| 1 |
See p. 76. |
| 2 |
There was also a small detached portion of Trentham
parish on either side of the road near Roe Lane Farm
in Seabridge township: T. Hargreaves, Map of Staffs.
Potteries and Newcastle (1832). The history of Clayton
Griffith is reserved for treatment under the parish of
Trentham in a future volume. |
| 3 |
Census, 1901, Staffs. |
| 4 |
See p. 1. |
| 5 |
Ward, Stoke, app. p. lxii. |
| 6 |
Kelly's Dir. Staffs. (1928). |
| 7 |
See p. 37. |
| 8 |
See p. 38. |
| 9 |
Local inf.; see p. 78. |
| 10 |
V.C.H. Staffs. iv. 56, no. 259; see p. 77. |
| 11 |
S.H.C. ii (1), 95. |
| 12 |
Ibid. x (1), 82. |
| 13 |
Ibid. 1919, 258. |
| 14 |
W.S.L., D. 1742, bdle. 55. |
| 15 |
Ward, Stoke, 520, 524; R. Plot, Map of Staffs. (1682);
S.C. 6/Hen. VIII/3352, m. 4. |
| 16 |
O.S. Map 6" Staffs. xvii NE. (1925). The site now
forms part of the Westlands housing estate. |
| 17 |
White, Dir. Staffs. (1834). |
| 18 |
Census, 1821, Staffs. Seabridge was described as including part of Swynnerton parish. |
| 19 |
Ibid. 1901, 1911, 1921, 1931. |
| 20 |
Act for repairing roads in Staffs. and Shrops., 4 Geo.
IV, c. 47 (local and personal). C. and J. Greenwood, Map
of Staffs. (1820), shows 2 adjacent roads from Newcastle to
Clayton, one of them a turnpike road, but at that date
these could only have been projected roads. |
| 21 |
Hargreaves, Map of Staffs. Potteries. |
| 22 |
W. Yates, Map of Staffs. (1775), reproduced facing
p. 4. |
| 23 |
See p. 78. |
| 24 |
Presumably under Act for repairing road from Newcastle to Drayton, 2 & 3 Wm. IV, c. 85 (local and personal)
The old line is shown on O.S. Map 1" lxxii NW. (1837).
and lxxiii NE. (1833) and the new line on Tithe Redemption Com., Tithe Maps, Stoke-upon-Trent (Clayton,
1849). |
| 25 |
S.H.C. vii (2), 133. |
| 26 |
Act to repair road from Shawbury to Drayton and
Newcastle, 9 Geo. III, c. 55. In the Annual Turnpike
Acts Continuance Act, 35 & 36 Vic. c. 85, it was scheduled
to be disturnpiked on or after 1 Jan. 1873. |
| 27 |
S.R.O., Q/SB, Mich. 1820; Hargreaves, Map of
Staffs. Potteries. |
| 28 |
These remains were identified in T.N.S.F.C. lxxviii,
p. A254. For other remains by the footbridge see p. 79. |
| 29 |
T.N.S.F.C. lxxvii, p. A221; Ward, Stoke, app. p. lxii. |
| 30 |
Ward, Stoke, 467–8, 494; Hargreaves, Map of Staffs.
Potteries. |
| 31 |
See p. 194. |
| 32 |
Census, 1901, Staffs.; Kelly's Dir. Staffs. (1900). Part
of Clayton Griffith had been taken into the borough of
Newcastle in 1877: see p. 1. |
| 33 |
See p. 1. |
| 34 |
See p. 199. |
| 35 |
Kelly's Dir. Staffs. (1900). |
| 36 |
D.L. 30/228/1. |
| 37 |
S.H.C. 1921, 154, 156. |
| 38 |
See pp. 23, 55 sqq. |
| 39 |
V.C.H. Staffs. iv. 56, no. 259. |
| 40 |
S.H.C. 1911, 146, 244; Cal. Pat. 1321–4, 182; D.L.
30/228; D.L. 30/250; D.L. 42/4, ff. 174a–177b; see p. 184. |
| 41 |
S.H.C. 1911, 123. In 1212 Ralph de Knutton held
lands in Clayton, Knutton and elsewhere as a royal sokeman by ancient right (Bk. of Fees, 143), but whether this
was the whole or only part of Clayton is not clear. |
| 42 |
See Dawson family's estate below. |
| 43 |
D.L. 42/4, f. 176b. |
| 44 |
C 3/50 (90). |
| 45 |
Stoke Churchwardens' Accts. (T.N.S.F.C. lxxiii),
pp. A7, 37, 40, 41, 47, 52, 56; ibid. lxxiv, pp. A61 (including Seabridge), 84, 86; W.S.L., D. 1742, bdle. 46,
book of 1740; W.S.L., D. 1788, P. 44, B. 8; ibid. P. 67,
B. 32. |
| 46 |
T.N.S.F.C. lxxiii, pp. A7, 37, 40, 41, 47, 52, 56; ibid.
lxxiv, p. A61; U.C.N.S., Sneyd MSS., Stoke Deeds (Jan.
1691/2). |
| 47 |
U.C.N.S., Sneyd MSS., Stoke Deeds (Jan. 1761). |
| 48 |
W.S.L., D. 1788, P. 33, B. 2. |
| 49 |
Ibid. |
| 50 |
Ibid. |
| 51 |
Ibid. P. 55, B. 10; Ward, Stoke, 422. |
| 52 |
W.S.L., D. 1788, P. 6, B. 19; ibid. P. 56, B. 23; ibid.
P. 58, B. 8; ibid. P. C. 1 (m). |
| 53 |
S.H.C. iv (1), 223; vi (1), 5; see p. 188. |
| 54 |
Tax. Eccl. (Rec. Com.), 252. Stone Priory had been
granted the advowson of the moiety about the mid-12th
cent.: see p. 188. |
| 55 |
Inq. Non. (Rec. Com.), 128; Valor Eccl. (Rec. Com.),
iii. 113. |
| 56 |
Cal. Pat. 1550–3, 372. |
| 57 |
Ibid. |
| 58 |
C 1/1120/12, 13. D.N.B. sub 'Machin, John', states
that the family held the estate from 1531. |
| 59 |
S.H.C. xiii. 208; xvi. 134; Stoke Churchwardens' Accts.
(T.N.S.F.C. lxxiii), pp. A7, 13, 37, 41, 47, 52, 56; ibid.
lxxiv, pp. A61, 85; S.H.C. vii (2), 170. Theirs was the only
family in Seabridge which Gregory King mentioned by
name in his survey c. 1680: ibid. 1919, 258. John Machin
(1624–64), a nonconformist preacher and minister who
worked in Staffs., Ches., and Warws. from 1649 to 1664,
was born at Seabridge and died there: D.N.B. |
| 60 |
Stoke Churchwardens' Accts. (T.N.S.F.C. lxxvii),
p. A226; W.S.L., D. 1788, P. 43, B. 4. |
| 61 |
W.S.L. 27/9/42, 27/11/42, 11/32/45. |
| 62 |
Parson and Bradshaw, Dir. Staffs. (1818); S.H.C. vii
(2), 141. |
| 63 |
White, Dir. Staffs. (1834). |
| 64 |
S.H.C. vii (2), 125, 141. |
| 65 |
Ibid. 141; Ward, Stoke, 525; White, Dir. Staffs. (1851);
P.O. Dir. Staffs. (1872); Kelly's Dir. Staffs. (1932); Burke,
Peerage (1949), 1791–2; ex inf. owner of Seabridge Farm
(1960). Mary, who brought Butterton Hall also into the
Pilkington family, had taken the name Milborne-Swinnerton: Burke, Peerage, 1791. |
| 66 |
Stoke Churchwardens' Accts. (T.N.S.F.C. lxxiv),
p. A114. |
| 67 |
W.S.L., D. 1788, P. 43, B. 4. It was in the hands of a
tenant. |
| 68 |
Tithe Redemption Com., Tithe Maps and Appt.,
Stoke-upon-Trent (Clayton); Hargreaves, Map of Staffs.
Potteries. |
| 69 |
See p. 38. |
| 70 |
Ward, Stoke, 521. |
| 71 |
Ibid. 521 and app., p. xlviii. John Clayton granted
lands there to his nephew Thos. Swynnerton of Butterton
c. 1454: S.H.C. vii (2), 132. Ward states that the male line
died out in 1633, but John Clayton was still living there in
1650: E 317/38 Staffs. No male member of the family was
there in 1666: S.H.C. 1921, 154. |
| 72 |
Ward, Stoke, 521; Pitt, Staffs. 389, where it is also
stated that Thos. Clayton d. c. 1659. |
| 73 |
Stoke Churchwardens' Accts. (T.N.S.F.C. lxxiv),
p. A126. |
| 74 |
S.H.C. 1921, 154. |
| 75 |
Ibid. 1919, 258. The other was the Lovatts: see below. |
| 76 |
W.S.L., D. 1742, bdle. 46 (book of 1740). |
| 77 |
Pitt, Staffs. 389. |
| 78 |
Ibid. |
| 79 |
A tablet on the house gives the date of rebuilding
while another is dated 1688 and bears the initials T L H. A
tablet on the barn to the N. is dated 1740 and has the
initials S L M. In the 1840's the farm was owned by the
Pilkington family and occupied by Wm. Machin: Tithe
Redemption Com., Tithe Maps and Appt., Stoke-uponTrent (Clayton); see above. |
| 80 |
D.L. 42/4, ff. 176b, 177a. |
| 81 |
T. Pape, Newcastle-under-Lyme in Tudor and Early
Stuart Times, 21. |
| 82 |
Ward, Stoke, 523; S.H.C. 1930, 9; Stoke Churchwardens' Accts. (T.N.S.F.C. lxxiii), p. A7; P. W. L. Adams,
Adams Family, 400; Newcastle Par. Reg. (Staffs. Par. Reg.
Soc.), i. 4. |
| 83 |
Ward, Stoke, 522–4 and app. p. xlviii; S.H.C. 1919,
258; W.S.L., D. 1742, bdle. 46 (book of 1740); W.S.L.,
D. 1788, P. 33, B. 2. In 1664 Nich. Lovatt bequeathed 2
messuages in Clayton and one in Seabridge to 3 different
members of the family: ibid. |
| 84 |
Ward, Stoke, 521. |
| 85 |
Ibid. 521, 524; see p. 203. |
| 86 |
Ward, Stoke, 521, 524; White, Dir. Staffs. (1851);
P.O. Dir. Staffs. (1854, 1876); Kelly's Dir. Staffs. (1880,
1892, and later edns. to 1916). |
| 87 |
Kelly's Dir. Staffs. (1924). Fred. Johnson was tenant
between at least 1900 and 1916: ibid. (1900, 1908, 1912,
1916). |
| 88 |
Ibid. (1940). |
| 89 |
Ex inf. the head mistress (1958); see p. 76. |
| 90 |
Ward, Stoke, 521 and illus. facing; Hargreaves, Map
of Staffs. Potteries. |
| 91 |
The new house, not mentioned in Ward, Stoke, published in 1843, and the new course of the road are both
shown on Tithe Redemption Com., Tithe Maps, Stokeupon-Trent (Clayton, 1849). |
| 92 |
Kelly's Dir. Staffs. (1940). There were 2 lime-burners
and a brickmaker in Clayton Griffith in 1834 (White,
Dir. Staffs., 1834) and a brick and tile maker there in the
middle of the 19th cent.: ibid. (1851); P.O. Dir. Staffs.
(1854). |
| 93 |
V.C.H. Staffs. iv. 56, no. 259. |
| 94 |
Ibid. |
| 95 |
S.H.C. ii (1), 95. |
| 96 |
Ibid. i. 47–49; ibid. 1923, 294, 296, 302. |
| 97 |
Ibid. 1911, 147. |
| 98 |
Ibid. 244. |
| 99 |
Ibid. 146. |
| 100 |
Ibid. 244. |
| 101 |
Ward, Stoke, app. p. xlviii. |
| 102 |
D.L. 43/8/32, f. 26a; W.S.L., D. 1788, P. 33, B. 2.
A 'Drybedfeld' was mentioned in the early 15th century
as having 2 acres of waste inclosed out of it (D.L. 42/4,
f. 177a); it may have lain in the Drybridge area in the
NE. of the later civil parish: Hargreaves, Map of Staffs.
Potteries. |
| 103 |
W.S.L., D. 1788, P. 33, B. 2. |
| 104 |
Ward, Stoke, app. p. xlv; S.H.C. 1941, 15; see pp. 49,
200. |
| 105 |
Ward, Stoke, app. p. xlii. The name still survives in
an area on the Trentham side of the boundary. |
| 106 |
S.H.C. 1911, 146, 244. |
| 107 |
T. Pape, Medieval Newcastle-under-Lyme, 119. |
| 108 |
A nearby meadow was flooded that year 'per exaltacionem capitis stagni molendini': ibid. 191. |
| 109 |
The sluice is shown on O.S. Map 1/25,000 Staffs.
xvii. 12. 2 (survey of 1877). The road between Seabridge
and Butterton used to cross the brook near this point (see
p. 76), and Hargreaves, Map of Staffs. Potteries (1832),
shows a building at the S. end of the bridge. |
| 110 |
H.R.L., Stoke Commrs.' Mins. 1839–48, 7 Oct. 1839. |
| 111 |
O.S. Map. 1/25,000 Staffs. xvii. 12.2 (survey of 1877). |