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People of Hutton Rudby in the C18/19: Dale to Dunning

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



Dale

1872 Post Office Directory:  Hutton Rudby:  Frederick Dale, F.R.C.S., surgeon, Enterpen

Frederick Dale M.D was the doctor who certified Mr Barlow’s death in 1878

Frederick Dale was born in Yarm, and baptised 13 Feb 1843.  His parents were both from Yarm.  He took the MRCS England in 1866, then MD at Edinburgh in 1867, where he had studied.  In 1871 he was a widower with a housekeeper and groom and lived in Enterpen, but within months he had remarried, to Mary Weatherill [cf Letters to a Miller’s daughter].  The 1873 directories give his address as Layton House. 

1877 & 1880 Medical Directories:  medical officer for Hutton Rudby District of Stokesley Union

1881:  he was succeeded by Dr Melvin as medical officer, and in the census is to be found in Stokesley, once more a widower, but now with three children under the age of 8 [cf Miller’s daughter], and practising from College Square.  Directory entries show this address until 1885, adding that he was a certified factory doctor.  Bickford’s Hull Medical Directory shows a Dr Frederick Dale, with the same qualifications, at 40 Charlotte Street, Hull, practising as an accoucheur in 1882.  In 1886 the Medical Directory shows Dale at Weston super Mare, holding the posts of medical officer to the Great Western Railway, and to an Assurance Society (probably part-time posts) [Dr Geoffrey Stout]




Dalking

16 Jun 1764:  Rachel Rayne, daughter of Robert & Alis, married Joseph Dalkin [witnesses:  Wm Bainbridge, James Catchasides]

31 Jan 1791:  Joseph Dalkin married Jane Barker [witnesses:  Mary Edwards, James Robinson]

22 Feb 1803:  Robert Dalkin married Elizabeth Fenwick at Crathorne

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

Richard Souter labourer of Hutton married Mary Doking on 24 Jul 1820 at HR. 

8 Dec 1822:  Joseph Dalking married Jane Garbut [witnesses:  James Smith, Samuel Hebbron]

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:  Joseph Dalkin went to Robert Goldsbrough’s house to try to find out about Huntley, who owned him £4, and was told he had gone to Whitby.  Dalkin went that day to Whitby, but could not find him [Yorkshire Gazette 12 Mar 1842]

John Dalkin was given a testament worth 1s in the Rudby School accounts – Middleton Book
Anne Dalkin is in a List of Girls – Middleton Book
J Dalkin was in A List of Boys – Middleton Book

1840 Whites:  Hutton Rudby:  Joseph Dalking, tailor
Robert Dalkin was a subscribers to the Wesleyan Youth’s Instructor in 1840

1841 Census:  near Hutton House:  Jane Dalking 80
1841 Census:  South Side:  Joseph Dalking 35 tailor, Jane 35, James 15 apprentice, Martha 12, Jane 10, Henry 7, Joseph 4, John 2 and Francis 3 mths
1841 Census:  Rudby, cottage:  Robert Dalkin 65 weaver and Elizabeth 60

‘Stokesley News & Cleveland Reporter’ 1 Apr 1844:
Births:
On Saturday, March 2nd, at Hutton Rudby, the wife of Mr Joseph Dalking, Tailor, of a son, being their eleventh child

1851 Census:  Linden Lodge:  Robert Dalking 77 gardener b HR and Elizabeth 71 b Crathorne
1851 Census:  Rudby:  Robert Dalking 34 hand loom weaver linen b Hutton, and wife Elizabeth 36 b East Harlsey
1851 Census:  next to Eden Surtees, near Hutton House:  Jane Dalking widow 86 pauper b Faceby, and son John Dalking widower 59 hand loom weaver linen b Swainby, with granddaughter Ann Musther 30 ship’s carpenter’s wife b Stockton and great grandson John Musther 2 b Mbro
1851 Census:  North Side, near Bay Horse:  Joseph Dalking 52 tailor employing 1 man b Hutton, and wife Jane 50 b Stokesley, and Hutton-born children Henry 17 tailor’s apprentice, John 11, Francis 10, Thomas 7 and Ann 4
1851 Census:  Linden Lodge:  Robert Dalking 77 gardener b Hutton Rudby and wife Elizabeth 71 b Crathorne

1872 Post Office Directory:  Hutton Rudby:  Joseph Dalking, tailor

Oddfellows Board:  Bro:  Joseph Dalkin, Hutton, 3 Jan 1881, a79

13 May 1896:  John Dalkin was tenant of Gowling Hill Garth


Davison

Yorkshire Poll Book 1807:  Hutton Rudby:  Thomas Davison tailor (freehold in West Rounton)

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

1823 Baines:  Hutton:  Thomas Davison, hawker
1823 Baines:  Rudby:  George Davison, shoemaker

FS 461:  2 & 3 Feb 1831:  John Davison had been a tenant of Rudby estate
FS 461:  2 & 3 Feb 1831:  cottage 6a:  occ by John Davison at £14-4s p.a
FS 461:  2 & 3 Feb 1831:  cottage 3a:  occ by George Davison at £6-18s p.a

John Davison is in Richard Jowsey’s class in the Wesleyan class lists 1836
John Davison died (2?) Mary 18(44), grave222 – not in PRs

1840 Whites:  Rudby:  George Davison, shoemaker

1841 Census:  more than one Davison family in the village
1841 Census:  George Davison 30 ag lab born out of county and Mary 25 and Thomas 10 mths, South Side
1841 Census:  William Davison 10 in household of William Sidgwick, North End
1841 Census:  Margaret Davison 55 servant born out of county, Jane 7 and Robert 1 in household of George Sidgwick, Rudby
1841 Census:  John Davison 75 coal leader, with John Ainsley 45 labourer, Hannah Ainsley 40, Ann 10 and William 7, cottage, Rudby
1841 Census:  George Davison 50 cordwainer, Ann 60, George 20 journeyman shoemaker, Ann 20, with Elizabeth Swallwell 14 servant, cottage, Rudby

1851 Census:  South Side:  George Davison 42 farm servant b Newcastle, Mary 35 b Hutton, Thomas 10 and uncle Thomas Gill widower 65 hand loom weaver linen, both b Hutton
1851 Census:  North Side:  George Davison 33 journeyman shoemaker b Rudby, Mary Ann Davison 30 b Hutton and daughter Mary Ann 1 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]

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

“Davison wife” is given 3s 6d in Dec 1869, in Barlow’s Notebook

1872 Post Office Directory:  Hutton Rudby:  George Davison, boot & shoe maker

Descendants of John, coal leader:
1851 Census:  George Davison 62 master shoemaker and wife Ann 72
1851 Census:  George Davison 33 journeyman shoemaker, Mary Ann 33 and Mary Ann 1
1861 Census:  George Davison 43 cordwainer, Mary Ann 43 and Mary Ann 11
1871 Census:  George Davison 53 master cordwainer, Mary Ann 53 and Mary Ann 21
1881 Census:  Mary Ann Davison 64 shoemaker’s widow, Evelyn D Telford 4 grandson

1878/9 Mrs Davison is shown living on North Side, west of the Wesleyan chapel, in the Trees Planting map

Davison descendant’s information:

John Davison, coal leader, Rudby (1761-1845), marr Elizabeth Hunter (1765-1827) in 1787 in Stokesley.  He was born in Stokesley, and she in Stainton.  They had 8 children:  Thomas, George, John, William, Elizabeth, Hannah (Ann), William, and James. 

Thomas Davison (1787-1848) left Hutton Rudby ca1832 and began working as a bricklayer in Middlesbrough, bought one of the first lots of land, in Dacre Street, and built on it a yard occupied by many families.  In the 1840s he built ten houses at Durham Place, just off Durham Street, which remained in the family until they sold it to the Council in 1937.  Buried in Middlesbrough (issue)
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).

John Davison (1792-1873) was an agricultural labourer, married Ann White in Stokesley, and is buried at Great Ayton.

William Davison died in infancy in 1796.

Hannah (Ann) Davison (1799-1889) married John Ainsley (1795-1866).  He was born in Sedgefield; an agricultural labourer.  Hannah is a cowkeeper with 6a in the 1881 census.  Buried in Rudby.  Their children were Hannah (Ann), William, John, and Elizabeth Ainsley.  Hannah Ainsley (1832-?) was a scullery maid at Stokesley Manor House in 1851 Census.  William Ainsley (1834-?) was a farm labourer 1861 census Rudby; he married Mariane.  Their son William, b Stainton 1865, married Catharine Charlton of Hutton Rudby, and on her early death Frances Ann Cowen of Enterpen.  He is in the 1897 Rudby estate photograph.  He is buried at Rudby with both wives.  His children died in infancy.  John Ainsley (1836-7).  Elizabeth Ainsley (1843-1933) married a widower, Robert Milestone (1825-1905) gardener, Rudby.  Mrs Milestone is in the 1897 Rudby estate photograph.

William Davison (1802-1879) went to Hartlepool

James Davison (1811-1815).    [descendant’s information] 


Dawson

Yorkshire Poll Book 1807:  Hutton Rudby:  William Dawson farmer

William Dawson was one of 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

FB 107:  15 Sep 1824:  3 closes on Doctor Lane [sic]:  parties:  Richard Eland of Leighton Buzzard Bedfordshire minister of the gospel (1) Edward Barry of Newington Causeway Surrey upholsterer (2):  previously occ by William Dawson and George Kingston and now by James Eland:  bounded by Doctor Lane to E, by Robert Huntley & by Samuel Hebbron to W, by Hutton to Crathorne road to N, by road to Rounton to S:  described in indre of 3 Mar last past to which the sd Richard Eland and William Eland currier were parties

15 & 16 Feb 1830:  property on East Side occupied by William Goldsborough and Robert Dowson [Dawson?] mortgaged by Taylor [East Side deeds]

1841 Census:  Enterpen:  Robert Dawson 55 ag lab born out of county, Dina 55 and Mary 15 born out of county

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


De L’Isle

1859 Whellan:  Hutton Rudby:  Lord De L’Isle and Dudley one of the principal proprietors of the soil
Lady De L’Isle gave £5 to School Acct 1874 – Barlow’s Notebook


Dennison

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


De Putron

7 May 1824:  Sarah Eland, daughter of Jonathan, married John de Putron.  He appears to have been a Channel Islander, and owned or occupied property near North Side for a time. 

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


Dickins

1872 Post Office Directory:  Middleton:  Thomas Dickins, farmer, Lodge


Dickinson

Ann Best, daughter of Martin, papermaker, and Hannah, was baptised at Hutton Rudby on 20 Sep 1818.  She married George Dickinson, collier, on 10 Aug 1840;  she was then 22 and he was 29.  She had already given birth to a daughter, Harriett, baptised on 17 Dec 1838.  Their son William was two days old at the time of the 1841 census.

“Dickinson” is listed in “Acct of straw” in Barlow’s Notebook

1841 Census:  Enterpen:  George Dickinson 25 collier, Ann 20, Harriet 3 and William 2 days

1851 Census:  Enterpen:  George Dickinson 40 collier b Coxhoe, Durham and wife Ann 31, children Harriott 13 and William 9 both b Hutton

1861 Census:  Brickyard, Enterpen:  George Dickison 50 ass. collier b Durham Blackgate, wife Ann 41 b Hutton Rudby, granddaughter Hannah Dickison aged 1 b Redcar and visitor Mrs Harriet Baker 23, gas work labourer’s wife b Hutton Rudby.  (Harriet is presumably their daughter, and Hannah is probably her child)

1871 Census:  South Side:  William Dickinson 29 ag lab b Hutton, wife Elizabeth 23 b Durham, and mother Ann Dickinson, widow, annuitant, b Hutton

William’s wife Elizabeth died in July 1871 and was buried in Crathorne on the same day as her baby son George;  it seems possible that the baby William buried in Crathorne in 1868 was also her child.  William remarried;  he and his wife lost three children before their second birthdays – James in 1875, William in 1879 and John in 1880.  

1881 Census:  Crathorne:  William Dickinson 39 ag lab b Hutton Rudby, Mary A 40 b Crathorne, children Mary 8 b Crathorne, Robert 5 b Guisbro, and Alice 4 b Seamer


Dinsley

1823 Baines:  Sexhow:  Joseph Dinsley, farmer; Henry Dinsley, farmer
Alice …insley is in the Wesleyan class lists 1836

1841 Census:  Henry Dinsley 65 ag lab, Nancy 60, South Side
1841 Census:  Sexhow cottage:  Joseph Dinsley 59 labourer, Hannah 49 and Hannah 8


Dixon

1832:  Elizabeth Dixon was buried on 10 Nov a41 [PRs]

13 Dec 1834:  Robert Dixon of Rudby weaver married Emma Wood of Rudby

R Dixon is in the 1836 Wesleyan Methodist class list

1841 Census:  North Side:  Robert Dixon weaver a25 b out of county, Emma 25 weaver, Elizabeth 5, John 3 and Ann 1

William Dixon of Broughton in Lancashire on behalf of his wife Jane was owner of 1/7 of Hutton tithes [Tithe Agmt 12 Jun 1838]


Dobbin

15 Feb 1827:  Ann Dobbin married George Brigham at Middleton (qv)

29 Apr 1841:  Rudby church:  Margaret Dobbin 35 spinster of Rudby, dau of William Dobbin farmer, married William Campion 40 bachelor, gentleman of Kirkleavington, son of John Campion Coates gentleman:  witnesses Thomas Righton, John Dobbin
 
1841 Census:  James Dobbin 25 farmer at Windy Hill Farm (Brigham)

James Dobbin was the informant at the death of George Brigham on 4 Dec 1841 (qv)

 ‘The Cleveland Repertory’ 1 Jul 1844:
“A Capital Thrashing Machine of Four Horse Power, for sale at Hutton Rudby.  Apply to Mr James Dobbin”

1851 Census:  Margaret Dobbin 5 niece and visitor at Ober Green farm, b Kirkleavington, with William Campion b Whitby & Margaret Campion b Picton


Dobson

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”


Dodsworth

1840 Whites:  Skutterskelfe:  John Dodsworth, farmer
1841 Census:  Brawith farm (217a):  Dodsworth
1851 Census:  Brawith farm:  Robt Dodsworth
1861 Census:  Brawith farm:  Dodsworth 


Donaldson

James Donaldson witnessed the Will of Thomas Passman on 20 Oct 1828



Douglas

19 Mar 1805:  Sarah Bewick married John Douglass [witnesses:  Thos ?, Wm Seamoor, Anthony Smith, Geo Christal, Geo Bewick, J Sleigh, John Armstrong]

Yorkshire Poll Book 1807:  Hutton Rudby:  Arthur Douglas gardener

1823 Baines:  Skutterskelfe:  Arthur Douglass, gardener

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

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

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

Arthur Douglas was Lady Amherst’s gardener [cf Skutterskelfe workers]. 

MI 378:  Erected in memory of Catherine the wife of Arthur Douglas who departed this life 30 Dec 1815 aged 62 yrs.  Also of the above Arthur Douglas who was gardener 50 yrs & upwards in the late Hon. Lady Amherst’s family.  He died Dec 8 1831 aged 84 yrs

Arthur owned property in the East Side/Barkers Row corner, which he left to his niece Mary Kay’s family on his death in Dec 1831

Sarah, John and Elizabeth Douglass are in the 1836 Wesleyan Methodist Class lists. 

John Douglas, weaver, is listed as one of the Trustees of Hutton Rudby Wesleyan chapel – date not given, possibly mid 1850s
Sarah Douglas in the class lists is probably the Sarah Bewick who married John Douglass in 1805;  she died in 1840. 
Her son John Douglas was a weaver in North End in the 1841 Census.  He married Elizabeth Smith in 1835.
Her oldest son William Douglas was a weaver;  he married Sarah Richardson in 1832.

1841 Census:  North End: John Douglas 30 linen weaver, Elizabeth 25, John 3, Sarah 1
1841 Census:  North End:  William Douglas 30 linen weaver, Sarah 30, Eliza 8, John 6, William 4, John 1

1851 Census:  North End:  William Douglas 44 hand loom weaver linen and Sarah 41, with John 16 and William 13, also weavers;  all b Hutton
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
1851 Census:  North Side:  John Douglas widower 39 hand loom weaver linen and daughter Sarah 11;  both b Hutton

1881 Census:  North End:  Sarah Douglas 76 weaver’s widow b Hutton Rudby, son-in-law John Hutchinson 44 widower platelayer b Gt Ayton and his son William Hutchinson 15 school monitor b Hutton Rudby
1881 Census:  High Street:  John Douglas 69 former sailcloth weaver b Hutton Rudby and wife Jane 68 b Gt Ayton


Dowker


George Dowker was churchwarden 1835-8
George Dowker was Poor Law Guardian [Hastings:  Local Govt & Socy]

1840 Whites:  Hutton Rudby:  George Dowker, farmer and brickmaker, Obergreen


Dowson

15 & 16 Feb 1830:  property on East Side occupied by William Goldsborough and Robert Dowson [East Side deeds]
1851 Census:  North Side:  Robert Dowson 70 farm labourer b Bampton, Durham and wife Dinah 70 b Coatham


Drummond

1861 Census:  Maurice Drummond 28 (S) Primitive Methodist minister b Prudhoe, lodging with Miss Willins

“In Queen Victoria’s jubilee year, Maurice A. Drummond had the high honour of building Hutton Rudby Jubilee Chapel, a beautiful structure costing £950, and seating 180 worshippers.”  [Northern Primitive Methodism by W.M. Patterson]


Drydale

7 Aug 1822:  George Drydale, Richard Jowsey & Thomas Gill witnessed the Will of B D Suggitt

FQ 434:  14 & 15 Apr 1829:  Joseph Dridle occupied land belonging to Elizabeth Sleigh

‘Drydales’ are listed in Barlow’s Notebook, giving 1s to charity collection

1841 Census:  John Drydale 25 linen weaver, Mary 25, with Mary Stainthorp 65 and Mary Carter linen weaver 15, North Side
1841 Census:  Joseph Drydale 60 linen weaver, Jennet 60, John 30 and George 25 linen weavers, and James 12, North Side
1841 Census:  Ellen Drydale 25 servant in household of Michael Chapman, Enterpen

1851 Census:  North End:  John Drydale 36 handloom weaver linen and Mary 36
1851 Census:  North Side:  Joseph Drydale widower 72 handloom weaver linen and unmarried children John 42 and George 38, both handloom weavers linen, and Elenor 35 housekeeper; with grandson George Drydale 11;  all b Hutton

1872 Post Office Directory:  Hutton Rudby:  George Drydale, gardener


Duck

1830:  Thomas Duck was overseer of Sexhow [Yorkshire Gazette 12 Mar 1842]

John Duck was churchwarden in 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

Churchwardens’ accounts 1832/3:  “John Duck coals 13s 9d”

1840 Whites:  Sexhow:  John Duck, farmer

1841 Census:  Sexhow:  John Duck 50 farmer and family


Dunning

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


People of Hutton Rudby in the C18/19: Easby to Emerson

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



Easby

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

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

1823 Baines:  Hutton:  William Easby, schoolmaster
1823 Baines:  Hutton:  vict. Shoulder of Mutton

1841 Census:  Ann Easby 50 ag lab born out of county and Thomas 13 ag lab, North Side


Ebleson

ET 604:  12 & 13 Sep 1823:  4a close in Hutton Moor, previously occ by Bart Wright now by Simon Sidgwick the weaver, bounded by 2 closes lastly sold to William Ebleson to S


Eden

7 Aug 1822:  B D Suggitt left to James Eden, grocer & chandler, in his Will whatever sum Eden owed him at his death

1823 Baines:  Hutton:  James Eden, grocer & tallow chandler

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

31 Jan 1838:  Sarah Allison 20 daughter of Jacob Allison labourer, married William Eden 22 tailor, son of Thomas Eden tailor [witnesses:  Margaret Hebron, Edward Allison]

1841 Census:  William Eden 25 journeyman tailor, Sarah 25, Scarlet 10 mths, with Mary Allison 13, North Side
1841 Census:  Mary Eden 15 servant in household of George Wilson, Enterpen

1851 Census:  William Eden 35 tailor b Thornton-le-Moor and Sarah 34 b Hutton, with son Scarlet 11 b Stockton, Thomas 9, Jane 6, Frances 4 “Sunday scholar” and William 2, the last four b Hutton

William Eden was the Primitive Methodist steward who made the return for the 1851 ecclesiastical census

Oddfellows Board:  Bro:  John Eden, Potto, 18 Oct 1871, a40

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]




Edmund

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


Edwards

1823 Baines:  Hutton:  Thomas Edwards, butcher


Eeles

Churchwardens’ accounts 1831/2:  “Thomas Eeles for flaging £2-4s”


Eland

1832:  Jonathan Eland was buried Fri 19 Oct a82 [PRs]

27 Feb 1747:  John Eland son of John baptised
13 Mar 1747:  Michael Elon “bastard child” of Hannah baptised
11 Mar 1751:  Jonathan Elon son of John, householder, baptised

John & Jonathan Eland were the sons of John Eland

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.
John Eland married Esther Willes at the age of 22, and they had ten children.  Their son John died aged 16.  Their son Thomas was a red morocco leather dresser, and can be found in the 1841 and 1851 Censuses.  Their son James was a linen manufacturer, and can be found in the 1841 & 1851 Censuses.  Their daughter Martha married Edmund Taylor.

Jonathan Eland and Esther had a daughter Hannah, who was baptised on 13 Oct 1776, the entry being noted “bastard”.
Jonathan Eland marr Esther Gricewood 10 Apr 1791.  Their daughters Amelia and Sarah were baptised on 23 Aug 1791.  Amelia died a3.
7 May 1824:  Sarah Eland, daughter of Jonathan, married John de Putron.  He appears to have been a Channel Islander, and owned or occupied property near North Side for a time. 

25 May 1794:  bap of John, son of Jonathan Eland
13 Sep 1795:  bap of John, son of -/Eliz. Eland  
I cannot disentangle the two John Elands. 
According to a pedigree resource file on the IGI from a Middlesbrough submitter:  John Eland was the son of Michael Carr & Elizabeth Eland.  They did not marry until 1808.  He married Mary Seymour at Hartlepool in 1824 [I assume that his father’s name has been extracted from this register].  They had children Elizabeth 1825-37, John 1826-1907, Mary 1828-42, Sarah 1830-9, Jane 1833 and Esther Ann 1837-8, all HR. 
The children’s baptisms do not appear in the parish registers of HR; some Elands were Nonconformist.  The NBI does not record the deaths of Mary and Sarah.  The only entry on the IGI is from the submitter, who seems to be a descendant.  John died in 1858.  If this submitter is correct, and he has many details not available from the registers, the John Eland <1795> present in the village for the 1841 and 1851 censuses is the son of Elizabeth Eland – certainly the children of John Eland mentioned in the censuses correspond with those known to the submitter.
 .
The whereabouts of John Eland son of Jonathan <1794> is unknown – but he may be the John Eland who married Sarah Coverdale on 25 Dec 1817 at Kirby-in-Cleveland.  Their children, baptised at Kirby, were Mary 1818, Esther 1820, Isabella 1823 and George 1825;  a John Eland baptised at Osmotherley in 1831 may also be theirs. 

Churchwardens’ accounts 1793:  “To Jonath Eland for mending Pitch pipe 1/3”
Churchwardens’ accounts 1796:  “To Jonath Eland for teaching psalmody 8/-”

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

Thomas, Richard, James & John Eland:   Thomas Eland occupied ppty on North Side and Mustard Garth, and bought them from Thomas Wayne’s executors in 1810.  He went to work as a leather dresser in Bermondsey with his wife Mary.  In 1831 he sold the ppties to Richard Eland of Newport Pagnell gent in return for cash and an annuity:  at this time John Eland was an occupant of one of the 3 houses on the North Side ppty.  In 1835 Mary Eland died in London.  In 1853 Thomas died in Hutton, leaving his eldest brother James as his heir-at-law.  In 1855 Richard & James Eland sold the ppties to William Codling:  at this time sd James Eland was an occupant of one of the 6 messuages which had been created from the 3 houses on the North Side ppty.

18 Mar 1808:  Thomas Eland of Hutton sievemaker was party to a deed re ppty on East Side [East Side deeds]

4 Jun 1808:  Michael Carr of Stockton married Elizabeth Eland [witnesses:  Jno Hinderwell, Jos Eland]

14 May 1810:  North Side ppty (house & garth) and Mustard 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

Thomas Eland of Hutton was left by James Young, weaver of Hutton, “the best suit of Cloaths that I have at the time of my Death if the same be to spare” – Will proved by Robert Brigham on 25 Jan 1811

Jonathan Eland was a tenant of the Tweddle/Flounders properties (The Elms area) before and in 1815

1823 Baines:  Hutton:  James Eland, linen manufacturer
1823 Baines:  Hutton:  Jonathan Eland, sieve & riddle maker
1823 Baines:  Hutton:  John Eland, cabinet maker

FB 107:  15 Sep 1824:  3 closes on Doctor Lane [sic]:  parties:  Richard Eland of Leighton Buzzard Bedfordshire minister of the gospel (1) Edward Barry of Newington Causeway Surrey upholsterer (2):  previously occ by William Dawson and George Kingston and now by James Eland:  bounded by Doctor Lane to E, by Robert Huntley & by Samuel Hebbron to W, by Hutton to Crathorne road to N, by road to Rounton to S:  described in indre of 3 Mar last past to which the sd Richard Eland and William Eland currier 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”

15 & 16 Feb 1830:  Thomas Eland late of Hutton sievemaker and now of Southwark leather seller was party to a deed [East Side deeds]

John Eland was a Vestry member in 1830 who signed the election entry for the churchwardens in April; ditto on 5 Apr 1831.  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.

27 & 28 Jun 1831:  North Side ppty:  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

May 1833:  George Wilson and John Eland took out Letters of Administration of the estate of John Cook, as his creditors.

2 Dec 1835:  burial of Mary Ann Eland a53 at Southwark Chapel [Abstract of title of Richard Eland 1855]

1840 Whites:  Hutton Rudby:  James Eland, gent
1840 Whites:  Hutton Rudby:  wheelwrights &c:  John Eland
Mr Eland was a subscriber to the Wesleyan Shilling Magazine in 1840 and 1841

1841 Census:  James Eland 60, linen mfr, Mary 60, and Thomas Eland 60 leather dresser, on North Side
1841 Census:  East Side:  John Eland joiner 45, Mary 45, John 15, Mary 13 , Jane 7

1851 Census:  East Side:  John Eland W 53 joiner bHutton and daughter Jane 17 bHutton
1851 Census:  North Side:  Thomas Eland widower 74 retd morocco leather dresser annuitant bHutton
1851 Census:  North Side:  James Eland 72 hand loom weaver linen and Mary 75, both b Hutton

Mr Eland gave 2/6d to the Auxiliary Fund in 1845

9 May 1853:  burial of Thomas Eland at Hutton [Abstract of title of Richard Eland 1855]

20 Nov 1855:  Mustard Garth & North Side ppty:  Richard Eland late of Newport Pagnell now of Market Harborough gent (1) Langley & Reece (2) James Eland of Hutton gent (3) William Codling of Hutton watchmaker (4) Robert Palmer jnr of Stokesley gent (5):  reciting indres of 14 & 15 May 1810, and 27 & 28 Jun 1831, and noting that the 2nd parcel in 1810, known as Hannah Kay’s Garth or Mustard Garth was not included in the indre of 1831:  deaths of Thomas and Mary Eland: that Thomas Eland died intestate leaving his eldest brother and heir-at-law James Eland in whom Mustard Garth vested: Richard Eland’s equitable title to the land in indre of 1831:  agmt for sale by Richard & James Eland to William Codling of both pieces of land, Richard to receive £300 and James £60:  the garth 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;  also 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

17 Nov 1856:  John Eland occupied a garden or orchard, formerly occupied by Edmund Taylor, behind a house & workshop on East Side:  sold by Walker to Barugh [East Side deeds]

31 Mar 1858:  burial of John Eland, aged 63 [PR transcript]

Mr Eland was a subscriber to the Wesleyan Youth’s Instructor:  no date, apparently 1859

James Eland is listed in Barlow’s Notebook, giving 6d to charity collection

1881 Census:  24 Simpson St, Newcastle (St Andrew):  John S Eland 73 b Hutton, joiner & cabinet maker, wife Margaret 64 b Gateshead, unmarried daughters Margaret 34 strawbonnet maker and Hannah 29 dressmaker, both b Newcastle, and granddaughter Margaret Eland 4 b Newcastle;  with 5 lodgers
This is the son of James Eland, linen manufacturer, and his wife Mary, born in 1807

1881 census:  Mill Cottage, Sockburn, Co Durham:  John Elande 54 widower b Hutton Rudby cartwright & estate bailiff, and unmarried daughters Elizabeth 22 and Emily 15 both b Sockburn
This is the son of John Eland, joiner, and Mary (and therefore the grandson of Elizabeth Eland, see above)


Elliott

FQ 434:  14 & 15 Apr 1829:  Robert Elliot occupied land belonging to Elizabeth Sleigh
FQ 434:  14 & 15 Apr 1829:  Thomas Elliott occupied house, gardens & premises in Enterpen belonging to Elizabeth Sleigh

Elizabeth Eliott is in a list of names in the Middleton Book
“Prayer book at 10d for E. Elliott” in the Rudby School accounts – Middleton Book
Ellen Elliott is in a List of Girls – Middleton Book
Isabella Elliott is in a List of Girls – Middleton Book

Elizabeth and Ann Elliott are in the 1836 Wesleyan Methodist Class lists

Tithe Map:  Thomas Elliott occupied a house and garden in the Station Hotel area

23 Dec 1839:  Ann Elliott, daughter of Thomas, labourer of Enterpen, married James Stanger at Whorlton; she was a servant and James a labourer.  Ann’s mother, Ann How, was the half-sister of John How, whose little girl Jane died in the time of the cholera

1841 Census:  Ann Elliott schoolmistress 50
1841 Census:  Linden Grove:  Isabella Elliott (15) was in service at the Barlows’
1841 Census:  North End:  Elizabeth Elliott 75 and Ann 50 schoolmistress both born out of county, with Stephen Calvert 45 linen weaver
1841 Census:  Enterpen:  James Elliot 50 ag lab, Mary 20 and Jane 13
1841 Census: Enterpen:  Thomas Elliot 50 ag lab, Ann 50 and Thomas 25 ag lab, next door to James

1 Jul 1843:  Mary Elliot, 22, daughter of James, married Mark Patrick Lawson, 22,
joiner, son of Allen Lawson, a soldier, both of Hutton, on 1 Jul 1843.

18 May 1845:  Isabella Elliot, daughter of James, married Thomas Kirton, a servant, his father a clerk (countryman) [PRs]

1851 & 1861 Census:  Enterpen (18a):  Elliott

1851 Census:  North End:  Ann Elliot 63 schoolmistress b Ayton Bank, Durham, with lodger Stephen Calvert single 57 handloom weaver linen b Hutton
1851 Census:  Enterpen:  Thomas Elliott 64 farmer 18 acres b Crathorne and wife Ann 65 b Hutton Rudby, with daughter Jane 23 servant b Hutton Rudby and grandson John Elliott 8 b Faceby

Jun 1859:  Henry Elliott was ploughing Mr Barlow’s field when Mr Barlow cut his hedge – Barlow’s Notebook

early 1861:  Robert Braithwaite snr had property in Enterpen, which was occupied by Christopher Meek, Henry Elliott and Robert jnr [East Side deeds]

1861 Census:  Ann Elliot 72 (S) schoolmistress, private school, b Northumberland

1871 Census:  Brawith farm (217a):  Elliott
1871 Census:  Ann Elliot 83 schoolmistress

1872 Post Office Directory:  Skutterskelfe:  John Elliott, farmer


Ellis

Churchwardens’ accounts 1838:  “Wm Ellis’s Bill [to New Window] £1-3-10 ½d”
Churchwardens’ accounts 1831/2:  “Wm Ellis Bill 2s 8d”

1840 Whites:  Hutton Rudby:  Wm Ellis, Bay Horse
1840 Whites:  Hutton Rudby:  William Ellis, blacksmith


Elwon

1872 Post Office Directory:  Viscount Falkland’s seat “is now the residence of” Major Thomas Light Elwon, J.P, Arncliffe


Emerson

FA 138:  21 & 22 Aug 1820:  New Close Farm:  formerly occupied by James Appleton, then by Thomas Kelsey and then by Joshua Emerson

1859 Whellan:  Hutton Rudby:  J Emerson Esq. one of the principal proprietors of the soil


People of Hutton Rudby in the C18/19: Falkland to Friendly Society

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Falkland

The 10th Viscount Lucius Bentinck Carey 1803-84 married
(1)     Amelia, by whom he had a son Lucius William Charles Augustus Frederick, born 24 Nov 1831, married 11 May 1858 and died 6 Aug 1871.  Buried Penshurst, Kent. [Memorial in chancel]
(2)     Elizabeth Catherine, Dowager Duchess of St Albans (d 2 Dec 1893) on 10 Nov 1859.  She was the youngest daughter of Maj-Gen Joseph Gubbins of Stoneham, Hants and Kilfrush, Co Limerick.  She had married the 9th Duke in May 1839, as his second wife (his first wife, the widow of the banker Coutts, had died without issue); her son was 10th Duke of Saint Albans.
On the death of the 10th Viscount 12 Mar 1884 the UK Barony (he was made Baron Hunsdon by William IV) expired.

FS 461:  2 & 3 Feb 1831:  mortgage of Rudby manor etc by Lord Falkland

FT 547:  4 Feb 1831:  mortgage of Rudby manor etc by Lord Falkland

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”

In 1842 Lord Falkland first paid one third of the expense of cleaning the church (£1-15-11 ½d)

Lord Falkland gave £20 to School Acct 1874 – Barlow’s Notebook
Lord Falkland was a major landowner in Kirklevington; there the Archbishop of York held the advowson
In 1860 Lord Falkland added an acre of ground to the churchyard [Eddowes]

“Lord Falkland has come tonight” [letter from E Garbutt 17 Aug 1863:  Letters to a Miller’s Daughter]

Date of Will        16 May 1874, executed in Paris
Date of death        12 Mar 1884
Place of death        the Villa Nevet, Montpellier, buried in cemetery there
Date of Probate    13 Jun 1884
Value of estate        gross personalty £2360-18-9d

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]




Falshaw

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


Farnaby

Yorkshire Poll Book 1807:  Hutton Rudby:  Thomas Farnaby weaver

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:  George Farnaby, bee breeder & dealer

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

Elizabeth Farnaby 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

late July 1830:  George Farnaby saw William Huntley coming down his yard;  “I live in a yard;  Huntley wrought at my shop.”   Farnaby had a field, which he had let Goldsbrough pasture a cow in previously.  Huntley sold his weaver’s loom to Farnaby before disappearing.

Ann Farnaby bought a Spelling Book for 1d in the List – Middleton Book
“Farnaby” is in a list of names in the Middleton Book

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

John Farnaby, son of Jane Farnaby, was baptised by Mr Barlow on 11 Nov 1832

William Farnaby of Danby Yard, Yarm, wrote for his birth certificate; he was the son of William and Violet. (The transcripts show he was baptised on 17 May 1833). 

“Jane Farnaby Widow – two children aged 8, 14” [Mr Barlow’s list ?1836]

1841 Census:  George Farnaby 60 weaver, Elizabeth 50 and Hannah 11, near the mill
1841 Census:  William Farnaby 30 ag lab, Violet 35, William 9 and three younger siblings, with Ambrose Burnsides 80 tinker born out of county, North Side

Mar 1842:  George Farnaby gave evidence in the trial of Robert Goldsbrough

1851 Census:  George Farnaby 73 hand loom weaver linen bHutton, Elizabeth 66 bOrmesby and Hannah S 21 bHutton with William 1 bHutton
1851 Census:  Enterpen:  William Farnaby widower 41 handloom weaver, children Jane 14 servant, John 10, George 7 and Thomas 4;  all b Hutton Rudby


Fawcett

1823 Baines:  Skutterskelfe:  John Fawcett, farmer
Robert Fawcett was churchwarden in 1843



 

Fawell

1823 Baines:  Middleton:  Watson Fawell, vict., Chequers
1840 Whites:  Middleton:  Walton Fawell, vict., Chequers
1841 Census:  Middleton:  Watson Farwell 65 innkeeper, Elizabeth 50 and Dorothy 15
1851 Census:  Middleton:  Watson Fawell 76 farmer 14a and licensed beer seller b Bildershill Co Durham, Elizabeth 64 bStokesley and Dorothy U 26 assistant beer seller bMiddleton


Fenwick

Robert Fenwick was a tenant of James Catchasides jnr in the Bay Horse area:  deeds of 1824 & 1830
FB 195:  19 & 20 Nov 1824:  Bay Horse area ppties bought by James Catchasides jnr, Robert Fennick being an occupier
FP 310:  12 & 13 Feb 1830:  Catchasides sale of Bay Horse ppties to Thomas Hall, Robert Fenwick an occupier

John Fenwick bought a Catechism for 1d in the List – Middleton Book


Flintoff

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


Flounders

Mrs Margaret Flounders was the daughter of Thomas Tweddle, and she and her husband James Flounders of Sexhow inherited his property – several houses and garths and gardens in the area of The Elms – in July 1815
Jonathan Flounders was a tenant of the property before 1815

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

Tithe Map:  James Flounders owned and occupied the house & garden next to the Bay Horse
Tithe Map from Elizabeth Sleigh:  George Flounders occ 187, 190

James Flounders bap 26 Nov 1775, son of George Flounders, Sexhow.
James Flounders marr Margaret Tweddle 26 Mar 1805 at HR [IGI Beryl]
James Flounders was churchwarden in 1818, with James Catchasides
James Flounders buried 16 Jul 1841, a65 of Sexhow

1823 Baines:  Sexhow:  Jonas [sic] Flounders, farmer
1840 Whites:  Hutton Rudby:  James Flounders, gent

1841 Census:  James Flounders 65 with two servants Elizabeth and Ann Orton and two children, Margaret 9 and George 7 Brown, lodgers
1841 Census:  George Flounders 50 linen weaver, Mary 55, Jane 25 weaver, James 2, South Side
1841 Census:  Elizabeth Flounders 70 ag lab, Mary Flounders 40 servant, South Side
1841 Census:  Jonathan Flounders 70 ag lab, Jane 80, Thomas 50, Elizabeth 30 and William 15, all linen weavers, and Charles 11, South Side
1841 Census:  Elizabeth Flounders 20 servant at Rudby Farm

Eliza Flounders is in a List of Girls – Middleton Book

1851 Census:  South Side:  Frances Flounders married 66 brickmaker’s wife, b Normanby
1851 Census:  South Side:  Thomas Flounders single 60 handloom weaver linen, sister Elizabeth single 42 and nephew Charles Flounders single 21 shoemaker, all b Hutton


Forster

Anne Forster is in a List of Girls – Middleton Book
Thomas Forster was churchwarden named in the Call Book 1861, and signed the Articles of Inquiry


Foster

“Mr Foster 5s 1d” appears in William Sayers Calculations 1815 in the Middleton Book
1823 Baines:  Middleton:  Thomas Foster, farmer
1841 Census:  Middleton Grange:  John Foston [sic] 20 miller, in household of Thomas Righton

Jun 1866:  Thomas Foster, Ober Green, gave £5 to the subscription for Thomas Garbutt

1872 Post Office Directory:  Hutton Rudby:  Robert Foster, miller, Enterpen


Fowler

Elizabeth Fowler, schoolmistress of Hutton Rudby, was a witness of Mr Barlow’s Will on 15 Apr 1875


Foxcroft

ET 257:  2 & 3 Jan 1823:  garth, orchard & houses, probably North End:  Thomas Foxcroft was previous occupier, then James Foxcroft


Friendly Society


The linen weavers in particular were served by a friendly society in Hutton – it had 55 members in 1802-3 and 40 members in 1813-5.  It will have helped alleviate their poverty.
[Parl Papers 1818 XIX Abstract of Returns relating to the Poor 1812-15:  ref from Hastings:  Local Govt & Socy]


People of Hutton Rudby in the C18/19: Garbutt to Grundy

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



Garbutt

8 Dec 1822:  Joseph Dalking married Jane Garbut [witnesses:  James Smith, Samuel Hebbron]

Matthew Garbutt occupied property, “heretofore 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

late July 1830:  George Garbutt was seen in company with William Huntley and Robert Goldsbrough, who was in 1842 tried for Huntley’s murder, by James Gears and James Maw, and seen drinking with Goldsbrough and others by Anthony Wiles.  The solicitor William Garbutt testified that George Garbutt “disappeared from our neighbourhood in the autumn of 1830.  Warrants have been issued against him, but he could not be found.”  [Yorkshire Gazette 12 Mar 1842]

Tithe Map:  Isaac Whorlton owned Jacques Barn field, which Robert Garbutt occupied

G Garbutt is in A List of Boys – Middleton Book

Christopher Garbutt jnr, joiner & licensed victualler, 1840-1910, was one of those elected to the first Parish Council.

1851 Census:  Kings Head:  Christopher snr 68 b Marton & Ann Garbutt 53 b Yarm, children Mary Ann 13 and Christopher jnr 11 b Potto

1861 Census:  Kings Head:  widow Ann, son Christopher, and lodger Mary Garbutt 64 b Marton, a sister of Thomas Garbutt of Hutton Grange

1871-91 (inc) Censuses:  Kings Head:  Christopher Garbutt & family

1851 Census:  Hutton Grange:  Joseph Garbutt single 35 farmer employing 3 labourers b Marton, and brother Thomas 22 b Eston, sister Jane Garbutt 31 housekeeper b Marton and sister Elizabeth 27 b Marton;  with farm labourers George Lee 18 b Stokesley and Richard Simpson 14 b Hutton Rudby, and house servant Jane Merrington 17 b Hutton Rudby
1851 Census:  Enterpen:  Miss Mary Willins 56 independent b Hutton Rudby, with lodger Miss Mary Garbutt 50 independent b Nunthorpe
1851 Census:  Enterpen:  Dorothy Garbutt lodged with her cousin Mrs Hannah Terry

Joseph & Thomas Garbutt were two sons of Joseph & Jane Garbutt of Eston Grange.  Of the twelve children who survived to adulthood, six were newly settled in Hutton Rudby in the 1851 Census:  Joseph, Thomas, Jane and Elizabeth at Hutton Grange Farm, and Mary and Dorothy lodging in the village.  A previous tenant of Hutton Grange was their relative, Harrison Terry.  Joseph became in some way incapacitated by 1861, and Thomas took over the farm.  The family remained there for many years.
Thomas Garbutt was churchwarden 1855-7; the churchwarden who signed the articles of inquiry 1857

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

1859 Whellan:  Hutton Rudby:  Mr Garbutt named as one of the principal proprietors of the soil.  “Hutton Grange is a large brick building with stone dressings a quarter of a mile west from the village”.

Jun 1866:  Thomas Garbutt lost 38 out of a herd of 40 “very valuable” cattle in the rinderpest outbreak.  Nearly ¾ of his loss took place before the Act of Compensation was passed, and his friends and neighbours, led by Henry Passman, Henry Chapman & George Wilson, made up a private subscription for his benefit:  Mr Barlow £2;  Henry Passman £10;  Henry Chapman £5;  E J Wilson £5;  Rev James Alder Wilson £2;  T Bowes Wilson, Sunderland £2;  John George Wilson, Durham £1;  Medd Scarth, Carlton £2;  Thomas Foster, Ober Green £5;  Allan Bowes Wilson £5;  George Wilson £10;  William Barugh, Seamer £5;  Miss D Boyes, Hutton £2;  Mr J Goldsbro, Hutton £1;  Mr W Goldsborough, Hutton £5;  Robinson Watson Esq, Stainton £5;  F Watson, Stockton £20;  Two friends G Coates & J Hogg £5;  A friend J Wallis 10/-;  T Nesham, Ormesby £1.  Total £93.10.0

1872 Post Office Directory:  Hutton Rudby:  Miss Garbutt, Enterpen
1872 Post Office Directory:  Hutton Rudby:  Christopher Garbutt, King’s Head
1872 Post Office Directory:  Hutton Rudby:  Mrs Elizabeth Garbutt, linen manufr
1872 Post Office Directory:  Hutton Rudby:  Thomas Garbutt, farmer, Grange

Oddfellows Board:  BG:  Matthw Garbutt, Barnsley, 16 Feb 1844, a50




Garfatt

1841 Census:  Middleton:  Butter Hill:  John Garfat 30 ag lab, Mary 30, William 7 and Ann 4
Oddfellows Board:  Bro:  John Garfatt, Thornt., 7 Sep 1883, a77


Gears

1818:  James Giers and his wife were removed from Boltby to Rudby [which must have been their parish of settlement – why was it so?  Perhaps he had been an apprentice here or was hired here for a year] [Hastings:  Local Govt & Socy]

In 1829 Rudby overseers paid his rent and his doctor’s bill – he had been receiving relief for several years.

late July 1830:  James Gears “a labouring man” last saw William Huntley with Goldsbrough and Garbutt when Gears “was breaking stones at Hutton Rudby … they lighted their pipes, and then went down the lane northwards – that was towards Middleton … [at] between three and four o’clock on the afternoon of the 30th of July.”  On the first Wednesday in August, Gears was looking at potatoes with Robert Goldsbrough when the latter pulled out £20 in five pound notes from his pocket, and Gears said “Robert, thou’s well off – thou’s better than me;  I work hard for my family, and never have a penny I can call my own.” [Yorkshire Gazette 12 Mar 1842]

James Gears occupied property on East Side:  Tithe Map.  Previously he had lived in Rudby.

1841 Census:  East Side:  James Gears 50 blacksmith, Ann 40, Elizabeth 20 flax spinner, Thomas 15, Mary 12 flax spinner, Catharine 10 and George 10

1851 Census:  East Side:  James Gears 60 blacksmith bBorrowby, wife Ann 51 bBoltby, Elizabeth S 31 bThirsk, Mary S 23 bHutton, Catherine S 19 bHutton, and George 17 farm labourer bHutton, with grandson James 3 bHutton

1851 Census:  Mill House, Hutton:  Thomas Gears 27 [sic] ag lab bHutton and wife Elizabeth 40 [sic] bStainmore, and her children John, Hannah and Mary Ann Wood aged 4 to 9 bHutton

1861 Census:  Bank Top:  James Gears widower 83 labourer unable to work b Borrowby, daughter Elizabeth Gears single 40 housekeeper b Thirsk, and granddaughter Ann Honeyman 6 b Hutton Rudby

“Gears Enterpen” is given 3s 6d in 1869, in Barlow’s Notebook
Bessy Gears appears in a list of names and amounts in Barlow’s Notebook

NBI:  James Gears buried 17 Dec 1869, aged 87

1871 Census:  East Row:  Elizabeth Gears single 50 dressmaker b Thirsk

1871 Census:  Tisbut Row:  George Gears 36 tile maker, Jane 40, Frederick W 11, Hannah 9, John G 5, Sarah A 3 and Alice G 1;  all b Hutton

1881 Census:  North End:  George Gears 46 general labourer, Jane 57, Fredrick 21 gen lab, John 15 and Alice 11

1881 Census:  5 Edmonds Sq, Stockton:  George Crosby 24 coachman b Darlington, Anne 26 and William 2 b Hutton Rudby and Herbert 1 b Stockton;  with visitor Elizabeth Gears single 63 b Thirsk


Gill


7 Aug 1822:  George Drydale, Richard Jowsey & Thomas Gill witnessed the Will of B D Suggitt

1851 Census:  South Side:  Mary Gill 83 widow, formerly rag gatherer, pauper, b Hutton
1851 Census:  South Side:  in household of George Davison, his uncle Thomas Gill widower 65 hand loom weaver linen

Oddfellows Board:  Bro:  Thomas Gill, Stockton, 20 Jan 1876, a37


Goldbeck [Colebeck]


“Mr Goldbeck 5s 6d” appears in William Sayers Calculations 1815 in the Middleton Book


Goldsbrough

23 Nov 1808:  John Goldsborough occupied property – probably house with garth & yard – on East Side, bought by Joseph, Thomas & William Whorlton [East Side deeds]

1823 Baines:  Hutton:  Bartholomew Goldsborough, butcher

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

Bartholomew Goldsborough was married at Middleton in 1828.

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

15 & 16 Feb 1830:  property on East Side occupied by William Goldsborough and Robert Dowson [Dawson?] mortgaged by Edmund Taylor  [East Side deeds]

late July 1830:  William Huntley disappeared, and Robert Goldsbrough was locally suspected of murdering him.  Goldsbrough moved to Barnsley in the autumn, where he lived under the name Towers (probably his mother’s maiden name).  He was tried for Huntley’s murder after the discovery of a skeleton in 1841 [Yorkshire Gazette 21 Aug 1841 & 12 Mar 1842]

Robert Goldsbrough is described in the newspaper accounts as a widower with two children.  The PR transcripts show that John Goldsbrough married Ann Towers on 15 Aug 1776 (she signed, he made his mark;  witnesses:  Richard Nightingale and William Ableson).  John, son of John, labourer, was baptised 26 Jan 1777;  Elizabeth, daughter of John, was baptised 12 Mar 1780;  Ann, daughter of John, was baptised 2 Aug 1782.  William, son of John, lace-weaver, was baptised 11 Apr 1788.  Robert, son of John & Ann, was baptised 24 Nov 1793, making him a late child of the marriage, born when his mother was 45.  The NBI indicates that Ann died in 1814 aged 66, and John in June 1828 aged 80.

The PR transcripts show that Robert married Susannah Smith on 12 Dec 1815 (both signed the register;  witnesses:  Thomas Eland and William Preston) and they had two sons:  Robert bap 4 Feb 1816, and William bap 7 Jun 1818.  On 27 Feb 1828 Susannah died aged 49.  Goldsbrough claimed that Huntley pressed him to go to America with him, but he refused as he had two children “whom he thought it was his duty to report” according to the solicitor, Wm Garbutt.

Robert Goldsbrough is described in the testimony of James Maw in the case report as having a sister-in-law, Sophia Goldsbrough.  The PR transcripts show William Gouldsbrough married Sophia Armstrong on 9 Dec 1807, witnesses John Imeson, James Catchasides, William Paterson and John Passman.

There may have been several Goldsbrough families in the village in the late C18/ early C19: besides John & Ann (see above), an LDS member records a John Goldsbrough & Elizabeth Brass having sons George, William, John, Robert and Thomas in the 1770s;  and John Goldsbrough married Elizabeth Bradley on 2 Jan 1803 and had Ann bap 23 Oct 1803, Elizabeth bap 1806, William bap 1808, William bap 1810, Sarah bap 1813, John 1815, Jane 1819 and Robert 1822 (according to the PR records on the IGI).
A Mary Goldsbro, daughter of John & Ann, was baptised on 17 Mar 1825.
Bartholomew Goldsbrough, son of Ralph & Ann and baptised in Stainton-in-Cleveland, farmed at Middleton Grange and was also a butcher.

Goldsbrough’s house:  was in a yard;  there was a box near the fireside on which James Bainbridge saw Huntley sitting in late July 1830;  it was two storey – Farnaby saw Goldsbrough with a sack which he took upstairs; there was a silver watch hanging up on the chimney piece, which Stephen Catchasides took down;  when Elizabeth Shaw called she found Goldsbrough “sitting by the fire reading”;  the fire was very large and he said “he had been putting some old rubbish from under the stairs, to burn in the fire”   [Yorkshire Gazette 12 Mar 1842]

Dalkin asked Goldsbrough where Huntley had gone, and was told, “me and Huntley have had that matter talked over about the money he owes you, and it’s no use thee going, as he never intends paying thee.”  [Yorkshire Gazette 12 Mar 1842]

John Kaye said:  Prisoner followed Dalkin out;  he stood against the door cheek and said to me – “That gentleman’s been at my house asking for Huntley.  He’ll neither find him at my house, nor at Whitby, nor nowhere else.”  [Yorkshire Gazette 12 Mar 1842]

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]

M Goldsboro is in a List of Girls – Middleton Book
R Goldsboro was in A List of Boys – Middleton Book

Mr Goldsboro gave 6s 4 ½d to Rudby School, Oct 24th 1832 – Middleton Book

Churchwardens’ accounts 1832/3:  “John Goldsbrough getting coals &c  1s”

Bartholomew Goldsborough signed the churchwardens’ accounts in July 1832.  He signed the appointment of churchwardens on 9 Apr 1833.

Tithe Map:  Middleton:  Bartholomew Goldsborough farmed Middleton Grange (landlord:  Lord Falkland)

1840 Whites:  Hutton:  Bartholomew Goldsborough, butcher
1840 Whites:  Middleton:  Bartholomew Goldsborough, farmer

1841 Census:  Middleton, Hall:  Bart Goldsborough 45 farmer, Ann 40, Ralph 13, John 11, Thomas 10, Ann 8, Elizabeth 5, Mary 4 and Henry 2, with George Walton 40 and Hannah Wilkinson 20 servants
1841 Census:  John Goldsborough 65 ag lab, Elizabeth 60, Sarah 25, Jane 21, Rob 15 and Hannah 5 (Sarah’s daughter) on East Side

Yorkshire Gazette 21 Aug 1841 & 12 Mar 1842:  reports of the trial of Robert Goldsbrough, who had been living in Barnsley since autumn 1830.  Bartholomew Goldsbrough gave evidence at the trial on seeing blood on the road near Middleton wood, on the road to Yarm.

‘The Cleveland Repertory’   1 Mar 1843
“Police Intelligence”: “ February 4th 1843.  Present Sir Wiliam Foulis, Bar., Edmund Turton, and Robert Hildyard, Esquires.  Upon the complaint of John Watson, of Ingleby Greenhow, woodman, against Elizabeth Goldsbrough, of Hutton Rudby, for having on the 30th of Jan done damage to a quantity of topwood, at the township of Skutterskelfe, the property of Sir William Foulis.  Ordered to pay one penny damage and costs, on or before the 25th of February.”

‘The Cleveland Repertory’ 1 Jan 1844:
At Middleton, on the 10th ult. aged 51, Mr Bartholomew Goldsbro’, lamented by a wide circle of neighbours and acquaintance.
Bartholomew Goldsborough d 11 Dec 1843 a50, grave 406 – not in PRs

‘The Cleveland Repertory’ 1 Feb 1844:
“In the affairs of Mr Bartholomew Goldsbrough, late of Middleton-on-Leven, in Cleveland, farmer and butcher, deceased.
All Persons having any Claim against the Estate and Effects of the above named Bartholemew Goldsbrough, are hereby requested immediately to forward an Account of their respective claims, with the nature of their Securities (if any), to Robert Palmer, of Stokesley, the Solicitor to the Executors, in order that the same may be examined, and (if correct) discharged.  By order of the Executors, Robert Palmer.  Stokesley, 10th Feb., 1844”.

‘Stokesley News & Cleveland Reporter’ 1 Apr 1844:
Births:
On Tuesday, March 26th, at Middleton-on-Leven, the widow of the late Mr Bartholomew Goldsbrough, Butcher, of a son

1851 Census:  North Side:  Edward G Goldsbrough 38 butcher b Middleton-one-Row and wife Ann 38 b Easby, with son Edward 4 b Hurworth
1851 Census:  Jackson’s Yard:  Elizabeth Goldsbrough widow 73 pauper b Middleton-on-Leven, and daughter Jane single 27 and granddaughter Hannah 13, both b Hutton

Goldsboro’s wife was weeding potatoes for Barlow in July 1856 – Barlow’s Notebook

1861 Census:  Burnt House:  Goldsborough

Jun 1866:  Mr J Goldsbro’, Hutton gave £1 to the subscription for Thomas Garbutt
Jun 1866:  Mr W Goldsbro’, Hutton gave £5 to the subscription for Thomas Garbutt

1871 Census:  Manor House:  Goldsborough
1872 Post Office Directory:  Manor House:  Wm Goldsborough

1872 Post Office Directory:  Hutton Rudby:  Bartholomew Goldsborough, butcher
1872 Post Office Directory:  Hutton Rudby:  William Goldsborough, farmer, Manor house

24 Feb 1879:  Sarah Goldsborough occupied a house on East Side bought by Matthew Hall [East Side deeds]

Bartholomew Goldsborough owned land east of Gowling Hill Garth [deed 13 May 1896, sale to Annie Hutton Wilson] corresponding to Tithe Map close 183, then belonging to Thomas Spence.  It was described as Bartle Goldsbrough’s cow house in the Tree Planting map.
1881 Census:  Crowell House area of North Side:  Bartholomew Goldsborough, his brother, two married sisters, an apprentice and a niece Jessie Goldsborough 15, who had planted a tree on South Side
1891 Census:  Beech House, South Side:  Bartholomew Goldsborough, who may have built the house, which he owned until he sold to Wanless in 1917


Goodall

1867/8 Slaters:  Mr Goodall, surgeon, Hutton Rudby [Dr Stout]


Gowland

27 Nov 1779:  Hannah Baller [signed Balery] married Roger Gowland [witnesses:  John Bordon, Hannah Fletcher, Richard Ramsell]

1787-8:  George Gowland, Sexhow, was churchwarden
1792-3:  Philip Gowland was churchwarden

DY 88:  26 Mar 1816:  Philip Gowland’s mortgage of Bay Horse properties

1823 Baines:  Sexhow:  Philip Gowland, farmer

ET 601:  23 & 24 May 1823:  Bay Horse area remtge “together with the new erection and buildings”

FB 195:  19 & 20 Nov 1824:  Philip Gowland & ttees to James Catchasides the younger shopkeeper & ttees
Philip Gowland of Sexhow mortgaged property in the Bay Horse area in 1816 – houses, warehouse, cowhouse, garden, 2 ¼ acre close – to John Calvert of Carlton.  Some of the properties were newly built.  He remortgaged in 1823 and sold to James Catchasides jnr in Nov 1824
Philip Gowland was churchwarden in 1825 and 1826
“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


Gowthorp

1872 Post Office Directory:  Skutterskelfe:  George Gowthorp, Folly hill


Graham

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

1823 Baines:  Hutton:  Thomas Graham, agent to Mr Nevill

1851 Census:  South Side:  Thomas Graham widower 61 handloom weaver linen b Aycliffe


Grainge

T Grainge was in A List of Boys – Middleton Book


Gravins

Anne Gravins is in a list of names in the Middleton Book
Anne Gravins is in a List of Girls – Middleton Book


Greenwell

‘Stokesley News & Cleveland Reporter’
, 1 Sep 1844:
Births:  On Friday, July 19th, at Hutton Rudby, the wife of Mr Thomas Greenwell, Saddler, of a son


Grice

Yorkshire Poll Book 1807:  Hutton Rudby:  Jeremiah Grice clerk (freehold in West Rounton)

Jeremiah Grice, Will dated 1 May 1820, died 13 May 1820, a71
Jeremiah Grice was born in Halifax, and took his degree at Cambridge.  His father’s name, according to the Marchants, was John;  according to the IGI it was Henry, and Jeremiah was baptised 2 Apr 1749.  His sister was bap 30 Apr 1747.  He was the last vicar to be buried within the altar rails.  He left a house and land in the Hutton Fields area, and a house and land at Trenholm.  He left property to Mary Ballieur, who was 13 when she inherited the contents of Mr Grice’s house in Hutton township with a life interest in his house and lands at Trenholme.  Her parents inherited life interests in the house and lands at Hutton Moor, subject to an annuity to his sister, who inherited after their death.  She inherited his property in Halifax and his personalty.
EK 48:  18 & 19 Jun 1819:  part of Hutton Moor House or Field Farm:  Matthew Appleton to Jeremiah Grice
EK 50:  21 Jun 1819:  part of Hutton Moor / Field Farm:  Matthew Appleton to parish, with QAB


Grundy

31 Jan 1803:  baptism of Thomas Grundy, son of William
7 Jan 1810:  baptism of Jane Grundy, daughter of William

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

early Aug 1830:  Thomas Grundy told the magistrates that he was asked by Goldsbrough to move a sack.

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]

1 Jan 1831:  Thomas Groundy married Hannah Farnaby [witnesses:  Joseph Richinson, Eleanor Jolly]

1841 Census:  Thomas Grundy 30 linen weaver, Hannah 35, Mary 9, John 7, with William Farnaby 12 spinner, South Side

Aug 1841:  Thomas Grundy, weaver, was taken into custody in York Castle having been charged as an accessory after the fact of the murder of William Huntley, and having failed to produce sureties for his appearance at the next assizes.  Grundy had said that several days after Huntley’s disappearance, Goldsbrough had asked Grundy to help him move a sack which contained the body of Huntley.
Thomas Grundy was a weaver.  “He was married, and his wife had had two children since their marriage, and one before.”  His wife was trying to get bail for him and he expected to be out “in a day or two”.  Grundy committed suicide within hours of arrival in York Castle, using his neckerchief and braces to strangle himself.  [Yorkshire Gazette 21 Aug 1841]

Hannah Grundy was born Hannah Farnaby in 1805, daughter of William & Jane Farnaby.  She married Thomas Grundy in 1831;  according to the newspaper report of 1841, they had three children in all – Mary [born ?1832] and John [born 1834] are named in the 1841 census, and Jane [born ?1838] in the 1851 census, but the PR transcripts show entries only for John in 1834 and Hannah in 1839.

1851 Census:  Enterpen:  Hannah Grundy widow 47 seamstress and daughter Jane 13, both b Hutton Rudby

1861 Census:  Brickyard, Enterpen:  Hannah Grundy 55 weaver’s widow and John Grundy single 26 ag lab, with lodgers Jane Farnaby and John Farnaby, aged 23 & 20, house servant and labourer in field;  all born HR [William Farnaby, widower, 51, ag lab – Hannah’s brother – lives next door]

1871 Census:  Brickgarth, Enterpen:  Hannah Grundy 76 widow and John Grundy 37 single, general labourer

John Grundy was gathering potatoes with 8 women in Oct 1862 when Barlow cut his hedge – Barlow’s Notebook
Grundy is listed in “Days work for men at the church” – Barlow’s Notebook

NBI:  John Grundy buried 22 May 1876, aged 41, and his mother Hannah seems to have moved to Osmotherley.  Her mother Jane Bowes Farnaby had died there in 1862;  Hannah died in 1879.  The 1881 census for Osmotherley shows the household of William Farnaby, aged 32, b Osmotherley, and four households of Bowes families.



People of Hutton Rudby in the C18/19: Hackforth to Hewison

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



Hackforth

ET 257:  2 & 3 Jan 1823:  garth, orchard & houses, probably North End:  John Hackforth was a previous occupier


Hall

1832:  Thomas Hall was buried on Fri 12 Oct a73;  Benjamin Hall on Fri 12 Oct a25;  Jane Hall on 12 Nov a30 [PRs] – Jane Hall’s age is given as 75 in the list “Sepultorum nomina”, but as Jacob Honeyman’s name is altogether omitted, this is probably an error in Mr Barlow’s reading of a list

1 Dec 1775:  Thomas Hall married Sarah Monroe [witnesses:  Jon Eland, William Smith]
22 Dec 1775:  Thomas Hall, papermaker, buried
13 Jan 1794:  bap of Charles, son of Thomas Hall at Whorlton [IGI]
27 Mar 1806:  bap of Benjamin David, son of Thomas Hall at Whorlton [IGI]

Thomas Hall married Ann Shields 23 Nov 1809 [witnesses: John Cliborn, Anne Richardson and Michael Gill]

30 Nov 1817:  Charles Hall of Whorlton married Mary Taylor otp.  Their children’s baptisms:  Jane 1818, Elizabeth 1819, Charles 1821, John 1823, Benjamin 1827, Robinson 1829, Marianne 1831, Isabella 1837.  Charles is described as farmer 1818-9, and labourer thereafter.  Their son Benjamin married in 1851 and remarried in 1861.  Charles died in 1854 a60.  His family’s gravestone [MI 396] is near the cholera mound, and records Charles, Elizabeth his daughter who d1844 a22, and Mary his wife

Robert Hall 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

FP 310:  12 & 13 Feb 1830:  James Catchasides jnr “late of Hutton shopkeeper and now of the township of Stockton miller” sold the ppties to Thomas Hall of Ormsby yeoman
Charles Hall 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

late July 1830:  James Maw went with George Bewick “to Robert Hall’s butcher’s shop;  we afterwards went to the prisoner’s house” [Yorkshire Gazette 12 Mar 1842]

Thomas Hall of Ormesby bought James Catchasides jnr’s premises near the Bay Horse in 1830.  The Hall family kept the property for many years

FU 99:  Will of Thomas Hall late of Ormesby gent dated 18 Oct 1830 & codicil dated 10 Dec 1830:  his brothers Jonathan Hall saddler of Whitby and John Hall grocer of Castleton were his executors

G Hall is in A List of Boys – Middleton Book

“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]

Tithe Map:  Charles Hall had a garden no 208 at the corner of South Side

1841 Census:  Charles Hall 45 ag lab and 7 children, South Side
1841 Census:  Stephen Hall 30 linen weaver and family, Castle Yard
1841 Census:  George Hall/Wall 23 servant, at Rudby Mill
1841 Census:  Charles Hall 18 servant at Windy Hill (Brigham)

Mar 1842:  Robert Hall gave evidence at the trial of Robert Goldsbrough [Yorkshire Gazette 12 Mar 1842].  He does not appear in the 1841 Census for Hutton Rudby, and no connection with the other Hall family has been established.

Elizabeth Hall died 26 Dec 1844 a22, grave396 – not in PRs

1851 Census:  South Side:  Charles 57 b Potto ag lab, Mary 51 b Crathorne, children John 28 hand loom weaver linen, Benjamin 23 ag lab, Mary Ann 19, and Edward 9, and grandson Thomas Hall 11, all b Hutton

Stephen Hall and his family may be the Halls who moved to Barnsley in the 1840s, according to Primitive Methodist records.  [Hastings: Ind Vill]

Benjamin Hall 23, labourer, son of Charles, labourer, married Hannah Braithwaite 21, daughter of Robert, tailor, on 3 May 1851 [witnesses:  Robert Oates, Wm Hebbron]

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 decd wife of Benjamin Hall:  nephew John Oates grocer. [East Side deeds]

Benjamin Hall 32 widower, groom, married Jane Wilkinson of Skutterskelf, servant, daughter of Lawrence, farmer, on 6 Apr 1861 [witnesses:  John Goldsbrough, Jane Fletcher]

1861 Census:  Mary Hall widow, with son 19, next door to
1861 Census:  Benjamin Hall, his 2nd wife and 3 children

Martha Hall is given 3s 6d on 20 Mar 1869, in Barlow’s Notebook

1871 Census:  Benjamin’s family absent.  Matthew Hall 40 master tailor b Crathorne and his family live in West End

1872 Post Office Directory:  Hutton Rudby:  Matthew Hall, tailor

24 Feb 1879:  Matthew Hall general dealer bought property on East Side from Allan Bowes Wilson [East Side deeds]

Oddfellows Board:  Bro:  Benjamin Hall, Middlesbrough, 14 Mar 1879, a53

1881 Census:  108 High Wilson Street, Middlesbrough:  Benjamin Hall’s widow Jane 49, her stepdaughter Mary A. domestic servant 23, Laurence 18 labourer b Hutton Rudby, Benjamin 16 labourer b Marton, Joseph 14 errand boy b Marton, Elizabeth 12 b Middlesbrough and George 9 b Marton

Oddfellows Board:  Bro:  John Hall, Hutton, 31 Mar 1884, a62

1884:  John died a62.  His gravestone [MI 315] records his daughter Lizzie d1893 a19, and Martha his widow d1915 a83

1887:  active members of the Primitive Methodist chapel at the time of building included William Graham Hall, Robert Maughan, Edward Bainbridge, 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]




Halliman

1872 Post Office Directory:  Hutton Rudby:  Mrs Margaret Halliman, grocer


Hammond

1841 Census:  John Hammond 25 linen weaver, wife and baby, Enterpen
1841 Census:  Thomas Hammond 50 ag lab born out of county, Ann 60 and Elizabeth 20, Enterpen
1841 Census:  John Hammond 49 farmer born out of county and family, Enterpen

‘Stokesley News & Cleveland Reporter’
1 May 1843: 
At the North Riding Sessions, Jane Best was convicted of stealing two flannel petticoats, from the garden hedge of the prosecutor, John Hammond, at Enterpen, in the summer of 1841.  Sentenced to three months imprisonment, with hard labour.

‘Stokesley News & Cleveland Reporter’, 1 Sep 1844:
Births:  On Thursday, the 15th of August, at Hutton, the wife of Mr John Homand, of a son [?]

John Hammond is listed as occupant of the property belonging to Mary Kingston, inherited from her father Thomas Passman, in the Tithe Map:  the Wheatsheaf.
But the 1840 Directory gives the landlord as John Rowntree

1851 Census:  Enterpen:  John Hammond 38 hand loom weaver b Hutton Rudby and wife Jane 30 b Whitby, with Hutton Rudby born children Elizabeth 10, Thomas 8, William 6, John 4, Ann 2 and Jane 3 wks
1851 Census:  Enterpen:  Thomas Hammond widower 66 ag lab b Durham, and daughter Elizabeth single 35 seamstress b Hutton Rudby


Hansel

NBI finds no Hansell burials in HR before 1826, so they may have come into the village after that date.  There are not many of them, and there are none of that name in the village in 1881 Census.

7 Jun 1818:  William Hansell married Jane Mennell [witnesses:  Stephen Richardson, John Eland]
28 Jul 1822:  Middleton:  Thomas Hansell married Ann Foster
Another couple, Edward Hansell, miller in Enterpen, and Mary had children in the 1830s and 1840s

15 & 16 Feb 1830:  Thomas Hansel and William Hansel were tenants of property on East Side mortgaged by Edmund Taylor – William Hansel occupied a tenement and weavers shop [East Side deeds]

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

J Ansell was in A List of Boys – Middleton Book. 

The date of the list is uncertain, but must predate the building of the National School in 1836:  John Hansell (below) was baptised 1823, and therefore too young to be at school; if the J is a misreading for T, Thomas (who was baptised Nov 1828) was the young scholar

28 Oct 1833:  William Hansell buried a34

Hansels are listed in Barlow’s Notebook, giving 2s to charity collection

1841 Census:  Middleton, cottage:  Thomas Hansell 60 labourer, Ann 55, Thomas 12 with James Harding 70 labourer
1841 Census:  Jane Hansell 35 servant in household of Robert Braithwaite

1851 Census:  Middleton Mill:  Thomas Hansell S 22 miller servant bHutton

25 Aug 1873:  Ann Hansell buried a87 [NBI]
8 Jan 1878:  Jane Hansell buried a75 [NBI]

1881 Census CD Rom:  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.  They seem to be the children of Edward and Mary Hansell.


Hardbottle

FQ 434:  14 & 15 Apr 1829:  Jonathan Hardbottle occupied land belonging to Elizabeth Sleigh
1841 Census:  Richard Souter 45 ag lab, Mary 40 and David 6, with Jonathan Hardbottle 80, ag lab, Enterpen


Harker

George Harker 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

“Burials in the Parish of Rudby in the County of York in the year 1838 – Ellen Harker, of Hutton, on 24 July, age 14, by R J Barlow, vicar” [solrs’ papers – Margt Brabin]

Thomas Harker was born in Malton, and his wife Salome in Brunswick Square, London.  He practised as an apothecary at the workhouse in Edmonton before 1815.

His brother John Harker, gentleman, Stokesley, died 29 Jul 1826, leaving his estate to his brother Thomas and sister Mary.  [Dr Stout]

He was appointed medical attendant to the poor by the Select Vestry in Nov 1832.  He lost his office [date?] when he over-exerted himself on behalf of his patients and complained of the way in which the overseers neglected to visit them.  He was replaced by an unqualified practitioner in 1833 [ref:  Dr Stout, quoting from Hastings, Rudby:  Local Govt & Socy].

Thomas Harker was at the vestry meeting on 2 July 1833 when Sarah Hebbron was elected Sexton.
On 6 Oct 1834, Thomas Harker, local medical officer, complained to the Poor Law Commission that the vestry had fallen under the control of H J Bainbridge, general dealer.  In 1837, under the Poor Law Amendment Act 1834, Rudby township became part of the Stokesley Union, and responsibility for the poor was taken from the overseers.  The Stokesley Union, being a large area, was split into two, and Harker was appointed for the Hutton district (13,050 acres) caring for 2,856 persons at an annual salary of £26.  [cf Dr Stout, quoting Hastings]

Thomas Harker occupied Lord Falkland’s property in the Hutton House area in the Tithe Map. 
Harker had owned property in Stokesley (inherited from his brother?):  the Darlington & District Banking Company opened a branch there in Jan 1841 in the High Street, the previous owner of the property being Thomas Harker, surgeon, Hutton.  [Dr Stout:  quoting the Midland Bank Archives]

1840 Whites:  Hutton Rudby:  Thomas Harker, surgeon & registrar

1841 Census:  Thomas Harker 45, Salome 45 and Rebecca 25 at Hutton House

22 May 1841:  Harker, as Vaccinator to Parish Local Council, found he had to visit reluctant patients himself [Dr Stout:  quoting Hastings]
Thomas Harker was registrar of bdm in Dec 1841 (Geo Brigham’s death cert) and 1852 (Mrs Barlow’s death)
Thomas Harker was a member of The Manchester Unity of Independent Odd Fellows, Hutton Rudby Lodge, the “Traveller’s Home”.  His title is given as “PG” on the Board. [the Wheatsheaf Board]

‘The Cleveland Repertory’ 1 Aug 1843:
“Stokesley Union. – A meeting of the Guardians of this Union took place on Saturday, the 8th ult. for the purpose of electing Medical Officers, when Thomas Loy, Esq. M.A. was appointed for the Stokesley Division, by a majority of 8 votes.  For the Hutton Rudby Division, Mr Harker; and for Ayton Division, W.A. Loy, Esq. M.D.”

‘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]
Harker v Cuthbert
Mr Appleton was for the Plaintiff, and Mr Collins for the Defendant.
Mr Thomas Harker the Plaintiff is a Surgeon, at Hutton; and James Cuthbert, the Defendant, was a Farmer at Crathorne, but has recently gone to reside at Eston, and the action was commenced to recover 12s 6d for medicines and medical advice furnished by the Plaintiff to the Defendants child, in the Spring of 1841.
Before a medical man can recover a Bill it is requisite to shew that he is legally qualified to practise, and for that purpose William Barroclough, the Governor of the Edmonton union Workhouse, in the County of Middlesex was called upon, and proved Plaintiff was in Practice as an Apothecary prior to the month of August, 1815, at which time the Apothecary’s Act came into the operation.  Verdict for Plaintiff.  Damages 12s 6d.

‘The Cleveland Repertory’ 1 Jul 1844:
Marriages:  At All Saints, Pavement, York, by the Rev C J Camidge, John Tindall, Esq of Heworth Place, to Rebecca Salome, only daughter of Thomas Harker, Esq Surgeon, of Hutton Rudby
Benjamin Willis Harker of York, 25, linen draper, son of Thomas, surgeon, married Ellen Milbourn of Rudby, 19, daughter of Joseph, woollen draper on 1 Aug 1844 [PRs]

‘Stokesley News & Cleveland Reporter’
, 1 Sep 1844:
Marriages:  On Wednesday, July 31st, at Hutton Rudby, Mr B W Harker, Draper, York, to Miss Ellen Milbourne, of the former place

‘The Cleveland Repertory’
1 Sep 1844:
Marriages:  on Thursday, the 22nd ult, at Hutton Rudby, by the Rev Ralph Grenside, Mr Benjamin Willis Harker, Linen Draper, and Silk Mercer, of High Ousegate, York, to Ellen, the youngest daughter of Mrs Milbourn, of Hutton Rudby

1845:  Thomas’s sister, Mary Harker of Hutton Rudby was buried 11 Feb 1845 a62 in Stokesley parish by Charles Cator [extracted 6 Mar 1854, from solrs’ papers]

1847:  Medical Directory [first published]:  Thomas Harker at Hutton Rudby, Medical Officer to Stokesley Union and Public Vaccinator for nine years.  (1846 E J Wilson was appointed medical officer qv)

1851 census:  North Side:  Thomas Harker 58 medical practitioner & registrar, b Malton, and his wife Salome 59 b Brunswick Sq, City of London, at Cleveland View

1852:  Rebecca Harker’s husband John Tindell died 29 Feb 1852

1855:  Rebecca Harker Tindell remarried on 25 Nov 1855 to Charles Crummack, who may have been a cousin of some degree.  Crummack would inherit on Salome Harker’s death part of a £300 mortgage on land near Malton and a house in York [Dr Stout]

1857 Medical Directory Obituary:  Thomas Harker, late of Hutton Rudby died 18 Apr 1856 at High Ousegate, York [Dr Stout:  another source gives 12.4.1858]

Oddfellows Board:  PG:  T Harker, York, 12 Apr 1855, a62

Thomas Harker late of Hutton, now of York:  Will dated 9 Sep 1854, died 12 Apr 1855 a62.  His executors were Henry Chapman of Enterpen, William Barr, farmer of Nunthorpe, and his daughter Rebecca.  Henry Chapman renounced.   [HR Wills]

Benjamin Willis Harker a68 was buried at Hutton Rudby on 30 Aug 1887


Harland

“Crossed at Harlands sale” on 3 Jan 1867 and “Harlands acct” including lime from Yarm and harrowing Jack Barn – Barlow’s Notebook
Henry Harland was churchwarden in 1840

1840 Whites:  Hutton Rudby:  Henry Harland, farmer

1871 Census:  Crow Trees (35a):  Binnington Harland 54 b Helme, Yorks, wife Rachel 50 b Nafferton, Yorks, and daughter Constance A 16 b Pocklington

1872 Post Office Directory:  Hutton Rudby:  Binnington Harland, farmer, Crow trees
It appears from the 1881 CD-Rom that the Harlands retired to live in York.


Harrison


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

1823 Baines:  Hutton:  Cuthbert Harrison, farmer
“James Harrison and wife – one daughter grown up” [Mr Barlow’s list ?1836]

1841 Census:  James Harrison 75 weaver, Elizabeth 55, South Side

1841 Census:  Brooks House farm:  William Harrison 30, Mary 25, children Margaret 6, Ann 3 and Mary 1, also Jane Harrison 45

John son of James & Jane Harrison died 1844, grave 286 – not in PRs

1851 Census:  Goslingmire:  William Harrison farmer 176a, wife Mary 39, daughters Margaret 17, Ann 14 and Mary 12 all born Kildale, and children Thomas 5, Susannah 4 and John 2 all born Hutton Rudby;  agricultural labourers Michael Jackson 18 b Grassholme, William Coverdale 17 b Hutton

1861 Census:  Goslingmire:  William Harrison 52 farmer 174a employing 1 man & 2 boys b Kildale, wife Mary 50 b Kildale, children Thomas 16, John 11, William 9, Henery 7 all b Hutton, Mary 21 b Kildale and Susannah 14 b Hutton;  grandson William Thompson 1 b Hutton;  servant Bridget Macne 30 b Sligo;  employee William Jennison 34 carter b Osmotherley

1871 Census:  Goslingmire:  William Harrison M 63 farmer of 200a b Kildale, children Thomas 25 and Susannah 23 b Hutton Rudby John 22, William 20 and James 18 all b Middleton, and servant Jane Wilson 16 b Stokesley

Easter dues settled with Harrison up to Jany 1st 1867 – Barlow’s Notebook

1871 Census:  Toft Hill:  William Harrison 44 farmer 100a b Stainton, wife Elizabeth 34 b Carlton, children Sarah 1 and Elizabeth 3 mths b Hutton;  also stepchildren John Hutchinson 14, Joseph 13 and Anne 11, (all children b Hutton);  servants Nanny Webster 19 b Hutton, Jane Stott 15 nurse b Carlton;  employees John Nicholson 24 b Bradford and Oliver Atkinson 14 b Newport, Yks

1872 Post Office Directory:  Rudby:  William Harrison, farmer
1872 Post Office Directory:  Hutton Rudby:  William Harrison, farmer, Toft Hill
1872 Post Office Directory:  Middleton:  William Harrison, farmer

1881 Census:  Toft Hill:  William Harrison 54 farmer 100a employing 1 labourer and 1 boy b Stainton and wife Elizabeth Rebecca Harrison 45 b Carlton;  stepchildren John Hutchinson 24 iron manufacturer’s clerk, Joseph Hutchinson 23 bank cashier and Anne farmer’s daughter 21 all b Hutton;  children Joseph Hutchinson Harrison 21 b Maltby draughtsman at steelworks, Margaret Sarah 10, William 8, Edwin 7 and Arthur 5 all b Hutton Rudby;  servants Isabella Stephenson 25 b Thirsk domestic servant and Joseph Stephenson 15 b Stockton farm servant indoors

William Harrison of Toft Hill 1826-1886 [MI]
Elizabeth Rebecca Harrison of Toft Hill 1836-1920 [MI]


Heaviside

1841 Census:  Middleton, cottage:  Sarah Heaviside 65 ag lab, Hannah 40, Margaret 35, Thomas 25 labourer, Hannah 13, Ann 9 and Mary 2

William Heaviside, schoolmaster of Hutton Rudby, was a witness of Mr Barlow’s Will on 15 April 1875


Hebron

25 Feb 1783:  Sam Hebron, cartwright, married Mary Bainbridge [witnesses:  Edward Meynell, John Eland]

EB 412:  21 & 22 Mar 1817:  ppty on North Side: Thos & Jos Whorlton (1) Wm Whorlton (2):  ppty bounded by Samuel Hebbron’s stable

EP 148:  3 Feb 1821:  mortgage to Wm Whorlton by John Shout:  ppty bounded by Samuel Hebbron’s stable to N

ET 257:  2 & 3 Jan 1823:  garth, orchard & houses, probably North End:  Samuel Hebbron was a previous occupant

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 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

FB 107:  15 Sep 1824:  3 closes on Doctor Lane [sic]:  parties:  Richard Eland of Leighton Buzzard Bedfordshire minister of the gospel (1) Edward Barry of Newington Causeway Surrey upholsterer (2):  previously occ by William Dawson and George Kingston and now by James Eland:  bounded by Doctor Lane to E, by Robert Huntley & by Samuel Hebbron to W, by Hutton to Crathorne road to N, by road to Rounton to S:  described in indre of 3 Mar last past to which the sd Richard Eland and William Eland currier were parties

1823 Baines:  Hutton:  Samuel Hebron, wheelwright & parish clerk
1840 Whites:  Hutton Rudby:  wheelwrights &c:  William Hebron

1841 Census:  Sarah Hebbron 55 ag lab and George Hebbron 9, on East Side
1841 Census:  David Hebbron 60 ag lab, Ann 60 and Margaret 20 dressmaker, Tisbut Row
1841 Census:  Samuel Hebbron 14 tailor apprentice in household of William Jackson, North Side
1841 Census:  North Side:  William Hebbron 40 cartwright, wife Mary 40 b out of county, and children William 14, George 11, John 8, Elizabeth 4 and James 1

‘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.

“Wm Hebron and wife – 3 young” [Mr Barlow’s list ?1836]
Mary [?] Hebron was in the 1836 Wesleyan class lists

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

The Samuel Hebron who owned the Shoulder of Mutton and went bankrupt seems to be of a different family.  A Henry Hebbron of Potto was a Primitive Methodist travelling preacher whose “conversion … in his father’s barn at Potto” culminated in the Hexham “Hebbron Memorial Chapel”.  His mother became leader of the Potto society, “the mother of the little church in her own house, and the instructor of the villagers in their way of life”.   [Northern Primitive Methodism by W M Patterson]

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

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.

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”.

Henry Hebron owned a house on North Side in the Tithe Map
Tithe Map from Elizabeth Sleigh:  William Hebron occ 186, 188, 189

‘Acct of days with Hebron’ appears in Barlow’s Notebook

1851 Census:  East Side:  Sarah Hebbron S 67 sexton Rudby church, bHutton
1851 Census:  Tisbut Row:  David Hebbron 73 former butcher pauper b Potto and Ann 69 pauper b Tunstall, Durham
1851 Census:  North Side:  William Hebbron 52 cartwright employing 1 man b Hutton and Mary 52 b Trimdon, with children William 23 journeyman cartwright, John 18 tailor’s apprentice, Elizabeth 13, James 11 and Richard 9, all b Hutton
1851 Census:  North Side, near Bay Horse:  Samuel Hebbron 25 journeyman tailor b Hutton and wife Mary Ann 24 b Potto

1861 Census:  North Side:  William Hebbron 66 farmer and children John S 38 tailor and Elizabeth S 22 housekeeper;  all b Hutton Rudby
1861 Census:  North Side:  Samuel Hebbron 35 tailor b Hutton Rudby and wife Mary 35 b Potto, with children Benjamin 7, William 5, Mary Ann 3 and John 11 mths


Hedley

1872 Post Office Directory:  Sexhow:  William Hedley, farmer


Herdman

Oddfellows Board:  Bro:  John Herdman, Potto, 7? Nov 1879, a43



Hewison

Oddfellows Board:  Bro:  John Hewison, Guisborough, 27 Jan 1883, a35



People of Hutton Rudby in the C18/19: Hibberd to Hutton Rudby Association for the Prosecution of Felons

$
0
0
... from my working notes ... accuracy not guaranteed ... for explanatory note, see post of 14 Feb 2013



Hibberd

1840 Whites:  Skutterskelfe:  Philip Hibberd, gamekeeper


Hildreth

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

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




Hird

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]

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

FS 461:  2 & 3 Feb 1831:  Thomas Hird had been a tenant of Rudby estate


Hogg

Jun 1866:  Two friends, G Coates & J Hogg, gave £5 to the subscription for Thomas Garbutt

William Hogg was churchwarden 1869-70


Holdgate

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


Holmes

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


Honeyman

1832:  Jacob Honeyman was buried on 14 Nov a75 [PRs]
Jacob Honeyman’s name does not appear in the list “Sepultorum nomina”

The first Honeyman to appear in the village was William Honeyman, whose birth is recorded in Edinburgh in 1716 [Hastings:  Ind Vill]

MI:  99:  Jacob, son of Jacob & Jane Whorlton 1748-53, Jane 1713-93, and Martha daughter of William & Jane Honeyman d1818

An LDS member entry on the IGI:  Jacob Honeyman born about 1757 in Hutton Rudby, the son of William Honeyman & Catherine Codling [NB Not "Codlingwere" as stated in the IGI - I understand from Dave Honneyman that this is a mistranscription caused by running two words run together and the original states that "William Huneman and Catherine Codling were married"], died 14 Nov 1832.  William Honeyman had been born in Midlothian in 1716 and had children Thomas c1738, Mary c1753, and Jacob c1757.

9 Aug 1785:  bap of Jacob, son of Will. Honeyman, weaver

Yorkshire Poll Book 1807:  Hutton Rudby:  William Honeyman weaver

28 Dec 1807:  Hannah Honeyman married Thomas Graham, weaver of North End:  one of the witnesses was Jacob Honeyman.  Hannah & Thomas’s son Jacob Honeyman Graham was bap in 1811. He became a music teacher, and is visiting his father in 1861 Census

1 Aug 1824:  Jacob Honeyman marr Mary Sadler, HR [IGI Beryl]
26 Feb 1827:  Martha, dau of Jacob/Mary Honeyman [IGI Beryl]

EH 212:  9 & 10 Oct 1818:  William Honeyman of Hutton, weaver, and his wife Jane, and William Braithwaite of Stockton, merchant (1)  Jacob Honeyman, weaver

EG 295:  12 Oct 1818:  Jacob Honeyman weaver (1) John Appleby of Stokesley gent (2) William Newby of Helmsley butcher (3)

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

ET 257:  2 & 3 Jan 1823:  Jacob Honeyman was trustee for John Milner in a purchase

1823 Baines:  Hutton:  William Honeyman, grocer

FQ 434:  14 & 15 Apr 1829:  Mary Honeyman occupied land belonging to Elizabeth Sleigh

Jacob Honeyman bought a Catechism for 1 ½d in the List – Middleton Book
Mrs Honeyman is in a list of names in the Middleton Book
Martha Honeyman is in a List of Girls – Middleton Book
J Honeyman was in A List of Boys – Middleton Book

1841 Census:  Thomas Honeyman 50 weaver and family, East Side/Barkers Row
1841 Census:  Robert Honeyman 50 ag lab and family, with Ann Meynel 29 and Isabella Meynel 5 and Matthew Meynel 2, South Side

1851 Census:  Walker’s Yard:  Ann Honeyman M 54 weaver’s wife bHutton, sons James 21 and William 19 ag lab, and grandson Thomas Ransom 6 and daughter Mary Whitehad M 29 mechanic’s wife all bHutton
1851 Census:  Walker’s Yard:  Thomas Honeyman 25 ag lab bHutton and wife  Hannah 20 bStockton
1851 Census:  South Side:  George Honeyman 33 licensed hawker, Hannah 26, and Ann 8, Joseph 6, Richard 4 and Elizabeth 2, all b Hutton

Robert Honeyman married Isabella Braithwaite, and had a son Robert, who in 1861 was of 1 Hanover Street, Walworth Road, Newington, who sold his ppty in HR to his cousin Robert Braithwaite jnr. 
28 Sep 1835:  Will of John Braithwaite:  daughter Isabella wife of Robert Honeyman, has son Robert Honeyman the younger, who in 1861 is of 1 Hanover Street, Walworth Road, Newington, and who then sells his ppty in HR to his cousin Robert Braithwaite jnr.  Isabella had survived her father, but died intestate before her husband, whose Will did not dispose of his real estate, leaving his son Robert jnr his heir-at-law [East Side deeds].  John Braithwaite’s children were Isabella Honeyman, Mary Oates, Robert, grandson John Oates [East Side deeds]

17 Mar 1850:  Robert Honeyman snr buried HR [East Side deeds]

17 Nov 1856:  Thomas Honeyman occupied a tenement & weaver’s shop on East Side, previously occupied by William Hansell [East Side deeds]

1872 Post Office Directory:  Hutton Rudby:  George Honeyman, grocer & draper
1872 Post Office Directory:  Hutton Rudby:  Joseph Honeyman, butcher

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]


Horne

FQ 434:  14 & 15 Apr 1829:  John Horne occupied house, gardens & premises in Enterpen belonging to Elizabeth Sleigh


Horner

“Tamar Horner 1s” appears in William Sayers Calculations 1815 in the Middleton Book
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

15 & 16 Feb 1830:  Tamar Horner occupied a tenement on East Side mortgaged by Edmund Taylor [East Side deeds]


Howe

1832:  Jane How was buried Sun 7 Oct a1 [PRs]

2 Feb 1782:  John How 23 cordwainer of Whorlton married Ann Key/?Kay.  They had 3 daughters baptised between 1783 and 1788. 
In 1789 Ann How died, and two years later John, then described as pauper, married Margaret Farnaby. 
John & Margaret How had seven children baptised between 1792 & 1806. 
John & Margaret How’s daughter Sarah, after the birth and death of an illegitimate daughter, married Thomas Bage in 1824; a witness was John Ingledew:  a John Ingledew had married Margaret Cook in 1828.
John & Margaret How’s daughter Jane had an illegitimate son in 1825, and died that year.  Her son died two years later.
John & Margaret How’s first son John was drowned aged 7; the younger John married Sarah Whorlton on  21 Oct 1829.  John Cook was a witness at the marriage.
John How jnr & Sarah Whorlton had several children between 1830 & 1840.  They lived in Enterpen.  He was a weaver

1823 Baines:  Hutton:  John Howe, shoemaker

28 Feb 1831:  bap of Jane, daughter of John & Sarah How of Enterpen, weaver

Mrs Howe is in a list of names in the Middleton Book

1840 Whites:  Hutton Rudby:  John Howe, boot & shoe maker

1841 Census:  John Howe 35 linen weaver and family, with Jane Whorlton 20 servant, William Robinson 20 servant, John Howe 80 shoemaker and Margaret Howe 70, Enterpen

1851 Census:  Barker’s Row:  John Howe 47 hand loom weaver, Sarah 41, Jane 16, William 11 and Joseph 7;  all b Hutton

1881 Census:  Adam St, Middlesbrough:  John Howe 72 general labourer, wife Sarah 72 and son Joseph unmarried 32 also general labourer;  all b Hutton Rudby
1881 Census:  Dale St, Middlesbrough:  William Howe 43 labourer b Hutton Rudby, wife Mary Ann 47 b London, and boarder Harry Dobson 13 b Middlesbrough


Hugil

J Hugil [crossed out] was in A List of Boys – Middleton Book
‘Hugils’ are listed in Barlow’s Notebook, giving 6d to charity collection

1841 Census:  Elen Hugill 60 ag lab, Enterpen
1841 Census:  Butter Hill:  Thomas Hugill 19 servant with William Robinson
1841 Census:  Butter Hill:  Rachael Hugill 18 indep [?] with household of Thomas Legg
1841 Census:  Middleton, cottage:  Thomas Hugill 35 labourer and family
1841 Census:  Middleton, cottage:  David Hugill 20 labourer and family


Hunt

Jane Hunt was paid 6d in “Expenses repairing Church” – Barlow’s Notebook

1851 Census:  East Side:  Thomas Hunt 34 ag lab bGreenhow Yks, Jane Hunt 30 bHutton, children Margaret 3 and Joseph 1 bHutton, and Thomas’s stepdaughter Anne Whorlton 8 bHutton

1872 Post Office Directory:  Hutton Rudby:  Joseph Hunt, blacksmith, Enterpen

1881 Census:  North Side nr Bay Horse:  Jane Hunt 62 gen servant, dau Margaret Fortune 33 dressmaker & her husband Denton Fortune 28 butcher b West Rounton & children, and son Joseph Hunt 31 groom


Hunter

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”


Huntley

FB 107:  15 Sep 1824:  3 closes on Doctor Lane [sic]:  parties:  Richard Eland of Leighton Buzzard Bedfordshire minister of the gospel (1) Edward Barry of Newington Causeway Surrey upholsterer (2):  previously occ by William Dawson and George Kingston and now by James Eland:  bounded by Doctor Lane to E, by Robert Huntley & by Samuel Hebbron to W, by Hutton to Crathorne road to N, by road to Rounton to S:  described in indre of 3 Mar last past to which the sd Richard Eland and William Eland currier were parties

Yorkshire Gazette 21 Aug 1841 and 12 Mar 1842:  William Huntley inherited property from his father, a farmer who died in 1821 or 1822, leaving an imperfect will which led to a Chancery case.  Huntley became a weaver, and “wrought at [George Farnaby’s] shop”; after his marriage [no record found] he moved to Eaglescliffe, but continued to visit his mother in Hutton, staying with Robert Goldsbrough when he did so.  Huntley finally came into the first instalment of his share on 22 Jul 1830, receiving from the Yarm solicitor William Garbutt the sum of £85 13s 4d;  he disappeared shortly afterwards.  Huntley was seen in company with Robert Goldsbrough and George Garbutt by James Maw, to whom Huntley said ‘Where has thou been thou caffey dog?’

Eleven years later a skeleton was found five or six miles from the place where Huntley was last seen, and it was believed locally that the body was that of Huntley.  Robert Goldsbrough, who had been popularly suspected of foul play in 1830, was tried for the murder but was acquitted.  Thomas Grundy, who was implicated in the matter and accused Goldsbrough of the deed, committed suicide in York Castle, and George Garbutt, who had been with Goldsbrough and Huntley when the latter was last seen by witnesses, had disappeared. 

William Huntley therefore appears to have been the son of Robert & Elizabeth Huntley, whose children according to the IGI were John 1802 and William 1804 (b Kirby), Robert 1809 and Solomon 1811 (b Ingleby Arncliffe) and Ann 1814 (b Hutton Rudby).  John, Solomon and Ann are all buried at Hutton Rudby.  Robert Huntley aged 50 was buried at Hutton Rudby on 17 Jul 1818.  A Robert Huntley married Elizabeth Carter in 1801 in Long Newton; an Elizabeth Huntley is buried there in 1841.

William Huntley was described by his solicitor as having “a large head and a projecting tooth from the left underjaw;  very low between the eyes;  very long behind in the head;  his head sloped particularly from the forehead.” [Yorkshire Gazette 12 Mar 1842]


Husband

Easter dues settled with Husband up to Jany 1st 1867 – Barlow’s Notebook

1872 Post Office Directory:  Middleton:  William Husband, farmer


Hutchinson

1840 Whites:  Hutton Rudby:  Joseph Hutchinson, farmer, Toft Hill

1851 Census:  Toft Hill:  Ann Hutchinson widow 67 farmer of 100 acres b Barton, Durham, with children Mary Ann 25 and Ralph 23, both b Leven Bridge;  and farm servants Thomas Dowson 35 b Norton and James Richardson 26 b Ingleby Greenhow, and house servants Margaret Bainbridge 19 b Carlton and Isabella Reay 15 b Haverton Hill, Co Durham

1861 Census:  Toft Hill:  Ralph Hutchinson, wife and 3 children

1881 Census:  Toft Hill:  William Harrison & Elizabeth Rebecca Harrison, widow of Ralph Hutchinson, with the Hutchinson and Harrison children

1891 Census:  Toft Hill:  Elizabeth Harrison, farmer & widow
Joseph and John Hutchinson were originators of the tree planting

William Harrison of Toft Hill 1826-1886 [MI]
Elizabeth Rebecca Harrison of Toft Hill 1836-1920 [MI]

Mrs Harrison went to live at Highfield


Hutton

18 May 1792 & 13 Aug 1803:  John Hutton occupied a house & garth on East Side [Paley ppty] [East Side deeds]

23 Nov 1808:  John Hutton occupied property – possibly house & garth or yard – on East Side bought by Joseph, Thomas & William Whorlton in 1808 [Hill ppty] [East Side deeds]

13 Jul 1815:  John Hutton married Jane Shout [witnesses:  James Harrison, Jas Eland]

Tithe Map:  John Hutton was still a tenant of William Whorlton on East Side, occupying the house just north of the Wheatsheaf
Tithe Map:  John Hutton was a tenant of James Flounders, occupying a garden & garth in the Stringers Row area

1823 Baines:  Hutton:  John Hutton [listed twice], farmer
1840 Whites:  Hutton Rudby:  John Hutton, farmer

1841 Census:  John Hutton 50 cow keeper, Jane Hutton 45, on North Side

1851 Census:  North Side:  John Hutton widower 60 retd farmer b Hutton

23 Jul 1846:  John Hutton chaired the vestry meeting on 23 July 1846 for auditing the churchwardens’ accounts

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

5 Nov 1814:  George Hutton married Barbara Bowes, Kildale [IGI]
10 Sep 1815:  Ann Hutton, dau of George & Barbara, baptised at Kildale [IGI]
9 Jun 1836:  Ann Hutton married George Wilson, St Andrews, Newcastle [IGI]


Hutton Rudby Association for the Prosecution of Felons

40 members, mainly farmers.  Established 1835, annual cost per member 2/- to 2/6d for protection of person and property, by paying for informers and prosecutions.  At its annual dinner at the Wheatsheaf in 1841 it was claimed that no felony had been committed in the eight townships during the previous 2 ½ years.  [Yorkshire Gazette 16.1.1841].  Thereafter nothing known of it, other than the fact that it still existed in Feb 1843 when it was mentioned in the Cleveland Repertory and Stokesley Advertiser. [Hastings:  Local Govt & Socy]

Cleveland Repertory & Stokesley Advertiser:  1 Feb 1843:
 “Police Intelligence”:  January 28th.  Before Sir Wm Foulis, Bart. and R Hildyard, Esq. William Carter of Hutton Rudby, weaver, for having on the 7th ult. committed a trespass on the farm and lands in the occupation of Leonard Appleton in search of game.  Fined £2 and costs.

Cleveland Repertory & Stokesley Advertiser:  1 Feb 1843:
“Hutton Rudby”:  The annual meeting of the Hutton Rudby Association for the Prosecution of Felons, was held I the National school room, on the 2nd of last month, which was numerously attended by its members.  Mr Righton, of Rudby, was unanimously elected treasurer, in the place of the late Mr Harrison Terry;  and Mr Jackson, solicitor.  The treasurer’s accounts were audited and passed, and several new members were proposed and admitted.
This Association was established in the year 1835:  it includes the townships of Hutton, Rudby, Sexhow, Skutterskelfe, Crathorne, and Potto.
“Hutton Rudby and Enterpen
Far more rogues than honest men.”
Some of our readers will recollect that this saying was proverbial to Hutton and the little village of Enterpen, which is a part of the town.  But a few years back these places were infested by a set of theives, and, it is to be feared, murderers were amongst their inhabitants.  Now crime is rarely heard of, and this in a great measure may be attributed to the active exertions of the Association in detecting and bringing to justice the delinquents.
An excellent dinner was provided at the Wheat Sheaf Inn, by Mrs Rayney.  It was pleasing to notice the good feeling and conviviality which existed among a company of as loyal, true-hearted, and substantial farmers as our country can boast of:  men of the old school, and who remind us of the lines,
“When Adam delved and Eve span,
Who was then the gentleman?”

Honeymans and Whorltons

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This information is from Dave Honneyman, for the benefit of people researching their Honeyman or Whorlton family history.

Dave tells me that they find themselves confronted by a particular problem dating from the early 19th century.

On 1 March 1818, Ann Whorlton’s baby boy George was baptised in Hutton Rudby.  No father’s name was recorded, and he was baptised as George Whorlton.

On 17 August 1819, Ann Whorlton married Thomas Honeyman (George’s father?), and George grew up in their household.

Thereafter, young George’s surname seems to have alternated between Whorlton and Honeyman.  He was George Whorlton on his marriage to Hannah Simpson, but George Honeyman for all the censuses.  When his daughter Sarah married Andrew Dodsworth in 1877, freebmd.org records her surname as Whorlton (I don’t know whether researchers have obtained this marriage certificate), while an entry on familysearch (source not recorded) gives her surname as Honeyman.  This has naturally led to confusion!

Dave concludes,
“So anyone who has an interest in further study of his family tree needs to be aware that if they can't find a particular record as a "Honeyman", then they should look for a "Whorlton" record instead and more than likely find it.”


An unusual Mortgage Deed

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1876 Mortgage Deed

 This is a Mortgage Deed made on 25 October 1876 between Messrs Sharvell & Imeson and Albert James Smith, Esq., of a piece or parcel of ground situate near the Park, Middlesbrough, in the County of York.

The solicitor who drew up the Deed was Gilbert B Jackson of Middlesbro' and Lofthouse.

As you can see from the photograph, it looks strangely crisp.

It seems to have been damaged in a fire, which has shrunk it to a fraction of its former size so that it now measures only about 10cm by 9.5cm (about 4 inches by 3 ½ inches).

This is evidently what happens to parchment when cooked!

reverse of 1876 Mortgage Deed



People of Hutton Rudby in the C18/19: Illegitimacy to Ingledew

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



Illegitimacy

As can be seen from these notes, there was considerable illegitimacy.  Alan Marchant calculated it at
1762-71    43 per 1,000 births
1782-91    65 per 1,000 births
1812-21    100 per 1,000 births (when Rudby overseers began to keep a detailed and separate Bastardy Account)
1862-71    88 per 1,000 births


Imeson

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

1823 Baines:  Hutton:  John Imeson, shoemaker
1840 Whites:  Hutton Rudby:  John Imes [sic], boot & shoe maker

6 Oct 1840:  Jane [transcript – in fact, Ann] Bewick 28, daughter of George Bewick, linen manufacturer, married John Imeson 21 shoemaker, son of John Imeson, shoemaker [witnesses:  William Douglass, Matthew Bewick]

1841 Census:  North End:  John Imeson 55 shoe maker, Elizabeth 50, Elizabeth 20 dressmaker, Mary 15, Nicholson 15 shoemaker
1841 Census:  John Imison 20 shoe maker and Ann 25, North End

1851 Census:  North End:  John Imeson 65 shoemaker b Masham, Elizabeth 63 b Potto, unmarried children Mary 28 and Nicholson 26 journeyman shoemaker, with granddaughter Jane Ann Imeson 8, all b Hutton
1851 Census:  North End:  Ann Imison 39 shoemakers widow with children Elizabeth Ann 9 and Robert 8, and visiting niece Jane Sherwood 12;  all b Hutton

1872 Post Office Directory:  Hutton Rudby:  Nicholas Imeson, boot & shoe maker

John Imison jnr died 1(4) Dec 1843 a24, grave401 – not in PRs
Mary Imeson’s burial is jotted in Barlow’s Notebook as 28 Oct 1852, in the burials register as 28 Sep 1852, and on the death certificate her death is recorded as 4 Oct 1852.  She was 30 years old, a labourer, daughter of John Imeson of Hutton who was present at her death of “hydrothorax certified”; deputy registrar Edwin James Wilson

Oddfellows Board:  Bro:  John Imison, Hutton, 14 Dec 1843, a24


Ingledew

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

14 Apr 1828:  Margaret Cook married John Ingledew [witnesses:  Robt Whorlton, Saml Hebbron]

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

15 & 16 Feb 1830:  John Ingledew had occupied a house (or the north end of a house) which had lately been taken down and rebuilt by Edmund Taylor [East Side deeds]

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

1841 Census:  James Ingledew 80 ag lab and Easter 70, Enterpen
1841 Census:  South Side:  Mary Cook 59 linen weaver, Margaret Brusby 32 linen weaver, Robert Ingledew 12 and Joseph Ingledew 5

Ann Ingledew died 13 Mar 1843 a24 grave216 – not in PRs


People of Hutton Rudby in the C18/19: Jackson to Jowsey

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



Jackson

John Jackson 1743-1808 was the master of Hutton Rudby School (see schoolmasters)

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]

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

1799    Jno Jackson paid a salary of One Guinea “for playing on the Violin Cello in Church time”

Yorkshire Poll Book 1807:  Hutton Rudby:  Thomas Jackson tailor

15 Dec 1809:  William Jackson born Hutton (godparents John Meynell, Sarah Bainbridge) baptised RC

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

4 Jan 1817:  Oliver Jackson, son of Thomas & Elizabeth, weaver, Hutton, was baptised.  This appears to be the Primitive Methodist minister mentioned in 1887

Oliver Jackson occupied the Whorltons’ house on North Side before it was occupied by Major Shout.  Thomas Jackson owned property further east on North Side, owned and occupied by William Jackson in the Tithe Map.

EB 412:  21 & 22 Mar 1817:  ppty on North Side: Thos & Jos Whorlton (1) Wm Whorlton (2), late in occ of Oliver Jackson

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

EO 107:  11 & 12 Aug 1820:  land near Jakebarn, recently puchased by Thomas Jackson from Simon Kelsey:  parties:  Thomas Jackson of Hutton tailor, Robert Brigham of Rudby gent & William Wood of Hutton yeoman, John Jackson of City of Durham innkeeper, and William Jackson of Hutton tailor

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

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

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 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

26 Dec 1823:  burial of Thomas Jackson 69

1823 Baines:  Hutton:  Nathaniel Jackson, baker
1823 Baines:  Hutton:  William Jackson, tailor, draper & hatter

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

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

Churchwardens’ accounts 1830/1:  Mr Jackson’s bill 1s 1d



FS 461:  2 & 3 Feb 1831:  John Jackson had been a tenant of Rudby estate
FS 461:  2 & 3 Feb 1831:  cottage 1r:  occ by William Jackson at £10-3s p.a

FS 461:  2 & 3 Feb 1831:  Thomas Jackson had been a tenant of Rudby estate

Sarah Jackson is in a List of Girls – Middleton Book
Wm Jackson gave 5s to Rudby School, Oct 24th 1832 – Middleton Book

Tithe Map from Elizabeth Sleigh:  Nicholas Jackson occ 143
Tithe Map from Elizabeth Sleigh:  John Jackson occ 144

1840 Whites:  Hutton Rudby:  William Jackson, tailor

1841 Census:  William Jackson 30 ag lab and Mary 60, Tisbut Row
1841 Census:  John Jackson 35 linen weaver and family, with Elizabeth Seamour 50 ag lab, North End
1841 Census:  Nicholas Jackson 30 linen weaver and family, North End
1841 Census:  James Jackson 35 linen weaver and family, with William Coverdale 4, North End
1841 Census:  Elizabeth Jackson 65 ag lab, John 10 linen weaver, with John Charlton 20, linen weaver, North End
1841 Census:  Oliver Jackson 80 linen weaver, Eleanor 50, William 75 linen weaver, William 13 linen weaver, North End
1841 Census:  William Jackson 50 draper & tailor, Mary 40, Samuel Hebbron 14 tailor apprentice, Jane Allan 13 servant, North Side
1841 Census:  George Jackson 30 independent, Susanna 35, William 15 linen draper, with Maria Oates 15 servant and Thomas Boyd 15, North Side
1841 Census:  John Jackson 40 linen weaver and Nancy 20, Enterpen

Mar 1842:  William Jackson, draper & hatter, gave evidence about Huntley, who he “supplied … occasionally with hats” [Yorkshire Gazette 12 Mar 1842]

‘The Cleveland Repertory’
1 Jan 1843:
“Temperance”:  “On Thursday evening, the 15th ult, a meeting was held at the Bethel Chapel, for the purpose of advocating the principles of true temperance.  Mr George Jackson of Hutton Rudby was called to the chair …”

‘The Cleveland Repertory’ 1 Jun 1843:
“Queries by Mr Oliver Jackson, Hutton Rudby
Where is that spot which the sun but once shone on, and never will again?
What Bird was it, that sat so high, that when he call’d, all the World heard him – and where did he sit?”

Jacksons Yard:  at Bay Horse:  so-called in 1851 Census.  Perhaps named after the prosperous David Jackson, who appears at that time

1851 Census:  South Side:  Nicholas Jackson 41 handloom weaver, Elizabeth 42, Richard 17 tailor’s apprentice, Dorothy 11, Jowsey 9, Elizabeth 6 and Thomas 4, all b Hutton
1851 Census:  South Side:  William Jackson 40 ag lab b Lofthouse, Elizabeth 34 and daughter Mary 5, both b Hutton
1851 Census:  North End:  John Jackson 46 hand loom weaver linen, Jane 43, and children William 22 hand loom weaver linen, Jane 17, Ann 12, Oliver 8, John 7, and Thomas 4, all b Hutton
1851 Census:  North End:  Sarah Jackson single 23 cowkeeper and children John 1 b Sedgefield and Sarah Jane 1 mth b Hutton;  with brother Robert 21 hand loom weaver linen, sisters Elizabeth 19 dressmaker, Jane 9 and Margaret 3 orphan children;  all b Hutton
1851 Census:  North Side, near Bay Horse:  David Jackson 37 tailor employing 5, b Hutton, wife Christiana 40 b Swainby, and children William 12, David 9, Elizabeth 8, and Dorothy 1, all b Middlesbrough, with servant Jane Jackson single 20 house servant b Hutton
1851 Census:  Cottage [Jakebarn]:  William Jackson widower 65 farmer b Hutton Rudby and housekeeper Sarah Hoggard single 38 b Bilsdale

Details of cutting the hedge at Jackson paddock Jacque Barn in 1850-62 – Barlow’s Notebook.  William Jackson was the tailor who gave evidence at Goldsbrough’s trial, and then moved to farm Jakebarn.  Mr Barlow had problems with William Jackson and his wife (Jackson’s second marriage was to his housekeeper;  it does not appear in the Hutton Rudby registers, nor do the baptisms of their sons).  Jackson died in Apr 1874

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

1861 Census:  Cottage [Jakebarn]:  William Jackson married 76 farmer of 11 acres b Hutton and wife Sarah 46 b Bilsdale, with sons John Thomas 7 and Bennison 5 both b Hutton Rudby
1861 Census:  Hutton:  David Jackson seems to have been replaced by George Honeyman, grocer & draper, and further east is:  William Jackson 33 butcher, Jane 32, Mary 8, John 5, brother Thomas 30 butcher’s lad:  all b HR.  The family continues here until the turn of the century and beyond

Dr Robert Jackson had practised at Gateshead and moved to North Ormesby in 1867.  In 1868 he gave his home address as Hutton Rudby, but had returned to Gateshead in 1869.  [Dr Stout]

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:  Nicholas Jackson, grocer
1872 Post Office Directory:  Hutton Rudby:  Richard Jackson, tailor
1872 Post Office Directory:  Hutton Rudby:  Thomas Jackson, butcher
1872 Post Office Directory:  Hutton Rudby:  William Jackson, butcher

Oddfellows Board:  Bro:  James Jackson, Hutton, 25 Jun 1850, a47 [linen weaver, JBTurner]
Oddfellows Board:  Bro:  A Jackson, Hilton, 6 Dec 1864, a64
Oddfellows Board:  Bro:  O Jackson, Hutton, 2 Mar 1873, a31

1881 Census:  Vauxhall Bridge Road, Runham, Norfolk:  Oliver Jackson, minister, 64, b Hutton, York, and wife Sarah 61, b Bircham Tofts, Norfolk

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]


Jobling

Elizabeth Joblin was a subscriber to the (Methodist) Youth’s Instructor in 1840


Johnson

1823 Baines:  Hutton:  Lewis Johnson, farmer; Richard Johnson, farmer

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

Mary Johnson is in a List of Girls – 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 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:  Richard Johnson, farmer

1841 Census:  Hutton Thorn:  Johnson


Jowsey

12 Dec 1804:  Richard Jowsey married Jane Lamb [witnesses:  John Seymour, Thos Eland]

7 Aug 1822:  George Drydale, Richard Jowsey & Thomas Gill witnessed the Will of B D Suggitt

ET 257:  2 & 3 Jan 1823:  garth, orchard & houses, probably North End:  Richard Jowsey was a previous occupant

FQ 434:  14 & 15 Apr 1829:  Richard Jowsey 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

Richard Jowsey was a leader of a Wesleyan Methodist class in 1836, 1838 and 1839
He was a weaver in the 1841 Census

John Joucy occupied a house and house and garden owned by William Whorlton at the bottom of North End in the Tithe Map

1841 Census:  South Side:  Richard Jowsey 60 linen weaver, John Jowsey 25, Thomas 9 and Charlotte Sidgwick 15 linen weaver
1841 Census:  North End:  William Jowsey 55 linen weaver in household of William Sidgwick

1851 Census:  North Side:  Richard Jowsey widower 71, hand loom weaver linen, b Aiselby Park, Durham, son John 36 hand loom weaver linen and his wife Elizabeth 36, and grandchildren Thomas 18 and Mary 14 house servant;  the last four all b Hutton
1851 Census:  North End:  William Jowsey 67 widower handloom weaver linen b Middleton lodging in the household of Charlotte Sidgwick single 28 and her children James 9 and Isabella 1, and nephew William Sidgwick 5 and niece Mary Ann Sidgwick 2

People of Hutton Rudby in the C18/19: Kavenagh to Knowles

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Kavenagh

The wages of Mr and Mrs Kavenagh are listed in Barlow’s Notebook


Kay

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

28 Feb 1796:  bap of Ann Kay, daughter of Matthew & Hannah at HR

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

12 Jun 1807:  Martha Kay, daughter of Elizabeth, baptised – her father was George Bewick, and her parents married four years later
12 Mar 1809:  Matthew Kay, son of Elizabeth, baptised – this is presumably the boy later known as Matthew Bewick (qv)

11 Feb 1811:  George Bewick married Elizabeth Kay [witnesses:  John Brown, John Howe, Robert Codling, John Cook, Robt Cook, John Jackson]
23 Sep 1811:  John Kay married Mary Quanbrough [niece of Arthur Douglas] [witnesses:  Hannah Kay, Ann Kay, Wm Frankland, Geo Brigham]

21 Aug 1817:  burial of Mary Kay

13 Aug 1818:  John Bainbridge married Ann Kay [witnesses:  John Kay, Susanna Bainbridge, Sarah Sigwick, Robt Hall]

7 Oct 1819:  John Kay married Susannah Bainbridge [witnesses:  John Armstrong, Ann Orton, Joseph Young, William Hebbron, Sarah Hebbron]

1823 Baines:  Hutton:  John Kay, wheelwright

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

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

John Kay and Hannah Kay occupied property before 1829 which was demolished by Mark Barker to build Barkers Row.  He then lived in Barkers Row.  Arthur Douglas left his estate to his niece Mary Kay on his death in Dec 1831, and John Kay is the owner and occupier in the Tithe Map
John Kay and John Colebeck sold a former coachhouse 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

late July 1830:  John Kaye, cartwright, “knew Wm Huntley.  About the time he disappeared I was sat upon Edward Taylor’s step, near the prisoner’s house.  I saw Dalkin go to his house and come back again.  Prisoner followed Dalkin out;  he stood against the door cheek and said to me – “That gentleman’s been at my house asking for Huntley.  He’ll neither find him at my house, nor at Whitby, nor nowhere else.”  [Yorkshire Gazette 12 Mar 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:  wheelwrights &c:  John Kay & Alvey Kay

1841 Census:  John Kay 55 cartwright, Susanna 50, Alvey 25 journeyman cartwright, Catharine 25, with Reuben Bainbridge 85, Joseph Brittain 35 brickmaker, John Heath 20 brickmaker and Hannah Bainbridge 19 servant, East Side

1851 Census:  North Side:  Thomas Kay 23 plumber & glazier b Osmotherley and wife Martha 24 b Helmsley
1851 Census:  Enterpen:  Lucy Kay married 48 retired grocer b Helmsley

1872 Post Office Directory:  Hutton Rudby:  Alvey Kay, joiner & builder




Kearsley ? Kelsey

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


Keen

1851 Census:  New Close House farm:  Matthew Keen 54 farmer of 142 acres b Kildale and wife Elizabeth 50 b Danby, with son Joseph 19 b Kildale;  and farm servant George Heron 17 b Manfield, Durham and house servant Hannah Tyres 15 b Bilsdale


Kelsey

Flax bounty:  Simon Kelsey received government bounty 1780-4
1789:  Simon Kelsey was churchwarden

Yorkshire Poll Book 1807:  Hutton Rudby:  Simon Kelsey farmer

EO 107:  11 & 12 Aug 1820:  land near Jakebarn, recently purchased by Thomas Jackson from Simon Kelsey

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

FA 138:  21 & 22 Aug 1820:  New Close Farm:  formerly occupied by James Appleton, then by Thomas Kelsey and then by Joshua Emerson

Simon Kelsey, yeoman, one of the five men listed as gentry in 1823 Baines, Hutton
Simon Kelsey was churchwarden in 1825 and 1826

“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

Simon Kelsey was a Vestry member in 1830 who signed the election entry for the churchwardens in April; ditto for 5 Apr 1831.  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
Thomas and Ann Kelsey had daughters baptised at Rudby church:  Ann on 24 May 1807, Catherine on 25 Feb 1810, and Mary on 19 Jul 1812.
Most of the entries for Kelsey in the NBI are to be found in the Midlands:  Lincolnshire, Worcs, and Warwickshire.

Simon Kelsey made his Will on 14 Apr 1838.  His executors were farmers of Danby Wiske and Barton, the husbands of his nieces.  He left his estate to nephews, nieces and their children. [HR Wills]

1841 Census:  Simon Kelsey was living on North Side in the household of Robert Oates

‘The Cleveland Repertory’ 1 Jun 1843:
Deaths:  On the 10th ult at same place [Hutton Rudby], Simon Kelsey, aged 85

Simon Kelsey died 10 May 1843 a86? and his wife Jane (?) (?) 18(44?), grave211 – not in PRs


Kendall

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


Kendrew

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

24 Aug 1850:  Mary Ann Braithwaite 24 of Hutton daughter of Robert, tailor, married John Kendrew 29 of Carlton Miniott, tailor, son of Daniel, tailor [witnesses:  Robert Braithwaite, Hannah Braithwaite]

1851 Census:  East Side:  Robert Braithwaite W 66 tailor employing 2 hands bHutton, children Robert S 26 journeyman tailor, John 16 tailor’s apprentice and Mary Kendrew M 24 and son-in-law John Kendrew 30 journeyman tailor bBorrowby

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]


Kettlewell


William Kettlewell of Helperby near Boroughbridge yeoman on behalf of his wife Mary was owner of 1/7 of the Hutton tithes [Tithe Agmt 12 Jun 1838]


Kidd

1872 Post Office Directory:  Hutton Rudby:  John Kidd


Kilvington


1840 Whites:  East Rounton:  Ann Kilvington & Son, farmer and owner
“Kilvington” is listed in the “Brick acct”, apparently for the school – Barlow’s Notebook

20 Mar 1851:  John Kilvington occupied property on East Side owned by Isaac Benson [East Side deeds]


Kingston

1791:  George Kingstone was churchwarden

1801:  George Kingston of Hutton found guildty of poaching with greyhounds
[Hastings:  Local Govt & Socy]

1805:  George Kingston was churchwarden

FB 107:  15 Sep 1824:  3 closes on Doctor Lane [sic]:  parties:  Richard Eland of Leighton Buzzard Bedfordshire minister of the gospel (1) Edward Barry of Newington Causeway Surrey upholsterer (2):  previously occ by William Dawson and George Kingston and now by James Eland:  bounded by Doctor Lane to E, by Robert Huntley & by Samuel Hebbron to W, by Hutton to Crathorne road to N, by road to Rounton to S:  described in indre of 3 Mar last past to which the sd Richard Eland and William Eland currier were parties

FS 461:  2 & 3 Feb 1831:  Mr Kingston had been a tenant of Rudby estate

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

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”

13 Feb 1845:  Thomas Kingston occupied a house and was a former occupier of the 4a close, Hunters Holme, purchased by Isaac Benson [East Side deeds]
13 Feb 1845:  Mary Kingston had occupied a house on East Side, purchased by Isaac Benson [East Side deeds]

Mary Kingston was the wife of publican Charles Kingston.  She inherited property of East Side from her father Thomas Passman:  the Wheatsheaf.  Her daughter Elizabeth Raney was the landlord there for many years.

Betty Kingston’s grave is no5 MI – 2(1?) Jun 18(42) a72 – not in PRs
Charles Kingston died 4 Feb 1844, grave4 – not in PRs

1841 Census:  Mary Kingston 50 and Ellen Kingston 20, dressmaker, next door to Wheatsheaf
1851 Census:  Enterpen:  Thomas Kingstone 43 handloom weaver b Hutton Rudby, wife Rachel 48 b Warrington, Lancs and son Charles T. 11, b Manchester

Oddfellows Board:  Bro:  James Kingston, Stockton, 7 Nov 1880, a78


Knowles

1872 Post Office Directory:  Rudby:  Thomas & George Knowles, farmers




People of Hutton Rudby in the C18/19: Lamb to Lythe

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Lamb

John Lamb, yeoman of Rudby, was the grandson & devisee of Christopher Legg; Legg had purchased East Side ppty in 1758, which Lamb sold in 1779

1784-6:  John Lamb, Sexhow, was churchwarden

12 Dec 1804:  Richard Jowsey married Jane Lamb [witnesses:  John Seymour, Thos Eland]

7 Aug 1822:  B D Suggitt left to Mrs Mary Lamb of Hutton £100 or £10 a year, as his executor thought best

Mary Lamb 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


Lawson

‘Stokesley News & Cleveland Reporter’, 1 Jul 1844:
Births:  On Friday, June 14th, at Hutton Rudby, the wife of Mr Mark Lawson, of a son




Legg

John Lamb, yeoman of Rudby, was the grandson & devisee of Christopher Legg; Legg had purchased East Side ppty in 1758, which Lamb sold in 1779

Tithe Map:  Middleton:  Thomas Legg occupies 4-9, 15, 18-33:  present day Middleton Lodge (landlord George Wyndham)

1840 Whites:  Middleton:  Thomas Legg, farmer

1841 Census:  Butter Hill:  Thomas Legg 40 farmer and family, with Henry Jameson 25, Thomas Mankin 14, John Wilson 12, Ann Saddler 40, Mary Clemshire 14, servants and Rachael Hugill 18 indep [?]


Leith


4 Oct 1819:  Francis Leith was a previous occupant of a cottage bought by John Braithwaite [East Side deeds]


Lennard

Mrs Lennard of Leven House laid the foundation stone of the Primitive Methodist rebuilt chapel 1 Jun 1887 [G Milburn’s notes on chapel]


Lincoln

Ann, dau of Thomas Lincoln, butcher, and his wife Ann was baptised by Mr Barlow on 16 Sep 1832

1840 Whites:  Hutton Rudby:  Isabella Lincoln, farmer; William Lincoln, farmer

1841 Census:  Ann Lincoln 30 grocer, Ann 9 and John 7, and Elizabeth Tones 30 dressmaker, South Side

1851 Census:  South Side:  Ann Lincoln widow 43 grocer, and children Ann 18 dressmaker and John 17 saddler apprentice, all b Hutton
1851 Census:  Broad Carr House:  George Lincoln 43 farmer of 215 acres employing 4 labourers b Easby and wife Jane 45 b Crathorne;  with mother Isabella Lincoln widow 80 retired farmer b Stokesley, nephew William Pickering 17 farm servant b Kirklevington and niece Alice Wetford 16 house servant b Crathorne;  also farm servants John Cundill 21 b West Rounton and William Barker 14 b Hutton Rudby
1851 Census:  Burnt House:  William Lincoln 42 farmer of 162 acres employing 2 labourers b Easby and wife Alice 41 b Kirkleatham with son John Lincoln 16 b Hutton Rudby;  and farm servant John Tinkler 17 b Faceby and house servant Ann Peart 15 b Maltby

1841-61 (inc) Census:  Broad Carr:  Lincoln
1841 & 1851 Census:  Burnt House:  Lincoln


Longstoff

James Longstaff was farmer at Whacker/Hutton Manor
James Longstoff signed the election of churchwardens and a church rate of 5 ½ per pound on 24 April 1832

1840 Whites:  Hutton Rudby:  James Longstaff, farmer

1851 Census:  main street, Hutton:  James Longstaff W 85 retd farmer bAyton, daughter Elizabeth Bousfield M 58 bAyton, her husband Edward 53 ag lab bSeamer, and their daughter Ann Mary S 21 ag lab bAyton


Longthorn

1871 Census:  Primrose Cottage (possibly Linden Lodge):  Thomas Longthorn 36 farmer 7 a b Northallerton and wife Ann 36 b Stokesley


Low

1823 Baines:  Hutton:  Michael Low, farmer
1841 Census:  Hutton Field House:  Lowe
1851 Census:  Hutton Field House:  Michael Lowe 68 b Linthorpe and wife Ann 67 b Hilton
1861 Census:  Hutton Field House:  Lowe


Lowther

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

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]


Lythe

Richd Lythe bought Charity Spelling book for 1d in List – Middleton Book
Robert Lythe bought a Catechism for 1d in List – Middleton Book
R Lyth was in A List of Boys – Middleton Book

1841 Census:  John Lythe 20 journeyman shoemaker, Harriot Lythe 25 and Elizabeth Richardson 5, near the Wheatsheaf
1841 Census:  Mary Lythe 43 baker, Ann 12, Joseph Richardson 40 and William Russell 55 shoe maker journeyman, South Side

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

Oddfellows Board:  PG:  William Lythe, Hutton, 18 Feb 1848, a32
Oddfellows Board:  Bro:  John Lythe, Rudby, 9 Jan 1882, a62

John Lythe was a boot & shoe maker.  He lived on North Side for the 1851 & 1861 Censuses;  on Rudby Road in 1871;  and at Bankfoot, Rudby in 1881
Robert Lythe was a shoe maker, and lived and in 1902 died at Skeeby, near Richmond
Richard Lythe was a blacksmith, lived in Great Broughton from 1841 to 1881.
Ann Lythe married James Salvin, paper maker of Richmond



People of Hutton Rudby in the C18/19: MacBean to Mawlam

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MacBean

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


Macfarlane

John Mackfarlan was in Stephen Calvert’s class in the Wesleyan class lists 1836

Dr John Macfarlane (1806-80) was born in Edinburgh.  On 12 Dec 1821 he was apprenticed to Henry Johnson of Edinburgh for 5 years.  He did not attend university lectures, taking his LRCS at Edinburgh on 6 Jun 1826.  From 1831 to 1833 he studied at University College, London, taking his LSA in 1834.  In 1836 he married Sarah Bailey Holdsworth.  Their first son, John, was born on 29 Apr 1837 and baptised at Hutton Rudby; he died the next year.  John and Sarah then had six children, all born at Leeds between 1840 and 1846.  They emigrated to Australia in 1849, and John registered his MD from Edinburgh in 1850.  Dr Stout wondered whether Macfarlane was the unqualified doctor appointed by the Vestry in 1833.  [Dr Stout]


Maclane/Maclean

15 Jun 1837:  Charles Maclean of Whorlton weaver married Jane Cook of Rudby [witnesses: Peter Tenisily?, William Hebbron]

1841 Census:  John Maclane 30 weaver and family on East Side
1841 Census:  Charles Maclane 25 linen weaver and family, North End

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

“Maclean son ill” was given 2s6d in Feb 1853, in Barlow’s Notebook

1851 Census:  North End:  Charles Maclane 38 handloom weaver linen b Swainby, Jane 34 b Hutton, and children Ann 13, Robert 6 and Charles Tom 2, all b Hutton;  and lodger Charles Toy widower 74 ag lab “Italian”

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




McLaughlin

John McLaughlin (18) groom b Ireland was servant at the Vicarage in 1851 Census


McRea

1840 Whites:  Skutterskelfe:  Roderic McRea, gardener
1841 Census:  Skutterskelfe Hall:  Roderick McRea 32 b Scotland, steward
1841 Census:  Butter Hill:  Mary McRea 20 b Scotland servant with William Robinson


Malvin


from Dr Geoffrey Stout:
Dr Mark Malvin, baptised 30 Nov 1854 at Eston.
1871 Redcar & Saltburn News:  reports success of preliminary exams.
1881 Medical Directory:  Poplar Villa, Hutton Rudby, medical officer & public vaccinator for Stokesley Union and Swainby Mines.
1881 Census:  Poplar Villa, Enterpen, with wife and baby daughter born Hutton Rudby.
1881 Middlesbrough News & Cleveland Advertiser:  announced resignation of his posts.
1883 Medical Directory:  addressed unconfirmed.
1884 Medical Directory & 1895 Kellys:  at Scarborough


Marshall

Mr Barlow’s hedge was cut in 1856 by Luke Marshall Jas Richardson’s man – Barlow’s Notebook

Wellcome Library Local History MSS:  William Pannell Marshall (fl 1828) surgeon, apothecary and accoucheur, Hutton Rudby:  photocopy and typed transcript of autograph letter to his father, William Marshall (architect at Northallerton), describing his training in London (inc. body-snatchers), plus photocopy of two trade cards announcing Marshall’s commencing practice in Hutton Rudby, 1828 and n.d. (MS 7312/10-12)
A trade card was reproduced on the cover of one of the Hutton Rudby photograph collections as a “card introducing a Mr Marshall, Apothecary, Surgeon and Accoucheur dated 8 Dec 1828”


Maughan

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

Mary Ellen Milburn b1850, dau of Thomas Milburn, marr Robert Maughan.  He worked for the Wilsons’ mill and was very active in the Primitive Methodist Chapel.  They had no children.
Undated newspaper clipping (c1922):

A Cleveland Golden Wedding
Mr & Mrs R S Maughan, Hutton Rudby
Hand loom weaving recalled
Our Cleveland correspondent writes:
Married 50 years ago at the Stockton Registry Office, Mr & Mrs Robert S Maughan, Hutton Rudby in Cleveland, have just celebrated their golden wedding.
Mr Maughan, who is a native of Eston, is 75 years of age.  Mrs Maughan, who before her marriage was a Miss Mary Anne Milburn, is 72, and is a native of Hutton Rudby.  Her father, the late Mr Thomas Milburn, was a weaver in the employment of Mr Allen Wilson [sic], who retired and closed his works about 14 years ago.  After their marriage Mr and Mrs Maughan went to reside at Stockton, and with the exception of that time, Mrs Maughan has lived in Hutton Rudby all her life.
When at Stockton, Mr Maughan worked at the Norton Furnaces, but later was a bleacher and worked for 36 years at Allen Wilson's Sail Cloth Works.  For nine of these years he was a journeyman, and for the remaining 27 years was a foreman.
For 47 years he has been connected with the Primitive Methodist Chapel, both in the Sunday school and as a local preacher, and he has held practically all the offices open to a layman.
At one time, in the earlier part of his life, Mr Maughan lived at Redcar, for about a year or so, and he remembers how there were three wrecks in one day, one of the ships being loaded with Dantzic wheat.
Mr Maughan told our representative that there have been few changes, on the whole, in Hutton Rudby - only a few houses have been built.  Years ago, he said, "there used to be loads of empty houses," but now they are very scarce.
Mr and Mrs Maughan have no family, but they have a large number of nieces and nephews, and at the celebration of their golden wedding there were no fewer than 24 relatives, including a great-great niece, aged one and a half years.
Mrs Maughan recalls how the hand loom weaving was one of the chief occupations of the district, and in the very house in which they now live, a hand loom was erected about 60 years ago.  Linen material, "huck-a-back" towelling, and "tick" were all made by these looms, and Mrs Maughan remembers that when she was a girl of about 12 years of age, she had a linen dress, the material of which she spun herself, and it had also been woven in her own house.
When the steam looms were started, a manufactury was erected at Hutton Rudby, near the church, and her father worked there, while her mother also acted as "web-picker."
An interesting story was also told of a Belgian refugee, an artist, who visited Hutton Rudby.  One day, when he came to their house (which is also the one in which they now reside) he was so struck by the antique appearance of the house and contents that he asked permission to paint it.  Permission was granted, and the old fireplace, with its "crane and wreckin'," on which was hung a kettle, became the background of a picture, the centre of which was occupied by Mrs Maughan, with an open Testament before her.  A musk plant was placed in the window, sweet peas upon the table, etc. and so charming was the result that the work was eventually hung in the Academy!
Remarking as to their age, Mr and Mrs Maughan pointed out that they were by no means the oldest of the inhabitants of the village; there were two people, husband and wife, who were both well over 90 years.

Maw

late July 1830:  James Maw lived in Hutton Rudby at that time.  He met Huntley, Goldsbrough and Garbutt on 30 July at 9 pm, “near to the Bridle-lane, leading to Crathorne, on the Middleton and Rudby road … Huntley spoke to me.  He said ‘Where has thou been thou caffey dog?’ … ”.  Maw went with the constable, Bewick, to question Goldsbrough, and again with the Catchasides, John Cook and other neighbours; he gave a vivid account of the interviews.  Maw had been in prison for absconding from his master’s service, and had been accused to taking money belonging to a trades’union. [Yorkshire Gazette 12 Mar 1842]


Mawlam

Yorkshire Poll Book 1807:  Welbury:  William Mawlam farmer (freehold in Hutton Rudby) 



People of Hutton Rudby in the C18/19: Mease to Mundale

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



Mease

Mease Brothers bought Hutton mill to convert to a water-powered flax-mill in 1834, but were affected by the recession and it closed ca 1844.

John Mease’s grandfather Solomon Mease (1731-1801) b Great Ayton, married Jane Humphrey and had 4 children.  He was the son of a weaver and trained as a weaver himself.  He inherited money and his wife brought him a good portion, but in the words of his son John, his “love for cards and drink was such that he was sold up in a few years”.  He joined the army and served as a sergeant in the American Wars.  Solomon’s son John Mease (1767-1849) was a grocer in Stokesley.  He married Isabella Turnbull, and they had 5 children:  Thomas, Isabella, John, Rachel and Mary.  His very interesting diary contains many references to the religious problems of the day and to Methodism.

John Mease jnr introduced handloom weaving of Table Cloths and Napkins in Stokesley in about 1820.  He had a small weaving shed behind his house (now Barclays Bank)

1823 Baines:  “a mill, which Messrs Thomas & John Mease are now erecting, to be worked by the power of steam”

1832:  John Mease bought land and old buildings on Levenside, Stokesley, to build his new mill.  John & Thomas Mease and Mr Blackett, a Leeds engineer whose son married Thomas’s daughter, built the mill by July 1833.  A new steam engine was installed and a large gasometer for lighting:  gas was piped over to Red House, where Thomas lived.  But the partnership failed, by Mar 1838 the affair was in Chancery, and the Stokesley mill closed.  Thomas joined with John in the Hutton Rudby venture, where John had bought the former paper mill, and was preparing to install machinery to weave sailcloth.  Their business was seriously affected by a severe depression which began in 1837.  Whites 1840 states that the flax mill employed 250 hands.  Thomas Pilter, the son of Isabella Mease, ran the mill at this point; he later founded a firm himself and his son became Sir John Pilter of Halifax.  By 1851 the mill is said to have reverted to corn milling. 

Thomas Mease (1792-1862) was a gifted artist, inventive with his hands, a speculator and inventor, and often had to take his family abroad to avoid his creditors.  He lived variously in Stokesley and Hutton Rudby.

Joseph Mellanby Mease (1827-1928) was the son of Thomas.  Well-educated and well-read, he had lost an arm in an accident in one of his father’s flour mills – according to a newspaper article written in his old age, it was the Hutton mill.  Joseph Mease was chief clerk at the chemical works in Jarrow owned by a member of the family.  He came to the village in 1858 as manager of a corn mill “on the site on which the police-constable’s house now stands”.  Three years later he lost his arm through his sleeve being caught in the machinery.

Joseph Mease’s wife ran a school, assisted by her daughter Jenny.  Mrs Mease’s school is mentioned in the Hutton School log book in 1879.

John Mease and his family lived in Hutton Rudby, where he rebuilt the old mill house as Leven House.

1841 Census:  John Mease 40 merchant and Mary Mease 30 and Edward 4 (not born in county) in the household of Thomas Pilter

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

1872 Post Office Directory:  Rudby:  Joseph Mellanby Mease, registrar of births & deaths

“Given by Mr Mease” 2s 6d “Sacrament Money” in Lent 1873

John Mease died 1876 and his wife Hannah Maria Geldart in 1851:  tablet in church

Joseph Mellanby Mease was the registrar who recorded the death of Mr Barlow in 1878.  
In ‘Northern Primitive Methodism’, there is a reference to a Mr  Mellanby in Greenhow.

EB 38:  1816:  Henry Mellanby of Stockton gent was witness




Meek

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)

1840 Whites:  Hutton Rudby:  James Meek, George IV, Enterpen
1840 Whites:  Hutton Rudby:  wheelwrights &c:  James Meek

1841 Census:  Enterpen:  James Meek 40 innkeeper & joiner, Mary 40, with children Mary 18 and Hannah 15, with John Wake joiner’s apprentice

 ‘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:  Enterpen:  Christopher Meek 42 machine maker b Crathorne and wife Mary 38 b Preston, Durham, and children John 16 apprentice b Yarm, Elizabeth 10 b Thirsk, Hannah 8 b Thirsk, Sarah Jane 5 b Thirsk and Anne Maria 1 b Hutton Rudby
1851 Census:  Enterpen:  Mary Meek widow 55 innkeeper b Ayton and daughter Hannah Meek 23 b Hutton Rudby, with grandson William Chapman 11 mths b Sexhow

Meek “committed a trespass” with Jackson in Mr Barlow’s field in May 1856 – Barlow’s Notebook

early 1861:  Robert Braithwaite snr had property in Enterpen, which was occupied by Christopher Meek, Henry Elliott and Robert jnr [East Side deeds]

1872 Post Office Directory:  Hutton Rudby:  Christopher Meek, wheelwright


Merrington

William Merrington occupied a house and land just below Tisbut Row, owned by Thomas Spence
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:  William Merrington 40 linen weaver and family, Tisbut Row

1851 Census:  Tisbut Row:  Alice Merrington weaver’s widow 58 b Lofthouse, and children John 21 handloom weaver linen and George 14 winder for weaver, both b Hutton


Merryweather

George Merryweather was the nephew of B D Suggitt, and inherited Tunstall Ground / Suggitt Grove / Linden Grove in 1822.  Merryweather, doctor of Whitby, married Jane Anderson Loy, daughter of Dr Loy of Whitby, and related to the Loys of Great Ayton and Stokesley.

Barlow rented Linden Grove on his arrival in the village
Mr Merryweather gave £2 to Rudby School, year beginning 24 Oct 1833 – Middleton Book
Mr Merryweather gave £1 to Rudby School, Oct 24th 1832 – Middleton Book


Metcalfe

1841 Census:  Middleton Hall:  Thomas Metcalfe 20 servant with Thomas Righton
Thomas Metcalfe was churchwarden 1862-8; the churchwarden named in the Call Book 1861
1872 Post Office Directory:  Sexhow:  Thomas Metcalfe, farmer


Meynell

The Meynell family seems to have been resident in Crathorne in the C18.  The first Meynell burial at Hutton Rudby is in 1805 [NBI]. 

4 Sep 1791:  Edward and Martha Meynell’s daughter Mary, baptised at the parish church on 4 Sep 1791 with the note “A Papist”.  She had been baptised a week earlier at the Catholic church in Crathorne.  Her siblings Elizabeth 1784, Edward 1787, James 1793 and Martha 1806 were all baptised at Crathorne Catholic church.  Edward was also baptised in the Anglican church.

1811-1823:  There were several Meynell marriages in Hutton Rudby:  Martha married James Hood 9 Dec 1823 at Hutton Rudby:  they had five children, baptised Catholic, three at Crathorne and two in Stockton.  William Meynell married Eleanor/Helen Moss on 13 Sep 1823:  they had seven children, baptised Catholic at Crathorne.  Jane Mennell married William Hansell on 7 Jun 1818.  Mary married Reuben Bainbridge on 18 Nov 1811:  they had twelve children, baptised Catholic at Crathorne.
The Hood, Hansell and Bainbridge children were confirmed at the Crathorne Catholic church on 22 Jun 1833.

1823 Baines:  Hutton:  Edward Meynell, wheelwright
1823 Baines:  Hutton:  Edward Meynell, vict. Board

1828:  Edward Meynell the younger weaver of Enterpen bought the two houses at the end of the Station Hotel terrace from John Sidgwick

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)

11 Sep 1828:  bap of Eleanor Meynell, dau of William, cartwright, and Eleanor

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

27 Dec 1830:  bap of Elizabeth Meynell, dau of John, wright, and Elizabeth

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 Menill bought a Catechism for 1d in the List – Middleton Book
Mary Menill bought a book for ½d in the List – Middleton Book
William and Mary Mennil appear in the “List of those who bought books” (presumed to date from ca1830-2) – they bought catechisms, which suggests that the children were receiving an Anglican education.

Tithe Map:  Edward Meynell occupied the Carpenters Arms, owned by Mark Barker
Tithe Map:  William Meynell and others occupied Barkers Row

18 Aug 1838:  Will of Mark Barker named Edward Meynell the younger of Hutton, weaver, as an executor; he renounced probate after Barker’s death in Jan 1839 [HR Wills]

1840 Whites:  Hutton Rudby:  Edward Mennell, Plough
1840 Whites:  Hutton Rudby:  wheelwrights &c:  Edward Mennell

1841 Census:  Hutton Rudby, near the Wheatsheaf:  William Meynell 45 cartwright, wife Ellen 45 (not b Yorks), and children Robert 11, George 9, Edward 6, Jane 4 and Eleanor 2
1841 Census:  Carpenters Arms:  Edward Meynell 75 publican & wright, Martha 75, Edward 50 weaver, Mary 20 dressmaker, William 15 cartwright, and Jane 15
1841 Census:  Farm House, Middleton:  Hannah Mennell 15 servant with John Tweddle

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

23 May 1842:  Mary Meynell dressmaker a24 married James Sidgwick weaver. 

‘Stokesley News & Cleveland Reporter’, 1 Jun 1844:
Deaths:  On Tuesday, May 7th, at Hutton Rudby, Mr Edward Meynell, aged 80 years
Grave384 – not in PRs

1853:  George Meynell married Jane Ann Lowe of Hutton; he is described as being of Kirklevington, but was the son of William the wheelwright. 

1851 Census:  East Side, Bensons Yard:  William Meynel W 54 carpenter, children Robert 21 journeyman carpenter, Jane 14 and Elen 12, and grandchildren William Moss 10 and Robert Moss 6 [their surnames appear in the transcript as Moss, but 1861C they are Meynell]:  all born Hutton
1851 Census:  Enterpen:  Edward Meynell single 64 hand loom weaver and sister Jane Hansell widow 48 housekeeper, both b Hutton Rudby

1861 Census:  East End, Main Street:  William Meynell widower 66 house carpenter, children Robert 31 house carpenter, and Eleanor Corner 22 shoemaker’s wife, with grandsons Edward Meynell 2 [born to Eleanor before marriage?], William 19 carpenter and Robert 15 carpenter
1861 Census:  Enterpen:  Edward Meynell 70 retd linen weaver and sister Jane Hansell widow 58, with lodger Martha Sidgwick 8

10 Mar 1862:  burial of Edward Meynell aged 75

28 Nov 1863:  William Meynell occupied a house and joiners shop on East Side, a little south of Robert Meynell’s property, mortgaged by J A Benson. 

1871 Census:  Bay Horse:  Robert Meynell 40 carter & publican, wife Margaret 43 [nee Wiles, late Braithwaite], children Elizabeth 5, Frederick 4, Herbert 2 and Martha 9 mths, with stepdaughter Sarah Braithwaite 10
1871 Census:  East End:  William Meynell widower 74 cartwright, with daughter Mrs Eleanor Corner 32 housekeeper and her children Edward Corner 12, Eleanor 8, Esther 4 and William 9 mths
1871 Census:  North End:  Jane Hansell annuitant 68

1872 Post Office Directory:  Hutton Rudby:  Robert Meynell, Bay Horse, & wheelwright & joiner
1872 Post Office Directory:  Hutton Rudby:  William Meynell, joiner & wheelwright

27 Nov 1876:  Robert Meynell occupied a workshop and buildings at the north end of East Side [East Side deeds] 

8 Jan 1878:  burial of Jane Hansell [NBI]

1881 Census:  Enterpen:  Robert Meynell, 50, joiner and builder, b Hutton Rudby, with his wife and family, and his 3 year old granddaughter b Mbro
1881 Census:  Bank Top:  Helen Corner (married) 42 charwoman, her father William Meynell widower 84 formerly joiner, her children Vincent 10, Agusta 7 and Dorcas 3 Corner;  all b Hutton Rudby

14 Jun 1887:  burial of Edward Meynell aged 53.  He was probably the Edward Meynell, 46, b Hutton Rudby, Chelsea Pensioner and tailor, who is listed in the 1881 Census as married, with a 15 year old son Robert, a wood turner b Dover Castle, Kent


Middlemass

“Middlemass ill 0-1-0” – Sacrament Money 1868 – Barlow’s Notebook


Milburn

1841 Census:  Thomas Milburn 25 linen weaver, Elizabeth 20 and John 1, North End
1841 Census:  Martha Milburn 14 servant at Rudby Mill
1841 Census:  John Milburn 45 labourer and family, cottage, Rudby

‘The Cleveland Repertory’ 1 Sep 1844:
Marriages:  on Thursday, the 22nd ult, at Hutton Rudby, by the Rev Ralph Grenside, Mr Benjamin Willis Harker, Linen Draper, and Silk Mercer, of High Ousegate, York, to Ellen, the youngest daughter of Mrs Milbourn, of Hutton Rudby

John Milburn b1824 with his family lived in Hartlepool in 1871 Census, near William Davison b1802 HR.

Mary Ellen Milburn b1850, dau of Thomas Milburn, marr Robert Maughan.  He worked for the Wilsons’ mill and was very active in the Primitive Methodist Chapel.  They had no children. 

1851 Census:  North End:  Thomas Milburn widower 35 handloom weaver linen b Whorlton and children John 11 handloom weaver linen, William 9 and Mary 7, 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


Milestone

1823 Baines:  Rudby:  Thomas Milestone, shoemaker

FS 461:  2 & 3 Feb 1831:  cottage 5a:  occ by Thomas Millstone at £12-3s p.a

Thomas Milston bought a Catechism for 1d in the List – Middleton Book
T Milestone was in A List of Boys – Middleton Book

1841 Census:  Thomas Milestone 55 shoe maker, Martha 55 and Thomas 17 gardener, cottage, Rudby
1841 Census:  Robert Milestone 14 servant at Rudby Farm

1851 Census:  Rudby:  Thomas Milestone W 72 shoemaker, with Thomas 28 gardener bRudby, Mary 27 bHutton, Martha 3 bRudby and Ruben 2mths bRudby
1851 Census:  Rudby:  Robert Milestone 25 bRudby ag lab and Mary 21 b Bilsdale

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

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

Thomas Milestone was Skutterskelfe gardener in the 1871 census

Hannah (Ann) Davison (1799-1889) married John Ainsley (1795-1866).  He was born in Sedgefield; an agricultural labourer.  Hannah is a cowkeeper with 6a in the 1881 census.  Buried in Rudby.  Their children were Hannah (Ann), William, John, and Elizabeth Ainsley.  Hannah Ainsley (1832-?) was a scullery maid at Stokesley Manor House in 1851 Census.  William Ainsley (1834-?) was a farm labourer 1861 census Rudby; he married Mariane.  Their son William, b Stainton 1865, married Catharine Charlton of Hutton Rudby, and on her early death Frances Ann Cowen of Enterpen.  He is in the 1897 Rudby estate photograph.  He is buried at Rudby with both wives.  His children died in infancy.  John Ainsley (1836-7).  Elizabeth Ainsley (1843-1933) married a widower, Robert Milestone (1825-1905) gardener, Rudby.  'Mrs Milestone' is in the 1897 Rudby estate photograph.


Miller

1823 Baines:  Rudby:  John Miller, weaver

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

FS 461:  2 & 3 Feb 1831:  Frances Miller had been a tenant of Rudby estate

FS 461:  2 & 3 Feb 1831:  cottage 28p:  occ by Fanny Miller at £2-1s p.a


Millers (cornmillers)

1841:  William Barton, at Rudby Mill?, employing John Sharp
1851:  Joseph Middleton, master miller, Rudby mill, bMiddleton St George; Thomas Gears at Mill House; Thomas Stringer, journeyman miller, in Rudby village
1861:  Michael Middleton, cornmiller, and Thomas Stringer in Rudby village; Thomas Mease at Bank Bottom, Hutton; Joseph Mease at Mill House, Rudby
1871:  Thomas Stringer in Rudby village; Robert Foster & family in Enterpen; John Mease at Mill House; Joseph Mease at Mill House, Rudby
1881:  no working miller in village?  Joseph Mease’s house now called Leven Valley


Mitchinson


“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”

1851 Census:  Enterpen:  Jane Mitchinson single 64 outdoor labourer b Elton, Durham


Mohun

Betty Mohun’s debts to Mr Barlow have many entries in the Middleton Book


Moon

Churchwardens’ accounts 1838:  “Robt Moon Glazier for Do. & Soldring Leads £5-12-3d] [ditto=New Window]


Mooras

1872 Post Office Directory:  Sexhow:  Misses Mooras, Old Hall


Morrill

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


Morton

S Morton was in A List of Boys – Middleton Book


Moss

Robert Moss occupied the Shoulder of Mutton on North Side in 1823 (deed ET 293)

1823 Baines:  Hutton:  Robert Moss, vict.  Black Swan

William Meynell married Eleanor/Helen Moss on 13 Sep 1823:  they had seven children, baptised Catholic at Crathorne. 

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

FB 195:  19 & 20 Nov 1824:  Bay Horse area ppties bought by James Catchasides jnr, Robert Moss being an occupier

FP 310:  12 & 13 Feb 1830:  Catchasides sale of Bay Horse ppties to Thomas Hall, Robert Moss an occupier


Mudd

James Mudd was a tenant of the Tweddle property at the east end of North Side in 1815 and was still a tenant of James Flounders, occupying a garden in the Stringers Row area in the Tithe Map

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]

1840 Whites:  Hutton Rudby:  John Mudd, boot & shoe maker

1851 Census:  South Side:  John Mudd 36 shoemaker, Rachel 31, and children Robert 11, James 7, Elizabeth 5 and Edward 3;  all b Hutton

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


Mundale

EO 107:  11 & 12 Aug 1820:  land near Jakebarn, recently purchased by Thomas Jackson from Simon Kelsey, bounded by George Mundell’s land to S

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

1823 Baines:  Hutton:  George Mundale, gardener
1823 Baines:  Hutton:  carriers:  G Mundale to Stockton, every Wed.

1840 Whites:  Hutton Rudby:  George Mundell, gardener

1841 Census:  George Mundale 60 gardener born out of county, Mary 58, Elizabeth 25 dressmaker, Ann 20 dressmaker, North Side

1851 Census:  North Side:  George Mundell 72 market gardener b Bishop Auckland and Mary 68 b Hutton

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).











Captain Michael Langborne: Whitby privateer

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In the Whitby Museum, there is a Letter of Marque granted by King George II in 1746 to Michael Langborne of Whitby.  Europe was at war and Britain required all the firepower she could find.  Captain Michael Langborne (c1703-82) was a Whitby master mariner and shipowner who was combining profit with patriotism by becoming a privateer.

His Letter of Marque entitled him “to set forth in warlike manner” in his ship, the Jane and Mary (300 tons), and apprehend, seize and take ships, vessels and goods – particularly if they were French or Spanish – and bring them to judgment in the High Court of Admiralty.  There he had to prove to the prize court that his Letter of Marque was valid and the ship he had taken belonged indeed to the enemy.  The prize court would then “condemn” it, and Captain Langborne would be able to sell the ship and he and his crew would divide the proceeds.

In addition, he was to keep a journal of his proceedings and note all the details of the prizes he took, and also
"of the station, motion and strength of the Enemys as well as he or his Mariners can discover by the best intelligence he can get … all of which he shall from time to time as he shall or may have opportunity transmit an account to our High Admiral …"
When Captain Langborne’s descendants gave the Letter of Marque to the Whitby Museum, staff at the Whitby Lit & Phil researched his family tree, which I will reproduce here, together with the later supplementary work done by Miss Grace Dixon and myself.

Michael Langborne (c1703-82) & Eleanor (c1699-1782)

Michael Langborne (c1703-82), privateer, shipowner, master of the Jane and Mary, was married to Eleanor or Ellin (c1699-1782).  They had six children, of whom the first four died in infancy:
•    William and Mary (twins), born on 29 Aug 1728 and buried 1 Sep 1728
•    Eleanor, born 4 Apr 1730 and buried 12 March 1732
•    Ellin, born 1 Dec 1732 and buried 6 Jan 1740
•    George (1735-1817)
•    Nathaniel (1739-1807)           
Eleanor was buried on 1 November 1781, aged 82.
Michael Langborne was buried on 23 May 1782, aged 79. 

Their sons George and Nathaniel survived and prospered as ship builders, and their sons after them.


Ship (from Richard Weatherill's The Ancient Port of Whitby)


Langbornes' Yard
There are several references to the Langbornes in the Revd George Young's History of Whitby, published in 1817.  The List of Subscribers to the book includes William (son of George), and George, Nathaniel and John Langborne (sons of Nathaniel).  William had evidently taken an interest in Young’s work, and had provided him with information on the whalefishery.
"The skill of our shipbuilders and carpenters has long been generally acknowledged"
writes Young on p 551
"and has brought much business to the town, and produced a great influx of property; especially during the first American war, and the last French war.  No ships are better adapted for transports, or more serviceable for general purposes, than those built at Whitby.  In strength, beauty, and symmetry, our vessels are equalled by few, and, I may venture to say, excelled by none.  
This remark does not originate in partiality for my townsmen, but rests on the united testimony of respectable strangers from various parts, whose information, judgment, and experience could not be questioned.  When the comparative cheapness with which vessels can be built or repaired here is also taken into view, it will fully account for the great run of business which our shipbuilders have enjoyed.  Numbers of beautiful vessels have been built at Whitby for the ports of London, Hull, Shields, Liverpool, Lancaster, and other places in England.  At one time, many of the Berwick, or Leith, smacks, which are now procured from Bridport, were built at Whitby; particularly by Mr George Langborne." 
Young gives an account (p459) of the development of Langbornes’ Yard (the site, on Langborne Road, is now home to the Tourist Information Centre, a supermarket and car parks):
"the yard belonging to Messrs Langborne, which is formed on land apparently gained from the Esk, did not commence till about the year 1760.  It was begun by Mr Richard Simpson, occupied for some time by Mr William Hustler, and then sold about 40 years ago to the family by whom it is still possessed."
Langbornes also took over Mr Simpson’s dry dock.  The earliest dry docks in Whitby were on the east side of the Esk and were built from about 1734 by the Dock Company, but
“On the west side of the Esk are also three dry docks; one at Boghall, built in 1757 by the late Mr Thomas Fishburn, and now belonging to Messrs Fishburn & Brodrick; one built by Mr Richard Simpson, about the year 1760, now belonging to Messrs Langborne, being an appendage to their ship-yard; and a third formed in 1812, by the late Mr Henry Barrick and his sons, being connected with the building yard belonging to that family.”
The Dock Company was held in four shares, and in 1816 one of these shares was owned by Messrs George, John and Nathaniel Langborne, and Mr Jameson.

Richard Weatherill's The Ancient Port of Whitby & its Shipping lists many vessels built by the Langbornes: for example, in 1792 they built the brigantine Palladium and ships Traveller and Ark; the Alexander, a bark built in 1801, was captained in that year by George Langborne, master mariner (son of Nathaniel) – she was later taken by the enemy.  A well-known Frank Meadow Sutcliffe photograph called 'The Dock End, Whitby' (1880) shows the Alert, built as a sloop by G & N Langborne in 1802 and later converted to a schooner.

The Langbornes' best known vessel was built by George and Nathaniel Langborne in 1774 for Mr William Herbert of Scarborough.  She was named the Diligence (295 tons), but when she was bought by the government to be consort to the Resolution for Captain James Cook's third and final voyage, she was renamed Discovery.

The last vessel built by Messrs Langborne was a ship, the Lady Hilda, built in 1837 and owned on registration by the executors of John Langborne.

The end of Langbornes’ Yard
The Langbornes were to own the yard for another 20 years after the publication of Young’s History, until 1837. 

For some years, the brothers Nathaniel, George and John had been in partnership with their brother-in-law William Jameson, trading as John Langborne & Co.  The youngest brother, John, held half the shares, while the other three took a one-sixth share each.  After William Jameson's death they had continued to trade, but in 1831 they decided to dissolve the partnership.  Nathaniel was then aged 60 and George 58, and 50-year-old John bought out his brothers' shares. 

The Deed of Dissolution of Partnership dated 1 January 1831 is held at the North Yorkshire County Record Office in Northallerton.  It shows that the joint stock-in-trade was then valued at £1,648-12s, and that they were owed £686-7s-11d by various debtors.  They appointed William Rymer Langborne as their attorney to get in the debts.  (He was the son of their cousin William Langborne).  The cranes etc were not included in the valuation, being considered part of the yard and premises. 

George died the year after the partnership was dissolved; his only son was to become a solicitor and die at the age of 29.

The next year, 1833, Nathaniel died.  His only son died the following year, aged 24. 

In 1836, John died.  He was aged 55, but his surviving sons were then aged only 9 and 4.  For a time, his trustees carried on the business on their behalf, but it was eventually sold.

Brig


.......next: The family of George Langborne (1735-1817), son of Michael & Eleanor Langborne .......

The family of George Langborne (1735-1817), son of Michael & Eleanor Langborne

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George Langborne was baptised on 19 August 1735. 

On 10 Feb 1763, George married Mary Rymer of Whitby, by licence.  The entry in the register gives his occupation as Ship builder; the marriage was witnessed by Nathaniel Langborne and Michael Blackbeard.

George Langborne (1735-1817) and Mary Rymer (1733-96) had seven children:

•    Mary, born 10 Jan 1764 and buried 18 March
•    Michael (1765-90)   
•    John, born 13 March 1767 and was buried aged five on 15 Nov 1772
•    William (1768-1844)
•    Mary (1770-1804)          
•    Eleanor (1773-1804) 
•    Margaret (1774-1816)
Mary (Rymer) Langborne died on 8 Apr 1796, aged 62.  She had married at the age of 30 and had seen three of her children buried.  When she died the surviving four children were unmarried and in their twenties. 

Her husband George survived her by many years, dying in 1817.  He outlived five of his children and his granddaughter. 
His Will was proved by his son William, his nephew William Jameson and his nephew George Langborne.  His estate (gross personalty) was valued at under £8,000 and was divided into three parts: for his son William; his son-in-law William Grenside (husband of his daughter Mary); and his son-in-law Thomas Jones (widower of his daughter Margaret) and her children Thomas Rymer Jones, Mary, Edward and Eleanor.  He made further provision for his son William, who had recently bought lands and grounds in Newham Dunsley for £4,800, which had since considerably decreased in value; William was to receive money to cover the depreciation.

Brigantine (from Richard Weatherill's book)

William Langborne (1768-1844), son of George Langborne & Mary Rymer

William was born 17 May 1768. 
He married Anne Mead (born 9 Dec 1775) on 12 June 1798.
William is in the 1823 Baines' Directory as a Ship Owner living in Baxtergate.
Anne died on 21 Sep 1826 aged 50, and William on 3 Feb 1844. 
They had four children:
•    John Langborne was born 20 June 1799.  He was of ‘Fernhill’, Newholm.  He married 5 Feb 1822 Hannah Barrick.  She died on 27 Dec 1828.  The Whitby Panorama and Monthly Chronicle reported the death: “At Fernhill, Mrs Langborne, wife of Mr John Langborne, and daughter of the late Mr Thomas Barrick, Ship-builder, aged 28.” She left two very young sons, the youngest boy having died some months earlier:
o    John Medd Langborne, b 26 Feb 1823, died in Canada.  He is possibly the youth living in the house of Henry Barrick, shipbuilder, at the 1841 Census (perhaps learning his trade with his mother’s relations)
o    Thomas William Langborne, b 5 Dec 1824, d 7 Sep 1896.  Unmarried.  Probably the last of the Langbornes to be a shipowner.  He does not seem to have been a ship builder in his own name.  According to the list of shipping in Richard Weatherill's book in 1848 he held 16/24 share in the brig Ellen built by his maternal uncle Henry Barrick [1]. Thomas is to be found in the household of his uncle Henry Barrick for the 1861, 1871 and 1881 censuses.  After Henry Barrick's death he lived with Thomas Forrest, a retired master mariner, in Mulgrave Place.  Forrest was a widower; his niece Miss Mary Allot seems to have kept house for him.  Thomas Langborne left Forrest and his niece his clothing, jewellery and trinkets, with a legacy each, and asked to be buried "as near as may be" to his uncle's grave.
o    Henry Langborne, b 26 Jan 1827, bur 25 Mar 1827
•    George Langborne, b 4 July 1801, bur 18 Mar 1803
•    William Rymer Langborne, b 18 Sep 1804. He is listed as an attorney in the 1834 Directory.  He died in May 1846
•    George Langborne, b 18 Apr 1807, he is mentioned in the Will of Susannah Langborne, his uncle Nathaniel's widow, in September 1852.  He was married, and had a son born 7 Feb 1829.  It seems likely that he is the George Langborne born 1807 who gained his Master’s ticket in Feb 1852.

Mary Langborne (1770-1804), daughter of George Langborne & Mary Rymer

Mary was born 3 Sep 1770.  She married William Grenside, a surgeon, on 26 Jan 1804.  Baines' Directory 1823 gives his address as 10 New Buildings, along the road from the well-known Dr Loy.  This address was later known as St Hilda's Terrace.  He does not appear in the 1840 Directory.  They had sons:
•    Ralph Grenside, bap 5 Dec 1804.  Clergyman in Warwickshire.
•    George Grenside, bap 10 Jan 1807.  Solicitor, lived in the Stokesley area.

Eleanor Langborne (1773-1804), daughter of George Langborne & Mary Rymer

Eleanor was born 13 Jan 1773.  She married her cousin George Langborne on 10 Dec 1801.  In 1804 their daughter was born and within a week Eleanor was dead.  She was buried in the parish churchyard on 25 November.  Their daughter:
•    Mary Ann Eleanor Langborne, baptised on 18 Nov 1804.  She died at the age of three, and was buried on 5 Jan 1808.

Margaret Langborne (1774-1816), daughter of George Langborne & Mary Rymer

Margaret was baptised 23 Nov 1774.  On 30 Nov 1808 she married Lieut Thomas Jones RN, an Excise Collector.  She died in 1816, aged 41, leaving four young children:
•    Thomas Rymer Jones (1810-80), surgeon, academic and zoologist.  A photograph of his memorial in King’s College Chapel, University of London is here
•    Mary Jones, b 27 Oct 1811, bap 29 Oct 1811
•    Edward Jones
•    Eleanor Jones

Barque (from Richard Weatherill's book)



[1]  There were two contemporary Henry Barricks, shipowners, who were known as Henry Barrick of East Side and Henry Barrick of West Side [letter A J Buchannan to H P Kendall, 31 Jan 1934].  One of the Barricks had a dry dock which was used by the Langbornes in 1838.



… next time – the family of Nathaniel Langborne (1739-1807), son of Michael & Eleanor Langborne


The family of Nathaniel Langborne (1739-1807), son of Michael & Eleanor Langborne

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Nathaniel Langborne was born 26 December 1739. 
On 17 July 1766, he married Ann Baker; he is described in the parish register entry as Carpenter. 

Nathaniel Langborne (1739-1807) and Ann Baker (c1742-84) had 15 children in 18 years of marriage.
Nine of the children died in infancy, and two died in their teens. 

Ann herself died at the age of 42 and was buried on 29 Aug 1784, a week after the funeral of her last baby, Henry, who had lived only 12 days after his baptism.  She was survived by five of her children, but her daughter Anne died, aged 8 at her mother’s death, died ten years later.

The children were:
•    Michael, b 2 May 1767, bur 12 Jan 1768
•    Mary, b 1768, bur 6 Apr 1769   
•    Eleanor, b 22 Feb 1769, bur 29 Dec 1782 (aged 13)   
•    George, b 1 Feb 1770, bur 7 Oct 1770
•    Nathaniel Langborne (1771-1833)   
•    George, b 28 May 1772, died the same year   
•    George Langborne (1773-1832)   
•    Michael, b 12 Nov 1774, bur 23 Nov 1774     
•    Anne, b 3 Dec 1775, bur 11 July 1794 (aged 18)
•    Mary Langborne (1777-?)     
•    Frances, b 16 Feb 1778, bur 11 Apr 1778      
•    Michael, b 1779, bur 13 Sep 1779 (aged 3 weeks)
•    John Langborne (1781-1836)
•    Michael, bap 17 Dec 1782, bur 19 Dec 1782       
•    Henry, bap 10 Aug 1784, bur 22 Aug 1784       
Nathaniel, George, Mary and John lived to be mentioned in their father Nathaniel's Will.



Nathaniel died in 1807, and his Will shows that he had at some point remarried after the death of Ann Baker in 1784.  His second wife was also called Ann [1].  He gave
"to my dear wife Ann such Part of my household Furniture as belonged to her previously to our marriage And all the residue of my household Furniture with my Plate and Linen I give unto and equally amongst my Wife my three sons Nathaniel George and John and Daughter Mary.  I give unto my said dear Wife one Annuity or yearly Sum of Sixty Pounds … and … I give and devise my House or Tenement situated near the Church-Stairs-Foot in Whitby aforesaid, in the occupation of William Arnet unto my son Nathaniel"
Nathaniel’s executors were his brother George Langborne, Shipbuilder, his nephew William Langborne, Gentleman, his son George Langborne, Mariner, and Jonathan Sanders, Merchant.  The first three were sworn as executors, but Sanders, "being one of the people called Quakers", affirmed instead [2]. Nathaniel's estate (gross personalty) was valued at under £15,000.

Schooner (from Richard Weatherill's book)

Nathaniel Langborne (1771-1833), son of Nathaniel Langborne and Ann Baker

Nathaniel was their fifth child, and was born on 7 Jun 1771. 
He was a Ship Owner.
On 21 Sep 1808 he married Susannah Widowfield.  The Athenaeum magazine of November 1808 (Vol 4)
records: 
At Whitby, Mr Nathaniel Langborne, of that place, to Miss Widowfield, of Stokesley, grand-daughter of the late gallant Captain Hornby [or Hornsby] of the Wrightson and Isabella, who, with five men and three boys, fought a French privateer of ten carriage and eight swivel guns, and seventy-five men, for six hours, when the latter blew up’ for which gallant conduct he received a gold chain and medal from the hands of his late Majesty, George II as a reward for his bravery.
From which it would appear that Susannah was the Susannah Widdifield, daughter of Richard Widdifield and Jane Hornby [sic], baptised at Stokesley on 14 Oct 1779.

Nathaniel Langborne (1771-1833) and Susannah Widowfield (c1777-1853) had two children:
•    Nathaniel Langborne, bap 13 Nov 1810, buried 11 Dec 1834 (aged 24)
•    Ann Hornsby Langborne, born 1815 and buried 23 Jun 1816.
Nathaniel died 24 Sep 1833, aged 62.  He was then living at Farndale Fields (this was the Skinner Street district).  The sole beneficiary and executrix of his Will was his widow Susannah; the estate was valued at under £1,500. 

There is a note in the parish registers, which states,
"On 18 Oct 1833 my father [ie James Andrew, minister] received (as I find by his private notebook) £10-10s being his fee for a Brick Grave for Nathaniel Langborne Esquire.  Signed Wm Andrew (minister) 24 Jan 1844" [Grace Dixon]     
Susannah Langborne survived her husband and children for some twenty years.  She died on 5 Apr 1853 at the age of 76.  She appears to have lived in Well Close square for some time, and is listed there in the 1834 and 1840 Directories.  In the 1851 Census, she is in Poplar Row.  At the time of her death her address was Skinner Street.

Susannah's Will, dated 27 Sep 1852, gave numerous charitable bequests and legacies to the younger generation of her husband's family: 
Her "linen apparel and ornaments" were divided between her own nieces. 
She gave legacies of £50 each to the Silver Street Chapel for the Church or Sunday Schools, to the London Missionary Society, the British and Foreign Bible Society and the Whitby Marine Bible Society – it may be seen from these that she was a Nonconformist, presumably attending the Silver Street (congregationalist) chapel. 
She left £25 each to the Whitby Public Schools for boys and girls. 
Her executors were to choose "such poor widows of deceased Ships Carpenters whose husbands may have sailed from the port or resided in the Borough of Whitby" and distribute £50 to them. 
Nineteen guineas apiece were given to George Langborne, son of William, and "my late husband's cousins Mrs Blackett of Shields and Jane Middleton of Liverpool".  (These may have been relations on his mother, Ann Baker's, side.) 
After various other legacies, the estate was divided as to one half for Susannah's nieces and nephews, and as to the other half, equally between her husband's nieces and nephews (see later for their details). 
Each of the six surviving daughters of George Langborne and the four children of Mary Jameson received a thirteenth share.  The four Buchannan boys took their mother's thirteenth share between them.  Frank Langborne, son of John, was given a two-thirteenths share to himself; we do not know why Susannah did not leave a share to his brother George.  The estate was valued at under £1,500 – the amount Susannah had received from her husband.

George Langborne (1773-1832), son of Nathaniel Langborne and Ann Baker

George was their seventh child, born 17 June 1773. 
He was a master mariner, ship owner and ship builder.

He was twice married: to his cousin Eleanor Langborne (1773-1804), daughter of his uncle George Langborne & Mary Rymer), and then to Jane Galilee (1783-1856).

George married Eleanor Langborne on 10 Dec 1801.  They had one daughter:
•    Mary Ann Eleanor, baptised on 18 Nov 1804. 
Within a week Eleanor was dead, and was buried in the parish churchyard on 25 November.  Mary Ann died at the age of three, and was buried on 5 Jan 1808.

George’s second wife Jane Galilee, bears a Whitby surname but was born in Rotherhithe, where she was christened at the age of one at St Mary, Rotherhithe on 4 Apr 1784.  Her parents were Thomas Galilee of Whitby and Jane Atkinson of Kirkleatham. 

George Langborne (1773-1832) and Jane Galilee (1783-1856) had seven daughters and one son:

Their son, Nathaniel, died unmarried at the age of 29.  Only one of the daughters married.  Their children:
•    Jane Langborne, b 15 Aug 1812, d 1 Feb 1858                          
•    Nathaniel Langborne, b 19 May 1814, d 13 Aug 1843                  
•    Ann Langborne, b 9 Aug 1817, marr 21 Sep 1841 to John Buchannan (1810-91), solicitor.  She died 30 May 1849, while the family were living at Lythe Hall.  The family vault and monument can be seen in Lythe churchyard.  Ann left four young sons:
o    George Buchannan (1843-1920), married Marianne Croft
o    Charles Buchannan (1844-1919), married Sarah Ellen Weatherill
o    Hugh Buchannan, b 8 Aug 1846, d 22 Aug 1857 
o    Arthur Buchannan (1849-95), married firstly Katharine Weatherill and secondly Margaret Elizabeth Richardson, née Weatherill
•    Mary Eleanor Langborne, b 24 Sep 1819, d 23 Apr 1884                                   
•    Harriet Langborne, b 28 May 1821, d 26 Sep 1889                     
•    Margaret Langborne, b 27 Apr 1825, d 4 May 1910            
•    Eliza Langborne, b 2 Dec 1826, d 28 Sep 1866                    
•    Georgiana Langborne, b 5 Mar 1829, d 14 May 1903 
George Langborne died on 7 June 1832. He was then living in New Buildings (St Hilda's Terrace); he had bought the site in 1815. 

He was aged 59 and died intestate, which suggests that his death came unexpectedly.  His estate was valued at under £12,000.  His wife Jane outlived him by more than 30 years, dying on 29 March 1856 aged 72.

George and Jane Langborne's family vault can be found in the churchyard of St Mary’s, not far from the footpath leading from Church Steps to the Abbey.

Nathaniel, the only son, died at the age of 29 in 1843.  He had become a solicitor and was in partnership with John Buchannan, his brother-in-law, in the firm Belcher, Buchannan & Langborne.  This must have been soon after 1840; in the 1840 White's Directory, there are two separate firms – John Buchannan, Solicitor & Coroner for Whitby Strand and Liberty, Flowergate, and Belcher & Langborne, attorneys, in Grape Lane. 
In his Will dated 11 May 1841, Nathaniel left £50 to the Church Pastoral Aid Society and ten guineas to each of his sisters "to purchase a mourning ring or other memorial".  He left his estate, including the house at St Hilda's Terrace which he had inherited from his father as heir-at-law, to his mother.  His Will was witnessed by George Weatherill, probably the artist.
Margaret Langborne

His mother Jane died on 29 Mar 1856.  The announcement of her death in the Yorkshire Gazette of 5 Apr 1856 said, “She was deservedly held in the highest estimation by all who knew her for her meek and unobtrusive piety.” By her Will dated 25 Jan 1856, she left the house at St Hilda's Terrace to her eldest daughter Jane, and the contents equally between the six daughters.  The remainder of the estate was divided equally between the daughters, the Buchannan boys taking their mother's share  Her executors were John Buchannan and "my friend the Revd John Barry Brodrick of Sneaton".  She died within a few months of making the Will, leaving six unmarried daughters aged between 27 and 44. 

Jane, her daughter, made her Will on 11 June 1856 and died two years later aged 45.  Her executors were her cousins William Jameson and Frank Langborne, solicitor, and she left the house to her sisters while they were spinsters, and afterwards to the four Buchannan boys.

Harriet Langborne
The remaining Langborne daughters lived with on in some state and comfort in St Hilda's Terrace, surrounded by furniture, pictures and plate inherited from their parents.

They were wealthy women and fond of visiting spa towns.  They seem to have been particularly fond of Leamington, where they gave an altar cloth to the parish church and subscribed to the building of the church tower.  Indeed, they owned a house there, possibly 4 Newbold Terrace, Leamington Priors, where Margaret and Georgiana, then aged 74 and 71, were living at the time of the 1901 census.

Eliza, the sixth daughter, died in 1866 in Torquay.  Mary Eleanor (the third) died in 1884, Harriet (the fourth) in 1889.  The youngest, Georgiana died in Leamington in 1903 aged 74.

Margaret, the fifth daughter, died in 1910 aged 85.  Subsequently, her great-nephew, the solicitor Archibald Buchannan, lived in the house in St Hilda’s Terrace.

Margaret Langborne (1825-1910) in old age

Mary Langborne (1777-), daughter of Nathaniel Langborne and Ann Baker

Mary was their tenth child, born 16 Jan 1777.  She married William Jameson on 30 July 1805.  He was a ship owner in Baxtergate. 
For some years, he was in partnership with the brothers Nathaniel, George and John Langborne, trading as John Langborne & Co.  He was one of the executors of the Will of George Langborne (1735-1817)

Mary Langborne (b1777) and William Jameson had four children:               
•    William Jameson, b 13 Jul 1806.  Shipowner, married Eliza Barr.  Children: Eliza Jane Jameson, George Jameson and Charles Jameson     
•    Mary Ann Jameson, b 15 Jan 1809, married George Browne   
•    Eleanor Jameson, b 19 Aug 1810     
•    Elizabeth Jameson, b 23 Nov 1811
The Jameson children took a one-thirteenth share under the Will of Susannah Widowfield (c1777-1853), widow of Nathaniel Langborne (1771-1833). 
William Jameson the younger was executor of the Will of his cousin Jane Langborne.
In 1851, William, Eliza and their children and his unmarried sisters Eleanor and Elizabeth are to be found living in Walker Street.  In 1871 Mrs Mary Ann Browne (62), widow, is living at 5 Esplanade with Eleanor and Elizabeth; William and his wife Eliza lived in Bagdale.


John Langborne (1781-1836), son of Nathaniel Langborne and Ann Baker
John was their thirteenth child, born 7 Jan 1781. 
He married Margaret Haviside of Stokesley, aged 21, daughter of John and Margaret Haviside, in 1817.  (The name was variously spelled at the time: Haviside, Heaviside, Havisides). 
They lived in Bagdale.

John Langborne was a shipowner and shipbuilder, as can be seen from the Directories and Richard Weatherill's book, and was in partnership with his brothers and brother-in-law: for example, the ship Admiral Moorsom was built in 1827 by John Langborne and the owners were John, Nathaniel and George Langborne and William Jameson.  She was sold in 1828 for £5,288-10s-6d.

Margaret Haviside’s family in Stokesley were dyers in the town for many years, with a branch in London; one of the family was Captain Tom Havisides of the East India Company, famous for his presence of mind in saving the cargo of the Royal George from a fire in 1825, and after whom Heaviside's Dolphin (Cephalorhynchus heavisidii) is named.  Margaret Havisides' sister Dorothy married Robert Barry of Park Hill, Fylingdale, near Whitby, and died in 1823 aged 28.  Some years later, John Langborne named her widower a trustee of his Will.

In 1836, when his youngest surviving son Frank was four years old, John Langborne died.  His Will was hastily made, and he signed a much altered draft copy in case he died before the Will was engrossed for signature.  This did in fact happen, and Henry Belcher (Nathaniel Langborne's partner), who witnessed the Will, had to give an affidavit regarding the draft to obtain probate. 

John named four trustees: Robert Barry Esq; Thomas Simpson of Whitby, banker; William Jameson (the son) of Whitby, ship owner; and Nathaniel Langborne (son of George) of Whitby, gentleman.  Provision was made for the trustees to keep the ships in business and to carry on ship building until John's son George could decide the future of the business.  George was only nine years old when his father died.

In 1837, the attempt to keep the business running was abandoned.  There had been a bad depression in the ship building trade in 1829-30, but the industry had revived in about 1835, boosted by the requirements of building the Whitby-Pickering railway.  Possibly it was felt inappropriate to keep the yard running for such a long time during the boys' childhood.  Frank became a solicitor, and George entered the army of the East India Company.

In the 1851 Census, John’s widow Margaret is to be found living at St Anns Staith with her son Frank, then aged 18, an articled clerk.  Her son George was by then married and in India.
Margaret died, acording to the transcription of her tombstone in Stokesley churchyard (as recorded in Stokesley Selection by Alec Wright) on 28 Nov 1871 aged 79 years; but it seems likely from freebmd.org.uk that she in fact died in late 1870, aged 76.  She was living in Holgate Road, York at the time of her death. 

John Langborne (1781-1836) and Margaret Haviside (c1794-1870) had four children, two surviving infancy:
•    John Langborne, b 30 Mar 1818, bur 5 Apr 1818              
•    John Anthony Langborne, b 18 Mar 1819, bur 24 May 1819                  
•    George Langborne, b 5 Aug 1827. He attended the East India Company’s military college at Addiscombe, and on passing out at the end of 1845 he was posted to Bombay.  He was in England three years later, when on 2 Feb 1849 he married Emily Loy Merryweather (1832-1907), daughter of Dr George Merryweather in 1849. 
Dr Merryweather was a Whitby practitioner who had inherited land in Hutton Rudby and was the inventor of the Tempest Prognosticator.  Emily's mother was the daughter of Dr Merryweather's partner, John Glover Loy. 
The marriage announcement in the Yorkshire Gazette describes George as “George Langborne, Esq., 21st Bombay Native Infantry”.  He was made lieutenant in 1850, and his eldest son George was born in India in c1851.  He does not appear in the Mutiny Medal lists (1857), so perhaps was not in India at the time.  His son Frank was baptised in Whitby in 1859 (but if he is the Francis Langborne, married police constable living in Dilworth, Lancs in the 1881 census, he was also born in India.) 
When her eldest son George was born, Emily was about 19 years old.  She was 38 years old when her youngest child, Arthur, was born in London in 1870 (according to census replies, no other record of his birth so far found).  (Three children survived to adulthood – there may have been others who did not). 
George’s date of death is not known.  Emily was widowed and living with her son Arthur in Shanklin, Isle of Wight, by the time of the 1881 census.  She died in Shanklin on 12 Jan 1907. 
The children of George Langborne and Emily Loy Merryweather:
o    George Loy Langborne (c1851-1927).  The 1911 census shows that George was born in Nuseerabad, East India.  He married firstly Mary Jane Hopkins (c1862-94), who died in Malton and secondly Mary (1865-1950).  He was issued his certificate as First Mate in April 1873, he got his Master’s ticket in Sep 1880 and his certificate as Extra Master in Jan 1887.  He was in the P & O Mercantile Marine Service and rarely appears in the censuses.  By 1919 he was living at 'Severn Lodge', Malvern Wells.  His second wife Mary survived him by many years.
o    Frank Haviside Loy Langborne, bap in Whitby on 8 July 1859, emigrated to Australia in the 1880s.  I was informed that he was twice married: to Mary Roe and to Alice Gailey.
o    Arthur Langborne, born in London in 1870.  He was a builder in Shanklin, IoW at the date of his mother’s Will, 1889            
•    Frank Langborne, bap 18 Aug 1832, d 1908.  He was a solicitor.  In 1857 he was in practice in Guisborough and Whitby; he later practised in Malton. He married Esther Rose in Malton on 18 Sep 1867.  Esther died in 1889.  Their daughter:
o    Rosa Haviside Langborne, b 1870, married William Arthur Holmes, bank manager.  They lived in Yorkersgate, Malton.  They had two daughters, Gladys Esther Mary Holmes and Elsie Rosemary Holmes.  By 1911 the family was living in Gosforth, Newcastle upon Tyne.

The Will of Susannah Widowfield (c1777-1853), widow of Nathaniel Langborne (1771-1833), left Frank Langborne a two-thirteenths share in her estate – this was not, as in the case of the other nephews and nieces, shared with his brother George.


Whitby Shipping (from Richard Weatherill's book)


...to follow - Galilees of Hinderwell and Atkinsons of Kirkleatham ...


[1]  It is possible that the second wife of Nathaniel Langborne (1739-1807) is the woman whose death is reported on 11 Nov 1833 in the Whitby Repository monthly magazine (indicating she was of some social status) but whose burial is not in the Whitby parish registers.  This lady's Will was drawn up and witnessed by John Buchannan, solicitor, and signed only five days before she died.  She was 89 years old and was unable, presumably because of infirmity, to sign her name to her Will, putting instead her mark in the form of a cross.

[2]  The Jonathan Sanders who was one of Nathaniel Langborne’s executors could have been Jonathan Sanders the elder, who died in 1810.  The Sanders had sailcloth factories in Guisborough and Whitby.  Jonathan the younger founded his Bank in Church Street in 1779, and he and his brother are said to feature as the Foster brothers in Mrs Gaskell's Sylvia's Lovers.

Ralph Hedley & Hutton Rudby

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I've heard from Clodagh Brown with more details of places to see paintings by Ralph Hedley in June 2013, the centenary of his death.

The Shipley Art Gallery in Gateshead has an exhibition called  Ralph Hedley: Painting the North East, which is on from now until December 21st.

In mid-June, the Cathedral church of St Nicholas in Newcastle will have an exhibition on the subject of Hedley, who worked on the cathedral's choir stalls and misericords.  There will be a celebratory choral evensong - I will post details when I have them.

And of course there are the Hedley paintings in the Laing to visit.

When you go there, those of you with Hutton Rudby connections might like to take a close look at the The Sail Loft.

One of the bales of canvas is clearly marked "Geo Wilson, Hutton Rudby, Cleveland, Yorkshire":

detail: The Sail Loft


My earlier post on Ralph Hedley and Allan Bowes Wilson of Hutton Rudby is here



Captain Thomas Galilee (1744-97) and his family

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Jane Galilee (1783-1856), the second wife of George Langborne (1773-1832), was the daughter of Captain Thomas Galilee of Whitby and Jane Atkinson of Kirkleatham. 

Her father Captain Thomas Galilee and his brother Samuel (also a master mariner) are examples (as in the story of Captain Thomas King, merchant of Wapping of the link between Whitby and the River Thames.

Jane and her five sisters were all born in Rotherhithe,  where Jane was christened at St Mary's, Rotherhithe on 4 April 1784 at the age of one. 

Captain Thomas Galilee (1744-97) was the son of John Galilee and Mary Campion of the parish of Hinderwell, on the coast north of Whitby:


John Galilee married Mary Campion at Hinderwell in 1741.
Their children were
•    Jane Galilee, bap 8 Oct 1742
•    Thomas Galilee, bap 27 Feb 1744
•    John Galilee, bap 29 Sep 1747
•    Robert Galilee, bap 20 Sep 1750
•    Mary Galilee, bap 17 May 1753
•    Samuel Galilee, bap 9 Dec 1755
•    Hannah Galilee, bap 26 Oct 1758
•    Margaret Galilee, bap 23 Jul 1761
•    “female” (?Henrietta) Galilee, bap 2 Sep 1763
A note, written by a much later hand (possibly Capt Galilee’s granddaughter Miss Margaret Langborne 1825-1910) on the inside back cover of Thomas Atkinson'sWhaling Journal was very useful in confirming that this was the family of Captain Thomas Galilee.  It states:
"Robert lived at Staithes and Jack at Sunderland both I believe also [drank?] like fishes as was the correct thing in those days for sailors.
Aunts Potter and Chilton were sisters"
[The word in square brackets is fairly illegible, but I’m afraid it does look very like “drank”!]





Captain Thomas Galilee (1744-97), son of John Galilee & Mary Campion

Thomas Galilee married Jane Atkinson (17?-1817) in June 1775. 
The Newcastle Courant of Saturday 17 June 1775 records: 
“Last week at St Mary’s Church, Rotherhithe, London, Capt Thomas Galilee of Whitby, to Miss Atkinson of Kirkleatham”
Thomas’s Will shows that they had six daughters (only Jane’s baptism has been found), and answers to censuses show that they were all born in Rotherhithe:
  • Mary Galilee, born ca 1779, married George Richmond, master mariner.  Their daughter:
    • Jane Richmond, born c1812
    • George Richmond, born 10 Mar 1817, bap 11 Apr 1817 at St George in the East, Middlesex.  He became a newspaper reporter, married and lived in Lewes, Sussex
1851 Census: Trinity Almshouse, Greenwich: George Richmond (72) late master mariner, b Sunderland, his wife Mary (72), and daughter Jane (39), b Wapping
1871 Census: St Andrews Lane, Lewes: George Richmond (53)b St George in the East and his wife Maria (34) b St Clement Danes, 5 daughters and 3 sons all b Lewes, and George’s sister Jane Richmond (58) living on dividends, b Wapping
 
  • Elizabeth Galilee, born ca 1781, married William Williamson. Their children:
    • William Williamson, born c1810
    • Emma Williamson, born 1817
    • Harriet Williamson, born 1820. 
1851 Census: Baxtergate, Whitby: William Williamson (41) (unmarried) chemist & druggist, b Rotherhithe, his mother Elizabeth (70), and unmarried sisters Emma (34) and Harriet (31), both b Stepney. 
1881 Census: 8 Park Terrace, Whitby: William Williamson (71) retired chemist b Rotherhithe and sisters Emma (64) and Harriet (61) (all unmarried)
  • Harriet Galilee, born ca 1782, remained unmarried, d in Cambridgeshire in 1862
  • Jane Galilee, bap 4 Apr 1784 aged 1 at St Mary, Rotherhithe, married George Langborne of Whitby (1773-1832) Their children:
    • Jane Langborne (1812-58)
    • Nathaniel Langborne (1814-43)             
    • Ann Langborne (1817-49), married John Buchannan (1810-91)
    • Mary Langborne (1819-84)                             
    • Harriet Langborne (1821-89)               
    • Margaret Langborne (1825-1910)          
    • Eliza Langborne (1826-66)                 
    • Georgiana Langborne (1829-1903)
  • Margaret Galilee, born ca 1785, remained unmarried, d Cambridgeshire in 1880, aged 94
  • Henrietta Galilee, born ca 1787, remained unmarried, d after 1851
Captain Thomas Galilee's Will was made on 16 Apr 1793 and proved on 26 Sep 1797.  He described himself as Master Mariner, of Princes Street  in the parish of St Mary Rotherhithe.  He named as his executors his
"good friends the Revd William Atkinson Fellow of Catharine Hall Cambridge [brother-in-law], Edward Sage, William Rawdon and Isaac Atkinson [brother-in-law] of Cheapside London wholesale Linen Drapers & Copartners, and my brother Samuel Galilee of Red Lion Street in the parish of St John of Wapping, Middlesex, Master Mariner"
He provided for his widow Jane and their six daughters (all then under 21 – Jane was aged about 14 at her father's death).  Mrs Galilee took out Letters of Administration with the Will annexed, the men named as Executors having renounced probate.

His wife Jane moved with her three unmarried daughters to live in a cottage near the home of her brother the Revd William Atkinson, at Stapleford, near Cambridge.

After Jane’s death in 1817, her daughters remained there.  Harriet was her uncle William’s housekeeper, and on his death in 1830 she was entitled under his Will to remain in his house for as long as she wished, with all reasonable housekeeping expenses and the wages for one maid paid.  The 1851 Census finds the three sisters, then aged 68, 65 and 63 living on the London Road, Stapleford.  After Harriet’s death in 1862, Margaret and Henrietta continued to live in Stapleford.


John Galilee (1747-), son of John Galilee & Mary Campion
John Galilee married Ann Garbutt at Hinderwell on 13 Jun 1779.  They had two children:
  • Ann Galilee, born 15 Jun 1780, bap 15 Jun 1780 at Hinderwell
  • John Galilee, born 2 Mar 1782, bap 3 Mar 1782 at Lythe

Robert Galilee (1750-), son of John Galilee & Mary Campion
Robert Galilee married Everel Weatherill on 6 Mar 1785 at Easington.  Information on this family comes from the IGI and Richard Weatherill's family tree.

Robert was a shipowner, sailor and farmer near Staithes.
They had ten children:
  • Robert Galilee, born 1 Nov 1786, bap 4 Nov 1786, buried 6 May 1796
  • James Galilee, bap 15 Jul 1788, buried 16 Feb 1789
  • Maria Galilee, born 15 Nov 1789, bap 16 Nov 1789, married Dr Appleby of Ripon [Richard Weatherill’s family tree]
  • Jane Galilee, born 4 Sep 1791, bap 5 Sep 1791, buried 16 Mar 1792
  • Averil Galilee, born 5 Dec 1793, bap 6 Dec 1793
  • Lucy Galilee, born 21 Jun 1795, bap 23 Jun 1795, buried 28 Apr 1796
  • Samuel Galilee, born 7 Dec 1796, bap 8 Dec 1796, married his cousin Hannah Weatherill [Richard Weatherill’s family tree]
  • Robert Campion Galilee, born 23 Sep 1798, bap 25 Sep 1798
  • John Galilee, born 18 Jun 1800, bap 19 Jun 1800
  • William Galilee, born 15 Nov 1803, bap 16 Nov 1803, married Elizabeth Verrill [Richard Weatherill’s family tree]

Samuel Galilee (1755-), son of John Galilee & Mary Campion
Samuel was one of the executors of the 1793 Will of his brother Thomas: “my brother Samuel Galilee of Red Lion Street in the parish of St John of Wapping, Middlesex, Master Mariner"
He was also executor of the 1806 Will of his friend Thomas Potts, merchant of the Belize River mouth in Honduras.


Hannah Galilee ( 1758-), daughter of John Galilee & Mary Campion
Hannah Galilee married William Weatherill on 24 Mar 1782 at Hinderwell. 
They lived in Hinderwell where William was a farmer and merchant, and churchwarden in 1827.  They had eight children:
  • James Weatherill, born 15 Aug 1783, bap 16 Aug 1783, bur 16 Nov 1787
  • Mary Weatherill, born 7 Aug 1785, bap 9 Aug 1785, “died at about 20 years old”
  • Hannah Weatherill, bap 2 Aug 1788, married her cousin Samuel Galilee.  She died 2 Nov 1856 and is buried in Hinderwell churchyard beside her husband
  • Jane Weatherill, born 24 Sep 1790, bap 26 Sep 1790.  Miss Jane Weatherill was the governess of John Buchannan's children, they called her Ebbie.
  • William Weatherill, born 31 Aug 1792, bap 3 Sep 1792, bur 12 Sep 1793
  • Margaret Weatherill, born 23 Nov 1794, bap 26 Nov 1794.  Died unmarried
  • Hannah Weatherill, born 22 Jun 1798, bap 24 Jun 1798
  • Ann Weatherill, born 12 May 1800, bap 13 May 1800
[main source: Richard Weatherill’s family tree]


Margaret Galilee (1761-), daughter of John Galilee & Mary Campion
Margaret Galilee married Harrison Chilton on 20 Nov 1785 in Hinderwell.  They had eleven children:
  • Henrietta Chilton, born 23 Aug 1786, bap 24 Aug 1786, Hinderwell
  • Isabella Chilton, born 25 Mar 1789, bap 26 Mar 1789, Hinderwell
  • Mary Chilton, born 7 Nov 1790, bap 9 Nov 1790, Hinderwell
  • Margaret Chilton, born 13 Sep 1792, bap 14 Sep 1792, Hinderwell
  • Harrison Chilton, born 19 Nov 1794, bap 12 Dec 1794, Whitby
  • Hannah Chilton, born 7 Feb 1797, bap 6 Mar 1797, Whitby 
  • Thomas Chilton, born 15 Aug 1798, bap 10 Sep 1798, Whitby
  • Samuel Chilton, born Dec 1800, bap 18 Dec 1800, Whitby
  • Jane Chilton, born 14 Aug 1802, bap 14 Sep 1802, Whitby
  • Isabel Chilton, born 22 Dec 1805, bap 17 Jan 1806, Whitby
  • Eliza Ann Chilton, born 11 Mar 1808, bap 7 Apr 1808, Whitby
1841 Census: Union Place, Whitby: Harrison Chilton (45) ship owner and family, including Eliza Chilton (30) independent

Henrietta Galilee ( ?1763-), daughter of John Galilee & Mary Campion
Henrietta married Thomas Potter on 27 Jan 1788 in Hinderwell.  They lived in Sunderland.  They had seven children:
  • John Potter, born 4 Nov 1788, bap 4 Jan 1789
  • Robert Potter, born 31 Jan 1790, bap 6 Jun 1790
  • Elizabeth Potter, born 3 Oct 1791, bap 6 Jun 1792
  • Thomas Potter, bap 27 Apr 1795
  • Samuel Potter, born 6 Jul 1797, bap 17 Sep 1797, buried 15 Sep 1798
  • Henry Potter, born 3 Jun 1802, bap 13 May 1803, Sunderland
  • Mary Potter, born 9 May 1805, bap 28 Sep 1805, Sunderland, died 13 May 1810

next – the family of Jane Atkinson of Kirkleatham, wife of Captain Thomas Galilee ...




Jane Atkinson of Kirkleatham, wife of Captain Thomas Galilee (1744-97)

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Jane Atkinson married Thomas Galilee in June 1775.

The Newcastle Courant of Saturday 17 June 1775 records: 
“Last week at St Mary’s Church, Rotherhithe, London, Capt Thomas Galilee of Whitby, to Miss Atkinson of Kirkleatham”
Jane was the daughter of Thomas Atkinson of Scaling Dam (a hamlet on the Whitby to Guisborough road) and the sister of surgeon Thomas Atkinson, who made a whaling voyage to the Davis Straits in 1764 at the age of 21.

Whitby Whalers in Davis Straits (R Weatherill's book)

Her brother William was a Cambridge academic who invented his own system of shorthand, which he believed was "infinitely superior" to anything yet published.  He tried to persuade his colleagues at Christ's College of its virtues by leaving them his manuscript treatise on the subject and sweetening the bequest with his own "splendid" copy of Chambers' Dictionary.  (This will have been Ephraim Chambers' Cyclopaedia; or An Universal Dictionary of Arts & Sciences.)



The Turner papers in Teesside Archives record that “Thomas Atkinson of Skaling Dam was born 13 April 1722 (old style)”.  Scaling was then in Easington parish; Thomas was baptised there on 10 May 1722.

He was admitted as “Master of the Blue Coat Boys belonging to the Turner Hospital” at Kirkleatham on 9 May 1751 and he gave up his place at Kirkleatham "and removed to Marsk Hall in Cleveland Midsummer 1775."

He was interested in mathematics, judging by his answer to a problem published in Miscellaneous Correspondence, in Prose and Verse.

Thomas Atkinson had eight children:
  • Thomas Atkinson, b1753.  Surgeon.  He was 21 when he made the voyage to Davis Straits.  For his later career, see here
  • William Atkinson (1755-1830).  Academic and clergyman
He was admitted to Catharine Hall, Cambridge as a sizar on 10 Oct 1776.
He matriculated Michaelmas 1778.  He was made deacon in 1778 and priested in 1781.
He took his BA in 1781, his MA in 1784, his BD 1792.  He was a fellow of Catharine Hall from 1781 to 1808.  He was a curate at Sawston in 1807.  
He left Catharine Hall because of a college feud in which he was involved and became a Fellow of Christ's.  Christ's College has no record of him holding a benefice and it appears that he was not resident in College, although he never missed a meeting until five years before his death. 
He died at Stapleford, near Cambridge on 28 May 1830 at the age of 75. 
He had made his Will in July 1828; its provisions indicate that he had lived at Stapleford in some comfort, had owned property there and made an income from farming.   
He left a legacy to his longtime servant Thomas Freeman (for his "honesty sobriety and faithful discharge of his duty")and he divided his estate divided between Daniel's and Jane's children: Jane Galilee's six daughters and Daniel's children Thomas Atkinson, William Atkinson and Mary Thompson. 
His executors were his niece Harriet Galilee and William Williamson of South Town near Yarmouth, Norfolk , who was presumably the husband of his niece Elizabeth Galilee. 
He left a series of bequests – they are rather revealing of his character and his life.
It seems a pity that we will never know why Miss Isabella Cox was chosen to receive his copy of Letters on the Improvement of the Mind, addressed to a Young Lady, nor why Miss Hassett was left the recently published Moral Inquiries on the Situation of Man and of Brutes by the animal rights campaigner Lewis Gompertz.
To the Master and Fellows of Christ College I give my splendid edition of Chambers' Dictionary for the use of the College Library as a mark of my respect and esteem for the Members of that liberal and flourishing Society by which I have had the Honour and Happiness to be adopted   
I will also beg of the Master and Fellows of Christ College to permit a small Original Manuscript Essay of mine on Short Hand to be placed in the College Library by the side of the two Treatises which it already contains on that subject 
This request is not made from any vain opinion on the Merits of the Essay itself but for the sake of a most ingenious System of Short hand (infinitely superior to any that has yet been published) which was the main object of that essay to describe and explain and of which (as no other account of it whatever exists) the very Memorial without this Security for the preservation of it will probably soon be lost
To my Nephew Thomas Atkinson I give my Gold Watch with the Gold Chain Seals and Key attached to it
And to my Nephew William Atkinson I give my Metal Watch and Chain and also a large Seal of Arms engraved on a Scotch pebble rimmed with Gold
To the Revd John Cox I give Mr White Sermons preached before the University of Oxford
To Master Thomas Kent I give my Glasgow edition of Virgil
To Miss Isabella Cox I giveMrs Chapone's Letters
To Miss Hassett I giveGompertz Moral Enquiries
To my old and highly valued friend Dr Brown Vicar of Gorleston I desire a Mourning Ring may be given and also that he will accept of my Miniature Picture of our late excellent friend Mr Hunter of Christ College
I will also that Mourning Rings be given to the Reverend Thomas Cawtley [Thomas Cautley of Jesus College, Perpetual Curate of St Clement's, Cambridge] to the Reverend Townley Clarkson [1841 census finds him at Beyton in Suffolk] also to my Niece Harriet Galilee and to Mr William Williamson”
  •  Isaac Atkinson, b 1757.  Wholesale linen draper in Cheapside.   He was named in his brother-in-law Thomas Galilee's Will of 1793.  By the time of the 1808 London Post Office Annual Directory, his former partners Sage and Rawdon are listed as "Sage, Rawdon & Jennings Merchants and Linen factors at 20 Cheapside" – it therefore appears that between 1793 and 1808 Isaac Atkinson had died.
  • Daniel Atkinson, b 1759.  He had died by 1828.  His three children Thomas, William and Mary were named in his brother William Atkinson's Will.  The specific bequests to his sons by William may suggest that William knew them personally – perhaps they lived within reach of Cambridge, or possibly in London.  His children were:
    • Thomas Atkinson
    • William Atkinson
    • Mary Atkinson.  Mary married a Mr Thompson
  •  John Atkinson, b 1761
  •  Robert Atkinson (1763-5)
  • Elizabeth Atkinson, b 1764, died the same year
  • Jane Atkinson (died 1817).  Her date of birth is not known.  Her baptism does not appear in the Kirkleatham registers and it is possible that she was born before her father took up his post at the Hospital in May 1751; she clearly was not the youngest of the children, as she married Thomas Galilee in 1775.  Presumably she was visiting family or friends in Rotherhithe at the time of her marriage.  For their six daughters, see the preceding post.


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