Kelly's Derbyshire Directory 1900
Entries for the area of the Ancient Parish of Glossop.



GLOSSOP.
GLOSSOP (or Glossop Dale) is a municipal borough, market and union town, head of a county court district and petty sessional division, township and parish, on the borders of Cheshire, with a station, 192½ miles by rail from London by Great Central railway, 9½ from Ashton, 24½ from Barnsley, 87 from Birmingham, 65 from Burton, 47 from Chesterfield, 58 from Derby, 41 from Doncaster, 87 from Leicester, 34 from Leek, 47 from Liverpool, 73¾ from Lincoln, 13 from Manchester, 20 from Macclesfield, 74 from Nottingham, 30 from Sheffield, 66¼ from Stafford, 10½ from Staleybridge, 11 from Stockport, 53 from Uttoxeter and 72 from Wolverhampton. It is in High Peak hundred and High Peak division of the county, rural deanery of Glossop, archdeaconry of Derby and diocese of Southwell. The Great Central (late M. S. & L.) Railway Company's line from Manchester to Sheffield is carried across Dinting Vale on a lofty viaduct of sixteen arches, constructed of stone, about a mile west from the Town hall, and there is a branch line from Dinting to Glossop and Hadfield. The parish of Glossop, before the passing of the “Local Government Act, 1894,” comprised the hamlets of Glossop, Hadfield, Padfield, Charlesworth, Chunal, Whitfield and Simmondley. By the operation of the above Act, the borough became, by an Order of the County Council, dated Aug. 10, 1894, a civil parish, consisting of the whole of the hamlet of Hadfield, and parts of the previously mentioned hamlets. By the same Act the hamlet of Charlesworth, and the other parts of the hamlets, became the parish of Charlesworth.
The borough is divided into three wards, viz.; All Saints, Hadfield and St. James’. The corporation consists of a mayor, 6 aldermen and 18 councillors. The borough has a commission of the peace and a police force. The water supply, derived from Peaknase moors, is collected in reservoirs at Swineshaw. The town is supplied with gas by a company formed in 1845.
Portions of the old parish of Glossop All Saints have been taken to form the ecclesiastical parishes of Whitfield, St. James'; Hadfield, St. Andrew’s, and Dinting, Holy Trinity. The ancient parish church of All Saints was pulled down in 1830. The present church is a modem edifice of stone, in the Early Gothic style, consisting of chancel, nave, aisles, south porch, vestry, organ chamber, erected in 1877, and a western tower, with spire, containing a clock and 8 bells, re-hung and a chiming apparatus attached in 1877, a cost of £180; the spire was rebuilt in 1856 : the stained east Window is a memorial to a late Duke and Duchess of Norfolk, Robert Shepley esq. and John Wood esq. former benefactors : the old church plate bears date 1745, but in 1877 a new set of plate was contributed by the parishioners: in 1886 the nave was reseated with open benches by Daniel Wood esq. of Moorfield, and in 1889 the church was restored and three stained glass windows were placed therein, at a cost of £1,300, defrayed by Miss A. A. Wood and others: there are also memorial windows to the Rev. John Dickinson Knowles M.A. vicar, 1865-89, and Mrs. Mary Rusby: the carved oak pulpit was presented, at a cost of £325, by John Wood esq. of Whitfield house : the altar front, presented to the church in 1895, is of carved oak open work tracery panels, flanked by figures of SS. Chad and Aidan, with silk frontals to slide in a groove behind the tracery: choir stalls of carved oak were erected in 1896, at a cost of £180, and in 1898, an oak screen bearing the names of the vicars of Glossop from 1321, was provided at a cost of £50: a new baptistery was erected in the same year and furnished with a font of white marble, presented, at a cost of £200, by C. E. Knowles esq. and other gifts have been made to the church by Miss Orange: the churchyard was closed against interments, with modifications, in 1857-8. The register dates from the year 1620. The living is a vicarage, tithe rent-charge £356, average £266, net yearly value £231, with residence, in the gift of trustees, and held since 1889 by the Rev. Adam Pyle Hamilton-Wilson.
The Rev. Christopher Howe, vicar 1793 to 1849 and for 40 years also incumbent of Woodhead, Cheshire, established a day school at Glossop, in which he personally taught, and partly rebuilt the parish church; he died 1st Sept. 1849, in the 85th year of !his age and the 57th of his vicariate of Glossop. Mr. Charles Winterbottom, for upwards of 60 years sexton and clerk of the parish of Glossop, died at the age of nearly 88 years.
The Catholic church, dedicated to All Saints, a building in the Classic style, situated near Glossop Hall, was erected by Bernard Edward Duke of Norfolk, in 1837, and consists of chancel, nave and a belfry, containing one bell : over the altar is a fine copy of Domenichino’s “Communion of St. Hyronome,” the original of which is in the Vatican; there are also valuable paintings representing the twelve apostles: there are 120 sittings.
The cemetery of 6 acres, formed in 1859, was enlarged in 1894 and has mortuary chapels, it is now under the control of the town council and Charlesworth parish council.
The Town Hall, with the Market House, was considerably enlarged in 1854.
The Free Library and Public Hall, Fauvel road, erected in 1887 by Herbert Rhodes esq. and Captain Edward Partington, at a cost of about £4,400, on a site given by Lord Howard of Glossop, is a building of stone in the Gothic style, containing a reading room and library of 530 volumes, lecture hall and a public hall : over the main entrance a tower with pinnacles rises to a height of 80 ft.
There are Conservative and Liberal clubs, each having news and recreation rooms.
The Public Baths, Howard Park, erected in 1887, by Samuel Wood esq. and Mrs. Wood, of Moorfield House, at a cost of about £15,000, comprise a swimming bath, six private baths for males and a like number for females, and vapour and Turkish baths : the buildings include a ventilating tower 100 feet high.
Here are cotton factories, and in the neighbourhood, calico printing establishments and paper mills : some of the former, and especially those of Messrs. John Wood and Bros. Limited, and Messrs. Francis Sumner and Co. Limited, are very extensive, employing in ordinary times from 5,000 to 6,000 workpeople. The first cotton mill was erected about the year 1784, but previously to this a few woollen factories and fulling mills had been in operation; one of these, The Gnathole mill, now covered with ivy, still remains.
At Dinting Vale are the large calico printing works developed by the skill and energy of the late Mr. E. Potter, and now carried on by Messrs. E. Potter and Co.
Hurst brook and Whitfield brook, two feeders of the Etherow, take their rise on the adjacent moors; the water of the latter possesses bleaching properties, which was taken advantage of in establishing the works at Charlestown. There are quarries producing building and paving stone. The principal market day is Saturday. Fairs are held on the 6th May, also the first Wednesday on or after the 10th day of October, for the sale of horses and cattle.
There are charities of £40 yearly value, distributed among the poor on St. Thomas' day, in money and clothing, by two representatives of the eight original hamlets of Glossop Dale.
The Wood’s Hospital, Howard Park, founded and endowed in 1887, by Daniel Wood esq. of Moorfield, at a cost of about £6,000, the endowment fund being £19,000, is a structure of brick, cased externally with stone, and comprises two male and two female wards, holding about 16 patients, with kitchens &c. and an administrative block, containing the offices, store rooms &c. : to the west of the hospital is a detached laundry, with lodge keeper’s residence.
Howard Park, North road, formed in 1887, at the joint expense of Lord Howard of Glossop, Samuel Wood esq. and Mrs. Wood, of Moorfield, is situated on an eminence, commanding a fine view of the town and neighbourhood; it is about 12 acres in extent.
At Old Cross, Old Glossop, are the remains of an ancient stone cross, about 12 feet in height and still in a fair state of preservation.
Glossop Hall, the seat of the Right Hon. Lord Howard of Glossop J.P. is a noble building,in the style of a French château of the 18th century, and stands on gently rising ground above Howard Town, surrounded by trees : it was much enlarged and improved by Henry Charles, 13th Duke of Norfolk, grandfather of the present owner.
The town and hamlets now comprising the manor of Glossop appears to have been divided in the time of Edward the Confessor into several parts among different Saxon proprietors, but in the Domesday Survey the whole of Glossop is put down as forfeited to the Crown; and the Conqueror afterwards gave it to his natural son, William Peveril, whose son Richard, however, being disinherited by Henry I. Glossop was again confiscated to the Crown, and in 1157 was granted by Henry II. together with the advowson of the church to the Abbey of Basingwerke, “in free and perpetual alms for ever,” and this abbey had acquired before the 15th century nearly all the hamlets now comprising the Glossop estate; Glossop remained. the property of Basingwerke Abbey till the dissolution of the lesser abbeys in 1536, when Henry VIII. seized it with other conventual property and afterwards granted it to the Earl of Shrewsbury, who in turn exchanged it with the Duke of Norfolk for estates in Ireland, and in this noble family it has remained to the present time; the present proprietor, lord of the manor and principal landowner, is the Right Hon. Lord Howard of Glossop J.P. cousin to the present Duke of Norfolk.
The land is partly moor and pasturage. The area is 20,781 acres; rateable value, £58,941; the population of the ecclesiastical parish of All Saints in 1891 was 2,865; Glossop Dale population in 1891 was 26,797, including 6 officers and 98 inmates of the workhouse.
Parish Clerk, Robert Hurst.
The area of the municipal borough is 3,033 acres; the population in 1891 was:—All Saints’ ward, 6,440; Hadfield ward, 7,658, and St. James’ ward, 8,318; total, 22,416.

WHITFIELD, in 1844, was formed into an ecclesiastical parish. On Aug. 10, 1894, the portion in Glossop borough was added to that parish, and the remainder amalgamated with the new civil parish of Charlesworth. The church of St. James is a building of stone, in the Early English style, consisting of chancel,nave, aisles and a western tower with spire and pinnacles containing 8 bells, added in 1884, and a clock placed in 1885 by Miss Wood, of Whitfield House : the organ, erected in 1860, was enlarged in 1870, 1880 and 1896: the brass eagle lectern was presented by Miss Wood, of Whitfield House, in 1882; and two stained windows have also been inserted to the memory of John, Daniel and Samuel Wood: the church was enlarged in 1895-6 by the erection of a chancel and vestry and the whole interior reseated at a cost, including special gifts, of over £4,000: there are 1,100 sittings, 550 being free. The register dates from the year 1846. The living is a vicarage,net value £300,with residence, in the gift of John and S. H. Wood esqrs. and Mrs. S. Wood, and held since 1892 by the Rev. Henry Thornton Dudley M.A. of Queen’s College, Oxford, and surrogate. The vicarage house, a stone building near the church, has been considerably enlarged since 1872. St. Luke’s Mission church is an iron structure in Talbot street, erected in 1895 by Mrs. S. Wood, and there are Mission rooms in George street and Wood street. The Sumner Memorial Catholic church, Sumner street, dedicated to St. Mary, founded and endowed by the late Francis James Sumner esq. D.C.L. of Park Hall, Hayfield, and erected in 1887 by his heirs on a site granted by the late Lord Howard of Glossop, at a cost of about £17,000, including £5,000 for endowment,is an edifice of local stone in the Early English style, consisting of apsidal chancel, clerestoried nave of eight bays, aisles, side chapels, baptistery, south porch, and an eastern turret with spire and ornamental finial, rising to a height of 90 feet and containing one bell : a very handsome stone screen separates the chancel from the side chapels: the altar and tabernacle are elaborately carved in alabaster, marble and Caen stone : the pulpit is entirely of Caen stone: the organ cost about £500 : stations of the cross were added in 1889 at a cost of about £150: there are sittings for 900 persons: adjoining the church is a presbytery, built in 1889, by the Right Rev. Canon Charles W. Tasker, rector, to the memory of John Sumner esq. : adjoining the Catholic school in St. Mary’s road, is a convent for the sisters of charity of St. Paul. The church has since been decorated by Mr. Norman, from Hardman & Co. Birmingham, in the style of the 14th and 15th centuries. Littlemoor Congregational schools, Victoria street, erected in 1881 at a cost, including fittings, of about £3.000, form a building of stone in the Italian style, and will hold 700 scholars; the schools are also used for lectures and concerts, and can be arranged so as to seat 1,000 persons : the front entrance, facing Victoria street, is surmounted by a turret 75 feet high. The Gospel Union Mission hall, in Ellison street, erected in 1888, is of stone in the Gothic style, and will seat 800 persons. Whitfield House, the residence of John. Wood esq. M.A., J.P. is a large stone building in the Elizabethan style, standing in its own grounds. Lord Howard of Glossop is lord of the manor and principal landowner. A new Technical school is in course of erection, the gift of Lord Howard of Glossop. The inhabitants are employed in the large cotton and paper mills just outside the township and in the bleach works within its boundaries. The soil is various; subsoil, clay. The chief crops are oats, hay and pasture.
Charlestown is a place here.
Sexton, Robert Hurst, Hall street.
Town Sub-Post & M. O. O., S. B. & Annuity & Insurance Office.—Miss Mary J. Russell, sub-postmistress. Letters through Manchester arrive 6.30 a.m. & 12, 2 & 4.30 p.m.; dispatched 8.40 & 10.20 a.m. & 1.20, 5, 7.20 & 9 p.m.
Wall Letter Box, cleared at 10 a.m. 1, 3 & 7 p.m

Chunal is 2 miles south from Glossop and partly within that borough, in the High Peak division of the county, hundred of High Peak, parish, petty sessional division, union and county court district of Glossop, and in the ecclesiastical parish of Whitfield; part is included in Glossop civil parish, the remainder being in Charlesworth civil parish.

DINTING, formed into an ecclesiastical parish, 1875, is partly in Glossop Borough, and has a station on the Great Central railway. This place is now amalgamated with Glossop and Charlesworth civil parishes. The church of the Holy Trinity, erected by the Wood family, of Glossop, and opened July, 1875, is a building of stone in the Gothic style of the 13th century, and consists of apsidal chancel, nave, aisles, an organ chamber forming a transept on the south side, vestry and a tower at the west end of the south aisle, with pinnacles and an octagonal spire, reaching a height of 137 feet from the ground to the top of the vane, and containing 6 bells : the nave is divided from the aisles by circular stone piers, with moulded caps and bases: the pulpit, of Caen stone and marble, was erected in memory of the patron and founder : the central window of the apse is a memorial to John H. Wood esq. d. 16 Dec. 1869, and was placed by his widow : the font, also presented by Mrs. Wood, consists of a basin of Caen stone on a shaft of red marble : the organ was presented by Mrs. Wood in 1882: the building has sittings for 630 persons, 90 of which are free. The register dates from the year 1875. The living is a vicarage, net yearly value £288, with residence, in the gift of the Wood family, and held since 1895 by the Rev. Edwin Charles Collier M.A. of St. John’s College, Cambridge. There is a Methodist New Connexion chapel, built in 1860, with sittings for 300 persons, 100 of which are free.
Post, M. O. O. S. B., Annuity & Insurance Office.— Joseph Moss, sub-postmaster. Letters arrive through Manchester at 6.23 a.m. 2.2 p.m. & 4.22 p.m. & from Glossop at 2.2 p.m. ; dispatched at 10.20 a.m. & 7.15 p.m; Sundays, arrive at 7.40 a.m.; dispatched at 7.15 p.m. The nearest telegraph office is at Glossop, 2 miles distant
Wall Letter Box cleared at 8 a.m. & 6 p.m. & on sundays at 8.30 a.m.

Brookfield is a hamlet 1 mile north of Dinting station. Here is a cotton mill. The Congregational chapel, erected in 1883, is a building of stone in the Early English style : all the windows are stained.

Gamesley is a hamlet 1 mile west of Dinting station. In the hamlet of Gamesley are the remains of a Roman camp, called by the country people from time immemorial “Melandra.” and “Melandra Castle;” it stands on a bold eminence at the confluence of the Course Brook and the Etherow, and traces of walls and gates may be plainly discerned : tablets inscribed to Roman emperors, coins of the Emperor Domitian, a large sword and other objects of archaeological interest have been found here : the summit is still called “The Castle Yard,” and a tradition exists that Melandra was one of the strongholds of the ancient British in the time of the Saxon invasion. On an opposite hill, called “Mousley,” is the site of another traditional castle. Some stones which came from Mousley Castle, inscribed with rude hieroglyphics, are still to be seen walled into the gable end of a house at Hadfield, and are evidently Runic. Both Melandra and Mousley lie on the Roman road from the camp of “Mancunium” (Manchester) to that of “Ad Petuariam” (Brough, near Castleton).

HADFIELD, together with the chapelry of Padfield, was formed in 1875 into a parish, but was Aug. 10, 1894, amalgamated with Glossop; it is on the borders of Cheshire, within the borough of Glossop and county court district of Glossop, with a station on the Great Central railway. The church of St. Andrew, erected at a cost of about £4,250 and consecrated July 4th, 1874, is a building in the Gothic style, consisting of apsidal chancel, nave, aisles, south porch, south transept, baptistery, organ chamber and a central bell turret containing one bell : the font, worked in native stone, was presented in 1874 by Mr. James Sherriff, of Christ Church, Canterbury. New Zealand, and formerly of Hadfield, and had previously been exhibited at the Colonial exhibition, Victoria: the richly-embroidered communion cloth was presented by the Rev. C. B. Ward M.A. vicar of Whitfield, and the credence table by Mr. Braddock, churchwarden: a new organ was erected in 1879, at a cost of about £650, by James Sidebottom esq. J.P. of Millbrook, Hadfield, as a memorial to his wife: the brass lectern was presented in memory of Beatrice Dawson, at a cost, including the readers stool, of about £1,000: there are 538 sittings. The register of baptisms dates from July 5th, 1874, and of marriages from August, 1875. The living is a vicarage, net yearly value £275, in the gift of five trustees, and held since 1875 by the Rev. Joseph Hadfield, of St. Bees, rural dean of Glossop, and surrogate. There is a Mission church at Woolley Bridge. The Catholic church, dedicated to St. Charles Borromeo, is an edifice of stone, in the Early English style, erected in 1858 by the late Lord Howard of Glossop, and consisting of nave, aisles, sacristy, baptistery and a western tower containing one bell, a memorial to the late Father McDonnell : the beautifully carved high altar of stone was erected in memory of the late Father Hickey : the Lady altar was presented by the Right Rev. Monsignor Canon H. Sabela : in the church are several figures carved in stone and many valuable oil paintings, one of these, a copy of Raphael’s “Transfiguration,” being placed above the high altar. A new pulpit of Caen stone, marble and alabaster, was erected in 1894 as a memorial of the nomination of the Rt. Rev. Monsignor Canon H: Sabela as domestic prelate to his Holiness Pope Leo XIII. There are memorial windows to Lord Edward G. Fitzalan Howard, 1st baron Howard of Glossop, d. 1 Dec 1883, & Augusta (Talbot) his wife, d. 3 July, 1862 : outside the church is a vault belonging to the Howard family. Adjoining is a presbytery. The convent of Sisters of Charity of St. Paul, a fine building on the south side of the church, was erected in 1887, at the cost of John Dalton esq. of Rose Bank, Hollingworth. The Wesleyan chapel, built in 1878, has 713 sittings; the Primitive Methodist chapel, built in 1876, has 500 sittings; the Free Methodist chapel, built in 1876 and enlarged in 1885, seats 280. There are several cotton mills, in which the population are employed, and political clubs with news and amusement rooms. Hadfield Hall, the ancient mansion of the Hadfields of Hadfield, dating from 1646, has been converted into a couple of cottages; some years ago the handsome black oak carving was taken down and erected in a farm house on the Glossop estate.
Post, M. & T. O., T. M. O., Express Delivery, Parcel Post, S. B. & Annuity Office.-—James Wright, sub-postmaster. Letters received through Manchester. Delivery, 7.15 a.m. 2.30 & 5 p.m.; dispatch, 10.15 a.m. 1 & 7 & 9 p.m.; Sunday, dispatched 7.15 p.m. Money orders granted & paid & savings bank business transacted from 8 a.m. till 8 p.m. ; on Saturdays till 8 p.m. Wall Letter Boxes:—Hadfield cross, cleared 7.50 a.m. & 5.40 p.m.; Station road, cleared 7.40 a.m. & 5.30 p.m.; Padfield, at 8 a.m. & 6 p.m.; Crowden, at 10 a.m.
Letter Bag dispatched to Glossop at 1 p.m. & arrives from Glossop at 2.30 p.m

PADFIELD, adjoining Hadfield station, miles north-west from Glossop and partly within that borough, in the High Peak division of the county, hundred of High Peak, parish, union, petty sessional division and county court district of Glossop, is included in the ecclesiastical parish of St. Andrew’s, Hadfield. The Wesleyan chapel, erected with Sunday school in 1880 at a cost of £2,000, will seat 400 persons. The population are employed in the cotton mills.
Letters through Manchester via Hadfield arrive at 6.45 a.m. 3 & 5 p.m. Wall Letter Box cleared at 8 a.m. & 6 p.m

OFFICIAL ESTABLISHMENTS, LOCAL INSTITUTIONS &c.
Post, M. & T. O., T. M. O., Express Delivery, Parcel Post, S. B. & Insurance & Annuity Office, Norfolk square.—Mrs. Sarah Elizabeth Rodley, sub-postmistress. Letters arrive via Manchester at 6.30 a.m. & 2.55 & 5 p.m.; dispatched to Manchester & all parts at 8.45 & 10.20 a.m. & 11.30 a.m. to Sheffield, & 12, 1.20, 5, 7.25 & 9.30 p.m. Money order office & post office savings bank open from 8 a.m. to 8 p.m. Postal orders & stamps, to 8.30 p.m.; on Saturdays from 8 a.m. to 8 p.m. Telegraph office open from 8 a.m. to 8 p.m.

COUNTY MAGISTRATES.
Howard of Glossop Lord, Glossop hall, Glossop
Barr John esq. Dinting, Manchester
Brown James esq. Chisworth house, Chisworth
Carver Thomas esq. The Hollins, Marple, Stockport
Partington Capt. Edward, Easton, High st. east, Glossop
Rowbottom Jas. esq. Chisworth, Broadbottom, Manchester
Sidebottom Col. William M.P., V.D. Harewood lodge, Broadbottom, Cheshire
Sidebottom Tom Harrop esq. M.P., D.L. Etherow house, Hollingworth, Manchester
Sumner Francis John esq. Eathorpe park, Leamington
Wainwright Joel esq. Finchwood, Marple Bridge, Stockprt
Wood John esq. M.A., D.L. Whitfield house, Glossop
The mayor of Glossop and the chairman, for the time being, of the Glossop Dale Rural District Council, are ex-officio magistrates
Clerk to the Magistrates, Theo. Walt. Ellison, Norfolk chambers
Petty Sessions are held at the Town hall at intervals of two or three weeks, at 10.30 a.m. Thursdays. The following places are included in the division:—Charlesworth,. Chisworth, Chunal, Compstall, Ludworth, Marple Bridge & Simmondley.

BOROUGH MAGISTRATES.
The Mayor
Barlow Thomas, The Avenue, Hadfield
Barnes John, 31 & 33: High street west, Glossop
Dawson William, Knowl house, Station road, Hadfield
Hunter Thomas Pearson, Talbot road, Glossop
Knowles Charles E. Holmdale, North road, Glossop
Partington Capt. Edward, Easton, High street east
Rowbottom Samuel, Shepley street
Shepley Charles Woffenden, Brookfield, Dinting
Sidebottom Col. William M.P., V.D. Harewood lodge, Broadbottom, Cheshire
Thorp W. The Firs, Glossop
White William M.D. Hadfield road, Hadfield
Clerk, Theo. Walter Ellison, Norfolk square
The magistrates meet on Monday at the Town hall every fortnight at 2.30 p.m

CORPORATION.
1898-9.
Mayor—Councillor S. H. Wood.
Deputy Mayor—Alderman John Barnes.
Aldermen.
ǁ William Dawson
ǁ Samuel Rowbottom
ǁ Edward Woolley
* Fletcher Rigge
* John Barnes
* Benjamin Platt
Councillors.
All Saints’ Ward.
Returning Officer for Ward Elections, Alderman S. Rowbottom.
ǁ Henry Hadfield
ǁ Brook Furniss
† Arthur Sidebottom
† James Malkin
ǂ James Beeley
ǂ Robert Bennett
St. James’ Ward.
Returning' Officer for Ward Elections,Alderman E. Woolley
ǁ William Holdgate
ǁ Herbert Partington
† Samuel H. Wood
† Alfred Garside
ǂ William McMellon
ǂ Capt. Edward Partington
Hadfield Ward.
Returning Officer for Ward Elections, Alderman William Dawson.
ǁ Joseph Bennett
ǁ John Joseph Whelan
† Israel Warrington
ǂ William Sargentson
ǂ George Thornley
Marked thus ǁ retire in November, 1899.
Marked thus † retire in November, 1900.
Marked thus ǂ retire in November, 1901.
Marked thus * retire in November, 1902.
Elective Auditors, James Edwin Platt & David Massey

OFFICERS OF THE CORPORATION & URBAN DISTRICT COUNCIL.
Town Clerk, Clerk to the Urban District Council & School Attendance Committee, Charles Davis, Ellison street
Borough Treasurer, T. K. Kenyon, Norfolk square
Assistant Treasurer, T. S. Bowden, Town hall
Medical Officer of Health, Duncan John Mackenzie M.D., C.M. Loch Maree, North road
Veterinary Surgeon (Infectious Diseases), E. S. Gubbin F.R.C.V.S. Fauvel road
Public Analyst, J. Carter Bell, Manchester
Borough Auditor, H. Broadhurst, Pikes lane
Surveyor, Thomas Haynes, Town hall
School Attendance Officer, Thos. Rhodes, 67 High st. east
Water Inspector, John Garner, 46 Church street
Head Constable & Inspector of Hackney Carriages & Captain of Fire Brigade, John G. Hodgson, Ellison street
Inspector of Police, John Cooper, Bankbottom, Hadfield
Sanitary & Lighting Inspector, Samuel Dane, Primrose la
Baths Superintendent, A. Sandiford
Park Superintendent, D. Downs
Collectors, General District Rate, S. Fletcher, St. Mary's road, Glossop; Borough & Watch, James Bridge, 11 Hadfield place; Water, Thomas Nield, North road, Glossop

PUBLIC ESTABLISHMENTS.
Borough Police Office, Ellison street, John G. Hodgson, head constable; 1 inspector, 4 sergeants & 20 constables
Borough Police Station, Albert street, Hadfield, John Cooper, inspector, & 5 constables
Cemetery, Cemetery road, Hadfield, F. W. G. Moran, clerk; offices, Norfolk street
County Court, His Honor S. D. Waddy Q.C. judge; Charles Davis, registrar & high bailiff; office, Ellison street, open from 10 to 4, on Saturdays from 10 till 1. The county court is held at the Town hall & comprises the following parishes:—Arnfield & district of Tintwistle, Brownside, Charlesworth, Chisworth, Chunal, Dinting, Gamesley, Glossop, Hadfield, Hollingworth, Padfield, Phoside, Rowarth, Saltersbrook, Simmondley, Torside, Waterside, Whitfield,Woodhead & Woolley Bridge
For Bankruptcy purposes this Court is included in that of Ashton-under-Lyne, Christopher Jenkins Dibb, official receiver; Arthur Bayley Potter, assistant official receiver, Ogden chambers, Bridge street, Manchester Certified Bailiffs under the “Law of Distress Amendment Act,” Josiah Mellor, High street west & Edwin Collier, Sheffield road
Free Library & Public Hall, Fauvel road, Miss P. Warhurst, librarian
Howard Park, North road
Public Baths, The Park
Town Hall, High street west
Wood’s Hospital, The Park, Arthur Walker M.D. Robert Nelson M.D. Duncan John Mackenzie M.D., C.M. William White M.D., C.M. James Harold Wylde L.R.C.P.Irel, W. E. S. Burnett L.R.C.P.Edin. Bennett Ralph Sidebottom L.R.C.P.Edin. medical officers; T. S. Bowden esq. hon. sec.; Miss Clarke, matron

VOLUNTEERS.
4th Volunteer Battalion Cheshire Regiment (L, M & N Companies), Glossop detachment, Drill hall; Hon. Col. John Wood V.D. commanding detachment; Capt. F. G. Knowles, commanding L Co.; Capt. Arthur Sidebottom, commanding M Co.; Capt. S. H. Wood, commanding N Co.; Oswald Partington, Ernest Sumner & Cyril Ellison, lieutenants; Surg. -Lieut. R. B. Sidebottom, medical officer; Rev. W. J. Canton, chaplain; James Clancy, sergeant instructor

GLOSSOP UNION.
Board day every alternate Wednesday, at 3 p.m.
Glossop union comprises the following parishes:—Charlesworth, Chisworth, Glossop & Ludworth. The population of the union in 1891 was 26,797; area, 20,943 acres; rateable value in 1899, £87,154.
Clerk to the Guardians & Assessment Committee, Thos. Swindells Bowden, 3 Wellgate, Glossop
Treasurer, Thomas T. Kenyon, Norfolk sq. Glossop
Collector, James Bridge, 11 Hadfield place, Hadfeld
Relieving & Vaccination Officer, John Wood Bowden, Fern house, Howard street, Glossop
Medical Officers, Glossop district, William James Bowden M.B., Ch.B. Norfolk street, Glossop; Whitfield district, Ralph Bennett Sidebottom L.R.C.P. & S.Edin. 20 Hollincross lane, Glossop; Hadfield district, R. Wilfred Bollans M.B., Ch.B. Railway street, Hadfield
Public Vaccinator for the Union, Ralph Bennett Sidebottom L.R.C.P. & S.Edin. 20 Hollincross lane,Glossop
Superintendent Registrar, John William Tweedale, Norfolk square, Glossop; deputy, Joseph Mason, Norfolk square, Glossop
Registrar of Births, Deaths & Marriages, Glossop sub-district, Thos. Swindells Bowden, 3 Wellgate, Glossop
Workhouse, to hold 144 inmates, John Warrington, master; William James Bowden, medical officer; Mrs. Hannah Warrington, matron

School Attendance Committee.
Meets at the Wesleyan schools, Chisworth, on mon. in each month, at 6 p.m.
Clerk, Thomas Swindells Bowden, 3 Wellgate, Glossop

PUBLIC OFFICERS.
Assistant Overseer, David Massey, 62 High street east
Coroner for the Honor of Tutbury, Chas. Davis, Ellison st
Stamp Distributor, Mrs. S. E. Rodley, Post off. Norfolk sq

PLACES OF WORSHIP, with times of services.
Parish Church, Rev. Adam Pyle Hamilton-Wilson, vicar; 8 & 10.30 a.m.; 2.30 & 6.30 p.m. & holy days, 11 a.m.; wed. & fri. 11 a.m. & 7.30 p.m
Holy Trinity, Dinting, Rev. Edwin Charles Collier M.A. vicar; 10.30 a.m. & 6.30 p.m.; wed. 7.30 p.m
St. James’, Whitfield, Rev. Henry Thornton Dudley M.A. vicar; Rev. Evelyn F. C. Eardley B.A. Curate; 8 & 10.30 a.m. & 6.30 p.m. ; daily, 9.30 a.m.; wed. & fri. 7.30 p.m. ; Leonard Foster Ward B.A. curate at St. Luke’s mission
St. Andrew, Hadfield, Rev. Joseph Hadfield, vicar; Rev. Joseph Ames Martin, curate; 10.30 a.m. & 6.30 p.m.; wed. 7.30 p.m
All Saints’ Catholic, Rev. Francis S. Ffrench, priest; 9.30 & 11 a.m. & 6.30 p.m
Reformers, Howard street, 10.30 a.m. & 6 p.m. ; wed. 7.30 p.m
St. James’ Mission Room, George street; 3.15 p.m.
St. Paul’s Mission Room, High street west; 3 p.m.
Talbot Street Mission Room; 10.30 a.m. & 6.30 p.m.
Sumner Memorial Church, Catholic (St. Mary’s), Sumner street, Rt. Rev. Monsignor Charles W. (Canon) Tasker, priest; 8.30, 9.30 & 11 a.m. & 6.30 p.m. ; daily at 8 a.m.; thurs. 7.30 p.m
Congregational, Littlemoor, Rev. William Latham Parker; 10.30 a.m. & 6.30 p.m.; wed. 7.30 p.m.; seat 800
Congregational, St. Mary’s road, Rev. Granvill Sharp M.A. ; 10.30 a.m. & 6 p.m.; wed. 7.30 p.m.; seat 600
Free Methodist Church, Hall street, Rev. John Collinge, 10.30 a.m. & 6 p.m.; alternate wed. 7.30 p.m. ; seat 450
Primitive Methodist, Shrewsbury street, Rev. Jas. Barnes ; 10.30 a.m. & 6 p.m. ; wed. 7.30 p.m.; seat 730
Primitive Methodist Mission Room, Princess street
United Methodist Free Church, Whitfield; 2.30 & 6 p.m.; thurs. 7.30 p.m. ; seat 400
Unitarian, Fitzalan street, Rev. A. Cunliffe Fox; 10.45a.m. & 6.30 p.m. ; seat 300
Wesleyan, High street west, Rev. Robt. Passmore & Rev. Campbell Jeffries; 10.30 a.m. & 6 p.m.; thurs. 7.30 p.m. ; seat 1,500. Wesley street, 10.30 a.m. & 6 p.m. thurs. 7.30 p.m.; seat 400. Whitfield, 2.30 & 6 p.m. \ wed. 7.30 p.m. ; seat 400

SCHOOLS.
Endowed, Old Glossop, with master’s residence, built & endowed in 1852 by Henry Charles, 13th Duke of Norfolk, & enlarged in 1887, for 250 boys, 250 girls & 100 infants; average attendance, 100 boys, 70 girls & 65 infants; George A. Howgate, master; Miss Stables, mistress: Miss Arnold, infants’ mistress
Endowed. Whitfield (mixed), with master’s residence, founded in 1779 by Joseph Hague esq. of Park hall, Hayfield & endowed with £39 yearly, for 144 children; average attendance, 135; Walter P. Evason, master; Mrs. Elizabeth Ann Evason, mistress
Infants’, Waterside, Hadfield, built in 1872, for 170 children; average attendance, 136; Miss A. E. Hall, mist
National mixed, Dinting, built in 1875 & enlarged by Mrs. Wood in 1887, for 320 children & 80 infants; average attendance, 130 children & 52 infants; Miss Clara Riley, mistress; Miss Ada B. Consterdine, infants mistress
National, Hadfield (mixed), erected 1853,for 550 children; average attendance, 386; Alfred Walker, master
National, Talbot street (girls & infants), built in 1880 & enlarged in 1897, for 350 children; average attendance, 200 ; William Henkinson, master
National Whitfield (mixed & infants), for 560 children; average attendance, 340; George Edward Cox, master; F. H. Morris, assistant master; Misses S. A. Morriss, Janet Cox, Gertrude Cox & E. Sutcliffe, mistresses
Day School, Padfield (mixed), erected 1887, for 250 children ; average attendance, 200; William Lees Marshall, master
Congregational, Victoria street (mixed), built in 1881, for 700 children; average attendance, 340; Joseph Walkden, master; Miss M. Jones, infants’ mistress
Catholic, St. Mary’s road, for 400 children; average attendance, 223 ; Sisters of the Order of St. Paul,teachers
Catholic, Old Glossop (mixed), for 120 children; average attendance, 70; Sisters of the Order of St. Paul, tchrs
Catholic, Hadfield (mixed), for 200 children; average attendance, 165 ; Sisters of the Order of St. Paul, teachers
Wesleyan, High street (mixed & infants), erected 1851,for 400 children; average attendance, 264; R. H. Dickenson, master
Wesleyan, Old Glossop (mixed), erected 1824, rebuilt 1876, for 225 children; average attendance, 140;Walter Houseman, master; Miss Hannah Thornhill, mistress
Wesleyan, Hadfield (mixed), erected 1808, enlarged 1822 & rebuilt 1854, for 300 children; average attendance, 200; Jas. Nelson, master; Miss Maria Nelson, mistress

RAILWAY STATIONS.
Glossop, John H. Schofield, station master
Dinting, William Vernon, station master
Hadfield, Richard Bratherton, station master

An omnibus runs from Glossop Town hall to Hollingworth & Hadfield about three times daily

GLOSSOP.
PRIVATE RESIDENTS.
Abraham Chas. Arthur, Spire Hollin
Allen Edward, Lea Mount
Allen Edward Wagstaffe, Lea Mount
Andrew Mrs. Holmleigh, North road
Appleyard James, 45 Sheffield road
Armitage Mrs. 77 Norfolk street
Armitage Thomas, Hurst villa
Atkin Wm. Edward, 36 St. Mary’s rd
Barlow John, 39 Charlestown
Barnes Rev. James (Primitive Meth.), 1 Shrewsbury street
Beaver George, Fern lee, Spire Hollin
Beeley Mrs. 13 Lord street
Beeley Mrs. Alice, Moorfield
Benton Mrs. 4. Mount street
Berry Joshua, 45 Norfolk street
Bethell Mrs. 77 Charlestown road
Booth Wm. Alfred, Slatelands road
Booth Wright, Rose cottage, North rd
Bowden John, 59 Norfolk street
Bowden Thomas Swindells, 3Wellgate
Bowden William. 102 St. Mary’s road
Bowden James M.B., Ch.B. (Vict.), 47 Norfolk street
Bradbury Mrs. 22 Slatelands road
Bramhall Thomas, 88 St. Mary’s road
Broadhurst Charles, 10 John street
Broadhurst Harry, 51 Pike’s lane
Brock Frederick H. 77 Primrose lane
Clayton Miss, 10 Primrose lane
Collier Edwin, Sheffield road
Collier Frank, Hillside, North road
Collinge Rev. John (United Methodist), 15 York street
Cooper Abel, 42 Primrose lane
Cox George Edward, Rose cottage, Hollin Cross lane
Crannage Alfred, 53 Hollin Cross lane
Crossland Mrs. 10 North road
Cuthbert John, Spire Hollin
Dakins Thomas, 127 Victoria street
Darwent Wm. Henry, 21 Lord street
Davis Charles, Dinting road
Dearnaley Joseph, Parkfld ho. Nrth. rd
Dearnally Abel, 17 Lord street
Dickenson Mrs. 1 North road
Dickenson-Knowles Mrs. Holly bank, Talbot road
Dudley Rev. Henry Thornton M.A. Vicarage, Whitfield
Eardley Rev. Evelyn F. C., B.A. (curate St. James’, Whitfield), 28 Slatelands road
Ellison Theo. Holly bank, Spire Hollin
Evason Walter P. 14 Hague street
Eversden William, 2 Railway street
Fairclough Walt. P. Mus.Bac.F.R.C.O. Shaw street
Ffrench Rev. Francis S. (Catholic), Royle house, Old Glossop
Fielding Mrs. Christopher, 69 Norfolk st
Fielding Samuel, 9 Gladstone street
Foley Mrs. 85 Surrey street
Fox Rev. A. Cunliffe (Unitarian), Sheffield road
Garside Alfred, Surrey street
Garside Ben, Bedford ho. Surrey st
Garside Miss, 1 North road
Garside Mrs. 39 Norfolk street
Garside Mrs. 56 Surrey street
Goldsmith Mrs. 8 Union street
Greaves William, Sheffield road
Hadfield Henry, Cowbrook
Hadfield John, Ashlands, Dinting road
Hadfield John, 8 Slatelands road
Hadfield Joseph, 73 Norfolk street
Hadfield Joshua H. Cowbrook house
Hadfield Misses, Lees hall, Turn Lee
Hadfield Mrs. 67 Norfolk street
Hadfield Mrs. Mary, 23 Ashton street
Hadfield Samuel, Fern bank
Hadfield Thomas, 75 Norfolk street
Haigh Mrs. 13 Norfolk street
Hall William, Sunny bank, North rd
Hambleton John, 91 Primrose lane
Hamilton-Wilson Rev. Adam Pyle (vicar of Glossop), The Vicarage
Hampson Joseph, 5 Bank terrace
Hardman Charles, 11 Lord street
Hardman John, Ingle Nook
Harrison Walter, 37 Norfolk street
Hawke Robt. G. Ryecroft house, Hall st
Henning Robert E. 6 Fauvel road
Holdgate Wm. The Tower, North road
Hollingbery William Hy. Hurst Lee
Hollingworth Samuel, Simmondley la
Horne Mrs. 19 Fauvel road
Houseman Walter, 47 Sheffield road
Howard of Glossop Lord J.P. Glossop hall; & Dorlin house, near Loch Sheil, Scotland; & 19 Rutland gate, London SW
Howard William, Primrose lane
Howton Rev. Richard (Gospel Union Mission), Furness buildings
Hudson Mrs. Sunny side ho. Turnlee rd
Hunter Thomas Pearson, Talbot road
Hurst John, 43 Sheffield road
Hyde George, Sumner street
Jackson James C. Sheffield road
Jeffries Rev. Campbell (Wesleyan), Talbot road
Kenyon Thos. T. The Bank, Norfolk sq
Knowles Chas. E. Holm Dale, North rd
Knowles Francis Gordon, Beechwood, North road
Lawton Mrs. Simmondley lane
Leech Alfred, Cowbrook cottage, Sheffield road
Littlewood Richard, Devonshire house, Surrey street
Lomas Miss Grace, 20 Howard street
Mackenzie Duncan John M.D., C.M Loch Maree, North road
McKnight Mrs. 61 Norfolk street
Malkin James, Sheffield road
Maxwell John, Lee Mount
Merry James, 86 St. Mary’s road
Mitchell Julian, 35 Norfolk street
Moran Frederick W. G. Oakleigh, North road
Moran Mrs. 15 Norfolk street
Morris Fredk. 8 Hague st. Whitfield
Nelson Jas. Milford ho. North road
Nelson Robert M.D. Norfolk street
Newton Mrs. Arundel villas, North rd
Nicol A. Campbell, 93 High street we
Oliver Walter, Woodleigh, North road
Ollerenshaw George, Highfield house, Talbot road
Ollerenshaw Robert, 87 Primrose lane
Orme William, 3 Corn street
Parker Rev. William Latham (Congregational), Littlemoor manse
Parrott John, 87 Primrose lane
Partington Captain Edward J.P. Easton, High street east
Partington Herbert, Talbot house
Passmore Rev. Robert (Wesleyan), Talbot road
Pennington Miss, 57 Norfolk street
Potts Joseph, 42 Sheffield road
Pratt James Edwin, 3 Bank terrace
Proctor Miss, 57 Norfolk street
Roberts Geo. 16 Hollin Cross lane
Robinson Miss, Cowbrook
Robinson Ralph Bernard, Arundel st
Rowbottom Herbert, 70 Church street
Rowbottom John, 31 Hall street
Rowbottom Oswald, Shepley street
Rowbottom Samuel, Shepley street
Schofield Alfred Ernest, Norfolk st
Scholes John C. 49 Sheffield road
Sellers Squire, 15 Lord street
Shaw Charles, 24 Slatelands road
Shaw Edwin, 85 Primrose lane
Shepley Mrs. 65 Norfolk street
Sheppard Mrs. Simmondley lane
Sidebottom Arthur, 28 High street east
Sidebottom Joshua, 31 Norfolk street
Sidebottom Ralph Bennett, 20 Hollin Cross lane
Slack Mrs. Ryecroft cottage, Hall st
Slack Samuel, Corn street
Stead Mrs Surrey villa
Swire Hezekiah, 71 Norfolk street
Sykes Samuel William Bennett, 84 St. Mary’s road
Sykes William, Simmondley lane
Tasker Rt. Rev. Monsignor Canon Charles W. (Catholic), Sumner st
Tatham Mrs. Fern bank
Taylor David, 55 Norfolk street
Taylor George W. North road
Thorp Walter, Talbot road
Tweedale John, Park croft
Tweedale John William, Talbot road
Tweedale Mrs. 45 Norfolk street
Walker Arthur, 16 High street west
Walton Mrs. Lord street
Ward Mrs. Moorside
Ward Rev. Leonard F., B.A. (curate St. Luke’s Mission), 8 Spire Hollin
Warhurst Mrs. 24 Howard street
Waterhouse Thomas, 23 Norfolk street
Weetman Henry, Wren Nest house
Weetman Jn. Aloysius, Wren Nest ho
Widdup William, 29 Norfolk street
Wilkinson Thomas, 2 Sheffield road
Wilson Mrs. Ann, 134 Victoria street
Wood John M.A., D.L., J.P. Whitfield house
Wood Mrs. 100 St. Mary’s road
Wood Mrs. Samuel, Moorfield house
Wragg Mrs. 63 Norfolk street
Wragg Samuel, Sheffield road
Wright Thomas J. 20 Fitzalan street
Wyatt Joseph, Turn Lees road

COMMERCIAL.
Abraham Charles Arthur, steward to Lord Howard of Glossop, Estate offices, Spire Hollin
Adshead Frederick, Crown inn, 142 Victoria street
Allen Edward, mill manager, The Beeches, Charlestown rd
Allen Edwin, mill manager, Lee mount
Allen Eliza (Mrs.), beer retailer, 64 Chapel street
Allen William, Ring o’ Bells P.H. Old Cross
Allsopp David, woodman to Lord Howard, Ashton street
Amps & Shelton (Misses), ladies’ school, Primrose house
Anderson Alfred, tobacconist, 72 High street west
Armitage John, wholesale fruiterer, Victoria street
Arnold George, tailor, 10 Wood street
Arrowsmith James, clog & patten maker, 132 High st. wst
Arrundale Samuel, baker, 117 Victoria street
Ash Israel, apartments, 9 George street
Ashcroft Jane (Miss), dress maker, 98 Victoria street
Ashton & Golightly, provision dealers, 81 High st. west
Ashton George, draper & grocer, 8 Gladstone street
Ashton Matthew, umbrella maker, 44 High street west
Atkinson Annie (Miss), dress maker, 16 Wesley street
Atkinson William, grocer, 117 High street west
Bagshaw & Fielding,coach proprs. Surrey st.& Norfolk mws
Bagshaw Arthur, cabinet maker, 26 High street west
Bagshaw Henry, Station inn, Norfolk street
Bamford Clarie & Alice (Misses), confectioners, 62 & 64 High street west (Error, should be 64 & 66)
Bamforth & Barber (Misses), shopkprs. 2 Whitfield cross
Bamforth Sam, ironworks manager, Cambridge house, Surrey street
Bamforth William, confectioner, 136 Victoria street
Band Sarah (Mrs.), grocer, 27 Sheffield road
Barber Alice (Miss), confectioner, 92 High street west
Barber Joseph, Bridge inn P.H. Market street
Barber Thomas, shopkeeper, 96 High street east
Barker Ruth (Mrs.), shopkeeper, 43 King street
Barlow Betty (Mrs.), shopkeeper, 106 Victoria street
Barlow John, mill manager, 39 Charlestown
Barnes Jas. & Son, drapers & milliners, 31 & 33 High st. wst
Barton Robert, tailor, 76 Edward street
Bates Herbert, tripe dealer, 13 Hadfield place
Batty George, joiner, 45 Chapel street
Beard Elizabeth Ann (Mrs.), fancy drpr. 44 St. Mary’s rd
Beard Job, farmer, Kiddroyd farm
Beard John, draper & milliner, 3 High street west
Beard John, tripe dealer, 134 High street west
Beard Joseph, farmer, Whitfield moor
Beeley James, ironmonger, Gladstone street
Bennett George, news agent, 128 High street east
Bennett Richard, woollen draper, 70 Charlestown road
Bennett Robert, pork butcher & beer retailer, 90 Victoria st
Bennett Samuel, stone mason, 22 Mount street
Bennett Thomas W. bookkeeper, 124 Victoria street
Bentley Edwin J. pork butcher, 2 St. Mary’s road
Benton Sarah (Miss), shopkeeper, 2 Mount street
Berry Mary (Mrs.), sewing machine agent, 83 Hall street
Berry William, insurance agent, 9 Whitfield cross
Beswick Edmund, hair dresser, 220 High street west
Bickerdyke William, tailor, 1 Bank terrace
Bill Posting & Advertising Co. Lim. (John Kidd Hollingbery, sec.), Howard chambers, Howard street
Bingham Reuben, farmer, Brownhill farm
Boardman & Sons, wheelwrights & smiths, High st. east
Boardman Wm. H. confectioner, 65 High street east
Boon Thomas, shopkeeper, 70 Freetown
Booth & Simpson, grocers, 59 Charlestown road
Booth Alice (Mrs.), confectioner, 76 High street east
Booth Frank, compositor, 128 Victoria street
Booth John, tobacconist, 81 High street east
Booth Nancy (Mrs.), farmer, Hobroyd
Booth Wright, brewery traveller, Rose cottage, North rd
Boots Lim. chemists (Thos. Brown, mgr.), High st. west
Bordan James W. watch maker, 23 High street east
Bowden Alice (Mrs.), shopkeeper, 16 King street
Bowden John, hardware dealer, oil merchant & tripe dresser, 1 Collier street
Bowden John Wood, relieving & vaccination officer, Fern house, Howard street
Bowden Joseph, grocer, 36 Church street
Bowden Joseph, shopkeeper, 128 St. Mary’s road
Bowden Lemuel, joiner, Bernard street
Bowden Mary (Mrs.), shopkeeper, 199 High street east
Bowden Samuel, farmer, Heath
Bowden Thomas Swindells, registrar of births, deaths & marriages, & clerk to the guardians,& school attendance & assessment committees of Glossop union, & clerk to Glossop Dale rural district council, 3 Well gate
Bowden William James M.B., Ch.B.Vict. surgeon & medical officer for the union, Glossop district, The Poplars, & Norfolk street
Bowden William, ironmonger, 1 High street east
Bowden Wm, Hy. builder & timber merchant, Howard st
Boyde Elizabeth (Mrs.), shopkeeper, 88 Victoria street
Boyer Alice (Mrs.), dress maker, 45 Charlestown road
Bradbury Albert, farmer, Whitfield green
Bradbury Charles, butcher, 141 Victoria street
Bradbury Edwin, shopkeeper, 10 Gladstone street
Bradbury John, butcher, 28 Princess street
Bradbury Martha (Mrs.), grocer, 1 Charlestown road
Bradbury Robert, hair dresser, 6 Victoria street
Bradbury Robert, painter, 133 High street east
Bradbury Thomas, chemist, 1 High street west
Bradbury Thomas E. grocer, 16 Princess street
Bradbury William,gamekeeper to Lord Howard of Glossop, Sheffield road
Braddock Eli & Son, estate agents, 73 High street east
Braddock George, insurance agent, 70 Simmondley lane
Braddock Walter, cycle maker, 74 High street east
Bradley George, beer retailer, 5 Bernard street
Bradley George, Prudential Insurance agent, 131 Hall st
Bradley John, shopkeeper, 56 Arundel street
Bradley John R. beer retailer, 38 High street west
Bradley Ralph, beer retailer, 99 High street east
Bramall James, salesman, Spire Hollin
Bramhall John, saddler, 75 High street west
Bramwell Luke, confectioner, 98 High street west
Bramwell Ruth (Mrs.), shopkeeper, 11 Shrewsbury street
Bridge James, borough & watch rate collector &; collector to the union, 11 Hadfield place
Briggs & Jowett (Misses), confectioners, 46 High st. west
British & Colonial Meat Co. butchers, 71 High st. west
Brodhurst Elizabeth Ann (Miss), dress maker, 10 John st
Brooks George, greengrocer, 96 High street west
Brown & Co. woollen drapers, 30 High street west
Brown George, caretaker of Masonic lodge, 12 Norfolk sq
Brown John, boot maker & repairer, 121 High street west & 34 Victoria street
Brown Louise (Miss), dress maker, 12 Norfolk square
Brownson George Limited, tailors, 2 High street east
Buckley James & Co. pawnbrokers, 13 High street west
Buckley James, shopkeeper, 42 Arundel street
Buckley James, beer retailer, 1 Surrey street
Buckley Joseph Edwin, grocer, 123 High street west & 52 Hollin Cross lane
Bunn Herbert, confectioner, 84 High street west
Bunting Joseph, hair dresser, 13 Victoria street
Bunting Joseph Hague, photographer, 103 Victoria street
Burkhard Charles, pork butcher, 65 High street west
Buxton Bennett, farmer, Whitfield Barn
Buxton William, farmer, Hurst farm
Carnall Robert, farmer, Hobroyd
Carrington Joseph, confectioner, 62 Victoria street
Carrington William, shopkeeper, 64 Victoria street
Cemetery (Hadfield) (F. W. G. Moran, clerk); offices, Norfolk street
Chadwick John C. pawnbroker & boot & shoe dealer, 45 High street west (error in original directory, Chadwicks occupied numbers 41 & 43)
Chapman Henry, police sergeant, 49 Norfolk street
Charlesworth Alfred, Norfolk Arms hotel, Norfolk square
Charlesworth Frederick, Junction inn, 379 High st. west
Charlesworth George, butcher, 36 High street west
Charlesworth Joseph, builder, 19 Shrewsbury street
Charlesworth William, butcher & contractor, 244 High st. we
Clarke James, pork butcher, 9 High street east
Clowes Mary (Mrs.), shopkeeper, 237 High street west
Cluskey Elizabeth (Mrs.), house furnisher, 21 High st. east
Collier Edwin, certified bailiff under the “Law of Distress Amendment Act,” Sheffield road
Collier John, greengrocer, 40 Kershaw street
Compton James, tailor, 48 Pike's lane
Conner Helen (Miss), milliner, 110 High street west
Conner Henry, drysalter, 32 St. Mary’s road
Conner John, shopkeeper, 271 High street west
Connor Alfred, shopkeeper, 12 Milltown
Connor Patrick, beer retailer, 25 Arundel street
Cooper Moses & Sons, tailors & drapers, 28 High st. west
Cooper Cephas, shoe maker, 11 Victoria street
Cooper Mark, insurance agent, Simmondley lane
Cooper Wiliam, Commercial inn, Charlestown
County Court Office (His Honor S. D. Waddy Q.C. Judge; Charles Davis, registrar & high bailiff), Ellison street
Craigh Elizabeth (Miss), dress maker, 21 Norfolk street
Crannage Annie (Miss), dress maker, 4 Railway street
Crannage Mary (Mrs.), watch & clock ma. 6 High st. west
Crossland Wm. W. cotton waste dlr. Arundel Street mill
Crossley Humphrey, draper, 52 High street west
Cuthbert John, tobacconist, 80 High street west
Dacre Ann (Mrs.), shopkeeper, 88 Kershaw street
Dale George, news agent, 90 Victoria street
Dane Samuel sanitary & lighting inspector to the corporation, Primrose lane
Darlington Edward, income tax collector, 9 Lord street
Darwent William Henry, ironmonger & gas & water fitter, & sec. to Conservative Club, 7 Victoria street
Darwent Frank, insurance agent, 19 Lord street
Darwent Jane (Mrs.). shopkeeper, 76 Freetown street
Darwent Joseph, stone mason, 100 Victoria street
Darwent Nathaniel, farmer, Bitten hill
Davis Charles, solicitor & coroner for the Honor of Tutbury & clerk to the urban sanitary authority & school attendance committee & registrar of county court, Ellison street
Dearnaley Thos. ironmngr. & blacksmth. 125 High st. west
Dewsnap Joseph, shopkeeper, 35 Princess street
Dinting Church Club (Albert Bradbury, sec.), 33 Primrose lane
Dixon John & Son, coal merchants, Railway yard & Sheffield road
Dixon George Henry, coal dealer, 183 High street east & Railway yard
Dixon John, farmer, Pikes farm
Dixon William, coal merchant, Railway yard
Doodson Sarah & Harriet (Misses), drapers, 76 High st. we
Downing Wiliam, tea dealer, 8 Norfolk street
Downs David, park superintendent, Park lodge
Drake Aborgill (Miss), shopkeeper, 17 Victoria street
Dunkerley Frederick, hair dresser, 70 High street west
Dutton & Sons, decorators, 4 Shrewsbury street
Dutton Thomas, painter, 88 High street west
Dyson John, chapel kpr. (P. M.), 3 Shrewsbury street
Dyson Joseph, boot & shoe repairer, 269 High street west
Elliott Henry, farmer, Heath
Elliott Joseph, insurance agent, 42 Whitfield cross
Ellison Theo Walter, solicitor & clerk to county & borough magistrates & Glossop reservoir committee, Norfolk chambers, Norfolk street
Eversden & Co. Tobacconists, High street west
Eversden George, hatter, Town Hall buildings
Eversden John W. farmer, Lane head
Eversden John William, corn merchant, 16 High st. east
Eyre Abraham, farmer, Carr farm
Eyre Mary E. (Miss), draper, 74 High street west
Fairclough Walter Peake Mus.Bac., F.R.C.O. professor of music, Shaw street
Farnsworth Thomas & Annie (Miss), fruiterers, 114 High street west
Fearnaly James W. insurance agent, Collier street
Fielding Enoch & Son, watch & clock makers, 24 High st. we
Fielding Charles, builder & stone dealer, 37 Whitfield cross
Fielding Edward, shopkeeper, Shepley street
Fielding Edward, shopkeeper, 2 Wesley street
Fielding James, insurance agent, Kershaw street
Fielding John W. grocer & draper, 126 & 130 Pike’s lane
Fielding William Walton, shopkeeper, 20 Norfolk street
Fletcher Samuel, rate collector, 98 St. Mary’s road
Fletcher Sarah Ann (Mrs.), shopkeeper, 63 Victoria street
Ford Eliza (Mrs.), Surrey Arms P.H. 133 Victoria street
France James, butcher, 139 High street west
Free Library & Public Hall (Miss P. Warhurst, librarian), Fauvel road
Freetown Working Men’s Institute (George Woodcock, sec.), Kershaw street
Frith Ann (Mrs), shopkeeper, 165 High street west
Furniss Brook, Albion inn, 15 Victoria street
Garlick Edward, shopkeeper, 37 King street
Garlick James, beer retailer, Whitfield cross
Garlick Matthew & Albert, coal merchants, Railway yard & 52 High street east
Garner John, manager to Water works, 46 Church street
Garside Cyrus & Sons limited, timber, slate, tile & cement merchants, Glossop saw mills, Surrey street
Garside John, mineral water manufr. Fern ho. Howard st
Garside Joseph (Mrs.), farmer, Lees Hall farm, Turn Lee
Gas Co. (Joshua Sidebottom. cashier), Arundel street
Gill Elizabeth (Mrs.), insurance agent, 54 Whitfield cross
Glossop Carriage Co. Limited, undertakers & coach proprietors, Howard street
Glossop Conservative Club (William Henry Darwent, sec.), 26 Norfolk street
Glossop Cricket Club (E. Collier, Hollinwood (auctioneer), sec.), North road
Glossop Dale Chronicle & North Derbyshire Reporter (Glossop Dale Chronicle Printing & Publishing Co. Lim. proprietors; published friday), 18 Norfolk street
Glossop Dale Chronicle Printing & Publishing Co. Lim. (Frederick H. Brock, manager), 18 Norfolk street
Glossop Dale New Industrial Co-operative Society (John Hyde, sec.), Norfolk square; 369 High street west; 20 Charlestown road; 8 Hall st.; reg. offi. 2 Railway st
Glossop Dale Savings Bank (W. P. Evason, actuary) ; open on Fridays, 8 to 9 p.m. & Saturdays, 6 to 7 p.m. Howard chambers
Glossop Football Club (Mark Elliott & George H. Dale, secs.), North road
Glossop Ironworks Co. Lim. (Sam Bamforth, manager), Surrey street. T A “Iron,Glossop”; T N 11
Glossop Liberal Club (Charles Beard, sec.), Henry street
Glossop Richmond Building Society (John Kidd Hollingbery, sec.), Howard chambers
Glossop Working Men’s Club (Henry Boyd, sec.), St. Mary’s road
Goddard Ann (Mrs.), grocer, Charlestown
Goddard James, farmer, Hurst nook
Goddard John, auctioneer & valuer, 14 Hollincross lane
Goddard John, chip potato dealer, 9 Princess street
Goddard Joseph, broker & machine dealer, Edward street
Goddard Mary (Miss), news agent & tobacconist, 242 High street west
Goddard Stephen, builder, The Ashes
Goddard William, earthenware dealer, 240 High st. west
Goggins James, shopkeeper, 59 Bernard street
Golden Alfred Percival, chemist, 48 High street west
Goldthorpe Ben, Talbot inn, 25 Hall street
Goldthorpe Elizabeth (Mrs.), beer retailer, 33 Charles st
Gray Thomas, grocer, 38 Pike’s lane
Gregory Samuel, farmer, Moorfield
Greenwood Edwin, stationer & bookseller, 57 High st. east
Greenwood John, farmer & stone merchant, Tan Yard frm
Griffiths Wm. G. boot & shoe maker, 14 High street west
Groves William, commercial traveller, Turn Lee road
Gubbin Ernest Sargent F.R.C.V.S.Lond. veterinary surgeon, Fauvel road
Hadfield Thomas & Son, drapers & outfitters,15 High st. we
Hadfield Amelia (Miss), confectioner, 20 High st. east
Hadfield Charles, farmer, Bank bottom
Hadfield Edna (Miss), dress maker, 81 Charlestown road
Hadfield Eli, grocer, 105 High street east
Hadfield Henry, farmer, Cliffe road
Hadfield James, Arundel Arms P.H. Cemetery road
Hadfield John, wire mattress maker, Hadfield street
Hadfield Joseph, carrier, 53 Norfolk street
Hadfield Joseph, coal merchant, Railway yard
Hadfield Joseph, greengrocer, 16 Norfolk street
Hadfield Joseph, shoe maker, 97 High street east
Hadfield Joseph, tobacconist, 63 High street east
Hadfield Samuel, mill manager, Fern bank
Hadfield Walter, boot & shoe maker, Whitfield cross
Hadfield William H. bookkeeper, 19 Fauvel road
Haigh Matthew, shopkeeper, 11 Arundel street
Haigh William, shopkeeper, Hague street
Hall John & Son, drapers, High street west
Hall Charles, tailor & draper, Leeds ho. High street west
Hall Hugh, boot maker, 8 Chapel street
Hall James, grocer, 146 St. Mary’s road
Hall John, blacksmith, 14 Howard street
Hall Joseph, hair dresser, 140 St. Mary’s road
Hall Joseph, shoe maker, 201 High street east
Hall Robert, cabinet maker, 1a, Gladstone street
Hall Thomas, chip potato dealer, 142 St. Mary’s road
Hallman Elizabeth (Mrs.), shopkeeper, 27 Bernard street
Hambleton John, mill manager, 91 Primrose lane
Hamnett Jas. & Son, watch & clock makers, 14a High st. ea
Hampshire Harriet (Mrs.), shopkeeper, 9 Gladstone st
Hampshire Joseph, shopkeeper, 89 Gladstone street
Hampson John, farmer, 2 Hague street, Whitfield
Handford William, Hare & Hounds P.H. 27 Hall street
Hardman John, dentist, 11 Norfolk square
Hare James, fancy draper, 51 High street west
Harris William, chip potato dealer, Hall street
Harrison Abel, coal merchant, Railway street; & at Broadbottom; Dinting & Hadfield railway stations
Harrison Charles Smith, grocer & corn dlr. 122 High st. wst
Harrison Thomas, beer retailer, 78 High street west
Harrison Walter, farmer, Jumble farm
Harrop John, patent medicine vendor, 71 High street east
Hawke Robert George, architect, Norfolk square
Hayes Thomas, insurance agent, 96 St. Mary’s road
Haynes Thomas, surveyor to corporation, Town hall, High street west & Fauvel road
Haywood Elizabeth (Miss), shopkeeper, 34 Princess street
Heap Joseph, grocer, 51 Victoria street
Heckingbottom Emma (Mrs.), shopkeeper, 4 Primrose la
Helm Fred, grocer & tobacconist, 36 High street east
Henkinson William, schoolmaster, 27 Norfolk street
Hersum David, shopkeeper, 17 Hope street
Hesketh Richard, Surrey Arms hotel, 67 High street west
Hewett William, shoe maker, 8 Collier street
Hibbs Hannah (Mrs.), shopkeeper, 213 High street west
Higginbottom John Sml, draper & milliner, 17 High st. we
Higginbottom William, draper, 2 Victoria street
Higton Frank, insurance agent, 69 St. Mary’s road
Hill David, insurance agent, Hadfield place
Hill Hugh, farmer, The Hurst, Bridgefield
Hill Samuel, painter, 46 Howard street
Hill William, baby linen dealer, 94 High street west
Hinchcliffe John & Co. coal merchants, Railway yard
Hinchcliffe Henry, stone dealer, 5 Lord street & Blake quarry, Blackshaw Clough
Hinchliffe Smith, news agent, 131 High street west
Hodgson John Gregory, head constable of borough police, inspector of hackney carriages & captain of fire brigade, Police office, Ellison street
Holdgate Wm. & Bros, florists & seedsmen, 23 Fitzalan st
Holdgate James & Sons, painters, glaziers &c. 149 High street west
Holdgate Thomas, shopkeeper, 5 Milltown
Holgate James, farmer, Bridgefield
Hollingbery John Kidd, chartered accountant, Howard chambers, Howard street
Hollins William, spring mattress maker, 6 Charles street
Holmes Frank, quarry master & dealer in paving setts, hewing stones &c. Lees Hall quarry, Turn Lee; res. Turn Lee
Howard Frederick, hair dresser, Market street
Howard George Frost, beer retailer, 13 Bernard street
Howard Sarah (Mrs.), farmer, Ashes
Howard William, joiner & builder, 27 Hadfield street
Hudson John G. confectioner, High street west & beer retailer, Market street
Hunter Thomas Pearson, draper, 9 High street west
Hunters The Teamen Limited, grocers, Town Hall bldgs. High street west
Hurst & Co. tailors, 18 High street east
Hurst T. W. & Co. corn merchants, Bernard street & 32 High street west
Hurst Sarah A. (Mrs.), shopkeeper, 16 George street
Hutts Limited, clothiers, 79 High street west (this is an error in the original directory, Hutts were at number 87)
Hyde Geo. milliner & fancy draper, 12 High street west
Hyde Walter, hatter & tobacconist, 34 High street west
Independent Order of Good Templars (meet every week at Good Templars’ room, Talbot street, Tuesdays 8 p.m.) (Samuel Wood L.D.), 15 Charles street
Ingerson Ann (Mrs.), dress maker, 6 Cross street
Ingerson John, tailor, 6 Cross street
Ingham Hannah (Mrs.), dress maker, 73 High street west
Ingham John, builder & contractor, Shrewsbury street
Irlam Wm. Hy. stationer, printr. & bookbndr. 55 High st. we
Irvine Wm. nurseryman, Hawkshead Nursery gardens, Old Glossop
Jackson Charles, draper, 106 Pike’s lane
Jackson Fredk. boot & shoe repairer, 45a, Edward street
Jackson Isaac, belt fastener manufacturer, Norfolk street
Jackson James C. manager of Manchester & County Bank, Norfolk square
Jackson James, tobacconist, 112 Victoria street
Jackson Levi & Son, rope, twine & cotton band manufacturers & farmers, Hobroyd & Bridgefield
Jackson Sarah A. (Miss), shopkeeper, 22 Primrose lane
Jackson Thomas, shopkeeper, 6 Chapel street
Jacobs Charles, shopkeeper, 5 Freetown
James Francis, joiner, Ash grove, Sheffield road
James Thomas, plumber & glazier, 10 Silk street
James William H. Manor inn, 77 High street east
Jepson John, agent for Bradbury's sewing machines, 54 Pike’s lane & 33 Princess street
Joule James, beer retailer, 178 High street east
Jowett Harriet Ann (Miss), confectnr. see Briggs & Jowett
Keate Alex, pianoforte warehouse, 102 High street west
Keightley John Charles, draper, 118 Victoria street
Kenny Margt. (Mrs.), confctnr. & dress ma. 6 High st. east
Keate Alex, pianoforte warehouse, 102 High street west
Kenworthy Albert E. chip potato dealer, 112 High street ea
Kenworthy Elizabeth (Miss), draper, 14 High street east
Kenyon Thomas T. manager of the Manchester & Liverpool District Bank & borough treasurer & treasurer to the union & rural district council, Norfolk square
Kenyon Walter, clogger, 68 High street west
Kershaw John, clogger, 138 Victoria street
Kinder Walter & Sons, slaters & plasterers, 35 Sumner st
Kinder George, grocer, 198 High street west
Kinder Henry, chemist & dentist, 85 High street west
Knott Samuel, farmer, Hurst
Knott Walter, shopkeeper, 108 Victoria street
Knowles Francis Gordon, solicitor, Howard street
Lamb Joseph, fishmonger, 84 Victoria street
Lancashire Cash Bakery Limited, bakers, 15 Shrewsbury st
Lancaster Elizh. (Mrs.), Wheat Sheaf P.H. 16 WelIgate
Large Samuel, milliner, 8 High street east
Latham & Co. grocers, 120 Victoria street
Lawton John, tinplate worker, 17 & 19 Well gate
Leach Frederick, pie maker, 10 High street west
Ledwick John, boot & shoe repairer, 1 Cemetery lane
Lee Hannah & Clarice (Misses), confectioners, 104 High street west
Lee George, fried fish dealer, 129 High street east
Leighton Randle, umbrella repairer, 102a Victoria street
Lester James, fruiterer, 142 High street west
Lewis Esther (Miss), baby linen dealer, 24 High street ea
Little Robert C. farmer, Dinting Vale farm
Little Robert, insurance agent, 68 Simmondley lane
Littlewood Dick, yeast dealer, Surrey street
Lockwood Thomas, coal merchant, Railway yard
Longden Alfred, farmer & stone engraver, Cemetery road
Longstone William, shopkeeper, 106 Charlestown
Lowe Moses, Grapes inn, 305 High street west
Lyne Hannah (Mrs.), beer retailer, 21 Charlestown road
Mackenzie Duncan John M.D., C.M. surgeon & medical officer of health to Glossop urban sanitary authority & Glossop Dale rural district council, Loch Maree, North rd
McMellon Lydia (Mrs.), dress maker, 6 Wood street
McMellon William, tailor & draper, 18 High street west
Mahew Thomas, Rose & Crown P.H. 89 High street west
McMillan Ruth (Mrs.), tripe dealer, 61 High street east
Malkin J. & E. T. corn millers, High street east
Manchester & County Bank Lim. (branch) (James C. Jackson, manager), Norfolk square; draw on Union Bank of London Limited, London E C
Manchester & Liverpool District Banking Co. Limited (branch) (Thomas T. Kenyon, manager), Norfolk sq. ; draw on London office, 75 Cornhill E C
Marsden Herbert, farmer, Lane side
Marsden Joseph, chip potato dealer, 140 Victoria street
Marsden Thomas, shopkeeper, 40 Church street
Marsden William, shopkeeper, 29 Hollin Cross lane
Marshall Thomas, hosier, 86 High street west
Mason Joseph, deputy supt. registrar, Norfolk square
Massey David, assistant overseer, 62 High street east
Mawson Thomas, saddler & harness maker, 8 Norfolk sq
Mawson Thomas, shopkeeper & beer retailer, 28 Freetown
May Thos. & Sons, basket & skip makers, 53 Victoria st
May Amos, skip maker, 59 High street east
May John, skip maker, Shrewsbury street
Maxwell John, mill manager, Lee mount
Melia Daniel & Co. Lim. tea merchants, 11 High st. west
Mellor Clara (Mrs.), shopkeeper, 9 Chapel street
Mellor Josiah, auctioneer, 42 High street west
Mellor Tom, brass & iron founder, George street
Merry Jas. ironmongr. plumbr. & gasfitter,34 High st. east
Metcalfe Sarah (Mrs.), confectioner, 112 High st. west
Middleton Henry, joiner, builder & undertaker, John st
Middleton Thomas, boot maker, 114 Victoria street
Miller Thomas & Co. grocers, 50 High street west
Milner & Robinson, grocers, 38 Queen street
Mitchell Julian, surgeon-dentist, 35 Norfolk street
Moore Martha (Mrs.), beer retailer, 25 High street east
Monks James, farmer, Whitfield cross
Moran Frederick W. G. solicitor & commissioner for oaths, Norfolk street
Moran Wm. J. G. chemist & drysalter, 7 High st. west
Morley John, Globe inn, 144 High street west
Morley Joseph, grocer, 50 Church street
Narny Michael, shopkeeper, 273 High street west
Needham Joseph, shopkpr. & postmaster, 20 Wellgate
Needham Joseph, saddler, 56 Church street
Nelson John, tailor, 22 High street east
Nelson Robert M.D., M.Ch. surgeon, Norfolk street
Newton Charles, beer retailer, 17 Gladstone street
Newton David, shopkeeper, 219 High street west
Newton Thomas, herbalist, 26 Princess street
Newton William, grocer, 45 Bernard street
Nicholls George, beer retailer, 277 High street west
Nicol Alex. Campbell L.R.C.P.Lond., M.R.C.S.Eng. surgeon, 93 High street west
Nield James, boot & shoe maker, 20 High street west
Nield Thomas, market inspr. & water rate collctr. North rd.
North Derbyshire & North Cheshire Advertiser (Advertiser Printing & Publishing Co. Lim. publishers & proprietors ; pub. friday), Howard street
Nuttall George, Howard Arms, 17 High street east
Ogden Kay. insurance agent, 25 Lord street
Oldham Hannah (Mrs.), shopkeeper, 163 High street east
Oldham Jsph. Edwd. professor of music, 2 Turn Lee road
Olive & Partington, paper makers, paper stainers & tin foil manufacturers, Turn Lee & Dover mills; & 11 Newmarket lane, Manchester
Oliver Ruth (Mrs.), shopkeeper, 103 High street east
Oliver Walter, ironmonger, 39 High street west
Ollerenshaw Abel, herbalist, 136 High street west
Ollerenshaw George, plasterer, 85 Primrose lane
Ollerenshaw John, slater & plasterer, 30 Talbot street
Ollerenshaw John, farmer, Cross Cliffe
Ollerenshaw John, farmer, 60 Hague street, Whitfield
Orme Joseph, draper, 197 High street west
Osborne George, butcher, 143 Gladstone street
Page Solomon, hair dresser & tobacconist, 6 Norfolk street
Partington Edward, paper manufr. see Olive & Partington
Phillips A. & J. carriers, 4 Fauvel rd. & 39 Surrey street
Phillips John, shopkeeper, 17 Freetown
Pickford Alfred, baker, 106 Gladstone street
Pickford Job, chipped potato dealer, 82 High street west
Pickford Lot, greengrocer, 56 High street west
Pilkinton Peter, Bee Hive inn, 35 Hague street
Platt Benjamin & Son, grocers & drapers, 119, 121 & 123 High street east
Platt George, butcher, 49 High street west
Platt Fred, chip potato dealer, 363 High street west
Platt James, coal merchant, 11 Railway street
Platt John, grocer, 12 Wellgate
Poole John Henry, tailor, 85 High street east
Porter Mira (Miss), shopkeeper, 147 Gladstone street
Pownall Martha (Miss), milliner, 9 Duke street
Public Baths (Anthony Dandyford, mgr.), Howard park
Public Weighbridge (Thos. Parr, weigher), Railway yard
Pye Julia (Mrs.), shopkeeper, 3 Duke street
Redfern Ann (Miss), glass & china dealer, 50 High st. west (Error, should be 56)
Redfern Isaac, shopkeeper, 35 Gladstone street
Redford Frederick, butcher, Turn Lee road
Redford Joseph, grocer, 70 Victoria street
Rhodes John H. insurance agent, 14 Derby street
Rhodes Thomas, school attendance officer to corporation, 67 High street east
Rider William, bookkeeper, 5 Charlestown road
Riley Sarah A. (Miss), dress maker, Simmondley lane
Riley Thomas, Bull’s Head P.H. 72 Church street
Riley William, shopkeeper, 92 Kershaw street
Roberts Charlotte (Mrs.), draper, 90 High street west
Roberts George, sec. to Shepley Mills Spinning Co. 16 Hollin Cross lane
Roberts Wm. Hy. calico printers’ designer, 23 Lord st
Robinson & Co. painters & glaziers, 62 High street west
Robinson James, painter, 2 & 4 Norfolk street
Robinson Mary (Mrs.), shopkeeper, 29 Hague st. Whitfld
Robinson Walter, draper, 12 & 14 Norfolk street
Robinson William, coal merchant, 12 Freetown
Rodley Sarah Elizabeth (Mrs.), stamp distributor, Post office, Norfolk square
Roe Jn. clerk of works to Lord Howard, 14 Wesley st
Rolan John, baker, 40 High street east
Ross Donald, foreman joiner, Surrey street
Rowbottom Herbert, mill manager, 70 Church street
Rowbottom .James, cotton spinner, Hurst mills
Rowbottom Maria (Mrs.), shopkeeper, 259 High st. west
Rowbottom Samuel, cotton spinner & band manufacturer, Meadow mills
Ruck William, shopkeeper, 191 High street west
Russell Mary J. (Miss), stationer, Whitfield post office, 113 Victoria street
Sale Harriet (Mrs.), beer retailer, 11 Chapel street
Salt Charles, greengrocer, 377 High street west
Schofield Alfred E. printer & stationer, Norfolk street
Schofield James, butcher, 83 High street east
Schofield John H. station master, 26 Howard street
Schofield Samuel, boot maker, 62 Pike’s lane
Scholes Albert, butcher, 119 High street west
Scholes John C. cashier at Lord Howard’s estate offices, 49 Sheffield road
Sellers Squire, draper, 3, 5 & 7 High street east
Shaw Tom, umbrella repairer, 287 High street west
Shawcross Joseph, shopkeeper, 137 Gladstone street
Shelton Summers, ladies’ school, see Amps & Shelton
Shephard Charles, provision dealer, 130 High st. east
Shepherd John, farmer, Mossy Lee
Shepherd William, shopkeeper, 59 Charlestown road
Shepley Mill Cotton Manufacturing Co. Limited (George Roberts, sec.), Shepley mill
Sheppard Martha (Mrs.) & Son, mineral water manufacturers, Shrewsbury street
Sheppard William H. farmer & furniture remover, Ashes & Howard street
Sherlock John W. yarn tester, Turnlee road
Shreeve Walt, butcher, 29 High st. west & 110 Victoria st
Siddons Joseph, farm bailiff to Lord Howard of Glossop, Blackshaw farm
Sidebottom Albert, pianoforte warehouse, 22 High st. west
Sidebottom Arthur, mill manager, 28 High street east
Sidebottom Joshua, sec. to Gas Co. 31 Norfolk street
Sidebottom Peter, gas company’s collector, 15 Princess st
Sidebottom Ralph Bennett L.R.C.P., L.R.C.S. & L.M, Edin., M.R.C.S.Eng. surgeon, & medical officer for Whitfield district, & public vaccinator for the union, 20 Hollin Cross lane
Sidebottom Samuel, Greyhound inn, Hope street
Sims Henry, salesman, York terrace
Skelton Cooper, beer retailer, 16 Chapel street
Skelton John, sand merchant, Whitfield cross
Slater Charles, hair dresser, 138 High street west
Smallpage James E. shopkeeper, 164 High street west
Smith Charles Lewis, cabinet maker, 55 High street east
Smith Edward, boot & shoe maker, 47 High street west
Smith Emma (Mrs.), ladies’ seminary, 55 High st. east
Smith James, draper, 38 High street east
Smith John, shopkeeper, 49 Hollin Cross lane
Smith Thos. commercial traveller, Turnlee ho. Turnlee rd
Smith William, boot & shoe maker, 35 & 37 High st. west
Stafford Samuel, beer retailer, 14 Milltown
Stagg & Son, wholesale wine & spirit mers. 8 Norfolk sq
Steel Elijah, greengrocer, 76 Victoria street
Still John, Commercial inn, 137 Hall street
Sumner Francis & Co. Lim. cotton spinners & manufacturers (William Thorpe, manager), Wren Nest mills
Swan Joseph, farmer, 16 Hague street, Whitfield
Swann George, watch & clock maker, 238 High st. west
Swinborn Thomas, grocer, 1 Edward street
Swire John & Son, boot & shoe makers, 8 High st. west
Swire Henry, boot & clog maker, 21 Victoria street
Swire William, fancy draper, & agent for W. & A. Gilbey Lim. wine & spirit merchants, 5 High street west
Sykes Robert Woolley & Son, auctioneers, 100 High st. we
Sykes Sarah (Mrs.),Royal Oak P.H. Sheffield road
Sykes William, shopkeeper, 218 High street west
Taylor Charles, Queen’s Arms P.H. 1 Shepley street
Taylor James E. house decorator, Hadfield street
Taylor John, farmer, Ashes
Taylor Robert, shopkeeper, 2 James street
Teasdale Albert, grocer, 45 High street west
Thom James, coal agent, 33 Norfolk street
Thompson Isaac, insurance agent, 117 Gladstone street
Thornhill William, general carrier, Silk street
Thornley Betty (Miss), grocer, 4 Charlestown road
Thornley Noah, butcher, 74 Victoria street
Thorp Walt, coal merchant, Norfolk square & Railway yrd
Thorp William, farmer, Hawkshead.
Tinker Henry, beer retailer, 120 Charlestown road
Tollerton John H. chip potato dealer, 11 Norfolk street
Tomlinson May (Miss), farmer, Turn Lee
Torkington’s Household Stores, grocers & tea dealers, 11 High street east
Town Hall, High street west
Traynor John, hair dresser, 19 Hadfield street
Trueman John, beer retailer, 40 Pikes lane
Turner Ephraim, fruiterer, 12a, High street east
Turner George, compositor, 130 Victoria street
Turner Isaiah, greengrocer, 53 High street east
Turner Manasseh, fruiterer, 26 High street east
Tweedale John William, solicitor & superintendent registrar, Norfolk square
Vernon Joseph, farmer, Whitfield green
Volunteer Battalion (4th), Cheshire Regiment (L, M & N Companies), Glossop Detachment (John Wood; V.D. hon. colonel commandant; Capt. G. Knowles,commanding L Co.; Capt. Arthur Sidebottom, commanding M Co. ; Capt. Samuel Hill Wood, commanding N Co.; Surgn.-Lieut. R. B. Sidebottom, medical officer; Oswald Partington, Ernest Sumner & Cyril Ellison, lieutenants; Rev. W. J. Canton, chaplain; Sergt.-Instructor, James Clancy); head quarters, Drill hall
Wain & Son, fancy drapers, 59 High street west
Walker Arthur, surgeon, 16 High street west
Walker Jacob, shopkeeper, 38 Kershaw street
Walmsley Thomas, shopkeeper, 12 Hague street, Whitfield
Walton John, bleacher, Charlestown works
Walton Richard F. drysalter, 14 Charlestown road
Walton William, bookkeeper, 26 Slatelands road
Ward Annie Eliza (Miss), dress maker, 29 Pike’s lane
Warhurst Alice (Mrs.), dress maker, 24 Howard street
Warrington Albert, butcher, 19 High street east
Warrington Jacob, beer retailer, Arundel street
Water Works (Jn. Garner, supt.; Thomas Neild, collectr)
Waterhouse Albert & Sons, pianoforte wareho. 60 Victoria st
Waterhouse James, decorator, 20 Wesley street
Waterhouse Jonathan, stationer, 130 High street west
Waterhouse Thomas, grocer, 25 Norfolk street
Watkins Thomas, shopkeeper, 140 High street west
Watkinson Mary Ellen (Miss), confectioner, 54 High st. we
Weavers' Association, Haigh terrace, Surrey street
Weetman Henry, mill manager, Wren Nest house
West End Working Men’s Club (Robert Tickle, president), 3 Arundel street
Wharmby George, oil & lamp dealer, 27 Hall street
Whiteley James William, draper, 197 High street east
Whitfield Church Reading Room (H.A. Broadhurst,sec.), 12 Charlestown road
Whitham John Thomas, photographer & news agent, 12 & 60 High street west
Whittingham Francis & Son, brush mas. 10 High st. ea
Wild Rachael (Mrs.), shopkeeper, 82 Gladstone street
Wild Samuel, shopkeeper, 9 Victoria street
Wilkin Joshua Thomas, plumber, 81 Norfolk street
Willey John William Crane, cabinet maker, 17 Norfolk st
Williamson James, shopkeeper, 4 James street
Willis Harriet (Mrs.), shopkeeper, 9 Charlestown
Wilson & Bates, aerated water manufactrs. King street
Wilson Richard, boot & shoe maker, 39 Sheffield road
Wood John & Brothers Limited, cotton spinners & manufacturers (David Taylor, sec.), Howard Town mills
Wood (Emma), parochial nurse ; Mrs. Cross, nurse, Hague street, Whitfield
Wood’s Hospital (T. S. Bowden esq. hon. sec.),Howard pk
Wood Charles, beer retailer, 3 Norfolk street
Wood Charlotte (Mrs.), shopkeeper, 87 High street east
Wood Hinchliffe, joiner & builder, Hadfield place
Wood Joel C. cashier, 30 Turn-lees road
Wood John, farmer, Derbyshire level
Wood John, farmer, Gnathole
Wood John, grocer & corn dealer, 25 High street west
Wood Joseph, butcher, 29 Gladstone street
Wood Peter, milliner, 53 High street west
Wood Samuel, shopkeeper & wheelwright, 13 Charles st
Wood Sarah (Mrs.), shopkeeper, 61 Hague st. Whitfield
Wood Thomas, carpenter & joiner, Spring pl. Turnlee rd
Wood Thomas, rag merchant, 6 Derby street
Woodcock George, fancy draper, 27 High street west
Woodcock Matthew, boot maker, 57 High street west
Woodhead. John, stone mer. 27 Hall st. & Law quarries
Woodhead William, chipped potato dealer, 185 High st. we
Woodhouse Ellen (Mrs.), butcher. 36 Church street
Woolley Edward, butcher, 77 High street west
Woolley Thomas, grocer, 61 High street west
Wright Henry, draper, 79 High street west
Wright Mary Ann (Mrs.), chipped potato dealer, 63 High street west
Wyatt Cephas, farmer, Blackshaw
Wylde Samuel, Market hotel, Market street

BBOOKFIELD.
Shepley Charles, Woffenden
COMMERCIAL.
Aldous Joshua, shopkeeper
Beaumont Joseph, grocer
Hawse Robert, chip potato dealer
McMath John, grocer
Moss Joseph, news agent
Robinson William, farmer
Rowbottom Alfred, monumental mason
Shephard Mary Ann (Mrs.), draper
Shepley John & William Lim. cotton spinners & manufrs. Brookfield mills
Walker William, Royal Oak P.H
Williams Thomas, milliner

CHUNAL.
Bann George, farmer, Monks’ road
Bann Jsph, frmr. Hollingworth head
Fielding Thos. farmer, Horse Shoe fm
Goddard Wm. Grouse inn, & farmer
Hadfield John, farmer
Neild Edwin, farmer
Shepley William, farmer
Shotwell James, farmer
Wood John, farmer. Gnat Hole farm

DINTING.
Bardsley Luke, Dinting lane
Barr John, Dinting lodge
Collier Rev. Edwin Chas. M.A. Vicarage
Hadfield Charles, Viaduct house
Huntzinger Alfred
Bradbury George & Co. grocers, 4 Dinting vale
Fielding Harold, farmer
Ford Samuel, farmer
Hadfield Charles, cashier at Messrs. E. Potter & Co.’s print works
Harrison Abel, coal & cannel factor, Railway station; & at Glossop
Harrison John, farmer
Jackson Geo. insur. agt. 7 Dinting vale
Moss Joseph, sub-postmaster
Pickford John Joseph, Plough inn
Platt Thomas, farmer, Hill top
Potter Edmund & Co. calico printers
Roberts Hannah (Mrs.), shopkeeper
Smith Irvine, Viaduct inn
West Elizabeth (Mrs.), shopkeeper
Wild John (Mrs.), farmer & carrier
Wood James, clogger

GAMESLEY.
Shepley Charles
COMMERCIAL.
Clayton Ben (Mrs.), farmer
Cooper George, butcher
Findlay Agnes (Miss), dress maker, Charlesworth road
Garlick Albert, Magnet inn
Garlick John, shopkpr. Cottage lane
Harrison Abel, coal mer. Railway yard
Johnson Sarah Ann (Mrs.), grocer
Marsden Moses, farmer
Needham Walter, farmer
Simpson John, farmer, Gamesley farm
Sykes Thomas Beard, slater & plastr
Thomley Andrew, farmer
Thomley John, farmer
Thorp Walter, coal mer. Railway yard
Turner James, farmer & greengrocer
Walker Jas. shopkpr. Cottage lane
Walton Jacob, farmer

HADFIELD.
PRIVATE RESIDENTS.
Bollans R. Wilfred M.B. Railway st
Booth Joseph, Hadfield road
Booth Thomas, Kent villa
Bramhall William, 56 Bank street
Buckley Henry, 2 Bross croft
Dawson Wiliam, Knowl house
Eastham James Cook, The Thorns
Garlick Robert, Holm Lea
Hadfield Rev. Joseph (vicar)
Kay Thomas, Green lane
Martin Rev. Joseph Ames (curate), Croft house
Platt Edward, Mersey bank
Rigge Fletcher, Rockley house
Sabela Right Rev. Monsignor Canon Hermann Jos. (Catholic)
Shaw John, Kent villa
Walsh Benjamin, Hadfield road
Whelan John Joseph, Hadfield road
White Wm. M.D., C.M. Hadfield road
COMMERCIAL.
Aldous Thomas, window blind manufactr. Hadfield road
Aldous William, farmer & shopkeeper, Main road
Atkinson Margaret (Miss), grocer, Church street
Bailey Mary (Mrs.), shopkeeper, 86 Platt street
Bamford James, tripe dresser, 53 Station road
Band James, insurance agent, Woolley bridge
Barker William, grocer, Hadfield road
Barlow William, Pear Tree hotel, Hadfield road
Battye J. W. & Sons, woollen drapers, 109 Station road
Belfield Alice (Miss), Anchor inn, Hadfield road
Bennett Thos. & Son, drapers & furn. dealrs. Station rd
Bennett Betsy (Mrs.), shopkeeper, Woolley bridge
Bennett Richard, boot maker, 20 Bank street
Bentham Jane (Mrs.), stationer. 47 Station road
Billinge Joseph, saddler, 108 Station road
Bollans R. Wilfred M.B., Ch.B. surgeon, & medical officer to Hadfield district, Glossop union, Railway street
Booth Henry, butcher, & grocer, 117 Station road
Bowden Annie (Mrs.). draper, 118 Station road
Braddock Thomas & Co. grocers, 111 Station road
Bramald Ellis, draper, 306 Hadfield road
Bramhall John, coal merchant. Station yard
Bratherton Richard, station master
Broadbent Elizabeth Ann (Miss), confctnr. 97 Station rd
Broadbent Ellen (Mrs.), shopkeeper, 52 Bross croft
Broadbent Peter, confectioner, 106 Waterside
Broadbent Zilpha (Miss), shopkeeper, 72 Bross croft
Brookes William, hair dresser, 33 Station road
Brooks Albert, greengrocer, 113 Station road
Butterfield Edwin, dentist, 65 Station road
Butterworth William, news agent, 22 Bank street
Buxton Thomas H. insurance agent, 31 Hadfield road
Chadwick William Thomas, pawnbroker, Station road
Challoner Samuel, grocer, 122 Station road
Charlton Ernest, draper, 72 Station road
Chevens John, farmer, Park road
Child Thomas, shopkeeper, Woolley bridge
Cooper John, inspector of police, Bankbottom
Corker Annie (Mrs.), Commercial inn, Bankbottom
Crawford David, Palatine & Railway hotel, Station road
Cuthbert William, beer retailer, 78 Station road
Dane Charles, outfitter, 121 Station road
Dawson William, plumber & painter, 85 Station road
Dearnaley James A. clog maker, 116 Station road
Dearnley David (Mrs.), beer retailer, Woolley bridge
Derbyshire Alfred Edward, decorator, Salisbury street & 150 Station road
Dewsnap John, farmer, Hadfield cross
Dickenson Albert, hair dresser, 150 Station road
Diggin Robert,chip potato dealer, Woolley bridge
Dixon Richard, tobacconist, 131 Station road
Downing William & Co. tea dealers, Station road
Duckworth Samuel, blacksmith, 36 Station road
Dunphey George, shopkeeper, 50 Bankbottom
Dutton James, beer retailer, 421 Hadfield road
Earnshaw Abraham, butcher, 43 Station road
Equitable Co-operative Society Limited (Jas. Harwood, sec.; Charles Loxley, treasurer). Station road & Woolley bridge; & Padfield & Tintwistle
Etchells H. & Co. grocers, 91 Station road
Eversden George Cooper, grocer, 102 Waterside
Fielding Ann (Miss), confectioner, 52 Station road
Fielding Herbert, grocer, 68 Station road
Firth Edward, shopkeeper, Woolley bridge
Firth Thomas, insurance agent, 58 Bank street
Garlick Esther A. (Mrs.), shopkeeper, Woolley Bridge rd
Gill Elizabeth (Mrs.), grocer, 49 Station road
Glossop & Hadfield Household Stores, grocers,27 Statn .rd
Goddard Elizabeth (Mrs.), milliner, 89 Station road
Gorst John, painters & decorators, Church street
Greaves James, boot maker, 24 Hadfield road
Greaves William, baker, 103 Station road
Hadfield & Hollingworth Coal Association Lim. (Thomas Sharpe, sec)
Hadfield Conservative Club Co. Limited (Levi Lee, sec)
Hadfield Liberal Club (William Hodkinson, sec)
Hadfield Thomas, draper, 84 Station road
Haigh William, boot & shoe maker, 9 Station road
Hall Thomas, watch maker, 31 Station road
Hammond William, shopkeeper, 1 Station road
Hampshire William, ironmonger, 51 Station road
Harrison Abel, coal & cannel factor, Station yard
Harrop Hugh, tailor, 25 Station road
Herbert Richard, furniture broker, 45 Station road
Hill Harriet (Mrs.), shopkeeper, Station road
Hill Mary (Mrs.), grocer, Woolley Bridge road
Hinchcliffe Benjamin, insurance agent, 10 Bross croft
Hinchcliffe Thomas John, stationer & news agent, 1a, Railway street
Hirst Mary Ann (Mrs.), draper, 96 Station road
Hodges Isaac, shopkeeper, 21 Hadfield street
Howarth George Frederick, draper, 62 Station road
Howarth Moses, confectioner, 27 Station road
Howbrook John, beer retailer, Waterside
Hoyland Miriam (Mrs.), ironmonger, Station road
Hunters The Teamen Limited, grocers, 39 Station road
Jagger & Fernaly, printers, 112 Station road
Jakeman Albert, stationer & news agent, 126 Station rd
Johnson Peter, herbalist, 84 Station road
Johnson Thomas, coal merchant, Station
Johnson Thomas, shopkeeper, 30 Bank street
Knowles Francis Gordon, solicitor, Station road
Jolly Kezia (Mrs.), Spinners’ Arms P.H. Marsden street
Lee L. & Co. grocers, 89 Hadfield road
Littlewood Fred, tripe dresser, 142 Station Toad
Livesley Squire, draper, 101 Station road
Lockwood Thomas, coal merchant, Station yard
Loxley John, farmer, Railway street
Manchester & Liverpool District Banking Co. Limited (branch) Station road; draw on London office, 75 Cornhill E C
Manchester & County Bank limited (branch), Station road: draw on Union Bank of London Lim. London E C
Martin William A. draper, 11, 13 & 55 Station road
Mason Thomas, clog maker, 35 Station road
Mason William James, boot & shoe ma. 115 Station road
Monk Evan, shopkeeper, 7 Station road
Moran William John, chemist, 15 Station road
Nadin William, confectioner, 152 Station road
Nelson Samuel, tailor, 74 Station road
Newton Samuel, general dealer, 103 Station road
Nuttall Joshua, shopkeeper, Railway street
Patchett Henry, butcher, 32 Station road
Potts James, builder & grocer, 2 & 12 Queen street
Powers Michael, provision dealer, 76 Station road
Poyner John, boot maker, 92 Station road
Public Weighing Machine (Charles Collier, weigher), Station yard
Redfern Job, hair dresser, Woolley bridge
Refuge Assurance Co. Limited, 127 Station road
Rhodes Thomas Limited, cotton spinners & manufacturers, Mersey mills
Richardson John M.P.S. chemist & drug stores, 9 Bankbottom
Rigge Fletcher, sec. at T. H. Sidebottom & Co.’s, Waterside mills
Robinson Alonzo, beer retailer, 41 Station road
Robinson Robert, shopkeeper, 93 Woolley Bridge road
Rothwell Rachel (Mrs.), dress maker, 34 Bank street
Rowbottom George, oil merchant, 38 Kiln lane
Sanderson Sarah (Mrs.), shopkeeper, 59 Hadfield road
Scholes James, butcher, 39 Railway st. & 97 Woolley Bridge road
Senior James H. tobacconist, 87 Station road
Shaw Annie (Mrs.), shopkeeper, Woolley bridge
Shaw Mary (Miss), shopkeeper, 80 Hadfield road
Shipman Lewis, shopkeeper, 37 Station road
Shufflebotham Joseph, clogger, 1a, Station road
Siddall Mary J. (Miss), dress maker, 1 Church street
Sidebottom T. H. & Co. Lim. cotton spinners & manfrs. Waterside mills & Bridge mills
Skelton John, shopkeeper, 5 Bross croft
Smallpage & Go. grocers & beer retailers, Waterside
Spencer Elijah, apartments, Woolley bridge
Stewart Robert, Spread Eagle P.H. Woolley bridge
Storey John Woodcock, builder, Station road
Sutton Thomas, stone mason, Railway street
Swire John, clogger, Woolley bridge
Swire William, draper & agent for W. & A. Gilbey Lim. wine & spirit merchants, 119 Station road
Taylor Abel, confectioner, 129 Station road
Taylor John, Woolley Bridge inn, Woolley bridge
Taylor Robert, fruiterer, 21 Station road
Thompson James, shopkeeper, 128 Station road
Thompson James, stationer & news agent, 82 Station rd
Thomley Arthur, taxidermist, 49 Bankbottom
Thornley Emily (Miss), milliner, 307 Hadfield road
Thorpe John, Victoria hotel, Bross croft
Thorney Deborah (Mrs.), shopkeeper, 79 Station road
Thorne Walter, coal merchant, Station yard
Torkington Charles Henry, tripe dresser, 10 Station road
Torkington Samuel, fried fish dealer & fishmonger, 17 & 69 Station road
Toulson William, draper & outfitter, 77 Station road
Wain Eliza (Mrs.), shopkeeper, 103 Hadfield road
Walker Elliott Morton, draper, 105 & 107 Station road
Walmsley Thomas, machine repairer, Woolley bridge
Walsh William, grocer, 154 Station road & 8 Bank street
Wardle Albert, butcher, 94 Station road
Warrington Israel & Son, grocers, Green lane
Webb John W. hair dresser & shopkeeper, 1 Salisbury street & 106 Station road
Whelan John Joseph L.S.A. surgeon, Hadfield road
White William M.D., C.M. physician, Hadfield road
Wibberley Denman, butcher, 3 Station road
Wild Thomas, farmer, Thyerbarn, Woolley bridge
Wilde John, blacksmith, 73 & 75 Station road
Willerton Emma (Mrs.), draper, Woolley bridge
Willis Charles, .boot & shoe maker, 125 Station road
Wishart Jessie (Miss), draper, 148 Station road
Woodcock Matthew, boot & shoe maker, 44 Station road
Woodhouse Samuel, butcher, 112 Station road
Woolley Bridge Working Men’s Club (Walter Dearnaley, sec.), Woolley bridge
Woolley Edward, butcher, Woolley bridge
Woolley George, butcher, Station road
Woolley Thomas, shopkeeper, Woolley bridge
Worsley Arthur, joiner, 42 Bross croft
Worsley Henry, shopkeeper & commission agent, 40 Bross croft
Worth Henry, draper, 124 Station road
Wright Ellis & Son, hearth rug makers, Salisbury street
Wright James, postmaster, 72 Station road
Wyatt Mary A. (Mrs.), chemical manufacturer, Bross croft
Youles Robert, shopkeeper, Woolley bridge

PADFIELD.
Handforth James
Mapp Charles
Platt William, Padfield brook
Sargentson Mrs. Rosey Bank house
Sargentson William, Glenthorne
COMMERCIAL.
Ashton Ann (Mrs.), shpkpr. 77 Platt st
Bamford Samuel, Prince of Wales hotel
Bennett John Thomas, shopkeeper
Bennett Joseph, farmer, Brook farm
Bennett Joseph, farmer, Old House
Booth Albert, farmer, Windy Arbor
Booth William, Peel’s Arms Hotel
Bowden Edward, farmer, Torside
Bowden Hy. chip potato dlr. Temple st
Brierley Harry, farmer
Broadbent Samuel, farmer & shopkpr
Brookes Willis, shopkeeper
Brown Elizabeth (Mrs.), shopkeeper, 15 Lees row
Carver Joe, farmer
Darley John W. shopkpr. 15 Post st
Equitable Co-operative Society Lim. (James Harwood, sec.; Charles Loxley, treasurer)
Goddard Jabez Solomon, farmer, Little Padfield
Greenwood Edwd. Higher Deepclough
Greenwood Hy. farmer & tripe dresser
Hewitt George, shopkeepr. 12 Platt st
Handforth James, cashier at Messrs. Thomas Rhodes & Son, Hadfld. mills
Howker Harriet (Mrs.), shpkpr. Platt st
Lyne Robert, confectioner
Oldfield Mark, farmer, Deep Clough
Padfield Liberal Club (Frank Sargentson, sec)
Platt E. & Co. grocers & tea dealers, 61 Platt street
Platt Edwd. Lim. cotton manufactrs
Platt Edward, butcher
Rhodes Thomas & Son, cotton spinners & manufctrs. Hadfield mills
Sargentson Jas. cotton waste dealer & blowing manufacturer
Turner Wm. wheelwright, 141 Platt st
Waterhouse Jsph. fruiterer, 24 Platt st
Whitehead Matthew, fancy draper & newsvendor, 16 Platt street
Wild Charles, shopkeeper, 1 Post street

Navigation

Button image GJH.me Home Page. Button image History Resources Page.


Last updated: 13 August 2020