jeremiah Burroug hes D. L., de Albini, ancestor of the Earls of Arundel of that family, as
J.P. d. 1767, and others of that name; Rev. John Drake A. M. a cell to St. Alban's, and was erected into a abbey by a
d. 1791, and others of the Drake family ; Rev. Peter Petit papal bull in 1440; the greater part of the church, as pre-
A.M. commissary of Norfolk, d. 1788; to the Buckle family, viously described, still remains; at the dissolution of the
- I]0]-40; and to the Clarke, Talbot, Jermy. Proctor, Cann monastery there were 12 monks, and revenues estimated at
and other families: the church was reseated in I 837, and £55- The Old Green Dragon inn, formerly attached to the
affords 1,or7 sittings, 6oo being free. The register dates abbey, is an ancient and interesting structure. St. Thomas
from the year r615. The living is a vicarage, con1mnted a-Becket's chapel, an interesting ecclesiastical structure in
tithe rent-charge£ 7c;9, net yearly value£ 531, including half Church street, was restored by the trustees of the Town
an acre of glebe, with residence, in the gift of the Bishop of Lands charity and is now used as the G-rammar School.
Norwich,and held since r854 by the Rev. Rober-t Eden lli.A. Near the church is St. Thomas a-Becket's well, formerly
late fellow of Corpus Cbrist.i college, Oxford, hon. canon of much resorted to by pilgrims, and from which flows a
:Norwich, an.:i snrroo-aLe.
0
The rectorial tithe now taken by

copious supply of beautifully fresh water. Stanfield Hall is
John Horner esq. as lay impropriator was comrnuted at an ancient 1nansion in the Tudor style, encompassed by a
£2,192 ISS- 4d. A l\lission Room was erected in 1892 moat, and occupiei the site of the original manor house, of
on ;\' orwich common. The Primitive Methodist chapel, the r2th century; the house, which stands in a park of about
Town Green, erected in r87o-r, at a cost (including 70 acres, has a lar-ge entrance hall, with richly grained roof,
site) of £r,3oo, has sittings for 500 persons: in r877 is now the propJrty of Re,?inald Philip Jermy Gwyn esq.
a minister's house was erected adjoining. There is also and is in the occupation of William Gilmour Cuthbertson
a small Primitive Methodist chapel at Silfield, erected esq. Burfield Hall, the residence of Major-General Henry
·in r867, to seat 200, anci one at Suton, erected in 1889, Beville c.a ahout 2 miles south on the London :rmd, is a.
with sittings for about 70 ptlrsons. The Congregational mansion of the Queen Anne period, erected in 1709, and
dmpel, :Fairland, erected about the year I]IO, and since en- contains a fine entrance hall and an old oak staircase; many
larged and refitted in 1877, is a structure of brick and will of the rooms are panelled and some of the walls are of con-
seat 550 persons. The Weslcyan chapel, Damgate street, siderable thickness; it was originally surrounded by a moat,
erected in 1879• is also of brick, and has 300 sittings. The traces of which still remain. Cavick house is the residence
. .Baptist chapel, Back lane, ert!cted about r8oo, will seat of William Cann esq. J. P. Gunvil Hall, now a farm house,
about 200 persons. The Plymouth Brethren have a meet- is a building in the Eliubethan style, and was also formerly
ing house with about 100 sitttings. The meeting house surrounded by a moat; it is now occupied by Mr. G-eorge
-of the Society of l<'riends, on the Crownthorpe road, seats Bow hill. There are sever-<1l manors in this pari11h 1 the chief
about 400 and has a bur-ial ground attached. There are of which are those of Grisaugh, Cromwells and Rustens, of
.Sah·ation Army barrack!! in .Fairland street with 200 sit- which the trustea.~ of the late Colonel Charles Robert IIohart,
tings. A Cemetery of 9 acres was opened on 1 M~y. r882, of Bath, ard lords; Queen "s manor, of which Mrs. J. de R.
at a cost, includmg site and two 1nortuary chapels, of B. Clarke is lady; and Gunvils, of which Edward William
£r,765; it is under the control of a Burial Board of 9 Routh Clarke esq. is lord ~ the other m>1.nors are Brockdish,
members formed in 1878. The Public Hall, erecte1 in 1890 Stalworthye's and Burlield Hall, Stanfield Hall and Wymond-
by a limited company, at a cost, including fittings, of £ r,ooo, ham Hethersett. The principal landowners are the Earl of
is of red brick in the Elizabethan style, and comprises a Kimberley K.G.; P.C. Edward William Routh Clarke esq.
hall 6o by 30 feet and 33 feet high, with anteroom~. The Colonel Hobart's trustees, H3nry Randal Rurroughea esq.
Police Station, formerly House ot Correction, comprises a of Bnrlingham Hall, and Colonel Lynes. The soil is varied,
eourt house and superintendent's residence. The Fire sub~il clay; the chief crops are wheat, barlev, turnips and
Brigade was establi1'hed in 1882: the station, in Market hay. The number of acres is 10,950; r.\teable value,
street, erected in 1883-4 at the cost of Mrs. E. P. Clarke, is £25,283; the population of tha whole parish in I891 was
of brick with stone dressings, and comprisc~s a hall, office, 4.764-
workshop and hose shl'd :there are two manna! engines and Parish Clerk, E. B. Pomeroy; deputy, Thomas Ru·iling,
~ther necessary appliances. The market cross, standing in Town green.
the centre of the town, and e-rected in I6r6, is an octagonal Sexton, John Bales.
structure, supported on -wooden pillars at the angles: in At \VA.TTLEFlEr.n, 3 miles south, is a chape~ of ease, of
x863 it was repaired and is now used as a news snd reading red brick, erected about I8~J, by John Mitchell esq. and
~oom and library, the latter containing about 500 volumes: consisting of chancel and nave only. It. is served.-> by the
694 WYMONDHAM. NORFOLK. [KELLY's
vicar and curate of Wymondham. There is also a small Superintendent Registrar, Francis John Howlett, Fairland
Wesleyan chapel here, built in the early part Df the present street, Vt'ymondham ; deputy, Edward Boyce Pomeroy,
century. Wattlefield Hall, a modern mansion in the Eliza- Vicar street, Wymondham
bethan style, stands in about 50 acres of pasture and wood Registrars of Births & Deaths, Costessey sub-district, Alfred
and is the seat of Edward William Routh Clarke esq. Barnard, Baruham Broom ; Wymondham 11ub-district,
SPOONER Row, formerly inhabited by makers of spoons Artbur G!asspoole, Town green, Wymondham ; deputy,
and other wooden ware, is in this division. There is like- Frederick Freshfield Cann, Downham
wise a small station on the main line of the Great Eastern Registrars of Marriages, Costessey sub-district, Caius Spaul,
railway, adjoining which are the extensive corn warehouses f'A>stessey ; Wymondham sub-district, Artbur Glasspoole,
of Mr. James Watts. Town green, Wymondham; deputy, Frederick Freshfield
SUToN adjoins the town on the south-west, SiU'lELD on Cann, Downham, \Vymondham
the east and south-east, and DowNHAM on the north and Workhouse, Wicklewood, a building of brick, built in 1777,
north-east, each extending about 3 miles from the town. to hold 450 imnate9, Obadiah Tills, master; Rev. II. M.
Kimberley Hall, the seat of the Right Hon. the Earl of Cross, chaplain; Gcorge Lowe M.D., C. M. medical
Kimberley K.G., P.C. is in Downham division (see Kimberley). officer; Mrs. Eliza J. Campling, matron
PosT, M. 0. & 'f. 0., S. B. & Annuity & Insurance Office
(telegraph business transacted from 8 a.m. to 8 p.m. RuRAL SANITARY AUTHORITY.
week days & from 8 to ro p.m. on sundays; money Meets at the Workhouse on alternate mondays at I I a. m.
orders issued & paid from 9 a.m. to 6 p.m. & for sale of Clerk, George Plumstead, Vicar street, Wymondham
stamps &c. from 9 a. m. to 9 p.m.).-Mrs. Sarah Harriot Treasurer, Henry Birkbeck, jun. esq. Norwich
Postle, postmistress, Market place. Letters received from Medical Officer of Health, Thomas Lambert Lack, llingham
London & all other places by night mail at 1.50 a. m. & by Inspector of Nuisances, Arthur Glasspoole, Town green,
day mail at r.2o p.m. ; from Norwich, Yarmouth & Wymondham
Lowestoft at 5.20 p.m. & from London &c. at 6.7 p.m.;
& dispatched to London, Norwich &c. by day mail at I I ScHOOL ATTENDANCE CoM:IiiTTEE.
a.m. & to London &c. at 2 p.m.; to Norwich, Yarmouth Meets at the Workhouse once a montli, on mondays, at
.11:; Lowestoft at 6.7 p.m. ; & to London, Norwich & all 11 a.m.
parts by night mall at ro.2o p.m. Deliveries commence Clerk, George Plumstead
at 7 a.m. 12.30 & 6.30 p.m. week days & at 8 a.m. on Attendance Officers, George :Fisher Dawes, Wymondha.m ;
sundays. A foot post at 6 a.m. to Barnham Broom, & Alfred Barnard, Barnham Broom
Tacolneston, Wreningbam, Morley, Spooner Row, Wickle-
wood & Barford, & returns at 8 p.m. Box closes at 9 p.m. PuBLIC EsTABLISHMENTS : -
Letters received until ro p.m. with an extra ~d. stamp Cemetery, Francis John llowlett, clerk to the burial board;
Sun-OFFICE, Suton (opposite the 'King of Prussia ').-John Henry Blazey, keeper of cemetery
Barker Parfect, receiver. Letters dispatched to Wymond- County Court, held at the Petty Sessional Court house,
ham at 6.25 p.m. week days Old Bridewell, once in two months ; His Honor E. P.
WALL LETTER BoxEs, Town Green, cleared at 8.40 p. m. ; Price Q.C. judge; Frederick Hawkin Newton, registrar &
Railway 'ltation, 9 p. m. ; Common, cleared at 7.15 p. m.; high bailiff. The following parishes are in the Wymond-
sundays, 8 a.m. ; Downham, cleared at 7.25 p.m ham county court district :-Ashwellthorpe, Aslacton,
PILLAR BoXEs, Damgate street, cleared at Io.so a.m. x.3o Barnbam Broom, Brand on Parva, Bun well, Carleton
& 9 p.m. ; Spooner row, cleared at 6 p.m. ; Suton, cleared Foreboe, Carleton Rode, Coston, Crownthorpe, Deopham,
at 7 p. m.; sundays, 6.45 p.m. ; Wattlefield, cleared at 6.ro Forncett St. Mary, Forncett St. Peter, Fundenhall, Hack•
p.m. ; Silfield, cleared at 7 p. m ford, Hapton, IIardingham, llethel, Hingham, Kettering-
bam, Kimberley, Morley St. Botolph, Morley St. Peter,
CoUNTY MAGISTRATES FOR THE PETTY SESSIONAL Moulton, Runhall, Tacolneston, Tibenham, Welborne,
DIVISION OF FORKHOE. Wicklewood, 'Yoodrising, Wramplingharn, Wreningham,
Kimberley Earl of K.G., P.C. Kimberley hall, chairman Wymondham. For bankruptcy purposes this court is in-
Cann William esq. Cavick house, Wymondham cluded in Norwich; H. P. Gould, 8 King street, Norwich,
Crawsbay Charles esq. Hingham, Attleborough bankruptcy official receiver
De Chair Rev. Frederick Blackett M.A. Rectory, Morley, Certified Bailiffs appointed under the "Law of Distress
Wymondham Amendment Act," Arthur Glasspoole, Town green; Waiter
Edwards Henry ·william Bartholomew esq. D.L. Hardingbam E. Balls, Poplc street; & Robert Borrett, Pulbam market
ball, Attleborough County l'olice Station, Old Bridewell, a superintendent
Ilunter-Muskett Rawdon esq. D.L. Hingham hall, Attle- & 2 constables
borough Fire Brigade, Fire Engine station, Market street, E. B.
Lombe Edwd. Hy. Evans esq. Great Melton hall, Wymondhm Porneroy, superintendent, & I I men
Read Clare Sewell esq. Honingham-Thorpe, Norwich Inland Revenue Office, 'King's Head,' Arthur John Birch-
Clerk to the Magistrates, Fras. John Howlett, Fairland st enough, officer
Petty Sessions are held the first & third tuesdays in every Public Hall, Town green, C. R. Ayton, secretary
month at the Police Station at 11 a. m. The following
places are included in the petty sessional division :-Bar- VoLUNTEERs.
ford, Barnham Broom, Bawburgh, Brandon Parva, Bow- 4th Volunteer Battalion (Norfolk Regiment) (I<' Co. ), Drill
thorpe, Carleton Forehoe, Colton, Costessey, Coston, hall, Town green, Capt. 'Valter C. Crawshay, command-
Crownthorpe, Deopham, Easton, IIackford, Hingbam, ant; Sydney G. Atkius & R. G. Hunter-Muskett, lieuten·
Honingbam, Kimberley, Marlingford, Morley St. Botolph, ants; Sergeant-Major Thomas Christopber Babbage, drill
Morley St. Peter, Runhall, Welbourne, Wicklewood, instructor
Wramplingbam & Wymondham PuBLIC OF.FlCEl{S : -
FOREHOH INCORPORATION. Assistant Overseer, Charles Robert Ayton, Church street
Board day, monday, fortnightly, at the Union house, Wickle- Clerk to Commissioners of Taxes, Francis John Howlett,
wood, at 11 a..m. Fairland street
The union comprises the following 23 parishes :-Barford, Clerk to Lighting Inspectors, George Plumstead, Vicar st
Barnham Broom, Bawburgh, Bowthorpe, Brandon Parva, Inland Revenue Officer, Artbur John Birchenough, Fair-
Carlet<m Forehoc, Colton, Costcssey, Coston, Crowntborpe, land street
Deopham, Easton, llackford, Hingham, Kimberley, Mar- Inspecwr of Weights & Measures, Jn. Riley, East Dereham
lingford, Morley St. Botolph, Morley St. Peter, Runhall, Medical Officer, 3rd District, Henstead Union & 8th District,
Welborne, Wicklewood, Wramplingham & Wymondham; Depwade Union, George Lowe M.D., C.M. Market street
the population of the Incorporation in 1891 was 11,988; Road Surveyor to County Council, Richard Entwistle
area, 37,838 acres; rateable value, £67,642. Stamp Distributor, Mrs. Jane White, MMket street
Treasurer, Henry Birkbeck, jun. Norwich Tax Collector, F. F. Cann, Downham
Clerk to the Guardians & Assessment Committee, George Town Crier, Jesse Harvey, Town green
Plnmstead, Vicar street, Wymondham
Relieving Officers & Collectors for the Guardians, Hingham SCHOOLS;-
district, Alfred Barnard, Barnbam Broom ; Wymondham The Grammar school was founded & endowed by King
district, George FISher Dawes, Bridewell st. Wymondham Edward VI. & various sums have been subsequently left
Vaccination Officers, George Plurnstead, Vicar street, Wy- by benevolent persons for its support : under a l'lew scheme
mondham ; & Alfred Barnard, Barnbam Broom of the Charity Commissioners in 1886, it is now managed
,Medical Otlicers & Public Va<:cinators, xst district, William by a body of eleven governors, of whom six are representa-
Ribton Spowart B.A., M. B. Norwich; 2nd district, Robert tive & five eo-optative, the Earl of Kimberley K.G. being
Heald, Hingham; 3rd district, David Watkin Hughes, chairman: the large schoolroom, formerly St. Thomas
Wymondham; 4th district, George Lowe M.D., c.M. Wy- a
Becket's chapel, is arranged for lOO boys, & the school
mondham ; sth district, William Henry Griffith-Williams house for 30 boarders, there being now (1892) 48 boys, of
L.R.C.P..Edin. Mattisha.ll whom :~:6 are boarders:, the Parker scholarship, of .£;'x8
DIRECTORY.] NORFOLK. WYMONDIIAM. 695
yearly, founded by Archbishop Parker in 1569, is tenable PLACES OF WORSHIP, with times of services:-
at Corpus Christi college, Cambridge ; there are also
five foundation scholarships, in the form of total exemp~ St. Mary's & St. Thomas a Becket's Church, Rev.
tion from the payment of tuition fees, awarded to boys Robert Eden :r.r.A. vicar ; Rev. Francis Thomas Hicks,
who have been not less than three years in any of the cura.tei 11a.m. &3&6.3op.m .............••.••.........
Public Elementary schools in the district: a fives court Wattlefield Chapel of Ease; 3 p.m ......................... ..
was erected by subscription in r885, & a covered gym- Congregational, Fairland, Rev. William Parry, min-
nasium & a chemical laboratory in r8gr : there are also ister; 10.30 a.m. & 6.30 p.m.; mon. 7.30 p.m.
two large playing-fields attached to the school: the school prayer meeting ; thurs. 7· 30 lecture .... , ............... .
is registered as a science school & art class in accordance Primitire Methodist, Town green, Rev. George Rud-
with the requirements of the Sonth Kensington Science & ram, minister; ro.3o a.m. & 2.30 & 6. 30 p. m. ; tburs.
Art Department; Rev. Arthur Wright Callis · M.A. of St. 7·3op.m ........................... . .- .............................. .
John's College, Cambridge, head master; Rev. Henry Primitive Methodist, Silfield, 10.30 a.m. & 6.30 p.m .. .
Mclntosh Cross B.A. late scholar of Pembroke College, Primitive Methodist, Suton, 10.30 a.m. & 6.30 p.m .. .
Oxon. & Lauritz H. Bay, assistant masters; A. S. Wilde, Baptist, Back lane, 2.30 & 6.30 p.m ...................... ..
music master; J. Lee, shorthand master Wesleyan, Damgate street, 6.30 p.m. ; tues. 7.30 p.m
The Commercial school, established in r888, has good Society of Friends, Chapel lane, I I a.m ................ ..
buildings, & is also in connection with the South Ken- Plymouth Brethren, Browick lane, I I a. m. & 6.30 p.m
sington Science & Art Department : it is available for Salvation Army, Jfairland street, 7 & I I a.m. & 3,
120 day boys & 40 boarders, the numbers in 1892 being 6.45 & 8 p.m. daily ............................................ .
51 day boys & 20 boarders ; head master, George Hare CONVEYANCE:-
Railway Station, David Norman, station master
A School Board of 7 members was formed 7 November, Cabs to meet every train f1·om 'King's Head,' Market st
1872 ~ the board meet the last wednesday in every month Railway Station, Spooner row, ilarry Jarrett Clark, station
at the clerk's oflice, Vicar street; George Plumstead, master
clerk to the board & attendance officer CARRIERS TO & FR01t! NORWICH:-
Board, Browick road, erected in 1876, for r8o boys, r8o Charles Mallows, Town green, mon. wed. & sat
girls & 200 infants ; average attendance, 158 boys, 124 William Balls, Town green, mon. wed. thurs. & sat
girls & 120 infants; Richard Charles Shockley, master; Edward Smith, Damgate street, mon. wed. & sat
Miss Jessie Manu, mistress; Miss Elizabeth J ackson, George Clabburn, Damgate street, mon. wed. & sat
infants' mistress Knott, from Rockland to Norwich, passes through on wed.
Board, Spooner row (mixed), erected in 1875, for 120 chil- & sat
dren; average attendance, r ro ; Robert Barnes, master Rayner, from Rockland, near Attleborough, to Norwich,
Board, Common (mixed), for Bo children; average attend- passes through on wed. & sat. calling at the Sun inn,
ance, 65; Miss Kate Mann, rnistress Damgate street
Board, Silfield ; average attendance, 32 boys & 27 girls ; Want, from Attleborough to Norwich, passes through on
Miss Clara P. Hichardson, mistress wed. & sat

PRIVATE RESIDENTS. • Jermyn Daniel, Bridewell street Alien John, farmer & cattle dealcr,Harts
Auger Thomas Edward, Town green King Miss, Town green farm, Norwich road
Ayton Charles Robert, Church street Larke Mrs. Vicar street Alien Wm. farmer & cattle cllr. Silfield
Ban ham Robert, N orthfield Low~ George 1\f. D. M'lrket street Alpe Robert Bird, chemist & druggist,
Bay Lauritz H. ( asistant master of the ;1IcG uwan \Yilliam MeEwen, Gd.rfield. Town green
Grammar school), School house house, Norwich road Ancient Order of Foresters, Court
Beeston Edmund, Friarscroft house Mason John Goldson, Beckett's well Loyal Windham Lodge (No. 2,904)
Betts George, N orthfield house Matthews Mrs. Chapel lane (Josiah Wade, sec.), Green Dragon,
Beville Major-General Henry C.B. Bur- Meadows Rev. William Henry [Primi- Church street
field hall tive Methodist], Pople street Attoe George, farmer, Suton
Bryant Charles George, Seymour house, Newton Frederick Hawkin, Church st Auger Thomas Edward M.R.c.v.s.
Norwich road Parker James, Market street veterinary surgeon, Town green
Callis Rev. Arthur Wright M.A. (head Parker John, Vicar street Aves Richaru, farmer, Spooner row
master of the Grammar school), Parker Mrs. Town Green villa Ayton Charles Robert, assistant over-
School house Parry Rev. William [Congregational], seer, poor's rate collector, sec. to Gas
Cann Mrs. J. Stephenson, Market place Bridewell street Co. & clerk to surveyors of highways
Cann Thos.Frdk. Mill cottage, Down ham Plumstead Georgc, Vicar street & sec. of Wymondham Public Hall
Cann William J. P. Cavick house Poll Misses, Town green Co. Limited, Chapelgate street
Cann Mrs. William, Bowden terrace Pomeroy Euward Hoyce, Vicli.r street Bailey John, farmer, Downham
Clarke Edward \Villiam Houth, Wattle- Pomeroy John Bartle, Vicar street Bailey Robt. jnn. coal dlr. Fairland rd
field ball Preston Frederick, Ivy Green villa, Baker William, dealer, Suton
Clarke Miss, Venetian cot. Norwich rd London road ·Baker William Horace, farmer Snton
Clarke Mrs. E. P. Vicar Street house Radley John Alfred c. E. Silfield lodge Bales Henry, shoe makQr, Fairland st.
Clements Robert, Station road Reyner Robert Violet, Church street Balls Waiter E. county court bailiff &
Colman Thomas Wilkins, Fairland st Rudd Mrs. Church street house agent, Pople street
Cook Misses, Bowden terrace Rudram Rev.George [Primitive Metho- Balls Walter, pastrycook & confectioner,
Crane Mrs. Vicar street dist], Town green Middleton street
Crispe Shepherd Edward,Market street Rushmer Thomas, Dunningham, Balls William, carrier, Town green
Cross Rev. Henry Mclntosh B. A. (assist- Chapelgate street Barker Clement Wm. farmer,Downham
ant master of the Grammar school), Self Mrs. Bowden terrace Barker Rebecca Diana (Mrs.), farmer,
Norwich road Semmence Alfred, The Fairland Downha1n
Cubitt Henry Lawrence, Market street Semmence Edward Larner, Town green Barker William, stone mason & coal
Cutbbertson Wm.Gilmour,Stanfield hall Semmence George, Town green dealer, Suton
Daniel Rev. William Dack, Town green Semmence Robert, Cavick road Barnard Amos, Leather Bottle P.H.
Dnnham William, Bridewell street Smith John Carman, Larner house Town green
Dunham Wilham Alfred, Northfield Spruce :Miss, N orthfield ho. Downham Barnard Arthur, farmer, Common
Eden Rev. Robt. :r.r.A. [vicar J, Vicar st Standlcy Charles Jagger, The Granaries Barnard Robert, boot & shoe maker &
Entwistle Richard Standley Frederick Wm. The Chestnuts shopkeeper, Damgate street
Everitt Charles, Northfield Standley John, Town green Barnard Robt. Hy. saddler, Bridewell st
Fryer Benjamm Stannard, The Park Standley Mrs. Town green Bartram Alice (Mrs.), dress maker
Fryer John Stannard, Browick hall Standley Thomas Hart, Town green Bartram Sarah Ann (Mrs.), shopkeeper,
Fryer Mrs. Browick hall Tayler Frederick W1lliam, Church st Lizard
Fryer William Bernard, Browick hall Taylor Mrs. Market place Bartram David, market gardnr. Siltield
Gamble-Norris Mrs. Northfield vill3 Thraxton Mrs. Northfield Bidewell Robert, boot & shoe maker,
Glasspoole Arthur, Town green Thurston John, Northfield Damgate street
Hanworth Capt. Edward, Brewery ho 'l'rixon Mrs. Town green Bilby Charley Collis, farmer, Suton
)Iare George, Commercial school Tuck \\'alter George, Norwich road BirchenougbArthurJohn,inland re'l"enue
Hicks Rev. Francis Thomas [curatel, Warren Harry, Hawthorn cottage officer, Fairland street
Market place \Vest Artbnr, Roundhaycot.Norwich rd Bird Henry, corn dealer, Middleton st
Hill Dennis, Market place \Veston Samuel Crnnness, Lonfield, Blazey Benjamin,bricklayer,Damgal.e st
Howchin Rev. Edward [Primitive London road Blazey Henry, keeper of cemetery
Methodist], 'fo wn green Wiffen Robert, llrowick Blazey Je..o;;se, commrcl. trav_ The Ferns
Howlett Francis John, Market place COMMERCIAL. Blyth William, baker & shopkeeper,
Hughes David Watkin, :Market street. AldenHerbert,marketi gardene:r,Vicar st Friarscroft lane
7
696 WYMO:NTBAM. NORFOLK. [KELLY S
Bowden Caroline (Mrs.), Griffin P.H. Crispe Shepherd Edward, brewer to Haldinstein P. & Son, boot & shoe
builder & contractor, Market street Messrs. Wm. Cann & Co. Market pl manufacturers, Market street
13owgen William R. Rose & Crown P. H. Cross George, cabinet maker & uphol- Hall John Burrell, farmer, Wattlefield
& plumber, Damgate street sterer, Damgate street Hall John Henry, grocer, pork butcher
Bowhill George, farmer, Gunvil hall Cross Thomas, butcher, Market street &c. Damgate street
Boyce Frederick, farmer, Dykebeck Cnbitt Henry Lawrence, manager of Hanworth Capt. Edward, manager to
Boyce George, farmer, Suton Gurney's Bank, Market street Wm. Cann & Co. Brewery house
Bracey Harry, hair dresser, Market st Cusbing Edith (Mrs. ),dress ma.Pople st Hardiment Henry, farmer, Suton
llrett Thos. tailor & outfitter, Market st Cushing Henry, furniture & general Bardiment John Mace, farmer & land-
Brewster James, gun maker (fridays), dealer & stationer &. photographer, owner, Silfie'd
Middleton street Market street Hare John, White Hart commercial
Briggs John Wm. beer ret. Damgaie st Gushing Joseph, saddler,Fairland street hotel, .Ma-rket street
Briggs Thos. vermin destroyer, Lizard Gushing William, coach painter,Pople st Harvey Anthony, baker & confectioner,
Brown George & Barnes, farmers, Black Cutbush George Arthur, florist & seeds- Market place
Car farm, ""'attlefield n1an, Market street Harvey Jesse, town crier, Town green
Brown James, farmer, Wattlefield Cutbush William T. florist, Poplc street HarwinArthurJn.farmcr, Dyke beck frm
Erowne Charlr~ Edward, farmer, Suton Davil"~ John, farmer, Downhatn Heron George, corn dealer, Damgate st
Brurnmage Jas. cabinet ma. Bride well st. Dawes George Fisher, relieving officer High Charlotte (Mrs.), timber carter &
Bunn Alfd.frmr.&estate carpntr.Silficld & collector for the guardians & school farmer, Si! field
BunnArth.l\'.frmr.Manor frm.Downhrn attendance officer, Wymondham dis- High Fanny (Mrs. ),farmer, Norwich rd
Bunn Brentwood, wheelwright & black- trict, Bridewell street Hood Jas. Hv. •
shoe maker, Damgate st
smith, Silfield Daynes Edwd. blacksmith, Spooner row Howard James, grocer, Damgate street
Bunn Elizabeth (Mrs.), farmer, Silfield Dennis Benjamin, saddler & harness Howard James John, Railway hotel
.Bunn Obadiah, farmer, Wattleficld maker, Market place Howes Erlward \Villiam, beer retailer,
Bunn Samuel, farmer, Downham grove Dightam Leon, printer, stationer & Town green
Bunn William, farmer &. poultry &c. tobacconist, Market street Howes Fredcrick, White Horse P.H. &
dealer, Downham Doubleday Charles, dealer, Spooner row plumber, Suton
B unn William, thrashing machine owner
~
Doubleday Samuel, farmer, horse dealer Howes J obn, fishmonger, Town green
& chimney sweeper, J<'airland street & cowkeeper, Spooner row Howc11 Jn. jun. fishmonger, Damgate st
Burt Charles, farmer, Suton Dover Hichard, wood turner, Back lane Howes Mary pirs.), ladies' school,
Cann William & Co. brewers, maltsters Downes Jn. King of Prussia P.H. Suton Damgate street
& spirit merchants, Wymondham Drake Clarissa (Mrs.), milliner & dress Howes William E. Dove inn, Pople st
brewery, Market place maker & shopkeeper, Damgate street Howlett Franc is J olm, solicitor, & clerk
Cann Frederick Freshfield, farmer, & Duffield Amos, wheelwright, Suton to the justices, to commissioners of
deputy registrar of births & deaths & Duffield George, blacksmith, Suton taxes, to charity trustees & to burial
tax collector, Downham Dunham 'Villiam,farmer & horse dealer, board, & superintendent registrar,
Cann Thomas Fredcrick, farmer, Mill Bridcwell street Fairland street
cottag-e, Downham Dunham Wm. Alfd.horse dlr.Northfield Hoy Wm. Geo. watch ma. Damgate st
.Carr Godfrey, farmer, Wattlefield Dnnnett James, farmer, Suton Hubbard Albcrt, baker & confectioner,
Carter Charles, insur. agt. Bowdcn ter Elliot Wm. M uskctt, farmer ,Spormer row Town green
Carter John, farm bailiff to Edward Elvin Charles, insurance agent, Lizard Huggins George, farmer & cattle dealer,
WilliamRouth Clarke esq. Wattlefield Entwistle Richard, county council dis- Spooner row
Carter William, shopkeeper, Damgate st trict road surveyor Hughes David ''\'atkin, surgeon,& rnedi-
Caston James, carpenter & shopkeeper, Fickling Jabez, coal dealer, Spooner row cal officer & public vaccinator 3rd
Spooner row Fire Brigade (E. B. Pomeroy, supt.), di~t. Forehoe union, Market place
Cemetery (F. J. Ilowlett, clerk to the Engine house, Market street Jermyn Dan (Mrs.), dress maker,
burial board; Henry Blazey, keeper Flint James, furniture broker, Poplc st Bridewell street
of cemetery) Ford George, shopkeeper, Common Jermyn Henry \Villiam,farmer & miller
Chase Philip, The (}oat P.H. Church st Forkes William, boot & shoe ma. Suton (\\ind & steam), Siltield
CheneryCha~.beer re: &carpntr. Chanl.la Foster Isaac, vermin destroyer, Lizard Johnson William, farm bailiff toW. ll.
Church William, farme>, Wattl~:.eJd Fox Benj. boot & shoe ma. Damgate brdg Fryer esq. Daddy's farm,Spooner row
Clabburn George, S.:n inn, 6r. carrier, Francis John Knapp, farmer, Suton Kerridge Arthur, butcher, Market st
Dam~~ate street Frank land George, umbrella maker, Kerriclgc I hrrict (Mrs.), patent medi-
Clark Harry Jarrett, station m:1ster, Darm.;ate street cinc v~nlut·, ;\hrket street
Spnoner row Fryer Benj. Stannard, farmer, Park frm Kerridge Herhert, butcher ,Bridewell st
Clarke Coleby E. builder &c.Bridewell st Fryer John Stannard, land agent, valuer Kett Eve (Miss), librarian, Market cross
Clarke Edward, grocer & linen draper, & farmer, Browick hall Kett Richard, farmer, Silfield
:\:Iarket street Fryer William llernard, land agent, King Edwarrl VI. Grammar School
Clarke William, greengrocer, Market st valuer & farmer, Browick hall (Rev. Arthur Wright Ca.llis M.A.
Clements Cubitt Cornelius (representa- Fulcher John, whitesmith & brazier, head master; Rev. H. Mcl. Cross
tives of), ironmongers &c. Fairland st Fairland street B.A. & Lg,uritz H. Bay, assistant
Codling George & Robert, fam1ers & Fulcber Waiter, whitesrnith & brazier, masters)
poultry &c. dealers, Siltield Damgate s.>reet King Freclk.commercial trav.Church st
Coe Edward, plumber, painter &c. Garrett Jethro Littlewood, merchant King George, farm bailiff to Earl of
Town green & miller (wind & steam),llrowick mill Kimberley K.G., P.C. Kimberley park
Coleman George, shoe maker, Silfield Gas Works (Charles RobertAyton,sec.); King Henry & Son, millers (wind &
Culler R. & Sons, coal, coke & salt mers. works, Fairland steam) & steam sawyers, North mill
&c. Railway station ; & at Norwich Genllrmd ThomasD.refreshment rooms, Knight Martha & Emma (Misses),dress
Commercial School,boarding & day Railway station makers, Bridewell street
school for boys ; thoroughly sound Girling Robert, tailor, Vicar street Knivett Henry, baker, Pnple street
middle class education ; special at- Glasspoole Arthur, auctioneer, registrar Knivett William, brick & tile maker &
tention given to bookkeeping, short- of births, deaths &. marriages for farmer, ~orthfield
hand & commercial correspondence; ~Wymondham sub-dist-nct & inspector Knott Hy. Three Feathers P. H. Town grn
George Hare, head 1naster of nuisances to the rural sanitary Lain Georgeanna (Mrs.), Hule & Corn-
Cooper Sara.h (Mrs.), hair dresser, authority, Town green pa!:!ses P.H. & farmer, Silfield
Fairland street Goffin William Joshua, Woolpack F.H. Lain John, beer retailer & cowkeeper,
Copeman John, farmer, 1\rattlefield Fairland street Fairland street
Corston Harriet (Mrs.), ginger beer Gooch John, tailor, Pople street Lain John, farmer, Silfield
maker & grocer, Spooner row Gooch Simon & Son, smiths & farriers, Lain William, farmer, Suton
County Court (His Honor E. P. Price Jt'airland street Lambert Thomas, grocer & linen dra-
Q.c.judge; FrederickHawkinNewton, Goodings David,shopkeeper, Damgate st per, Market place
registrar & high bailiff; Ezekiel Goodings Robert, chimney sweepet", Lane George, butler to Mrs. E. P.
Balls, bailiff), Town green Damgate street Clarke, Town greer:
Crane Charles, agricultural machine Gore Thomas, horse breaker & pork Lausdell Charlotte (Mrs.). farmer,
maker, Town green butcher, Fairland street Wattlefield
Cranness Arthur, grocer & draper, Gotts Robt.Adkins,bricklayer & builder Laycoek Christopher James, pork
Damgate street & sanitary engineer, Bridewell street butcher, Market street
Cranness George, carpenter, Damgate st Gurneys, llirkbecks, Barclay & Huxton, Leatherdale 'Villiam, farmer, Silfield
Cranness Henry, boot & shoe maker, bankers (branch) (Henry Lawrence Lee James, bill poster, Suton
Damgate street Cubitt, agent) (closed on saturdays); Leech Joseph, farmer, Sutou
Cranness Thomas Howlett, boot & shoe draw on Messrs. Barda'f, Bevan & [ Leeder Williarn, farmer, Spooner row
maker, Town green Co. London~ c Lem(ln Saml.boot&shoo ma.Damgatest
DIRECTORY.] NORFOLK.- WYMONCHAM. 697
Long Frederick, tailor, Market street Postle Sarah Harriot (Mrs.), postmis- Stanley Fred, photographer, Station rd
Long William, boot maker, Damgate st tress, Market place Stebbings Lydia. (Mrs.), laundress,
Lowe George M.D., c.M, surgeon, & Quantrell Mary Ann (Miss), dress Damgate street
medical officer & public vaecinator maker, Chandler's hill Stone Henry G. printer & stationer,
4th distriet, & medical ollicer work- Quantrell Wm. jun. farmer, Silfield Town green
house, "\<Vymondham union & medical Race John, farmer, Suton Stone James, beer retailer, London road
officer 3rd district, Henstead union Reading Room & Library (James Taylor George, shoe maker, Lizard
& 8th district, Depwade m1ion, Parker, hon. sec.; Miss Eve Kett, TaylorThomasStandley,corn merchant,
Market street librarian), Market cross Damgate street & farmer, Suton
Loyal Agincourt Lodge of Oddfellows Reeve George, farmer, Suton Thettord Thomas, beer rotailer, Suton
(No. 314) Manchester Unity (Robert ReeveJeremiah, TneMarinersP. H.Silfield ThompsonHy .&W m.farmers, Downharn.
V. Keyner, sec.), (,!ueen's head Reeve Maria Sarah (Miss), ironmonger, Thurston Jesse, farmer, Silfield
:McGowan William McEwen, draper & Town green Thurston John, farmer, Stanfield
tea dealer, Norwich road Riches Isaac, butter merchant, Common Thurtle Herbert, farmer, Si I field
McMullon Richd. com. trav. Church st Ringer Benjarnin, tailor, Darngate st Tuddenham William, butcher, Town grn
Mallows Charles, carrier & eab pro- Ringer Jn. coach builder, Norwich rd Tunaley Hy.Roch, horse dlr.~tation rd
prietor, Town green Ringer Robt. (representatives of), Three Tunaley Thomas, hoPBe trainer .
Mallett William, farm bailiff to Wm. Boars l'.H. Spooner row Volunteer Battalion (4th) Norfolk Regi-
Cann esq. J .P. Town green Rix Alice E._ (Miss), boarding & day ment (Capt. Waiter C. Crawshay,
March Sarah (Mrs.), shopkpr. Pople st school for girls, Town green commandant; Sergt.-Major Thomas
Marshal! Joseph J. King's Head Rix Thos. Colman, coach bldr. Common ChristopherBabbage,drill instructor).
hotel, Market place Hobins Mary Ann (Mrs.), earthenware Drill hall, Town green
Maynard George Christopher, chemist dealer, Damgate street \Vaje Chas. (:Mrs.), baby linen & fancy
& dentist, Market place Rolfe Jas. ( exors.of), farmers,Downham repository, Market street
Meadows Thomas, chimney sweeper & Rose Ell en( Mrs. ),drss. m a . .Friarscroft la Wade William, corn dealer, Market st
scavenger, Damgate street Rushmer Thomas Dunningham, wine & \Vainwright \\'illiarn, head gardener to
Midrllcton Sarah (Mrs.), Gcorge & spirit & ale &porter mer. Chapelgate st Earl of Kimberley K.G., P.C. K.im-
Dragon P.H. Market place Savory David, farmer, Common berley park
Mills Benjamin, dyer, Back lane 8ecker Samuel, basket ma.Bridewell st ·Warren Harry, superintendent for the.
.Minns James, coal dealer, Town green Selby Charles James, grocer, draper, Prudential Assurance Co. Limited,
Minns James, shopkeeper, Church st milliner, dress maker & wine & spirit Hawthorn cottage
Minns John, carpenter, Suton merchant, Market place Watts James, corn, coal, cake, seed &
Moore Henry, Duke's Head P.H. & Self Frank, farmer, Stanfield manure merchant, farmer & land-
- blacksmith, Damgate street Self Wm. Leonard,farmer, Spooner row owner, Spooner Row station
Moore John, beer retailer, Norwich rd Semmence Robert & Sons, timl;>er mer- Wells Charles, baker & shopkeeper,
Moore William Carr, farmer, Silfield chants, steam saw mills, turning Damgate street
Morley Jn. boot & shoe ma, Fair land st hctory & japan works, Cavick road Wells John, shopkeeper, Town green
Morris John, greengrocer, Folly lane Semmence Edward Larner, stone & West Arthur, fruit grower, Norwich rd
Neal Thomas E. manager toR. Coller marble mason & builder, Town green WestSaml.Arthr.ironmonger,Market pl
& Sons, coal mers. Railway station Semmence Henry, military & civil Wharton Georgc, grocer & butcher,_
N eave John, corn dealer, Fairland st tailor, Market street Spooner row
Newton Frederick Hawkin, solicitor, & Sewcll Geo. boot & shoe ma. Market st "\<Vharton Johu Rt. butcher, Damgate st.
registrar & high bailiff of county SlurpeAlfd.brick & tile ma.Norwicb. rd Whitcher Harry, gamekeeper to E. \V.
court, Church street Shepherd Waiter, Duck & Dog P.H. & R. Clarke esq. Wattletield
Nichols Elizabeth (Miss), dress maker, shopkeeper, Market street White Jane (Mrs.), stamp distributor,
Damgate street Shorten Fredk. \Vrr.~ farmer, Silfield Market street
Norman David,statn.ma. Railway statn Skipper & Bartram, carpenters & White John, farmer, Silfield
Page 8. D. & Sons Lim. brush manufrs builders, Fairland street Whiterod Joseph, farmer, f::luton
Page:\Iary(Mrs. ),laundress, Damgate st Sloper George, fanner, Downham, \\Thites & Pomeroy, solicitors, Vicar st
Pank J osiah, jun. gas fitter, Damgate st Smith John Robert & Sons, grocers, Wigby Robert, farmer, Dykebeck
1

l'arker & Sons,grocers,drapers,mineral drapers & outtitters, Town gr~en i \Vilde Algernon Sidney, professor of
water manufacturers &c. & agents to Smith W. H. & Sons; news agents,Hail- , music, ~rket street
W. & A. Gilbey, wine & spirit mer- way station i \VilliamsonGeorg0,refreshmcnt rooms,
chants, Market place SmithAlfd.GreenDragon P.H.Church st 1 Damgate street
Parker's Fancy Stores(James S.Parker, Smith Edward, carrier, Damgate street-1 Woodcock Albert James, shopkeeper,.
proprietor), china & glass, hoots & Smith Ed ward Lewis, boot maker & Fairland street
shoes, stationery & fancy repol:litory, shopkeeper, Damgate street Woodcock Blanche (Mrs.), carter,
Market street Smith Georgc William Gates, watch & 1 Station road
Peacock Waiter, farmer, Suton clock maker, Damgate street Wright Jeremiah, farmer, Browick
Pearson George, (,!ueen's Head P.H. Smith James, boot & shoe maker &. , Wright Robert, market gardener &.
Bridewell street leather cutter, Damgate street florist, Market street
Pease Samuel, farmer, Suton Smith Jarnes, farmer, Silfield \Vright William, farmer & machine
Peel William, shoe maker & shopkeeper, Smith John, shopkeeper, Lizard owner & shopkeeper, Common
Common Smith John C. corn, cake & seed mer- \\'right W1lliam, farmer, Silfield
Peele Ed win Peele (Mrs.), farmer, Stan- chant, Larner house \Vymer Alt'red, wheelwright, Town grn
field Hall farm Smith Robt. Hy. fishmonger,Market st Wymondham Amateur- Athletic Club
Perfitt Ephrairn, watch & clock maker, Smith William, builder, Middleton st (E. W. R. Clarke esq. president~
Market street Smith Wm. Windmill P.lf. Norwich rd Chas. R Ayton, hon. sec.),Church st
PBI·fitt. Ephrairn J oseph, fancy reposi- Smith William, Cock inn, Town green Wymondham Canary Breeding Society
tory & watch maker, Town green SpinksChina(Mrs.),shopkpr.Damgate st (R. Gooch & J. Pearson, secs)
Perfitt Wait. grocr. & drpr. Fairland st Standley John & Sons, auctioneers, j·Wymondham Cricket Club (John Pear-
Plumstead George, clerk to the school valuers & estate agents, Town green; , son, hon. sec.), Bride well street
board, to the board of guardians, to & corn, seed, cake, manure & coal I Wymondham Football Club (Associa-
the rural sanitary authority & to mers.& wool staplers,H.aihvay station tion) (George Hare, hon. sec)
Bracon Ash school board, vaccination Standley Frederick William, solicitor & Wymondham Musical Society (J. B.
officer & school attendance officer, commissioner to administer oaths in Pomeroy, sec.), Vicar street
Vicar street the Suprerr.e Court of Judicature, WJmondham Public· Hall Co. Limited
Plunkett Benj. shoe maker, Market st Town green (C. R. Ayton, sec.). Town green
PlnnkettWm.Cross Keys P.n.Market pl Standley Charles Ha.rvey, ironmonger, Wymondham Union Co-operative
Pomeroy Edward Boyce (firm, Whites Town green Society (\Vm.Knivett,sec. ), Town gm
& Pomeroy), solicitor & commissioner Standley Job (Mrs.),farmer,BellRope la Wymondham Young Men's Society
for oaths & deputy supt. registrar, Standley Robert, thatcher, Station rd (The Earl of Kimberley K.G., P.C.
Vicar street Standley Florence (Mrs. ),tailor,draper, president; J. Pearson,sec. ),:\Iarket pl
Pomeroy John Bart)e, solicitor, Vicar st & hatter, Church street Youngman John, farmer, Downham
698 YARMOUTH. NORFOLK. (KELLY'S

YAltlVIOU'"rH .
YARMOUTH, or GREAT y ARMOUTH (Magna Gernemutha), shortest route to London, and has a separate station in South
which derives its name from its situation at the mouth of town, also affords communication with all the towns m
the river Yare (the Garhuenus of the Romans), is a popular Suffolk.
seaside resort, seaport and market town, a municipal county ! The Eastern and Midlands railway, formed by the a mal-
and parliamentary borough, and the bead of a union, with! gamation of several small companies, has its terminus at
stations on the Great Eastern and Eastern and Midlands rail- the Beach station, Nelson road north, closely adjoining the
ways, 145 miles from London by rail (via Cambridge), 120, aquarium, parade and beach, and affords communication
by the East Suffolk railway (via Ipswich), 123 by road, 20 with the Midland and Northern counties, via Fal!:enham,
east-by-south from Norwich by rail and 24 by road, 9 north Lynn, Sutton Bridge and Peterborough, and also brings the
from Lowestoft, 54 north-east from Ipswich and so north- towns and districts of Cromer, North Walsham, Aylsham,
east from Bury St. Edmunds, in lat. 52° 16' N. and long. Mclton Cnnstable and J<'akenham, in direct communication
I 0 43' 7"' E. in the Eastern division of the comity, hundred with Yarmouth, as well as providing an alternative route to
of East Flegg, petty sessional division of East and West Norwich and Lynn; the celebrated Norfolk Broads are
Flegg, rural deanery of Flegg and archdeaconry and diocese easily accessible by this railway.
of Norwich. The "Denes" on which Yarmouth is situated, form a
The parish of Yarmouth is wholly in Norfolk, but the long and narrow tongue of land, or peninsula, running from
municipal borough includes the parish of GoRLESTON and the nortl! towards the south, washed on the east side by the
hamlet of SouTHTOWN, both in Suffolk, and over which, for German ocean, and on the west by the river Bure, Breydon
municipal and sanitary purposes, the town council of Yar- Water, which receives the Yare and Waveney, and the main
mouth have jurisdiction. In April, 18g1, Gorleston was channel, which carries all these rh·ers to the sea. The old
amalgamated with the parish of Yarmouth and formed into town is built on the river side of the denes, but of late years
a union. Yarmouth has extended completely to the sea, and now has
Next to Norwich, Yarmouth is the chief town of the a frontage seaward of nearly three-quarters of a mile, and
eastern counties, and the port of East Norfolk and Suffolk, the North and South Quays. which are very broad, extend
and is a flourishing town, owing to its fisheries, its foreign for nearly a mile and a quarter.
trade, its advantages as a bathing place, and its manu- The Britannia Pier at the north end and the Wellington
factures ; its situation is as peculiar as its origin, being on a Pier at the south end of the Parade, and the Old Jetty be-
sand drift formed at the entrance of the estuary, which at tween them, afford agreeable promenades, and the former
~ne time extended to Norwich. pier is useful for passengers landing from boats. A pro-
An ancient channel to the sea, on the north side of the menade and carriage drive extends along the entire sea
town, called "Grubb's Haven," gradually became choked frontage of the town, from the Cemetery road at the north
with sand, and is not now discernible. The south channel end to the Haven's mouth at the south end, being three
was once at Newton, near Cor ton, in Suffolk, 4 miles south miles in length next the sea, and returns along the east bank
of the present channel, and afterwards beyond Corton; and of the river back to the town.
in 1337 it became so choked with sandbanks, and was so in· There is water communication with North Walsham,
convenient, that the trade of the town was stopped. Subse- Aylsham, Norwich, Beccles and Bungay.
quently many attempts were made to cut channels in different The fine air of this watering place, the extensive sea view
places, and after seven trials, the present channel, begun in and its splendid and safe sands render this town one of the
rss9, was completed in IS67 by Joost Jansen, or Joyce John- most favoured of seaside resorts; it is regularly built, and
sen, a Netherlands engineer: and the shores on each side are has some fine houses, both in the old and new parts; under
now defended by piers and jet tie!.'. The rise of spring tides , the provisions of the " Health of Towns Act," it has been well
is about 6 feet, and of neap tides 4 feet, the depth of the water paved and drained. The principal streets run parallel with
on the bar being about 12 feet, and at high tides from 18 to the quays, and are crossed by 145 narrow lanes called rows,
20 feet. The roadstead, except with eastern or north-east which are numbered. Remains of the ancient town walls,
winds, affords excellent anchorage, and was much resorted begun in the reign of Henry III. still exist.
to by the navy in time of war, as it is by merchantmen and The town is lighted with gas from works in South Denes
colliers passing the east c·oast at the present time, so that road, and is supplied with water from one of the local
frequently as Inany as r,ooo vessels are to be seen at anchor "broads," at Ormesby, about 8 miles north-west from Yar-
t once. There are commissioners for the haven and pier, mouth, which has an area of between 700 and 8oo acres ;
and also fur pilotage. the works belong to a company, incorporated under an Act
The limits of the port were defined in 18_s2, and ordered to of Parliament in r853. There is a large covered reservoir
extend from Walcot Gap to League Hole; but in r88o, Spar- at Gorleston, from which both that place and Yarmouth are
row Gap, the limit of Lynn, was made the eastern limit for supplied.
Yarmouth. Fishing boats and implements belonging to the King John granted to the burgPsses a charter, still pre-
port are distinguished by the latters Y H. served, making Yarmouth a free borough, and conferring
Here the Bure, the Waveney, and the Yare, with their tri- many valuable rights and privileges, in consideration of a fee-
bntaries the Ant, the Thurne, and the Wensum, after fer- farm rent of £so, which is still paid to the Crown. From
tilizing very extensive tracts of country, flow through a this period Yarmouth greatly increased, and became so
long and broad artificial haven, and discharge their con- powerful that it supplied Edward Ill. with more ships and
fluent waters into the German ocean. At a. very early men for carrying on his wars than any other place in the
period this place was frequented by fishermen from different kingdom. Many subsequent charters (all of which are now
parts of England, especially the Cinque Ports, who dried in the muniment room at the Town Hall), were conferred
their nets on the denes or downs, and eventually erected by successive monarcbs ; and in the reign of Charles II.
houses thereon, so that in the time of Edward the Confes- Southtown was incorporated with Yarmouth. The Cinque
sor there were 70 burgesses, -and the place became the great Ports, under a charter of Edw. I. long exercised the right of
mart for herrings, especially during the annual free fair. sending bailiffs to Yarmouth to govern the place during the
The bridge over the Yare, between Yarmouth and South- herring season, from Michaelmas to Martinmas, their juris-
town, forms a connecting link between Norfolk and Suffolk, diction being concurrent with that of the bailiffs of Yar-
and was completed in 1854; it is built of iron, on the tubu- mouth; this arrangement, the only instance of the kind on
Jar principle, and is carried on two massive stone piers each record, led to many disputes, and in the reign of Charles II.
12 feet across ; between the piers and the abutments the span . the bailiffs of the Cinque Ports finally ceased to attend.
of the waterway is 65 feet, and in the centre between the The town is under the government of a corporation, con-
piers the span is 50 feet ; the centre span opens in two parts, eisting of a mayor, twelve aldermen, thirty-six councillors,
the lea yes of which weigh upwards of 90 tons; the cost, in- with a recorder, high steward, town clerk, coroner and clerk
eluding the purchase of the site, was about £so,ooo. An of the peace. The Corporation act as the Urban Sanitary
iron tubular bridge, in two compartments, connects the Authority. There is a separate commission of the peace,
railway with the tramways, which extend the entire length including the mayor and ex-mayor, and under it petty ses-
of the quays. A wrought-iron bridge has been erected over sions are holden daily, and also quarter sessions. The
the Bure, at the spot where, by the fall of the other bridge in recorder presides in the borough court.
May, 1845, many persons were plunged into the river and The borough has its own police force, and under the
some drowned. "Local Government Act, 1888," it has been declared for
Yarmouth is connected with the main line of th3 Great certam purposes a county borough. •

Eastern system by a branch to Norwich, which is the route Yarmouth formerly returned two member~ to Parliament,
to the North and the Midland counties; whilst the East but it was disfranchised by the "Representation of the
Suffolk section of the same line, from Ipswich, which is the 1 People Act, r867," and by the "Redistribution of Seats Act,
DIRECTORY.] NORFOLK. YARMOUTH .. 699
x885," it now returns one member. The parliamentary St. John's church, situated near the beach, and erected in
borough comprises the municipal borough and a part of the x857, is an e:lifice of cut flints with stone dressings in the
parish of Runham. Early English style, consisting of apsidal chancel, nave,
There was a chapel here, dedicated to St. Benet or Bene- aisles, transepts, organ chamber, north and south porches
diet, as early as the reign of the Confessor; but in 1121 and a turret over the south porch containing one bell : there
Herbert de Losinga, first Bishop of Norwich, begun the are vestries connected with the church by a corridor: several
erection of the church of St. Nicolas in connection with a of the windows are stained: the church has been several
Benedictine priory adjoining, and it was dedicated in 1251. times enlarged, and most recently in r884 at a cost of
The church, as now existing, is a cruciform building, 1,-I,Soo, from designs by Messrs. llottle and Olley, archi-
chiefly of flint, in the Early English, Decorated and Perpen- tects, of Great Yarmouth, and now affords about goo sit-
dicular styles, and consists of chancel with wide gabled aisles tings. The register is kept at the parish church. This is a
or chapels, transepts, nave, south porch, and a central tower, curacy in the gift of the \'icar, and held since x8g2 by the
with trefoiled parapet and pinnacles and an octagonal spire, Rev. Herbert Fitzackerley Freeman B.A. of Corpus Christi
and containing a clock and 10 bells: in 1551 the monu- college, Cambridge.
mental brasscs were cast into weights and measures, and St. Andrew's church, on the North quay, erected in r8sg-
during the time of the Commonwealth the church suffered 6o, principally for the river population, is an edifice of cut
great mutilation and damage, its various portions being flints, with stone dressings, internally faced with red and
partitioned off for the use of different religious sects; the white brick in the Early English style, and con.sists of
chancel being assigned to the Independents, and the north apsidal chancel, nave, south aisle, transepts and a belfry
aisle to the Presbyterians, the Episcopalians being allowed containing a clock and" 2 bells : there are 300 sittings.
the use of the nave; various repairs were carried out during St. Jameg' church, Queen's road, erected during the period
the first decade of the present century and in 1847 a partial x87o-8, at a cost of £4,500, is an incomplete structure of
restoration, including the opening of the north aisle, was red brick and flint, consisting of chancel and nave only,
effected, at a cost of about £6,ooo, under the direction of affording about 400 sittings. The Rev. George Edgar
Mr. J. H. Hakewell, architect; in 1862 the work of restora- Augustus Pargiter M.A. of Merton College, Oxford, has been
tion was recommenced, under the direction of Mr. J. P. curate in charge since 1892.
Seddon, architect, when the old tower was thoroughly re- St. Paul's church, North end, has been in charge of the
paired and the parapet and pinnacles at the angles replaced, Rev. John Lewis llughes B.A. of St. David's College,
the chancel proper restored and the partition walls dividing Lam peter, since 1892.
the chancel and its aisles from the remainder of the church
taken down, and, for the first time during 300 years, the The Catholic church, dedicated to the Virgin Mary, and
whole of this noble edifice was thrown open~ the south standing at the junction of Regent and Nelson roads, was
aisle, which was in a ruinous state, has been tho,.oughly erected in 1850, at a cost of over £10,ooo, and is a building
restored, and in 1883 a complete restoration of the south of flint in the Gothic style, consisting of chancel, clerestoried
transept and west front was effected at a cost of about nave, aisles, sacristy and a lofty embattled tower at the
£4,000, under the direction of Mr. J. L. Pearson R.A. : a north-west angle, with pinnacles, and containing one bell:
stained east window was inserted in r878 to the memory of the high altar, reredos and pulpit are of stone, elaborately
Mr. and Mrs. Palgrave, by their children, and there are carved : the fourteen stations of the Cross arc represented
- others: the cost of the handsome oak choir stalls was de- in has-relief on the walls and there is a statue over each of
frayed from funds raised by a ladies' working party held the seven pillars of the nave : there are about 400 sittings.
weekly at the Vicarage: the fine pulpit was erected in 1884: The Meeting House of the Society of Friends, in Row 6o,
the organ, a magnificent instrument, first built by Jordan Howard street, has about roo sittings.
in 1733, has been divided and thoroughly repaired and en- . The Baptist chapel, Wellesley road, was erected in 187o,
larged, and was re-opened 6th July, 1875: there are monu- in place of the Old Meeting House, in Row 15, built in 1i56.
ments to George England, who died in 1702, Benjamin Eng- The Particular Baptist chapel, York road, was built in 1841.
land d. I]II, Rev. Richard Turner B.D. d. 1835, Francis The Baptist chapel, St. George's park, was built in x86x, at
Turner d. r864 and the Fuller family, and plain marble a cost, including schools, of £3,500 and has sittings for 6oo
slabs marking the resting-places of John Carter, the friend persons.
of Cromwell and of Mrs. Bridget Bendish, daughter of The Brethren have a small chapel in Albion road.
General Henry Ireton and granddaughter of the Lord Pro- The Congregational chapel, Middlegate street, built in
tector: the font, of Purbeck marble, is octagonal and of con- 1870, at a cost of £3,500, has about 700 sittings. A large
siderable age : the vestry contains a small collection of old lecture hall with class rooms was added in r879, at a further
books and a curious revolving reading-desk: the area of the cost of £3,500. The Congregational chapel, King street~
church is larger than that of any other parish church in the built in 1855, affords about Boo sittings.
kingdom, and it will seat 3,500 persons, about 1,5oo sittings The chapel of the Countess of Hw1tingdon's Connexion, in
being free. The parish register dates from the year 1558. Fish street, is now (r8g2) closed and the congregation are
The living is a vicarage, average tithe rent-charge £46, net removing to a new but teml1orary building in South Town
yearly value £236, with residence, in the gift of the Dean road.
and Chapter of Norwich, and held since 1892 by the Rev. The Methodist New Connexion chapel, King .'ltreet, con-
Joseph Edmund Rogers M.A of Christ College, Cambridge. tains about 400 sittings.
St. George's chapel, built in 1713, is a structure of red The Primitive Methodist chapel (Yarmouth Temple),
brick, consisting of aspidal chancel, nave, aisles, three west- Priory plain, built in 1875, at-a cost of about £5.300, has
ern porches and a belfry containing a clock and one bell : sittings for I,150 persons. The Primitive Methodist chapel,
it was thoroughly repaired and reseated in 1883 at a cost of Queen's road, built in 1867, at a cost of £I,68o, will seat
about £1,200 : the chapel ~ontains a fine organ, built in about 6oo.
1730 by Jordan, Byfield and Bridges, and repaired and en- The Unitarian chapel or Old Meeting House, Middlegate
larged in r887 at a cost of about £soo: a new communion street, has sittings for about soo.
table of richly carved oak has lately been presented and the The Free Methodist church, Regent road, was built in
chancel floor relaid in mosaic at the cost of Miss Harriet r856 and enlarged in 1887, when a new organ was erected:
Turner, of Yarmouth: there are about 850 sittings. The the church seats about 6oo.
living is a vicarage,in the gift of the Church Patronage Society, The Wesleyan chapel, Dcne side, was built in 1837, and
with an endowment of £2ooa year,derived from the Borough re-pewed and renovated in 1886 at a cost of £2,000, and will
rates, and held since 1885 by the Rev. James Sinclair Moore seat about r,ooo.
H.A. of Trinity College, Dublin. The parish churchyard, which is extensive, was enlarged
St. George's Church Rooms, in King street, erected in about 1833. A cemetery of 12 acres, north-east of the
181)0-I, at a cost of £2,000, form a building of red brick and church and adjoining the churchyard, was inclosed in 1855
stone in the Classic style: the front elevation being relieved and a further inclosure of 1:5 acres of ground adjoining the
by stone columns, and adorned with moulded brick work latter was made in 1876. The total extent of burial ground
and stone pilasters: the building contains a hall capable of contiguous to the church is now about 40 acres. There are
seating 400 persons, and three large class-rooms, and is at two mortuary chapels ; that belonging to the church has
present used for sunday schools and various classes and not been consecrated and theN onconformist chapel is seldom
entertainments in connection with St. George's. used. The Town Council acts as a Burial Board. The
Catholic cemetery, in Northgates street, occupies about 2
St. Peter's church, built and consecrated in x833, at a acres and has one mortuary chapel.
cost of £ I2,ooo, is an edifice of white brick, consisting of
nave, aisles and an embattled western tower u8 feet high, The Blue Coat Charity School, in the Market place, erected
containing a clock with four dials : in the church is a copy in 1713 by the Corporation, was closed in r8gr; its income
of Rubens' •• Descent from the Cross~ " there are about is about £200 yearly from invested funds.
1:,5oo sittings, of which Boo are free. The register is kept The Priory of St. Nicholas, anciently existing here, was
at the parish church. The livin~ is a perpetual curacy, founded about IIOO by HerbEll't Losinga, bishop of Norwich,
yearly value £230, in the gift of the vicar of Yarmouth. and for monks of the Benedictine ord.ell t the refectory (126o),
held since x88x by the Iwv. William Thorpe Goodrich. standing near the parish church, has been _purcha.sed and-
700 YARMOUTH~ NORFOLK.
converted into a Priory school. In 1853 buildings were The Royal Aquarium Theatre, on the Marine drive and
erected in a style corre.-;ponding with that of the schools, to near the Britannia pier, is a fine building, and will hold
fonn a reading-room, libr-.uy aud museum. 2,ooo l'ersons.
The Hospital of the Blessed Virgin Mary, founded in Vl'inton's New Assembly Rooms, in the centre of Marine
the reign of Edward I. by Thomas Fastolfe, for eight poor parade, are open every evening for dancing: and elemen,
men and eight poor women, but dissolved at the Reforma- tary and ad \'anceu assemblies are held throughont the winter.
tion and transferred to the Corporation, was appropriated The trade of Yarmouth consists chiefly in the supply of
to the Grammar school on its foundat.ion in I5SI, and the the towns on the rivers, which are navigated by wherries
Great Hall of the hospital and other parts of the old build- and lighters. Dnring the year ending March 25th, r8g2,
ing, including a house for the master, continued to be so 59,153 tons of coals were imported, the port and haven
used ..until 1757, and a part of the revenue of the hospital dues upon which were £985 17S. 9d.; and upon the wood
was applied to the support of the master and of the Grammar imported £1,210 IIS. rod.; r49,r87 quarters of corn and
school. seed were imported and exported, the port and haven dues
The Town Hall, situated on the Quay and erected in upon which were £932 8s. 8d. There has been of late years
IB82-3, at a cost of [3o,ooo, was opened I June, 1883, by a large increase in vessels of 1 so tons an'l upwards, the
H. R. H. the Prince of Wales, and is an edifice of red brick and tonnage of which, during the year, was 82,244: vessels of
red Cumberland sandstone, in the so-called Qneen Anne smaller size amounted to 94,608 tons: the dues on the two
style, from plans by Mr. John B. Pearce, archited, of classes of ve sels amounted to £3,258 14s. ; the dues upon
Norwich, and comprises a central hall (8o by 24 feet), a clock fish and fishing vessels were £2,315 os. 7d. ; and miscel-·
tower I 10 feet in height, offices for the town clerk, muni· laneous goods £2,029 r5s. ud. ; the total amount of collec-
ment, committee and accountants' rooms, chief constable's tion of port and haven dues was £10,712 8s. 9d. Barley is
and police room, surveyors' offices, rooms for barristers, the chief article of export. There are numerous and very
waiting rooms.. for witnesses and cells : the grand staircase extensive malting-bouses in Yarmouth and it:> neighbour-
is of white Portland stone, with balusters of teak, beautifully hood, belonging to Messrs. E. Lacon and Sons and to the
carved ; on the first floor are the quarter sessions court (32 metropolitan brewers and others, which afford employment
feet by 49 ), with gallery for the public and judges' retiring to a large number of hands. The town is a great centre of
room; the Assembly room ( roo feet long by 45 feet wide), the fishing trade; the herring fishery, for which Yarmouth
with chairs for 900 persons and a refreshment room : here are is so highly and justly celebrated, affords employment orl
also the council room and rooms for the use of the grand and shore for a very large number of persons, both men and
petty juries, a police court, room for witnesses, and a stone women, in salting and curing the fish; those called "red
staircase from the cells to the court. The building, erected herrings" being first cured with salt and afterwards dried
on a subsoil of gravel, ooze and made ground, gave early with the smoke of a wood fire : the produce is equal to one-
indications of unequal subsidence, especially in wet seasons fifth of the entire return of the herring fisheries thronghont
and at low tides, and in r887 it became necessary to take the kingdom, the number taken being reckoned by "lasts,''
steps for its preservation, the west front having sunk con- each last consisting of about r3,ooo herrings; from August
siderably and exhibiting, as well as the north wall, several to the middle of December is the time for herring fishing;
serious fissures, besides which the tower had settled, leaning there are also fisheries for mackerel, cod, sprats, turbot,
towards the river. Under the advice and superintendence soles, skate, whitings, eels and shrimps. A large portion of •
of Mr. Duckham, engineer. of the Millwall Docks, and Mr. this produce is sent to London, Manchester, Birmingham
J. E. Teasdel, engineer and surveyor, of Yarmouth, the and other distant. towns. According to Brooks' list there
western portion of the structure was taken down with a view were (in 1887) 708 first-class fishing vessels sailing from
to its re-erection on a firmer site, and the remainder, includ- the port of Yarmouth, 633 were registered there, 72 in
ing the tower, has been underpinned with cast-iron screw London and 3 at other ports, 433 adapted as trawlers, 102
cylinders filled with cement concrete, on the top of which as drifters, and 173 for both purposes, carrying from six to
and parallel with the walls, double lines of wrought-iron eleven men each ; while there are a somewhat larg-er number
~

girders were fixed and connected at. their ends by means of of vessels of smaller siz~. The Fish Wharf, on the South
bolts, with iron needles from 14 to 16 feet long, passed Denes, commenced April 2oth, 1867, and opened February,
through under the concrete foundation of the building, and r869, at a cost of about £23,ooo, is 2,251 feet in length, with
thus transferring its weight, estimated at about s,ooo tons, a shed 7 so feet long and 40 feet wide : the roof rests on 148
to the screw piles. The work, occupying ten months, was iron columns, about 9 feet high in front and 7 feet in the
completed in Nov. r887, at a cost of £8,250, and in the rear ; on the east side are fish salesmen's offices, and in the
course of it various interesting relics were met with ; the rear of the market a series of curing houses and yards. A
remaining renovations and repairs were finished in July, new quay wall was built into the fish wharf in r89r at a cost
I888, and no further subsidence has since been observed. of £26,ooo. Ship and boat building employ many hands,
The Tol-House and Free Public Library.-Since the erec- and vessels of 460 tons are built here. There arc several
tion of the Town Hall, and the transference of prisoners to rope and twine and trawl net manufactories. The silk
the gaol at Norwich, the old Tal-house has become useless : crape works belonging to :Messrs. Grout and Co. erected in
the front portion of it, however, is an unusually interesting r8rB, give employment to nearly r,ooo operatives of both
piece of architecture, containing two very beautiful Early sexes.
English doorways. The Corporation have arranged upon There are steam packets to and from London, Hull and
certain conditions to secure the preservation of all the ancient :Newcastle, for passengers and goods, and the Scotch s1eam
part of the building, which is accordingly lPt on lease to a packets pass throngll Yarmouth Roads and occasionally
corporate body consisting of the mayor and the vicar, with land and embark passengers.
others added from time to time, and the building has been The Custom House, on the Qu'ly, is a large and commo-
restored at a cost of about £700. In consequence of the diom! building.
adoption in r885 of the " Public Libraries Act, 1855" ( r8 &
19 Vict. c. 70), it was decided to use the Tal-house as a Free The Corn Market is held on the Hall quay; the market
Library, aud the necessary alterations were effected at a days are \Vednesday and Saturday. Fairs are held on
cost of about £250: the library comprises 13,036 volumes ; Sllrove Monday and Tuesday, and on the Friday and Satur-
and the total issue for the year 1891-92 was 126,107 volumes: day after Easter.
in 1889 a new reading room was built, the lending library en- There are several small docks or basins belonging to the
larged and a librarian's office opened, at a total cost of£ 2,400. ship builders, one of which will take a soo-ton ship.
The Public Library, South quay, established in r8o2 by a The Savings Bank, in the Market place, was established
number of shareholders and yearly subscribers, now pos- in r8 r8.
sesses a valuable collection of about r6,ooo volumes of all The Royal National Life Boat Institution maintain a boat
classes of literature and on all subjeets of general interest, called the "John Burch," on the Marine parade, and two
and among them are 40 large folios of the Public Records, boats, the "Mark Lane " and the " Leicester," at Gorles-
printed by Government and deposited here for public use in ton : the former was presented by Mark lane merchants and
1825, including the Domesday Book, published with indexes the latter by the inhabitants of Leicester ; there is also a
I783-rBr6, and the new edition of 1875. The library is 45 voluntary life-boat presented by Mrs. Elizabeth Simpsoil
feet long by 22 feet wide, and the reading room, 30 by 24 Stone and named after her.
feet, is opeu to all subscribers, and is well supplied with the The Bath House, in Marine drive, to which a com-
best London and local daily and weekly newspape111 and the fortable family hotel was added in 1835, is held on lease from
leading magazines of the day. the corporation by the executors of the late :Mr. Samuel
Walker Bly, for a term of 500 years from September, J759•
The Pnblic Free Library and Reading Room, High street, with a covenant that no other baths shall be erected on the
poened in 1887, contains about I,ooo volumes, and con- corporation waste lands: in 1778 a Public room was erected,
sists of one room and office for the librarian. which IS the only portion now remaining of the original
Tbe Theatre Royal, erected in '1778 and remodelled in structure; the House was rebuilt, enlarged and refitted in
1820, was added to and further remodelled by Mr. }<'rank I835, and has since been extended and much improved;
Matcham in 1892, and is capable of seating 8oo persons. and hot and cold ~ea water baths can always be had •.
DIRECTORY. J NORFOLK. YARMOOTH. 701
Yarmouth is the head quarters of the Militia and Volun- it are varied and extensive: the roof of the shaft is supported
teer Artillery, Eastern district, and the 2nd sub-depot of by caryatides, and these are surmounted by a ball and
the Eastern division of Garrison Artillery : the barracks, figure of Britannia holding in her hands a trident and a
situated on the South Denes, were erected in 1850 and laurel branch.
enlarged in 1885, with the object of making them into Royal On the North Denes, close to the sea, is one of the most
Artillery barracks. There are two corps of volunteers in extensive golfing links in England, containing 18 holes and
the town, one of artillery and the other of rifles : the butts extending about 3 miles.
are on the North Denes. The Drill Hall of the rifle volun- Recreation grounds, on the North Denes, 8 acres in ex-
teers, erected in 1867, on St. Peter's plain, covers a space of tent, were laid out in r88g; and in 1891, about 3 acres of
ground 147 feet in length by 65 feet in width : the large hall gr.mnd lying between Wellington Pier and the Jetty were
is roofed in one span with elliptic ribs, and is lighted chiefly also laid out as gardens.
by a skylight at the apex of the roof. Races take place on the South Denes, in August. There
The Volunteer Artillery Drill Hall, Nelson road, built in is also a yearly regatta in the roadstead, and another on
t88I, is 66 feet long and 35 feet wide. Breydon Water, near Burgh Castle.
HOSPITALS AND CHARITABLE INSTITUTIONS. In addition to the remains of the ancient town walls and
The Yarmouth Hospital, Dene Side, first founded in 1.838 the Tal-house, the antiquities of the town include several old
and rebuilt in 1888 on the same site, from designs by Messrs. houses of much interest; amongst these is the Star hotel,
llottle and Olley, architects, of Yarmouth, at a cost of about which contains some curious carvings and pendant ceilings :
£n,ooo, is a structure of red brick with terra cotta dress- and No. 4 South quay, built in 1596, and now the residence
ings in a free Italian style, on the Pavilion system ; the of Mr. Samuel Aldred, which has some fine Elizabethan
centre block is intended chiefly for administrative purposes, rooms, in one of which, according to tradition, the death
ani the wings for the reception of patients, and the whole of Charles I. was determined on; it now belongs to the
contains about 44 beds, with facilities for an increase to Carter family, and a granddaughter of Oli ver Cromwell once
50 beds, when the out-patients' department is removed; resided in it. In the neighbourhood of Yarmouth is the site
the foundation stone was laid by t.he Prince of Wales (with of the Roman camp at Burgh. called Gariononum, one of the
full Masonic honours) on the 18th May, 1887. most perfect and considerable of such remains in Great
The Cottage Hospital, Trafalgar road cast, is a neat Britain, and the ruins of Caistcr Castle, erected by the
structure of red br~ck, erected in 1887 at a cost of about renowned Sir John Fastolff, in the 15th century; near here
£420, from funds raised by subscription; it contains two are also some curious parish churches.
wards and four beds: the visiting days are Tuesdays, The parish comprises 1,270 acre..'! of land and 240 of water;
Thursdays and Sundays. rateable value, £135~212; the population of the parish in
The Naval Lunatic Asylum, at the southern extremity of 1891. was 36,982, and of the borough, 1881, was 46,519, and
the town, is the only institution of this kind in the kingdom : in r8gr, 49,318-viz. Great Yarmouth, 36,982; Gorle3ton
the inmates consist of 55 officers of all ranks and 145 seamen and Southtown, n,694 ; Runham- Vauxhall, 642 ; Cob holm
and marines, making a total of 200. Island is included with the return of Great Yarmouth.
The Convalescent Home for Children, at the corner of
Euston road and Marine parade north, will hold 36 children, RuNHAM VAUXHALL, which is part of Yarmouth, has a
who are admitted by a subscriber's letter, girls up to the population ( 1891) of 642.
age of thirteen and boys up to ten years : the home is sup- Parish Clerk, Edward John Lupson, Church plain.
ported by voluntary contributions and subscriptions. Gorleston is a parish and suburb of and within the
The Sailors' Home, on the Marine parade, a noble edifice boundary of the borough of Great Yarmouth, and is
of red and white brick, was erected in 186o at a cost of ~bout pleasantly situated about 2 miles south of the town, on a hill
L2,ooo, and is a refuge for the many shipwrecked seamen overlooking the sea and the river Yare, but within the Nor-
who are annually landed from the wrecks occurring on this thcrn division of the county of Suffolk, in the union, petty
dangerous part of the coast: since its establishment and up sessional division, incorporatiOn and county court district
to 1892, not less than 6,911 persons rescued from shipwreck of Great Yarmouth, rural deanery of Lothingland, arch-
have been received: there are baths and other appliances for deaconry of Suffolk and diocese of Norwich. This parish
the restoration of the apparently drowned, and a reading- was added to the borough of Great Yarmouth by the Parlia-
room, library and small museum for the use and benefit of mentary and Municipal Reform Acts of 1.832 and 1835.
seafaring persons; it is supported principally by voluntary The hamlet of SouTHTOWN, which was anciently a separate
contributions; Henry Edward Buxton esq. honorary trea- parish, was annexed to the borough of Great Yarmouth in
surer, and Mr. George Thomas Watson, secretary. 1681, and in 1891 Gorlellton and Southtown were almaga-
The Walrond Memorial Fishermen's Institute, South mated with the parish of Great Yarmouth. The church of
Gates road, erected in 1875, is a building in the Gothic St. Andrcw is a large and ancient edifice of. flint with stone
style, containing reading rooms, a large room for meetings dressings, in the Early English and Perpendicular styles,
and offices, and is now worked by the Church of England consisting of chancel with north-east and south-east chapels,
Mission to Seamen Society, and is used as an institute nave of six bays, aisles, south porch and a western tower
for fishermen and sailors, under the direction of the Rev. 90 feet in height, containing ~ bells, presented by Mrs.
S. Streeten M.A. the mission chaplain for the port of Yar- Roberts in 1873 : there is a brass, with cross-legged effigy,
mouth. to a knight of the Bacon family: the font, repaired in 1842,
The Fishermen's Hospital, founded in 1702, for decayed is carved with illustrations of the Seven Sacraments, and
and disabled fishermen, is endowed with property yielding was originally painted and gilt: in the north-east chapel is
£63 yearly: there are free houses for 20 decayed fishermen I an Easter sepulchre: in 1872-3 the fabric of the church
who have attained the age of sixty, and the yearly income of 1
(excepting the tower) was thoroughly restored at a cost of
the charity is divided among them. £3,000, under the direction of Mr. J. T. Bottle, architect,
The Boys' Home, in Belfort place, was founded in 187o, and special gifts to the value of £1,000 additional: in 1885
for the purpose of feeding, clothing and bringing up destitute a stained window was erected in memory of William Danby
children from ten to sixteen years of age, on a domestic Palmer: there are 750 sittings. The register dates from
system; it is unsectarian, the only qualification being that the year 1674. The living is a vicarage, average tithe rent-
applicants are poor and without parents; the home is sup- charge £270, net yearly value £26o, in the gift of trustees,
parted by the industry of the boys and by voluntary contri- and held since 1882 by the Rev. Arthur Robert Abbott H.A.
butions; there are now (1892) 25 boys in residence. of the University of London. St. Andrew's mission church
Warne's Charity amounts on an average to about £300 a will seat 150 persons, and St. Peter's Catholic church, erected
year, derived from an estate at Thrigby, in Norfolk, and a in 1889, affords 190 sittings. There is a Congregational
small sum in Consols, and is applied irt gifts of money in chapel, erected in 1812, and seating 440; United Methodist,
sums not exceeding £1 each, to the poor widows of Great seating 300; Wesleyan, erected in 1866, with 200 sittings;
Yarmouth. Baptist, erected in 1875, with 420 sittings; Bethel mission
Paston's, Packer's, Hall's and Colby's charities for dis- church, erected in 1883, and seating 450 ; and a chapel for
tribution in money and coals, to the poor of the parish, Plymouth Brethren, holding 250. The Salvation Army
amount in the ag~regate to about £30 yearly. meetings are held in the Public hall, which will hold 500.
The charities of the town, amounting to about £r,ooo a A Cemetery of 9~ acres was formed here in 1879, at a cost
year, are administered by trustees under the control of the of £2,000, and in 1883 was transferred to the borough of
Charity Commissioners and others. Yarmouth: a mortuary chapel for Dissenters was erected
On the South Denes stands the column, erected by the in 1890. The herring fishery is carried on here. Two
county in 1817, as a memorial to Admiral Lord Viscount lighthouses were erected at the mouth of the Yare, in 1887:
Nelson, who was born at Burnham Thorpe, in this county, one, which serves as the tide light, stands at the end of the
29 Sept. 1758, and was killed at the battle of Trafalgar, south pier and is constructed of wood and iron. The other
21 Oct. 1805: it is a fine pillar of the Doric order, with lighthouse, on the Brush wharf, is of red brick, 64 feet in
fluted shaft, its extreme height being 144 feet : the summit height, and was built at a cost of 1,"400: both are lighted
is reached by 270 steps in the interior, and the views from on the Dioptric system. A Public hall was erected in 1874,
(J, N, & s. 45
702 YARMOUTH.' NOlU~'OLK. (KELLY'S
at a cost'8f £r,2C)(), ana will hold about Soo persons. The church o( Bt. Mary:erected in r83T, at a c~st of £3,ooo, on
parish is in two manors 1 viz. the paramount manor of Gor- a site given by the Earl of Licbfield as a chapel of ease to
leston, of which Sir 8. B. Crossley bart. is owner, and the small Gorlesron, is a rectangular edifice of white brick and flint,
manor of Bacons, which is held by the trustee of the late in ahJ Early Gothic style, consisting of nave with small
Thomas Burton esq. The largest portion of the land belongs recessed chancel ~ the church affords about 700 sitting8, 300
to the Earl of Lichfield, but there are various other owners. being free. The living is a perpetual cnracy, net yearly
The soil is light ; subsoil, sand. The chief crops are wheat value £140, chiefly derived from pew ~ents and offerings, in
and barley. The area is 2,135 acres of land and 40 of water, the gift of the vicar of li-orleston, and held since' ·x89o by
of which the hamlet of Southtown comprises 596A. 211. 26P.; the Rev. Zouch Horace Turton, of Magdalen Hall, Oxford.
rateable value of Gorleston, £,x8,ro3 xos.; of Southtown, The Church mission hall is at Cobholm Island, and affords
£23,354; together £41,457 IOS.; according to the census sittings for 200 persons: There is a Primitive Method1st
of 1891 the parish contained a population of u,6g4. chapel in Tieccles road, erected in 1868 and seating 25o, and
Parish Clerk, William Henry Hristow. a Congregational mission hall at Cobholm Island, seating
about 2oo. The trade here is chiefly in timber and ship and
Southtown (or WEST TOWN or I,rTTLE YARMOUTH) boat building- and herring fisheries. Cattle sales are held
is a hamlet of Gorleston parish and a suburb of Great Yar- here on Wednesday in each week, on the sale grounds, near
mouth, with which it is connected by a bridge a.cro11s the railway station. Tbe Earl of Lichfield and Charles F. Lucas
Yare, and has a terminal station on the Ipswich and Yar- esq. of Great Yarmouth, are the principal landowners. The
mouth branch of the Great Eastern railway. This hamlet, area is 596A. 2R. 26P. of land, principally marsh; rateable
anciently a separate parish, was added to the borough of value, £23,354; the population in 1891 'was 4,780:
Great Yarmouth in r68r, and in I8gr was amalgamated CoBHOLM IsLAND, in the county of Suffolk, is included in
with that parish. The place is Jighted with gas by a com- the parish of Yarmouth, Norfolk. Lady's Haven, formerly
pany formed in r853, the works being erected in 1854. The navigable for wherries and barges, is now arched over.
Official Establishments, Local Institutions &c.
PosT, M. 0. & T. 0., S. B. & Annuity & Insurance Office, Council of the County :Borough.
Hall qnay.-William Henry Monk, postmaster · (1891-92).
HouRs OF ATTENDANCE.-Ordinary business, 7 a.tn. till ro M.&Yon~Frank Burto:ri
p.m. week days; 8 tlll ro a.m. sundays. Money Orders, DEPUTY M.&YOR-James Tntton
Savings Bank, Government lnsurances & Annuities, 9 HIGH STEWARD-The Marquess of Salisbury K.b. • P.e., D. c. L
a.m. till 6 p.m. ; sat. 9 a. m. till 8 p.m. Telegraph busi- · RECORDER-Simms Reeve esq. 35 St. Giles street,· Norwich
ness, 7 a. m. till 10 p. m. on week days ; 8 till ro a m. & 5 ALDERMEN.
till 6 p.m. on sundays. Parcels Post, 7 a.m. till 9 p.m. tBarnard William Fenner Horatio
week days tBly John Henry Press Benjamin Howard
ARRIVAL oF MAILS-Delivenes coq~.mence by letter carriers tCombe Edward Hy. Uarvey Smith John Caporn
& to callers:- tPalmer William Hurry Steward Thomas Burton
From London, Norwich, Lowestoft & all parts of England, tWoolverton Charles 'Wiltshire Charles Henry
Ireland & Scotland, 7 a. m. ; London & all parts, I0.3o tWorlledge Edward William Youell Edward Pitt
a. m. ; London & all parts with Norwich mail, r.3o p.m. ; couNCILLORS.
London & all parts with Norwich & local posts, 5.30 & 8 North or St. Nicholas Ward. Market \Vard.
p.nt tGreeves Arthur 0 tPalmer James Hurry
DISPATCH OF MAILS. *Foulsham Heevor J tArnold William
To Lowestoft, 3· '15 a.m.; Caister, Martham, Winterton, *Stafford Stephen ,Jn. Fredk *Sill George
I<'legg, Burgh, Filby, Rollesby, Repps, Thurne &c. 4·4-5 tRoyal James John *Tunbridge Richard Henry
a.m.; Gorleston, Hradwell, Burgh Castle & Hopton, !).15 tRising Thomas Alfred tHarrison Edward
a.m. ; London, Beccles, Belton, Fritton, St. Olaves, t Martins Richard ,
Hemsby & Ormesby, 5-45 a.m.; Norwich, 8.25 a.m. ; Regent Ward. St. George's Ward.
Norwich & Lowestoft, 9.50 a.m.; London, Ipswich & all tChamberlin Harold t Peaton Arthur
parts, 10.30 a.m. (extra stamp, 10.45 a.m.); Norwich, tMayo ..Alfred Charles tJohnson John Wm. Budds
Cam bridge, Colchester & Norfolk generally, 12.30 p. m. ; *Cooper Abraham S tDiver Walter
Caister, Ormesby, Martham, Filby, Flegg Burgh & Stal" *Williment James tGreen Thomas
ham, I p.m.; London &all parts, 1.3op.m. (extra stamp, t Arnold Frank *Palmer Frederick Danby
1.45 p.m.) ; North of England, Scotland, the Midland & t Burton Frank *Blagg Harry Adolphus
Western Counties, 3 p.m. ; London (to meet the midnight Nelson Ward. Gorleston & Southtown or
dispatches) & all parts, 3.40 p.m. ; Norwich & London, 5 tDe Caux John William St. ..Andrew's Ward.
p.m. (extra stamp, 5.15 p.m.); Ipswich & most parts of tSuffiing Norford ~Keymer Henry John Cubitt
Suffolk & Essex, 8 p.m. (extra stamp, 8. 20 p. m.) ; London, *Sutton J ames tRuddock Richard Turner
Norwich & all parts, 8.15 p.m. (extra stamp, 8.45 p.m) *Nutman John Runniff *Cockrell John Wailer
Fish Wharf B. 0. Money OTder & Telegraph Office tTomkins Daniel *Harvey-George Harvey
RECEIVING, M. 0. & 'f. 0. & 'I'. M. 0. 0., S. B. & Annuity & tSutton James , tBellamy Da.vid Winter ,
Insurance Office, Gorleston.-William Ballard Cock rill, tSaul Thomas
postmaster. Letters arrive through Yarmouth at 5-55 & Marked thus t retire in 1892.
10.55 a.m. & 2.20 & 6.5 p.m. ; sunday, 5·55 a.m. ; dis- Marked thus • retire in 1893.
patched at 6.5, 8.40 & 11.45 a..m. & 2. 30, 6.55 & 1·55 p.m. ; Marked thus t retire in 1894.
sunday, 6 a.m. & 6.55 p.m. For telegrams 8 a.m. to 8 Marked thus § retire in 1891i.
p.m. ; sundays, 8 to 10 a.m Quarterly meetings of the council at the Town hall, at four
Letters are dispatched direct from Gorleston (chief office) too'clock in the afternoon of the second tuesday in February,
lpswieh at 7·55 daily, sundays excepted May & August & at noon on the gth November
RBCEIVING & M. 0. 0., S. B. & Annuity & Insurance Offices. ALDERMEN OF WARDS.
-Seven collections on week days; on sundays three col- North or St. Nicholas Ward. St. George's Ward.
lections. In the Southtown district four collections on Palmer William Hurry Press Benjamin Howard
week days; on sundays two collections. These letterS' are Market Ward. Nelson Ward.
delivered in the town-first collection at 7 a.m. ; second Worlledge Edward William Steward T. Burton
at ro.go a. m.; third at 1.30 p.m.; fourth at 5.30 p.m. ; Regent Ward. Gorlesron & Southtown or
fifth & sixth, 8 p.m Barnard William St. Andrew's Ward.
Blackfriars road, John William .Argyle Youell Edward 11 itt
Northgatc street, Frederick Wyatt James Auditors, James Sutton, John H. Norman & George
Crown road, Charles Denton Rammant
Kimberley terrace, Francis Shirtliff
King street, George Hristow OFFICERS OF THE CoUNCIL & URBAN & PORT SANITARY
Market place, Alfred T. Manu AUTHORITY.
tNelson road, corner of St. Nicholas road, George Yallop Town Clerk & Clerk to the Urban Sanitary .Authority,
Regent road, R. H. Hammond Thomas Mathias Baker, Town hall
tSt. Peter's road, Henry I<'rederick Calver Registrar of the Borough Court of Record, Thomas Mathias
Cobholm !~land, Arthur Halls Baker, Town hall •
Sonthtown, George Harrison Nicholson Clerk of the Peace, Isaac Preston, I I Queen street
tGorle..'!ton (South), vacant Coroner, John Tolver Waters, 2 South quay 0

,Marked thus tare Telegraph Offices. Medical Officer of Health, John Bately M.D. Gorleston
Member of Parliament. Surgeon to the Police Force, Yarmouth District, Thomas
James Marshall Moorsom esq. Q.c., B. A.. 2 Paper buildings, Lettis, 6 Regent road
Temple, London E c Surgeon to the Police Force, GorJeston District, John
Returning Officer, The Ma.yor Bately M.D. Gorleston
DIRECTORY. J NORFOLK.· YARMOUTH. 70S
Borough Accountan~, W, J. Nutman, Town hall Consular Agenta. ·I
Borqugh Surveyor & Inspector of Gas Meters, John William AUBtro-Hnngarian, William Palgrave Brown, Southtown
Gockrill, Town hall . Greece, Matthew Butcher, 91 St. Peter's rd. (& Lowestoft)
Head Constable & Superintendent of Fire Brigade, William Italy, Matthew Butcher, 91 St. Peter's rd. ~&Lowestoft)
Brogden, Police station, Middlegate street . 1
Inspectors of Nuisances, South District, Patrick O'Connor, Publio Establishments.
125 Nelson road; Gorleston & Southtown & North Ward BaiTacks, Charles Marsh, barrack sergeant
District, Joseph Crane, 93 Trafalgar road, Gorleston Board of Trade Rocket Life Saving .Apparatus, near the
Receiver of Corporation Rents, E. J. Bonfellow pier, Gorleston, Robert Wall in charge of station
Inspector of Hackney Carriages, Chas. Cable, 5 High Mill rd Board of Trade Surveyors' Office, William J. Taylor, sur-
Inspector of Weights & Measures, Robert Joseph Buddery, veyor, Custom house
Town hall Cemetery (Yarmouth) Office, Church plain, Thomas Mathias
Fish Wharf Master, Geo. Hy. Jay, Fish wharf, South De~es Baker, clerk to the burial board; John James Manu,
Veterinary Inspector, William Shipley H.R.c.v.s. South- superintendent & sexton
town road Cemetery, Gorleston, Thomas Mathias Baker, clerk to
Superintendent of Roads, Aaron Ward, 55 St. Nicholas road burial board ; John Eagle, sexton
Collectors of Rates, North ward, Frederick Forder, Church Cemetery (Catholic), Caister road, George Blake, keeper
plain; Market ward, Robert John ~adbroke, 8 Middle- Coastguard Station, Marine parade, Arthur Geo. Fullerton
gate street; Regent ward, R;obert Hill, 67 Crown road : R.N. inspecting commander; John Ritty R.N. chief officer
tlt. George's ward, Albert Smtth, 13 South quay ; Nelson · Coastguard Station River side Gorleston Robert Wall
ward, Frederick Harbert, 36 Havelock road ; Gorleston chief .boatman & ~ men ' ' · '
& Southtown ward, William Thomas Blyth, 131 South- Corn Market Hall Duke's Head yard Hall quay Beevor
town roa d . John Foulsham, 'proprietor . ' '
Sergeant~at-Mace, Jamcs G. Elhs, 39 Regent road County Court, holden at the Town hall, Yarmouth, His
To":n Cner, Henry Thompson, 5 North Market ~oad Honor H. Eardley Wilmot, judge; Edward William
Pansh Clerk, Ed~ard John Lupson, Church plam . Worlledge M. A. registrar, high bailiff & district registrar
Sexton & Supermtendent of Yarmouth Cemetery, John of the High Court of Justice; H. P. Gould, bankruptcy
James Mann official receiver; John Etheridge, chief clerk 1 office, u
Sexton Gorleston Cemetery, J,?hn Eagle South quay (hours 10 till 4, except thursdays, when the
Town Hall Keeper, Charles "\\ llson office closes at I o'clock). A County. Court is held once a
Chapel Clerk, Benjamin Spanton month
Neatherd, Benjamin Wailer Certified Bailiffs, appointed under the "Law of Distress
Amendment Act "-John Etheridge, :u South quay;
Borough Magistrates. Waiter G. Knowles, Central hall, Theatre plain; Charle~>
W. Johnson, Bridge road, ·Southtown; James Prior, 219
The Mayor
The Recorder Ex-officio Northgate street
Custom House, South quay, Edgar Bates, collector; Lewis
The Mayor last in office _
Aroold Frank, q. Euston road Samuel Blomfield, xst clerk; Henry Dobson, 2nd clerk;
Barnard William, St. George's gate James Phelan, examining officer; Robert D. Morrison &
Bessey William Henry, 49 Marine parade Henry H. Bozier, preventive officers
Blake Lovewell, Ormesby St. Margaret Fire Engine Station,· Gorleston, police act as fire brigade
Brown W alter, Princes road · under Inspector William Dann
Brown William Palgrave, The Elms, Sonthtown road Fish Wharf, South Denes, George Henry Jay, wharf master
Bryant Richard, Norwich Free Library, Tal-house, Middlegate st. Wm. Carter, librarian
Burton Samuel Crickmer, Glenelg house, Nelson rd. south Gorleston Free Library & Reading Room, John F. Barnes,
Buxton Henry Edmond, Hall quay librarian
Cherry J ames (London) Gorleston Voluntary Life Boat, R. Godfrey Bately,hon. sec.;
Corn be Edward Henry Harvey, Ferryside house, Southtown Edward Drane, coxswain '
de Caux John William, 2 Regent road High Lighthouse, Pier head, Gorleston, George Manthorpe,
Dowson Richard Enfield, East Dereham keeper
Fellows John Henry, Westbourne lodge, Southtown Inland Revenue Office, 35 South quay. Tax Department :
Harrison William, 22 Rodney road Yarmouth District, comprising the borough of Great
Hill Isaac, 2 Camperdown Yarmouth & the hundreds of East Flegg & West Flegg,
Martins Richard, 7 South quay Loddon and Clavering in Norfolk; & Wangford, Blything,
~ightingale Samuel, West Somerton Mutford & Lothingland &. borough of Dunwich, in Suffolk,
Orde Charles Somerville, Hopton Edward R. Purcbas, surveyor of taxes; Edward Sim-
Palgrave Robert Harry lnglis, Belton, near Yarmouth mons, clerk ; Collectors of taxes, North, Ernest William
Palmer Frederick, 52 South quay , Buckle, 9 Southampton place, Nelson road north: Central,
Palmer Salmon, 52 South quay George 'V. Kett, 20 Apsley road; South, Robert Samuel
Pal mer William ,Hurry, Norwich Hub bard, 71 Victoria road; Excise Department: .A. R,
Press Benjamin Howard, High Mill house, Southtown Birt, Norwich, collector; Patrick Alphonsus Kenrtedy,
Saul Thomas, 30 Southtown road supervisor; H. B. Davey, inspector of corn returns; Geo.
Smith John Caporn, 24 King street Todd, officer
Spelman Samuel Waters, South Dene lodge Masonic Hall (only used for balls, concerts &c.), St.George's
Steward Thomas Burton, South View house, .Albert square row west, Charles Cotton, proprietor
Tomkins Daniel, The College, South quay & Sutherland Pier & llarbour Works, Gorleston, William Teasdel, con-
house, Marine drive sulting engineer; James Green, deputy engineer
Woolverton Charles, .Alexandra road Police Office (Borough), Middlegate street, William Brogden,
Worlledge Edward William M.A. ro Albert square chief constable ; Thomas Snelling & William Dann, in-
Youell Edward Pitt, Hall quay & Gorleston lodge spectors : the force consists of in addition to the above, 7
Clerk, Charles Diver, 23 King street sergeants & 43 constables; Thomas Lettis, surgeon to the
Borough Petty Sessions are held at the Town hall every man- borough police
day, wednesday, friday & Saturday, at rr a.m Police Station, High street, Gorleston, William Dann, in-
spector & 6 constables
Consul. Port & Haven Dues Office, Town hall. Commissioners:-
Belgium, Lovewell Blake, Hall Quay chambers, 2A, South Norfolk-John Penrice, chairman; Samuel Benjamin
quay (Cambridge, Norfolk & Suffolk) Cooke & Sir Reginald Proctor Beauchamp bart.; Suffolk-·
John Edwin Crisp, James Peto & Edward Henry Ha.rvey
Combe; Norwich-Sir Harry Bullard., Russell James
Vice-Consuls. Colrnan & Geoffrey Fowell Buxton; Yarmouth-Charles
Denmark, William Palgrave Brown, Southtown Diver, Benjamin Howard Press, George Jewson & Harvey
France, Horatio Littlewood, 43 South quay & II'J Wellesley Harvey-George ; Sir E. B. K. Lacon hart. treas. ; John
road (Norfolk & Suffolk) Tolver Waters, clerk; Coode, Son & :Matthews (London),
Germany, Matthew Butcher, 91 St. Peter's road engineers; Henry Downing Sayers, collector ; Robert
Netherlands, William Palgrave Brown, Southtown James Carter Day, pier master ; Thomas Press, ballast
Portugal, Matthew Butcher, gr St. Peter's rd. (&Lowestoft) & harbour master ; W. Teasdel C.:&. resident consulting
Russia, Horatio Littlewood, 43 South qy. & 117 Wellesley rd engineer; James Green, deputy engineer; George Smow-
Spain, Henry Wm._ Turrell, 23 South quay (including Lynn) ton, bridge master ; J. Pumfrey, crane master; Robert
Sweden & Norway, Matthew Butcher, gr St. Peter's road Henry Teasdel, accountant
C. N. & S. 45*
704 YARMOUTH. NORFOLK. [KELLY'S

Public Library & Reading Room, 22 South quay, Bishop of firmaries, lunatic wards & other buildings & is now
Norwich, patron; 8. C. Burton esq. president; Sir Henry available for 500 inmates ; Thomas Blyth, master; Rev.
W. Tyler & E. Birkbeck esq. M. P. vice-presidents; Chas. Edward Whitehead M.A. chaplain; Surgeon-Major J. C.
James Pearson, treasurer; Edgar Bond, sec. & librarian Smith, medical officer; Mrs. Elizabeth Blyth, matron
Royal Aquarium Theatre, Marine parade, John W. Nightin-, EAST & WE~T FLEGG INCORPORATION.
gale, lessee ; I<'rederick R. Y eulett, sec Board day, every alternate tuesday at 11 o'clock at the
Royal National Life Boat Institution {branch), Gorleston; Workhouse, Rollesby.
J. S. Dawson, hon. sec. ; Edward Woods, ISt coxswain; The incorporation of Flegg (East & West) comprises the
Sydney Harris, 2nd coxswain following places :-Ashby-with-Oby, Billoekby, Burgh St.
Stamp Office, Post office, Hal1 quay Margaret, Caister- next- Yarmouth, Clippesby, Filby,
Sub-Commissioners of Pilotage Office, Custom house, South Hemsby, Martham, Mautby, Ormesby St. Margaret-witb-
quay, Captains Thomas Emerson, R. J. C. Day & Edgar Scratby, Ormesby St. Michael, Repps-with-Bastwick,
Hates & sub-commissioners Ronesby, Runham, Stokesby-with-Herringby, Tbrigby,
Theatre Royal, Theatre plain, John W. Nightingale, pro- Thurne, East & West Somerton & Winterton. The popu-
prietor; Frederick R. Yeulett, sec lation of the incorporation in I 891 was 9,8 ro; area,
Tide Lighthouse, The Pier, Gorleston, Thomas Bolt (flood) 2g,o87 acres; rateable value, £58,932
& Samuel Wood (ebb), keepers Clerk to the Guardians & Assessment Committee, Charles
Town Hall, Quay, Charles Wilson, hall keeper Diver, 23 King street, Yarmouth
Trinity Stores, South Gates road, Thomas Emerson, supt Treasurer, Edward Pitt Youell (Messrs. Lacon & Co.
Volunteer Life Saving Co. Gorleston, Major Edward E. H bankers), Yarmouth
H. Combe, captain, & 25 men Relieving, Vaccination & Inquiry Officer, East & West Flegg
Winton's New Assembly Rovms, Marine parade, Edward district, James Cooper I<'aulke, Martham
Winton, proprietor Medical Officers & Public Vaccinators, Bure district, Stephen
Yarmouth Market, Wm. llendie, Market rd. clerk & collector John .Frederick Stafford, Market place, Great Yarmouth ;
HOSPITALS & CHARITABLE INSTITUTIONS. East I<'legg district, Robert Woodman M.D. Ormesby St.
Margaret; West Flegg district, John Turpin Waller,
Convalescent Home for Children, Euston road, .Miss Ellen Burgh, & Antbony Crisp, Martham
Jane Turner, lady superintendent & matron Superintendent Registrar, John T. Wailer, Burgh; deputy,
Cottage Hospital, Trafalgar road east, Gorleston, William Samuel Simnet, Ormesby St. Margaret
Mallam Vores M.B. Robert Godfrey Bateley & Edwin Registrars of Births & Deaths, East Flegg sub-district,
Tipple, surgeons ; Mrs. S. Sebrey, matron Thomas Bradtield, Ormesby St. Margaret; deputy,
l<'ishermen's Almsbouses, Church plain Robert Bradfield, Ormesby St. Margaret ; West Flegg
Great Yarmouth Home for Destitute Boys, Belfort place, sub-district, Anthony Crisp, Martham; deputy, James
St. Nicholas road, G. T. Smith, treasurer & hon. sec. ; C. I<'aulke, Martham
Martin Edmonds, superintendent ; Miss Ellen Lydia Ed- Registrar of Marriages, Thomas Bradfield, Ormesby St.
monds, matron Margaret
Great Yarmouth Hospital, Dene side, C. S. Orde esq. Workhouse, Rollesby, a building of brick, built in 1777, to
treasurer ; Ernest E. Leach, hon. sec. ; Daniel Meadows, hold 400 inmates, Alfred Mills, master; Rev. J. Budd,
Thomas Lettis, AHred Charles Mayo, Henry Bln.ke M.B. & chaplain; Robert Woodman lii.D. medical officer; Miss
James Ryley lii.D. medil'al otlicers; Henry Freeman Hannah Harris, matron; Miss Martha Claxton, school-
White L.D.S.R.c.s.Eng. dental surgeon; George Walker mistress
M. B. house surgeon; Miss Clara E. Bowman, matron
RuRAL SANITARY AuTHORITY.
Royal .Kava! Hospital (lunatic asylum), Queen's road, Meets at the Workhouse, Rollesby, on the same day as the
Thomas Browne M. D., R.N. fleet surgeon in charge; Jas. board of guardians (every alternate tuesday).
W. Underhill R.N. surgeon;. Rev. Hugh llellamy M.A. Clerk, Charles Diver, 23 King street, Yarmouth
chaplain; Charles William Borne, clerk; ~eil Campbell, Treasurer, Edward Pitt Youell, Hall quay
foreman of works Medical Officer of Health, John Turpin Waller, Burgh
Sailors' Home & Refuge for the Shipwrecked, Marine Inspector of Nuisances, Thomas Crane Edmonds, Caister
parade, Henry Edward Buxton esq. hon. treasurer; George
Thomas W a tson, sec ScHOOL ATTENDANCE COMMITTEE.
Shipwrecked Fishermen & Mariners' Royal Benevolent Meets at the Workhouse, Rollesby, on the first board day
Society, Sailors' home, Marine parade, G. T. Watson, hon. in each month.
agent Clerk, Charles Diver, 23 King street
, Walrond Fishermen's Institute, South Gates road, Rev. S. Attendance Officers, Thomas Parker, Oby; William Green,
Streeten M.A. chaplain Burgh; Jsph. Edmonds,Hemsby; Benj.Edmonds,Rollesby
GREAT YARMOUTH UNION. Military.
Comprising the parishes of Great Yarmouth & Gorleston. 2nd Volunteer Battalion Norfolk Regiment (comprising
Board day, alternate fridays at 2.30 p.m. at the Town hall. A, B, C, D, E, I<', G, H & I companies); head quarters,
Clerk to the Guardians & Assessment Committee, I<'rederick Drill hall, York road, Edward H. H. Combe, lieut.-
Danby Palmer, 38 Hall quay colonel; Hon. Lieut.-Col. H. J. Hartcup, 2nd in com-
Treasurer, Henry Edmund Bnxton, Gurneys & Co.'s Bank mand; Major Waiter Diver, commanding head quarter
Collectors, John G. Baker, Nethergate terrace, Prince's rd. companies ; Captain A. R. Hume, adjutant; Hon. Capt.
(Market ward); William J. Pitcher, 33 South quay (Re- James Cooper, quartermaster; Rev. R. M. Marsball M.A.
gent ward) ; Henry Pechey, ro Anson road, Southtown hon. chaplain; Rev. J. Rowsell M. A. & Rev. W. H.
(St. George's ward); Benjamin C. Child, 65 York road Andrews M.A. acting chaplains; companies, A, Captain
(North ward); John G. Neave, 53 Victoria road (Nelson H. W. Youell; B, Capt. John Taylor; C, Capt. C.
ward) ; William T. Blyth, 131 Southtown road (Gorleston J. Wiltshire; D, Lieutenant J. C. Miles; E, Gorleston,
& Southtown ward) Lieutenant P. G, Gilmour; Surgeon-Capt. W. M. Vores
Relieving Officers, North district, J. D. Hayes, 8 Nelson rd. M.H. medical officer; Ven. Archdeacon William Donne
north; South district, Charles Rum bold, jun. 4 Dene side M.A. acting chaplain; Alfred John Ostler, sergeant-major
Vaccination Officer, J. C. Smowton, Crown road GARRISON ARTILLERY, EASTERN DIVISION.
Medical Officers, North district, Chas. O'Farrell L.R.C.P.Ed. Sub-Depot Brigade (No. 2); head quarters, South Denes,
White Horse plain; South district, James Ryley M. D. Lieut,-Col. W. V. Gregory, commanding Royal Artillery,
141 King street Great Yarmouth; A. J. Dunnage, major; H, Capt.
Public Vaccinator, Henry Blake M.B. 25 South quay; station, C. H. A. Hervey, adjutant; A. E. Daniell, capt. ; E. R.
Middle Street hall, Middlegate street, tues. :n to I Phillips, W. R. Arnold & R. H. F. McCullocb, lieutenants
Superintendent Registrar, I<'rederick Danby Palmer, 38 Hall 2nd Brigade (Prince of Wales' Own Norfolk Artillery,
quay; deputy, William John Pitcher, 33 South quay · Militia & Volunteer) ; bead quarters, South Denes, Hon,
Registrars of Births & Deaths, North sub-district, Frederick Col. Lord Suffield K.C.B. commanding; Hon. Lieut.-Col.
William Ferrier, 33 Hall plain ; deputy, Richard I<'rcdk. E. R. M. Pratt, major; Lieut. E. H. Evans-Lombe, in-
E. Ferrier, 33 Hall plain ; South sub-district, J oseph st.ructor of artillery; Capt. C. H. Hervey R.A. adjutant ;
Henry Bayly, 3 Eagleton villas, Bath hill ; deputy, Mrs. Hon. Capt. H. Russell R.A. quartermaster; Surg.-Major
Anna Bayly, 3 Eagleton villas, Rath bill; Gorleston sub- John Ad cock M. D. medical officer
district, James Ling, High street, Gorleston; deputy, rst Norfolk Artillery Volunteers {Eastern Division Royal
Arthur William Blake, Thornville, Southtown Artillery), 3 batteries of position & 7 garrison companies ;
Registrar of Marriages, Lovewell Blake, Hall Quay cham- head quarters, Drill hall, Nelson road, The Ear I of Strad-
bers, 2A, South quay ; deputy, Ernest B. Blake, 1 South broke, lieut.-col. commandant; T. Burton Steward,
quay lieut.-col. ; T. Wilson & lion. Lieut.-Col. S. Smyth,
The Workhouse, on the North Denes, opened in 1838 at a majors; Capt. W. J. Napier R.A. adjutant; Hon. Capt.
cost of £7,000, for 400 inmates, stands on land of about L. E. English, quartermaster; Rev. B. Vaux :M.A. hon.
eight acres & has been enlarged by the addition of in- chaplain
-
DIRECTORY. j NORFOLK. YARMOUTH. 70.5
No. I Battery, Capt. A. F. Clowes; Surg. Lieut.-Col. T. Baptist, Wellesley road, Rev. Thomas B. Curry; 10.30
Moxon, medical officer; Rev. J. S. Moore M.A. acting a. m. & 6.30 p. m. ; thurs. 7.30 p.m ... .................... .
chaplain; No. 4 Company, Capt. E. B. Orpen; Sur g. Baptist, St. George's park; 10.30 a.m. & 6.30 p.m. ;
Lieut. R. Wrigley, nredical officer ; 2 batteries at Nor- tues. 7.30 p. m .................................................. .
wich & 2 companies at Lowestoft & I each at Aldeburg h, Brethren (Salem), Albion road; 10-45 a.m. & 6.30 p.m
Beccles, Harlestou & Southwold Christadelphian Hall, 67A, Georga street, no stated
minister; I I a. m. & 6.30 p.m.; wed. 8 p.m .......... ..
Public Officers. Congregational, King street, Rev. Ebenezer Evans;
10.30 a. m. & 6.30 p.m.; wed. 7.30 p.m ................. .
Charity Trustees, R. H. I. Palgrave, chairman; B. Jay, Rev. Congregational, Middlegate street, Rev. Ebenezer Evans .
J. E. Rogers, vicar (ex officio), H. E. Buxton J.P. Thus. B. & Rev. James Le Pla; 10.30 a.m. &6.3o p.m.; mon.
Steward, C. H. Wiltshire, S. W. Spelman, E. P. Youell, & wed. 7. 30 p. m ............................................... .
S. C. Hurton, E. W. Worlledge, J. Tolver Waters, J. W. Congregational, High st. Gorleston; 10.45 a. m. & 6.30
B. Johnson, E. B. Frere, Richard Martins & I<'. Danby p.m.; mon. 8p.m.; wed. 7.30 p.m ........................ .
Pal mer Countess of Huntingdon's Connexion, Southtown road,
Clerk to the Charity Trustees, Thomas Alfred Rising, 3 Rev. Thomas Whitehouse; I0.45 a. m. & 6.30 p.m. ;
South quay wed. 7.30 p.m .................................................. .
Clerk to Commissioners of Taxes for East & West J<'legg, Mariners', South quay; 11 a.m. & 6.30 p.m.; wed.
Robert Gory, 22 Som,h Howard street
Clerk to the llaven Commissioners, John Tolver 'Vaters, 2 7-30p.m ............ ·························•··················
Methodist New Connexion, King street,Rev. Esarhaddon
South quay Wainman; 10.30 a.m. & 6.30 p.m.; wed. 7.30 p.m .•
Clerk to the Rainham Drainage Commissioners, Robert Plymouth Brethren, High street, Gorlcston ; 10.45
Cory, 22 South Howard street a. m. & 6.30 p.m ................................................. .
Clerk to the Winterton Drainage Commissioners, Charles Primitive Methodist, Priory plain, Rev. Thomas Meakin ;
. Henry Wiltshire, 12 South quay 10.30 a.m. & 6.go p.m.; thurs. 7.30 p.m ............. ..
Clerk to the Income, Land & Assessed Tax Commissioners, Primitive Methodist, Beccles road, Southtown ; 2.30 &
Frederick William Ferrier, 33 Hall plain 6.30 p.m. ; tues. 7.30 p.m ...... ............................. .
District Registrar of the High Court of Justice, Edward l)rimitive Methodist, Queen's road, Rev. George Griffin ;
William Worlledge M.A. 11 South quay 10.30 a. m. & 6.30 p.m.; wed. 7.30 p.m ................ ..
Harbour & Ballast Master, Thomas Press, Town hall Unitarian (Old Meeting House), Middlcgate street, Rev.
Inspector of Fish, William Parker, Fish wharf William Stephens; 10.45 a. m. & 6.30 p.m ........... .
Lloyd's Agents, T. Small & Co. 43 South quay United Methodist Free Church, Regent road, Rev.
Receiver of 'Vreck for the Port of Great Yarmouth, Edgar Arthur John Walkden; 10.30 a. m. & 6.3op.m.; wed.
Bates, South quay 7-30 p.m ........................................................... .
Supervisor of Inland Revenue, Patrick Alphonsus Kennedy, United Methodist Free Church, High street, Gorleston,
35 South quay Rev. George Batterby; 10-45 a. m. & 6.30 p.m. ; tues.
Surveyor of Taxes, Edward B. Purchas, 35 South quay & thurs. 7.30 p.m ...............·................................ .
Vestry Clerk, Henry Robert Harmer, Town Hall chambers Wesleyan, Oene side; 10.30 a. m. & 6.3oI Revs. T.Ferrier
p.m. ; wed. 7 p.m l Hulme B.A. &
Places of Worship, with times of Services. Wesleyan, Lowestoft road, Gorleston; rwalter Wigley
10.45 a.m. & 6.30 p.m. ; mon. 7· 15 I Haughton
The Parish Church of St. Nicholas, Rev. Joseph Edmund
Rogers B. A. vicar; Rev. Herbert F. Freeman B. A. & Rev. p.m. ; thurs. 7.30 p.m )
Clarence G. Mylrea B.A. curates; Edward John Lupson, Salvation Army, Public ball, Gorleston
parish clerk; John James Mann, sexton; 8 (holy com- MISSION HALLS.
munion) & 10.30 a.m. & 6.30 p.m.; prayers daily, 10.30
a. m. & 4 p.m.; wed. 7.30 p.m Established Church, Rev. Lance Allwood; I I a.m. & 7 p.m
St. Andrew's Church, Gorleston, Rev. Arthur R. Abbott Bethel, Pier walk, Gorleston, no minister yet appointed; 1 I
B.A. vicar; sun. holy communion 8 a.m. 10.30, 11.45 a.m. & 6.30 p.m. ; mon. wed. & fri. 7.30 p.m
(with holy communion) & 6 30 p.m. ; daily 8 a.m. sum- Congregational, Cobholm Island; 7 p.m. ; week days, 7.30
mer, 5 p.m. winter ; wed. 8 p.m p.m
St. George's Chapel, King street (date 1713), Rev. James Wesleyan, Tower street; 10.45 a. m. & 6.30 p.m
Sinclair Moore M.A. incumbent; Rev. Trevor Joseph Great Yarmouth Town :\1ission, entirely unsectarian & con-
Hamilton Carson M.A. curate; 10.45 a.m. & 6.30 p.m. & ducted by the Great Yarmouth Mission Committee;
3 p.m. on the last sun. in the month & holy communion Frederick Charle.o; Fuller, sec. ; J. Garson Blake, financial
at 6.30 the 2nd & 3rd sun. in month; tues. 7.30 p.m sec. ; James Read, missionary; George Bass, colporteur
St. Peter's Church, St. Peter's road, Rev. William Thorpe Bethel, Northgate street; 10.45 a.m. & 2.45 & 6.30 p.m.;
Goodrich, incumbent; Rev. John Hadfield Wolfenden, mon. tues. & wed. 7.30 p.m. & will accommodate 400
curate; holy communion 8 a.m. excepting the third persons, having been enlarged in 1889
sunday in each month, I0.45 a. m. & 3 & 6.30 p.m. ; wed. Be~hel, Rodney road; 2.45 & 6.30 p.m.; thurs. 7.30 p.m
7.30 a.m.; fri. I I a. m
St. John's (Sailors' Church), York road, Rev. Herbert Great Yarmouth School Board.
Fitzackerley Freeman B.A. curate in charge; 8 & 10.30
a. m. & 3 & 6.30 p.m. ; daily 8 ; fri. 7.30 p.m The board consists of I I members & was formed com-
St. Andrew's Church (Wherrymen's Mission), North quay pulsorily 16 February, 1875; clerk, Charles Henry 'Vilt-
(date 1B5g), Rev. Clarence Garland Mylrea B.A. curate shire; office, 12 South quay; James B. Shadrake, super-
in charge; 8 & 10.45 a. m. & 6.30 p.m.; daily 8.30 a. m. ; intendent, High street, Gorleston; attendance officers,
wed. 7·45 p.m.; thurs. 7.30 p.m :North district, Harry Rowe Long, 10 York road, Yar-
St. J ames' Church (Beach & Harbour Mission), Queen's mouth ; South district, Benjamin R. Bateley, Albany road,
road (date 1862), Rev. George Edward Augu.."!tus Pargiter Southtown; Gorleston, Hy.Burton,Albany rd. Southtown
M.A. curate in charge; 8 & I I a.m. & 6.30 p.m.; daily The board meet at the Town hall the 1st & 3rd tuesday in
8.;;o a.m. & 5.30 p.m. & wed. 7.30 p.m every month at 4 p.m
St. Paul's, North end, Rev. John Lewis Hughes BA. curate;
10.45 a.m. & 6.30 p.m.; tues. wed. & fri. 8.rs p.m
St. Andrew's Mission, Lower Cliff road, Gorleston, Rev. Runbam-Vanxhall School Board, now added to Yar-
Thomas A. Hydes, curate; 6.30 p.m mouth School Board.
Synagogue District Mission, Row 42 BOARD SCHOOLS.

Stradbroke road, erected in 1876 & enlarged in 18go, for 290


St. Mary's Catholic, Regent road, Rev. John Beall s.J. boys, 270 girls & 350 infants ; average attendance, 200
& Rev. Charles Lonergan S.J. priests; mass 8 & 10.30 boys, 210 girls & 270 infants; Robert Cooke, master ;
a.m. ; catechism & benediction 3, & vespers, sermon Miss Mary Whitehead, mistress; Miss Carolina Nayler,
& benediction 6.go p.m. ; holy days, mass 8 & 9.30 infants' mistress
a. m. ; week days, 7. 30 & 8 ; benediction, wed. & fri. 8 Cobholm Island, 300 boys; average attendance, 204;
St. Peter's Catholic, Church lane, Gorleston, Rev. William Theobald, master
Edward Scott, priest; 8.go & 10.30 a. m. & 2.30 & Cobholm Island, for 240 g~rlil & 288 infants; average attend-
6.30 p.m.; fri. 8 a.m. & 7.30 p.m ...... , .................... . ance, 240 girls & 199 infants; Mrs. Alice M. Wigg, girls'
Friends' Meeting House, Howard street tentrance in mistress; Miss U. Westgate, infants' mistress
Row 6o); 11 a. m. & 6.30 p.m.; thurs. II a.m ...... Trafalgar road, for 210 boys ; average attendance, I7I ;
Baptist, Lowestoft road,Gorleston, Rev.George Plumbe; John D. Gobbett, master
10.45 a. m. & 6.30 p. m. ; m on. & wed. 7.30 p.m .••••• St. George's, for 244 girls & 348 infants ; average attend-
Baptist (Particular), York road, James Muskett; 10.30 ance, 287 girls & 305 infants; Mrs. Emma Chapman,
a.m. & 6.30 p.m. ; thurs. 7.30 p.m ....................... . girls' mistress; Miss Elizabeth H. Brown, infants' mist

706 Y .!RMOUTII. NORFOLK. [KELLY'S

Northgate, for 340 boys, 324 girls & 400 infants; averaQ"e Newspapers.
attendance, 270 boys, 250 girls & 28o infants ; Thomas Yarmouth Gazette & East Norfolk Constitutionalist {friday),
James Wigg, master; Miss Emma Harrow, girls' mistress; Norfolk Chronicle Co. Limited, proprietors; Ea.st Norfolk
Miss Mary A. E. B. Smith, infants' mistress Co. printers ; office, 34 Regent street & 27 Sonth quay.
Church road, erected in r884t at a .eost of between £4,000 & See advertisement
£5,000, for 279 boys, 279 girls & 200 infants; average at- Yarmouth & Gorleston Times (friday for saturday), George
tendance, 240 boys, 290 girls & 220 infants; Benjamin Bond, editor, 3 & 26 Market row
Peart, master; Miss Charlotte Phrebe Ives, mistress; Yarmouth Independent & Eastern Counties Herald (satur-
Mrs. J a ne Grayston, infants' mistress day), .Frederick Hart Causton, manager, Hall plain 1
Run ham-Vauxhall (mixed), built in 1878 1 for 120 children ; Yarmouth Mercury (friday for eaturday), King street ·
average attendance, II4; James Bernard Ives, master
Industrial Day, Gvrdon road, Southtown, for 6o boys ; Railway Conveyance:
average attendance, 35; William F. Goode, superintend- Great Eastern & East Suffolk Railway-Stations, South-
ent ; Mrs. Goode, matron• town road & Vauxhall; Brian Bell, Southtown, station
master. Parcels Receiving & Inquiry Office, Market pl
Other Schools, Eastern & Midlands Railway.-The Beach station, Nelson
Grammar, Trafalgar road, founded in 1551, & for some road north ; William Joshua Price, district agent
time carried on in the old buildings of St. Mary's Hospital ; Sutton & Co. (Joseph Jefferies, agent), 3 & 4 Fish street
the school was closed in 1757 & so remained ttll 1862, Conveyance.
when it wa.s re-established by the Local Charity Trustees,
under a scheme of the Charity Commissioners ; the pre- GORLESTON-The Yarmouth & Gorleston Tramway Co.
sent buildings, opened by H.R.H. the Prince of Wales in Limited, every quarter hour
1872, have since been enlarged by the addition of four Omnibuses & flys to & from the railway stations to meet
a
class rooms, chemical laboratory & a workshop. There every train & convey passengers to any part of the town
are now (r8g2) 120 boys, of whom 24 are boarders. The Water Conveyance.
school is managed by a governing body of 14persons; Rev.
William Henry Murray Ragg M. A. head master; Thoma.s HULL-The steamship Norfolk from the wharf, So4-th quay,
Elrington M.A. 2nd master; Capt. E. Chester Queripel, according to sailing bills ; Clarke & Reeve, general mana-
gers, Norwich & Yarmouth i Thomas Copeman, agt. Hull
modern side master; William Griffiths Griffiths B.A.
William Kingsley Kefford & Edmund Henry Swann H.A. LoNDON-The General Steam Navig!ltion Co.'s steamship
assistant masters; J. F. Ryan, drawing master; J. Lee, leaves Irongate wharf, London, every tues. afternoon; &
shorthand master the Bridge quay, Yarmouth, on sat. according to tide.
Hospital (Foundation), Market place, rebuilt in 18.p, for Special arrangements for passenger serviCe are made dur-
about 300 boys & 280 girls; average attendance, 290 boys ing the summer months. Regular steam service to Ham-
& 260 girls ; this school is supported from a charity le.ft in burg, Harlingen, Amsterdam, Rotterdam, .Antwerp,
r65o by Mr. Owner, of Yarmouth, ori6Tinally for the main- Ostend, Havre, Bordeaux, Oporto & Mediterranean.
tenance of a workhouse, but applied by the Corporation, Benjamin Clarke Rofe, chief clerk, Yarmouth
with other funds, to its present purpose ; Benjamin NEWCASTLE-The iron steamship East Anglian, from the
William Spanton, master ; Miss E. E. Bellamy, mistress wharf, South quay, every wed. & leaves Newcastle every
Government Schools of .Art, Science & Navigation, 59 South fri. ; Clarke & Reeve, general managers, Norwich & Yar-
quay; James Francis Ryan, art master; William Stock- mouth; "'illiam Furley, sec. King's Lynn
ton B.sc. Lond. science & navigation master ; R. H. I. Sailing vessels toN ewcastle every week, & London & Sunder-
Palgrave, Frank Burton, Percy Martin & John C. Miles land every 3 or 4 weeks; & wherries to & from Norwich,
esqrs. hon. secs Bungay & Heccles, daily ; agents, H. H. Barber & Co. 10
Pupil Teachers' (Yarmouth centre); class held daily from 7 South quay
to 8 a. m. at St. George's girls' school (William Theobald, Norwich screw steamer Alpha, every wed. & sat. i wherries
teacher), & on saturday from ro to 11 a. m. & on tuesday to & from daily ·
from 7 to 9 p.m_ (Gorleston centre by Mr. Peart, at the
Church Road school)
Carriers.
Corporation Technical Schools, T. M. Baker, clerk, South With the places they go to & the inns they start from. with
Market gates days & time of starting.
Corporation Schools for Navigation & Practical Seamanship, .ACLE-George netts,' George & Dragon,' Church plain, wed.
Fisher's institute, Gorleston ; William Stock ton, instructor & sat. at 4 p.m .
in naY"igation; John Farmer, instructor in seamanship BACTON & NoRTH W ALSHAM-Banyer, 1 Flegg House, 1North-
Priory Upper Grade, Priory row, opened in 1852, for 450 gates street, daily, 5 p. m
boys, 165 girls & 165 infants; average attendance, 400 BILLOCKBY-George netts, 'George & Dragon,' Church plain,
boys, 165 girls & 165 infants; Robert Mills, master; Miss sat.4.3op.m ,
Harriet. Hughes, mistress ; Miss Mary J. Godrey, infants' BLUNDESTON-Pearce, Buck inn, Hall quay, wed. & sat. 4.30
mistress p.m. summer & 3.30 p.m. in winter; Gage & BlakeJfrom
St. Andrew's Higher Grade (National), erected in 1849, & en- same place, wed. & sat. 4 p. m
larged for 200 boys ; average attendance, 90; Ernest I<'. CALIFORNIA-llodds, mon. wed. & sa~+. 4.30 p.m. ·from
Frost, master; Ernest Russell, assistant master 1
King's Arms,' N orthgates street
St. Andrew's (infants'), North quay, erected in r86o, for 200 FrLBY-Adam Howes, 'White Horse,' Northgates street,
children; average attendance, 200; Miss Emily Platton, wed. & sat. 5 p.m.; Hubbard,' King's Arms,' Northgates
mistress street, wed. & sat. 4 p.m.; ''Vatson, 'White Horse,' daily,
St. Peter's (National),Deneside, erected in 1849, for 26o boys, 5 p.m
• r9o girls & 225 infants ; average attendance, 220 boys, 214 FLEGG BuRGH-John- Skipper, 1
George & Dragon,' Church
girls & 225 infants ; George Henry Osborne, master ; Miss plain, wed. & sat. 4.30 p.m. in winter, 5 p.m, in summer;
1
Carolina Jane Westgate, mistress ; Mrs. Anna Maria Os- George Curtis, Waggon & Horses,' Northgates. street,
borne, infants' mistres'i wed. & sat. 4.30 p.m
St. James', Queen's road (boys, girls & infants), erected FRITTON-.Alfred Ship, Duke's Head inn, Hall quay, w.ed. &
1866-72, for 202 boys, 195 girls & 202 infants ; average at- sat. 4.30 p.m
tendance, 204 boys, 185 girls & 168 infants; Edward GoRLESTON- Warner & Hunt, Buck inn, Ha1l quay, d~ily, 1
Green, master; Miss Barnaby Smith, mistress; Miss !sa- & 5 p.m
bel Spanton, infants' mistress HADDISCOE-Alfred Ship, Duke's Head inn, Hall quay, wed.
St. John's, Lancaster road, for 350 girls & infants; average & sat. 4.30 p.m
attendance, 135 girls & 103 infants ; Miss Frances Eliza- HASBRO'-Cubitt Lacey, 'George & Dragon,' Church plain,
beth Norman, mistress -sat. 5 p.m
British (boys), St. George's road, erected in 1813. for 315 boys; HE:&t~HY--Gowen, Nurse's Stables, St. Nicholas road, wed.
average attendance, 252; Alfred Alpe. master ; George 2p.m.&sat.4p.m '·
R. (haver, assistant master HrcKLINO William Beckett, Mitre tavern, St. Nicholas rd.
Catholic (mixed & infants), Albion road, erected in 1881, at sat. 4 p.m. 1 Bevor, 'George & Dragon,' Church plain,
a cost, including site, of £4,000, for about 6oo children ; sat. 5 p.m.; Samuel Bell, same place & day
average attendance, boys & girls, 170 ; infants, 130; Miss HoRNINO John Skipper, 'George & Dragon,' Church plain,
Mary Toomey, mistress ; Miss Matilda .Fitzgerald, infants' wed. & sat. <J·3o p.m. in winter, 5 p.m. in summer
mistres& ' ' HORSEY--Clarke, 1 George & Dragon,' Church plain, wed. &
Gourlay (Wesleyan) (mixed), Dene side, erected in 1867, for sat. 5 p.m -' ' 4

320 children; average attendance, 210; Arthur Coe, mast LESSINGHAM Cubitt Lacey, 'Goorg& & Dragon,' Church
Unitarian (mixed & infants), 92 Row, erected in r845 & en- plain! wed. & sat. 2 p.m . . )
' larged in 1B79; for about 100 children; average attend- LonDON-Alfred Ship, Duke's Head inn, Hall ·quay, wM. &
ance, 40 ; Miss Maria Holmes, mistress -sat. 4· 30 p. m
DIRECTORY. J NORFOLK. YARMOUTH. 707
LOWESTOFT-Bowles, Buck inn, daily, 4 p.m r SC"&ATBY,Frederick Hodds, 'King's ,Arms,' Nortbgates
MARTHAM-Grimble, from 'Waggon & Horses,' Nortbgates stteet1 wed, & sat. 5 p.m .
street, wed, & sat. at 5 p.m. ; Dow, East & West Flegg SOMERTON (EAsT & WRsT)-Hales, 'Flegg House,' North-
inn, Northgates street, sat. 5 p.m gates street, sat. 4 p.m
NoRTON SUilCOURSE-Alfred Ship, Duke's Head inn, Hall STOKESBY-Jobn Palmer, 'White Horse,' Not'tbgates street,
quay, wed & sat. 4.30 p.m wed. & sat. 4.30 p.m.; Powley, 'King's Arms,' ~orthgate11
0RMESBY-Willia!ll .Holt, East & West Flegg inn, North- street, daily, 4 p.m 1
gates street, sat. 4-30 p.m THURLTON-Alfred Ship, Duke's Head iil.n, Hall quay, wed.
PALI.ING-George Shrieve, East & West Flegg inn, North- & sat. 4.30 p.m :
gates 1;1treet, daily, 3.30 p.m THURNE--Betts, 1 Waggon & Horses,' Northgates street,
RoLLEBBY--Shrieve, 1 Flegg Houss,' N orthgates street, daily, :wed. & sat. 4 p.m. ; Betts fi<; Smith, same time & place,
3 p.m ..; George Shrieve, East and West Flegg inn, North- UPToN~George Betts, 'George & Dragon,' Churcll plain,.
gates street, daily, 3 p.m sat. 4.30 p.m ')
RUNHAM George Palmcr, 'King's Arms,' Northgates street, J WINTERTON-Smith & King,, 1 Waggon & Horses.' .riorth-
tues. wed. & sa~." 5 p.m gates street, daily, 5 p.m , ·
Yarmouth.
PRIVATE RESIDENTS . Barnes George, Vauxhall Bough ton Saml. The Cabin, South beach
.Abel Mrs. 20 Trafalgar l'Oad Barnes George Casement, Wynford Boult Mrs. 3 Princes road
AbsolonDa vid U rq uhart, 1 3N elson rd. sth house, Wellesley road Boulter Mis.'!, 19 Crown road
Adams Robert, r8 Trafalgar road Barrett Charles James, 3 Hall quay Bowen Samuel, 77 Regent road
Adamson Peter, 21 Queen's road Barrett James, ug Southtown road Bowe~ G.corgc, 5 Camperdown
Adcock Brigade-Surgeon John M.l>. 8 Bartlett Miss, 221 NorLhgates street llowles Thomas, -86 Havelock road
Brandon terrace Barwick Miss, 25 Camperdown Boyden James William, 5 Bath Hi!\ ter
.Aldred Duncan Anderson, 56 George st Bateley Benjamin, Albany rd. Southtwn Bozier Hy.Humphrey,147 Ssuthtown rd
.Aldred Frederick Wm. 36 Prince's road Bately Mrs. Cobb's place, Market road Bracey Charles, 107 Ha,velock road )
Aldred Mrs. I 14 Regent road Bateman Alfd. H.37 Wellesley rd, north Bracey George, 105 ,l:Iavelock road ~
.Aldred Samuel, 4 South quay Baternan Mrs. 17 Crown road llracey flerbert John, 56 South quay
Aldridge Thomas, 51 Victoria road Bates Edgar, 33 Quc~m's road Bracey Redmond, 28 Nelson mad south
Alexander Charles, 15 Crown road Beall Rev. John s.J .. [Catholic], Pres- Bradl)eer Miss, 272 Southtown road
Alexander Charles, I r8 Southtown rd bytery, Regent road Bradbury Geo. 94 High rd. ~onthtown
.A.llan Jop.n, 20 Southtown road Reeching Frank, South Gates road Bradley Thomas, 8g North quay
AllenGeo. 8Kimber ley ter .Marine parade Beech~ng Harry, 51 Apsley road Bradshaw Arthur C. 55 Regent road
Allen Miss, 93 High road, Southtown Beeching Mrs. 5 Derby cots. Nelson rd Bradshaw Frank, 13 Wellington road
Alien Samuel James, 23 Nelson road Beeching Samuel, 38 Nelson road south Bradshaw Mrs. 31 Queen's road
Allen Thos. Howard, 132 Blackfriars rd Beaching Thomas, 22 Queen's road Brain Robert Thornton, 4 Euston road
Allen Wm. 12 Saxon place, Albion road Beevor Arthur J. 21 Southtown road Branch Miss, Gordon road, Southtown
Alpe Alfred, 7 Kent place, Apsley road Beevor Waiter, 7 Caister road Branch William, 23 Nelson road north
.Alpe Mrs. 74 Rodney road Bell James, Albert house, Caister road Brand Edward, Albany rd. Southtown
Ames Miss, 3 York road Bell Miss, 163 Nelson road Brand Hy. lloward, 54 Marine parade
Annison Henry, 20 St. George's road Bell Mrs. x86 Northgates street Brasnett Charles, 47 Regent road
Ansell Mrs. 43 & 44 Marine parade Bell Hobert, Anson road, Southtown Brazell David, Lickfield rd. Southtown
Applcton JamesGooch,97 Blackfriars rd Bell Vincent, 2 Derby cots, ~elson road llrereton Rev. Arthur Henry M. A. Gros-
.Arbon James Noah, 10 South beach Bellamy Rev. Hngh M,A. [chaplain venor house, Marine parade north
Archard Mrs. 37 Soutbtown road Royal Navy hospital], 13 Euston road Brett John, 75 Lancaster road )
Archer Clement, 3 Fuller's hill Bellamy Charles Seaman, II7 King st Brett John, 16 Trafalgar road )
Archer George, 20 Flushing terrace, Bellamy Frederick S. 5 Havelock road Brighton Wm. Lichfield road, Southtwn
Nelson road north Bellamy Herbert, 68 St. Peter's road BrisLow Johu M. 58 St. George's :road
.Archer Mrs. 92 King street Bellin Percy Rlair, 3 Trafalgar road Bristow Mrs. 16 Devonshire road
Archer Samuel, 130 Nortbgates street Benuis Samuel H. 22 King street Brown Chas.N.6Westbourne ter ..Sthtwn
Archibald William Henry, 1 Salisbury Bessey Wm. Henry, 49 :Marine parade Brown Edward Keer, 23 Nelson rd. sth
road, N urth Denes Bezant Mrs. 70 York road Brown Harry Stewart, 261 Southtown
ArnoldLieut. Wm.Rd.R. A. roTrafalgar rd Bickers William, 22 St. George's road road, Soutlltown 1
Arnold Frank, 14 Euston road lliddlecombe Hy. 82 Beccles rd. Southtn Brown John, 14 Regent road
Arnold William, 4 Norfolk square Billnarn Mrs. 2 South Market road Brown Miss, 137 Southtown road
Arnott Miss, 86 High road, Southtown Hillup Joshua, 47 York road Brown Mrs. 39 Nelson road south
.Asker George, 26 Camperdown Bishop ArLhur Joseph, 88 Regent road Brown Mrs. 268 South town road
Attwood Miss, Fermoy house, Apsley rd Bishop Mrs. 27 St. Nicholas road Brown Mrs. Phoobe, 22 Dene side
Austin Mrs. Lichfield road, Southtown Blagg Harry Adolphus, r8 Prince's rd Brown Thomas, 51 Middle Market road
Ayers Edward Thomas, 28 Prince's rd Hlagg Mrs. 62 High roa,d, Southtown Brown William Palgrave, 1'he Elms,
Bacon Charles, 6 Nelson road Blake Arthur William,254Southtown rd Southtown road
.Bagley James, 38 Nelson road north Blake Charles Cecil, 83 St, George's rd Browne Albert Richard, Gordon roa<l
lhiley Hy. 5 St, John's ter.Lancaster rd Blake Ernest Brightin, 33 Southtown Browne Thomas M. D., R.N. (fleet surgn.
.Baker Arthur, 77 Northgates street road, South town in charge), Roya.l Naval hospital,
.Baker John, 57 Southtown road Blake Garson James, 37 South quay Queen's road
.Baker Mitchell, 8 Paget road Blake H1mry M. B. 25 South quay Browne Mrs. Elizabeth,Sunrise cattago,
Eaker Samuel Wright, 20 Regent road Blake Mrs. Garson, 63 South town road .Marine parade
.Baker Thomas Mathias, 34 Queen's rd Blanchflower John, 31 Victoria road Browne Mrs. Robert, 8 Cro.wn roa.d 1
.Bald win William Diboll, 39 Alrna road Bland ~Irs, Row 57 llrunning Mrs. 79 Northgates street
.Bales John Beets, 123 Nelson road Bliss Chas. Rit:hd. Linton ho. Apsley rd Buck Charles, China cottages, Apollo
Bales Mrs. Albany road, Southtuwn Rlomfield Lewis, Surrey cot.Southtn.rd walk, Northgatcs street
.Bales Wm. E. Gordon rd. South town Blomfield Mrs. IIg Wellesley road Buck John, Denelodge, Dene side
.Baly John, 28 Camperdowq Bloom Alfred George, 12 Pro\·idence Buckingham Edward, 104 Havelock rd
Eambridge Henry, 27 King street place, Russell road Buckle Alfred, 66 Nelson road
.Banks Robert, 16 Nelson road Bly Chas. Edwd. 86 Beccles rd. Southtn Buckle William, 36 Nelson road
.Barber Martin Wells, 54 South quay llly John Henry, Ferry farm, Vauxhall Buckley Joseph, 23 Crown road ,
.Barber Mrs. 69 York road Blyth Henry, 18 & 19 Regent road Buddery Mrs. 208 N ortbgates street
.Barber Thomas, 3 Camperdown Blyth Mrs. 87 Regent road Bul wer Edgar Turner, I Crown road
.Barber William, 52 Crown road Blyth William, Anson road, Southtown Bulwer Miss, 22 Audley street
J3arbour Thomas, 55 Nelson road north Blyth Williarn, 132 Southtown road Bulwer Mr!'l. 20 Wellesley road
.Rarcha.m Mrs. 44 North quay Hlyth William, 72 Rodney road Bumstead Robert, 68 North quay
Barker George, A.lbert bo.Albert square Bond Charles, 45 Victoria road Bunn Charles, ~53 South town road
.Barker Henry Linnell, 4 Paget road Bond Frederick Walter, I Church plain Bunn Jame:> Thos. 262 Southtown road
!Barker Mrs. 19 Bla.ckfria.rs road Bond George, 31 Sout·ht.)wn road Bunn Mrs. 87 Beccles road, Southtown
Barker Mrs. 20 Queen's road Bond Harry, 56 Southtown road Bunn .Mrs. Lichfield road, SouthtoWil
Rarnaby William Henry, 17 York road Bond James, Bank house, flall quay Hunn Mrs. 75 Southtown rd.Southtown
.Barker Wm. Staff, Lit:htield rd. Southtn Bone John, 33 Dene side Bunn Walter, 252 ~outhtown road
.Barnard Benjamin~ Albany rd. Southtn Bone Mrs. 31 York road Burch :Mrs. 108 Havelock ;road ,, )
llarnard Mark, Lichfield rd. Southtown Bonfellow Edmund Jn.21 Wellington rd Burgess Mrs. 5 Euston road
Barnard William, St. George's gate, Bonfellow Herbert, 44 Crown road Burrell Robert, 10 Camperdown 1
St. George's road Booming Mrs. I 3 Wellesley road Burrell Robert Cooper, go King street.
:Barnby Mrs. 23 Prince's road 1 Bottle Jonn. Tebbs, 33 Wellesley rd. nth. Burton Frank, 35 Queen's road 1 1 r·
708 YARMOUTH. NORFOLK.
Burton James, 6 Trafalgar road Cowen Miss, 6o Marine parade Evans Rev. Ebenezer [Congregational],
Burton Mrs. Gordon road, Southtown Cowl Arthur Edwin, 7 Trafalgar road 18 Camperdown
Burton Samuel Crickmer, Glenelg ho. Cowl Henry, n St. George's rooo Evans Wllliam, 75 Crown road
Nelson road south Cox Edward Forbes, 18 Paget road Everett William Wilson, Windsor house,
Burton William, 30 High rd. Southtwn Cox Mrs. 202 Southtown road Prince's road
Buston Hezekiah Wm. 218 Northgate st Crabtree Mrs. 251 Southtown road Faulke Mrs. 37 High road, Southtown
But<:her Matthew, .Anson rd. Southtwn Crabtree William Fox,265 Southtown rd Feek Mrs. 98 N orthgates street
Butcher Matthew, St. Peter's road Crickmer Miss, 44 South Market road Fellows Henry, 76 Southtown road
Butcher Mrs. 24 Southtown road Crisp Edward, 24 Crown road Fellows John Frederick, 7 South beach
Butler Nicholas Josph. 67 St. Peter's rd Crisp Miss, 78 Regent road Fellows Jn.Hy. Westbourne lo. Southtwn
Buxton Henry EdmundJ.P. Hall quay; Crisp William, 257 Southtown road Fellows The Misses, 9 Nelson rd. sonth
& atFrilton decoy,Frilton, nr. Yarmth Cross Benj. Shirley, t53 Southtown rd Fenn Mrs. John, 3 Queen's sq. Regent rd
Calver John, 38 Victoria road Cross John \'\'enn, 19 Nelson rd. south Fenner Horatio, r6 Regent road
Candler Edgar, 105 Regent road Crow Mrs. 19 St. Ueorge's road Fenner lloratio P. 38 High street
CarmanMrs.GreencapMill ho.Southtwn Culliugford J n. U. 94 South Market rd Fenwick John, 133 Northgates street
Carr Charles F. 15 Nelson road south Curry Rev. Thomas Burton [Baptist], Ferrier Frederick Wm. 39 Camperdown
CarsonRev. '!'rev or J osephH amilton M. A. Apsley house, Britannia road Ferrier Rd. Fdk.Ernest,39 Camperdown
[curateJof St.George],27Camperdown Curtis Henry Samuel, 73 Rodney road Fielding Thomas, 16 Euston road
Carter William, 41 Havelock road Cutlack Mrs. 58 Albion road Fill Mrs. IO Crown road
Case William Hy. 82 St. George's road Dale John, 58 Ha velock road Fish Frederick, 46 Nelson road north
Castle Alfred Wm.Albany rd. Southtwn Darnell John, I I South beach Fish Mrs. 8 South King street
Castle Arthur B. Gordon rd.Southtown Davey Frederick Wm. 91 South town rd Fil'her Charles, 73 Crown road
Castle Edward, 64 Southtown road Davey Miss, 11 Trafalgar road Fitzgibbon Mrs. Beaconsfield house,
Cattermole Wm. Thos. 19 Wellington rd Davey Robert, 22 Southtown road Beaconsfield road, North denes
Causton Archer, 67 York road Davie Allisun Cufaude, 42 Regent road Fitzroy Mrs.6 Kimberley ter.Marine par
Ceiley Robert, II I Regent road Davies Mrs. 79 Crown road Flaxman Walt. Lindsley, 16 Trafalgarrd
Chamberlain Percy, Uordon rd.Sthtwn Davis John, 13 South beach Fleming Edmund, qo Southtown road
Chamberlin Ueorge Fk. 2 Wellesley rd Dawson Charles, 14 Wellesley road Folkes Fredk. W. 63 Middle Market rd
Chamberlin Harold, 70 Marine par. nth Dawson Mrs. 16 Crown road Foreman John Alfred, 6 Crown road
Chamberlin Percy D. Broad row Dawson Samuel, 2 Crown road Foreman Miss, 4 Crown road
Chamberlin William John, Woodthorpe, DeanB Mrs. 32 Albion road Foreman Misses, 15 Trafalgar road •
36 Southtown road de Caux John William, 2 Regent road Fortescue Jn.Hy.Jas.3Kent pl.Apsley rd
Chant Mrs. 34 Crown road Delf Mrs. 2 Nelson road south Foulsham Mrs. 69 North quay
Chaplin Herbert, 1 Belgrave cottages, Denney John William, 100 Nelson road Fowler Daniel Read, 6o Apsley road
Rt. George's road Denney Miss, 8 St. George's road Fowler Mrs. 72 ~elson road
Chaplin Mrs. 13 Duncan road Denton Frederick, 58 Havelock road Francis George, 39 Southtown road
Chapman Charles, 61 York road Des Quartiers Madame, I Brandon ter Francis Miss, 5 St. George's road
Chapman Miss, 18 St. George's road Devey Albert, 271 Southtown road Franklyn Louis Hugh, 36 Regent road
Chapman Mrs. 76 King street Dihall John, 77 Crown road Fransham Hobert H. 2 Euston road
Chap man William, 21 Nelson road Diboll Jsph. W. Lichfield rd. Southtown Freeman Rev. Herbert Fitzackerley M.A.
Chappell James, 71 Marine par. north Diboll Joseph W. jun. 91 St. George's rd [curate in charge of St. John's], St.
Chasteney Jn. E. Lichtid. rd. Sonthtwn Dicker Henry, 2 Havelock road John's Clergy house
Child John Sarnl. 37 N orthgates street Dickson Arthr. W. 56 Nelson road north Freeman Mrs. 12 Regent road
Childs Henry, 53 Regent road Dingley George, 24 Wellesley road Freestone George Edward, I Gothic
Childs Mrs. Trafalgar ho. Trafalgar rd Ditcham Miss, 96 Havelock road villas, Clarence road ·
Chipperneld Capt. Charles Lucraft, 278 Diver Charles, 25 Camperdown Freestoue Thomas R. 15 York road
Southtown road Diver Waiter, I Regent road French ~rs. 37 Nelson road south
Chittleburgh Frdk. J. 83 Southtown rd Dixon Gen. Thomas, 12 Nelson rd. south Frere Edgar Barker, 148 King street
Church William, 45 Marine parade Doble Thomas, 1 Devonshire road Frere Mrs. Frederick, 9 Crown road
Church William, 18 Southtown road Dobson Henry, 156 Suuthtown road Frosdick Mrs. 47 Middle Market road
Clark John Fish, 45 Nelson road north Dobson John, 34 Prince's road Fryer John, Albany road, Southtown
Clarke George, 94 Nelson road Dodman Mrs. Woburn ho. Langham rd Fryer Mrs. 73 Prince's road
Clarke John Thomas, I2 Regent street Doughty Hy. Matthew, 6 Trafalgar sq Fulcher Ed ward, 96 South Market road
Clarke Rd. Jn. Beulah,St. Nicholas rd Doughty Thomas William, 34 Regent rd Fulcher Wm. Popplewell, 22 Prince's rd
Clarke Robert Harvey, Southtown Dove Francis Henry, 26 Wellesley road Fuller Frederick, 45 Dene side
Clarke Samuel T. 74 Regent road DoweyMrs.37!Southtown rd.Southtown Gadge William, 39 Regent road
Claxun J ames, 53 Crown road Dowler Mrs. 9 Camperdown Gamble William, River side, Vauxhall
Clay Arthur, 12 Middle Market road Dowsett Fredk. J n. Hall Plain chambers Gambling Frank, 9.'i St. George's road
Clayton Mrs. 26 Dene side Dowsett Henry, 53 Southtown road Gambling Mrs. 95 St. George's road
Clifton Gabrie\, 47 Havelock road Duwsett John, 14 Trafalgar road Garfield Edward S. 44 Northgates road
Clipstone John, 130 Southtown road Draper William Henry, 3 Lancaster rd Garnharn Mrs. Hill ho.High rd.Southto
ClowesAlbert Frank, 31 Hegent street Driver Alfd. 6 Cobholm ter. Southtown Garratt John, 26 South quay
Clowes Jn. Edwd. Napier ho. Albert sq Drummond Walt.Lichfield rd.Southtwn Garrett Clifford, Anson rd. Southtown
Clowes Mrs. M.D. 5 Norfolk square Dncket Clark Armstone M.D., F.R.G.s. Garrett N at ban Vincent, 82 North quay
Clowes Mrs. 267 Southtown road (fleet surgeon R.N.), 12 St. George's rd Garrod Mrs. 7 York road
Clowes Mrs. Gcorge, 276 South town rd Dutlield Wm. 35 Somerset pi. Russell rd Garwood Mrs. 3 Alpha ter. Southtown
Cobb John Swanston L.D.s. 28 King st Dunn Mrs. 67 Lancaster road Gates Mrs. 28 Regent road
Cobb Misses, 23 Paget road Dunnage Maj.A. J. H. A. 27 Nelson rd.sth Gedge Mrs. 69 King street
Cockett Mrs. 55 High road, Southtown Durrant Thomas John, 25 Duncan road Gedge William, 69 King street
Cockrill John Wilham, I2 Euston road Dyson James Edward, 34 Victoria road George Dennis, 2I Duncan road
Cocks John, 53 Albion road Dyson John, 35 Victoria road George William, II2 Regent road
Cocks Jsph. Arthur, 141 Southtown rd .Eagleton Miss, Victoria lo. Nelson rd. sth Gerish William, 85 Southtowu road
Cole Mrs. 39 Havelock road Earl Miss, I Duncan road Gibbons William, 68 Crown road
Coleman Miss, Redenhall ho. Paget rd Easter Mrs. IOI King street Gibbs George, Albany road, Southtown
Collier Thomas, 8r Havelock road Eastwick Harold, 7I Havelock road Gilbert John Wilson, 4 Albert square
Collins Miss, 98 Northgatcs street Ebbage Mrs. 72 Crown road Giles George William, 28 Southtown rd
Collison William Thomas J. P. Albemarle Ecclestone Mrs. 27 Dene side Giles Miss, 67 Southtown road
house, Marine parade north Eglington Mrs. 154 Southtown road Giles Mrs. 75 Beccles road, Southtown
Combe Edward Henry Harvey J.P. Ekin Mrs. 27 Duncan road Gill William, Albany road, Southtown
Ferryside house, Suuthtown Ellis James, 9 Beccles road, Southtown Gimson Luke, 21 Devonshire road
Cooke Edward, 72 Southtown road Ellis Robert Bean, 14 Wcllesley road Glanfiel.d Mrs. 8o St. George's road
Cooke Mrs. L1chfield road, Scuthtown Ellis Sydney, Anson road, Southtown Glanfield Wm. Arthur, I St.George's rei
Cooper-, 45 Havelock road Elrington Thomas M.A. (assistant mas- Gobbctt John D. 72 Haveloek road
CooperAbrhm. Dorincourt ho.Euston rd ter at Grammar school), 32 Crown rd Goddard Mrs. 68 Lancaster ro!td
Cooper Alfred, 71 Nelson road Emerson Mrs. 54 St. George's road Goff John Johnson, 32 Carnperdown
Cooper Henry, 5 Beccles rd. Southtown Emerson Thomas, South Gates road Goffin Jas. Thornhill, 62 Southtown rd
Cooper William, 146 Southtown road Ernes Miss, 6 Fuller's hill Goffin Mrs. 25 Dene side
Corbould William, 29 Regent road . Emmerson Mrs. 66 Crown road Gooch Charles, 23 Audley ~reet
Corbyn Miss, 7 Crown road Emmerson Mrs. Elizabeth, 84 Albion rd Gooda Miss, 5 Trafalgar road
Corke Mrs. 70 Havelock road Emms Miss, 280 Southtown road Goodrich Rev. William Thorpe [incum-
Costerton Frederick, 36 Camperdown Engledow Waiter, 18 Queen's road bent of Rt. Peter's], St. Peter's par-
Coupe Fredk.33 Somerset pl. Hussell rd Etheridge John, 40 Southtown road sonage, 8 Dene side
DIRECTORY.j NORFOLK. Y.ARMOUTH. 709
Goodrick Geo. Jas. 36 Wellesley rd. nth Howlett William, 52 Southtown road Larke Samuel John, 84 Regent road
Goodwin Misses, 59 Nortbgates street Hubbard Daniel, 2 Belgrave cottages, Larkman Misses, 3 Kimberley terrace
Goodwin Mrs. 56 Nelson road north St. George's road Marine parade
Gowing Alfred, II6 Wellesley road Hubbard Robert Samuel, 71 Victoria rd Larter The Misses, 158 Middlegate st
Gray J<'redk. Augustus, 18 Market place Hudson Miss, r Duncan road Lawn Mrs. Lichtield road, Southtown
Gray James, 84 Southtown road Hughes Rev. John Lewis B.A. [curate Laws Noah, 51 St. Ueorge's road
Green Edwd. Wm. 17 St. Edward's rd in charge of St. Paul's J, St. Paul's La wson J ames, 29 Victoria road
Green Joseph, Market place Clergy house, Caister road Layton Miss, 222 Northgates street
Greenacre Charles, 4 Prince's road Hulme Rev. Terrier B.A. [Wesleyan], Lee Miss, 35 Nelson road south
Greenwood Mrs. 44 Nelson road north 24 Prince's road Lee :virs. 72 York road
Greeves William, 56 York road Humphreys :\irs. 15 Nelson road north Lee William, Gordon road, Southtown
Grice Henry, Licbfield rd. Southtown Humphries Edward Walter, 32 Welles- Leggett James, 28 Victoria road
Griffin Rev. George [Primitive Method- ley road north Lemmon Rd. Wileman,29 Nelson rd.sth
ist], 20 Mariners road Humphries Mrs. 30 Albion road Lepard Thos.Cobholm island,Southtwn
Griffiths William Griffiths B.A. (assist- Hunt Jn.Lee, Fisher'squay,~orthquay Le Pla Rev. lames [Congregational].
ant master at Grammar school), 103 Hunt Samuel Lucas, 8 South quay South Dene house, South Uates road
Wellesley road Hunt William, 11 Apsley road Lettis Thomas, 6 Regent road
Guthrie Mrs. 21 Crown road Hunter Mrs. 45 York road Lincoln Richard, So N orthgates street
Gyton George Harbord, 10 Prince's rd Burr James, Anson road, Southtown Lindsay Wm. Thos. 7 Beccles rd. Sthtwn
Haddon Miss, 5 Albert square Hurrell Harry, Albany road,Southtown LittlecottThos.2Eagleton vills.Bath hill
Haines James, 12 Camperdown Hurren Mrs. 134 Southtown road Livingstone Wm. 16 Middle Market rd
Haines John Benjamin, 9 Euston road Burst Mrs. 8o Southtown road Lock George Henry, Edinburgh lodge.
Hall Charles, 70 Regent road Hussey Ueorge,Lichfie!d rd. Southtown Fi tzwilliam square
Hall John Parkinson, 24 South quay H utton Mrs. 8o King street Lockwood John, 46 Dene side
Hall William, 65 South quay Hyde Clarendon John, 3 Albert square Logsdail Waiter, 39 Prince's road
Hall Williarn John, 5 Prince's road lngledew William James, 31 Prince's rd Lombe Edward Evans, 6 South beach
Hamilton Mrs. 26 North quay Ingram Fredcrick R. I 1 r South town rd Lonergan Rev. Charles B.J. [Catholic].
Hammant George, 21 Trafalgar road lsaac George, Anson road, Southtown Presbytery, Regent road
Hammant George, 9 Wellesley road Isaac John Jsph. 69 Marine parade nth Long David, 30 St. Nicholas road
Hammond Charles, 86 St. George's sq Isaac Mrs. 63 King street LongJames Mayhew,275 Southtown rd
Hammond Miss, 152 Southtown road Ives James Thomas, 7 Nelson road Long Matthew, 40 St. Nicholas road
Hanan Samuel Wesley, 106 Wellesleyrd Ives William, 34 St. Nicholas road Long Miss, 47 Crown road
llarbord Arthur, 75 York road Jackson Rev. Oliver [Primitive Method- Love Misses, 20 Nelson road south
Harbord :Mrs. Avon ho. Langham road ist], 6 Runbam terrace, Vauxhall Luces Charles Frank, 7 Dagmar terrace.
Hardement Mrs. 29 Nelson road north .Tackson Mrs. 25 Queen's road Nelson road south
Hardesty James, 64 Northgates street James Louis, 85 St. George's road Lupton Frederick, 13 Prince's road
Hardingham Mrs. 24 Nelson rd. north James Mrs. 52 High road, Southtown Mabson Mrs. 6 Euston road
Hardingham Thomas, 59 St. George's rd J ames Thoma~, 38 N orthga te street McBride Arthur Edwd. 40 Havelock nl
Hardyman Mrs. 16 St. George's road Jaquiery Joseph, 54 Southtown road McCowan David, 57 Regent road
Hare Mrs. 29 Que1m's road Jay Mis~es. 26 Nelson road McDongall Mrs. 7 Wellesley road
Barman John, I Eagle villas, Bath hill Jay Mrs. 66 Nelson road north Mack Freeman N. 65 Southtown road
Harmer Henry Robt. 269 Southtown rd Jeckell Miss, 36 Queen's road Mack Isaac Ueorge, 92 South town road
Harmer Rd. Fielding, 16 Nelson rd. nth Jenkins Mrs. 37 St. Nicholas road Mack )lrs. 37 Regent road
Harris Fredk. Hills, 22 Nelson rd. south Jenks Joseph, 51 Crown road Mack Wm.C.27 Somerset pl.Russell rd
Harris George, sr High rd. Southtown J ennings Frederick, 3 Dun can road Maclean William Crighton F. R.G.s ••
Harris Mrs. ;p Crown road Jewitt John, 44 Apsley road F.G.s., F.R.H.s. 31 Camperdown
HarrisonEdwd.BrSouthtown rd.Sthtwn Jex Edward, 17 Camperdown Mallett Alfred, 3 Derby cots. Nelson rd
Harrison Mrs. 15 St. George"s road Johnson Arthur, Eastholme, Euston rd Manu Clement, 86 :::louthtown r(lad
Harrod Fred Henry, 16 St. Peter's plain Johnson Charles W. 277 Southtown rd Manwaring :virs. 3 St. George's plain
Hart Charles, 59 North quay J ohnson Frank, 64 Nelson road north Marritt Harry, 46 Middle Market road

Hartwell Joseph, g6 High rd. Southtwn J ohnson Frederic, 5 Regent road Martin Percy, 34 Southtown road
Harvey Edmund, 107 Regent road J ohnson J n. "\Vm. Budds, 3oCamperdown Martins Mrs. so Apsley road
Harvey Robert, 258 Southtown road Johnson Mrs. Frederick, 56 Marine par Martins Richard, 7 South quay
Harvey William, 24 South Market road Johnson Robert, 15 Euston road Mason Harry Burgess, 8 Welles:ey roacl
Hastings Henry, 5 Crown road Johnson Reptimus, 6 St. George's road Mason Henry, 6g Havelock road
Hatch Mrs. 36 St. Nicholas road Johnson William Steward, 5 Regent rd Mason "'illiam, 30 Crown road
Haughton Rev. Waiter Wigley [Wes- J ohnson William To bias, 62 King st Master "!\iiss, 4 Camperdown
leyan l, 32 Victoria road Johnston John, 79 St. George's road Mayhead John, 12 Wellesley road
Hawes James, rr Euston road Johnstone Samuel, 13 Crown road Mayo Alfred Charles, St. George's Park.
Hawes Mrs. 48 Northgates street Jordon Chas. Aleyn, r87 Northgates st house, Alexandra road
Hawkins George, 44 Havelock road Joseph Joseph, 87 Southtown road Mayston John Hy. Albanyrd.Southtwn
Haylett John, 6 Alpha ter. Southtown Kannegiesser Charles, 108 N orthgates st Meadows Daniel, 141 King street
Heard David, 38 Devonshire road Keable .Mrs. Alexandra ho. Apsley road Meadows Hamilton, 141 King street
Hemmings Rd. Alfd. 57 Nelson rd. nth Keely James, 129 Southtown road Meadows Mrs. Anson road, Southtown
Herbert Miss, 222 N orthgates road Kefford William Kingsley (assistant Meakin Rev. Thomas [PrimitiveMethod-
Herring Robert, g Nelson road master at Grammar school), Gram- ist ], 10 Paget road
Hewitt Arthnr S. Albany rd. Southtwn mar school, Trafalgar road Micbael Mrs. 281 Southtown road
Hewitt Mrs. 86 Regent road Kell Mrs. 14 Nelson road south Miles John Caley, 6 Norfolk square
Hill Isaac, 2 Camperdown Kemp Miss, 51 King street Miller Miss, 92 St. George's road
Hill Mrs. roB Regent road Kemp Robert, 54 Nelson road north Miller Mrs. 279 Southtown road
Hill Robert, 67 Crown road KempeCharles Edwd. M.D. I Nelson rd Mills Mrs. 6 Nelson road north
Hilton Mrs. 3 t-lt. George's road Kerridge Albert E. 259 Southtown road Mills Robert, 59 Nelson road north
HinchcliffeMrs. Langhm.ho.Langhm.rd Kett George Woodhouse, 20 Apsley rd Mite hell "Miss A. 78 Crown road
Hinde Francis, 46 Marine parade Key Miss, 43 Regent road Mitchell Mrs. 25 Southtown road
Hinds William Edmond, 65 Apsley rd King Capt. Henry, 24 Nelson rd. south Moore Rev. James Sinelair M.A. [in-
HoggettJn. Tot ten ham cot. Southtwn. rd King Charles William, 88 Southtown rd cumbent of St. George's chapel], St_
Hoggett Mrs. 10 Beccles rd. Southtown King Mrs. 45 High road, Southtown Ueorge's house, Euston road
Hoggett Mrs. 12 Southtown road King Thomas, 115 Wellesley road Moore Arthur, 8 Camperdown
Holmden Alfred, 26 ~elson road north Kirby William, 58 N orthgates street Moore Henry, 30 Prince's road
Holmes Fras. Sloman, 3 :"\'elson rd. nth Kirkham Mrs. 82 York road Moore John Hill, 42 Crown road
Holmes Geo. Sendall, 2 St. George's plain Knight Mrs. 33 Crown road Moore Miss, 35 Nelson road south
Holmes Jamcs C. 6 Dene side Knight William, 30 Queen's road Moore Mrs. Charles, 3 Crown road
Holt Mrs. Seafield, King's road Knights Samuel Gedge, 41 Albion road Moore Thomas, 6 Wellesley road
Holt Thomas, go Southtown road Knowles "'"alter Gilbert, Central hall, Moore Thomas, 18 Wellington road
Hopper Rt. Hy. 57 High rd. Southtown Theatre plain Morgan Mrs. 1-4 St. George's road
llotblack Mrs. 53 South Market road Lacon Miss, Villa Graham, Albert sq Motts George, 11 Middle Market road
Houghton Mrs. 86 Regent road Lamb Robert, 71 Albion road Moxon Alban Henry, 44 King street
Howes Jas. 76 Beccles road, Southtown Lambert William, So Crown road Moxon Thomas Henry, 44 King street
Howes Robert, :101 Southtown road Lane Benjamin, 35 High rd. South town Mnnford Mrs. 31Somerset pl.Russell rd
Howlett George, 3 Devonshire road Lane James Arth. Anson rd. Southtown Murrell Wil!iam, 109 Southtown road
Howlett John, 67 North quay Langton Horatio, II York road Mylrea Rev. Clarence Garland B.A.
Howlett Richard, 8 Caister road Lark Mrs. II7 Southtown road St. Andrew's Clergy house
710 YARMOU fH. NORFOLK. [KELLY'S
Napier Capt. Wil!iam J. R.A. (adjutant, Poley Mrs. Weller, Kimberley house, Saul Thomas John, 10 Eustan roaq
~:st Norfolk Artillery Volunteers, Kimberley terrace, Marine parade Sayers Frederick, I08 Southtow~ road
Eastern Div. R. A.), 14 Prince's road Porter John Morris, 5 Apollo walk, Sayers Henry, Carlton house, Crown,rd
N ash Miss, xo6 Regent road Northgates street Sayers Henry Downing, Io Crown road
Neale William, 57 Crown road Potter Henry, 23 Southtown road S!.!aife Alfred, 8 Queen Anne's terr~~oce,
Neave Alfred, 47 Marine parade Power John, 29 Nelson road Southtown road
Neave Charles, :131 Northgates street l'ratt Mrs. Cotswold ho. Langham rd Scarborough Reginald,9 St.George'l! rd
Neave John George, 53 Victoria road Presant Mrs. 40 Crown road Scott Henry, 47 So11th quay .
Neave Joseph Samuel, Moat house, Press Capt. Thos. Crisp, 30 Dene side Scott John, Lichfield road, Sou~htown
N orthgates street Press Benj.Howard,High Ml.ho.Sthtwn Scott Mrs. 7 Church plain
Neave Misses, 39 Northgates street Press Horace, Lichfield rd, Southtown Scully Mrs. so Albion road
::!"'eave William, 25 Wellesley road _ Press Joseph, 54 High road, Southtown . Seaman Mrs. 6 Queen Anne's terrace,
Nelson Matt.nSouthtown rd.Southtwn Press Joseph Crisp, 73 King street oouthtown road L
N ewark Charles, 4 Nelson road Press Miss, Greencap Mill ho.Southtown Secrett William Charles, 19 Dene side
Newcombe Percy, 24 Trafalgar road Press Mrs. 263 Southtown road Self George Henry, 44 South quay
N ewell Freeman, 12 Prince's road Press Mrs. Mary Ann, 34 Albion road Self Miss, 87 .St. George's road
Nicholas Mrs. 89 St. George's road Preston George F. 8 Trafalgar road Self Mrs. 1 Queen's square, Regent road
Nicholson John, South Gates road Preston lsaac, 30 W ellesley road north Selleck Charles,Lichtield rd.Southtown
Nicholson Mrs. 69 Nelson road Preston Jacob, 48 ~outh quay Shalders Edward, 43 Northgates street
Ntghtingale John W. 7 Paget road Preston Miss, 17 Nelson road south Shearly James Cross, I4 Crown roaci
Nightingale Mrs. Shaddingfield lodge, Preston Mrs. 34 High road, Southtown Shephard Henry, 5 Trafalgar square
Marine parade Preston Mrs. Lushington, Apsley house Shipley W illiam, Fairlawn, South town rd
N orgate Heginald Starling, 78 South- west, A psley road Shipley Wm. jun.llridge ho.Southtown
town road, Southtown Preston Mrs. Sarah, 9 Nelson road nth Shreeve Mrs. 87 High road, Southtp.wn
Norman A rthur, 56 A psley road Price Alfred, 83 St. George's road Shuttleworth Col, Ashton John R.Aj. 2
Norman Charles Fredk, 48 Regent road Price William Joshua, 21 Nelson rd.nth Trafalgar road
Norman John,Howes, Theatre plain Prime Joseph Oldring, 155 Southtn. rd Sill George, 65 Nelson road north
North J ames, 9 Paget road Provart William, 42 .St. George's road Silvers Miss, I03 King street
Nort<m James Thomas, I Bath Hill ter Punchard Miss, 71 King street Simmons Thos. Wm. 32 Lancaster rd
Norton Miss, 14 Wellington road Purchas Edwd.Bootley, II3 Southtn.rd Simpson William, 3I Nelson road south
Nuthall Misses, 17 Trafalgar road Purdy Miss, 22Union rd. sth.Market rd Skinner Mrs. 93 St. George's road
Nutman John, 9 Albert·square Purdy Mrs. 38 Southtown road Skippen Nathaniel, 14 Nelson road
Nutman William James, SI South quay Purton Daniel, 78 llavelock road Skipper Armine Hngh, 20 Regent st
Obee Fredk. John, 63 North Market rd Pycraft Edward Sidney, 75 South quay Smiter William, 133 Southtown road
O'Farrell Charles, White Horse plain Qneripel Capt. E. Chester (assistant Smith Surg.-Maj. John Caporn, 24
Olley Henry, 6o York road mast,er at Grammar school), Reden- King street ,
()lley Thomas, 274 Southtown road hall house, Paget road Smith Job, Anson road, Southto~n
Ommanney Mrs. The Cottage,Sth.beach Ragg Rev. William Henry Murray M. A. Smith John, 97 Southtown road
()rfeur Mrs. IOJ Havelock road (head master of Grammar school), Smith Miss Martha, 43 Crown road,
Orpen Ernest Halls, North quay Trafalgar road !Smith Mrs. 5 Paget road
()sborne George Henry, sr Havelock rd Ragg Mrs. Grammar schl. Trafalgar rd Smith Mrs. I7 Providence pl.Russell rd
Osborne Mrs. 40 Apsley road Rainer Francis, 105 King street Smith Mrs. I38 Southtown road
Osmond William, r6 \V olsley road Rainer Samuel, 64 York road Smith Waiter L. Albany rd.Southtown
Owles James John, Hall quay Rand James, 107 Nelson road Snook Wilharn, 53 High rd. Southtown
Owles Mrs. 51 Regent road Randell Mrs. 24 Queen's road Snowling John, 36 Albion road
Page Phi lip William, 68 South town road Rant J oseph, 84 Beccles road, Southtown Somerville Joseph, 13 St. George's rd
Page Williarn, 29 Southtown road Ratcliffe John, I6 Prince's road Souster John Ed ward, Albany road,
Pain Capt. Thos. 49 Southtn.rd. Southtn Ray Miss, 20 Crown road Southtown .
Palmer Ernest, 32 Southtown road Rayson Ziba, 8 Kent place, Apsley road Southgate John, 8g Southtown road
Palmer J<'rederick, South Beach lodge Read Jame-'l, 5o Crown road Spankie Mrs. 41 Regent road
Palmer Frederick, 52 South quay Reading Edwin, 2 Ex mouth pl.Albion rd Spanton llenjamin Wm. Market place
Palmer Fredk.Danby D.L.52 South qua~r Redgrave William, 15 Victoria road Spelrnan SamuelVVaters,SouthDene ldg
Palmer George, 132 Northgates street Reeder Miss, 82 llavelock road , Spencer Mrs. IS Wellesley roaq
Palmer Hubert, South Beach lodge RichardsonChas. Ed wd. I 1 r \V ellesley rd Spilling William, 21 York road
Pal mer J. Hurry, Nelson vil. Albert sq Richmond Saml. Anson rd. Southtown Spinks Sergt.-Maj. R.A. 10 Nelson road
Palmer Mrs.· Ivybourne, Southtown Rising Miss, 12 Duncan road Spinks Mrs. 46 South quay
road, Southtown Rising Mrs. 66 Southtown road Springall Miss, 40 Regent road
Palmer Mrs. 109 'Wellesley road Rising Thomas, r8 Lancaster road Stacy-Watson Christopher, 219 North-
Paimer Mrs. Arthur, 4 Nelson road sth Ritty John R.N. Coastguard station, gates street
Palmer Mrs. Henry, 26 Queen's road Marine parade Stafford Stephen John Fredk.Market pl
Palmer Mrs.Wm.Danby,26Southtwn.rd RivettJas. Arnold, Anson rd. ;:!outhtwn Stafford Wm. Fredk. 23 W ellesley road
Palmer Salmon, 57 South quay Rivett Mrs. 95 High road, Southtown Stagg Mrs. 1 Hall quay
Palmer Wilham Ilurry, 17 South quay Rivett Sidney, 103 Soutbtown road Stamper Miss, 266 Southtown road
Pancben Charles, 39 King street Roberts Misses, I 16 King street Stanley William Hy. q8 Southtown rd
Papworth Charles, 47 Southtown road Robinson Samuel, Albany rd.Southtwn Stanton Thomas, 25 N clson road south
Paraire Mrs. 61 South Market road Rofe Benj. Chas. 39 Middle Market rd Starke James, 76 Northgates street
Pargiter Rev. G orgeJEdgar Augustus Rogers Rev. Joseph. Edmund B.A. StarnesJoseph,Nelson ho.Nelson rd.nth
M.A, [curate in charge of St. J ames] l vicar 1, Vicarage Stebbings Benjamin, Isabella ,square,
Parker Hammond John, 98 Nelson road Rogers James, 107 Wellesley road St. George's road 1 1
Parkerson Miss, 29 Albion road Rose James, 7 Alpha ter. Southtown Stephens Rev. William [Unitarian],
Parmenter Mrs. Church plain Rose Mrs. Alba.ny road, Southtown Waverley ho. Albany rd. Southtown
Parmenter Thomas George, 180 North- Rowe Mrs. 9 Trafalgar road Stevens Arthur Edward, 70 North quay
gates street Royal James John, Vauxhall Steward Alfred, 20 Prince's road
Parr Mrs. 88 High road, Southtown Royle Miss, 27 Crown road Steward Cbarles,Priory ho.Priory plain
Pascoe William Stephen, 95 Nelson rd Royle Mrs. 22 Crown road Steward Mrs. Priory house, Priory plain
Pashley' Alexander H. D. Leicester Rudd Charles, 35 St. Nicholas road Steward Mrs. Charlotte, I 1 RWellesley rd
house, Britannia road Rudd James, 73 Havelock road Steward Thomas Hurton, South View
Paterson John Yates, 41 :Marine parade Rudd Mrs. IS Queen's ter. Crown road house, Albert square
1
Pearce Mrs. Anson road, South town Rudd William, Factory square Steward William Charles,2o Prince s rd
Pearson Charles J ames, 27 Hall plai~ Ruddock Richard, Southtown house Stirling Charles, 12 St. Peter's road
l'earson Samuel, St. Peter's plain Rumbold Geo.35Southtown rd.Southtn Stockton William (science & navigation
Peaton Arthur, 27 South quay Ryan J ames Francis (art master, School master, Art, Science & Navigation
Pechey Henry, Anson road, Southtown of Art, Science & Navigation), 52 school), 41 Nelson road south
Pembroke William, Anson rd.Southtwn Marine parade Stolworthy George, 3 Euston roa?.
Petre Mrs. Cyprus cot. Southtown road Ryley James M.D. 41 King street Stonex Henry, 35 Regent road
Phillips Mrs. r Io Wellesley road Sacret Mrs.73Southtown rd.Southtown Stove William Isaac, 52 Apsley road
Phipp John Charles, 150 Soutbtown rd Salmon Frederick John, 30 Victoria rd Streeten Rev. Henry Robert Br!idlcy
Pitcher William John, 33 South quay Salmon Thomas, I +9 South town road Septimns M.A. [chaplain to Walrond
Plane John, x8 Duncan road Sancroft Edward Haselum, Conga Fishermen'slnstitute ], 3 7Gamperd wn
Flatten Mrs. 33 South Market road Sanderson William, IIJ Exmoutb road Suftiing Norford, Dagmar vil.Albert sq
Playford John, 15 Regent road Sarjeant Wm. Arthur, 9 Bath Hill ter Sumner Herbert, Alba.ny rd.Southtown
Pointer Daniel, 8 Admiralty road Saul ~homas, 30 Southtown ro~d Sutton James, Telegraph ho. King's, rd
DIBECTOBY.J YARM.OVT:S:. • •711
Swann Edround Henry B. A. (as~istant 1 Vince Joseph, 57 St. George's road Whitehouse Rev. Thomas [Countess of
master at Grammar school), Gram- Vince Mrs. Christmas house, Salisbury Uuntingdon's Connexion ], 31 Welles-
mar school, Trafalgar road road, ~orth denes ley road north
Swan Edwa.rd, 57 Havelock road Vores William Mallam B.A., M.B. 7 St. Whitnell Stphn.Thos. Anson rd.Sonthtn
Swindell Theophilus, 30 Regent road George's road Wickham Miss, 33 Nelson road south
Symonds Mrs. 13 North Market road Voysey Mrs. 3 Kent ter. Apsley road Wicks Mrs. 8 Apsley road .
Tabraham Miss, Church plain Wain William Hy. 217 Sou thrown road Wigg Herbert, 85 Regent road
Taylor John, Bank house, Hall quay Wainman Rev. Es'lrbaddon [Methodist Wigg Thomas James, Sx Nortll quay
Taylor Mrs. 157 Middlegate street New Connexion ], 86 King street Wigger Chas. x8 Harley ter. Nort.h denes
TaylorWalter,28Soroerset pl.Russell rd Wakeford \Villiam, 79 York road Wigglesworth Mrs. 59 Apsley roa.li
Taylor Wm.32 Highfield ter.Soutbtown Walkden Rev. Arthur Jahn [United Wilde Miss, 37 Victoria road
Taylor William J. 120 Wellesley road Methodistl, 109 Regent road W1lkins Mrs. 48 High road
Teasdel James Edwin, 5 Queen street Walker Arth. Ernest, 260 Southtown rd Williarns Jn. Andrew, 44 Nelson rd.sth
Teasdel Mrs. 46 Southtown road Walker Mrs. ID9 Havelock road Williams Miss, 209 ~orthgates street
Teasdel Robert, 74 Southtown road Waller Miss, 6 Queen street Williment James, 6r Apsley road.
Teasdel Walter, 27 Southtown road Ward Capt. W1lliam, 3 Havelock road Wilson Josiah Jarnes, 39 Crown road
Thaine Charles, 99 Havelock road WardAlmondJames,41 Southtown road, Wilson Orson Boswell, 47 Albion road
Thompson Mrs. Edna, 31 Regent road Southtown Wind red Alfred, 4 Trafalgar road
Thorburn Richard, 2 Fitzw1lliam square Ward Charles F. 250 South town road Wisken Henry Thomai'\, Britannia road
ThoresbyFredk.77lleccles rd.Southtown Ward Henry, Anson road, ::louthtown Withers Wm. R. Nelson ho. I I Paget rd
Tilroouth Chas.Henry,12oSouthtown rd Warner William, 4 Duncan road Wixstone Mrs. 36 Nelson road south
Tilmouth John, Anson -road, Southtown Waters John Tolver, 18 Nelson rd. south Wulfenden Rev. John Hadfield [curate
Todd James, r Alma road, King street Waters Mrs. 6 Nelson road south of St. Peter's], 57 St. Peter's road
Todd Mrs. 89 High road, Southtown Waters Mrs. Carolina, 29 Crown road Wooden Hichard, 74 South quay
Tomkins Daniel, The College, South Waten Mrs. Robert, 13 Regent road Woodger George Edwd. 58 South quay
quay & Sutherland ho. Marine drive Watkin Walter Frdk. 273 Southtown rd Woodger Nathan L. Enston road
TomkinsWm.D.ThRCollege,South quay Watling Mrs. 6 Brandon terrace \Voodrow Miss, 74 York road
Tomlinson Mrs. 7 Brandon terrace Watson Francis, 38 Havelock road \Voods Christopher, xs Camperdown
Tooley John, Anson road, Southtown Watson George Thomas, Marine parade \Voods Miss, 2 tlt. George's road
Towler Miss, 222 Northgates street Watson John, 32 Nelson road south Woods Mrs. Br King street
Tuck Mrs. 85 Beccles road, Southtown Wa.tson Miss Stacy, 33 Nelson road sth Woodward Boothby, 4 Trafalgar sq
Tuck Mrs. 5 llrandon terrace Watson Mrs. China cottages, Apollo Woolston Mrs. 14 York road
Tuck Mrs. Elizabeth, 66 N orthgates st walk, N orthgates street Woolverton Charles, Alexandra toad
Turner John, r2 Paget road \Vatson Mrs. 11 Wellington road Woolverton James, 25 Regent street
Turner Joseph, 44 Northgates street Watts Arthur, 5 Nelson road south Woolverton Mrs. James, 68 King street
Turner Miss, 25 Prince's road \Vebster Mrs. 66 York road Wortledge Edwd. Wm. M. A. ro Albert sq
'Turner Miss, 2r Regent road Welby RichardJameS,I2 Wellingtonrd Wrake George, 143 Southtown road.
Turner Mrs. 77 York road Weller Mrs. 2II Southtown road Wright Jas.Lancaster, 55 Southtown rd
Turner Obadiah1 12 Swirles place, Mid- Wellington James R. 27 Regent road Wright John, 42 Southtown road
dle Market road Wells Henry, 12 Trafalgar road Wright Joseph Waldron, IJ Nelson rd
Turrell Henry William, 13 York road Wells Herbert, 76 ~elson road Wright Mrs. 88 Havelock road
Turrell Thomas, 70 Nelson road Wells Misses, 13 Camperdown Wright Mrs. 25 High road, Southtown
Turton Rev. Zouch H. [curate of St. Wenn Fredcrick, 102 Havelock road Wright Mrs. W. 5 Trafalgar road
Mary's], 256 Sonthtown road West Miss, Albany road, Southtown Wright Thomas, xo Nelson rojld south
Turvev Mrs. 39 South Market road Whaites Miss, 103 Regent road Wrigley Robert B. A. x8 Regent road
Ulph Henry William, 15 Wellington rd Wharton Edwin Charles, Lichfield road, Wroughton Fdk. W.Anson rd. Southtwu
Ur1derhiliJamesW.(surgeon R.N. ),Royal Southtown Wyldes

Mrs. x Nelson road
Naval hospital, Queen's road Wheelhouse Mrs. 3 Prince's road Wyllys William Edwd. 25 King street
Utton Miss, 43 King street Wb1te Ebenezer, Wolsley rd. Southtown Youell Edward Pitt, Hall quay &
Varden Mrs. I I Devonshire road White Henry Freeman, 21 South quay Gorleston lodge
Vaughan Arthur C. 76A, Southtown rd WhiteheadRev.EdwardErnestWolffM.A. Y ouell Herbert Willoughby, Hall quay
Vaux Rev. Bowyer M A. 2 St. John's ter I chaplain of uninn], North denes & Branthwaite house '
Vea.le Mrs. 64 South quay Whiteley Mrs. 63 Northgates street Youell Mrs. 9 St. Peter's plain
Veale William, 4 St. George's road Whitfield Charles S. H. 96 Regent road

COMMERCIAL. Alpe Edward, lodging house, 103 Albion road


Abbott Harriet (Mrs.), lodging house, 6 Devonshire road Alpe Honour (Mrs.), lodging house, 105 Wellesley road
Adams Alfred, grocer, r3 Market place Ames J sph. A. & Co. waterproof manfrs. & mers. 707 King st
Adarns Elizabeth (Mrs.), shopkeeper, Friars lane Ames George, lodging house, 66 Albion road
Adams Henry W. insnrance agent, 61 Havelock road Ames Richard George, lodging house, 3 St. John's build-
Adams Robert, stationer & tobacconist, 64 St. George's road ings, Fitzwilliam square l
Adams William, dairyman, Ormond road, N orthgates street Ames Samuel, fish curer, St. Peter's row east
Adamson John, fish merchant & curer, Exmouth road Ames Walter E. carpenter, 99 Nelson road
Adcock & Gibbons, leather sellers, 164 :\1iddlegate street Ames Walter Edward, carpenter, Row 71
Ainslie Charles, cab proprietor, 8 Rodney road Amis Arthur, lodging house, 19 Devonshire road
Akam Edward, dairyman, 38 St. George's road Am is George, lodging house, 50 Y o'!"k road
Alden Frank, shopkeeper, 12 l:!t. Mary's terrace, Southtown Amis James, pleasure boat proprietor, 26 Duncan road
Aldis Hannah (Mrs.), lodging house, 43 Middle Market road Amis James William, beer retailer, 93 Ha.velock road ,
Aldis Laura Cleveland (Miss), lodging ho. 51 Nelson rd. nth Amis Samuel, beer & wine retailer, 13 St. Peter's road
Aldiss Patience (Mrs.), lodging house, 45 Prince's road Amis William, beer retailer, 74 George street
Aldred & Son, watch makers, jewellers, silversmiths, berlin Anderson Alfred, sail & tent maker, 51 North quay&. Water-
wool, art work & fancy repository, 56 George street side, Southtown
Aldred Henry Tooley, Pleasure Boat tavern, North quay Anderson Charles, cab proprietor, 52 South Market road
Aldred Samuel, auctioneer, valuer & estate agent,4 South qy Anderson John·, shopkeeper, 32 Elsie road, Southtown
Aldred Sarah (Mrs.), school for young ladies, Row 55 Andrews Harry, baker, conf'ectioner & pastry-
Aldredge Henry, lodging house, 19 Middle Market road cook &c. 23 St. Nicholas road
Alexander Frederick William, tailor & hatter, I7 Regent st Angel Benjamin, chimney sweeper, Say's corner, North quay
Alford Samuel, market toll collector, 90 Northgates street Angel Benj. market gardener, Apollo walk, N orthgates st
Algar John, boot & shoe maker, Row 129 Angel George William, fish curer, 62 North quay
Alger Fanny (Mrs.), lodging house, 10 Apsley road Anglo-American Oil Co. Limited (John BoydenMeed,mana-
Alger H.obert, coal dealer, 33 George street ger ), Southgates road
Allcock George, lodging house, 26 York road Anglo-Danish Dairy Co. butterman, Broad I:'OW
Allcock Robt. shoe maker, N orford's grdns. St. Nicholas rd Anguish Henry, lodging house, 27 Middle Market road
Allen Charles, lodging house, 23 St. Peter's road Annis Mary (Miss), lodging house, 13 Devonshire road
Alien Frederick, Crown P.H. 177 King street & Regent street Annis Mary Ann (Mrs.), lodging house, 54 Nelson road
Allen Frederick, Elephant & Castle P.H. 40 Market place Annison William. twine spinner, Moat rd. ~orthgates street
Allen George, Weavers' Arms P.H. Market place Appleby Charles, joiner, 93 Albion road H
Alien Henry, lodging house, 2 :Marine terrace Applegate Elizabeth {Mrs.), lodging house, 47 Tuttenha.m st
.Alien Marian (Mrs.), lodging house, 53 St. Nicholas Toad Appleton Henry Gooch, lodging house, 3 Bath Hill1ienrace
Allen William Herwood, poulterer, 5 York road Apps Em m a (Mrs.), lodging house, Bo Crown road chs
Allen William Stannard, poulterer, 30 St. George's road Arbon George Daniel, beer retailer, Saxon place; Albion road
Allman Robert John, shoe maker, 87 George street Archard George, Wiltshire Arms P.H. 22 ~orthgates street

7
712 YARMOUTH. NORFOLK. [ KELLY S

Archer Clement, jun. marine store dlr. Rainbow corner nth Barber Thomas Robert, toy dealer, 6 Regent street
Archer George, rope, metal, fish manure & salt merchant Barber William, fly proprietor, Pier place, Havelock road
& marme store dealer; stores, Vauxhall; telegraphic Barber William, registered lodging house, 75 George street
address " Metal " Barber William Charles, printer, 7 Howard street north
'
Archer Henry, trinity pilot, 82 St. Peter's road Barber William Jacob, fishmonger, 20 George street
Archer Thomas, fish merchant, 7 Clarence road Barge & l''reeman, ironmongers, gasfitters, bellhangers &
Argyle John William, grocer, & agent for W. & A. Gilbey, hot water fitters, 23 Market place
wine & spirit merchants, 20 Victoria road; I Nelson road Bargewell George, lodging house, 35 Apsley road
north & post office, 95 Blackfriars road ·Barham Mary Ann (Mrs.), lodging house, 28 Devonshire rd
Arnold Brothers, linen drapers, 179, 180 & x81 King street Barkaway Arthur Charles, grocer, 95 St. Peter's road
& house furnishers, Howard street & Market row Barker Benjamin, London tavern, 42 Middlegate street
Arthur John, chemist & druggist, 55 Middlegate street Barker Caroline (Mrs.), lodging house, 5I Alhion road
Artis Jessy (Mrs.), dressmaker, 23 York road Barker George Edga.r, tailor, 69 North Market road
Artis John, collector of tolls, Wellington pier Barker Mary (Mrs.), lodging house, 64 Middle Market road
Artis Robert, smack owner, 29 Alma road Barker William Wilson, cooper, 12 Blackfriars road ; South-
Assembly Rooms (opposite Wellington pier) (John W. gates road & Theatre plain
Nightingale, lessee), South Beach BarnabyWm. Hy .agt. for EconomicChemicalCo. IOSouth quay
Atkins Henry Raynes, gasfitter, 58 Howard street Barnard Mark, builder & contractor, Southtown road
Atkins James, Albert tavern, Southga.tes road Barnard Richard, shopkeeper, 72 Middlegate street
Atkina dames, coventry & bath chairs proprietor, 3 Harnes Charles, butcher, 28 George street
Rodney road Barnes Charles, hair dresser, 86 George street
-'.ttridge James, lodging house, 14 North Market road Barnes George, fish manure, ice & oil merchant, Vauxhall
Auker Robert, tobacconist, Market gates & 2 Queen street Harnes Henry, sail maker, South Gates road
Ayers Ben jam in J ames, lodging house, 19 Albion road Barnes John, bricklayer, 87 Northgates road
Ayers Edward Thomas, solicitor, commissioner for oaths flames Samuel, brick & tile merchant, North quay
&c. agent to Guardian Fire & Life Office, 13 Regent street Barnes Sydney, dairyman, Vauxhall
Ayers Thos.fancy repository & photographer, 8 & 9 Regent rd Barnes William, grocer, 8 Market place
Back & Co. wine merchants, 28 Market place & Middlegate Barrett George, beer retailer, Southgates road
street ; bonding warehouses, Fuller's bill Barrett William, dairyman & cabinet maker, 50 King street
Bacon George, blacksmith, 83 Lancaster road Bartlett Franccs (Mrs.), lodging house, 53 George street
Bacon Robert, marine store dlr.Barrow's walk,Northgates st Barton John, milk seller, Common lane, 8outhtown
Bailey Henry, wholesale stationer, 12 & 14 Market row Bartram Charles Fuller, builder, 212 N orthgates street
Bailey James, smack owner, High road, Southtown Bartram John Samuel, pork butcher, 58 Victoria road
Bailey James Edward, plumber & painter, 8 Queen street Bartram Priscilla (Mrs.), shopkeeper, 3 Victoria road
Baird James, boot & shoe maker, 11 Regent street Bartram William, greengrocer, Rainbow corner, North quay
Baker Charles, lodging house, 27 Albion road Harwood William, pork butcher, 64 lioward street north
Baker Charles Gilham, architect & surveyor, Hall plain Hatchelder Stphn. J n. artist, 24 Heaconsfield rd. North Denes
Baker George, smack & tug owner, 28 Queen's road Batchelor John, brick & tile manufacturer (manager,
Baker Isaac, beer retailer, Albion road Charles Holman), Queen Anne's road, Southdown; head
Baker John G. poor rate collector (Market ward), Nether- office, Stalham
gate terrace, Prince's road Bately Benj. mast & block maker, see Graystone & Bately
Baker Robert, baker, 62 & 63 South Market road Bately Benjamin, school attendance ollicer, Hope cottage,
Baker Thomas Mathias, solicitor & town elerk & clerk to the Albany road, Southtown
urban sanitary authority & registrar of the borough court Bately John, hair dresser, SS King street
of record, Town hall Bateman Alfred Horace (C. J. Barrett, agent), 3 Hall quay;
Baker \Vilham, baker, I Bore ham road & at 39 Coal exchange, London E c
Balding Brothers, mineral water manufacturers, 25 Middle Bates Edgar, receiver of wreck for the part of Great Yar-
Market road ; works, Heauford place, St. Nicholas road mouth & collector of customs, South quay
Bald win Caroline Eliza (Miss), fancy stationer, see Gaze Bates James Edward, Jamaica Rum 8tores P.H. 152 King st
& Baldwin Batley Richard, beer retailer, Church plain
Baldwin Maria (Mrs.), lodging house, 32 St. Nicholas road Battalora J oseph, cafe, 73 St. Peter's road
Baldwin William, professor of music, 43 George street Baxfield Harry, 1naster rnariner, 22 Nelson road
Balem Henry, lodging house, 84 St. Peter's road Bayes Judith Anne (Mrs.), shopkeeper, 73 South quay
Bales Fredk. Wm. house & corn m. agt. 2 Queen's sq.Regent rd Bayfield Wrlliam, fish curer, Quay Mill wharf, North quay
Bales William, french polisher, Row 51 Bayly Joseph, registrar of births & deaths for South sub-
Ball Charles, lodging house, 44 George street district, 3 Ea.gleton villas, Bath hill
Ball Stanley Arthur, agent for pianos & wringing machines, Beales J uhn, shopkeeper, 90 St. Nicholas road
4 South Market road Bean George, lodging house, 69 Nelson road north
Ballord Sarah (Mrs.), fancy repository & all kinds of toys Bean Henry, lodgmg house, 2 Mar! borough ter. Apsley rd
&c. & basket maker, 3 Church plain Bean Waiter, bricklayer, 4 Rainbow corner, North quay
Balls Ann Winter (Mrs.), lodging house, 33 A udley street Bean William, chimney sweeper, Row 61
Balls Benjarnin, smack owner, 39 North quay & 81 Crown Beazor Elizabeth Mary (Miss), ladies' underclothing ware-
road house, 33 Regent street
Balls Benjamin, jun. beer retailer, North quay Bebee Waiter James, baker & confectioner, 135
Balls Charles William, lodging house, 28 Albion road King street & 22 Regent street
Balls Charlotte M. (Mrs.), fruiterer & game- Heck Emma (Mrs.), lodging house, Alexander ho. Apsley rd
keeper, 159 King street Beck Joseph, lodging house, 53 Southtown road, oouthtown
Balls George, smack owner, Lancaster road BeckbessingerHelenLee(Mrs. ),pork butchr. 2gHoward st. n to
Balls Harold Griffin, lodging ho. 4 Hodney ter. Rodney road Hecket Albert, furniture dealer, 38 Howard street north
Balls Henry, butcher, 29 Boreham road Beckett Cubitt Thomas, shopkeeper, 37 Well street
Balls James, greengrecer, 98 & 99 Blackfriars road Beckett Frederick Bush, baker, 102 Northgates street
Balls John, grocer, 18 Friar's lane Beckett George, builder & contractor, Soutbtown road
Balls Lydia (Mrs.), lodging house, 24 Devonshire road Beckett Georgina (Mrs.), lodging house, 12 Havelock road
Balls Matilda (Mrs.), fruiterer, 19 Victoria road Bedingfield Robert May, trinity pilot, 67 Rodney road
Balls Robert, fisherman, 29 North Market road Beech George William, builder, 216 Northgates street
Balls Sarah (Mrs.), lodging house, 7 Devonshire road Heeching Brothers, ship & boat builders, dry dock & saw mill
Balls William James, fish merchant, Io8 King street proprietors & mast, spar & block makers, :;outh Gates rd
Balls Susannah (Mrs.), lodging house, 18 Wellesley road Heels Ell en S. (Miss), milliner, 26 Regent road
Baly, Sutton & Co. Limited (Henry John Ludlow, sec.), Beer Jonas, fly proprietor, 17 Pier place, Havelock road
vitriol & manure manufacturers, Run ham marsh Beevor Arthur Henry, baker, 58 Iloward street north &
Bambridge Henry, surgeon-dentist, 27 King street Turk's Head P. H. 170 Middlegate street
Bammant Robert, South Star P.H. 79 South quay Beevor John, pork butcher, 123 Middlegate street
Bammont John George, master mariner, 43 Havelock road Beevor Sarah (Mrs.), lodging house, 52 Nelson road north
Ban ham .Elizabeth (Mrs.), confectioner, 126 Middlegate st Beevor Thomas William, baker, 4 Howard street
Banham Mrs. fish tally maker, 100 King street Beevor William John, pork butcher, 12 Middlegate street
Banks Robert, builder, 153 Nelson street Bell William & Co. fish curers, Row 2
Banyard Robert, commercial traveller, 145 Southtown road Bell Aune (Mrs.), lodging ho. 2 Marlborough sq. Apsley rd
Barber H. H. & Co. shipping agents, 10 South quay Bell Brian, station master (G.E.R.) Southtown & VauxhalJ
Barber Jn. Lee & Co. oil cake & seed mers. ; stores, South town stations
Barber James, boat bujlder, Vauxhall Bell George, boot & shoe maker, 6 Friar's lane
Barber James, pig killer, Barrows' walk, Northgates street Bell lsaac Martin, shopkeeper, w6 George.street
.Barber Robert, travelling dmper, 26 Crown road Bell John, proprietor of hand carts, 84 8outh Market road
DIRECTORY. J NORFOLK. YARMOUTH. 713
Bell Richard, boot maker & grocer, 162 Northgates road Blaxell Samuel, Fishing Boat P.H. III Middlegate street
Bell Robert Benjamin, flour dealer, 92 George street Blaza Elizabeth (Mrs.), fruiterer, 75 Regent road
Bell Susie E. (Mrs.), butcher, 63 Market place Blaza Henry John, tobacconist, 44 Regent road
Bell Waiter William, butcher, 24 Northgates street Bliss Charles Richard, toy &c. bazaar, 25 St. Peter's road
Bellamy Charles Seaman, butcher, II7 King street Blomfield Sarah (Mrs.), lodging house, 52 Regent road
Bellamy David Winter, family butcher, I36 King street; & Bloomfield Thomas, bill poster, St. George's row east
at 207 High street & 32 Baker street, Gorll'.ston. See advt Bloomfield Wm. Edward, dairyman, St. George's row east
Bell amy Herbert, butcher, 6 I King street Blue Ribbon Gos;:>el Army Barracks, 47 Howard st. north
Bellin Percy Blair, timber merchant, see Orfeur & Bellin Bly & Sill, Ironmongers, mewl merchants, iron &
Belmore Phcebe (Mrs.), lodging house, 45 Albion road brass founders, patentees & manuf'"acturera of'"
Belson Frederick, plumber, xoo South Market road cooking stoves, 9 Market place ; works & foundry at
Benjafield William, Black Swan P.H. 6 Howard street Runham-Vauxball & Railway foundry
Bennett, Cole & Co. grocers, & agents for W. & A. Gilbey, Bly John Henry, iron & brass founder &c. see Bly & Sill
wine & spirit merchants, IS Market place Blyth Arthur, plumber & glazier, 2 Northgates street
Bennett's Grocery Stores, I I r King street Blyth John Thomas, shoe maker, Garden lane
Bennett John, butcher, Cobholm island Blyth J oseph, beer retailer, 62 Nelson road
Henns Wm. John, seedsman & corn merchant, 5 Church pln lllyth Joseph, Bricklayer's Arms P.H. 62 Nelson road
Bensley Arthur, Horse & Groom P.H. 26 Northgate street Blyth Robert JoFm (exors. of), tobacconists, 2 & 3 Broad rd
Bensley Samuel, lodging house, 7I St. Peter's road Blyth Susannah (Mrs.), midwife, Row 6o
Benslev•
Wm. bldr. & contrctr. Cobholm island& I Beccles rd Blyth Thos. master of Yarmouth workhouse, Northgates st
Bensley William (Mrs.), ladies' school & preparatory school Blyth Thomas W. baker, 25 Northgates street
for boys, I lleccles road, Southtown Blyth William Thomas, collector of sanitary & poor's rates
Benthorp William, carter, Stanley road for Southtown & Gorleston, I3I Southtown road
Bernstein Joseph, tailor, sr Blackfriars road Board of Trade Surveyor's Office ( William J. 'faylor, sur-
Berry Chas. baking powder manufr. Lichfield rd. South town veyor), Custom house, South quay
Berry Emma (Mrs.), chiropodist, 45 Elsie road, South town Boa.twright Fred John, pawnbroker, 132 King street
Berry George, beer & wine retailer, I68 Middlegate street Bokenham John, trinity pilot, 49 Albion road
Berry James, boot maker, 7I St. Nicnolas road Bond Arthur Edgar, builder, 87 Albion ro.ld
Berry Miss, lodging house, 53 St. George's road Bond Edgar, librarian to the Public Library, 22 South quay
Besford James, builder, I26 Nelson road Bond Edgar (Mrs.), ladies' day & boarding school, Albany
Besford William, supt. of silk-crape factory, Factory yard rAJ.i 1 Sout\town
Bessey & Palmer, ship brokers & coal merchants, I8 South Bond Frederick Waiter, insurance agent, I Church plain
quay & Southtown Bond George, bookseller & advertisement agent &c. 3 & 26
Betts Ann (Mrs.), lodging house, 48 York road Market row
Biddlecombe Henry, draper, 3, 4, 5 & 6 King street Bond William, hair dresser, 32 George street
Bird Elizabeth (}iiss), lodging house, 74 St. Peter's road Bonfellow Edmund John, beer & spirit mer. Middlegate st
Bird William, basket maker, I20 Nelson road Barking Elizabeth (Mrs.), lodging house, 25 Crown road
Bishop Ann (Mrs.), butcher, 165 Northgatesstreet Borrett Frederick, boarding establishment, Sandringham
Bishop Arthur Jsph. Winchester House school, 88 Regent rd house, Paget road
Bishop Henry, shopkeeper, Camden road Bottle & Olley, architects & surveyors, 34 Regent street
Bitton Benjamin, confectioner, 4 Broad row Botwright Herbert John, butcher, 35 Middlegate street
Blagg Harry Adolphus, grocer, tea dealer, wine, spirit & ale Botwright Jeffrey_(exors. of), pawnbrokers, 40 Middlegatest
& porter merchant, & agent for W. & A. Gilbey, wine & Boughton Sl. beer ret. Uncle Tom's Cabin, Britannia pier
spint merchants, I6A, & 18 Market row & I67 King street, Boulton George, upholsterer, 4 Priory plain
& tobacconist & cigar merchant, 16 Market row Boulton Henry Swann, fishmonger, 5 Grosvenor road
Blake Garson & Son Limited, coal, salt, portland cement, Boulton J ames William, draper &c. 55 North quay
lime & general builders' merchants (Lovewell Blake, Boulton Thomas, Steam Packet P.H. South beach
managing director ; Ernst. Brigbtin Blake, sec.) ,I Sth. quay Bowen Annie (Miss), mantle maker, 45 South Market road
Blake George & Son, fish curers, :Nelson Curing works, Bowen John, lodging house, 58 St. Peter's road
Exmouth road Bowen Thomas, grocer, 75 Havelock road
Blake R. T. & Son, fish merchants, South Gates road Bower Thos. grocer, & post office, Salisbury rd. North denes
Blake Arthur William, boat builder & sb.ip chandler, South- Bowes Samuel, lodging house, 3 Mar! borough sq. Apsley rd
town ferry & South Gates road Bowles George F. hair dresser, 91 St. Nicholas road
Blake Arthur William, deputy-registrar of births & deaths, Bowles Robert, fish curer, Row 54
Gorleston sub-district, Thornville, Southtown Bowles Samuel, fish dealer, 22 lloward street north
Blake Charles, boot maker, I38 Blackfriars road Bowles Samuel, furniture broker, 74 Midd.legate street
Blake Charles, fisherman, 18 Conge Bowles William, dining:rooms, 46 North quay
Blake Ernest Brightin, agent Imperial Union Accident Co. Bowman Kenneth, shopkeeper, I28 Southtown road
& deputy-registrar of marriages for Great Yarmouth Box & Co. boot manufacturers, 9 South quay
district, I South quay Boyce Kate (Miss), fishmonger, 1 & 2 Fish market
Blake Frederick, bricklayer, 10 Howard street north Boyce,Nelson, jun. shoe maker, Laughing Image corner,
Blake Garson Henry Lovewell, solicitor, 38 Hall quay North quay
Blake Georgo, smack owner, I I Nelson road south Boyce William, corn & seed merchant, 79 King street
Elake Henry M.B. hon. medical officer Great Yarmouth Boyce William, lodging house, 14 South beach
Hospital & public vaccinator for Yarmouth, 25 South qy Boyce William, lodging house, 20 York road
Blake Lovewell, fellow of the Institute of Chartered Ac- Bracey & Son, rope manufacturers, Queen's road
countant.", Belgian Consul for the counties of Norfolk, Bracey William, builder & contractor &c. St. ~icholas road
Suffolk & Cambridge, registrar of marriages fot Great Bracey William Robert, painter, go High road
Yarmouth district, auditor to the corporation of Great Brackenbury Robert Wiliiam,hair dresser, I84 Middlegate st
Yarmouth, the Port & Haven Commission, the Great Bradfield Jesse, dairyman, 11 Conge
Yarmouth Charity Commission, the Great Yarmouth Gas Bradley Thomas, engineer, 8o North quay ·
Co. & the Free Press Newspaper Uo. Lim. ; secretary to Bradnum Isaac, florist, Portland place, Southtown
the Norfolk & Suffolk Permanent Benefit Building Society, Bradnum Wm. general gardener, St. Mary's pL Southtown
to the Yarmouth Traders' Association, to Great Yar- Brady Edward, baker & shopkeeper, 38 Howard street
mouth Investment Co. Lim. 2A, South quay; & at Lowes- Bramble William, coach builder, South Gates road
toft, Beccles & Great Ormesby Branch John, grocer, 145 Middlegate street
Blake Robert, fish curer, Exmouth road Brand Henry lloward, tailor & waterproof clothing manu-
Blake Stuart Charles, bookseller & stationer, 20 Market pl fac~urer, Broad row & South Denes road
Blanchflower & Sons, curers & preservers of all kinds of Bran son Harriet (Mrs.), lodging house, I Nelson road south
fish, game &c. manufacturers of pickles, sauces, jams, Bray Annie (Mrs.), fancy repository, 43 & 44 St. Peter's rd
jellies &c. wholesale, french & italian warehousemen, 95 1 Bray James Frederick Wm. builder, 84 St. George's road
g6 & 97 King street Breeze 'Villiam H. grocer, Anson road, Southtown
Blanchflower Timothy Coleman, butcher & poulterer, Brett Jonn. Thomas, furniture warehouse, 26 Howard st.nth
Regent road Brewer Eliza (Mrs ), lodging house, 40 Nelson road north
Bland Ann (Mrs.), lodging house, 18 Devonshire road Brewer George, fish curer, St. George's row east
Bland Edward, builder, I St. Mary's terrace, Southtown rd Brewer Waiter William, tailor & hatter, I 59 Middlegate st
Bland James, Ship P.H. 4 Middlegate street Brewer William, fishmonger, I53 Middlegate street
Bland en Elizabeth (Mrs.), shopkeeper, 22 North quay Brewster William, beer & wine rlitailer, 48 Blackfriars road
Blanden Henry, shopkeeper, IS Howard street Briggs Mary (Miss), lodging house, 63 Marine parade
Blaxell Arthur Charles, hay&; corn dealer, 1 Friar's lane Bright Sarah (Mrs.), lodging ho. 40 York ter.St.Geurge's rd
Blaxell Charles, Marine hotel, South beach Brighton William, yacht builder & designer, Southtown
Blaxellllarry, fly prop. Mount Hotel stables, South b:;ach Bristow Emily (Mrs.), lodging house, 16 Devonshire road
714 ";'YARMOUTH. NORFOLK.' [KELLY's

Bristow George, hair dresser &c. 154 King street k sub-post Bunn Sarah (Mrs.), lodging house, 4r Nelson roa.d south
office, Marine parade ' Bunn William Fuller, master mariner, 35 Albion road
Bristow John Williarn, butcher, 68 Middlegate street Bunnage Mary Ann (Mrs.), lodging house,s8 Marine parade
Bristow Waiter, tailor, 85 Albion road & Row 6o Bunting Thomas, grocer, Hall quay
Britannia Pier (John- Joseph Isaac, proprietor; Samuel Burcham Rhoda (Mrs.), lodging house, 57 Apsley road
Houghton, renter of tolls), 69 Marine parade north Burgess James, master. mariner, 14 St. Peter'il road
British & Foreign Sailors' Society (William Jary,missionary), Burgess Wm. Th!lin, statuary & stone mason, l:I North quay
84 Havelock road · Hurling The Misses, lodging house, 24 Rodney road
British Gas Light Co. Lim. manufg. chemists, Vauxhall Burling JameS', carpenter, 33 Nelson road
Brock Samuel, builder, Southtown road Burn John, boot maker, North Market road
Brock Samuel, lodging house, 4 Wellington road Burrage Hannah (Mrs.), shopkeeper, 55 Burnt la.Southtown
Brodie Frederick, beer retailer, Liohfield road, Southtown Burrage Horace John, grocer, 19 Nelson road •
Brogden William, chief constable & superintendent of fire Burrell FrankS. confectioner, ng King street
brigade & inspector of hackney carriages, Middlegate st Bnrrell Thos. twine spinner & trawl net manufr. Ordnance rd
Brooks Benj. (Mrs.),milk seller,Rainbow corner,Northquay Burrell William, bout maker, 32 St. George's road
Broom Ambrose (Mrs.), shopke~per, Cob holm island Burrell 'Villiam, marine engineer & boiler maker, Victoria
Broomhead Mrs. lodging house, 8 Princes roa~ 1 engineering works, South Gates road & engineers' stores,
Brown & Colby, iron merchants. I79 Middlegate street & 85 South Denes road & I Mariner's road. See advert
9 South quay ; & at Thetford Burrows Deborah (Mrs.), lodging house, 22 Wellington road
Bro-n Palgrave & Sons, timber & coal merchants, Burton & Son, solicitors, 2 King street
ship owners & saw mills, arbitrators & valuers, Nether- Burton Charles Gourlay, plumber &c. 169 Middlegato street
lands & Danish vice-consulate, Imperial & Royal Austro- Burton Emily (.Mrs.) lodging house, I Queen's pl. Albion rd
Hungarian consular agents, Southtown Burton Frank (firm, Burton & Son), solicitor, commissioner
Brnwn Alfred, fish merchant, 70 King street to administer oaths in the Supreme court, 2 King street
Brown Ann (Mrs.), lodging house, 42 Albiun road Burton George, fish curer,. South Denes
Brown Arthur, boat buildor, Cobholm island Burton George Myhill, upholsterer, 78 York road
Brown Arthur .Mavor, lodging house, 49 Regent road Burton Samuel Crickmer _(firm, Burton & Ban), solicitor,
Brown Barbara (Mrs.), lodging house, 6o Havelock road commissioner to administer oaths in the Supreme court &
Brown David, cowkeeper, l<'rosdick's buildings, Manby road perpetual commissioner for taking acknowledgments of
Brown Edward, lodging house, x6 Providence pl. Russell rd deeds by married women, 2 King street
Brown Eliza (Mrs.), lodging house, I Fitzwilliam ilqnare · Burwell Robt. P. marine store & coal dealer, South Gates rd
Brown Frank, tobacconist, 5 Regent street Burwood James, mast & block maker, South O"ates road
Brown F.redk. lodging house, 5 Brock's bldgs. Wellington rd Burwood James, milk seller, Vauxhall
llrown Frederick, lodging house, 98 Havelock road Burwood Thomas, bricklayer, 4 Derby cottages, Nelson road
Brown George, Wrestler's inn, Church plain Burwood William, cart ownPr, 73 North quay
Brown G-eorge Thomas, coffee tavern, 17 Howard st. north Bushell Charles, carter, Stanley road
Brown Jas. Chas.carpenter,14Southampton pl.Nelson rd.nth Buston Herbert, butcher, 16 Howard street
Brown James George, lodging house, 17 Apsley road Butcher Henry, coal dealer, St. Peter's row west
13rown John, boat proprietor, Princes road Butcher .Mary Ann(Mrs. ),marine store dlr. 144 Middlegat.st
Brown John, cab proprietor, 39 Nelson road north Butcher Matthew, ship agent & insurance broker, vice-
Brown Mary A. (Mrs.), lodging house 1 105 Nelson road consul of the German Empire, Sweden & Norway, Por-
Brown 1\'lary Ann (Mrs.), Vine P.H. 5 Howard street tugal, Italy & Greece, gr St. Peter's road
Brown Richard, bathing machine proprietor, 55 Albion road Butler .Arthur, hair dresser, 93 Middlegate street
Brown Richard, beer retailer, 52 North quay Butler Henry, dairyman, Vauxhall
Brown Robert, fish c11reri 1 Alpha terrace, Southtown Butler ~icholas Jsph. physician & surgeon, 67 St. Peter's rd
Brown Thomas, lodging house, 64 Marine parade Butler Robert, sail maker, see Laws & Butler
Brown Thomas, shopkeeper, 136 Southtown road Butters Alfred, lodging house, r6 Camperdown
Brown Waiter, clothier, 20 Northgates street Buttifant Thomas, boot & shoe maker, 34 Howard street
Brown Walter, maltster, 29 South quay & Rodney road Buxton J n. Cornelius, window blind ma. 9 Middle Market rd
Brown Wm. boot maker 32, & shopkeeper 33, Middlegate st Buxton William James, lodging house, 46 Albion road
Brown William Pal grave, vice-consul to the Nether lands, Byford Isaac, general dealer, Row 58
Denmark & Austro-Hung-<~.ry, Southtown Cable Cha~.inspector of hackney carriages, 3 High Mill road
Browne John, carpenter, 8 Blake's buildings, Russell road Cadywould Elizh.(Mrs.),shopkpr. 12 Braces bdngs,Southtwn
Brundish Henry, lodging ho. 6 Blake's buildmgs, Russell rd Cadywould Henry George, venetian blind maker & ward-
Brunning Isaac & Co. seedsmen, 3 Regent street & nursery- robe dealer, Theatre plain
men, Caistel" road . Caftey William James, Anchor & Hope P.H. 45 St. Peter's
Brunning George William, Rodney tavern, Rodney road road & St. George's road
Brunning J ames, lodging house, 7 Bath Hill terrace Cahill Jane (Mrs.), lodging house, 49 Vic:toria road
Bryant Hubert Charles, lodging house, 8o Albion road Callow Charles, Regent tavem, 33 Regent road
Bryanton Wm. boot & shoe ma. Nettle hill, Nelson rd. north Callow Richard, fishing boat owner, 22 Nelson road north
Buck Fred, pork butcher & fruiterer, 43 South Market road Calthorpe John G. beer retailer, Reccles road, Southtown
Buck John, china & glaaa merchant, St. George's Calver Edwin George, lodging house, 6 Apsley road
hall, 32 King street Calver Frederick, upholsterer, 91 Northgates tltreet
Buck Sarah M. (Mrs.), lodging house, 38 St. Nicholas road Calver Hy. Fredk. stationer, & post office, 40 St. Peter's rd
Buckingham John Robt.marine store dealer,South Gates rd Cambridge (Old) Dining Rooms; every accommoda-
BuckinghamMaryAnn( Mrs.), boot &shoe m a. soBlackfriars rd tion & home comforts, for commercials & visitors (Waiter
Buckland Isabel, lodging house, Britannia ho. Britannia rd Grimes, proprietor), Market place
Buckle Ernest William, collector of income tax, 9 South- Camp John, dairyman, 65 & 66 Market place
ampton place, Nelson road north Campling & Sons, dyers & cleaners, 122 King street
Buckle John, steam printer, & publisher of the "Yarmouth Campling Catherine( Mrs.) ,laundry,Southtown & I22 King st
Mercury," 35 & 36 King street & 35 Dene side Candler Henry, lodging house, 69 St. Nicholas road
Buckle William, baker, 67 South quay Cann Frederick, lodging house, 43 Princes road
Huddery Jsph.LadyHaven tavern,Cobholm island,Southtwn Cann Sarah (Mrs.), lodging house, 56 Havelock road
Buddery Robert Joseph, inspector of weights & measures; Cannell John, cowkeeper, Southtown
office, Town hall ; res. N orthgate cottage, N orthgate st Capon 'Valter, lodging house, 63 Apsley road
Buddery William Martins, carter & cab proprietor, 207 Carpenter Charlotte {Mrs.), tobacconist, 26 Market place
Northgates street Carpenter Wm. Jn. mgr. Yarmouth Gas wks. Sth. Gates rd
Budds Alfred, marine store dealer, South Gates road Carr Arthur, lodging house, 21 Rodney road
Budds James Horatio, hair dresser, 2 Howard street Carr Charles, fancy repository & bookseller, Theatre Royal,
Bndds William, shopkeeper, 89 St. Nicholas road Regent road & Albion road .
Bullen Charles John, marine store dealer, I Blackfriars road Carr Charles, news agent, 8 Albion rd. & ro Howard st. nth
J~uller Charles John, auctioneer, I37 & 138 King street Carr George, fancy draper, 34 Market row
Huller Thomas, lodging house, 27 York road Carr George, linen draper, 123, 133 & 150 King street
Bulley Arthnr, lodging house, 18 Albion road Carr James, lodging house, 4 Lancaster road ·
Bulley William Thomas, beer retailer, nB Nelson road Carr Onesimus, grocer, 42 Lancaster rd.& 25 St.George's rd
Bnllimore Mahala (Mrs.), dress maker, 10 Middle Market rd Carr Richard Simmonds, grocer, 99 King street
Bullman James Benjaman, tinsmith, n6 Havelock road Carrier Arthnr, Gallon Pot P. H. so Middlegate street
Bullmore Geo. Rt. coal dealer, Fuller's passage, Fuller's hill Carrier Charles, beer retailer, Cobholm island, Southt.own
Bullver Sarah (Mrs.), lodging house, 16 Southampton place, Carrier "\Villiam Porter, baker, 39 Howard street north
Nelson road north 1 " Carter Mark & Son~ builders, Row 123
Bulman Lydia. (Mrs.), florist, Northgates street Carter & Wright, carpenters, Row 102
Bu•m J. & H. corn & general merchants, Southtown Carter Daniel, trinity pilot, 27 Victoria road
DIRECTORY.] • NORFOLK. YARMOUTH. 1
715
Carter Hen'l'y, eecond·hand clothes dealer, 37"George street Clark Jobri' Thos. solicitor & notary public, i2 Regent st
Carter Horatio Draper, trinity pilot, 39 Apsley road Clark William, shopkeeper, 137 Middlegate street
Carter John Owen, fishmonger, ro6 Middlegate street Clark William Bream, lodging house, 6o Nelson road north
Carter Laura {Miss), dress maker, 83 Regent road Clark & Reeve, wharfingers & carriers, Newcastle & Hull
Ca l"tet Sarah Ann (Mrs.), lodging house, 7r. Sth. Market rd Steam Packet office, South quay; & at Norwich
CarterWm.librarian of free library, Tolhouse, Middlegate st Clarke Charlotte (Mrs.), registry office for servants, 8I St.
Cartledge Louisa (Mrs.), lodging house, 85 Crown 't'oad George's road · ' ·
C trver Robert, general engineer, 4 Queen's place, S'outhtwn Clarke Emmeline (Ml"s.), lodging house, ro York road
Case & Steward, corn, coal, oil cake, seed merchants &c. Clarke Rnbert Harvey ,corn merchant, Waveney steam roller
South quay : & at Norwich & Loddon mills, Southtown ·
C.tsh & Co. boot makers, branches, 170 King st. & 22Market st Clarke Samuel Tennant, boat builder, North quay
Ca4le Edwa.rd & Son, ship & boat bldrs. &c. Southtown rd Clarke William, Three Herrings P.H. so South quay
Castle & .Johnson, auctioneers, valuers, house, estate & Claxton Alexander, agent for .Standard Accidental Insurance
insurance agentS', Bridge Auction mart, Southtown & High Co. 52 St. Nicholas road
street, Gorleston • Claxton Frederick, cabinet maker, 57 George street
Castle Arthur B. auctioneer &c. see Castle & Johmmn Clay & Son (John I. Isaac, proprietor), manufacturing con-
Castle Art!J.ur Briggs, coal, coke & salt mer. Southtown rd fectioners, Middle Market road
Caston Hannah (Mrs.),'private boarding ho. 23 Trafalgar rd Cleaver Julia (Mrs.), lodging house, 92 St. Peter's road
Cater Richard Valentine, coach bldr. 17 Middle Market rd ClementsAlice(Miss ),dress m a. t7Coniston sq.St. Nicholas rd
Caton Jarnes, lodging house, 8 Fitzwilliam square Clements Elizh. (Mrs.), lodging ho.s Queen's cots.Albion rd
Cattee William, boot & shoe maker, 8 South Gates road Clcments Maria (Mrs.), lodging house, 36 Crown road
Cattermole Thos. Wm. Blackfriars tavern, 94 Blackfriars rd Clowes Albert Frank, solicitor, 31 R~gent street
Causton Frederick Hart, editor of the "Yarmouth Inde- Clowes John Edward, dealer in tea, grocery, provisions,
pendent," r85 Northgates street patent medicines, perfumery, brushes, mats, stationery,
CJ.uston Frederick Hart, manager to the Free Press News- baskets & mineral wat.ers, 14 & 15 Hall quay & 99 & roo
paper & Printing Co. Limited, Hall plain High street, Gorleston
Cavendish Frederick, lodging house, 44 Albion road Coastguard Station (Arthnr George Fullerton R.N, inspect-
Ceiley Alfred Barney, market stall caretaker & stable keepr. ing commander; John Ritty R.N.chief officer),Marine par
Row 32 Coastguard Telephone Station Office, Marine parade
Ceiley Robert, medical botanist, III Regent road Coates William, currier, How 48 & 9 Queen's pl. Southtown
Cemetery (Catholic) (George Blake, keeper), Northgates st Cobb John Swanston L.D.s.Eng. dentist, 28 King street
Cemetery Office (Thomas Mathias Baker, clerk to the burial Cockrill John Wilham, borough surveyor & inspector of gas
board: John James Manu, supt. & sexton), Church plains meters, Town hall
Central Hall ,Auction & Bazaar Rooms (Waiter Gilbert Cockrill William Ballard, architect, 31 Regent street & High
Knowles, proprietor), Theatre plain street, Gorleston •
Chace William, shopkeeper, 63 Havelock road Colby Joseph, fish merchant, 25 South Market road
Chamberlin & Leech, solicitors, 13 Queen street Colchester Brewing Co. (Ed ward Cooke, agent), brewers;
Cbamberlin Harold (firm, Chamberlin & Leech), solicitor, stores, Mill lane, Southtown
notary public & clerk to the Martham drainage commis- Colchester Brewing Co. Lim. refreshment rms. Fish wharf
sioners ~clerk to Stokesby-with-Herringby school boards, Cole Arthur, tobacconist, 49 North quay
13 Queen street Cole Elizabeth (Mrs.), stationer & news agt. IxSA, King st
t;hamherlin Percy D. artist, Broad row Cole Henry, basket maker, 90 Beccles road, Southtown
Chambers Emma Frances (Mrs.), fancy repos. 35 Regent st Cole lsaac Leggett, shopkeeper, 104 Middlegate street
Chambers Samuel, shrimper, Cobholm island Cola James Henry, window blind maker, 6 Middlegate st
Chandler Alfred, beer retailer, 56 Albion road Cole Mary Ann (Mrs.), lodging house, 2r Albion road
Chaney Bertha (Mrs.), lodging ho. 5 Alpha ter. South town Coleman & Co. Lim. beer & wine retlrs. 30 & 3 r St. Peter's rd
Chaplin Robert, hay & corn dealer, 14 Dene side Coleman Edmund, lodging house, 12 Nelson road north
Clmpman Edward, fish dealer, 25 Howard street Coleman Henry Samuel, watch maker, 9 Middlegate street
Chapman Ed win, lodging ho. 5 Marlbarough ter. Apsley rd Coles Emma (Mrs.), lodging house, 20 St. Peter's road
Chapman Elizabeth (Mrs.), cow keeper, 66 Victoria road Calk George, Bath ho. & family hotel, St. George's road &
Chaprnan George, boat builder, see Howes & Chapman Marine parade
Chapman George, fish curer, 115 Middlegate st. & Row 139 Col!ett Lavinia (Mrs.), dress maker, 24 High rd.Southtown
Chapman Geo. Wm. general dealer, 8 & 5 Howard st. north Collins Edwd.chimney sweeper, Nettle hiU,.Nelson rd. north
Chapman Henry A. fish merchant,' 76 King street- Collins William Hasling, cab proprietor, 49 Lancaster road
('hapman James, fish merchant & curer, Row 145 Collyer Morris Betts, lodging house, 69 Albion road
Chapman Jn. boot maker & grocer, r8 & 19 White Horse pln Colman's Flour Stores & Shipping Office (John Cole Wright.
Ctmpman John (Mrs.), fruiterer, Theatre plain clerk), South quay ''
Chapman Joshua, paraffin oil & coal dealer, 2 Manby road Colman J<J.mes, lodging house, 36 Victoria road
Chapman Maria (Mrs.), baker, 51 Middlegate street Combe & Co. Limited (Edward Henry Harvey Combe,
ChapmanWalter,china, glass & earthenware stores,r2Hall qy agent), maltsters & corn merchants, Southtown
Chapman Waiter, Gallon Can P.H. 29 South quay Combes & Hook, engineers & smiths, South quay
Chapman William, boot maker, 52 King street Combes Jame.q, lodging house, ro8 Nelson road
Chapman William, builder, 21 Nelson road Condon Jane (Mrs.), glass & china riveter, Row 25
Chapman William, lodging house, 49 King street Conservative Club (John Tolver Waters, sec.), Quay house,
Chapman Willie, lodging honse, 46 Havelock road Hall quay
Charlton Stanley, lodging house, 42 Victoria road Constable Emma (Miss), registry office & home for servants,
Chase James, boot & shoe maker, 66 North Market road 227 N orthgates street
Chase John Heckett, hair dresser, 10 Friar's lane donvalescent Home for Children (Miss Ellen Jane Turner,
Chase Robert, missioner, Wherrymen's mission, Vauxhall lady superintendent & matron), Euston road
cottage, Vauxhall Cooper Abraham Shearing, ironmonger &c. 32 & 33 Market.
Chase William, corn merchant, Northgates street place & 5 & 7 Market row
Chasen Christopher, cart owner, Vauxhall · Cooper Charles William, Buck inn, Hall quay
Chasen Mary Ann (Mrs.), lodging house, Church plain Cooper Elizabeth (Miss), lodging house, 74 Crown road
Chaston Mary (Mrs.), lodging house, "76 North Market road Cooper Elizabeth (Mrs.), lodging house, 56 Crown road
Chater Mary (Mrs.). lodging house, so Marine parade Cooper Elizabeth (:Mrs.), lodging house, I South Beach pi
Cheeseright Caroline E. (Miss), milliner & dress maker, 6 Cooper Frederick, hairdresser, 35 Northgates street
Regent road Cooper George Hy. insurance supt. 38 High rd. Southtown
Child Benjamin C. collector of poor rates North ward, Yar- Cooper Isaac .Shearing, builder, Theatre plain
mouth Union, 65 York road Cooper James Buxton, carpenter, see Rand & Cooper
Child& William, private apartments (unrivalled sea Cooper Robert Henry, lodging house, 53 Marine parade
view) with or without board (established 30 years), Tra- Cooper William, lodging house, I Wellesley road
falgar house, Marine parade & Trafalgar road Corfist.on Mrs. lodging house, 25 Nelson road
Chilvers Edmund, lodging house, 39 Camden road Cork William, builder & contractor, Northgates st
Chittenburgh Henry Edward, butcher, 72 St. Peter's road Corn Market Hall (Beevor John Foulsham, proprietor),
Christian Robert, paperhanger & picture frame maker, 42 Duke's Head yard, Hall quay
South Market street Corn Meters' Office, at the St. John's Head P.H. 58 Nth. quay
Christie Alexander, credit draper, 54 St. Nicholas road Corporation Schools for Navigation & Practical Seamanship
Christmas William, butcher, 3r King street (Wm. Stockton, instructor in navigation; John Farmer,
Church Charles, dairy, 68 Howard street instructor in seamanship), Fishers institute, Gorleston
Church Martha (Mrs.), lodging house, So York road Corporation Technical Schools ('f. M. Baker, clerk), South
Church Sarah (Miss), lodging house, 4 Havelock road Market gates
Church \V1lliam, twine spinner, 65 Northgates street Corsbie Priscilla (Mrs.), lodging house, r6 St. Peter's road
716 YARMOUTH. NORFOLK. (KELLY'S ·
Cory Elizabeth (Miss), lodging house, 28 Duncan road Davey Hy. Brown, inland revenue officer & inspector of corn
Cory Robert, solicitor, clerk to commissioners of taxes for returns ; office, 35 South quay; res. 122 Nelson road
East & West Flegg & Rainham Drainage Commisswners, Davey Margaret (Mrs.), lodging house, 11 Kent pl. Apsley rd
22 South Howard street & at Great Ormesby Davidson Fredk. tobacconist, 36 & 37 Howard street north
Cossey Thomas Robert, boat builder, Vauxhall & 12 Kent Davis J. W. & Son, varnish & paint manufacturers; branch
place, .A psley road warehouse, 47 King street
Costerton Frederick Samuel, solicitor; office, Queen street Davis Alfred, lodging house, 73 Regent road
Cotton Charles, pianoforte tuner, St. George's row west Davis Henry, lodging house, 3 Brocks buildings
Cotton William John, lodging house, 24 .Apsley road Davis John, fruiterer, 8 Broad row
<:'JOull William, lodging house, 72 Marine parade north Davis Mary Ann (Mrs.), shopkpr. & beer ret.4r Ordnance rd
County Court (His HJn. H. Eardley Wilmot, judge; Ed- Daviss Williarn & Thomas, carriage proprietors &
ward William Worlledge M.A. registrar, high bailiff & jobrnasters, wedding broughams, open & close car-
district registrar of the High Court of Justice; John riages, gigs & dogcarts of every deseription; hunters
Etheridge, chief clerk), l i South quay & saddle hacks, Livery stables, Norfolk hotel, St.
Cowan Annie (Miss), boarding & day school for girls ; prin- George's road & Duke's Head stables, Bridge quay
cipal certificated; assisted by visiting masters & certifica- Davy Elijah, watch maker, St. Peter's row east
ted teachers; kindergarten attached; house large & airy, Da,·y William John, plumber & glazier &c. South Gates rd
facing the sea, 6o Marine parade Dawber William & Son, slaters & slate merchants (Robert
Cuwdery William, tobacconist, St. George's row east J. Hill, manager), Southtown
Cowey Jonas, lodging house, I Marlborough ter. Apsley rd Dawson Abraham, boot maker, 48 South Market road
Cowl A. E. & W. H. solicitors, 14 South quay DawsonAnnEliza(Miss),boot & shoe wareho.3glioward st.nth
Cowl Arthur Edwin (firm, Cowl A. E. & W. H.), solicitor, Da wsonAnnSophia( Mrs.), lodging ho. 3 Queen's cots . .Albion rd
commissioner to administer oaths in the Supreme court, Dawson William John, watch maker, gr South quay
solicitor to East Anglian Investment Association Li.m. Day & Son, Barking Smack Hotel, I6 Marine parade
Liberal Club House Co. Limited & to the Gt. Yarmouth Day George, boot & shoe maker, 8 South Market road
Temperance Building Society, 14 South quay Day John, lodging house, 43 Albion road
Cowl Henry, notary public, conveyancer, salvors' agent, Deacon William, beer retailer, 83 .Northgates street
commissioner to administer oaths in the Supreme court, Dean Frederick, hair dresser, 6r Black friars road
secretary to Gorleston Mutual Insurance Co. Limited & Dean Frederick L. hair dresser, 10 Southtown road
agent for Wakefield Marine Insurance Co. I4 South quay Dcbbage William, butehcr, 51 Market place
Cox Charles, beer retailer, 8 South town road de Caux John William, fish salesman & auctioneer, 2 Hegent
Cox: Frederick Henry, jeweller, 3 Northgates street road & Fish wharf
Cox: George, boat owner, Grosvenor road De Caux William M. baker, 4 Alpha terrace, Southtown
Cox: John, fish dealer, South Gates road Decks Arthur, hair dresser, 63A, Howard street
Cox Joshua, Tanner's Arms P.H. Union rd. South Markt. rd Decks Isaac, ham & bacon smoker, 2 Fuller's hill
Cox Richard, iish merchant, 76 Lancaster road Delf Frederick Riches, grocer, ng Middlegate street; I ] &
Cox: Richard, smack owner, 1 Saxon villas, .Albion road I8 North quay & I I Tower road
Crabtree I•'rederick, coal dealer, South quay Delf Miss, dress & mantle maker, 53 King street
Crabtree Williarn F. general engineer, millwright, iron Denew William, printer & lithographer, 10 Regent street
& brass founder & boiler maker, Southtown iron works Dennington William, beer retailer, 96 Northgates street
Crane .Ann (Mrs.), lodging ho. 10 Marlborough ter . .Apsley rd Denton & Trett, carpenters & joiners, Havelock road
Crane Josiah, basket & sieve maker, 222 Routhtown road Denton Charles, grocer, & post office, 86 Crown road
Cranwell Amelia (Mrs.), George & Dragon P.H. Church plain Deuton Frederick, boot & shoe maker, 131 Middlegate st
Crate Robert, hair dresser, 66 St. George's road Denton Jn. Chas. Park hotel & boarding ho. St. George's pk
Creak William, commercial traveller, 38 South quay Dew Henry, greengrocer, 26 .Albion road
Crisp Albert Edward, confectioner & fruiterer, Broad row Diboll Joseph William & Son, bookbinders, I2 Iloward st
Crisp George, cowkeeper, Caister road Diboll James, fisherman, 33 Boreham road
Critten Hy. ship & boat bldr. &c. Cobholm island, Southtwn Dicker Henry, pork butcher, 143 King street
Crome Thomas, mast & block maker, see Stacey & Crome Dicker \Villiam Arthur, butcher, 1 Camden road
Crome Wm.Henry,smack ownr.Newcastle rd.SouthGates rd Dicker William Arthur, Two Bears P.II. Southtown road
C:ronshey Agnes & Margaret (:\:1isses), ladies' school, IO Dickerson James, baker & shopkeeper, 6I George street
Kimberley terrace, Marine parade Dickerson John, shopkeeper, 105 Middlegate street
Crook William, boot & shoe maker, 34 Northgates street Dickson Arthur W. vegetable black manu-
Cross Betsy (Mrs.), baby linen warehouse, 24 Market row f"acturer1 4 & 5 Caister road
Cross Edwin, shopkeeper, 28 Lancaster road Ditcham Charles, lodging house, 6 York road
Cross Valentine, chemist, 28 Regent street Di~er & Preston, solicitors, 23 Kmg street
Cross Valentine, lodging house, 37 Crown road Diver & Son, wine & spirit ·merchants, agents for
Crosswell Albert, shopkeeper, 43 Howard street Messrs. Ind, Coope & Co.'s Romford ales, 13 King street
Cross well Arthur, lodg-ing house, 45 Middle Market road & The Gallon Pot P.H. 12 King street
Crouchen Henry, tailor, 4 Devonshire road Diver Charles (firm, Diver & Preston), solicitor & notary
Crow Horace, lodging house, 3 Exmouth place, .Albion road public & justices' clerk for the borough of Great Yarmouth
Crowe George, Captain Barman P.H. I Northgate street & petty sessional division of East & West Flegg, clerk to
Crowe Mary Ann (Mrs.), White Swan P.H. 4 North quay the school board for the united district of Ormesby, clerk
Crox:ton William, lodging house, 24 Nelson road to the guardian!! of East & West Flegg & clerk to the rural
Cubitt Alfred, Bridge hotel & commercial house, Bridge sanitary authority & school attendance committee, 23
road, Southtown King street
Cubitt Fanny E. (.Mrs.), Anson Arms P.H. Southtown Dix Hannah (Mrs.), lodging house, 25 Trafalgar road
Cubitt Mary ("Mrs.), lodging house, 4 Queen's cots. Albion rd Dix William, tailor, Bg Albion road
Cubitt Samuel, boat builder, Sefton lane, Southtown Dixon Emily (Miss), lodging house, 3 Br"d,ndon terrace
Cubitt William, fish dealer, 10-1- Northgates street Dix:on John, lodging hDuse. 2I Paget road ,
Culley Benj. surveyor of works to Messrs. E. Lacon & Sons Dobson .Alfred, house & ship painter, Southtown road
Gully William, life insurance agent, 70 Albion road Dobson William, brazier, 226 Northgates street
Cnnningham Louisa (Mrs.), lodging ho.3 Unionpl..Albion rd Docwra James, chair caner, 230 Northgates street
Curnick & Co. contractors & butchers (Edward Dunn, Dodson Samuel, painter, 90 Albion road
mana'!er), I7 Southtown road, Southtown Dodson Samuel, pork butcher, 66 Howard street
Curtis Wm. & Son, cork cutters & importers, Church plain Dodwell J. Brunswick Temperance commercial hotel 1
Curtis Mary Anne (Mrs.), shopkeeper, 6r Howard street spacious commercial room with writing room attached;
Cu-;tom House lEdgar Bates, collector; Lewis Samuel stock rooms, coffee & private sitting rooms, King street
Blomtield, 1st clerk & Henry Dobson, 2nd clerk),Sth.quay Donaldson John, fish curer, Ex:mouth road
Dady John Wlmrr, carter, South quay Doolan Edgar John, lodging house, 5 W ellesley road
Dale William, blacksmith, Row 128 Dossett John, lodging house, 52 George street
D11.niels Charles, lodging house, 52 .Albion road Doughty Thomas Drane, grocer, 146 King street
Daniels \Villiam, beer retailer, off Nelson road south Downing Charles, beer retailer, 3 Uoward street north
Danish Dairy Co. buttermen, 10 Market row Downing Elizabeth (Mrs.), linen draper, 45 Regent road
Dapling Catherine ('Trs. ), dress maker, 48 Have lock road Downing Louisa (Miss), boarding establishment, Felix:stowe
Darby Charlotte (Mrs.), Rising Sun P.H. South town house, Langham road
Darby Henry, shipwright, Low quay, Sonthtown Downing Rcbecca (Mrs.), lodging house, I2 Manby road
Darby William C. relieving & va~~ination offi<;er for the Downing Thomas L. bathing hut propr. 2I Nelson rd. south
Southtown & Gorleston district of Yarmouth union, 79 Downing Thomas William, basket maker, Northgates street
High road, Southtown Downing Thomas William, fish curer, South Denes
Darnell William, lodging house, 8 Bath Hill terrace Dowsett Frederick John, solicitor, Hall Plain chamber!!
Davey Elijab, watch maker, St. Peter's row east Drake Charle~, blacksmith, Queen's road
DIRECTORY.] NORFOLK. Y .A.RM.O UT H • 7li

Drake Chas. boot & shoe ma.73 Nelson rd.& II2 Blackfriars rd Ellis AUred, Norfolk & Norwich Arms P.H. & fly proprietor,
Drake Elizabeth Ann (Mrs.), beer ret. 24 St. Nicholas road 46 St. George's road
Drake Harry Waiter, lodging house, 23 Albion road Ellis Charles, lodging house, 49 Apsley road
'Drake Henry, whitesmith, Bermondsey pl. east, Princes rd Ellis George, basket maker, 45 Admiralty road
Drane James Henry, shopkeeper, Cemetery road Ellis Jamos Reeder, tailor, 37 Regent street
Draper Henry, tailor, 3 .Mile lane, Southtown Ellis John, fish merchant, x65 Nelson road
Driver James, lodging house, 30 Lancaster road Ellis Joseph, Holkham hotel, 36 Marine parade
Driver William, lodging house, 68 Nelson road Ellis Matthew, tailor, 22 Middle Market road
Duckett Ada (Mrs.), lodging house, 42 Princes road Ellis Margaret (Miss), dress maker, 23 Middle Market road
Duffell Emily (Mrs.), confectioner, I35 Middlegate street Ellis Sidney William, printer & stationer, 69 Howard street
Duffell Sarah (Mrs.), greengrocer, 43 Middlegate street Ellis Waiter, horse slaughterer, I Fisher's quay, North quay
Duffield Charles, carter, Cob holm island, :::louthtown Ell wood Laura (Mrs.), lodging house, 6I Regent road
Duftield lsaac R genera.l carter, 68 North Market road ElphinstonB Ann Elizh. (Mrs.), Theatre tav. Theatre plain
Duffield John, carter, Mill lane, Southtown Elsey Elizabeth (Miss), greengrocer, 41 Howard street
Duley Edward John, fish merchant, Row 92 El!!ey William, baker, 70 George street
Dunning Mary (Miss), shopkeeper, 196 Northgates street Emerson Thomas, supt. of Trinity stores, South Gates road
Durrant Alfred, beer retailer, II2 Nelson road EmigratiOn Office (Turrell & Torkildsen, agents) (Cunard,
Durrant Alfred Thomas. practical electrician, 4 Queen st Dominion, Johnston, Shaw, Savill & Albion & Union
Durrant Edmund Alfred, grocer, fish merchant & curer & Steam Ship Cos.), 23 South quay
smack owner, 63 South quay Emmerson Frederick, carpenter, Row 50 & 75 King street
Durrant George, dairyman, 129 Nelson road Emmerson George William, printer, 69 Middle Market road
Durrant George Waterlow, carpenter, 30 Duncan road Emmerson Henry, lodging house, I Saxon place, Albion rd
Durrant J ames, shopkeeper, Cemetery road EmmcrsonMary( Miss), berlin wool &fancy repos. 9 Il{.e~en t rd
Durrant John, shopkeeper, 21 South Market road Emms Elizabeth (Mis~). lodging house, 58 York road
Durrant Joseph George, coal dealer, 71 Rodney road England Mary Ann (Miss), lodging lio. 55 South Market rd
Dnrrant Robert, pork butcher, 66 Blackfriars road England William Thomas, milfwright, 181 Northgates st
Durrant Susannah (Mrs.), lodging house, 63 Albion road England William W. lodging house, 4 York road
Durrant William, Britannia tavern, 46 South Market road English Sarall Ann (Mrs.), shopkeeper, 36 South Market rd
Durrant William, fruiterer &c. go South Market road English Thomas, boot & shoe maker, Manby road
Durrant W"illiam, shopkeeper, Vauxhall Errington Susannah (Mrs.), confectionr. St. George's row ea
Durtnall Lucy (Miss), dress maker, 13 Middle Market road Estcourt James, cab proprietor, Redan cot. Havelock road
Dyball Jane ()lrs. ), lod!!ing house, 34 Devonshire road Etheridge John, chief clerk to the county court & bailiff
Dye Benjamin, baker, Row 6o under the Agricultural Holdings Act, 1 r South quay
Dye Robert Craness, Cellar House P.H. 67 North quay Everett Wm. Wilson, lodging house, 4 Kent ter. Apsley rd
Dye \Villiam, boat builder, Lime Kiln wharf, North quay EverittHenry Beckett. trawl net manufacturer, Havelock rd
Dye William Duke, Great Eastern P.H. 64 Howard street Everitt Hy. John Ford, tailor & fancy draper, 20 Market row
Dyson George, fish merchant, 2 Duncan road Everitt Thomas, shopkeeper & carpenter, Mill la. South town
Dyson James Edward, decorator & contractor, Nelson road Everitt William, tea merchant, 29 High road, Southtown
Dyson Richard, sail maker, Row I 12 Everitt William A. carpenter & joiner, Cobholm island
East Anglian Investment Association Lim. (Arthur Edwin Ewing Jane (Miss), preparatory school, 16 ~elson rd. south
Cowl, solicitor), 14 South quay Fairhead Waiter, tly proprietor, 95 Havelock road
East Coast Mutual Marine Insurance Co. Lim. (John William Fall William, lodging house, 9 Marlborough ter. Apsley rd
de Caux, sec.), 2 Regent road I<'arman Joseph William, lodging house, 25 Rodney road
East Counties Angling Society (Waiter Lowne, sec.), Corn l''arman William, cabinet maker, 5 South Market road
Exchange, Hall quay Farnell Rebeeca (Mrs.), lodging house, 2 Kent pi. Apsley rd
East Norfolk Printing Co. Row 66 ; stationery dep(Jt, 29 Farrant I<'rances (Mrs.), lodging house, 42 ~elson rd. south
Regent street (George Isaac, manager) Farrow lsabella (Mrs.), lodging house, .p Marine parade
Easter James Wilby, general turner, Row 71 Farrow Waiter, lodging house, 5 Kent place, Apsley road
Easter John W. wood turner, Cobholm island, Southtown Faulke William, butcher, 136 King street
Eastern Daily Express (branch office) (Harry Edward Faulkner James, ship smith, Alpha road, Southtown
Hurrell, agent), 24 Regent street Feek Harry, Lord Nelson P.H. 24 North quay
Eastern Evening News (Norwich) (H. E. Hurrell, repre- Feek Jn. Townley, baker&grocer, Salisburyrd. NorthDenM
sentative), 24 Regent street Felmingham John, bricklayer, 74 Nelson road
Eastern & Midlands Railway Company (Williarn Joshua Feltows Henry & Son, ship builders, Southtown road
Price, district agent), The Beach station, Nelson rd. north Fenner Horatio, auctioneer & fish salesman, Fisll wharf; &
Eastern Star Provident .Association (Charles W. Harrison, auctioneer, Hegent street
sec.), 14 Queen street Ferrier Frederick William, solicitor, commissioner to ad-
Eastick Henry Frederick, boat owner, Grosvenor road minister oaths & clerk to the income, land & assessed ta:x:
Eastick John Waiter, coffee rooms, 42 South quay commissioners & registrar of births & deaths north
Easto John, builder, 67 Albion road sub-district, 33 Hall plain
Eastoe James, boat owner, I Victoria road Ferrier Richard l''rederick E. solicitor, deputy registrar of
Eastoe Robert, builder, Dene side birt.hs & deaths north sub-district, agent Scottish Widows7
Eastoe Robert Moy, tobacconist, 9 Southtown road Fund, North British & Mercantile Insuranc.;e & Sun Fi~e
Eaton & Bamber, tailors & outfitters, I63 King street Office, 33 Hall plain & at Feathers plain, Gorlcston
Eaton William, lodging house, 19 Trafalgar road Fickling John, beer retailer, 9-l George street
Eaves Witliam, french polisher, 5 Fish street Field Robert, greengroeer, 72 Nelson road north
Ebbs John, beer retailer, 101 Northgates street Field Robert, grocer, 47 & 48 Princes road
Ecclestone Waiter, lodging house, 27 Tottenham street Field Robert, lodging ho. 4 Southampton pl. Nelson rd. ntb.
Ecclestone William, Three Tuns inn, Southtown F'ielding & Co. coal merchants, Wellesley road
Edmonds John, fisherman, Row 25 Filbey Cnarles, grocer, 21 St. Peter's road
Edwards The Misses, lodging house, 62 Middle Market road Filbey Robert H. Swan-with-two-Necks P.H. 6 Market place
Edwards Charles George, saddler, 44 York road Fillenham Edgar John, tailor, 6 Saxon place, Albion road
Ed wards Charlotte (Mrs.), lodging house, 59 Regent road Finch John, carter, )!ill lane, South town
Edwards Hephzibah (Mrs.), lodgiug house, I4Nelson rd.nth Findlay Philip Elton, commercial trav. I6o Bla.ckfriars road
Edwards Thomas George, paperhanger, 88 St. Peter's road Fish Wharf (George Henry Jay, wharf master), SouthDenes
Edwards Waiter, fancy draper, 3 & 5 Broad row Fish Rachael E. (Miss), draper, 73 Burnt lane, Southtown
Edwards William Henry, shopkeeper, I Tottenham street Fisher Alfred, trinity pilot, Norfolk house, Marine parade
Egan Thomas, shopkeeper, Cobholm island 1
Fisher Alvina (Mrs.), lodging ho. Gladstone cot. Russell rd
Egget:t: The Misses, boys' preparatory school, 46 Fisher Edward George, London trinity pilot, 55 York road
Regent road F1sher Elvina (Mrs.), lodging house, 59 Albion road
Ellen & Holt, solicitors, 6 South quay Fisher Richard, fisherman, 70 Victoria road
Ellen Frank Stratton M. A., L.L.llf. solicitor, see Ellen & Holt Fishermen's Almshouses, Church plain
Eller Mary Ann (:\Iiss ), lodging house, 29 Apsley road J Fisk Eliz<t.beth (Mrs.), lodging house, ro4A, King street
Ellerd Deborah & Martha (.Misses), boys' school, An son . Fisk George, china&. glass dealer, 56 Market place
road, Southtown Fisk Joseph, beer retailer, Havelock road
Elltltt George, fish dealer, Pier plaee, Havelock road ! Fitch Walter, fancy draper, I4 Regent street
Ellett James, block maker. Mill lane, Southtown · Fitt James, draper, I4 White Horse plain
Elliott Emma (Mrs.),lodging ho.Apsley ho.ntb.Britannia rd Fitzgerald William, musician, 4 Saxon place, Albion roal
Ellis & t:;on, brush & basket makers, Broad row Flaxman Anna Maria (.\irs. ), lodging house, 63 York road
Ellis Arthur, lodging house, 3 Paston place, St. George's rd Fhxman George, builder, Lichfield road, Southtown
C. N. & S. 46
. 718 YARMOUTH. . NORFOLK .
-Flaxman James, beer retailer, Isabella sq. St . .Oeorge's road Garwood Charlotte (Mrs.), shopkeeper, I6I Middlegate st
Flaxman Robert, blacksmith, Quay Mill road, North qnay Garwood George Henry, shopkeeper, Anson rd. Southtown
Flaxman Samuel, builder, Moat road & Southrown Garwood Robert, fishmonger & curer, 62 Howard street
Flaxman Samuel, carpenter &c. 59 St. Peter's road north & H.ow 29
Flerty Joseph, fishmonger, 138 Middlegate street Garwood Robert, jun. fishmonger, 41 South Market road
Fletcher Elizh. Stewardson(Miss ), lodging ho. 41 Camperdown Gaze & Baldwin, fancy stationers & drapers, I I Broad row
Folkes John, trawl net manufacturer, Garrison walk Gaze J a ne (Mrs.), lodging house, 25 Cerdic Shore cot-
Folkes Robert William, beer retailer, 71 Nelson road north tages, Apsley road
Folkes Samuel, lodging home, I2 Conge Gedge Charles, carpenter & builder,High Mill rd.Southtown
Footer Arthur, lodging house, 48 Nelson road north Gedge Robert Johnson, saddler, 17 Friars lane
Furbisher Joseph, draper, 6 Broad row Gee George Charles, pianoforte tuner, I Queen's road
Ford Thos. Paul, plumber, 6 Wellington rd. & 8I South quay General Steam Navigation Co. (Benjamin Charles Rofe,
I•'order J<'rederick, cabinet maker & rate collector for North chief clerk for Yarmouth), Quay house
ward, Church plain George Betsy (Mrs.), china & glass &c. dealer, I~ Market pl
Ford er Geo. Saml. coal dlr. 5 Stanlcy ter. Middle Market rd George Isaiah, lodging house, 19 Apsley road
Forder Henry Edward, painter & plumber, 3 South Market George Isaiah Shields, coal dealer, 62 Albion road
road & 89 Middle Market road George Jacob, smack owner, 2 Queen's road
Forder John George, furniture dealel". 3 Market place George Joseph, twine spinner, Ordnance road ·
Ford er M aria (Miss), lodging house, 49 Nelson road north George Thomas Purdy, bookseller & stationer, 24 & 4 Market
"Fordel" Robert James, carpenter, 2I Middle Market road place & 66 & go Regent road
Forder Thomas, lodging house, 34 Somerset pl. Russell rd George Walter, fisherman, 6 Stanley terrace, Market road
Forder William Thomas, fisherman, 7 Blackfriars road George William, Ye Olde Ferry Boat inn, & fish curer,
Foreman A. & Co. grocers, 59 Howard street north South town
Foreman Harriet (MJ;s.), lodging house, 3 Camden road Gibbard William, net manufacturer, 83 Blackfriars road
Foreman John Alfred, railway agent, 6 Crown road Gibbons Clara (Mrs.), lodging house, 55 St. Peter's road
Foster James, tailor, 127 Nelson road Gibbon!! William, leather seller, see Adcock & Gibbons
Foulkes William, beer retailer, no George street Gibbs George, pork butcher, 45 Middlegate street
Foulsham Beevor John, London hotel, dining rooms Gibbs John, fowl dealer, Beccles road, Southtown
& restaurant, I I & 12 Market place & Duke's Head Gibbs William, butcher, 49 Blackfriars road
hotel, Hall quay & Exchange vaults, Howard street Gilbert John, lodging house, 114 Wellesley road
Fox Ann (Miss), lodging house, 46 Apsley road Gilbert John, sail maker, 68 Nelson road north
Fox Elizabeth (Miss), Columbia tavern, Crown road Giles George Wm. auctioneer & fish salesman, Fish wharf
Fox Mary Anne (Mrs.), lodging house, 5 Devonshire road Gilcs John, Belvidere tavern, Cemetery road
Fox William, master mariner, 27 Rodney road Gilham Charles, shipwright, 37 South Market road
Fozzard Jonathan, London trinity pilot, 62 York road Gilham Martha (Mrs.), King's Arms inn, 229 Northgates st
Francis George, fishmonger, 82 Northgates street Gilham William, King's Arms P.H. Northgates street
Francis "\Villiarn, twine spinner, Vauxhall Gillings Eleanor Maria (Mrs.), boot & shoe maker, 12 & 13
Francis William Keeley, tish merchant, 12 Southwwn road Broad row & hair dresser & tobacconist, Hall quay
Franklyn Louis H ugh, physician & surgeon, 36 Regent road Gilmore George, grocer, 88 Albion road
Fransham Robert Henry, carpenter & joiner, 70 Girling James & Henry, coal &c. merchants, 13 Regent st
St. Nicholas road . Girling William, Coach & Horses inn, 197 N orthgates street
Free Library (Wm. Carter, librarian), Tolhouse, Middlcga te-st Gladdan William, boot maker, 107 George street
Free Press Newspaper & Printing Co. Limited (publishing Glanfield Williarn Arthur, house & estate agent,
the "Yarmouth Independent" new~paper) (Frederick Hart public accountant, & agent to the Norwich Union Fire
Causton, manager) : otlice, Hall plain & Life Otlice & Ocean Accident Insurance Co. Limited,
Freeman, Hardy & Willis, boot makers ; (branch) 103 1 St. George's road
Marketgates & 36 Regent street Goate Step ben, King Street coffee tavern, 155 King street
Freeman Thos.G.& Son,curriers & leather mers.68 Ilqward st Goate Thomas, Cromwell commercial, family & temperance
Freeman Edmund B. (from Freeman's, of Norwich), hotel, Hall quay
carver, gilder, picture frame maker, picture & Gobbett John Alders, upholsterer, I Pier pl. Havclock road
print restorer, 49 Dene side Godbold George Robert, lodging house, 22 Russell road
Freeman Harriet (Mrs.), lodging house, 5 Queen street Godbold Maria (Mrs.), cow keeper, 135 Blackfriars road
Freeman Herbert, ironmonger &c. see Barge & Freeman Godhold Martha (Mrs.), lodging house, 106 Nelson road
-Freeman '\Villiam, fruiterer, 72 Howard street Goddard Henry Edward, pharmaceutical chemist, 17
Freeston Herbert, corn chandler, 6o Howard street White Horse plain
Freman Daniel, lodging house, 28 Crown road Godfrey William, shoe maker, 26 George street
French Alfred, baker, 1 Well street Goff John Johnson, corn dealer, Bridge foot, Southtown
-French Alfred John, commission agent, 5 Nelson road north Goffin Arthur, baker, 32 Nelson road north
French Eliza (Mrs.), fishmonger, 109 King street Goffin James Thornley, sanitary plumber, painter, glazier &
French Henrietta (Miss), lodging house, IO Wellesley road paperhanger, 58 King street & 62 Southtown road
French John Watson, carter & lodging house, 9 Apsley road Goffin John Lincoln, butcher, 20 St. Peter's road
Fricker Arthur, steward to Conservative club, Quay house, Goffin Mary Ann (Mrs.), lodging house, 4 Brand on terrace
Hall quay Golder William, baker, Nettle hill, Nelson road north
Friendly Societies' Hall, Middlegate street Golding Sarah (Miss), lodging house, 22 Trafalgar road
Fromow George, hair dressel", 65 Howard street north Golding William, shoe maker, 73 Victoria road
Frosdick Joseph, market gardener, Beccles road, Southtown Goldspring James, beer retailer, Mill lane, Southtown
Frost Brothers, rope makers, South Gates road Goldspring John, corn & flour dealer, Market place
Frost William, lodging house, 13 Providence pi. Russell rd Goldstone Abraham, tailor, 134 King street
Fryer George F. blacksmith, I88A, Northgates street Gooch Robert David, fish curer, Vauxhall
Fulcher Henry, hair dresser, 62 Market place Gooch William, shoe maker, Row 5~
Fulcher John Arthur, greengrocer, 25 Howard street north Gooda Geo. Wm. painter & glazier, 210 Northgates street
Fulcher William Jellouse, sail maker, 41 Apsley road Gooda Pbilip, Bush P.H. IS South quay
Fuller Frederic, silk mercer, linen draper, laceman, glover, Goodens Mrs. lodging house, 55 Crown road
hosier & family mourning, ladies' underclothing, millinery, Goodings Lydia (Mrs.), lodging house, 25 Devonshire r_oad
dress making & mantle establishment, 178 King street & Goodrick George James, boot & shoe maker, I I Market row
· I & 2 Regent street Goose Artbur, marker gardener, 4 Fuller's hill
Fuller Robert, fishmonger, I40 Middlegate street Goose Edward, grocer, South quay
Fuller Sophia (Miss), dress maker, Row 54 Goose HenryS. market gardener, Northgates street
Fullerton George, lodging house, 55 Apsley road Goose Henry Thos. watch maker & jeweller, 4I Fuller's hill
Futter Henry, coal merchant, Irene honse, 14 Paget road; Goose Waiter, nurseryman, Vauxhall
Beach station & 57 St. Nicholas road Goose William, nurseryman, Vauxhall
Gage Horace, fishmonger, 20 Middlegate street Goreham Caroline (Mrs.), shopkeeper, 53 Howard st. north
Gall Edmund, lodging house, 65 Albion road Gorleston Land Company (Lovewell Blake, sec)
Gallant James, carpenter, 24 Russell road Gorleston Mutual Insurance Co. Limited (Henry Cowl, sec.),
Gardiner Caroline J. (Mrs.), lodging house, 54 Regent road 14 South quay
Gardiner Thomas, lodging house, 46 Nelson road south Gorleswn & Southtown Gas Light & Coke Co. (Frederick
Garrard Alfred, Albion tavern, Fuller's hill '\Veller, manager; W. P. Brown, sec.), Southtown
Garratt Charles, lodging house, 17 Edward ter.North Denes Gosling Jacob, marshman, Boundary road, Southtown
Garrett Lewis Perrin, wine & spirit mercht. I & 2 Market pl Gosling John, Waggon & Horses P.H. 40 Northgates street
Garrod John 1 fishmonger, 29 St. Peter's road Gosling William, cab proprietoc, Cromwell rd. Southtown
Garwood Elizabeth Mary & Lucy (M1sses), dress makers, 10 Goss Frances (Mrs.), Crane P.H. 19 South quay
St. Maty's terrace, Southtown Goss Henry, lodging house, 3 Wellington road
DlRECTORY .] NORFOLK. YARMOUTH. 719
Gottson James, chimney sweeper, Row 31 · ' Green A.braham, toll -contractor & ferry propri,etor, Ferry
Gonge Beatrice (Miss), dress maker, St. Peter's plain hill, Southtown

Gouge Elizabeth (Mrs.), lodging house, 94 St. George's rd Green Charles, outfitter, 4 Broad row .
Gouge G-eorge Patrick, plumber, St. Peter's plain Green Elizabeth (Miss), lodging house, 36 Dene side
Gourock Rope Work Company, rope, tarpaulin,& canvas, Green George, Yare hotel, Howard street
manufacturers, (Robert Young, agent), Hull wharf,! Green George Edward, pawnbroker, 2oHoward street north
Southgates road Green John, lodging house, 4 Brock's bldgs. Wellington rd.
Government Schools of Art, Science & Navigation (James I Green John, trinity pilot, 65 Rodne:y road
Francis Ryan, art master ; William Stockton B.sc. Land. Green John Bloomfield, grocer, 9 Kmg tltreet ·
science & navigation master ; R. H. I. Palgrave, Frank Green John James, beer retail~r, I I White Horse plain
Burton, Percy Martin & John C. Miles esqs. hon. secs.), Green ~Iary Ann (Mrs.), lodgmg house, 6o Regent road
59 South quay Green Samuel James~ boatm~n, 33 Devonshire. road
Gowen Isaac, lodging house, 83 Albion road Green T~o~as, cl~tlner & trulor, 19 & 167A, Kmg street
Gowen Peter, chimney sweeper, Row 39 Green Wllham, pamter, 15 Nelson road
Gower Henry, carpenter, The Priory Greenacre John, ham & b~~ dealer, 158 Nelson road
Gowing George, general dealer, 91 George street Greenacre John Henry, dmmg- rooms, 76 Regent road
Gowing Jas. lodging house, 26 Cerdic Shore cots. Apsley rd (~reenacre Tho~as, groc~r, 58 .George street
1
Grammar School (Rev. William Henry Murray Ragg Greenacre W1lham, Barkmg Fishery P.H. Soutbtown
M.A. head master) Trafalgar road Greengrass Saml. Richmond, shopkpr. 55 Howard st. north
Grave Frederick, bo~t maker, 49 Howard street north Greengrass Th?mas, jun. m1ll~r (wind), North Denes mill
Gravenall Charlotte (Mrs.), boot & shoe maker, 46 Middle- Greenhow Lomsa (Mrs.), lodgmg house, 9 Dunca.n road
gate street · Greenwood Cordelia (Mrs.), Lion tavern, Nelson road north
Gravenall Waiter (Mrs.), upholsterer, Lichfield rd.Southtwn, Greenwood Wm. shoe maker, 6 Lime Kiln walk, North quay
Graver Hannah (Mrs.), lodging honse, 133 Blackfriars road · Greeves Benjamin, greengrocer, 56 King street
Graver Susannah (Mrs.), greengrocer, 152 Middlegate st Gref Charles, lodging house, 26 Victoria rl)ad
<rraves Thomas, dairy, 1 Silk Mill road Gresbam Janet (Mrs.), florist, 193 Southtown road
Gray & Palmer, gasfitters & ironmongers, bell- Grey Elizabeth (Miss), fancy repository, 57A, King street
hangers, engravers, braziers & locksmiths (John Ellis, Greystone Elizabeth (Mrs.), lodging house, 24 Duncan road
manager), 144 King street Grice Charles, lodging house, 49 South Market road . ·
Gray Frederick Augustus, milliner & draper, 18 .Market· Grice Edward, baker, ?9 South Market road
place; & at High street, Gorleston I Grimble I<'rederick, bmlder, 158 Northgates street
Gray Geo. Christopher, bicycle & tricycle depot,17 Regent rd Grimes Henry Clement Durrant, boot maker, Queen street
Gray Louisa (Mrs.), beer retailer, 6 Southdown road Grimes Waiter Cambridge, dining rooms, Market place
Gray Robert, builder, 23 Camden road Grimes William Pestell, carpenter, 58 Neh10n road north &
Gray Thomas Henry, lodging house, 61 Mariner parade St. Peter's plain ,
Gray William, beer retailer, 16 North quay Grimmer Samuel & Co. wine & spirit merchants, Row 6o,
Grayston Samuel, master mariner, 38 Crown road Roward street; & at Norwich
Graystone & Bately, mast & block makers, North quay Grimson Ellen (Miss), dress maker, Lichfie]d rd. South town
Graystone Robert, smack owner, Southgates road Grimson George, lodging house, Collingwood house,
Great Eastern Railway Goods Inquiry Office (Charles F. Marine parade
Ward, manager), Southtown road Groom Martha (Mrs.), lodging house, 38 Victoria road
Great Eastern Railway Receiving Office, 54 Market place Grout & Co. silk crape manufacturers, St. Nicbolas road
Great Yarmouth Co-operative Society Limited (C. Phillips, Graver Charlotte (Yfrs. ), lodging house, 38 Camden road
sec.), 175 Middlegate street Grudgfield Robert William, beer retailer, 20 Blaekfriars rd
Great Yarmouth & District Amateur Poultry, Pigeon, Cage Gunhill James, tailor, 20 Nelson road
Bird & Rabbit Society (Waiter Lowne, sec.), Corn Ex- Gunston John, beer & wine dealer, 44 Boreham road
change, Hall quay Gunton Alfred, butcher, 52 Market place
Great Yarmouth, East Norfolk & Suffolk Mutual Drift Net Gurneys, Birkbeek, Barclay, Buxtons & Orde, bankers;
Fishing Boat Owners' Trade Protection Society (Richard open daily 10 to 4; thurs. 10 to 1; head office, Hall quay;
Samuel Steele, sec.), Hall quay draw on Ba.rclay, Bevan & Co. London E c
Great Yarmouth Fish Wharf (George Henry Jay, wharf Gvton Thomas, cabinet maker, 151 Middleg-cJ.testreet
. master), South Denes . Hacon Alfred Thain, hide & skin merchant, 5 Garson place,
Great Yarmouth Home for Destitute Roys (supported by Middle Market road
voluntary contributions) (G. T. Smith, treasurer & hon. Hacon Kate (Mrs.), shopkeeper, 8 Alpha terrace, Southtown
sec.; Martin Edmonds, supt.; Mrs. Ellen Lydia Edmonds, Hacon William George, baker & grocer, 160 Northgate& st
matron), Belfort place, St. Nicholas road Haddon Mary Bird (Miss), boys' school, 5 Albert square
Great Yarmouth Hospital (C. S. Orde esq. treasurer; Danl. Hagen Eliza (Mrs.), lodging house, g Devonshire road
Meadows, Thomas Lettis, A. C. Mayo, Henry Blake M.B. Hagen William, master mariner, 9 Wellington road
& James Ryley M. D. medical officers; Ernest E. Leech, Hagg Arthur, insurance superintendent, 270 Southtowu rd
hon. sec. ; George VV"alker M.B. house surgeon; Henry F. Hales George, beer retailer, Southgates road
White, dental surgeon ; Miss Clara E. Bowman, matron), I Halesworth Samuel, lodging house, 22 Camden road
1

Dene side Hall William John & Sons, ship smiths, Row u8 & South-
Great Yarmouth Ice & Co-operative Co. Lim. William Hy. gates road
Howard Hogg, sec.), 49 South quay Hall & Co. butchers, 21 King street
Great Yarmouth Investment Co. Limited (Love well Blake, Hall Annie (Mrs.), ladies' boarding & day schl. 70 Regentrd
managing director), Hall Quay chambers Hall Charles, assistant vestry clerk, 70 Regent road
Great Yarmouth Law Society (F. Danby Palmer, hon. sec.), Hall Charles, bricklayer, 29 St. Nicholas road
38 Hall quay Hall Henry, fried fish dealer, 8g Blackfriars road
Great Yarmouth Licensed Victuallers' Protection Society Hall James, biscuit baker, 36 Hall plain
(Richard Samuel Steele, sec.), Hall quay Hall John, York tavern, 128 King street
Great Yarmouth Musical Society (Charles Somerville Orde, Hall Joseph, bricklayer, 24 Middle Market road
. president; William D. Tomkius, sec. ; Henry Stonex, Hall Matilda F. (Mrs.), butcher, 68 Beccles rd. South town
conductor) Hall Samuel Robert, monumental mason, 84 :Northgatesst
Great Yarmouth Mutual Total Loss Fishing Insurance As- Hall William Matthew, owner of hand carts, St. Nicholas rd
sociation Lim. (Wm. Hy. H. Hogg, sec.), 49 South quay Hallock William, plumber, Row 36
Great Yarmouth New Mutual Smack Fishing Insurance As- Halls William & Susannah (Miss), butchers, 123A,
sociation Lim. (Wm. Hy. H. Hogg, sec.), 49 South quay King street; 128 Nelson road&. Anson road, Southtown
Great Yarmm~th Piscatorial Society (William Kirby, sec.), Halls Arthur, engineer, Cobholm island
Hall quay Halls Arthur, grocer, & post oftice,Cobholm island, Southtn
Great Yarmouth Rowing Club (T. R. Buller & F. N. Ed- Hallums Arthur, beer retailer, 68 Middle Market road
wards, hon. secs.) ; boat house, North quay Hamant Susan (Miss), lodgmg house, 29 Tottenham street
Great Yarmouth Savings Bank (Charles Somerville Orde Hammond Henry, fish!llonger, 42 St. Peter's road
J.P. treasurer; R H. Teasdel, actuary; open on tues. 7.30 Hammond John (exors. of), ship chandlers & corn & seed
to 8.30 p.m ; wed. & sat. from I I till 1 ), Market place merchants, South Gates rd. & North quay; & at Gorlestn
Great Yarmouth Steam Tug Co. Limited (George Waiter Hammond Robert Hunting, fancy repository, post office, &
Owens, manager), South quay builder &c. 91, 92 & 93 Regent road
Great Yarmouth Yacht Club (F. Danby Palmer, comma- Hammond Sarah (Mrs.), lodging house, I2 Victoria road
dore: Robert Nudd, rear-commodore; Garson Henry Hannant Edgar, fishing tackle manufacturer & hair dresser.
Lovewell Blake, hon. sec.), 38 Hall quay &c. Market gates & 75 Howard street
Green Alfred John, watch maker & jeweller1 14 Broad row Hannant Henry, Silk Mills hotel, 76 St. Nicholas road

C. N. & S. 46*
720 YARMOUTH. NOR~'OLK.

llannant William, dining rooms, 57 Marine parade Henry Henry, shopkeeper, 15 Fuller's hill
Hanneysee John, lodging house, 102 King street, & ship Henry Maria ()frs. ), shopkeeper, 139 Northga.tes street
smith, Row 142 Hepworth J. & Son, clothiers, 29 Market plac-e
llanson Albert Edward, carpenter & joiner, 6 Queen's road Hepworth & Co.'s Trade Protection Institute (Arthur Edwin
& so Victoria road Cowl, solicitor), 14 South quay
Harbert Clara (Miss), lodging ho. I Exmonth pl. Albion rd Herbert Waiter, lodging house, 17 Devonshire road
Harbert Frederick, collector of borough rates (Nelson ward), Herford Elizabeth (Mrs.), lodging house, q. Apsley road
36 Havelock road Herring John George, ham & bacon curer, 161 King street
Harbert 'Waiter, lodging house, 17 l>evonshire road Hewett James 'Villiam, baker, 39 St. Peter's road
Harbone Daniel, lodging house, 27 Devonshire road Hewitt Arthur S. A. R. I. B. A. architect, 10 Regent street
Harbord Henry Thomas Douglas, baker, Laughing Image Hibben John Maxted, shopkeeper, 5 Clarence road
corner, Row 3 Hickling Henry, mattress maker, 45 Lancaster road
Harbord Robert, dairyman, 57 York road Hickling Mrs. lodging house, 45 Lancaster road
Harbord Thomas George, smith, Priory plain Hickling Robert Geo. printer & stationer, :r84 King street
Harbord William Jn. hay & straw dealer, I North Market rd High Anna Maria (Miss), haberdasher, 38 Middlegate ~treet
Harding William, stationer, 64 Middlegate street High James, shopkeeper, 52 Havelock road
Harley George Kirby, wine & spirit merchant, 76 Howard st High Jessie Ann (Mrs.), fancy draper, 65 Blackfriars road
Harling William Benjamin, master mariner, 44 Victoria rd High John M.U.I.H.P.A. (late High & Todd), bill poster&;.
Harlock Charles Albert, lodging house, 29 Lancaster road ad\•ertising contractor, lessee of all the principal posting
Harlock Mary Louisa (Mrs.), lodging house, I Albert square stations in Yarmouth & district, 162 Middleg-ate street
Harman Maria (Mrs.), lodging house, 54 Albion road High William, shoe maker, 75 Middle Market road
Harman Stephen Benjamin, coal merchant, 5 Aurlley street Hill Frank, commercial traveller, 66 North quay
Harman 'Wm. sewing machine repairer, 172 Middlegate st Hill Robert, collector of rates, Regent ward, 67 Crown road
Harmer & Ruddock, solicitors, Town Hall chambers Hilling William, dairyman, Cobholm island
Harmer llenry Robert (firm, Harmer & H.uddock), solicitor, Hillyard Samuel, beer retailer, Factory road
vestry clerk & commissioner to administer oaths in the Hindes Susannah (Mrs.), lodging house, 3 Paget road
Supreme Court; office, Town Hall chambers Hockley Charles, bricklayer, 13 Audley street
Harper Annie (Miss) & Jerrard Lillie (Miss), ladies' out- Hodgson Thomas, fancy draper, Broad row & Howard street.
fitters, 32 Regent street Hoey Geo. pleasure boat propr. Quay Mill wharf, North quay
Harper Susan (Mrs.), pork butcher, Mill road, South town Hogg Georgianna (Mrs.), fishmonger, 52 Middlegate street
Harrington Edward, agent to Messrs. Thomas Moy Limited, Hogg James, fishmonger, 152 Nelson road
coal & coke merchants & factors, 54 North quay Hogg Wm. Hy.Howard, ship & insurance brkr.49South quay
Harris John, beer retailer, 184 Middlegate street, & tobacco Hoggar Robert,lodging house, 14 Devonshire road
pipe maker, Row SI Holdsworth Richard, boot & shoe maker, 5 Manby road
Harrison Charles, artist, 77 Southtown road, Southtown Holland Frederick, beer retailer, I George street
Harrison Chas. carver, gilder & tobacconist, 5 Theatre plain Holland George Frederick, fish dealer & curer, 61 George st
Harrison Edward, grocer, 42 Ap~ley road Holliday Daniel, hair dresser, 36 Northgate street
Harrison Edward, grocer, 31 & 34 Market pi. & 10 Broad row Holliday James H. hair dres'ler, 228 Northgates street
Harrison Thomas, painter & plumber, IO Southampton Holliday William, bricklayer, Union road, South Market rd
place, Nelson road north Hollis Robert, cutler, 20 Howard street
Harrisson Waiter Charles, carver & gilder, 3 Howard street Holman James, ludging house, 33 Havelock road
Harrisson Wm. smack owner, 22 Rodney rd. & South quay Holmes Erlmund, ltJdging house, 1 Paget road
Harriss Sarah (Mi~s), lodging house, I I Saxon pl. Albion rd Holmes Edward, trawl net maker & twine spinner, Garrison
Harrod Fredk. tinsmith & potato salesman, 2 Mariner's rd walk & 92 ~orthgates street
llarrod George, registered plumber by examination, painter Holmes Elizabeth (Mrs.), fish curer, Row 83
& glazier, 67 King street • Holmes Fredk. fish merchant, Clarence rd. & 23 Victoria rd
Hart Edward J. Royal hotel, for families & gentlemen, Holmes George Sendall, dentist, 2 St. George's plain
situate in the best part of the Marine parade, under the Holmes James Cornelius, mas~r mariner, 62 Marine parade
patronage of the Royal family; tariff on application Holmes Joseph, chimney sweeper, Row I38
Hartley Robert, shopkeeper, I I Friar's lane Holmes Lydia (Miss), haberdasher, I74 Middlegate street
Harvey Alfred, lodging house, 43 St. George's road Holmes Mary (Miss), lodging house, 59 Southtown road
Harvey Hy.hay & straw dlr.& livery stables, I I Hath Ill. ter Holmes Richard, twine & trawl net maker, Southtown road
Ha.rveyJererniah, wheelwright, Barrows walk, Northgatesst Holrnes Robert, lodging house, 48 Victoria road
Harvey John, baker, 15 Moat road, Northgates street Holt Anne (Mrs.), shopkeeper, Laughing Image corner
Harvey John, greengrocer, 20I Northgates street Holt John, lodging house, I I Haveloek road
Harvey Ma.ry (Mrs.), shopkeeper, Redman pl. Havelock rd Halt William Edward, solicitor (firm, Ellen & Holt)
Harvey Rt. timber mer. St. Andrew's saw mills, Southtown Ilomes George, carver, 64 Apsley road
Harwoud Benjamin, boat builder, Cobholm island Hook Alfred, smith, see Cornbes & Hook
Harwood Robert, beer retailer, 18 Middlegate street Hook Hannah (Mrs.), fish merchant, 52 Blackfriars road
Harwood 'Wm. ·walt.carpenter,Lime Kiln wharf,NorthQuay Horn Horace, fisherman, 31 Boreham road
Hastings James, Bell & Crown P. u. 45 South quay Home Wm. lodging ho. 2 Southampton pl. Nelson road nth
Hastings Richard, shopkeeper, 53 Lancaster road Ilorrex John, lodging house, 27 Nelson road north
Hastinns Mrs. lodging house, 68 Rodney road Horsley Alfred, insurance agent, 19 Prince's road
Hatch Frederick Johnson, brazier & tinman, Row 48 Horsley Georg-e, beer retailer, Market place
Hatch Job, brazier, 13 Victoria road Horsley Williarn, rope manufacturer, High road, Southtown
Hatherton Joseph, lodging house, 27 Paget road Horth Louisa (Mrs.), lodging house, I4 Blackfriars road
Havers Ellen (Mrs.), lodging house, 89 Havelock road Houghton Alfred Sterry (Mrs.), oil shop, 23 Howard st. nth
Hawes Amelia (Miss), milliner &c. 59 George street Houghton George, beer retailer, 27 Howard street
Hawes John II. carpenter & joiner, Mill road, Sonthtown Houghton Henry, m1lk seller, Lichtield road, Southtown
Hawes Joseph Robert, seed & fruit merchant, I Alpha road Hounsfield Emily(Mrs.), lodging house, 7 Fitzwillia.m square
& Southtown road Housego Henry Thoma~, engineer, 23 North Market road
Hawkins Mary Ann (Mrs.), lodging house, 38 Regent road Hovell Robert, Alexandra tavern, 39 Victoria road
Hayes Harry Arthur, cyde works, 203 Northgates street Howard & Thurtle, cab proprietors, 6o St. George's road
Hayes Harry Arthur, watch maker, 63 lloward street north Howard Arthur, Tal bot Vaults P.H. 28 Howard street north
Hayes John Dunn, relieving officer (North district), 8 Nel- Howard Charles, pawnbroker &c. St. Peter's row west
son road north Howard Charles, smack owner, 9 Blackfriars road
Hayes Williarn, butcher, 82 King street Howard James, teacher of music, 77 Havelock road
Hayhow William, lodging house, 2 Prince's road Howard John, jun. butcher, so Howard street north
Haylett Ann (Mrs.), lodging house, 46 York road Howard Richard, dairy farmer, 77 St. George's road
Ha.ylett Samuel, plumber, 18 Nelson road north Howard Samuel, master mariner, 35 South Market road
Haylett Samuel (Mrs.), lodging house, 6 Fitzwilliam square Howard Samuel, shoe maker, 33 Tottenham street
Haylett 'Villiam, lodging house, 12 Devonshire road Howard Thomas, shopkeeper, 146 Middlegate street
Hayward Bros. plumbers & painters &c. St. Nicholas road Howard William, boot maker, 124 Blackfriars road
Hayward Edward Waiter, dairyman, Model dairy, Howe Mary Ann (Mrs.), lodging house, 67 Nelson road
30 King street Howell Alfred William, lodging house, 26 Wellington road
Hayward Ellen (Miss), lodging house, 19 St. George's road Howes & Chapman, boat builders, South quay
Headley John, news agent, 76 George street Howes Charles, boot & shoe maker, St. Peter's row east
Heal Harriet (Miss), lodging house, 13 Saxon pL Albion rd llowes Edward, builder & contractor, Mill house, Albion rd
Hearn George White, grocer, u8 King street Howes Frank, butcher, Blackfriars road
Heath Frederick ·waiter, musician, 63 Nelson road north Howes Henry, news agent, 67 George street
Heck James, fish salesman, Clarence road Howes Horac-e, Old White Lion P.H. 112 King street
Hennings Rd. Alfd. btchr. •& purveyor, 97 & g8 St. Peter's rd • Howes John, tobacconist, 76 South quay
DIRECTORY.] NORFOLK. XARMOUTH. 721
Howes Robert, Suffolk tavern, I66 Middlegate street Jenner James, lodging house, 264 Southtown road
Howes Sophia (Mrs.), lodgi~ house, 31 Albion road Jewson & Sons, timber, coal & slate merchants & sawing,
Howes Thomas, builder, 59 York road planing & moulding mills ; head office, Colegate street,
Howes Walter, tobacconist, 99 St. Peter's road Norwich; also at Southtown & Plymouth
Howes William, shopkeeper, I Cobb's pl. North Market rd · .Tex Arthur, book maker, rs Howard street north
Howlett (William) & Kiug (Arthur), upholsterers, 21 & 22 Jex Edward, smack owner, 3 Queen's road
Middlegate street Johnson J. W. & Sons, oil clothing manufacturers, Middle-
Howlett A. E. auctioneer &c. Bridge foot, Southtown gate street; retail shops, 70, 71 & 72 South quay & Soutl:1
Howlett Ann (Miss), lodging house, 20 Wellington road Gates road , •
Howlett James, fish merchant, 27 Friars lane .Tohnson Charles W. auctioneer &c. see Castle & Johnson
Hubbard Craske, lodging house, 53 St. Peter's road Jolmson Ellen (Miss), milliner, 40 C<~omden road
Hubbard Ellis, chimney sweeper, Row 6o Johnson Hy. gcnl. dealer, 129 Blackfriars rd. & 131 King st
Hubbard James, grocer, 74 Howard street Johnson Henry, oil & color man & fruiterer, I3l King
Hubbard Joseph, fisherman, 10 North quay street & Tower road
Ilubbard Robt. SI. collector of Queen's taxes, 71 Victoria rd Johnson Henry Alfred, butcher, 72 Albion road ,,
Hubbard Wllliam, confectioner, 121 King street Johnson Henry William, carman, Cemetery road
Huke William, lodging house, 3 Blake's bldgs. Russell road. Johnson John, carter & fly proprietor, 8o Victoria road
Rulbert Waiter, St. George's vaults P.H. 162 King street· Johnson John, lodging house, 87 Havelock road
Hull Edwin, Crown restaurant, 68 Regent road Johnson John, lodging house, 59 Marine parade
Hulley Hernard W. profes-<or of music & organist of St. Johnson John, lodging house, 7 St. Peter's road
~1ary's R. C. church, 76 Albion road Johnson John, smack owner, 40 Camden road
Hnlley William, music teacher, 76 Albion road Johnson Robert, builder, 6o St. Peter's road
Humm Saml. Luke, confctnr. 6o King st. & I St. Peter's rd J ohnson H.obert, lodging house, 31 Lancaster road
Humphrey Robert, grocer & beer retailer, 61 Albion road Johnson Robert Sherrington, grocer & baker, Tyrolean
Hunt & Son, aerated water mas. & confectioners, 8 Howard square, Southtown
street & Theatre Royal, Regent road Johnson Samuel, smack owner, 41 Camden road
Hunt Aldred, butcher, 21 Union road, South Market road Johnson Samuel Gower, fishmonger, T~ Georg-e street
Hunt Cornelius, lodging house, 2 Kent terrace, Apsley road J ohnson Wm. baker&confectioner, 8 King st.&8!St.Nicholas rd
Hunt Frederick, shopkeeper, 154 Northgates street Johnson W1lliam Ellett, fisherman, Laughing Image corner
Hunt Henry (late), watch maker, 5 Broad row J ones George Wm. Rose tavern, I I King st. & Theatre plain
Hunt James Frederick, nurseryman, 165 Northgates street Jones John, lapidary, 32 St. 11 eter's road
Hunt John, hair dresser, I2I Blackfriars road Jones John D. music teacher, 79 South Market road
Hunt John, King's Head P.H. & dining rooms, 48 King st Jones Thomas, pork butcher, 40 Howard street north
Hunt John Lee, general & fancy draper, Market row Jones William, lod~ring house, 4 Salisbury road, North Denes
Hunt Samuel Lucas, solicitor & corn. for oaths, 8 Sonth quy J osson Samuel, lodging house, I Kent terrace, Apsley road
Hunter Ernest, Vauxhall tavern, Vauxhall Joyce Robert Thomas, tailor, IS Middle Market road
Hurn Edward, slater, 7 Union road, South Market road Juby Thomas Henry, carpenter & builder, Row 48 &
liurrell George, sen. paperhanger, roo & 101 Hlackfriars rd Clarke's road, Vauxhall
Hurrell George, upholsterer & paperhanger, 44 Dene side Juby Thomas Nunn, dairyman, Row 48
Hurrell Harry Edward, newspaper representative; office, Julier Samuel (Mrs.), pork butcher, Lichfield rd. Southtown
24 Regent street Julier Samuel Thomas, carpenter, 5 Duncan road
Hutton Robert, White Swan P.H. 31 South quay Julier Wil!iam, shrimper, 30 Havelock road
lngledew William James, tobacconist, Market row Juher Zachariah, flour dealer, 86 York road
Ingram Benj. fishmonger, Bermondsey pl. west, Princes rd Keable Georgianna (:Miss), lodging house, 6o Albion road
Ingram George, tailor, Barrow's walk, Northgates street Keable Henry, window blind maker, Theatre plain
Inland Revenue Office (Tax department, E. H. Purchas, Keable Susannah (Mrs.), milliner, 45 King street
surveyor of taxes; Edward Simmons, clerk : Excise de- Keable William Edward, window blind maker, 45 King st
partment, A. R. Birt, Norwich, coUector ; Patrick A. Kear Robert John, tobacconist, 31A, South quay
Kennedy, supervisor), 35 South quay Kebbell Henry, lodging house, 38 York ter. St. George's rd
lsaac Edward, carpenter, Row go Keeble John, Market Gate House P.H. Market gates
Isaac Ernest, lodging house, 22 Apsley road Keeler James, fish merchant, 22 North Market ro1d
Isaacs John, confectioner, 35 Market row Keeping Thos. Wm. boot& shoe ma. 38Regent st.& 6 Broad row
Israel & Joel, fish carriers (r'rederick E. Denwn, agent), Kelsall Brothers, fish curers & merchants, South Denes
South town Kemp Ehzabeth (Miss), dressmaker,Wolseley rd.Southtown
Ives Charles, firewood cutter, Broad row yard, Broad row Kemp John, boot & shoe maker, Common lane, Southtown
Ives George, fruiterer, 57 Howard street north Kemp Hobert, cab proprietor, 38 Prince's road
Ives George, ginger beer manufactursr, Havelock road Kempe Charles Ed ward, surgeon, Regent road & Broad row
J"ackman Edward, general dealer, 39 Fuller's hill Kennedy Patrick Alphonsus, supervisor of inland revenue,
J"ackson & Carr, cheese & butter factors, candle makers & 3.1 South quay
corn, seed & salt merchants, North quay & Market gates Kent Robert David, Admiral Seymour P.H. Salisbury road,
J"ackson Annie (Mrs.), lodging house, 56 Regent road North Denes
J"ackson John, bricklayer, 153 Nortllgates street Kent William, shopkeeper, 84 Middlegate street
Jacobs James, basket ma. 2 Brock's buildings, Wellmgton rd Kerridge Brothers, "wholesale & retail drapers, silk mercers,
.Tames Emma (Miss), dealer in art needlework, 127 King st dre~s & mantle makers, furnishing warehousemen &c .
James Fk. Wyatt,grocer, & post office,23 & r66Northgates st r83 King street
.Tames William, lodging house, 26 Middle Market road Kerridge Ann (Miss), corset maker, 34 Howard st. north
J"aquiery Joseph, fancy repository, 28 St. Peter·s road Kerridge Henry E. ironmonger, I85 King street
.Tared George, general smith, South quay Kerridge Rebecca (Mrs.), lodging house, ro Albion road
.Jarmy Mary (Mrs.), lodging house, I I Camperdown Kerridge William, dairyman, 44 Middlegate street
Jarrold & Sons, printers, publishers & ~tatnrs. 182 King st Kerrison George, boot maker, 40 Admiralty road
J"arvis Christopher, tailor, Apsley house, South Apsley road Kerrison John, .Mariner's Compass P.H. 61 South quay
J"arvis John, tobacconist, 114 King street KerrL'>on Riehd. Saml. twine spinner, Moat rd. Northgates st
J"arvis Susan (Mrs.), lodging house, 45 Apsley road Kett George Woodhouse, collector of taxes (central ward),
J"arvis William, fish curer, 5 Middle Cross rd. South Denes 20 Apsley road ·
Jarvis William, Norwich Arms P.H. North quay King Alison Henry, Crown & Anchor hotel, Hall quay
J"ary George, ship smith, South Gates road King Arthur, upholsterer, see Howlett & King
Jary Robert, beer retailer & fish curer, 24 Mariner's road King Charles, hair dresser, Conga
J"ary William, sailors' missionary, 84 Havelock road King- Elizabeth Ann (Mr~.), lodging house, Thurlow house,
Jay Francis, baker, 65 King street Prince's road
.fay George Henry, wharf master, Fish wharf, South Denes King Geo. Wm. lodging house, 2 Saxon place, Albion road
Jay James Brand white, baker & grocer, Rainbow corner, King Henry, Earl St. Vincent P.H. 93 King street
North quay King John, butcher, Prmce's road
Jay James Thomas, master mariner, 74 Havelock road King- Sarah Ann (Mrs.), lodging house, 72 King street
.Tay Jane (Mrs.), lodging house, 92 Albion road King Waiter Jacob, grocer, 20 & 2I North Market road
Jay John, hay & straw dealer, Nortbgates street King William, lodging house, 6g Victoria ro>~.d •
.Tay John, stationer &c. 142 King street Kirby Charles, shopkeeper, 28 Howard street
.fay Robert, fishmonger, 130 Havelock road Kirk Henry, beer retailer, 161 Northgates street
.Jay William, beer retailer, 65 George street Kirk ham Eliza (Mrs.), lodging house, 8o Havelock road
J"aynes Elizabeth (Miss), billies' school, uo Regent rogd Kirkha.m Harriet (Mrs.), iron & brass founder, Row 127
"4olefferiea .Joseph, agent to Sutton & Co. carriers, 3 & Knight Arthur J. baker, 62 St. George's road
4 Fish street ; & at Norwich Knight Maud (Mrs.), lod!ring house, 41 St. George's road
J"enks George Alfred, tobacconist, Theatre Royal, Regent rd Knight William Robert, dining rooms, 3I Hall plain
722 YAIL.\IOVTR/ [ KELL1.-'s1
Knights James Edward, baker, 128 & 129 Middlegate street :Leparg Tfiomas, • engineer, millwright & boiler' & tank
Knights James Pulham, builder, 28 Exmouth road maker, Cobholm works, Southtown
Knights (Miss), lodging house, 6o Marine parade Lettis Thomas, surgeon & surgeon to Yarmouth division of
Knowles Henry, plumber, 38 Dene side borough police, 6 Regent road
Knowles Isaac, shopkeeper, 24 George !"treet · L"ewell Arthur, boot & shoe maker, 45 North quay
Knowlcs Waiter Gilbert, auctioneer & valuer, Lewis Mendel, picture dealer, 130 King street '
Central ball & Regent sale rooms, Regent road Leyton Horace (Mrs.), lodging house, 48 Lancaster road
Lacey Benjamin, butcher, 73 & 74 St. Nicholas road Liberal Club House Co. Limited (Arthur Edwin Cowl~
Lacon E. & Sons, brewers & spirit merchants, Brewery, solicitor j, 14 South quay
Church plain Liberal & Radical Club (Cyril Flower esq. M.P. president;
Lacon (Sir Edmund K. bart. ),Lacons, Youell & Co. bankers; James Williment, sec.), 24 Market place
head office, Hall quay; draw on Glyn, Mills, Currie & Co. Liffen Joseph, fisherman, Row 125
London E c Lincoln Arthur, lodging house, 23 Devonshire road
Ladbroke Robert John, collector of borough rates (Market Lincoln Harry Charles, hair dresser, 59 Howard street
ward), 8 Middlegate street Lincoln Henry, hair dresser, 7 Middlegate street
Ladell Richard lt'oulsham, confectioner, 168 King street Lincoln Jonathan, beer retailer, 30 Hall plain
Lake Robert John, fish curer, Middle Market Road place Lincoln Kezia (Mrs. ),lodging ho.6 Marlborough sq. Apsley rcl
Lake Robert John, Nelson tavern, 89 King street Lincoln Theodore Jas. beer retailer, Sefton la. Southtown rcl
Lamb Charles King, silversmith &c. 17 :Market row Lines Miss, lodging house, 30 Nelson road '
Lamb Francis, beer retailer, 62 South quay Ling Harriette Johnson (Mrs.), lodg.ho. ro Kent ~1.Apsley rd
Lamb Sarah Ann 1Mrs.), lodging house, 1 Wellington road Ling William, grocer, 17 Nelson road north'
Lamb Thomas, lodging house, 3 Saxon place, Albion road Lingwood John Robert, greengrocer, 48 Howard st. north
Lamb Thomas William, watch maker, 18 Regent street Lingwood Robert, lodging house, 62 Apsley road
Lambert Francis & Son, tea dealers, Broad row Lionel Percy, artist, 23 High road, Southtown
Lambert Benjamin, cab proprietor, 92 South Market road Littlewood Bnrton L. draper, 5 N orthgates street
Lambert Henry H. S. R. dairyman, 203A, Northgates street Littlewood Edgar .Albert, linen draper, 6 :Market row
Lambert John, boot maker, 203~ Northgates street Littlewood Horatio, vice-consul for France & Rnssia, 43
Land Edward William, dining rooms, 63 George street · South quay & 117 Wellesley road
Lane Frederic .John, chemist & druggist, 19 Mar- Littlewood Jas. painter & plumber, 75 High rd. Southtown
ket place Littlewood William, boot & shoe maker, 66 Rt. Nicholas rd
Lane Henry Jas. Star family &"commercial hotel, Hallquay Livingston William, linen draper, I King street
Langley Edward George, master mariner, 139 South town rd Lockett Martha (Mrs.), grocer, 218 Southtown road
Langley Mary (Miss), dress & mantle maker, 78 Albion road Lodge George, fish curer, 19 North quay
Lark .Arthur, boot & shoe maker, 125 King street Lodge Isaac Henry, cab proprietor, 36 Nelson road north
Lark Charles, outfitter, 130 Middlegate street Lodge William Samuel, cow keeper, 135 N orthgates street
Lark Daniel (Mrs.), outfitter, 12 Friar's lane London & Provinchtl Bank Limited (branch) (Charles Jame~
Lark William, cooper, Row 32 ' Pearson, manager), Regent street; draw on head office,..
Larke Henry Waiter, master mariner, 164 Nelson road 7 Bank buildings & Glyn, Mills, Currie & Co. London
Larkins James, baker & shopkeeper, 90 George street Lone Eliza (Mrs.), lodging houS<', 27 Princes :road
Larkins William, carpenter & joiner, High Mill road Long Charles, coal dealer, 8r George street
Larkman Charles, boot maker, 37 Middlegate street Long Elizabeth (Mrs.), lodging house, 23 Russell road
LarnElizh. (Mrs.), fish curer, Rainbow corner, North quay Long Harry R. watch maker & jeweller, & school attendance
Larn George, fish dealer, r8 Howard street otlicer for the South district, 2 Bath Hill terrace
Last Frederick Booty, Feathers hotel & veterinary surgeon, Long John, Bowling Green P.H. North quay
Market gates Long Matthew, lodging house, 40 St. .Nicholas road
Last George Clifford, watch maker &c. 172 King street Long Nicholas, working jeweller, 75& 77 St. George's road
Last Wllliam Frederick, baker, 13 Howard street Longfoot John, engineer, 6 Salisbury road, North Denes
Lattin;wre Elizb. Charlotte (Mrs.), pawnbkr. 31 Howard st Lord Mary Ann (Mrs.), lodging house, 67 Nelson rd. north
Lattimore James, tailor, g8 Albion road Lorne William, firewood dealer, Cobholm island
Lawrance & &ns (established r86o), mineral water manu- Lound Thomas, lodging house, I22 Blackfriars road
facturers, 184 Nortbgates st.; & at Beccles & Saxmundhm Lowe Christopher, carpenter, Snuthtown road
Lawtence Sarah Ann (Mrs.), lodging ho. 11 Wellington rd Lowne David, lodging house, 20 Rodney road
Laws & Butler, sail makers, Row 124 Lowne Waiter, naturalist & taxidermist, 40 Fuller's hill
Laws Gcorgc, grocer, 54 Howar<l street north Lowther James, farmer, Marsh farm, Southtown
Laws John Cooper, lodging house, 15 Southampton place, Lubbock Elizabeth (Miss), lodging house, 49 York road
Nelson road north Lubke Mary Anne (Mrs.), lodging ho. 6 Kent pl. Apsley ri
Lawson Henjamin Quelcb, lodging ho. 4 Kent pl. Apsley rd Lucas G. & C. F. solicitors, 5 South quay
Lawson George, Ferry hotel, 41 South quay Lucas Charles Frank, solicitor (firm, Lucas G. & C. F)
Lawson Gcorge, hair dresser, 63 Middlegate street Lncock Hannah (Mrs.), lodging house, 6 Duncan road
Lawson George, tobacconist & hair dresser, 36 Peter's road Ludbrook Mary & Ann (Misses), lodging bo. 32 Crown rd
Lawson James, fish merchant, South Dimes Lummis Frederick, dining rooms, 67 Howard street
Lawson Williarn Josepb, shopkeeper, 15 Exmouth road Lupson Edward John, parish clerk, Chnrch plain
Laxon Robert, grocer & beer retailer, l r I Blackfriars road Lydamore Ambrose, stone & marble mason, 3 Dene side
L11y John Henry, tailor, George street Maas Eugene J. Victoria private & f"amily hotel
Lay Susannah (Mrs.), baby linen warehouse, Broad row (opposite Wellington pier)
Layeock Gcorgc, cowkeeper, Runham, Vauxhall McBride Arthur, carriage builder, Bridge foot, Soutbtown
Layton Caroline (Miss), milliner, 53 Middle Market road Macey Emma (Mrs.), coffee rooms, 78 South quay
Layton: Julia Sophia (Mrs.), lodging house, 10 Duncan road Mack Alfred Newton, ironmonger, 120 King street
Leach Charles, manufaduring confectioner, Row 44 Mack William, fruiterer, 6o Market place · "
Leach .John, dealer in oils, paints, lamps & paper- Mack William Leeder, tailor, 22 St. Peter's road
hangings, general ironmongers & importers Mackley Thomas, surgeon dentist., attends at the Brunswick:
of -indow glass, 21 Market place & 113 King street; hotel, King street, the first thursday in every month
& at St. Step hen's street & St. Benedict's street, Norwich Maddison, Miles & Maddison, surveyors, auctioneers, valuer~
Leak Charles, blacksmith, Cobholm island & estate agents, Hall quay; & at Harlesdon, Cantley &;. •
Lecture Hall, Howard street Lowestoft
Lecture Hall (Samuel Randell, proprietor), Row 51 Maddox Eliza (Mrs.), lodging house, 65 Nelson road
Leech Ernest Edwa,rd, &olicitor, see Chamberlin & Leech Major Harriet (Mrs.), lodging house, 92 Havelock road
Leeder Arthnr Gcorgc, cooper, Winter's passage, North Makepeace Wm. Hy. lodging ho. 39 York ter.St.George's rd
Market road Mallet John, dairyman, 27 Boreham road
Leeder James, cowkeeper, Row 45 Mallett Alfred, gasfitter, Nelson road
Leeder James, St. John's Head P. H. sa North quay . Mallett Elizabeth (Miss) ,marine store dealer ,49Middlegate st.
Leegood Charles, Judging house, 28 St. Nicholas road Mallett Emma (Mrs.). lodging house, 28 Nelson rd. north
Leggett Frederick, beer retailer, 71 George street MallettJas.hay & straw dealer,BridgeHotelstables,Southtwill
Leggett James, builder, 27 Dene side & North quay l\fallett Katherine (Miss), lodging house, 51 Marine parade
Leggett John, Tomlinson's Arms P.n. 67 Middlegate street Manu Alfred Thos. grocer,& sub-post office, 25 Market place
Leggett Mrs. private apartments in close proximity to the Mann Henry, shoe maker, Row 48
sea, 81 York road Mann John Jamcs, sexton & superintendent of Yarmouth
Leggett Waiter, \leer retailer, 1o6 Ha,•elock road cemetery, Church plain r"
Legood .'Jere:miap, photographer, Ferry lane, Southtown Mannall Chas. insurance agent, 46 Winifred I'd. Southtowa
Legood Mary E. (Mrs.), dress maker, 32 Olive rd.Southtown Manning Deborah (Miss), lodging house, 35 Albion road
Leighton Ebenezer, fish merchant, South Denes Manser Richard, lodging house, 66 Havelock road
Leighton Horatio Nelson (Mrs.), lodging house, 87 King st Mansfield Ame]ia (Mrs.), lodging house, so Regent road
NORFO~Kt: y .!RM0 rJTU. 723"'
Mans hip Ruth. (Mrs.), beer- retailer, 37 North quat, Mfsshmt~t Deep .Sea Fisliermen (stores}-{WilHed F. Green~
Manthorpe. Elizh. (1'.-lr&.)., lodg-ing house, 59 South Market rd : fel, supt.), Alpha road, Southtown ' , _ ,.
Manthorpe Robert, tailor, 6o South Market road Mitchell William, travelling draper, 19 Nelson road north
Marjarom William, H~lf Way House P.J1. Southtown road Mobbs John Henry, Mariners' tavern, 62 IIoward "!!treet
Marrison J oseph, butcher, 94 N orthgates street, , Mobbs Sarah (Mrs.), lodging house, 67 South Market road
Marsh Frederick William, clothier & furniture dealer, 12 & Mobbs Thomas; blitcher 1 55 Market placjjl ·,
13 Howa.rd stv north &.pawnbooker, :.;64 King st.& Row 85 Moll Maria. (Mrs.), shopkeeper, sr Olive road, Southtown
Marshall Elizabeth (Mrs. ).laundress, Ansell pl. lS"OI"th beach Moorby James, lodging house. 65 Middle Market road
Ma:rshall Emily (Mrs.), shellfish dealer,..Row 51 Moore The Misses, dress malters, t:~o Nelson road '
Marsha.ll Isaac, Odd Fellows P.H. 134 Middlegate street Moore & Sons, engineerS', boiler & tank makers, iron & brass -
Marshall Louisa Ann (Mrs.), lodging house, 19 York road founders, ship & general smiths, .Nelson Iron works,
Marshall Thomas, insurance agent, :151 Southtowa road South Gates road , •' '
Martin Christiana (Mrs.), pork butcher, II5 King street : Moore Thomas & Son, tailors, hatters & outfitters, t74
Martin Mary Ann (Mrs.), M1ddlegate ta.:v. 76 Middlegate st King street
Martin Percy, solicitor, Hall plain , · Moore Charles, beer retailer, 130 Nelson road
Martin Sarah (Miss), lodging house, 53 Apsley road Moore Charles, grocer, 30 York road
Martins Richard & Thomas, tailors, 9 Market row Moore Elizabeth (Miss), lodging house, 69 Rodney road
Martins William, tailor, 58 Crown road Moore Thomas Rohert, smack owner, xr Clarence road
Maryson Francis "William, printer, How 101 Moore William, fish curer, 7 Rainbow corner, North quay
Mason Henry Burgess, ironmonger & hot water engineer, Moore William, fisherman, 142 Blackfriars road
1 Howard street Moore William, marshman, Spotted Cow, Southtown
Mason ,Jonathan,sewing machine agent(Br;u:lbury),& private Morgan James, boot maker, 72~ St. George's road
apartments,in close proximity to the sea, 83St.Nicholas rd Morley Frederick & William, cabinet makers, Row 39
Masonic Hall (for balls, concerts &c.) (Charles Cotton, pro- Morley Kate (Miss), ladies' school, 34 King street
prietor), St. George's row wrut . ' Morley William James, cabinet maker, 9 North Market rd
Masterson Eliza. (Miss), lodging hou..<~e, 1 St. John's build- Mornement Henry J. pharmaceutical chemist, I51 King st
ings, Fitzwilli;1m square :\'!orris !Wen (Miss), lod6ring house, 65 Marine parade
Masterton George, Sceptre P.H. 68 South quay Morris Henry Arthur, shopkeeper, 107 NorthgateB street
Matthews Samuel & Son, surgeon accoucheurs, Yarmouth; Morris Walter W. bicycle & tricycle depot, Lancaster road
& at 1 Raglan street, Dereham road, NorwiC'h & London Morrison Robert D. customs officer, 56 Hi~h rd. Southtown
Mat thews Ellen (Mrs. ) 1 lodging house, x6 Apsley road Mortlock John, refreshment rooms, Church plain
Matthews James, cabinet maker & undertaker, 7 White Morton Sarah Wilson (Mrs.), draper, 18 King street
IIorse plain . Mortson John Newton, confectioner, 43 IIoward st. north
Mayes William Thomas, beer retailer, 56 Gelson road Moss Alfred Davies, refreshment rooms, 33 St. Peter's road
Mayes William (Mrs.), lodging house, 25 Lancaster road Moss Charles, professor of music, 21 Trafalg-ar' Toad
Mayman Edward & George, rope & twine spinners, Moat Moss Martha (Mrs.), greengrocer, 34 & 35 St. Peter's road
road, Northgates stree~ Moss Mary Ann (Mrs.), currier & leather seller,6o George st
Mayman Edward, shopkeeper, 157 Northgates street Moss Thomas Arthur, fish agent, r Queen's road
Mayo Alfred Charles, surgeon & admiralty surgeon, St. Moss William, shell fishmonger, 66 King street
George's Park house, Alex.andra road Motts Benjamin, baker, 18 Alma road
Mays William & George, butchers, 56 Middlegate street & Motts l<'rederick, butcher, 8 Middle Market road
Exmouth road Moule Alfred, lodging house, 24 Camden road
Mays George Knights, butcher, 84 Victoria road Moxon & Son, surgeons, 44 King street
Mayston & Son, ship lamp makers &c. 55 & 56 South quay Moxon Alban Henry M.R.c.s.E. surgeon, see Moxon & Son
Meadows Daniel, surgeon (firm, Meadows & Son), 141 Kingst Moxon Thomas Hy. M.R.c.s ..1mg. surgeon, see Moxon & Son
:Meadows Hamilton, surgeon (firm, Meadows & Son) Moy Thomas Limited (Edward Harrington, agent), coal &
Meadows Sl. proprietor of hand carts, 85 South Market rd coke merchants & factors, 54 North quay
Meadows Saml. wheelwright, Norford's walk, St.Nichola.s rd Mullane John, brigarie quartermaster sergeant, Royal Artil-
Meadows William Lond, grocer, 34 North quay lery, South denes
Mears Daniel, shoe maker, 30 South Ma<ket road Mulliner James, lodging house, I Conge 1
Medd John Boyden, manager for .A,nglo-American Oil Co. Mnlliner Arthur, baker, 42 Pier place, Havelock road
Limited, 9 Queen's road Munford Charles1 plumber & glazier, Theatre plain
Mede Emmaline (Mrs.), Wheel of Fortune P.H. 29 George st Myhill Mary A .• (Mrs.), refreshment rooms, 43 York road
Meecb: & Wells, fish curers, 72 & 73 Middle Market road Narbnrgh Laura (Miss), lodging honsA, 45 Crown road
Meech Thorn~, Bull "f,H. Market place Nash John William, leather seller, 33 King street
Meecham Charles, confectioner, St. Peter's row east National Provincial Bank of England Limited (branch)
Meek llugh Simpson, draper, 31 Nelson road (John Taylor, manager), Hall quay; draw on head office,
Merrison James, general carter, 188 Northgates street ' London R c '
Merrison Louisa (Mrs.), dress & mantle maker, 55 St. National Telephone Co. Lim. (Fred. Heath, district super-
George's road · visor), 9 Regent street
Metropolitan Boarding House (F. & H. Hill, pro- Naunton Frederick Willia.m, baker, 72 Victoria road
prietors), Marine parade Naunton Waiter George, grocer; 28 Middlegate street
Mickleburgh George Borrett, master mariner, 7 Bowling Neal Rachel (Miss), lodging house, 2 Queen's cots. Albion rd
Green walk, North quay , Neave Charles JamPA'I, printer, Row 79
Middle -Street Hall., Middlega te street Neave Edward, lodging house, 30 Roduey road -
Middleton Jacob, carpenter, Middle Market Road place Neave James William, tailor & outfitter, 224 Northgate.9 st
Middleton Samuel, wardrobe dealer, 121 Middlegate street Neave John George, collector of poor rates (Nelson ward),
1\Ilddleton William J. beer retailer, 62 North Market road Yarmouth union, 53 Victoria road .
Mihill George Hill, twme spinner, 56 Ordnance road Neave William, tinplate worker, Row 35
Miles John C. dairyman, The Creamery, Northgate street Neele Jarnes, fancy hosiery manufacturer, 121 Middlegate st
Miles John Caley, auctioneer &c. see Maddison, Miles & Neep Goorge, dentist, 17 Prmces road
Maddison N eslen Wm.Bond, manufr. of ginger beer &c.75Middlegate st
Miller David, carpenter, 12 Nelson road Newark Isaac, cabinet maker, Row 48
Miller Henry, shopkeeper, Beaconsfield road, North denes Newark William Crisp, whitesmith, Broad Row yard
Miller John, fisherman, 31 Tower street Newby Arthnr John, carpenter, 5 Blake's bldgs. Russell rd
Miller John, Golden Ball P.H. 69 George street Newby Edwin Ra.y, umbrella manufacturer, Hroad row
Miller Wm. Francis, mail cart contractor, 65 St. George's rd Newby Francis, lodging house, 20 Devonshire road
Millers Royal Photographic Studio, photographers, Newby James Patterson, carpenter, Row 99
14 King street Newell William, lodging house, 83 St. Peter's road
Millican Alfred, greengrocer, 6 Camden road N ewman Alfred, whitesmith, :10 Fuller's hill
Millican Robert James, lodging house, 68 Albion road Newman Charles, whitesmith, 177 Northgates street
Millican Thomas, fish dealer, 11 Camden road Newman Charles Wright, hmlder, 4r High i"Oad, Southtown
Milligan Alfred, greengrocer, 62 Middlega.te street Newman David Richard, mineral water maker, 17 Stanley
Milligan William, hair dresser, IO IIoward street terrace, Middle Market road
Millington Williarn Henry, The Aquarium Hotel, N ewman Frederick, lodging home, 23 Middle Market road
Nelson road north & St. Nicholas road Newman IIenry, flQrist, Theatre Royal, Regent road
Mills David, lodging house, 14 Victoria road Newman James, Lord Collingwood P.H. 6 Laughing Image
Mills Frederick William, boot & shoe maker, Albion road corner .
Mills William1 Rifle Volunteers P.H. Dene side Newson IIarriet & Sarah (Misses), lodging house, 3 Nelson
Minister Ephraim Augustus, baker & confectioner, Lichficld road south. ·
road, Southtown . Newstead Amelia (Mrs.), lodg1ng honse, 2r Dene !lide
Minns William & Son, plumbers, Union place, Albion road Newton Waiter, teacher of music, I.ichfield rd. Southtown
724 Y.ARMOUTH. NORFOLK. (KELLY'S

Nicholls Wm. Thomas, baker & shopkpr. 47 & 48 Howard st Offord William, boat builder, 32 Boreham road
Nichols George, smack owner, Havelock road Oldham Alfd. Riton, coal mer. go Regent st.& 219 Southtn. rd
"Nichols George, jun. smack owner, 13 Alma road Oldham Cornelius John, shopkpr. High Mill rd. Southtown
Nichols Henry Watson, boot & shoe maker, 13 Swirle's Oldman Ellen (Mrs.), lodging house, 57 King street
place, Middle Market road Old man J ames, lodging house, 77 George street
Nichols Mary (Miss), lodging house, 67 Nelson road north Oliver & Co. chemists, 176 King street
Nichols Robert, beer retailer, 56 Howard street north Oliver Eleanor (Mrs.), shopkeeper, 28 High rd. Southtown
Nichols Robert, smack owner, 6 Clarence road Olley Henry, architect & surveyor, see Bottle & Olley
Nichols Wm. lodging house, 15 Blake's buildings, Russell rd Olley Susannah (Miss), upholsterer, 97 South Market road
Nicholson & 'fatlor, engineers & boiler makrs.South Gates rd Olley Thomas Lettis, tailor & hosier, 15 Market row
Nicholson George, tug owner, 27 Exmouth road Orfeur & llellin, timber merchants, Southtown road
Nicholson George Harrison, grocer, & post office, 238 South- Orfeur Ann E. (Mrs.), ladies' school, 29 Dene side
town road Orford George, master mariner, 2 Gothic villas, Clarence rd
Nicholson Samuel Robert, greengrocer, 74 Victoria road Orpen Ern est Balls, wine, spirit & ale mervhant, North quay
Nicholson Sophia (Mrs.), lodging house, 46 Prince's road Orton Vl'illiam G. carpenter, 5 York road
Nightingale John W. ref"reshment contractor, Osbiston Harriette (Mrs.), lodging house, 3 Marlborough
Royal aquarium, Marine parade terrace, Apsley road
Nightingale John W. proprietor of the Theatre Royal, Osborne Alfred & Henry, Nelson Monument P. H. South Denes
Theatre Royal, Theatre plain Osborne George, lodging house, 53 Nelson road north
Nobbs George Charles, insurance agent, 18 Victoria road Osborne Jane Susannah (Miss), berlin wool & fancy reposi-
N obhs John Fryer, lodging house, 15 Apsley road tory, 23 Regent road
Nobbs Mary (Mrs.), beer retailer, 75 Victoria road Ostter Alfred John, sergeant-major to 2nd Volunteer Batta-
Noble George, coach builder, 51 Nelson road lion, Nor folk Regiment, Drill hall, York road
.!S' oble Nehemiah, coach builder, St. Peter's plain Oughton Rubert William, biscuit baker, 24 Middlegate st
Nockolds "Kathaniel, painter, 21 Hlackfriars road Overton Henry, lodging house, 16 Wellington road
Norfolk Artillery (2nd Brigade) Militia & Volunteer (Prince OIVles & Son, pharmaceutical chemists, Hall quay & Southtn
of Wales' Own) (Col. Lord Suffield K.C.B. lieut.-col. com- Owles Henry, land agent to Sir Edmund B. K. Lacon bart.
manding; Hon. Major E. R. M. Pratt, instructor of 98 Southtown road
artillery; Capt. C. H. Hervey R.A. adjutant; Capt. H. Paddle John William, fishmonger, 154 Middlegate street
Russcll R.A. quartermaster; Surgeon-Major John Ad- Page Annie (Miss), dress maker, 25 North Market road
cock M. D. medical officer), South denes Page Georgina (Mrs.), dress maker, 74 North Market road
Norfolk (1st) Artillery Volunteers, Eastern Division, Royal Page Maria (Mrs.), lodging house, S Conge
Artillery (The Earl of Stradbroke, lieut.-col.commandant ; Page Sarah (::VIiss), lodging house, 31 St. Nicholas road
Capt. W. J. Napier R.A. adjutant; Hon. Capt. W. E. Page Thomas, Ropemakers' Arms P.H. 9 Howard st. north
English, quartermaster; No. I Battery, Capt. A. F. Clowes Page William, butcher, 5 Middlegate street
& No. 4 Company, Capt. E. B. Orpen; James Spinks, Page \Villiam Francis, baker 36, & beer retlr. 42, George st
brigade sergeant-major); head quarters, Drill hall, Page William John, grocer, 14 Middlegate street
Nelson road Pagells Charles T. smack owner, 67 South Market road
Norfolk Chronicle Company Limited, proprietors of the Pain George, boot maker, 86 Middlegate street
" Yarmouth Gaz9tte & East Norfolk Constitutionalist," 34 Pain Margaret (Miss), lodging house, 44 Lancaster road
Regent street & 27 South quay. See advertisement Palk William James, china, glass &c. dealer, 27 Market row
Norfolk Chronicle & Norwich Gazette (William A. Rudd, Palmer Brothers, linen & woollen drapers, lacemen,
local representative; published sat.) ; office, 34 Regent st hosiers, silk mercers, dress & mantle makers, furriers,
Norfolk Dental Institute (Joseph Starnes, manager), Nelson carpet & furnishing warehousemen, 37, 38, 38A & 39
house, Nelson road north Market place
Norfolk News (Norwich) (H. E. Hurrell, representative; Palmer (H.) & Rayson, solicitors, 8 Regent street
published weekly, on fri. for sat.), 24 Regent street Palmer Alfred, pianoforte tuner, 126 Northgates street
Norfolk Regiment, 2nd Volunteer Battalion (comprising A, Palmer Edmund, eating house, Hall quay
B, C, D, E, F, G, H & I Companies) (Edward H. H. Palmer Edmund I. lodging house, 68 Havelock road
Combe, lieut.-col. ; Capt. A. R. Hume, adjutant; James Palmer Frederick, surgeon, 52 South quay
Cooper, quartermaster), Drill hall, York road Palmer Frederick Danby, solicitor, notary public, perpetual
Norfolk & Suffolk Finance & Reversionary Interest Co. commissioner & commissioner to administer oaths in the
Limited (William Hurry Palmer, sec. ; Charles Henry supreme court, foreign passport agent, clerk to the
Wiltshire, solicitor) ; oflice, 18 South quay guardians, superintendent registrar of births, deaths &
Norfolk & Suffolk Permanent Benefit Building Society (F. marriages & hun. sec. to Great Yarmouth Law Society &
llanby Pal mer, solicitor; Love well Blake, sec.), Hall clerk to the assessment committee, 38 Hall quay
Quay chambers Palmer Hubert, solicitor, South Beach lodge
Nor~ate Caroline (Mrs.), lodging house, 22 Devonshire road Palmer James W. draper, 76 York road
N orgate Reginald Starling, collector of Queen's taxes, 78 Palm er John, tobacconist, Blackfriars road
Southtown road, Southtown Palmcr John Henry, baker & confectioner, 7 Market place
Norman Jn. Howes & Son, plumbers & painters,'fheatre plain Palm er J onathan Robert, cork manufr. 12 White Horse plain
Norman Sirnon & Son, cabinet rnakers & f"ur- Palmer Mary Ann (Mrs.), lodging house, 8 Devonshire road
nishers &c. 14 Market place & 78 George street; & at Pal mer Rebecca (Mrs.), shopkeeper, 96 George street
Lowestoft Palmer Williarn, cooper, 2 Alpha terrace, Southtown
Norman Emma (Mrs.), lodging house, 8 Euston road Palmer William, shopkeeper, 29 Middlegate street
Norman Victor H. school & church furnisher, Palmer William Charles, cabinet maker, 11 Middlegate st
Dene side Palmer William Hurry, ship broker, see Bessy & Palmer
Norman Victor II. carpenter, 42 Camden road Panton David, Fleur-de-Lis P.H. 2 Howard street
Norris Maria A. (Mrs.), boot & shoe maker, 22 Regent road Parish John, photographer, 45 Southtown road
North Samuel, lodging house, 56 St. Peter's road Parke Hannah (Mrs.), fish curer, 5 Blackfriars road
Norton Eliza (Mrs.), dress maker, 10 St. Peter's road Parker Benjamin, beer retailer, 27 Middlegate street
Norton George, tobacconist, 7 Broad row & Church plain Parker Charles, registered lodging house, 93 George street
Norton James Thomas, coal merchant; office, Hall plain; Parker H.obert John, baker, 47 Blackfriars road
depot, Vauxhall station; & at Corn Exchange, Norwich Parker Samuel, shopkeeper, 8 North quay
Norton Susan (Mrs.), lodging house, 22 Albion road Parker William, fish inspector, Fish wharf
Nudd Robert, road contractor & carman, 78 Northgates st Parkinsun James William, working jeweller, 71 Crown road
Nurse Henry, The Mitre tavern, wholesale & retail hay & Parkerson William, shoe maker, Row 6r
corn merl'hant & livery & bait stables, St. Nicholas road Parmenter Louisa (Mrs.), lodging house, 32 North quay
Nutman Catherine (Mrs.), lodging house, 65 Havelock road Parmentcr Thomas, fish manure mer. 180 Northgates street
Nutman Edward, beer retailer, 34 Nelson road north Parmenter Thomas Robert, Railway tavern, 45 North quay
Nutman Henry, carpenter & jomer, 6r Middle Market road Parochial Library & Church Club (Thomas Greenacre, sec.),
N.lltman John Edward, lodging house, 85 Havelock road The Priory
Nlltrnan J uhn Runniff, fish merchant & curer, Black friars Parr Elizabeth (Mrs.), lodging house, 44 St. George's road
road & Fish wharf Pash Arthur, boot & shoe manufacturer, 30 Market place
Nutman William James, corporation accountant, Town hall Patterson William, agent to Prudential Assurance Co. 52
Oakley, Son & Co. fish carriers (Wm. King, agt. ), Southtown N ortbga tes street
Obee Elizabeth (Miss), shopkeeper, 100 Albion·road Pattinson Robinson, Guano works, Vauxhall, manufacturer
O'Connor Patrick, inspector of nuisances (South district), of pure fish guano & pure dried blood powder, for flowers,
125 Nelson road vines, fruit, vegetables &c. also manure for roots, grain,
O'Farrell Charles L.R.C.P., L.R.c.s.Edin. surgeon, & medical grass &c. vendor of old fishery salt, fish for manure, fish
officer, North district, Great Yarmouth union, White scales & bloater oil
Horse plain Paul Robert William, corn merchant, Southgates road
DIRECTORY.] NORFOLK. YARMOUTH

• 725
Pt>~rce Charles James (late J. Flowerday), jobmaster, livery Press Brothers (also 1ate Gambling Brothers), millers, Yare
stable keeper & funeral proprietor (patronized by H.R.H. & Southtown steam roller flour mills; & at North Wa.lsham
the Prince of Wales), Victoria Hotel mews & Cromer
Pearson Charles James, manager of London & Provincial Press George, sail maker, Queen's road
Bank Limited, Regent street Preston Geo. Frdk. Durrant, solicitor (firm, Diver & Preston)
Pearson Edward, lodging ho. 10 Blake's buildgs. Russell rd Preston Isaac, solicitor, notary public & clerk of the peace
PearsonGeo. Stannard,boarding establishment, 55 Marine par & commissioner for oaths, I I Queen street
Pearson Sarah (Mrs.), lodging house, 1 Marine terrace Pretty William, stay & corset manufacturer, Fuller's hill
Pe<>ton Arthnr, journalist, 27 South quay Price Altred, photographer, 26 King street
Pechey Henry, poor rate collector, St. George's ward, Yar- Price William Joshua, district agent Eastern & Midlands
mouth union, 10 Anson road, Southtown Railway Co. The Beach station, Nelson road north
Peck Edward, master mariner, 6 St. Peter's road Prichard Edwin, coal dealer, Mariner's road
Pedgrift Maria (Mrs.), lodging house, 15 Devonshire road Prudential Assumnce Co. Limited (district office) (Waiter
Pee~< George, beer retailer, South Gates road Norfolk, superintendent), 8 Regent street
Peirson Harry B. tailors & hosiers, 169 King 11treet Pumfrey James, crane master, Town hall & South quay
Penati & eo. restaurant, Nile & North Beach cottages, Pumping Station (Thomas Lepard, supt. ), Cobholm island,
Marine parade Southtown
Fender John Thomas, grocer, 29 Blackfriars road PumpingStation(Drainage)(Fdk. Hall,enginr. ),N orthgates st
Perry John, lodging house, 2I Russell road Purchas Edward Bootley, surveyor of taxes, 35 South quay
Pestell Ann Elizabeth (Mrs.), shopkeeper & bathing machine Purdy Daniel, lodging house, go St. George's road
proprietres9, 59 North Market road Purdy Robert, carter, :Friar's lane
Pestell Hannah (Miss), preparatory school, 3 Wellington Pycraft Edward Sidney, ship & shoeing smith, South qnay
place, Albion road Pye Richard, baker, 4 St. Peter's road
I'ettingill Alfred & Son, auctioneers &c. 26 Regent street Pye Richard A. lodging house, 44 Prince's road
Pettingill Edith (Miss), haberdasher, St. Peter's row east Pye Waiter, fish curer, 53 North qnay
Pettingill Edward Dow, butcher, 54 Middlegate street Pyemont & Watts, musical instruments, 15 &; 16
Phelan James, custom house officer, Custom ho. South quay King street & 13 Market row
Phelan John, customs officer, Licbfield road, Southtown Pywell Richd. Matthews, umbrella ma. St. George's row east
Phillips Anna (Mi&'l), lodging house, 2 Devonshire road Quintan !''red Charles, lodging house, 21 St. George's road
Phillips Barcbam Phillips, pawnbroker &c. 8o George street Quintan John, sail maker, 64 Crown road
Phillips Charles, tripe dresser, St. George's row east Raby William, boot maker, 18 Fuller's hill
Phillips Joseph Artbur, boot maker, 46 King street Rackham Charles, baker, Saxon place, Albion road
Pickford & Co. carriers & railway agents (Charles Betts, Rackham Chas. lodging ho. Parana ho.Marine parade north
agent), Market gates Rainer Samuel,plumber,glazier,painter& decorator,
Pierson Thomas William, British Lion P.H. 36 Market place 4 I Nelson road & York road
Pigney John, greengrocer, 73 Middlegate street Ralph William, boot & shoe maker, I I Princes road
Pike Robert, sail maker, 38 North quay Ramsey Samuel, Trinity Arms P.H. South Gates road
Filler Hannah (Mrs.), shopkeeper, 5 Abyssinia road Ramsey Samuel J ames, Royal Standard hotel, St. Peter's rd
Piller Joseph, fisherman, Conge Ramsey Waiter, Railway P.H. 33 .North quay
Pitcher George, smack owner, Exmouth road Rand & Cooper, builders, Nelson road & Regent road
Pitcher William, shopkeeper, 3I Nelson road north Rand Sarah Eliza (Mrs.),lodging house, 1 Edinburgh place,
Pitcher William John, deputy superintendent registrar of near Fitzwilliarn square
births, deaths & marriages, & collector of poor rates for Randell Samuel, The Tailor King, wholesale &; retail
Regent ward, 33 South quay clothing manufacturer,hatter,hosier,shirt maker; special
Pitchers James, fish merchant, Birkbeck house, Camden rd value, boys', youths' & men's clothing, 41 & 42 Market
Pitchers James, jun. fish merchant, South Denes place; & at 29 London road, Lowestoft & St. Stephen's &
Pitts Agnes Sophia (Mrs.), dining rooms, 41 St. Peter's rd St. Benedict's streets, Norwich. See advertisement
Plane John James, sail maker &c. Cobholm island Handle Robert, lodging house, 20 Albion road
Plane Richard, pork seller, 2 I St. Nicholas road RansonCbas.Frdk.master mariner, IS Maud ter.Cemetery rd
Plane 'Villiam, ship smith, South Gates road Ranson Joshua Farrar, timber merchant, Southtown; & at
Platt George & Son, plumbers & gla11iers, 182 Middlegate st Norwich & Lowestoft. See advertisement
Flatten John, beer retailer, 47 North quay Rant Wm. Francis, boot & shoe maker, 8 St. George's row we
Flatten John, cowkeeper, Cemetery road Raven Edward, boot & shoe maker,67 Heccles rd.Southtown
Platten Sarah E. (Mrs.), lodging hou<>e, 28 Marine parade Raymes George, lodging house, 101 Haveloek road
Platten Thomas, tailor, 20 King street Rayson Ziba (firm, Palmer H. & Rayson), solicitor & com-
Playford Annie (Miss), dress ma. 23 St. Mary's pi. Southtown missioner for administering oaths in Supreme court, 8
Playfnrd Daniel, lodging house, 25 Albion road Regent street
Playford John William, hosier & glover, 21 Regent street Read Eliza (Mrs.), baker, 36 Middlegate street
Plow 'Villiam, boot & shoe maker, Cobholm island Read Ellen Maria (Mrs. ),news agt. & stationer,Church plain
Plowman Charles, fish merchant, 23 Exmouth road Read Esther (Mrs.), lodging house, 26 Trafalgar road
Plowman Jane (Mrs.), lodging house, 72 Regent road Read Henry J obn, refreshment house, 46 Ho ward st. north
Plummer Edward, tailor, Row 48 Read James, shoe maker, Apollo walk, Northgates street
Pocock Brothers, boot & shoe makers, I73 King street Read James, town missionary, Albion road
Police Office (Wm. Brogden, chief constable), Middlegate st Read James Samuel, carpenter & builder, 59A, North quay
Poll Samuel, lodging house, 37 Nelson road north Read Samuel, bricklayer, 34 Well street
Poll William Sheppard, pharmaceutical chemist & dentist, Reade William, tea dealer, 2 Market row
32 Hegent road ; Tower road & Blackfriars road Reader Magdalen (Mrs.), fancy repository, 7 Fish market
Polley .Alfred, boot maker, 15 Howard street Reader Richard E. insurance agent, 28 Winifred road
Pollhill Kate (Mrs.), lodging house, I Kent pi. Apsley road Redgrave Thomas, grocer, Vauxhall
Pond Alfred, cabinet maker, I 8t. Peter's road • Reed Geo. lodging ho. I8 Southampton pl. Nelson rd. sth
Pooley Frederick, Greyhound inn, Southtown Rees Elizabeth (Mrs.), lodging house, 161 Nelson road
Pooter Charle..'l, grocer, 15 South Market road Reeve Emma (Mrs.), lodging house, 76 Crown road
Popay William & Son, carters, 35 Ordnance road Reeve Harry, wharfinger, see Clarke & Reeve
Port & Haven Dues Office (Robert James Carter Day, pier Reeve Job, shoe maker, 69 George street
master; Robert Henry Teasdel, accountant ; Henry Reeve Mary Ann (Mrs.), lodging house, II9 Nelson road
Downing Sayers, collector), Town hall Rey Albert, baker, 125 l\liddlegate street
Porter Charles Thomas, lodging house, 17 Victoria road Rice Richard, boot & shoe maker, Pier place, Havelock road
Potter David, shopkeeper, 147 Middlegate street Rice Robert Turner, tailor, 92 St. Nicholas road
Potter Henry, tailors' trimming warehouse, 23 Market row Rice Samuel, boot maker, 10 Nursery ter. Northgates rd
Potter Henry Benjamin, wood turner, Row 24 Rice Waiter, lodging house, 6 Princes road
Potter John, boot & shoe maker, Market row Richardson Waiter Harry, yeast importer, 63 Iloward street
Powcll Benjamin, Trafalgar tavern, 54 Victoria road Riches Henry, lodging house, 34 Boreham road
Powell Joseph, lodging house, 94 King street Riches Isaac, lodging house, 63 St. Nicholas road
Powell William Thoma.o;, beer retailer, 70 Crown road Riches James, shopkeeper, 64 lllackfriars road ·
Powels Edward, lodg. ho. 5 St. John's bldgs. Fitzwilliam sq Riches William, fish curer, 98 Middlegate street
Pratt Edward Jonathan, chemist, 165 King street Richmond .Alfred Edward, chemist, 3 St. Peter's road
Pratt Robert Cook, lime burner & brick, cement & gravel Rising Maria. (Mrs.), dress maker, 53 Havelock road
merchant & wherry owner; agent for MP..ssrs. J. B. White Rising Thomas Alfred (firm, Worship & Rising), solicitor,
& Brothers Limited, manufacturers of portland, roman & commissioner for taking affidavits, perpetual commissioner,
other cements, Limekiln wharf, North quay clerk to the charity trustees, sec. & solicitor to the Vic-
Pre..<>s Thomas, harbour & ballast master, To~w.,...n hall & 52 toria Building Co. & to the Yarmouth Waterworks Co. 3
Victoria road South quay
NORFOLK( ·· [uw..y's ·
Rising William, tobacconist, g5 St. Peter's road ~ Savory Samuel, Lion & Lamb P.H. 140 King street •
Rivers Elizabeth (Mrs.), lodging house, 48 Marine parade Savory. Samuel, New Fountain P.H. i27 Middlegate street
Rivett Sidney, architect & surveyor, 5 South quay Sayer George, beer retailer. 139 Middle~a~ street
Rix Joseph, grocer, 129 King street Sayer William Clements, clothier, 2r Market row
Roberts Aqnes (Mrs.) 1 lodging house, II2 "Wellesley toad Sayers Henry Downing, ice merchant,Norway wharf,South-
Robert;s Charles, boot & shoe maker, 40 Victol'ia road town & collector of port & haven dues, TO }VI\ hall
Roberts John, cab proprietor, Vauxhall Scarlett Frederick William, water works inspector, St.
Roberts John Philip 1 hair dresser, 14 Howard street north Petl'r's villa, St. Peter.'s plaiq f .
Roberts Samuel, bricklayerj Apollo walk, Northgates street Sca.rnelli Alfred Benjamin, lodging house, 63 Crown road
Robertson Alexander, watch & cl."Jck maker, 54 King street Schofield Charles, Am1y & Navy P.H. Blackfriars road
Robey William, hair dresser, 24 Regent road Scott Isaac, boot & shoe maker. Beccles road, Southtown
Robinson Charlesj greengrocer, 61 Hodney Toad Scott William Long, blacksmith, 10 Nelson road north
Robinson Chas. Titus, lodging bo. 32 Somerset pl.Rnssell rd Scatter William, tobacconist, 27 St. Peter's road
Robinson John, tobacconist,Marine parade & lodging house, Seago Francis & Samuel, fish merchants & marine store
· 8 South beach dealers, St. Peter's road & II3 Nelson road
RGbinson John, tobacconist, South Gates road Seago James Thomas, fish dealer, Row 51!
Robinson William, lodging house, 27 Lancaster road Seago Samuel, fish merchant, 25 Wellington road
Robson Chas. Hy.china & glass& fancy repos.4&22Market row Seago William Henry, mariue store dealer, Row 133
Roe Frederick Waiter, teacher of music, 22 Yol'k road Seaman George, beer retailer, 36 South quay ,
Rogers Thos. Criterion hotel & dining rooms, 1 Church plain Seaman Sarah Ann (Mrs.), lodging house, 6o North quay
Rolfe Frederick Oscar, pianoforte teacher & tuner,74 King st Seaman Wm. chimney swpr. Water's bldgs. Stb. Market rd
Rolfe Mary L. (M!'s. ), music warehouse, 26 King street Search Percy, fruiterer, Mal'ket row
Roling Samuel, beer retailer, High Mill road, Southtown Self George & Son, boot makers, 166 King street
Rolling Charles Edward, baker, 21 Northgates street Self James, lodging house, 47 Lancaster road
Rook Edward, dairyman, 73 Nelson road north Self Robert, hair dresser, 31 St. George's road
Roope Charlotte (Mrs.), lodging house, 5 Apsley road Servants' Training Home & Free Registry (Miss Frances
Roope William, cabinet maker, 37 Middle Market road Trudgett, matron), 56 North quay ,
Raper Henry George, beer retailer, Garden lane Sew ell Harriett (Mrs.), shopkeeper, 173 Middlegate street
Rose William, blacksmith, Row 90 Sexton James, boot & shoo ma. w High Mill rd. Southtowu
Rosenthall Henry, tailor, 13 Middlegate st!'eet Sexton Mary Ann (Mrs.), lodging house• 4 St. John's build-
Rouse Henry, lodging ho. 6 Brock's buildings, Wellington rd ings, Fitzwilliam square
Rouse William, bricklayer, Ir Victoria road Shadlow Mary Ann (Mrs.), shopkpr.Laughing Image corner
Rowland Charles, fl'uiterer, 21 Howard street north Shale Wm. Angel family & commercial hotel, 27 ~arket pi
Royal Naval Hospital (Lunatic Asylum) (Thomas Browne . Shapland Ric~hard, lodging ho.g Blake's buildings,Russell rd
M. D., R,N. fleet surgeon, in charge; James W. Underhill, Sharman Mary Ann (Mrs.),lodging house, 40 Nelson rd, sth
surgeon ; Rev. Hugh Bellamy M.A, chaplain; Charles Sharman Nelson, basket maker, 73 George street
William Horne, clerk; Neil Campbell,foreman of works), Sharman Robert, blacksmith, 4 Wellington pL Albion road
Queen's road Sharrnan "\Villiam, beer retailer, Mill lane, Southtown
Rowlett Robert, watch maker, 2 Fish street Shaw George, provision dealer, 153 King street
Royal Alfred Aged Merchant Seamen's Institution (George Shepherd Hcnry 1 wardrobe & furn. dlr, 6o Howard st. nth
Thomas Watson, hon. agt. ), Sailors' home,Marine parade Shepherd Hrbt. Wm. boot & shoe ma. Bridge foot-,Southtwn
Royal Aquarium Theatre (John W. Nightingale, lessee; ShermanGeorge,photographer & tricycle depot,82 Regentrd
Frederick R. Yeulett, sec.), Marine parade Sherwood Susannah (Mrs.), lodging bouse,2Wellington road
Royal Carolina (Mrs.), shrimp dealer, St. Peter's row west Shipley \Vilham M.R.c.v.s. veterinary surgeon, & inspector
Royal James John, proprietor of bridge tolls, Vauxhall under the ContagiousDiseases(Animals) Act,Southtown rd
Royal Thomas, fish mer. & herring curer, 15 St. Peter's rd Shipley Wm.jnn.M.R.c.v.s.vet.surg.Bridgefoot, Southtn. rd
Royal William, Victoria Gardens P.H. 22 Blackfriars road Shipwrecked Fishermen & Mariners' Royal Benevolent
Ruddock Richard Turner (firm, Harmer & Ruddock), soli- Society (G. T. Watson, hon. agent), Sailors' Home,
citor & commissioner to administer oaths, Town Hall Marine parade ·
chambers Shirtcliff F'rancis; dispensing chemist, & post office, 9 Kim-
Rumbold Charles, jun. relieving officer for the Southern berley terrace, Marine parade
district, 4 Dene -side • Short Blue Mutual Fishery Assurance Association Limited
Rumbold George, ship broker, Bridge foot, Southtown (John Thomas Clarke, solicitor), 12 Regent street
Rump George, Bath Hotel livery stables, carriages Shol'ten Phillip, lodging house, 4 Marlborough sq.Apsley rd
open & closed, -eddinga & f'"unerala conducted, Shorten Richard, .baker, 15 Middlegate street
St. George's road , Shreeve John, Saracen's Head P.H. Church plain
Runacre James, carpenter, r42 Middlegate street Shreeve John, smack ownel', 104 King street
Runniff John, shopkeeper, I4 Rodney road Shreeve Thomas, govel'nment contractor, hay, straw & coro
Runniff John Joshua, fish merchant & curer, 156 Nelson rd dealer & livery stables, Priory plain
Runniff Robert John, lodging house, 109 Nelson road Sbulver Jonathan W. steam miller, com merchant, baker &
Rushmer Charles Joshua, lodging house, 57 Marine parade confectioner, & post office, 3 Beccles road, Southtown
Uushmer Edgar, lodging house, Witton house, Britannia rd Sidle William, smack owner, 42 Blackfriars road
Rushmer Thomas W. boot & shoe rna. St.George's road east Sill George, i"ron & brass founder &c. see Bly & Sill
Rnshmer William John, painter, 155 Northgates street Simmons Edwd.clerk to the surveyor of taxes,3sSouth quay
Rust Ell en (Mrs.), lodging house, 69 Crown road Simmons Elizh. (Mrs.), lodging ho. 2 Sax on vils. Albion rd
Ruthen Harrict (Mrs.), Druid's Arms P.H.I5oMiddlegate st Simmoilll Francis, lodg-ing house, 4 Nelson road north
Ryan James J:<'rancis, art master, Government Schools of Simmons Henry Chaseney, beer retailer, 19 Friar's lane
Art, Science & Navigation, 59 South quay Simmons James, boot & shoe maker, 88 .Northgates street
Sacret & Co. Lim. tobacconists & hair dressers,rs Regent st Sithons Frederick Green, lodging ho. Arch ho.Camperdowo
Sacret Ernma (Mrs.), boot & shoe maker, I Broad row Sirns Agnes (Miss), dress maker, 34 South Market road
Sadd Charles, shopkeeper, 31 George street Sims Agnes (Mrs.), shopkeeper, 26 South Market road
Sailors' & Fireman's Union Office(CharlesSwanbrow,agent), Sims John, carpenter, 28 South Market road
7 Friar's lane ' Singer Manufacturing Co. Limited (Israel N ewman, mana-
Sailors' Home & Refuge for the Shipwrecked (Henry ger); branch, r6o King street
Edward lluxton esq. hon. treasurer; George Thomas Sizer Thomas, dining rooms, 27 Regent street ,
,Watson, sec.), Marine parade . Skelman Harriet (Mrs.), lodging house, 35 Crown road
St. John's Institute (Arthur H. Staff. sec.), Lancaster road Skinner Jane (Mrs.), lodging house, gr Alb10n road
Salinger Henry, hair dresser, 40 South Market road Skippen Jarnes Jonatban, builder, 7 North Market road
Salmon F. & Son, fish salesmen & auctionee!'s, Fish wharf Skippen Jonn. builder & undertaker, 74 Middle Market rd
Salmon Frederick, smack owner, Dene side Skoulding Mary (Mrs.), lodging house, I I Wellesley road
Salmon Rd. basket ma. Brand's buildings, St. Nicholas rd $koyles Henry Christmas, hand-hearse proprietor, Row 35
Salmon Robert, carpenter, 34 South quay $koyles Samuel, general dealer, 30 George &treet
Salter John, butcher, t i Southampton pi. Nelson rd. north Slater Emma (Miss), lodging house, 41 Princes road
Salvation Army Barracks, Regent road Slater William, watch maker, 23 St. ~eorge's road
Sandall Elizabeth & Selina (Misses), milliners & dress Slipper Armine Hugh, solicitor, 20 Regent street .
makers, 82 Crown road ~mall 'f. & Co. ship brokers & Lloyds' agents at Yarmouth,
Sandall Edward .Tas. plumber & painter,77 & 78:.Vorth quay 43 South qnay
Saul Thomas & Son, importers of deals & timber, Smith Albt. collctr. of boro' (St. George's ward), 1:3Sth.quay
sawing, planing & moulding mills, Southtown; & Stand Smith Alfd. Chas. Peace & Plenty P.H. ,1 South Market rd
7o, Corn hall, Norwich; also at Lowestoft & Beccles Smith Ann (Mrs.), shopkeeper, Victoria st. Northgate street.
SaundersEdward.assist. schoolmstr.I Edward ter.Nth.Denes Smith Benjamin, fishmonger, 141 Middlegate street
Saunders John, l~dging house, 6 Bath Hill terrace Smith Benjamin, sail maker, 32 York road
DIREUI'ORY. J NbRFOLK~ YAR~OUTH. 7"27 1
Smith Charles, fancy draper, 42 Fuller's hill · Staff William Henry, greengrocer, 47 St. Peter's road
Smith Cbarles, fish eurer & cooper, 7 Dene side Stafford Stephen John Frederick, surgeon, & medical officer
Smith Charles, shopkeeper, Southgates road & public vaccinator, Bure district East & West F1egg
Smith Charles C. ironmonger & oil & lamp dealer, 12 & 13 union (late surg.-major to Prince of Wales' Own Norfolk
South Market road & 16 1\Iiddlegate street artillery militia), Market place
Smith Charlotte P. (Mrs.), fishmonger, I3 St. Nicholas road Stagg James Henry, chemist, Broad row
Smith Edward Robert, lodging house, 69 Lancaster road Staight Thomas, greengrocer &c. 41 Victoria road
Smith Elizabe-th (Miss), lodging house, 22 Wellesley road Stamp Office, Post office, Hall quay
Smith Ernily ~Miss), pork butcher, St. Peter's row east Stangroom Alfred Lioncl, railway fish agent, London &;
Smith Frederick Ed ward, fishmonger, 4 Fish market North Western fish wharf
Smith George, naturalist, I9 llarley terrace, North Denes Stanley Brothers, stone & marble masons, 6o Northgates st,
Smith George Oliver, grocer, Blackfriars road "> Stanley William Henry & Son, auctioneers, fish salesmen &~. L'
Smith Henry, First & Last P.H. 84 South quay Fish wharf & Alpha road, Southtown
Smith Henry, net maker, 145 Blackfriars road Stanley William Osborn, fish curer, 77 Lancaster road
Smith Henry John, pork butchllr, 64 South Market road Star Tea Co. tea dealers, rg Market row
Smith Isabella Frances (Mrs.), lodging house, 49 Crown rd Starling Ernma (Mrs.), glove cleaner, 'dyer &
Smith James, lodging house, 48 Apsley road f'urrier, 139 .King street
Smith Jamcs, lodging house, 10 Devonshire road Starling Frederick, musical instrument dlr. 59 'King street
I .
Smith Jatne&, lodging house, 70 Nelson road north Starling John, hatter, hosier & glo,•er & shirt & umbrella
Smith John, carter, South Gates road maker (late of Market row), 171 King street, nearly o~
Smith John, coal dealer, Friar's lane & 83 Middlegate street posite Regent road
Smith John, stencil plate maker, Row 32 Starling Richard Holmes, Camden tavern, Camden road
Smith John Caporn, surgeon, & medical officer, Yarmouth Stead, Simpson Lim. boot 'makers (br!fnch), ro King street
workhouse, 24 King street Stee Charles, lodging house, East cottage, Apsley road
Smith Johrt Heill'y James, lodging bo.2Queen's pl.Albion rd Steel Charles, lodging ho. East cot. Cerdic Shore, Marine par
Smith Joseph, shopkeepm•, 25 Victoria road Steel Joseph, wine & spirit merchant., T.7 Market place
Smith Louisa (Mrs.), Market tavern, Market place Steele Richard Samuel, Steam Packet hotel & boarding
Smith Mary (Mrs.), lodging house, 39 Marine parade · bousd, eec. to Great Yarmouth Licensed Victuallers' Pro-
Smith Mary Ann (Mrs.), beer retailer, Bridge rd. Vauxhall tection Rociety & Great Yarmouth, East Norfolk & Suffolk
Smith Richard, ship lamp maker & tinplate worker, 133 Mutual Drift Net Fishing Boat Owners• Trade Protection
Middlegate street i Society &·to Foresters No. 2,o6o Court, Crown & Anchor, ,
Smith Robert Thomas Sharman, cabinet maker i:; paper- Hall quay · "
hanger, 67 Howard street north Step hen son Harrict (Mrs.), Great Eastern hotel, Albion rd ,
Smith Samuel, boot maker, St. Peter's plain l Stevens Alfred, farrier & smith, St. Nicholas road ·
Smith Thomas, coach builder, 32 A psley road Stevens Arthur, blacksmith, St. Nicbolas road '
Smith Thomas, Edinburgh P.H. 16 Market place Stevenson Henry Downing, lodging house, 2r Apsley road
Smith Thomas, twine spinner, Apollo walk, Northgates st St.evenson John Downing, lodging house, 26 Nelson rd. sth
Smith Thomas Blackwell, lodging house, 29 Devonshire rd Ste\'enson John P. master mariner, 65 Havelock road
Smith Thomas C. fishmonger, 33 Northgates street Steward, Patteson, Finch & Co. (branch) (Thomas Burton '
Smith Thomas Wi!liam, baker & grocer, 9 Howard street Steward, agent), brewers, wine & spirit merchants &
Smith Waiter, wholesale grocer, I Middlegate street mineral water manufacturers, 65 North' quay; & at
Smith William, Railway hotel & restaurant (late of the Norwich, Ipswich & Colchester. See advertisement
Holborn restaurant, London), Southtown. See advert Steward & Son, chemists, 5 Market place
Smithson William, lodging house, 65 Crown road bteward Thomas Burton, agent to Messrs. Steward,- Patte-
Smouton Sarah Arm (Mrs.), bathing machine proprietor, sorr, Finch & Co. brewers, wine & spirit merchants &c. ;
97 Havelock road office, North quay ; res. South View house, A lbert square ,
Smowton George C. corndealer, N orth!,"Rtes street Steward William Charles, solicitor, Hall Plain chambers
Snell & Westgate, mast & block makers, South quay Stimpson Caroline (Mrs.), lodging house, 28 Trafalgar road
Snelling Thomas, police inspector, Middlegate street Stone Andrew William, ironmonger, 99 Albion road '
Soanes Cbas. buildr .& contractr. Bcrmondsey pl. ea. Prince's rd Stone William M'Ivor, lodging house, 76 St. Peter's road
Soanes Henry, fish curer, Row 3 Stonex Henry, professor of music, 35 Regent road '
Soanes John Ri('hard, lodg-ing house, 30 Somerset place Stonex Henry Bassett, engineer & macninist, Broad Row
Softley Elizabeth (Mrs.), dress maker, II3 Regent road yard, Broad row
Sooby Sarah Ann (Miss), lodging house, I3 Apsley road Storey Mary Ann (Mrs.), shopkeeper, Sefton lane,Southtown
Southey Ann (Mrs.}, lodging house, 77 St. Peter's road Stuart J. & W. net & cotton manufacturers, 40 South quay
Southey Elizabeth (Mrs.), shopkeeper, Row 5~ Styles Elizh. (Mrs.), servnts'. registry office, 10 Middlegate st
Southey James Frederick, saddler, 61 Market place Styles Frederick, tobacconist & news agent, 19 Howard st '·
Southgate John, Star & Garter P.H. Hall quay. Suffiing Norford, auctioneer & fish salesman, Fish 'Wharf
Southgate John William, butcher, 91 Middlegate street Suggit Coote (Mrs.), teacher of music, 71 York road
Southgate William, butcher, 4 Northgates street Sumner Herbert, hair dresser, 9 Regent street
Spandler Brothers, general carters, South Gates road · Sun man George Corby, carpenter & joiner, IIA, Clarence nl
Spanton Benjamin Mason, scripture reader & grocer, 72 Susman Frederick, lodging house, 2 Marine parade •
St. Nicholas road Sussams Sarah (Mrs.), baker &c. South Gates road
Spanton Benj. Wm. master of Hospital school, Market place Sutton & Co. (JosephJetferies, agent), general carriers, ,
Spanton Wm. fish curer, 2 Stanley ter. Middle Market rd 1 4 Fish street ;. & at Norwich
Sparham Thomas, boat builder, 7 Duncan road Sutton Richard, fishing boat owner, 85 King street
Sparham Thomas, fish curer, 87 Blackfriars road Swan Christiana (Mrs.), lodging house, 9 Kent pl. Apsleynl
Spelman H. W. & C. auctioneers, valuers & estate agents, Swan Harriet (Mrs.), lodging house 1 26 Devonshire road
Hall plain; & at 76 St. Giles street, Norwich & Dagmar Swan Thompson, Queen's Head :p.H. r6 Howard st. north
house, LGwestoft Swanbrow Maria (Mrs.), tobacconist, 8o South quay ,
Spence William, boat builder, 14 WaV"eney road, Sonthtown Swann M aria (:\'lrs. ), beer retailer & fish cuter, Havelock rd ,
Spencer Emma (Mrs.), lodging house, 22 Pag-et road Swann William, butcher & farmer, 57 Market place
Spencer William T. oil & color man, Dcne side ' Swann Wm. Isaac, bread & biscuit baker, 95 Middlegate st.
Spencer William Thomas, painter &c. 35 Nelson road Swansf.on James, fish curer, South denes
Spendlove John, lodging house, 2 Blanks bdgs. Russell road Symonds Alfred, boot maker, Apsley road
Spinks Robert R. lodging ho. 23 Union rd. South Market rd Symonds Alfred, boot maker, 22 Victoria road
Spinney Daniel, bookbinder, 68 York road Symonds James, fish curer, 28 Friar's lane
Springall Bcnjamin, builder & contractor, Rodney road l::lymonds Rebecca (Mrs.), lodging house, Trafalgar opening~
Sprowston .Tames, fish merchant, 62 Havelock road & Trinity North beach •
place, Alma road Taylor Francis, baker & shopkeeper, 109 George street
Spruce Lydia (Miss), dress ma. Chatham ter.Cobholm island Taylor Gilbert H. beer & wine retailer, Factory road
Stacey & Crome, mast & block makers, South Gates road Taylor Herbert Henry, watch maker, 35 Howard st. north
Stacey Lonisa (Mrs.), greengr()(•er, 58 Middlegate street Taylor James Comen, tobacco pipe maker, Row 47
Staey & Cn. grocers, 132! Middlegate st. & SI Howard st. nth Taylor John, manager of the National Provincial Bank
Stacy- Watson Christopher & Co. herring curers, Yare fishery Limited (branch), Hall quay -
works, South Denes road Taylor Richard, eommercial traveller, 61 North quay
Stacy- Watson Christopher, commission & emigration agent, Taylor Thomas, lodging house, I Paston pl. St. George's rd
40 South quay Taylor Wm. engineer & boiler ma. see Nicholson & Taylor
Staff & Nicbolson, plumbers &c. 68 Blackfriars road Taylor William J. local surveyor to the Board of Trade~ ,
Staff Amelia (Miss), stay maker 1 6 Queen's ootts. Albion rd office, Custom house, South quay
Staff John Thomas, beer retailer, 24 Clarence road Teasdel & Son, ship chandlers & general merchants, Bridge
Staff Williatn Barker, painter &c. South Gates road Joot, Southtown road
728 'YARMOUTH. NORFOLK: [KELt.Y's

Teasdel Charles, grocer, 25 & 26 Howard street Turner & Co. tar distillers & chemical manufrs. Caister rd
Teasdel Eliza (Mrs.), lodging house, 13 Nelson road Turner John, carpenter, Alpha road, Southtown
Teasdel .Jarnes Ed-in 1 architect, surveyor & civil Turner Obadiah, confectioner & pastrycook, 15 Market row
engineer, originator or the underpinning & raising of the Turner Robert, lodging hou!le, 28 Nelson road
Great Yarmouth Town Hall & subsequent renovations, 3 Turner Rubert, Rumbold Arms P.II. Southtown road
Queen street Turrell & Torkildsen, merchants, ship & insurance agents
Teasdel Robert Henry, port & haven accountant, Town hall & steam ship brokers, agents for sale & shipment of pitch
Teasdel Walter, wheelwright & cart bldr. Mill la. Southtown & salt, agents for Cunard, Dominion, Johnston, Shaw
Tebbutt Rachael (Mrs.), lodging house, 62 Havelock road Savill & Albion & l)nion Steamship Co.'s, vice-consulate
Temple J emima (Mrs.), lodging house, 42 Middle Market rd for Spain, 23 South quay; Telegraphic address, " Turrell,
Temple Priscilla (Mrs.), beer retailer, 34 Middlegate street Yarmouth"
Thacker William, baker, Row 30 Turrell Henry William, vice-consul for Spain, 23 South quay
Thackray Christopher. grocer, St. Nicholas road Tnrrell \'Valter Robert, coffee tavern, Fish wharf
Thain William, grainer & decorator, xo South Market road Tnrrell Williarn Henry, carpenter, Row 56
Thaxter George, beer retailer, 23 North quay Tyler John, Barge tavern, Hall quay
TbaxLer Robert, farmer, Dairy farm, t'outhtown ; & at Tyrrell Arth. Norman, dairyman,Cobholm island,Southtown
Swim farm, Runham Turrell Thomas, New White Lion P.II. 106 King street
'Thoennisson John, hat & cap maker, 122 Middlegate street Upton George, lodging house, 3 Marine terrace
Thomas Anna (Mrs.), lodging ho. East Anglia ho. Sth. beach Utting Emily (.)Jiss), lodging house, 54 Crown road
Thomas Frederick, fisherman, Row 24 Utting William, lodging house, 6 Paget road
Thomas Henry, fisherman, 36 North quay Vaccination Station (Henry Blake M.B. public vaccinator),
Thomas John, shopkeeper, 7 Fuller's hill Middle Street hall, Middlegate st. ; on tuesdays at n a. m
Thomas Louisa (Miss), ladies' school, Church plain Veal Henry John, smack owner, 23 Rodney road
Thomas Simon, Queen Victoria P.II. 156 Northgates street Veale Robert Henry, draper, 7 King street
Thomas William, boot & shoe maker, Sefton pl. Southtown Vellum Mary Ann (Miss), lodging house, 5 Nelson road
Thompson Benjamin, gasfitter &c. 37 King street Versey Wilham John, supt. of waterworks, 83 York road
Thompson Elizh. (Mrs.), lodging ho. 44 Middle Market rd Victoria Building Co. (T.A.Rising,sec.& solicitor), 3 Sth. quay
Thompson Henry ,town crier & potato mer. 5 North Market rd Vincent Mary Ann (Mrs.), beer retailer, Market gates
Thompson James, shoeing smith, Fish street Vincent Mrs. lodging house, 36 Middle Market road
Thompson James Holmes, dining rooms, 58 Market place Vint Henry, shoe maker, Row 41 .
Thurnpson Joseph, lodging house, 54 St. Peter's road Vores Wm. Mallam B.A., M. B. physician, 7 St. George's rd
Thompson l\Iary Ann (Mrs.), lodging ho. 2 South Gates rd Wade Eruily (Mrs.), lodging house, so Havelock road
Thompson Miss, lodging house, 3 Nelson road Wade Jas. Hy. jun. lodging ha. & shipwright, 20 Dene side
Tbompson Richard Bunn, saddler, 69 Market place Wade John Alfred, Queen's Arms P.H. Queen's road
Thompson Wm. Jonas, lodging ho. 3 Queen's pl. Albion rd Wade Louisa (Mrs.), shopkeeper & beer retailer, Trinity
Thorn ton Sophia lMrs. ), lodging house, I Camperdown place, Alma road
Thorpe Charles, fisherman, 42 North quay Waine Eliza. (Mrs.), lodging house, 20 Middle Market road
Thorpe Joseph, master mariner, 65 York road Wales Durrant, gun maker, 16 Regent street
Tburdstun William D. bricklayer, 37 Nelson road Wales Robert, Rose & Crown P.II. 45 Howard street north
Thurlow Horatio, lodging house, 15 Paget road Walesby Saml. John, boot & shoe ma. &c. 95 St. Nicholas rd
Tibenham Ellen (Miss), ladies' school, 225 Northgates street Walker William David & Arthur Ernest, corn merchants,
Tice William, lodging house, 4 Carnden road Corn market, Hall quay
Tingle Harry, linen draper, 124 King street Walker Elizabeth (Miss), dress maker, 162 Nelson road
Todd George, inland revenue officer, 35 South quay Wailer Elizabeth (Mrs, ), herring curer, South Denes road
Todd Maria Margaret (Mrs), lod,;ing house, 46 Crown road Wailer George, homooopathic chemist, 3 Middlegate street
Todd Mary (Mrs.), lodging house, 2 ~ elson road Wallington Samuel, boot maker, 103 Northgates street
Todd William, Jolly Tar P.H. 64 Rodney road Walrond Fisherman's Institute (Rev. Septimus Streeten
Todd William, shopkeeper, Fysons buildgs. St. Nicholas rd M.A. chaplain), South Gates road
1'odd William C. greengrocer & fruiterer, I Fysons build- Ward Aaron, superintendent of roads, 55 St. Nichola.s road
ings,
·- St. Nicholas road Ward Ambrose,carter ; stables,N orth quay&55St.Nicholas rd
Togni Ernest, Victoria House restaurant., 65 Regent road Ward Arthur, tailor, 66 South Market road
Tomkins Daniel, gentlemen's boarding & day school, The Ward Charles Frederick, goods agent to the G. E. Railway
College, South quay; since 1864, 308 boys have passed the Co. 250 Southtown road
Cambridge & Oxford local examinations, 145 in honours ; Ward John, builJer, Lichfield road, Southtown road
also 9 have passed the London University Matriculation Ward John Benj. lodging house, 7 Queen's cot. Albion road
examination Ward Reginald, hair dresser, 16 Victoria road
Tomkins Daniel (Mr. & Mrs.), ladies' boarding & day school, Ward Robert James, hair dresser, 17 King street
Sutherland house, Marine drive; since 1867, 67 girls have Warn Alfred, lodging house, 50 Middle Market road
passed the Cambridge local examinations, 27 in honours; Warner Robert, fishmonger, 83 George street
38 distinctiOns have been gained Warnes Mark, private apartments in close proximity to the
Torn kins George .F. Norfolk family hotel, Marine parade sea, 8 St. Nicholas road
Tooley Robert, painter, 17 North Market road Warren Henry, fish curer, South Denes
Tooley Robert Dent, corn chandler, 16 White Horse plain; Warren James, boot maker, 136 Blackfriars road
Market place & 53 Nurthgates street Waterlow Robert, boot maker, 115 Middlegate street
Toolet William Dent, corn chandler, Church plain & miller, Waters John Tolver, solicitor, commissioner to administer
North quay · oaths, perpetual commissioner, borough coroner & clerk
Topps Thomas, flsh curer, 79 Middle Market road to Port & Haven commissioners, 2 South quay
Topps Waiter, lodging house, 6r Nelson road north Waterton John, lodging house, 37 Prince's road
Topps William, fisb curer, Quay Mill road, North quay WaLling R.S.&Son,corn mers.&maltsten, Waterside,Suuthtn
Town Hall (Charles Wilson, hall keeper), Quay Watson Francis & John, fish mers. & coopers, South Denes
Townrow .A.rthr. Richd. Foresters' Arms P.H. South Gates rd Watson Amelia (Miss), lodging house, 18 Apsley road
Townrow Joseph, lodging house, 7 & 8 St. John's buildings, Watson Christmas, shopkeeper, Cobholm island, Southtown
Fitzwilliam square \'Vatson Clement, butcher, 7 1:-louthtown road
Trayner & Sons, fish curers, Nelson road Watson Edward Richmond, hatter & hosier, Hall quay
Traynier Anthony Francis, fish merchant, 18 St. Peter's rd Watson Ellen (~1rs.), lodging house, x6 Paget road
Tret.t Arthur, painter, 4 Manby road Watson Francis Hall, baker, 44 Howard street north
'I'rctt Charles, carpenter, see Deuton & Trett Watson George Thomas, secretary to the Sailors' home ~
'frett Martha (Mrs.), lodging house, 217 Northgates street Refuge for the shipwrecked, Marine parade
Trett William, confectioner, Church plain Watson Henry, confectioner, 41 Howard street north
Trinity Stores (Thomas Emerson, snpt. ), Southgates road Watson Herbert George, shopkeeper, 52 Howard street nth
Tripp J ames, beer retailer, Friar's lane Watson James, Golden Lion P.B. 25 George street
Trorey Thos. Townscnd, boot & shoe ma. 136 Middlegate st Watson John, fish merchant, South Denes
Trovers John Seth, lodging house, Br Albion road Watson Robert, whitesmith, Bracey's yard, St. Nicholas rd
Tubby Robert, dairyman, Vauxhall Watson Walter,pork butcher,QuecnAnne's ter.Southtown rd
Tuck l"rederick, beer retailer, Nettle hill, Nelson road north Watt Hugh, travelling draper, Adam & Eve gardens
Tudman William, carpenter, 65A, Blackfriars road Watts James, builder, Southtown
Tudman William, lodging house, 45 St. George's road Watts Robert, Albion hotel, Albion road
Tunbridge R. & Son, -ax candle manu-fac- Watts Susannah (Mrs.), milk dealer, St. Peter's row east
turers, Market gates Waythe William Echline, trinity pilot, 9 Prince's road
Tunbridge John, travelling draper, 6 White Horse plain Webb Charles, lodging house, 7 Blakes buildings, Russell rd
Tunbridge Thomas, linen draper, 175 King street Webb Edward, baker, Says corner ,
Tungate James, coal dealer, 1o6 Northgates street Webb Ed ward, fried fish dealer. 113 Blackfriars road
DIRECfORY.J NORFOLK. YARMOUTH. 729
Webber Arthur, engineer & millwright, Mill lane, Southtwn Winter James, draper, 51 South Market road
Webster George, fish curer, Friar's lane Winton Edward, Royal Standard hotel, Marine parade .
Webster George Alexander, smack owner, Mariner's road Winton'a Assembly Rooms (Edwd.Winton,proprietor),
Webster Henry, wheelwr1ght, 70 St. Peter's road centre of Marine parade
Webster Laura (Mrs.), lodging house, 70 St. Peter's road Wiaeman Charles, bricklayer & diatemperer, 22
Wedderburn H. & Son, scale makers, Church plain Well street
Weeds Horatio, tailor, 7 Southampton pi. Nelson rd. north Wiseman Peter, bricklayer, Laxon's passage, Blackfriars rd
Welch Eliza & Alice (Misses), ladies' school, 33 Carnperdown Withers Robert, carpenter, Priory platn
Welham John, Unicorn P.H. 66 South quay Woillaume Wm. Jules, confectioner & fruiterer, 39 Regent st
Wellington Pier (Edward Winton, lessee), South beach Wolsey Frederick, lodging house, 15 North Market road
Wells John, fish dealer, Row 3 Wolsey Jessie (.Miss), lodging house, 58 South Yfarket road
\Veils J on as, cab proprietor, 34 Nelson road Wood Elizabeth (Mrs.), Mitre P.H. 62 George street
Wells Maria (Mrs. ),lodging ho.6 Marlborough ter. Apsley rd Wood William, lodging house, 2 Paston pl. St. George's rd
Welsh Thomas, lodging house, 29 8omerset place, Russell rd Woodcock George, carter, 20 Beccles road, Southtown
Welton James, master mariner, I I Nelson road Woodcock Thos. John, chemist, Church plain & Howard st
Welton John Richard Henry, boot & shoe maker, 124 Middle- Wooden Brothers, boat builders, t:louth quay
gate street & Anson road, Southtown Woodger John & Sons, herring curers, 83 South quay & 2
Wenn I<'rederick, fish trunk maker &c. Southgates road Market row
West David, engineer, 44 High road, Southtown Woodhouse Robert, trawl net maker & twine !!pinner, r54
Westgate Mary Elizabeth (Mrs.), lodging ho. 38 Apsley rd Blackfriars road
We..o;;tgate Robert, lodging house, 66 Rodney road Woodhouse Robert, Wellington P.H. 37 St. Peter's road
Westgate Robert, mast & block maker, see Snell &Westgate Woodhouse William, Royal Oak P.H. Hall plain
Westgate Robert Waiter, paperhanger, 71 Middlegate street Woodrow Charles, cabinet maker, Row 34
Westoby John, lodging house, 52 St. George's road Woodrow John, dairyman, 99 George street
Weston Matthew, Queen's hotel, close to pier & aquarium, Woods Charles, lodging house, Nelson cottage, Marine par
unnvalled Rea view; replete with every home comfort for Woods Margaret (Mrs.), lodging house, 45 A udley street
families & gentlemen; moderate charges; ladies' drawing Woolby George John, lodging house, 17 Wellesley road
room, reading, billiard,smoke & bath rooms,Marine drive Woollsey Hannah(Miss),ladies' boarding school,29 Prince's rd
Whaites Emma (Mrs.), lodging house, Br St. Peter's road Woolmer Susannah '(Miss), fancy & berlin wool repository.
Whall John Robert, joiner & builder, Lichfield rd.Southtwn Market row
Whall Robert, carpenter, Row 45 & 7 Queen's pl. Southtwn Woolnough James, shopkeeper, 25 Rlackfriars road
Whincop William Henry, hair dresser, 49 North quay Woolsey Elizabeth (Miss), lodging house, 28 Rodney road.
Whiskin Charles (Mrs.), teacher of music, 91 Havelock rd Woolsey John Carver James, lodging house, 38 Nelson road
Whire Richard & Sons, dentists, 21 South quay Woolsey Wm. rope & twine spmner, Moat rd. Northgates st.
White Alice (Mrs.), lodging house, 47 Apsley road Woolsey Wm. Christmas, hair dresser, 6r North Market rd
White Clara (Mrs.), lodging house, I I St. Peter's road Woolston John, butcher, Harley terrace, North Denes
White John, shopkeeper, 51 Admiralty rd.&cooper,Row 102 Woolverton & Son, plumbers, 39 South quay
White John, lodging house, 28 Paget road Woolverton Emma (Miss), ladies' day school, 68 King st
White Mary A. (Mrs.), lodging house, 46 Camden road Woolverton James, auctioneer, valuer & estate agent, 2$
White Sarah Ann (Mrs.), shopkeeper, 6 Howard st. north Regent street ; & at Acle
Whiteley John James, tobacconist, 143 Middlcgate street Wootton John, lodging house, I I I Nelson road
Whitfield Charles S. H. private home f"or invalids, Workhouse (Thomas Blyth, master; Rev. Edward White-
Regent villa, 96 Regent road head M. A. chaplain ; Surgeon-Major J. C. Smith, medical
Whitlock Ernest, boot & shoe maker, 17 Sefton pl.Southtwn officer; Mrs. Elizabeth Blyth, matron), Northgates road
Whitsed Ellen (Mrs.), ladies' school,8g Beccles rd.Southtwn Working Girls' Home (Mrs.Spelman, sec ),227 Northgates st
Whittleton - , lodging house, 20 Providence pi. Russcll rd Working Men's Conservative & Constitutional Club (Arthur-
Wickham Wm. Thomas, lodging house, r8 North ~Iarket rd Edwd. Lang, sec.; Hy. Jn. Barnes, steward), 16 South quay
Wigg Herbert Charles, fancy draper, 7 Regent street Worlledge Edward William M.A. solicitor, commissioner for
Wigg 8arah (Miss), lodging house, 3 Trafalgar square oaths, registrar, high bailiff of the county court & district.
Wigg William Smith, watch maker, 4 Regent street registrar of the BigJ.t. Court of Justice, I I South quay
Wildee Waiter, beer retailer, I I Nelson road north Worship & Rising, solicitors, 3 South quay
Wilkins Sarah (Mrs.), lodging house, 26 Rodney road Wragg John, carpenter, North quay
Wilkinson Aliee (Miss), ladies' school, 12 Queen Anne's ter- Wrate Mary Anne (Mrs.), lodging house, 7 Apsley road
race, Southtown road Wren Joseph, fish curer, South Denes road
Wilkinson Charles, lodging ho. 1 Marlborough sq.Apsley rd \Vright Alfred William, confectioner, 71 Regent road
Wilkinson Edward, commission agent, 48 Crown road Wright Ann (.Mrs.), lodging house, 15 Duncan road
Wilkinson Em m a (Mrs.), tobacconist&hairdrssr .67 Regent rd Wright Catherine P,Iiss), lodging house, q. Camperdown
Wilkinson John, lodging house, 3 Conge Wright Charles Arthur, coal dealer, r5o Northgates street
Wilkinson Peter, slater, 9 Garson place, Middle Market rd Wright Elizabeth (Mrs.), lodging house, 54 Havelock road
Williams, Freere & Co. wine & spirit merchants & im- Wright Emma (Miss), lodging house, 3+ Camperdown
porters, agents for the Marques de Casa-Pavon's Wright Francis Henry, jeweller, 5 St. Peter's road
sherries & Greene's bury ales, Worthington's burton Wright George, carpenter, see Carter & Wright
ales, Raggett•s nourishing stout & Coate's original Wright George, smack owner, 19 Queen's road
plymouth gin, 148 S:ing street Wright George Wllliam, carter, 58 Exmouth road
Williams Chas. Edward,chemist & druggist,38 St.Peter's rd Wright Henry, carter, Frosdick's yard, Manby road
Williams Isaiah,birmingham&sheffield warehouse,Broad row Wright Henry, milk seller, 44 Elsie road, Southtown
Williment James, accountant &c. 31 Regent street Wright James, smack owner, Row 104
Willimont Howlett, saddler, 66 Howard street north Wright Maria (Mrs.), lodging house, 6o Crown road
Willimont William, brazier, r Manhy road Wright Mary Ann (Mrs.), confectioner, 17 Middlegate street.
Willis Elizh. (Mrto. ), lodging ho.5 Marlborough sq.Apsley rd Wright Mary Ann (Mrs.), lodging house, ~7 Trafalgar road
Wilshak Joseph, Crown P.H. Crown road Wrigbt Mary Elizabeth (Mrs.), shopkeeper, 62 Lancaster rd
Wilson George, cab proprietor, 41 Middle Market road Wright Richard, dairyman, Lichfield road, Southtown
Wilson Harriett(Mrs. ),lodging ho.Connaught ho.Britannia rd Wright Richard, jun. lodging house, 4 Bath Hill terrace
Wilson Laura (Mrs.), lodging house, 21 Prince's road Wright Robert, baker & confectioner,2 Howard street north
Wilson Richard, Angel P.H. 34 South quay & Southtown road
Wilson William, fish net merchant, Br South Market road Wright Robert, St. George's tavern, 56 St. George's roac\
Wilson William, Penrice Arms P.H. 15r King street Wright Samuel, coal deal~r, 14 Duncan road
Wilson Wm. Hy. carpenter & joiner, 97 High rd. Southtwn Wright Sarah (Mis~),lodging house, 47 Nelson road north
Wiltshire & Son, solicitors, 12 South quay & at Lowestoft Wright Thomas, blacksmith, Mill lane, Southtown
Wiltshire Charles Henry (firm, Wiltshire & Son), solicitor, Wright Thomas, watch maker, Market gates
commissioner for affidavits, clerk to the Great Yarmouth Wright Thomas Waldon, bricklayer, 77 Albion road
school board, to the Winterton drainage commissioners, & Wright William, builder, 70 Lancaster road
Conservative registration agent for Great Yarmouth & Wright William, coal & coke dealer & general carter, 7'2:
North Suffolk, 12 South quay; & at Lowestoft Burnt lane, Southtown
Wiltshire Charles Jennings ~firm, Wiltshire & Son), solicitor, Wright Williarn, confection~r, 158 King street
12 South quay ; & at Lowestoft Wright William, fish dealer, 96 & 97 Albion road
Winchester House School, private boarding & day Wright ~'m. Scarlc, wine & spirit mer. 42 Howard st.. nth
establishment(Arthur .Jsph. Bishop,principa1),88 Regent rd Wrigley Hobert B.A., llt.R.c.s. surgeon, r8 Regent road
Windle Abel, musician, r8 Admiralty roaq Wyllys ~'m. Edwd. L. R.C. P.Edin. surgeon, 25 King street
Windley William Charles, Royal Alfred hotel, Marine par Yallop George, grocer, & post office, St. Nicholas road
Wmter Martha (Mrs.), lodging house, 6 St. John's build- Yallop James George, carver, gilder, picture frame maker k
ings, Fitzwilliam square pictures restored, 52 King street

730 , "fARMO~T~. NORFOLK. [KELLY's
Yallop Mary (Mrs.), lodging house, 17 St. George's road Yarmouth Traders' Association lLovewell Blake, sec.), Hall
Yarmouth & East Coast Mutual Marine Total Loss Insurance Quay chambers, 2A, South quay ,
Co. Lim. (John William de Caux, sec.), 2 Regen~ road Yarmouth Water Works Co, (Thomas Alfred Rising, sea. &
Yarmouth Gas & Coke Co. (Wm. John Carpenter, engineer solicitor ; John Ayris M. mst.c. E. manager ; ·1 Joshua
& manager; Charles Panchen, sec.), 42 King street Flowerday Rushmer, collector; William H. Ea ton, sub-
Yarmouth Gazette & East Norfolk Constitutionalist (Nor- collector), York road~ & pumping station at Ormesby
folk Chronicle Co. Lim. proprietors; East Norfolk Co. (Thomas Robinson, engineer; Benjamin Scarf, foreman)
printers ; published weekly ou friday), 34 Regent street Yarmouth Weekly Press (II. E. Hurrell, representative;
& 27 South quay. See advertisement published on friday for saturday), 24 Regent street
Yarmouth & Gorleston Times (George Bond, editor; pub- Yaxley Charles, fish curer, 87 Middle Market road
lished on friday for saturday), 3 &. 26 Market row Yaxley Daniel, Lancers P.H. 24 Howard street. north
Yarmouth Independent&Eastern Counties ,Herald;(Frcderick Yaxley John, carter, Northgates street
llart Causton, manager; published every saturday) ; Yaxley Thomas, carter, 104 Northgates street
officl', Hall plain Yaxley William, fish curer & cab proprietor, Stanley road
Yarmouth ,Mercury (published on friday & .saturday) ; Yaxley William James, fishmonger, 156 King street
office, King street Yeulett Frederick Russell, sec. to the Aquarium & Theatre
Yarmouth Public Library & Reading Rooms (Sir Henry Royal, 25 Paget road
Tyler M.P. & E. Birkbcck esq. M.P. vice-presidents; Edgar Youell Eliza (Mrs.), ironmonger, 16 & 17 Broad row
Bond, sec. & librarian), 22 South quay Y ouman Henry J ames, lodging house, 24 St. Peter's road
Yarmouth Town Miss1on (Frederick Fuller, hon. sec. ; Youmans Richard Christmas, shoeing smith, Fuller's hill
James Read, missioner; George Bass, colporteur; Garson Young Frederick, draper, hosier & haberdasher, berlin wool
G. Blake, financial secretary), Mission rooms, Northgate & fancy warehouse, 27 N orthgates street
street & Bethel, Rodney road
Gorleston.
GrenfellWilfredThomasonL.R.C.P.Lond. COMMERCIAL, ,
PRIVATE RESIDENTS. Cliff house AdamsThomas,hair dressr.52Beccles rd
Abbott Rev. Arthur RobertB.A. [vicar] Halifax Mrs. 246 High street AllenAmelia(Mrs. ),drss. ma.119 High st
Aldrich Staff-Commander William Geo. Hammond Mrs. Stradbroke road Allen David, outfitter, lliver side
R.N. Leaton villa, Upper Cliff road Hewitt Douglas, 1B Baker street Allen John, smack owner, B.iver side
Andrews J n. Corneli us,41 Strad broke rd Hodsdon ~rs. 100 Lower Cliff road AllenJn.Lewis,smack owner,River plain
Arnott Henry Dudley, High street Hydes Rev. Thos. Arnold B.A. [curate], AllmanWm.boot&shoe maker,21Nilerd
Arnott Mrs. 21 Lowestoft road Feathers plain Annis Charles W.grocer, Trafalgar road
Arnott Mrs. 24 Lowestoft. road Hy lton Frank, 54 Stradbroke road Arnott lly .Dudley ,architect, qll:Iigh st
Ball John, Cliff cottage JohnsonJn.Wm.Roslyn ho.Lowestoft rd Arnup Jas. Albion tavern, Lowestoft rd
Barber \\'illiam, 239 High street Johnson Paul, 30 Lower Cliff road Athert<Jn Charlotte (Mrs.), tailoress,
Bately John M.D, Sydenham ho. High st Kemp Richard, Marine house, Pier Pier plain
Bat.ely Robert Godfrey, High street Kew George Chas. The Elms, High st AustrinChas. W.lodg.ho. I Upper Cliff rd
Batt.erby Rev. George [United Meth- Keymer Henry John Cubit, Marine Ayden Wm. insurance agent,61Bells .rd
odist], Blackwall reach cottage, River side Bailey Albert, baker, g8 Trafalgar road
Ba nmgartner John Percy, Eastland King Mrs. Upper Cliff road Bailey Thomas, master mariner, 39
house, Cliff hill Kittle Robert, 4 Sunning Hill terrace, Stradbroke road
Bebee Thos. Bell Vue house, Cliff hill Lowestoft road Bales John, shopkeeper, 88 Bells road
Beck Pbilip, 4 Breakwater terrace Layton Mrs. Lowestoft road Bamford Elizabeth Ann (Mrs.), lodging
Bessey Miss, Stra.dbroke road Leach Jn. Stradbroke vil. Lowestoft rd house,2 l:lnnningHill ter.Lowestoft rd
Rond Charles, Beccles road Leggett Harry, Cliff hill BanhamJas.boot maker,Blackwall reach
Bonney Mrs. 192 High street Leggett Mrs. 82 Lower Cliff road Barber William J. tinplate worker,
Bonney Mrs. 79 Nelson road Ling Mrs. Cameron house, High iltreet Hewitt's wharf
Bracey Misses, 8 Stradbroke road Lockhart David A. Lowestoft road Bass John H. boat builder, River side
Brown Mrs. Lowestoft road Lockhart William, I Mount Pleasant Bass Joseph, Crown & Anchor P.H.
Browne Robert, 234 High street Ludlow Harry John, 'l'be Woodlands Baker stre.. t ,
Browne Mrs. Manor house, The Plain Macawbry Mrs. Lowest.oft road Bately John M. D. surgeon, & medical
Burton Mrs. Pier walk Mede 8amuel N. 7 Mount Pleasant officer of health, Yarmouth, & surgn.
Clarence Ralpb, Upper Cliff road Metcalf Mrs. Upper Cliff road Gorleston div. of Yarmouth borough
Cockrell John W, Britannia terrace Miller Mrs. Upper Cliff road police, Sydenham house, High street
Cockrell Waiter G. Upper Cliff road Mills Mrs. Lowestoft road BatelyRbt.Godfrey,surgeon,Is8High st .
Cockrill Septimus, 59 High street Mitchell Mrs. Mount Pleasant 1Beaver Mary Ann (Mrs.), wardrobe
Cockrill Thomas, 241 High street Moore Laurence Henry, 225 High street dealer. 187 High street
Cockrill William Ballard, High street Morley Mrs. 6 Sunning Hill terrace, Bellamy David Winter, family butcher,
Collier Herbert M.D. The Grange, Lowestoft road 207 High street & 32 Baker street~ &
Lowestoft road N ewson Mrs. Lowestoft road at 136 King st. Yarmouth. See advt
Col well Charles, Lowestoft road Norfolk Waiter, Braytborpe house Bellamy Joseph, butcher, Baker street
Cook George, Springfield road Oldham Albert Riton, Britannia terrace & Lower Cliff road
Cook Robert, Lowestoft road Palmer Edmund S. Springfield road Bensley Georgiana (Mrs.), Anchor &
Cook William Warner, Suffield lodge, Palmcr Frederick, 5 Sunning Hill ter- Hope P.H. Pier head
Lowestoft road race, Lowestoft road Biswell Henry, engineer, Folly quay
Cooper James, Lowestoft road Palmer Mrs. Manor house, Pier plain Blake James, shopkeeper, u6 High st
Copeman Rev. Canon Arthur Charles Parfrement Charles, Beccles road BlythSaml.LordNelson P.H.'frafalgarrJ
M.B. [vicar of St. Andrew's, Norwich, Pearce Benjamin, 243 High street Bobby Chas.F. & Co.grocers,221 High st
& rural cdean of Norwic·h], ·west Pearce James, 2 Mount Pleasant Bond George, stationer, 97 High street
Bungalow Plumb Rev. George [Baptist],n Mount Booty Willia:m J. boot makr. Pier walk
Cosgrave Miss, Britannia terrace Pleasant Bradnum Benjamin, potato merchant,
Crane Frederick, Lowestoft road Preston Benjamin, 9 Mount Pleasant Lowestoft road
Daniels .Alfred, 4 Mount Pleasant Pu.rdy Marsham, Lowestoft road Bradnum James (Mrs.) shopkeeper,
Darnell Joseph Allen,5Stradbroke road Reed J obn Sleeman, Britannia terrace 1 79 High street
Davis Robert, 6 Mount Pleasant Scott Rev. Edward [Catholic], 271 Brett Charles,shopkeepr.4Providence l'l
Dawson Jamcs Smith,29 Lowestoft road Lowestoft road Bristow William Henry, tailor & parish
Dendy Mrs. East Bungalow, Cliff park Shepherdson Samuel, I St. Andrew's ter clerk, g6 High street
Derry Horatio, Victory villa, Bells road SimmonsRichd.Hadden cot.Lowestft. rd Brooks & Co. boot & shoe m as. 8gHigh ~t
Farmer John, Lowestoft road Swan Mrs. 13 Stradbroke road Buckland Charles, bookseller, stationer,
Fellows Alec, Upper Cliff road Teasdel William, The Pier printer,& fancy repository,226High st
Fish Mrs. High street Tipple Edwin, 22 Lowestoft road Budd Charlotte A, (Miss), dress maker,
Fisher Mrs. Cliff hill Thurlby Mrs. 3 Mount Pleasant 48 Trafalgar road east
Fisk John Ambrose, England's lane Turney Henry, Gorleston house Bullard Frederick Walter,baker, Nile rd
Fulcher Ramuel, 46 t:)tradbroke road Walsh Capt. William, Stradbroke road Bullard Henry, beer retailer, High st
George Harvey H. The Tower 'VarnerArthurAlbert,28 Lowestoft road Bullock Robert,cooper,Black Wall reach
Gilmour Percy Graham, High street Warner Robert, Pier walk BurrageChas.(Mrs.),shpkpr.Up.Cliff rd
Gostage Thomas, 4 Cliff hill Webb RobertJ. 81 Lower Cliff road BurrageHannah(Mrs.),shpkpr.Burntla
Grayston Mrs. 240 High street Willis Mrs. u Mount Pleasant Burrage William,shopkeeper,29 Nile rd
GreenGeo.H.ISunningHl.ter.Lowstft.rd Wright George, 26 Lowestoft road Bussey James Albert, draper & grocer,
Green James, The Pier Youell Edward Pitt, Gorleston lodge; & agent for W. & A. Gilbey's wines &
Green J oseph L. Elmshurst Hall quay, Yarmouth spirits, High street

.. DIRECT9RY.] . NORFOLK. • , ;YARMOUTH ( GORLESTON ). 731
ButTellElizbth.(Mrs. ), baker&c.Baker st Ferrier Richard Frederick E. solicitor,& Kemp Richard, coal merchant, Pier rd
Buxton Richd, boot maker, 202 High st agent for Scottish Widows' J<'und, Kent Charles, shopkpr. England's lane
Calthorpe E1ward Dennis, farmer & North l3ritish & Mercantile & Sun Kew George Charles, breweJ," & wine
Candler ~artha E. (Miss), ladies' Fire Office, Feathers plain; & at Hall merchant,Gorleston brewery,High st
school, ¥.n High street plain, Yarmouth Keymer Hy. J. C. engineer, River side
Capps Wi1liam, bathing machine owner, Fish Rachol Elizabeth (Miss), shop- King BrottJers, fish curers; bloaters &
Pier ma\rsh keeper, Burnt lane reds during season, Pier walk
Carrier Alfd.shopkpr.38 Trafalgar rd.ea Fisher Institute (Alfred Farrington, King CharlesArgyle,SuffolkFishery P.H.
Castle & Jo\J.nson, auctioneers, valuers, sec.), High street Pier walk
house, es te & insurance agents, Fisher Wm. (Mrs.) ,lodging house,Cliff hl King Edwd. lodg. ho. 15 Lowestoft Toad
High stree · & at Bridge auction Fisk Wm.(Mrs.),lodging house, Cliff hill King Elizabeth S. (Miss), dress maker,
mart, Southto n Flegg Matilda(Mrs.),shopkpr.64Bells rd 20 Lower Cliff road ·
Cattee Fredk. boot ma. 4 Lowestoft rd Ford Chas. boot & shoe ma. 58 Nile rd LangleyGeo.Hy.boot&shoe ma.High st
Cemetery (Thos. Mathias Baker, clerk Forder Robert, shopkeeper, 208 High st Langley Robert., boot ma. 155 High st
to burial board; John Eagle, sexton) Free Library & Reading Room (J. F. Layton Geo. carpenter, 6 Lowestoft rd
Chaney Ann (Mrs.), shopkpr. Beach rd Barnes, librarian) Leak William Pilgrim, marine store
Chapel John (Mrs.),lodging ho.Cliff hill Fuller George, carpenter, High street dealr.& garden net maker,River sida
Chapman William, baker, Beach road Gallant Harriet (Mrs.), WQite Lion inn, Lee Henry, boat builder, River side
Chelsford Thos. chimney swpr. High st Cliff hill Lee John Carrington, mast & block
Chilvers Henry, cooper, The Plain GatesEtizbth. (Miss ),greengro. Pier plain maker, River side
Chilvers J oseph,smack ownr. Pier marsh GeorgeRobt.fish curer, Trafalgar rd.east Leech Edgar George, mount cutter, 20
Clarke John, farmer, Church lane Gibberd Hy. boot & shoe ma.24Priory rd Lowestoft road
Clarke Joseph, shopkpr. Upper Cliff rd Gilmour Percy Graham L.R.O.P. Lond. Leggett Richard, fisherman, River side
Clowes John Edward, grocer, 99 & 100 physician·~ surgeon (firm, ~ollier & Leggett Thomas, builder & contractor,
High street; & at Yarmouth Gilmour), High street England's lane
Coastguard Station (Robert Wall, chief Goodrick Geo. Jas. boot m a. 106 High st Liffen James, dealer in photographic &
boatman), RiV"er side Good rum Jn.Edrurn,general dlr.Cliff hl fret work appliances, 6 Pier Cliff ter
Cockrell John Wailer & Sons, builders Gorleston Athletic.: Club (H. Mil!i- Ling James,registrar of births & deaths,
& undertakers, High street ,champ, sec) High street
Cockrell Thomas,'shopkpr. SI High st Gorleston Dock (Hewitt & Co. Limited, Ling .John, draper & boot & shoe
Cockrill Joseph James, builder, Upper proprietors) . factor, 74 High street
Mount Pleasant Gosling Amelia (Mrs.), dairy, Bells rd Lowne Hy. Wm.carpenter,43 Beccles rd
Cockrill William, stationer, Bells road Goss J oseph, florist, 3 I Strad broke road Lowther William R~d, White Horse
\
' Cockrill William, builder, 190 High st Gowing Samuel, beer retailer, High st inn, Burnt lane
\ Cockrill William Ballard, architect & Gray l<'rederick Aug. draper, High st LuckMarianne(Mrs. ),shpkpr.29 High st
''\ postmaster, High street Green James, deputy engineer to the Luff Ebenezer, Belle Vue P.H.Pier bead
,Colebrook Edward Thomas, engineer & Great Yarmouth Port & Haven com- Madden Georg-e, carter, Beccles road
/ ship smith, River side missioners, Pier head Mallett Jas.hay&straw dlr.Tratlgr.rd.we
/ Collier Herbert M. D. surgeon, The GreenacreWilliam,farmcr, Lowestoft rd Mars ham Wm. J.shopkpr. Frederick rd
· Grange, Lowestoft road GrenfellWilfredThomasonr.. R. c. P .Lond. MastersonWm.blacksmitht31Beccles rd
Cooper Jas. Moore, grocer, England's la physician & surgeon, Cliff house Mayes Davd.mast& block ma.Pier walk
t:ooperWm.bathing tent ownr.Pier mrsh Gurney & C9.'s Bank (branch), open Menthorpe James, William the Fourth
Coppin Chas. W.shpkpr.57 Traflgr.rd.ea mon. wed. & fri. 10 a.m. to I p.m. P.H. Pier marsh
Courtman \Villiam, beer retailer & out- (Thomas Lindsey,mangr.),g8High st :Millichamp Edward, musical instru-
fitter, Dock lane Guyton James, cattle dlr. I2 Church la ment dealer, Pier bill
Cottage Hospital ( William Mallam Vores Hadden William., shopkeeper, High st MooreSarah(Mrs. ), shpkpr.England's la
M. B. Robert Godfrey Bately & Edwin HalfnightJas. Wightman,ldg.ho.Cliff hl Moore William, plumber,Lower Cliff rd
Tipple, surgeons; Mrs. S. Sebrey, Harnrnond .John (exors. of'), ship Morley Ernest, boot maker, 47 Bells rd
matron), Trafalgar road east chandlers & corn & seed merchants, Moules Andrew, Ship inn, Pier walk
Crane Joseph, inspector of nuisances for High street ; & South Gates road & Mowle Jsph.pork butcher,5o Beccles rd
Gorleston & Southtown & NorthWard North quay,_ Yarmouth Muskett B.obert,sbopkeeper, 160 High st
districts, 93 Trafalgar road Hannan Saml.com. traveller, TheHollies Mutton Benj. wheelwright, Beccles rd
Crispen ·wm. greengrocer, 209 High st Hannant Henry, glass & china ware- National Federation of Fishermen of
Crowe James, blacksmith, Beccles road house, England's lane Great Britain & Ireland (Robert
Crowe John, farmer, Trafalgar road HarrisJob, boat owner, Cliff hill Crawford, sec.), High street
Culley Jn.shopkpr.82 Trafalgar rd. west Harris Richard, farmer, Arfus lane. N eilDvd.recruiting sergt.Duke'sHead la
Culling Horace (Mrs.), lodg. ho. Cliff hl Hart Jn. Wm. smack owner,Pier marsh Nelson Sarah (Mrs.), pork butcher,
Curtis Henry, fish curer, England's lane Harvey Herbt.Jn.painter&c.229High st England's lane
Dady David, shopkeeper, Pier walk Hewett & Co. Limited (H. Harvey Newman Hy. markt. gardnr.Becclesrd
Daniels AlfredWm.twine mfr.River side George, manager), smack owners, Newrick William, shopkeeper & beer
Daniels Elizabeth (Mrs.), dress maker, River side retailer, 70 Nelson road
England's lane Hewett G-eorge, ship smith, River side Newson Philip, smack owner,Pier wa1k
Daun William, inspector of police, Hewitt Josepb, fishmonger, 206 High st Newstead Geo. shpkpr. 53 Nelson road
' Gorleston branch Hewson Ann (Miss), lodg. ho. Pier wlk Nicbolson Elizabeth (Mrs.), lodging
Darby Thomas, blacksmitb,Eng-land's la Hewson John, beer retailer, River side huuse, 13 Lowestoft road
Da vis&Co. Lim. gnl. engineers, River side Hilham ·John, beer retailer, High street Olley William, beer retailer, High street
Day George Henry, shopkpr. 27 Nile rd Hi!ham William, hair dre8ser, High st Page Alice (Miss). dress ma. Beccles rd
Day Robert James Carter, pier master, Hindle Wm.chmst.goHigh st.&Pier plain Palmer Charles, shopkeeper, Cliff hill
Pier head Hogarth Bros. pawnbrokers, High st Palmer Edmund, coffee ho. Pier walk
Deuton Edwa.rd, bathing machine Hoggett Robert S.ship smith,River side Palm er John, farmer, Lowestoft road
owner, Cliff hill HoodRal ph, George&DragonP. H. High st PalmerSus~nh.():liss ),shopkpr.Burnt la
Deuton Henry, coal dealer, 13 Bells road Holt Abel Francis, general carrier, Panchen Edmund, jeweller, 195 High st
Denton William, beer retailer, Cliff hill furniture remover & carting agent Panchen Sarah (Miss), ostrich feather
Derry Robert, butcher, 75 High street for Gt. Eastern Ry. Co.Lower Cliff rd cleaner, 195 High street
Dore James, boat builder, River side Ho well Horace, farmer, Lowestoft rd ParkerFrdk. watch&clock ma. Pier walk
· Drake Thomas, shopkeeper, 232 High st Howes Jas. market ga.rdener,Cburch la Perfect Thomas, boat owner, Nelson rd
DraysonSusannah(Mrs. ),grocr.Bell's rd Howlctt Herbert, plumber &c. Cliff hill Pier & Harbour Works(William Teasdel,
Dunnett H.obert, coal dealer, River side Howlett Wm. dairyman, Church road consulting engineer; James Green,
Durrant Jeremiah, tailor, hatter & Hunt Step hen, coffee house, Pier walk deputy engineer)
general outfitter, High street Hurren Herbert, shopkeeper, Beach rd Pool William, hair dresser, 205 High st
DurrantJn. Wm. Suffolk hotel, Pier plain Hutton Richard, dr1ll instructor 2nd PorterRbt.stone&marble mason, High st
Ellingham HarryJ.beer ret.England's la Volunteer Battalion Norfolk Regi- Powley Albt.Jn.smack ownr. Up.Cliffrd
EmmersonAnnie(Miss ),dress ma.Cliff hi ment, Priory road Powley Harry, smack owner,Pier mrsh
Farman John, fish curer, Chnrch lane Jackson Louisa (Miss), grngro. Bells rd PoxonEmma(Mrs.) ,prk. btchr .28High st
Farman Samuel, baker, Cbnrch road Jcrmy Elizh.(Mrs. ),shopkpr. Up. Cliff rd Pratt William, grocer, Baker street
Farman Wm. shopkeeper, 125 High st Johnson & Sons, outfitters & tobacco- Pumfrey Wm. pork butcher, 86 Bells rd
J<'arrington Alfd. in sur. agt. Trafalgar rd nists, Baker street Purchas Edward B. surveyor of taxes,
Farrow James, lodging bonse, Cliff hill Jones John. beer retailer, Bells road Cliff villas, Upper Cliff road
I?aulkner James, ship smith, River side Jones John Wm. shopkeeper, The Plain Randall Henry, beer retailer, High st
Fellows John Alex. & Co. timber mers. JonesWm.Tramway hotel,Lowestoft rd Rangers Salvage Co. (Job Woods, cox-
& saw mill proprietors, River side Keens William,shopkeeper,I04 High st swain)
•Fenn William, shopkeeper, Cliff hill Kelf Philip, ship smith, Hewitt's quay Read George, plnmber, High street
732 YARMOUTH ( GORLESTON ). NORFOLK. [KELLY S
Read George, cowkeeper, Arfu~ lane Smith Robert, twine spinner, River side Warner Rot>ert., cab proprietor & fish
Read John Wm. printer, I75 High st Slater Willia.m, watch maker, High st merchant, Pier walk
Reed JohnSleeman,physician & surgeon Southey James Frederick, saddler, 123 Wase Emma (Miss), ladies' school, 5
(firm, Lettis & Reed), Britannia ter High street Mount "Pleasant
Reeve Jame!!, cowkeeper, Arfus lane Spashett Waiter, sail maker, River side Watson Rebecca (Mrs.), gem~ral dealer,
Reeves L~.>ura (Mrs.), lodging house, Spencer Geo. N. ironmonger ,I94High st Lower Cliff road
Springfield road Spurg-eon Rd. chimney sweep,Beach rd Watts Edwin, hair dresser, 103 High st
Revell J n. bout & shoe ma. 37 High st Stanford Mary Annie (Mrs.), stationer, Watts Herbert, hair dresser, Pier walk
Riches Charles, baker, England's lane 114 High street Weavers Hy. dairyman, Lower Cliff rd
Riihms August, beer retailer, Baker st Stevens Robert,master mariner, 3 rLower Weavers William George, shopkeeper,
Robson David, lodging house, Yare ter Cliff road High street
RogersSaml. 'Varner,grocer, 1 II High st StimsonEliza(Miss),shpkpr.32N el.son rd VI/ebb Robert James, smack owner,
Rolfe Charles, Feathers inn, High street Storm Salvage Co. (Edward Wood, Lower Cliff road
Rope Margetson H. farmer, High street coxswain) WelstedSamuel,coal dealer,Church lane
Rouse George, shoe maker, Pier walk Strand Joseph, shopkeeper, 85 High st Whiley Edward, boat owner, Cliff hill
Rouse Wm. Life Boat tavern, Pier walk Suffiing Jeremiah,Earl GreyP.H.Highst Whiley James, insurance agent, Nile rd
Rowland James, shopkeeper, Cliff hill Swann William, farmer, Brad wall road Whur Waiter, bricklayer, Pier walk
Hussell Frederick, sail maker, Ri,•er Symonrls Wilham Duke's Head P.H. Wigg Arthur, carpenter, Pier plain
side & tobacconist, High street 10I High street Wightman Robert Ambrose, iron-
SadlcrElizth.(Miss),dress ma.23Nile rd Taylor Goo. baker&confectioner, High st monger &c. Baker street
Sadler Thos.bricklayer, II2 Low .Cliff rd Taylor James, boat builder, Pier marsh Wood tlamuel, boot maker, 26 Lower
SalmonCharles,smack owner, Pier mrsh Teasdel William, resident consulting Cliff road
Salmon Charles Goodwin, fish mer- engineer to the Great Yarmouth Port ·woodcock Robert,boot maker, 6c Lower
chant & curer, Stradbroke road & Haven commissioners, Pier head Cliff road
Salmon Emma (Miss), boys' school, ThomiJSOn Herbt.Jn.butcher, Church rd Woods Job, fisherman, Cliff hill
19 Stradbroke road 'fhompsonRd.llunn,saddler, r63 High st Wright Benjamin, carter, 213 High st
Salmon Richard, grocer, Lower Cliff rd 'fhornpson Waiter Hy. baker,Beccles rd Wright Benj.shopkeeper,s Lowestoft rJ
Salmon Richd. (.Mrs.), lodg-. ho. Cliff hl Thrower Wm. shopkeeper, High street Wright Frederick, tramway inspector,
Salmon Waiter, boot ma. Low. Cliff rd Tipple Edwin, physician & surgeon, 22 Lowestoft road
Sanders Sarah (Mrs.), ladies' school, Lowestoft road Wright Jas. Hy. coal dlr. 47 Nelson r<l
I 8 Lowestoft road Todd Philip, furniture dealer, Pier walk WrightMaria(Mrs. ),lodgng.ho.Yare ter
Saul Edward, boot maker,49 Beccles rd Todd Philip, lodging house, River side Wright Philip W. grocer, High street
Savory Geo. beer retailer, 49 Bells road Topson John, baker, High street Wright Robert, hawker, Upper Bells rd
Sayer George, watch maker, 88 High st V enables Samuel, chemist, High street Wright William, coal & coke dealer &
Scott Wm. Saml. coach buildr. High st Ward Herbert E. clothier, 70 High st general carter, Burnt lane
Scott Wm. smack owner, 28 Bells road Warner Arthur Albert, fish merchant, Yarmouth & Gorleston Tramways Co.
Seaman John, coal dealer, Dock lane general carrier & . cab proprietor ; Limited (George Wright, sec)
Shadrake James Boreham, accountant funeral coaches & hearses, Pier walk Young Salvage Company (William
& school board attendance otlicer, 245 WarnerElizh.(Mrs. ),shopkpr.78High st Flemming, coxswain)
High street

Y AXHAM is a parish and village, with a station on the hall. The charities include Hardy's gift of 3s. 4d. yearly;
Wymondbam and Dereham section of the Great Eastern Whood's of ros.; Mountain's Dole, £I 6s. and Burr's Dole,
railway and 2 miles south from Dereham, in the Mid division 6s.; total, £2 ss. 4d. The poor's land of 3R. 27P. yields a.
of the county, Mitford hundred, Mitford and La.unditch petty yearly rent of £I 12s. 6d. and the fuel allotment of 2:>
sessional division and union, Dereham county court district, acres, I3 of which are rented for grazing purposes, a yearly
rural deanery of Hingham, Mitford division, archdeaconry of rent of [20: the rent of the remaining lands, about 7 acres,
Norfolk and diocese of Norwich. The church of St. Peter is is carried to the churchwardens' account, and applied to
a structure of flint with stone dressings, consisting of church purposes. The trustees of Sir William Robert
chancel, nave, south aisle, south porch and a round western Clayton hart. are lords of the manor. Albert Collison esq.
tower containing 5 bells : the base of the tower, as well as J. P. of Mile ham Hall, who is also lord of the manor uf
the tower arch, are of Early Norman date; the building, Yaxham Old Hall, and John Marcon esq. J. P. are the chief
with this exception, is Decorated, with Perpendicular inser- landowners. The s01l is heavy and very productive; subsoil,
tions; the very beautiful octagonal font is also Perpendicular, clay and brick earth. The chief crops are wheat, barley,
and has been reproduced in that of Cromer church: the roots and hay. The area is I,596 acres; rateable value,
windows, some of which are memorials, ha"e been enriched £3,397; the population in r8g1 was 450.
with stained glass by various donors: in 1889 the chancel Sexton, Henry Baxter.
was repaved, the seats re-arranged, a new organ being
at the same time presented by Miss Howlett, of Mattisball: PosT, M. 0. & T. 0., S. B. & Annuity & Insurance Office.-
tbere are 28o sittings, those in the south aisle being free. Henry Baxter, postmaster. Letters received through
The register dates from the year 1686. The li ,·ing is a Dereham, arrive at 6.40 a. m. & 3· I 5 p. m. & are dispatched
rectory, average tithe rent-charge £396, net yearly value at 6.45 a. m. & 6. IS p. m
£4o6, includin~ ~7 acres of glebe, with residence, in the gift National ::3chool (mixed) built in I84 3 & enlar ed in IBSo
of the Rev. W1ll1am Cowper Johnson lii.A. rector of North- for 100 children; average ' attendance, 72; Miss g ElJ.za J'.
wold, and held since r88o by the Rev. William Cowper Bass m"stres
1
Johnson, jun. M.A. of Trinity College, Cambridge. Here is I ' s
a. Congregational chapel, in connection wit-h that at Mattis- Railway Station, Henry Stokes, station master
Bailey Arthur, The Elms Bush William, farmer 1 Isbill Francis, carpenter
Bradfield Robert Coe John, Bush inn, & farmer 1\iallett Henry, farmer, Bailey moor
Clark John Critoph William,miller (wind & steam), Matthews Charles, Lord Nelson P.H
Goulder Robert, Brakefield green & corn merchant Meachen Charles, farmer
High Mrs Cross Lacey, " A " P. H Meachen Frederick, farmer

Johnson Rev. William Cowper, JUn. Easter Frederick William, farmer Meachen George, farmer, Badley moor
M.A. Rectory Francis Henry, shopkeeper Meachen James C. farmer
Lewell Mrs. John, Hollands hall Groom Ja.mes, shopkeeper :Nelthorpe Jas. wheelwright& carpenter
COMMERCIAL. Harden John, farm bailiff to Robert Phillippo James, fellmonger
Aldous George, builder, contractor, Howard esq Read John, farmer
wheelwright & undertaker Ilornigold Wm. hunlle ma. & thatcher Smith John, farmer
Arthurton William, farmer Howlett Frederiek, coal, coke, corn, Srriith Nehemiah, farmer
Baker James, farmer seed, beans, pollards & cake mer- Spelman Hobert, farmer.
Balls Henry, farmer chant, agent for Fisons' (of Thetford) Tilney Barnabs. blacksmith, Badley moor
Barlow William, farmer manures, & manure mnfr. & farmer Vincent Thos. farmer, Bralr.efield green
Beatley John, shoe maker Hutson John, coach painter & hot water Walpole Edward King, Woolpack P.H
Blyth Robert, farmer plumber &c Williamson Robert, farmer & coal mer
Bowden Frederick, painter &c Hutson Robert, blacksmith Wyatt David, boot maker

YELVERTON is a village and parish, 5 miles south- I and Clavermg union, county court district of Norwir.;h, rural
east from Norwich and 4 south-east from Trowse station deanery of Rrooke westerll' division, archdeaconry of Norfolk
on the Ipswich and Norwich section of the Great Eastern and diocese of Norwich. The church of the Virgin Mary is
railway, in the Southern division of the county, Swains- a. building of flint, in the Decorated style, consistmg of
thorpe petty sessional division, Henstead hundred, Loddon chancel, nave, south aisle, south porch and an embattled
DIRECTORY.] NORFOLK. YRLVERTON. 73~

western tower containing 3 bells : the windows retain frag- Cambridge, rural dean of Brooke western division, and LP.
ments of ancient stained glass : there is a fine marble mural Norfolk. The fuel allotment of 4 acres produces £6 12s.
monument to Humphrey Rant, 1661 ; a stone floor slab, yearly, and Rant's charity of 21 acres, £15 yearl~; these
with brass. ta..Margare.t. Aldriche,. JJb~ :1525 .;. aud an ancient amounts are equally divided. bet.weeu Yelverto11-and .AJ.tH.flg-
rood screen "t)f·oak, ea~ ~nd 13ainted: -the rood staircase ton. The Earl or Roscbery P.C., "F.R.s., F.S.A. ·is1l1rd of the
has been restored : the stone font is a work of considerable manor : the land is owned by various persons. 'I;be soil is
interest and merit, and in the south porch is a holy water sandy loam ; subsoil, clay and gravel. 'rhe chief props are
:stoup: the church was restored in 1883 from plans by Mr. wheat, oats, barley and turnips,. The ar-ea is s:a3 acres;
Lacey, architect, of Norwich, when the interior was re- rateable value, £682; the population in 1891 was 6Ij.
1

floored, a vestry formed, the chancel re-seated in oak, and Parish Clerk, see Alpington. j
a carved oalc pulpit, Teading desk and chancel rails erected: Letters through Norwich, -via Framingbam Earl, nrrive at
there are 150 sittings. The register dates from the year 8. 30 a. m. Brooke is the nearest money order office.
I55'1- The living is a rectory. with that of Alpington The nearest telegraph office is at Trowse Newton
:annexed, average tithe rent-charge £243, joint gross yearly A board school of 5 members was formed cornp~sorily 4
value £334• including 15 acres of glebe and residence, in June, x888, for the united di.'ltrict of Yelverton .\ Alping-
i;he gift of the Lord Chancellor, and held since 1865 by the \ ton; J. C. Copeman, Loddon, clerk to the board, I
Rev. Charles Robert Ferguson,Davie lll.A. of Trinity Hall., The children of this place attend the schoo\ at AlpiPgton
.Ferguson-Davie Rev. Charles Robert Carman Frederick, farmer • ' Rmith'William, farmer l
M.A., J.P. [rector & rural dean], Nobbs Henry, farmer Thurlow Henry, farmer 1
Rectory Nobbs Jeremiah, butcher Waldcn Gcorge, farm bailiff i J. B.
Burton Henry, farmer Riches Robert, farmer Stansby esq .
' •

c. ~. & ~. 4.7 •

PUBLISHED ANNUALLY•

WITH WHIOH IS INOORPORA.'l'ED THB


'

CONTAINING

COMPLETE LISTS OF THE CLERGY IN ENGLAND, WALES, SCOTLAND, IRELAND


AND THE COLONIES,
INCLUDING ARMY 1 NAVY 1 PRISON, UNION AND FOREIGN CHAPLAINS, &c., WITH
DEGREES, ORDERS AND APPOINTMENTS,
AN ALPHABETICAL LIST OF BENEFICES,
WITH THiil DEDICATION OF THE CHURCHES, POST ToWN, RAILWAY STATION, CoUNTY, INCUMBENT,
CuRATES, ANNUAL VALUE, PATRON AI~o-n PoPULATION;
THE CATHEDRAL ESTABLISHMENTS, RURAL DEANERIES & CONSTITUENT LIVINGS,
LIST OF PUBLIC AND PRIVATE pATRONS OF BENEFICES, WITH YALUE 1 &c. 1 &c.

London: KELL Y & CO. LIMITED,


51, GREAT QUEEN STREET, LINCOLN'S INN FIELDS, W.C.

----~==================================================~--

Published Annually.

TO THE
+ +

t , rta
'
CONTAINING ABOUT
T"W'"ENTY T I I OUSAND N AJY.i:ES,
GIVES AN ALPHABETICAL LIST OF
AI.L MEMBERS OF NOBLE FAMILIES, BISHOPS, PRIVY COUNCILLORS, BARONETS,
MEMBERS OF THE HOUSE OF COMMONS, LORDS-LIEUTENANT, GOVERNORS OF COLONIES.
KNIGHTS AND COMPANIONS OF ORDERS, DEANS, AND ARCHDEACONS,
JUDGES, SERJEANTS-AT-LAW, QUEEN'S COUNSEL, ETC.,
SUPERIOR OFFIOERS OF THE ARMY AND NAVY,
COUNTY MAGISTRATES, AND. OWNERS OF THE PRINCIPAL SEATS IN ENGLAND•

PRICE, 16s.
LONDON: KELLY & CO. LIMITED,
POST OFFICE DIRECTORY OFFICES, 51, GREAT QUEEN STREET, W.C~

KET~LY'S

N LK CO RT DIRE RY.
In order to afford space for the addresses, the abbreviation" esq." for esquire, has no longer been appended to eacb
name in the "Court Directory." It should be understood that such should be added to the name of every gentleman
in the following pages, to which no inconsistent addition is affixed.
Abbey J. 50 Prince of Wales rd. Norwch\Aldiss Mrs. York house, White Hart .Ailfery S. Reginald, Dickleburgh, Scale
Abbott Rev.A. R B.A. Gorlestn.Yarmth lane, Swaffham Allinson Henry, St. Margaret'spl. Lyon
Abbott Edward, 7 St. Mark's terrace, Aldous A. F. Commercial rd. Aylsham Allnutt Rev. Thomas B.D. Rectory,.
City road, New Lakenham, Norwicb. AldonsC.JISt.Mark's ter.City rd.Nrwch Stibbard, Dereham
Abbott Edwin, Winterton, Yarmouth Aldous Miss, Ha.rleston Alpe A. 7 Kent pL Apsley rd. Yarmouth
Abbott E. J. 53 Bracondale, Norwich Aldons Mrs. 144 Queen's road, Norwich .Alpe Mrs. 74 Rodney road, Yarmouth
Abbott Mrs. Mere street, Diss AldrP.d D. A. 56 George st. Yarmouth Alston Rev. Alfred Edward, Rectory,
Abbs James, The Woodlands, West Run- Aid red F. W. 36 Prince's rd. Yarmouth Framingham Earl, Norwich
ton, Cromar Aldred James, 8 Stafford st. Norwich Alvis Rev. Edward John M.A. Vicarage,.
Abel Cain, 37 Mill Hill road, Norwich Aldred J. E. 92 Edinburgh rd. Norwich East Winch, Lynn
Abel Mrs. Camperdown house, Chapel- Aldred Mrs. Dene house, II4 Regent Ames Josiah, I Grove road, Norwich
field road, Norwich road, Yarmouth Ames Miss, 3 York road, Yarmouth
Abel Mrs. 20 Trafalgar rd. Yarmouth Aldred Mrs. Hethersett, Norwich Ames-Lyde Mrs. Thornham cottage,
Abel Mrs. III Trinity street, South Aldred Ham!. 4 South quay, .Yarmouth Thornham, Lyon
Heigham, Norwich Aldrich Staff-Commander William Geo. Amherst William Amhurst Tyssen
Abel W. P. I Mount Pleasant, Norwich R.N. Le:1ton villa, Upper. Cliff road, D.L., J.P. Didlington hall, Northwold;,
Abigall Hy. 19 Alexandra rd. Norwich Gorleston, Yarmouth & 8 Grosvenor square, London w
Able John, Fincham, Downham Aldrich Harry Edward, Mount st. Diss Amies Mrs. Eagle cottage, Newmarket
Able Mrs. Fincham, Downham Aldrich John, Market square, Diss road, Norwich
Absolon D. U.13Ne\son rd.south,Yarmth Aldrich Mrs. Fredk. Roydon road, Diss Amies Mrs. Norwich rd. Nth. Walsham
Acton Rev. William B.A. Vicarage, Aldrich Mrs. George, Roydon road,Diss Amies Robt. Sharpe, Coltishall, Norwich
Wicklewood, Wymondham Aldrich Mrs. Harry C. Roydon rd. Diss Amos Charles Morgan, 6 Bedford street,
Adames William Bennes,5 TheCrescent, Aldrich Mrs. Rubert,St.Nicholas st.Diss South Heigham, Norwich
Chapelfield, Norwich Aldrich Robert, Mount street, Diss Amyot Miss, Mount street, Diss
Adams Rev.J ames Williams B. A. Rectory, Aldridge Thos. 51 Victoria rd. Yarmouth Amyot Thomas Ed ward, Mount st. Diss
Postwick, Norwich Aid worth Rev. John M. A. 27 Bedford Anderson Major John Albert (late x8th
Adams Rev.Josiah,The Priory,Litcham, street, South Heigham, Norwich Hussars), Dilham ho.Dilham,Norwch
Swaffham Alexander C. 15 Crown rd. Yarmouth AndersonRev.A.J.Hockering,E.Derehm
Adams R. 18 Trafalgar rd. Yarmouth Alexander C. 11& South town rd. Ya.rmth Anderson Rev. John Hendry M.A. Ths
Adams W. Tyne villas, Gaywood, Lynn,Alexander D. 55 Cambridge st. Norwich Rectory, Foulsham, East Dereham
Adamson Peter, 21 Queen's rd. Yarmth [Alexander David Henry, Newton hall, Anderson Rev. Michael James M. A.
Adcock Brigade-Surgeon John llf.D. 8 Walpole St. Peter, Wisbech Hockering, East Dereham
Brandun terrace, Yarmouth Alexander J. E. Gladstone villa, Watton Anderson Mrs. 20 White Hart st.Thetfrd
:Adcock D.Sa!emcot.Up.Hellesdn.Nrwch Alexander Miss, 7 Gmtnock place, Lynn Andrew Rev. Hy. B.A. Griston, Watton
AdcockErnestD.16 Mt.Pleasant,Norwch Alexander Miss, 83 Mill Hillrd. Norwch Andrew Mrs. Nelson street, New Wal-
Adcock Mrs. H. Shire Hall terrace, Alexander T. A. Clemat1s house,Watton soken, Wisbech
Walsingham R.S.O Algar H. H. 27 Grove st. west,Norwich Andrews Rev. Lancelot William Hale
Adcock Robert, 61 Grove road, Norwich Algar J. 58 Prince of ·wales rd. Norwich 1\J.A. Lammas, Norwich
Adcock R.Hildersham,Bracondle.Nrwch Algar J.Violet bnk.Swainsthorpe,Nrwch Andrews Rev. William North M.A.
Adcock Robt. West End house, Watton Alger Cleer Sewell, Brunswick house, Paston, North Walsham
Adcock W. Brooke, Knight street, Roydon road, Diss Andrews Arth. Claremont ho. Attleboro•
Walsingham R.S.O Alger Frederick, Victnria road, Diss Andrews Frank, Bank house,Fakenham
Addison Thomas, 5 Bridge street, Lynn Alger James, Waveney house, Diss Andrews Geo. Saml. Butt lands, Wells
Adlington Capt. Henry Smith J.P. The Alger William, 10 Sunnyside, Diss Andrews Henry, Mill house, Magdalen
Hall, Ho! me Hale, Watton Allan John, 20 South town rd. Yarmont~ gates, Norwich
Affleck William Joseph, Old Bank house, Allarde Miss, 2 Windsor road, Lynn Andrews John Cornelins, 41 Stradbroke
Kingstaith square, Lynn Allcock Mrs.Ebury cot.Blofield,Norwicll road, Gorleston, Yarmouth
Aiken Mrs. 6 Whitefriars road, Lynn Allcn Rev. W.M. M.A . .Shouldham,Dwnhm AndrewsMiss,52.St.Stephen's rd.Norwch
Ainger Rev. Walter Henry B.A. The AllenC.uCedar rd.ThorpeHamlt.Nrwch Andrews Mrs. 20 Grove street west,
Dale, East Dereham Allen George, 8 Kimberley terrace, Unthanks road, Norwich
Akroyd John B. Elmharn hall, Elmham, Marine parade, Yarmouth Andrews Mrs. Jardine villa, Bexwell
East Derebam Alien Henry, 6 Union street, Lynn road, Downham
AI borough Mrs. The White house, Nor- Allen J. Howes, Thorpe, Norwich Andrews Mrs. Little Dunham, Swaffhm
wich road, Thetford Alien Joseph, 19 Tombland, Norwich Andrews ~Irs. 5 Oxford street, Norwich
Albrecht John Loms, Broom hill,Saham Alien Miss, 6 Queen's road, Norwich Andrews Mrs. 7 The Crescent, Chapel-
Toney, Watton Alien Miss,93 High rd.Southtwn.Yrmth field road, Norwich
Alden A. H. 62 St. Philip's rd. Norwich Allen Mrs. Fairfield house,. Lime Tree Andrews R. E. 51 Botolph st. Norwich
Alden Hy. Wm. Lower close, Norwich road, Town close, Norwich Andrews Stephen, 40 Grove rd. Norwch
Alderson Mrs. 139 Unthanks rd. Nrwcb Alien Mrs. roB London road, Lynn Andrews Thos. Jn. Bank ho. :Fakenham
Alderton George, 31 Carlton terrace, Alien Mrs. 55 South Everard st. Lynn Andrews William, Railwayrd. Downhm
Surrey road, Norwich Alien Philip, Wiveton, Dereham Angerstein Willia.m n.L., J.P. \Veeting
Alderton William, II5 Trinity street, Alien Saml. J. 23 Nelson rd. Yarmouth hall, Brandun
South Heigharn, Norwich Alien Thos. 32 All Saints' grn. Norwich Angerstcin John Richard J. J.P. Weeting
Aldham Robert H. Kingstaith sq. Lynn Alien T. H. 132 Blackfriars rd. Yarmth hall, Brandon ·
Aldis Jn. Brown, 5 Ipswich rd. Norwich Alien Wm. 57 Caernarvon rd. Norwich Angerstein William J. Nettleship J.P.
Aldis Miss,Seaview ho.Ea.Runtn.Cromr Alien W. 12 Saxon pl. Albion rd. Yarmth Weeting hall, Brandon
Aldis T. jun. Thoroughfare, Harleston Allen William Josiah, Heathside road, Annett Alfred George, Carbrooke villa,
Aldis Wm. Theatre st. East Dereham Thorpe hamlet, Norwich Carbrooke, Watton

C. Y. & S. 4~*
736 ANN NORFOLK. (KELLY'S

Annison H. 20 St. George's rd. Yarmth Austen Edward, 15 Denmark road, BaileyWilliam,Town farm,Garbaldsham
Annison William, 26 )lagdalen road, Earlham road, Norwich ro<td, East Harling, Thetford
Norwich Austin Rev. Thus. 13 Valinger's rd.Lynn Bailey Wm. E. 39 Distillery st. Norwich
Ansell Mrs. 43 &44Marinepar. Yarmth Austin Mrs. Lichfield road, Southtown, Hatley Wm. Wltr. so York st. Norwich
Anthony Jn. Ivy ho. Fincham,Downham Yarmouth Baillie Col. Hugh Smith & Glentworth
Appleton Rev. James Allen n.A. Burn- Avann Rev. Arthur Alfred n.A. Man- Viscountess, Marham house,Marham,
ham, Sutton, Lynn gate street, Swaffham Downham
Appleton J. G.g7 Blackfriars rd. Yarrnth Avey George, 36 Grove road, Norwich Baillie William R. Harleston
Applewhaite Col. C. M. J.P. Pickcnham Ayers E. T. 28 Prince's rd. Yarmouth Baker Rev. Charles Wm. Heathcote B.A.
ball, South Pickenham, Swaffham Ayers James Harris, 7 Valentine street, Rectory, Colegate street, Norwich
Applewhaite Hanson, Pickenham hall, Dereham road, Norwich Baker Rev. Henry Fowler H.A. Rectory,
South Pickenham, Swaffharn Ayers Mrs. 217 Dereham rd. Norwich Great Ryburgh, Fakenham
Arbon J. N. IO South beach, Yarmouth Aylmer George Winearls, Manor house, Baker A. 77 Northgates st.. Yarmouth
Archard Mrs. 37 South town rd. Yarmth • Fincham, Downham Baker Charles Thomas, The Acacias,
Archbold Rev. Thomas M.A. Rectory, Aylmer Hugh, The Abbey, West Dere- Holt R.S.O
Taverham, Norwich ham, Stoke Ferry Baker D. M. jun. 3 Blackfriars rd.Lynn
Arch dale Major C. W.Coltishall, Norwich Aylmer .John Bough en, The Hall, Finch- Baker Edward, sen. Shelfanger, Diss
Archdale G. :F. 11 St. John's ter. Lynn am, Downham Baker Ernest W. 23 Castle st. Norwich
Archer Rev. George Frederick M.A. The Aylmer Miss, Fincham, Downham Baker Fredcrick Charles, 96 Dereham
Vicarage, Croxton, Thetford Ayre Charles Harris, King street, Lynn road, Norwich
Archer Clement, 3 Fuller's hi. Yarmth Ayris John, Heigham Grove house, St. Baker Henry William, 91 Dereham
Archer Ernest Geo. Feltwell, Bramlon Giles road, Norwich road, Norwich
Archer George, Felt well, Brandon Ayton Chas. R. Church st. \Vymondham Baker John, 57 South town rd.Yarmouth
Archer George, 20 J<'lushing terrace, Back Rev. Hugh Cairns Alex. M . .A. Baker Lewis Wm. 13 Belvoir st.Norwch
Nelson road north, Yarmouth Rectory, Haverland, Norwich Baker Miss, Rose villas, Gladstone road,
Archer John, Grimston, Lynn Hack Rev. Arthur James M.A. The Fakenham
Archer Mrs. 92 King street, Yarmouth Vicarage, Monstead, Norwich Baker Misses. The Grange, Twyford,
ArcherS. 130 Northgates st. Yarmouth Back Alfd. H. Foubham, East Dereham East Dereharn
Archer Thomas G. 9 Portland st. Lynn Back Herbert Hatfield M.H.Lond. Reep- Baker Mitchell, 8 Paget rd. Yarmouth
Archibald William Henry, I Salisbury ham, Norwich Baker Mrs. Mundford R.S.O
road, North Denes, Yarmouth BackJ.A.TheOldhall, Hethersett,Nrwch Baker Sml.W. 20 Regent rd. Yarmouth
Ardron Richard, 1 1 Neville terrace, Back Misses, Church terrace, Aylsham Baker Thomas M. !lolly IIill lodge,
Grove street north, Norwich Back Mrs. Sunnyside, Costessey,Norwch Ditchingham, Bungay
Aris John, 64 Clarendon road, Norwich Back Mrs. Hy. Hethersett hall, Norwich Baker Thos. M. 34 Queen's rd. Yarmth
Armes Mrs. 36 All Saints' green,N orwich Back P. Mile End rd. Eaton, Norwich Baker William, 95 Dereham rd. N orwch
Armes Mrs. Irby lo. Hunstanton R.S.O Back Philip Edward, Curat's house, Baker William Charles, Kelling cottage,
Armitage George William, 6 Brunswick Ilaymarket, Norwich Kelling, Holt R.S.O
New road, Norwich Back William Henry, Wentworth villa, Baker William Gibson, Shrub house,
Armstrong Rev. Renjamin Jolln M.A. Newmarket road, Norwich Holme Hale, Watton
Rectory, Heydon, Norwich Backham Mrs. 31 London road, Lynn Balderson Charles Waiter, Lancaster
ArmstrongMrs.178 Dereham rd.Norwch Bacon Hev. Josiah Newbegin, 58 Earl- terrace, Queen's road, Fakenham
Armstrong Mrs. 10 Park lane, Norwich ham road, Norwich Balding Alfred John Wm. 103 Norwich
Armstrong R. Bacton, North Walsham Bacon Charles, 6 Nelson rd. Yarmouth road, New Walsoken, Wisbech
Armstrong \V. 89 Mill Hill rd. Norwich Bacon Charles William, Rose villa, Balding Miss, 95 London road, Lynn
Arnold Lieut. William Richard R.A. 10 Blofield, Norwich Balding Miss, Pickenham rd. Swaffham
Trafalgar road, Yarmouth Bacon F. M. The Beeches, Attleborough Raldry Robert, 4 Tombland, Norwich
Arnold Rev. Henry James Lawes M.A. Bacon Henry, 4 The Crescent, Chapel- Baldwin Edwin, 19 Park lane, Norwich·
Vicarage, East Dercham field, Norwich Baldwin J. G. 37 Cambridge st.Norwch
,Arnold Frank, 14 Euston road, Yarmth Bacon Horace Henry, Attleborougb Baldwin Mrs. 48 Untbanks rd. Norwich
Arnold Horace Beadon, 8 Clarendon Bacon Jarnes, Attleborough Baldwin Mrs. 8 Valentine st. Norwich
road, Heigham, Norwich Bacon J.E. River bank, Thorpe, Nor_wich Bald win Robert, Victoria road, Diss
Arnold Mrs. 103 Pottergate st. Norwich Bacon Mrs. 8 Oak villas, St. Martin's Baldwin Thomas, \Valcott, Stalham
Arnold Wm. 4 Norfolk sq. Yarmouth road, Norwich Baldwin Wm.Diboll,39Almard.Yarmth
Arnottii. D. Iligh st. Gorleston, Yarmth Bacon Nicholas Henry J.P. Ravening- Bale Isaac, Toftrees, Fakenham
A·rnott Miss, 86 High road, Southtown, ham hall, Norwich Bale Mrs. Quebec road, East Dereham
Yarmouth Bacon Percy Herbert, Attleborough Bale Mrs. S. A. Holly cotta.se, Hether•
.Arnott Mrs. 21 Lowestoft road, Gorles- Bacon Waiter, 53 St. Philip's rd.Norwch sett, Norwich
ton, Yarmouth Bader Charles, Fenhouse, Stoke Ferry Bales George, Sculthorpe rd. Fakenham
Arnott Mrs. 24 Lowestoft road, Gorles- Badger Rev. William Collins M.A. The Bales Jn. Beets, 123 Nelson rd. Yarmth
ton, Yarmouth Rectory, Bressingham, Diss Bales Mrs.Albany rei. South town, Yrmth
Ash Rev. H. C. M.A. Martham, Yarmtb Bagge Sir Alfred Thomas hart. D.J•. ,JP. Bales Thomas, 154 Queen's rd. Norwich
Ashford Mrs. 84 Prince of Wales road, Crimplesham hall, Downham Bales W. E.Gordon rd.Southtwn. Yrmth
Norwich Bagge Miss,8o Prince of Wales rd.Nrwch Ball John, Cliff cot. Gorleston, Yarmth
Ashley James, 28 Railway road, Lynn Bagge The Misses, Mintlyn house, Ballachey Mrs. The Mount, Edgefield,
Ashley Miss, 43 St. Stephen'ssq. N orwch Hunstanton R.S.O Briningham S. 0
Ashley Mrs. 28 Trinity street, South Bagge Thomas Edward M.A., D.L., J.P Hallance Rev. Josiah Descarrieres M.A.
Heigham, Norwich Gaywood hall, Lynn Vicarage,Horsham St.Faith's,Norwch
.Ashley William, Bowden villas, Con- Bagley Jas. 38 Nelson rd.nth. Yarmouth Ballord Thomas, 29 Bracondale, Norwch
naught road, Attleborough Hagley Richard, 34 Botolph st. Norwich Balls Rev. William, Briston, Dereham
Ashton Rev. John W. Terringbm St. Bagnall George, Gorgate hall, Beetley, Balls John, Caister, Yarmouth
Clement, Lynn East Dereham Balls John Edward, I Oxford st.Norwch
Asker George, 26Carnperdown, Yarrnth Bagshaw A. G. 30 Essex st. Norwich Balls Mrs. Manor house, Banningham,
Asker Mrs. 39 Mount Pleasant, Norwich Bagshaw Mrs. 102 Unthanks rd.Norwch Aylsham
Asker Mrs. 37 Newmarket rd. Norwich Bagshaw Robert Ueorge, Brunswick Baly John, 28 Camperdown, Yarmouth
Askew Rev. Edwin, Mount street, Diss house, Newmarket road, Norwich Barn bridge Hy. 27 King st. Yarmouth
Atcheson R. I84 Dereham rd. Norwich Bailey Arthur, The Elms, Yaxham, RambridgeMartin,Greenway la.Faknhm
.Atkiuson Rev. George Barnes M. A. East Dereham Bane Frdk. M. 30 Aylsham rd. Norwich
Swanington, Norwich Bailey Elijah Thomas, 45 Heigham road, Bane Miss, Blofield, Norwich
Atkinson Rev. John Balfour L.Th. The Norwich Bane Mrs. 24 Aylsham road, Norwich
Rectory, Larling, Thetford Bailey Frederic, Hethersett, Norwich Baney Mrs.Sea View ho.Heacham,Lynn
Atkinson Charles, Swanton house, Bailey Frederic Charles, The Grange, Banfather Rev. Edward Henry B.A.
Swanton Novers, Dereham Fnndenhall, Wymondharn Coltishall, Norwich
Atkinson John, New rd.North Walsham Bailey Henry, 5 St. John's terrace, Banger Edgar Henry, 67 Denmark rd.
Atkinson Miss, Hayes lane, Fakenham Lancaster road, Yarmouth Earlham road, Norwich
Atkinson Mrs. 18 West parade, Norwich Bailey Joseph, 7 Havelock rd. Norwich Banham Edward, New hall, Methwold,
Atmore Edward Alfd.2Haylett ter.Lynn Bailey M. J. Christchurch rd. Norwich Stoke Ferry
Atthill Anthony, 29 Bedford street,South Bailey Miss, 2 Brunswick road, Norwich Banham F. J. 4 Newmarket rd.Norwich
Ileigham, Norwich Bailey Mrs. Hethersett, Norwich Ban ham I. G. 70 St.Stephen's rd. Norwich
Attwood Miss, Fermoy house, Apsley Bailey Mrs. IS Thorpe road, Tborpe Banham Joseph John, Lion house,Meth•
road, Yarmouth hamlet, :Yorwich wold, Stoke Ferry
Attwood Wm. Fdk. 42 London rd.Lynn Bailey Waiter John, Manor house, Banham Miss, Dun burgh hill,Geldeston,
Auger Thos. E. Towngrn. Wymondham Morley St. Botolph, Attleborough Beccles
COURT DIRECTORY.) NORFOLK. BEA 731'
Ba.nham Robert, Northfield, Wymondhm Barnard William, St. George's gate, St. Batchelor .Alfred Williams :B.C.L., M. A.
Banks Rev.Samuel JohnSherbrooke M. A. George's road, Yarmouth Clarendon ho. Unthanks rd. Norwich
Surrey house, Surrey road, Norwich Barnby Mrs. 23 Princes rd. Yarmouth Bateley Benjamin, Albany road, South-
Banks Robert, 16 Nelson rd. Yarmouth Barnes Rev. Thomas, Burgh, .Aylsham town, Yarmouth
Banks William, Christchurch lodge, Barnes Alfred, Dunwich villa, Thorpe Bately John M.D. Sydenham house, IIigh
Eaton, Norwich road, Thorpe hamlet, Norwich street, Gorleston, Yarmouth
Banner Thomas, Castle acre, Swafi'ham Barnes Charles, Eagle house, Aylsham Bately Mrs. Cobb's place, North Market
Bansall W. H. M.B. Heydon rd . .Aylsham road, Norwich road, Yarmouth
Barber Rev. Samuel Francis M.A. Rec- Barnes Edward William, 4 Clarence Bately R.G.High st.Gorleston,Yarmouth
tory, West Raynham, Fakenham road, Thorpe hamlet, Norwich Bateman Rev. John Fitzherbert M.A.
Barber Benj. Hy. 88 York st. ~orwich Barnes George, Vauxhall, Yarmouth South Lopham, Thetford
Barber Edward Henry, Thorpe, Norwich Barnes George Casement, Wynford Bateman Alfred H. 37 Wellesley road
Barber John, Bank Top house, St. Mar- house, Wellesley road, Yarmouth north, Yarmouth
tin's road, Norwich Barnes Henry, 43 Hcigham rd. Norwich Bateman Sir Frederic M.D., J.P. Upper
Barber John, Coltishall, Norwich BarnesJas. Denmark ho.Gaywood,Lynn St. Giles street, Norwich
Barber John Geo. Railway rd. Downham Barnes Jn.E.so Mount Pleasant,N orwich Bate man Miss, I<; Brunswick rd.N orwich
Barber Martin ,V. 54 South qy. Yarmth Barncs Samuel, 6 Catton Grove villas, Bateman.Miss,3oSt.Stephen's rd.Norwch
Barber Mrs. 2 Park lane, ~orwich Catton, Norwich Bateman Mrs. 17 Crown road, Yarmouth
Barber Mrs. 58 Unthanks road, Norwich Barnes Walter, 27 Cedar road, Thorpe Bateman Mrs. 63 Unthanks rd. Norwich
Barber Mrs. 143 Unthanks rd. Norwich hamlet, Norwich Rates Cha.s. Bothwell,7o Park la.Norwich
Barber Mrs. 6g York road, Yarmouth Bar nett J oseph,3r Heigham rd. Norwich BatesEdgar,33 Queen's rd. Gt. Yarmouth
Barber Thos. 3 Camperdown, Yarmouth llarnham Geo. Park cot.Griston, Watton Bates F. Mus.noc. Upper close, Norwich
Barber Wm. 52 Crown road, Yarmouth llarratt Gordon, Reedham hall, Reed- Bates Miss, Mostyn ho. Heacham, Lynn
Barber William, 239 High st. Uorleston, ham S.O Bates Miss, The Laurels, Stalham
· Yarmouth Rarrett Rev .Geo. Slatyer B. A. Hracondale, Rates :VI rs. Gresham ho.Rosaryrd. N orwch
Harbour Thos.ss Nelson rd.nth.Yarmth Norwich & Overstrand, Cromer Bates Mrs. Orange farm, Terrington
Barcham Miss, r8 Mt. Pleasant,Norwich Barrett Rev. George Willoughby !r.A. St. Clcmen~, Lynn
Barcham Miss, r6 Newmarket rd.Nrwch Lower close, Norwich Bates Mrs. Thurlow ho. Heacham, Lynn
Barcham Mrs. Brandon house, Strump- Barrett Rev. Henry Alfred M. A. Rectory, Bates Mrs. Westgate house, Burnham
shaw, Norwich Chedgrave, Norwich market, Lynn
Barcham Mrs. 44 North quay, Yarmth Barrett Re\"". Herbert Deedes B.A. The Bath Misses, I3 Broad street, Lynn
Barcham Robert Samuel, Norwich road, Vicarage, Old Hunstanton, Hun- Bath Rd. Os borne ho. Walsoken, Wisbech
North Walsham stanton R.S. 0 Bath Wm.Bradfield,3Blackfriars st. Lynn
Barclay H. G. J.P. Colney hall, Norwich Barrett Chas. J. 3 Hall quay, Yarmouth Batson Rev. Arthur Wellcsley Mus.Hac.
Barclay John Gurney, The Warren & Barrett George, 66 Queen's rd. Norwich Rectory, Great Ringstead, Lynn
Herne close, Cromer BarrettJas. uySouthtown rd. Yarmouth Batterbee Mrs. Eastdale, Gaywood road,
Bardell John, Goodwin's road, Lynn Barrett Joseph Wm. 98 London rd. Lynn Lynn
Bardell Wm. South Everard st. Lynn Barrett Miss, Victona road, Diss Batterbes Edwin, 2 Grove aven.Norwich
Ba.rford Rev. John :::5heldon M. A. Vicarage, Barrett Mrs. Gaywood road, Lynn Batterby Rev. George, Black wall reach,
·Upper Sheringham, Cromer BarrettWilliam,I79 Queen's rd.Norwich Gorleston, Yarmouth
Barker Rev. George Llewellyn 111. A. Barrington Fredk . .Albt. Chapel st. Lynn Batterby John, Butt lands, Wells
· Rectory, Watlington,DownhamMarket BarroR Alfd. 52 South Everard st. Lynn Batterham Alfred, jun. Killingworth,
BarkerRev.Howland Vectis M.A. Vicarage, Barron .Mrs. Market hill, Diss Good win's road, Lynn
City road, New Lakenham, Norwich Barrow Miss, The Laurels, Downham Batterham James, Pentney, Swaffham
Barker Chas.\\'m.64 Trinityst. Norwich Barrowl\1rs.r3RrunswickNewrd.Norwch Batterham Miss, Shipdham, Watton
Barker Edmund., The Lilacs, Horsharn Barrow Mrs. Rectory house, 'facolnes- Batts Rev. Arthur Chas. Upwell, Wisbech
St. Faith's, Norwich ton, Wymondham Bauly Miss, The Terrace, Kenninghall,
Barker George, Albert house, Albert Harry Re\•.DavidThos. B.A.Acle,Norwich Thetford
square, Yarmouth Harry Rev. Robert M.A. Rectory, North Bauly Mrs. The Terrace, Kenninghall,
Barker Hy. Linnell, 4 Paget rd. Yarmth Tuddenham, East Dereham Thetford
Barker Miss, \Vatton BarshamJ n. Brigham,Fincham, Downhm Baumgartner J n. Percy, Eastland house,
Barker Mrs. 19 Blackfriars rd. Yarmth Bartle Miss, Stibbard, Dereham Cliff hill, Gorleston, Yarmouth
Barker Mrs. 20 Queen's road, Yarmouth Bartle William, 8 Ex ton road, Lynn Bavm Benj. The Cottage,Catton,N orwich
Barker Mrs. The Beeches, Blickling Bartlctt Rev. John Edward Parker, Haxter Capt. John Cordy R.E. Swiss
road, .Aylsham Rectory,Barnham Broom,Wymondhm cottage, Ashwicken, Lynn ~
Barker Mrs. The Hall, Wiggenhall St. Bartlett Rev. Thomas Willis Butler, The Baxter George, Crescent house, Chapel-
Germans, Lynn Hermitage, Beetley, East Dereham field, Norwich
Barker W.J.Ivy ldg. Dereham rd.Norwch Hartlett,.Miss,22r Northg-ates st.Yrmouth RaxterHy.Jas. 20 Golden Dog la. Norwich
Barker William, East house, vVatton Hart on Rev . .Alfred John B. A. Rectory, Baxter James, Pulharn St. Mary the
Barker William, 24 Sussex st. Norwich Strumpshaw, Norwich Vu gin, Harleston
Barker Wm. Jas. 1:30 \Vater loo rd.Nrwch Barton Rev. J. Yarker, 44 Bishopsgate HaxterMiss, r Baxter et. King st.N orwich
Barker William Staff, Lichfield road, street, Norwich Baxter Mrs. Jas. 24 Magdalen st. Norwich
South town, Yarmouth Ba.rton L. Commercial rd. East Dereha.m 1
BaxterMrs. TheLimes, Walsoken, ·wisbec:h
Barkham Thomas Hall, Sunnyside, Barton :\Iiss, Sunnyside, Watton Hay L. H. School house, Wymondham
Hunstanton R. S.O Barton SI. J. M.D. 34 Surrey st. Norwich Bayes Frederick William Hart, High
Barkley Mrs. The Lodge, Hetbersett, Barton Thos.Allday,Threxton ho. Watton street, Walsingham R.S.O
Norwich BartonWalt.er.M.Guildhall,EastDereham Bayes Mrs. Scarning, East Dereham
Barlee Rev. William M. A. Cringleford Bar tram Cha.s. Wm.Magdalen st. Thetfrd Ha yes Wilham, 22 Trinity st. Norwich
hall, Norwich Bartram Mrs. Happisburgh, Stalham Hayfield 'l'hos. G. 44 Bracondale,N orwich
Barley Edmund J. Hcmpton, Fakcnham Barwcll Henry G. 33 Surrey st. Norwich Hayfield W. 185 Up. Queen's rd.Norwich
Barnaby Wm. Hy.r7 York rd. Yarmouth Barwell John, St. Catherin3 close, Upper llayles Mrs. rr4 Trinity street, South
Barnard Alfred George, 36 Thorpe road, Surrey street, Norwich Heigham, Norwich ·
Thorpe hamlet, Norwich Barwell Mis5, Surrey street, Norwtch Baylis Frederick, 19 Clarence road,
Barnard B. .Al ban y rd. South town,Y rmth Bar wick Miss, 2 sCam perdown, Yarmouth Thorpe hamlet, Norwich
Barnard Daniel, I I Broad street, Lynn HarwoodBenj.Mlll ho.Horstead,Norwich Baynard F. Up. Norwich rd. E.Dereham
BarnardG.Saxlingham ldg.LongStrattn Harwood Fredk. 7 All Saints' st. Lynn RaynP.s Walter,233 Dereham rd.Norwch
Barnard GeorgeSydney,St.John's villas, Basden Rev. Frederick Sherrard, The Beales F. Ravenhoe,Bracondale,Norwich
Park lane, Norwich Manse, Denton, Harlcsron Beales Mooro William, Olive house,
Earnard Ueorge W.G.Saxlingham lodge, llasham Mrs. Northwold, Stoke Ferry Martham, Yarmoutll
Long Stratton Bassett J sph. Martin, 9 Railway rd. Lynn Beales S. sen. North Lopham, Thetford
Barnard Godfrey,The Cedars,.Albemarle Bassham Henn, Weybread ho.Fakenham Beales Thoma-8, 73 Norwicll road, New
road, Norwich Bassham Luke, Wolferton, Lynn 'Valsoken, Wisbech
Barnard James LawrenceNesbitt,Heath- Bassingthwaighte George, 41 Dereham BeaU Rev. John s.J. Presbytery, Regent
side, Thorpe hamlet, Norwich road, Norwich road, Yarmouth
liarnard John, Bunwell, .Attleborough Bassingthwaighte William, 6 Bedford Bean Jsph. Aylsham rd.North Walsham
Barnard Mark, Lichtield road, South- Cross street, South Heigham, Norwich Beane Jas. 3 Somerleyton rd. Norwich
town, Yarmouth Rassingthwaighte William Weston, I6 Bear James, ro South Everard st. Lynn
Barnard The Misses, 33 Prince of Wales Denmark road, Earlham rd. Norwich Bearcroft Rev. Edward Charles King
road, Norwich Batcheldcr Miss, 29 St. Stephen's road, LL.n. Felmingham, North Walsham
Barnard Miss, Park ho.Snettisham,Lynn Norwich Beard G. A. W. 68 'l'horpe rd. Norwich
Barnard Mrs. 36 Queen's road, Norwich Batchelor Rev. Robert Twiddy, Vicarage, Beard Mrs.II & 13 Heigham rd.Norwch
Barnard Wm. IO'J Trinity st. Norwich Brooke, Norwich Heare Philip, Wells road, Fakenham
'l38 BEA NORFOLK. (KELLY's
Eoore Albert Prater, Grove road, Bell Thos. Hy. 9 Cambridge st.Norwich Beverley Bamabas, Ellingha.m, Bunga.y
Thorpe hamlet, Norwich Bellamy Rev. Hugh M. A. 13 Enston Beverley Michael M.D. Overst.rand cot-
Beare Sml. P, The Oaks,Thorpe,Norwch road, Yarmouth tage, Overst.rand, Cromer
Bea.rt Charles, White house, Railway Bellamy Rev. James D.D. Manor house, BeverleyM.s4PrinceofWalesrd.Norwich
road, Downham Ingoldisthorpe, Lynn Beville -'1ajor-General Henry c. B. Bur-
Beart Mrs. Hig-h street, Down ham Bellamy Chas.S. II7 King st. Yarmouth field hall, Wymondham
Beart Waiter J ames,48 London rd. Lynn Bellamy F. S. 5 Havelock rd. Yarmouth Bexfield Thos. Jas. Thurlton, Norwich
Beatley John Parker, Homefields,Christ- Bellamy H. 68 St. Peter's rd. Yarmouth Bezant Mrs. 70 York road, Yarmouth
church road, Norwich Bellin Percy B. 3 Trafalgar rd. Yarmth Bibbey T. 68 Mountergate st. Norwich
Beatley Joseph, 36 Grove st. we.Norwch Bellman Capt. :t'rederick Harvey, Ends- Bichard Rev. John Gallienne, The Vicar-
Beatley Mrs. 2 Clarence road, Thorpe leigh house, Grove street, Norwich age, Surlingham, Norwich
hamlet, Norwich Bellman Rev. Augustus Frcderic B.A. Bickers W. 22 St.George'srd.Yarmouth
lleaty Georg••, Market street, Lynn Vicarage, Moulton, Norwich Biddlecombe Henry, 82 Beccles road,
Beauchamp Rev. Robert William M. A., Bellman .Mrs. 5 Victoria terrace, Southtown, Yarmouth
J.P. Rectory, Wickmere, Norwich Vicarage road, Cromer Biddulph Rev. Godfrey John M.A. West
Beaumont Miss, Loddon, Norwich Beloe Edward Milhgen, Paradise, Lyna Newton, Lynn
Be bee Edwin, 14 Cat ton Grove villas, Beloe:\irs. 1 Stuart ter.HunstantonR.S.O Bidewell Rev. G. J. Bodham, Holt R.S.O
Catton, Norwich Belson Richard Durrant, a St. Mark's Bidewell Wilham, Cromerrd.HoltR.S.O
Bebee Thomas W. Belle Vue house, Cliff ter. City rd. New Lakenham,Nurwich Bidwell T. B. Trunch, North Walsham
hill, Gorleston, Yarmouth Bel ton Samuel, Ongar hill, Terrington Bid well Thomas S. Ford street, Thetford
Bee her Captain Andrew C. The Cedars, St. Clement, Lynn Bid well William Henry, 12 Thorpe :-oad,
Thorperd. Thorpe hamlet, Norwich Benest Rev. John William R.A. Little Thorpe hamlet, Norwich
Beck Rev. Harry E. Harpley, Swaffham Cressingham, Watton S.O , Bignold Lt.-Col. Chas. Ed wardn.L., J.P.
Beck C. Smedley, 9 Grove rd. we.Nrwch Benest James Smyth A.M.I.C.E. Grove~ Harford lodge, Ipswich road, Norwich
Beck Edwd. Wm. 4 Chester pi. Norwich house, Newmarket road, Norwich Bignold Charles Arthur Bathurst D.L.,
Beck George Morris J.P. Ormesby lodge, Bennell Wm. M. x6 Whitefriars rd.Lynn J.P.Heymerston lo.St.Giles rd.Norwch
Ormesby St. Margaret, Yarmouth Rennet Chas. H. Garboldisham,Thetford' Bignold Edward S. Lady's la. Norwich
Beck Horace, Harpley, Swaffham Bennet Philip George Harrison, The Bignold Misses, Stanley house, Surrey
Beck Miss, 87 Norfolk street, Lynn Hall, Blo' Norton, Thetford street, Norwich
Beck Mrs. Lime Tree road, Norwich Bennett Col. Adrian, The Grange, Pul- Billham :\'lrs. 2 South Market rd. Yarmth
Beck Mrs. Mill hom:e,Castle Rising,Lynn ham St. Mary the Virgin, Harleston Billing Thomas, Burnham market, Lynn
Beck Philip, 4 Breakwater terrace, Bennett Rev. Henry, Sea view cott.ages, Billup Joshua, 47 York road, Yarmouth
Gorleston, Yarmouth Freeman street, Wells Bilshorough Thoma.~, St. Clement's hill,
Beckett Rev. William Thomas M.A. Bennett Rev. Julian Levett, High street, New Catton, Norwich
Ingoldisthorpe, Lynn Foulsham, East Dereham Bingant Rev. Charles, Fern villa, Bex.-
Beckett Joseph, Ivy house, Tilney St. Bennett Austin, 88 Park lane, Norwich well road, Downham
. Lawrence, Lynn Bennett Henry, 8o Ro~e lane, Norwich BinghamRev.C.R.M.A.Litcharn,Swaffhm
Beckett William, 55 Nelson street, North Rennett Jn. Lee, Station vi I. Down ham Birch Rev. Charles George Robert LL.M.
Heigham, Norwich Bennett Jn.Ruse,Mnt.Pleasant,Downhm Rectory, Brancaster, Lynn
Beckinton Miss, 5 Guanock pl. Lynn Bennett Mrs. ro Newmarket rd.Norwich Birch Rev. Francis Charles n.A. Rectory,
Beddows Joseph, Lamb cottage, Nor- Bennett Mrs. Union terrac.e, Downham Wilby, Attleborough
wich road, Thetford Bennett Waltr. I 2 Brunswick rd.N IJrwich Birch Albert Ed ward Henry, Watlington
Bedinfeld Henry E. Caldecote,Swaffh m Bennington Arthur George, 9 Carrow hall, Watlington, Downham Market
Bedingham Wm. Goodwin's rd. Lynn road, Thorpe Hamlet, Norwich Birch Henry, 15 Essex street, Norwich
Beebee Rev. Geo. 16 Portland st. Lynn Banns Samuel H. 22 King st. Yarmouth Birch Miss, Avenue road, Norwich
Beecheno Charles Jas. Alexandra man- Bensley Mrs. Brewery ho.Sutton,Stalhm Birch Mrs. 40 Bethel street, Norwich
sions, Prince of Wales' road, Norwich Bensley Mrs. Pleasant place, Wells Birch Mrs. 3 Bracondale, Norwich
Beecheno Frederick Rutter, 17 Cedar Bensley Wm. II3 Unthanks rd. Norwich Birch Mrs. Watlington hall, Downham
road, Thorpe hamlet, Norwich BenslyW.T.LL.D.Newmarketrd Norwch Bircharn Merrick B. Choseley, Lynn
Beecher F. The Grange, Thelveton, Scale Benson Harry Wilson, High home, Great Bircham Samuel 1. P. Moor house, Reep-
Heechey Rev. Canon St. Vincent M.A. .Fransham, East Dereham ham, Norwich
Rectory, Hilgay, Downham Benstead E. Burnham Thorpe, Lynn Bird Rev. Godfrey J. Illington, Thetford
Beaching Frank, Sonthgates rd. Yarmth Benstead John, Stratton St. Michael, Bird Arthur, Bridge street, Dowhham
Beeehing Harry,sr Apsley rd. Yarmouth Long Stratton Bird Frederwk, Bridge street, Downham
Beeching .Mrs. 5 Derby cottages, Nelson Bernasconi Paul, Colegate st. Norwich Bird G. The Hall,EastBeckham,Dereham
road, Yarmouth Berney Rev. Thomas M.A. Bracon Ash,BirdG.H.Ipswichlo.Ipswichrd.:Norwich
Beaching Samuel, 38 Nelson. road south, hall, Bracon ash, Norwich Btrd Jacob Mason, Eagle house, Bridge
Great Yarmouth Berney Mrs. The Hall, Morton-on-the- street, Downham
BeechingThos. 22 Queen's rd. Yarmouth Hill, Norwich Bird J. r St. Giles ter. Bethel st.Norwich
Beecroft Saml.Nar ho. Wisbech rd.Lynn Berry William (Sergt.-.Major B.B.), 227 Bird J. Watlington ho. Downham Market
Beer Alfred, Theatre st. East Dereham Dereham road, Norwich Bird The Misses, 13 Victoria st. Norwich
Bees ton E. Friarscroft ho. Wymondham Berry A.J. LimeTree cot. Thorpe,N orwich Bird .Mrs. 2 The Chase, Lynn
Beet Mrs. Dereham road, Watton Berry Edward, r68 Dereham rd.Norwich Bird Mrs. 78 St. Stephen's rd. Norwich
Beevor Rev. John Hare B.A. Heving- Berry Mrs. 35 Victoria street, :Norwich BirdRichd.OldBuckenham,Attleborough
ham, Norwich Berry Samuel Neave, 17 Denmark road, Bird W. E. jun. Up. Surrey st. Norwich
Beevor A. J. 21 Southtown rd. Yarmtb Earlham road, Norwich Birkbeck Sir Edward bart. D.L. 1 J.P.
Beevor Walter, 7 Caister rd. Yarmouth Berry Thomas, Elvin rd. East Dereham Horstead hall, Norwich; & 10Charles
BelchamMiss, Commercial rd. E. Derehm Berry W .H. The Yilla,Kenninghll. Thetfrd street, Berkeley square w & Carlton
Belding D. T. South Creake, Fakenham Bertie Hon. Charles Claude, The Hall, & Marlborough clubs, London s w
Belding Herbert William Robert, Point Bawburgh, Norwich Birkbeck Edward Lewis, Old hall, Caistor
house, New Catton, Norwich Bessey James G. Acle, Norwich St. Edmund, Norwich
Belding Mrs. 12 Denmark road, Earl- Bessey Miss, Stradbroke road, Gorles-' Birkbeck Henry, The Grove, Cromer
ham road, Norwich ton, Yarmouth Birkbeck Henry J.P. Stoke hall, Stoke
Belemore Alfred John, Oak lodge, Bessey W. H. 49 Marine par. Yarmouth Holy cross, Norwich
Thorpe road, Norwich Best Herhert, Fulham house, St. Leo-' Birkheck Henry, jun. Keswick Old hall,
1

Bell Rev, John Stormont M. A. Northum- nard's road, Thorpe Hamlet, Norwich I Keswick, Norwich
berland ho. Unthank road, Norwich Bettinson George Young, Norfolk villa, IBirkbeck Wm. Cliff Lane cot. Cromer
Bell Albert, 7 Connaught road, Norwich Goodwin's road, Lynn Birkbeck William J.P. Thorpe High
Bell Ambrose W. 53 Botolph st.Norwch Betton Rev. Edward A.ugustus Bright, house, Thorpe, Norwich
Bell Ambrose Winter, Catton, Norwich M.A. Narborough, Swaffham Birrell Augustine H.A., M.P. Lower Sher-
Bell George, 13 Caernarvon rd. Norwich Betts Rev, Robert, Acle, Norwich ingham, Cromer; & 30 Lower Sloane
Bell Jas. Albert ho. Caister rd. Yarmth Betts Edward, Moulton St. Miehael, streets w & 3 New sq. London w c
Bell John, Lynn road, Downham ,......, Long Stratton Bishop Rev.E.B.A.Rectory,Cley,Derehm
Bell Miss, 9 Elvin ter. East Dereham Betts Ernest A.rthr. Princes st. Norwich Bishop Rev. Everett James M.A.
Bell Miss, r63 Nelson road, Yarmouth Betts Geo. Northfield ho. Wymondham Tivetshall St. Margaret, Scole
Bell Mrs. Great Ryburgh, Fakenharn··, BettsG.x6TheCrescent,Chapelfld.Nrwch Bishop Rev. George William, Randalls
Bell Mrs. 186 Northgates st. Yarmouth Betts James, Watton road, Swaffham buildings, Cley, Dereham
Bell Rt. Anson rd.Southtown, Yarmouth Betts Jn. S. 12 Connaught rd. Norwich Bishop Albert, 43 Railway road, Lynn
Bell Samuel John, Hargham hall, Harg- Betts Mrs. Hall farm, Salhou~e. Norwich Bishop Arthur J. 88 Regent rd. Yarmouth
ham, Attleborough Betts Mrs. 23 Mill Hill road, Norwich Bishop Jas. E.30 Cattle market, Norwich
Bell Vincent, 2 Derby cottages, Nelson Betts Mrs. John, The Cottage, Moulton Bishop George William, Guy's cliff,
road, Yarmouth St. Michael, Long Stratton Gaywood
. roa.d, Lynn
COURT DIRECTORY.] ~NORFOLK. DRA
-
739
Eishop J. J. Kirdi!'lton, Norwich BlythErnest Egbert Lr•• B. Clarence road, Bootman Chas. Ivy ho. The ChaSA, Lynn
Eishop Mrs. 27 St.Nicholas rd. Yarmouth Thorpe Ham let, Norwich Uooty J<'redk.Hy. 31 St. Giles rd.N orwich
Bishop Robert, 23 Railway road, Lynn BlythHenry,I8&19Rcgentrd.Ya.rmouth Booty Horace John, 149 Thorpe road,
_Black Rev. Alured Elliot M.A. The Hlyth Jabez James,32Trinity st.Norwich Thorpe hamlet, Norwich ·
Vicarage, Buxton, Norwich Blyth JosiahT.21 Earlham road, Norwich BootyRbt.T.Norwich rd.NorthWalsham
:Bla.ckl\'lr!'l.Church house,Heacham,Lynn Blyth Misses,59 Unthanks road,Norwich Borrett Arthur, Button, Stalham
Blackie Mrs. Blackfriars road, Lynn Blyth Mrs. 87 Regent road, Yarmouth Borrett Jn. Old hall, Ingham, Stalha.m
Black lock Mrs. 26 South Everard st. Lynn Hlyth Mrs. L. P. Victoria street, Norwich Borrett J n. The Hall, Hickling, Stalham
iB!ackwoodJohn,6Chapelfield rd. Norwich Blyth Robert,Holme-next-the-Sea,Lynn Horrett The Misses, Church lane, Necton,
BladesArthur,WhiteHartstreet,Aylsham HlythThomas,27Victoria street,N orwich Swaffham
.Blagg Harry A. 18 Prince's rd.Yarmonth HlythWm.Anson rd.Southtown,Yarmth Borrett Robert, Pulham St. Mary ;I\'Iag-
BlaggMrs.62Hig-h rd.Southtn. Yarmouth HlythWilliam,72Rodney ruad,Yarmouth dalen, Harleston
JJlake Rev. Warrenne James, The BlythWilliam,I32Southtown rd.Yarmth Bosanquet Rev. Reginald Albert B.A.
Vicarage, Easton, Norwich HlythWilliam,4o[]nthanks road,Norwch Shmgham, Swaffham
.IHake A.W.254Southtown rd.Yarmouth BlythWm.Thos.r83 Queen's rd.Norwich Boston George, 17 Victoria st. Norwich
.Rlake Chas.C.88 St. George's rd. Yarmth Board man Edward F.R. I. B.A. Oak house, Boston William, Devonshire house •
.Blake Ernest Bright-in, 33 Southtown Newmarket road, Norwich A1bemarle road, Norwich
road, South town, Yarmouth Board manEd wd. Thos. Queen st. Norwich Boston Wm. Hy. 142 Queen's rd.N orwich
.Blake Garson Henry Lovewell,The Elms, HoardmanJ.T.32Newmarket rd.Norwch HoswellJ.C.PineDell,Ipswich rd.Norwch
Ormesby St. Margaret, Yarmouth Bobby Alfred, Mount street, Diss Boswell James F Upper close, Norwich
BlakeGarson J.37Sonth quay, Yarmouth Bobby James, Brunswick house, Diss Boswell Mrs. 26 Grove road, Norwich
Hlake Henry M.B.25 South quay, Yarmth Bobby Samuel, Victoria road, Diss Boswell Sml. North Ea ton farm,Norwich
Blake Hy. The Ha.ll,Bramerton,Norwich Bobby William, Victoria road, Diss Bosworth Rev. William Th.A.K.C.L.
Elake Lovewell J.P. The Elms, Ormesby Bocock Rev. Enock [Primitive], White Rectory, Beeston Regis, Cromer
St. Margaret, Yarmouth Hart street, East Harling, Thetford BottleJ.T.33Wellesleyrd.nth.Yarmouth
.Hlake Miss, The Hall, Bramerton,N orwich Boddington Rev. Thomas Francis M. A. Bouch Agrippa F. 2 Black friars rd. Lynn
Blake Mrs. 3 Heigham road, Norwich Salhouse, Norwich Bouchier-,TheHall,Gt.Plumstd~orwch
Blake )lrs.G.63Southtown rd. Yarmouth Bodington Rev. Herbert Jamcs M.A. Boughen Hugh, 124 Queen's rd. Norwich
lllake Hobert, 21 Bracondale, Norwich Vicarage, Ea. Tuduenham,Ea. Derehm Houghen Smith, 29 Park lane, Norwich
IUake Robert Wiffen, North Walsham Bodley Rev. William Hamilton M.A. BougbtonS.TheCabin,Sth.beach,Yarmth
road, Sprowston, Norwich Ox borough, Stoke Ferry Boulderson Arthnr,Beeston Hall, Beeston
BlakeW. 2 7St. Andrw's. Broad st.N orwch Boileau Sir Franc is George Manningham St. Lawrence, Norwich
Blake-HumphreyMrs.TheClose,Norwich hart. B.A., D.L., J.P. Ketteringham Boulding Edward, 53 Railway rd. Lynn
BlakeleySI.Heacbam ho.Heacham,Lynn park, '\\'ymondham Houlger Francis, Dereham rd. Norwich
Blakelock Rev. Clement Ogle M. A. Boileau Col. George Wilson D.L., J.P., Boult Mrs. 3 Princes road, Yarmouth
Shelfanger, Diss F.R.G.S., F.R.z.s. Catton, Norwich Ronlt Rht. The Hall, Whitwell, Norwich
.BlanchflowerJohn,3rVictoria rd. Yarmth Boileau Maurice Col borne J .P. Kettering- Boulter Robert, Ha yes lane, Fakenham
;Blanchtlower TimothyColcman, Welling- ham hall, Wymondham Boulter Miss, 82 Chapelfield rd. Xorwich
tonia villa,Mundesley rd.Nth. Walshm Bokenha.mJn. W.B llavelock rd.Norwich Boulter Miss, 19 Crown road, Yarmouth
,Bland Mrs. Row 57, Yarmouth Balding William Johnson Jennis, Boulton Fk.W.41 Grove st.west,Norwich
Eland T. Warborough ho. Stiffkey,Wells Wahourne, Holt RS.O Bonlton Rohert, Dilham, Norwich
BlandunMisses,I9Brnnswick rd.N orwich Bolinbruke Mrs. N. 6 Grove avenue, St. Boulton Wm.A.35St.Philip's rd.N orwich
Blathwyte Mrs. The Holmc, Hunstanton Step hen's road, Norwich BourchierC. E. ThcHall,Felthrpe.N orwch
RS. 0 , Bolingbroke Angustus Frederick Coke, Bourchier Mrs. James, The Hall, Fel-
__Blazeby HenryE.23Earlham rd.Norwich The Beaches, St. Giles road, Norwich thorpe, Norwich
lnazebyH.Henry,23Earlham rd.Nox-wich Bolingbroke Horace Charles, The Gables, Bonttell Thos.Bacton rd.North Walsham
Blencowe Rev. Edward Everard B.A. Christchurch road, Eaton, Norwich Bowden Mrs. 84 Thorpe road, Thorpe
Stow Bardolph, Downham BolingbrokeLeonardG.TheClose,Norwch hamlet, Norwich
Blencowe Misses, Nelson street, Lynn Holing broke Louis Errington, Surrey Howen Mrs. 30 Friars street, Lynn
JUewitt The Misses, S wardeston,N orwich court, Surrey street, Norwich Bowen Samuel, 77 Regent rd. Yarmouth
Blick Miss, Mountain Ash villa, London Bolingbroke Mrs. The Cove, Christ- HowerRev.M.M.A. 114Queen's rd. Norwch
road, East Dereham church road, Norwich Bower Chas.Jn.9 St. Philip'srd.Norwich
Blight William Lyne M.D. Hill house, Bolingbroke Mrs. Southfield, New- Bower Jas. G. II St.Martin's la.Norwich
Denmark street, Diss market road, Norwich Bower James Garton, jun. Earlham
lnissC.R.Linton ho.Apsley rd.Yarmouth Bolton Mrs. 13 Thorpe road, Thorpe house, Earlhatn road, Norwich
Bliz7.ard Charles, Blo' Norton, 'l'hetford haml~t, Norwich Bower Rt. E. 115 Dereham rd. Norwich
Eloreld Rev. Robert Singleton :M. A., J. P. Bolton Walt.H. J. P. Oulton hall,Aylsham Bower Wm.J. T.East Rudham,Swaffham
Vicarag-e,Ormcsby St.Margrt.Yarmth BoltonW.H.C.late R.A.East\Vinch,Lynn Bowcs Geo. 5 Camperdown, Yarmouth
Blofeld Worshipful Thomas Calthorpe B,ond Rev. William Heddon, 99 Norwich Bow hill 0. H.34 Grove st.north,Norwich
M. A., J.P. Hoveton house, Norwich road, New Walsoken, Wisbech Bowhill Thomas, Hill House road,
BlotieldWm. Watling,Alburgh.Harleston Bond C. Rec::cles rd_ Gorleston, Yarmouth Thorpe hamlet, Norwich
Hlomefield Rev. Samuel Edward B.A. Bond Charles, 45 Victoria rd. Yarmouth Bowhill Walt. 4 Lakenham ter. Norwich
Rectory, Burn ham Sutton, Lynn Bond C. F. TheElms,Mt.Pleasant,N orwch BowlcrFk.E.Flordon cot.ReedhamR. S. 0
Blomfield Alfred, South Wootton, Lynn Bond E.W.5 Brunswick Newrd.Norwich Rowles Frederick, Swan st. I•'akenham
lUomfield Bernard William, Beech- Bond Fred Arthnr, 46 York st. Norwich Bowles Mrs. 27 Heigham road, Norwich
wood, Watton Bond Fk. Wlt. 1 Church plain 1 Yarmouth Bowles Hoger, Rank house, Church
.Blomfield Lewis, Surrey cottage, South- Bond Geo. 31 Southtown rd. Yarmouth st. & Prospect villa, Hall rd. Cromer
town road, Yarmouth Bond Grcgory, Thurlton, Norwich Bowlcs Thos. 86 Havelock rd. Yarmouth
__Blomfield Mrs. Park road, East Dereham Bond 'Harry, 56 Southtown rd.Yarmouth Bowsher Wm. H. St. James' rd. Lynn
..Blomfield Mrs. II9 Wellesley rd. Yarmth HondJ.Rank house, Hall quay, Yarmouth Uowyer Mrs. s Victoria street, Norwich
Bloom Alfred George, 19 Providence Bond Mrs. The Hall, Pulham St. Mary Boxhall Thomas, Sheringham, Cromer
place, Russell road, Yarmouth the Virgin, Harleston Boyce Rev. \Vlt.B.A. St. James' st. Lynn
.BloomMrs.TheGro.Ca.stleacre,Swaffhm Bond Samuel,65 Pottergate st. Norwich Boyce Henry, Narborough, Swaffham
Bloom Mrs. Watton road, Swaffham Bond William, The Shrubland~, Hoyce Jn. The Grange, Catton, Norwich
:Blower Mrs. Ashill, Watton Heigham road, Norwic::h Boycott Rev. William Douglas B.A,
.Bloxham Alfred, Goodwin's road, Lynn Bond-CabbellMrs.Benj.TheHall,Cromer Rectory, Burgh St. Peter, Beccles
Bloy Thomas, Sprowston, Norwich llond-CabbellMrs..J.Cromer Hall,Cromer Boyd Rev. Sidney Adolphm M.A., B.C.L.
£lundertield .Mrs. Cawston, Norwich Hone Jas. Manor ho. A.lborough, Norwich St.Giles'vicarge. Untbanks rd. Norwch
.Blunderfield Mrs. 7 Denmark road, Bone John, 33 :Pene side, Yarmouth Boyden Jas. W.5 Bath Hill ter Yarmouth
Earlham Toad, Norwich Bone John, White house, Aylsham road, Boyer John, 16 Coronation square, Lynn
lUundertield Wm.Ellis,Loddon,Norwich Upper Hellcsdon, Norwich BoyesFrnk.Oakwood ho.Tottenhill,Lynn
Blunt Rev. Henry Wilfrid M.A. Bridg- Hone Mrs. 31 York road, Yal'!uouth Boyton Chas.'l'.42Mnt.Pleasant.Norwich
ham, Thetford Bonfellow E. J.21 Wellington rd.Yannth Bozier Hy.H. 147 So~thtown rd. Yarmth
Blunt Rev. William Russell n.A. Bonrellow Herbt. 44 Crown rd. Yarmouth Braccy Chas. IOJ Havelock rd. Yarmouth
·wormegay, Lynn Banner Hy. C. East Rudham, Swaffham Bracey Geo. 105 Havelock rd.Yarmouth
Ely C. E. 86Heccles rd.Southtwn. Yarmth BonneyMrs. 192High st. Gorlstn. Yarmth Bracey Herbt.Jn.56 South quay, Yarmth
Ely Jn.Hy.Ferryfarm, Vanxhall,Yarmth BonneyMrs.79'Nelson l'd.Gorlstn.Yarmth Bracey Misses, 8 Stradbroke road.
Blyth Rev. Alan Gwyn M . .&.. St. Philip's Booming Mrs. 13 Wellesley rd. Yarmouth Gorleston, Yarmouth
vicarage, Heigham :road, Norwich BoonMrs.C.Walpole St.Andrew, Wisbech Hracey R. 28 Nelson rd.sonth, Yafmonth
.Biyth Rev. Phillip W. Rockland .St. Booth Mrs. Helhonghton, Fakenham BradbeerMi!'s,272Southtown rd.Yarmth
Mary, Norwich Booth Mrs. Outwell, Wtsbech Bradbury George, 94 High road, South•
lUyth CharlesH.Day,32London rd.Lyno Booth Nathan, Nordelpb, Downham town, Yarmouth "
7
.740 BRA NORFOLK; [KELLY S

Braddock Daniel, Martham, Yarmouth Britton Chas. J. 7 Whitefriars rd. Lynn Browne Rev. Edward Utten, Vicarage,
Bradfield Henry, Gaywood villa, Gay- Broadbent Alfred, Denmark street, Diss Besthorpe, Attleborough
wood road, Lynn Broadhurst Henry J.P. Trent cottage, BrowneRev.W. E.WestWalton,Wishecit
1lradfield Mrs. Glaisdale lodge, Hun- Cromer; & 4 Elm gardens, Brook Hrowne-, College rd. Unthnks. rd.Nrwh
stanton R.S.O green w & 19 Buckingham street w c Browne AlbertRichd.Gordon rd. Yarmth
Bradrleld Robert, Gaywood villa, Gay- & Reform & National Liberal clubs BrowneChas.27Prince ofWales rd.Nrwch
wood road, Lynn Brock Mrs. 36 Kimberley st. Norwich Browne Edward, The Rookery,Funden-
Bradfield Robt. Yaxham, East Dereham Brock Oliver, 4 Wildernesster. Harlestn hall, Wymondham
Bradley Thos. 89 North quay, Yannouth BrockRobt. Park frm. Hempnall,N orwich BrowneFrederick Waiter, Loddon, Nrwch
Bradshaw Rev. Charles James, South- Brock Wm. 7 Somerleyton st. Norwich Browne George,x6Essexstreet,Norwich.
bergh, Watton BrockWm.Edwd.Redenhall rd.Harlestn Browne Henry, 114 Dereham rd.Nrwch
BradshawArthr.C.ssRegentrd.Yannth Brockbank Joseph Henry (master of Browne llenry,x2oDerehamrd.Norwch.
Bradshaw F. 13 Wellington rd. Yarmth the Dean & Chapter's choristers' BrowneJames,Albion pl.Grimston,Lynn.
Bradshaw Mrs. 31 Queen's rd. Yarmouth school), Bishop's Bridge rd. Norwich Hrowne John Frederick, 19 Thorpe
BradshawMrs.WestSomerton,Yarmouth BrodieFrdk.CardenM.B.Oak st.Fakenhm road, Thorpe hamlet, Norwich
Brady Mrs. 150 Queen's road, Norwich Broke Rev. G.M.A.TheDale,EastUerehm Brownc Jn. G. 66 St.Philip's rd.Norwcb.
Braikenridge George John, Manor cot- Brook Thos. V. 26 Victoria st. Norwich BrowneJohnRd.35Cambridge st.Nrwich.
tage, Winterton, Yarmouth Brooke Melancthon W. H. L. Attleboro' Browne Miles, 'Vestview, Rosary road,.
Brain Robt. T. 4 Euston rd. Yarmouth Brooke Miss, High st.WalsinghamR.S.O Thorpe hamlet, Norwich
Braith waite Rev. Arthur, Fersfield, Diss Brooks Edward, Bunwell, Attleborough Browne Miss,Cromer rd.NorthWalsham
BramwellDanl. K. 39 Grove rd.Norwich Brooks George, Avenue road, Norwich Browne Miss, 46 Queen's road, Norwich
Branch Joseph, River view, St. Martin's Brooks Mrs. Lower close, Norwich Urowne Mrs. Urooksbank cottage,
road, Norwich Brooks Thomas, 62 Unthanks road Salhouse, Norwich
BranchMiss,TheCot.London rd.Harlestn Broom Mrs. 4 Grove avenue, St. Ste- Browne Mrs.Hill ho.Hethersett,Norwich.
Branch Miss, Gordon road, South town, phen's road, Norwich Browne Mrs. Manor house, The Plain,.
Yarmouth Broom Robert,.J~:;ssamine cottage, Plum- Gorleston, Yarmouth
Branch Mrs. 38 Trinity street, Norwich stead road, Norwich Browne Mrs. Sunrise cottage, Marine·
Branch Wm. 23 Nelson rd. nth.Yarmth Broscomb Jas. Hy.13 Groverd.Norwich parade, Yarmouth
Brand E. Albany rd. Southtwn. Yarmouth Broughton Ed win J n. Broad st. Harlstn Browne Mrs. Robert, 8 Crown rd. Yarmth'
Brand Hy. H. 54 Marine parade, Yarmth Broughton William, Alby, Norwich Browne Mrs. W. London road, Harlestn
Brandreth Rev. Henry M.A., J.P. Rec- BrownRev.Arthur B.A.Catfield,Stalham Browne Richard Charles J.P. Hall farm,.
tory, Dickleburgh, Scale Brown Rev. Henry M.A. Rectory, Elsing, East Dereham
Branford Miss, Flordon house, Un- Stratton St. Mary, Long Stratton BrowneR.234Highst. Gorleston,Yrmth
thanks road, Norwich Brown Rev. James Landy M.A. Chapel- Browne Thomas M.D., R.N. Royal Naval:
Brasnett Chas. 47 Regent rd. Yarmouth field grove, Norwich hospital, Queen's road, Yarmouth
Brasnett Miss, 'Vatton Brown Rev. Stafford Meredith, Horsey- BrowneThos.Henry,68Bethclst.Norwich·
Brasnett Mrs. Hingham, Attleborough next-the-Sea, Yarmouth Browne ·waiter F gHeigham rd.Norwic!l!
Brasnett Thomas John, West house, Brown Rev. William Henry M.A. Ree- Browne William John Utten J.P •.
Saham Toney, Watton tory, Oxborough, Stoke Ferry Heigham grove, Norwich
Brattrick Mrs. Thornage, Dereham Brown Charles John, x Maud street, Bruce William, Blickling road, Aylsham.
Hrazell D. Lichfid.rd.Southtwn. Yarmth North Heigham, Norwich Brumell Rev. Charles M.A. Rectory,.
Bream William, go Sussex st. Norwich Brown Charles N. 6 '\\'estbourne ter- Sharrington, Dereham
Breem John, 58 Trinity street, Norwich race, Southtown, Yarmouth Brumell Rev. E. B.n.Rectry.Holt R.S.O
Breese Mrs. Lower close, Norwich Brown Edward, 77 London road, Lynn Hrunning Mrs. 93 London road, Lynn
Breese Thos. Scurll,Lower close,Norwch BrownEd wd.K. 23 Nelson rd.sth. Yarmth Brunning Mrs. 7g N orthgates st. Yrmth
Brennan Rev. Geoffrey, St. Mary's Brown Frdk. Geo. go York st. Norwich Brunton Mrs.Cowper road,EastDereham
presbytery, London road, Thetford Brown Frederick Sayers, Clarence ho. Brutton Mrs. West Winch, Lynn
BrennanMiss,TheMoor,Reephm.Norwch Clarence rd. Thorpe hamlet, Norwich Bryant Charles George, Seymourhouse,.
Brereton Rev. Prebendary Joseph Brown Geo.Dnl.12Caernarvon rd.Nrwch Norwich road, Wymondham
Lloyd M.A. Rectory, Little Massing- Brown Harry, 57 London road, Lynn BryantHorace,Market pl.NorthWalshiib
ham, Swaffham Brown Harry Stew art, 261 Southtown Bryant J ames K. Parkfields road, Diss
Brereton Rev. Arthur Henry M. A. Gras- road, Southtown, Yarmouth Bryant Miss, The Cottage, Binham,.
venor ho. Marine parade, Yarmouth Brown Henry, 64 UnLhanksrd.Norwich Wighton R.S.O
Brereton Rev. Charles John B. A. Rec- Brown James, Chase house, Lynn Bryant Mrs. Old Market place,Harleston
tory, Thornage, Dereham BrownJn.2Gaywood vls.Gaywd.rd.Lynn Bryant Rd. Besthorpe hall, Besthorpe~
Brereton Rev. Randle Barwick M. A. Brown John, 14 Regent road, Yarmouth Attleborough
Brinton cottage, Brinton, Dereham Brown Joseph Benj. Sprowston,Norwich Bryant Richard John, Atmore house.
Brereton Shovell H. B.A.BrininghamS.O Brown L. C. Roselea;Snettisham, Lynn Station road, East Harling, Thetford
,Breton Rev. Arthur H. Grosvenor house, Brown Miss, 33 Bracondale, Norwich , llryant R. A. Crows lo. Church st. Diss.
Marine parade north, Yarmouth Brown Miss, 137 Southtown rd. Yarmth BryningAlfd.Jas. 19St.Philip's rd.Nrwch.
Brett .Alfd. Hy. West lo.Easton,Norwich Brown Mrs. Brandiston, Norwich Buck Rev.GeorgePeter,Belaugh,Norwch.
Brett John, 75 Lancaster rd. Yarmouth Brown Mrs. 22 Dene side, Yarmouth Buck Rev.Jn.Aylsharn rd.Nth.Walsham
Brett Daniel, Costessey, :Norwich Brown Mrs. 192 Dereham road, Norwich Buck Charles, China cottages, Apollo-
Brett John, 16 Trafalgar rd. Yarmouth Brown Mrs. London road, Attleborough walk, Northgates street, Yarmouth
Brett Wm.Mundesley rd.NorthWalsham BrownMrs.Lowestoft rd.Gorlstn.Yrmth Buck Charles Kemp, Brook house, Pul-
Brett Wm. Geo. 30 Trinity st. Norwich Brown Mrs. 77 London road, Lynn ham St. Mary the Virgin, Harleston
Brewitt Rev. James Christopher, 6g Brown Mrs. 39 Nelson rd.sth. Yarmouth BuckJohn,Dene lodge, Dene side, Yrmtht
Calvert street, Norwich Hrown Mrs. 49 St. Philip's rd. Norwich Buck William Henry Gifford, Wiveton
Bridges George, The Friary, County Brown Mrs. Scarning, East Dereham hall, Wiveton, Dereham
- Court road, Lynn Brown Mrs. 268 Southtown rd. Yarmth BuckenhamJas.27Somerleytonst.Nrwch
BridgesMisses,Lyndhrst.Hnstntn.RS.O Brown Mrs. Thomas, Gordon villas, Buckenbam The Misses, r8 Thorpe
Bridgman John Brooks L.D.s.uel. 40 Theatre street, East Dereham road, Thorpe hamlet, Norwich
St. Giles' street, Norwich Brown Samuel, 20 Tombland, Norwich Buckenham Mrs. G. E. TheLimes,North
Bridgwater Rev. Henry Hugh M.A. Brown S.L.28 Newmarketroad,Norwich Lopham, Thetford
Vicarage, Snettisham, Lynn Brown Thomas, Exton's road, Lynn Buckenham Thos. South Lop ham, Thetfrd
Brigham John, Brooke, Norwich Brown 'I'hos.Josford ho. 'l'he Chase,Lynn Buckenham William Alfred, Stoke l<'erry
Brigham Miss, Brooke, Norwich BrownThos.TheHall,Marham,Downham Buckingham E. 104 Havelock rd.Yrmtho
Bright Rev. Thomas, 28 Denmark road, Brown Thos.5rMiddleMarket rd.Yrmth Buckingham Geo.4rUnthanksrd.Nrwcb.
Earlham road, Norwich Brown Thomas, 22 Thorpe road, Thorpe Buckingham Herbert, Harleston
Bright Mrs. Thorpe road, Thorpe ham- hamlet, Norwich Buckingham Herbert, jun. Harleston
let, Norwich Brown Thos.Artb.28 St.Giles' hl.Norwch Buckle Alfred, 66 Nelson rd. Yarmouth.
Brighton Wilham, Lichfield road, South- Brown Thomas Charles, 27 Essex: street, Buckle Miss, Thetford road, Watton
town, Yarmouth South Heigham, Norwich Buckle Mrs. 39 Bracondale, Norwich
Brightwell Mrs. Flordon Mill house, Brown William, Martham, Yarmouth Buckle William, 36 Nelson road, Yarmth
Flordon, Long Stratton Brown William, 20 Railway road, Lynn Buckley Rev. Wm. Louis B.A. Rectory,
Bristow Charles, Goodwm's road, Lynn Brown William, 13 St. James' rd. Lynn Alderford, Norwich
BristowG.Sunnycote,Gaywood rd.Lynn Brown William, The Chestnuts, Hoe, Buckley Joseph, 23 Crown rd. Yarmouth
BristowJ. M. 58 t:it. George's rd. Yarmouth East Dereham Buckley Miss, 2g Trinity street, Norwich
Bristow Mrs. x6 Devonshire rd. Yarmth Brown William Hy. 30 London rd.Lynn Buckworth Mrs. Heggatt hall, Horstead,
Bristowe Mrs. 51 Mill Hill rd. Norwich Brown William Palgrave, The Elms, Norwich
Brittain H. The Cedars,Blofield,Norwich South town road, Yarmouth Buck worth Richard, The Hall, Cockley
Brittan Thomas, GOQd"'in'l:! rop.d, Lynn . Brawl!~ ~v, C, E, Bf\rford! W~oqdlg!! Cler! E?waftha~
' ..,
COURT DIRECTORY. J NORFOLK . 741
.
Hudd Rev.Jsph.West Somerton, Yarmth Burr Lawrence, SkeytAJn, Norwich Butcher Rev.C. 64 Mill Hill rd. Norwich
Budd Rev. Theodore, Briningham S.O Burrage Wm.Jas.34 Victoria st.Norwich Butcher M. Anson rd.Southtown,Yrmth
Buddery Mrs.2o8 Northgatcs st.Yarmth BurrellC.St.Mary's ho.Bury rd.Thetford Butcher Henry Frederick, I Chester
Bugg Miss, I Bedford Cross st. Norwich Burrell Charles,jun. Shrublands, Thetfrd place, St. Giles' road, Norwich
BuggWm. 14Cathedral st.nortb,Norwich Burrell Frederick John, .St. Mary's Butcher M. St. Peter's road, Yarmouth
Bull John, Queen's road, Fakenham house, llnry road, Thetford Butcher Mrs. Cliff house, Mundesley,
Bull Mrs. Isaac, Broome, Bungay BurrellMiss,Gimingham,NorthWalshm North Walsham
Bull Samuel, 14 Albert street, Lynn Burrell Miss, 6 West parade, Norwich Butcher Mrs. 24 Southtown rd. Yarmth
BullamoreJ.Trimingham,Nth. Walsham, Burrell Mrs. 9 Bridge street, Thetford Butcher Robert Symonds, Fakenham
Bullard Sir Harry D.L., J.P. Hellesdon Burrell Mrs 6I Heigham road, Norwich ButcherS. S. 93 Dereham rd. Norwich
house, Norwich Burrell Mrs. Ilempton, Fakenham Butcher Waiter W. Sprowston, Norwich
Bullard Archie, The Laurels, Town Burrell Mrs. Ladybridge house, Bridge Butler Rev. George Hew M.A. Wood
close, Norwich street, Lynn Dalling, Norwich
Bullard Charles, 34 Duke st. Norwich BurrellMrs. White hall,Carbrooke,Wattn ButlerRev.Montague Russell,lloughton,
Bullard Edwin M. 20 Park la. Norwich Burrell Robt. ro Camperdown, Yarmth Walsingham R.S.O
BullardE. Wood hall,Hethersett,Norwich Hurrell Robt. Cooper,go King st. Yarmth Butler George Butler, Church house,
Bullard Fred, Catton, Norwich BurrellRobt.Geo. Minstergate st. Thetfrd Brisley, East Dereham
Bullard John, 34 Kimberley st. Norwich Burrell William H.Market pl.Holt R.S.O ButlerH.22 Essex st.Sth.Heigbm.Nrwch
Bullard Mrs. C. Wood hall, Hethersett, Burrough Rev. John M.A. Rectory, Butler Henry Jackson, Bouton, Norwich
Norwich Hilborough R.S.O ButlerJ ohn,2Manor cots.Gaywood, Lynn
BullardPhilipH.32Grove st.nth.Norwich Rurroughes Hon. Mrs. Holly lodge, Butler .:\irs. 66 Clarendon road, Norwich
Bullard Thomas, 38 York st. Norwich Thorpe, Norwich Butler N. J. 67St. Peter's rd. Yarmouth
BullenBcnjamin,I28Queen's rd.Norwich Burroughes Henry Randal J.P. The Butler Thomas, North Walsham road,
BullenJames William,34 Friars st. Lynn Hall, Burlingham St. Peter, Norwich Sprowston, Norwich
Bulley Mrs. 30 Grove st. nth. Norwich Burroughes Randall Ellis, 85 Thorpe Butler Thos. B. Lower close, ::Vorwich
Bullimore Thomas, Hellesdon road, road, Thorpe hamlet, 1'1 orwich Butler Waiter, 140 Ber street, Norwich
Norwich Burroughes Joseph Robert, Sunnyside, Butler Wm. 66 Cambridge st. Norwich
Bullock Richard, Blakeney, Dereham Old Buckenham, Attleborough Butler W.J.G.Arundel,Town clse.Nrwch
Bullock Stanley, Millgate, Aylsham Burrow Richard,r3oQueen's rd.Norwich Butterfant Wm.G.Mile End rd.Norwich
Bulman-Fleming Rev. James Atkinson Burrows Daniel, Foxley, East Dereham Butterficld Mrs. Hardingstowe, Earlham
B. A. Rockland St. Peter, Attleborough Burrows Edward William, 6 Osborne road, Norwich
Bulmer Rev. Canon Edward M. A. Lower villas, Aylsham road, Norwich Butterwick Mrs. Wiggenhall St. Mary,
close, Norwich Burrows Ezekiel,42 St.Giles' hi. Norwich Magdalen, Lynn
Bulwer Gen. ''Villiam Earle Gascoyne Burrows George Press, Eagle walk, Buttifant Joshua, 3 Bedford Cross st_
Lytton J.P. Heydon hall, Norwich Newmarket road, Norwich South Heigham, Norwich
Bulwer Brig.-Gen. Wm. Earle Gascoyne Burrows Miss, 7 Catton Grove villas, llnttifant Thos. 6o Trinity st. Norwich .
Lytton J.P. Quebec ho. East Dereham Catton, Norwich Buttolph William Kiddle, Whitehall,
Bulwer Lt.-Gen. Sir Edward Earle Burt Miss, Dilkusha, Bradeston,Norwich Saham Toney, Watton
G. K.C.B. The Grange, Heydon,Norwch Burton C.H.Empson ho.North Walsham Buxton Sir Thomas Fowell hart. M.A.,.
Bulwer Rev. Henry Earle M.A. Rectory, Burton Edward, 50 Thorpe road, Thorpe n.L., J.P. Colne cottage, Cromer
Stanhoe, Lynn hamlet, Norwich Buxton Dowager Lady,Colne ho.Cromer
BulwerEdgar Turner,ICrown rd.Yrmth Burton Frank, 35 Queen's rd. Yarmth Buxton Charles Louis J.P. Bolwick hall,
Bulwer Miss, 22 Audley st. Yarmouth Burton Gent, 18 Bedford street, South Marsham, Norwich
Bulwer Mrs. 20 Wellesley rd. Yarmoutl1 Heigham, Norwich Buxton G. Mundesley, North Walsham
Bulwer William Dering Earle J.P. Burton G. Oak cot. Marsham, Norwich Buxton Geoffrey Fowell .J.P. Sunny hill,
Quebec house, East Dereham Burton George, New Conduit st. Lynn Thorpe, Norwich
Bumstead Mrs. Denmark street, Diss Burton Geo. Jas. 45 Oxford st. Norwich Buxton H. E. J.P. Hall quay, Yarmouth;
BumsteadKobert,68North quay.Yarmth Burton James,6 Trafalgar rd. Yarmouth & Fritton decoy, Fritton,near Yarmth
BunfieldChas.C.F1eld bo.Gaywood,Lynn Burton Jn. Gurney,Mile End rd.Norwich Buxton Miss, Shad well court, Rushford,
Bunkall John Thos NewComluit st.Lynn Burton Miss, 38 Cambridge st. ~orwich Thetford
Bunkall Mrs. Rail way road, Down ham Hurton Miss, 40 Cambridge st. Norwich Buxton Mrs. 9 Essex street, Norwich
Bunn Charles,253Southtown rd. Yarmth Burton Mrs. Burnham Thorpe, Lynn BuxtonS.G.D.L.,J.P.Catton hall,Norwch
Bunn Edward N .Mend ham rd. Harleston Burton Mrs-. 63 Carlton terrace, Surrey Buxton Sydney Charles M.P. Ship-
BunnJamesT.262Southtown rd. Yarmth road, Norwich bourne, Vicarage road, Cromer; 15
Bunn Mrs. Acle, Norwich Burton Mrs. Uordon road, Southtnwn, Eaton place & Reform & National
BunnMrs. 87 Beccles rd.Sthtwn. Yarmth Yarmouth Liberal clubs, London s w
Bunn~Irs. Lichfield rd. Southtwn. Yrrnth Burton Mrs. Pier walk, Gorleston, Yrmth Buxton Thus. F. J.P. Up ton ha. Cromer
Bunn Mrs. 75 .Southtown road, South- Hurton Mrs. r87 Queen's road, Norwich Byles Mrs. Hardwick, Long Stratton
town, Yarmouth Burton Mrs. Rt. Bacton rd. Nth. Walsham Byles William, Magdalen rd. Norwich
Bunn Robert, Church street, Wells Burton Samuel HerbertM.B. so St.Giles Byrne Rev. Franeis, Presbytery, St.
BunnWalter,252 Southtown rd. Yarmth street, Norwich& Overstrand,Cromer George's plain, Norwich
Bunnett Edward, M:us. D. Cantab. Burton SamuelCrickmer,Glenelg house, Bywater William, Exton's road, Lynn
Upper close, Norwich Nelson road south, Yarmouth Cable Mrs. Burnham market, Lynn
Bunting Anthony, Butt lands, Wells Burton Thos. TheLodge,NorthWalsham Cadarny Charles, Butt lands, Wells
BuntingA.Drayton ho. Drayton,Norwich Burton T. W. Mundesley rd.N. Walsharn Cadge E. Bank house, Loddon, Norwich
BuntingG.Marconho.Mrkt.pl. Swaffhm Hnrton W.3oHigh rd.Sonthtown,Yrmth Cadge John, Market hill, Dis.~.
Buntmg Miss, Thornham, Lynn Burton Williarn, The Laurels, East Cadge J.P.Arley ho.Bracondale,Norwich
Bunting Mrs. 55 Park lane, Norwich Runton, Cromer Cadge Robt. Hy. Queen's rd. Fakenham
Burch Mrs. 108 llavelock rd. Yarmth Burton-Fanning Frederick William M.B. Cadge William, 49 St. Giles st. Norwich
Burch Mrs. 23 Valinger's road, Lynn 46 Prince of \Vales' road, Norwich Cahill Robert S. go Park lane, Norwich
Burcham John G. Surrey lodge, Church Hnrwooci. Richd. 82 Queen's rd. Norwich Caird Wm. Theatre st. East Dereham
street, Hunstautou R.S.O Bury Rt. Hon. Viscount M.P., D.L., J.P. CairnsJas.H1ll grove,Cringleford,Nrwch
Burcham Robert, Kingstaith sq. Lynn Quidenham hall, Thetford; & 7 St. Caley Rev.W. B.R.lii.A.Vicaragc,Watton
BurgessH.2Essex st. Sth.He1ghm. Nrwch J arnes' square, London s w Caley A. J. Chapelfield grove, Norwich
Burgess Mrs. 5 Euston rd. Yarmouth Bury Thos. 8 Somerleyton st. Norwich Caley E. J. Eaton Old house, Norwich
Burgis Mrs. The Lodg-e, Docking, Lynn Bush Geo. Waiter, 8 Grove rd. Norwich Caley Mrs. 25 Thorpe road, Thorpa
Hurgis Mrs. Rt. The Villa,Docking,Lynn Bush George William, The Rookery, Hamlet, Norwich
Burgis Richard, Docking, Lynn Walcott, Stalham Callaby Robert, r26 London road, Lynn
Burke Hev. Michael Vernon, River Bush Miss, Rose cottage, Wreningham, Callard Geo. go Mill Hill road, Norwich
. house, Wroxham, Norwich Wymondham Callis Rev. John M.A. Trinity rectory,
Burkinshaw William Edward, 2 Ethel Bush Mrs. Burnham Overy Staith, Lynn Essex st. South Heigham, Norwich
road, Thorpe hamlet, Norwich Bush Mrs. 179 Dereham road, Norwich Callow Mrs. Northrepps lodge, North-
Burkitt William, Hill house, Lynn Bush Mrs. 11 Earlham road, Norwich repps, Norwich
Bnrlcigh Mrs.45 St. Philip's rd. Norwich Bush Mrs. 86 Mill Hill road, Norwich Calthrop James Sykes, The Manor ha.
BurlinghamCharles Fulcher, Tudorho. Bush Mrs. 2 Somerleytonst.. Norwich Honing, Norwich
Low.Clarencerd.Thorpehamlt.Nrwch Bush Mrs. John, The Chimneys, Wal- Calver John, 33 Victoria rd. Yarmouth
Burn Rev. W. Pelham M. A. St. Peter's cott, Stalham Calver Miss, 53 Newmarket rd. Norwich
vicarage, The Chantry, Norwich Bush Robert David, White Horse Corn- Calver Miss, Sprowston, Norwich
Burnand George Berger, Holly Grove mon, North \Valsham CalveT Miss, 17 Cambridge st. Norwich
house, Worstead, Norwieh Rnshell Fk. 8 Bloomshnry pl. Norwich Calver Phillip, Burnham Overy, Lynn
Burne Mu. 100 Queen's road, Norwich Buston H. W. 21:8 Northgate st.Yarmt.h Calver William, Cawston Td. Aylsham.
;Burnett Rit!lmrd, IJgckingt Lynn Buston Wtn. 170 King street, Norwich Calvert Joseph B. A.. The Close, Norwich
742 CAM NORFOLK. (KELLY'B

Cambridge Mrs. Bexwell rd. Downham Case James Lee, Valley farmr Ayl'lba.m Chapman Charles. Walnut Tree !house,
Cameron D. S. 12 Trinity st. Norwich Case )hss, 66 Earlbam road, Norwich Upwell, Wi.sbech
Cameron J. Silverdale,The Chase. Lynn Case Mrs. 5 Chester place, Rt. Giles rd. Chapman Chas. 6r York rd. Yarmouth.
Cameron Miss, Blofield, Norwich Norwich Chapman D. 12A1 Blackfriarsst. Lynn
Cammack Headley,Rockland All Saints, Case Mrs. Lower close, Norwich Cbapman George, Blotield, Norwich
Attleborough Case Thos. Hy. 2 Trinity st. Norwich Chapman Godfrey, Congha.m ldg. Lynn
Campbell Rev. StratonC. A. M. .A.Vicar- Case W. H. 82 St. George's rd. Yarmth Chapman Henry Edward, ro Osborne
a~e, Weascnham St. ~ eter, Swaffham Casebow Mrs. Union terrace, Downham villas, Aylsham road, Norwich
Campbell Mrs. 6 Grove road, Norwich Cassan Rev. Henry Crozier R.A. The ChapmanJ.G. 22Clarendan rd.Norwich
Campbell Mrs. Fraser, The Nutshell, Old Rectory, Mundesley, North Walsham Chapman Miss, Mundford R.S.O
Hunstanton, Hunstanton R.S.O Castle Alfred \Vilham, Albany road, Chapman Miss, 122 Queen's rd.Norwich
Camp bell Tomline, Scale villa, Scale South town, Yarmouth Chapman Miss,r8 8t.George's rd. Yrmth
CamplingChas.J.1zEarlham rd.Norwich Castle Arthur B. Gordon rolld, South- ChapmanMrs. Alborough, Norwich
Campling G. H. 87 Calvert st. Norwich town, Yarmouth ChapmanMrs.r2Chapeltieldgdns.Norwh
CamplingJ.R.Rosecot.Sa.lhouse,Norwch Castle Edwd. 64 Southtown rd. Yarmth Chapman Mrs. 70 King st. Yarmouth
Ca.,upling Mrs. Harleston Caston Mrs. Roydon road, Diss Chap man T. K. White Horse st. Fakenhm
Campling Mrs. 62 York street, Norwich Uaswall Robert Hadfield, Vine cot. St. Cbapman Wm. 21 Nelson rd. Yarmouth
Camp:ing R. 2.r Golden Dog la. Norwch Leonard's rd. Thorpe hamlet, Norwich Chappell J. 71 Marine par. nth. Yarmth
Camplin~ Thomas, 9 Denmark road, Catchpole John, Caister, Yarmouth Charlesworth John Barff, The Hall,
E~rlham road, Norwich Cater William, Sandringham terraee, Stradsett, Downham
CandlerEdgar, 105 Regent rd. Yarmth Gaywood, Lynn Charlton T. Sculthorpe rd. Fakenham
Candler John, Harleston Cates Mrs. The Limes, Fakenham Charter James B.A. Belle Vue house,
Candler William John, Harleston Catling Mrs. 12 Portland street, Lynn Eaton park, Norwich
Cann::vliss,Homcfields,HunstantonR.S.O Caton Joshua, Mount road, Diss Chase Alfred Hy, London rd. Harleston
Cann :Vlrs. J. S. Market pi. Wymondham Caton Miss,Pulham St. Mary the Virgin, ChaseG. Buckingham ho.Victoria rd.Diss
Cann Mrs. W.Bowden ter. Wymondham Harleston Chastenoy John E. Lichfield road,
CannT. F. Mill cot.. Oownham, Wymndhm Cator Albemarle B. A., D.L., J. P. Wood- Southtown, Yarmouth
Cann Wm ..J.P. Cavick ho. Wymondhm bastwick hall, Norwich; &83 Eaton ChattertonP.T.Wbiteho.Londn.rd.Lynn
Cannell C. T. 84 Newmarket rd.Norwich square & Carlton club, London s w; Cheal W.H. Rose vil.Goodwin's rd.Lynn
Cannon Edwd. Bacton, North Walsham Beckenham place, Kent & Trewsbury, Cheeseright Thomas, Hollywood house
Cannon Sampson, Martham, Yarmouth Cirencester Thorpe, Norwich
Canterbury Viscount D.L. 1 J.P. Brooke Cator Jn. B. A., J.P. Woodbastwick hall, Chenery Charles, Denmark street, Diss
house, Norwich; & 12 Queensbury pl. Norwich; & 83 Eaton sq. London s w Chenery Robert, Victoria road, Diss
London s w Cator Mrs. Thornhill, Denbigh house, Chiddick Fras. J. 16 Oxford st. Norwich
Cantrell Mrs. 7oUnthanks rd. Norwich Newmarket road, Norwich Chilrl Jn.S. 37 Northgates st.Yarmouth
Capon E. H. 33 St. Giles st. Norwich 'Cattcrmole Edward, 41 Prince of Wales Childs Henry, 53 Regent rd. Yarmouth
Carley Miss, Holly house, London road,' road, .:Vorwich Childs Mrs. Trafalgar house, Trafalgar
Thetford CattermoleW.T.19Wellington rd.Yrmth road, Yarmouth
Carlier A. G. 6o Unthanks rd. Norwich. Caudwell Eber, Harleston Chilvers Horace, 44 Denmark road, Earl-
Carman Mrs. Haddiscoe, Norwich Causton Rev. A. J. Swan st. Fakenham ham road, Norwich
Carman Mrs. Grecncap, Mill house,, Causton Archer, 67 York rd. Yarmouth Chilvers John, 71 Grove road, Norwich
South town, Yarmouth i Cavalier Rev. Edwd. Frederic M. A. Rec- Chilvers Miss, Hurnham market, Lynn
Caro.J.Rosary ho.Thorpe hamlet,Nrwch j tory, Wramplingham, Wymondham Chipperfield Capt. Charles Lucraft, 278
Carpenter Fredk. John, High st. Lynn Cave Miss, Lannria ho. IIunstantonR.S. 0
i South town road, Yarmouth
Carpenter Mrs. Ormesby St. ~Iargaret, Cavell Rev. Frederick T.A. K. c. L. Vicar- Chittleburg F.J. 83 Southtown rd. Yrmth
!

Yarmouth age, Swardeston, Norwich ChittockJ.C.Point house,Thorpe,Norwh


Carpenter Mrs.42SouthEverard st.Lynn Cavell Rev. R. C. Binham, Wighton R.S.O Chittock J.G.25 Newmarket rd.Norwich
Carr Charles F. 15 Nelson road south, Ceiley Robt. III Regent rd. Yarmouth Choate Ebenezer, 56 London road, Lynn
Yarmouth Chadwick R~v. Edward Taylor,Rectory, Cholmeley Rev. John M.A. Carleton
Carr John, 16 Rail way road, Lynn Wacton, Long Stratton Rode, Attleborough
Carr Miss, Market place, Aylsham Chadwick G. R. St. Margaret's pl. Lynn Cholmondeley Marquess of D.L. Hough-
Carr Wm.J.P.Ditchingham hall,Bungay Chad wick Mrs. Heacham, Lynn ton hall, Swaffham
Carr William, jun. Old Hall, Ditching- Chad wick Wm. 7 Blackfriars rd. Lynn Christian Jas.B.R.N. Toft Monks, Beccles
ham, Bungay Chalker H. G. 29 Dereham rd. Norwich Uhristie James, Manor house, Framing•
Carritt Charles, South Wootton, Lynu Chamberlain Mrs. Shire Hall terrace, ham Pigot, Norwich
Carson Rev. Trevor Joseph Hamilton Walsingha.m R.S.O Christmas Charles, Rollesby, Yarmouth
M.A. 27 Camperdown Chamberlain Percy, Gordon road, Christmas John, Ormesby Old hall,
Carter Rev. J. H. White Hart st.Aylshm Southtown, Yarmouth Ormesby St. Margaret, Yarmouth
Cartet• Henry, Beech bank, Unthanks ChamberlainThos.Nth.Lopham/l'hetford Christmas Mrs. 22 Mill Hill rd. Norwich
road, Norwich Chamberlin Alexander Robert, The Christopher Mrs. 10 Bedford street,
Carter Jn. B. Northwold, Stoke Ferry GroYe, Ipswich road, Norwich South Heig-ham, Norwich
Carter J. R. Brewery grange, Thetford ChamberlinG.TheLodge,Bixley,Norwch Church G W. 32 Havelock rd. Norwich
Carter M. Theatre st. East Deroham Chamberlin G. F. 2 Wellesley rd. Yarmth Church J. Beech ho. BraconAsh,N orwich
Carter Miss, Linden cottage, Northold, ChamberlinH.7aMarine par. nth. Yarmth Church Joseph Watts, The Vineyards,
Stoke Ferry ChamberlinPercyD.Broad row,Yarmtb Bracon Ash, Norwich
Carter Misses, Sporle road, Swaffham Chamberlin Ronald, Groye avenue, St. Church Wm. 45 Marine par. Yarmouth
Carter Mrs. Northwold, Stoke Ferry Step hen's road, Norwich Church Wm.18 South town rd. Yarmouth
Carter Mrs. Point ho. Ipswich rd. N orwch Chamberlin William John Woodthorpe, Church W orthington,Bramerton,Norwch
Carter Mrs. J. Park rd. East Dereham 36 Southtown road, Yarmouth Churchill Rev. S.B.A.Boughton,Brandon
Carter 0. Wereham hall, Stoke Ferry Chambers Rev. William H. B.A. 125 ClmrchyardJas.S.Magdalen rd.Norwich
Carter Thos. The Elms, Catton, Norwich Dereham road, Norwich Churchyard Mrs. Broad st. Harleston
Carter Wm. 41 Havelock rd. Yarmouth Chambers Miss, The Hall, Colkirk, ChurchyardMrs.33 Heigham rd.Norwch
Carter W. 4 Manor cots.Gaywood, Lynn Fakenham Churchyard Mrs. Victoria road, Dissc
Carter Wm. J. Park rd. East Dereham Chambers Mrs. The Cottage, Colkirk, Chute Rev. Theophilus D. M. A. Rectory,
Cartcr-Knapton Rev. Jamcs, Hapton Fakenham Moulton St. Michael, Long Stratton
house, Hapton, Long Stratton Chambers William J. Malt house, Burn- Clabburn James William, Guild house,
Carthew Mrs. Deuton lodge, Harleston ham, Sutton, Lynn Thorpe, Norwich
Cartter Thomas James, Alhy, Norwich Champion Rev. Francis Beresford M.A. Clabbnrn Mrs. The Grange, Mundesley,
Cartwright Rev. Charles William, Rec- The Rectory,Nth.Pickenham,Swaffhm North Walsham
tory, Mileham, Swaffham Chandler George, 61 Uarlton terrace, Clack Darius, 19 London road, Lynn
Cartwright Mrs. Tower ho. llracondale, Surrey road, Norwich Clapcott Rev. John William B. A. Rectory,
Norwich Chandler G. O.Beech ho.Broome,Bungay Thrigby, Yarmouth
Carver H. White ho.Freethorpe, Norwich Chauey .Mrs. North green, Pulham St. Clare Mrs. 49 Trinity street, Norwich
Carver James, 31 Cambridge st. South Mary The Vir~in, Harleston Clare W. 19 St. Stephen's sq. Norwich
Heigham, Norwich Chant Mrs. 34 Crown road, Yarmouth ClaremontU.C.42 Chapelfield rd.Norwch
Carver Mrs. Carpusty, Norwich Chaplin Herbert, ~ Belgrave cottages, Clarence Mrs. Norwich rd. Attleborongh
Carver Mrs. 9 London road, Lynn St. George's road, Yarmouth Clarence Ralph, Upper Cliff road, Gor•
Case Edward, Bridge street, Fakenham Chaplin Mrs. 13 Duncan rd. Yarmouth leston, Yarmouth
Case E. The Cot. Kettlestone,Fakenham Chaplin Thomas,Milestone house,Thorpe Claridge Rev.Charles William,Vicarage,
Case E. The Hall, Toftrees, Fakenham road, Tborpe hamlet, Norwich Edinburgh road, Norwich
Case Henry, 2 Trinity street, Norwich ChapmanA.E.Mundesleyrd.Nth.Wlshm Clark George, I~ Mill Hill rd. Norwich
Case James, 25 Wisbech road, Lynn Cbapman ArthurHy.Wroxham,Norwich Clark Geo.0.59 Caernarvon rd. Norwch
COURT DIRECTORY.] NORFOLK. COM
Clark James, 8 Park lane, Norwich ClowesFras.Bank pl. Bank plain, Norwich Cole William Henry, 25 Carlton terrace,
Clark Jas. B. Commercial rd. Aylsbam Clowes Francis,TheHall,Sutton,Stalham Surrey road, Norwich
Clark John, Yaxham, East Dereham Clowes John Edward, Napier house,, Coleby Ueorge Thomas, Sinclair house,
ClarkJ.Fish,4sNelson rd.nth.Yarmouth Albert square, Yarmouth I Chapelfield road, Norwich
Clark Miss, Elvin road, East De re ham Clowes Mrs. M. D. 5 Norfolk sq. Yarmouth Coloby J ames Bennett, 42 Cambridge st.
Clark Miss, 3 Suffield park, Cromer Cluwes Mrs. 267 Southtown rd. Yarmth Heigham, Norwich
Clark )liss, Watton road, Swaffbam ClowesMrs.G.276 Southtown rd. Yarmth Coleby Mrs. 72 Queen's road, Norwich
ClarkMiss,Westernho.Marketpl.Swffhm Clubb Miss, 15 West parade, Norwich Coleman Rev.H.J.M.A.Westwick,Nrwch
Clark Mrs. 29 Clarendun road, Norwich Clutten Miss, The Limes, Harleston Coleman Edward, 7 Bedford street,,
Clark Mrs. Commercial road, Aylsbam Coaks Isaac Bugg D.L •• J.P. Fern hill, South Heigham, Norwich
Clark Mrs. Yew Tree cottage, Reden- Grove road, Thorpe hamlet, Norwich Coleman George L. 26 Park la. Norwic~
ball, Harleston Coalman Mrs. 17 Earlham rd. Norwich Coleman Horace, 33 Essex st. Norwich
Clark Thos. William, Pool rd.Swaffham Coates John Barnard, 71 Thorpe road, Coleman John, 64 Earlham rd. Norwich
ClarkeCol. Stanley, Appleton, Lynn Thorpe hamlet, Norwich Coleman John, Manor house, Brandon
Clarke Rev. Herbert Sydenham JILA. Coates Maurice Lindsay, Rackheath parva, Wymondham
Rectory, Colton, Norwich park, Rackheath, Norwich Coleman John Abraham, Stalham S.O
Clarkc Rev. Percy Carmichael B.A. St. Coates Mrs. 3S London road, Lynn Coleman Miss, Redenhall house, Paget
Michael at Plea recty.Princes st.Norwh Cobb J. S. r..n.s. 28 King st. Yarmouth road, Yarmouth
Clarke A. J. TbeGables,Thorpe,~orwich Cobb Misses, 23 Paget road, Yarmouth Coleman Mrs. Blofield, Norwich
ClarkeA.Willow cot.Lowerclose,Norwcb Cobb Mrs. 26 Cambridge st. Norwich Coieman W.Illawarra,Bradestn.Norwch
ClarkeE. W.R. Wattlefid.hall, Wymndhm Cob bald T. A. 13 Castle meadow,Norwch Colinson A. 28 South Everard st. Lynn
Clarke Fredk. 73Newmarketrd.Norwich Cobon Henry, The Hall, Great Elling- Caller Charles Tarrant, Lime grove,
Clarke George, 94 Nelson rd. Yarmouth ham, Attleborough Limo Tree road, Norwich
Clarke J. B. Glenholt, Carrow hill, Cobon .Misses, Riverside cottage, Lether- Coller George Arthur, 94 Newmarket
Bracondale, Norwich ingsctt, Dereham road, Norwich
Clarke J. Shrublands,Hethersett,Norwh Cobon Mrs. The Laurels, Yarmouth Collett Re''· William Rcynolds M.A. Rec-
Clarke James William Youngs, 39 Hall road, North Walsham tory, Hetbersett, Norwich
road, New Lakenham, Norwich Cochrane Andrew, 2 Blackfriars st. Lynn Collier Hcrbcrt M.n. Tho Grange, Lowcs-
Clarke J.Bentinck cut.Nurth Lynn,Lynn Cochrane Robert, 4 Park lane, Norwich toft road, Gorleston, Yarmouth
ClarkeJohn,Glenthorne,The Chase,Lynn Cochrane W.R. 13Cambridge st.N orwich ·Collier Thos. 81 Havelock rd. Yarmouth
Clarke John, Ludham, Norwich Cock Geor~e Thomas, Annesley house, Calling William Muir, Jubilee villas,
1

Clarke John Osmond, Church st. Diss Newmarket road, Norwich Gaywood road, Lynu
Clarke Jn. Thos. I2 Regentst.Yarmouth Cock John, Shipdha.m, Watton Collins Alfd. Jas. 66 Essex st. Norwich
Clarke Miss, 3 The Crescent, Chapel- Cockell Arthur T. Hill ho. Attleqorough Collins Edward Thomas, 8 Denmark rd.
field road, Norwich Cockctt Alfred, The Mount. Norwich I Earlham road, Norwich
Clarke Miss, The Lodge, Ipswich road, road, New Walsoken. Wisbech I Collins Howard James, Norfolk & Nor-
Norwich Cockett Henry, The Chesnuts, Norwiehl wich hospital, St. Stephen's rd.Nrwch
Clarke Miss, Venetian cott<Ige, Norwich road, New Walsoken, Wisbeah ;Collins Jn. Wm. Chestnut vil. Downhm
ruad, Wymondham Cockett John, The Chesnuts, Norwich·Collins Miss, 98 Northgates st.. Yarmth
Clarke Misses, 25 Trinity street,N orwich road, New Walsoken, Wisbech ·. Collins T. C.Tb.e Limes, Sunnyside, Diss
Clarke Mrs. Boughton, llrandon CockettMrs.ssHigh rd.Sout.htn. Yarmth! Collinson Thomas, 19 Portland st. Lynn
Clarke Mrs. Carbrooke, Watton Cockett Thomas, Chapnall house, Wal- 'Collison Rev. Henry M. A. East Bilney,
Clarke Mrs. Quebec rd. East Dereham sokcn, Wisbech East Dereham
Clarke Mrs. 45 St. Stephen's sq.Norwch Cockrell John W. Britannia terrace, Collison Albert J. P. The Ha.ll, Mileha.m,
Clarke Mrs. Wabourne, Holt R.S.O Gorleston, Yarmouth Swaffham
Clarke Mrs. E. P. Vicar t:it. bo. Wymndhm CockrellW.G. Up.Cliffrd.Gorlstn. Yrmth Collison Hy. Tuesday Market pl. Lynn
Clarke Riphard John, Baulea.h, St. Cockrill John W. 12 Euston rd. Ya.rmtb Collison William Thomas J.P. Albemarle
Nicholas road, Yarmouth Cockrill S.59 Highst.Gorleston, Yarmth ho. Marine parade north, Yarmouth
Clarke Robt. 21 Newmarket rd.Norwich CockrillT.241 High st.Gorleston,Yarmth Culls Mrs. 7 Alexandra road, Norwich
Clarke Robert H. Southtown, Yarmouth Cockrill William, 29 Cambridge street, Culls Samuel, 41 Cambridge street,
Clarke Samuel, The Cedars, Stoke Holy South Heigha.m, Norwich tlouth Heigham, Norwich
cross, Norwich Cockrill W. B. High st.Gorlestn.Yarmth Culls Samuel H.eeve, 10 Grove avenue,,
Clarke Sml. 'f. 74 Regentrd. Yarmouth Cockrill W. J. Town Close rd. Norwich St. Stephen's road, Norwich
Clarke William Arthur, 33 Carlton ter- Cocks John, 53 Albion road, Yarmouth Collyer D'Arcy Bedingfeld B.A., s.c.r-
race, Surrey road, Norwich Cocks J. A. 141 Southtownrd. Yarmth Hackford, Norwich
Clarke William Thomas, Holly lodge, Cocks Stroud Lincoln, Uplands, Diss Collyer D' Arcy B. Horstead, Norwich
""'est Winch, Lynn Cocks Wm. Richd. 21 London rd. Lynn Collyer Mrs. Hackford hall, Norwich
Clarkson Mrs. Dersingham hall, Lynn Codling A. J. 13 Grove st. we. Norwich Collyer Mrs. Lower close, ::'iorwich
Clax•m James, 53 Crown rd. Yarmouth Codling Richa.rd, 130 London rd. Lynn Collyer Mrs. 17 Thorpe road, 'fhorpe.
Claxton A. J. High st.WalsinghamR.S.O Cue Albert E. 5 Cambridge st. Norwich hamlet, Norwich
Claxton George, 3 Belle Vue terrace, Coe George S. Kenninghall, Thetford Colman Caleb, Toft Monks ho. Beccles
Aylsham road, Norwich Coe .John, n6 London road, Lynn Colman Edwd. 28 Valinger's rd. Lynn
Claxton H. Croxton rd. Hefford, Norfolk Coe John Elijah, 3 Coronation sq. Lynn Colman Edward John, Sunnymead, The
Claxton Miss, Burnham market, Lynn Coe Mrs. Bacton road, North Walsham Chase, Lynn
Claxton Mrs. Hernpnall, Norwich Coe Mrs. IS Portland street, Lynn Colman Henry, I I Bracondale, Norwich
Claxton R. 7 HeighamGrove ter.N orwich Coe Mrs. Rose cot. Dersingham, Lynn Colman H. P. 52 Bracondale, Norwich
Claxton W. C. 70 Earlham rd. Norwich Coe Mrs. Surrey grove, Norwich Colman Jeremiah James M.P., J.P., D.L.
Clay A. 12 :Middle Market rd. Yarmouth Coe Mrs. R. I Providence ter. Swaffhm Carrow house, Norwich & The Clyffe,.
ClayA.L.Mulbartonlo.Mulbarton,Norwh Coe Wm. Rogers, London st. Swaffham Carton, Lowestoft; & Belgrave man-.
Clayton Mrs. 26 Dene side, Yarmouth Cogswell Rev. Thomas Smith Th.A.K.C.L. sions, & Devon1hire & Reform clubs
Cleary Rev. B.ichard B.A. Rectory, Ta.sburgh, Long Stratton s w & City Liberal club, London E c
Banningham, Aylsham Coke Viscount J.P. Holkham hall, Wells; Colman John Alfred, Wensum house,,
Cleaver Rev. William Heory M.A. Rec- & 13 Cauugan square, London s w St. Martin's road, Norwich
tory, Pulham St . .M.ary The Virgin, Coker Mrs. Up. Norwich rd. E. Dereham Colman J. D. 15 Heigham rd. Norwich
Harleston Colborne Fredk. 57 Park lane, ~orwich Colman Mrs. 13 St. Philip's rd. Norwich
Clements Capt. George, Moss Know, Culby James, Bridge street, Thetford Colman Mrs. Town Close lodge, Ipswich
Mill Hill road, Norwich Colby Richard, Lower close, Norwich road, Norwich
Clements R. Quebec st. East Derebam Coldham H. 0. 37 Oxford st. Norwich Colman R.J.Bracondalewoods, Norwich
Clements Robt. Station rd. Wymondhm Co!dham Miss, Snettisbam, Lynn Colman Thomas Hovell, Manor house,
Cleverley W. E. 15 Havelock rd.Norwcb Coldham Mrs. Anmer hall, Lynn Rockland St. Peter, Attleborough
Cliff Rev. Richard Atbol, Marlborough Cole Hon. Artb. Edwd. Cassamajor J.P. Colrnan T. W. Fairland st. Wymondhm
house, Hunstanton R.S. 0 Eccles hall, Attleborough; & Carlton Colman T. W. 11 Bracondale, Norwich
Clifton Cyrus Artbur, Northcote house, club, London s w Colman Timothy, Eastfield house 1 East
Hunstantun R.S.O Cole Rev. James Henry B.A. Quiden- Harling, Thetford
Clifton G. 47 Havelock rd. Yarmouth ham, Thetford · Colman W.Beaufoy vil. Marthm.Yrmth
Clifton William, Littleport street, Lynn Cole Herbert Henchman, Hill house, Col well C.Lowestoft rd.Gorlestn. Yrmth
ClimpsonE.TheLaurels,Broome,Bungay Bradeston, Norwich Coman Mrs. Coltishall, Norwich
C!ipswne J. 13oSouthtown rd. Yarmouth Cole John, Bs Grove road, Norwich Coman Thomas L. Coltishall, Norwich
Clow .Miss, 64 Bracondale, Norwich Cole Mrs. Great Plumstea.d, Norwich Combe Edward HenryHarvey J.P.Ferry-
Clowes A. F. 31 Regent st. Gt. Yarmouth Cole Mrs. 39 Havelock road, Yarmouth side house, South\:Qwn, Yarmouth
Clowes A. T. New Buckenham,Attleboro' Cole Mrs. 19 Victoria street, Norwich Combe Frederick Orloff !I. D., C. M. Holly
Clowes Charles R. llracondale, Norwich Cole William, Banham, Attleborough house, North Walsham
744 eo M NORFOLK. (KELLY'g

Compton Rev. Spencer James M.A. Rec- Cooper William CharlP..s Payne, Bank Conston Mrs.Manor ho.Ingham,Stalhm
tory, South Creake, Fakenham house, Tucker street, Cromer Coverdale Hy. Costessey park, Norwich
Compton Thomas Joscph M. D. Hcigham Cooper W. P. 55 St. Philip's rd. Norwch Coverdale Jsph. Costessey pk. Norwich
hall, Old Palace road, Norwich • Cooper W. H. Mayfield, Town close, Coverley Rev. Samuel Lee B.A., Th.A.
Connop Ernest M. Rollesby hall, Rol- Norwich Nonlelph, Downham
lesby, Yarmouth Coote Miss, Methwold, Stoke Ferry 8.0 Cowburn R.High st.Walsingham R.S.O
Cook Benjamin, Hill house, Heydon Copeman Rev. Canon Arthur Charles Cowell Rev. John Edward B.A. London
road, Aylsham M.B.,A.K.C.L. St. Andrew'sparsonage, street, Swaffham
Cook George, Springfield road, Gorles- Broad steeet, Norwich & West Bunga- Cowen Miss, 6o Marine parade, Yarmth
ton, Yarmouth low, Gorleston, Yarmouth Cowl Alfd. E. 9 Aylsham rd. Norwich
Cook Henry, Sussex farm, Brancaster Copeman Rev. Arthur Garry B. A. Crin- Cowl A. E. 7 Trafalgar road, Yarmouth
Staith, Lynn gleford, Norwich Cowl Henry, 11 St. George's road,
Cook Het·bert, The White house, Thwaite Copeman Alfred George, Dun ham lodge, Great Yarmouth
All Saints, Norwich Little Dunham, Swaffham Cowles Jn. Connaught rd. Attleborough
Cook Isaac, Little Melton, Norwich Copeman Henry John, 2 Town close, Cowles Robert William, 9 St. Mark's
Cook J. Harold, Holt R.S.O Norwich terrace, City road, New Lakenham,
Cook Miss, Church terrae!', Aylsham Copeman James Cole, Loddon, Norwich Norwich
Cook Miss, 2 Connaught road, Norwich Copeman John, St. Stephen's house, Cow tan E. W.M.Church st.Ea. Dereham
Cook Miss, St. Bartholomew's close, 1 1'\ewmarket road, Norwich Cox Rev. Samuel, St. Martin-at-Palace
Norwich Copeman Miss, Blickling road, Aylsham plain, Norwich
Cook Miss, Tuesday Market place, Lynn Copcman Miss, Loddon, Norwich Cox Rev. Thomas Edward Hankinson
Cook Misses, Bowden ter. Wymondham Copeman Misses, Rose cottage, Surrey M.A. Bircham ~ewton, Lynn
Cook Mrs. Oak street, Fakenham grove, Norwich Cox Edward, F1lby, Yarmouth
Cook R.Lowestoft rd. Gorleston,Yarmtb Copeman Mrs. Dnnbam lodge, Little Cox Edward F. 18 Paget, rd. Yarmouth
Co<Jk Thomas, 32 Bethel street, Norwich Dunham, Swafiham Cox Ernest V. 37 Park lane, Norwich
Cook William Warner, The Abbey, Hor- Copeman Mrs Netherton house, Strat- Cox Joscph, Quebec rd. East Dereham
sham St. Faith's, Norwich ton St. Mary, Long Stratton Cox Joseph, Shipdham, Watton
Cook William Warner, Suffield lodge, Copcman Thomas,Blickling rd. Aylsham Cox Miss, Roydon road, Diss
Lowestoft road, Gorleston, Yarmouth Copland Miss, 32 Railway road, Lynn Cox Mrs. 77 Rosary rd. Thorpe Hamlet
Cooke Rev. William Harris M.A. Stracey Copley Robert Flower, Monument house, Cox Mrs. 202 South town road, Yarmth
house, Thorpe hamlet, Norwich Norfolk street, Lynn Cox Mrs. The Shrublands, Holt R.S.O
Cooke Edwd.72Southtown rd. Yarmouth Coppin Selth J. 13 Whitefriars ter. Lynn Cox Mrs. The Willows, Heacham, Lynn
Cooke George Frederick, Holmwood, Copping Mrs. Roydon road, Dis!! Cox Robert, 84 Mill Hill road, Norwich
Thorpe hamlet, Norwich Corbet Rev. John William M.A. The Rec- Cox Sidney, 24 King street, Lynn
Cooke George Robert, 5 Lakenham ter- tory, Holme Hale, Watton Cox Thomas, 45 Bracondale, Norwich
. race, Norwich Corhett Samuel, r5 Park lane, Norwich Coy Jeffery S. 58 Pitt street, Norwich
Cooke HarryArthur, Wroxham, Norwich Corbett Waiter John, Home farm, New Coy Wm. T. Market pl. North Walsham
Cooke John Edward, Manor house, Blo- Hough ton, Swaffham Coytc Mrs. 70 Thorpe road, Thorpe
field, Norwich Corbetta Joseph, North 'Valsham road, hamlet, Norwich
Cooke Miss, Alexander house, Bridge Sprowston, Norwich Cozens-Hardy Clement William Hardy
street, Thetford Corbetta Jol'!eph, Unthanks rd. Norwich J.P. Cley hall, Cley, Dereham
Cooke Miss, 6 Trinity street, Norwich Corbould Miss, 12 Up. Surrey st.Norwich Cozens-Hardy Sydney LL.B. 72 Bracon-
CookeMrs.The Beeches,Catton,Norwich Corbould William,29 Regent rd. Yarmth dale, Norwich
eooke Mrs.Lichfield rd.Southtn.Yarmth Corbould-Warren Rev. J. W·. LL.M., J.P. Cozens-Hardy Theobald J.P. Oak lodge,"
Cooke Robins, Glandford, Dereham Tacolneston Old hall, Wymondham Sprowston, Norwich
CookeSaml.Benjamin,Belaugh,Norwich Corbonld-Warren Edward,Hracon lodge, Cozens-Hardy William Hardy J.P.
Cookson George John, Manor house, Bracon Ash, Norwich Letheringsett hall, Dereham
Garboldisham, Thetford Corbyn Miss, 7 Crown rd. Yarmouth Crab be Mrs. 5 Hedford Cross st. Norwich
Coomber I<'rancis, Oak street, Fakenham Corder Edward, 31 London st. Norwich Crabtree Mrs.25rSouthtown rd.Yarmth
Cooper Rev. Ernest Simmons M.A. Mar- Carder Octavius, Hradcston, Norwich CrabtreeW.F.265Southtown rd.Yarmth
ket place, Aylsham CordwellWalter,5Wilderness ter.Harlstn Cracknell Alfd. 19 Heigham rd.Norwch
Cooper Rev. J. 9 Vahnger's road, Lynn Corke Mr~. 70 Havelock rd. Yarmouth Cracknell George, ParaLhse, Lynn
Cooper Rev. John Edward M. A. Rectory, Corkran Colonel Seymonr, Congham Cracknell Mrs. 21 Heigham rd. Norwch
· I<'orncett St. Mary, Long Stratton house, Congham, Lynn; & 2 Chesham Cracknell William Octavius, White Hart
Cooper Rev.Joseph,Southrepps,Norwich street, London s w street, East Harling, Thetford
Cooper Hev. Thomas Jennings B. A. Cormick Mrs. Kinclaven, Mundesley, Cradock Mrs. 8 London road, Lynn
Norwich road, North Walsham North Walsham . Crafer William,Canister hall,Houghton,
Cooper-, 45 Havelock rd. Yarmouth Cornish Mrs. High st.Walsingham R.S.O Walsingham R.S.O
Cooper Abraham, Dorincourt house, Cornish Mrs. Hill house, Letheringsett, CraneF.Lowestoft rd.Gorleston,Yarmth
Euston road, Yarmouth Dercham Crane Miss, High street, Cromer
Cooper Alfred, 71 Nelson rd. Yarmouth Cornish Hobinson, Tudor house, Gram- Crane Mrs. Vicar street, Wymondham
Cooper Alfred, Sunnyside, Knapton, mar School road, North Walsham Cranmer Thomas, Quebec street, East
North ·walsham Cornish William, Glebe house, Wells Dereham
Cooper Arthur Wade, Kilverstone lodge, Cornwall William, 'Vat ton S. 0 Cranmer W.J. W.Park rd.East Derebam
Kilverstone, Tbctford Corrick Henjamin, 56 Pitt st. Norwich Crawford Rev. John obert M.A.
Cooper Augustus Henry, Rosaville, Corsbie S. W. 15.5 Dereham rd. Norwich Vicarage, East Walton, Lynn
· Mundesley, North Walsham Cory Rev. Robert Frederick B.A. Vicar- Crawford John, 3 Whitefriars ter. Lynn
Cooper Carlos, Lakenham, Norwich age, Terrington St. John, Lynn Crawshay Charles J.P. St. Andrew's
Cooper Edwd. 7 Clarendon rd. Norwich Cory Charles, Market pl. East Dereham house, Hingham, Attleborough '
Cooper Francis, 69 Grove road, Norwich Cory Miss, 17 St. James' road, Lynn Crawshay Frederick, Scole lodge, Scole
Cooper Geo.H. Quebec rd.East Dereham Cosgrave Miss, Britannia terrace, Crawshay Richard W. J. P. Scole lodge,
Cooper H. 5 Bcccles rd.Southtn. Yarmth Gorleston, Yarmouth Scole
Cooper James, Lowestoft road, Gorles- Cossey John,Clyde ho.West par.Norwch Crawshay Waiter Cubitt, St. Andrew's
ton, Yarmouth Cossey Mrs. 18 Grove st. we. Norwich house, Hingham, Attleborough
Cooper Miss, 2r Havelock rd. Norwich Cossey Mrs. Reedham R.S.O Creake Mrs. 72 Clarendon rd. Norwich
Cooper Miss, Manham, Norwich Cossey Samuel, Hilgay, Downham Creeny Rev. William Frederic M. A.
Cooper Miss, 8 Mill Hill road, Norwich Costerton F. S. 36 Camperdown, Yarmth 8 Orford hill, Norwich
Cooper Miss, St. Nicholas street, Lynn Costerton Mrs. Scale house, Scole Ct·emer John E. Sparham ho. Norw1ch
Cooper Miss, 76 St. Philip's rd. Norwich Cotter MajorEdmondWil!iam,75 Thorpe Cremer Mrs. Grammar School road,
CooperMiss, 34 Unthanksroad,Norwich road, Thorpe hamlet, Norwich North Walsham
CooperMisses,2oNewmarket rd.Norwich Cotton Mrs. Ash by, Norwich Cremer Robert R.35 Princes st. Norwch
Cooper Mrs. Cromer road, Holt R.S.O Coulson Albert, High street, Downham Cremer Thomas Wyndham B.A., J.P.
Cooper Mrs. St. Mary's, Cromer Coulson Charles B. Brockdish, Scole Beeston hall, Beeston Regis, Cromer
Cooper Mrs. Scarning, East Dereham Coulson Fredk. W. High st. Downham Cresswell George, 5 Cliff esplanade,
Cooper Robert, Waltham lodge, New- Couiton John James, Little Ketlam, Hunstanton R.S.O
market road, Norwich Pentney, Swaffham Cresswell George I<'. A. King st. Lynn
Cooper Robert Aspland, Aspland house, Coulton Richd. C. St. Ann street, Lynn CresRy Miss, 3 Southwell rd. Norwich
Thorpe hamlet, Norwich Coupe Frederick, 33 Somer8et place, Creswell Rev. Saml. Fras. D. D., F.R.o.s.,
Cooper Thos.Great Ryburgh, Fakenham Russell road, Yarmouth F.R.A.S. Rectory,Northrepps, Norwch
Cooper W. Commercial rd. East De re ham Court Rd. H. ro Mill Hill rd. Norwich Crick mer Miss, 44 South .Market road,
Cooper Wm. 5 Providence fer. Swaffham C-onrthope Rev. Arthur H. M. A. Yarmouth
Cooper Wm. 146 Southtown rd. Yarmthl Sprowston, Norwich Crickmore William, Seething, Norwich
COURT DIRECTORY.] NORFOLK •. DAll

Crisford Rev. Alexander Thomas M.A., Crowe Robert, W~:oxham, Norwit.:h ICurtis Mrs. 22 London road, Lynn
J.P. Rectory, Ovington, Thetford Crowfoot William Charles, Heath house, CurtisOsborneS Summer hill,Fakenham
1

Crisp Alfred Henry, Nassau villa, Good- J1roome, Bungay Curtis William, 24 Oxford st. Norwich
wins road, Lynn Cro:xfordEdward,sHavelock rd.Norwich Cushine Mrs. 37 Essex street, Norwich
Crisp Anthony, Martham, Yarmouth Cruso Miss, 94 London road, Lvnn Cushine Robert, 35 Essex st. Norwich
Crisp Edward, 24 Crown rd. Yarmouth CubittMaj.F.A.J.P.Thorpe hall,Norwich Cushing Rev. Mathew Stacy, Watton
Crisp James, Windsor road, Lynn Cubitt Major Henry Archibald J.p. The Road terrace, Croxton road, Thetford
Crisp Jn.Albion ho.MileEnd rd.Norwich Lodge, Earlham, Norwich Cushing Mrs. 38 Grove road, Norwich
Crisp Miss,4Ethel rd.Thorpe rd.N orwich Cubitt Capt. C. P. Coltishall, Norwich CushionAlfred,83St.Philip's rd. Norwich
Crisp Miss, 78 Regent road, Yarmouth Cubitt Arnold, The Grange, Bacton, Cushion Miss, 37 Dereham rd. Norwich
Crisp Miss, Reydon honse, Harleston North Walsham Cushion Mrs. I Providence street, Lynn
Crisp Misses, Docking, Lynn CubittBenj.Point ho. Neatishead,Norwch Cushion Wm. 164 D~reham rd. Norwich
Crisp Mrs. London road, Harleston Cubitt C.Holly gro. Neatishead,Norwich Custance Col. Sir Hambleton Francis
Crisp Mrs. The Gables, Harleston Cubitt Charles, 65 York street, Norwich K.C.B.,D.L.,J.P. \\'estonhouse, Weston
Crisp Mrs. Stephen, Beech cottage, Cubitt C. Jn. 28 Havelock rd. Norwich Longville, Norwich
Snettisham, Lynn CubittEdwd. Geo. J. P. Honing hall,N rwch Custance Lieut.-Col. l''rederic Ramble·
Crisp Wm. 2_S7 South town rd. Yarmth Cubitt G. 10 Brunswick~ ew rd.~ orwich ton J. P. W'eston Longville, Norwich;
Crispe S. E. Market st. Wymondham Cubitt George, Happisburgh, Stalham & 12 John street, Mayfair, London
Critoph R. Upper Sheringham, Cromer Cubitt George Cole, 23 Denmark road, Custance Rev. Charles William Neville
Croker~lrs.TheGrange.Cantley,Norwich Earlham road, Norwich M.A. Rectory, Ashill, Watton
Cronshey Rev. Frederick John M.A. Cnbitt Henry L.Market st. 'Wymondham Cuthbertson William Gihnour, Stan·
White Hart street, Thetford / Cubitt Miss, Bacton, North Walsham field hall, Wymondham
Cronshey A. G. White Hart st. Thetfrd Cubitt Miss, Happisburgh, Stalham Cutlack Mrs. 58 Albion road, Yarmouth
Cronshey James Tanner st. 'fhetford Cubitt Mrs. Little Barningham,Norwich Gutting Rev. W.AubreyM.A.Gayton,Lynn
Cronshey Jas. Hy. Raymond st. Thetfd Cubitt Mrs. 21 Railway road, Lynn Czerny Mrs. Earsham, Bungay
Crook A. 53 Prince of Wale~ rd.Norwich CubittMrs. Montana ho.North Walsham Dack James, 7 Sunnyside, Diss
Crook Edward, 59 Mill Hill rd. Norwich Cubitt Mrs. The Grange, Bacton, North Dade T. H. 38 Ayl:sham road, Norwich
CrookJ n. York ho. Chapelfield rd. N orwt.:h Walsham Daines John, 70 Heigham rd. Norwich
Crook Mrs. Beechamwell, Swafiham CubittMrs.B.LittleBarningham,Norwch Daines Jn.li. r85 Dereham rd. Norwich
Crook Wm. G. All Saints' grn. Norwich Cubitt W. P.Abbey, Bacton, Nth. Walshm Dakin John H.8 Castle meadow,N orwich
Crook~hank Rev. Gerrard Alexander M.A. Cud don Philip, 76 Unthanks rd.N orw1ch Dakin William Ho ward, 2 Chester place,
Vicarage, Fordharn, Downham Cuddon-Fletcher Bernard James (J.P. St. Giles road, Norwid1
CrosbieHy.Greaves, 103Trinity st.Nrwch for Norfolk & Argyleshire (Dunans) & Dalby Alfred Edward, Docking, Lynn
Crosbie Hy. J. A.r8Clarendon rd.N orwch barrister-at-law), Somerton hall, West Dale John, 58 Havelock road, Yarmouth
CrosbieHoraceW.76Earlham rd.Norwch, Somerton, Yarmouth Dale William J. Thorpe, Norwich
Crosbie Samuel W. 2r Park la. Norwich Cufande Frank, Acle, Norwich Dales Robert, 43 Norwich road, New
Cross Rev. H. Mcl. B.A. Norwich road, Cull Rev. Ernest George M.A. 22 Grove Walsoken, Wisbech
Wymondham avenue, St. Stcphen's road, Norwich Dalglish R. P. H. Snettisham, Lynn
Cross Aquila, 31 Newmarketrd. Norwch Cullen Mrs. 4 Christchurch rd. Norwich Dalison Rev. John Beauvoir M. A., J.P.
CrossA.li.Cantelupe ho.Dersinghm.Lynn Cullen Thos. B. 73 Heigham rd.~orwich Rectory, Upwell, Wisbech
Cross Benjamin, 74 Park lane, Norwich Culley Albert John, Wensum cottage, DallirnoreRev. Harry,Vicarage,Halver•
Cross B. S. 153 Southtown rd. Yarmouth Costessey, Norwich gate, Norwieh
Cross C. B. 8r Chapelfield rd. Norwich CulleyA.C.TheGrove,Bracondale,Nrwch Dalmaine Rev. Henry Norman M.A.
Cross Frank, 8 Whitefriars road, Lynn Culley Frederick, Denmark pl. Aylsham Wiveton, Dereham
Cross George, Postwiek hall, Norwich CulleyFk.Sl.Belle vue,Brundali,Norwieh Dalrymple Mrs.Thorpe lo.Thorpe,Nrwch
Cross George Frederick ?.LB.& B.s. llolly Culley Hy. R. 52 Thorpe road, Norwich Damant Mrs. Lammas, Thorpe,N orwich
house, I<'incham, Downham Culley Miss, The Cedars, Thorpe road, Darnpier Rev. Augustus M.A. Rectory,
Cross Henry Ernest, The Beeches, Caw- Thorpe hamlet, Norwich Gillingham All Saints, Beccles
ston road, Aylsham Culley Misses, Wensum cottage, Costes- D'Angibau Rev. George M.A. North
Cross James, 219 Dereham rd. Norwich sey, Norwich Creake, Fakenham
Cross John, 9 Mount Pleasant, Norwich Cnlley Mrs. Alborough, Norwich DanielRev.W.D.Towngrn.Wymondham
Cross John M. Mile End road, Norwich Culley Samuel, 6 Chester place, N orwieh Daniel Thomas William li!.A., .J.P.
Cross Jn. W. 19 Nelson rd. sth. Yarmouth CullingfordJ.G.g4Sth. Market rd. Yrmth Thrigby hall, Yarmouth
CrossJoseph,6 Providenee ter.Swaffham Cullingford Robert Alfred, 4 Oak villas, DaniellEdward,61Pottergate st.Norwich
Cross Miss, East Gate cottage, N ecton, St. Martin's ro1.d, Norwich Daniels Alfred, 4 Mount Pleasant,
Swaffham Cullum James, Victoria road, Diss Gorleston, Yarmouth
Cross Mrs. Bacton rd. North Walsham Culyer Robert, Der;;ingham, Lynn DanielsChas.MileEnd rd.Eaton,Norwich
Cross lVIrs. 8o Chapelfield road, Norwich Cumber! and Mrs. Whitt.ington,StokeFrry Daniels George, The Lindens, Lime
Cross Mrs. 25 Earlham road, Norwich Gumming Rev. James John lLA. Rec- Tree road, Town close, Norwich
Cross Mrs. Ivy ho. Stibbard, Dereham tory, East Carlton, Norwich Daniels R.Minister,Martham,Yarmouth
Cross Mrs. Tunn street, Fakenham Cummings George Bushall, New road, Daniels Samuel, Blakeney, Dereham
Cross Robert, 12 Clarence road, Thorpe St<1tion road, Thetford Daniels Thomas Abbott, Stalham
hamlet, Norwich Cundall Miss, 4 Brunswick rd. Norwich Daniels Thomas Brown, Woodlands,
Cross T. VV. 45 Mount Pleasant, Norwich Cunnell Chas. 8 Newmarket rd. Norwich Gressenhall, East Dereham
Cross Walter, 21 Valinger's road, Lynn Cunningham Edwd.L.r6Pitt st.Norwich Darby Albert William, Bridge house,
CrosseRev.A.A. T. M.A. Hickling,Stalham Cunning ham Mrs. Heacham, Lynn Gillingham All Saints, Becdes
Crosse Rev. Charles Henry M. A., M. L. CunningtonChs. t41 Dereham rd.N orwch Darby Arthur Wellesley, 53 Denmark
Rectory, Fincham, Downham Cunnington J. 144 Dereham rd.Norwich road, Earlham road, Norwich
Crosse Rev. Marlborough B.A. Vicarage, Cuppage Rev. Robert Jackson M.A. Darlow Henry, Lessingham, Stalham
Terrington St. Clement, Lynn Rectory, North Barsham, Walsing- Darnell John,II South beach, Yarmouth
CrosseReginaldEdwd. Norfolk& Norwich ham R.S.O Darnell J oseph Allen, 5 Stradbroke road,
hospital, St. Stephen's road, Norwich Curl Edward, 4 Ipswich road, Norwich Gorleston, Yarmouth
Crosse Thos. Wm. 45 St.Giles st.Norwich CurlH.Fairmile,Xewmarket rd.Norwich Darnell Phillip, Barrington house,
Crosskill C. R. 199 Dereham rd.Norwich Curl Jacob, 85 Newmarket rd. Norwich Hacton, Nort;h Walsham
Crosskill R. C. 201 Derebam rd. Norwch Curl John, Docking, Lynn Darrell Rev. John Freeman B. A. Rectory,
Crossland Rev. William, Ridlington, Curl Mrs. 6r Trinity street, Norwich Haynford, Norwich
North Walsham Curry Rev. Thomas Burton, Apsley Darrell H. W. 35 Surrey street, Norwich
Crotch Mrs. 3 Lyndhurst villas, Magda- house east, Britannia road, Yarmouth Dashwood Rev. Charles John M.A.
len road, Norwich Cur son Fredk. A. 14 Valinger's rd. Lynn Billingford, East Dereham
~row Mrs. 19 St. George's rd. Yarmouth Curson Geo. R. Hempton, .Fakenham Dash wood E. H. 15 Grove st. we. Norwich
Crowdy Rev. William Slater M.A. Thurs- CursonHy.Laurel ho.Goodwin's rd.Lynn Dash wood Leopold,76 St.Stephen's road,
ford, Briningham Curson Mrs. Exton's place, Lynn Norwich
Crowe Major Stephen M. 4 St. Giles Curson Mrs. Goodwin's road, Lynn Dashwood Robert J.P. Dunburgh hill,
terrace, Bethel street, )I orwich Cur son Samuel, N eatishead, Norwich Gcldeston, Beccles
CroweA.53Carltonter.Surreyrd.Nrwch Cnrson T. MarketpL\\-'alsinghamR.S.O Daunt Rev. A. B.A. Broome, Bungay •
Crowe Benjamin, Grove cottage, Grove Curson Waiter, Bury road, Thetford Davey Clifford, 10 Albion terrace, Gay-
lane, Catton, Norwich Curteis Miss, Shelton lodge, Morning- wood road, Lynn
Crowe Fredk.Bowen,Wroxham,Norwich tborpe, Long Stratton Davey F. Wm.91Southtwn.rd. Yarmouth
Crowe James, Burgh apton, Norwich Curteis William Calverly LL.D., J.P. Davey G. Manor ho.Horningtoft,Derehm
Crowe Miss, 21 Pitt street, Norwich Shrubbery, Scole Davey John George Ellis J.P. Longlands,
Crowe Mrs . .')2 Cambridge st. Norwich Cnrtis Fredk.25 Chapelfield rd. Norwich Holkham, Wells
Crowe Mrs. 23 Trinity street, Norwich

CurtisHy.Saml. 73Rodney rd. Yarmouth DaveyMrs. Withburga cot.East Dereham
746 DAV NORFOLK. [KELLY'S

Davey Miss, :rr Trafalgar rd. Yarmouth Daynes John William Crook,Riverview, Devey Albert,27rSonthtown rd.Yarmth
Davey Robt.22 Sonthtown rd.Yarmouth Hradeston, Norwich Dewe Rev. George Downing M.A. Rec-
Davidson Major James, Hill house, Daynes Mrs. 14 Dereham road, Norwich tory, Felthorpe, Norwich
• Thorpe hamlet, Norwich Daynes Mrs. 65 Newmarket rd. Norwch Dewe Rev.Robert lll.A. Rectory, Geldes-
Davidson Rev. Alfred Knight, Old Daynes Samuel, Ivy gates, Mount wn, Heccles
Buckenham, Attleborough Pleasant., Norwich DewhirstCharlesRoger, Bank ho. Aylsbm
Davidson James Alex. Butt lands, Wells Deacon G. Edward, Hethersett, Norwch Dewing Herbt. Augustus, Mill ho. Wells
Davie A!lison C. 42 Regent rd. Yarmouth Deacon Geo. F. :M. D. Hethersctt, Norwch De wing Miss,63 Newmarket rd. Norwich
Davie Miss, Acle, Norwich DeanRev.T.S.OldHuckenham,Attleboro' Dewing Misses, Hurnham market, Lynn
Davies Very Hev. Monsignor Geo. M.A. Dean Mrs. 34 Queen's road, Norwich DewingMrs.26Grove street nth.Norwch
Costessey, Norwich Deane Rev. William Edward M.A. The DewingRd.Wm.Baron's hall, Fakenham
Davies Rev. Alfred M.A. St. James' Rectory, Eccles, Attleborough Dexter Mrs. 40 Bracondale, Norwich
vicarage, Norwich Deane Mrs. 2 Paragon street, Norwich Diball John, 77 Crown road, Yarmouth
Davies Rev. Arthur Charles H. A. Rectory, Deans Mrs. 32 Albion road, Yarmouth Diboll Joseph W. Lichfield road, South-
Antingham, North \\'alsham Dearle George, St. Marie's terrace, Diss town, Yarmouth
Davies Rev. Evan Lcwis AI. A. Hcctory, Dearlove Thomas Dearlove, Oxburgh Diboll J.W.jun.9ISt.George's rd.Yrmth
Stanfield, East Dereham hall, Emneth, Wisbech Dicker Hy. 2 Havelock road, Yarmouth
Davies Rev. Frederick M.A., J.P. Vicar- Dearsly H. H.44 Mount Pleasant,Nrwch DieksonRev.T.M.M.A.Crostwick,Norwch
age, W'iggenhall St. Mary Magdalen, Debenham Miss, A! burgh, Harleston Dick son A. W.56 Nelson rd. nth. Yarmth
Lynn deHoltz Henry, 70 Cambridge st. Nrwch Digby Commander Henry Almarus R.N ••
Davies Rev. Frederick Charles M. A. De Carle Wm. I4 Newmarket rd.Nrwch J. P The Limes, North Runcton, Lynn
Albemarle road, Norwich De Caux John, 23 Park lane, Norwich Digby Rev. Charles Tilton M.A. Rectory,
Davies Fairfax, Maudesley & Scarbor- de Caux J. W. 2 Regent rd. Yarmouth Warham St. Mary, Wells
ough hill, North Walsham Decaux Lucas, 107 Unthanks rd. Nrwch Digby Algernon M. A. High field,Faknhm
Davies George Christopher, Orwell De Chair Rev. Canon Frederick Blackett Diggens Francis George, West wick
house, Town close, Norwich M.A., J.P. Rectory, MorleySt.Hotolph, house, Thorpe road, Norwich
Davies Mrs. 79 Crown road, Yarmouth Attleborough Diggons Mrs. 5 Blackfriars street, Lynn
Davies Mrs. St. Marie's terrace, Diss Deigham Miss, 55 Mill Hill rd. Norwich Digings Jenni8,Baxter row,East Derehm
Davis Rev. Philip Henry, St. Mary's Delf Mrs. 2 Nelson rd. sth. Yarmouth Dimmock George Thomas, Fairholme,
terrace, Bury road, Thetford Delf Robert P. Ss St. Philip's rd. Nrwch Ipswich road, Norwich
Davis John, I3 South beach, Yarmouth Delf Samuel Newton, Longwood house, Dines William, 17 Whitefriars rd. Lynn
Davis Mrs. 7 Upper Surrey st. Norwich Topcroft, Bungay DingleA.Groverd.Thorpe hamlet,Nrwcl•
Davis Robert, 6 Mount Pleasant, Gorles- Delf W. M. 141 Unthanks rd. Norwich Dinglcy George,24 Wellesley rd. Yarmth
ton, Yarmouth Delves Joseph, 20 Wellington rd. Nrwch Ditcham Miss, 96 Havelock rd. Yarmth
DavisonRev.James,RedLion st.Aylsham Dendy Mrs. East Bungalow, Cliff park, Diver Charle~, 25 Camperdown,Yarmth
Davison Daniel, Ebenezer cot. Stalham Gorleston, Yarmouth Diver Walter,1 Regent road, Yarmouth
Davison Mrs. Saxthorpe, Norwich Den ham Mrs. River View house, St. Divers Frederick, 7 London road, Lynu
Davy Dennis, 2 Belle vue terrace, Ayls- Martin's road, Norwich Dix Rev. William Henry M.A. Rectory,
ham road, Norwich Denison Miss, Claremont lodge, New- Hramerton, Norwich
Davy John William J.P. The Hall, Cong- market road, Norwich Dix Alfred, Tivetshall St. Mary, Scole
ham, Lynn Dennes Charles llevan, Avenue lodge, Dix C.4 Carrow vale,Carrow rd.NorwP-h
Davy Misses, Mount Amelia, Ingoldis- Newmarket road, Norwich Dix F.1Essex st.SouthHeigham,Norwch
thorpe, Lynn Dennes Mrs. Ivy cottage, Philadelphia Dix James, Grimston, Lynn
DavyWm.NewBuckenham,Attleborough lane, Norwich Dix Miss, 20 Earlham road, Norwich
Davy Wm. 45 South Everard st. Lynn Denney Edwin James, White house, Dix Misses, Trunch, North Walsham
Daw "\\'m. Edwd. 4 Gaywood rd. Lynn Yarmouth road, North Walsham Dix Mrs. 3 Earlham road, Norwich
Dawdy Edward, Carrow road, Thorpe Denney Jn. W. 100 Nelson rd. Yarmth Dix Wm. 87 Hall rd.Lakenharn,Norwch
hamlet, Norwich Denney Miss, S St. George's rd. Yarmth Dixon Gen.T. 12Nelson rd.sth. Yarmouth
Daws Charles Waterhouse, 34 London Dennis Edwin E. Riddlesworth farm, DixonRev.John,Station rd.Attleborough
street, Norwieh Riddlesworth, Thetford Dixon Rev. 'Villiam Francis M. A. Ashby-
Daws Hy. W. 7~ Mill Hill rd .. Norwich Dennis Miss, Hurnham market, Lynn cum-Oby, Yarmouth
Daws Robert, sS Mill Hill road, Norwich Dennis Mrs. I7 London road, Lynn DixonAbelW.'fbeHali,Saxthorpe,Nrwch
Dawson Col. Algernon Cecil J.P. Manor Dennis .Mrs. 92 London road, Lynn Dixon Hcrbert, Saham Toney, Watton
house, Cat ton, Norwich Dennis Rt. Royston ho. North \Valsham Dixon Irving- E. 20 Sussex st. Norwich
Dawson Chas. 14 \Vellcsley rd. Yarmth DennyAlexander,3xClarendon rd.Nrwch Dixon James, Harborough,Christchurch
Dawson Edwin, Queen's road, Fakenham Denny Donald Anthony, St. Leonard's road, Norwich
Dawson Henry, 11 Victoria st. Norwich road, Thorpe hamlet, Norwich DixonJohn,Brentnall ho.NorthWalsham
Dawson Jabez, 1S South well rd. N orwch Denny George, London road, Harleston D1xon Mrs. Cawston road, Aylsham
DawsonJ.S. 29 Lowestoftrd. Yarmouth Denny Jarnes, Sycarnore uouse, North- Dixon Mrs. Paston, North Walsham
Dawson John, Tower house, St. Martin's wold, Stoke Ferry DobbsG.K.A.C.P.Hingham,Attleborough
road, :\orwich Denny .Miss, Northwold, Stoke Ferry Dobie Mrs. r6 Mill Hill road, Norwich
Dawson Jonn.W. ~t.Martin's rd.Norwich Denny Mrs. 66 Heigham road, Norwich Doble Thomas, I Devonshire rd. Yarmth
Dawson Mrs. I6 Crown road, Yarmouth Denny Mrs. Manor house, Burgh Apton, DobsonHenry,156Sonthtown rrl.Yarmth
Dawson Mrs. I St. James' road, Lynn Norwi<"h Dobson John,34 Princes road, Ya!'Inouth
Dawson Robert Thorndick, 17 The Crcs- Denny Richard Harrison, Framing ham Dobson John, Town Close road,N orwich
1
cent, Chapelfield, Norwich cottage, Framing ham, Norwich 1 Dodd Ed ward J ames,42 Coach & Horses
Dawson Samuel, 2 Crown rd. Yarmouth Denny William, London road, Harleston, street, South Heigham, Norwich
Dawson Wm. 8 North Everard st. Lynn DentSnrg.-Capt.H.C.Norwch.rd.Cromer Dodd Mrs.Wellswill house, Dersingham,
Dawson William Thorndick, 65 Carltvn Dent Arthur Edwin Clare, Plumstead • Lynn
terrace, Surrey road, Norwich road, Thorpc hamlet, Norwich I Dodds Miss, I Primrose terrace, Gay-
Day Rev. Alfred Ueorge M.A. Rectory, Dent Mrs. 62 Heigham road, Norwich wood, Lynn
Great Melton, Norwich Dent Robert, Cromer road, Aylsham 1Dodman Alfred, Sunnyside, Goodwin's
Day Rev. RussellM.A.Recklry,Horstead, Dent Wilham Richard, Redbourne,Nor-i road, Lynn
Norwich wich road, Crorner i Dodman Mrs. Mountfield, Goodwin's
Day Rev. Theodore Henry Crossman Deuton Fredk. 55 Havelock rd. Yarmth road, Lynn
B.A. Limpenhoe, Reedham R.S.O · Denton \\'illiam Henjamin, Rose villas, Dodman .Mrs. Woborn house, Langham
Day Alfred, Upper Surrey .st. Norwich Gladstone road, Fakenham road, Yarmouth
Day Daniel, Lime Kiln house, East de Poix Edmond Tyre! J.P. Broome Dodson Wm. 9 St.Stephen's sq. Norwich
Harli1:g, Thetford Place, Bungay Doggett Fredertc Ernest, 64 Thorpe
Day D.D.M.B.4 UpperSturey st.Norwich De Ramsey Lord D.L., J.P. The Hall, road, Thorpe hamlet, Norwich
Day Geo. F. 57 Cambridge st. Norwich Haverlaml, Norwich; & 2 Grosvenor Doggett Miss, Burnbam Overy, Lynn
Day Herbert William, Dalton house, square w & Carlton clubs w London Dolan Rev.J.A.M.A. Stokcsby,Yarmouth
, Castleacre street. Swaffham Derry Horatio, Victory villa, Bells road, Dolignon Rev. John William B.A. Cock-
Day John Henjamin, ll Essex street, Gorleston, Yarmouth · ley Cley, Swaffham
South Hcigham, Norwich. Des Quartiers 1\Jadame, 1 Brandon ter- Dolman Mrs. Pulhatn St. Mary Magda-
Day Matt. Wreningham. "\\'ymondham race, Yarmouth !en, Harleston
Day Miss E. J. 7 Lakenham ter. Norwch Desborough Mrs. Wells road, Fakenham Dolphin Mrs.T.Swafield,NorthWalsham
Day Misses, Market place, Swaffham Deuchar JuhnJamesWalker F.F.A. ,F. I. A. Donne Miss, 6 Mount Pleasant, Norwich
Day Mrs. Paxton terrace, Lynn Fern bill, Unthanks road, Norwich Donnison Rev. James Watson Stote
Day Mrs. 47 Unthanks road, Norwich Deuchar Miss, Fernhill, Unthanks road, M.A., J.P. Dove house, Harleston
Day Wm. H. 3 Surrey street, Norwich Norwich Doubleday Frederick Thomas, 2 Park
Daynes A. W. 23 Es~ex street, Norwich De Vear Miss, I Cow hill, Norwich villas 1 Denmark street1 Diss
COURT DIRECTORY.] NORFOLK. ELL 747
Doughty Hy. M. 6 Trafalgar sq.Yarmth Dunham Mrs. Chnrch terrace, Aylsham Eaton Rev. Canon John Richard Turner
DoughtyThos. Wm .34Regent rd. Yannth Dun ham Wm. Bridewell st. Wymond ham M.A. Rectory, Den ton, Harleston
Douglas-llamilton Alfred, Manor house, Dunham W. A. Northfield, Wymondham Ea ton Rev. William Ray B. A. Rectory,
Stratton St. Mary, Long Stratton Dunmore Mrs. 32 Thorpe road, Thorpe East Bradenham, Thetford
Dove Fras. By. 26 Wellesley rd. Yarmth hamlet, Norwich Eaton Charles Jas. 7 Railway rd. Lynn
Dow Arthur G. 2 Coronation ~;q. Lynn Dunn Miss, Theatre st. East Dereham Eaton George, Garboldisham, Thetlord
Dow·ell Rev. Edward William B.A.Vicar- Dunn Mrs. 23 Chapeltield rd. Norwich Eaton George Clayton, Cleveland house,
age, Dnnton, Fakenham Dunn Mrs. 67 Lancaster rd. Yarmouth Newmarket road, Norwich
Dow·ey Mrs.37~ Southtowl}. road,South- Dunnage Major A. J. R.A. 27 Nelson Eaton Mrs. Victoria road, Diss
town, Yarmouth road south, Yarmouth Ebbage Mrs. 72 Crown road, Yarmouth
Dowler Mrs. 9 Camperdown, Yarmouth DunnanMrs. 53 Heigham road, Xorwich Ebbetts J. E. Munde..'lley,Nth. Walsham
Downer Henr~', Magdalcn road, Wat- Dunnett Daniel, Watton S.O Ebbetts Mrs. Ivy ho. '\\ hitwell,Norwich
lington, Downham Market Dunnett llerbert John, Watton S.O EcclesJames Laird, 44 Railway rd.Lynn
Downes Herbert Richard, 9 Thorpe Dunning Wm. IS Blackfriars st. Lynn Ecclestone Mrs. 27 Dene side, Yarmouth
road, Thorpe hamlet, Norwich Dunning William, Southrepps, Norwich Eddington A. 20 Unthanks rd. Norwich
Downes J. Rock land St. Peter,Attleboro' Dunning William, jun. Yarmouth road, EdenCapt.R. LowerSheringham,Cromer
Downcs Wm. P. 2 Whitefriars rd. Lynn North Walsham Eden Rev. R.M.A.Vicar st.Wymondham
Downing Geo. Jn. 59 Grove rd.Norwch Dunster Hev. Henry Peter M.A.Vicarage, Eden Henry Ilamilton Forbes, Eden
Downing J0hn, Victoria street, Norwich Woodbastwick, Xorwich lodge, Heeston Regis, Cromer
Downing- Mrs. Butt lands, Wells Dunt John, Lenwade, Norwich EdgeSaml.Geo.B.A.,M.H.Blofie d,Nrwcb
Downs Misses, IO Denbigh road, Park Dunt Mrs. Acle, Norwich Edwards Major Henry Berbert, The
lane, Norwich Du-Port Rev.J.M.M.A.Denver,Downham Highlands, Sidestrand, Cromer
Downton Mrs. Hall hills, Diss Durrant Lady, Scottow hall, l\orwich EdwardsRev.A .. W. Derebam rd ..Watton
Dowsett Freuk.Jn. Hall Plain chambers,, Durrant G. Redenhall grange, Harleston Edwards Rev. Henry M.A. Marsham,
Yarmouth & Station road, Heccles Durrant G. jun.Richmond ho.Harleston Norwich
DowsettHenry, 53Southtown rd. Yarmth Durrant Jas. Stoke Holy cross, Norwich Edwards - , 1 2 Mount Pleasant,N orwch
DowsettJohn, 14Trafalgar rd. Yarmouth DurrantJn.Erpingham ho.Nth. Walsham Edwards Edward, Prospect cottage, St.
Dowson Rev. George, Rockland St. Durrant Martin, 61 London road, Lynn Leonards road, Norwich
Peter, Attleborough Durrant Miss,TheHall,Brumstead,Stlhm Edwards Frederic, Scarning,E. Dereham
Dowson Edwd. T. J.P. Geldeston,Bcccles Durrant 1\Irs. Caister, Yarmouth Edwards George Robert, 51 Denmark
Dowson Frank Withers, Branksome, Durrant Mrs. 29 King street, LJnn road, Earlham road, Norwich
Overstrand, Cromer . Durrant Mrs. TheHall, Brurmtead, Stlhm Ed wards Henry Wm. Hartholomew D. L. •
Dowson Frank Withers,Brewery ho.Diss Durrant Mrs. Watton S.O J.P. Hardingham hall, Attleborough
DowsonFredk.IsCastle meadow,Norwch Durrant T. J. 25 Duncan rd. Yarmouth Edwards Josiah, I6,SDereha.m rd.Nrwch
Doyle Mrs. Lower close, Norwich Durrell Mrs. 31 Essex street, South Edwards Miss, IS9 Dereham rd.Norwich
D'Oyly Mrs. Hempnall, Norwich Heigham, Norwich Edwards The Misses, Manor house,
Drage Mrs. East Rudham, ~waffham Durrell Mrs. 31 Trinity street, Norwich Tanner street, Thetford
DrageThornasB.EastRudham,SwaffhamjDusgate Rd. lJ. The Hall, Fring, Lynn Edwards Mrs. 35 Dereham rd. Norwich
Drake Rev. Canon William M.A. Knap-' Dut.dunan Miss, Holly lodge, London Edwards Mrs. Fir cottage, Strump-
ton cottage, Knapton,Korth Walshaml street, Swaffham shaw, Norwich
Drake Rev. Waiter Yonge M.A. Rectory,; Dwane Rev.M.Lynford,Mundford RS.O Edwards Mrs. 12 Newmarket rd.::'irwch
St.ratton St. Michael, Long Stratton ; llyball Charles, 18 Helvoir st. Norwich Edwards Mrs. Rollesby, Yarmouth
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