GRINTON
Sometimes Grenton (xiii–xviii cent.); Grunton
(xvii cent.).
The parish is composed of the townships of Grinton,
Melbecks, Muker and Reeth, of which Melbecks was
formed into a new ecclesiastical parish in 1841. (fn. 1)
Melbecks township includes the hamlets of Feetham
(Fytun, xiii cent.), Gunnerside, Kearton, Lodge
Green, Low Row (Raw) and Pot Ing. Muker township contains the villages of Muker, Angram, Keld
and Thwaite and the hamlets of Birkdale, East and
West Stonesdale, Oxhop, Ravenseat and Satron.
Reeth is composed of the town of Reeth and villages
of Fremington and Healaugh.
The 52,081 acres of this vast parish support only
1,878 inhabitants. (fn. 2)
The district of Upper Swaledale was said in 1707
to be bounded by Stollerstone Stile on the east,
Hollow Mill Cross on the west, Arkengarthdale on
the north and Wensleydale on the south, (fn. 3) and therefore is coterminous with the parish of Grinton, being
'perhaps,' said Whitaker, (fn. 4) 'the largest tract of waste
in South Britain.' There are only 4 acres of arable
land and 60 acres of woods and plantations, while
12,919 acres are permanent grass (fn. 5) and the rest moorland. Walter de Gant, who died in 1138 or
1139, married Maud daughter of Count Stephen of
Britanny, (fn. 6) overlord of all this region, (fn. 7) and received
with her in free marriage 'the whole of Swaledale.' (fn. 8)
In 1207–8 Brian son of Alan, probably as heir of
Bodin, (fn. 9) claimed half the forest of Swaledale against
Gilbert de Gant, who called the successor of Count
Stephen to warranty (fn. 10) ; the Gants continued
in possession. (fn. 11) William Edenham, who claimed
the keepership in 1302, (fn. 12) stated that the right of
removing reeves, mowers and others belonged to his
bailiwick. (fn. 13) With Healaugh, which became the head
manor of the district, a park and free chase descended. (fn. 14)
Gilbert son of Robert de Gant granted to Rievaulx
Abbey, with pasture, sheep-folds and lodges, the
right of keeping hounds and horns in Swaledale (fn. 15) ;
the grant was confirmed by his descendants, the overlord, by Henry III and Edward III. (fn. 16) The abbey also
received permission from Gilbert to catch wolves 'in
any way they could.' (fn. 17) Swaledale was the last place
of refuge of the wild deer. (fn. 18) The present deer park
lies between West Grinton and Healaugh. Park Hall,
built in 1700 by Thomas afterwards Marquess of
Wharton, (fn. 19) is now used as a farm.
The soil varies; the subsoil chiefly consists of Yoredale Rocks and Millstone Grit. Lead was perhaps
worked as early as the reign of Henry II, for in 1219,
when the Gant lands were in the hands of the Crown,
a mandate was issued to secure to the king's workmen
in the manors of Swaledale and Wensleydale the right
to work unmolested as they had done under Henry II
and his successors. (fn. 20) In 1599 the Crown reserved a
lead mine in a grant of the manor (fn. 21) of Grinton, late of
Bridlington Priory. The lead mines of Grinton,
Whitaside, Harkerside and Fremington were leased
to Humphrey Wharton in 1628. (fn. 22) The Crown's
annual rent from these mines in 1650 was £60. (fn. 23)
The lead used to be carried by 'jagger' horses to the
smelting-mills at Gilling or Marrick. (fn. 24) The Crown
always leased the Fremington mines, (fn. 25) but the
Whartons, the usual lessees, seem to have acquired the
royalties of the others in fee. (fn. 26) Lead and a coalmine passed with the manors of Healaugh and Swaledale in 1653. (fn. 27) When the estates of Philip Duke of
Wharton were sold in 1738 (fn. 28) the mines of lead, iron
and copper were reserved to the use of the duke's
sisters Lady Jane Coke and Lady Lucy Morris. (fn. 29)
Lady Jane survived her sister and died in 1760,
having bequeathed the mines in trust to Anna Maria
Draycott, who married in 1764 George Earl of
Pontefract. Her children were the third Earl of
Pontefract, General Fermor and Lady Charlotte, who
married Peter Denys of Hans Place, Chelsea. (fn. 30) George
William Denys, son of Lady Charlotte, was created a
baronet in 1813 (fn. 31) and died in 1857, leaving a son and
heir George William, succeeded in 1881 by the present
baronet, Sir Francis Charles Edward Denys-Burton. (fn. 32)
Lady Charlotte also left a daughter Anna Maria
Draycott Denys, who married Sir Francis Shuckburgh,
bart., of Shuckburgh, Warwickshire, and died in
1846. (fn. 33) Sir Francis died in 1876, leaving a son and
heir George Thomas Francis, who was succeeded in
1884 by the present baronet, Sir Stewkley Frederick
Draycott Shuckburgh. (fn. 34) He and Sir Francis Charles
Edward Denys-Burton, who lives at Low Fremington
—now called Draycott—Hall, are owners of the
mining royalties of Healaugh and Muker. (fn. 35) The
workings, long abandoned, have recently been reopened in some of the mines. The family of Swale,
who pretended to a manor of West Grinton, made
unsuccessful claim to the mineral royalties during the
17th century. (fn. 36) A chert mine on Fremington Edge
is worked by the Boulder Flint Company, and there
are numerous disused quarries.
At Grinton there are earthworks on two hills by
the River Swale. (fn. 37) There is now a Castle Farm at
Fremington. The capital messuage of Bridlington
Priory seems to have been Swale Hall, (fn. 38) that of the
succeeding lords of Grinton the Nether Hall, now
called Blackburn Hall. (fn. 39)
The village of Grinton lies on the south side of
the river where the road descends to the bridge. (fn. 40)
Close to the river stands the church, and on the north
side of the churchyard is Blackburn Hall, a rectangular
house with a central chimney stack. The windows
are mullioned, and some have semi-classical triangular
labels; one of the fireplaces has a moulded lintel with a
classical keystone. The two staircases are of stone.
On a chimney is the date 1635. South of the church
is a rather smaller house with a doorway having
moulded jambs and cambered lintel on which is
inscribed 'GH 1663 FH.' The plan is a development
of the central chimney type of cottage, there being
only one fireplace and a passage connecting the two
rooms.
Half a mile west of the church is Swale Hall, a
farm-house with a central chimney stack and a gabled
projection at the back. The front doorway has a
cambered lintel with mouldings extending down the
jambs and a triangular label above. There is a
moulded string-course inside the doorway and another
in the east room which extends across the width of
the room above a large fireplace. A stone stair built
in a flat projection on the back wall leads to the first
floor in one flight.
Facing Grinton on the north bank of the Swale,
where Arkengarthdale opens into Swaledale, stand
Low and High Fremington on the east bank of the
River Arkle. The moiety of a mill pond in Fremington was in 1331 acquired by Bridlington Priory from
Henry Fitz Hugh. (fn. 41)
West of Grinton is Healaugh at the junction of
Gang Beck with the Swale. Here the Gants and
afterwards the Bigods had a capital messuage called
Healaugh Park (fn. 42) with a chapel and lead-covered
'touresse' whence they could see the deer coursed
in the park. (fn. 43) Gang Hall, built by Philip Lord
Wharton, was introduced into an anonymous 18thcentury ballad:
'Then stepp'd a gallant squire forth,
Of visage lean and pale,
Loyd was his name, and of Gang Hall,
Fast by the river Swale.' (fn. 44)
There used to be a mill by Gang Beck. (fn. 45) Opposite
Healaugh on the heights of Harkerside is the sepulchral
circle known as Maiden Castle. (fn. 46) On the west bank
of the Arkle is Reeth, a town half-way up the slope
of Mount Calvey (1,599 ft.) built round a large oldfashioned market-place. The tolls that passed with
Healaugh Manor in 1513 (fn. 47) point to an early market
at Reeth. Four yearly fairs are held, including
'Bartle Fair' on St. Bartholomew's Day. These
fairs and a weekly market on Friday were in 1694
granted to Philip Lord Wharton in fee simple, (fn. 48)
but the market is disused. Further west, remote
among hills, is Muker, where a customary market is
held. Kisdon Hill towers above it on the north,
Staggs Fell on the south. Between Muker and
Keld, the last village in the county on the Westmorland border, the Swale, now only a mountain
torrent, forms the waterfall of Kisdon Force. Above
Keld, a hamlet perched among the mountains, rise
Rogan's Seat, High Seat and the Lady's Pillar. (fn. 49)
This district, the watershed of the Swale, is also on
its western side the watershed of the River Eden.
A tenement called Cogden, late of Bridlington
Priory, (fn. 50) was held by the family of Alderson in the
17th century. (fn. 51) John son of Caleb Readshaw built
the present Cogden Hall, 'a conspicuous object in
the Vale,' in the 18th century. (fn. 52)
Roman remains have been found at Fremington,
and about a mile from the valley known as the
Bloody Vale iron armour and battle-axes have been
discovered. (fn. 53)
Feetham, Blades and Low Row are practically continuous and consist of small stone cottages in a long
straggling street. On the lintel of a cottage doorway north of the road to Muker at Low Row is the
inscription 'g. r. 1708. m.' Another cottage, also at
Low Row, a little further west, is of stone with a
central projecting gable, and has been enlarged by a
modern addition. The old part is now divided into
two, one portion belonging to the modern addition,
the other independently occupied. There are two
doorways in the projecting gabled portion; on the
lintel of the eastern one is inscribed 'gf if 1720.'
The church of Melbecks is at Feetham and stands
high on the north side of the road to Muker.
The hamlet of Low Row was for generations the
seat of the Parke family. Sir James Parke, kt.,
created Lord Wensleydale in 1856, (fn. 54) was grandson
of John Parke of Low Row, who died in 1796. (fn. 55)
The poet John Close was born at Gunnerside in
1816, (fn. 56) and the sportsman John Kirton or Kearton
lived at Oxnop. (fn. 57)
Partly owing to the influence of the Whartons (fn. 58)
Nonconformity flourished very early in Swaledale,
and John Wesley visited and preached in this district.
Swanton (fn. 59) Hall, which belonged in the 16th century
to the Molineux family, (fn. 60) was endowed by Philip
Lord Wharton as a Presbyterian meeting-house, (fn. 61)
and he transformed part of Smarber Hall, his shooting lodge, into a chapel. (fn. 62) The Congregational chapel
at Reeth was founded in 1783 and the Wesleyan in
1796. (fn. 63) Keld chapel was rebuilt in 1789 for Independents. (fn. 64) There are Wesleyan chapels at Gunnerside founded in 1789 (fn. 65) and rebuilt in 1866, Muker
(1845) and Low Row (1901). The Roman Catholic
chapel formerly standing west of Gunnerside was built
by the Duke and Duchess of Leeds when the duke
was Crown Ranger of Swaledale. (fn. 66) There are public
elementary schools at Fremington and Muker; the
latter, which was rebuilt 1849, was endowed in 1678
by Anthony Metcalfe. (fn. 67)
The Agricultural Society of Reeth and district has
an annual show, and there is an agricultural show in
September at Muker. No railway enters this parish,
for which Richmond is the nearest station.
Manors
Torphin's 'manors' of GRINTON
and Reeth and Crin's 'manor' of
Fremington passed at the Conquest to
Count Alan (fn. 68) and were afterwards members of the
honour of Richmond, (fn. 69) as was also Healaugh, (fn. 70) which
is not mentioned in 1086.
Bodin in 1086 held the 'manors' of Grinton and
Reeth, (fn. 71) and it was probably as a descendant of Bodin (fn. 72)
that Brian son of Alan claimed half the forest of
Swaledale in 1207–8. (fn. 73) Perhaps some exchange was
made with Bodin, for Walter de Gant received a grant
of the whole of Swaledale. (fn. 74) Walter, who in about 1094
succeeded to Folkingham in Lincolnshire, the chief
seat of the Gants, and all the English lands of his
father Gilbert, (fn. 75) founded Bridlington Priory, (fn. 76) and
distinguished himself at the battle of the Standard. (fn. 77)
His descendants became possessed of four knight's fees
in Swaledale free of ward at Richmond Castle, but
paying a pair of gilt spurs yearly. (fn. 78) Of these fees
Healaugh (fn. 79) was the head.

Bridlington Priory. Party sable and argent three text B's counter-coloured.
Grinton, where there was 1 geld carucate of land
in 1086, (fn. 80) was probably given by the Gants (fn. 81) with
the church to Bridlington
Priory, which, despite the
claim of the Swales, seems to
have been regarded, at any
rate by the 15th century, as
sole owner of the manor. The
priory held the manor of the
heirs of the Gants (fn. 82) until the
Dissolution. (fn. 83) It was sold in
1599 to Richard Wiseman,
citizen and goldsmith of London, and Francis Fitch of
London, with rents in Grinton called gresfirms. (fn. 84) Richard
Wiseman afterwards sold the
royalties to the Rev. Henry
Simpson, (fn. 85) who sold them to Roger Hillary. (fn. 86) This
was probably the Roger Hillary who died in 1640,
leaving a son and heir Roger, (fn. 87) lord in 1697. (fn. 88) In
1705–6 John Hillary (son of John Hillary) made a
settlement of the manor, and, no doubt in view of
the Swales' claim, called it 'Grinton alias East Grinton alias West Grinton.' (fn. 89) Reginald Marriott had
an interest in 1707, (fn. 90) but in 1711 Samuel Hillary
conveyed two-thirds to James and Richard Marriott
and the heirs of James. (fn. 91) In 1726 Reginald Marriott
held the manor, (fn. 92) which afterwards came into the
possession of the Blackburnes of Richmond (fn. 93) ; it was
acquired by Matthew Wilson of Eshton in Craven,
who conveyed it in 1740 to Caleb Readshaw, nephew
of Francis Blackburne (fn. 94) ; Caleb conveyed it to Matthias
Mawson, Bishop of Ely, in 1769–70, (fn. 95) and it was
afterwards sold by the Readshaws to James Fenton
of Loversall. (fn. 96) It was purchased from Godfrey Wentworth of Wooley Park, Wakefield, in 1855 by the
father of the present proprietor, Colonel Albany H.
Charlesworth, J.P., of Chapelthorpe Hall near
Wakefield. (fn. 97)
In 1275 Gilbert de Gant was charged with taking
escapes from the lands of the Prior of Bridlington. (fn. 98)

Swale of Swale. Sable three harts' heads cabossed argent with their horns or.
The Swales, who acquired Swale Hall after the
Dissolution, sought to establish their claim to a
'manor of West Grinton.' The tradition is that
Alice sister of Walter de Gant married John de Swale
and became mother of Alured de Swaledale (living
1157), who was chamberlain to his uncle and received
from him a grant of this manor. (fn. 99) Alured is an
historical personage; he and his men owed £4 in
1158–60, (fn. 100) and there was a Robert de Suidale in
1170–1. (fn. 101) William Over Swale held 1 carucate of
land in Reeth in 1273–4 (fn. 102) and was assessed for the
subsidy in Grinton in 1301–2. (fn. 103) In 1316 Robert
Swakk (? Swale) was even returned as joint lord of the vill
of Grinton. (fn. 104) The Swales continued to live here for some
centuries, (fn. 105) apparently without
claiming manorial rights; but
in 1578 John Swale made a
settlement of the 'manor of
Swale' and a water-mill and
lands in West Grinton. (fn. 106) A
deponent in 1697 said he
had heard from his father
that John Swale was 'the
ancientest gentleman in Yorkshire,' and that he or his
ancestors built the north aisle of Grinton Church,
in a window of which were the arms of Swale. (fn. 107)
John Swale, described as of Swale Hall, had an only
daughter Katharine, who married a Richard Swale
and had a son Solomon. (fn. 108) Solomon, himself childless and desirous of securing the estate to the family,
sold or bequeathed it to Sir Solomon Swale of South
Stainley, (fn. 109) son of Francis Swale. (fn. 110) In a suit in 1697
a witness for the Swales, who were then claiming
a manor of West Grinton, said that Swale Hall was
the chief manor-house in Swaledale, and old Solomon
Swale lord of the moors and wastes. Roger Hillary,
the father of the acknowledged lord of Grinton, had
once, it was said, pulled down a cottage built by a poor
man on Grinton Moor; and Solomon Swale, saying
'hee would finde the said Hillary worke enough if he
wanted worke,' thereupon with an iron bar broke
down part of the wall of an inclosure belonging to
Hillary, and owing to his protection the poor man's
cottage was built. (fn. 111) Old Solomon's grantee, Solomon
Swale, the first person to suggest in Parliament the
proclamation of Charles II as king, (fn. 112) was created a
baronet in 1660, (fn. 113) died in 1678, and was succeeded
by his son Sir Henry, who died in January 1682–3,
leaving a son and heir Solomon. (fn. 114) The new owner of
Swale Hall made another effort to obtain recognition
of the Swale manorial rights. He started the story
of Alured's grant, and one day when Roger Hillary's
workmen were digging for coals on Grinton Moor
took their tools from them. (fn. 115) He died in poverty, (fn. 116)
unmarried, in 1733 and was succeeded by his brother
Henry's son, Sir Sebastian Fabian Enrique Swale, on
whose death leaving three daughters the baronetcy
became extinct, although the title has since been
assumed by other Swales. (fn. 117) Swale Hall, sold by
auction in 1786, (fn. 118) is now only a farm-house; near
it there is still a water-mill.
FREMINGTON, included in the grant of Swaledale to the Gants, was granted by Robert de Gant
to Hervey or Henry, ancestors of the Fitz Hughs, (fn. 119)
and confirmed to Henry by King John in February
1200–1. (fn. 120) Under the mesne lordship of the Gants (fn. 121)
the manor descended with that of Kirkby Ravensworth until 1570, (fn. 122) when, William Marquess of
Northampton dying childless, his estates escheated to
the Crown. (fn. 123) Fremington was quitclaimed by the
Dacres to the Crown in 1583 with Romaldkirk (fn. 124)
(q.v.). It was sold by Charles I in February 1636–7
to Francis Braddock and Christopher Kingscote of
London, their heirs and assigns, (fn. 125) and conveyed by
them to the freeholders, (fn. 126) who have ever since held it.
The manor was leased to Sir Timothy Hutton,
who kept courts here in 1606. (fn. 127) William Wharton
of Gilling was evidently lessee in 1725–8 (fn. 128) when he
appointed gamekeepers, (fn. 129) and John Wharton of Gilling
in 1796. (fn. 130)
The lord of the manor and his heirs had a grant
of free warren in 1251. (fn. 131)
For the manor of HEALAUGH (Helage, xiii cent.;
Helach, xiii–xiv cent.; Helawe, xiii–xv cent.; Helagh,
xiii–xvi cent.; Helehawgh, xv cent.; Hellowe, Heloo,
Heyloo, xvi cent.; Heley, Heley, xvi–xvii cent.;
Healy, Helaugh, Healaugh, xvii–xviii cent.) the tenant
rendered a pair of gilt spurs yearly to the lord of
Richmond for all service. (fn. 132)
Walter de Gant, the first of his line enfeoffed in
Swaledale, was succeeded in 1138–9 by his son
Gilbert, who, created Earl of Lincoln by Stephen,
died in 1156, and left an only daughter Alice
married to Simon de St. Liz Earl of Huntingdon. (fn. 133)
Alice made grants in Swaledale to Bridlington Priory, (fn. 134)
died without male issue, (fn. 135) and was succeeded by her
uncle Robert de Gant, whose son and heir Gilbert
took the side of the barons against John, was made
prisoner at the battle of Lincoln, 1217, and remained
a captive until his death in 1241–2. (fn. 136) Gilbert's
son Gilbert (fn. 137) died in January 1273–4 holding the
manor of Healaugh in demesne and leaving a son and
heir Gilbert. (fn. 138) Gilbert IV was summoned to Parliament as a baron in 1295 and died in 1298, (fn. 139) when
his heirs were his sister Julia, Peter son of Peter de
Mauley, who had married his sister Nicholaa, and Roger
son of William de Kerdeston (Gertheston, Kircheston), who had married his sister Margaret. (fn. 140) These
three heirs held Healaugh and Reeth jointly in 1316. (fn. 141)
Julia, aged forty in 1298, must have died childless, and
the manor subsequently descended in two moieties.
Sir William de Kerdeston, kt., son of Sir Roger de
Kerdeston, kt., (fn. 142) confirmed possessions in Swaledale to
Rievaulx Abbey, (fn. 143) and died seised of half the manor
in 1361, when Sir John de Burghersh, kt., a minor,
son of his daughter Maud, was his heir. (fn. 144) In 1381–2
John de Burghersh sold the manor of Healaugh and
half the manor of Swaledale (i.e. Reeth) and the free
chase in Swaledale to Sir Robert de Plessington, kt. (fn. 145)
Sir Robert died in 1393; his son Robert, having
taken the part of the Lords Appellant in 1398, was
declared impeached and attainted, (fn. 146) and his lands
were given in 1399 to William le Scrope Earl of
Wiltshire, (fn. 147) in his turn attainted on the accession
of Henry IV, (fn. 148) when these lands were restored to
Sir Robert's guardians, he not being of sound
mind. (fn. 149) Sir Robert died seised in or before 1405–6,
leaving a son and heir Robert, a minor in 1409, (fn. 150)
who died young, and another son Henry, (fn. 151) afterwards
knighted. Sir Henry was succeeded in 1452 by his
son William, (fn. 152) who died in 1457, when his heir was
his cousin Isabel wife of John Francis (Fraunceys) and
daughter of John brother of Sir Henry Plessington. (fn. 153)
Sir John Francis and Isabel (who afterwards married
a Sapcotes and died in or before 1494) had three daughters, Joan wife of William Nevill, Alice wife of William
Staveley of Bignell, Oxfordshire, and a second Joan
wife of Thomas Sapcotes. (fn. 154) By agreement in 1501
the Sapcotes had the Rutlandshire lands of this
inheritance, the trees and mines of Healaugh were
equally shared, and the other two sisters shared
the Swaledale manorial rights. (fn. 155) The elder Joan afterwards married Roger Flower of Whitwell, Rutland, (fn. 156)
who died seised of a quarter of the manor and a quarter
of the Gant mesne lordship over the other Swaledale
manors in February 1526–7, leaving a son and heir
Richard, (fn. 157) whose son John (fn. 158) in 1561 conveyed this
share to John Molyneux (fn. 159) of Thorpe near Newark,
Notts. George son of William and Alice Staveley
died in 1525. His son John, who inherited the third
part of the manor, (fn. 160) conveyed his share in 1548 to
Sir Edward or Edmund Molyneux, serjeant-at-law (fn. 161)
and afterwards justice of the Common Pleas, (fn. 162) son of
the grantee John. John Molyneux, who died in 1588
seised of the several moieties of half the manors,
joined with the owner of the other half of the lordship in inclosing commons. (fn. 163) His son Edward or
Edmund (fn. 164) succeeded and had a dispute with his
mother as to these moieties in 1591–2. (fn. 165) Edward's
son and successor John, (fn. 166) knighted in 1608, (fn. 167) had
frequent disputes with the tenants, (fn. 168) who were in
1602 granted leave by the Crown to pay their rents
to Timothy Hutton of Marske until further orders. (fn. 169)
Sir John made various settlements and mortgages of
this estate, (fn. 170) granting it in fee in 1618 and 1621 to
Thomas Meade, (fn. 171) who conveyed a quarter part in
1628 to Sir Thomas Vachell. (fn. 172) In 1635 Vivian
Molyneux, Sir Thomas Vachell and Tanfield Vachell
granted two mills, free chase and half the manors to
Philip Lord Wharton in fee. (fn. 173)
The Whartons were already in possession of the
other moiety of the manor. The Mauley share had
descended with Mulgrave Castle, (fn. 174) and came to the
Bigods, (fn. 175) who held it (fn. 176) until the attainder of Sir
Francis Bigod for his share in the Pilgrimage of Grace
in 1537. (fn. 177) It was granted in 1556 in fee to Thomas
Lord Wharton, (fn. 178) created a baron in 1544 for his
services at Solway Moss. (fn. 179) His family estates lying at
Wharton in Westmorland adjoined those he received
from the Crown in Grinton parish. In 1568 he was
succeeded at Healaugh and in the manor of Muker,
which he had acquired in
1544, (fn. 180) by his eldest son
Thomas. (fn. 181) Thomas died seised
in 1572, leaving a son and
heir Philip, (fn. 182) succeeded in
1625 by his grandson Philip
son and heir of Sir Thomas
Wharton of Easby. (fn. 183) Philip
fourth Lord Wharton took an
active part on the Parliamentary side in the Civil War,
and died in February 1695–6,
leaving a son and heir
Thomas, (fn. 184) who had drafted
the invitation to the Prince
of Orange, and been one of
the first to join him at his landing. (fn. 185) After other
honours he was created Marquess of Wharton and
Marquess of Malmesbury in February 1714–15. (fn. 186)
Dying a few weeks later he was succeeded by his son
Philip, immortalized by Pope as

Wharton, Lord Wharton. Argent a sleeve gules and a border sable with eight pairs of lions' paws crossed or.

Lyell of Kinnordy. Or a cross parted and fretty azure between four crosses formly gules in a border engrailed gules.
'Clodio! the scorn and wonder of our days.'
He squandered his estates, took the part of the Pretender
and aided the Spaniards in the siege of Gibraltar in
1727, being subsequently outlawed. (fn. 187) The manors of Healaugh and Muker were in
1733 granted to trustees for
payment of his debts and in
1738 sold to Thomas Smith
of Easby. (fn. 188) Frances only
daughter and heir of Thomas
Smith married in 1796
Charles Lyell of Kinnordy
and had a son Charles, (fn. 189)
knighted in 1848, (fn. 190) from
whom the manor has descended to the present owner,
Captain Francis Horner Lyell.
Gilbert de Gant in 1278–
81 established his right to free chase in Swaledale
from time immemorial, and therefore to free warren
at Healaugh (fn. 191) ; an inquiry was ordered to be made
as to his taking undue escapes and his claim to infangentheof in all his demesne lands in Swaledale,
gallows and amends of the assize of bread and ale in
Reeth. (fn. 192)
The tenure of copyhold lands in Healaugh, West
Grinton and Harkerside was in gavelkind. (fn. 193)
The manor of MUKER (Meuhaker, xiii cent.;
Mewacre, xvi–xviii cent.; Meucarr, Mukar, xviii
cent.) was formed from the pasture in Swaledale
granted to Rievaulx Abbey by Gilbert de Gant, (fn. 194)
and held by that abbey until the Dissolution. (fn. 195) The
manor, with its members the hamlets of Oxhope,
Keld, Angram, Thwaite, Birkdale and Kisdon, was
granted to Thomas Lord Wharton in fee in 1544, (fn. 196)
and has since descended with the manor of Healaugh. (fn. 197)

Plan of Grinton Church
Despite the grant of all Swaledale by the lord of
Richmond to Walter de Gant, Brian son of Alan,
probably tenant by inheritance from Bodin, (fn. 198) sold
half the manor of REETH (Rie, xi cent.; Rith,
Rythe, xiii–xvi cent.; Reathe, Reeth, xvii cent.) to
Gilbert de Gant in 1239 for £100. (fn. 199) This sale and
that of half the forest probably meant a quitclaim of
the right of the lords of Bedale in Swaledale, and seems
to point to Reeth having been head of the lordship of
Swaledale before Healaugh became so; moreover, a
statement was made in 1303 that Healaugh was
'neither village, borough nor hamlet, but a certain
site of the manor of Reeth.' (fn. 200) Peter de Mauley, coheir of the lordship of Swaledale, was said in 1355
to have died seised of the manor of Reeth, (fn. 201) not of
Healaugh, as was Maud widow of Peter de Mauley
in 1438. (fn. 202) It was generally, however, known as the
manor of Swaledale, and as such descended with
Healaugh, (fn. 203) in which it has now merged.
Churches
The church of ST. ANDREW
consists of chancel 37 ft. 9 in. by
18 ft. 6 in., north chapel continuous
with the north aisle 19 ft. 8 in. wide, south chapel 29 ft.
by 16 ft., nave 51 ft. 6 in. by 23 ft. 6 in., north aisle
17 ft. 8 in. wide and measuring with the north chapel
85 ft. in length, south aisle 12 ft. 9 in. wide, west
tower 14 ft. 6 in. square, a small vestry at the northeast of the chancel and a south porch. The building
dates from Norman times, having consisted in the
early part of the 12th century of chancel and nave
only, but of this early building the only remaining
details are the window over the tower arch and the
north jamb of the chancel arch. At the end of the
same century a tower was built at the west end—
the arch communicating with the nave being still in
situ—and in the early years of the 14th century a
south aisle extending the full length of the nave was
added, the east end of which was possibly used as a
Lady chapel, while the chancel was widened on the
south side, necessitating a new chancel arch, and
perhaps lengthened. In the 15th century a north
aisle was built, extending two bays beyond the chancel
arch, and little more was done afterwards until the
end of the 16th century; at this time great alterations were made by widening the north aisle, adding
a vestry at the east end with a second door into the
chancel, building a chapel on the south of the chancel,
and entirely rebuilding the tower.
The east window of the chancel is of five cinquefoiled lights with vertical tracery above under a four
centred arch. The 15th-century north arcade is of
two bays with arches of two chamfered orders and a
central octagonal pier with broach stops at the base;
on the responds the arches spring from corbels
moulded like the capital of the pier. The opposite
arcade is a debased copy of the north arcade. The
mouldings are poor and the broaches at the base of
the shaft do not form a square. On the north of the
sanctuary is a small chamfered four-centred arched
doorway leading into the vestry, and above it is a late
three-light chamfered square-headed window; opposite this in the south wall is a modern square-headed
two-light cinquefoiled window, and between this and
the arcade is the eastern part of sedilia,
the western seat or seats having been
cut away when the south chapel was
added. The chancel arch, built at
the same time as the arcade in the
south of the nave (the respond corbels
of which are similarly moulded to that
on the south of the chancel arch), is
of three pointed chamfered orders on
the west side, and two on the east,
and rests on a 12th-century north pier
with scalloped capitals and moulded
bases. At the north-west of the chancel, to the north of the chancel arch,
is a doorway to the rood stairs, which
opened on to the loft by the squareheaded doorway on the nave face of
the dividing wall between chancel
and nave.
The north arcade of the nave is of
four bays with octagonal columns and
corbelled responds, moulded similarly
to those on the north side of the
chancel. The south arcade, also of
four bays, has octagonal columns and
corbels of the early 14th century; the
bases of the shafts are formed by
octagonal plinths chamfered on the
upper side and having broached stops.
Above this arcade are plain mullioned
clearstory windows, the eastern pair of
three lights and the western pair a
single light and a window of two
lights. The tower arch is of three
chamfered orders and rests on late
12th-century capitals, two each side,
the shafts of which are gone; above
it is an earlier window deeply splayed
on the inside and having a semicircular
head.
The north aisle has a late pointed
doorway and a square-headed five-light mullioned
window of the 16th century in the west wall. On
the north side are six three-light square-headed windows, four being cusped in the style of the 15th
century and two being later. Under the second
from the west are the jambs of a former doorway and
to the east of it is a holy water stoup. In the east
wall is a five-light square-headed 16th-century window with no cusping, and to the south of it is the
entrance to the vestry under a rough arch, which is
covered by a 17th-century screen and door.
The chapel on the south side of the chancel has a
late five-light square-headed mullioned window at the
east end; in the south wall are a very small piscina, a
two-centred window of three trefoiled pointed lights
(both probably reset work of the early 14th century,
the latter much restored, if not entirely renewed)
and a doorway with a plain stone lintel on the inside;
to the west in a projecting angle is a squint.

Grinton Church from the South-west
The south aisle contains two debased two-light
windows with square heads; the heads of the lights
are similar, but the easternmost window has a deeper
reveal externally having two chamfered orders, whereas
the mullion of the other is almost flush with the
external surface, the former probably having been
built in earlier jambs, while the latter was entirely
renewed. The south doorway is of two continuous
orders, the outer chamfered, the inner deeply moulded;
there is a moulded hood with head-stops round the
head, which is pointed. The whole is early 14th-century
work. To the west of this doorway is a triple lancet
window, apparently of 13th-century date renewed,
and perhaps reset from the south wall of the nave.
The exterior of the church is simple in character;
the tower, which is in four stages, is of late date and
has an embattled parapet but no buttresses. The
windows in the bell-chamber are of two transomed
trefoiled lights under a square head, those in the
other stages being mere slits with square stone lintels;
there is a doorway into it on the south side, which
has also a square head. The south aisle and nave
are built of random rubble with an embattled parapet
and there are no buttresses. The porch is very plain
and has a pointed arched doorway with a small
hollow chamfer. The roofs of both nave and aisles are
low pitched; they are open inside and show their old
timbers. The windows at the east end and those each
side of the sacristy have moulded labels. The wall of
the north aisle, built also of rubble, is divided by twostage buttresses into six bays, and its parapet and that
of the nave project and are not embattled. All the
windows have labels. The west window is also
labelled and the doorway has square jambs.
The font has a Norman cylindrical bowl worked
with diagonal lines on a modern base.
The chancel is separated from both the north and
south chapels by screens pierced in the upper portion
and panelled below, that on the north being of the
15th century and the other of later date. The latter
also extends across the aisle, forming the Lady chapel.
The pulpit is late Jacobean work and has a soundingboard dated 1718. In the east end of the north aisle
is an old reading desk holding a chained New Testament, and over the font is a carved tabernacle-work
canopy of the late 15th century.
In the floor of the Lady chapel is a slab to Elizabeth
Blackburne dated 1688.
There are six bells: the first inscribed 'Gloria
in altissimis Deo 1750,' by Dalton; the second by
Mears, 1825; the third with the same text as the
treble and dated 1763; the fourth by Dalton, dated
1779; the fifth inscribed 'Jesus be our speed 1623';
the tenor, which has been recently recast, bears the
inscription 'Sancta Catarena ora pro nobis +.' The
frame, which has since been repaired, is inscribed
'ja . . . . st harrison of barrow in lincolnshire
bellhanger 1751,' and the churchwardens' names.
The communion plate includes a cup and cover
paten of 1623, a large standing paten of 1718,
inscribed 1720, and a large flagon of 1873. The
church also possesses an old brass almsdish, which is
stamped with a representation of the Fall, showing
the figures of Adam and Eve and the serpent.
The registers begin in 1640. Mention of what
must have been a select vestry occurs in the register
under the year 1661, where it is stated that on
Tuesday of Easter week following the restoration of
King Charles II, 'after the unnaturall civil wars (by
the blessing of God ended),' the four and twenty
were elected, besides the four churchwardens. The
entry of their election appears again in 1752. Other
entries are those concerning the casting of two new
bells and the repairing of the loft in 1661, and of
three others by Dalton of York in 1751.
The church of ST. MARY THE VIRGIN,
Muker, is built of stone, and consists of a continuous
nave and chancel 68 ft. by 22 ft., a west tower
7 ft. 9 in. by 7 ft. 3 in. and a south porch. Its date
is uncertain, any distinguishing detail that remained
prior to 1890 having then been destroyed in a drastic
restoration which practically amounted to a rebuilding.
All the windows to the body of the building are
modern, but in the east wall on the south side of the
altar are two moulded image brackets, apparently of
14th-century date, while built into the east end of
the north wall is a long shelf of uncertain section.
The south doorway has chamfered jambs and segmental head, and is inscribed 'lw 1714.' The
doorway into the tower is also modern.
The tower, which is divided internally into three
stories, the lower one now being used as a coal cellar,
is crowned by an embattled parapet, having small
pinnacles at the angles. The ground stage is lighted
by a small rectangular window in the south wall,
while the bell-chamber has two-light square-headed
windows with hollow-chamfered jambs. On the
head of the rain-water pipes to the tower are the date
1793 and the churchwardens' names. The porch is
small, and has a plain square outer doorway of rough
workmanship. The roofs are modern.
In the east window is a fragment of old glass; it
represents the head of a woman.
There is a sepulchral slab to James Hassic of
Redruth, Cornwall, who died 1746.
There are two bells; they have no inscriptions,
but the long, narrow shape suggests a mediaeval date.
There is a silver cup (1583), modern paten, and a
pewter flagon and plate.
The registers begin in 1638.
The church of HOLY TRINITY, Melbecks, built
in 1841, when the parish was separated from Grinton,
consists of a small chancel with an east window of
three lights, a nave with three two-light windows
and a square-headed window in either wall. There
is a gallery at the west end, the space below being
used as a vestry. On the west gable is a small bellturret with two bells. The octagonal font and pulpit
are of stone.
Advowson
Maud daughter of Count Stephen
of Britanny, with the consent of
Walter de Gant her husband, its
founder, granted to Bridlington Priory the church of
St. Andrew of Swaledale, (fn. 204) a grant confirmed by
Walter's descendants (fn. 205) and by Henry I. (fn. 206) It was
already called Grinton Church by 1292. (fn. 207) The
priory held it appropriated, (fn. 208) a vicarage being ordained
in 1272. (fn. 209)
After the dissolution of the monasteries the advowson was retained by the Crown until 1890, (fn. 210) when it
was transferred to the Bishop of Ripon, (fn. 211) now patron.
Bridlington Priory held the church of East Cowton
besides that of Grinton in the Archdeaconry of
Richmond, and a bull of Pope Innocent III was
issued against their abuses of hospitality when making
visitations of these churches, sweeping through the
country as they did with a train of nearly a hundred
horses and dogs and falcons. (fn. 212)
Sir Ralph and Sir Francis Bigod built a chapel
in their manor-house of Healaugh Park. (fn. 213)
An old chapel at Keld was, says Whitaker, (fn. 214)
demolished in a riot of the inhabitants 'from a very
inadequate but not wholly improbable cause which I
shall not record.' There is an entry in the churchwardens' accounts of 1695: 'For walling up Keld
chapel door 1s.' (fn. 215) Partly restored, it was used by
Calvinists until 1789, and then rebuilt as an Independent chapel. (fn. 216)
It is practically certain, from traces of early work
found in the present building, that there was a
mediaeval chapel at Muker. An entry in the earliest
register at Grinton records that ' William Chatterton
Bishop of Chester did visit the Chappel of Muker
third day of August 1580 and did allow the inhabitants to baptise, marry, and bury and to minister the
sacraments, the said inhabitants to pay all the ecclesiastical duties to the vicar of Grinton.' This is
followed by a note that the 'license of the Bishop
was granted without consent of her Majestie who is
the Patroness and without consent of the vicar of
Grinton and but during the Bishop's pleasure.' In
1707 Muker Chapel was said to be the only chapel
of ease in the parish. (fn. 217) An Order in Council was
issued for the separation of the parish of Muker from
Grinton in 1843, but this was not carried out till
1890. The living is a new vicarage in the gift of
the vicar of Grinton.
The living of Holy Trinity, Melbecks, is a vicarage in the gift of the vicar of Grinton.
Charities
In 1696 Ann Colville by will
demised a rent-charge of £2 10s. for
the poor of the townships of Grinton
and Reeth, issuing out of land at Riddings, which is
paid by the owner, Mrs. Robinson, together with an
ancient payment of 10s. a year for the poor of Reeth
charged on the same property. A sum of 2s. 6d. a
year is also paid by Mr. Barker out of land at Reeth.
The Rev. — Joy, a former rector, left £105
stock, now consols, the dividends, amounting to
£2 12s. 6d., being distributable in bread, one moiety
for the townships of Grinton and Reeth, and the
other moiety for the chapelry of Muker and township of Melbecks. In 1904 these charities, amounting to £5 15s., were applied as follows: for poor of
Grinton £1 14s., Muker 16s., Melbecks 15s., Reeth
£2 10s.
This parish is entitled to benefits under the charity
of Matton Hutton at the Newcastle-upon-Tyne
Infirmary and at the Reeth Dispensary mentioned
below, and in the discretion of the trustees to a
grant for the school, and to share in the portion of
the charity which is applicable in apprenticing. (See
General Charities under Richmond.)
The Reeth Dispensary receives £30 yearly from
the charity of Matton Hutton to be applied for
medical aid to the poor of Reeth, Grinton and
Marrick.
The chapel at Low Row in the township of
Melbecks is endowed with 196 a. 2 r. 22 p., known
as Birkett Pasture in the parish of Kirkby Stephen,
Westmorland, let at £70 a year, and with about
16 acres known as Waller Field, in Ravenstonedale,
let at £18 a year. The net rents are paid to the
minister.
Educational Charities.—The school at Fremington, founded by will of James Hutchinson, 1643, is
regulated by a scheme of the High Court of Chancery
of 9 July 1860, as varied by a scheme of the Board
of Education of 17 July 1905. The school is endowed
with 7½ acres, producing £10 a year, also with a fixed
annual payment of £10, and about £50 a year,
being a moiety of estate at Wakefield, Mary Hutchinson's charity.
A school at Feetham in Melbecks was founded in
1806 by public subscription and will of Rev. David
Simpson, Nonconformist minister. The old school
and site were sold in 1903 with the sanction of the
Board of Education, and the net proceeds invested in
£25 12s. 10d. consols with the official trustees,
regulated by schemes of 7 May 1903 and 10 August
1906. The income is applicable in providing
prizes of from 5s. to 10s. for boys and girls whose
parents are bona fide resident in the township of
Melbecks.
In 1765 Ruth Garth by will devised a schoolhouse
and left a sum of £70, now charged on land at
Crackpot, to be used for the education of children
of the township of Crackpot or Whitaside. The
official trustees also hold a sum of £26 5s. 9d. consols
arising from accumulations. The income is applicable
under a scheme of 1899 for prizes and evening classes
or lectures, with preference to those resident in either
of these townships.
A school at Reeth was erected in 1809 by two
brothers, George Raw and John Raw, members of
the Society of Friends, who by their wills, dated
respectively 2 February 1814 and 2 June 1815,
endowed the same. The official trustees hold a
sum of £4,000 consols in trust for the school, which
is regulated by a Chancery scheme of 18 March
1859, as varied by a scheme of the Charity Commissioners of 9 January 1866.
Township of Muker.—The Free school, founded
in 1678 by will of Anthony Metcalfe, is endowed
with 14 acres of land, producing about £20 a
year.