The Wenlock Franchise is bounded on the east by the Brimstree Hundred, on the south by the Stottesden Hundred, on the west by the Condover and Munslow Hundreds, and on the north by that of South Bradford. The borough and franchise of Wenlock were formerly co-extensive with the Hundred of Patintern, mentioned in Doomsday Book, which comprised the following parishes, viz.:—Much Wenlock, Little Wenlock, Broseley, Madeley, Benthall, Barrow, Tinley, Badger, Beckbury, Priors Ditton, Stoke St. Milborough, Eaton-under-Heywood, Hughley, Shipton, Monk Hopton, Willey, Deuxhill, and the Extra Parochial Liberty of Posenhall. By an order of quarter sessions, held at Shrewsbury, April 4th, 1836, the parishes of Badger, Deuxhill, and Beckbury, were added to the Brimstree Hundred; and the parishes of Eaton, Shipton, and Stoke St. Milborough, should thenceforward be considered as part of the Munslow Hundred. Ironstone, coal, limestone, and a superior clay, are found in this division of the county, which is celebrated for extensive iron-works, the manufacture of porcelain earthenware, tobacco pipes, bricks, tiles, and draining pipes. The manufacturing district is chiefly confined to the north and north-east verge of the franchise. It is intersected by the river Severn at the northern extremity, and the river afterwards forms the boundary of the franchise for some distance. At the census of 1841 this division of the county contained 3,703 inhabited houses, 155 uninhabited, and 29 building; and a population of 18,016 souls; of whom 8,936 were males and 9,080 females. Of the total population 16,518 persons were born in the county, and 1,498 elsewhere. BARROWis a small but pleasantly situated village and parish, in the Wenlock Franchise, two miles east from Much Wenlock, and two miles south-west from Broseley. The parish contains 2,989a. 0r. 39p. of land, the rateable value of which is £3,086. 6s. 1d. At the census in 1801 there were 479 inhabitants; 1831, 351; and in 1841 there were 85 houses and a population of 383 souls. Lord Forester and Sir Richard Acton, Bart., are the landowners. Willey Hall, a handsome mansion, is the occasional seat of Lord Forester. The lands in this parish abound with game, which is rigidly preserved. The Church is a venerable structure, dedicated to St. Giles, and consists of nave and chancel, with a turret, in which are two bells. The walls display many tabular monuments, and there is an antique font, with a capacious basin. On the south side of the church-yard is buried Tom Moody, the celebrated whipper-in to George Forester, Esq. The grave-stone is simply inscribed “Tom Moody, died 19th November, 1796.” The church was formerly an appendage to the Priory of Wenlock. The living is a perpetual curacy annexed to the rectory of Willey. The Rev. Henry Bridgeman is the incumbent. The School and Almshouse.—John Slaney, merchant tailor of London, having, in his life-time, built in the parish of Barrow an almshouse for six poor aged men or women that had been ancient dwellers thereabout, and appointed six acres of ground to be laid out for their better relief and to the support of a school. He also directed an allowance of 1s. 4d. weekly to be made to each inmate, and every alternate year a good frieze gown to be given to each person, worth 13s. 4d., and hose and shoes to the value of 6s. 8d. Mr. Slaney also erected a school for the free teaching of twenty children, and ordained that a great part of the six acres of land above mentioned should be for the maintenance of the school; and he gave towards the maintenance of the schoolmaster £10 a-year for ever. For the performance of the said allowance he gave a rent charge of £30 per annum issuing out of his manor of Willey. And for the residue of his gift to make up the pensions of the said schoolhouse and almshouse, he charged his cousin, John Slaney, that he and his heirs and assignees should for ever pay the same as a rent It appears from the parish books, that a sum of £9 poors’ stock, which had for many years been in the hands of successive parish officers, was applied in the year 1788 to the repairs of the church, as interest of which the sum of 10s. is distributed by the churchwardens at Christmas in fourpenny loaves among the poor of the parish. Directory.—John Michael Howell, farmer, The Marsh; Thomas Instone, farmer, Swinney; Augusta Jones, schoolmistress; Robert Peake, farmer; William Thursfield, Esq., farmer and land agent to Lord Forester. BENTHALLis a small parish with a scattered population, three miles and a half from Much Wenlock, which comprises 1,195a. 3r. 1p. of land, the whole of which is the property of Lord Forester, who is also lord of the manor. The land has a bold swelling surface, and abounds in limestone. There are lime works in this parish, which give employment to a number of the inhabitants. There is also a tobacco pipe manufactory, and an establishment for the manufacture of earthenware, carried on by Mr. Edward Bathurst. At the census of 1801, the parish contained 636 inhabitants; 1831, 525; and in 1841 there were 131 inhabited houses, and 587 souls. The Church, dedicated to St. Bartholomew, consists of nave and chancel, and has a small turret, in which is one bell: it was rebuilt in 1667, and stands on a gentle eminence: it is neatly pewed with oak sittings, and has a gallery at the west end. On the north wall of the chancel there is a tablet to the memory of Ralph Brown, Esq. and Catherine, his wife; the former died in Mrs. Ann Brown, by her will dated 30th May, 1764, directed that the dividends of £200 stock, consolidated three per cents, belonging to her, should be yearly, at Christmas, distributed by her brother, Francis Turner Blithe, and his heirs, and the minister of Benthall, as they should think fit. The dividends are received under the power of attorney, and are paid to the minister, who regularly distributes them about Christmas in small sums among the poor. Edward Brown, Esq., of Broseley, bequeathed £200 to the minister and churchwardens for the time being of Bethnall in the county of Salop, on trust to invest the same in funds, or government or real securities, and to apply the interest in repairing and maintaining the vault and tombstone of his late brother in-law, Sir Humphrey Charlton, situated in the church yard at Benthall, and to apply the surplus to the relief of poor persons from time to time resident in the parish. Posenhall is an extra parochial liberty, contiguous to Benthall, which at the census of 1841 is returned as containing five houses and twenty-two inhabitants. There is only one farm here, which is in the occupancy of Mr. Thomas Pitt; there is also an earthenware manufactory: the names will be found included in the Benthall directory. Directory.—Edwin Bathurst, earthenware manufacturer, Benthall Pottery; John and Edward Burton, farmers and brick makers; Joseph Currier, shopkeeper; John Duckett, timber merchant; Rev. Thomas H. Edwards, B.A., curate, Benthall House; Mary Gother, vict., Britannia Inn; John Gother, joiner; Hiram Hill, lime burner, residence, Broseley; Joshua Instone, blacksmith; John Jones, vict., Leopard Inn; Warren Taylor Jones, earthenware manufacturer, Posenhall Pottery; John Patten, lime burner and barge owner; Ann Pitt, farmer; Thomas Pitt, farmer, Posenhall; Edward Roden, farmer and corn miller; Mary Roden, farmer; Noah Roden, tobacco pipe manufacturer; James Shepard, maltster. BROSELEY,anciently written Burwardsley, is a parish and considerable market town in the Wenlock franchise, four miles east from Much Wenlock, 13 miles south-east from Shrewsbury, and 146 miles north-west from London. The town is seated on an eminence above the Severn, and consists principally of one long irregular built street, with minor streets branching off in different directions. The houses are mostly of brick, some of them of respectable appearance, interspersed with others of a more humble description, inhabited chiefly by miners and the operatives employed in the brick and iron works. It stands in the middle of an extensive mining district, in which coal and ironstone are obtained; and there is an extensive iron foundry here, with others in the immediate vicinity. The town and neighbourhood are also famous for the manufacture of fire bricks and tobacco pipes, which are exported to all parts of the kingdom. Broseley is the only place in England where the celebrated glazed tobacco pipes are manufactured, and it is supposed this was the first place where the manufacture of this article commenced; upwards of two centuries ago they were made from clay procured in this locality, now the clay got here is used for the manufacture of bricks, tiles and earthenware, and the pipeclay is procured from Devonshire and Cornwall. Messrs. William Southron and Co. The Church, dedicated to All Saints, is a free-stone structure, consisting of nave, chancel and side aisles, with a square tower in which are six bells; the nave is separated from the side aisles by five pointed arches on each side; over the side aisles and at the west end are galleries; upon the latter is placed an organ. The church was rebuilt in 1845, and in consequence of a grant of £400 from the Incorporated Society, 694 of the sittings are free and unappropriated for ever; there is now accommodation for 1,200 hearers; it is neatly fitted up with oak sittings, and the roof is of groined timber. The old church was a brick structure, with a low tower of free stone, and had sittings for 782 persons. The living is a rectory, valued in the king’s book at £7. 18s. 6d., in the patronage of Lord Forester: incumbent, the Hon. and Rev. Orlando Watkin Weld Forester, M.A.; curate, Rev. Andrew Burn, B.A. The tithes are commuted for £453. The Baptists have small chapels in Duke street and on Harris’s Green. The Independents have a chapel in Duke street. The Wesleyan Methodists have a chapel at Duke street and one at Coalford. The Primitive Methodists have a chapel at Broseley Wood. The National School is held in a spacious room over the Market Hall, which measures sixty-one feet long and twenty-one feet broad. The average attendance of scholars at the present time is one hundred and ninety-five. Jackfield is a populous hamlet, in the parish of Broseley, stretching along the banks of the Severn, and situated near a mile north of the parish church. Here the inhabitants are busily engaged in extensive works for the manufacture of bricks and tiles. At this place is also situated the Ivanhoe Pottery, an establishment conducted by Mr. George Proudman, where all kinds of earthenware are manufactured. The clay used in the manufacture is got from mines on the premises, and is found in regular layers above the coal and limestone; some of the mines extend to the depth of one hundred yards. The Church (or Chapel of Ease) at Jackfield is a handsome brick structure, with stone finishings, consisting of nave and chancel, with a square tower. It is situated on an eminence overlooking Ironbridge and a part of Coalbrook Dale. It is dedicated to St. Mary, and was built in 1759, by Francis Turner Blythe, Esq. The interior has a neat appearance, and on the south side there is a neat marble tablet to the memory of Alexander Brodie, Esq., ironmaster, of Calcutt, who died June 5th, 1830. Another neat tablet remembers the founder of the church, Francis T. Blythe, Esq., who died September 22nd, 1770, aged 61 years. There is also a tablet to Thomas Carter Phillips, Esq., who died in 1783. The National School is a commodious brick structure, erected in the year 1844. The school-room is used as a place of worship on Sunday and Wednesday evenings. The rector and curate of Broseley officiate alternately. A most melancholy accident occurred near Broseley on October 23rd, 1799. The passage boat in crossing the Severn, which at this place is very rapid, was overturned. There were forty-one persons in the boat who were employed in the china works of Messrs. Rose and Co., of these thirteen only escaped, the remaining twenty-eight were all drowned. Tradition states that a large house in Broseley was formerly in possession of some Dutchmen, who had a mint for coining money secreted in cellars under the house. They lived in a very expensive style, and kept race horses. There is a curious fossil found here in the stratum of coal resembling a fish with the head and tail cut off. It is covered with scales, and measures about eight inches long. Its solidity is much greater than the substance in which it is infolded, and when broken appears like limestone; if thrown into the fire it explodes with considerable violence. In the year 1711 a very remarkable inflammable spring was discovered at Broseley, of which the Rev. Mr. Mason, professor at Cambridge, gives the following account:—“The well for four or five feet deep is six or seven feet wide, within that is another hole of like depth, dug in clay; in the bottom whereof is placed a cylindric earthern vessel, of about four or five inches diameter at the mouth, having the bottom taken off, and the sides well fixed in, the clay rammed close about it. Within the pot is a brown water as thick as puddle continually forced up with a violent motion, beyond that of boiling water, and a rumbling hollow noise rising and falling by fits; but there was no appearance of any vapour arising, which perhaps might have been visible had not the sun shone so bright. Upon putting the candle down at the end of a stick, at a quarter of a yard distance, it took fire, darting and flashing after a very violent manner, for about half a yard high, much in the manner of spirits in a lamp, but with great agitation. It was said that a tea kettle had been made to boil in about nine minutes time, and that it had been left burning for forty-eight hours without any sensible diminution. It was extinguished by putting a wet mop upon it, which it was necessary to keep there for a considerable time, otherwise it would not go out. Upon the removal of the mop there arises a sulphurous smoke, lasting about a minute, and yet the water is cold to the touch. The cause of this inflammable property is most probably the mixture of the waters with petroleum, which is one of the most inflammable substances in nature, and has the property of burning on the surface of water.” In the year 1755 this well entirely disappeared by the sinking of a coal pit in its neighbourhood. Charities.—John Barrett, Esq., of the Madeiras, bequeathed the sum of £200 to the poor of Broseley. Frances Morgan left £50, the interest to be divided among twelve poor widows on Christmas-day annually. Richard Edwards, of Rowton, left £110 to be William Lewis, by indenture, dated January 2nd, 1740, granted a yearly rent charge of 20s., issuing out of a messuage and two acres of land, situate near the church, in Broseley, with the penalty of 6s. for every day that the payment should be in arrear, and directed the same to be distributed among twenty poor widows. It further appears from the benefaction table that Andrew Langley, of the Woodhouse, left 12s. yearly to be distributed by the minister and churchwardens on St. Andrew’s-day yearly, and to be paid for ever by the owner of the Woodhouse estate. Mary Cotton, who died in 1838, bequeathed to the minister and churchwardens for the time being of this parish the sum of £300, three per cent consolidated bank annuities, upon trust, to receive the interest and divide it among forty poor widows of this parish on the 29th of December, yearly. Fanny Pritchard left £100 in trust to the same parties, to be invested in government securities, and directed the interest to be divided among ten poor widows on St. Thomas’s day. At a place called the Birches, between Buildwas and Ironbridge, and not far from Broseley, an extraordinary phenomenon occurred in May, 1775, of which the following account has been given by the Rev. John Fletcher, of Madeley. “When I went to the spot,” says Mr. Fletcher, “the first thing that struck me was the destruction of the little bridge that separated the parish of Madeley from that of Buildwas, and the total disappearing of the turnpike road to Buildwas bridge, instead of which nothing presented itself to my view but a confused heap of bushes, and huge clods of earth tumbled one over another. The river also wore a different aspect; it was shallow, turbid, noisy, boisterous, and came down from a different point. Whether I considered the water or the land the scene appeared to me entirely new, and as I could not fancy myself in another part of the country, I concluded Post Office—At Mr. Jeremiah Ashwood’s. Letters arrive at 8 A.M., and are despatched 5.35 P.M. Marked 1 are in Cape or King street; 2 Church street; 3 High street; 4 Queen street; 5 Barratt’s hill; 6 Broseley Wood; 7 Jackfield and neighbourhood; 8 Barber’s row; and 9 Duke street. 2 Amphlet Susannah, vict., The Dog 3 Ashwood Jeremiah, corn miller, maltster, and postmaster 3 Bartlam Edward Glover, Esq., surgeon, and coroner for borough of Wenlock 5 Bathurst Henry Martyn, schoolmaster (national) 5 Baker Mrs. Frances 3 Baker The Misses, drapers and mercers 2 Baugh George, Esq. 2 Bayliss Miss Helen, ladies’ boarding school 7 Beard Thomas, victualler, Werps Inn 3 Beddoes John, shoemaker 6 Beddow Thomas, grocer 6 Bill Jeremiah, butcher, shopkeeper and beerhouse 3 Birch Thomas, coalmaster 7 Boden Susannah, shopkpr. 3 Booth Henry, farmer and butcher 6 Bradley Richard, tobacco pipe maker 3 Bourne Wm., blacksmith and beerhouse-keeper 2 Boycott Richard, baker and confectioner 2 Broadhurst Thos., timber merchant & wheelwright 2 Brodie Mrs. 7 Brown Edwd., blacksmith, and vict., Summer House 3 Burnet Henry, hosier and haberdasher 3 Burnet Isaac, boot and shoemaker 3 Burnet John, grocer and dealer in hops 7 Burn Rev. Andrew, B.A., curate, Rock House 7 Burton Edward, brick and tile manufr. & barge owner 7 Burroughs John, rope manufacturer 3 Cartwright Chas., butcher 6 Cartwright James, butcher 3 Charlton Humphrey, wine and spirit and hop and seed merchant 4 Colley Bernard Wilkinson, maltster 8 Collins Thos., locksmith 2 Cooke Joseph, victualler, Old Crown 3 Corfield Thomas, butcher 3 Cowley Jas., grocer, ironmonger, and seedsman 3 Cox Robert, saddler 3 Crowder Leonard, painter, plumber, and glazier 3 Crump William, butcher 7 Crumpton William, ferryman and barge owner 7 Cullis William, victualler, Tumbling Sailors 7 Davies Ann, brick and tile maker 7 Davies James, sen., brick and tile maker, The Rock 7 Davies James, jun., brick and tile maker, The Rock 3 Davies John, farmer 6 Davies Samuel, butcher and maltster 7 Davies Thos., shopkeeper, and brick and tile maker Davies Thomas, tailor, The Delph 6 Dean James, thatcher and beerhouse-keeper 1 Davies Thomas, victualler, Duke of Cumberland 7 Dillon Joseph, bargeowner, Salt house 7 Dodd Andrew, bargeowner, Salt-house 7 Doughty Geo., bargeowner, Salthouse 7 Doughty Robert, bargeowner, Salthouse 7 Doughty Theophilus, brick & tile maker, Lloyd Head 6 Easthope Mrs. Ann 2 Edwards Ann, victualler, Foresters’ Arms 3 Evans Edwin R. auctioneer, accountant, house & estate agent, valuer & appraiser, agent to the Sun Fire office, and superintendent registrar 9 Evans Richard, registrar of births and deaths 6 Evans John, shopkeeper and poulterer Evans Robert, Esq., J.P., The Dunge 8 Evans Susan, confectioner 3 Evans Thos., confectioner 8 Everall Robert, butcher and vict., The Plough 1 Everall Thomas, baker and grocer 3 Fawkes Arthur, victualler, Cape of Good Hope 8 Fenton John, brazier and tinman 2 Forester The Honourable and Rev. Orlando Watkin Weld, M.A., The Rectory 5 Firfield Mrs. 5 Francis Robert, tailor 8 Glover Edwd., hairdresser 6 Gough Mrs. Martha 2 Griffiths Edward, shopkeeper, Salt-house 2 Griffiths John, timber merchant and wheelwright Griffiths Miss, milliner 3 Gwynn Geo., basket-maker 5 Gwynn Martha, basket-maker 7 Harris Richard, tailor, Salt-house 3 Hartshorne Edward, boot and shoemaker 2 Hartshone Frederick H., Esq., surgeon 3 Hartshorne George, auctioneer, appraiser, cabinet-maker, builder, and upholsterer 1 Harvey John, grocer, draper, accountant, agent to the Birmingham fire office, and medical, clerical, and general life office 9 Hayman John, glass dealer and victualler, The Fox 1 Holmes Wm., coalmaster 8 Hill Benjamin, joiner and builder 5 Hill Hiram, grocer and coal master 8 Hiskett Thomas, tin-plate worker 7 Holt Thomas, victualler, Woodbridge Inn 3 Humphries John, grocer, chandler, and hop dealer 2 Instone Samuel, grocer 2 Jones Adam, surveyor and victualler, The Pheasant Commercial Inn Jackson Rev. Wm. (Baptist), Broseley Cottage 8 Johnson John, tailor and habit maker 7 Jones Isaac, blacksmith 7 Jones John, vict., Duke of Wellington, The Werps 6 Jones Samuel, baker 3 Jones Stephen, tailor and habit maker Jones Rev. Wm. (Baptist), Chapel Hill 3 Jones Richard, painter, plumber, glazier, & paper hanger 7 Jones Thos., fishmonger, and beerhouse-keeper, The Rock 2 Knight Henry, Esq., professor of music 3 Leadbetter Enoch, agent to Crown Life Assurance office 9 Legge Mrs. Margaret 3 Lister Edward, victualler, The Elephant 6 Lister Thomas, Esq. 7 Lloyd Henry, waterman and vict., The Oak 6 Lloyd William, beerhouse-keeper 3 Mason James, shoemaker, and licensed to let post-horses 7 Mapp Thomas, cement manufacturer 6 Mason Henry, hatter and marine-store dealer 6 Mason John, grocer and tea dealer 7 Miles Francis, shopkeeper, Salt-house 3 Miles Thomas, victualler, The Albion 3 Molineux Thomas, boot and shoemaker 6 Morris John Cox, Esq. Morgan Mrs., Rock House Mortimer Mrs. Favell Lee, Broseley Hall 3 Nevitt Enoch, stationer 3 Nevitt Samuel, shopkeeper Nicholas William, Esq., Field House 3 Oakley Jesse, druggist and grocer 3 Oare Charles, Esq. 2 Onions John, Esq., iron-founder, and brick & tile maker, White Hall 7 Oswell George, beerhouse-keeper and ferryman Page Thomas, maltster 7 Parker Benj., bargeowner & vict., Lloyd’s Head Inn 7 Parker Charles, victualler, Black Swan 3 Parsons Wm., blacksmith 3 Perrin William, draper, mercer, and hatter 9 Peters Moses and Richard, nail makers & ironmongers 3 Potts Geo., Esq., solicitor, clerk to borough of Wenlock & to Madeley County Court, The Green 3 Potts & Nicholls, solicitors 2 Pountney Edwin, baker 3 Pountney Samuel, grocer 9 Pountney Samuel, tailor 6 Powell Richd., shopkeeper 7 Price Robert, mine agent, Calcott 3 Pritchard’s Boycott and Nicholas, bankers; draw on Barnett, Hoares, and Company, London 2 Pritchard George, Esq. 3 Pritchard John, Esq. 2 Pritchard Miss 3 Pugh Helen, milliner and dressmaker 3 Pugh Thos., china painter 5 Raspass Elizbeth, shopkpr. 7 Reynolds John, bargeowner 3 Rhodes Charles, vict., The Lion Commercial Inn 7 Richards Geo., beerhouse, The Salt-house 7 Richards Robert, victualler, Severn Trow 3 Richards Thomas, saddler 7 Robinson Jas., blacksmith 7 Roden Samuel, brick and tile manufacturer; house, Ironbridge 7 Roden Thomas, joiner, Salt-house 6 Rowe Chas., wheelwright 6 Rufus Hannah, victualler, King’s Head 2 Rushton Henry, joiner and builder 3 Rushton Richard, grocer 2 Shaw William P., agent to legal and general life assurance office, and to Salop fire office 6 Smith Moses, hosier 4 Salmon John, hosier 6 Southorn Ann, beerhouse 6 Southorn Joseph, tobacco-pipe manufacturer 6 Southorn Wm. & Co., tobacco-pipe manufacturers 4 Speak Thos., shopkeeper 5 Squires Richard, builder 2 Stable Mrs. Mary, The Deanery 2 Stables Miss Jane, The Deanery 3 Stephan Caroline, milliner and dressmaker 4 Taylor William, butcher 7 Taylor William, coal and brick master, The Tuckies 2 Thorn John, Esq., White Hall 4 Thursfield Richard, Esq., surgeon, and high bailiff to Madeley County Court 5 Tonkiss Richard, tobacco-pipe maker 5 Trupp Thomas, inland revenue officer 7 Transom Jas., bargeowner 9 Watkin Richd., shoemaker Watkins Wm., victualler, Duke of York 6 Weaver Mary, shopkeeper 9 Weeks John, shoemaker 6 Weeks Thos., shoemaker 9 Weeks Richard, boot and shoemaker, & beerhouse 8 Willings Benjamin, boot and shoemaker 9 Westover John, attorney’s clerk 7 Wiggins John, schoolmaster (national) 7 Wild John, bargeowner 2 Wilkinson John, blacksmith 5 Wilkinson Mrs. Lucia 3 Williams Ann, shopkeeper and poulterer 7 Williams Edward, shopkeeper, and brick and tile maker, The Werps 7 Williams Edwd., jun., vict., Dog & Duck, Lloyd Head 7 Williams Mr. Silvanus, Salt-house 9 Whooton Herbert, butcher and farmer Wyke Richard, surgeon, Salt-house 5 Yates Elizabeth, victualler, The Crown 7 Yates Robt., vict., Ash Tree HUGHLEYis a parish and village delightfully situated in a lovely vale four and a half miles S.W. from Much Wenlock; the Wenlock Edge bounds the parish on the eastern side, and on the west is a small mountain stream. The parish contains 1,111a. 3r. 38p. of land, the soil of which for the most part is of an inferior description, but produces tolerable crops of oats, and wheat is also grown. Rateable value £817. The land in this parish is the property of the Earl of Bradford, except about three roods and a small cottage. A bridge has recently been built over the stream here, which is a great advantage and convenience to the inhabitants, as the waters occasionally rush with great impetuosity from the hilly district, and render the fording of the stream dangerous. The bridge was built by subscriptions, under the superintendence and aid of the late rector. In former times the extensive woods with which Hughley was surrounded were long the retreat of robbers; a commission was issued in the reign of Richard II. to inquire into the best means of securing the banditti, and protecting travellers from their lawless depredations. The Church, a small but interesting specimen of the gothic style of architecture, is dedicated to St. John the Baptist; it is very ancient, and consists of nave and chancel, the latter divided from the nave by a beautifully rood loft elaborately carved; on the roof also is some beautifully carved work. A recess in the wall containing a number of human bones is conjectured to have been a shrine; the bones are probably the remains Directory.—Richard Bullock, blacksmith; Edward Corfield, miller; Elizabeth Owen, farmer; Thomas Madeley, farmer; Rev. John Wakefield, M.A., rector; Andrew Walker, farmer, Upper Hill farm; Richard Walleter, farmer, Lower Hill farm. LINLEYis a small parish in the Wenlock franchise, situated about three and a half miles south-east from Much Wenlock. The parish comprises 636 acres of land, the principal owners of which are Lord Forester and John Stephens, Esq. At the census in 1801 there were 108 inhabitants; 1831, 111; and in 1851, 105; of whom 42 were males, and 63 females. At the same period there were 19 inhabited houses, and one uninhabited. Gross estimated rental of the parish, £809. 2s. Rateable value, £729. 18s. Lord Forester is lord of the manor and impropriator. The Church, a plain, unpresuming structure, has the appearance of great antiquity: the windows are small and square headed, and there is a short tower. The church is situated in a field, and near it stands a venerable yew tree, but there is no inclosed burial ground. The living is a rectory, annexed to that of Broseley. The Hon. and Rev. Orlando Forester is the incumbent. Divine service is only performed once a month. Linley Hall was formerly the seat of the ancient family of Lacon, who possessed the greater part of the parish. It is a plain brick structure, now occupied by Miss Martha Onions. Directory.—George Carpenter, vict., Duke of Wellington Inn; Robert Harrison, farmer; Joseph Langmore, wheelwright and blacksmith; Ann Newton, vict., Britannia Inn; Miss Martha Onions, Linley Hall; Edward Owen, proprietor of Owen’s pills and drops, Linley Villa; Josiah Wellings, bailiff to Mr. Hembry. LITTLE WENLOCKis a parish and small rural village, styled in ancient records “Wenlock under the Wrekin,” and is situated three miles south from Wellington, thee miles north-west from Ironbridge, five miles N.N.E. from Much Wenlock, and eleven miles south-east from Shrewsbury. The village is pleasantly situated on a bold acclivity, near the eastern side of the Wrekin, commanding some fine views over a picturesque and delightful district. The Wrekin stands partly in this parish, and also extends into the parishes of Wellington, Wroxeter, and Uppington. The Willow Moor or Wrekin farm is situated in a sequestered vale near to the Wrekin. This valley is supposed to have been the scene of a battle at some remote period. As a labourer was cutting a drain in the year 1835, about a hundred yards from the turnpike from Little Wenlock to Wellington, he suddenly came upon a heap of broken spears, which had been thrown together, and which it is stated numbered between two and three hundred. In the immediate vicinity are five barrows, which were opened about sixteen years ago, but nothing was discovered in them. The parish comprises 2,460 acres of land, the soil of which is a mixture of clay and gravel, producing tolerable crops of wheat, barley, and turnips. The minerals are ironstone, coal, and limestone, but none of these valuable minerals are got except on the northern verge of the parish, probably in consequence of The Church is a very ancient structure, dedicated to St. Lawrence. The body of the church appears of older date than the tower, which was built in 1667. The fabric was enlarged in 1822 by adding a south transept of brick; the rest of the structure is of free stone. The tower contains five bells. The pulpit is of carved oak, very ancient. There is accommodation for upwards of 600 persons: 520 of the seats are free and unappropriated. A neat marble font is placed at the west end. The living is a rectory, valued in the king’s book at £11. 13s. 4d., in the patronage of Lord Forester: incumbent, Rev. George Edmonds, M.A. The tithes have been commuted for £584. 3s. 4d., and there are nine acres of glebe land. The parish register dates from the year 1689. In the church-yard are several venerable yew trees. The Rectory is a commodious brick residence, a short distance from the church, from which are seen some pleasing and picturesque views of the country. The house stands 600 feet above the level of the Severn, whose silvery waters flow in the vale beneath. Wenlock Hall is now divided into cottage tenements. Huntington is a hamlet about a mile north from the church. Coalmoor a hamlet a mile south from the church. Charities.—Maurice Haywood, who died in 1760, bequeathed the sum of £10, the interest thereof to be distributed in bread to the poor of the parish on St. Thomas’s day, yearly. This legacy was paid to the churchwarden, and the parish has ever since made a distribution of bread to the amount of the interest at five per cent. Mrs. Alice Green gave an annuity of 11s. 6d. to the poor of this parish, payable out of an estate called the Dairy House Farm, at Brierley, in the parish of Sedgley, in Staffordshire, of which 10s. was to be given to the poor, and 1s. 6d. to the person who fetched it for his trouble. The estate on which this annuity is charged is the property of Mrs. Foley. Much irregularity has taken place in the payment of this little annuity, in consequence apparently of the distance from which it was to be procured. Mrs. Mary Tipton, in the year 1844, bequeathed £50, and directed so much of the interest as should be necessary to be applied in painting and keeping in repair her monument in the church-yard, and the residue to be annually distributed among the poor. Mrs. Hannah Shepherd bequeathed the sum of £100, the interest to be applied in the purchase of suitable clothing for the benefit of the poor. Marked 1 are at Coalmoor, 2 Huntingdon, and the rest in Little Wenlock or where specified. Boore Edward, maltster Boore George, grocer Boore John, farmer 1 Boycott Richard, charter master 1 Boycott William, draper, grocer and farmer Chant Thomas, shoemaker Davis Richard, farmer Davis Thomas, farmer and maltster 2 Dawes Benjamin, maltster Edmonds Rev. George, A.M. rector, The Rectory Edmonds William, Esq. 1 Garbitt Wm., vict., Peacock Harper Daniel, farmer, Wrekin farm Harris Edwin, vict., Spread Eagle Hulse John, beerhouse keeper 2 Jervis Francis, farmer, maltster, and collector of taxes Jones Martha, beerhouse keeper 1 Milner William, farmer and maltster 1 Maun James, vict., Labour in Vain Poole Mrs. Charlotte Poole Henry, blacksmith and shopkeeper 1 Ralphs John, sawyer and beerhouse 1 Shepherd, Richard, farmer Steele William, farmer and vict., Five Bells Walker Edward, farmer, Willow Moor Wellings, Walter, farmer Williams Mrs. Emma Wilson John, farmer 2 Yates Catherine, farmer is a considerable parish and market town in the Wenlock Franchise, four and a half miles S.W. from Shiffnal, nine miles N.N. by W. from Bridgnorth, and fifteen miles S.E. from Shrewsbury. This parish is celebrated for its valuable mines of coal and ironstone, its extensive and flourishing ironworks, the Coalport china manufactory, and the manufacture of superior bricks. The parish comprises 2,810 acres of land; at the census of 1801 there were 4,758 inhabitants; 1831, 5,822; 1841, 7367; and in 1851, 8,524; of whom 4,163 were males and 4,361 females; at the latter period there were 1,711 inhabited houses, 47 uninhabited, and four houses building. Rateable value, £19,900. The principal landowners are Joseph Reynolds, Esq., James Foster, Esq., Abraham Darby, Esq., Rev. John Bartlet, Francis and John Yates, Esqrs., and the representatives of the late Francis Darby, Esq. Joseph Reynolds, Esq., is lord of the manor. The town of Madeley so far as regards that portion in the vicinity of the church is irregularly built, and consists chiefly of detached ranges of cottages rather than streets; in the immediate vicinity are a number of handsome villa residences and neat cottages. The Prior and convent of Wenlock in the 53rd of Henry III. had the grant of a market on Tuesday, to be held at Madeley, and a fair on the eve, the day, and the morrow of St. Matthew the apostle and evangelist. This market subsequently became obsolete, but was revived in 1763, when a new market house was built in the Dale at Ironbridge; here a flourishing market is held on Friday, and fairs are held on January 26th, May 29th. and October 12th. The extensive establishment of Abraham Darby and Company, ironmasters, and the porcelain manufactory of Messrs. Rose and Co., give employment to a great number of the labouring population. The Madeley Wood Company’s iron works employ about eight hundred operatives, and in the establishment of James Foster and Company are employed upwards of five hundred hands, chiefly in making pig iron. A house and barn not far from the church at Madeley, afforded shelter to the unfortunate Charles II., after his defeat at the battle of Worcester. Madeley Court House, an antique old mansion in the Elizabethan style of architecture, was formerly the residence of Sir Basil Brooke, fourth in descent from Sir Basil Brooke, a zealous royalist in the time of Charles I. It is now the residence of Mr. George Jones; in the grounds is a curious old sun-dial. The Madeley County Court, for the recovery of debts, embraces the following parishes and places, viz.: Albrighton, Badger, Barrow, Beckbury, Benthall, Blymhill, Bonninghall, Broseley, Buildwas, Dawley, Donnington, Kemberton, Linley, Little Wenlock, Madeley, Much Wenlock, Patshull, Posenhall, Ryton, Sheriff Hales, Shiffnal, Stirchley, Stockton, Sutton Maddock, Tong, Weston-under-Lizard, and Willey. Judge, Uvedule Corbet, Esq.: Clerk, George Potts, Esq.: Assistant Clerk, Mr. William Bailey: High Bailiff, Mr. Richard Thursfield. The Madeley Poor Law Union comprehends twelve parishes, embracing an area of forty-three square miles, with a population returned at the census of 1831 of 22,164 souls: in 1841 the inhabitants had increased to 26,172, and at the last census in 1851 there were 27,626 inhabitants, of whom 13,668 were males and 13,958 females. The Union House is a plain brick structure which will accommodate 140 inmates; the average number of paupers is about 70. The parishes embraced within the Union are Madeley, Little Wenlock, Buildwas, Dawley, Stirchley, Broseley, Benthall, Posenhall, Barrow, Linley, Willey, and Much Wenlock. Clerk to Guardians, William Reynolds Anstice, Esq.: Superintendent Registrar; Mr. Edwin R. Evans: Chaplain, Rev. James H. Gwyther: Governor, William Wildblood. The Church is a handsome and spacious octagonal structure, with a finely-proportioned square tower in which is a peal of bells. This fabric was built in 1795, and subsequently enlarged; it is partly fitted up and provided with commodious galleries, having accommodation for upwards of a thousand worshippers; the organ is a handsome fine-toned instrument. The old church which was taken down on the erection of the present building exhibited the Norman style of architecture; a chantry was erected in the ancient structure and dedicated to the Virgin Mary, in the 11th of Richard II. Several of the ancient monuments were removed from the old church when it was taken down and are now placed in the new Ironbridge, a populous and interesting portion of the parish of Madeley, takes its name from an iron bridge which has been erected across the Severn at this place. Here are many handsome residences, good inns, and shops in all the different branches of the retail trade. A flourishing market is held on Friday. A market hall has been built, gas introduced, and the whole has a thriving and prosperous appearance, and may be considered the focus of commercial pursuits in the parish. The iron bridge which spans the Severn is a magnificent structure, and was cast at the Coalbrook Dale Works, in 1799. The span of the arch is one hundred feet six inches, height forty feet, and the road way twenty four feet broad. It was the first iron bridge erected in England. The total weight of the iron in the bridge is three hundred and seventy-eight tons, and the whole was erected in the space of three months. The abutments of the bridge are of stone, covered with plates of iron, with mortices, in which stand two upright pillars of the same. Against the foot of the inner pillar, the bottom of the main rib bears on the base plate. This rib consists of two pieces connected by a dove-tail point, in an iron key, and secured by screws. The cross stays, braces circle in the spandrils, and the brackets connect the larger pieces, so as to keep the bridge perfectly steady; while a diagonal and cross stays, and top plates, connect the pillars and ribs together in opposite directions. The bridge is covered with iron top plates, projecting over the ribs on each side, and on this projection stands the balustrade of cast iron. The bridge being private property a small charge is made to pass over. Large quantities of iron, all kinds of castings, coal, and lime are shipped at the wharf to distant parts of the country. Near to the Lodge Farm are several beds of fine sand, which is much used by the Coalbrook Dale Company in their beautiful castings. The Church, a handsome structure of brick, dedicated to St. Luke, is situated on elevated ground, and approached by a flight of steps one hundred and nineteen in number. It was built in the year 1836, and consists of nave, chancel, and side aisles, with a tower, in which is one bell. The east window is richly beautified with stained glass, and has full length figures of St. Peter, St. James, and St. John, executed by the celebrated Evans, of Shrewsbury. The church is provided with galleries, and has a small organ. There are a thousand and sixty-two sittings, of which six hundred and sixty-two are free and unappropriated. The living is a perpetual curacy in the gift of the vicar of Madeley. Incumbent, Rev. John Andrew Jetter. The Wesleyan Methodists have a chapel at Madeley Wood, built in the year 1837, which will hold about seven hundred persons. They have also a place of worship near to the wharf, and a spacious Sunday school at Madeley Wood, where four hundred children are instructed. The Wesleyan New Coalbrook Dale, a winding glen two miles from Madeley, hemmed in by lofty hills and hanging woods, is celebrated for the most considerable iron works in England; the forges, mills, and steam engines, with all their vast machinery,—the flaming furnaces, and smoking chimneys, with handsome residences nestling under the cliffs of the hills, have altogether a most romantic and singular appearance, and perhaps in no part of the globe are features of so diversified and wonderful a character brought together within so limited a compass,—here art has triumphed over nature, and the barren wilderness has been converted into one of the most animating abodes of commerce, and being studded with residences of taste and elegance, it gives the whole a very interesting appearance. Coalbrook Dale is chiefly the property of the Darby family, who carry on the extensive iron works here and in the adjoining parish of Dawley, where they have been already noticed. The Coalbrook Dale Company is one of the largest establishments in England, justly celebrated for the superiority of their castings, and for the manufacture of every description of iron goods. The Friends’ Meeting House, a neat brick structure, was built in 1789, and has a small burial ground attached. It stands near the site of a former meeting house. The Wesleyan Chapel, a plain brick structure, was occasionally the scene of the labours of the eminent Fletcher, the vicar of Madeley. A spacious school room has been built at the expense of the Coalbrook Dale Company, where about eighty boys are instructed. It is chiefly supported by the liberality of the same company. The room above the school is used as an episcopal place of worship, and here the curate of Madeley usually officiates twice on the Sabbath. A commodious school for girls has been built near the works, which is supported by Mrs. Abraham Darby; here about one hundred girls and an equal number of infants are now receiving instruction. Sunny-side House, a good brick residence on the heights above the dale, was unoccupied when our agent visited Coalbrook Dale. The residences of Abraham Darby, Esq., Richard Darby, Esq., and the Mrs. Darby, are handsome mansions, situated near the works in the dale. East Field is a good residence at the bottom of the dale, the seat of Barnard Dickinson, Esq., near to which is Severn House, the residence of Henry Dickinson, Esq., besides which there are several other handsome residences. Coalport, celebrated for its rich and extensive china works, is situated about two miles from Ironbridge. The eminent firm of Rose and Company has been established here upwards of half a century; and the articles produced at this manufactory, for superior taste and elegant workmanship, are nowhere excelled. The establishment is known as the Coalbrook Dale China Manufactory, and is the most extensive in the kingdom. The firm employs 537 operatives. Charities.—By an Indenture dated 29th May, 1706, we find that Basil Brook, by his will bequeathed to the poor of the parish of Madeley the sum of £40, which the churchwardens and parishioners desired might be laid out in the purchase of lands and tenements for the use of the poor of the parish. It was witnessed that Comerford Brook, in consideration of the said £40, and also of a further sum of £30 paid to him by Audley Bowdler and eight others, parties to the said indenture, granted to Audley Bowdler and The annuity of 5s. above mentioned was formerly paid out of premises belonging to Mr. Beddoes, but by whom given is not known. In the returns made under the Act of the 26th George III., it is attributed to a person of the name of Johnson, and there was formerly such a person who had property in this parish. A person of the name of Bowdler, who held the premises after Beddoes, became bankrupt, when the premises were sold, and there being no means of establishing a claim to this annuity against the purchase, it was agreed that the trustees of the other charity should receive from the assignees the sum of £5, in lieu and in discharge of this annuity. This sum, and 20s. for four years arrears, was accordingly paid to the trustees, and by them placed in the savings bank. Mr. William Yate, in 1810, bequeathed four kneelings in his pew in the gallery of the church for the benefit of the Sunday school. The following biographical sketch of the Rev. John Fletcher, formerly vicar of Madeley, is taken from the account of that celebrated individual published by the Rev. Robert Cox, curate of St. Leonard’s, Bridgnorth, and other authorities:—“John Guillaume de la Flechere, or as he was generally designated in this his adopted country, John William Fletcher, was born in Switzerland, at Nijon, in the Pays de Vaud. His father, in the early part of his life, had been an officer in the French service, but on his marriage retired from the army, and afterwards became a colonel in the militia of his own country. Young Fletcher having passed the early part of his boyhood at Nion, was sent to the University of Geneva, where he was soon distinguished by the superiority of his talents, and the intensity of his application. About this period Fletcher met with a providential escape, which he never afterwards mentioned without the strongest expressions of gratitude. He lived for some time at a place very near the Rhine, where he frequently bathed, being careful to keep near the shore that the stream might not carry him away. Once, however, being less careful than usual, he was drawn into mid-channel, where the course of the water was very swift. He endeavoured to swim against it, but in vain, till he was hurried a distance of five miles from home. At last, despairing of life, he was cheered by the sight of a fine smooth creek, into which he was swiftly carried by a violent stream. A powder mill stood directly across it, and the last thing he could remember was the striking of his breast against one of the piles on which it stood. He then lost his senses, and knew nothing more till he rose on the other side of the mill, in a calm safe place, perfectly well. Many persons gladly welcomed him on shore; and one gentleman in particular said, ‘I looked when you went under the mill, and again when you rose on the other side. The time of your being immerged among the piles was exactly twenty minutes.’” After the arrival of Mr. Fletcher in this country, he resided about eighteen months in the house of a Mr. Burchell, in Herefordshire, under whose directions he studied the English and various branches of polite literature. At length he was engaged as a tutor in the family of Mr. Hill, M.P. for Shrewsbury, who resided at Tern Hall, in this county. Mr. Fletcher generally accompanied the family to London, when Mr. Hill went to attend his parliamentary duties; and on one of these journeys he accidentally met with a poor woman who, he said, talked to him so delightfully of Jesus Christ, that he knew not how the time passed away. This little circumstance was attended with the most important results; and although at first he felt somewhat indignant at the idea of not being perfectly acquainted with the nature of religion, yet at length he obtained that lively faith which, through the grace of God, will incite men to do all they can do, whilst it teaches them to rely upon nothing which they have done. Not long after this period, Mr. Fletcher’s attention was again directed to the work of the ministry; but being diffident of his qualifications for so weighty an office, two years elapsed before his ordination. “Before,” said he, “I was afraid; but now I tremble to meddle with holy things.” At length his reluctance being overcome, he solemnly determined to offer himself as a candidate for holy orders in the English Church, and was accordingly ordained deacon at the Chapel Royal of St. James’s, on the 6th of March, 1757, and preached on the following day. After having preached to some French refugees in his own language, and also in several chapels belonging to Mr. Wesley, with whom he was now acquainted, he determined to return to the charge of his pupils at Tern Hall. The churches of Atcham, Wroxeter, St. Alkmunds, and the Abbey Church in Shrewsbury, were now the occasional scenes of his gratuitous services. In the summer of 1779 he was frequently engaged in performing the duty of Madeley, and during the following year was presented to the vicarage of that place. This living he accepted in preference to another of above double the value, which was offered to him about the same time; his affection for the people to whom he had ministered would not allow him to be separated from them. The circumstance of his appointment to Madeley is worthy of notice. One day, Mr. Hill informed him that the living of Dunham, in Cheshire, then vacant, was at his service: “The parish,” he continued, “is small, the duty light, the income good (£400 per annum), and it is situated in a fine healthy sporting country.” After thanking Mr. Hill most cordially for his kindness, Mr. Fletcher added, “Alas, sir! Dunham will not suit me; there is too much money, and too little labour.” “Few clergymen make such objections,” said Mr. Hill, “it is a pity to decline such a living, as I do not know that I can find you another: What shall we do? Would you like to go to Madeley?” “That, sir, would be the very place for me.” “My object, Mr. Fletcher, is to make you comfortable in your own way; if you prefer Madeley, I shall find no difficulty in persuading Chambray, the present vicar, to exchange it for Dunham, which is worth more than twice as much!” In this way he became vicar of Madeley, with which There was an energy in his preaching, observes Mr. Gilpin, that was irresistible; his subjects, his language, his gestures, the tone of his voice, and the turn of his countenance, all conspired to fix the attention and affect the heart. Without aiming at sublimity, he was truly sublime, and uncommonly eloquent without affecting the orator. He was wonderously skilled in adapting himself to the different capacities and conditions of his hearers. He could stoop to the illiterate and rise with the learned; he had incontrovertible arguments for the sceptic, and powerful persuasions for the listless believer; he had sharp remonstrance for the obstinate, and strong consolation for the mourner. Mr. Wesley describes him as superior to Whitfield in his qualifications as a public preacher. Instead of being confined, says he, to a country village, he ought to have shone in every corner of our land. He was full as much called to sound an alarm through all the nation as Mr. Whitfield himself; nay, abundantly more so, seeing he was much better qualified for that important work. He had a more striking person, an equally winning address, together with a richer flow of fancy, a stronger understanding, a far greater treasure of learning, both in languages, philosophy, philology, and divinity; and above all, which I can speak with full assurance, a more deep and constant communion with the Father and with the Son Jesus Christ. It is not to be supposed that so zealous a minister of the gospel would meet with no opposition. The drunken colliers and self-interested publicans were his special enemies. The voluptuary detested his temperance; the licentious were offended at his gravity and strictness; and the formal were roused to indignation by that spirit of zeal and devotion which influenced his whole conduct. And to these opponents must be added some of the neighbouring clergy and magistrates, who objected to his well-intended but unauthorised interference in their parishes. In spite, however, of these oppositions, his piety and benevolence won upon the people, and the church, which at first was so thinly attended that he was discouraged by the smallness of the congregation, began to overflow, and he saw an effectual change take place in many of his flock. Madeley abounded with persons in extreme indigence, and over this destitute part of his flock Mr. Fletcher watched with peculiar concern. The whole rents of his small patrimonial estate were set apart for charitable uses, and he drew so liberally from his other funds as at times almost to deprive himself of the necessaries of life. In order to feed the hungry, he led a life of self-denial and abstinence; and to cover the naked he clothed himself in the most homely attire. The incessant labours of Mr. Fletcher, both in public and in private, with intense application to his studies, at length impaired his health, and in 1777 he was induced to visit Switzerland for the benefit of his native air. He continued at Nijon, the place of his nativity, and its vicinity for nearly three years; during which period, though his health was gradually improving, he was still too weak to undertake much public duty, but he employed his time in writing, giving private exhortations, and in instructing the children who assembled, in the first principles of religion. The fearless intrepidity of Mr. Fletcher’s Christian character was strikingly exemplified in his conduct towards one of his nephews during his residence in Switzerland. This young man had been in the Sardinian service, where his profligate ungentlemanly conduct had given such general offence to his brother officers that they were determined to compel him to leave their corps or fight them all in succession. After engaging in several duels he was obliged to quit the service, and return to his native country. As a desperate man he resorted to desperate measures. He waited on his uncle, General de Gons; and having obtained a private audience, he presented a pistol, and said, “Uncle de Gons, if you do not give me a draft on your banker for five hundred crowns, I will shoot you.” The general, though a brave man, yet In March, 1781, Mr. Fletcher took a final leave of Switzerland and returned to England, and in the autumn of the same year was married to Miss Bosanquet, a lady of respectable family and eminent piety. From the time of his marriage Mr. Fletcher experienced no return of his consumptive symptoms, and his general health materially improved. In compliance with the solicitation of Mr. Wesley, Mr. Fletcher was sometimes present at the annual conference, when his sermons and pious conversation became the theme of every tongue. No employment of Mr. Fletcher’s seemed more pleasing to him than that of being engaged in preparing food or medicines for the poor. On Sundays As a clergyman he was never exceeded in zeal, disinterestedness, affection for his flock, or anxiety for their spiritual welfare. As a writer Mr. Fletcher was considerably above mediocrity, and had he been a candidate for literary distinction he had talents to have occupied no inconsiderable rank. His deportment and manners were of the most engaging and courteous kind, presenting such a combination of gravity, condescension, and gentleness as few have ever witnessed. Of his appearance in the pulpit the liveliest fancy could not frame from any of the ancient saints an aspect more venerable or more apostolic. The abundant current of his charity flowed in affection towards all, and his liberal heart rejoiced in the spiritual welfare of other denominations. In the church-yard is a plain and simple tomb to his endeared memory, covered with a cast iron plate, on which in raised letters is the following memorial:—
The following is a copy of the entry in the parish register:—“John Fletcher, clerk, died on Sunday evening, August 14th, 1785. He was one of the most apostolic men of the age in which he lived. His abilities were extraordinary, and his labours unparalleled. He was a burning and shining light, and as his life had been a common blessing to the inhabitants of this parish, so the death of this great man was lamented by them as a common and irreparable loss. This little testimony was inserted by one who sincerely loved and honoured him. Joshua Gilpin, vicar of Wrockwardine.” Albert William, plumber, glazier, & painter Alker Thomas, plumber, glazier, & painter Bailey John, builder Bailey John, chartermaster Bailey Joseph, chartermaster Bailey William, assistant clerk, county court Barker John, boot and shoemaker Bartley Thomas, grocer and draper Bartlett Rev. John, M.A., Marnwood Beddell Thomas, beerseller Blanthorne Isabella, beerseller Bowdler Henry, farmer, Cuckoo Oak Brewer Francis, grocer Brickhill Mr. Solomon Bryan Arnold F., draper Cartwright George, butcher Caswell John, boot and shoemaker Chalmers Rev. John, curate Currier Thomas, cabinet maker Dainty William, chartermaster Davies John, brick, tile, & draining pipe mkr Dawes William, organ builder Dyas Charles, vict., Royal Oak Dyas William, butcher, farmer, maltster, and grocer Eastwick Miss Mary Edwards Mr. Edward Farmer Miss Ann Farr James, wheelwright Farr John, beerseller Fenton Samuel, brazier and tin plate worker Ferriday Charles James, Esq. Ferriday Miss Jane Fisher Jesse, manufacturing chemist Ford John C., draper Foster & Co., iron & coal masters; Francis Pearce, agent Garner Joseph, stone mason Glaze George, beerseller Glover Thomas, hair dresser Green Henry, beerseller Griffiths Philip, tailor and clothier Groom Richard, tailor Guy Benjamin, beerseller Gwyther Rev. James H., vicar, surrogate for granting marriage licenses, and chaplain to Madeley union Harper Ann, draper and grocer Harper William, farmer Harris William, chartermaster Harvey Richard and Randall John, grocers and ironmongers Harvey Thomas J., vict., Horse Shoes Headley James, chemist and druggist Heaford William, tailor and woollen draper Holmes John, chartermaster Hopley Peter, farmer and chartermaster Hopley William, chartermaster Jacks John, chartermaster Jacks Joseph, painter and glazier Johnson William, schoolmaster Jones George, mine agent to James Foster, Esq., Madeley Court Jones Jonas, chartermaster Kearsley James, chartermaster Kearsley Sarah, milliner Keay John, beerseller and grocer Keay John, chartermaster Keay Peter, beerseller Lane John, wheelwright Lavender Samuel, draper and milliner Lissiter William, beerseller Madeley Wood Company ironmasters; Mr. Anstice, agent Millard Thomas, gardener and seedsman Mollineaux Thomas, grocer Molloy Rev. William Morgan Mr. Joseph, Gothic Villa Morris Richard, blacksmith Munday Thomas, bookseller and stationer Onions James, confectioner Owen Thomas, saddler and harness maker Page William, butcher Patrick Miss Mary Ann Pearce Francis, agent to James Foster, Esq., Park Cottage Peirce Richard, surgeon Penn Thomas, furnace manager to James Foster, Esq. Powell William, beerseller Rayner Mr. Charles, Holley House Roberts Charles, boot and shoemaker Rodgers William M., grocer Rose Mrs. Appilona Rushton Jane, milliner Rushton Samuel, blacksmith Rushton William, grocer Smith Edward, ale and porter merchant, and maltster and limeburner Smith Samuel and Co., brick, tile, and drainage pipe manufacturers Smith Thos., architect, builder, & surveyor Street Elizabeth, earthenware dealer Thompson Matthew, chartermaster Walker John, beerseller Wall William, shopkeeper Ward Mrs. Alice Ward George, mine agent to Madeley Wood Company Ward William, chartermaster Watson Andrew, tailor Webb Matthew, surgeon Wilkins James, grocer and ironmonger Willcox Mr. Thomas Williams Mrs. Elizabeth Williams James, beerseller Williams Joseph, wheelwright Williams Richard, farmer, and furnace manager to Madeley Wood Company Williams Richard, farmer, The Cottage Williams Susannah, beerseller Wones John, beerseller and shopkeeper Yate Joseph, Esq., Madeley Hall Post Office at Mr. Henry P. Baldwin’s, Bridge street. Letters arrive at 7 45 A.M., and are despatched at 5 50 P.M. Ironbridge and Madeley Wood Directories.Anstice John, Esq., manager to Madeley Wood Company, The Lloyds Anstice Wm. Reynolds, solicitor and clerk to Madeley Board of Guardians, Church street Bartlett Rev. John, M.A., Marnwood Ball William, supervisor, Church street Bayliss William, engineer to Madeley Wood Company, The Lloyds Cartwright Mrs., Hodge Bower Clarke William, tea and whiskey dealer, Severn Terrace Cock Miss Ann, Brockholes Cooke Emanuel, locksmith, Lincoln’s Hill Davies Mrs., The Orchard Evans William, secretary to Mechanics’ Institution, house, Broseley Fisher, John, Esq., Madeley Wood Ford John, parish clerk, Church street Gordon, Wm. Pierson, Esq., solicitor & clerk to magistrates, residence, Linley Haywood John, wire worker, Bridge street Jetter Rev. John Andrew, incumbent, The Parsonage Jones Thomas, nail maker, Madeley Wood Kelsall Rev. Henry, curate, Brockholes Lewis John Bennett, inland revenue officer, Severn Terrace Lewis Edward, manager to Joseph Reynolds, Esq., Coalport Madeley Wood Company, ironmasters, and brick and tile manufacturers, John Anstice, Esq., manager, The Lloyds Nicholas Joseph, patten maker, Lincoln Hill Nickless Enoch, ale, porter and cider merchant, Lincoln Terrace Pugh Charles, agent to Lilleshall Company and Beriah Botfield, Esq., Coalport Pugh William, Esq., porcelain manufacturer, Coalport Reeves William, chartermaster, Lincoln Hill Riddiough William, patten and clog maker, Madeley Wood Rose John & Co., porcelain manufacturers Rose William, Esq., porcelain manufacturer, Coalport Stokes William Smith, gent., Old Parsonage Wase John, farmer, The Hay Whiteley Mr. James, agent to Jno. Rose & Co. porcelain manufacturers, Coalport Wildblood Wm., governor of Union House, Brockholes Woodruff James, gent., Lincoln Terrace Wright Henry, ale & porter dealer, Lincoln’s Hill Yates Adam, gent, Madeley Wood Weare William, auctioneer, house and estate agent, accountant, agent to Shropshire and North Wales Fire Office, and British Empire Life Office, Madeley Wood Academies.Brassington & Southern, the Misses, (Ragged School), Severn Side Evans Wm., Waterloo street, house, Broseley Johnston John, (Boarding) Brockholes Lusmore Miss, (Parochial) Severn Side Timmis Mrs and the Misses, (Ladies Brdng) Dale Coppy White Miss, (Ladies Boarding) Church street Attornies.Anstice Wm. Reynolds, and clerk to Madeley Board of Guardians, Church street Bakers and Flour Dealers.See also Shopkeepers. Broadbridge Chas., Bridge st Milner George, Bridge street Bankers.Savings Bank, Church street, William Smith, manager, residence, Bridgnorth Shropshire Banking Compy., Hy. C. T. Dickenson, Esq., manager, The Elms Barge Owners.Bailey James, The Lloyds Burton J. & Edw., The Wharf Goodwin George, The Wharf Owen Benjamin, The Wharf Owen Thomas, The Wharf Owen Edward, The Wharf Yates Francis and John, The Wharf Blacksmiths.Bisall John, Madeley Wood Edwards Jno., Madeley Wood Walton John, Church street Booksellers, Binders, Printers and Stationers.Slater John, Bridge street Smith Geo. Mortimer, Market square Smith Saml. C. Bridge street Boot & Shoe Makers.Blocksidge John, Coalport Crowder John, The Lloyds Dodd Richd., Church street Hughes Chas., Bridge street Lloyd Benj., Madeley Wood Price Thos., Madeley Wood Roberts Thos., The Wharfage Wood Thos., The Wharfage Braziers & Tin-plate Workers.Bartham Chas., Bridge street Fenton Thomas, & constable, Waterloo street Brick & Tile Manufacturers.Bayliss John and George, Madeley Wood Burton John and Edward, The Wharfage Davis John, Madeley Green Madeley Wood Company, Waterloo street Roden Saml., Hodge Bower Butchers.Barnett Thos., Bridge street Barnett Wm., Bridge street Delves Joseph, Bridge street Dyas William, Bridge street Page John, Bridge street Poole Charles, The Lloyds Wilcox John, Madeley Wood Wilcox William, Brockholes Cabinet Makers and Upholsterers.Davies George, High street Jones William, The Wharfage Chemists & Druggists.Baldwin Henry P., and post master, Bridge street Hartshorne Wm., Market sqre Clothiers.Cohen Luke, Bridge street Gotthimer Aaron, Waterloo st Confectioners.Barclay William, & dealer in British Wines, Bridge st Milner George, Bridge street Rogers Mary, Bridge street Cooper.Roberts Richd., Church street Curriers.Cock John and James, Madeley Wood Stirrop Robert J., and leather cutter, Bridge street Drapers & Silk Mercers.Brown Samuel, and laceman, Bridge street Bowyer Thomas, and woollen draper, Market square Charlton Henry, Bridge st Evans Thos., Madeley Wood Goodwin Wm., The Wharfage Greenhalgh Brothers, Bridge street Pardoe Edward, Bridge street Farmers.Barnett Thos., Bridge street Dyas William, Bridge street Thompson Isaac, Lodge Farm Wase John, Hay Farm Yates Francis and John, Castle Green Fire & Life Office Agents.British Empire Life, William Weare, Madeley Wood Clerical, Medical & General Life, George M. Smith, Market square Medical, Legal and General Mutual Life, George M. Smith, Market square Shropshire and North Wales Fire, Wm. Weare, Madeley Wood Furniture Brokers.Davies George, High street Franks William, High street Jones Wm., The Wharfage Grocers & Tea Dealers.Dax William, Madeley Wood Evans Wm., Madeley Wood Franks Benj., Madeley Wood Greenhalgh Brothers, Bridge street Hammond Thos., Brockholes Latham John, & glass dealer, Madeley Wood Milner Betsey, Bridge street Price Chas. L., (firm, Smith and Price) Bridge street Smith & Price, Bridge street Smith Charles W., Bridge st Smith Henry, (firm, Smith and Price) Bridge street Wilcox Thos., Madeley Wood Hair Dressers.Baugh George, Bridge street Poole Thomas, Bridge street Reynolds Rd., The Wharfage Hat Manufacturers.Shingler John, The Lloyds Shingler John, Bridge street Hosiers and Haberdashers.Brown John, Madeley Wood Crowther The Misses, The Wharfage Owen Miss Sarah, Bridge st Hotels, Inns, and Taverns.Bird in Hand, John Shingler, The Lloyds Blockhouse, John Heighway, The Lloyds Half Moon, Joseph Pugh, Madeley Wood Horse, Joseph Edwards, Lincolns Hill Lake Head, William Yates, The Lloyds Retreat, William Shingler, Bridge street Robin Hood, James Bailey, The Lloyds Rodney, Susannah Lloyd, The Wharfage Royal Oak, Thomas Nivitt, Church street Swan Inn, John Barrow, The Wharfage Swan, Wm. Fowler, Lincolns Hill Talbot, George Boycott, The Wharfage Three Tuns, Thos. Corfield, and licensed to let post horses, Bridge street Tontine Hotel, and commercial and posting house, Elizabeth Jones, Bridge st Unicorn, Samuel Harvey, Madeley Wood White Hart, commercial and posting house, William Shingler, The wharfage Beerhouses.Broadbridge Chas., Bridge st Davies Jas., Madeley Wood Franks Benj., Madeley Wood Harper Joseph, Brockholes Jones Ann, The Wharfage Lloyd Samuel, Waterloo st Morrall Rd., Madeley Wood Hoole Fred. W., Bath lane Pugh Thos., Madeley Wood Taylor Catherine, The Loyds Thompson Isaac, Madeley Wood Wood Thos., The Wharfage York Mary, Madeley Wood Ironmongers.Davies Richard, and patten maker, Wharfage Smith Chas. W., Bridge st Joiners and Builders.Marked * Builders only. Bailey Wm., senr., Madeley Wood Bailey Wm., jun., Madeley Wood * Barclay John, Bridge street Davies George, High street * Jenks Thomas, High st Nevitt & Co., Madeley Wood Nickless Enoch, Lincoln ter. Maltsters.Barrow John, The Wharfage Lloyd Benj., Severn Terrace Smith Edward, Park lane Yates Francis and John, The Wharfage Milliners & Dressmakers.Armstrong Miss Maria, Market street Crowther Miss Sarah, The Wharfage Ferrington The Misses, Church street Owen The Misses, Bridge st Stodd Miss Emma, Bridge st Painters, Plumbers, & Glaziers.Crowther Leonard, The Wharfage Hinsley John, The Loyds Williams Abr., The Wharfage Saddlers & Harness Makers.Poole George Hy., Bridge st Woof Edwd., The Wharfage Spirit Vaults.Charlton Humpy., Bridge st Stirrop Robert, Bridge street Straw Bonnet Makers.Acton Mrs., Market square Hartshorne Mrs., Bridge st Surgeons.Proctor Richd., Esq., Severn Terrace Rowlands Jas., Esq., Church street Tailors.Bates Edwin, Madeley Wood Gwynne Thomas, & woollen draper, Market square Heaford Hiram, & woollen draper, The Wharfage Shotton John, Madeley Wood Timber Merchant.Chune Joseph Fred., Lincolns Hill Watch & Clock Makers.Hinkley Wm., Bridge street Peplow Fran., The Wharfage Omnibuses.To Shiffnal at 7-30 A.M. from the Tontine Hotel, returning at 6-45 P.M. To Wellington at 8 A.M. and 4-30 P.M. from the Tontine Hotel, returning at 2-45 P.M. and 9 P.M. Coalbrook Dale Directory.Marked 1 reside at the bottom of the dale. Bailey Benj., boot & shoekr. Bailey John, beerhouse kpr. Bailey William, grocer Biddiough William, grocer Boycott Thomas, accountant Branford Thomas, painter, plumber and glazier 1 Chune George and Joseph, timber merchants Chune John H., miller and corn factor, Coalbrook Dale Mill 1 Clarke William, grocer and seedsman Coalbrook Dale Company, ironmasters Cookson Samuel, engineer Crookes Mr. Chas., manager of the foundry, Paradise House Darby Abraham, Esq., The Chesnuts Darby Mrs. Hannah, White House Darby Mrs. Lucy, Dale House Darby Richard, Esq. Delves Joseph, butcher 1 Dickenson Henry C. T., bank manager, The Elms 1 Dickinson Barnard, Esq., East Field 1 Dickinson Henry, Esq., Severn House 1 Dunbar Sarah, hosier Edwards Edward, surgeon Fox John, accountant Gething George, tailor Graham Mr. Thos., Woodside Cottage Harbridge John, accountant Hughes John, draughtsman Lane Julia, schoolmistress 1 Lloyd Aaron, grocer 1 Lowe Geo., tailor & draper Morgan The Misses Priscilla and Rebecca Norris William, cashier 1 Oliver William, shopkeeper Onions Isaac, schoolmaster 1 Owen Benj., barge owner 1 Owen Edwd., barge owner 1 Owen Mr. Thomas 1 Phillips John, tailor Ramsell Edward, shoemaker Robinson Mr. John Roberts William, clerk Rose Mrs. Ann Buckley Mrs Sarah, Hawkeshead Cottage Sankey Mrs. Hannah Smith and Price, grocers 1 Turton George, inland revenue officer Timmis Mrs., boarding schl. Weston Phillip, accountant Wilbraham Charles, draper, (travelling) Wright Benjamin, registrar of births, deaths, and marriages, & Commercial Inn and posting house Wright Peter, farmer, and agent to the Royal Exchange Fire & Life Office Coalport Directory.Anstice John Esq., agent to Madeley Wood Company Blocksidge John, grocer & shoemaker Doughty Daniel, butcher Fennell Susannah, shopkr. Hargreave Rebecca, beerhse Harper John, butcher Harper Joseph, beerhouse John Rose and Co., porcelain manufacturer Lewis Edward, manager to Joseph Reynolds, Esq. Musgrave Wm., beerhouse Oakes George, shopkeeper Pugh Chas., agent to Lilleshall Company and Beriah Botfield, Esq. Pugh Wm., Esq., porcelain manufacturer Rose William, Esq., porcelain manufacturer, Rock House Wase John John Holland, farmer, Hay Farm Wheeler Thomas, beerhouse Whiteley James, Esq., agent to porcelain manufactory MONK HOPTONis a parish and small rural village pleasantly situated six miles W. from Bridgnorth, and four and a half miles S. from Much Wenlock, contains 2,240a. 0r. 37p. of land, chiefly the property of Lord Wenlock, who is also lord of the manor. The farm houses and cottage residences are mostly neat structures, having been in many instances rebuilt by the late proprietor Sir Francis Lawley. Rateable value, £1,814. 13s. 9d. At the census in 1801 this parish had a population of 212 souls; 1831, 208, and in 1841 there were thirty-five houses and 189 inhabitants. The Church, a small structure, has been beautified and repaired within the last few years. The living is a perpetual curacy in the gift of the lord of the manor, and incumbency of the Rev. Robert W. Dayrell. There is a school in the village, which is chiefly supported by Lord Wenlock and the minister; about forty children attend. Weston is a hamlet in the parish of Monk Hopton, about two miles from the church; the Duke of Cleveland and Mrs. Susannah Butcher are the landowners. The principal residents are Edward Bradley, farmer; Rev. Robert W. Dayrell; William Dixon, farmer and corn miller; Mary Evans, schoolmistress; Elizabeth Evans, blacksmith; Edward Marston, farmer, Monk Hall; Richard Nichols, vict., Wenlock Arms; William Shiston, bailiff; Richard Wall, wheelwright. The residents in Weston are Susannah Butcher, farmer; Richard Lewis, farmer; and Thomas Reynolds, farmer. MUCH WENLOCKis a parish, market town, and borough, having separate and independent jurisdiction, twelve miles south east from Shrewsbury, and 148 miles from London. The town consists principally of two streets, at right angles to one another. The houses in general have an ancient appearance, and are ill built; there are, however, several houses and shops of modern appearance of a more respectable character. The parish contains 8,821 acres of land; and at the census of 1841 had 2,487 inhabitants. In 1851 there were 2,398 souls, of whom 1,179 were males, and 1,219 females; and at A charter of incorporation was granted to Wenlock in the 8th of Edward IV. The second and last charter, which is a confirmation and extension of the former, was granted in the 7th of the reign of Charles I. Under this charter the government was invested in a bailiff, a recorder, bailiff’s peers, a treasurer, a coroner, a town clerk, a serjeant-at-mace, and other officers. The bailiff, recorder, and bailiff’s peers, were justices of the peace; the recorder held his office for life, and the others were elected annually on Michaelmas day by a jury of the burgesses. The jurisdiction of these magistrates was co-extensive with the borough. By the charter they were allowed a court of common pleas every second Tuesday, and also an assize court for the trial of criminals, not even excepting those suspected of capital crimes; and from the early registers of the parish of Wenlock many executions seem to have taken place. A court of record was also held by the mayor every alternate Tuesday, and considerable business was done in this court. Under the municipal reform act the government of the borough is vested in a mayor, six aldermen, and eighteen councillors. Quarter sessions are held before the recorder. The mayor is elected annually on the 9th of November by the council. His duties are to preside at all meetings of the council, and to sign notices thereof, and with the assessors to revise the burgess list. He is a justice of the peace ex-officio for the year of his mayoralty and the year following, and has precedence within the borough, and is returning officer at elections for members of parliament. In the absence of the recorder he is empowered to open and adjourn the court of quarter sessions. Any councillor elected mayor, but refusing to serve, is liable to a fine not exceeding £100. The aldermen are one-third of the number of councillors, and are elected triennially by the council on the 9th of November. Half of their number go out of office every three years, but are eligible to be re-elected. An alderman is to preside at elections in case of death or inability of the mayor, and refusing office is to pay a fine not exceeding £50. The councillors are chosen in the different wards on the 1st of November, by persons whose names are on the burgess roll; one-third of the councillors go out of office annually, but are capable of re-election. All such elections are held before an alderman, and two assessors appointed for each ward. The recorder is appointed by the crown, has precedence after the mayor, and is sole judge at quarter sessions and in the court of record, and ex-officio justice of the peace. He must be a barrister of at least five years standing. He cannot be a member of parliament, alderman, or councillor, of the borough. The town-clerk is appointed by the council, and must be an attorney. The freemen’s roll is made out by him. He receives from the overseers, on the 5th of September, the list of burgesses, which he has to get printed, and expose copies on the Town Hall door. He receives claims of persons omitted in the burgess list and of persons objected to. He issues instructions to overseers to make out lists of electors, and publishes the same when revised; attends and takes minutes of all proceedings at council meetings, and makes out warrants for borough-rates, and has charge of all borough registers and other documents. The clerk of the peace is appointed by the council. His duties are to give ten days’ notice of time and place of holding quarter sessions; to summon, at least seven days Members of Parliament:—The Hon. George Cecil Weld Forester, Esq., and James M. Gaskell, Esq. Justices of the Peace:—Moses George Benson, Esq.; George Pritchard, Esq.; John Pritchard, Esq.; Thomas Mytton, Esq.; William Pugh, Esq.; Henry George Harnage, Esq.; John Anstice, Esq.; John Stephens, Esq.; W. P. Brookes, Esq.; and Richard Thursfield, Esq. Corporation.—Mayor: Charles Belsher, Esq. Aldermen: Richard Thursfield, Esq.; William Nicholas, Esq.; J. W. Rowlands, Esq.; John Anstice, Esq.; Charles Belsher, Esq.; and John Parry, Esq. Councillors of Wenlock Ward: George Adney; Joseph Amphlitt; William Canlin; Robert Horton; William Newill; and William Jeffrey. Broseley Ward: George Pritchard; Thomas Lister; John Onions; William Thursfield; Thomas Pitt; Robert Evans. Madeley Ward: Henry Charlton; George Chune; William Cooke; Edward Edwards; Henry Davies; Henry Dickinson. Recorder: Uvedale Corbet, Esq. Clerk of the Peace: George Potts, Esq. Town Clerk: Roger Charles Blakeway, Esq. Clerk to Justices: William P. Gordon, Esq. Treasurer: Mr. Joseph Roden. High Constable: Mr. Richard Patten. Wenlock is remarkable as being the first borough that acquired the right of representation by charter in parliament. The boundary of the present parliamentary borough is the same as prior to the passing of the Reform and Corporation Act, but the municipal boundary is not so extensive. The revising barristers divided Wenlock into the three wards of Wenlock, Broseley, and Madeley; Wenlock ward to consist of the several parishes of Much Wenlock, Ditton Priors, Hughley, Monk Hopton, and such part of the parish of Shipton as lies on the left side of the streams called Brockton brook and the river Cowe in descending the same. The Madeley ward to consist of the parishes of Madeley and Little Wenlock; and Brosley Ward to consist of the parishes of Broseley, Barrow, Benthall, Linley, and Willey, and the Extra Parochial Liberty of Posenhall. And having regard as well to the number of persons rated to the relief of the poor in each ward, as to the aggregate amount of the sums at which all the said persons are so rated, they apportioned and assigned six councillors and two aldermen to each of the said wards. The town returned one member to parliament in 1478. It afterwards acquired the privilege of sending two, who were elected by the burgesses (in number about five hundred), the writ being returned by the bailiff. The greatest number of electors polled previous to the Reform Act was 258. The freedom was acquired by inheritance, and occasionally by election from a common hall. The whole precinct now called the franchise appears to have been included in the original charter. The number of electors is now upwards of nine hundred. The lord of the manor holds annual courts at Michaelmas and Easter, at the former of which constables are appointed. The town of Wenlock gives name to a deanery, and the Borough and Franchise were formerly co-extensive with the hundred of Patintern, mentioned in Doomsday book, which comprised the following parishes—viz., Much Wenlock, Little Wenlock, Broseley, Madeley, Benthall, Barrow, Linley, Badger, Beckbury, Priors Ditton, Stoke St. Milborough, Eaton-under-Heywood, Hughley, Shipton, Monk Hopton, Willey, Deuxhill, and the Extra Parochial Liberty of Posenhall. By an order of Quarter Sessions, held at Shrewsbury, April The Parish Church, which stands near the ruins of the priory, is a venerable structure, consisting of nave, chancel, and side aisles, with a square tower, surmounted by a neat spire of timber, covered with lead. The structure bears many evidences of great antiquity, and the architecture of the Saxon and Norman ages is discoverable. The interior, during the present year, has been restored and re-pewed at a cost of £1,350. The arches, which separate the nave from the side aisles, rise from clustered pillars, and are very beautiful, having been cleared of the plaster and mortar which had accumulated for ages. A lofty round arch separates the nave from the chancel, which contains the remains of a very elegant sedilia, together with a piscina and aumbrey, and several old brass memorials. The Church is dedicated to the Holy Trinity; and from the parish register, it appears that service was first celebrated in the English tongue in this church on the 26th of June, 1559. The church-yard has just been enlarged by the addition of three quarters of an acre, and contains several tombs, but none of them sufficiently remarkable as to deserve special notice. The living is a vicarage, rated at £12. 9s. 6d., in the patronage of Sir W. W. Wynn: incumbent, Rev. William Henry Wayne. The Methodists have a small chapel in the town. The National School was built in 1847, at a cost of about £1,000, of which £500 was obtained of the National Society and the Committee of Council on Education. 150 children attend. The Town Hall or Guild Hall is an antique structure, chiefly composed of timber and plaster, resting on piazzas. It is evidently of great antiquity, but there is no record to show the date of its erection. In the parish register of Wenlock, however, which seems to have been also a chronicle of remarkable events of the parish, it is stated that the house over the prisons, which is clearly an addition to the original building, was put up in 1577. The interior consists of two commodious rooms, the first is the sessions room, and over the Recorder’s seat are the arms of Charles II. The inner room is the Municipal Court House, which has recently been panelled and furnished with carved oak of the most elaborate and costly workmanship, principally at the expense of W. P. Brookes, Esq., one of the borough magistrates. The chairs (two of which were presented to the corporation by the Rev. R. H. G. More), as well as the table, chimney piece, and seats, are remarkably handsome, the cost is stated to have been not far short of £1000. The Savings Bank is a plain brick building situated near the church. The total number of depositors on November 20th, 1850, were 1,909, including thirty-six charitable societies and thirty-four friendly societies. The capital stock of the bank at the same period amounted to £62,650. 12s.; of the total number of depositors there were 1,061 whose respective balances did not exceed £20., 451 were above £20 and not exceeding £50., 210 not exceeding £100., 66 above £100 and not exceeding £150., 42 not exceeding £200., and nine were above the latter sum. The deposits of the charitable societies at the same period amounted to £2,608. 11s. 8d., and of the friendly societies to £3,248. 17s. 6d. Treasurer, George Pritchard, Esq.: Secretary, Mr. William Smith. The Public Library is situated near the ruins of the abbey, and contains about 1,500 volumes, mostly valuable works, chiefly presented by gentlemen in the neighbourhood, and the Duke of Wellington, the Marquis of Anglesey, and Major Herbert Edwards. Wenlock Edge is a precipitous ridge about two miles from Wenlock, formerly densely covered with wood. King Henry I. on his March to Shrewsbury to besiege that town was under Wenlock Monastery, Bishop Tanner says, that a nunnery was erected at Wenlock about the year 680, by Milburga, daughter to King Merwald, and niece to Walphere king of Mercia, of which she became abbess; she was renowned for sanctity, and it is recorded by William of Malmesbury, who wrote early in the 12th century, that for some “time after the arrival of the Normans, through ignorance of the place of her burial she was neglected; lately however, while a new church was erecting, a boy running violently along the pavement, brake into the hollow of a vault and discovered the body of the virgin, when a balsamic odour pervading the whole church she was taken up, and performed so many miracles, that the people flocked thither in great multitudes; large spreading plains could hardly contain the troops of pilgrims, a common faith impelling all, nor did the saint deceive their expectations, for no one departed without either a perfect cure or a considerable abatement of his malady, and some were even cured of the king’s evil where medical advice had been unavailing.” Traditions of miracles worked by Milburga are still preserved in the neighbourhood, and her shrine is said at length to have been burnt in the market place. The blind devotion which led crowds of people of all ranks with their hands filled with rich oblations to offer at this shrine produced a large income to the monastery, and for some time kept in the shade the wondrous doings of canonized saints of the rival establishments in this neighbourhood. The canonization of saints was for centuries a source of great wealth to the Roman Catholic Church, and much of their success no doubt depended on a wily priesthood trumpeting forth their miraculous powers among the ignorant multitude. To show the craftiness of the priesthood in this respect we may observe that St. Dunstan after his death in 988 was canonized, and his relics were held in such esteem that they shortly after produced an immense revenue to the cathedral of Canterbury. About the time of Henry VII. however, the monks of Glastonbury anxious to bring a portion of grist to their own mill, began to boast of having the relics of St. Dunstan in their possession, which soon turned the tide of affairs and caused the rich offerings and oblations to flow to Glastonbury. This sorely troubled the archbishop of Canterbury, who had the tomb of Dunstan opened, when the body was found in a lead coffin in his pontifical habit; the archbishop therefore immediately issued his mandate charging the monks of Glastonbury to desist from all further boasting of their possession of St. Dunstan’s relics. Notwithstanding the objectionable mode the priesthood had of obtaining riches, it is but justice to observe that their revenues and gains were all expended either in alms or hospitality, or in building and adorning their magnificent churches and abbeys; and although learning was then at a low ebb, it being generally styled the dark or illiterate age, yet what learning there was then was mostly to be found in the cloister of the monks, where some attained to great reputation for their proficiency in knowledge. The house founded by Milburga was destroyed by the Danes, but was restored by Leofric Earl of Chester, at the request of his wife, the lady Godiva. Before the Norman conquest it had again fallen into decay, and in the 14th of William the Conqueror was rebuilt and endowed by Roger de Montgomery, Earl of Arundel, Chichester, and Shrewsbury, a person of vast possessions in these parts, who placed therein a prior and convent of monks of the Cluniac order, and made it a cell to the house of De Charitate, in France; this house suffered the same fate with other alien priories till it was naturalized in the 16th year of Richard II. It was dedicated to St. Milburga, and according to Dugdale, in the 26th of Henry VIII. had revenues to the yearly value of £431. 1s. 2d. In the Monastican is the patent of King Edward III. reciting and confirming the charter of Isabel de Say, lady of Clun, whereby she granted to these monks the church of St. George, at Clun, with seven chapels depending on it, namely, the chapel of St. Thomas, in Clun, of St. Mary’s, at Waterdune, of St. Swithin, at Clumbierie, St. Mary, at Cluntune, St. Mary, at Appitune, with those of Eggedune, and Subbledune. There is likewise an inquisition Adjoining the south side of the nave was the great cloister, which was encompassed by the refectory, dormitory and chapter house. Two arched doors which open in the cloisters still remain, but not a fragment of the cloister itself. The chapter house is an oblong square, 66 feet by 31 feet. It communicates by a small door with the house of the Prior, the exterior of which, and some of the apartments, retain their original character. The whole of the eastern side of the building has a singular cloister or ambulatory, consisting of upper and lower story, each of which is formed by a continued line of arches, that have originally been glazed. Opening into the upper gallery are two apartments, one The site of this monastery and manor was granted soon after the dissolution to Augustine de Augustine, and was sold in 1545 to Thomas Lawley, Esq., who made it his residence, and it continued in the Lawley family till it was sold by Robert Bertie (who was the son of Ursula, the great granddaughter of the said Thomas Lawley,) to the family of Gage. Viscount Gage sold it about the year 1632 to Sir John Wynne, of Wynnstay, in whose family it continues in the person of Sir W. W. Wynne, whose father was happily called (by George IV., when Regent) “the real prince of Wales.” The most memorable prior was one Joybert, a Norman, who held the monasteries of Coventry, Daventry, Wenlock and Bermondsey, all at the same time. The annals of Worcester state that a confederacy was entered into in the year 1253, between that house and this, for the mutual support of both; and the same annals take notice of one William, a monk of Wenlock, who put himself at the head of a gang of robbers, but was afterwards taken and executed. John Cressage, who surrendered this monastery January 26th, 1539, had a pension assigned him of £80 per annum. Charities.—The Rev. Francis Southern by his will, proved on the 19th December, 1778, left to the minister and churchwardens of Great Wenlock, and their successors, the sum of £300, to be disposed of as follows. The interest of £200 to be paid to a school-master for teaching ten poor boys to read and write, to be continued till they can read the Bible and write a plain legible hand, and repeat the catechism with Lewis’s expositions readily and distinctly, and understand the first five rules of arithmetic. The interest of £65 to be laid out in bread, to be given every Lord’s day to six poor widows, or old men, who should attend divine service. The interest of £25 to buy Bibles, Testaments and Expositions, to be distributed on New Year’s day among the poor schoolboys. And lastly, the interest of the remaining £10 he gave to the minister for preaching an annual sermon on New Year’s day. This legacy of £300 was invested in the purchase of £640. 2s. 3d. three per cent consols, the dividends of which amount to £19. 4s. per annum, and are disbursed in the following manner. £14. 5s. 10d. paid to a schoolmaster; £1. 5s. expended in books; 12s. 6d. to the minister for a sermon; and £3. 0s. 8d. is distributed in bread. There have been always ten free boys in the school, and generally twelve. A charge is made to each of 2s. 6d. a year for fire money, which is the only expense incurred by them. The following benefactions to the poor of this parish are noticed on a table in the church, the donors of which directed the interest of the several sums affixed to their names to be distributed in bread:—Ralph Pendlebury and Dorothy his wife, £20; William Churchman, £5; Thomas Lokier, £4; Henry Sprott, £5; Edmund King, £5; Joan Patten, £8; William Parsons, £111; Richard Cleveley, £10; John Clark, £5; Richard Littlehales, £10; Edmund Hancocks, £10; Joseph Read, £10; Mrs. Jane Litllehales, £5; and Thomas Patten, £10. Of these specific benefactions, the total amount of which is £213, no further trace remains in any parish book or document; but there is a sum of £240. 19s. 4d. stock, in the three per cent. consols, now standing in the name of trustees, John Murrall, dyer, by will, dated in 1796, bequeathed to such poor people as frequent divine service in the parish church of Much Wenlock, the yearly sum of £7. 4s. to be distributed in bread; twelve twopenny loaves on every Sunday in the year, and ten twelvepenny loaves on each of the following days, namely, St. Thomas’s day, Old Christmas day, Good Friday, and Easter day. Mr. Murrall died in 1769, and his will having been contested, his executors were not able to establish any fund for securing the payment of this charity till 1781, when a sum of £250 stock in the three per cent. consols was purchased for that purpose. The dividends, amounting to £7. 10s. a year, are now received by Dr. Rowley and Geo. Pritchard, Esq., and a distribution of bread takes place on St. Thomas’s day and Good Friday. John Skett, by will, dated 13th March, 1727, left 10s. per annum to be given to the poor of this parish in bread, chargeable on a certain house in Shineton street, the property of Mr. France. John Littlehales, by will, 1760, devised to Richard Woof a messuage in Shineton street, in Much Wenlock, in trust, that he and his heirs should pay yearly out of the profits thereof, to the minister and churchwardens, the sum of 30s., on the 25th of December, to be given in wheaten bread, as follows:—Twelve twopenny loaves to be placed near a tombstone erected by him, before the service begins, on the first Sunday of every month, and to be given when the communion is ended by his heirs, the vicar and churchwardens, to twelve ancient people of the parish, regard being had to those who frequent the church service; and so to continue the first Sunday of each calendar month, Christmas day, Good Friday, and Easter day, yearly. Mrs. Mary Smyth, by will, dated 23rd November, 1773, gave the interest of ten guineas to be distributed yearly in sixpenny loaves on the feast of St. Thomas, amongst poor widows and housekeepers of the parish of Wenlock. Almshouses.—Mrs. Ann Sprott bequeathed £10, the interest to be applied in the repairs of the almshouses. In the parliamentary reports of 1786 it is stated that a person of the name of Price left, for clothing the poor in the almshouse, land then vested in Harry Yate, and producing £4 a-year. With respect of the first mentioned sum of £10, it is conjectured that it formed part of a sum of £150 poor’s stock, previously noticed, as an entry found in the churchwardens’ book, in 1773, states that 10s. was then received, to be laid out in the repairs of the almshouse, being part of the money due to the poor of the parish from the turnpike security; but nothing has been paid for this purpose from the produce of the poors’ stock for many years. With respect to Price’s benefaction, it appears that clothing was formerly provided for the poor in the almshouse by Harry Yate, formerly a draper at Ludlow, in respect of a small estate in Herefordshire, but this was discontinued upwards of seventy years ago by the above mentioned Harry Yate, on the ground that the gift was void under the statute of George II., c. 36. At the time the Charity Commissioners published their report, William Moseley, Esq., the representative of the Sprott family, appointed the almspeople, and stated that when he succeeded to the estate he found the almshouses consisting of four tenements, in miserable condition, and was requested to repair them; and that he rebuilt three brick tenements, with tiled roofs, adjoining another tenement in a different part of the town, with the approbation of the inhabitants. This he did chiefly from charitable considerations; but he was unable to give any information respecting the almshouses from any documents in his possession. He always understood that they were for the benefit of decayed widows of the parish of Wenlock, to be nominated by or with the approbation of the representative of the Sprott family. After referring to the legacy as stated to have Mrs. Ann Minshull left £20, the interest to be applied in teaching poor children to read. Nothing has been paid in respect of this legacy for upwards of fifty years. A legacy of £10, left by the Rev. George Carver, and £5 left by the Rev. Mr. Baker, noticed on a tablet in the church, have long been lost. Post Office.—At Mr. Thomas Lawley’s, Wilmore street. Letters arrive at 7-30 A.M. and are despatched at 5 P.M. Those Marked 1 reside in Barrow street; 2 The Bank; 3 Bull Ring; 4 High street; 5 Shienton street; 6 Spittal street; and 7 Wilmore street 1 Adney Miss Elizabeth 5 Adney George, tanner 5 Ainsworth Thomas, farmer 4 Amphlett Joseph, currier 6 Aston Jeremiah, victualler, Bull’s Head 2 Aston Jonathan, beerseller 1 Barnett Joseph, butcher 1 Beavan Thos., vict., Black Lion 7 Belcher Charles, grocer 6 Binnell Henry H., tailor and woollen draper Blakeway Roger C., Esq., solicitor Boughton Chas., Esq., The Abbey 6 Bowyer Mrs. Fanny 6 Boycott Rd., confectioner 7 Brookes Wm. P., surgeon Canlin William, maltster, Burton road 7 Castle Wm., provis. dealer 1 Clayton William, boot & shoemaker 1 Christopher James, joiner 4 Coley James, brazier and tin plate worker 1 Cooper & Purton, bankers, (draw on Williams & Co., London), open on Monday and Thursday 2 Cooper Jermh., limeburner 4 Cooper John, vict., The Fox 4 Cooper Lettice, milliner 7 Cooper Thomas & Samuel, graziers 1 Crowther George, boarding school, and registrar for Wenlock district 2 Crowther Edward, farmer Davies Mrs. Eliz., Burton rd 4 Devey John, shoemaker 3 Divers James, schoolmastr. 4 Edwards Thos., wheelwrt. 2 Felteaus John, vict., Robin Hood 6 Fox William, joiner 4 Franks Richard, builder 1 Griffiths William, agent to Salop fire office and legal and commercial fire and life offices 1 Hartland Rt., vict., Raven 6 Haynes Thos., blacksmith 3 Heighway Mary, librarian 4 Hopton Henry, grocer Hollis Mary, schoolmistress 1 Horton Ann, vict., The Plough 6 Horton Robert, chemist & druggist Hinton Edward, land agent to Sir W. W. Wynne 1 Hughes Edwd., shoemaker 5 James James, farrier 5 James John, farrier 4 James Wm. A., surgeon Jeffreys William, farmer and miller, The Downes 1 Jeffreys Elizabeth, draper 1 Jenks Sarah, vict., Royal Oak 1 Johnson Thomas, tailor 1 Johnson John, tailor 6 Jones Ann, milliner 1 Jones John, skinner 1 Jones Jno., vict., Britannia 6 Jones Sarah, butcher 6 Jones William, skinner 4 Keysell Edwin, maltster, seedsman, and corn dealer 7 Lawley Thomas, stationer and printer 6 Mansell Thos., ironmongr. 4 Martin Mary, vict., The Harp 3 Mason Edwd., vict., Punch Bowl 4 Mason Wm., shoemaker 4 Massey Thomas, boot and shoemaker 6 Miles Thomas, maltster Minton Rev. Samuel, St. Mary’s lane 4 Minshall Josiah, saddler 7 Moreton George, vict., The Pheasant 6 Moreton George, vict., Talbot 6 Moreton Francis, hat manufacturer 5 Newell William, farmer & maltster 1 Nicholson Martha, tea dealer 5 Palmer Thomas, nailmkr. 1 Parton Benjamin, vict., The Swan 1 Patten Mr. Richard 1 Pearce Chas., wheelwright 1 Phillips Mr. Thomas 1 Phillips Henry & Samuel, curriers 4 Phillips Andrew, solicitor 5 Power Elizabeth, schoolmistress 1 Poyner Wm., confectioner 4 Rhoden Joseph, vict., 6 Rowe John, vict., Crown 1 Share Thomas, painter, plumber and glazier Shepherd George, farmer & limeburner, Westwood Cottage 6 Smith William, grocer & druggist 1 Summers Thomas, draper 1 Thomas Henry, beerseller 5 Silley William, tailor 7 Trevor Edward, provision dealer and baker 6 Trevor Henry, grocer, chandler, & stamp office 5 Vaughan Miss Sarah 4 Wayne Rev. Wm. H., vicar Wayne William H., Esq., The Grange 6 Webb Feild, saddler 4 Wheeler John, watchmkr. 4 Wheeler George, vict., The Falcon 6 Williams Thomas, grocer 4 Wilkinson Francis, shopkr 4 Woofe William, saddler 4 Yardley Edwin, cooper 6 Yates Mary, vict., The George 6 Yates Thomas, hairdresser 2 Yates Wm., blacksmith Atterley is a small township in the parish of Much Wenlock, two miles S.E. from the parish church, and at the census of 1841 contained eight houses and 52 inhabitants. This township and that of Walton conjointly contain 903a. 3r. 11p. of land, the principal owner of which is Sir John Acton. Watton is situate about a mile S.E. from Much Wenlock, and in 1841 had four houses and a population of 23 souls. Gross estimated rental, £1,115. 15s. 4d. Rateable value, £1,016. 18s. The tithes of both townships are commuted for £54. 13s. The principal residents in Atterley and Walton are Thomas Bayer, farmer, Atterley; Ann Howells, farmer, Walton; John Howells, farmer, Walton; Frank Pardoe, farmer, Atterley. Burton, or Borton, and Calloughton are two townships in the parish of Much Wenlock, containing together 3,163a. 2r. 39p. of land. Gross estimated rental, £3,501. 7s. 1d. Rateable value, £3,160. 8s. Burton is situated two and a half miles S.W. from Much Wenlock, and at the census in 1841 is returned as having 33 houses and 181 inhabitants; Calloughton at the same period had 23 houses and 149 inhabitants. Lord Wenlock, the principal landowner, occasionally resides at Burton Cottage—an elegant and ornamental structure of only one story in height, the interior of which is very beautifully furnished. The farm houses have most of them been rebuilt by the late proprietor, Sir Francis Lawley, Bart. They are good residences, with commodious and convenient out premises. The church is a small but interesting structure in the gothic style of architecture, consisting of nave, chancel, and side aisle, the latter added at the expense of Lady Lawley; it has a tower containing four bells. The living is a perpetual curacy in the gift of the vicar of Much Wenlock, and enjoyed by the Rev. Samuel Minton. The income of the living is derived from a farm in Radnorshire of the annual value of £50, and a sum of £200 given by Sir Robert Lawley to augment the living. The village of Calloughton is situated about a mile and a half south from Much Wenlock, and is chiefly composed of cottage residences. The farms are scattered and mostly modern erections; there is also a corn mill which can either be worked by steam or water power, in the occupancy of Mr. W. B. Childs. The tithes of Burton and Calloughton are commuted for £74. 18s. Directory.—Those marked 1 are at Burton, and 2 are at Calloughton. 2 Benjamin Ainsworth, farmer, Beggarley Brook; 2 Samuel Ainsworth, farmer, Spoonbill; 1 Thomas Blunt, agent to John Onions, Esq.; 1 John Brooks, farmer; 2 William Baldwin Childs, corn miller; Francis Dickinson, farmer; 1 Joel Evason, shopkeeper; 2 Thomas Instone, farmer; 1 Thomas Instone, farmer; 1 Edward Kinsey, gentleman; 1 Thomas Lewis, blacksmith; John Massie, farmer, Bradeley; 2 Thomas Trow, farmer, Spoonhill; 1 John Woof, painter and vict., Talbot. Farley Wyke and Bradley, a township in the parish of Much Wenlock, situated three miles N.E. from the parish church, comprises 960a. 0r. 8p. of land. Gross estimated rental, £1,948. 5s. 3d. Rateable value, £1,787. 8s. The principal landowners are Sir W. W. Wynn, Abraham Darby, Esq., and Lord Forester. At the census in 1841 this The principal residents in this township are Ann Cadwallader, beerhouse keeper; Thomas Chidley, wheelwright and beerhouse keeper; Thomas Harper, corn miller; Caleb Harper, corn miller; Edward Hill, wheelwright; William W. Hull, Esq., Tickwood; John Perry, farmer, Wyke; Joseph Lloyd, farmer and stone dealer. Harley-Wigwig and Homer, a small township in the parish of Much Wenlock, containing 552a. 1r. 20p. of land, at the census of 1841 had 47 scattered houses and a population of 218 souls. Gross estimated rental, £861. 11s. 6d.; rateable value, £765. 6s. The principle landowners are the Duke of Cleveland, Lord Forester, Samuel Meire, Esq., Sir George Harnage, and the Rev. Samuel Minton. The land is chiefly farmed by the owners except at Harley. The residents in this township are chiefly cottagers, and the houses are for the most part scattered. The tithes are commuted for £48. 15s. Presthope is a township with a few scattered houses in the parish of Much Wenlock, situated on the Wenlock Edge, upwards of three miles from the parish church; at the census of 1841 there were fourteen houses and 71 inhabitants in the township, which comprises 742a. 2r. 8p. of land, the principal owners of which are Lord Bradford, and M. G. Benson, Esq. Gross estimated rental, £807. 6s. 8d.; rateable value, £727. 6s. Wenlock Edge is a precipitous ridge running about eleven miles in a south-westerly direction. King Henry I. after the capture of Bridgnorth commanded his army to pass through Hunel Hege and lay siege to Shrewsbury. “Hunel hedge is the English name for a passage through a wood; in Latin it may be called malus callis or vicus; for it was a hollow way of a mile in length, full of great sharp stones, and so narrow as scarcely to admit two horsemen abreast. It was overshadowed on each side by a dark wood wherein were stationed archers in ambuscade who greatly annoyed the army with arrows and other missile weapons; but as the king had more than 60,000 men in his army he detached large parties to cut down the wood and make a wide road which should endure for the use of posterity.” From this period we may probably date the existence of a road over this steep ridge which has since been rendered more commodious. Many of the passes however down this rugged steep retain much of their wild and romantic character. The tithes are commuted for £80. 6s. The chief residents at Presthope are Richard Child Milner, farmer; Rev. Robert H. G. More, and John Shirley, farmer. PRIORS DITTON,or Ditton Priors is a parish and village pleasantly situated on the northern verge of the Brown Clee Hill, eight miles south-west from Bridgnorth. The parish contains the townships of Priors Ditton, Ashfield and Ruthall, and Middleton Priors, and has 5,284 acres of land, mostly of an inferior quality, the rateable value of which is £3,451. 4s. 8d. At the census of 1801 the parish had a population of 620 souls; 1831, 620; and in 1841 there were 137 houses and 660 inhabitants. The township of Priors Ditton contains 2,154a. 0r. 34p. of land, and in 1841 had 81 houses and 359 inhabitants. Rateable value, £1,597. 1s. 8d. The principal landowners in this township are Philip Henry Howard, Esq., William Millward, Esq., and Mrs. Ann Howells; the former is lord of the manor, and impropriator. The Church dedicated to St. John the Baptist, is an ancient structure consisting of nave, chancel, and south aisle, with a short tower upon which was erected a spire in the year 1831, at a cost of £231; the roof is of groined timber finely wrought, which gives the interior a very beautiful appearance. The living is a vicarage, valued in the king’s book at £5. 15s. 8d., now returned at £147, in the patronage of Philip Henry Howard, Esq.; incumbent, Rev. Edward Ridsdale. This church was formerly an appendage to the abbey of Wenlock. In the reign of Henry VIII., Charities.—Mrs. Catherine Barker, by her will dated the 24th of January, 1699, devised to trustees certain freehold estates in Priors Ditton, on trust, (after certain other purposes specified by her) that they should out of the residue assure to the use of the poor of the said parish the yearly sum of £5, to continue for ever, and to be paid to the parson and churchwardens at the feast of Christmas and St. John the Baptist in equal portions. This annuity is paid by Francis Canning, Esq., of Foxcote, in the county of Warwick, who is the proprietor of the premises charged. The amount is distributed in small sums among the poor. Mrs. Dorothy Holland, by her will dated November 15th, 1723, bequeathed to the churchwardens and overseers of the poor of the parish, the sum of £20 in trust, to be invested in lands, and the rents of such lands she directed to be laid out in bread and distributed by the minister and churchwardens among twelve poor people of the parish, one half on Easter-day and the other half on Christmas-day. We do not find any account of the disposal of the money prior to the 2nd June, 1783, when it appears to have been placed in the hands of Francis Canning, Esq., at five per cent interest, upon the security of his bond. The interest is distributed by the churchwardens in the same manner as Barker’s charity, a course of distribution which is somewhat at variance with the directions of the donor. Ashfield and Ruthall is a small township in the parish of Priors Ditton, on the north-west side of the parish, and within the bounds of the Munslow hundred, the rest of the parish being in the Wenlock Franchise. The township contains 697a. 3r. of land, and at the census of 1841 had nine scattered houses and fifty-five inhabitants. Rateable value, £373. 6s. Lady Boyne is the proprietor of the land at Ashfield. The landowners in Ruthall are Thomas Roberts, Esq., Richard Onslow, Esq., and John Adney, Esq.; the former is lord of the manor. The lord of the manor claims a heriot (usually the best beast) on the death of every owner in his lordship. Middleton Priors is a township in the parish of Priors Ditton which comprises 2,450a. 0r. 34p. of land, mostly an inferior soil. The land as chiefly the property of Philip Henry Howard, Esq., who is also lord of the manor. At the census in 1841 there were 47 houses and 109 inhabitants. Rateable value, £1,479. 19s. 6d. Middleton Hall is a spacious modern house which stands on a considerable elevation and is a conspicuous object many miles around. It was formerly the residence of the Howard family, when the top story of the hall was converted into a private oratory; it is adorned with some fine paintings, and over the altar is a beautifully executed representation of the crucifixion; adjoining is a room for robing and unrobing the priests, and another room is used as the confessional. A commodious and airy school room has been built by the lord of the manor, who also pays for the gratuitous education of the children; about sixty attend. A dwelling house for the teacher has also been built. Priors Ditton, Ashfield and Ruthall, and Middleton Priors Directories.Adney John, farmer, Ruthall Amies John, wheelwright, Priors Ditton Andrew William, vict., Plough, Priors Ditton Barnbrooke, Timothy, farmer, Middleton Bradley Thomas, farmer, Priors Ditton Chidley Edward, farmer, Priors Ditton Cubby William, schoolmaster, Middleton Davis Edward, surgeon, Priors Ditton Darrell Thomas, farmer, Middleton Downes John, farmer, Manor house, Ruthall Easthope Thomas, farmer, Middleton Evans John, farmer, Priors Ditton Evans William, wheelwright, Priors Ditton Goode Thomas, farmer, Priors Ditton Green Henry, farmer, Priors Ditton Green Mary, farmer & corn miller, Middleton Hicks William, blacksmith, Priors Ditton Jones George, farmer, Priors Ditton Jones Thomas, farmer, Middleton Millward William, farmer, Priors Ditton Power Michael, maltster, miller, and steward to P. H. Howard, Esq., Middleton Reynolds Francis, farmer, Priors Ditton Reynolds Richard, farmer, Middleton Reynolds Richard, farmer, Priors Ditton Ridsdale Rev. Edward, vicar, Priors Ditton Smallman Richard, blacksmith, Priors Ditton Southern Henry, vict., Cannings Arms, Priors Ditton Thomas Edward, farmer, Middleton Thomas John, cattle dealer, Priors Ditton Wainwright Mary, farmer, Ashfield WILLEYis a small parish comprising 1353a. 2r. 6p. of land, situated in a pleasant part of the county, four miles east from Much Wenlock, and four and a half miles north-west from Bridgnorth. At the census in 1801 there were 163 inhabitants; 1831, 159; and in 1851, 144; of whom 75 were males, and 69 females. Inhabited houses, 30. Rateable value, £1,888. 8s. 5d. Lord Forester is the principal landowner, and lord of the manor. Henry Cartwright, Esq., is also a proprietor. Willey Park, the magnificent seat of Lord Forester, is a spacious and elegant mansion of freestone, delightfully situated in an extensive and richly wooded park. The principal front, with the offices, extends upwards of three hundred feet, and is approached by a portico of the Corinthian order, greatly admired for superb workmanship and architectural effect. The interior of the mansion is splendidly furnished, and contains many fine paintings, many of which are the exquisite productions of some of the most celebrated masters. The library is extensive, and contains a valuable and choice collection of standard works. The gardens and pleasure grounds are laid out with great taste, and the park is beautifully adorned with sylvan beauty, a fine lake adding much to the interest of the scene. The family of Weld had anciently a seat at Willey. “William Weld was sheriff of London in 1352: his descendant, Sir John Weld, purchased Willey from Sir Thomas Lacon, of Kinlet, between 1612 and 1623. His descendant in the fourth degree, Elizabeth Weld, married Brooke Forester, of Dothill Park, near Wellington; whose son George, dying unmarried, bequeathed Willey and his other great estates, with an injunction to adopt the name of Weld, to his cousin, Cecil Weld Forester, created Lord Forester, of Willey Park, in 1821.” Mr. Moule, author of a work on Heraldry, says, “Lord Forester is lineally descended from John Forester, Esq., of Watling street, who held a singularly curious grant from King Henry VIII. to wear his hat in the royal presence; which identical document is preserved in the family.” The Church is a small venerable fabric, consisting of nave and chancel, with a short tower, which contains three bells. There are several memorials to the various members of the ancient family of Weld. The living is a rectory, with the perpetual curacy of Barrow annexed, valued in the king’s book at £5. 6s. 3d., now returned at £329, in the patronage of Lord Forester: incumbent, the Hon. and Rev. George O. Bridgeman. The tithes of Willey have been commuted for £233. 18s. Charities.—Robert Evans, of the Dean, bequeathed 10s. per annum to be expended in bread for the poor. The payment of this gift commenced in 1709, and the legacy is now considered to be secured by a bond in the possession of the parish, given by the late Mr. John Perry, of Willey, whose executors pay the money to the parish officers. The Rev. Francis Wheeler, rector of Willey, bequeathed 10s. yearly, to be paid at Christmas by the ministers of the two churches in Bridgnorth; 5s. each to be given to the poor of Willey in money or bread. This gift is distributed at Christmas, together with the sacrament money and Evan’s gift. The following benefactions, also given to the poor of Willey, are involved in much obscurity. Elizabeth Weld in 1688 gave £10. Dorothy Weld in 1674 gave £10, the interest to be distributed on St. Thomas’s day. Mrs. Mary Saltalston £20, to be added to the poor’s stock, and the interest of £10 to be distributed to the poor yearly. Mary Ogden gave 40s. to the poor in 1680. Judith Corbett £5 in 1691. Mary Evans £5 in 1729. The principal residents in Willey are the Right Hon. Lord Forester, Willey Park; the Hon. and Rev. George O. Bridgeman; Henry Cartwright, Esq., The Dean; George Goodfellow, bailiff to George Pritchard, Esq.; Edmund Raby, farmer; and John Stobbs, farmer. LUDLOWis a borough and market town, on the southern border of the county, 143 miles N.W. by W. from London, and twenty-five south from Shrewsbury, situated on an eminence, at the junction of the Corve with the Teme, and surrounded by a country varied with delightful prospects in every direction. This ancient and populous town is upwards of a mile in length and half a mile in breadth, having a number of regular and wide well paved streets, lying in diverging and inclined directions from the highest and most central part of the town; a circumstance which greatly promotes its cleanliness and salubrity. The houses in general are neat, well built, and better arranged than those of most inland towns of the same antiquity. The town is skirted by the rivers Corve and Teme, and abundantly supplied with water by pipes from springs in the vicinity to the public pumps, as well as from the river Corve by machinery and pipes to the different houses. The glove trade formerly employed upwards of one thousand hands here, but owing, it is thought, to the introduction of French gloves, and the establishment of marts for articles of a cheaper fabrication in Leicestershire and Nottinghamshire, the trade declined some years ago, and has now become almost extinct. Malt is made to a considerable extent, and there is a paper mill, and an establishment for the manufacture of blankets and a coarse kind of woollen cloth chiefly used for horse collars. The town has, however, been kept in a flourishing state by the numerous respectable residents which the extreme beauty of its situation has attracted to it. There is a market here on a Monday for grain, provisions, and poultry, which is usually well attended. Markets are also held on Wednesdays, Fridays, and Saturdays, for provisions. Fairs for horned cattle, horses, pigs, and general merchandise, are held on the Monday before February 13th, Tuesday before Easter, May 1st (for hiring servants), Wednesday in Whitsun-week, August 21st, September 28th, and the first Mondays in November and December. Population in 1801, 3,897; 1831, 5,253. In 1841 the parish of St. Lawrence contained 1,086 houses and 5,064 inhabitants; of whom 3,041 were males and 3,157 females. Rateable value of the borough, £12,812. 4s. 9d. An act of parliament was obtained in 1794 for lighting and paving the town. The annual races are held in July, and continue for two days. Ludlow was no doubt a town of note in the time of the Britons from the British name it bears (Dinan), though we have no historical record left of it. How it came to be Under the Municipal Reform Act, a commission of the peace has been granted anew, and the court of quarter sessions re-appointed. Petty sessions are held weekly, and a court leet annually for swearing in constables. The borough is now governed by four aldermen and twelve councillors, under the usual corporate style. The persons qualified to vote for the town council, after the passing of the act, amounted to 307 in the parish of St. Lawrence, and seven in the township of Ludford, of which latter district the boundary commissioners proposed the exclusion, it being practically beyond the corporate limits. In other respects, the boundaries laid down in their report are extended on the west and east; particularly the latter, which stretches into the parishes of Stanton Lacy, on building ground as far as the parliamentary borough. The following is a list of the members of parliament, borough magistrates, and corporate officers for the year 1851:— Members of Parliament: Colonel Salwey and Henry B. Clive, Esq. Magistrates: Francis Massey, Esq.; Humphrey Smith, Esq.; John Thomas, Esq.; Robert Thomas, Esq.; and Benjamin Urwick, Esq. Mayor: Richard Marston, Esquire. Aldermen: Francis Massey; Benjamin Urwick; Samuel Valentine, and Henry Whittall. Councillors: Francis Boulton, Joshua Cooper, George Griffiths, Ambrose Grounds, James Hand, Charles Harper, James Jones, Horatio Russell, Edward B. Smith, Richard Valentine, Philip Wayn. Town Clerk and Coroner: John Williams, jun. Treasurer: Thomas Childe. Assessors: George Cocking It is well known that the aboriginal inhabitants of this island made a last and determined stand against their invading enemies in that district which had its boundary in what in later times was called the Marches of Wales, in which Ludlow seems to have been anciently included. This tract, however, might be extended from time to time, one way or the other, as either party occasionally gained ground; it is certainly known that Ludlow was early occupied as a military station to withstand the incursions of the Britons, who manfully disputed every inch of ground as they slowly retreated before their powerful enemies. The Romans are said to have been engaged nearly two hundred years in subduing Britain, and of the active operations of the contending parties interesting traces yet remain. Upon the remarkable hill called Caer Caradoc, historical accounts agree in stating it to have been occupied by the brave Caractacus, and many fierce battles to have been fought in its vicinity. An ancient writer describes this place as “exceedingly well fortified, both by nature and art, upon the toppe of an high hill, environed with a tripple ditche of greate depth. There were iij gates, and on three sides steepe headlong places, and compassed on the lifte hande with the river Colun, on the right with Themis.” Different situations have been ascribed to the scene of the last decisive action between Ostorius and Caractacus, but none rest upon such strong grounds of probability as the stations of Brandon Camp and Coxwall Knoll. The first of these is situated a little west of the Roman road leading from Magna to Ariconium or Wroxeter. The second is within sight, and distant from the Roman Camp about three miles, near the village of Brampton Brian. It crowns the summit of a lofty hill, and is of irregular shape, strong by nature, but made stronger by art. A survey of these two camps by the antiquarian must be peculiarly interesting, when he recollects that an Ostorius stood on one camp and a Caractacus on the other; and that their heroic deeds were recorded by the pen of a Tacitus. Each particular related by the historian concerning their respective situations coincides with the natural position of the river Teme and the camps of Brandon and Coxwall hills. From the departure of the Romans to the Norman conquest history supplies no certain information concerning Ludlow; yet it is probable that there existed here a town or fortress previous to the recorded erection of the castle. Ludlow Castle. It is recorded in old chronicles that “Roger de Montgomery erected the greatest part of the castle, and fortified the town with walls,” from which it may be inferred, that in the times and place alluded to a town and fortress must have been co-incident with each other. This Roger came over with the conqueror, to whom he was related, and led the centre division of his army in the memorable battle which secured the conquest of England, and was afterwards advanced to the Earldoms of Arundel and Shrewsbury. He was the liberal founder of several rich monasteries and churches, particularly the monastery of Wenlock, and the abbey of Shrewsbury. Having completed his favourite structure, “Ludlow Castle,” he enjoyed it until his death in 1094. It was forfeited to the crown by the attainder of his son Robert, who being banished the realm, King Henry I. gave Dinan or Ludlow, with the territory of Corvedale, to a Norman Knight, known by the name of Fulke Fitzwarine, surnamed de Dinan; between whom and Walter de Lacy, Lord of Ewias by right of conquest, there arose several contests, whether out of emulation, or about fixing the boundaries of their royalties, is not known. In one of these skirmishes the said Sir Walter de Lacy, and his trusty knight, Sir Ernauld de Lis, were taken prisoners of war and carried to Dinan, where being in custody, by intriguing with a fair damsel they found a way to make their escape. Gervas Pagnel, governor of the castle, having betrayed his trust in joining the Empress Matilda, King Stephen besieged it, and in conducting the operations of the siege the king gave a signal In the 47th of Henry III., Roger Mortimer, James de Alditheley, and Hamo L’Estrange had a general rendezvous with the barons of the Marches at Ludlow, to concert proper measures for suppressing the insolence of Simon de Montford, Earl of Leicester, and the other barons who had taken up arms against the king. The Earl of Leicester, to oppose the powers of the Marches, made a league with Leoline Prince of Wales, who with united forces attacked the castles of Hay and Ludlow, which were both burnt and demolished. Roger Mortimer, governor of the castle in the time of Edward II., was committed to the tower for a riot that he promoted on account of his dissatisfaction with the ministry of the Spencers: being jealous of a design against his life, he made an entertainment for Sir Stephen de Segrave, the constable of the tower, and in the midst of their cups and jollity, he privately gave him a soporiferous medicine, which, with the contrivance of his keeper, gave him an opportunity of sliding down a rope, and so flying into France. Upon his return, out of a grateful acknowledgment of divine providence for his deliverance out of the tower, he built a chapel in Ludlow castle, dedicated it to St. Peter, and appointed a priest to celebrate divine service for ever. In the second of Edward III. he was made chief justice of Wales, and created Earl of March; and the same year he celebrated with great magnificence the feast of the round table at Bedford. Soon after, the king making a progress into Wales, he was entertained at Ludlow. The promotion of this lord to exalted stations made him excessively proud, and he eventually fell into disgrace at court. He was apprehended at Nottingham, and carried under arrest to London; all his land being seized, and his chattles secured at the same time to the king’s use. The two main articles against him were, his having a hand in conspiring the murder of King Edward II., and his lewd familiarity with the queen, for which he was executed near Smithfield, where his corpse hung two days, and was exposed to greater indignities than usual. The castle, on his insurrection, having come into the possession of Richard Duke of York, was subjected to a siege by the forces of Henry VI. As he advanced towards Ludlow, the army of the Yorkists was drawn out into an intrenched camp in the fields of Ludford. Sir Andrew Trollop, who had been made marshal of the Yorkist army, deserted to the royalists, carrying with him the veteran troops under his particular command, and betrayed all their councils to the king. Dismayed by this defection, the Yorkists broke up their camp and fled, and the Lancasterians entered Ludlow, and wreaked their vengeance on the town and castle, which are said by old historians to have been plundered to “the bare walls.” The Duchess of York, with her two sons, were taken and placed in safe ward, and many of the rich partisans of the duke were executed, and their estates confiscated. Edward Earl of March was on the Welch border when he received the first intelligence of the disastrous battle of Wakefield, and of the death of his father. He had collected an army in the north and was already marching against the Queen when he was called to oppose a large force of Welsh and Irish, which, under the Earl of Pembroke were advancing in the hope of making themselves master of his person. The two armies met at Mortimer’s Cross, near Ludlow, and it is said that before the battle commenced three suns appeared in the sky In the civil wars between Charles I. and the Parliament, Ludlow was occupied by the royal party. In the summer of 1645, a force of nearly two thousand horse and foot, drawn together out of the garrisons of Ludlow, Hereford, and Worcester, were, by a less number of the Parliamentary forces, defeated at Stokesay, near Ludlow. It was not, however, till the following year that Ludlow Castle fell into the hands of General Sir Wm. Brereton, to whom it was given up by Sir Michael Woodhouse. The Earl of Bridgwater, governor of the castle, died in 1648, and was succeeded by Richard Lord Vaughen, Earl Carbery. Samuel Butler, the satirical author of “Hudibras,” was appointed his secretary and steward. A tower is still shown as the place where Butler wrote a part of his incomparable work, the first part of which was published in 1663. This poem was universally admired; the King quoted, the courtiers studied, and the royalists applauded it, but the author was the dupe of promises which were never fulfilled. In the midst of disappointment and neglect he published the third part in an unfinished state, and in 1080 he died in indigence. The ruins of this ancient baronial fortress are strikingly fine; the sullen stillness that now reigns throughout these forlorn and deserted towers, once the scene of royal splendour and feudal revelry, present a spectacle of the fallen magnificence of past ages, rarely to be equalled. The structure stands at the extremity of a bold headland, and its foundations are laid upon a bare grey rock. The part towards the north consists of square towers, with high connecting walls which are embattled; the old foss and part of the rock have been formed into walks and planted with beech, elm, and lime trees. These trees having now arrived at maturity, form an agreeable shade, and add much to the “Anno Domini Millessimo Quinquitesimo Octagesimo completo, Anno regni illustrissimÆ ac serenissimÆ regina ElizabethÆ vicesima iertio currente, 1581.” The court is an irregular square, and not very spacious, but the lofty embattled walls by which it is enclosed, though in ruins, still preserve their original outlines, and the frowning towers and bold masses, luxuriously mantled with ivy, present a rare specimen of the fallen magnificence of the feudal ages. The keep is a large square embattled tower, divided into four stories, and rises to the height of 110 feet. It is probably the only part of the castle which dates from the time of Roger de Montgomery. Most of the windows and doorways are distinguished by their round Norman arches. The ground floor is the dungeon half under ground. The arched roof is twenty feet in height. In the arch are three square apertures, which communicating with the chamber above, served for the purpose of admitting and inspecting the prisoners, and were probably intended also for raising supplies of ammunition and provisions, during a time of siege. On the second floor is a room measuring 30 feet by 18, with a fire place. The room communicates on the left with a square arched chamber, and on the right with a narrow oblong room. This tower measures 46 feet by 34, and the walls are from 9 to 12 feet thick. Facing the gate is the hall, measuring 60 feet by 30, and was originally approached by a flight of steps. There remains now neither roof nor floor to this once elegant apartment where the splendid scene of Comus was first exhibited, and where hospitality and magnificence blazed for ages in succession without diminution or decay. Two pointed arches lead to a spacious tower attached to the west end of the hall, in which are several apartments, one of which is still called Prince Arthur’s room. On the opposite end of the hall is another square tower, one of the rooms of which is pointed out as the banqueting hall. A spacious chamber above has been adorned with an unusual degree of rude magnificence. The chapel was built in the reign of Henry I. by Joce de Dinan; all that now remains of it is the nave—a circular building, one of the earliest of this description in England. The approach is by a remarkably elegant Norman doorway, richly adorned with ornaments peculiar to the style of the period in which it was built. In the interior rising from the floor are fourteen recesses in the wall formed by small pillars, with indented capitals supporting round arches, which have alternately plain and zigzag mouldings. A filleted ornament runs round the exterior of the wall. A covered way led from the state apartments to the chapel. In the time of Queen Elizabeth the interior was covered with panels exhibiting the armorial bearings which church-yard describes as “armes in colours sitch as few can shewe.” From an inventory of goods found in Ludlow Castle bearing date 1708, the eleventh year of the reign of Queen Anne, we learn that about forty rooms were found entire at that period. Among these were the hall, council chamber, lord president’s and my lady’s, with drawing rooms, the steward’s room, great dining room, chief justice’s room, second judge’s room, Prince Arthur’s room, captains’ apartments, kitchen, &c.; and as in this The Church, which stands in the highest part of the town, is a very beautiful cruciform edifice in the decorated gothic style of the latter part of the fifteenth century, forming undoubtedly the finest ecclesiastical fabric in the county, and perhaps the most stately parochial church in England. The structure is dedicated to St. Lawrence, and has a lofty and noble appearance; it consists of nave, chancel, choir, side aisles, transepts, and two chantry chapels, with a handsome tower rising from the centre, having at each angle an octangular turret, surmounted by a pinnacle. The tower contains eight musical bells, and a set of chimes was put up at the expense of the parish in the year 1795. The principal entrance is by a large hexagonal porch. The nave is divided from the aisles by six lofty pointed arches on each side, springing from light clustered pillars. Above them is a clerestory with a range of heavy windows. The four great arches under the tower are remarkably bold, beneath the eastern arch is the choral rood loft, embellished with open carved work, but upon it is erected a modern gallery, above which stands a powerful and fine toned organ, the gift of Henry Arthur Earl of Powis, in the year 1764; it cost £1,000. The choir is lighted by five lofty pointed windows on each side, and one of much larger dimensions at the west end. This window is richly adorned with stained glass, chiefly representing the legend of St. Lawrence, the patron saint of the church. The other windows in this venerable edifice bear evidence of having once been enriched with a profusion of stained glass of the most exquisite workmanship. The large eastern window containing the legendary history of St. Lawrence having been so defaced and wantonly broken that the various subjects could with difficulty be traced. It remained in this state till the year 1828, when the corporation of Ludlow directed Mr. David Evans, of Shrewsbury, to restore the window according to its original design. It was completed in a masterly manner in 1832, and the skill displayed by the artist in overcoming the difficulties he had to encounter has excited the admiration of every one who has seen it. The window is justly considered the most magnificent specimen of the art of glass staining in the county, and for general effect is surpassed by few in England. The window is divided into sixty-five compartments, and contains five hundred and forty feet of glass. The whole of the subjects depicted in the window are under elegant canopies of delicate tabernacle work, differing in design; and the costume of the figures throughout the various scenes are particularly curious, and well deserve attention, as the richness of colour and general effect is not inferior to some of the finest specimens of the ancient stained glass. The window is supposed originally to have been setup during the episcopacy of Thomas Spoford, who was promoted to the see of Hereford in 1421. The three large windows on the south side of the chancel display full length figures of bishops, apostles, and Romish saints, the apex of each containing twelve small curious The north and south chapels of the choir are separated from the transepts by remarkably handsome carved screens; in the windows are paintings representing the history of the apostles, and also very splendid remnants of stained glass, portraying the story of the ring presented by some pilgrims to Edward the Confessor, who, as “The Chronicles” relate, “was warned of his death certain days before he died by a ring that was brought him by certain pilgrims, which ring he had secretly given to a poor man that asked his charity in the name of God and St. John the Evangelist. These pilgrims, as the legend recites, were men of Ludlow.” The ceiling is of oak resting on corbels, which spring from highly decorated figures of angels bearing shields. The extreme length from east to west is 203 feet, and the breadth across the transepts measures 130 feet. The tower rises 131 feet in height, forming a prominent object, and gives considerable beauty to many prospects from the neighbouring country. In the church there are two highly finished effigies of Judge Bridgeman and his lady, but much mutilated. The head of the tomb was opened in 1805 (on sinking a grave for the body of Mrs. Turner) when the hair of both Sir John and his lady was found perfectly entire; the coffins mouldered on exposure to the air. In the high chancel is a large Grecian monument displaying an elegant sculptured cherub and emblems of time and eternity, in memory of Theophilus Salwey, Esq., who died in 1760. A handsome altar tomb of white marble has recumbent effigies of chief Justice Waiter and his lady; and on the front are figures representing their issue. Judge Walter died in 1592. Within the communion rails is a tomb in memory of Sir Robert Townsend and his lady, with two full length figures, and surrounding the base stand their children. Dame Mary Evre, who died in 1612, has a tomb erected to her memory, at the back of which are the armorial bearings of the family. Upon the tomb is a recumbent figure resting on a cushion, habited in the dress of the times and the head covered with a hood. In various parts of the building will be found several interesting tablets and mural monuments. Though not collegiate the church of St. Lawrence anciently possessed a chantry of ten priests, maintained by the rich guild of St. John, who gave to its choral services the splendour of a cathedral. The living is a rectory valued in the king’s book at £19. 12s. 6d., now returned at £160 in the patronage of the lord chancellor. The tithes have been commuted for £23. 13s. 6d. Ecclesiastical courts are held here for granting probates of wills and letters of administration. The Independent Chapel, situated in Old street, is a neat structure capable of accommodating upwards of three hundred persons, and was erected in 1830. The congregation formerly assembled for divine worship in a chapel still standing, situate on the banks of the river, near the bottom of Corve street. Before the erection of this fabric, in which they continued to meet for nearly a century, the dissenters conducted their religious services in a licensed dwelling house, where, in the early part of 1731, they were furiously assailed by a mob. This vain attempt to crush them led to the erection of the first dissenting house in the borough. The Rev. Theophilus Davies is the pastor of the congregation. The Methodist Chapel, a plain structure situated in Lower Broad street, was enlarged in 1835, and is now capable of holding about five hundred hearers. The Primitive Methodist Chapel, situated in Old street, is a substantial building erected in 1836, and has accommodation for upwards of three hundred worshippers. The Boys’ National School is held in a spacious room over the Market Cross; and the Girls’ School is held in a house in Brand lane. They are supported by voluntary subscriptions and charitable benefactions: the latter will be found noticed with the general charities of the borough. The gross income for the year 1850 was £155. 16s. 3d. The Savings’ Bank, held in the public buildings, Castle street, was established in 1816. On November 20th, 1850, the total number of accounts was 1,939, of which The Ludlow County Court, for law proceedings in actions and claims not exceeding £50, embraces the following places, viz., Abdon, Ashford Bowdler, Ashford Carbonell, Aston, Acton Scott, Bitterley, Bromfield, Burrington, Cainham, Clee St. Margaret, Cold Weston, Culmington, Diddlebury, Downton, Elton, Halford, Heath, Holdgate, Hope Baggot, Hopton Cangeford, Leinthall Starkes, Leintwardine, Ludford, Munslow, Onibury, Richards Castle, St. Lawrence Ludlow, Sibdon Carwood, Stanton Lacy, Stoke St. Milborough, Stoke Say, Tugford, Wigmore and Wistanston. Judge, Uvedale Corbett, Esq.; Clerk, John Williams, Esq.; High Bailiff, William Davies. The Ludlow Library, and Mechanics’ Institution, established in 1841, is held in one of the rooms of the market hall, the use of which has been granted by the corporation. The institution has an interesting library of nearly 300 volumes. Mr. George Cocking is the secretary. The Public Rooms, situated in Castle street, were erected in 1840 by a company of shareholders. One portion is set apart for the Ludlow Natural History Society, where there is deposited a choice and valuable collection of fossils, British and foreign birds and animals, &c. This institution was established in 1834. There is also a spacious and elegant Assembly Room, and another for magisterial purposes, besides a Reading Room well supplied with the principal London and provincial journals. The Market Cross is a neat edifice, with a cupola, where butter and other productions are sold on the market days. The Market House is a plain brick building in Castle street, containing large and convenient rooms for the meetings of the corporation. The Dispensary is supported by voluntary subscriptions, a collection made in Ludlow church every alternate year, and the dividends of certain charitable bequests. The number of patients cured or relieved during the year 1851 was 279. Mr. H. Hodges, consulting surgeon; and Mr. Harley, dispenser. The Lying-in Institution was established in 1810, since which 3,561 persons have been relieved and visited, under the direction of the managing directors. The Gas Works. The Union Gas Works were established in 1840 by a company of shareholders with a capital stock of £3,050. The old gas works are situated on the road to the Clee Hill. The Water Works are the property of the corporation. The water is forced by an engine from the river to a reservoir at the top of the Market-hall, and thence conveyed in pipes to different parts of the town. There are also conduits supplied by pipes with excellent water from the neighbouring hills. Ludlow Poor-law Union Workhouse is a spacious stone edifice, situated in the parish of Stanton Lacy. The union comprehends an area of 125 miles, and embraces the following parishes, viz.:—Abdon, Ashford Bowdler, Ashford Carbonel, Bitterley, Bromfield, Caynham, Clee St. Margaret, Cold Weston, Culmington, Diddlebury, Halford, Heath, Holdgate, Hope Baggott, Hopton Cangeford, Munslow, Onibury, Richard’s Castle, St. Lawrence Ludlow, Stanton Lacy, Stoke, St. Milborough, Stokesay, and Tugford, all in the county of Salop; Aston Burrington, Downton, Elton, Leinthall Starkes, Richard’s Castle, and Wigmore, in Herefordshire; the parishes of Leintwardine and Ludford are situated in both counties. Expenditure for the year ending 28th September, 1850, £3,533. 15s. 10½d. Clerk: Robert Thomas. Medical Officers: Henry Meymott, John Southern, Charles Pothecary, Daniel Gingell, Robert Jones. Relieving Officers: William Russell, James Jones, John Harding, Edward Millichap. Chaplain: Robert Meyricke. Master and Matron: William and Mrs. Russell. Dinham House, an elegant and spacious mansion, situated near the Castle (now the residence of John Thomas, Esq.), towards the close of the late war was occupied by Lucien Bonaparte, being then detained a prisoner in England. He left Ludlow on Sunday, June 30th, 1811. Among the customs peculiar to this town that of rope pulling is not the least extraordinary. On Shrove-Tuesday the corporation provides a rope, three inches in thickness and thirty-six yards in length, which is given out at one of the windows of the Market House, when a large body of the inhabitants, divided into two parties (one contending for Castle street and Broad street wards, and the other for Old street and Corve street wards), commence an arduous struggle; and as soon as either party has gained a victory, by pulling the rope beyond the prescribed limits, the pulling ceases. The rope is usually purchased from the victorious party, and then given out again. Ludlow preserves the custom of walking over the limits of the township once a-year. This procession takes place on the Wednesday before Holy Thursday, on which occasion the boys of the different schools, attended by one of the clergy, proceed from the church to a place near Corve Bridge, where a cross formerly stood. Here the Epistle for the preceding Sunday is read; from whence passing to Weeping Cross, the boys again kneel down, and the Gospel for the same day is read by the clergyman. The Broad Gate, the only one now remaining entire, receives its name from an ancient religious foundation called Barnaby House, famous in past ages as the temporary resting place of the numerous devotees passing through Ludlow on their way to the Holy Well of St. Winefrede, in North Wales. Adjoining formerly stood a chapel, dedicated to St. Mary of the Vale. The Gateway of Millgate is at the end of Barnaby lane. In Lower Millgate traces of the town wall are still to be seen. In 1786 Dinham gate remained entire, adjoining which anciently stood a chapel, approached by a flight of steps. The land leading from the bottom of Mill street to Dinham bears the name of Camp, from the frequent encampment of soldiers there. Old Gate stood at the bottom of Old street. A religious house of White Friars was founded at Ludlow, in 1349, by Sir Laurence de Ludlowe, Knt., which we are informed by Leland “was a fayre and costlie thinge, and stoode without Corve Gate by north, almost at the end of that suburb.” Stukeley, who wrote about the year 1720, says, “There was a rich priory out of the town, on the north side. Little remains now to be seen, excepting a small adjoining church once belonging to it. About the same place an arched gateway went across the street, but now demolished.” The church above mentioned was the chapel of St. Leonard, founded in 1590, and intended for a charitable and religious establishment, the almshouse having survived its chapel, and, according to the will of the founder, contributes to the maintenance of four poor persons. Near to Friars’ lane was situated the establishment of Augustine Friars, to which Edmund de Pontibus was a benefactor. There was an Hospital, dedicated to St. John the Baptist, situated near the bridge, founded by Peter Undergod, and endowed with certain lands for the maintenance of certain religious brethren, and sustentation of poor and infirm people. The annual value at the dissolution was £17. 13s. 3d. Thomas Johnes, Esq., was born at Ludlow, in the year 1783. He received his early education at Shrewsbury school, and took his degree of M.A. at Oxford. In 1783 Mr. Johnes erected an elegant mansion at Hafod, which in 1807 was consumed by a destructive fire, with much of its valuable contents, the loss amounting to £70,000. Notwithstanding this disaster, he rebuilt and adorned his mansion anew. Here he indulged his taste for literature, employed a printing press on his own premises, and produced some elegant historical works. He died in 1814, and was buried in the church which he had built at Hafod. Charities.—The Grammar School.—It appears that all the premises specified in a certain grant, and constituting the possessions of the Guild or Fraternity of Palmers, had been unconditionally surrendered by them to King Edward VI. by deed under their common seal, dated 1st June, in the fifth of his reign. The property thus unconditionally surrendered to the king was granted by him to the corporation for the relief and better sustaining of the town and borough of Ludlow, and for the corporation, “at their own costs and charges,” to maintain a free grammar school, and other charitable institutions mentioned in the charter. It appears the legal import of the charter was not to grant the property upon trust to employ the whole of the rents and profits to the maintenance of the charities, but to make a beneficial grant of it to the corporation, coupled with a condition that they should, out of the income they thus acquired, sufficiently maintain the charitable institutions therein specified. The school premises comprise two houses, in which the master resides. About fifty years ago, the premises were nearly rebuilt, at a cost of £700. The school is open to the whole town, without any limitation of number, on payment of £3 annually. Four of the boys, nominated by the bailiffs, receive a benefaction of £2. 13s. 4d. per annum, under the will of Dr. Langford. The school is also entitled to two exhibitions of £45 to Baliol College, Oxford, for 11 years, founded by the Rev. Richard Greaves in the year 1704. There are also three exhibitions of £50 for three years to any college in Oxford, Cambridge, or Durham. It is stated in the particular of the Guild estate, that “there is an almshouse to the Guild appertaining, with thirty-three chambers therein inhabited by poor people, according to the foundation and ordinance of John Hoyser, to every of which poor people is weekly allowed 4d.” The Palmers Guild was a religious fraternity, established about the year 1248, for the relief of the poor, and for the administration of charitable bequests. Before the period of the Reformation, their funds had increased so considerably that they formed a college, with a warden for three priests, and maintained the above almshouse for thirty-three poor people, and the grammar school. On the passing of the Municipal Act, in 1835, it became necessary to separate the charity from the municipal property; and, after much litigation, lands yielding a clear rental of £1,800 a-year were secured to the charity for the purpose of maintaining the above-named objects. The preacher, now called the lecturer (and who, as well as the assistant, is appointed by the corporation), received from them a salary of £26. 13s. 4d. per annum, when the Charity Commissioners published their report. It appears that the Palmers Guild had been used to pay yearly to a schoolmaster, for keeping a free grammar school, £10; to one priest, £6; and to two others, £5. 6s. 8d. each. The particular duties of these priests are not specified; but it seems probable that the usher, preacher, and assistant, were intended to be substituted by the charter in their stead. From an old book belonging to the corporation, containing copies of wills and other documents relating to the charities of the town, it appears that James Walters, Esq., in 1624, devised an annuity of £20 to be paid out of his lands in Stanton Lacy and Richards Castle; £10 thereof to be distributed among the inmates of the almshouse, and £10 to be bestowed on the preacher. It appears that a fee farm rent of £24. 13s. 4d., reserved by a charter of King Edward IV., out of certain lands granted to the corporation of Ludlow, and also the rent of £8. 13s. 4d., reserved by charter of King Edward VI., eventually became vested in the corporation; and £20 is now paid to the treasurer of the national school, and the remainder, £13. 6s. 8d., is considered as forming a part of the weekly payments to the almspeople. Charles Foxe, by his will dated 1590, after reciting that he had lately purchased the chapel of St. Leonard, in Corve street, Ludlow, and a parcel of ground near thereto, whereon he had begun to erect four almshouses, for four poor and impotent persons, gave and bequeathed to certain trustees, in trust, four messuages, and all lands, tenements and hereditaments, with their appurtenances, situated in the city of Worcester, of the annual value of £8; to be by them so settled that out of the rents £4 should be paid to the four poor persons in the almshouse, and divided amongst them quarterly. To the curate of Ludford, or some other sufficient minister, for reading divine service to the poor there, the sum of 40s. yearly. To some learned preacher for a sermon in the said chapel at Christmas, 6s. 8d.; and the like sum for a sermon there in Lent. And the residue of the rents (being £1. 6s. 8d.) he directed to be employed for the necessary repairing the said almshouses and chapel, and other necessary charges. He gave two bells to be hung up in the steeple of the chapel. About the year 1751 the chapel had gone greatly to decay, and the houses in Worcester become so ruinous and incapable of repair, that in 1758 the ground on which the tenements stood was let on building leases, at an annual rent of £11. 9s. 6d., for 99 years. James Foxe the trustee, by deed in 1769, conveyed to the bailiffs, burgesses and commonalty of Ludlow, the aforesaid premises, in trust, for the support of the almshouse, in consequence of his residing so remote from Ludlow. The present income of the charity is £14. 13s. 10d. The almshouse consists of four dwellings, with a garden to each, and is inhabited by two poor persons from the parish of Bromfield, and two from Ludlow; who also receive from the corporation 1s. 6d. per week each, and 3s. 2d. yearly from Mrs. Susan Gay’s benefaction. Thomas Lane, by will in 1674, after giving certain legacies, bequeathed all the rest of his estate to Sir Job Charlton and two others, to be disposed of by them as he should appoint; and in default of such appointment, to some charitable use according to their best discretion. From the will of Sir Job Charlton, bearing date 1691, it appears that the money derived from this bequest had been employed in repairing and furnishing an old house which had been granted to the trustees by the town of Ludlow, and in purchasing certain lands in Middleton of the annual value of £30. Under the residuary clause of Thomas Lane, by a second codicil to his will, in 1676, devised his closes of meadow and pasture land, lying near the east side of Broad street, in Ludlow, to be conveyed to feoffees in trust, that the rents and profits should be weekly disposed of in bread and money to twelve poor widows of the town of Ludlow. The land contains 1a. 3r. 34p., which produces an annual income of £23. 10s. From an entry in an old book belonging to the corporation, it appears that Evan Phillips gave £22 to remain a stock for ever for the poor of the town of Ludlow; and directed certain trustees to dispose of the same in the purchase of lands, or otherwise, as they should think fit; the profits of the £20 to be given to twelve poor persons, and the remaining 40s. to be spent by the trustees, for their recreation, at their meetings on the business of the charity. It appears from the same book that he also gave a judgment debt of £10, due to him, for the use of six more poor persons of Ludlow. There is now a piece of land in Lynney appropriated to this charity, called the Poor’s Close, containing 3r. 26p., which is let at an annual rent of £13; of which £12. 6s. 8d. is distributed among eighteen poor persons by the bailiffs of the town. Richard Davies, by will dated 1699, bequeathed £100 to be laid out in lands, in trust, to distribute the rents and profits among eight poor widows of Ludlow, not partakers of any other charity in the town. In respect of this sum the corporation make an annual payment of £6, which is distributed as the donor directed. Eleanor Handford left £25, the interest thereof to be given to ten poor persons in Castle street ward on Good Friday, yearly. John Long, by will, gave to the poor of the parish of St. Lawrence, in Ludlow, the sum of £20, the interest thereof to be distributed among the poor. There is also found copied into the charity book a statement that Mrs. Robinson left £100 to the poor of Ludlow, the interest to be applied as follows; viz.: 50s. to the Charity school, and 50s. to twenty poor housekeepers, to be named by the bailiffs and rector on St. John the Evangelist’s day. Thomas Meyricke, by will, dated 1724, bequeathed to the bailiffs, burgesses, and commonalty £40, in trust, to lend it from time to time to four poor tradesmen, not being ale sellers for three years, without interest, in sums of £10 each, upon sufficient security. Sir Timothy Tourueur, Knight, also gave £100, to be lent for a like time to four young tradesmen upon good security. Thomas Meyricke also bequeathed £40, the interest to be paid to the charity schools at Ludlow. Richard Gwilliams, by will, dated 1629, gave to the parson of Ludlow and vicar of Leominster, and the vicar of Kings Capel £3 a year, issuing out of all his messuages, lands, tenements, and hereditaments in the county of Hereford, to the intent that they should distribute 20s. thereof yearly to the poor impotent people of each of those places. Charles Sonnibank, D.D., by deed dated 10th of October, 10th Charles I., after reciting a grant made by him to Margaret Postern and her heirs of a messuage and lands containing about 155 acres, situated at Brome, in the parish of Hopesay, in Shropshire, reserving to him and his heirs a rent of £13. 6s. 8d., granted the said rent to trustees, in trust, to distribute it among ten poor widows inhabiting Ludlow, in weekly payments of 6d. each, and the parson to retain 6s. 8d. for his care in receiving it. Jane Higginson, by will, dated 1707–8, gave £5 per annum to five decayed tradesmen’s widows in Ludlow, for keeping clean the chancel of the church, to be paid on the 28th day of February. She likewise gave an annuity of £5 to the rector of Ludlow and his successors for ever. The Rev. Richard Morgan, in 1766, left £140, in trust, the interest therefrom to be expended in teaching poor children. The present fund derived from this bequest is £120, three per cent. consols, the dividends of which are £3. 12s. per annum, which is now paid to the national school. There was an ancient charity school in Ludlow called the Blue Coat School, which has formed the basis of a national school now established there. It has been seen in the report of Tonlyne’s charity that in the year 1716 it was ordered by the corporation that £20 should be secured to the trustees of this charity school out of the tolls of the market, as forming part of Mr. Tonlyne’s charity. From an entry in the corporation ledger in 1782 it appears that this sum of £20 was paid by the chamberlain to the treasurer of the charity school till the 28th of October, 1761, from which time it had been in arrear; and that this arrear, together with the interest of the several sums of £100, £50, and £40 due to the charity school on several bonds from the corporation, then amounted to the sum of £629, which sum was afterwards invested in the purchase of £1,000, three per cent. consols. It appears from the ledger that on the 29th of October, 1806, a further arrear of the annuity and of the interest on the bonds had occurred, which left a balance due from the corporation of £458. This balance it was resolved to apply in the purchase of a schoolhouse, which was effected in 1815. The purchase money of this house, with the charges of repairing and fitting up, amounted to £600. 13s., exceeding the amount of the arrears by £142. 13s., which was paid out of the corporation funds. From the year 1806 the annuity of £20 was paid by the charity school till its combination with the national school. The house is now used for the female department of the national school. The children of the Blue Coat School were clothed, and accordingly clothing to the amount of £27 a year is now given to children in the national school, chosen by the subscribers in rotation. These children are also put out apprentice with a premium of £3 each. Thomas Hollingworth, by will, dated 1809, gave £50 four per cent. bank annuities, to be transferred to the rector and churchwardens of St. Lawrence, Ludlow, the dividends to be laid out in bread and distributed at Christmas to poor widows, inhabitants of the said parish. Richard Nash, by will, dated 1814, gave to the ministers and churchwardens of the parish of St. Lawrence, Ludlow, £100, the interest thereof to be distributed among the poor of the parish. Lost Charities: Among the books of the corporation are mentioned charities left by six several donors, amounting in the whole to £200, which have long been lost to the poor. Letters arrive from London and Shrewsbury at 8 A.M., Birmingham and London 8.45 P.M., Hereford, &c., 9.58 A.M., and Worcester at 11.58 A.M., and are despatched to London and Shrewsbury at 4.50 P.M., Birmingham 8.45 A.M., Hereford, 2.47 P.M., and Worcester at 1.30 P.M.—Eleanor Sankey, post-mistress. Acton Capt. Edward, Gravel Hill Barnes Thomas, wool agent, Castle street Baxter Mrs. Elizabeth, Broad street Breakwell Mr. Thomas, Friars Cottage Brittle Mrs. Penelope, Broad street Bryce Dr. Charles, Broad street Burlton Miss Ann, Mill street Butler Miss Sarah, Mill street Calvert Mrs. Hannah, Old street Childe Mr. Thomas, Corve street Crocker Joseph, inland revenue officer, Corve street Davenport Mrs. Mary, Bull Ring Davies Mrs. Ann, Mill street Davies Miss Mary, Mill street Davies Rev. Theophilus, (Independent), Brand lane Dean Rev. Wm., (Prim. Meth.), Old street Greenhouse Mrs., Old street Griffiths Mrs. Ella, Dinham Hammond Richard, town crier, Old street Hodges Mrs. Elizabeth, Broad street Hodges Miss Ann, Cave street Hodson Mr. William, Castle street Hookey George, gentleman, Corve street Hutchings Hubert, Esq., Broad street Jefferson Mrs. Mary, Mill street Jenson Mary, poulterer, Harp lane Jones Robert, superintendent of police Jones Miss Selina, Brand lane Lambe Mr. William, Corve street Lambe Mrs. Sarah, Mill street Leake Mr. John Linney Ledderdale Miss Margaret, Corve street Leech Mr. Edward, Corve street Locke Rev. John, (Wesleyan), Old street Mallett Mrs. Mary, Corve street Maund Mrs. Sarah, Mill street Middleton Rev. Joseph (Prim. Meth.), Old st Owen Mr. John, Corve street Pardoe Miss Isabella, Broad street Page Mrs. Martha Parry James, pump maker, Brand lane Parsons Mrs. Hannah, Brand lane Penny Mr. John Dingham Penwarne John, Esq., Mill street Phillips Rev. John, Broad street Pillinger Maria and Charlotte, Italian warehouse, Bull Ring Price John, manager of gas works, Upper Gaolford Pritchard Mrs. Ann, Corve street Ree Adam, organist, Mill street Robinson John, parish clerk, Dinham Rocke, Eytons, Campbell, and Co., bankers, Broad street Russell Miss Ann, Mill street Russell Mr. Benjamin, The College Salwey Mrs. Isabella, Broad street Sargeant Richard, supervisor, Corve street Smith Mr. Jacob, Dinham Smith The Misses, Broad street Stott Rev. Ralph, (Wesleyan), Lower Broad st Swainson Rev. Edward C., Broad street Taylor Mrs. Elizabeth, Dinham Thomas John, Esq., Dinham House Thomas Mrs. Jane, Old street Thomas Edward, warden, Almshouses, The College Vaughan Mr. Brettle, Castle street Warman George, horse trainer, Raven lane Wayn Mary, stamp office, Corve street Weems Mrs. Mary, Corve street Wellings Capt. George, Brand lane Williams John, town clerk, Mill street Woodyatt Mary, fancy repository, High st Academies.Marked * take Boarders. Copner Maria, Linney * Evans Caroline, Castle st * Evans Thomas, Old street * Harley Elizabeth, Linney * Lewis Misses, Corve street Legge John, College National, John Robinson and Charlotte Baker * Powill E. & C., Castle st * Russell Horatio, Mill street Williams John, Mill street Willis Rev. Arthur, (Free Grammar School), Mill st Whitwell Thomas, Old street Accountants.Oliver Samuel, Old street Whitwell Thomas, Old street Agricultural Implement Maker.Hodges Chaplin, Dinham Artists.Gill George, Mill street Gwynn William, Corve street Attorneys.Anderson George & Rodney, Mill street Clark Lutrell, Mill street Dansey George, Castle street Lloyd John, Brand street Russell Charles, College Salwey Humphrey, Guildhall Southern Francis, Mill street Urwick & Marston, Castle st Weyman Thomas, Corve st Williams J. & Son, Guildhall Auctioneers and Valuers.Bach James, Broad street Crosse John, High street Davies William, Guildhall Griffiths Thomas, Bull ring Bakers and Flour Dealers.Christmas William, Corve st Collings George, Bell lane Crundell James, Tower st Davies John, Lower Broad st Gatehouse Richard, Corve st Harris William, Harp lane Holloway Charles, Old street Jacob Joseph, Old Gate Fee Leary Edward, Tower street Lewis Thomas, Bull ring Whatmore John, Broad st Bankers.Shrewsbury and Ludlow Old Bank, Broad st. Rocke, Eytons, Campbell, & Co.; draw on Robarts and Co., London Ludlow & Tenbury Banking Company; draw on Barnett and Co., London. H. Whittall, manager Price Edward, Corve street Price Joseph, Lower Gaolford Blacksmiths.Lowe Joseph, Corve street Pillinger Sarah, Bull ring Pound John, Raven lane Pugh Richard, Raven lane Rudd Thos., Lower Gaolford Booksellers, Binders, Printers and Stationers.Evans John, Castle street Felton William, Narrows Griffiths Thomas, Bull ring Griffiths Thos. jun., Narrows Humphries George, Bull ring Jones Richard, Broad street Partridge Edward, Broad st Woodyatt William, High st Boot & Shoe Makers.Ashcroft Edward, Bull ring Baker John, High street Barker Thos., (and Grindery dealer), Brand lane Byrne Hugh R., Brand lane Evans John, Bull ring George James, Raven lane King Henry, Bull ring Morris Thomas, Old street Needham John, High street Pearce Alex., Lower Broad st Pugh William, Bell lane Robinson John, High street Venables Charles, Broad st Watkeys Mary, High street Wilkes Ricd., Lower Gaolford Brazier & Tin-plate Worker.See also Ironmongers. Cobbin Jph., Upper Gaolford Builders.Atkins Robert, Corve street Griffiths Jno. Lower Gaolford Grosvenor John, Bell lane Smith Blakeway, Corve street Stead Edward, St. John’s Brick & Tile Manufacturer.Sheffield T. Upper Gaolford Butchers.Chipp S., Tower st. & Bell ln Coleman Thomas, Broad st Dayus Samuel, Bull ring Griffiths John, Old street Nash John, Bull ring Pitt Benjamin, High street Preen Thomas, Old street Price John, High street Price Richard, Bull ring Towers, John Harrows Williams Charles H., Harp ln Cabinet Makers.Marked * are Upholsterers. * Bowen Thomas, Bull ring * Davies William, Bull ring Harper Joseph, Broad street Price Edward, Castle street Carvers and Gilders.Bowen Richard, Old street Gwynn William, Old street Chemists & Druggists.Cocking George, Bull ring Foster Edward, Castle street Grounds Ambrose, King st Grieves John E., Old street Marston Richard, Broad st Coach Makers.Griffiths James, Raven lane Hunt Thomas, Raven lane Rollings Elias, Upper Gaolford Confectioners.Crane Thomas, Bull ring Crundell James, Tower street Lewis Thomas, Bull ring Powell George, Narrows Taylor William, Broad street Coopers.Bayliss Thomas, Bull ring Cooke James, Bull ring Green Geo., Lower Gaolford Price Edward, Corve street Sankey Jeremiah, Broad st Sankey Mry, Lower Gaolford Curriers and Leather Cutters.Griffiths Margaret, Narrows Lello Thomas, Bull ring Mantell Fred., Lower Gaolford Cutlery Dealer.Bursnell Francis, Tower st Farmers.Ball Richard, Broad street Griffiths George, Bull ring Hand James, Corve street Fellmonger.Weaver Joseph, Tower street Fire & Life Offices.County.—E. Foster, Castle st Merchants’ and Tradesman’s.—Geo. Cocking, Bull ring North Wales.—Philip Wayn, Corve street Norwich.—William Felton, King street Phoenix.—Thos. Laurence, Broad street Salop.—Richard Marston, Broad street Sun.—T. Griffiths, Bull ring Fishmongers.Messer James, Bull ring Russell Mr., Old street Williams William, High st Fruiterer.Humphries George, Bull ring Furniture Broker.Williams William, High st Glass and China Dealers.Brown Elizabeth, Bull ring Crump Ann, Broad street Milner Benjamin, Harp lane Jolley Sarah, Broad street Jones Edward, Broad street Glover.Bottomley Mary, Bull ring Grocers, Tea Dealers, and Cheesemongers.Bowen John, Narrows Brown Charles, Tower street Harding William, Narrows Hawkins Joseph, Broad st Mason Charles, King street Morris Benjamin, Tower st Morris Thomas, Castle street Patrick William, Old street Penny William, Bull ring Pugh George, Harp lane Reynolds John, Bull ring Stokes Mary, High street Valentine Samuel, Broad st Gun Makers.Holland Titus, Old street Lonorgan Timothy, Old st Hair Dressers and Perfumers.Anthony John, Bull ring Crundell George, Broad st Griffiths Catharine, Broad st Pearce Benjamin, King st Ashworth John, Broad street Jones Blanch, High street Hop Merchants.Lloyd Henry, Old street Rawlins William, Corve st Hosiers.Jones Mary Ann, Broad st Powell Edward, High street Hotels, Inns, and Taverns.Angel, Eliz. Cooke, Commercial Inn & Posting House, Broad street Barley Mow, Eliz. Juckes, Broad street Bear and White Lion, Mary Ann Harrington, Bull ring Bell, Ths. Js., Upper Gaolford Bell, Jas. Pillinger, Lower Broad street Black Boy, Thomas Jenkins, Tower street Blue Boar, J. Davies, Mill st Bricklayers’ Arms, Andrew Fielding, Upper Gaolford Bull Inn, William Whiteman, Commercial Inn & Posting House, Bull ring Coach and Horses, Henry Oliver, Bell lane Compasses, J. Pearce, Corve st Crown and Horse Shoe, G. Davies, Lower Broad st Dolphin, Thomas Cooper, Upper Gaolford Eagle, Jno. Mantell, Corve st Elephant & Castle, Matthew Evans, Bull ring Feathers Hotel, T. Prothero, Commercial Inn & Posting House, Bull ring Fox, Esther Davies, Upper Gaolford Friars, John Hancock, Old st George Inn, Margaret Bach, Castle st Globe, William Coates, Hand and Bell lane Golden Lion, Wm. Morris, Old street Green Dragon, Ed. Edwards, Corve street Green Dragon, Tho. Hodges, Old street Greyhound, Wm. Thompson, Upper Gaolford Half Moon, John Davies, Lower Gaolford Hand and Bell, Jas. White, Hand and Bell lane Harp, James Dye, Harp lane Hop Pole, Jno. Wems, Mill st Horse and Jockey, Wm. Key, Old Gate Fee Horse Shoes, William Lugg, Upper Gaolford Mitre, Robert Allum, Corve st Lowe Frederick, beerhouse, New road King’s Arms, Ann Owen, Bull ring Knight John, beerhouse, Lower Broad street Nag’s Head, James Evans, Corve street Old Red Lion, Timothy Price, Hand and Bell lane Ozyer John, beerhouse, Old Gate Fee Paul Pry, Richard Powis, Lower Broad Street Pheasant, Henry Hardwick, Tower street Plough, Thomas Whatmore, Raven lane Plumbers’ Arms, Jas. Collier, Raven lane Portcullis Arms, Ed. Painter, Gaolford Prince of Wales, Wm. Pea, Raven lane Queen’s Arms, Richard Bird, Corve street Queen’s Head, Tho. Sheldon, Lower Gaolford Railway Arms, Hy. Thomas, Old Gate Fee Ram, John Evans, Corve st Raven, Jas. Harding, Upper Gaolford Raven, Rd. Pugh, Raven lane Rose and Crown, Thomas Amies, Bull ring Royal Oak, William Pearce, Lower street Spread Eagle, Ann Ellis, Corve street Star and Garter, Thomas Coston, Corve street Sun Inn, William Shepherd, Castle street Talbot, Jph. Weaver, Tower st Three Tuns, Thomas Dunn, Mill street Trotting Horse, Richard Coleman, Corve street Unicorn, Hny. Oliver, Corve street Wheat Sheaf, Thomas Humphries, Lower Broad st White Hart, Thos. Berrington, Old street Wright John, beerhouse, Lower Broad street Ironmongers.Cooper & Bluck, Castle st Egginton Edward, Bull ring Hodges Chaplin, Dinham Penny Thomas, Bull ring Smith John C., King street Joiners.Davies Samuel, Raven lane Evans John, Mill street Smith Rd., Lower Broad st Land, Estate, & House Agents.Baines Thomas (wool agent), Castle street Harrison John (wool agent), Linney Linen and Woollen Drapers and Silk Mercers.Boulton Francis, Corve street Evans James, The Cross Gardener Robt. G., Bull ring Harding Jas. & Ewd., High st Harper Charles, High street Jones Wm. & Harley, High st Leake James, Castle street Shepperd John, Broad street Steward Mr., Narrows Maltsters.Acton William, Corve street Atkins Robert, Corve street Corfield John, Corve street Davies Richard, Corve street Harding Henry, Corve street Hockey James, Old street Jones James, Bull ring Jones John, Corve street Lloyd Henry, Old street Rawlins Wm., Corve street Smith John, Corve street Millers and Corn Dealers.Harding William, Mill street Hockey James, Old street Williams Joseph, Dinham Whatmore John, Broad street Milliners & Dress makers.Cartwright Martha, Corve st Daniel Decime & Catherine, Corve street Glaye Matilda, Broad street Hotchkiss Elizabeth, King st Heighington Harriet, Brown street Jones Ann M., Broad street Lello Mary, Bull ring Montgomery Margaret Pearce Sarah, King street Price Sarah, Castle street Poole Mary, Harp lane White Mary, Corve street Millwright.Hodges Chaplin, Dinham Nursery and Seedsmen.Marked * are Nurserymen only. Bowen Ann, Broad street Cooke Ann, Raven lane * Cox Elizabeth, Old street Hand James, Corve street * Pillar Thomas, Old gate fee * Rooke Owen, Corve street * Tyler William, Old street Painters.Bowen John, Broad street Cooke Thomas, Old street Gwynn William, Old street Osborn John, Old street Powell Edward, Castle street Powell Samuel, Raven lane Ward James, Raven lane Wayn Philip, Corve street Pawnbroker.Collins Francis, Corve street Paper Manufacturer.Wade John, Paper mills Physician.Bryce Charles, Broad street Plumbers and Glaziers.Collins Samuel, Old street Cooke Thos. (and gas fitter), Old street Powell Edward, Castle street Powell Samuel, Raven lane Round Jas., Lower Gaolford Ward James, Raven lane Wayn Philip, Corve street Williams Richard, Brand lane Poulterers.Evans Sarah, The Narrows Jenson Mary, Harp lane Professor and Teacher.Price John (dancing and fencing) Corve street Saddlers & Harness Makers.Amies Samuel, Bull ring Gough John, Castle street Hotchkiss Thos., King street Jones James, Bull ring Roberts Edward, High street Sharebroker.Bach James, Broad street Shopkeepers.Bradley Thos. Lower Gaolford Dukes Richd. Lower Gaolford Frances Rosetta, Corve street Griffith Martha Hodnett Martha, Lower Broad street Jones David, Tower street Leary Edward, Tower street Pelly Thomas, Old gate fee Small Wm., Lower Broad st Spade Tree Makers.Harper John, Linney Sankey Jeremiah, Broad st Stone & Marble Masons.Greenhouse John, Broad st Hammond Andrew, Corve st Russell Edward, Old street Russell John, Mill street Stead Samuel, Castle street Watkins Jas. Upper Gaolford Straw Hat Makers.Baker Maria, High street Gray Hannah, Bull ring Powell Jane, Old street Wall Ann, High street Surgeons.Hodges George, Broad street Hodges Henry, Broad street Meymott Henry, Broad street Southern John, Broad street Valentine Richard, College Walker Henry, Broad street Surveyors.Brettle Cornelius (land and mine), Broad street Clark Edwin F., Corve street Evans Herb. (land), Castle st Smith E. Blakeway, Corve st Tench John & Richard (and land agents), Church-yard Tailors.Marked * are Woollen Drapers also. * Carter John, Narrows Crosse Samuel, Mill street Crundell Daniel, High street Downes Edward, Tower street * Jones Isaac & Son, High st Morgan Edwin, Bell lane Pearce Samuel, Bell lane * Wall Henry, High street Wall Richard, Brand lane Williams Henry, Harp lane Tanner.Unwick Benjamin, Corve st Timber Merchants.Harper John, Linney Hind James, Upper Gaolford Sankey Jeremiah, Broad st Toy and Fancy Repositories.Crosse Elizabeth, High street Crundell George, High street Woodyett Mary, High street Trunk Maker.Powell John, Harp lane Turner in Wood.Bennett Wm., Lower Gaolfrd Veterinary Surgeons.Cresswell Charles, Broad st Jones James, Corve street Watch and Clock Makers.Ashby John, Raven lane Edwards Robert, Raven lane Farmer Joseph, Old street Payne George, Bull ring Phillips William, Castle street Wood Samuel, Bell lane Day George, Lower Broad st Halford Thomas, Bell lane Wells Henry, Old street Wine & Spirit Merchants.Evans Edward, The Cross Massey Francis, Bull ring Parry Jas., Hand & Bell lane Powell Edward, Castle street Sankey Eleanor, Broad street Woollen Manufacturer.Evans Wm., Lower Broad st Carriers.To Shrewsbury—Dodd Daniel, Corve street To Worcester—Webb Hry. and James, Upper Gaolford street |