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Jane Langborne's cookery book

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Jane Langborne's cookery book & handwritten recipes


Jane Galilee (1783-1856), the second wife of George Langborne (1773-1832), owned a copy of Mrs Rundell's celebrated book,  A New System of Domestic Cookery; formed upon Principles of Economy: and Adapted to the Use of Private Families

The small volume is packed with recipes: Soles in the Portuguese way – rolled beef that equals hare – Spadbury's Oxford sausages – green sauce for green geese – eel pie – gooseberry fool – stewed golden pippins rout drop-cakes ...

There are instructions for the cook:  how to stew a shoulder of venison – how to salt pork – how to brew very fine Welch ale ... 

There are chapters of advice on how to manage the dairy and the poultry yard and on cooking for the sick and for the poor.  A chapter headed Various Receipts includes instructions on how to make Lavender Water, on how to make ink, and how to preserve furs and woollen from moths.

No wonder it was a publishing sensation in Britain and America, as this article in the Guardian explains.  Mrs Rundell was the Mrs Beeton or Delia Smith of her age. 

Jane's copy was the 1810 edition, published in London by John Murray.  A couple of recipes are jotted on the last page of the index.  One is a Receipt for making Ink:
5 oz of Powdered Gall
2 oz of Copperass
1 oz of Gum Arabic
1 oz of Rock Alum
1 Quart of Watter
Infuse them a month
stirring them every Day
("Watter" for "water" must be a reflection of the local dialect – as can be found in Wordsworth, in fact).

Useful recipes on slips of paper have been preserved between the pages: Calves Foot Jelly, Raspberry Vinegar, Plum Cake ...

For anyone eager to try it, here is a useful recipe for Parkin:
2 lbs of oatmeal
2 lbs of treacle, warmed
half a pound of brown sugar
½ an ounce of ground ginger
¼ lb of candid lemon
a table spoonful of carbonate of soda
½ lb of butter melted & mixed with the treacle
bake into dishes or tins well buttered in a slow oven
and in these straitened times, the recipe that Mrs Holtby kindly wrote out for Mrs Langborne might be useful:
A Cheap Plum Pudding
Half a pound of Potatoes, ¼ lb of Carrots boiled till they can be mashed quite fine, ½ lb of Flour, ¾ of Currants, ¼ of Suet shred fine, ¼ lb of Moist Sugar to be mixed with the Potatoes and Carrots when you mash them, 1 oz of Candied Lemon, a little Cinnamon, and Nutmeg, to your taste.  Mix all together over night, and boil it 4 hours.
[signed] Mrs Holtby




As you might have guessed, I did not spoil the charm by altering the spelling of the originals ...





People of Hutton Rudby in the C18/19: Nattrass to Norman

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... from my working notes ... accuracy not guaranteed ... for explanatory note, see post of 14 Feb 2013


Nattrass

Oddfellows Board:  Bro:  William Nattrass, Hutton, 9 Apr 1880, a21


Nellist

Yorkshire Gazette 12 Mar 1842:  John Nellist: “I am a farmer, and reside in the parish of Seymour …”  He found the bones of the man that was presumed to be William Huntley. 


Nelson

“Nelson my Hind” saw Meek and Jackson trespassing in May 1856 – Barlow’s Notebook




Neville

1823 Baines:  Agents [inc] Thos Graham (to Mr Nevill)

Joseph Neville was the bleacher at Crathorne [Hastings:  Ind Vill]

late July 1830:  Thomas Grundy said that he and Robert Goldsbrough “went together by Mr Neville’s, the high house on the road, and near the stone bridge they found a bag lying on the ground ... the bag was about 200 or 300 yards from the bridge, in a lonely rough place in the wood.” [Yorkshire Gazette 12 Mar 1842]
This house is presumed to correspond to Susie Dugdale’s:  Park House, Crathorne


Newsame

Robert Newsam (Sexhow) was a Poor Law Guardian [Hastings:  Local Govt & Socy]

1840 Whites:  Sexhow:  Robert Newsam, farmer
1841 Census:  Sexhow:  Ann Newsham 75 farmer born out of county, Robert Newsham 42

‘Stokesley News & Cleveland Reporter’ 1 Apr 1844:
Deaths:
On Saturday, March 24th, at Rudby Mill, Mr Joseph Newsame, aged 39 years


Nicholson

“Nicholson wife” is given 3s 6d on 1 Apr 1869, in Barlow’s Notebook


Nightingale

EB 242:  8 Oct 1816:  assignment of property of Matthew Taylor:  Robert Nightingale of Hutton farmer is a party

1823 Baines:  Hutton:  Robert Nightingale, farmer

FC 147:  14 Nov 1825:  James Bainbridge bricklayer (1) Hutchinsons & Place bankers (2) William Richmond of Stockton mercer & draper (3) Richard Nightingale the younger of Middleton St George (4):  2 houses, lately in 3 tenements, with garden behind, formerly occ by James Bainbridge, Richard Wood & Thomas Almond, then by James Bainbridge & John Simpson, now by James & John Bainbridge; and also 2 new erected houses now in 3 tenements lately erected by James Bainbridge in the garden, now occ by George Harker, Alice Pedlar & Ann Rudd:  all bounded by messuage & garden of Roger Bowes to E, by messuage & garden of Edmund Taylor to W, by street to N, by Thomas Passman to S

FL 58:  13 May 1827:  East Side, judging by occupants & boundaries:  2 houses lately used in 3 tenements with garden behind formerly occ by James Bainbridge, Richard Wood & Thomas Almond, then by sd James Bainbridge & John Simpson, then by sd James Bainbridge & John Bainbridge:  and the 2 houses used in 3 tenements “newly created” and “lately erected” by sd James Bainbridge in the sd garden, then occupied by George Harker, Alice Pedlar & Ann Rudd:  bounded by house and garden bel to Roger Bowes to E, by Edmund Taylor to W, by street to N, by Thomas Passman to S:  parties:   Richard Nightingale the younger late of Middleton St George gent and George Stanger of Pickton farmer:  reciting indre of 14 Nov 1825 to which James Bainbridge, George & John & Henry Hutchinson, Thomas Place, William Richmond and said Richard Nightingale were parties


Norman

17 May 1810:  HR:  Eleanor Catchasides married Robert Norman [witnesses:  James Catchaside, James Catchaside jnr, Ann Burdon, Wm Frankland]. 
Their children James 1811, Mary 1813, Elizabeth 1815, Ann 1819, Robert 1822, and Grace 1828 were baptised in Hutton Rudby

EB 38:  15 Jun 1816:  Robert Norman (1) James Catchasides innkeeper (2):  asignment of paper mill, occ by Robt Norman;  one witness was Robert Catchasides of Hutton near Rudby gentleman

EB 102:  11 & 13 May 1816:  Hutton manor & mill:  mill occ by Robert Norman

Mrs Norman gave the Primitive Methodist missionary William Clowes accommodation for the night in 1820 [Hastings: Local Govt & Socy]

1823 Baines:  Hutton:  Robert Norman, coarse paper manufacturer

FS 577:  9 Jun 1831:  Robert Norman paper maker to Robert Holliday Dobson of Potto gent:  6a close in Hutton known as the Cottages bounded by Widow Johnson to S, road to the Rountons to N, William Spencer to W, Mr Rickaby to E, occ by Robert Norman

MI:  Robert Norman d 26 Apr 1846 a66 [of Moorsley Banks, St Oswalds, Durham:  PRs];  Eleanor his wife, d ?1869 a ?;  Robert Norman, their son

People of Hutton Rudby in the C18/19: Oates to Oxendale

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... from my working notes ... accuracy not guaranteed ... for explanatory note, see post of 14 Feb 2013


Oates

1823 Baines:  Hutton:  George Oates, agent to Mr Norman
1823 Baines:  Hutton:  Robert Oates, shoemaker

FQ 560:  2 & 3 Nov 1829:  ppty bought by Jane Willans widow in Enterpen:  garth of 1r 3p where a cottage formerly stood, formerly occ by John Miller, then by George Wilson, Mary Young & Hannah Young, then by Matthew Richardson jnr, then by John Burden, bounded by Thomas Wayne to N, E & W, and by street called Enterpen to S; with the houses “lately erected upon the garth” & now occupied by Simeon Burden, John Smelt, Paul Oates, John Goldsbrough, William Jowsey, Abraham Holdgate and William Burnsides

1840 Whites:  Hutton Rudby:  Robert Oates, boot & shoe maker

1841 Census:  Robert Oates 45 shoe maker, Mary 40, John 25 shoe maker journeyman, and Simon Kelsey 80, Jane and Hannah Bainbridge both a12:  on North Side

1841 Census:  Maria Oates 15 servant in household of George Jackson, North Side

John Oates bought the shop (previously weavers, now carpenters), the butchers shop and 9p of land from Thomas Spence in 1842 for £50

GZ 204:  2 May 1842:  Thomas Spence late of Hutton weaver but now of Middlesbrough baker & shopkeeper (1) John Snowdon of Stokesley shoemaker (2) Thomas Sidgwick of Hutton linen manufacturer (3) George Wilson of Hutton linen manufacturer (4) reciting indres of 1839:  John Snowdon had lent Thomas Spence £90 with £4-17-5d interest also owing, on Spence’s property on East Side:  Spence sold Sidgwick the house (formerly 2 houses) & garden for £180, the mortgage to be paid off:  the garden & orchard to be sold to Sidgwick was staked out and contained 33 p; previously occ by Thomas Spence and now by William Meynell; the rest to be sold to John Oates; mortgagee George Wilson

GZ 206:  May 1842:  Thomas Spence to John Oates for £50:  the 2 shops, one formerly a weaver’s shop and now a carpenter’s and the other a butcher’s shop, with the ground behind now staked out and measuring 9 p:  now occ by William Meynell, William Sherwood and John Oates:  bounded by Thomas Sidgwick’s purchase from Spence to E & N, by street to W, Edmund Taylor to S; mortgagee George Wilson

1851 Census:  East Side:  Robert Oates W 59 shoemaker emp 2 hands bHutton and niece Hannah Braithwaite S 21 house servant bHutton
1851 Census:  North Side:  John Oates 35 grocer and wife Elizabeth Hutton [sic] 35 milliner, both b Hutton

John Braithwaite’s children:  Isabella Honeyman, Mary Oates, Robert, grandson John Oates [East Side deeds]
13 Nov 1860 with codicil:  Will of Robert Braithwaite jnr:  tailor & draper.  Wife Margaret.  Cousins John Oates and Robert Honeyman.  Robert jnr died 4 May 1861; he died before Robert snr. [East Side deeds]
19 Feb 1861:  Will of Robert Braithwaite snr:  retired tailor & draper.  Pbte 11 Aug 1862.  Wife Margaret:  sons Robert jnr & John of Sedgefield: daughters Mary Ann wife of John Kendrew tailor, & Hannah wife of Benjamin Hall:  nephew John Oates grocer. [East Side deeds]

11 May 1868:  Codling mortgage:  Mustard garth bounded by John Oates & George Davison to E, Robert Southeran to S and John Sidgwick to N

1872 Post Office Directory:  Hutton Rudby:  John Oates, grocer & draper
1872 Post Office Directory:  Hutton Rudby:  Robert Oates, boot & shoe maker
Robert Oates occupied a house belonging to Edmund Taylor next door to Braithwaite’s house on East Side in 1819

1 Dec 1874:  John Oates owned property on East Side, which had been purchased by John Braithwaite from Edmund Taylor.  Oates sold to John George Wilson. [East Side deeds]

Oddfellows Board:  Bro:  John Oates, Hutton, 13 Oct 1877, a62




Oddfellows

From George Tweddell’s ‘Stokesley News & Cleveland Reporter’ 1 Nov 1842:
Odd Fellow’s Funeral.  
On Friday morning, October 28th, the members of the Traveller’s Home Lodge, of the Independent Order of Odd Fellows, assembled at the house of Mr Wm Robinson, the King’s Head Inn, Hutton, for the purpose of paying their last token of respect, to the remains of the late Host of their Lodge, Mr Jeremiah Raney, of the Wheat Sheaf Inn. 
After the usual funeral ceremony of the Order had been read in the room, to the assembled brothers, by Mr Thos Saddler, N.G., they proceeded in procession, to the house of their departed brother, each wearing the usual funeral regalia of the Order.  Having formed in a circle round the door of the deceased, the corpse was brought out, and the scarlet sash of the departed thrown upon his coffin.  The funeral oration of the Order was then read by George Tweddell, P.S. of the Cleveland Lodge.  
The procession then accompanied the body to its last resting place, where the service of the Church was read by the Rev R. J. Barlow.  
After the coffin had been lowered into the “cold and silent grave”, each member dropped a sprig of rosemary, into the “narrow bed” of their departed brother, according to their usual custom.  As we dropped the sprig with which we had been supplied, upon the coffin of the dead, we could not forbear exclaiming in the language of Shakspeare’s Ophelia, 
“There’s rosemary, that’s for remembrance.”
The procession having again formed, returned to the place from which it set out.
From George Tweddell’s ‘Stokesley News & Cleveland Reporter’ 1 Jan 1844:
Oddfellowship.  On Thursday Evening, December 28th, the Members of the Traveller’s Home Lodge of the Independent Order of Odd Fellows, celebrated their anniversary at the house of Widow Raney, the Wheat Sheaf Inn, when a good supper was provided for the occasion.  The evening was spent in the usual harmonious manner of the brotherhood, and the company broke up highly pleased with the evening’s hilarity.

Orton

William Orton sold property at the east end of North Side to Thomas Tweddle.  William Orton was a tenant of the property before 1815; Elizabeth Orton was a tenant in 1815

20 Nov 1822:  Thomas Bainbridge married Ann Orton [witnesses:  Sarah Johnson, Eliz Hutton, Eliz Seymour, Stephen Catchasides, Robert Hall, J Simpson]

1841 Census:  James Flounders 65 with two servants Elizabeth and Ann Orton and two children, Margaret 9 and George 7 Brown, lodgers

and see these posts: here and here


Oughtred

1872 Post Office Directory:  Hutton Rudby:  Nathaniel Oughtred, commercial traveller


Oxendale

FK 513:  22 Feb 1828:  mortgage of house in Hutton occ by Richard Rymer and closes adjoining:  Robert Baillieur late of Trenholme now of Castle of York innkeeper and Robert Nelson Wilson late of Yarm now of Castle of York yeoman: bounded by Richard Shepherd to N & S, by John Rickarby to E and by Christopher Oxendale to W

FQ 204:  9 Dec 1829:  Robert Baillieur late of Trenholm innkeeper but now of Yarm yeoman (1)  Robert Nelson Wilson of Yarm gent (2) John Harker of Yarm jobber [?] (3):  house, orchard, garth, stable & outbldgs in Hutton Field occ by Richard Rymer and closes adjoining:  bounded by Richard Shepherd to N & S, John Rickarby to E, Christopher Oxendale to W

People of Hutton Rudby in the C18/19: Parish Clerk to Pyman

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... from my working notes ... accuracy not guaranteed ... for explanatory note, see post of 14 Feb 2013


Parish Clerk

“A man appointed to assist the parish priest and who held his office for life.  He was paid from church funds.  His duties included making arrangements for services and leading the responses.”  [Oxford Companion to Local & Family History]

Thomas Atkinson d 30 Aug 1787, Clerk of Middleton [PRs]

16 Feb 1783    James Catchaside carpentr & clark of the parish of Hutton Rudby which office he discharged 36 years & died of a fevr aetatis suo 63.o anno

John Eland jnr, sieve maker, (1747-1822) was clerk of this parish for 38 years, according to his memorial inscription.  He was clerk after James Catchasides’ death in 1783, until about 1820.

1823 Baines:  Hutton:  Samuel Hebron, wheelwright & parish clerk

Samuel Hebron (wheelwright) was the Parish Clerk for 1820-1836:  eg 1829/30 £1 salary to Samuel Hebron clerk.  He also played the Bass Viol in church:  1830/1:  “ditto playing Bass Viol £1”.  1831/2:  his salary £1 and his Bill £1-7-6d

William Hebron was parish clerk, paid £1 a year.  He was the clerk described by the wardens in 1857 as “A man very capable but very neglectful”.  His predecessor was Samuel Hebbron.

1872 Post Office Directory:  Rudby:  Spencer Holmes, parish clerk and master of the National School


Parlor

Parlor is listed in “Recpts for 1854” – Barlow’s Notebook

1851 Census:  Doddle Hill:  Peter Parlour 30 farmer of 188 acres employing 3 labourers b Darlington, Yorks and wife Sarah 31 b Lofthouse, and son John 4 mths b Hutton Rudby;  with niece Elizabeth Thompson 15 scholar b Easby and farm servants Robert Hunt 21  b Ingleby Greenhow and William Truman 17 b Topcliffe




Passman

1832:  John Passman was buried on Sun 7 Oct a5; Harriott Passman was buried on Mon 15 Oct a6 (acc to sept. nomina).  [PRs]

early C18:  parish registers show Passmans at Sexhow, and East Side deeds show they owned property there.  They were related to Coates and Dinsleys

1771:  William Passman, Sexhow, was churchwarden

Flax bounty:  William Passman of Sexhow received government bounty 1780-4

Robert Balier of Rudby & East Rounton marr Elizabeth Passman of Rudby at East Rounton on 7 Apr 1806:  witnesses Wm Wood, Matthew Appleton, Eliza Kay and Harry Passman [PRs]

Yorkshire Poll Book 1807:  Hutton Rudby:  Thomas Passman farmer

DU 390:  2 & 3 Aug 1815:  Thos Cust to Thos Newton, house, stable yard or garth in
Hutton, occ by Wm Carter, previously, and now by John Passman and Wm Easby

DW 581:  4 Apr 1816:  James Bainbridge of Hutton bricklayer (1) George, John & Henry Hutchinson the younger & Thomas Place bankers at Stockton (2):  3 houses adjoining each other in Hutton, occ by James Bainbridge, Richard Wood & Thomas Almond:  bounded by Thomas Passman & Thomas & George Farnaby to E & N, by street to W, by Edward [sic] Taylor to S

EC 354:  30 Oct 1817:  James Bainbridge bricklayer (1) William Richmond of Stockton mercer & draper (2):  2 houses with garden behind, occ by James Bainbridge & John Simpson:  bounded by messuage & garden of Roger Bowes to E, by messuage & garden of Edmund Taylor to W, by street to N, by Thomas Passman to S

FC 147:  14 Nov 1825:  James Bainbridge bricklayer (1) Hutchinsons & Place bankers (2) William Richmond of Stockton mercer & draper (3) Richard Nightingale the younger of Middleton St George (4):  2 houses, lately in 3 tenements, with garden behind, formerly occ by James Bainbridge, Richard Wood & Thomas Almond, then by James Bainbridge & John Simpson, now by James & John Bainbridge; and also 2 new erected houses now in 3 tenements lately erected by James Bainbridge in the garden, now occ by George Harker, Alice Pedlar & Ann Rudd:  all bounded by messuage & garden of Roger Bowes to E, by messuage & garden of Edmund Taylor to W, by street to N, by Thomas Passman to S

FL 58:  13 May 1827:  East Side, judging by occupants & boundaries:  2 houses lately used in 3 tenements with garden behind formerly occ by James Bainbridge, Richard Wood & Thomas Almond, then by sd James Bainbridge & John Simpson, then by sd James Bainbridge & John Bainbridge:  and the 2 houses used in 3 tenements “newly created” and “lately erected” by sd James Bainbridge in the sd garden, then occupied by George Harker, Alice Pedlar & Ann Rudd:  bounded by house and garden bel to Roger Bowes to E, by Edmund Taylor to W, by street to N, by Thomas Passman to S:  parties:   Richard Nightingale the younger late of Middleton St George gent and George Stanger of Pickton farmer:  reciting indre of 14 Nov 1825 to which James Bainbridge, George & John & Henry Hutchinson, Thomas Place, William Richmond and said Richard Nightingale were parties

FQ 249:  13 & 14 Mar 1829:  exors of Wayne to Barker:  the Carpenters Arms with the cartwrights shop and stable on the west end thereof, the garden and the privy on the south & backside of the premises, bounded by road to East Rounton to E, by Mrs Elizabeth Hildreth to W & S, by road to East Rounton, John Robinson and Mr Farnaby to N – occ by Edward Meynell;  the garth occ by Edward Meynell, bounded by Elizabeth Hildreth to E, by John Burdon to W, by Thomas Passman, Elizabeth Hildreth, Mr Kendall & William Spence to N, by road to East Rounton to S; the site where buildings lately occupied by John & Hannah Kay & taken down by Mark Barker stood; the garth now used as garden ground to the E & backside of the sd site;  the new houses built by Mark Barker on the site and part of the garth: some of the houses and the garden ground “at present unoccupied”, the others occupied by Robert Hall, William Souter, George Sanderson, John Kay, Mary Lamb, Jackson Richardson, John Wild and Thomas Shaw:  bounded by house & lands bel to Rev Richard Shepherd to E & S, by Arthur Douglas and townstreet to N & W

FT 511:  11 & 12 Jan 1830:  East Side:  Edmund Taylor of Hutton joiner, Thomas Eland of City of London currier, James Bainbridge bricklayer:  the land on which James Bainbridge has lately erected 4 new houses & other buildings, 79 ft x 14 ft, and the passage thereto from the street:  previously occ by Elizabeth Robinson, then by William Coates, then by Edmund Taylor and now by James Bainbridge or his undertenants:  bounded by Thomas Passman to E, by street to W, by Roger Bowes to N, by Edmund Taylor to S:  “heretofore the estate of Joseph Tunstall and his wife Catherine”

FQ 435:  26 & 27 Mar 1830:  house on East Side:  Baillieur to Lowther:  formerly occ by Thomas Sanderson, then by Thomas Shaw and now by Robert Tweddle:  bounded by Joseph Whorlton to N, by Thomas Passman to S, by street to W

FU 261:   22 & 23 Nov 1831:  north end of East Side:  James Bainbridge bricklayer & Elizabeth his wife to George Grenside of Stokesley gent:  piece of ground on which he had recently built 4 new houses and other buildings, 79ft long x 14ft wide, with the passage leading to them from the street:  previously occ by Elizabeth Robinson, then by William Coates, then by Edmund Taylor, and now by James Bainbridge or his undertenants:  bounded by Thomas Passman to E, by street to W, by Roger Bowes to N, by Edmund Taylor to S:  “heretofore the estate of Joseph Tunstall & Catherine his wife”

FU 487:  16 May 1832:  South Side, tithe map 194-6:  John Passman of Hutton yeoman (1) James Robinson of Whorlton yeoman (2) Robert Pulman of Stockton gent [solicitor] (3):  building with cowhouse & premises adjoining, and garth of 2r adjoining to the N:  bounded by Jane Farnaby to E, by Mrs Hildreth to W, by street to N, by Mark Barker to S:  occ by John Passman & James Harrison & Mary Kingston;  and the house with garden adjoining, bounded by street to E & N, and by above prems to W & S

Thomas Passman owned property on East Side:  deeds of 1817 and 1830. 
Thomas Passman, yeoman of Hutton, made his Will on 20 Oct 1828 and died 11 Sep 1830 a80.  On his death, he owned houses, buildings, yards, garths and gardens and a 4 acre close called the Holme or Hunters Holme.  Part of the property had been bought by William Passman in 1729; part Thomas had bought from Elizabeth Souter and Robert Moon Souter in 1822.  His trustees were Thomas Tweddle and Thomas Kingston;  he left his estate to his daughter Mary Kingston and her family.  The Kingston family were related to the Hebbrons. 

1807-1815:  John & Isabella Passman had 4 children, Thomas, Margaret, Mary and Ann.  He was a labourer, and the Tithe Map shows them on South Side.  He may be the John Passman who owned land on the Tithe Map, in the area where his widow is living in 1841, next door to Henry Dinsley, whose wife Ann was a Passman.

1841 Census:  South Side:  Isabella Passman 55 ag lab widow, Thomas 30 ag lab, Margaret 30 servant.
John & Isabella’s daughter Ann died aged 13.  Margaret married James Carling, Mary married George Crossand and Thomas married Mary Ploughman. 
.
Aug 1815:  John Passman occupied Thomas Cust’s house and garth on North Side, with William Easby

1820-1828:  William & Jane Passman had six children:  William, Margaret, Ann, John, Harriot and Robert. 
John Passman was baptised 1824 and would have been 8 in 1832; though Mr Barlow records the age of John at burial in Oct 1832 as 5, it appears highly probable that it was this John.  Harriot was baptised 13 Feb 1827; one burial register is illegible, but her age is given as 6 in the list “Sepultorum nomina”, making it again highly probable that she died in the cholera autumn. 
William & Jane Passman & family were not in the village after 1832.  However, the 1851 Census for Seamer has: William 79 b Newham, Jane 63 b Middleton, William 30 b Hutton, Hannar 22 b Broughton, and John 4 mths b Seamer [1851 Census index]

1823 Baines:  Hutton:  William Passman, saddler

“John Passman and wife – one young, one for school” [Mr Barlow’s list ?1836]

Wm Passman bought Charity Spelling book for 1d in List – Middleton Book
Passman gave 1s to Money recd for the <monument>  – Middleton Book
Anne Passman is in a List of Girls – Middleton Book

1839-1855:  Thomas (son of John & Isabella) & Mary have 6 children: Mary, John, Margaret, Thomas, Eleanor and Ann.  He was a handloom weaver.  1851C: South Side.  1861C:  Brickyard, Enterpen

13 Feb 1845:  William Passman was an early occupant of East Side property sold by Thomas Passman to Isaac Benson in 1845 [East Side deeds]

1841 Census:  Manor House Farm:  Henry Passman 27 farmer, with Ann Harper 25 & John Richardson 26 servants

1851 Census:  Manor House Farm:  Henry Passman 38 farmer 108 acres emp 2 labs, b Carlton, with his mother Sarah Passman (“widow”) 65 housekeeper b Busby, and half-brother Mark Barker Passman 24 landowner b Great Ayton; servants William Nattrass 20 and Ann Robson 20
1851 Census:  South Side:  Thomas Passman 56 handloom weaver linen, Mary 34, and children Mary 12, John 10, Margaret 7, Thomas 4 and Eleanor 1, all b Hutton

15 Nov 1858:  Mark Barker Passman died a32 and was buried at Stokesley [Stokesley Selection]
17 …ember 1858:  Sarah Passman died and was buried at Stokesley [Stokesley Selection]

1860:  Henry Passman married Mary Ann Thompson

1861 Census:  Manor House Farm:  Henry Passman 48 farmer 108 acres b Carlton, wife Mary Ann 44 b Stokesley; with William Nattrass 29 b Ayton and Jane Flounders 15 servants; and visitors Hannah Bruce (M) 42 dressmaker b Stokesley and Robert Bruce (M) 43 sailor b South Shields

15 Oct 1863:  Mary Ann Passman died a46 and was buried at Stokesley “Dear Parents do not weep / Submit to God’s decree / And be prepared for death / You soon will follow me” [Stokesley Selection]

Jun 1866:  Henry Passman led a subscription to assist Thomas Garbutt, donating £10
Jun 1866:  Miss D Boyes, Hutton, gave £2 to the subscription for Thomas Garbutt

9 Jan 1868:  Henry Passman married Dorothy Boyes 44, daughter of Scarth Boyes [cf poem in ‘Letters from a Miller’s daughter’]

1881 Census:  North Side:  Henry Passman 68 retired farmer b Carlton and wife Dorothy 68 b Normanby
 
Sarah Passman was b Busby c1786; she was unmarried.  Henry Gowdy Passman was her son by Henry Goldsborough. 

1872 Post Office Directory:  Henry Passman Esq is lord of the manor

1874-1885:  Thomas (son of Thomas & Mary) & Sarah have 4 children:  John, Deborah, William and Joseph.  Thomas was a gardener.  They lived on the Wynd.  His wife and oldest child were b Potto.  Joseph and William died 1913 and 1917;  John died 1964.

“Passman 1s 6d” appears in “paid out by me for Church 1874-5” – Barlow’s Notebook


Paterson/?Patterson

1823 Baines:  Hutton:  Jane Paterson, baker

early Aug 1830:  Anthony Wiles saw Robert Goldsbrough, Thomas Grundy, William Patterson and George Sanderson “at Scotson’s, public-house … They were sitting in the front kitchen drinking.  They might have “teens” of pints of ale.  The prisoner paid for them;  he paid half-a-crown every two or three pints.  They remained there till about four in the morning;  they came in at twelve o’clock at night” [Yorkshire Gazette 12 Mar 1842]

It can be seen (below) that William Patterson was the brother-in-law of Thomas Grundy.


Pattison/?Patterson


Although only one Yorkshire-born Patterson/Pattison etc can be found in the 1841 Census (Joseph, 30, a servant in the house of Stephen York), the parish registers show that there were numerous Pattersons in the village in the late C18/early C19.  It is not clear how they were related.

6 Sep 1773:  Thomas Pattison married Mary Taylor [witnesses:  Stephen Catchasides, John Eland]
children of Thomas, labourer & Mary:  Elizabeth baptised 1774, Thomas 1776, Robert 1779, John 1785

14 May 1785:  Robert Pattinson married Jane Bell [Tho Edwards, Mary Hildreth, James Hutchinson]
children of Robert, butcher & Jane:  Ann baptised 1786, John 1788, Deborah 1791 (died 1793), Robert 1793, Deborah 1796, Mary & Elizabeth 1798, Thomas 1800
Robert Pattison died in 1807 aged 55

18 Jan 1807:  Robert Codling married Ann Pattinson [witnesses:  Robert Wilson, John Eland, John Pattinson]

23 Nov 1808:  Thomas Pattison occupied property on East Side, bought by Joseph, Thomas & William Whorlton [East Side deeds]

22 Aug 1814:  Robert Salvin, HM 19th Regt of Foot, married Elizabeth Pattinson, with consent of parents [witnesses:  John Peacock, John Eland and Susanna Bainbridge]  

child of Thomas Pattison & Marady [transcript]:  William baptised 1801
children of Thomas Pattison:  William baptised 1808, Catherine 1810, Jane 1811
child of Thomas Pattison, papermaker, & Elizabeth:  Ruth baptised 1813, Mary 1815, Margaret 1818

child of John Pattison:  Mary baptised 1811
child of John, labourer, & Isabella Pattison:  Thomas baptised 1813, John 1814, Elizabeth 1817

29 Nov 1828:  William Pattison married Jane Grundy [witnesses:  William Goldsbro, Jane Pattison, Samuel Hebbron]

children of William Pattison, weaver, & Jane:  Thomas baptised 1828 (died 1831), Elizabeth 1832
child of William Pattison, labourer:  Margaret baptised 21 Jun 1840 – Jane Pattison was buried on the same day, aged 30
children of William Pattison, weaver, & Mary:  Catherine bap 1835, Mary Jane 1838
[unfortunately, Mr Barlow’s errors in the registers mean that no firm conclusions can be drawn – it seems very probable that the mother’s name should read ‘Jane’]
children of Thomas Pattison, weaver, & Jane:  Thomas baptised 1834

child of Ann Pattison, spinster:  Robert Pattison, born 13 Jun & bap 10 Jul 1829

FQ 434:  14 & 15 Apr 1829:  Jane Pattison occupied land belonging to Elizabeth Sleigh

It can be seen that William Patterson was the brother-in-law of Thomas Grundy.


Paver

Miss Paver gave 10s to School Acct 1874 – Barlow’s Notebook


Peacock

“4 Catechism to Peacock .. .4d” in the Rudby School accounts – Middleton Book
R Peacok was in A List of Boys – Middleton Book

Richard Peacock of Rudby married Jane Scott of Stockton on 13 Sep 1832

GA 84:  3 Mar 1826:  Will of Arthur Douglas of Skutterskelfe, gardener:  his house, weavers shops & garth lying contiguous, now occ by George Wright and others, and his 2 cottages now occ by Hannah Kay & [ - ] Peacock:  beneficiaries: Alvey Kay and Catherine Kay, children of testator’s late niece Mary Kay, and testator’s sisters Alice Scorer and Ann Hutton decd


Pearson

EB 102:  11 & 13 May 1816:  Hutton manor & mill:  Andrew Pearson occd the mill before Robert Norman


Pedlar

Alice Pedlar was a tenant of James Bainbridge on East Side:  deed of 1825

FC 147:  14 Nov 1825:  James Bainbridge bricklayer (1) Hutchinsons & Place bankers (2) William Richmond of Stockton mercer & draper (3) Richard Nightingale the younger of Middleton St George (4):  2 houses, lately in 3 tenements, with garden behind, formerly occ by James Bainbridge, Richard Wood & Thomas Almond, then by James Bainbridge & John Simpson, now by James & John Bainbridge; and also 2 new erected houses now in 3 tenements lately erected by James Bainbridge in the garden, now occ by George Harker, Alice Pedlar & Ann Rudd:  all bounded by messuage & garden of Roger Bowes to E, by messuage & garden of Edmund Taylor to W, by street to N, by Thomas Passman to S

FL 58:  13 May 1827:  East Side, judging by occupants & boundaries:  2 houses lately used in 3 tenements with garden behind formerly occ by James Bainbridge, Richard Wood & Thomas Almond, then by sd James Bainbridge & John Simpson, then by sd James Bainbridge & John Bainbridge:  and the 2 houses used in 3 tenements “newly created” and “lately erected” by sd James Bainbridge in the sd garden, then occupied by George Harker, Alice Pedlar & Ann Rudd:  bounded by house and garden bel to Roger Bowes to E, by Edmund Taylor to W, by street to N, by Thomas Passman to S:  parties:   Richard Nightingale the younger late of Middleton St George gent and George Stanger of Pickton farmer:  reciting indre of 14 Nov 1825 to which James Bainbridge, George & John & Henry Hutchinson, Thomas Place, William Richmond and said Richard Nightingale were parties


Petty

John Petty witnessed the Will of Thomas Passman on 20 Oct 1828


Pilter

1840 Whites:  Hutton Rudby:  Thomas Pilter, linen manufacturer & flax spinner
1841 Census:  Thomas Pilter 20 flax spinner


Plowman

R Plowman was in A List of Boys – Middleton Book

1841 Census:  Mary Plowman 30 ag lab, Mary 2 and John 10 mths, North Side
1841 Census:  George Plowman 75 ag lab, Mary 65 and Margaret Nixon 85 ag lab, Enterpen


Plummer

Mr Plummer gave £2 to Rudby School, year beginning 24 Oct 1833 – Middleton Book
1823:  Baines Directory:  Smith James, agent to Clark, Plummer & Co., Newcastle


Pollard

15 & 16 Feb 1830:  Joseph Pollard was a tenant of property – tenement with bakehouse and stable – on East Side mortgaged by Edmund Taylor [East Side deeds]

17 Nov 1856:  Joseph Pollard had been a tenant of a house, bakehouse & stable which was now unoccupied [East Side deeds]


Poll Book

The county franchise:  freeholders with land worth 40/- a year, free of charges
(places in brackets are where the freehold is not the same as the place of residence)

Yorkshire Poll Book 1807:  

Hutton Rudby:  Matthew Appleton farmer; William Ableson schoolmaster; John Bainbridge gent (Dalton); Jasper Barugh yeoman (Dishforth); Thomas Cust farmer; James Catcheside blacksmith; William Dawson farmer; Thomas Davison tailor (West Rounton); Arthur Douglas gardener; Thomas Farnaby weaver; Jeremiah Grice clerk (West Rounton); William Honeyman weaver; Thomas Jackson tailor; Simon Kelsey farmer; Thomas Passman farmer; Francis Stainthorp weaver; William Spencer weaver; Simon Sedgwick weaver; Michael Sedgwick weaver; John Sedgwick weaver; Edmund Taylor joiner; Breckon Thompson farmer; William Weatherall farmer; Joseph Walton weaver; Isaac Worlton weaver
In Sexhow:  John Armstrong farmer (Hutton Rudby); Christopher Sleagh farmer (Hutton Rudby)
In Welbury:  William Mawlam farmer had a vote in respect of Hutton Rudby 
In Crathorne:  John Robinson farmer (Hutton Rudby); Richard Simpson innkeeper (Hutton Rudby)
Mark Barker, in Ayton in respect of property there


Preston

1832:  Thomas Preston buried Sat 6 Oct a50

12 Jan 1800:  bap of Robert, son of William Preston at Hilton

There are Preston from Hilton burials in pre-1832 burial registers:

1776:  burial of John Preston, yeoman of Hilton
MI 195:  Erected to the memory of Jane the wife of John Preston who departed this life Apr 2? 1801 aged 37 yrs and of John their son who died 30 Jan 1803 aged 12 yrs.  Also of the above named John Preston who dep this life Jan 1 1830 aged 73 yrs
The burial register states he was of Hilton
MI 196:  Sacred to the memory of Sarah the dau of John & Jane Preston [of Hilton] who died Jul 29 1796 aged 11 yrs.  5 lines verse
MI 197:  To the memory of William Preston who dep this life 11 Jul 1776 aged 56 yrs.  He was ? husband & ? parent.  Mary Preston d 2 Nov 1789 aged 6? [rest sunk].  The burial register states that she was aged 62, the relict of William, who was a yeoman of Hilton

5 Oct 1817:  bap of Harrison, son of Margaret Preston, spinster

1823 Baines:  Rudby:  William Preston, schoolmaster

10 Aug 1826:  Robert Preston, schoolmaster, married Sarah Sidgwick.  Four baptisms:  William 1826, Mary 1828, Hannah 1830 & Sarah Anne 1832, followed by Jane 1837 [see below]

FS 461:  2 & 3 Feb 1831:  school & land Rudby estate:  occ by Robert Preston

Churchwardens’ accounts:  include:  1829/30 11s 6d salary due to R Preston;  1830/1:  “Robert Preston’s Bill £1-5-8d” and “ditto for writing 11s 6d”; 1831-2:  “Robert Preston’s Bill £2-1-6 ½d”;  1832/3:  “Robert Preston for writing 11s 6d”

Thomas Preston was a vestry member in 1831 and 1832.  He was at “a meeting held in vestry” on 16 Jun 1831 where they voted a church rate of 2 ½ per £ to church repairs.  He signed the churchwardens’ accounts in July 1832.  He signed the election of churchwardens and a church rate of 5 ½ per pound on 24 April 1832.

Sarah Preston is in the Wesleyan class lists 1836

30 Jun 1837:  bap of Jane, daughter of Thomas [sic] Rudby schoolmaster & Sarah.  This is certainly one of Mr Barlow’s mistakes, as Jane aged 5 appears in the 1841 Census

1840 Whites:  Rudby:  Robert Preston, schoolmaster

1841 Census:  Robert Preston was the enumerator.  He was then living on North Side a40, with Sarah 40, William 14, Mary 12, Sarah 8, Jane 5 and Margaret 3, and Sarah Sidgwick a80 in the household
1841 Census:  Hannah Preston 11 servant in household of Michael Chapman, Enterpen

1851 Census:  North Side:  Robert Preston 51 painter & joiner b Hilton, Sarah 50 b Hutton, and son William Preston 24 journeyman painter b Hutton
1851 Census:  Hutton House:  George Wilson 39 linen mfr b Newcastle, Ann 34 b Kildale, Thomas Bowes 11 and John George 2;  with servants Hannah Preston 20 b Rudby and Sarah Sedgwick 17 b Hutton
1851 Census:  Enterpen:  Mrs Hannah Terry widow 53 b Skelton, cousin Miss Dorothy Garbutt 36 b Marton, servant Jane Preston 15

1853:  Robert Preston, infant, buried:  presumably the son of one of the Preston daughters

20 Nov 1855:  Eland to Codling:  Mustard Garth 1r 28p:  previously occ by Hannah Kay widow, then by Thomas Eland, now used as allotment gardens occupied by John Sidgwick, Robert Preston, Anthony Smith, Anthony Smith jnr, Thomas Milburn, Thomas Crook and Christopher Garbutt

1861 Census:  North End:  Robert Preston 59 painter & glazier b Hilton, Sarah 60 b Hutton, William 34 (S) painter & glazier b HR, Margaret 22 (S) b HR, and granddaughter Alice Daughton 1

Sarah Preston died in 1865 and Robert Preston died in 1869

1871 Census:  North End:  William 44 painter & glazier, his wife Margaret 24 b Herts, and niece Ellen Barnaby 11 b Middlesex

1872 Post Office Directory:  Hutton Rudby:  William Preston, painter & glazier

William Preston died in 1873 aged 47.  His widow remarried, a Mr Martin, and she and her two daughters born in Hutton Rudby, together with a son by her second marriage born in Stockton, can be found there in the 1881 census


Pulman

T C Pulman was buried on Sun 7 Oct a36.

1 May 1820:  T C Pulman witnessed the Will of Jeremiah Grice

1823 Baines:  Hutton:  Thomas C Pulman, surgeon

Entry for Swainby Poor Law 29 Apr 1831:  Mr Pulman was prepared to attend paupers belonging and residing within 7 miles of Swainby for £6 for one year from this day.  His proposal accepted “by present company”.  If Mr Pulman should refuse to attend any patient when sent for by order from the Overseer … then another medical man to be got and whatever expense attend it, to be paid out of the Sallary [sic] of Mr Pulman. [Dr Stout: quoting from Mrs J J Hartley’s Swainby Exhibition 1981]

No details exist of Mr Thomas Pulman.  It may be noted that there were Pulmans in Guisborough: ‘Stokesley News & Cleveland Reporter’, 1 Feb 1843:  Deaths reported include “on Monday Jan 9th, at Guisborough, the wife of Mr William Pulman, Draper, aged 31 years”.  1828 Pigot:  a Catherine Pulman was teaching at Stokesley Day School [Dr Stout].

FU 487:  16 May 1832:  South Side, tithe map 194-6:  John Passman of Hutton yeoman (1) James Robinson of Whorlton yeoman (2) Robert Pulman of Stockton gent [solicitor] (3):  building with cowhouse & premises adjoining, and garth of 2r adjoining to the N:  bounded by Jane Farnaby to E, by Mrs Hildreth to W, by street to N, by Mark Barker to S:  occ by John Passman & James Harrison & Mary Kingston;  and the house with garden adjoining, bounded by street to E & N, and by above prems to W & S
 

Pyman

Mr Pyman gave 2gns to the School acct 1874 – Barlow’s Notebook

1878/9 Mrs Hutchinson planted a tree “for Mr Pyman’s family” [Tree Planting]

1881 Census:  Linden Grove:  Thomas English Pyman 37 ship owner b Raithwaite, Mary Ann 39 b South Shields, Nellie 11, Jane 7 and May 5 all b West Hartlepool, and Linda 4 and Thomas English 2 both born HR;  visitor:  Mary Alice Smurthwaite cousin 23 b West Hartlepool;  governess Emily Addison 34 b Gloucester;  servants:  cook Ann Grainger 29 b Thirsk, housemaid Caroline Elizabeth Loftus 29 b York and nurse Isabella Watson 19 b Newcastle

T E Pyman, like his parents and brothers, was a Congregationalist, and in politics a Liberal.  He was a coal trader and shipowner, a partner in George Pyman & Co from 1872.  He moved the resolution to set up the West Hartlepool School Board in 1875 and was elected to the new Board that year, as a Nonconformist.  He served many years as President of the West Hartlepool Liberal Association.  In 1887 he was councillor for the North West Ward of West Hartlepool. 
This suggests that Linden Grove was a second home for his family.  West House, his home in Hartlepool, was near his father’s house, ‘The Willows’, in Clarence Road.

May 1892 Parish Magazine:  The death of Mr T E Pyman, of West House, West Hartlepool (formerly of Linden Grove for many years) at the early age of 49 years, has saddened many hearts at Hutton Rudby.  He died on Tuesday, the 12th of April, after a short illness






People of Hutton Rudby in the C18/19: Race to Richardson

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... from my working notes ... accuracy not guaranteed ... for explanatory note, see post of 14 Feb 2013



Race

11 Jan 1846:  Hutton Rudby:  Thomas Stringer, grocer, of Appleton Wiske, son of Tobias Craddock Stringer, miller married Ann Davison, daughter of George Davison, shoemaker;  witnesses:  Byers Race and William Hebbron

Byers Race was churchwarden in 1848-50 and the churchwarden who signed the articles of inquiry 1849


Ramshaw

Ramshaw cut Mr Barlow’s hedge, after harvest 1850 – Barlow’s Notebook

1851 Census:  Linden Grove:  Forbes MacBean 60 Lt Col Artillery full pay b Annapolis Nova Scotia British subj, wife Eliza 65 b St Petersburg British subj, daughters Elizabeth 25, Margaret Murray 20 & Marianne Georgina 18, all b Woolwich; wife’s sister Miss Marianne Scougall 45 indep also b St Petersburg;  servants:  groom Joseph Dawson 21 b Baysdale, housemaid Elizabeth Trenham 35 b Stokesley, cook Mary Wailes 23 b HR and boy groom William Ramshaw 13 b HR

1851 Census:  South Side:  Mary Ramshaw (married) ag lab b Ingleby
1851 Census:  South Side:  James Ramshaw 50 ag lab b Hutton and Jane 25 b Liverton, with his brother Robert Ramshaw, single, 26 common carrier b Hutton




Raney

1823 Baines:  Hutton:  William Rayney, blacksmith

FQ 434:  14 & 15 Apr 1829:  Richard Renney occupied land belonging to Elizabeth Sleigh

FU 494:  14 & 15 May 1832:  messuage with garden garth & close in Hutton, previously occ by Thomas Ward and now by Richard Raney:  various persons of Welbury & West Rounton to Richard Raney of Hutton blacksmith

1840 Whites:  Hutton Rudby:  Jeremiah Raney, King’s Head
1840 Whites:  Hutton Rudby:  Jeremiah Raney, blacksmith

1841 Census:  Elizabeth Raney 30 publican, Old Wheatsheaf, Eliza 8, John Raney 20 journeyman blacksmith, John Harrison 17 app blacksmith
1841 Census:  Richard Raney 50 blacksmith, North End

Mar 1842:  Jeremiah Raney gave evidence at the trial of Robert Goldsbrough, re the projecting tooth of William Huntley [Yorkshire Gazette 12 Mar 1842]

From George Tweddell’s ‘Stokesley News & Cleveland Reporter’ 1 Nov 1842:
Odd Fellow’s Funeral.  
On Friday morning, October 28th, the members of the Traveller’s Home Lodge, of the Independent Order of Odd Fellows, assembled at the house of Mr Wm Robinson, the King’s Head Inn, Hutton, for the purpose of paying their last token of respect, to the remains of the late Host of their Lodge, Mr Jeremiah Raney, of the Wheat Sheaf Inn. 
After the usual funeral ceremony of the Order had been read in the room, to the assembled brothers, by Mr Thos Saddler, N.G., they proceeded in procession, to the house of their departed brother, each wearing the usual funeral regalia of the Order.  Having formed in a circle round the door of the deceased, the corpse was brought out, and the scarlet sash of the departed thrown upon his coffin.  The funeral oration of the Order was then read by George Tweddell, P.S. of the Cleveland Lodge.  
The procession then accompanied the body to its last resting place, where the service of the Church was read by the Rev R. J. Barlow.  
After the coffin had been lowered into the “cold and silent grave”, each member dropped a sprig of rosemary, into the “narrow bed” of their departed brother, according to their usual custom.  As we dropped the sprig with which we had been supplied, upon the coffin of the dead, we could not forbear exclaiming in the language of Shakspeare’s Ophelia, 
“There’s rosemary, that’s for remembrance.”
The procession having again formed, returned to the place from which it set out.
Oddfellows Board:  Host:  Jeremiah Raney, Hutton, 26 Oct 1842, a33

Rev Isaac Benson of Acklam bought property on East Side 1845, 1846 & 1847, including the Wheatsheaf:  he conveyed it to his son in 1851, and it was sold to Elizabeth Raney in 1873 [East Side deeds] 

1872 Post Office Directory:  Hutton Rudby:  Mrs Elizabeth Raney, Wheatsheaf
Jeremiah Raney died (?) Oct 1842, grave184 – not in PRs


Raper

1840 Whites:  Hutton Rudby:  John Raper, beerhouse

1841 Census:  John Raper 25 ag lab and family, South Side

20 Mar 1851:  John Raper occupied property on East Side, fellow occupants Elizabeth Raney and John Whorlton [East Side deeds]

1851 Census:  Barkers Row:  John Raper 57 horsebreaker b Kirby, wife Sarah 34 bMiddleton, children Thomas 18 horsebreaker, Margaret 11, Sarah 9, Mary 7, John 3 and Elizabeth 6 mths, all born Hutton
1851 Census:  North Side:  stable boy William Raper 16 b Hutton in service with household of Edwin James Wilson 45 licentiate of Apothecary’s Hall, General Practitioner


Rayne

1832:  Dinah Rayne was buried Sat 13 Oct a81 [PRs]

8 Jan 1722:  William, son of William Rain sexton and Elizabeth Outon/ ?Orton b/bap

1725:  Robert Rayne married Alis Hutchingson:  they had 7 children

1745:  William Rain weaver married Dorothy Jigg
William Rain & Dorothy Jigg had three sons, one of whom died aged 22.

1759:  Alice Rayne, daughter of Robert & Alis, married Edward Peacock
1764:  Rachel Rayne, daughter of Robert & Alis, married Joseph Dalkin
1764:  Jane Rain, sister of William, married Thomas Peacock 

1780:  death of Dorothy Jigg Rain

29 Aug 1785:  Dinah Grundel widow 34 married William Rain widower 61 [witnesses:  John Cust, Thomas Cust]. 

9 Dec 1785:  Henry Rain [brother of William, born 1725] married Mary Stannach [witnesses:  John Eland jnr, Johnathan Eland]

8 Jul 1796:  John Rain, son of Henry & Mary, baptised – buried on 13 July

17 Nov 1789:  bap of Thomas Rain, son of William, pauper
23 Jul 1790:  burial of Thomas Rain, son of William, pauper
12 Feb 1804:  burial of William Raine


Redhead

1823 Baines:  Skutterskelfe:  John Redhead, farmer

1840 Whites:  Rudby:  Reuben Redhead, farmer
1840 Whites:  Skutterskelfe:  John Redhead, farmer
1840 Whites:  Sexhow:  George Redhead, farmer

1841 Census:  Rudby Farm:  Rubin Redhead 55 farmer, Ann 35, with Elizabeth Flounders 20 servant, James Hudson 16 servant and Robert Milestone 14 servant
1841 Census:  Thoralby farm:  Redhead
1841 Census:  Sexhow Hall:  George Redhead 58 farmer, William 13, with Jane Coverdale 30 and Robert Kirkham servants

Ord 1846:  Mr Redhead “the intelligent tenant, shewed us several remains” of “the ancient hall of the Laytons of Sexhowe”

William Redhead was churchwarden 1858-60 ; the churchwarden at the time of the Call Book for the Visitation 1857

1851 Census:  East Side:  Reuben Redhead M 69 yeoman household property bWorsall and Anne 45 bBilsdale, with visitor Mary Willians M 48 bForcett

An entry in the PRs for the baptism of John Herring Redhead [transc. as Henry] son of John & Hannah, Sexhow, farmer:  should read William & Hannah [JBTurner:  errors in baptismal register]
Reed
1804:  Richard Reed was churchwarden

DY 88 & ET 601:  Margaret Reed was a tenant of Philip Gowland in the Bay Horse area in 1816-1823

Richard Reed of Hutton, innkeeper, witnessed Deed re houses near Bay Horse, 18 & 19 Jul 1815

1841 Census:  Tame Bridge farm:  Reed
1851-71 (inc) Census:  Hutton Thorn:  Reed
1851 Census:  Hutton Thorn House:  Thomas Reed 43 farmer of 90 acres b Broughton and wife Elizabeth 32 b Stokesley, and children George 14 b Broughton, Anne 3 and Mary 1 both b Kirby

1872 Post Office Directory:  Hutton Rudby:  Thomas Reed, farmer, Cutting thorns


Rice of Rudby Mill

‘Stokesley News & Cleveland Reporter’
, 1 Sep 1844:
Births:  On Friday, the 23rd of August, at Rudby Mill, the wife of the late Mr Rice, of a son


Richardson

1823 Baines:  Hutton:  John Richardson, wheelwright
1823 Baines:  Hutton:  Robert Richardson, dog trainer

Jackson Richardson is a tenant of Barkers Row in 1829

FQ 249:  13 & 14 Mar 1829:  exors of Wayne to Barker:  the Carpenters Arms with the cartwrights shop and stable on the west end thereof, the garden and the privy on the south & backside of the premises, bounded by road to East Rounton to E, by Mrs Elizabeth Hildreth to W & S, by road to East Rounton, John Robinson and Mr Farnaby to N – occ by Edward Meynell;  the garth occ by Edward Meynell, bounded by Elizabeth Hildreth to E, by John Burdon to W, by Thomas Passman, Elizabeth Hildreth, Mr Kendall & William Spence to N, by road to East Rounton to S; the site where buildings lately occupied by John & Hannah Kay & taken down by Mark Barker stood; the garth now used as garden ground to the E & backside of the sd site;  the new houses built by Mark Barker on the site and part of the garth: some of the houses and the garden ground “at present unoccupied”, the others occupied by Robert Hall, William Souter, George Sanderson, John Kay, Mary Lamb, Jackson Richardson, John Wild and Thomas Shaw:  bounded by house & lands bel to Rev Richard Shepherd to E & S, by Arthur Douglas and townstreet to N & W

FQ 434:  14 & 15 Apr 1829:  William Richardson occupied land belonging to Elizabeth Sleigh

FQ 560:  2 & 3 Nov 1829:  ppty bought by Jane Willans widow in Enterpen:  garth of 1r 3p where a cottage formerly stood, formerly occ by John Miller, then by George Wilson, Mary Young & Hannah Young, then by Matthew Richardson jnr, then by John Burden, bounded by Thomas Wayne to N, E & W, and by street called Enterpen to S; with the houses “lately erected upon the garth” & now occupied by Simeon Burden, John Smelt, Paul Oates, John Goldsbrough, William Jowsey, Abraham Holdgate and William Burnsides

Robert Goldsbrough’s trial 1840
late July 1830:  Thomas Richardson lived all his life at Hutton until about 1839;  in Mar 1842 he was a tile maker at Stockton.  At the trial he stated that he had sold Robert Goldsbrough a gun.  Richardson had been in prison twice for poaching and once for felony.  [Yorkshire Gazette 12 Mar 1842]
His wife Maria gave evidence regarding Huntley’s clothes at the trial.
Thomas Richardson married Maria Best on 11 Dec 1837 in Hutton Rudby.  She had been baptised on 13 Apr 1811 at Heworth, Co Durham, the daughter of Martin Best and Hannah Kidd;  her family settled in Hutton Rudby a few years later, and remained in the village after her father’s death.  Maria’s son Martin was born in 1834 (father unknown).  He married and had at least four children, and can be found in the 1881 census in County Durham.  Thomas and Maria appear to be the couple living in Fletcher Street, Middlesbrough in 1881;  he is described as a fettler at the iron works.
 
Churchwardens’ accounts 1830/1:  “John Richardson’s Bill 3s 6d”

FS 461:  2 & 3 Feb 1831:  Rudby Mill:  previously occ by John Richardson
27 & 28 Jun 1831:  Lease:  parties:  Thomas Eland of Grange Road Bermondsey leather dresser and wife Mary, Richard Eland of Newport Pagnell Bucks gent and Langley & Reece:  to convey from Thomas to Richard and to secure an annuity to Thomas and his wife:  garth 1a 2r 28p, bounded by John De Putron & - Richardson to W, Flounders & De Putron to E, river to N and street to S: and 3 houses (formerly one house) barn, cowhouse & carpenter’s shop:  occ by John Eland, John Sherwood & Thomas Wiles

Anne Richardson “my Servt” bought a prayer book at 7d in the List in Middleton Book
Richard Richardson bought a Catechism for 1d in List – Middleton Book
Thomas Richardson bought a Catechism and < > Saviour for 1d in the List – Middleton Book
[blank] Richardson is in a List of Girls – Middleton Book
John Richardson, mechanic, and his wife Elizabeth’s son Robert was baptised by Mr Barlow on 16 Sep 1832

GG 130:  31 Oct 1835:  Thomas Spence of Hutton weaver & Dorothy his wife (1) Henry Collins of Stokesley gent (2):  2 houses now used as one, the weaver’s shop adjoinging & the garden or orchard of 1r behind, occ by Thomas Spence; the butcher’s shop adjoining the weaver’s shop occ by William Sherwood:  bounded by Lord Falkland to E, street to W, Mrs Kingston to N, Edmund Taylor to S; also Gowdie/Gowlay Hill Garth 1a with cowhouse occ by Thomas Richardson:  bounded by John Charlton to E, by Francis Stainthorpe to W, by street to N, by Jane Willans & Edward Meynell to S; also house with garden & garth behind 2r, occ by William Merrington:  bounded by street to E, William Wood to W, John Seamer to N, John Rymers & Francis Stainthorpe to S; also 3 closes formerly 2 closes called the Cottager 7a, previously occ by William Braithwaite as tenant to William Spence decd:  bounded by Robert Halliday Dobson to E, George Hunter & William Ableson to W, by Rounton road to N, by Richard Johnson to S; “& all other the messuages lands tenements and hereditaments formerly belonging to Thomas Smith late of Hutton yeoman decd and comprised in his Will”

“Thos Richardson and his Wife – two grown up [children]”  [Mr Barlow’s list, ?1836]
“Robt Richardson and his Wife – two for school” [Mr Barlow’s list ?1836]
“Robt Richardson and His Wife – one Girl away” [Mr Barlow’s list ?1836]
Matthew Richardson is in the 1836 Wesleyan Methodist class list

Tithe Map from Elizabeth Sleigh:  William Richardson occ 129, 130, 133, 134, 214
Tithe Map from Elizabeth Sleigh:  Martin Richardson occ 131, 132

1840 Whites:  Hutton Rudby:  Robert Richardson, bricklayer
1840 Whites:  Hutton Rudby:  wheelwrights &c:  Joh [sic] Richardson

1841 Census:  Stephen Richardson 40 weaver and family near the Wheatsheaf
1841 Census:  Robert Richardson 45 bricklayer, Margaret and family, East Side/Barkers Row.  Margaret was the half-sister of Anthony Wiles, described by him as keeping a shop in 1830 [Yorkshire Gazette 12 Mar 1842].  She married Robert Richardson in 1822, and they had (at least) three children:  Ann 1824, Elizabeth 1826 and Robert 1828.
1841 Census:  Jackson Richardson 45 ag lab, Margaret Richardson 60, John Ward 45 ag lab, Matthew Ward 20 ag lab, John Ward 25 ag lab, next door to Robt Richardson

1841 Census:  Thomas Richardson 75 and Sarah 70, South Side
1841 Census:  Robert Richardson 70 farrier, South Side
1841 Census:  Joseph Richardson 40 coal carrier in household of Mary Lythe, South Side, next door to Robert Richardson

1841 Census:  William Richardson 55 linen weaver, wife and three sons 15, 15, & 20 linen weavers, North End
1841 Census:  Martin Richardson 25 linen weaver and family, North End

1841 Census:  Matthew Richardson 30 linen weaver and family, North Side
1841 Census:  John Richardson 45 general mechanic and family, Enterpen
1841 Census:  Joseph Richardson 40 linen weaver and family, Enterpen

‘Stokesley News & Cleveland Reporter’
, 1 Sep 1843: 
Marriage:  on Mon 21 Aug, at Stokesley, Mr Jackson Richardson, of Hutton Rudby, to Miss Ann Hartas, of the former place

‘The Cleveland Repertory’ 1 Jun 1843:
Police Intelligence
27th May.  Present Edmund Turton and J B Rudd, Esquires, and the Rev H Clarke, junior.  Upon the information of William Hugill of Bilsdale, Midcable, farmer, against Jos Richardson and Jno Bowman, both of Hutton Rudby, Colliers, for having on the 20th inst wilfully and maliciously consumed the grass growing in some fields occupied by the said William Hugill, by depasturing a number of ponies, mules and asses therein, the property of Lord Feversham.  Ordered that they pay the sum of £2 2s for the damage, and also the costs, to be paid before the ninth of this month.

‘Stokesley News & Cleveland Reporter’, 1 Jun 1844:
Birth:  On Wednesday, May 22nd, at Hutton Rudby, the wife of Martin Richardson, weaver, of a daughter

‘Stokesley News & Cleveland Reporter’, 1 Jul 1844:
Deaths:  On Thursday, June 27th, at Hutton Rudby, Elizabeth Jane, daughter of Martin Richardson, weaver

16 Jul 1846:  conveyance by William Lowther of Faceby labourer, the brother & heir-at-law of John Lowther late of Seamer innkeeper decd (1) Rev Isaac Benson (2) John Richardson of Hutton joiner (3).  John Lowther left a widow, Margaret [East Side deeds]

1851 Census:  Barkers Row:  Robert Richardson 59 bricklayer and Margaret 56, both b Hutton
1851 Census:  South Side:  Thomas Richardson 88 pauper formerly shoemaker and Sarah 84 pauper, both b Hutton
1851 Census:  South Side, next door:  in household of John and Harriet Lythe, Elizabeth Richardson 14 servant b Hutton, John’s stepdaughter
1851 Census:  South Side:  Joseph Richardson 58 ass collier, Mary 53, stepdaughter Ann Lythe 22 servant, and her sons William Lythe 2 and John Lythe 11 mths, with lodger Henry Salvin 8;  all b Hutton
1851 Census:  North End:  Matthew Richardson 42 common carrier b Hutton, Mary 41 b Stockton, children John 16 common carrier, Elizabeth 10, William 5, Mary 5, Matthew Thomas 3 and Sarah 10 mths, all b Hutton
1851 Census:  North Side:  Rachel Richardson widow 55 grocer b Whitby and house servant Teresa Flintoff 15 b Ingleby
1851 Census:  North Side:  James Richardson 22 joiner and wife Hannah 23, both b Hutton
1851 Census:  Enterpen:  John Richardson widower 56 cabinet maker, nephew Stephen Richardson 15 apprentice cabinet maker and lodger Simeon Burdon 18 apprentice cabinet maker;  all b Hutton Rudby
1851 Census:  Enterpen:  Isaac Richardson 30 hand loom weaver, Sarah 32, Hannah 3 and Sarah A. 1;  all b Hutton Rudby

Richardson is listed in “Recpts for 1854” – Barlow’s Notebook
Mr Barlow’s hedge was cut in 1856 by Jas Richardson’s man (Luke Marshall) and by Mr Barlow himself “in presence of James Richardson and three of his men” in Aug 1857 – Barlow’s Notebook

28 Nov 1863:  Henry Richardson occupied a house north of the Wheatsheaf, morgaged by J A Benson [East Side deeds]

11 May 1868:  Codling mortgage:  North Side ppty bounded by John Mease to W and Miss Righton and George Davison to E, and occupied by James Stephenson, with the 6 messuages occupied by William Codling, James Catterick, Mrs Falshaw, Richard Richardson, James Stephenson and Reuben Bainbridge

1872 Post Office Directory:  carriers:  to Stokesley, William Richardson, Saturday
1872 Post Office Directory:  Hutton Rudby:  Isaac Richardson, grocer, Enterpen
1872 Post Office Directory:  Hutton Rudby:  James Richardson, joiner & steam sawmills, Enterpen
1872 Post Office Directory:  Hutton Rudby:  John Richardson, joiner, Enterpen
1872 Post Office Directory:  Hutton Rudby:  Robert Richardson, bricklayer
1872 Post Office Directory:  Hutton Rudby:  William Richardson, carrier

Mr Richardson gave £1 to School Acct 1874 – Barlow’s Notebook

Oddfellows Board:  Bro:  R Richardson, Hutton, 26 Jun 1870, a45
Oddfellows Board:  Bro:  J Richardson, Hutton, 26 Feb 1878, a78
Oddfellows Board:  Bro:  M Richardson, Middlesbrough, 1 Dec 1882, a69



People of Hutton Rudby in the C18/19: Rickarby to Rymer

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... from my working notes ... accuracy not guaranteed ... for explanatory note, see post of 14 Feb 2013


Rickarby

FK 513:  22 Feb 1828:  mortgage of house in Hutton occ by Richard Rymer and closes adjoining:  Robert Baillieur late of Trenholme now of Castle of York innkeeper and Robert Nelson Wilson late of Yarm now of Castle of York yeoman: bounded by Richard Shepherd to N & S, by John Rickarby to E and by Christopher Oxendale to W

FQ 204:  9 Dec 1829:  Robert Baillieur late of Trenholm innkeeper but now of Yarm yeoman (1)  Robert Nelson Wilson of Yarm gent (2) John Harker of Yarm jobber [?] (3):  house, orchard, garth, stable & outbldgs in Hutton Field occ by Richard Rymer and closes adjoining:  bounded by Richard Shepherd to N & S, John Rickarby to E, Christopher Oxendale to W

FS 577:  9 Jun 1831:  Robert Norman paper maker to Robert Holliday Dobson of Potto gent:  6a close in Hutton known as the Cottages bounded by Widow Johnson to S, road to the Rountons to N, William Spencer to W, Mr Rickaby to E, occ by Robert Norman


Rickatson

John Rickatson of Hutton was churchwarden in 1832 and at the time of the Call Book for the Visitation 1857

1840 Whites:  Hutton Rudby:  John Rickatson, farmer

1851 Census:  Gardenstone:  John Rickatson 49 widower farmer of 90 acres b Kirby, with sons Thomas H 10 and Charles 8, and servants Margaret Featherstone single 40 b Ayton, Hannah Easby 16 general servant b Ayton and Robert Burdon 22 farm servant b Osmotherley

“Principal inhabitants” signing the record of exchange of bounties on 28 Sep 1857:  Robert Braithwaite, John Rickatson, George Wilson, Henry Willins, John Robinson, Thomas Sidgwick, John Sidgwick, George Davison [Terriers]

1851-71 (inc) Census:  Gardenstone:  Rickatson
1861 & 71 Census:  Belle Vue:  Rickatson

1872 Post Office Directory:  Hutton Rudby:  John Rickatson, farmer, Gardenstone
John Rickatson, 38, of New Close Farm married Anne Catterson, 31, of Gardenstone Farm on 4 Dec 1839.

Barlow’s Notebook lists the times he “crossed by the old style way through Rickatson farm”

1887:  active members of the Primitive Methodist chapel at the time of building included Edward Bainbridge, Robert Maughan, William Graham Hall, Thomas Sage and Kilvington Rickatson of Trenholme Bar [G Milburn’s notes]
1887:  memorial stones at the new Primitive Methodist chapel were laid by K Rickatson, W Seymour (Spout Bank), Mrs Honeyman, Mrs Eden, Mrs Hall and Mr E Bainbridge; and on behalf of Viscount Falkland, G Y Blair, and Rev Oliver Jackson, a Primitive Methodist minister born in Hutton Rudby [G Milburn’s notes]

1930:  Dorothy Rickatson was invited to switch on the new electric lights in the Primitive Methodist chapel [G Milburn’s notes]




Righton

“Mr Wrighton 5s” appears in William Sayers Calculations 1815 in the Middleton Book

1823 Baines:  Middleton:  Wm Righton, farmer

25 May 1826:  burial of William Righton of Middleton 84

FS 461:  2 & 3 Feb 1831:  William Righton had been a tenant of Rudby estate

FS 461:  2 & 3 Feb 1831:  Goslingmire Farm:  occ by Thomas Righton at £220 p.a

Thos Righton was at “a meeting held in vestry” on 16 Jun 1831 where they voted a church rate of 2 ½ per £ to church repairs.  He signed the appointment of churchwardens on 9 Apr 1833.  He was at the meeting on 2 July 1833 when Sarah Hebbron was elected Sexton.

Mr Wrighton gave 10s to Rudby School, Oct 24th 1832 – Middleton Book
Mr Wrighton gave 10s to Rudby School, year beginning 24 Oct 1833 – Middleton Book

1840 Whites:  Middleton:  Thomas Righton, farmer

1841 Census:  Middleton Grange:  Thomas Righton 55 farmer, Ann 50 independent, Ann Paver 20 independent, with Alice Binks 16, Thomas Metcalf 20, John Bruster 19, Edward Topham 16, servants, and Elizabeth Sayer 16 independent and John Foston 20 miller

2 Jan 1843:  Mr Righton was appointed treasurer of the Hutton Rudby Association for the Prosecution of Felons in place of the late Mr Harrison Terry [Cleveland Repertory & Stokesley Advertiser]

1851 Census:  Hutton:  [The Elms]:  Ann Righton 54 landed prop b Tockwith, cousin Ann Paver 24 farmer’s daughter b Houssham, cousin Mary Kirby 19 farmer’s daughter b Theakston; visitors:  Ann Taylor 20 annuitant b Hutton, Elizabeth Brigham 24 farmer’s daughter b Rudby

MI 287:  Thomas Righton, son of William & Ann, and Ann Righton, his sister
MI 288:  William Righton

1849:  28 Apr:  burial of Thomas Righton a64 of Hutton House

11 May 1868:  Codling mortgage:  North Side ppty bounded by John Mease to W and Miss Righton and George Davison to E, and occupied by James Stephenson

Miss Righton gave money to the church – part of an account is listed in Barlow’s Notebook
“Righton” is listed in the “Brick acct”, apparently for the school – Barlow’s Notebook
Miss Righton died on 20 Jul 1868
Miss Righton paid for the wall and the deeds in the enlargement of the churchyard – churchwardens account


Robinson

28 Sep 1770:  Pbte of Will of Christopher Wayne:  Evereld Robinson widow occupied a croft owned by Wayne
Yorkshire Poll Book 1807:  Crathorne:  John Robinson farmer (freehold in Hutton Rudby) 

17 Mar 1808:  Elizabeth Robinson was a previous occupant of a cottage & garth of 1r on East Side, bought by Edmund Taylor from John and Ann Pape [East Side deeds]

1823 Baines:  Rudby:  Robert Robinson, corn miller

FQ 249:  13 & 14 Mar 1829:  exors of Wayne to Barker:  the Carpenters Arms with the cartwrights shop and stable on the west end thereof, the garden and the privy on the south & backside of the premises, bounded by road to East Rounton to E, by Mrs Elizabeth Hildreth to W & S, by road to East Rounton, John Robinson and Mr Farnaby to N – occ by Edward Meynell;  the garth occ by Edward Meynell, bounded by Elizabeth Hildreth to E, by John Burdon to W, by Thomas Passman, Elizabeth Hildreth, Mr Kendall & William Spence to N, by road to East Rounton to S; the site where buildings lately occupied by John & Hannah Kay & taken down by Mark Barker stood; the garth now used as garden ground to the E & backside of the sd site;  the new houses built by Mark Barker on the site and part of the garth: some of the houses and the garden ground “at present unoccupied”, the others occupied by Robert Hall, William Souter, George Sanderson, John Kay, Mary Lamb, Jackson Richardson, John Wild and Thomas Shaw:  bounded by house & lands bel to Rev Richard Shepherd to E & S, by Arthur Douglas and townstreet to N & W

FT 511:  11 & 12 Jan 1830:  East Side:  Edmund Taylor of Hutton joiner, Thomas Eland of City of London currier, James Bainbridge bricklayer:  the land on which James Bainbridge has lately erected 4 new houses & other buildings, 79 ft x 14 ft, and the passage thereto from the street:  previously occ by Elizabeth Robinson, then by William Coates, then by Edmund Taylor and now by James Bainbridge or his undertenants:  bounded by Thomas Passman to E, by street to W, by Roger Bowes to N, by Edmund Taylor to S:  “heretofore the estate of Joseph Tunstall and his wife Catherine”

FU 261:   22 & 23 Nov 1831:  north end of East Side:  James Bainbridge bricklayer & Elizabeth his wife to George Grenside of Stokesley gent:  piece of ground on which he had recently built 4 new houses and other buildings, 79ft long x 14ft wide, with the passage leading to them from the street:  previously occ by Elizabeth Robinson, then by William Coates, then by Edmund Taylor, and now by James Bainbridge or his undertenants:  bounded by Thomas Passman to E, by street to W, by Roger Bowes to N, by Edmund Taylor to S:  “heretofore the estate of Joseph Tunstall & Catherine his wife”

“Jonathan Taylor and wife & Wm Robinson and wife – 2 young, 1 for school” [Mr Barlow’s list ?1836]

William Robinson of Thormanby near Easingwold yeoman was owner of 1/7 of the Hutton tithes [Tithe Agmt 12 Jun 1838]

Tithe Map from Elizabeth Sleigh:  William Robinson occ 163, 164
Tithe Map:  William Robinson occupied the Oxgang/White House farm

1840 Whites:  Hutton Rudby:  John Robinson, butcher
1840 Whites:  Hutton Rudby:  William Robinson, farmer
1840 Whites:  Hutton Rudby:  Robinson & Wilson, linen manufacturers

1841 Census:  Thomas Robinson, ag lab 35, and family on North Side
1841 Census:  William Robinson 35 farmer and family, South Side
1841 Census:  William Robinson 20 servant born out of county, in household of John Howe, Enterpen
1841 Census:  Butter Hill:  William Robinson 25 farmer, Elizabeth 20, with Thomas Hugill 19, William Thomas 14, George Mankin 12 and Mary McRea 20, servants

From George Tweddell’s ‘Stokesley News & Cleveland Reporter’ 1 Nov 1842:
“Odd Fellow’s Funeral.  On Friday morning, October 28th, the members of the Traveller’s Home Lodge, of the Independent Order of Odd Fellows, assembled at the house of Mr Wm Robinson, the King’s Head Inn, Hutton….. [qv Oddfellows]

‘Stokesley News & Cleveland Reporter’ and ‘The Cleveland Repertory’ 1 Nov 1843: 
Langbaurgh Court:  The Court Baron of George Marwood, Esquire, chief Bailiff of the Liberty of Langbaurgh, was held at the court Room, in Stokesley, on Tuesday, the 24th, day of October last, before John Page Sowerby, Esq., the Steward, and a respectable Jury, when the following cases were heard.
[inc]
Hebron v Robinson
Mr Appleton was for the Plaintiff, and Mr Collins for the Defendant
William Hebron, of Hutton, Cartwright, was the Plaintiff, and William Robinson, of the same place, Farmer, the Defendant.  The action was brought to recover 39s 11d for work performed by the Plaintiff in the spring of 1837, upon a farm occupied by the Defendant under the Rev R J Barlow.  Verdict for Defendant.

Robert Robinson was churchwarden in 1829

John Robinson was one of the five men listed as gentry in 1823 Baines, Hutton
John Robinson was churchwarden 1855-7; the churchwarden who signed the articles of inquiry 1857
Messrs Robinson & Wilson, according to Ord 1846, linen manufacturers with warehouses in Newcastle for the sale of their goods, employed many inhabitants.

1851 Census:  Windy Hill, Rudby:  Thomas Robinson 65 farmer 262a bBarwick, and Anne 62 bSexhow with servants
1851 Census:  Rudby:  John Robinson 32 farmer 377a bCrathorne and Margaret 29 bMarske and children
1851 Census:  Middleton Grange:  William Robinson W 46 farmer 202a bRudby, and children aged 4, 6 & 8, with mother-in-law Dianah Taylor W 76 housekeeper bRounton

“Principal inhabitants” signing the record of exchange of bounties on 28 Sep 1857:  Robert Braithwaite, John Rickatson, George Wilson, Henry Willins, John Robinson, Thomas Sidgwick, John Sidgwick, George Davison [Terriers]

1872 Post Office Directory:  Hutton Rudby:  William Robinson, farmer, Enterpen

Oddfellows Board:  Bro:  Thomas Robinson, Middlesbrough, 24 Jul 1883, a78


Rochford

EB 38:  15 Jun 1816:  deed re paper mill states that John Rochford occupied the mill before Robert Norman


Rountree/Rowntree

Christopher Rowntree of Middleton-on-Leven was a famous fox hunter and racing man, who won a gentleman’s race at Stokesley and had the prize withheld for not being a gentleman.  He took the case to the Assizes at York in 1803. [Fairfax Blakeborough’s account related in Eddowes, see this post]

“Mr Rountree 6s” appears in William Sayers Calculations 1815 in the Middleton Book

1823 Baines:  Middleton:  Robert Rountree, farmer and William Rountree, farmer

Mary Rountree is in a list of names in the Middleton Book
Mary Rountree was given a book worth 7d in the Rudby School accounts – Middleton Book
Mary Rountree is in a List of Girls – Middleton Book

1840 Whites:  Hutton Rudby:  John Rowntree, Wheat Sheaf

Oddfellows Board:  Host:  John Rowntree, Hutton, 10 Jan 1841 a29


Rudd

Ann Rudd was a tenant of James Bainbridge on East Side:  deed of 1825

FC 147:  14 Nov 1825:  James Bainbridge bricklayer (1) Hutchinsons & Place bankers (2) William Richmond of Stockton mercer & draper (3) Richard Nightingale the younger of Middleton St George (4):  2 houses, lately in 3 tenements, with garden behind, formerly occ by James Bainbridge, Richard Wood & Thomas Almond, then by James Bainbridge & John Simpson, now by James & John Bainbridge; and also 2 new erected houses now in 3 tenements lately erected by James Bainbridge in the garden, now occ by George Harker, Alice Pedlar & Ann Rudd:  all bounded by messuage & garden of Roger Bowes to E, by messuage & garden of Edmund Taylor to W, by street to N, by Thomas Passman to S

FL 58:  13 May 1827:  East Side, judging by occupants & boundaries:  2 houses lately used in 3 tenements with garden behind formerly occ by James Bainbridge, Richard Wood & Thomas Almond, then by sd James Bainbridge & John Simpson, then by sd James Bainbridge & John Bainbridge:  and the 2 houses used in 3 tenements “newly created” and “lately erected” by sd James Bainbridge in the sd garden, then occupied by George Harker, Alice Pedlar & Ann Rudd:  bounded by house and garden bel to Roger Bowes to E, by Edmund Taylor to W, by street to N, by Thomas Passman to S:  parties:   Richard Nightingale the younger late of Middleton St George gent and George Stanger of Pickton farmer:  reciting indre of 14 Nov 1825 to which James Bainbridge, George & John & Henry Hutchinson, Thomas Place, William Richmond and said Richard Nightingale were parties

<Henry> Rudd bought a Catechism for ½d in the List – Middleton Book


Rymer

FK 513:  22 Feb 1828:  mortgage of house in Hutton occ by Richard Rymer and closes adjoining:  Robert Baillieur late of Trenholme now of Castle of York innkeeper and Robert Nelson Wilson late of Yarm now of Castle of York yeoman: bounded by Richard Shepherd to N & S, by John Rickarby to E and by Christopher Oxendale to W

FQ 204:  9 Dec 1829:  Robert Baillieur late of Trenholm innkeeper but now of Yarm yeoman (1)  Robert Nelson Wilson of Yarm gent (2) John Harker of Yarm jobber [?] (3):  house, orchard, garth, stable & outbldgs in Hutton Field occ by Richard Rymer and closes adjoining:  bounded by Richard Shepherd to N & S, John Rickarby to E, Christopher Oxendale to W

GG 130:  31 Oct 1835:  Thomas Spence of Hutton weaver & Dorothy his wife (1) Henry Collins of Stokesley gent (2):  2 houses now used as one, the weaver’s shop adjoinging & the garden or orchard of 1r behind, occ by Thomas Spence; the butcher’s shop adjoining the weaver’s shop occ by William Sherwood:  bounded by Lord Falkland to E, street to W, Mrs Kingston to N, Edmund Taylor to S; also Gowdie/Gowlay Hill Garth 1a with cowhouse occ by Thomas Richardson:  bounded by John Charlton to E, by Francis Stainthorpe to W, by street to N, by Jane Willans & Edward Meynell to S; also house with garden & garth behind 2r, occ by William Merrington:  bounded by street to E, William Wood to W, John Seamer to N, John Rymers & Francis Stainthorpe to S; also 3 closes formerly 2 closes called the Cottager 7a, previously occ by William Braithwaite as tenant to William Spence decd:  bounded by Robert Halliday Dobson to E, George Hunter & William Ableson to W, by Rounton road to N, by Richard Johnson to S; “& all other the messuages lands tenements and hereditaments formerly belonging to Thomas Smith late of Hutton yeoman decd and comprised in his Will”



Local solicitors in 1886

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from Waterlow Bros & Layton’s Legal Diary and Almanac for 1886


Extracted from:

List of Country Solicitors
Corrected by comparison with the Roll of the Incorporated Law Society; the list of Commissioners to administer oaths, and list of Perpetual Commissioners, and from direct correspondence

Perpetual commissioners were those appointed to take acknowledgments of deeds made by married women.  This finally became unnecessary after the Married Women's Property Act 1882.
The year stated against each entry is the date of admission to the Roll.  
The name in brackets is that of the firm, but it is not always stated.  
The name in italics is that of the firm of solicitors that acted as the solicitor’s London agents.

Coatham, near Redcar (Yorks.)

Meek, J M (M.A.) – 1872, p. com. and at Middlesborough ..... Adam Burn

Spry, S – 1876, com. oaths, and at Middlesbrough and South Bank ..... Williamson, Hill & Co

Wethey, R E – 1884, 5, Albert-road, and at Middlesboro' ..... Smiles & Co


Guisborough (Yorksh.)

Buchannan, A – 1870, com. oaths, clerk to lieutenancy of North Riding, coroner for Langbaurgh East district, clerk to guardians and rural sanitary authority, clk. to Guisbro’ local and burial bd., Guisbro’ school bd., Skelton local bd. and burial bd., and Brotton local bd., hon. sec. South Durham and North Yorkshire law soc., solr. to Guisbro’ and dis. bldg. soc ..... Pitman & Son

Carrick, W L – 1880 ..... Gray & Mounsey

Ord, C O – 1840, p. com., com. oaths ..... R M & F Lowe

Richardson, W – 1882 ..... Pitman & Son

Trevor, W C – 1866, p. com., com. oaths, deputy clk. of the peace for North Riding, clk. to mags. for div. of Langbaurgh East, and at Northallerton ..... R M & F Lowe


Hutton Rudby (Yorks.)

Kindler, A W – 1882, and at Stockton-on-Tees ..... H F Wood



Loftus-in-Cleveland (Yorksh.)

Jackson, F H – 1872, com. oaths (Jackson & Jackson), and at Middlesborough and Saltburn-by-the-Sea ..... Jackson & Evans

Jackson, G B – 1876, com. oaths, clk. to the local bd. of health, sol. to Loftus-in-Cleveland and dis. per. bldg. soc (Jackson & Jackson), and at Middlesborough and Saltburn-by-the-Sea ..... Jackson & Evans


Middlesborough [sic], (Yorksh.)

Bainbridge, G – 1860, com. oaths, town clerk, clk. to rural san. auth., and clk. to burial bd. (Bainbridge & Barnley) ..... Belfrage & Co

Barnley, G E – 1877, com. oaths (Bainbridge & Barnley) ..... Belfrage & Co

Belk, J T – 1859, p. com., com. oaths, notary, clerk to boro’ mags., clk. to sch. bd., cor. for dis. of Langbaurgh North (J T Belk & Cochrane) ..... Van Sandau, Cumming & Armitage

Brewster, F – 1879. clk. to mags. for div. of Langbaurgh North, not. pub., cons. agent for Cleveland Division of North Riding ..... Williamson, Hill & Co

Chamberlain, C M R – 1841

Cochrane, O H – 1884, (J T Belk & Cochrane) ..... Van Sandau, Cumming & Armitage

Dobson, W L – 1831, com. oaths ..... Kingsford, Dorman & Co

Draper, J H – 1860. com. oaths, and at Stockton-on-Tees ..... Field, Roscoe & Co

Gill, W – 1876, and at Knaresborough ..... Paterson, Snow & Bloxam

Jackson, F H – 1872, com. oaths (Jackson & Jackson), and at Loftus ..... Jackson & Evans

Jackson, G B – 1876, com. oaths, clk. to Loftus loc. bd., sol. to Loftus in Cleveland, and dis. per. ben. bldg. soc (Jackson & Jackson), and at Loftus ..... Jackson & Evans

King, W M – 1878, com. oaths ..... Berry, Binns & Lincoln

Leach, F J – 1879 ..... Bell, Brodrick & Gray

Lewis, T – 1879 ..... Wontner & Sons

Meek, J M (M.A.) – 1872, p. com. and at Coatham ..... Hanhart & Gillman

Parrington, H J – 1867, com. oaths ..... Van Sandau & Cumming

Peacock, J – 1874, com. oaths, 1 Zetland-road ..... Helder, Roberts & Gillett

Robson, G – 1877, com. oaths ..... Iliffes & Co

Sill, A H – 1876, com. oaths, and at Redcar ..... E Warriner

Spry, S – 1876, com. oaths, clk. to Normanby, Ormesby and Saltburn-by-the-Sea loc. bds., sol. to Normanby-in-Eston sch. bd., and at South Bank and Saltburn-by-the-Sea ..... Williamson, Hill & Co

Stubbs, J R (J.P.) – 1860, official recvr., com. oaths, notary public, sol. to Cleveland ben. bldg. soc. ..... Williamson, Hill & Co

Thompson, L, jun. – 1863, p. com., com. oaths, sol. to Saltburn pier co., sol. to York per. ben. bldg. soc. and 2nd Prov. Lofthouse, Staithes and Hinderwell bldg. soc, and at Saltburn-by-the-Sea ..... .Iliffes & Cardale

Ward, T H – 1873, com. oaths, clerk to Whitton and Stillington (united district) school board ..... Crowder, Anstie & Vizard

Watson, H – 1857, p. com., com. oaths ..... E Peacopp

Wethey, R E – 1884, 5, Albert-road, and at Coatham and Redcar ..... Smiles & Co

Wilkes, J J – 1873,p. com., com. oaths (Wilkes & Wilkes) and at Darlington ..... Chester, Mayhew & Co

Wilkes, R M – 1881, (Wilkes & Wilkes), and at Darlington ..... Chester, Mayhew & Co


Northallerton (Yorksh.)

Fowle, W – 1859, p. com., com. oaths, clerk to grdns., ass. com. and rural san. auth., coms. taxes, and Brompton and Osmotherley sch. bds ..... Williamson, Hill & Co

Jefferson, J I – 1876, com. oaths ..... Bompas, Bischoff, Dodgson & Coxe

Jefferson, W T – 1842, p. com., reg. cty. crt., clk. to mags. for Allertonshire, dep. steward and clk. of halmote courts ..... Bompas, Bischoff, Dodgson & Coxe

Trevor, W C – 1866, p. com., com. oaths, deputy clk. of the peace for North Riding, and at Guisbro ..... R M & F Lowe

Waistell, C – 1857, p. com., com. oaths ..... Maples, Teesdale & Co

Walker, W D – 1824 ..... Milne, Riddle & Mellor


Redcar (Yorksh.)

Chilton, R F – 1878, and at Stockton-on-Tees ..... Crossmans & Co

Sill, A H – 1876, com. oaths, and at Middlesboro’ ..... E. Warriner

Thompson, J G – 1857, p.com., com. oaths, clk. to local board and burial board, and at Stockton ..... Gregory & Co


Saltburn-by-the-Sea (Yorksh.)

Gill, R – 1830, p. com., com. oaths, sol. to Saltburn, Skelton, and Lofthouse building soc, and at Middlesbrough ..... Paterson, Snow, Bloxam & Kinder

Jackson, F H – 1872, com. oaths (Jackson & Jackson), and at Loftus and Middlesbrough ..... Jackson & Evans

Jackson, G B – 1876, com. oaths, (Jackson & Jackson), and at Loftus and Middlesbrough ..... Jackson & Evans

Spry, S – 1876, com. oaths, clk. to local bd. ..... Williamson, Hill & Co

Thompson, L, jun. – 1863, clerk to local board and to pier co., and at Middlesborough ..... Iliffes & Cardale

 

Stockton-on-Tees (Durham)

Archer, C J – 1871, com. oaths, and at Stockton-on-Tees ..... J R Eldridge

Bayley, E D’Oyley – 1857, p. com., com. oaths ..... Ullithorne, Currey & Villiers

Bolsover, R W – 1870, com. oaths, (Hunton & Bolsover) ..... .Prior, Church & Adams

Brayshay, W – 1875, com. oaths ..... Cree & Son

Cadle, C E – 1875, (Dodds & Co) ..... Ullithorne, Currey & Villiers

Chilton, R F – 1882, clk. to Redcar local bd. and burial bd., and at Redcar ..... Crossmans & Co

Crosby, A B (B.A.) – 1884, (Crosby, Farmer & Crosby) ..... G & W Webb

Crosby, T – 1849, p. com., com. oaths, reg. co. ct., and dis. reg. High Ct. Jus., (Crosby, Farmer & Crosby) ..... G & W Webb

Dodds, F L (M.A.) – 1881, (Dodds & Co) ..... Ullithorne & Co

Dodds, J (M.P.) – 1851, p. com., com. oaths, chief clk. to Tees conservancy coms., clk. to South Stockton local bd. and Stockton and Hartlepool hghwy. bd., (Dodds & Co), and in London ..... Ullithorne & Co

Dodds, M B (M.A., J.P.) – 1878, town clk., clk. to Kirkleatham local board and sec. to Tees fishery board (Dodds & Co) ..... Ullithorne, Currey & Villiers

Draper, J H – 1860, com. oaths, and at Middlesborough ..... Field, Roscoe & Co

Faber, T H – 1884, clerk to tax coms., clerk to mags. of Stockton boro’ (Faber & Fawcett) ..... Bell, Brodrick & Co

Farmer, J S – 1876, com. oaths, dep. reg. county ct., dep. dis. reg. High Ct. Jus. (Crosby, Farmer & Crosby) ..... G & W Webbs

Fawcett, W R – 1862, clk. to mags. for Stockton ward and Yarm petty sess. div. (Faber & Fawcett) and at Yarm ..... Bell, Brodrick & Gray

Fowler, J – 1881 ..... Bell, Brodrick & Gray

Hunton, J R E – 1863, com. oaths (Hunton & Bolsover) ..... .Prior, Church & Adams

Hutchinson, J A – 1842 ..... Williamson, Hill & Co

Kindler, A W – 1882, 59 High-st., and at Hutton Rudby ..... Plunkett & Leader

Langley, W C – 1875, com. oaths ..... J Crowdy, Son & Tarry

Mills, W H – 1882

Newby, G – 1882, notary (Watson, Newby & Robson) ..... Cree & Sons

Robson, F – 1875, com. oaths, (Watson, Newby & Robson) ..... Cree & Sons

Thomas, E J – 1876, dep. cor. ..... Merediths, Roberts & Mills

Thompson, J G – 1857, p. com., com. oaths, clk. to Redcar local bd. and bur. bd., and at Redcar ..... Gregory & Co

Trotter, H H – 1871, com. oaths ..... J Crowdy, Son & Tarry

Trotter, J (J.P.) – 1859, p. com., com. oaths, clk. of lieu. co. Durham ..... J Crowdy, Son & Tarry

Tweedy, J – 1874 ..... Cree & Son

Watson, G M (J.P.) – 1855, p. com., com. oaths (Watson, Newby & Robson) ..... Cree & Son

Wilson, T R – 1885


Stokesley (Yorksh.)


Jameson, C E – 1870, p. com., com. oaths, clk. to Langbaurgh West highway bd., and to Stokesley sch. bd. (Wilcox & Jameson) ..... Hicks & Son

Sowerby, J C – 1855, p. com., com. oaths, cor. for Langbaurgh West, registrar of co. court, clerk to magistrates, and coms. of taxes (J C & T Sowerby) ..... Williamson, Hill & Co

Sowerby, T – 1859, com. oaths, clerk to the guardians, rural sanitary authority, clerk to magistrates (J C & T Sowerby) ..... Williamson, Hill & Co


Whitby (Yorksh.)


Buchannan, C – 1875, (Buchannan & Sons) ..... Bell, Brodrick & Gray

Buchannan, G – 1864, com. oaths, notary, cor., clk. to highway board, clk. to mags. reg. co. court (Buchannan & Sons) ..... Bell, Brodrick & Gray

Buchannan J – 1833, reg. co. crt., clk. to mags. (Buchannan & Sons) ..... Bell, Brodrick & Gray

Dotchon, T – 1860, com. oaths, notary pub. ..... Bell, Brodrick & Gray, and Clarkson, Greenwell & Wyles

Frankland, W J – 1868, com. oaths ..... G & W Webb and Williamson, Hill & Co

Gray, M – 1850, p.com., clk. to gdns., supt. reg., clk. to san. authy., sch. att. com. and ass. com. (Gray & Pannett) ..... Bell, Brodrick & Gray

Pannett, R E – 1858, com. oaths, clerk to local board (Gray & Pannett) ..... Bell, Brodrick & Gray

Simpson, J C – 1874, com. oaths (Thornton & Simpson, sols. to Whitby pot and harbour trustees and Whitby marine insurance companies) ..... G & W Webb and Williamson, Hill & Co

Smith, M – 1869 ..... Bell, Brodrick & Gray

Stephenson, T – 1854, p. com., com. oaths, clerk to burial board ..... Crossman & Co

Thornton, F – 1872, com. oaths, clk. to coms. taxes, sol. to per. ben. bldg. soc (Thornton & Simpson, sols. to Whitby pot and harbour trustees and Whitby marine insurance companies) ..... Williamson, Hill & Co and G & W Webb

White, R W – 1879, (Woodwark & White) ..... Radford & Frankland

Wilkinson, S – 1841, p. com., com. oaths, sec. to Esk bd. of cons ..... Bolton, Robbins, Busk & Co

Woodwark, T H – 1878, com. oaths, (Woodwark & White) ..... Radford & Frankland



Yarm (Yorksh.)

Archer, C J – 1871 and at Stockton-on-Tees

Faber, T H – 1884, (Faber & Fawcett), and at Stockton-on-Tees ..... Bell, Brodrick & Gray

Fawcett, W R – 1862, clk. to mags., (Faber & Fawcett), and at Stockton-on-Tees ..... Bell, Brodrick & Gray


Simon Frederick Thompson's Legal Diary for 1886

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This diary belonged to Simon Frederick Thompson (1862-1928), solicitor, Middlesbrough.  His name does not appear in the list of solicitors for the town in the 'Country Solicitors' section, so possibly he was not yet on the Roll, or had only recently been admitted. 

He seems to have started work in March and his first entry in the diary is for Sunday 21 March 1886:
Mother died at ten minutes to two in the afternoon
(His mother Ann was born in Langley, Northumberland, and was the wife of John Thompson, iron works engineer).

The next is for Tuesday 23 March 1886:
paid £60 into Bank
Paid Gibson £10.12.6
He soon begins to enter a brief note of  matters he has been dealing with each day, eg.:
Wednesday 21 April 1886
Imeson v Armstrong….Preparing swearing & filing affdt of service
Simon Frederick Thompson was in practice at 11 Albert Road, Middlesbrough; by the middle of the 20th century, the office was the home of the firm Thompson, Trotter & Gray.  In 1911, he and his wife Mary Grace Goodyear Beech were living at Cleveland Villas, Grove Hill, Middlesbrough; they had been married 19 years and had no children.  He died in 1928.



It is clear from similar diaries that the working day was shorter than has become usual in recent decades, but on the other hand, the office remained open on Saturdays and it is always interesting to remember their very different attitude to the Christmas holidays – they closed only for the afternoon of Christmas Eve and for Christmas Day itself.


Simon's entry for 1 November 1886 was:
Municipal Elections today
Presiding at No 7 Wellington St


The report in the local newspaper shows how things have changed in local elections since 1886:

The Daily Gazette for Middlesbrough, Tuesday 2 November 1886
Middlesbrough
The contests for seats in the Middlesbrough Town Council as representatives for the West, South, North-West, and South-East Wards took place yesterday, but they passed off very quietly, any evidence of excitement being entirely absent. 
The various candidates and their supporters worked energetically, as will be seen by the heavy polls, the result of the contests being that three of the retiring members have found themselves ousted.  The whole of the candidates supported by the Nonconformist Association have been elected, a heavy blow having been dealt the licensed victuallers’ interest. 
The counting took place at the Town Hall [the Old Town Hall, on East Street], and, considering the cross voting and heavy poll, the work was got through with the most commendable promptitude, the results being declared from the window at 10.15.  There was a crowd of some 300 or 400 people in the Market-place at the time, and the names of the gentlemen who were successful were received with cheers. 
There were only 21 spoilt papers, an exceptionally small number – namely, in the South Ward, 2; West Ward, 5; North-East Ward, 10; North-West Ward, 4.  The returning officers were – for the South Ward, Alderman Bulmer; West Ward, Alderman T Hugh Bell; North-East Ward, Alderman Fidler; and North-West Ward, Alderman Archibald. 
Appended are the results, the asterisk preceding the names denoting the retiring members:-
South Ward
J Hedley ..... 640
*J McLauchlan ..... 514
Unsuccessful: *J Bruce ..... 285
West Ward
*J Mardon ..... 804
Illtyd Williams ..... 763
Unsuccessful: *J G Stokell
North-East Ward
*J L Pullen ..... 597
*W Conway ..... 428
Unsuccessful: Peter Feeney ..... 342
North-West Ward
W Burrows ..... 835
*C Ephgrave ..... 738
Unsuccessful: *G Hearse ..... 496
J G Poole ..... 485 
We believe that an objection has been, or will be, lodged by Mr George Hearse against the return of Mr W Burrows for the North-West Ward, on the ground that Mr Burrows has contracted with the Corporation to supply the Fever Hospital with grocery, &c.  Mr Hearse has had a long interview with the Town Clerk (Mr G Bainbridge) this morning on the subject, but we have been informed that the details of that interview must be considered as private.

Two days later, the Daily Gazette reported that Mr Burrows had indeed “declined to accept office” because of his contract with the corporation.  His friends resolved to get him released from the contract and have it transferred to Messrs Birk Bros of Linthorpe Road, so that he could stand again.


People of Hutton Rudby in the C18/19: Sadler to Seamer

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... from my working notes ... accuracy not guaranteed ... for explanatory note, see post of 14 Feb 2013


Sadler

ET 257:  2 & 3 Jan 1823:  garth, orchard & houses, probably North End:  William Sadler was an occupier

1840 Whites:  Hutton Rudby:  William Sadler, farmer, Well Hill

1841 Census:  Thomas Sadler 30 linen weaver and Ann 30 linen weaver, Tisbut Row
1841 Census:  Ann Sadler 65 ag lab, Jane 25 servant, Alice 25 linen weaver, William 12 ag lab and Andrew 8, North End
1841 Census:  Butter Hill:  Ann Saddler 40 servant with Thomas Legg
1841 Census:  Belle Vue:  Sadler

From George Tweddell’s ‘Stokesley News & Cleveland Reporter’ 1 Nov 1842:
“Odd Fellow’s Funeral.  On Friday morning, October 28th, the members of the Traveller’s Home Lodge, of the Independent Order of Odd Fellows, assembled at the house of Mr Wm Robinson, the King’s Head Inn, Hutton, for the purpose of paying their last token of respect, to the remains of the late Host of their Lodge, Mr Jeremiah Raney, of the Wheat Sheaf Inn.  After the usual funeral ceremony of the Order had been read in the room, to the asembled brothers, by Mr Thos Saddler, N.G…[qv Oddfellows]

1851 Census:  North Side:  Ann Sadler 44 weaver’s wife and niece Elizabeth Barker 3 both b Hutton

Oddfellows Board:  PG:  Thomas Sadler, 1869, a62
Oddfellows Board:  Bro:  William Sadler, Sexhow, 24 Dec 1869, a19


Sage

T Sage and J B York, both members of the chapel, took down the old Primitive Methodist chapel for £5 for the rebuilding in 1887 [G Milburn’s notes]

1887:  active members of the Primitive Methodist chapel at the time of building included Edward Bainbridge, Robert Maughan, William Graham Hall, Thomas Sage and Kilvington Rickatson of Trenholme Bar [G Milburn’s notes]



Sanders

ET 258:  7 & 8 Jan 1823:  southern part of land occ by Mundell and bought by him from Simon Kelsey:  parties:  George Mundell of Hutton gardener, John Thompson of Faceby yeoman, William Jackson of Hutton tailor, Robert Brigham of Rudby gent and William Wood of Hutton gent:  bounded by land bought by John & Thomas Sidgwick from Sir Wm Hy Pennyman to E,  by Mr Sanders and Mr Wigham to W, by northern part of land bel to Thomas & William Jackson to N, by Simon Kelsey to S

FT 109:  21 Aug 1830:  Jaques Barn glebe lands:  Michael Sidgwick late of Hutton now of Broughton weaver & John Sidgwick late of Hutton weaver now of Deighton farmer to Rev Richard Shepherd with the QAB money:  two pieces of ground called Jaques Barn each about 1a, part of a close of 7a:  bounded by Jonathan Sanders to N & W, land of George & Mary Bowes contracted to be conveyed to Isaac Whorlton & others to E, Rounton road to S:  previously occ by James Kendrew and now by John & Michael Sidgwick


Sanderson

13 Dec 1790:  George Sanderson married Jane Russell [witnesses:  John Eland, Thomas Eland]

18 May 1792:  Thomas Sanderson was a previous occupant of a house and garth on East Side north of Wheatsheaf [East Side deeds]

25 Jul 1818:  Thomas Sanderson was a previous occupant of a house in the Wheatsheaf area,  between Whorlton and Passman property, bought by Baillieur from Passman [East Side deeds]

1823 Baines:  Hutton:  George Sanderson, shoemaker

7 Oct 1826:  George Sanderson married Ann Goldsbro [witnesses:  John Pattinson, Eliz Goldsbro, Robt Preston]

George Sanderson is a tenant of Barkers Row in 1829

FQ 249:  13 & 14 Mar 1829:  exors of Wayne to Barker:  the Carpenters Arms with the cartwrights shop and stable on the west end thereof, the garden and the privy on the south & backside of the premises, bounded by road to East Rounton to E, by Mrs Elizabeth Hildreth to W & S, by road to East Rounton, John Robinson and Mr Farnaby to N – occ by Edward Meynell;  the garth occ by Edward Meynell, bounded by Elizabeth Hildreth to E, by John Burdon to W, by Thomas Passman, Elizabeth Hildreth, Mr Kendall & William Spence to N, by road to East Rounton to S; the site where buildings lately occupied by John & Hannah Kay & taken down by Mark Barker stood; the garth now used as garden ground to the E & backside of the sd site;  the new houses built by Mark Barker on the site and part of the garth: some of the houses and the garden ground “at present unoccupied”, the others occupied by Robert Hall, William Souter, George Sanderson, John Kay, Mary Lamb, Jackson Richardson, John Wild and Thomas Shaw:  bounded by house & lands bel to Rev Richard Shepherd to E & S, by Arthur Douglas and townstreet to N & W

FQ 435:  26 & 27 Mar 1830:  house on East Side:  Baillieur to Lowther:  formerly occ by Thomas Sanderson, then by Thomas Shaw and now by Robert Tweddle:  bounded by Joseph Whorlton to N, by Thomas Passman to S, by street to W

early Aug 1830:  Anthony Wiles saw Robert Goldsbrough, Thomas Grundy, William Patterson and George Sanderson “at Scotson’s, public-house … They were sitting in the front kitchen drinking.  They might have “teens” of pints of ale.  The prisoner paid for them;  he paid half-a-crown every two or three pints.  They remained there till about four in the morning;  they came in at twelve o’clock at night” [Yorkshire Gazette 12 Mar 1842]

J Sanderson was in A List of Boys – Middleton Book

1840 Whites:  Hutton Rudby:  George Sanderson, boot & shoe maker

1841 Census:  George Sanderson 45 shoemaker, Jane Sanderson 75, Anne Broads 40 and Anne Broads 13, East Side area
1841 Census:  South Side:  George Sanderson 40 linen weaver, Ann 35, James 14, Elizabeth 12, Sophia 9, Samuel 7 and Sarah 1
1841 Census:  Elizabeth Sanderson 15 in household of Thomas Ward, North End
1841 Census:  William Sanderson 40 schoolmaster with Mary Rowe, servant

1851 Census:  East Side:  George Sanderson S 59 shoemaker bHutton, servant Ann Broads W 22 housekeeper and visitor Mary Sherwood 8 bHutton

George & Jane Sanderson had three children baptised in Hutton Rudby:  George 1791, Jane 1793 and William 1796.  George and William appear never to have married, but Jane married William Broads, a weaver, in 1826 and had one daughter Jane, baptised in 1827.  William died aged 28 in August 1828, and Jane and her daughter are to be found with their mother and George in 1841 census.

The family of George & Ann Sanderson, linen weaver, appear in Hutton Rudby only in the 1841 census.  One of the sons, Samuel, can be found in the 1881 census at Stranton, Co Durham, an iron dresser.

The identity of the George Sanderson who drank with Robert Goldsbrough is not known – but George the weaver was married to a Goldsbrough.

NBI:  15 Nov 1860 George Sanderson buried, aged 68
NBI:  24 Aug 1864 William Sanderson buried, aged 68


Sangar

Rev George Sangar, vicar of Carlton, was curate to Mr Barlow for the 3rd service – 1871 & 1877
He was curate in Stokesley before becoming vicar of Carlton in 1865.
In 1877-9 Sanger replaced the old church at Carlton, described by Ord in 1848 as a “singular and extraordinary structure”, with a sturdy Norman-style tower and a thatched nave and chancel “little better than a shepherd’s hut”.  He drew up his own plans, directed the work, was his own “contractor, clerk of works, master mason and foreman carver” [Fairfax Blakeborough].
It was opened in Mar 1879, and in Oct 1881 was destroyed by fire.  The villagers suspected the vicar of arson, and although the Stokesley magistrates threw out the case, the Archibishop of York suspended him for five years for a supposed ecclesiastical offence.  He remained in the parish, ostracised by his parishioners.  A week before his death, the Carlton blacksmith pinned up a farewell note from Sanger to his parishioners in his shop, and many villagers went to make their peace with him before his death.  When Canon Kyle was appointed to the parish as his successor the Archbishop of York advised him, “You will have to exercise the highest form of charity – that is, charity to the uncharitable.” [A Prospect of the North York Moors by Harry Mead]

See Chapters 21 and 23 of Remarkable, but still True, and particularly Chapter 24


Sawkell

Oddfellows Board:  Bro:  John Sawkell, Stokesley, 29 Feb 1848, a27
Oddfellows Board:  Bro:  R Sawkell, Stokesley, 28 Jan 1857, a40


Sayer

The Sayer family of Rudby were descended from a junior branch of the Sayers of Worsall, who had held that manor from the C14 and were noted recusants.  In the mid C17, John Sayer of Rudby married a granddaughter of Francis Sayer of Yarm.

Entries in the parish registers for the Sayer family begin before 1600, and continue for eight generations into the early C19, becoming a very widespread group, splitting into a large number of different families.

Descendants of John Sayer were recusants in 1691.  In 1745 Joseph, Thomas & James Sayer refused to abjure their faith but agreed to abide by the anti-papist laws.  Thomas was still a recusant at his death in 1789.  Thereafter there are no references to Catholicism among the Sayers of the North Riding.  Edward Sayer 1823-97 was the first to leave Yorkshire, going to London in 1837.  His great-uncles James and William were among the last Sayer burials in Rudby, dying in 1815. [‘The Sayer family of Worsall’ by J P Sayer]
It is however possible that there were later Sayer burials, unrecorded by Mr Barlow

1786:  John Sayer was churchwarden

“William Sayers Calculations … Martinmas 1815” appear in the Middleton Book

William Sayer (Middleton) was a Poor Law Guardian [Hastings:  Local Govt & Socy]

1823 Baines:  Middleton:  William Sayer, bleacher and corn miller

“Apprenticeship Indre:  Stephen Hall aged 12 years apprenticed to John Cook of Hutton near Rudby, weaver, to age 21 – April 1823:  made between William Sayer (churchwarden) and Thomas Tweddle and William Sayer (overseers of poor of township of Middleton) and Stephen Hall ‘a poor child belonging to said township of Middleton’” [NYCRO Mic 1204]

William Sayer was a Vestry member in 1830 who signed the election entry for the churchwardens in April

Mr Sayer gave 10s to Rudby School, Oct 24th 1832 – Middleton Book
Mr Sayer gave 10s to Rudby School, year beginning 24 Oct 1833 – Middleton Book

John Sayer was the enumerator for part of Hutton for the 1841 Census
1841 Census:  John Sayer 20 schoolmaster in household of Mary Willins, Enterpen
1841 Census:  Middleton Grange:  Elizabeth Sayer 16 independent in household of Thomas Righton

Thomas Sayer was an early occupant of East Side property sold by Thomas Passman to Isaac Benson on 13 Feb 1845


Scales

1840 Whites:  Hutton Rudby:  William Scales, grocer & draper
1841 Census:  Mary Scales 60 tea dealer born out of county, North End


Scarth

Richard Scarth was at “a meeting held in vestry” on 16 Jun 1831 where they voted a church rate of 2 ½ per £ to church repairs
Richard Scarth (East Rounton) was a Poor Law Guardian [Hastings:  Local Govt & Socy]

1840 Whites:  East Rounton:  Richard Scarth, farmer and owner

Jun 1866:  Medd Scarth, Carlton gave £2 to the subscription for Thomas Garbutt


Scholes

1872 Post Office Directory:  Hutton Rudby:  John Scholes, bobbin manufacturer


Schoolmasters

Thomas Ableson was the first schoolmaster of the Bathurst school, died in 1750 and was succeeded by his son William [Hastings]

William Ableson d 1782 a 63, Master of Rudby School, d of asthma [PRs]

10 Oct 1789 William Ableson admitted and licensed to teach a Petty or English School in Hutton Rudby [Borthwick faculties etc 1768-1793]

5 Jun 1790:  Let the Ordinary be Cautious that no licence be granted to James Hird to teach a Petty School in the Parish of Hutton Rudby in the Diocese of York till John Jackson the licensed Schoolmaster to the Established School there be first called or William Ashwith Notary Public his Proctor who entered this Caveat the fifth day of June in the year of our Lord 1790 [Borthwick Faculties etc 1769-93]

John Jackson 1743-1808 was “an able classical and mathematical scholar and had the sons of many prominent Clevelanders at his school.  He spent his leisure time in making sun-dials, that at Hutton Rudby Church being one … He wrote the well-known hunting song ‘The Cleveland Fox Chase’” [‘The Bards and Authors of Cleveland’ quoted by Eddowes]

1823 Baines:  Hutton:  William Easby, schoolmaster
1823 Baines:  Rudby:  William Preston, schoolmaster

William Sidgwick: “To the memory of William Sidgwick who for several years was master of the National school of this Parish.  On the 19 Feb 1837 he calmly resigned his spirit to Him who gave it at the premature age of 29 years, leaving behind him a character for manliness and Christian piety seldom equalled on this side of Eternity.  Most faithful and assiduous in the discharge of his duty, he filled the station allotted to him with surpassing excellence and endeared all by his amiable disposition.  He was universally regretted, by few more than the Vicar of this Parish who knew and valued his services and inscribes these lines in lasting memory of his worth.” [MI 259 – but the inscription is taken from Eddowes’ account]

1840 Whites:  Rudby:  Robert Preston, schoolmaster

‘Stokesley News & Cleveland Reporter’, 1 Sep 1844:
Marriages:  On Wednesday, July 10th, at Leek, by the Rev W Warrington, Mr Robert Cooper, Master of the National School, Hutton Rudby, to Grace, third surviving daughter of the late John Ripley, Esq., M.D., Knayton, near Thirsk

William Sanderson, 20 years master of Rudby school, died 22 Aug 1864 a68 “This stone was erected by some of his pupils” [MI 167]

1841 Census:  John Sayer 20 schoolmaster in household of Mary Willins, Enterpen
1841 Census:  Mary Sidgwick 85 independent and Charlotte 50 schoolmistress, Enterpen
1841 Census:  William Sanderson 40 schoolmaster with Mary Rowe [?] servant

1851 Census:  Ann Elliot 63 schoolmistress b Ayton Bank, Durham
1851 Census:  Charlotte Sidgwick 58 schoolmistress b Rudby
1851 Census:  Thomas Maddison 30 schoolmaster b Sedgefield & family, in Enterpen
1851 Census:  William Sanderson 54 classical, mathematical, arithmetical teacher b Hutton, in Rudby with Mary Roe 60 b Egton, house servant

1861 Census:  Ann Elliot 72 (S) schoolmistress, private school, b Northumberland
1861 Census:  George Laurence 39 schoolmaster b Spofforth, with wife & child

1871 Census:  Ann Elliot 83 schoolmistress
1871 Census:  Spencer Holmes 28 schoolmaster b Addingham, Leeds, with wife b Durham
1871 Census:  Isabel Tinkler 24 (S) schoolmistress b Northallerton, lodging with the Bainbridges

1872 Post Office Directory:  National School, Spencer Holmes, master; Miss Mary Tinker, mistress
William Heaviside, schoolmaster of Hutton Rudby, was a witness of Mr Barlow’s Will on 15 April 1875
as was Elizabeth Fowler, Schoolmistress, Hutton Rudby


Scorer

GA 84:  3 Mar 1826:  Will of Arthur Douglas of Skutterskelfe, gardener:  his house, weavers shops & garth lying contiguous, now occ by George Wright and others, and his 2 cottages now occ by Hannah Kay & [ - ] Peacock:  beneficiaries: Alvey Kay and Catherine Kay, children of testator’s late niece Mary Kay, and testator’s sisters Alice Scorer and Ann Hutton decd


Scotson

early Aug 1830:  Anthony Wiles saw Robert Goldsbrough, Thomas Grundy, William Patterson and George Sanderson “at Scotson’s, public-house … They were sitting in the front kitchen drinking.  They might have “teens” of pints of ale.  The prisoner paid for them;  he paid half-a-crown every two or three pints.  They remained there till about four in the morning;  they came in at twelve o’clock at night” [Yorkshire Gazette 12 Mar 1842]

George Scotson widower of Hutton married Alice Gray of Darlington on 20 Dec 1833 [witnesses:  Matthew Scotson, Sarah Scotson]


Seamer  see also Seymour

1823 Baines:  Hutton:  William Seamer, linen manufacturer

FQ 434:  14 & 15 Apr 1829:  John Seamour occupied land belonging to Elizabeth Sleigh

GG 130:  31 Oct 1835:  Thomas Spence of Hutton weaver & Dorothy his wife (1) Henry Collins of Stokesley gent (2):  2 houses now used as one, the weaver’s shop adjoinging & the garden or orchard of 1r behind, occ by Thomas Spence; the butcher’s shop adjoining the weaver’s shop occ by William Sherwood:  bounded by Lord Falkland to E, street to W, Mrs Kingston to N, Edmund Taylor to S; also Gowdie/Gowlay Hill Garth 1a with cowhouse occ by Thomas Richardson:  bounded by John Charlton to E, by Francis Stainthorpe to W, by street to N, by Jane Willans & Edward Meynell to S; also house with garden & garth behind 2r, occ by William Merrington:  bounded by street to E, William Wood to W, John Seamer to N, John Rymers & Francis Stainthorpe to S; also 3 closes formerly 2 closes called the Cottager 7a, previously occ by William Braithwaite as tenant to William Spence decd:  bounded by Robert Halliday Dobson to E, George Hunter & William Ableson to W, by Rounton road to N, by Richard Johnson to S; “& all other the messuages lands tenements and hereditaments formerly belonging to Thomas Smith late of Hutton yeoman decd and comprised in his Will”

Tithe Map from Elizabeth Sleigh:  John Seamer occ 137, 138, 141, 142

John Seamer was a subscribers to the Wesleyan Youth’s Instructor in 1840



People of Hutton Rudby in the C18/19: Selby to Sidgwick/Sedgwick

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... from my working notes ... accuracy not guaranteed ... for explanatory note, see post of 14 Feb 2013


Selby

Oddfellows Board:  Bro:  James Selby, Sum. Houses, 5 Dec 1875, a27


Sextons

8 Jan 1722:  William, son of William Rain sexton and Elizabeth Outon/ ?Orton b/bap

13 May 1784:  burial of William Stockdale, sexton of Rudby Church
19 Feb 1790:  burial of Thomas Seamore, a 74, Sexton of Rudby Church

Sarah Hebron was elected Sexton on 2 July 1833 “to have £2/12 per year for doing the duty of a Sexton to attend to the fires and keep the church clean.  The Churchwardens to see about getting the stove in repair”.
The sexton has the care of the fabric of the church and is responsible for digging the graves and ringing the bells.  It is not clear from the churchwardens’ accounts who was the previous sexton;  it may have been Nathaniel Smithson.  The records do not show who the vestry appointed to take care of the bells and, particularly, the gravedigging.


Seymour/Seamer

“Seymour for well 2s 6d” appears in William Sayers Calculations 1815 in the Middleton Book

7 Aug 1822:  B D Suggitt left £20 a year to his servant Mary Seymour, if still residing with him at the time of his death

1823 Baines:  Hutton:  William Seamer, linen manufacturer

FQ 434:  14 & 15 Apr 1829:  John Seamour occupied land belonging to Elizabeth Sleigh

T Seymour was in A List of Boys – Middleton Book

GG 130:  31 Oct 1835:  Thomas Spence of Hutton weaver & Dorothy his wife (1) Henry Collins of Stokesley gent (2):  2 houses now used as one, the weaver’s shop adjoining & the garden or orchard of 1r behind, occ by Thomas Spence; the butcher’s shop adjoining the weaver’s shop occ by William Sherwood:  bounded by Lord Falkland to E, street to W, Mrs Kingston to N, Edmund Taylor to S; also Gowdie/Gowlay Hill Garth 1a with cowhouse occ by Thomas Richardson:  bounded by John Charlton to E, by Francis Stainthorpe to W, by street to N, by Jane Willans & Edward Meynell to S; also house with garden & garth behind 2r, occ by William Merrington:  bounded by street to E, William Wood to W, John Seamer to N, John Rymers & Francis Stainthorpe to S; also 3 closes formerly 2 closes called the Cottager 7a, previously occ by William Braithwaite as tenant to William Spence decd:  bounded by Robert Halliday Dobson to E, George Hunter & William Ableson to W, by Rounton road to N, by Richard Johnson to S; “& all other the messuages lands tenements and hereditaments formerly belonging to Thomas Smith late of Hutton yeoman decd and comprised in his Will”

Tithe Map from Elizabeth Sleigh:  John Seamer occ 137, 138, 141, 142

John Seamer was a subscribers to the Wesleyan Youth’s Instructor in 1840

1841 Census:  John Seymour 40 linen weaver, William 30 linen weaver and John 25 linen weaver, North End.  Next door, in household of Thomas Biggins, Mary Seymour 12.
1841 Census:  Thomas Seymour 40 linen weaver and family, North End

John Seymour, weaver, is listed as one of the Trustees of Hutton Rudby Wesleyan chapel – date not given, possibly mid 1850s

1851 Census:  North End:  John Seymour widower 55 hand loom weaver linen
1851 Census:  North End:   John Seymour widower 37 hand loom weaver, and children Mary 5 and Elizabeth 10 mths
1851 Census:  North End:  William Seymour 41 handloom weaver linen b Hutton and Mary 32 also handloom weaver linen b Dodsworth, Yks
1851 Census:  North End:  Thomas Seymour 49 handloom weaver linen and Ann 49, with children Mary 18, Dorothy 11 and Elizabeth 8;  and lodger Richard Richardson single 26 handloom weaver linen;  all b Hutton

Oddfellows Board:  Bro:  Thomas Seymour, Middlesbrough, 25 Sep 1875, a53

1887:  memorial stones at the new Primitive Methodist chapel were laid by K Rickatson, W Seymour (Spout Bank), Mrs Honeyman, Mrs Eden, Mrs Hall and Mr E Bainbridge; and on behalf of Viscount Falkland, G Y Blair, and Rev Oliver Jackson, a Primitive Methodist minister born in Hutton Rudby [G Milburn’s notes]




Shaw

Thomas Shaw was buried on Tues 23 Oct a65;  Jane Shaw on Sun 28 Oct a62 [PRs]

21 Jan 1793:  Thomas Shaw married Ann Carter [witnesses:  William Shaw, John Eland]

26 Oct 1800:  Ann Carter 26 wife of Thomas buried
Baptisms:  children of Thomas & Ann Shaw:  Mary 1796, Thomas 1798

Thomas then seems to remarry, to Jane:  children of Thomas:  Ann 1802, Elizabeth 1804 (dau of Thomas & Jane), John 1810, and William 1812

25 Jul 1818:  Thomas Shaw occupied a house in the Wheatsheaf area,  between Whorlton and Passman property, bought by Baillieur from Passman [East Side deeds]

Thomas Shaw is a tenant of Barkers Row in 1829

FQ 249:  13 & 14 Mar 1829:  exors of Wayne to Barker:  the Carpenters Arms with the cartwrights shop and stable on the west end thereof, the garden and the privy on the south & backside of the premises, bounded by road to East Rounton to E, by Mrs Elizabeth Hildreth to W & S, by road to East Rounton, John Robinson and Mr Farnaby to N – occ by Edward Meynell;  the garth occ by Edward Meynell, bounded by Elizabeth Hildreth to E, by John Burdon to W, by Thomas Passman, Elizabeth Hildreth, Mr Kendall & William Spence to N, by road to East Rounton to S; the site where buildings lately occupied by John & Hannah Kay & taken down by Mark Barker stood; the garth now used as garden ground to the E & backside of the sd site;  the new houses built by Mark Barker on the site and part of the garth: some of the houses and the garden ground “at present unoccupied”, the others occupied by Robert Hall, William Souter, George Sanderson, John Kay, Mary Lamb, Jackson Richardson, John Wild and Thomas Shaw:  bounded by house & lands bel to Rev Richard Shepherd to E & S, by Arthur Douglas and townstreet to N & W

FQ 435:  26 & 27 Mar 1830:  house on East Side:  Baillieur to Lowther:  formerly occ by Thomas Sanderson, then by Thomas Shaw and now by Robert Tweddle:  bounded by Joseph Whorlton to N, by Thomas Passman to S, by street to W

Elizabeth Best married William Shaw.  He was possibly the son of Thomas & Jane, born 1812.

Elizabeth Shaw gave evidence at the trial of Robert Goldsborough in 1842:  “on cross-examination she admitted that she had been in jail on a charge of stealing geese; and that she had two children born before marriage.”

1841 Census:  William Shaw 25 weaver, Elizabeth 30 and James Best 13 weaver,  Ann Best 11 and Margaret Best 8, on East Side

The Shaw family do not feature in the 1851, 1861 and 1871 censuses, but it seems likely that Margaret, then aged 18 and a “house servant”, was living with Hannah Best, her grandmother in 1851;  she is listed in the transcript as Hannah’s daughter. 

Elizabeth Shaw, weaver’s widow, aged 70, b Tabron, Norfolk is listed between the Wheatsheaf and Hutton House in 1881.

James Best appears to have been living in Hutton Rudby in 1881;  the census shows James Best, married, 52, b Hutton Rudby, a sailcloth weaver, was visiting in the household of Isabella Foster, a widow in Queens Terrace, Middlesbrough, and Mrs Mary Best 51, b Gateshead, was living on South Side, and ten year old Mary Best, b Hutton Rudby, was staying with her.


Shepherd

Robert Sheppard of Barrack [Barwick], Parish of Egglescliffe was buried Sat 27 Oct [PRs]

Rev. Richard Shepherd:  nothing is known of his family background.  The IGI has three possibles:  bap 13 Apr 1788 at Kirkby Moorside William/Sarah; bap 8 Oct 1788 Danby William/  ; 5 Jul 1789 Barlby Edward/  .

A Deed of declaration of abode by George Thirkell of Middleton was sworn before R Shepherd Vicar of Rudby “at my lodgings at Hutton in the parish of Rudby” on 2 Nov 1822 – which indicates he was living in lodgings before his marriage

Richard Shepherd married Ann Brigham on 21 Apr 1824.  Witnesses:  Thos Simpson, M Simpson, Jw Brigham, John Colbeck, Ann Simpson, Samuel Hebbron.  The vicar of Egton, Glaisdale, Mr Benjamin Richardson, officiated.
Their son Richard Brigham Shepherd bap 10 Sep 1826, and son Robert bap 13 Jul 1828

The deeds relating to the Barkers Row area state that a dwellinghouse and lands belonging to the Rev Richard Shepherd bounded Barkers Row to the east and south, while property belonging to Arthur Douglas bounded it to the north and west.  But there are no deeds to indicate that he owned property there, so I assume that Mr and Mrs Shepherd had been living in Hutton House.

FK 513:  22 Feb 1828:  mortgage of house in Hutton occ by Richard Rymer and closes adjoining:  Robert Baillieur late of Trenholme now of Castle of York innkeeper and Robert Nelson Wilson late of Yarm now of Castle of York yeoman: bounded by Richard Shepherd to N & S, by John Rickarby to E and by Christopher Oxendale to W

FQ 204:  9 Dec 1829:  Robert Baillieur late of Trenholm innkeeper but now of Yarm yeoman (1)  Robert Nelson Wilson of Yarm gent (2) John Harker of Yarm jobber [?] (3):  house, orchard, garth, stable & outbldgs in Hutton Field occ by Richard Rymer and closes adjoining:  bounded by Richard Shepherd to N & S, John Rickarby to E, Christopher Oxendale to W

FQ 249:  13 & 14 Mar 1829:  exors of Wayne to Barker:  inc the Barkers Row house:  bounded by house & lands bel to Rev Richard Shepherd to E & S, by Arthur Douglas and townstreet to N & W

FT 294:  26 & 27 Dec 1830:  Jakebarn:  Michael Sidgwick of Hutton yeoman & John Sidgwick jnr of Hutton farmer to William Jackson of Hutton tailor:  a fenced off close of 1a called Jakebarn:  previously occ by Richard Shepherd & now by his widow Ann:  bounded by Isaac, Joseph & William Whorlton’s land to E, by land recently bought by QAB from vendors to W & N, by road to S

Rev Rd Shepherd took his last baptism on 15 Jun 1830, and was buried 18 Nov 1830 a 42 by T. Hartley, curate (R.T. Hartley, curate of Stokesley, had taken earlier services); Ann Shepherd, then of Redcar, bd 1 Jun 1860 a 64.

In Hutton Rudby at the same time as Richard Shepherd:  George & Jane Shepherd farmed at Oxgang House in Oct 1824 (when their son George was baptised), were still there in June 1826 (baptism of William) and in April 1827 (Elizabeth), and in Jun 1828 (George) and in Sep 1829 (James)

George Shepherd rented Oxgang at £7 p.a. c1820 – Middleton Book

Daniel Shepherd of Sexhow was churchwarden in 1831.  He was at “a meeting held in vestry” on 16 Jun 1831 where they voted a church rate of 2 ½ per £ to church repairs


Sherwood

27 & 28 Jun 1831:  Lease:  parties:  Thomas Eland of Grange Road Bermondsey leather dresser and wife Mary, Richard Eland of Newport Pagnell Bucks gent and Langley & Reece:  to convey from Thomas to Richard and to secure an annuity to Thomas and his wife:  garth 1a 2r 28p, bounded by John De Putron & - Richardson to W, Flounders & De Putron to E, river to N and street to S: and 3 houses (formerly one house) barn, cowhouse & carpenter’s shop:  occ by John Eland, John Sherwood & Thomas Wiles

GG 130:  31 Oct 1835:  Thomas Spence of Hutton weaver & Dorothy his wife (1) Henry Collins of Stokesley gent (2):  2 houses now used as one, the weaver’s shop adjoinging & the garden or orchard of 1r behind, occ by Thomas Spence; the butcher’s shop adjoining the weaver’s shop occ by William Sherwood:  bounded by Lord Falkland to E, street to W, Mrs Kingston to N, Edmund Taylor to S; also Gowdie/Gowlay Hill Garth 1a with cowhouse occ by Thomas Richardson:  bounded by John Charlton to E, by Francis Stainthorpe to W, by street to N, by Jane Willans & Edward Meynell to S; also house with garden & garth behind 2r, occ by William Merrington:  bounded by street to E, William Wood to W, John Seamer to N, John Rymers & Francis Stainthorpe to S; also 3 closes formerly 2 closes called the Cottager 7a, previously occ by William Braithwaite as tenant to William Spence decd:  bounded by Robert Halliday Dobson to E, George Hunter & William Ableson to W, by Rounton road to N, by Richard Johnson to S; “& all other the messuages lands tenements and hereditaments formerly belonging to Thomas Smith late of Hutton yeoman decd and comprised in his Will”

William Sherwood was a tenant of Thomas Spence in 1835, occupying the butcher’s shop.  He was still a tenant in 1842

11 Jun 1838:  William Sherwood 35 butcher, son of John Sherwood, farmer, married Martha Kay 31, daughter of George Bewick, linen manufacturer [witnesses:  Henry Bainbridge, Matthew Bewick]

1840 Whites:  Hutton Rudby:  William Sherwood, butcher

Mr Sherwood was a subscriber to the Wesleyan Shilling Magazine in 1840

1841 Census:  William Sherwood 35 butcher, Martha 30 and George 11 mth near the Wheatsheaf
1841 Census:  Mary Sherwood 65 ag lab and Mary 25 ag lab, North End

GZ 204:  2 May 1842:  Thomas Spence late of Hutton weaver but now of Middlesbrough baker & shopkeeper (1) John Snowdon of Stokesley shoemaker (2) Thomas Sidgwick of Hutton linen manufacturer (3) George Wilson of Hutton linen manufacturer (4) reciting indres of 1839:  John Snowdon had lent Thomas Spence £90 with £4-17-5d interest also owing, on Spence’s property on East Side:  Spence sold Sidgwick the house (formerly 2 houses) & garden for £180, the mortgage to be paid off:  the garden & orchard to be sold to Sidgwick was staked out and contained 33 p; previously occ by Thomas Spence and now by William Meynell; the rest to be sold to John Oates; mortgagee George Wilson

GZ 206:  May 1842:  Thomas Spence to John Oates for £50:  the 2 shops, one formerly a weaver’s shop and now a carpenter’s and the other a butcher’s shop, with the ground behind now staked out and measuring 9 p:  now occ by William Meynell, William Sherwood and John Oates:  bounded by Thomas Sidgwick’s purchase from Spence to E & N, by street to W, Edmund Taylor to S; mortgagee George Wilson

1851 Census:  North Side:  William Sherwood 47 butcher b Winton, Yks, and wife Martha 43 b Hutton, with Hutton-born children George Bewick 10, Betsy 6, John William 4 and Matthew Henry 2


Shout/Shutt

1802:  John Shoute was churchwarden

13 Jul 1815:  John Hutton married Jane Shout [witnesses:  James Harrison, Jas Eland]
18 Jul 1815:  Major Shout married Ann Whorlton [witnesses:  Mary Seamour, Thomas Barker, John Jackson]

EB 102:  11 & 13 May 1816:  Manor House Farm?:  previously occ by James Dunning, now by John Shoute 

EB 412:  21 & 22 Mar 1817:  ppty on North Side: Thos & Jos Whorlton (1) Wm Whorlton (2), occ by Major Shout

EP 148:  3 Feb 1821:  mortgage to Wm Whorlton by John Shout:  house previously occupied by Oliver Jackson and now by Major Shout, land and weaver’s shop
Major Shout was a tallow chandler.  He occupied the Whorltons’ house on North Side ca1817, and his son Major was baptised 18 Jul 1815 (son of Major and Anna Shout)

1823 Baines:  Hutton:  John Shutt, farmer


Sidgwick/Sedgwick 

There were numerous Sidgwicks in the village through the C19 and C20 (and before - earliest date not checked);  it is not clear how they were related, if at all.

In the late C18, William, Simon, Thomas & John all had children at the same time eg 1785-90.  It is known that Simon Sidgwick of Enterpen died a80 in 1821 and left a widow Sarah & six children:  William the weaver, John grocer of Kent, Michael merchant of Enterpen, Mary who married William Sidgwick yeoman of Hutton, Jane & Sarah spinsters.  It is also known that John Sidgwick, who bought houses in Enterpen in 1779, probably died in 1815 a76.  He had a son John, a linen manufacturer of Enterpen, who had a son John, yeoman of Gt Broughton in 1828

Michael of Enterpen and John the grocer were churchwardens – ie property owners

John the weaver – in 1841 there were four, aged 15, 20, 25 and 55 – was a Wesleyan

15 & 16 May 1779:  John Sidgwick bought house on Enterpen corresponding with Tithe Map no 232 [see below]

Charlotte Sidgwick bap 9 Aug 1789 dau of -/Mary Sidgwick, HR [IGI Beryl]

Yorkshire Poll Book 1807:  Hutton Rudby:  Simon, Michael & John Sedgwick, all weavers, all voted

1810:  John Sidgwick was churchwarden
1812:  Simon Sidgwick was churchwarden

4 & 5 Oct 1819:  Thomas Sedgwick of Hutton weaver – party to a deed re East Side property [East Side deeds]

The bill for 1819 from Powell & Harker, recd by Robert Brigham on their behalf, included 17 Dec 1819 for “Commitment of Geo Sidgwick to the House of Correction for disobeying Bastardy Order” 1/- [Middleton Book]

EO 107:  11 & 12 Aug 1820:  land near Jakebarn, recently purchased by Thomas Jackson from Simon Kelsey, bounded by land purchased by John Sidgwick & Thomas Sidgwick from Sir Wm Hy Pennyman to E

ET 257:  2 & 3 Jan 1823:  garth, orchard & houses, probably at bottom of North End:  parties:  William Sidgwick farmer & wife Mary, Michael Sidgwick farmer & wife Mary, John Sidgwick farmer, Robert Rayson of Co Durham gent, Henry Mellanby of Hutton gent, John Milner of Helmsley weaver, Mary Sidgwick widow of John Sidgwick of Enterpen linen manufacturer, Jacob Honeyman weaver

ET 258:  7 & 8 Jan 1823:  southern part of land occ by Mundell and bought by him from Simon Kelsey:  parties:  George Mundell of Hutton gardener, John Thompson of Faceby yeoman, William Jackson of Hutton tailor, Robert Brigham of Rudby gent and William Wood of Hutton gent:  bounded by land bought by John & Thomas Sidgwick from Sir Wm Hy Pennyman to E,  by Mr Sanders and Mr Wigham to W, by northern part of land bel to Thomas & William Jackson to N, by Simon Kelsey to S

ET 604:  12 & 13 Sep 1823:  4a close in Hutton Moor, previously occ by Bart Wright now by Simon Sidgwick the weaver, and buildings in Enterpen formerly used as house & occ by William Sidgwick, now used as barn & weaver’s shop & occ by Simon the weaver:  parties:  Sarah Sidgwick the elder widow of Simon yeoman of Enterpen, William Sidgwick of Hutton weaver, John Sidgwick of St Mary’s Gray, Kent, grocer, Michael Sidgwick of Enterpen merchant, William Sidgwick of Hutton yeoman & Mary his wife (Mary being the daughter of Simon decd), Jane Sidgwick & Sarah Sidgwick the younger both of Enterpen spinsters,  Simon Sidgwick of Hutton weaver, Francis Cuthbert Reed draper of Yarm and William Garbutt gent of Yarm & Stokesley:  premises devised under Will of late Simon Sidgwick

1823 Baines:  Hutton:  William Sidgwick, farmer
1823 Baines:  Hutton:  William Sidgwick, Simon Sidgwick, Michael Sidgwick, Mary Sidgwick & Sons, linen manufacturers
1823 Baines:  Hutton:  Charlotte Sidgwick, schoolmistress
1823 Baines:  Rudby:  Thomas Sidgwick, weaver
1823 Baines:  Skutterskelfe:  John Sidgwick, linen manufacturer

“Principal inhabitants” signing the Rudby terrier 1825:  Simon Kelsey, Robert Brigham, William Wood, Michael Sidgwick, Philip Gowland, James Catchasides <jnr>, and churchwardens James Catchasides and John Wrightson

10 Aug 1826:  Sarah Sidgwick married Robert Preston, schoolmaster.  At least five children

Michael Sidgwick was churchwarden in 1827-8 and 1839. 

Elizabeth Sidgwick b 13 Apr 1829, who became Mrs Russell of 15 Alma Parade, Redcar – her brother William wrote in 1908 from Darlington. Their parents were William and Mary of Brooks Farm, Trenholme Bar.

18 Jul 1828:  Lease (preliminary deed for convce):  house on Enterpen corresponding with Tithe Map 232 ie at the end of the old terrace near the Station Hotel:  John Sidgwick of Great Broughton yeoman, son & devisee of John Sidgwick of Enterpen linen manufacturer decd (1) Edward Meynell the younger of Enterpen weaver (2):  sale of 2 houses with garden behind on Enterpen:  occ by John Sidgwick decd, and now by Thomas Hawman and James Meek:  bounded by land of John Sidgwick of Broughton to E & N, by Sarah Sidgwick to W, by road to S:  part of ppty conveyed to John Sidgwick the grandfather of John Sidgwick of Broughton in deeds 15 & 16 May 1779, the release made between George Flintoff & Ann Flintoff widow (1) and John Sidgwick the grandfather (2)

FT 108:  25 Aug 1830:  Hutton Moor [Tithe Map 384 & 385]:  Michael Sedgwick late of Hutton now of Broughton weaver (1) Mary Sedgwick of Broughton widow (2) Govnors of QAB (3) Rev Robt Fawcitt curate of Hilton (4):  two closes, the Cottage & the Orchard, one about 1a the other about 2a, previously in one close “in a place called Hutton Moor” [ie that described in ET 604]:  occ by Bart Wright as tenant to Thomas Dennison, then by Michael Sidgwick:  bounded by Thomas Dennison to E & S, by George Truefitt to W, by Rounton road to N

FT 109:  21 Aug 1830:  Jaques Barn glebe lands:  Michael Sidgwick late of Hutton now of Broughton weaver & John Sidgwick late of Hutton weaver now of Deighton farmer to Rev Richard Shepherd with the QAB money:  two pieces of ground called Jaques Barn each about 1a, part of a close of 7a:  bounded by Jonathan Sanders to N & W, land of George & Mary Bowes contracted to be conveyed to Isaac Whorlton & others to E, Rounton road to S:  previously occ by James Kendrew and now by John & Michael Sidgwick

FT 294:  26 & 27 Dec 1830:  Jakebarn:  Michael Sidgwick of Hutton yeoman & John Sidgwick jnr of Hutton farmer to William Jackson of Hutton tailor:  a fenced off close of 1a called Jakebarn:  previously occ by Richard Shepherd & now by his widow Ann:  bounded by Isaac, Joseph & William Whorlton’s land to E, by land recently bought by QAB from vendors to W & N, by road to S

FS 461:  2 & 3 Feb 1831:  Thomas Sedgwick had been a tenant of Rudby estate
FS 461:  2 & 3 Feb 1831:  cottage 6a:  occ by Thomas Sidgwick at £13-14s p.a
FS 461:  2 & 3 Feb 1831:  cottage 9a:  occ by Benjamin Sidgwick at £13-14s p.a

Michael Sidgwick was a vestry member on 5 Apr 1831 who signed the election of the churchwardens.  He was at “a meeting held in vestry” on 16 Jun 1831 where they voted a church rate of 2 ½ per £ to church repairs.  He signed the election of the churchwardens and a church rate of 5 ½ per pound in April 1832.

Churchwardens’ accounts 1831/2:  “George Sidgwick Repairing Bil  1s”

“Warrant for apprehension:  George Sidgwick of Rudby, weaver, reputed father of son of Jane Mitchinson for non-payment of £21-13-2 under a maintenance order for payment of £1-15-0 lying-in expenses and 2/- per week 20 Jan 1831”

William Sidgwick bought a Catechism for 1d in the List – Middleton Book
Isabella Sidgwick is in a list of names in the Middleton Book
Charlotte Sidgwick is in a list of names in the Middleton Book
Isabella Sidgwick is in a List of Girls – Middleton Book
Wm Sidgwick is in A List of Boys – Middleton Book
[blank] Sidgwick was in A List of Boys – Middleton Book

John Sidgwick the grocer was appointed churchwarden in 1833.  He was at the meeting on 2 July 1833 when Sarah Hebbron was elected Sexton. 

John Sedgwick was in the 1836 Wesleyan Methodist class lists.
Isabella Sedgwick, Elizabeth Sedgwick were in the 1836 Wesleyan class lists
Sarah Preston nee Sidgwick is in the Wesleyan class lists 1836

Elizabeth Sidgwick:  Elizabeth & William Sidgwick:  Hannah bap 1831, Sarah bap 1834 and John bap 1837.  This could be William & Elizabeth in Rudby
Elizabeth Sidgwick:  a Bessy was the unmarried mother of Thomas, bap 20 Jan 1833
Elizabeth Sidgwick:  an Elizabeth died 1839 a54
Isabella Sidgwick:  Isabella & William had Robert Myers bap 1832.  This William Sidgwick appears not to have been born in Hutton Rudby.
 
An account of School expenditure commencing Oct 24th 1836 shows “Paid Mrs Sidgwick up to and for July 29th 1837  £4-15-0 ½d”

1838/41:  John Sidgwick, grocer & churchwarden, North End was a property owner
1838/41:  Michael Sidgwick, farmer, Enterpen was a property owner
1838/41:  Sarah Sidgwick, elderly independent, North Side, was a property owner
1838/41:  Thomas Sidgwick, linen manufacturer, North Side was a property owner

Tithe Map:  John Sidgwick owned & occ property on North End, and occupied a close on Enterpen owned by Michael Sidgwick
Tithe Map:  Michael Sidgwick was an owner & occupier on Enterpen
Tithe Map:  Sarah Sidgwick owned property on Enterpen
Tithe Map:  Thomas Sidgwick owned property on Enterpen, and occupied property on North Side and in the Kelsey Field area beyond Doctors Lane
Tithe Map:  William Sidgwick owned & occ property on Enterpen, and occupied gardens & garths on North End
Tithe Map from Elizabeth Sleigh:  William Sidgwick occ 105 gdn – North End
Tithe Map from Elizabeth Sleigh:  James Sidgwick occ 139, 140 – mid North End

In 1839 [or 1840?] Michael Sidgwick was chosen churchwarden, but this was opposed by Thomas Chapman, who demanded a vote; the ballot elected Chapman. [1839:  Eddowes lists Michael Sidgwick and Thomas Chapman; 1840:  Eddowes lists Henry Harland and Thomas Chapman.] 

1840 Whites:  Hutton Rudby:  Michael Sidgwick, gent
1840 Whites:  Hutton Rudby:  academies:  Charlotte Sidgwick
1840 Whites:  Hutton Rudby:  John Sidgwick, grocer & draper; Thomas Sidgwick, grocer & draper
1840 Whites:  Hutton Rudby:  Thomas Sidgwick, linen manufacturer

John Sedgwick:  in the 1841 Census there were three:  2 weavers and one grocer. 

1841 Census:  North Side:  Thomas Sidgwick 45, linen mfr, Sarah 45 and James Bainbridge 25, blacksmith
1841 Census:  Robert Preston was the enumerator.  He was then living on North Side a40, with Sarah (nee Sidgwick) 40, William 14, Mary 12, Sarah 8, Jane 5 and Margaret 3, and Sarah Sidgwick a80 in the household
1841 Census:  South Side:  Charlotte 15 in household of Richard Jowsey
1841 Census:  North End:  John Sidgwick 20 linen weaver, Christopher 15 linen weaver, with William Charlton 11
1841 Census:  North End:  William Sidgwick 50 linen weaver, Isabella 15, with William Davison 10 and William Jowsey 55 linen weaver
1841 Census:  North End:  James Sidgwick 15 linen weaver, Charlotte 20 with George Drydale 1
1841 Census:  North End:  John Sidgwick 55 linen weaver, wife and James 20 and John 15 both linen weavers, with John Stainthorp 6 born out of county
1841 Census:  North End:  John Sidgwick 50 grocer, Hannah 40, with Ann Charlton 15 servant
1841 Census:  Enterpen:  William Sidgwick 55 linen weaver, Dina 50, Mary 20, William 20, Moses 14, Margaret 4
1841 Census:  Enterpen:  Michael Sidgwick 55 farmer, Mary 55 born out of county, Jane Wood 26 and Sarah Goodall 20
1841 Census:  Enterpen:  Michael Sidgwick 18 draper & grocer in household of George Wilson
1841 Census:  Enterpen:  Mary Sidgwick 85 independent and Charlotte 50 schoolmistress
1841 Census:  Enterpen:  John Sidgwick 25 linen weaver and Simon Sidgwick 45 linen weaver, in household of Thomas Simpson [who is Simon’s brother-in-law]
1841 Census:  Rudby, cottage:  Benjamin Sidgwick 55 labourer, Ruth 55, Ruth 10, Robert 7
1841 Census:  Rudby, cottage:  George Sidgwick 45 weaver, with Margaret Davison 55 servant born out of county, Jane Davison 7 and Robert Davison 1, and Thomas Sidgwick 25 Wailer/waiter
1841 Census:  Rudby, cottage:  William Sidgwick 45 weaver, Elizabeth 45, Margaret 20, Charles 14, Robert 12, Sarah 7

John Sedgwick was churchwarden in 1833 and 1841-54 and 1863-4. 

Thomas Sidgwick bought the house and garden from Thomas Spence in 1842 for £180:
GZ 204:  2 May 1842:  Thomas Spence late of Hutton weaver but now of Middlesbrough baker & shopkeeper (1) John Snowdon of Stokesley shoemaker (2) Thomas Sidgwick of Hutton linen manufacturer (3) George Wilson of Hutton linen manufacturer (4) reciting indres of 1839:  John Snowdon had lent Thomas Spence £90 with £4-17-5d interest also owing, on Spence’s property on East Side:  Spence sold Sidgwick the house (formerly 2 houses) & garden for £180, the mortgage to be paid off:  the garden & orchard to be sold to Sidgwick was staked out and contained 33 p; previously occ by Thomas Spence and now by William Meynell; the rest to be sold to John Oates; mortgagee George Wilson

GZ 206:  May 1842:  Thomas Spence to John Oates for £50:  the 2 shops, one formerly a weaver’s shop and now a carpenter’s and the other a butcher’s shop, with the ground behind now staked out and measuring 9 p:  now occ by William Meynell, William Sherwood and John Oates:  bounded by Thomas Sidgwick’s purchase from Spence to E & N, by street to W, Edmund Taylor to S; mortgagee George Wilson

‘The Cleveland Repertory’
1 Jun 1843:
Deaths:  On the 7th ult. at Hutton Rudby, the wife of John Sidgwick, aged 46
[the wife of John the grocer]

‘Stokesley News & Cleveland Reporter’, 1 Sep 1844:
Births:  On Saturday, the 24th of August, at Hutton, Charlotte, the wife of Mr James Sidgwick, of a daughter

‘Stokesley News & Cleveland Reporter’, 1 Sep 1844:
Deaths:  On Monday, the 19th of August, at Hutton, Mr William Sidgewick, Weaver, aged 53 years

25 Mar 1845:  a Vestry meeting was chaired by George Wilson:  “John Sidgwick shopkeeper appointed for Hutton Parish and Mr Barlow appoints Henry Chapman for his.  Geo Wilson Chairman” [Barlow’s family]

John Sedgwick was the churchwarden who completed the articles of inquiry 1849 and in 1853.

Oddfellows Board:  Bro:  James Sidgwick, Hutton, 28 Feb 1851, a36 [linen weaver, JBTurner]

1851 Census:  Hutton House:  George Wilson 39 linen mfr b Newcastle, Ann 34 b Kildale, Thomas Bowes 11 and John George 2;  with servants Hannah Preston 20 b Rudby and Sarah Sedgwick 17 b Hutton
1851 Census:  Enterpen:  Charlotte Sidgwick 58 schoolmistress b Rudby
1851 Census:  East Side:  Thomas Sidgwick 56 linen mfr bHutton and Sarah 58 bKnaresbrough
1851 Census:  North End:  Charlotte Sidgwick 32 licensed hawkers wife, with children John 9, Jane 6, Sarah 5, George 3, and James 1;  all born Hutton
1851 Census:  North End:  John Sidgwick 28 handloom weaver linen, Jane 25, Jowhn William 3 and David 2;  all b Hutton
1851 Census:  North End:  Charlotte Sidgwick single 28 with children James 9 and Isabella 1, and nephew William Sidgwick 5 and niece Mary Ann Sidgwick 2;  all b Hutton;  and with lodger William Jowsey widower handloom weaver linen b Middleton
1851 Census:  North End:  James 30 handloom weaver linen and Mary 33 with children Jane 7, Mary 5, James 3 and William 7 mths;  all b Hutton
1851 Census:  North End:  John Sidgwick widower 65 handloom weaver linen b Hutton
1851 Census:  North End:  John Sidgwick 33 hand loom weaver and Mary 28 with children Elizabeth Carter Sidgwick 6 and William 2;  all b Hutton
1851 Census:  North Side:  John Sidgwick 40 widower grocer & draper b Rudby, with lodgers Henry Willins 28 carpenter, Sidgwick’s niece Mrs Ann Willins 27, and John Thomas Willins 6, all b Hutton
1851 Census:  North Side:  Ann Sidgwick 38 tailor’s widow b Tunstill, Staffs, and visitors Sarah Jameson 20 b Alnmouth and John Thomas Smith 4, policeman’s son b Lee-gate, Durham
1851 Census:  North Side:  James Sidgwick 61 handloom weaver linen, Sarah 54, son Christopher 27 hand loom weaver linen, and visitor William Charlton single 21 journeyman carpenter;  all b Hutton
1851 Census:  North Side:  William Sidgwick 27 tailor b Rudby and wife Mary 31 dressmaker b Carlton
1851 Census:  Enterpen:  Dinah Sidgwick widow 62 retd innkeeper b Welbury and son William 29 hand loom weaver b Hutton Rudby
1851 Census:  Enterpen:  Thomas Simpson 52 widower, ag lab, b Potto, and unmarried children Mary Ann 26 housekeeper, Thomas 23 ag lab, Jane 20, Hannah 17,  all born Hutton Rudby;  with son-in-law John Sidgwick 32 hand loom weaver widower [?], brother-in-law Simon Sidgwick single 60 hand loom weaver, both born Hutton Rudby

Charlotte Sidgwick’s name is jotted in Barlow’s Notebook, as buried 26 Sep 1852

“Dinah Sidgwick ill” in Feb 1853 is given 2s6d, in Barlow’s Notebook

20 Nov 1855:  Eland to Codling:  Mustard Garth 1r 28p:  previously occ by Hannah Kay widow, then by Thomas Eland, now used as allotment gardens occupied by John Sidgwick, Robert Preston, Anthony Smith, Anthony Smith jnr, Thomas Milburn, Thomas Crook and Christopher Garbutt

Thomas Sidgwick is listed in Barlow’s Notebook, giving 1s to charity collection

“Principal inhabitants” signing the record of exchange of bounties on 28 Sep 1857:  Robert Braithwaite, John Rickatson, George Wilson, Henry Willins, John Robinson, Thomas Sidgwick, John Sidgwick, George Davison [Terriers]

Sarah Sidgwick was one of two linen manufacturers in the village in 1861

1861 Census:  Hutton House:  George Wilson 50 sailcloth mfr b Newcastle, Ann 45 b Kildale, James 23 commoner Wadham, Alan 21 sailcloth mfr, and Ann Hutton W. 5;  cook Elizabeth Ann Hold 28 b Durham and housemaid Elizabeth Sidgwick 18

John Sedgwick was churchwarden in 1833 and 1841-54 and 1863-4. 

11 May 1868:  Codling mortgage:  Mustard garth bounded by John Oates & George Davison to E, Robert Southeran to S and John Sidgwick to N

“Wm Sidgwick wife” is given 3s6d on 20 Mar 1869, in Barlow’s Notebook
[William the weaver and his wife would then both be 73 years old. William the tailor was younger]

1872 Post Office Directory:  carriers:  to Middlesbrough, James Sidgwick, Friday; to Stockton, James Sidgwick, Wednesday
1872 Post Office Directory:  Rudby:  Robert Sidgwick, boot & shoe maker

Exors of Michael Sidgwick owned Layton House until April 1914 [Rate Books 1914-20]

The 1881 CD-Rom shows there were 16 households headed by Hutton Rudby born Sedgwicks, 10 of them living in the village


People of Hutton Rudby in the C18/19: Sigsworth to Souter

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... from my working notes ... accuracy not guaranteed ... for explanatory note, see post of 14 Feb 2013


Sigsworth

FQ 434:  14 & 15 Apr 1829:  Thomas Sigsworth occupied land belonging to Elizabeth Sleigh


Simpson

David Simpson’s charity: yearly rent charge of 20s, 1783.  B D Suggitt was his grandson.

Yorkshire Poll Book 1807:  Crathorne:  Richard Simpson innkeeper (freehold in Hutton Rudby)

John Simpson was a tenant of James Bainbridge on East Side in 1817
 
EH 212 & EG 295:  relate to the same ppty:  a house which had been divided into two tenements and in 1818 was “lately occupied in four different tenements or dwellinghouses”:  tenants were previously Jane Whorlton & her tenants William Easby, Oliver Jackson & William Honeyman; tenants were in 1818 William Honeyman, Thomas Graham, Robert Walton and Robert Codling:  bounded to E by Christopher Flintoff decd, to S & W by townstreet, to N by David Simpson decd

EC 354:  30 Oct 1817:  James Bainbridge bricklayer (1) William Richmond of Stockton mercer & draper (2):  2 houses with garden behind, occ by James Bainbridge & John Simpson:  bounded by messuage & garden of Roger Bowes to E, by messuage & garden of Edmund Taylor to W, by street to N, by Thomas Passman to S

FC 147:  14 Nov 1825:  James Bainbridge bricklayer (1) Hutchinsons & Place bankers (2) William Richmond of Stockton mercer & draper (3) Richard Nightingale the younger of Middleton St George (4):  2 houses, lately in 3 tenements, with garden behind, formerly occ by James Bainbridge, Richard Wood & Thomas Almond, then by James Bainbridge & John Simpson, now by James & John Bainbridge; and also 2 new erected houses now in 3 tenements lately erected by James Bainbridge in the garden, now occ by George Harker, Alice Pedlar & Ann Rudd:  all bounded by messuage & garden of Roger Bowes to E, by messuage & garden of Edmund Taylor to W, by street to N, by Thomas Passman to S

FL 58:  13 May 1827:  East Side, judging by occupants & boundaries:  2 houses lately used in 3 tenements with garden behind formerly occ by James Bainbridge, Richard Wood & Thomas Almond, then by sd James Bainbridge & John Simpson, then by sd James Bainbridge & John Bainbridge:  and the 2 houses used in 3 tenements “newly created” and “lately erected” by sd James Bainbridge in the sd garden, then occupied by George Harker, Alice Pedlar & Ann Rudd:  bounded by house and garden bel to Roger Bowes to E, by Edmund Taylor to W, by street to N, by Thomas Passman to S:  parties:   Richard Nightingale the younger late of Middleton St George gent and George Stanger of Pickton farmer:  reciting indre of 14 Nov 1825 to which James Bainbridge, George & John & Henry Hutchinson, Thomas Place, William Richmond and said Richard Nightingale were parties

28 Sep 1835:  Will of John Braithwaite:  he left a house occupied by son Robert (except a room built over a coalhouse occ by tenant Richard Simpson) with garden & privy;  a house occupied by Richard Simpson (except the room beforementioned);  house lately occupied by William Mudd and now unoccupied.  [East Side deeds]

Churchwardens’ accounts 1838:  “Thos Simpson Lime & Lead Do. 15s” [ditto=New Window]

James Simpson (15) was a servant at the Barlows’ at Linden Grove in the 1841 Census
1841 Census:  Ann Simpson 50 ag lab, Robert 20 journeyman blacksmith and Hannah 15 flaxspinner, South Side
1841 Census:  Thomas Simpson 40 farmer and family, with John Sidgwick 25 linen weaver and Simon Sidgwick 45 linen weaver, Enterpen

1851 Census:  South Side:  Ann Simpson widow 62 pauper farmer’s widow, b Crathorne
1851 Census:  Enterpen:  Thomas Simpson 52 widower, ag lab, b Potto, and unmarried children Mary Ann 26 housekeeper, Thomas 23 ag lab, Jane 20, Hannah 17,  all born Hutton Rudby;  with son-in-law John Sidgwick 32 hand loom weaver widower [?], brother-in-law Simon Sidgwick single 60 hand loom weaver, both born Hutton Rudby

Oddfellows Board:  Bro:  Robert Simpson, Linthorp, 19 Nov 1874, a57




Skeen

Matthew Skeen was churchwarden 1859-60
1872 Post Office Directory:  Hutton Rudby:  Matthew Skeen, farmer, New Close


Skelton

Mrs Betty Skelton’s age is left blank in the list “Sepultorum nomina”
Elizabeth dau of James Catchasides/Grace bap HR 7 Mar 1784 – marr Joseph Skelton 3 Aug 1826 at HR


Skutterskelfe workers

William Hammand “45 years a faithful domestic in the Rt Hon Lady Amherst’s family who laments his loss and orders this to be inscribed as a tribute justly due to his merit and long service.  He died suddenly 22    1816 aged    ” [MI 381]

Christopher Corkshut.  “He lived 2(1?) years faithful servant with the Rt Hon Lady Amherst who <  > this inscription as a testimonial”.  4 lines illeg verse.  He died Jan 1817 aged 48 years [MI 380]

Arthur Douglas “who was gardener 50 years and upwards in the late Hon Lady Amherst’s family”.  He died 8 Dec 1831 a84 years.  Also to his wife Catherine who d 30 Dec 1815 a 62 years [MI 378]   

Thomas Milestone b 9 Jul 1822 d 18 Dec 1908 “a devoted servant and friend for over 60 years in the families of the 10th, 11th and 12th Viscounts Falkland.  This stone is erected to his memory at to that of Mary his wife b 18 May 1824 d 4 Dec 1912 and to Martha Milestone their daughter b 18 Feb 1848 d 29 Dec 1903 by their late master Viscount Falkland in affectionate remembrance and repect” [MI 320] ie stone erected after the Falklands had sold


Sleigh

1787:  29 Jan:  Christopher Sleigh married Mary Hildreth, witnesses John Weighell and John Eland
1795:  3 Nov:  Christopher Sleigh widower married Elizabeth Atkinson, witnesses John Sleigh, Michael Atkinson and John Lamb
Christopher Sleigh and Elizabeth Atkinson have children William 1796, Mary Ann 1797, Thomas 1800, and Hannah 1804.  William went to Canada in 1816, and was married there in 1824; became Town Clerk there 1825.

Yorkshire Poll Book 1807:  Sexhow:  Christopher Sleagh farmer (freehold in Hutton Rudby) 

14 May 1810:  house & garth and garth:  Tipping & Wardell exors of Thos Wayne to Thomas Eland:  house & garth 1a 2r 28p occupied by Eland, bounded by street to S, river Leven to N, Francis Tweddle & Francis Stainthorpe to E, and Christopher Sleigh to W;  garth 1r 28p on north side of Hutton, formerly occ by Hannah Kay widow, now by Thomas Eland, bounded by B D Suggitt to S, Thomas Jackson to E, street to W and Isaac Whorlton to N

“Mr Slee 3s” appears in William Sayers Calculations 1817 in the Middleton Book
<Sleigh> and Samuel gave 4s to Money recd for the <monument>  – Middleton Book

1823 Baines:  Middleton:  William Sligh, farmer

1828:  13 Jan:  burial of Christopher Slee 81 of Middleton

FQ 434:  14 & 15 Apr 1829:  estate of Elizabeth Sleigh:  Warcop Consett of Brawith Hall Esq (1) Wm Hugill of Ellermire in Bilsdale farmer (2):  the reversion expectant on death or marriage of estate or interest of Elizabeth Hildreth & all other the lands etc of Elizabeth Sleigh:  the ppties in Hutton now or late occupied by William Richardson, Thomas Sigsworth, Thomas Jackson, Joseph Dridle, Robert Elliot, John Seamour, Ann Codling, Thomas Taylor, Jonathan Hardbottle, James Bainbridge, Mary Honeyman, Jane Pattison, James Wake, Jonathan Taylor, Richard Jowsey and Richard Renney; and two houses & premises in Enterpen occupied by Thomas Elliot and John Horne

Mr Sleigh gave 5s to Rudby School, Oct 24th 1832 – Middleton Book

Tithe Map:  Hutton:  Elizabeth Sleigh owned 105, 125-134, 137-144, 163-4, 186-193, 211-214
Tithe Map:  Middleton:  Elizabeth Sleigh owned house and fields in the area of Butter Hill Farm, and it was occupied by William Sleigh

1840 Whites:  Middleton:  William Sleigh, farmer

1851-71 (inc) Census:  Middleton:  Butter Hill (1851) thereafter called Indian Farm:  Thomas Sleigh.  In 1891 the farm is again called Butter Hill, and is occupied by the Charltons
1872 Post Office Directory:  Middleton:  Thomas Sleigh, farmer

Settled Easter dues with Sleigh to Jany 1st 1868 – Barlow’s Notebook


Smelt

DY 88 & ET 601:  John Smelt was a tenant of Philip Gowland in the Bay Horse area in 1816-1823

FQ 560:  2 & 3 Nov 1829:  ppty bought by Jane Willans widow in Enterpen:  garth of 1r 3p where a cottage formerly stood, formerly occ by John Miller, then by George Wilson, Mary Young & Hannah Young, then by Matthew Richardson jnr, then by John Burden, bounded by Thomas Wayne to N, E & W, and by street called Enterpen to S; with the houses “lately erected upon the garth” & now occupied by Simeon Burden, John Smelt, Paul Oates, John Goldsbrough, William Jowsey, Abraham Holdgate and William Burnsides

1841 Census:  Ann Smelt 75 ag lab, Enterpen


Smith

George Smith was a tenant of the Tweddle property at the east end of North Side in 1815
William Smith, farmer, Middleton or Rounton

4 Oct 1819:  William Smith occupied a newly built cottage and garden at the end of a garth on East Side, bought by John Braithwaite from Taylor [East Side deeds]

ET 604:  12 & 13 Sep 1823:  4a close in Hutton Moor, previously occ by Bart Wright now by Simon Sidgwick the weaver, bounded by lands late belonging to Margaret Smith & now to William Spence to E

1823 Baines:  Hutton:  James Smith, agent to Clark, Plummer & Co, Newcastle
1823 Baines:  Hutton:  James Smith, grocer

William Smith was at “a meeting held in vestry” on 16 Jun 1831 where they voted a church rate of 2 ½ per £ to church repairs
<Smiths> gave 5s to Money recd for the <monument>  – Middleton Book
Mary Smith was given a testament worth 1s in the Rudby School accounts – Middleton Book
Mary Smith is in a List of Girls – Middleton Book

Tithe Map:  Middleton:  William Smith farms Spyknave (landlord:  George Wyndham)

GG 130:  31 Oct 1835:  Thomas Spence of Hutton weaver & Dorothy his wife (1) Henry Collins of Stokesley gent (2):  2 houses now used as one, the weaver’s shop adjoinging & the garden or orchard of 1r behind, occ by Thomas Spence; the butcher’s shop adjoining the weaver’s shop occ by William Sherwood:  bounded by Lord Falkland to E, street to W, Mrs Kingston to N, Edmund Taylor to S; also Gowdie/Gowlay Hill Garth 1a with cowhouse occ by Thomas Richardson:  bounded by John Charlton to E, by Francis Stainthorpe to W, by street to N, by Jane Willans & Edward Meynell to S; also house with garden & garth behind 2r, occ by William Merrington:  bounded by street to E, William Wood to W, John Seamer to N, John Rymers & Francis Stainthorpe to S; also 3 closes formerly 2 closes called the Cottager 7a, previously occ by William Braithwaite as tenant to William Spence decd:  bounded by Robert Halliday Dobson to E, George Hunter & William Ableson to W, by Rounton road to N, by Richard Johnson to S; “& all other the messuages lands tenements and hereditaments formerly belonging to Thomas Smith late of Hutton yeoman decd and comprised in his Will”

Mary Smith, John Smith, <Henny> Smith were in the 1836 Wesleyan Methodist class lists
John Smith was a Wesleyan class leader in 1838 and 1839

1840 Whites:  Middleton:  William Smith, farmer
1840 Whites:  Hutton Rudby:  John Smith, foreman

1841 Census:  John Smith 30 foreman to a linen manufacturer, Sarah Smith 20 straw hat maker and baby Esther, Martha Taylor 55, North End
1841 Census:  Martha Smith 55 servant, next door to John Smith, North End
1841 Census:  Anthony Smith 30 linen weaver and family, with John Smith 30 linen weaver, Enterpen
1841 Census:  John Smith 35 servant at Windy Hill Farm (Brigham)
1841 Census:  Middleton:  Butter Hill:  William Smith 55 farmer and family

John Smith was Wesleyan Steward for Hutton Rudby in 1841, and was the steward who made the return for the ecclesiastical census in 1851
M.A. Smith was a subscribers to the Wesleyan Youth’s Instructor in 1841
John Smith, Hutton, accountant is listed as one of the Trustees of Hutton Rudby Wesleyan chapel – date not given, possibly mid 1850s

A John Smith was a weaver in Enterpen, another was foreman to a linen manufacturer, in the 1841 Census

‘Stokesley News & Cleveland Reporter’ 1 May 1844:
Births:
On Tuesday, April 2nd, at Hutton Rudby, the wife of William Smith, of a son. 

1851 Census:  Middleton:  Spyknave:  Jane Smith, widow, farmer 122a b East Harlsey with children Mary 33, Christopher 31, William 29, Thomas 20 (b East Rounton) , and granddaughter Sarah Smith 1
1851 Census:  East Side:  Eliza Smith S 33 milliner bRudby and sister Jane Smith S 29 milliner bRudby
1851 Census:  North End:  John Smith widower 41 foreman to linen manufacturer, and children Esther Ann 10 and James 7, all b Hutton
1851 Census:  North End:  Martha Smith widow 67 flourdealer b Kirby, and unmarried children Henry 33 linen hand loom weaver and Margaret Ann 28 straw bonnet maker, both b Hutton
1851 Census:  North Side:  Anthony Smith jnr widower 28 handloom weaver linen, and children Mary Ann 4 and Sarah Elizabeth 2,  all b Hutton; and grandmother Sarah Garth widow 84 pauper b Newton, Yks
1851 Census:  North Side:  Anthony Smith snr 64 handloom weaver linen b Hutton and Sarah 52 b Skeeby, Yks, with children Christopher 19 handloom weaver linen, Sarah 21 dressmaker and Elsie 10, and grandson Anthony Smith 3, all b Hutton

20 Nov 1855:  Eland to Codling:  Mustard Garth 1r 28p:  previously occ by Hannah Kay widow, then by Thomas Eland, now used as allotment gardens occupied by John Sidgwick, Robert Preston, Anthony Smith, Anthony Smith jnr, Thomas Milburn, Thomas Crook and Christopher Garbutt

1861 Census:  Middleton Farm 153a:  Smith

“Settled Easter dues with Smith” in early Feb 1866 in Barlow’s Notebook
Christopher Smith was given 3s 6d in Dec 1869, in Barlow’s Notebook

1871 Census:  Carr House, Rudby:  Smith

1872 Post Office Directory:  Rudby:  William Smith, farmer
1872 Post Office Directory:  Hutton Rudby:  Edmund Smith, boot & shoe maker
1872 Post Office Directory:  Middleton:  Christopher Smith, farmer

10 Mar 1874:  Anthony Smith occupied a house on East Side, north of Wheatsheaf [East Side deeds]
1 May 1877:  Anthony Smith and Henry Smith occupied houses north of Wheatsheaf [East Side deeds]


Smithson


Churchwardens’ accounts 1829/30:  £1-0-6d for a safe and lock from Nathaniel Smithson
Churchwardens’ accounts 1830/1:  “Nathaniel Smithson’s salary £1”  “Nathaniel Smithson letter to Ayton 2s” “Nathaniel Smithson for kindling and illeg 3s 6d”
Daniel Shepherd and William Wood’s accounts for 1831-2:
“Nath Smithson’s Salary        £1
Caot allowd in Cash            £1 – 10”
He may have been the sexton at the time. 

1841 Census:  Nathaniel Smithson 75 ag lab, Ellas 75, Enterpen


Smyth

J Wm Smyth was at “a meeting held in vestry” on 16 Jun 1831 where they voted a church rate of 2 ½ per £ to church repairs


Snary

20 Nov 1855:  Eland to Codling:  the garth on North Side of 1a 2r 28p with the 6 messuages formerly in 3 tenements with barn, cowhouse & carpenter’s shop occ by Thomas Milestone, - Kearsley, George Snary, Nicholas Jackson, John Mudd, Robert Batty and James Eland


Souter

Thomas Souter was buried Sat 6 Oct a5; David Souter was buried 1 Nov a13;  Elizabeth Souter was buried 29 Nov a87;  Emma Souter was buried 11 Dec a38.  [PRs]

Burials are recorded of Souter children after 1790, and baptisms of Souter children after 1816.

The IGI, and a Pedigree Resource File from a submitter in Ontario:
23 Aug 1747:  birth of Elizabeth Moon at Newton by Guisborough, William Moon/Mary Anderson [PRF]
7 Jan 1769:  Elizabeth Moon married John Souter at Carlton-in-Cleveland [IGI:PRs]
7 Oct 1783:  William Souter bap [PRF]
14 Sep 1786:  Robert Moon Souter bap at Crathorne [IGI:PRs]
14 Oct 1790:  Richard Souter born at Crathorne [PRF]
7 Apr 1793:  Emma Souter bap at Crathorne [IGI: PRs]
27 Dec 1809:  Robert Moon Souter married Hannah Hall at Crathorne [PRF]
20 Oct 1815:  Robert Moon Souter married Eleanor Robinson at Crathorne [PRF]
22 Jun 1811:  William Souter married Mary Moon at Stokesley [PRF]

From the PRs it may be deduced that:

William Souter labourer of Hutton & Mary had:   Mary Ann (1816-26), David (1819-32), Jane (1825-), and Thomas Moon (1828-32).  By 1841 Mary is a widow, living with her daughter Jane, and not thereafter.  Mary Souter of Hutton Rudby was godparent at a Catholic baptism in 1833 to a Meynell/Moss child.
A William Souter is buried 21 Mar 1835, age according to transcript 21.

Robert Souter labourer of Enterpen & Eleanor had:  John (1819-22), Robinson (1822-4), William (1824-  ), Robinson (1827-31), and Anne (1831-  ).  At John’s birth, Robert is described as a farmer:  later, as a labourer.  This family does not appear in the 1841 census in Hutton Rudby, but in Crathorne the 1851 Census Index shows that they had returned to that village:  Robert Souter 64 b Crathorne, and Eleanor Souter 61 b Berwick-on-Tees [sic].  In 1851 Census, William Souter 26 b Hutton, publican & blacksmith, is with his family at the Bay Horse.

Richard Souter labourer of Hutton married Mary Doking [probably Dalkin] on 24 Jul 1820 at HR.  They had:  Jane (1820-  , marr Thomas Walker), Elizabeth (1827-  , marr Robert Glover), John (1829-  ) and David (1835-  ).  They lived in Enterpen for the 1841 and 1851 Censuses; the latter shows that Richard was born in Crathorne.  In the 1851 Census, their son John 22 b Hutton labourer is with his wife and children in Enterpen.

11 & 13 May 1822:  Elizabeth Souter and Robert Moon Souter sold East Side property to Thomas Passman [East Side deeds]

FQ 249:  13 & 14 Mar 1829:  exors of Wayne to Barker:  the Carpenters Arms with the cartwrights shop and stable on the west end thereof, the garden and the privy on the south & backside of the premises, bounded by road to East Rounton to E, by Mrs Elizabeth Hildreth to W & S, by road to East Rounton, John Robinson and Mr Farnaby to N – occ by Edward Meynell;  the garth occ by Edward Meynell, bounded by Elizabeth Hildreth to E, by John Burdon to W, by Thomas Passman, Elizabeth Hildreth, Mr Kendall & William Spence to N, by road to East Rounton to S; the site where buildings lately occupied by John & Hannah Kay & taken down by Mark Barker stood; the garth now used as garden ground to the E & backside of the sd site;  the new houses built by Mark Barker on the site and part of the garth: some of the houses and the garden ground “at present unoccupied”, the others occupied by Robert Hall, William Souter, George Sanderson, John Kay, Mary Lamb, Jackson Richardson, John Wild and Thomas Shaw:  bounded by house & lands bel to Rev Richard Shepherd to E & S, by Arthur Douglas and townstreet to N & W

William Souter is a tenant of Barkers Row in 1829
Elizabeth Souter is in a List of Girls – Middleton Book
“Richard Salter and wife & Jonathan Harberton – 3 childn, 2 for school” [Mr Barlow’s list ?1836]
Tithe Map:  Richard Souter occupied a house & garden 6, near Enterpen Farm

1841 Census:  Mary Souter 50 labourer and Jane Souter 15 flax spinner on East Side
1841 Census:  Richard Souter 45 ag lab, Mary 40 and David 6, with Jonathan Hardbottle 80, ag lab, Enterpen
1841 Census:  Elizabeth Souter 14 servant at Sexhow Hall (Chapman)

1851 Census:  Bay Horse:  William Souter 26 blacksmith & victualler b Hutton, Jane 29 b Seamer, and children Robert 3 b Seamer and John 1 b Hutton; with nephew William George Walton 15 blacksmith’s apprentice b Hutton;  servant Elizabeth Ghent 12 b Seamer;  lodgers James Scott widower 70 juggler, Robert Scott married 40 juggler and their servants Mary Grenson 31, Henry Ryley widower 50 and Henry Ryley 11 – birthplace of lodgers not known
1851 Census:  Enterpen:  John Souter 22 ag lab b Hutton rudby, wife Jane 25 b Staindrop, and children Mary J. 2 and Margaret A. 7 wks, both b Hutton Rudby
1851 Census:  Enterpen:  Richard Souter 60 ag lab b Crathorne and wife Margaret 53 and son David 16 ag lab, both b Hutton Rudby

28 Nov 1863:  William Souter occupied a house with blacksmith’s shop behind it (later to be a butcher’s shop) near Wheatsheaf, mortgaged by J A Benson [East Side deeds]
“Souter 3s” appears in “paid out by me for Church 1874-5” – Barlow’s Notebook



People of Hutton Rudby in the C18/19: Southeran to Swallwell

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... from my working notes ... accuracy not guaranteed ... for explanatory note, see post of 14 Feb 2013



Southeran

11 May 1868:  Codling mortgage:  Mustard garth bounded by John Oates & George Davison to E, Robert Southeran to S and John Sidgwick to N


Spence

Yorkshire Poll Book 1807:  Hutton Rudby:  William Spencer [sic] weaver

ET 604:  12 & 13 Sep 1823:  4a close in Hutton Moor, previously occ by Bart Wright now by Simon Sidgwick the weaver, bounded by lands late belonging to Margaret Smith & now to William Spence to E

FQ 249:  13 & 14 Mar 1829:  exors of Wayne to Barker:  the Carpenters Arms with the cartwrights shop and stable on the west end thereof, the garden and the privy on the south & backside of the premises, bounded by road to East Rounton to E, by Mrs Elizabeth Hildreth to W & S, by road to East Rounton, John Robinson and Mr Farnaby to N – occ by Edward Meynell;  the garth occ by Edward Meynell, bounded by Elizabeth Hildreth to E, by John Burdon to W, by Thomas Passman, Elizabeth Hildreth, Mr Kendall & William Spence to N, by road to East Rounton to S; the site where buildings lately occupied by John & Hannah Kay & taken down by Mark Barker stood; the garth now used as garden ground to the E & backside of the sd site;  the new houses built by Mark Barker on the site and part of the garth: some of the houses and the garden ground “at present unoccupied”, the others occupied by Robert Hall, William Souter, George Sanderson, John Kay, Mary Lamb, Jackson Richardson, John Wild and Thomas Shaw:  bounded by house & lands bel to Rev Richard Shepherd to E & S, by Arthur Douglas and townstreet to N & W

FS 577:  9 Jun 1831:  Robert Norman paper maker to Robert Holliday Dobson of Potto gent:  6a close in Hutton known as the Cottages bounded by Widow Johnson to S, road to the Rountons to N, William Spencer to W, Mr Rickaby to E, occ by Robert Norman

GG 130:  31 Oct 1835:  Thomas Spence of Hutton weaver & Dorothy his wife (1) Henry Collins of Stokesley gent (2):  2 houses now used as one, the weaver’s shop adjoining & the garden or orchard of 1r behind, occ by Thomas Spence; the butcher’s shop adjoining the weaver’s shop occ by William Sherwood:  bounded by Lord Falkland to E, street to W, Mrs Kingston to N, Edmund Taylor to S; also Gowdie/Gowlay Hill Garth 1a with cowhouse occ by Thomas Richardson:  bounded by John Charlton to E, by Francis Stainthorpe to W, by street to N, by Jane Willans & Edward Meynell to S; also house with garden & garth behind 2r, occ by William Merrington:  bounded by street to E, William Wood to W, John Seamer to N, John Rymers & Francis Stainthorpe to S; also 3 closes formerly 2 closes called the Cottager 7a, previously occ by William Braithwaite as tenant to William Spence decd:  bounded by Robert Halliday Dobson to E, George Hunter & William Ableson to W, by Rounton road to N, by Richard Johnson to S; “& all other the messuages lands tenements and hereditaments formerly belonging to Thomas Smith late of Hutton yeoman decd and comprised in his Will”

GZ 204:  2 May 1842:  Thomas Spence late of Hutton weaver but now of Middlesbrough baker & shopkeeper (1) John Snowdon of Stokesley shoemaker (2) Thomas Sidgwick of Hutton linen manufacturer (3) George Wilson of Hutton linen manufacturer (4) reciting indres of 1839:  John Snowdon had lent Thomas Spence £90 with £4-17-5d interest also owing, on Spence’s property on East Side:  Spence sold Sidgwick the house (formerly 2 houses) & garden for £180, the mortgage to be paid off:  the garden & orchard to be sold to Sidgwick was staked out and contained 33 p; previously occ by Thomas Spence and now by William Meynell; the rest to be sold to John Oates; mortgagee George Wilson

GZ 206:  May 1842:  Thomas Spence to John Oates for £50:  the 2 shops, one formerly a weaver’s shop and now a carpenter’s and the other a butcher’s shop, with the ground behind now staked out and measuring 9 p:  now occ by William Meynell, William Sherwood and John Oates:  bounded by Thomas Sidgwick’s purchase from Spence to E & N, by street to W, Edmund Taylor to S; mortgagee George Wilson

Mrs Spence is in a list of names in the Middleton Book
Anne Spence is in a list of names in the Middleton Book
Mark Spence was given a prayer book worth 10d in the Rudby School accounts – Middleton Book
Catherine Spence is in a List of Girls – Middleton Book
M Spence was in A List of Boys – Middleton Book

Thomas Spence of East Side was a weaver, and he and his wife Dorothy appear in the 1836 Wesleyan class lists
They had children:  Moses baptised 23 Feb 1831; and Titus baptised 15 Feb 1830; also Dorothy who lived 1837 to 1838.   Moses died in 1831.
In 1835 he owned a house (previously two houses, now used as one) with a weaver’s shop and a garden behind, amounting to 1 rood.
He also owned an acre with a cowhouse at Goldie Hill, and a house and 2 roods of land occupied by Wm Merrington, just below Tisbut Row, and three closes called the Cottager or Cottage Fields out in the Hutton Fields/Moor area, on the Rounton road
The cottage fields had been occupied by Wm Braithwaite, as tenant to Wm Spence decd, and the deed included all lands “formerly belonging to Thomas Smith late of Hutton yeoman decd and comprised in his Will”.  [William Spence of Hutton was buried aged 63 on 19 Jun 1835.  Wm and Ann Spence(r) had Margaret in 1796, Thomas in 1797, William in 1799, and Elizabeth in 1801; possibly more.
1840 Whites:  Hutton Rudby:  Thomas Spence, grocer & draper – ie. the depression in weaving has forced him to change occupation.
In 1842 Thomas had left Hutton to become a Baker and Shopkeeper in Middlesbrough.  He owed £90 to John Snowdon, and he sold up his Hutton property:  the house and part of the garden (33p) was sold to Thomas Sidgwick for £180 - this was bounded by Mrs Kingston on north.  The weaver’s shop, now used as a carpenter’s shop, with the butcher’s shop and 9p of land was sold to John Oates for £50.  The mortgages were paid off, and it appears that George Wilson was the purchasers’ mortgagee.
The result can be seen on the 1891 map – the northern (Sidgwick) property has the majority of the garth.
William Spence, weaver of Hutton, and his wife Lucy had their son George baptised on 16 Jan 1831




Spilman

1861 Census:  Middleton Farm 393a:  Spilman


Stainthorpe

Mrs Stainthorpe was a previous occupant of a house and garth on East Side bought by Edmund Taylor in 1803 from William Paley

Yorkshire Poll Book 1807:  Hutton Rudby:  Francis Stainthorp weaver

14 May 1810:  house & garth and garth:  Tipping & Wardell exors of Thos Wayne to Thomas Eland:  house & garth 1a 2r 28p occupied by Eland, bounded by street to S, river Leven to N, Francis Tweddle & Francis Stainthorpe to E, and Christopher Sleigh to W;  garth 1r 28p on north side of Hutton, formerly occ by Hannah Kay widow, now by Thomas Eland, bounded by B D Suggitt to S, Thomas Jackson to E, street to W and Isaac Whorlton to N

FA 299:  5 & 6 Nov 1824:  2 houses with garden, orchard, shop & stable in Hutton,  lately bought by David Hebbron from Francis Stainthorp weaver of Hutton, occ previously by John Horner & Thomasin Burton, then by Thomas Edmund & Thomas Dalkin, then by David Hebbron & John Wiles:  parties:  David Hebbron of Hutton butcher & Michael Hebdon of Stokesley weaver, James Eden of Hutton grocer, Simon Kelsey, Robert Longstaff of Broughton yeoman, William Driver of Yarm gent

GG 130:  31 Oct 1835:  Thomas Spence of Hutton weaver & Dorothy his wife (1) Henry Collins of Stokesley gent (2):  2 houses now used as one, the weaver’s shop adjoinging & the garden or orchard of 1r behind, occ by Thomas Spence; the butcher’s shop adjoining the weaver’s shop occ by William Sherwood:  bounded by Lord Falkland to E, street to W, Mrs Kingston to N, Edmund Taylor to S; also Gowdie/Gowlay Hill Garth 1a with cowhouse occ by Thomas Richardson:  bounded by John Charlton to E, by Francis Stainthorpe to W, by street to N, by Jane Willans & Edward Meynell to S; also house with garden & garth behind 2r, occ by William Merrington:  bounded by street to E, William Wood to W, John Seamer to N, John Rymers & Francis Stainthorpe to S; also 3 closes formerly 2 closes called the Cottager 7a, previously occ by William Braithwaite as tenant to William Spence decd:  bounded by Robert Halliday Dobson to E, George Hunter & William Ableson to W, by Rounton road to N, by Richard Johnson to S; “& all other the messuages lands tenements and hereditaments formerly belonging to Thomas Smith late of Hutton yeoman decd and comprised in his Will”

1841 Census:  Francis Stainthorp 35 linen weaver and family inc Charles 5, North End
1841 Census:  Mary Stainthorp 65 ag lab in household of John Drydale, North Side

1851 Census:  North End:  Francis Stainthorp 48 handloom weaver b Hutton and Ann 51 b Ingleby Arncliffe
1851 Census:  North End:  John Stainthorpe 40 handloom weaver linen b Hutton, Mary 36 b Easby and Francis 11 wks b Hutton

1872 Post Office Directory:  Hutton Rudby:  Charles Stainthorpe, butcher, Enterpen

13 May 1896:  Annie Hutton Wilson bought the close on South Side numbered 182, which had belonged to Francis Stainthorpe, with the building on its NW corner


Stamp

Oddfellows Board:  Bro:  Johnston Stamp, Kirby, 5 May 1879, a32


Stamper

1851 Census:  Middleton Mill:  Thomas Stamper W 84 master miller farmer 88a bCroft, and son Edward M 55 farmer bHurworth, his wife Hannah 43 bMoulton and servants

1872 Post Office Directory:  Middleton:  Edward Stamper, miller 


Stanger

James Stanger, born Faceby, 1815-98 was the informant on Mr Barlow’s death certificate where he is described as “cousin”.  He was then living at Kirby Sigston Lodge


Stead

John Stead was Barlow’s tenant in 1859 and saw him cut his hedge in June – Barlow’s Notebook


Steel

Archibald Steel occupied a house and garden owned by Sarah Sidgwick near the Station Hotel site in the Tithe Map

Churchwardens’ accounts 1838:  £8-16s to Archibald Steel’s Bill “for <  > New Window”

1840 Whites:  Hutton Rudby:  Archibald Steel, stone mason

1841 Census:  Archibald Steel 30 stone mason & builder b Scotland, Mary 20, Henry 1, with Henry Steel 20 stone mason b Scotland, Enterpen


Stephenson


11 May 1868:  Codling mortgage:  North Side ppty bounded by John Mease to W and Miss Righton and George Davison to E, and occupied by James Stephenson, with the 6 messuages occupied by William Codling, James Catterick, Mrs Falshaw, Richard Richardson, James Stephenson and Reuben Bainbridge; Mustard garth bounded by John Oates & George Davison to E, Robert Southeran to S and John Sidgwick to N

1872 Post Office Directory:  Hutton Rudby:  James Stephenson, Station hotel, Enterpen


Stevenson

Churchwardens’ accounts 1831/2:  “Thomas Stevenson Whitewashing £2-8-5”


Stockdale

1851 Census:  Walker’s Yard:  Ann Stockdale W 75 pauper bHutton
1851 Census:  Walker’s Yard:  Thomas Stockdale 35 blacksmith bStainsby Co Durham and wife Sarah 32 bHutton

17 Nov 1856:  Ann Stockdale occupied a tenement previously occupied by Tamar Horner, sold to Barugh [East Side deeds]

11 Mar 1874:  Thomas Stockdale occupied a house which John Oates agreed to sell to J G Wilson, north of Wheatsheaf [East Side deeds]


Storey

1872 Post Office Directory:  Skutterskelfe:  James Storey, farmer


Stringer

1872 Post Office Directory:  Rudby:  Thomas Stringer, miller

George Davison (1790-1860) shoemaker, Rudby, married Ann Bage (1780-1853).  He left £450 on his death.  Buried in Rudby.  Their children were Ann and George.  Ann  (1816-1855) married Thomas Stringer.  George (1817-1871), shoe maker, Rudby, married Mary Ann Mundell (1817-1882)  Buried in Rudby (issue).

Thomas Stringer was b 1816 Coverdale. 

11 Jan 1846:  Hutton Rudby:  Thomas Stringer, grocer, of Appleton Wiske, son of Tobias Craddock Stringer, miller married Ann Davison, daughter of George Davison, shoemaker;  witnesses:  Byers Race and William Hebbron

Thomas & Ann Stringer had one daughter, Sarah Ann.  Ann was buried 4 Mar 1855, a39.

27 May 1856:  Thomas Stringer, widower, miller, a40, of Rudby, son of Tobias Stringer, miller, married Catharine James, a32, servant, daughter of George James, farmer;  witnesses:  George James, John Hebbron.


Sugget/Suggit

21 Mar 1751:  baptism of Ann, daughter of Mr Benjamin Suggit, “mariner gentleman”
9 Jun 1752:  baptism of John, son of Mr Benjamin Suggit, “mariner”
28 May 1757:  baptism of David Benjamin, son of Mr Benj. Suggit, yeoman

4 Sep 1782:  Benjamin David Suggit, gentleman, married Jane Nicholson [witnesses:  Jane Carton, James Catchasides]
31 Mar 1787:  baptism of Benjamin William, son of Benjamin David Suggit, born 23 Mar

B D Suggitt was the grandson of David Simpson, who set up a charity by his Will of 1783, administered by Suggitt.

The coastal connection:  his father was a mariner, and his nephew a doctor in Whitby.  A Whitby Suggett subscribed to Richard Weatherill’s history of Whitby shipping and George Suggett of London to the History of Whitby by Rev George Young.

Benjamin David Suggitt was one of the five men listed as gentry in 1823 Baines, Hutton

ET 293:  21 Mar 1823:  sale of ppty of Samuel Hebbron late of Hutton nr Rudby butcher dealer & chapman now or late a prisoner in the gaol of the Castle of York:  being the Shoulder of Mutton public house [predecessor of King’s Head], occ by Samuel Hebbron, then by David Hebbron & now by Robert Moss:  bounded by Thomas Whorlton and Thomas Jackson, Thomas Cust, B D Sugget and Thomas Wayne to W and N, by street to S, by Thomas Jackson to E; also the stable; a close of 5a 2p bounded by William Wood to N, by William Dawson to E, W & S, and occupied by William Dawson; also land in Potto

FA 439:  15 Apr 1825:  demise to Rev George Lewthwaite by George Merryweather, devisee of B D Suggitt

7 Aug 1822:  Will of B D Suggitt
2 Apr 1823:  death of B D Suggitt
5 Apr 1823:  burial of Benjamin David Suggett a66
15 Apr 1823:  grant of probate to George Merryweather jnr, nephew and sole exor

1841 Census:  Middleton, cottage:  Ann Suggitt 65 ag lab, Christopher Suggitt 10

1851 Census:  Middleton:  Ann Suggett W 78 bMiddleton, and brother John Shaw W 67 Chelsea Pensioner bMiddleton and grandson Christopher Suggitt U 18 ag lab bMiddleton

Nanny Sugget’s burial is jotted in Barlow’s Notebook as 23 Oct 1852, and recorded in the burial register as 26 Sep


Surtees

7 Dec 1797:  HR:  William Surtees married Eden Dodds; witnesses:  Thomas & Mary Jackson, Ann Brigham, John Eland, Thomas Hird and Elizabeth Catchaside

William Surtees & Eden Dodds had several children:  Jane 1799, Sarah 1801, William 1803, John 1807, Sarah 1809 and probably Margaret 1811
Jane Surtees, spinster, had William 1817 and Elizabeth 1832-1845
Sarah Surtees, spinster, had Richard 1817

John Surtees was in A List of Boys – Middleton Book

John 1807-1827 [MI]
Jane 1799-1834 [MI]

19 Dec 1830:  HR:  Margaret Surtees married Edward Hansell of Kirklevington

1841 Census:  Eden Surtees 70 ag lab, John Surtees 15 stone mason apprentice, Elizabeth Surtees 10, next to Hutton House
John is probably a son of Jane or Sarah, and could be the boy in A List

1851 Census:  Eden Surtees widow 80 pauper, farm labourer, b Middleton, Yks

William died 1845 a66.  Eden died 1854 a84

1871 Census:  Eden Cottage:  William Surtees 45, Clara 35 b Australia, Thomas 12, Eva Eden 3 b Australia, Amy 2.

William Surtees appears to have been a grandson of William Surtees and Eden Dodds.  No trace of his baptism in HR.  Eden may have brought him up:  she lost her husband, son and a daughter, and lived with her grandchildren in the 1841 census.  William’s first wife and two children died in Australia, and he returned to Hutton with his second wife and surviving family, and is said to have set up a linen manufactury in Albion House.  He died in 1877, and his family seem to have left the village.

1872 Post Office Directory:  Hutton Rudby:  William Surtees, builder & contractor

1881 Census CD Rom finds no trace of William’s wife and daughters, but his son Thomas is a fitter, boarding with Margaret Hansell 38 laundress and her brothers Thomas 49 miller and William 31 joiner,  all unmarried and b Stockton, in Brunswick Street, Stockton.  John Hansell 47 b HR auctioneer and his large family lived in Regent St.


Swales

Diana Swales was a former occupant of property, once used as a coachhouse, sold by Kay and Colebeck to Mark Barker in 1830

FT 30:  12 & 13 May 1830:  East Side:  John Kay of Hutton cartwright & others to Mark Barker & trustees:  house heretofore used as a coachhouse & formerly occ by James Ingledew, Mary Collyerson & Diana Swales, then by Elizabeth Farnaby, then by Charles Hall, then by Hannah Best, & now by Matthew Garbutt:  bounded by street to E, Mark Barker to W & S, Arthur Douglas to N

J T Swales of Toft Hill Farm, who formerly farmed at Broad Carr, and was for 25 years a parish councillor and also had the office of school manager, was associated with the Wesleyan Church.  Died in the 1920s [newspaper cuttings]


Swallwell

George Swallwell of Rudby was churchwarden in 1829-30
George Swallwell was at “a meeting held in vestry” on 16 Jun 1831 where they voted a church rate of 2 ½ per £ to church repairs

FS 461:  2 & 3 Feb 1831:  George Smallwell [sic] had been a tenant of Rudby estate
FS 461:  2 & 3 Feb 1831:  cottage 6a:  occ by George Smallwell at £10-3s p.a

1840 Whites:  Rudby:  George Swallwell, saddler
1841 Census:  Elizabeth Swallwell 14 servant in household of George Davison, Rudby


People of Hutton Rudby in the C18/19: Taylor to Tweddle

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... from my working notes ... accuracy not guaranteed ... for explanatory note, see post of 14 Feb 2013


Taylor

Palliser Taylor, flaxdresser, and wife Sarah sold East Side ppty in 1760 [East Side deeds]

Edmund Taylor married first Ann Smith in 1800, and second Martha Eland in 1810
Martha Taylor married Thomas Milestone in 1802

Edmund Taylor of Hutton  -  Class leader for Hutton Wesleyan Methodist Church in 1836.  A joiner, he bought, rebuilt and sold houses to the north of the Wheatsheaf.  An Indenture of 1830 describes him as “of Hutton House, carpenter”.  On 24 Dec 1833 a Notice to Sell served by the parties to the purchase from Taylor of the East Side properties, requiring Taylor to repay the mortgage principal and interest, was served on him by Thomas Hutchinson at Leven Grove (ie Skutterskelfe Hall).  Perhaps he was working there?
His date of death is unknown.  His family gravestone is MI no. 219.  His wife Martha Eland died 1857 a76.  Their daughter Esther Ann died 1837 a26; she was then of Thorpe Arch, Wetherby.

Sarah Taylor is in Edmund Taylor’s class in the Wesleyan class lists 1836

13 Aug 1803:  George Taylor joiner was party to a deed of Edmund Taylor [East Side deeds]

Yorkshire Poll Book 1807:  Hutton Rudby:  Edmund Taylor joiner



Edmund Taylor bought property on East Side from William Paley in 1803 and from John & Ann Pape in 1808.  He redeveloped it, mortgaged it, sold part of it, and the remainder seems to have been sold by his mortgagees.

EB 242:  8 Oct 1816:  assignment of property of Matthew Taylor of Rudby parish, tanner dealer & chapman, bankrupt

DW 581:  4 Apr 1816:  James Bainbridge of Hutton bricklayer (1) George, John & Henry Hutchinson the younger & Thomas Place bankers at Stockton (2):  3 houses adjoining each other in Hutton, occ by James Bainbridge, Richard Wood & Thomas Almond:  bounded by Thomas Passman & Thomas & George Farnaby to E & N, by street to W, by Edward [sic] Taylor to S

EC 354:  30 Oct 1817:  James Bainbridge bricklayer (1) William Richmond of Stockton mercer & draper (2):  2 houses with garden behind, occ by James Bainbridge & John Simpson:  bounded by messuage & garden of Roger Bowes to E, by messuage & garden of Edmund Taylor to W, by street to N, by Thomas Passman to S

4 Oct 1819:  George Taylor late of Hutton now of Yarm joiner was party to a deed of Edmund Taylor [East Side deeds]

1823 Baines:  Hutton:  Jonathan Taylor, grocer
1823 Baines:  Hutton:  Edmund Taylor, wheelwright

FC 147:  14 Nov 1825:  James Bainbridge bricklayer (1) Hutchinsons & Place bankers (2) William Richmond of Stockton mercer & draper (3) Richard Nightingale the younger of Middleton St George (4):  2 houses, lately in 3 tenements, with garden behind, formerly occ by James Bainbridge, Richard Wood & Thomas Almond, then by James Bainbridge & John Simpson, now by James & John Bainbridge; and also 2 new erected houses now in 3 tenements lately erected by James Bainbridge in the garden, now occ by George Harker, Alice Pedlar & Ann Rudd:  all bounded by messuage & garden of Roger Bowes to E, by messuage & garden of Edmund Taylor to W, by street to N, by Thomas Passman to S

FL 58:  13 May 1827:  East Side, judging by occupants & boundaries:  2 houses lately used in 3 tenements with garden behind formerly occ by James Bainbridge, Richard Wood & Thomas Almond, then by sd James Bainbridge & John Simpson, then by sd James Bainbridge & John Bainbridge:  and the 2 houses used in 3 tenements “newly created” and “lately erected” by sd James Bainbridge in the sd garden, then occupied by George Harker, Alice Pedlar & Ann Rudd:  bounded by house and garden bel to Roger Bowes to E, by Edmund Taylor to W, by street to N, by Thomas Passman to S:  parties:   Richard Nightingale the younger late of Middleton St George gent and George Stanger of Pickton farmer:  reciting indre of 14 Nov 1825 to which James Bainbridge, George & John & Henry Hutchinson, Thomas Place, William Richmond and said Richard Nightingale were parties

FT 511:  11 & 12 Jan 1830:  East Side:  Edmund Taylor of Hutton joiner, Thomas Eland of City of London currier, James Bainbridge bricklayer:  the land on which James Bainbridge has lately erected 4 new houses & other buildings, 79 ft x 14 ft, and the passage thereto from the street:  previously occ by Elizabeth Robinson, then by William Coates, then by Edmund Taylor and now by James Bainbridge or his undertenants:  bounded by Thomas Passman to E, by street to W, by Roger Bowes to N, by Edmund Taylor to S:  “heretofore the estate of Joseph Tunstall and his wife Catherine”

FU 261:   22 & 23 Nov 1831:  north end of East Side:  James Bainbridge bricklayer & Elizabeth his wife to George Grenside of Stokesley gent:  piece of ground on which he had recently built 4 new houses and other buildings, 79ft long x 14ft wide, with the passage leading to them from the street:  previously occ by Elizabeth Robinson, then by William Coates, then by Edmund Taylor, and now by James Bainbridge or his undertenants:  bounded by Thomas Passman to E, by street to W, by Roger Bowes to N, by Edmund Taylor to S:  “heretofore the estate of Joseph Tunstall & Catherine his wife”

FQ 434:  14 & 15 Apr 1829:  Thomas Taylor occupied land belonging to Elizabeth Sleigh
FQ 434:  14 & 15 Apr 1829:  Jonathan Taylor occupied land belonging to Elizabeth Sleigh

FS 461:  2 & 3 Feb 1831:  Benjamin Taylor had been a tenant of Rudby estate
FS 461:  2 & 3 Feb 1831:  cottage 1r:  occ by John Taylor at £4-2s p.a

GG 130:  31 Oct 1835:  Thomas Spence of Hutton weaver & Dorothy his wife (1) Henry Collins of Stokesley gent (2):  2 houses now used as one, the weaver’s shop adjoining & the garden or orchard of 1r behind, occ by Thomas Spence; the butcher’s shop adjoining the weaver’s shop occ by William Sherwood:  bounded by Lord Falkland to E, street to W, Mrs Kingston to N, Edmund Taylor to S; also Gowdie/Gowlay Hill Garth 1a with cowhouse occ by Thomas Richardson:  bounded by John Charlton to E, by Francis Stainthorpe to W, by street to N, by Jane Willans & Edward Meynell to S; also house with garden & garth behind 2r, occ by William Merrington:  bounded by street to E, William Wood to W, John Seamer to N, John Rymers & Francis Stainthorpe to S; also 3 closes formerly 2 closes called the Cottager 7a, previously occ by William Braithwaite as tenant to William Spence decd:  bounded by Robert Halliday Dobson to E, George Hunter & William Ableson to W, by Rounton road to N, by Richard Johnson to S; “& all other the messuages lands tenements and hereditaments formerly belonging to Thomas Smith late of Hutton yeoman decd and comprised in his Will”

Tithe Map:  Edmund Taylor owned two houses at the south end of East Side

Tithe Map from Elizabeth Sleigh:  Jonathon Taylor occ 193 (with Thomas Cust)

 “Jonathan Taylor and wife & Wm Robinson and wife – 2 young, 1 for school” [Mr Barlow’s list ?1836]

1840 Whites:  Hutton Rudby:  Jonathan Taylor, grocer & draper

1841 Census:  Jonathan Taylor 75 grocer and Dinah 60, South Side
1841 Census:  John Taylor 70 carpenter, cottage, Rudby

GZ 204:  2 May 1842:  Thomas Spence late of Hutton weaver but now of Middlesbrough baker & shopkeeper (1) John Snowdon of Stokesley shoemaker (2) Thomas Sidgwick of Hutton linen manufacturer (3) George Wilson of Hutton linen manufacturer (4) reciting indres of 1839:  John Snowdon had lent Thomas Spence £90 with £4-17-5d interest also owing, on Spence’s property on East Side:  Spence sold Sidgwick the house (formerly 2 houses) & garden for £180, the mortgage to be paid off:  the garden & orchard to be sold to Sidgwick was staked out and contained 33 p; previously occ by Thomas Spence and now by William Meynell; the rest to be sold to John Oates; mortgagee George Wilson

GZ 206:  May 1842:  Thomas Spence to John Oates for £50:  the 2 shops, one formerly a weaver’s shop and now a carpenter’s and the other a butcher’s shop, with the ground behind now staked out and measuring 9 p:  now occ by William Meynell, William Sherwood and John Oates:  bounded by Thomas Sidgwick’s purchase from Spence to E & N, by street to W, Edmund Taylor to S; mortgagee George Wilson

1851 Census:  Hutton:  [The Elms]:  Ann Righton 54 landed prop b Tockwith, cousin Ann Paver 24 farmer’s daughter b Houssham, cousin Mary Kirby 19 farmer’s daughter b Theakston; visitors:  Ann Taylor 20 annuitant b Hutton, Elizabeth Brigham 24 farmer’s daughter b Rudby
1851 Census:  North End:  Martha Taylor widow 67 yarn winder


Terry


 “Terry” is listed in the “Brick acct”, apparently for the school – Barlow’s Notebook

For Harrison Terry’s family, see Two Ancient Townships by Grace Dixon, pp 17, 18, 18n, 25 & 26.  His sister married a Lee of Pinchinthorpe.  His father was one of a group of Protestant dissenters in Newton-under-Roseberry.

1840 Whites:  Hutton Rudby:  Harrison Terry, farmer

1841 Census:  Hutton Grange:  Harrison Terry
Harrison Terry died in 1842

1851 Census:  Enterpen:  Mrs Hannah Terry widow 53 b Skelton, cousin Miss Dorothy Garbutt 36 b Marton, servant Jane Preston 15

Mrs Terry was a subscriber to the Wesleyan Shilling Magazine:  no date, apparently 1859

1861 Census:  Enterpen:  Mrs Hannah Terry widow 63 b Skelton, servant Ann McLane 23 and lodger Miss Dorothy Garbutt 48 b Marton


Thompson

1783:  Breckon Thompson, Skutterskelf, was churchwarden

Yorkshire Poll Book 1807:  Hutton Rudby:  Breckon Thompson farmer

Brian [sic]Thompson was one of five men listed as gentry in 1823 Baines, Hutton

1841 Census:  Moses Thompson 25 publican and family, King’s Head

1872 Post Office Directory:  Middleton:  John Thompson, farmer, Seamer grange

Oddfellows Board:  Bro:  Samuel Thompson, Bishop Auckland, 19 Feb 1874, a40


Tinker

1872 Post Office Directory:  Miss Mary Tinker, mistress of the National School


Tones

1823 Baines:  Hutton:  Sarah Tones, grocer

“Sarah Tones – two grown up” [Mr Barlow’s list ?1836]

1840 Whites:  Hutton Rudby:  Sarah Tones, grocer & draper

1841 Census:  Elizabeth Tones 30 dressmaker, in household of Ann Lincoln

‘Stokesley News & Cleveland Reporter’ 1 May 1844:
Marriages:
On Monday, April 8th, at Hutton Rudby, Mr George Wharton, of Middleton-on-Leven, to Miss Elizabeth Tones, Dress-maker of the former place


Truefitt

FT 108:  25 Aug 1830:  Hutton Moor [Tithe Map 384 & 385]:  Michael Sedgwick late of Hutton now of Broughton weaver (1) Mary Sedgwick of Broughton widow (2) Govnors of QAB (3) Rev Robt Fawcitt curate of Hilton (4):  two closes, the Cottage & the Orchard, one about 1a the other about 2a, previously in one close “in a place called Hutton Moor” [ie that described in ET 604]:  occ by Bart Wright as tenant to Thomas Dennison, then by Michael Sidgwick:  bounded by Thomas Dennison to E & S, by George Truefitt to W, by Rounton road to N


Tunstall

FT 511:  11 & 12 Jan 1830:  East Side:  Edmund Taylor of Hutton joiner, Thomas Eland of City of London currier, James Bainbridge bricklayer:  the land on which James Bainbridge has lately erected 4 new houses & other buildings, 79 ft x 14 ft, and the passage thereto from the street:  previously occ by Elizabeth Robinson, then by William Coates, then by Edmund Taylor and now by James Bainbridge or his undertenants:  bounded by Thomas Passman to E, by street to W, by Roger Bowes to N, by Edmund Taylor to S:  “heretofore the estate of Joseph Tunstall and his wife Catherine”

FU 261:   22 & 23 Nov 1831:  north end of East Side:  James Bainbridge bricklayer & Elizabeth his wife to George Grenside of Stokesley gent:  piece of ground on which he had recently built 4 new houses and other buildings, 79ft long x 14ft wide, with the passage leading to them from the street:  previously occ by Elizabeth Robinson, then by William Coates, then by Edmund Taylor, and now by James Bainbridge or his undertenants:  bounded by Thomas Passman to E, by street to W, by Roger Bowes to N, by Edmund Taylor to S:  “heretofore the estate of Joseph Tunstall & Catherine his wife”


Tweddle


The Tweddle family were yeomen of Middleton.  Thomas Tweddle bought several houses, garths and gardens at the east end of North Side from William Orton, which was inherited by his daughter Margaret Flounders and husband James in July 1815
In 1815 Robert Tweddle was a tenant of the property

Robert Tweddle was the occupant of the property owned by Thomas Passman in 1830, which was inherited by his daughter Mary Kingston who owned it at the time of the Tithe Map.  John Hammond is listed as occupant in the Tithe Map, and the 1840 Directory gives the landlord as John Rowntree.  Mary Kingston’s daughter Elizabeth Raney was the landlord there for many years.

14 May 1810:  house & garth and garth:  Tipping & Wardell exors of Thos Wayne to Thomas Eland:  house & garth 1a 2r 28p occupied by Eland, bounded by street to S, river Leven to N, Francis Tweddle & Francis Stainthorpe to E, and Christopher Sleigh to W;  garth 1r 28p on north side of Hutton, formerly occ by Hannah Kay widow, now by Thomas Eland, bounded by B D Suggitt to S, Thomas Jackson to E, street to W and Isaac Whorlton to N

DW 374:  18 & 19 Jul 1815:  Thos Tweddle of Middleton, heir at law of Thos Tweddle decd (1) James and Margaret Flounders (2):  the property in the Bay Horse area bought by the late Tweddle from Wm Orton

DY 88:  26 Mar 1816:  Philip Gowland of Sexhow (1) John Tweddell the elder of Stokesley grocer & Francis Rose of Busby yeoman (2) John Calvert of Carlton yeoman (3)

1823 Baines:  Hutton:  Robert Tweddle was the publican of the Wheatsheaf
1823 Baines:  Hutton:  Robert Tweddle, butcher
1823 Baines:  Middleton:  Thomas Tweddle, farmer

“Apprenticeship Indre:  Stephen Hall aged 12 years apprenticed to John Cook of Hutton near Rudby, weaver, to age 21 – April 1823:  made between William Sayer (churchwarden) and Thomas Tweddle and William Sayer (overseers of poor of township of Middleton) and Stephen Hall ‘a poor child belonging to said township of Middleton’” [NYCRO Mic 1204]

FO 157:  12 Jul 1828:  Baillieur’s remtge:  Robert Tweddale the occupant of his house in Hutton and Richard Imenson the occupant of his house & farmlands in Hutton

26 & 27 Mar 1830:  Robert Tweddle occupied a house & garth between Whorlton and Passman, sold by Baillieur to Lowther [East Side deeds]
13 Feb 1845:  Robert Tweddle was an early occupant of a house sold by Thomas Kingston to Isaac Benson [East Side deeds]

FQ 435:  26 & 27 Mar 1830:  house on East Side:  Baillieur to Lowther:  formerly occ by Thomas Sanderson, then by Thomas Shaw and now by Robert Tweddle:  bounded by Joseph Whorlton to N, by Thomas Passman to S, by street to W

Tithe Map:  Middleton:  John Tweddle farms Foxton Lodge (landlord:  George Wyndham)

1840 Whites:  Middleton:  John Tweddale, farmer

1841 Census:  Farm House, Middleton:  John Tweddle 55 farmer and family, with Ann Mason 65 independent, Elizabeth Mason 5, and servants John Hunt 15 and Hannah Mennell 15

1851 Census:  Middleton:  John Tweddle 65 farmer 144a bDinsdale, with Ann 44 bSmeaton and children Jane, Mary,Elizabeth & John aged 16-22 bRounton, and mother-in-law Ann Mason W 75 bHarlsey

1851 –71 (inc) Census:  Farm House, Middleton:  Tweddle

1872 Post Office Directory:  Middleton:  John Tweddle, farmer

Easter dues settled with Tweddle “the day her daughter was married” in Barlow’s Notebook




People of Hutton Rudby in the C18/19: Wailes to Wiles

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... from my working notes ... accuracy not guaranteed ... for explanatory note, see post of 14 Feb 2013


Wailes

1840 Whites:  East Rounton:  the Grange is the seat and property of John Wailes Esq

1851 Census:  Linden Grove:  Forbes MacBean 60 Lt Col Artillery full pay b Annapolis Nova Scotia British subj, wife Eliza 65 b St Petersburg British subj, daughters Elizabeth 25, Margaret Murray 20 & Marianne Georgina 18, all b Woolwich; wife’s sister Miss Marianne Scougall 45 indep also b St Petersburg;  servants:  groom Joseph Dawson 21 b Baysdale, housemaid Elizabeth Trenham 35 b Stokesley, cook Mary Wailes 23 b HR and boy groom William Ramshaw 13 b HR


Wake

FQ 434:  14 & 15 Apr 1829:  James Wake occupied land belonging to Elizabeth Sleigh

Thomas Wake was witness at the wedding of Richard Peacock of Rudby and Jane Scott of Stockton on 13 Sep 1832

1841 Census:  John Wake 17 joiner’s apprentice in the household of James Meek, Enterpen

‘The Cleveland Repertory’
1 Aug 1843:
“Police Intelligence.  July 22nd, - Present Robt Hildyard and Wm Mauleverer, Esqrs.  Upon hearing the complaint of Jno Wake, an apprentice to Jas Meek, of Hutton Rudby, against the said James Meek, for having on the 12th ult, illtreated him, the said Jno Wake – ordered that he be forthwith discharged from his apprenticeship, and that the said James Meek, pay the costs.”

1851 Census:  Carpenters Arms:  Elizabeth Wake widow 56 victualler’s wife b Whorlton, and children John Wake 38 house carpenter journeyman, b Stokesley, Jane Wake 21 dressmaker b Carlton, and Mary Wake 17 house servant b Carlton, and grandson Robert Kitching 5 b Pickering

This may be the family of Charles Wake, who left for America in 1855 with the Mormons:
Charles Wake was one of the Faceby tailors.  He was 24 years old at the time of the 1851 Census when he and his young family were living next door to James Stanger junior.  He gave his place of birth as Stokesley, and his wife Elizabeth, aged 25, was born in Potto.  They had a ten month old son James, who had been born in Faceby, and Charles’ fifteen year old brother Thomas was living with them as a tailor’s apprentice – he had been born in Hutton Rudby.  The register for 7 Aug 1836 records that Thomas’s parents were James Wake, gamekeeper, of Rudby and his wife Ann. 
According to ancestral files on the IGI, Charles Wake was born in Stokesley in 1826, the son of James Wake and Elizabeth Wrightson, and married Elizabeth Thompson, the daughter of Robert and Jane Thompson of Potto, in Whorlton in 1849.  Robert Thompson was a cartwright in Potto at the 1851 Census.  Charles’ and Elizabeth’s oldest child is said to have been baptised in Stokesley in 1850, and the younger two children in Faceby.  The third child does not appear on the passenger list, but details of her life are given in the IGI.




Walker

George Walker was a tenant of the Tweddle property at the east end of North Side before 1815
1841 Census:  Thomas Walker 16 servant at Rudby Carr House (Barugh)

Jane Souter bap 6 Oct 1820, married Thomas Walker


Wallis

Jun 1866:  A friend, J Wallis, gave 10/- to the subscription for Thomas Garbutt


Walters

1823 Baines:  Hutton:  Joseph Walters, farmer


Walton/Whorlton

Jane Walton was buried Tues 16 Oct a59 [PRs] - her age is given as 57 in the list “Sepultorum nomina”

Yorkshire Poll Book 1807:  Hutton Rudby:  Joseph Walton weaver

EH 212 & EG 295:  1818:  relate to the same ppty:  a house which had been divided into two tenements and in 1818 was “lately occupied in four different tenements or dwellinghouses”:  tenants were previously Jane Whorlton & her tenants William Easby, Oliver Jackson & William Honeyman; tenants were in 1818 William Honeyman, Thomas Graham, Robert Walton and Robert Codling:  bounded to E by Christopher Flintoff decd, to S & W by townstreet, to N by David Simpson decd

1841 Census:  Middleton, Hall:  George Walton 40 servant with Bart Goldsborough

‘Stokesley News & Cleveland Reporter’ 1 May 1844:
Marriages:
On Monday, April 8th, at Hutton Rudby, Mr George Wharton [sic], of Middleton-on-Leven, to Miss Elizabeth Tones, Dress-maker of the former place

1851 Census:  Middleton, farm:  Robert Walton 59 farmer 220a bKirklevington, Mary 50 bAycorn Northumberland and son John S 26 bKirklevington

George Walton is shown living in the Lincoln House area, on the Tree Planting map

1881 Census:  George Walton 78 horsebreaker, wife Elizabeth 75 and niece Ann Lincoln 46 dressmaker


Ward

FU 494:  14 & 15 May 1832:  messuage with garden garth & close in Hutton, previously occ by Thomas Ward and now by Richard Raney:  various persons of Welbury & West Rounton to Richard Raney of Hutton blacksmith

Robert, son of Robert Ward, collier, and his wife Jane was baptised by Mr Barlow on 23 Sep 1832

Francis Ward is in a List of Girls – Middleton Book

1841 Census:  Robert Ward 35 weaver and family, South Side
1841 Census:  Thomas Ward 60 dealer in coal, Elizabeth 60, Isabella 15 servant, Fanny 15 servant, and William 1, with George Lowther 25 ag lab and Elizabeth Sanderson 15, North End
1841 Census:  Thomas Ward 20 linen weaver, Elizabeth 15 and George 1, North End
1841 Census:  Jane Ward 15 servant at Rudby Carr House (Barugh)

1851 Census:  South Side:  Robert Ward 50 ag lab, Jane 56, son John Ward 23 ag lab, granddaughter Jane Flounders 5 , all b Hutton
1851 Census:  North End:  Mary Ward single 38 charwoman and son William 12, both b Hutton;  with sailcloth weavers lodging:  Thomas Dennison widower 44 b Clouse Derbyshire, Edward Houseton 47 married b Newark, Notts, and Richard 36 married b Harneth, Lancs


Watson

Jun 1866:  Robinson Watson Esq, Stainton gave £5 to the subscription for Thomas Garbutt


Wayne

ET 293:  21 Mar 1823:  sale of ppty of Samuel Hebbron late of Hutton nr Rudby butcher dealer & chapman now or late a prisoner in the gaol of the Castle of York:  being the Shoulder of Mutton public house [predecessor of King’s Head], occ by Samuel Hebbron, then by David Hebbron & now by Robert Moss:  bounded by Thomas Whorlton and Thomas Jackson, Thomas Cust, B D Sugget and Thomas Wayne to W and N, by street to S, by Thomas Jackson to E; also the stable; a close of 5a 2p bounded by William Wood to N, by William Dawson to E, W & S, and occupied by William Dawson; also land in Potto

EB 102:  11 & 13 May 1816:  Hutton manor & mill:  assignmt to Barker

EX 146:  26 & 27 Nov 1823:  Hutton manor, mill and [Manor House] farm

FQ 560:  2 & 3 Nov 1829:  ppty bought by Jane Willans widow in Enterpen:  garth of 1r 3p bounded by Thomas Wayne to N, E & W, and by street called Enterpen to S


Webster

1851 Census:  Tile Sheds:  Richard Webster 33 tile maker b Rockliffe, Yorks and wife Martha 27 b Knaresborough with children Thomas 8 b Rockliffe, Jane 6 b Maunby, Richard 3 and Nancy 1 b Hutton Rudby; and nephew Young Loftus 13 ag lab b Rockliffe; and ag lab George Calvert 58 b Ainderby, Yorks

1871 Census:  Middleton farm house 200a:  Webster

1872 Post Office Directory:  Middleton:  Thomas Webster, farmer, Hill house


Weighell

ET 257:  2 & 3 Jan 1823:  garth, orchard & houses, probably North End:  John Weighell was an occupier

1841 Census:  Jane Wieal 20 servant at Rudby Carr House (Barugh)

1851 Census:  Enterpen:  Joseph Weall 58 ag lab b Worsall, Yks and wife Margaret 60 b Elton, Durham

1871 Census:  Burnt House:  Weighell
1871 Census:  Doddle Hill:  Weighell

1872 Post Office Directory:  Hutton Rudby:  John & William Weighell, farmers, Burnt House
1872 Post Office Directory:  Hutton Rudby:  Stephen Weighell, farmer, Doddle hill

William Weighell of Obergreen was the class leader who revived the Wesleyan society and sold them the land for the new chapel in 1878


We(a)therill

Yorkshire Poll Book 1807:  Hutton Rudby:  William Weatherall farmer

DY 88 & ET 601:  William Weatherill was a tenant of Philip Gowland in the Bay Horse area pre- 1816

1840 Whites:  Hutton Rudby:  the co-heiresses of the late Geo Weatherill Esq are impropriators of the great tithes

1841 Census:  Ann Wetherell 75 independent, John Morris 40 blacksmith, South Side

Mary Weatherill, daughter of William Weatherill farmer of Stokesley and his wife Mary, was a friend of the Garbutts and Wilsons of Hutton Rudby.  She married Frederick Dale. [‘Letters to a Miller’s Daughter’]


Wetherill

Wetherill cut Mr Barlow’s hedge, in turnips and “William Wetherell son of my < > friend George Wetherell” cut the hedge in 1854 – Barlow’s Notebook

Charlotte Wetherill of Knaresborough spinster was owner of 1/7 of the Hutton tithes;  Isabella Wetherill of Knaresborough spinster was owner of 1/7 of the Hutton tithes [Tithe Agmt 12 Jun 1838]

IGI:  George Wetherill & Anne Scaife had Mary (bap 13?4/91);  George Wetherilll & Jane Collingson had Charlotte (bap 25/3/01), Isabella (bap 28/8/06), and Jane (bap 24/4/95) all at Topcliffe.  Jane Wetherill married William Dixon at Brafferton, 26/5/1819.


Wharton

‘Stokesley News & Cleveland Reporter’ 1 May 1844:
Marriages:
On Monday, April 8th, at Hutton Rudby, Mr George Wharton, of Middleton-on-Leven, to Miss Elizabeth Tones, Dress-maker of the former place


Whorlton   see also Walton

Jane Walton [Whorlton?] was buried Tues 16 Oct a59 [PRs];  her age is given as 57 in the list “Sepultorum nomina”

The Whorlton family appears in the registers in the early C18, and cannot be disentangled.  The brothers Thomas, Joseph and William, sons of Thomas, cannot be identified in the registers.  There were two Jane Whorltons buried in the 1830s:  one aged 48 and the other 57 or 59.  One was perhaps the Jane Lawson who married Robert in 1808;  he died in 1827.  The other may have been Jane, the wife of William, whose children were born between 1798 and 1818. 

28 Sep 1770:  Pbte of Christopher Wayne:  Jacob Whorlton occupied a house & croft owned by Wayne

Yorkshire Poll Book 1807:  Hutton Rudby:  Joseph Walton weaver
Yorkshire Poll Book 1807:  Hutton Rudby:  Isaac Worlton weaver

Thomas Whorlton, weaver, left three sons:  Thomas, Joseph & William (deed re North Side dated 1817)
The Whorlton brothers owned a house in “Little London” (as it was called in 1847), next to the Wheatsheaf, which bounded it to the south.  In 1808 the property was houses, garths and yards with six tenants
The Whorlton brothers owned a house on North Side and a weaver’s shop behind (no 86 TM), which was transferred to William Whorlton.  In 1817 it was occupied by Major Shout, previously by Oliver Jackson.  They also owned the house next door and a garden behind.

23 Nov 1808:  Joseph, Thomas & William Whorlton, weavers & brothers, bought houses, garths & yards from Francis Flintoff [East Side deeds]

14 May 1810:  house & garth and garth:  Tipping & Wardell exors of Thos Wayne to Thomas Eland:  house & garth 1a 2r 28p occupied by Eland, bounded by street to S, river Leven to N, Francis Tweddle & Francis Stainthorpe to E, and Christopher Sleigh to W;  garth 1r 28p on north side of Hutton, formerly occ by Hannah Kay widow, now by Thomas Eland, bounded by B D Suggitt to S, Thomas Jackson to E, street to W and Isaac Whorlton to N

EB 412:  21 & 22 Mar 1817:  ppty on North Side: Thos & Jos Whorlton (1) Wm Whorlton (2)

EH 212 & EG 295:  1818:  relate to the same ppty:  a house which had been divided into two tenements and in 1818 was “lately occupied in four different tenements or dwellinghouses”:  tenants were previously Jane Whorlton & her tenants William Easby, Oliver Jackson & William Honeyman; tenants were in 1818 William Honeyman, Thomas Graham, Robert Walton and Robert Codling:  bounded to E by Christopher Flintoff decd, to S & W by townstreet, to N by David Simpson decd

EP 148:  3 Feb 1821:  mortgage to Wm Whorlton by John Shout:  house previously occupied by Oliver Jackson and now by Major Shout, land and weaver’s shop:  bounded by house bel to Thos & Jos Whorlton to E

1823 Baines:  Hutton:  Isaac Whorlton, and Joseph Whorlton, linen manufacturers

ET 293:  21 Mar 1823:  sale of ppty of Samuel Hebbron late of Hutton nr Rudby butcher dealer & chapman now or late a prisoner in the gaol of the Castle of York:  being the Shoulder of Mutton public house [predecessor of King’s Head], occ by Samuel Hebbron, then by David Hebbron & now by Robert Moss:  bounded by Thomas Whorlton and Thomas Jackson, Thomas Cust, B D Sugget and Thomas Wayne to W and N, by street to S, by Thomas Jackson to E; also the stable; a close of 5a 2p bounded by William Wood to N, by William Dawson to E, W & S, and occupied by William Dawson; also land in Potto

FQ 435:  26 & 27 Mar 1830:  house on East Side:  Baillieur to Lowther:  formerly occ by Thomas Sanderson, then by Thomas Shaw and now by Robert Tweddle:  bounded by Joseph Whorlton to N, by Thomas Passman to S, by street to W

FT 109:  21 Aug 1830:  Jaques Barn glebe lands:  Michael Sidgwick late of Hutton now of Broughton weaver & John Sidgwick late of Hutton weaver now of Deighton farmer to Rev Richard Shepherd with the QAB money:  two pieces of ground called Jaques Barn each about 1a, part of a close of 7a:  bounded by Jonathan Sanders to N & W, land of George & Mary Bowes contracted to be conveyed to Isaac Whorlton & others to E, Rounton road to S:  previously occ by James Kendrew and now by John & Michael Sidgwick

FT 294:  26 & 27 Dec 1830:  Jakebarn:  Michael Sidgwick of Hutton yeoman & John Sidgwick jnr of Hutton farmer to William Jackson of Hutton tailor:  a fenced off close of 1a called Jakebarn:  previously occ by Richard Shepherd & now by his widow Ann:  bounded by Isaac, Joseph & William Whorlton’s land to E, by land recently bought by QAB from vendors to W & N, by road to S

Jane Wholton is in a list of names in the Middleton Book
Margaret Wholton is in a list of names in the Middleton Book
Margt Whorlton is in a List of Girls – Middleton Book
Jane Whorlton is in a List of Girls – Middleton Book
Wm Walton was in A List of Boys – Middleton Book

Tithe Map:  Isaac Whorlton owned Jacques Barn field, which Robert Garbutt occupied
Tithe Map:  William Whorlton owned North End Garth, occupied by William Sidgwick, and Jacques Barn Field, which he occupied himself

1841 Census:  William Whorlton 67 ag lab, Ann 43 and Mary Atkinson 5, East Side/Barkers Row
1841 Census:  Isaac Whorlton 80 linen weaver, North End
1841 Census:  Joseph Whorlton 70 linen weaver, William 65, North Side
1841 Census:  John Whorlton 40 linen weaver and family, Enterpen
1841 Census:  Jane Whorlton 20 servant in household of John Howe, Enterpen

28 Dec 1847:  Joseph Whorlton now decd, William as his heir-at-law and devisee of Thomas, sold houses, garths & yards to Isaac Benson [East Side deeds]

1851 Census:  East Side, Benson’s Archway:  John Whorlton 50 farm lab and wife Margaret 54, William 21 ag lab, Thomas 23 ag lab, Isabella 16 servant, Mary 12 and Joseph 7, with son-in-law John Charlton W 31 handloom weaver linen, and his children William 2 and Jane 11 mths:  all born Hutton
1851 Census:  Barkers Row:  William Whorlton 41 ag lab, b Hutton, and Ann 37 bWesterdale, with Richard 3 and Jane 1, both b Hutton
1851 Census:  Barkers Row:  William Whorlton 76 weaver & pauper b Hutton, and Ann 58 b Northallerton
1851 Census:  North End:  Isaac Whorlton widower 94 retired weaver, with servant Eliza Douglas 18 and lodger Jane Douglas 10 weaver’s daughter;  all b Hutton

The 1881 Census CD-Rom finds only a few Whorltons born in Hutton Rudby in Yorkshire and the Northern Borders:
North End:  William 59 drainer, Hannah 54, Elizabeth 29, grandchildren Mary 10, Sarah 9, Margaret 5 mths
Enterpen:  Thomas 56 labourer, Mary 47
Bank Top:  Sarah 52 U, David her son ag lab 29, Margaret her niece 26 dressmaker, Ann niece 22 dom serv, John Walker nephew 22 farm servant
They are the children of John Whorlton & Margaret Howe, and so may be:
California, Gt Ayton:  Joseph 36 whinstone miner & family
In Long Newton, there are a brother and sister, children of David Whorlton & Elizabeth Busby:  Nicholas 74 retd butcher, his son 43 b Long Newton, and his sister Martha 70 U

In the 1881 Census CD-Rom, there are no “Whorltons” outside Yorkshire and Durham, but many thousands of “Waltons”.


Wigham

ET 258:  7 & 8 Jan 1823:  southern part of land occ by Mundell and bought by him from Simon Kelsey:  parties:  George Mundell of Hutton gardener, John Thompson of Faceby yeoman, William Jackson of Hutton tailor, Robert Brigham of Rudby gent and William Wood of Hutton gent:  bounded by land bought by John & Thomas Sidgwick from Sir Wm Hy Pennyman to E,  by Mr Sanders and Mr Wigham to W, by northern part of land bel to Thomas & William Jackson to N, by Simon Kelsey to S


Wild

John Wild is a tenant of Barkers Row in 1829

FQ 249:  13 & 14 Mar 1829:  exors of Wayne to Barker:  the Carpenters Arms with the cartwrights shop and stable on the west end thereof, the garden and the privy on the south & backside of the premises, bounded by road to East Rounton to E, by Mrs Elizabeth Hildreth to W & S, by road to East Rounton, John Robinson and Mr Farnaby to N – occ by Edward Meynell;  the garth occ by Edward Meynell, bounded by Elizabeth Hildreth to E, by John Burdon to W, by Thomas Passman, Elizabeth Hildreth, Mr Kendall & William Spence to N, by road to East Rounton to S; the site where buildings lately occupied by John & Hannah Kay & taken down by Mark Barker stood; the garth now used as garden ground to the E & backside of the sd site;  the new houses built by Mark Barker on the site and part of the garth: some of the houses and the garden ground “at present unoccupied”, the others occupied by Robert Hall, William Souter, George Sanderson, John Kay, Mary Lamb, Jackson Richardson, John Wild and Thomas Shaw:  bounded by house & lands bel to Rev Richard Shepherd to E & S, by Arthur Douglas and townstreet to N & W

1841 Census:  Thomas Wilds 62 linen weaver, Ann 63 and Margaret 12, Enterpen


Wiles

FA 299:  5 & 6 Nov 1824:  2 houses with garden, orchard, shop & stable in Hutton, occ previously by John Horner & Thomasin Burton, then by Thomas Edmund & Thomas Dalkin, then by David Hebbron & John Wiles:  parties:  David Hebbron of Hutton butcher & Michael Hebdon of Stokesley weaver, James Eden of Hutton grocer, Simon Kelsey, Robert Longstaff of Broughton yeoman, William Driver of Yarm gent

late July 1830:  Anthony Wiles lived then in Hutton Rudby next door to his half-sister, who kept a shop, where Huntley used to get half-crowns for small change.  He saw Goldsbrough, Grundy, Patterson and Sanderson at Scotson’s public house. [Yorkshire Gazette 12 Mar 1842]

The half-sister who kept a shop may have been Margaret Richardson, wife of Robert, bricklayer, on East Side [1841C]:  Anthony Wiles was the son of Joseph Wiles, bap 1789;  Joseph & Margaret had an older son John, bap 1786.  In Feb 1795 Joseph married Ann Fenney, and had Margaret bap Aug 1795 and Cuthbert bap 1798.  Margaret Wiles married Robert Richardson on 8 Oct 1822; a Margaret Wiles daughter of John & Jane was bap in 1808 and it is presumably this Margaret who married Robert Armstrong in 1826

27 & 28 Jun 1831:  Lease:  parties:  Thomas Eland of Grange Road Bermondsey leather dresser and wife Mary, Richard Eland of Newport Pagnell Bucks gent and Langley & Reece:  to convey from Thomas to Richard and to secure an annuity to Thomas and his wife:  garth 1a 2r 28p, bounded by John De Putron & - Richardson to W, Flounders & De Putron to E, river to N and street to S: and 3 houses (formerly one house) barn, cowhouse & carpenter’s shop:  occ by John Eland, John Sherwood & Thomas Wiles

1841 Census:  John Wyles 55 ag lab, Jane 55, John 25 linen weaver and Joseph 30 linen weaver, South Side

Mar 1842:  Anthony Wiles was an ostler at Stockton at the time of Goldsbrough’s trial

1851 Census:  South Side:  John Wyles 37 handloom weaver linen and Jane 35, with James 12 tailor apprentice, George 3 and Mary 1, all b Hutton, and mother-in-law Mary Flounders widow 68 pauper b Potto
1851 Census:  South Side:  Janet Wyles widow 66, labourer’s widow, pauper, b Elwick, and daughter Elizabeth Wyles 26 ag lab and grandaughter Jane Wyles 5, both b Hutton, and granddaughter Jane Ann Wyles 2 b Mbro
1851 Census:  North End:  Thomas Wyles 71 hand loom weaver linen and Ann 72

Anthony Wiles of Hutton was in the field when Mr Barlow cut his hedge in Jun 1858 – Barlow’s Notebook

Anthony Wiles died 1871 a85, Thomas in 1869 a92, Jane in 1854 a70, John in 1848 a62


Hutton Rudby shops & businesses in 1922

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 Advertisements from the catalogue of entries for the Hutton Rudby 3rd Annual Show 
 Monday 7 August 1922
 
A A Smith
Motor Bus Proprietor
North End, Hutton Rudby
Stockton & Hutton Rudby Carrier every Wednesday
Leaving 8.30

Mrs A Sidgwick (late Barr)
Confectioner & General Dealer
Varied assortment of Crockery & Hardware
Chocolates & Sweets from the best Makers
Hutton Rudby

Established 1903
S J McCutcheon
Clock & Watchmaker, Cycle Dealer &c
Hutton Rudby
Clocks, Watches, Jewellery, Gramophones, Etc, cleaned & repaired promptly & efficiently

Established 1814 (108 years) W & A Bainbridge
Builders, Contractors, & Merchants
Hutton Rudby
Manufacturers of high-class joinery work.
Drainage & sanitary work a speciality. 
Schemes prepared & estimates given for all kinds of Building work

Percy Honeyman
Family Butcher, Hutton Rudby
Noted for High-class Beef, Pork & Mutton
Personal attention to all orders

John T Barthram & Sons
Grocery & General Stores
Petrol & Oil.  Chocolates.  Tobacco & Cigarettes.
Corn Flour & Poultry Foods.  Agents for Spratts.
Centre of Green, Hutton Rudby

Established 1879.  J T Tarran & Son
Hutton Rudby
Builders, Contractors & Sanitary Engineers.
Workshops fitted with the Latest Machinery

Hutton Rudby shops & businesses in 1923

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Advertisements from the catalogue of entries 
for the Hutton Rudby Village 4th Annual Show
Monday 6 August 1923

C H Grierson
Boot & Shoe Maker.
Repairs neatly executed on the shortest notice
Moorfield, Enterpen, Hutton Rudby, Yorkshire

F F Carter
Open & Closed Car for hire
Bank Top, Hutton Rudby
Regular Service to & from Potto Station
Orders for Weddings, Funerals & Drives respectfully solicited

B A & M Carter
Grocers, Drapers & Provision Merchants
Bank Top, Hutton Rudby
Satisfaction guaranteed

Robert Sidgwick
Grocer & General Dealer, Boot & Shoe Maker
Enterpen, Hutton Rudby
All Work Done on the Premises

T Simpson
Chimney Sweep
North End, Hutton Rudby
Invites your enquiries.  Terms on application

T Metcalfe
Hackney Carriage Proprietor
The Green, Hutton Rudby
Trains met at Potto Station when required
Funerals & Weddings attended

T A White
South Side, Hutton Rudby
Having trained under the Government Scheme for Ex-Servicemen in Upholstery,
solicits your enquiries.
Any kind of Chair or Couch undertaken
Good workmanship guaranteed

Hutton Rudby shops & businesses in 1924

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Advertisements from the catalogue of entries for the 
Hutton Rudby Village 5th Annual Show
Monday 4 August 1924

 
C H Grierson, Hutton Rudby
Boot & Shoe Dealer & Repairer
Ladies’ & Gents’ Boots made to measure. 
Repairs Promptly & Neatly executed
Hand-sewn Repairs a speciality
Large assortment of Boots & Shoes, & Sundries always in stock
Neighbouring Villages Visited Weekly
A Trial Solicited.  Satisfaction guaranteed

F F Carter
Open & Closed Car for hire
Bank Top, Hutton Rudby
Regular Service to & from Potto Station
Orders for Weddings, Funerals & Drives respectfully solicited

Ye Roast Beef of Old Englande
J W Sidgwick, Family Butcher, Hutton Rudby
Spiced Beef & Tongues a Speciality
Family Orders promptly attended to

T A White
South Side, Hutton Rudby
Having trained under the Government Scheme for Ex-Servicemen in Upholstery,
solicits your enquiries.
Any kind of Chair or Couch undertaken
Good workmanship guaranteed

Cosy Car Service
Hutton Rudby
The Fiat Saloon Bus will run Wednesdays & Saturdays
All kinds of Haulage
Estimates Free.  Distance no object
Special Trips & Parties catered for
On application to G Stringer, or Messrs Carter’s shop, Hutton Rudby

Longstaff’s Fruit Stores, Hutton Rudby
Have a Choice Selection of English & Foreign Fruits
Bananas a Speciality
Try our Home-grown Tomatoes
Wreaths & Crosses made to order

G Stringer, Coal Merchant
Furniture Remover & Carting Contractor
The Green, Hutton Rudby
Enquiries Solicited.  Prompt attention given

G Stringer, Jr, Motor Bus Proprietor
Pleasure Parties conveyed at very reasonable charges
Enquiries invited for Light Haulage & Furniture Removals
Hutton Rudby

Visitors to the Show can’t do better than call at the Bay Horse Inn, Bass on draught
All the best Spirits & Refreshments at Reasonable Prices
Wm Munkley, Proprietor

People of Hutton Rudby in the C18/19: Williams to Wyndham

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... from my working notes ... accuracy not guaranteed ... for explanatory note, see post of 14 Feb 2013


Williams

23 Nov 1808:  Jane Williams was an occupant of property on East Side, bought by Joseph, Thomas & William Whorlton [East Side deeds]

George Williams witnessed the Will of Thomas Passman on 20 Oct 1828


Willins

FQ 560:  2 & 3 Nov 1829:  ppty bought by Jane Willans widow in Enterpen:  garth of 1r 3p where a cottage formerly stood, formerly occ by John Miller, then by George Wilson, Mary Young & Hannah Young, then by Matthew Richardson jnr, then by John Burden, bounded by Thomas Wayne to N, E & W, and by street called Enterpen to S; with the houses “lately erected upon the garth” & now occupied by Simeon Burden, John Smelt, Paul Oates, John Goldsbrough, William Jowsey, Abraham Holdgate and William Burnsides

GG 130:  31 Oct 1835:  Thomas Spence of Hutton weaver & Dorothy his wife (1) Henry Collins of Stokesley gent (2):  2 houses now used as one, the weaver’s shop adjoinging & the garden or orchard of 1r behind, occ by Thomas Spence; the butcher’s shop adjoining the weaver’s shop occ by William Sherwood:  bounded by Lord Falkland to E, street to W, Mrs Kingston to N, Edmund Taylor to S; also Gowdie/Gowlay Hill Garth 1a with cowhouse occ by Thomas Richardson:  bounded by John Charlton to E, by Francis Stainthorpe to W, by street to N, by Jane Willans & Edward Meynell to S; also house with garden & garth behind 2r, occ by William Merrington:  bounded by street to E, William Wood to W, John Seamer to N, John Rymers & Francis Stainthorpe to S; also 3 closes formerly 2 closes called the Cottager 7a, previously occ by William Braithwaite as tenant to William Spence decd:  bounded by Robert Halliday Dobson to E, George Hunter & William Ableson to W, by Rounton road to N, by Richard Johnson to S; “& all other the messuages lands tenements and hereditaments formerly belonging to Thomas Smith late of Hutton yeoman decd and comprised in his Will”

1841 Census:  Mary Willins 45 independent with John Sayer 20 schoolmaster, Enterpen

1851 Census:  Enterpen:  Miss Mary Willins 56 independent b Hutton Rudby, with lodger Miss Mary Garbutt 50 independent b Nunthorpe

“Principal inhabitants” signing the record of exchange of bounties on 28 Sep 1857:  Robert Braithwaite, John Rickatson, George Wilson, Henry Willins, John Robinson, Thomas Sidgwick, John Sidgwick, George Davison [Terriers]

1861 Census:  Maurice Drummond 28 (S) Primitive Methodist minister b Prudhoe, lodging with Miss Willins

Henry Willins was churchwarden 1865-8

1872 Post Office Directory:  Hutton Rudby:  Henry Willins, grocer, linen draper & post master

Oddfellows Board:  Bro:  Henry Willins, Hutton, 24 Nov 1887, a65




Wilson

William Wilson of Hutton was left “a Coat and Waistcoat after the said Thomas Eland has chose one first” by James Young, weaver of Hutton – Will proved by Robert Brigham on 25 Jan 1811.

c1775:  birth of James Wilson, who died at Hutton 14 Jul 1865 a90
c1785:  birth of Isabella Cowens, sister of James Wilson, who died at Hutton 24 Mar 1851 a66

30 Jan 1798:  James Wilson married Mary Straker, Gateshead [IGI]
Children of James Wilson & Mary Straker baptised at All Saints, Newcastle between 1798 and 1812:  William, James, John, Henry, Jane, Matilda, George and Edward [IGI]
18 Dec 1808:  George, son of John Wilson & Elizabeth Bainbridge, baptised All Saints, Newcastle [IGI]
12 Aug 1810:  George, son of James Wilson & Mary Straker, baptised All Saints, Newcastle [IGI]
9 Jun 1836:  Ann Hutton married George Wilson, St Andrews, Newcastle [IGI]

James Alder Wilson c1838-1910: Wadham, Oxford:  Rector of Crathorne 1878
Allan Bowes Wilson c1839-1932.  Hutton House.  Estate £105,000+
Thomas Bowes Wilson 1845-1929:  marr Maria Hutton:  children:  Capt George Hutton Wilson 1878-1915, solicitor, marrd Nora Limary:  Lt Col John Hutton Wilson 1880-1917:  and Mary Hutton Austin.  Enterpen Hall.  Estate £54,000+
John George Wilson 1849-c1930:  Solicitor, Durham:  marr Miss Eade.  Estate £56,000+
Annie Hutton Wilson 1856-1947:  “wasn’t allowed to marry” by the family [Wilson descendant]
John Bowes Wilson’s life was saved in the Boer War by a sergeant who was awarded the VC [Wilson descendant]
George Wilson’s family were friendly with the Garbutts of Hutton Grange [‘Letters to a Miller’s daughter’]

George Wilson came to the village ca 1830s as a clerk to Clark & Plummer, and was a linen manufacturer in his own right by 1841.  He took over Hutton mill and by 1851 is listed as linen & sailcloth manufacturer.

FQ 560:  2 & 3 Nov 1829:  ppty bought by Jane Willans widow in Enterpen:  garth of 1r 3p where a cottage formerly stood, formerly occ by John Miller, then by George Wilson, Mary Young & Hannah Young, then by Matthew Richardson jnr, then by John Burden, bounded by Thomas Wayne to N, E & W, and by street called Enterpen to S; with the houses “lately erected upon the garth” & now occupied by Simeon Burden, John Smelt, Paul Oates, John Goldsbrough, William Jowsey, Abraham Holdgate and William Burnsides

GZ 204:  2 May 1842:  Thomas Spence late of Hutton weaver but now of Middlesbrough baker & shopkeeper (1) John Snowdon of Stokesley shoemaker (2) Thomas Sidgwick of Hutton linen manufacturer (3) George Wilson of Hutton linen manufacturer (4) reciting indres of 1839:  John Snowdon had lent Thomas Spence £90 with £4-17-5d interest also owing, on Spence’s property on East Side:  Spence sold Sidgwick the house (formerly 2 houses) & garden for £180, the mortgage to be paid off:  the garden & orchard to be sold to Sidgwick was staked out and contained 33 p; previously occ by Thomas Spence and now by William Meynell; the rest to be sold to John Oates; mortgagee George Wilson

GZ 206:  May 1842:  Thomas Spence to John Oates for £50:  the 2 shops, one formerly a weaver’s shop and now a carpenter’s and the other a butcher’s shop, with the ground behind now staked out and measuring 9 p:  now occ by William Meynell, William Sherwood and John Oates:  bounded by Thomas Sidgwick’s purchase from Spence to E & N, by street to W, Edmund Taylor to S; mortgagee George Wilson

In May 1833, George Wilson and John Eland took out Letters of Administration of the estate of John Cook, as his creditors.

Tithe Map:  George Wilson occupied nos. 157, 158, 159, 161:  house, outbuildings & yard owned by James Emerson:  above Tisbut Row, on North End

George Wilson was churchwarden in 1838

1840 Whites:  Hutton Rudby:  George Wilson, linen manufacturer, Enterpen
1840 Whites:  Hutton Rudby:  James Wilson, gent
1840 Whites:  Hutton Rudby:  Edwin James Wilson, surgeon

1841 Census:  James Wilson 65 independent born out of county, and Henry Smith 20 linen weaver, South Side
1841 Census:  Robert Wilson 60 linen weaver, Elizabeth 65 and Robert 20 linen weaver, with John Mudd 20 shoe maker and Rachael Mudd 20, Robert Mudd 2, North End
1841 Census:  Edwin Wilson 35, his wife Sarah 25 and William 3 and Edwin 1, with servants Miriam and Frances Peacock 15, North Side
1841 Census:  possibly Layton House:  George Wilson 30 linen mfr born out of county and family, Mary Wilson 17 born out of county, Mary Eden 15 servant, Michael Sidgwick 18 draper & grocer and William Wood 20 farmer, Enterpen
1841 Census:  Butter Hill:  John Wilson 12 servant with Thomas Legg
1841 Census:  Middleton, cottage:  John Wilson 30 labourer born out of county and family

George Hutton Wilson died in infancy 8 Aug 1842 grave248 – not in PRs

‘Stokesley News & Cleveland Reporter’, 1 Jul 1844:
Births:  On Tuesday, June 25th, at Hutton Rudby, the wife of Mr George Wilson, linen manufacturer, of a son

‘Stokesley News & Cleveland Reporter’, 1 Sep 1844:
Births:  On Tuesday, July 16th, at Hutton Rudby, the wife of E.J. Wilson, Esq., Surgeon, of a son

1851 Census:  Hutton House:  George Wilson 39 linen mfr b Newcastle, Ann 34 b Kildale, Thomas Bowes 11 and John George 2;  with servants Hannah Preston 20 b Rudby and Sarah Sedgwick 17 b Hutton
1851 Census:  South Side:  Elizabeth Wilson widow 73 pauper weaver’s widow b Carlton and son Robert 32 handloom weaver linen b Hutton
1851 Census:  South Side:  John Wilson 34 ag lab b Hutton, Sarah 22 b Carlton, and children Mary Ann 3 and Francis 6 mths, b Hutton
1851 Census:  South Side:  James Wilson widower 76 householder retd agent, b Woodhouse Northumberland, and granddaughter Matilda Churnside single 19 housekeeper, b North Shields, with his daughter visiting:  Mrs Jane Inigo 43, shipowner’s wife, b Newcastle
1851 Census:  North Side:  Edwin James Wilson 45 licentiate of Apothecary’s Hall, General Practitioner b Stockton, Sarah 35 b Armley, Yks, and son Alfred 6 b Hutton, with stable boy William Raper 16 b Hutton

“Principal inhabitants” signing the record of exchange of bounties on 28 Sep 1857:  Robert Braithwaite, John Rickatson, George Wilson, Henry Willins, John Robinson, Thomas Sidgwick, John Sidgwick, George Davison [Terriers]

1861 Census:  Hutton House:  George Wilson 50 sailcloth mfr b Newcastle, Ann 45 b Kildale, James 23 commoner Wadham, Alan 21 sailcloth mfr, and Ann Hutton W. 5;  cook Elizabeth Ann Hold 28 b Durham and housemaid Elizabeth Sidgwick 18

“The Doctor is changing his housekeeper again” letter from E Garbutt 17 Aug 1863:  [Letters to a Miller’s Daughter]

Jun 1866:  George Wilson led a subscription to assist Thomas Garbutt, donating £10
Jun 1866:  E J Wilson gave £5 to the subscription for Thomas Garbutt
Jun 1866:  Rev James Alder Wilson gave £2 to the subscription for Thomas Garbutt
Jun 1866:  T Bowes Wilson, Sunderland, gave £2 to the subscription for Thomas Garbutt
Jun 1866:  Allan Bowes Wilson gave £5 to the subscription for Thomas Garbutt
Jun 1866:  John George Wilson gave £1 to the subscription for Thomas Garbutt

1868:  E J Wilson wrote verses to celebrate the marriage of Henry Passman

George Wilson “has the acct” of “money in hand given by Miss Righton &c”, and was in charge of the Bathurst money in 1868-9 – Barlow’s Notebook

1871 Census:  Hutton House:  George Wilson 60 sailcloth mfr emp 24 men & 9 women & landowner, Ann 55, Allan Bowes 31 and Thomas Bowes 26 both sailcloth mfrs;  cook Ann Milestone 18 b Hutton and housemaid Mary Jackson 18 b Hutton

1872 Post Office Directory:  Hutton Rudby:  Edwin James Wilson
1872 Post Office Directory:  Hutton Rudby:  George Wilson, linen & sailcloth manufacturer
1872 Post Office Directory:  Skutterskelfe:  Thomas Wilson, gardener to Major T L Elwon, The Hall

Mrs Wilson gave 10s to School Acct 1874 – Barlow’s Notebook

24 Feb 1879:  George Wilson occupied workshop or buildings on East Side sold by Allan Bowes Wilson to Matthew Hall [East Side deeds]

1881 Census:  Hutton House:  Allan B Wilson 41 canvas mfr emp 50 hands, sister Annie H 25;  visitors Miss Mary Hutton 58 b Newcastle and Miss Alice M Hutton 20 b Sunderland;  cook Jane Carnegie 27 b East Rounton and housemaid Harriet Foster 19 b Harwood
1891 Census:  Hutton House:  Allan B Wilson 51 sailcloth mfr and Annie H 35;  housemaid Jane Beatty 22 b Ireland

Mr John George Wilson of 16 North Bailey, Durham, senior partner of Wilson, Ornsby & Cadle, solicitors, 45 years Under Sheriff of the County, who won the 100 yards race for Oxford in 1869-70 and 1871 and the English Amateur Championship in 1869 and 1871, Legal Secretary to the Lord Bishop of Durham and solicitor to the Dean and Chapter, has left estate of value £56,457, with net personalty of £47,118.  Letters of Administration granted to his son Allan Aylmer Luxmoore of 5 North Bailey  [?1930 newspaper clipping]

from John George Wilson’s obituary: he served his articles with Joseph Dodds, who represented Stockton in Parliament.  He married Miss Eade, daughter of the late Revd J D Eade, who was Canon of Durham and Rector of Aycliffe.  His eldest son, Alan Aylmer Luxmoore, succeeds his father in most of his offices.  His second son, Commander G A Wilson R.N., is farming in Queensland.  His third son, Captain R A Wilson died in the War.  Two younger boys died in their youth.  One of the two daughters married Colonel G P Atkinson, who was killed a few moths ago while playing polo.  Mrs Wilson died 15 years ago.
[newspaper clipping]

Mr Thomas Bowes-Wilson of Kilrule, St Andrew’s, Fife, and formerly of Enterpen Hall, Hutton Rudby, has left estate of the value of £54,274, with net personalty £50,123.  He gives £100 to his daughter-in-law, Nora Dulcie Bowes-Wilson, £10,000 between his granddaughters Elizabeth Hutton Bowes-Wilson and Jean Margaret Bowes-Wilson, £100 to his son-in-law, an annuity of £45 to his sister Annie Hutton Wilson, and the residue of the property in trust for his daughter, Mary Hutton Austin and her children
[1929 newspaper clipping]

Hutton Rudby Man’s Fortune for sister
Mr Allan Bowes Wilson J.P. of Hutton House, Hutton Rudby, Lord of the Manor of Hutton, left estate in his own disposition of the gross value of £105,953, with net personalty of £99,096.  Probate has been granted to his sister Miss Annie Hutton Wilson of the same address, the sole Executrix, to whom he left all of his property absolutely
[1932 newspaper clipping]


Edwin James Wilson, surgeon, was the deputy registrar who recorded the death of Mary Imeson on 6 Oct 1852.  He was baptised in Stockton on 11 Apr 1806, passed the LSA of London in 1837 and in 1839 was appointed surgeon for the district of Lythe, travelling 30 miles from Hutton Rudby.  [Dr Stout]
13 Feb 1845:  Edwin James Wilson occupied the 4a close Hunters Holme [East Side deeds]
1846:  in spite of holding only a single diploma, he was appointed medical officer to the Hutton District of Stokesley Union (no alternative candidtates) [Dr Stout]
1847 and 1848:  Medical Directories:  E J Wilson on Poor Law Medical Staff
1851 Census:  on North Side, with wife and Alfred 6
1861 Census:  Linden Grove:  Edwin J Wilson 53 surgeon LSA London b Stockton widower, with servant Sarah A Thompson 28 b Osmotherley
1867 Middlesbrough Weekly News of 20 and 27 Sep:  “a card” from Mr Alfred Wilson, MRCS London, late pupil with Sir John Fife.  Mr Edwin J Wilson’s, surgeon, Linden Grove, Hutton Rudby (standard method of announcing entry into medical practice) [Dr Stout]
1871 Census:  no longer in practice, living on North Side
1873 Medical Directory:  obituary note for E J Wilson, no date given [Dr Stout]
Oddfellows Board:  Bro:  E J Wilson, Hutton, 7 Apr 1872, a65

1871 Census:  Linden Grove:  William Wilson 54 retd farmer b Hornby, wife Mary 43 b Enfield Middlesex, son Arthur 7 b Newsom Co Durham; servant:  Margaret Tosland 31 b Kent


Wood


Robert Balier of Rudby & East Rounton marr Elizabeth Passman of Rudby at East Rounton on 7 Apr 1806:  witnesses Wm Wood, Matthew Appleton, Eliza Kay and Harry Passman [PRs]

DW 581:  4 Apr 1816:  James Bainbridge of Hutton bricklayer (1) George, John & Henry Hutchinson the younger & Thomas Place bankers at Stockton (2):  3 houses adjoining each other in Hutton, occ by James Bainbridge, Richard Wood & Thomas Almond:  bounded by Thomas Passman & Thomas & George Farnaby to E & N, by street to W, by Edward [sic] Taylor to S

1823 Baines:  Hutton:  William Wood, farmer
1823 Baines:  Hutton:  William Wood, bacon & cheese factor

ET 293:  21 Mar 1823:  sale of ppty of Samuel Hebbron late of Hutton nr Rudby butcher dealer & chapman now or late a prisoner in the gaol of the Castle of York:  being the Shoulder of Mutton public house [predecessor of King’s Head], occ by Samuel Hebbron, then by David Hebbron & now by Robert Moss:  bounded by Thomas Whorlton and Thomas Jackson, Thomas Cust, B D Sugget and Thomas Wayne to W and N, by street to S, by Thomas Jackson to E; also the stable; a close of 5a 2p bounded by William Wood to N, by William Dawson to E, W & S, and occupied by William Dawson; also land in Potto

“Principal inhabitants” signing the Rudby terrier 1825:  Simon Kelsey, Robert Brigham, William Wood, Michael Sidgwick, Philip Gowland, James Catchasides <jnr>, and churchwardens James Catchasides and John Wrightson

FC 147:  14 Nov 1825:  James Bainbridge bricklayer (1) Hutchinsons & Place bankers (2) William Richmond of Stockton mercer & draper (3) Richard Nightingale the younger of Middleton St George (4):  2 houses, lately in 3 tenements, with garden behind, formerly occ by James Bainbridge, Richard Wood & Thomas Almond, then by James Bainbridge & John Simpson, now by James & John Bainbridge; and also 2 new erected houses now in 3 tenements lately erected by James Bainbridge in the garden, now occ by George Harker, Alice Pedlar & Ann Rudd:  all bounded by messuage & garden of Roger Bowes to E, by messuage & garden of Edmund Taylor to W, by street to N, by Thomas Passman to S

FL 58:  13 May 1827:  East Side, judging by occupants & boundaries:  2 houses lately used in 3 tenements with garden behind formerly occ by James Bainbridge, Richard Wood & Thomas Almond, then by sd James Bainbridge & John Simpson, then by sd James Bainbridge & John Bainbridge:  and the 2 houses used in 3 tenements “newly created” and “lately erected” by sd James Bainbridge in the sd garden, then occupied by George Harker, Alice Pedlar & Ann Rudd:  bounded by house and garden bel to Roger Bowes to E, by Edmund Taylor to W, by street to N, by Thomas Passman to S:  parties:   Richard Nightingale the younger late of Middleton St George gent and George Stanger of Pickton farmer:  reciting indre of 14 Nov 1825 to which James Bainbridge, George & John & Henry Hutchinson, Thomas Place, William Richmond and said Richard Nightingale were parties

William Wood was a Vestry member in 1830 who signed the election entry for the churchwardens in April.  He signed the appointment of churchwardens on 9 Apr 1833.

FS 461:  2 & 3 Feb 1831:  cottage 1a:  occ by William Wood at £1-10s p.a

William Wood of Hutton is churchwarden in 1831
William Wood buried 29 Sep 1835 aged 72 [PRs]

GG 130:  31 Oct 1835:  Thomas Spence of Hutton weaver & Dorothy his wife (1) Henry Collins of Stokesley gent (2):  2 houses now used as one, the weaver’s shop adjoinging & the garden or orchard of 1r behind, occ by Thomas Spence; the butcher’s shop adjoining the weaver’s shop occ by William Sherwood:  bounded by Lord Falkland to E, street to W, Mrs Kingston to N, Edmund Taylor to S; also Gowdie/Gowlay Hill Garth 1a with cowhouse occ by Thomas Richardson:  bounded by John Charlton to E, by Francis Stainthorpe to W, by street to N, by Jane Willans & Edward Meynell to S; also house with garden & garth behind 2r, occ by William Merrington:  bounded by street to E, William Wood to W, John Seamer to N, John Rymers & Francis Stainthorpe to S; also 3 closes formerly 2 closes called the Cottager 7a, previously occ by William Braithwaite as tenant to William Spence decd:  bounded by Robert Halliday Dobson to E, George Hunter & William Ableson to W, by Rounton road to N, by Richard Johnson to S; “& all other the messuages lands tenements and hereditaments formerly belonging to Thomas Smith late of Hutton yeoman decd and comprised in his Will”

1840 Whites:  Hutton Rudby:  William Wood, gent

1841 Census:  John Wood 30 publican, with family, at the Bay Horse
1841 Census:  William Wood 60 independent, Elizabeth 70, with Margaret Wilkinson 15 independent, North Side
1841 Census:  Jane Wood 26 in household of Michael Sidgwick, Enterpen
1841 Census:  William Wood 20 farmer in household of George Wilson, Enterpen
1841 Census:  Middleton, cottage:  Josiah Wood 70 miller, Margaret 60 and Mary 35
Richard Wood was a tenant of James Bainbridge on East Side in 1816

‘Stokesley News & Cleveland Reporter’, 1 Jun 1844:
Marriage:  On Sunday, May 12th, at Rudby, Mr William Wood, to Mrs Jane Bulmer

‘The Cleveland Repertory’ 1 Jun 1844:
Marriage:  On Sunday the 12th ult, at Rudby Church, by the Rev R J Barlow, Mr Wm Wood of Hutton, to Mrs Jane Bulmer, of the same place

Ord 1846:
A respectable farmer named Wood, now deceased, living near Entrepen, lost a number of geese during the night; and in the morning he found the annexed doggrel chalked on the door of his poultry-house:
William Wood, your geese are good
But not very fat;
So out of eleven we took but seven,
And you many thank us for that
William Wood is listed in Barlow’s Notebook, giving 1s to a charity sermon

Oddfellows Board:  Bro:  John Wood, Hutton, 11 Jun 1848, a40 [publican Bay Horse]


Wooley

Mr <Wooley> owned lands to the south of the farm Oxgang c1820 – Middleton Book


Wright

4 & 5 Oct 1819:  George Wright occupied a dwellinghouse on East Side bought by John Braithwaite [East Side deeds]

ET 604:  12 & 13 Sep 1823:  4a close in Hutton Moor, previously occ by Bart Wright now by Simon Sidgwick the weaver

1823 Baines:  Hutton:  George Wright, shoemaker

GA 84:  3 Mar 1826:  Will of Arthur Douglas of Skutterskelfe, gardener:  his house, weavers shops & garth lying contiguous, now occ by George Wright and others, and his 2 cottages now occ by Hannah Kay & [ - ] Peacock:  beneficiaries: Alvey Kay and Catherine Kay, children of testator’s late niece Mary Kay, and testator’s sisters Alice Scorer and Ann Hutton decd

FT 108:  25 Aug 1830:  Hutton Moor [Tithe Map 384 & 385]:  Michael Sedgwick late of Hutton now of Broughton weaver (1) Mary Sedgwick of Broughton widow (2) Govnors of QAB (3) Rev Robt Fawcitt curate of Hilton (4):  two closes, the Cottage & the Orchard, one about 1a the other about 2a, previously in one close “in a place called Hutton Moor” [ie that described in ET 604]:  occ by Bart Wright as tenant to Thomas Dennison, then by Michael Sidgwick:  bounded by Thomas Dennison to E & S, by George Truefitt to W, by Rounton road to N

1841 Census:  Mary Wright 15 servant at Yorks’, Sexhow

Oddfellows Board:  Bro:  John Wright, America, 22 Aug 1844, a54 [farmer, acc to JBTurner]


Wrightson

1823 Baines:  Skutterskelfe:  John Wrightson, farmer

“Principal inhabitants” signing the Rudby terrier 1825:  Simon Kelsey, Robert Brigham, William Wood, Michael Sidgwick, Philip Gowland, James Catchasides <jnr>, and churchwardens James Catchasides and John Wrightson

John Wrightson was a vestry member who signed the election of churchwardens on 5 Apr 1831. 

John Wrightson was at “a meeting held in vestry” on 16 Jun 1831 where they voted a church rate of 2 ½ per £ to church repairs.  He signed the churchwardens’ accounts in July 1832.  He signed the election of churchwardens and a church rate of 5 ½ per pound on 24 April 1832.  He signed the appointment of churchwardens on 9 Apr 1833.

John Wrightson (Skutterskelfe) was a Poor Law Guardian [Hastings:  Local Govt & Socy]

1840 Whites:  Skutterskelfe:  John Wrightson, farmer
1841 Census:  White House, Skutterskelfe:  Wrightson

Mar 1842:  John Wrightson, farmer, gave evidence at the trial of Robert Goldsbrough;  he had known Huntley for about 14 years [Yorkshire Gazette 12 Mar 1842]

‘Stokesley News & Cleveland Reporter’ and the ‘Cleveland Repertory’ of 1 Oct 1843 announced the birth of a son to John Wrightson, farmer, Skutterskelfe

John Wrightson may have been of White House farm
John Wrightson was churchwarden with James Catchasides in 1822-4


Wyndham

1840 Whites:  Middleton-upon-Leven:  mostly the property of Colonel Wyndham … who is lord of the manor



People of Hutton Rudby in the C18/19: Vansittart to Vestry Members

$
0
0
... from my working notes ... accuracy not guaranteed ... for explanatory note, see post of 14 Feb 2013

yes, this should have been posted earlier!  I lost track ...


Vansittart

Henry Vansittart of Kirkleatham Esq was owner of 2 / 7 of the Hutton tithes [Tithe Agmt 12 Jun 1838]


Vaughan

Nanny Vaughan was born c1801 and died aged 66 on 26 Oct 1867

1859 Whellan:  Skutterskelfe:  Leven Grove … is now let for a few years to
– Vaughan Esq of the firm of Bolckow and Vaughan, Middlesbrough 


Vestry members


“Principal inhabitants” signing the Rudby terrier 1825:  Simon Kelsey, Robert Brigham, William Wood, Michael Sidgwick, Philip Gowland, James Catchasides <jnr>, and churchwardens James Catchasides and John Wrightson [Terriers]

“Principal inhabitants” signing the record of exchange of bounties on 28 Sep 1857:  Robert Braithwaite, John Rickatson, George Wilson, Henry Willins, John Robinson, Thomas Sidgwick, John Sidgwick, George Davison [Terriers]

People of Hutton Rudby in the C18/19: York to Young

$
0
0
... from my working notes ... accuracy not guaranteed ... for explanatory note, see post of 14 Feb 2013

York

1840 Whites:  Sexhow:  Stephen York, farmer
1841 Census:  Francis York 15 servant at Sexhow Hall (Chapman)
1841 Census:  Sexhow:  Stephen York 40 farmer, wife Elizabeth 30, and James 13, with Joseph Patterson 30 and Mary Wright 15 servants

11 Dec 1857:  George Smith a26, butcher, son of William Smith butcher, married Mrs Elizabeth York a45 daughter of James Gricewood farmer:  [witnesses:  Thomas Sleigh, George Shirwood]

1872 Post Office Directory:  Hutton Rudby:  John Barker York, bricklayer
“men and women of distinction in service … Mrs York, of Hutton” [Northern Primitive Methodism by W.M.Patterson]

1878/9 Mrs Yorke planted a tree near Ebenezer Place. 

1881 Census:  Mrs Mary York, widow, 57, and her daughter Dinah 34, next door to the Misses Temple, in or near Ebenezer Place

A headstone to Mary York, wife of John Barker York who died 1882 a59.

J B York and T Sage, both members of the chapel, took down the old Primitive Methodist chapel for £5 for the rebuilding in 1887 [G Milburn’s notes]


Young

1840 Whites & 1859 Whellans:  the poor have “the dividends of £100 three per cent consols, purchased with £70 left by James Young, in 1807”

FQ 560:  2 & 3 Nov 1829:  ppty bought by Jane Willans widow in Enterpen:  garth of 1r 3p where a cottage formerly stood, formerly occ by John Miller, then by George Wilson, Mary Young & Hannah Young, then by Matthew Richardson jnr, then by John Burden, bounded by Thomas Wayne to N, E & W, and by street called Enterpen to S; with the houses “lately erected upon the garth” & now occupied by Simeon Burden, John Smelt, Paul Oates, John Goldsbrough, William Jowsey, Abraham Holdgate and William Burnsides



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