Chalgrove (St. Mary)
CHALGROVE (St. Mary), a parish, in the union of
Thame, hundred of Ewelme, county of Oxford, 4 miles
(N. N. E.) from Bensington; containing, with Rufford
liberty, 691 inhabitants. This place was distinguished
in the civil war as the scene of an action that occurred
at Chalgrove Field, in June, 1643, between the royalists
under Prince Rupert, and a detachment of the parliamentarian army under the Earl of Essex; in which the
latter were defeated, several officers killed, and the celebrated Hampden mortally wounded. In 1843, precisely
two centuries afterwards, a monument was erected to
the memory of Hampden, on the spot where he received
his death-wound. The parish comprises 2364 acres,
whereof 167 are common or waste inclosed under an act
passed in 1843. The living is a vicarage, valued in the
king's books at £10. 5. 5.; net income, £276; patrons,
the Dean and Canons of Christ-Church, Oxford. Tithes
were commuted for land and a money payment in 1797;
and under the recent act, the tithes belonging to ChristChurch have been commuted for £435. 2., those belonging to the Dean and Canons of Windsor for £164. 6.,
and the vicarial tithes for £158. 1.: the appropriate
glebe contains 65½ acres, and the vicarial 3½ acres, with
a glebe-house. The church, whose steeple was struck
down by lightning in 1727, contains some interesting
monuments, and a curious ancient font. There are a
chapel of ease at Berrick-Salome, in the parish, and a
place of worship for Baptists.
Chalk (St. Mary)
CHALK (St. Mary), a parish, in the union of
North Aylesford, hundred of Shamwell, lathe of
Aylesford, W. division of Kent, 1¾ mile (E. S. E.)
from Gravesend; containing 385 inhabitants. This parish, which is bounded on the north by the Thames, and
intersected by the Thames and Medway canal, comprises
1941 acres, whereof 45 are woodland; the soil is chalk,
with a little gravel. There was formerly a considerable
manufactory for gun-flints, esteemed the best in Europe.
A fair is held on Whit-Monday. The living is a discharged vicarage, valued in the king's books at £6. 3. 8.,
and in the patronage of the Crown; impropriator, the
Earl of Darnley. The great tithes have been commuted
for £481. 10. 10., and the vicarial for £198. 10.; the
impropriate glebe contains upwards of 30 acres. The
church is very ancient, and has various figures carved
over the entrance, the origin and meaning of which have
caused much controversy.
Challacombe (Holy Trinity)
CHALLACOMBE (Holy Trinity), a parish, in the
union of Barnstaple, hundred of Sherwill, Braunton
and N. divisions of Devon, 10 miles (N. E. by E.) from
Barnstaple; containing 305 inhabitants. The parish
comprises 5342a. 1r. 22p., nearly one-half of which is
common: the South-Molton and Combmartin road
passes through its western extremity. Slate and stone
are quarried, the former of inferior quality. The living
is a rectory, valued in the king's books at £11. 9. 2.;
and in the patronage of Earl Fortescue: the tithes have
been commuted for £189, and the glebe contains nearly
60 acres, with a glebe-house. The church is a small
edifice in the later English style, and has a fine stone
font, of curious workmanship. About a mile and a half
south-east of the church, is an encampment called
Showlsborough or Shrewsbury Castle, of an oblong
form, containing about two acres, surrounded by a
mound of earth.
Challoc (St. Cosmus and St. Damien)
CHALLOC (St. Cosmus and St. Damien), a parish,
in the union of East Ashford, hundred of Felborough, lathe of Shepway, E. division of Kent, 6 miles
(S.) from Faversham; containing 429 inhabitants. It
comprises by measurement 2739 acres, of which upwards of 1000 are arable, 694 wood, and 970 meadow
and pasture, the larger part of the last being park land.
A fair is held on the 8th of October, for horses, cattle,
and pedlery; a grant for which, and for a market now
disused, was obtained in the 38th of Henry III., by
Henry de Apulderfield, then lord of the manor, whose
mansion is said to have stood upon a spot called Apulderfield's garden, in the Earl of Winchilsea's park. The
living is annexed to the vicarage of Godmersham: the
church is a spacious edifice in the early English style,
with an embattled tower, a spire, and beacon-turret.
Challow, East
CHALLOW, EAST, a chapelry, in the parish of
Letcomb Regis, union of Wantage, hundred of
Kintbury-Eagle, county of Berks, 1¼ mile (W.) from
Wantage; containing 336 inhabitants. The chapelry
comprises 1293a. 14p. It is crossed by the Wilts and
Berks canal, and the Great Western railway approaches
within 1¼ mile of the chapel; which is dedicated to St.
Nicholas.
Challow, West
CHALLOW, WEST, a chapelry, in the parish of
Letcomb Regis, union of Wantage, hundred of
Kintbury-Eagle, county of Berks, 2 miles (W. N. W.)
from Wantage; containing 248 inhabitants. The chapelry comprises 666 acres; the Wilts and Berks canal
intersects it, and the Great Western railway passes
within a mile. The chapel is dedicated to St. Lawrence;
the living is a donative, in the gift of Miss Ferard.
Chalton
CHALTON, a hamlet, in the parish of Toddington,
union of Woburn, hundred of Manshead, county of
Bedford; containing 224 inhabitants.
Chalton, or Chalkton (St. Michael)
CHALTON, or Chalkton (St. Michael), a parish,
in the union of Catherington, hundred of FinchDean, Petersfield and N. divisions of the county of
Southampton, 3 miles (N. E.) from Horndean; containing, with the chapelry of Idsworth, 659 inhabitants.
The parish is situated chiefly on the downs; the soil is
unfavourable. There is a small iron-foundry at Idsworth. The living is a rectory, with that of Clanfield
united, valued in the king's books at £20. 0. 10., and
in the patronage of King's College, Cambridge: the
tithes have been commuted for £218, and the glebe contains 77 acres, with a glebe-house. The Independents
have a place of worship.
Chalvey
CHALVEY, a hamlet, in the parish of Upton, union
of Eton, hundred of Stoke, county of Buckingham,
1¼ mile (N.) from Eton; containing 674 inhabitants.
The tithes were commuted for land and a money payment in the year 1808. Here is a place of worship for
Independents.
Chalvington (St. Bartholomew)
CHALVINGTON (St. Bartholomew), a parish, in
the union of West Firle, hundred of Shiplake, rape
of Pevensey, E. division of Sussex, 10½ miles (S. by E.)
from Uckfield; containing 192 inhabitants. It comprises about 730 acres, of which 446 are arable, 259
meadow, and about 15 wood; the surface is altogether
flat, and the soil has several varieties. The living is a
discharged rectory, valued in the king's books at £8,
and in the gift of Augustus Elliott Fuller, Esq.: the
tithes have been commuted for £190, and the glebe comprises 29 acres. The church is principally in the decorated English style.
Chandlings
CHANDLINGS, an extra-parochial district, in the
union of Abingdon, hundred of Hormer, county of
Berks, 3 miles (N. by E.) from Abingdon; containing
11 inhabitants. It lies on the road from Abingdon to
Oxford, and comprises 75 acres of land.
Chapel, Essex.—See Pontisbright.
CHAPEL, Essex.—See Pontisbright.
Chapel-Allerton, or Chapeltown
CHAPEL-ALLERTON, or Chapeltown, a chapelry, in the parish of St. Peter, liberty of Leeds, W.
riding of York, 2 miles (N. by E.) from Leeds, on the
road to Harrogate; comprehending the villages of Chapeltown, Meanwood, Gledhow, and Moor-Allerton; and
containing 2580 inhabitants. It abounds with picturesque
scenery, and is noted for the salubrity of its air. The
lands, which comprise by admeasurement 2763 acres,
are well cultivated; and from the gentle undulation of
the surface, embellished with villas and plantations, the
district has a strikingly beautiful aspect. Stone of good
quality abounds, and the quarries have afforded materials for the erection of the church, and several of the
principal residences. The great tithes have been commuted for £260, and the small for £28. The living is a
perpetual curacy; net income, £361; patron, the Vicar
of Leeds. The church, which is in the Grecian style,
was enlarged and repaired in 1840, at a cost of £1200,
raised by subscription. There is a place of worship for
a congregation of Wesleyans; and at Meanwood is a
school where divine service is performed by license from
the bishop.
Chapel-En-Le-Frith (St. Thomas à Becket)
CHAPEL-EN-LE-FRITH (St. Thomas à Becket),
a market-town and parish, and the head of a union, in
the hundred of High Peak, N. division of the county
of Derby, 41 miles (N. W. by N.) from Derby, and
167 (N. W. by N.) from London, on the road from Sheffield to Manchester; containing 3199 inhabitants, and
comprising the townships of Bowden-Edge, BradshawEdge, and Coombs-Edge. The town is pleasantly situated
on the acclivity of a hill rising from a vale embosomed
in the mountains that bound this extremity of the
county; it is partially paved, and amply supplied with
water. A small subscription library was established
a few years since. The principal branch of manufacture
is that of cotton, in which more than 300 people are
employed: about 100 persons are engaged in the manufacture of paper, chiefly for the London newspapers;
and there are a rope-walk and an iron-forge near the
town; also several coal-mines in the parish. The Peak
Forest canal passes three miles to the north-west, and,
by means of a railway, communicates with the Peak
Forest limeworks, about three miles to the east of the
town: there is a reservoir in the parish that occasionally supplies the canal with water. The market, which
is on Thursday, has greatly declined: the fairs, most of
which also are insignificant, are on the Thursday before
February 13th, on March 24th and 29th, the Thursday
before Easter, April 30th, Holy-Thursday, and the third
Thursday after, for cattle; July 7th, for wool; the
Thursday preceding August 24th, for sheep and cheese;
and the Thursday after September 29th, and the
Thursday before November 11th, for cattle. The High
Peak court, for the recovery of debts under £5, at which
the steward of the Duke of Devonshire presides, is held
every third week: the powers of the county debt-court
of Chapel-en-le-Frith, established in 1847, extend over
the registration-district of Chapel-en-le-Frith, and part
of that of Hayfield and Glossop. The parish comprises
about 8370 acres, the surface of which is in general
hilly. The living is a perpetual curacy, in the patronage of the resident Freeholders, of whom a committee of
27, chosen in equal numbers from the three "edges," or
hamlets, into which the parish is divided, elect the
minister by a majority; net income, £145. The glebe
contains about 60 or 70 acres, with a glebe-house. The
church is a neat edifice in the later English style, with a
square embattled tower, which, with the south front, was
built in the beginning of the last century, at the expense
of the parishioners. There is a place of worship for
Wesleyans. The union of which the town is the head,
comprises 17 parishes or places, and contains a population of 11,349. At Barmoor-Clough, about two miles to
the east, is an ebbing and flowing well; and on a hill
two miles to the south, are the vestiges of a Roman encampment, from which a Roman road leads to Brough,
about eight miles distant.
Chapel-Hill
CHAPEL-HILL, a chapelry, in the parish of Swineshead, wapentake of Kirton, parts of Holland, county
of Lincoln; containing 213 inhabitants. The living is
a perpetual curacy; net income, £47; patron, the Vicar
of Swineshead. The chapel was erected by subscription,
in the year 1826.
Chapel-Hill
CHAPEL-HILL, a parish, in the union and division
of Chepstow, hundred of Raglan, county of Monmouth, 5 miles (N.) from Chepstow; containing 521
inhabitants, several of whom are employed in the manufacture of iron wire. This parish, consisting of 820
acres, is romantically situated on the right bank of the
Wye, in a district abounding with richly varied and
beautiful scenery. It contains the venerable and stately
remains of Tintern Abbey, founded for Cistercian monks
by Walter de Clare, in 1141, and dedicated to St.
Mary: at the Dissolution, the revenue was estimated at
£256. 11. 6., and the site was granted to the Earl of
Worcester, from whom it has descended to the Duke of
Beaufort. The remains consist principally of the walls
of the abbey church, which are almost entire, and richly
mantled with ivy; and the exterior of the building,
though defaced by mean cottages built with the materials
of the abbey, forms a striking object as seen from the
opposite bank of the river. The clustered columns, of
light and graceful proportion, which separated the south
aisle from the nave, and the sharply pointed arches that
supported the roof, are yet entire; and those of loftier
elevation which sustained the central tower, though dilapidated, still retain their grandeur of effect. The ranges
of pillars and arches in the transepts are also in good
preservation. The east window, which occupies nearly
the whole of the end of the choir, is beautifully enriched with tracery; and the interior generally, from
the beauty of the style (the early English in its richest
state, merging into the decorated), the symmetry of its
parts, the harmony of its arrangement, and the richness and elegance of its details, is unsurpassed by any
specimen in the kingdom. The living is a perpetual
curacy; net income, £60; patron and impropriator, the
Duke of Beaufort.
Chapel-Le-Dale.—See Ingleton.
CHAPEL-LE-DALE.—See Ingleton.
Chapel-Sucken
CHAPEL-SUCKEN, a township, in the parish of
Millom, union of Bootle, Allerdale ward above
Derwent, W. division of Cumberland, 12 miles (S. E.
by S.) from Ravenglass; containing 214 inhabitants.
Chapel-Thorpe
CHAPEL-THORPE, a district chapelry, in the
parish of Great Sandall, union of Wakefield, Lower
division of the wapentake of Agbrigg, W. riding of
York, 3 miles (S. by W.) from Wakefield; containing
1479 inhabitants. It comprises the township of Crigglestone, and is separated from Horbury by the river
Calder; the number of acres is 3000, and the district
is rich in coal and freestone. The living is a perpetual
curacy: net income, £200; patron, the Vicar of Great
Sandall; impropriator, R. Allatt, Esq. The chapel,
dedicated to St. James, is a neat plain edifice, built 80
years since, by parochial rate.
Chapeltown
CHAPELTOWN, a church district, in the parish of
Ecclesfield, union of Wortley, wapentake of Strafforth and Tickhill (N. division), W. riding of York,
6 miles (N.) from Sheffield; containing about 3000 inhabitants. The district is three square miles in extent,
and contains two villages. It lies on the new line of road
called the Sheffield, Barnsley, Wakefield, Pontefract, and
Goole road, which passes through the village of Chapeltown, as do the turnpike-road from Sheffield to Barnsley
and Leeds, and the Rotherham, Worsley, and Penistone
road. Coal and ironstone of good quality are obtained;
and the Chapeltown Company's and Thorncliffe Company's iron-works employ respectively several hundred
hands. Good stone, also, is quarried for building. The
district was constituted in Sept. 1844, under the act 6th
and 7th Victoria, cap. 37; and the erection of a church
was commenced in the summer of 1847: it is in the
decorated style, the cost being estimated at £2500. There
are three Wesleyan places of worship. At the Thorncliffe works is an excellent chalybeate spring; and in
the garden of Howsley Hall is a fine old cork-tree in
full growth, supposed to be the only one in England,
with the exception of that at Windsor Castle.
Charborough (St. Mary)
CHARBOROUGH (St. Mary), a parish, in the
union of Blandford, hundred of Loosebarrow, Wimborne division of Dorset, 6¼ miles (S. S. E.) from
Blandford. The living is a discharged rectory, annexed
to the vicarage of Morden, and valued in the king's
books at £7. 3. 6½. The church, a handsome and interesting edifice, is the burial-place of the Drax family.
Over the door of a small arched building in the grounds
of Charborough House is a tablet put up by Thomas
Erle Drax, Esq., in 1780, with an inscription commemorating the meeting, in 1686, of some patriotic individuals
who here concerted the plan of the Revolution.
Charcombe
CHARCOMBE, an extra-parochial liberty, in the
hundred of Kilmersdon, county of Somerset; containing 30 inhabitants.
Chard (St. Mary)
CHARD (St. Mary), a borough, market-town, and
parish, and the head of a union, in the hundred of
Kingsbury-East, W. division of Somerset, 12 miles
(S. E. by S.) from Taunton, and 139 (W. S. W.) from
London; comprising the tythings of Forton and Tatworth; and containing 5788 inhabitants, of whom 2877
are in the borough, 1331 in the tything of Old Chard,
517 in Crim-Chard, and 471 in South Chard. This was
a place of considerable importance during the heptarchy,
and was by the Saxons called Cerdre (subsequently
Cherde or Cerde), a name supposed to be derived from
Cerdic, the founder of the kingdom of Wessex. In the
14th of Edward I. it was incorporated by Bishop Joslin,
who set apart fifty-two acres out of his manor of Cherde,
which he constituted the borough, giving leave for
any person to settle here except Turk or Jew. It made
eight returns of members to parliament, the franchise
being exercised until the 2nd of Edward III., when
the privilege was discontinued. In the civil war of the
seventeenth century a battle took place, in which a
party of royalists, under the command of Colonel Penruddock, was defeated.
The town is situated at the southern extremity
of the county, and upon the highest ground between
the Bristol and English Channels, both of which
are visible from Windwhistle Hill, about three miles
to the east. It is in a flourishing state, and consists
principally of two streets, intersecting each other,
and lighted with gas; the houses are in general well
built, and the inhabitants are supplied with water conveyed by leaden pipes into four conduits, from a spring
at its western extremity, which furnishes a clear stream
of water running through it. A handsome and commodious hotel, called the Chard Arms, has been erected
in the Fore-street, at an expense of £5000. The
clothing-trade was formerly the staple trade of the
town, but it has been almost superseded by the manufacture of lace, for which several large works have been
built within a few years, and which at one time employed 1500 of the inhabitants; this also is now on the
decrease. Two attempts to find coal have been made in
the vicinity, one in 1793, the other in 1827, when, after
boring to the depth of 378 feet, without penetrating
through the lias formation, the operations were discontinued: the stone found is chiefly flint, which is used
for building. A branch canal to the town from the
Taunton and Bridgwater canal, near Creech St. Michael,
was lately completed at a cost of about £70,000: in
1846, however, an act was passed for converting a large
portion of the bed of the canal into a railway. The
market is on Monday, and is noted for the sale of corn,
potatoes, and various other commodities: the fairs are
on the first Wednesdays in May, August, and November;
and there are four great cattle-markets, namely, on the
first Monday in December, the second Mondays in
January and February, and the third Monday in March.
The ancient assize hall, used as a market-house, the shambles, and the town-hall (originally a chapel dedicated to
St. Stephen), which stood in the centre of the Forestreet, have been removed; and an elegant structure
comprising a town-hall, market-house, and butchery,
has been erected on the south side of the same street,
at an expense of more than £3000, from a design by
Mr. R. Carver, architect, of Taunton. The town was formerly governed by a portreeve and twelve burgesses,
assisted by a town-clerk, two bailiffs, and a constable;
but by the act of the 5th and 6th of William IV., cap.
76, the corporation now consists of a mayor, four aldermen, and twelve councillors; the mayor and late mayor
are justices of the peace. The powers of the county debtcourt of Chard, established in 1847, extend over part of
the registration-district of Chard. A petty-session is
held monthly at the hotel.
The parish comprises about 5400 acres, nearly equally
divided between arable and pasture land. The Living
is a vicarage, valued in the king's books at £36. 18. 9.;
patron, the Bishop of Bath and Wells: the vicarial
tithes have been commuted for £520, and those of the
impropriator for £322; there are four acres of glebe, of
which one belongs to the vicar, who has also a house in
good repair. The church is a handsome cruciform
structure, with a low tower at the west end. In the
north-east corner of the south transept is a splendid
monument having the effigies of William Brewer, M.D.,
and his wife, kneeling before an altar, with their family
of eleven children behind them; and in the south corner
of the same transept, and various parts of the church,
are other handsome monuments. The edifice was repaired and enlarged in 1830. A second church has been
erected at Tatworth. There are places of worship for
Particular Baptists, Independents. and Wesleyans; also
a school established by the portreeve and burgesses, to
whom a house and field were devised by William Symes,
of Pounsford, in 1671. An almshouse for poor people,
which has been rebuilt, was founded in 1668, by Richard
Harvey, who endowed it with estates producing about
£300 per annum. The union of Chard comprises thirtyfour parishes or places, of which thirty-two are in
Somerset, and one in each of the counties of Devon and
Dorset; and contains a population of 26,609: the
union-house forms a striking object at the eastern
entrance into the town, on the London road. A few
years since, a beautiful tessellated pavement was discovered on the road to Taunton, leading to a Roman
encampment called the Castle of Neroche, about six
miles from the town; and, in 1831, the gardener of
Henry Host Henley, Esq., of Leigh House, in the vicinity, dug up in the garden a Roman urn, containing a
number of gold coins of the Emperor Claudius.
Chardstock (St. Andrew)
CHARDSTOCK (St. Andrew), a parish, in the
union of Axminster, hundred of Beaminster, Bridport division of Dorset, 3 miles (S. S. W.) from Chard;
containing 1405 inhabitants. The parish comprises
5800 acres, of which 1018 are common or waste. It is
intersected by the road from Bristol to Lyme Regis, and
by that from Chard to Honiton; and is bounded on the
south-east by the river Axe. Limestone is quarried, and
burnt chiefly for manure. Great quantities of cider are
made. The living is a discharged vicarage, in the patronage of the Bishop of Salisbury, and valued in the king's
books at £14. 2. 6.; impropriator, and lord of the
manor, Lord Henley. The great tithes have been commuted for £490, and the vicarial for £490; the impropriate glebe consists of 65 acres, and the vicarial contains
about an acre, with a glebe-house. The church, rebuilt
in 1839, is a handsome structure in the later English
style: the pulpit is of stone, and the altar-screen, also of
stone, is richly carved, and embellished with canopied
niches: the windows of the chancel are of painted
glass. A district called All Saints was formed in 1841,
and attached to a chapel at the southern extremity of the
parish; it comprises a population of about 400 persons,
half of whom reside in this parish, and half in that of Axminster. The chapel was consecrated April 23rd, 1840:
Robert Williams, Esq., presented an elegant service of
communion-plate. The income of the living, which is a
perpetual curacy, was augmented in 1842 to £80 per
annum by the Ecclesiastical Commissioners. There is
a place of worship for Wesleyans.
Charfield (St. James)
CHARFIELD (St. James), a parish, in the union of
Thornbury, Upper division of the hundred of Grumbald's-Ash, W. division of the county of Gloucester;
containing 471 inhabitants. The Gloucester and Bristol
railway has a station here, two miles from the Wickwar
station. The living is a rectory, valued in the king's
books at £10. 1. 3.; patron, J. Neeld, Esq.: the tithes
have been commuted for £304, and the glebe contains
36 acres, with a glebe-house. The church is principally
in the later English style, with a low tower.
Charford, North (St. Peter and St. Paul)
CHARFORD, NORTH (St. Peter and St. Paul,)
a parish, in the union and hundred of Fordingbridge,
Ringwood and S. divisions of the county of Southampton, 3½ miles (N. by E.) from Fordingbridge; containing 116 inhabitants, of whom 62 are in the tything of
South Charford. In the Saxon annals this place is
called Cerdickford, from Cerdic, who defeated the Britons
near a ford on the Avon, and subsequently became the
founder of the West Saxon kingdom. The living is a
perpetual curacy, valued in the king's books at £5. 13. 4.:
the church is in ruins.
Charing (St. Peter and St. Paul)
CHARING (St. Peter and St. Paul), a parish, in
the union of West Ashford, hundred of Calehill,
lathe of Shepway, E. division of Kent, 12½ miles (E.
S. E.) from Maidstone, on the road from London to
Folkestone; containing 1241 inhabitants. On the division of the possessions of the monastery of ChristChurch, Canterbury, in the time of Archbishop Lanfranc,
Charing was allotted to the archbishop, who had a palace
here, the ruins of which are still standing near the
churchyard. It is uncertain when and by whom the
palace was built, but it was of great antiquity, and must
have been extensive: it is reported to have been the
residence of King John. Archbishop Morton rebuilt it
in the reign of Henry VII., and in March, 1507, lodged
and entertained that monarch here; Henry VIII., also,
slept in it on the 23rd of May, 1520, when on his way
to the continent to have his celebrated interview with
Francis I. of France, in the Field of Gold Cloth. The
parish is in the bailiwick of Chart and Longbridge, and
comprises 4551a. 19p., of which about 2414 acres are
arable, 1229 pasture, 60 acres hop-grounds, 684 wood,
and 72 common. The Hill of Charing contains an inexhaustible supply of chalk, immense quantities of which
are yearly converted into lime, principally consumed in
the Weald of Kent. It also abounds with fossil exuviæ
of marine production; and some beautiful specimens of
palatal and other teeth of Plychodus, Polygyrus, and
other varieties of extinct species of fossil sharks, with
spongia, oysters, echinites, vertebræ, ammonites, plagiostoma, spinosum, &c., have been procured from the
chalk. In the galt below the hill, ammonites, belemnites, hamites, and other chambered shells, enamelled
scales, and various bivalve shells, are plentiful. Its
summit affords a beautiful, varied, and extensive prospect of the surrounding country, with the British Channel in perspective. Fairs are held at the village on
April 29th and October 29th, for cattle (mostly Welsh)
and pedlery.
The living is a vicarage, valued in the king's books
at £13; patrons, the Dean and Chapter of St. Paul's,
London. The rectory is valued in the king's books,
with the annexed chapel of Egerton, at £47. 5. 4., and
is held on lease under the Dean and Chapter by the
executors of Mrs. Cassandra Marshall. The great
tithes have been commuted for £735, and the vicarial
for £480; the glebe contains 29 acres. The church
consists of an aisle, transept, and lofty chancel, with a
chapel on the south side of it (built by Amy Brent in
the reign of Richard II.), and a square tower with a
turret at the south-eastern angle; it is chiefly in the
later style of English architecture, and has twice sustained injury by fire. The arms of Hugh Brent, and a
rose, the badge of Edward IV., are still visible in the
belfry. There is a place of worship for Wesleyans. A
free school, founded by a bequest of Elizabeth Ludwell,
who died in 1765, is endowed with £25 per annum, and
has two exhibitions to Oriel College, Oxford. Urns,
coins, and other evidences of a Roman station, have
been found in the parish.