Kelly's Derbyshire Directory 1881
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, township parish,
polling-place for North Derbyshire, and railway station, 192½
miles by rail from London (King’s Cross), from 9½
Ashton, 24¼ 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 Staley bridge, 11
from Stockport, 53 from Uttoxeter and 72 from Wolverhampton. It is in
High Peak hundred, rural deanery of Castleton, archdeaconry of Derby
and diocese of Lichfield, situate on the borders of Cheshire. The
parish contains the townships of Glossop Dale, Hadfield, Padfield,
Whitfield, Charlesworth, Simmondley, Dinting, Chunal, Ludworth and
Chisworth.
The
borough is divided into three wards, viz. All Saints, Hadfield and
St. James’s. The corporation consists of a mayor, 6 aldermen,
and 18 councillors.
The
Manchester, Sheffield and Lincolnshire Railway is carried across
Dinting Vale on a lofty viaduct of sixteen arches, constructed of
stone, about a mile west from the town hall.
The
parish of All Saints, Glossop, is now divided into four - (1) the old
parish of Glossop, All Saints; (2) the parish of Whitfield, St.
James; (3) the parish of Hadfield, St. Andrew; (4) the parish of
Dinting, Holy Trinity. The ancient parish church of All Saints,
pulled down in 1824, consisted of chancel, clerestoried nave, north
and south aisles, porch and tower with spire: the style was
principally Perpendicular, but included portions of earlier work,
from Norman downwards. The present church is a modern Gothic edifice,
consisting of a chancel with lancet windows, a nave of one span,
surrounded on three sides by galleries, a vestry and organ chamber,
erected by the present vicar and a tower containing: 8 bells, re-hung
during the past year and a chiming apparatus attached, at a cost of
£180, with spire rebuilt in 1856 : there is a stained east
window of three lights 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 during the past year a new set of plate
has been contributed by the parishioners. In addition to the churches
above mentioned, there are in the ancient parish of Glossop the old
chapelries of Hayfield and Mellor,the new parish churches of
Charlesworth and New Mills, and the new district church of Limedale,
comprising the townships of Chinley, Bugsworth and Brownside: the
churchyard is closed except for interments in walled graves where
there may be room. There is a burial board and a cemetery with
separate chapels for Churchmen, Nonconformists and Catholics. The
register dates from the year 1620. The living is a vicarage, yearly
value £280, with residence, in the gift of Lord Foley, and held
by the Rev. John Dickenson Knowles M.A. of St. Peter’s College,
Cambridge.
Among
the more recent vicars of Glossop, mention deserves to he made of the
Rev. Christopher Howe, born at Threlkeld, in Cumberland, July 1st,
1765, incumbent of this living from 1793 to 1849, and for 40 years
also incumbent of Woodhead in Cheshire: he was appointed to the
vicarage of Glossop by the Hon. and Rev. Edward Harcourt, then Bishop
of Carlisle and afterwards Archbishop of York, and during his long
and laborious ministry, more than 46 years of which were passed
without assistance, he established a day school at Glossop, in which
he personally taught, and partly rebuilt the parish church: he died
September 1st and was buried September 7th, 1849, in the 85th year of
his age and the 57th of his vicariate of Glossop. Not less venerable
for the number of his days and the prolonged character of his public
services, was Mr. Charles Winterbottom, who died at the age of 87
years and 7 months, having been for upwards of 60 years sexton and
clerk of the parish of Glossop; the united official service of both
covers, as will be seen, the almost fabulous period of 116 years.
The
Unitarians, Congregationalists, the Associated Methodists, the
Primitive Methodists and the Wesleyans have each a chapel.
Near
Glossop Hall stands the Catholic chapel of All Saints, a building in
the Classic style, erected by the late Duke of Norfolk in 1831, and
containing many valuable paintings.
There
is a Cemetery of six acres, with mortuary chapels, for members of the
Church of England, Nonconformists and Catholics.
There
are Charities of £60 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.
Here
are cotton manufactories, and in the neighbourhood, calico printing
establishments and paper mills: some of the former, and especially
those of Messrs. John Wood and Brothers limited, and of Mr Francis J.
Sumner, are amongst the largest in the kingdom, 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, with quaint old diamond shaped
window panes still remains.
At
Dinting Vale are perhaps the largest calico printing works in the
United Kingdom, developed by the skill and energy of Mr. E. Potter.
Here
are two newspapers, published on Saturday.
The
County Magistrates meet once in three weeks; the Borough Magistrates
every Monday, in the Town Hall, which, with the Market House,
considerably enlarged in 1854, forms a handsome pile of buildings.
There
are Conservative and Liberal clubs, a Coffee tavern and a Catholic
club, each having news and recreation rooms, and the latter a
library.
Hurst
brook and Whitfield brook, two feeders of the Etherow, take their
rise on the adjacent moors, the water of the latter possessing
bleaching properties, which is taken advantage of by 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, cattle &c.
The
Cottage Hospital, initiated by Lady Howard, has accommodation for six
patients, under the care of a trained nurse: the existing building
was adapted to its present use at the expense of Lord Howard of
Glossop, who has placed it at the disposal of the town for five
years, under the management of a committee of ladies and gentlemen:
the funds of the hospital are raised by subscription, a small weekly
charge being made upon the patients.
Glossop
Hall, the seat of the Right Hon. Lord Howard of Glossop, is a noble
building, in the French château style of the eighteenth
century, and stands on gently rising ground above Howard Town,
surrounded by trees: it was much enlarged and improved by the late
Henry Charles, 13th Duke of Norfolk, father of the present owner.
The
town and hamlets now comprising the manor of Glossop, in the Domesday
book of Edward the Confessor, appear to have been divided into
several parts among different Saxon proprietors: thus Glossop itself
belongs to Levine, Dinting to Levintot, Charlesworth and Chisworth to
Swen, evidently a Dane, Ludworth to Bran, Chunal to Eilmer &c.:
in the Domesday book of William the Conqueror, the whole of Glossop
is put down as forfeited to the Crown : he afterwards gave it to his
natural son, William Peveril, his son Richard however being
disinherited by Henry I. for the crime of poisoning the Earl of
Cheshire, GIossop was again confiscated to the Crown : Henry II, in
1157, gave Glossop and the advowson of the church there to the Abbey
of Basingwerke, “in free and perpetual alms for ever” and
this abbey had acquired before the fifteenth 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 and lord of the manor is the Rt. Hon. Lord Howard,
uncle to the present Duke of Norfolk.
The
Right Hon. Lord Howard of Glossop is lord of the manor and the
principal landowner. The land is partly moor and pasturage. The
acreage is 49,960; rateable value, £17,486, being one of the
largest parishes in England ; the population of the township in 1881
was 6,153 ; the population within the municipal borough in 1831 was
19,574.
Parish
Clerk, James Winterbottom.
Hadfield
is a township and large village, on the borders of Cheshire, within
the borough of Glossop, 2 miles north-west from Glossop, and, with
the adjoining township of Padfield, forms the ecclesiastical parish
of St. Andrew’s, or chapelry of Hadfield, having a station on
the Manchester and Sheffield railway, in the hundred of High Peak
union, parish and county court district of Glossop. The church of St.
Andrew is a modern Gothic building, consecrated July 4th, 1874, and
consisting of chancel, nave, south transept, baptistery, and a bell
turret with 1 bell: the chancel is enclosed on either side by a
screen, and has an organ chamber on the south, the east end forming a
hexagonal apse, lighted by two stained windows : the nave is lighted
chiefly from the west end, besides large dormer windows high up in
the roof, serving also as ventilators: at the west end, near the
entrance and within an arched recess, is the baptistery, containing a
font worked in native stone and presented to the church by Mr. James
Sherriff, of Christ Church, Canterbury, New Zealand, and formerly of
Hadfield, it having previously obtained a second prize at the
Colonial exhibition, Victoria : a richly embroidered communion cloth
has been contributed by the vicar, and the cost of credence-table
defrayed by Mr. Braddock, churchwarden : a new organ with three
manuals and grand pedal organ, has been also erected at a cost of
about £650, by James Sidebottom esq. J.P. of Arrowscroft House,
Hadfield, as a memorial to his late wife; organist, James C. Eastham
: the total cost of the church has been about £4,000. The
register of baptisms dates from July 5th, 1874, and of marriages from
August, 1875. The living is a vicarage, yearly value £240, in
the gift of five trustees and held by the Rev. Joseph Hadfield, of
St. Bees. Here are a Wesleyan and Primitive Methodist chapels, and a
Catholic chapel (towards the erection of which the Right Hon. Lord
Howard of Glossop gave £5,000) containing many valuable
paintings. There are also several cotton mills, in which the
population are employed, and political clubs with news and amusement
rooms. Hadfield Hall, the ancient mansion of the family of that name,
dating from 1646, is now converted into a couple of cottages : some
years ago the handsome black oak carving was taken down and erected
in Glossop Hall, the seat of Lord Howard. The township contains 357
acres; rateable value £7,122 ; the population in 1881 was
3,449.
Post,
Money Order &.Telegraph Office & Savings Bank. - Squire
Garlick, postmaster. - Letters received via Manchester. Delivery,
7.30 a.m. & 5.10 p.m.; dispatch,.
11
a.m. 1.15 p.m. & 7.30 p.m. Sunday delivery 8.30 a.m dispatched
7.15 p.m. Money orders granted & paid & Savings Bank business
transacted from 9 a.m. till 6 p.m.; on Saturdays till 8 p.m
Insurance
Agents :—
Standard
Life.—G. E. Cox, Rose cottage, Hollincross lane, Glossop
Westminster
Fire & Life, W. S. Wright (fire only), Station road, Hadfield
Padfield
is a township adjoining Hadfield station, 1½
miles north-west from Glossop, and partly within that borough, in the
hundred of High Peak, parish, union and county court district of
Glossop, included with Hadfield in the ecclesiastical parish of St.
Andrew’s. A Wesleyan chapel to seat 400 persons, with Sunday
school attached, has been erected at a cost of £2,000. The
population are employed in the cotton mills. The acreage is 643;
rateable value, £11,168 ; the population in 1871 was 1,687 and
in 1881, 2,485. Letters through Hadfield. Wall Letter Box cleared at
8.30 a.m. & 6 p.m.; on Sundays at 9.30 a.m.
Whitfield
is a township giving its name to a new parish or ecclesiastical
district, constituted under Sir Robert Peel's Act of 1844, one mile
south from Glossop, and partly within the borough, in the hundred of
High Peak, parish, county court district and union of Glossop, rural
deanery of Castleton, archdeaconry of Derby and diocese of Lichfield.
The new pariah originally contained the whole of the townships of
Chunal, Dinting and Hadfield, and parts of the townships of Glossop,
Whitfield and Padfield, but since February 3,1872, when the present
incumbent was instituted, the churches of St. Andrew at Hadfield, and
of the Holy Trinity, in Dinting Vale, have been built and
consecrated, and the townships of Hadfield and Dinting, with parts of
the townships of Padfield, Glossop and Whitfield, have been legally
assigned to them : the last severance is recorded in the “London
Gazette” of February 14th, 1879, and from that date the new
parish of St. James has comprised the township of Chunal and parts of
the townships of Glossop and Whitfield, the population being about
7,000, or a little more than half what it was in 1872. The church of
St. James is a handsome building in the Early English style,
consisting of chancel, nave, aisles, and a tower with spire at the
north-west angle, containing 1 bell; the nave and aisles being
covered by a single span roof, though the well-moulded stone pillars
which separate them suggest the idea that a clerestory was once
included in the plans : the chancel is wider than it is long, and the
vestry is inconveniently small; a staircase to the gallery has, on
the other hand, been built so substantially at the south-west angle,
that it is capable of hearing a second spire, and this would complete
a west front of exceptional beauty: a peal of eight bells and a clock
are already in contemplation: the organ, erected in 1860, is
particularly fine and was enlarged in 1879 and 1880: a handsome brass
eagle lectern has recently been presented by Miss Wood, of Whitfield
House. The register dates from the year 1846. The living is a
vicarage, yearly value £333 6s 8d. gross, nett £275, with
residence, in the gift of Daniel Wood esq. Samuel Wood esq. and Mrs.
Emma Wood and is held by the Rev. Charles Bruce Ward M.A. of Oriel
College, Oxford : W. R. Fairclough F.C.O. MUS. BAC. Dublin, is
organist. The parsonage house is a stone building, contiguous to the
church, and has been considerably enlarged since 1872. There are two
Wesleyan and two Congregational chapels. The Right Hon. Lord Howard
of Glossop is lord of the manor and principal landowner. 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. The acreage is 1,577 ; rateable value, £11,724; the
population in 1881 was 6,320.
Charlestown
is a place here.
Wall
Letter Box cleared at 9 a.m. & 7 p.m.; on Sunday, 6.15 p.m
Chunal
is a township, 2 miles south from Glossop, and partly within that
borough, in the hundred of High Peak, parish, union and county court
district of Glossop, and in the ecclesiastical parish of Whitfield.
The acreage is 885; rateable value, £689 ; gross rental, £789
; the population in 1881 was 98.
Dinting
is also a township of this parish, forming part of the ecclesiastical
district of Dinting Vale, which was formed in 1879; and. being partly
also in the borough of Glossop, 11¾
miles from Manchester, on the Manchester Sheffield and Lincolnshire
railway, which has a station here. Calico printing forms the chief
source of employment. The church of the Holy Trinity, opened July,
1875, and erected by the liberality of the Wood family of Glossop, is
a stone building in the later style of the thirteenth century, and
consists of apsidal chancel, nave, aisles, an organ chamber, forming
a transept on the south side, a vestry on the north side of the
chancel, and a tower 18 feet square, rising from the west end of the
south aisle, with angle buttresses tapering upwards, and terminating
in pinnacles ; the tower is surmounted by an octagonal spire, the
whole reaching a height of 137 feet to the top of the vane, and
contains 6 bells: the interior dimensions of the church are-total
length of nave and choir 74 feet by 26½
feet; height, 49½
feet; north and south aisles 74 feet and 60 feet long respectively,
8½
feet wide and 20 feet high; chancel, including apse, 28 feet by 18
feet, and organ chamber 16 feet by 13 feet: in the western gable is a
circular window, 13 feet diameter, with filate tracery : the entrance
to the church is by a porch under the tower, with another door on the
north side of the nave available in case of emergency ; the nave is
divided from the aisles by circular stone piers,with moulded caps and
bases, and the wails lined with cream coloured bricks relieved by
bands of brown,the arches and window jambs being of the same material
: the choir opens into the nave by an archway 16 feet wide and 24
feet high, with stone moulded jambs, carved caps and richly-moulded
arch: the pulpit is of oak, and the reading desks and seats of pitch
pine varnished : the chancel roof has groined moulding, ribs filled
with boarding, varnished, and is supported on stone corbels, with
carved bosses at the apex : the central window of the apse is a
memorial to John H. Wood esq. who died 16th December, 1869, and was
placed by his widow: the font., also presented by Mrs. Wood, is in an
arched recess at the west end of the south aisle, and is of bath
stone on a shaft of red marble: the building will seat about 530. The
living is a vicarage, yearly value £290 with residence, in the
gift of Mrs. Wood and D. and G. Wood esqs. and held by the Rev.
Charles Sutcliffe, appointed as the first vicar, December 29th, 1875.
The area is 586 acres; rateable value, £5,588 ; the population
in 1881 was 983.
Brookfield
is a place 1 mile north of Dinting station. Here is a cotton mill.
Gamesley
is a place 1 mile west of Dinting station, with a spring mattress
manufactory. 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 from time to
time: the summit is still called “The Castle Yard,” and a
village 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, it may be remarked, lie on the iter or Roman road
from the Camp of Mancunium (Manchester) to that of Ad
Petuarium (Brough, near Castleton).
Official
Establishments, Local Institutions &c.
Post
& Money Order & Telegraph Office, Savings Bank &
Government Insurance & Annuity; Office, Norfolk square.—Miss
Betty Kaye Woodhead, post mistress. Letters arrive via Manchester at
6 a.m. 2.45 p.m. & 5 p.m.; dispatched to Manchester & all
parts at 10 a.m. 1.20 p.m. & 7.35 p.m. Money order office &
post office savings bank open from 9 to 6; on Saturdays from 9 a.m.
to 7 p.m. Telegraph office open from 8 a.m. to 8 p.m
COUNTY
MAGISTRATES-
Edmund
Potter esq, Thomas H. Sidebottom esq, Francis J. Sumner esq, John
Wood esq, Samuel Wood esq, W H Turner esq, Thomas Rhodes esq,
Frederick Buckley esq, William Shepley esq.
Petty
Sessions are held every three weeks
Clerk
to the Magistrates, Thos. Michael Ellison, Ellison st
The
following places are included in the division:—Glossop, Mellor,
Charlesworth, Ludworth, Chisworth, Simmondley, Marple Bridge, Chunal
& Compstall Bridge
BOROUGH
MAGISTRATES-
Joseph
Stafford esq, Francis J. Sumner esq, Samuel Wood esq, William
Shepley esq, Frederick Buckley esq, Thomas Rhodes esq, Jas.
Sidebottom esq. (Mayor), Samuel Rowbottom esq, James Shepley esq,
Edward Platt esq.
Clerk
T. M. Ellison.
The
Magistrates meet at the Town Hall every Monday
CORPORATION.
Mayor—James
Sidebottom esq. J.P.
Aldermen:
James Shepley, Edward Woolley, Samuel Rowbottom, Joseph Stafford,
Henry Buckley, James Sidebottom .
Councillors.
All
Saints Ward.
Joseph
Buckley, Joshua Beeley, John Walton, John Hadfield, John Mellor, John
Rowbottom
St.
James’ Ward.
Samuel
Wood, George Wilson, John Charlesworth, Cyrus Garside, Timothy
Holroyd, Thomas Hampson
Hadfield
Ward.
John
Roberts, James Wood, James Sargentson jun, William Dawson, William
Sidebottom, William S. Rhodes
Officers
of the Corporation and Urban Sanitary Authority.
Town
Clerk, Thomas Michael Ellison, Ellison street
Medical
Officer, James Rhodes, Victoria street
Public
Analyst, J. Carter Bell, Manchester
Surveyor,
James Nuttall, Sheffield road
Superintendent
of Waterworks, John Garner, Ellison st
Head
Constable, William Henry Hodgson
Inspector
of Police, Ernest Charlton
Inspector
of Nuisances, Samuel Dane, Town hall
Collector,
George Williamson, Market street
INSURANCE
AGENTS
Guardian,
H. E. Evasion, Norfolk street
Hand-in-Hand,
T. A. Pettit, Howard street
London,
G. B. Cox, Rose cottage, Hollin Cross lane
London
& Staffordshire Fire, J. Hall, High street west; Mellor &
Higginbottom, Hollin Cross lane & 42 High street west; & T.
A. Pettit, Howard street
Phoenix
Fire, Higginbotham & Lees, Norfolk square
Royal
fire & Life, L. Pennington, 57 Norfolk street
Standard
Life, G. E. Cox, Rose cottage, Hollin Cross lane
PUBLIC
ESTABLISHMENTS.
Borough
Police Office, Ellison street, William Henry Hodgson, head
constable - Ernest Charlton, inspector
Burial
Board, Ellison street, Thos. Michael Ellison, clerk
Cemetery.
Cheshire
& Derbyshire Rifle Volunteers (4th) (L, M & N,
Companies); head-quarters of Derbyshire Co. Town hall, Wm.
Sidebottom, capt. commandant; Edward Partington & Frederick
Buckley, capts.; Dr. Bennett, surgeon
Cottage
Hospital (Albert Andrew, Mathias Butler, Duncan John Mackenzie &
James Rhodes, medical officers), St. Mary’s road
County
Court, Thomas Ellison esq. judge; John Hibbert, registrar &
high bailiff; Robert Murray, assistant registrar & deputy high
bailiff; office, Norfolk square, open from 10 to 4; on Saturdays from
10 till 1. The County Court is held at the Town Hall, and comprises :
the following parishes :—Armfield & district of Tintwistle,
Brownside, Charlesworth, Chisworth, Chinley, Chunal, Dinting,
Gamesley, Glossop, Hadfield, Hayfield, Hollingworth,Kinder, Padfield,
Rhodes, Phoside, Rowarth, Salter brook, Simmondley, Torside,
Waterside, Whitfield, Woodhead, and Wooley Bridge
Gas
Company, Arundel street, James Dalgleish, manager; Peter
Sidebottom, collector
Inland
Revenue Office, Hollin Cross lane, Alfred Joseph Sims, officer
Town
Hall, High street west
Water
Works, John Garner, superintendent; G. Williamson, collector
PUBLIC
OFFICERS.
Clerk
to the Commissioners of Turnpike Roads, Michael Joseph Ellison,
Norfolk street
Inspector
of Weights Measures & chief constable, Wm. Henry Hodgson;
police office, Ellison street
Surveyor
of Turnpike Roads, Charles John Hadfield, Norfolk street
Stamp
Distributor, Henry Kinder, High street west
Glossop
Union.
Glossop
union comprises the following places:—Charlesworth, Chisworth,
Chunal, Dinting, Glossop or Glossop Dale, Hadfield, Ludworth,
Padfield, Simmondley, & Whitfield; rateable value of the union
£59,941
Board
day every alternate Wednesday, at 3 p.m.
Clerk
to Guardians, T. S. Bowden, Wellgate
Assistant
Overseer, E. Hadfield, Ellison street .
Collector,
E. Hadfield, Ellison street
Relieving
Officer, John Wood Bowden, Fitzalan street
Vaccination
Officer, T. S. Bowden, Wellgate
Medical
Officers & Public Vaccinators, W. H. Hunt, Norfolk street &
James Rhodes, 25 Victoria street
Superintendent
Registrar of Births, Deaths Marriages, T. S. Bowden, Wellgate
Workhouse,
John Beeley, master; W. H. Hunt, surgeon; Mrs. Mary Beeley, matron
Rural
Sanitary Authority.
Clerk,
T. S. Bowden, Wellgate
Medical
Officer, W. H. Hunt, Norfolk street
Inspector
of Nuisances, Samuel Dane, Town hall
PLACES
OF WORSHIP.
Parish
Church, Rev. John Dickenson Knowles m,a. Vicar
Holy
Trinity, Dinting, Rev. Charles Sutcliffe, vicar
St.
James' Church, Whitfield, Rev. Charles Bruce Ward M.A. vicar;
Rev. Alfred George, curate
St.
Andrew’s, Hadfield, Rev. Joseph Hadfield, vicar
All
Saints’ Catholic Chapel, Rev. Canon Charles W. Tasker &
Rev. Henry Koerfer, priests
Congregational
Chapel, Littlemoor, Rev. Geo. Sadler
Congregational
Chapel, St. Mary’s road, Rev. James Kendal Kirby
Primitive
Methodist Chapel, Shrewsbury street, Rev. Edward Cairns
Reformers’
Chapel, Howard st., Rev, Alexander Holland
Reformers’
Chapel, Whitfield
United
Methodist Free Church Tabernacle, Hall street, Rev. Isaac Ambler
Unitarian
Chapel, Fitzalan street, Rev. Wm. Harrison
Wesleyan
Chapel, High street, Rev. Samuel Birt Coley & Mark Potter
Gilbert, ministers
Wesleyan
Chapel, Whitfield
SCHOOLS
Endowed,
Old Glossop, with master’s residence, built & endowed by
Henry, 13th Duke of Norfolk, has 300 scholars, Arthur Henry Roberts,
master; Mrs. Anne Roberts, mistress Endowed, Whitfield,
founded in 1778 by Joseph Hague esq. of Park Hall, in the parish of
Hayfield, & endowed with £39 per annum, Walter P. Evason,
master; Mrs. Elizabeth Ann Evason, mistress
Catholic
(mixed), Sisters of St. Paul
Catholic,
Infants’, St. Mary’s road
Congregational,
King street, Miss Martha Dyas
Infants’,
Waterside, Hadfield, Mrs. Ellen Shaw, mistress
National,
Dinting, John Howard, master
National,
Hadfield (mixed), is a good building of stone, Alfred Walker, master
National,
Talbot street, Miss Mary Jane Ingham, mistress
National,
Whitfield, George Edward Cox, master; Mrs. Sarah Jane Cox, mistress
Wesleyan,
High street, James Parker, master; Mrs. Maria Parker, mistress
Wesleyan,
Old Glossop, John Fisher, master; Mrs. Elizabeth Fisher
Wesleyan,
Hadfield, John William Rathmell, master
RAILWAY
STATIONS.
Glossop,
Thomas William Melbourne, station master
Dinting,
William Charlesworth, station master
Hadfield,
Richard Brotherton, station master
Glossop.
Private
residents.
Ambler
Rev. Isaac [United Methodist Free Church], 41 Sheffield road
Andrew
Albert, 14 High street west
Armitage
Mrs. 41 Norfolk street
Beard
Samuel, 35 Norfolk Street
Booth
Mrs. 83 Hall street
Bowden
Mrs. 2 Wesley street
Bowden
William, 102 St. Mary’s road
Bradbury
Edwin, Mill Moor terrace, Pikes lane
Bramall
Edward, 26 Hollin Cross lane
Buckley
Frederick J.P. Hurst
Butler
Mathias, Norfolk square
Cairns
Rev. Edward [Primitive Methodist], Shrewsbury street
Chapman
Francis, 43 Norfolk street
Chappell
John, 24 Hollin Cross lane
Coley
Rev. Samuel Birt [Wesleyan], Alexander villa
Cook
Samuel, 51 Norfolk street
Cox
George Edward, Rose cottage, Hollin Cross lane
Ellison
Thomas Michael, Ryecroft house, Hall street
Fisher
John, 53 Hall Street
Fothergill
Thomas, 100 St. Mary’s rd
Gilbert
Rev. Mark Potter [Wesleyan], Alexander villa
George
Rev. Alfred [curate], Lord st
Greaves
Charles, 39 Norfolk street
Hadfield
Charles, 100 St. Mary’s road
Hadfield
Charles John, Holly mount, Norfolk street
Hadfield
Henry, Cowbrook
Hadfield
John, jun. Cowbrook
Hadfield
Misses, Lees hall, Turn lee
Hall
James, 16 Hollin Cross lane
Hall
William, 67 Norfolk street
Hampson
Joseph, 5 Bank street
Hampson
Thomas, Highfield house
Harrison
Rev. Wm. [Unitarian], Lord st
Hatch
Thomas, 53 Norfolk street
Hawke
Francis, Spire Hollin
Holdgate
Mrs. 20 Gladstone street
Holland
Rev. Alexander [Wesleyan Reform Union], Gladstone street
Hollingbery
W. H. Norfolk square
Howard
of Glossop Lord D.L. Glossop hl
Howe
Misses, Ryefield, Hall street
Howe
Rowland, Ryefield, Hall street
Hunt
William, Cowbrook cottage
Hunt
William Henry, Norfolk street
Hunter
Thomas Pearson, Talbot road
Hurst
William. 39 Sheffield road
Kelly
James, 37 Norfolk street
Kershaw
Miss, Slatelands
Kirby
Rev. James Kendal [Congregational], 27 Norfolk street
Knowles
Rev. John Dickenson M.A. [vicar], Vicarage
Koerfer
Rev. Hy. [Catholic], Royle ho
Mackenzie
Duncan John, High street
Mellor
Mrs. 22 Hollin Cross lane
Merry
James, 86 St. Mary’s road
Moran
Mrs. 19 Norfolk street
Parker
James, 98 St. Mary’s road
Partington
Edward, Hollin house
Pennington
Levi,57 Norfolk street
Perry
Robert, 14 Hollin Cross lane
Pott
Mrs. Spire Hollin
Rhodes
James, Victoria street
Robinson
Ralph Bernard, 23 Arundel st
Robinson
Samuel, Holly bank
Rowbottom
John, 1 Shepley street
Rowbottom
Samuel J.P. 35 Hall street
Rusby
Rev. William H. L. Hurst
Sadler
Rev. George [Congregational], Littlemoor manse
Shepley
James, Shepley street
Shepley
Miss
Sheppard
Robert, 23 Norfolk street
Smith
Thomas, 45 Norfolk street
Stafford
Joseph J.P. Norfolk street Sumner Fras. James D.L., J.P. [high
sheriff of Derbyshire], East view, High st. east; & at Park hall,
Little Hayfield, Stockport
Tasker
Rev. Canon Chas. W. [Catholic], Royle house
Thorp
Walter, 3 Bank street
Thorpe
William, 96 St. Mary’s road
Tweeddale
Mrs. 29 Norfolk street
Unwin
Mrs. 20 Gladstone street
Wagstaffe
Mrs. 37 Sheffield road
Walton
John, Moorside
Ward
Rev. C. Bruce M.A. [vicar], Whitfield
Waterhouse
Mrs. 65 Norfolk street
Wood
Daniel, Moorfield
Wood
John B.A. Whitfield house
Wood
Mrs. Whitfield house
Wood
Samuel J.P. Talbot house
Wragg
Samuel, 63 Norfolk street
Wyatt
William, Charlestown villa
Commercial.
Andrew
Albert, physician,14 High st. we
Armitage
Chas. Hy. grocer. 93 High st. we
Armitage
John, draper, 84 High st. we
Armitage
John, jun. fruiterer, 82 High street west
Armitage
John Thomas,coal merchant, 77 Norfolk street & Railway street
Arnold
Ralph, coal mer. Railway yard
Arrowsmith
Jas. clog & patten maker, 132 High street west
Ashcroft
Mary (Mrs.), milliner & dress maker, 132 Victoria street
Ashton
Geo. drpr. & grcr. 8 Gladstone st
Ashton
Robert, joiner, 14 Wood st
Atkin
William Edward, coal merchant, 48 St. Mary’s road & Railway
yard
Atkinson
Mary (Mrs.), beer retailer & builder, Old cross
Atkinson
Wm. grocer, 113 High st. we
Bagshaw
John, wheelwright, Manor st
Bamforth
& Barber, milliners, Shrewsbury street
Bamforth
William, shpkpr. 11 Freetown
Band
Charles Downs, mason & builder, 90 High street east
Barber&
Scholes, furniture dealers, High street west
Barber
Albert, watch maker & dentist, Town Hall buildings
Barber
Albert, hair dresser & umbrella maker, 6 Norfolk street
Barber
Alice (Miss), confectioner, 92 High street west
Barber
James, shopkpr. 17 Hope st
Barker
Luke, sand grinder, Pikes lane
Barnes
James & Son, drapers & milliners, 31 High street west
Barnes
William, grocer & corn dealer, 65 High street west
Barratt
Jane (Mrs.), milliner, 73 High street east
Barton
Joseph, clogger, 62 Kershaw st
Bates
Harriet (Mrs.), tripe dresser,102 High street west & 13 Hadfield
place
Bates
Walter, printer & stationer, 102 High street west & 13
Hadfield place. See advertisement
Batty
George, joiner, 57 Chapel st
Beard
James, farmer, Whitfield moor
Beard
Jn. draper & milliner,3 High st. we
Beard
Sl. shoe ma. 17 Gladstone street
Beckett
Benj. artist, Mount Pleasant
Beeley
James, farmer, Moorfield
Beeley
Jas. Howard Arms,17 High st. ea
Beeley
Joshua, yeoman, Moorfield
Beeley
Robert, yeoman, Moorfield
Bennett
James, joiner, 1 Cliff road
Bennett
Joseph, farmer, 16 Hague st
Bennett
Robert, pork butcher, Victoria street
Bennett
Robert, shopkpr. 28 Freetown
Bennett
William, butcher, 6 Bennett’s fold, Sheffield road
Bentley
Joseph, farmer, Heath
Benton
William, stonemason, Princes st
Beresford
Charles, Queen's Arms, & musical instrument dler. 1 Shepley st
Berry
Joshua, coal dealer, 25 High st. east & Railway yard (25 is a misprint, should be 52 (confirmed by census records))
Blackwell
Samuel, brass &iron founder, George street
Boardman
William Hyde, shoeing & jobbing smith, 85 Hall street
Booth
Ann (Mrs.), shopkeeper, 84 Charlestown road
Booth
James, farmer, Hobroyd
Booth
John, beer retailer, 14 Milltown
Booth
John, shopkeeper, 25 Arundel st
Bottomley
Wm. Hy. grcr. 11 High st. ea
Bowden
Geo. pork butcher, 8 Victoria st
Bowden
Elizabeth (Mrs.), shopkeeper, 12 High street east
Bowden
Joe, shpkpr. 126 St. Mary’s rd
Bowden
John, hardware dealer & tripe dresser, 1 Collier street
Bowden
John Wood, relieving officer, 1 Fitzalan street
Bowden
Joseph, shopkpr. 36 Church st
Bowden
Samuel, farmer, Heath
Bowden
Samuel, shpkpr. 199 High st. ea
Bowden
Thomas Swindells, superintendent registrar & registrar of births,
deaths & marriages, clerk to the guardians & vaccination
officer, Wellgate
Bowden
Wm. joiner & builder Bernard st
Bowden
William Henry, joiner & builder, 7 Talbot street
Bowker
Wm. dry soap mnftr. Bank st
Bradbury
Charles, butcher, 139 Victoria street
Bradbury
George, grocer & corn dealer, 339 High street west
Bradbury
Martha (Mrs.), grocer, 1 Charlestown road
Bradbury
Rbt. hair dresser, 6 Victoria st
Bradbury
William, painter, plumber, paper hanger & decorator, Norfolk
square. See advertisement
Braddock
Eli, draper, 59 High st. east
Braddock
Robert, confectioner & tea dealer, 68 High street west
Bradley
Geo. beer rtlr. 5 Bernard st
Bradley
Henry, Market hotel, Market st
Brain
Elizabeth (Mrs.), draper, 28 High street west
Brain
Hy. Wm. watch ma. 28 High st. we
Bramhall
Richd. irnmngr. 86 High st. we
Bramhall
Thomas, beer rtlr. Market st
Bramhall
Wm. beer rtlr. 64 Chapel st
Bramwell
Luke, confctnr. 98 High st. we
Bramwell
Thomas, confectioner, 197 High street west
Bridge
Hannah & Sarah (Misses), 211 High street east
Bridge
Thomas, beer retailer, 2 Arundel st
Broadhurst
Joseph, shpkpr. 106 Gladstone street
Brook
Anna Margaret (Miss), dress maker, 67 High street east
Bruckshaw
John,shpkpr. 25 Norfolk st
Bruckshaw
John Henry, music teacher, 25 Norfolk street
Buckley
Frdk. cotton spinnr. Hurst mills
Buckley
Joseph, pawnbroker, Town Hall buildings
Buckley
Margaret (Mrs.), beer retailer, 120 Charlestown
Buckley
William, slater & plasterer, 23 Mount street. See advertisement
Bunting
Jsph. hair drssr. 13 Victoria st
Bunting
Joseph Hague, photographer, 120 Victoria street
Butler
Mathias, surgeon, Norfolk sq
Buttery
John, editor & manager of the Chronicle Printing Co. 14 Princes
st
Buxton
Bennett, farmer, Jumble
Buxton
James, farmer, Cross cliffe
Buxton
Wm. farmer, Whitfield Barn
Catholic
Club (William Fernley,sec.), Arundel street
Cemetery
(Thomas Michael Ellison, clerk to the burial board), Ellison st
Chadwick
Joel, butcher, 234 High st. we
Chadwick
John, grocer & draper, 329 High st. we & pawnbroker, 4 Cross
st
Charlesworth
& Haigh, builders, St. Mary’s road
Charlesworth
Jn. builder, Shrewsbury st
Charlton
Ernest, inspector of borough police, police office, Ellison street
Cheshire
& Derbyshire Rifle Volunteers (4th) (L, M&N Companies) (Wm.
Sidebottom, capt. commdnt.; Edwd. Partington & Fredk. Buckley,
captns.; Dr. Bennett, surgeon; Sergeant-Instructor Rae),
headquarters, 1 Town hall
Clarke
George, shpkpr. 184High st. we
Cluskey
Edward,shpkpr. 273 High st. we
Cockayne
Geo. whlwright. Primrose la
Cockcroft
Grnwd. clggr. 21 Victoria st
Coe
Joseph, dentist, 36 Norfolk street
Cohen
Simeon, jeweller, 88 High st. we
Collier
Charles, grocer & corn dealer, & agent for W. & A.
Gilbey, wine & spirit merchants, 5 High street west
Collier
Jas. fishmonger, 34 High st. we
Collier
Joseph, Norfolk Arms hotel posting house
Collier
SI. Rose & Crown, High st. we
Collier
William, shopkpr. 10 Chapel st
Collinge
James, Grapes, 335 High st. we
Collins
Henry, cotton spinner, see T. P. Sykes & Sons
Connor
Patrick, beer rtlr. 24 Arundel st
Cook
Martha (Miss), farmer, Heath
Cooke
John, hatter, 63 High street we
Cooper
Moses & Son, tailors & drapers, 24 High street east
Cooper
Cephas, shoe maker, Edward st
Cooper
Jn. beer retailer, 277 High st. we
Cooper
John,umbrella ma. 44 High st. ea
Cottage
Hospital (Albert Andrew, Mathias Butler, Duncan John Mackenzie &
Jas. Rhodes, medical officers), St. Mary’s road
County
Court Office (Thomas Ellison esq. judge; John Hibbert, registrar &
high bailiff; Robert Murray, assistant registrar & deputy high
bailiff), Norfolk square
Craigh
Elizabeth (Miss), dress maker, 21 Norfolk street
Cresswell
Joseph, grocer & draper, 81 High street east
Crompton
& Elliott, cabinet makers & undertakers, 26 High st. we. &
Surrey st
Crossland
William Henry, shopkeeper, 16 Hall street
Cuthbert
John,tobacconist, 80 High st. we
Dalgliesh
James, gas works manager, 84 St. Mary’s road
Dane
Samuel, inspector of nuisances, Shrewsbury street
Darwent
John, ironmonger, gas & water fitter, 7 Victoria street
Darwent
Luke, farmer, Bitten hill
Davis
Charles, solicitor, 6 Market st
Dearnaley
John, shopkeepr. 9 Chapel st
Dearnaley
Thos. ironmonger & blacksmith, 125 High street west
Denham
Daniel, stone merchant, 11 Hope street. See advertisement
Denton
Eli, grocer, 110 St. Mary’s rd
Dixon
Geo. Hy. shopkeeper, 34 Edward st
Dixon
John, coal dealer, 183 High street east & Railway yard
Dixon
William, butcher, 100 High st. we
Doodson
George, drapr. 76 High st. we
Downing
William, grocer, 8 Norfolk st
Downs
David, furniture dealer, 83 Gladstone street
Downs
Joseph, clogger, 1 Victoria st
Downs
Joseph, draper & milliner, The Bazaar, 59 High street west
Drinkwater
John, umbrella maker, 191 High street west
Dutton
James, shopkeeper, 6 Wellgate
Dutton
Tom, painter, plumber & glazier, & Junction inn, High street
west
Dyas
Edwd. Cabint. mkr. 1A, Gladstone st
Dyson
Robert,coal dealer, 154 Victoria st
Earnshaw
& Bamforth, builders, Whitfield cross
Earnshaw
Jonathan,beer retailer, Whitfield Cross
Eldread
William Sergus & Son, bill posters, 29 Chapel street. See advt
Ellis
Michael, stone mason, 44 Surrey st
Ellison
Thomas Michael, solicitor & clerk to magistrates &c town
clerk & clerk to the burial Board, Ellison st
Ernill
Cephas, furniture broker, Pike’s lane & Commercial inn,
Charlestown
Ernill
Ralph, coal agent, 3 Pikes lane
Evason
Henry Edward, cashier at Lord Howard’s estate office, 59
Norfolk st
Evason
Mary Anne (Miss), ladies’ school, 103 Victoria street
Eversden
William, grocer, 2 Railway st
Fairclough
Walter P. professor of music, Pikes lane
Field
Henry, umbrella maker, 24 Charlestown road
Field
William, boot & shoe maker, 22 Charlestown road
Fielding
Charles, builder & stone dealer, 21 Whitfield cross
Fielding
Christopher, mill manager, 71 Norfolk street
Fielding
Enoch, watch & clock maker, 24 High street west
Fielding
George, grocer, 14 Old Cross
Fielding
James, fruiterer, 21 Norfolk st
Fielding
James, shopkeeper, Queen st
Fielding
Saml. coal merchant, Railwy. yd
Fielding
Walter, coal merchant, 75 Norfolk street & Railway Yard
Fielding
Wm. grocer, 12 & 32 High st. we
Firth
Joshua & Son, bill posters, 13 Shrewsbury street
Fisher
Charles, painter, 1 Surrey st
Fletcher
Jsph. Manor Inn, 77 High st. ea
Foden
John, fishmonger, 4 Milltown
Ford
John, auctioneer & beer retailer, 25 High street east (misprinted as west)
Ford
Joseph, shopkeeper, 63 Gladstone st
Foster
Robert, clogger, 61 High st. east
Fothergill
Eliza (Miss), ladies’ school, 100 St. Mary’s road
Fowley
Joseph, nail maker, 4 Church st
Foy
Anthony, fishmonger, Victoria st
France
Geo. shopkeeper, 78 Victoria st
France
Jas. butcher, 139 High st. west
France
Joseph, grocer, 123 High st. west
Freemasons’
Lodge( Devonshire) (Wm. Fielding, tyler), Norfolk Arms hotel
Freetown
Working Men’s Institute (Edwin Greenwood, sec)
Frost
Thomas Benjamin, Crown inn, 168 Victoria street
Garlick
Joseph, grocer & corn dealer, 40 High street east
Garside
Charles, shopkeeper, Princes st
Garside
Cyrus, timber, slate, tile & iron merchant, Glossop saw mills,
Surrey street. See advertisement
Garside
John, farmer, Hague street
Garside
Joseph, farmer, Lees Hall farm, Turn Lee
Garside
William, farmer, Hurst Nook
Gas
Co. (James Dalgliesh, manager), Arundel street
Gaskell
Peter joiner, George street Gerard Danl. Surrey Arms, Victoria st
Gill
James, oil & tallow dealer, Rose Green cottage, Sheffield road
Gilleat
Robert, cotton waste spinner, Primrose mill
Glossop
Brewery Co. Whitfield Cross
Glossop
Coffee Palace Co. (Charles Hall, sec.), High street west
Glossop
Conservative Club (William Sheppard, sec.), 26 Norfolk street
Glossop
Cricket Club (John Thorpe, sec.), 157 High street west
Glossop
Dale Chronicle & North Derbyshire Reporter (Chronicle Printing
Co. proprietors), Norfolk st
Glossop
Dale New Industrial Cooperative Society (William Walton, sec.),
Norfolk square
Glossop
Dale Poultry Show (John Hurst & William McMellon, jun. Secs)
Glossop
Dale Savings Bank (Charles John Hadfield, actuary), open on
Saturdays, 12 a.m. till 1 p.m. & 6 to 7 p.m. Town hall
Glossop
Ironworks Co. Limited ( Alfred Taylor, manager), Surrey street
Glossop
Liberal Club (Josiah Mellor, sec.), Henry street
Goddard
Ann (Miss), dress maker, 27 Hague street
Goddard
Jas. stonemason, 27 Hague st
Goddard
Jn. Edwn. fruitr. 96 High st. we
Goddard
John, farmer & beer retailer, 21 Charlestown road
Goddard
Joseph, fruiterer & furniture remover, 114 High street west
Goodwin
Jehu, joiner, 2 Church street
Goodwin
Wm. news agent, 23 High st. we (Misprint in original, should be High Street East)
Graves
Geo. confectioner, 46 High st. we
Grayson
Benjamin, joiner & builder, 14 Gladstone street
Green
Eli, grocer, 70 Freetown
Greenwood
Edwin, sec. to the Freetown Working Men’s Institute,12 Pike’s
la
Greenwood
John, stone mer. Old Cross
Hadfield
Charles, farmer, 8 Hague st
Hadfield
Charles John. surveyor & valuer & actuary of savings bank, 40
Norfolk st
Hadfield
Eli, grocer, 105 High st. east
Hadfield
Eli, warehouseman. Lord st
Hadfield
James, farmer, Hall street
Hadfield
John, cotton spinner, Cowbrook mill
Hadfield
John, grocer, 56 High st. west & 98 Station road, Hadfield
Hadfield
Joseph, fruiterer. Norfolk st
Hadfield
Joseph, shoe maker,84 Freetown
Hadfield
Joseph, shoe maker, 97 High street east
Hadfield
Thomas, draper & outfitter, 29 High street west
Hague
Joseph, mill man.28High st. east
Hall
James, machinist, 25 Surrey st
Hall
John, blacksmith, Howard street
Hall
John, tailor & draper, Leeds house, High street west
Hall
John, tailor & draper, Town Hall buildings, High street west
Hall
Joseph, shoe maker, 201 High st. ea
Hall
Joseph Bridge, confectioner, 142 High street west
Hall
Samuel,.butcher, 127 Hall street
Hall
William, secretary to John Wood & Bros, limited, 67 Norfolk
street
Hamnett
James & Son, watch & clock makers, High street east
Hampshire
Thos. shopkeeper, 12 Milltwn
Hampson
Sarah (Miss), beer retailer, 99 High street east
Hampson
Elizabeth (Mrs.), farmer, Hague street
Hampson
Nancy (Mrs.), grocer, 24 Chapel street
Hampson
Thos. stone mer. Highfield ho
Hardman
Henry Chas. farmer, Hurst
Hardman
John, dentist, 47 Norfolk st & chemist, 48 High street west
Hardy
Edwin, hatter, 14 High st. east
Hargreaves
Sl. beer retailer, 19 Chapel st
Harrison
Abel, Station inn, & mineral water manufacturer, Norfolk street
Harrison
Charles Smith, jun. grocer & corn dealer, Liverpool house, 41
High street west
Harrison
Charles Smith, sen. grocer & corn dealer, 122 High street west
Harrison
Jas. shoe maker, 91 Victoria st
Harrison
Robert & Sons, slaters & plasterers, 1 Hall street. See
advert
Harrop
Geo. beer retailer, Gladstone st
Harrop
James, farmer, Hill top
Harrop
James, shopkeeper, 9 Freetown
Harrop
John, draper, 22 High st. west
Harrop
John, patent medicine vendor, 71 High street east
Harrop
Joseph, shopkeeper, Wesley st
Hawke
Francis, steward to Lord Howard of Glossop. Spire Hollin
Hayes
Thos. Commercial inn,137 Hall st
Hays
John, clothes dealer, 1 Chapel st
Helm
Brian, grocer & tobacconist, High street east
Hesselden
William, stone dealer, 5 Oldham street & Blackshaw Clough Quarry.
See advertisement
Hewitt
William, shoe maker, 8 Collier st
Heys
George Hy. broker, 45 Gladstone st
Hibbert
Jhn. & Jsph. solicitors, Norfolk sq
Hibbert
John, solicitor (firm, Hibbert John & Joseph), registrar &
high bailiff of county court, Norfolk square
Higginbottom
& Lees, auctioneers, accountants, valuers, estate & insurance
agents, 9 Norfolk square & 43 High street west. See advertisement
Higginbottom
Charles, auctioneer, see Higginbottom &. Lees
Higginbottom
Jas. gen. dlr. 43High st. we
Higginbottom
James, quarry owner, Turn Lee quarry
Higginbottom
John, auctioneer, see Mellor & Higginbottom
Higginbottom
John Samuel, draper & milliner, 17 High street west
Higginbottom
Wm. drapr. 38 High st. ea
Higginbottom
William, mill manager, 28 High street east
Hill
Fras. (Mrs.), shopkpr. 164 Victoria st
Hill
Mary (Mrs.), farmer, Cliffe road
Hill
William, shoe dir. 94 High st. we
Hinchcliffe
Henry, stone dir. 44 High street east, & Blake quarry, Blackshaw
clough Hinchliffe John & Co. coal merchants, Railway yard
Hindle
John, shopkeeper, 118 Victoria street
Hodgson
William Henry,head constable of borough police, Police office,
Ellison street
Holdgate
William & Brothers,florists & seedsmen, 1 Edward street
Holdgate
James, painter, glazier &c. 149 High street west
Holdgate
Thomas, shopkpr. 5 Milltown
Holdgate
Wm. iron brkr. 83 St. Mary's rd
Hollingberry
W. H. manager of the Manchester & Liverpool District bank,
Norfolk square
Housley
Thomas, engineer & machinist, Surrey Street machine wrks. See
advt
Howard
John, farmer, Ashes
Howard
Helen (Mrs), grocer, 27 Charlestown road
Howard
Thos, farmer, 43 Primrose la
Howarth
Edwd. shopkpr. 213 High St. we
Howe
James, butcher, 18 Princes st
Hoyland
Thos. sand grindr. 37 Hague st
Hudson
Ralph, stone dealer, Turn Lee quarry. See advertisement
Hunt
William, surgeon, Cowbrook cottage, Sheffield road
Hunt
William Hy. surgeon, Norfolk st
Hunter
Thomas Pearson, draper, 9 High street west
Hurst
Aaron, shopkeeper, Charlestown
Hurst
George, butcher, 150 Victoria st
Hurst
John, coal merchant, Railway st
Hyde
Thomas, shopkpr. Whitfield cross
Ingerson
John, tailor, 9 Norfolk square
Ingerson
Wm. milliner, 1 & 4 Norfolk sq
Ingham
John, draper, 93 High st. we
Irlam
William Hy. stationer, printer & bookbinder, 55 High street west
Jackson
& Wood, joiners & builders, Bridgefield. See advertisement:
Jackson
Elizabeth (Miss), beer retailer, 38 & 40 High street west
Jackson
Isaac, saddler & harness maker, 75 High street west & Station
road, Hadfield. See advertisement
Jackson
Levi (exors. of), rope, twine & cotton band manufactr. Hobroyd
Jackson
Olive (Mrs.), drpr. 162 Victoria st
Jackson
Rowland, tobacnst. 4 High st. ea
Johns
Jas. cabinet ma. 119 High st. we
Jones
Wm. stone mason, Bridgefield
Kelly
Jas. tailor & draper, High st. we
Kelsall
William, saddler & harness maker, 12 Old cross
Kenny
Henrietta Margaret (Mrs.), dress maker, 69 Norfolk street
Kinder
Henry, chemist & dentist, 85 High street west
Kinder
John Jas. butcher, 6 High st. we
Kinder
Walter, slater & plasterer, 2 Princes street
Knott
John, coal agent, 78 High st. east
Lamb
Edmd. goods inspctr. 31 Norfolk st
Lancaster
Henry Slater, Wheat Sheaf, & butcher, 16,18 & 20 Wellgate
Lawton
John, tin plate worker, Wellgate
Lawton
Wm. brush ma. 81 Victoria st
Lee
Ellen (Mrs.), confectioner, 230 High street west
Lee
George, clogger, 110 High st. west
Lee
Hannah, Clarice & Sarah (Misses), confectioners, 104 High street
west
Leech
Annie Matilda (Mrs.), milliner, 60 High street west
Leech
Charles, mill man, 43 Sheffield rd
Leech
Jn. Thos. cabinet ma. 60 High st. we
Lister
Lewis, piano dealer, 3 Freetown
Littlewood
Dick, shopkpr. 267 High st. we
Lockley
Michael, shoe ma. 191 High st. we
Lockwood
Thos. coal mer. Railway yard
Lomas
Robert, stone mer. 48 Church street & Shire Hill quarry
Longden
Alfred, farmer & stone engraver, Padfield road
Longden
Jn. blacksmith, 3 High st. east
Longden
John, farmer, Lane Head
Lowe
Moses, shoe maker & beer retailer, 13 Bernard street
Lowe
William, tailor, 89 Gladstone st
Lyne
Edwd. undertaker’s agt. High st. ea
McKelvey
Rd. hair dressr.70 High st. we
Mackenzie
Duncan John, surgeon, 64 High street west
McKnight
Thomas, leather dealer & ironmonger, 1 High street east
McLeod
Jn. photographer, High st. we
McMellon
William, tailor & draper, 18 High street west
McWilliam
John, tailor & draper, 11 Norfolk street
Maginnis
Sarah Ann (Mrs.), ladies’ school, Primrose house
Makin
James, stationer, 11 Victoria st
Malkin
Sam. corn miller, High st. east
Manchester
& Liverpool District Bank (branch) ( W. H. Hollingbery,man.),
Norfolk square; draw on Smith, Payne & Smith, London E.C.
Marsden
Elijah, shopkeeper, 73 Hall st
Marsden
Thomas, shopkpr. 40 Church st.
Mason
Jsph. brokr, & br. rtlr. 33 Charles st
Massey
David, grocer & butcher, 66 High street east
May
Amos, basket & skip maker, 136 Victoria street
May
Thomas, basket & skip maker, 90 Victoria street
Mellor
& Higginbottom, auctioneers, Hollin Cross lane & 42 High st.
west
Mellor
John, grocer & corn dealer, 2 High street east
Mellor
Wm. confectioner, 131 High st. we
Merry
James, ironmonger, plumber & gasfitter, High st. east. See advert
Minshall
Lydia (Mrs.), shopkeeper, 148 Victoria street
Mills
Henry, beer retailer, Arundel st
Morton
Martha (Mrs.), dress maker, Princes street
Needham
William, farmer, Hurst
Nelson
Margaret (Miss), confectioner, 20 High street east
Newton
George, grocer, 65 Bernard st
Newton
William, coal dlr. 43 King st
Nield
Daniel, tanner, Hague street
Nield
James, shoe maker, 9 Victoria st
Nield
Thomas, tea dealer, 49 Norfolk st
North
Derbyshire & North Cheshire Advertiser (Thomas Allard Pettit,
publisher & proprietor; published Saturday), Howard street
Nuttall
Jas. borough survyr. Sheffld. rd
Nuttall
Jsph. shoe dlr. 121 High st. west
Nutter
Robert, grocer, 10 Gladstone st
Ogden
Kay, insurance agent, Lord st
Ogden
Samuel, clogger, 30 Church st
Olive
& Partington,paper makers, paper stainers & tin foil
manufacturers, Turn Lee & Dover mills; & 10 Newmarket lane,
Manchester
Ollerenshaw
John, slater & plasterer, Spire Hollin
Ollerenshaw
Robert, grocer, & slater & plasterer, 30 Queen street
Orme
Joe, beer retailer, Norfolk street
Orme
Thos. joiner & builder, High st. we
Partington
Edward, paper manufacturer, see Olive & Partington
Patchett
Abraham, Butcher 36 High st we
Paulden
John, shoe ma. 151 High st. we
Pemberton
& Howarth, joiners & builders, 48 Sheffield road
Pemberton
John, butcher, 112 High st. we
Pemberton
Joseph, farmer, Royal gate
Percival
David, wine & spirit merchant, Norfolk square
Pettit
Edwin Walter, bookseller & stationer, 27 High street west
Pettit
Thomas Allard, publisher & proprietor of the “North
Derbyshire & North Cheshire Advertiser,” Howard street
Pickford
Job, shopkeeper, 5 Freetown
Pickford
John, grocer, 112 Victoria st
Plant
Wm. tin plate worker, Victoria st
Platt
Benjamin, grocer, 76 High st. ea
Platt
George, butcher, 49 High st. we
Platt
Joe, butcher, 39 High st. west
Platt
John, shopkeeper. 20 Church st
Platt
Joseph, farmer, Hill top
Pollitt
James, mill manager, Wren Nest
Potts
Bros, drapers, 11 High st. west
Potts
Joseph, joiner, 5 Sheffield road
Pownall
Edwin, shopkeeper, 93 Gladstone street
Priestnall
Harriet (Mrs.), shopkeeper, 82 Gladstone street
Proctor
Robt. chemist, 7 High st. west
Pye
John, gamekeeper, Heath
Quinn
Jn. umbrella ma. 83 Victoria st
Ramsbottom
William, clerk, Lord st
Rathbone
Jn. shoe ma. 140 High st. we
Redfern
Isaac, coal dealer, & school attendance officer, Gladstone street
Rhodes
James, surgeon, 25 Victoria st
Riley
Jas. shopkeeper, 21 Gladstone st
Roberts:
James, farmer, Herod farm
Robertson
Thos. shopkpr. Liberal hall
Robinson
George, drapr. 15 High st. we
Robinson
George, painter, glazier & paper hanger, 26 High street west (Error, should be 62)
Robinson
Joe, contractor, 63 Charlestown road
Robinson
Jsph. shopkpr. 116 Victoria st
Robinson
Joseph (exors. of), woollen cloth manufacturer, Gnathole mills
Robinson
Samuel, grocer, 16 High st. ea;
Robinson
Thomas, manager & sec. of the Shepley Mill Cotton Manufacturing
Co. Limited, Princes street
Robinson
Thos. shopkeepr. Charlestown
Robinson
Walter, draper, 12 Norfolk st
Rodgers
Richard & Son, cutlers, 129 High street east
Rolley
Alice (Miss), milliner, 53 High street west (misprint in original, should be 54)
Rosson
John Henry, chemist & dentist, 1 High street west
Rowbottom
Samuel, cotton spinner & band manufacturer, Meadow mills
Rowbottom
Thos. draper. 85 High st. we
Rowbottom
Thos. shopkpr. 63 High st. ea
Salisbury
Hy.&Son, jwllrs. 58 High st. we
Sandiford
Anthony, grcr. 228 High st. we
Schofield
Charles & Son, stationers, printers & bookbinders, 6 Norfolk
sq
Schofield
Alfred Ernest, music teacher, Gladstone street
Schofield
Hannah (Mrs.), butcher, 83 High street east
Schofield
Samuel, boot & shoe maker, 103 Victoria street
Seddon
& Bradley, dressmakers, 196 High street west
Sellars
Jas. Bull's Head, 72 Church st.
Sellars
John, draper, 13 Norfolk street
Sellars
Joseph, Talbot, 25 Hall street
Sellars
William Henry, oat cake baker, 90 Victoria street
Shallcross
Joseph, grocer, 42 Edward st
Shaw
Edwin, piano & music seller, 9 High street east. See advert
Shephard
Abrahm. grcr. 128 High st. ea
Shephard
James, farmer, Ashes
Shepherd
John, farmer, Mossy Lee
Shepley
Robert& James, cotton spinners & manufacturers, Shepley
street
Shepley
Thos. ironmonger, 2 Norfolk st
Sheppard
James, farmer, & furniture remover, Ashes. See advert
Sheppard
John, mineral water manufacturer, 14 Norfolk square
Shepley
Mill Cotton Manufacturing Co. Limited (Thomas Robinson, sec. &
manager), Shepley mill
Siddons
Joseph, farm bailiff to Hon Francis Howard, Blackshaw
Sidebottom
Peter, confectioner, & gas rate collector, 127 High street west
Sidebottom
SI. farmer, Hollin Cross la
Sims
Alfred Joseph, inland revenue officer, Hollin Cross lane
Slack
Saml, beer retlr. 78 High st. east
Slater
Thos. hair dresser, 138 High st. we
Slater
Wm .coal dealer, 132 High st. we
Smith
Edward, boot & shoe maker, 47 High street west
Smith
Ellen (Miss), milliner & dressmaker, 62 High street east
Smith
Emma (Mrs.), ladies’ seminary, High street east
Smith
John Bower & Son, cabinet makers, 55 High street east
Smith
Wm. boot & shoe ma. 37 High st. we
Stafford
Joseph, china & earthenware dealer, 10 High street west
Stafford
Jsph. cotton spinner, Arundel st
Statham
James, warehouseman, 15 Norfolk street
Statham
Mary (Mrs.), dress maker, 15 Norfolk street
Sumner
Francis James, cotton spinner & manufacturer, Wren Nest mills
Swindells
Thomas, baker & confectioner, 6 High street east
Swire
John, clogger, 8 High st. west
Swire
William, draper, 2 Victoria st
Sykes
James, Surrey Arms, High st. we
Sykes
Joseph, cotton spinner, see T. P. Sykes & Sons
Sykes
Sarah (Mrs.), Greyhound, 7 Hope street
Sykes
Thomas Patterson & Sons, cotton spinners & doublers, Hawk’s
head
Sykes
Wiliam, grocer & corn dealer, 7 Norfolk square
Tarbatt
Hy. butcher, 216 High st. we
Taylor
Alfred, ironworks man. Pikes la
Taylor
Charles, draper, 131 Hall street
Taylor
John, farmer, Ashes
Thom
James, coal agnt. 33 Norfolk st
Thompson
Charles William, outfitter, 45 High street west
Thornhill
Sl. warehouseman, 55 Norfolk st
Thornhill
Wm. farmer, Woodcock road
Thomley
Betty (Miss), grocer, 4 Charlestown road
Thornley
James, clogger & shoe maker, 1 Charlestown road
Thornley
James, farmer, Hague street
Thomley
John, butcher, 102 Victoria st
Thornley
Robert, butcher, Freetown
Thorp
Hannah (Miss), shopkeeper, 50 Church street
Thorp
Joseph, draper, 126 High st. ea
Thorp
Walter, coal merchant, Henry st
Tifney
Simeon, stone dealer, 13 Wellgt
Tomlinson
May (Miss), frmr. Turn Lee
Tomlinson
Wm. chemist, 53 High st. we
Traynor
Thos. hairdrssr. 30 High st. we
Trueman
John, Bee Hive inn, & quarry master, 35 Hague street
Turner
Manasseh, fruiterer, 26 High st. ea
Twells
Thomas, draper, 74 High st. east
Voisey
Harriet (Mrs.), shopkeeper, 92 Victoria street
Wagstaffe
Jn. butcher, 19 High st. ea
Walker
Crowther, draper, 90 High st. we
Walker
John, bleacher, Charlestown works; & at 15 Dickenson street,
Manchester
Walton
James, Bridge inn, Market st
Walton
Jsph. Albion inn, 15 Victoria st
Walton
Matt, tobacconist, 7 High st. ea
Ward
James, stationer & bookseller, 57 High street east
Waterhouse
Aaron, farmer & coal dealer, Ashes
Waterhouse
Albert, stone mason, 76 Victoria street
Waterhouse
Jonathan, joiner & builder, 30 Hollin Cross lane
Waterhouse
Jonathan, stationer, 130 High street west
Watts
George, shoe maker, Freetown
Watts
Mary (Mrs.), shopkpr. Hope st
Whatmough
Enoch, watch maker, 65 High street east
White
George, farmer, Brown hill
White
Thos. draper, 133 High st. east
Whittaker
Thos. beer rtlr. 32 Chapel st
Whittingham
Francis & Son, brush makers, 10 High street east
Williamson
George, rate coll. Market st
Williamson
William, grocer, corn & coal dealer, 32 High street east
Willie
John William Crane, cabinet maker, 17 Norfolk street
Willis
Harriet (Mrs.), shopkeeper, 121 Charlestown
Wilson
Elijah, farmer. Heath
Wilson
Hannah (Mrs.), boot & shoe maker, 20 High street west
Wilson
Joseph, hair dresser, 124 High street east
Winterbottom
George, Royal Oak, Sheffield road
Winterbottom
James, stone engraver, 6 Hall street
Winterbottom
Robert, registrar to burial board, Cemetery lodge
Wood
Charlotte (Mrs.), shopkeeper, 27 High street east
Wood
Daniel, cotton manufacturer, see Wood John & Brothers, Limited
Wood
Eli, music seller, 42 Edward st
Wood
George & Brothers, undertakers & coach proprietors (formerly
James Wood), Howard street. See advert
Wood
Gilbert, butcher, 38 Kershaw st
Wood
Isaiah, grocer, 52 Church street
Wood
James, farmer, Windy harbour
Wood
John & Brothers Limited, cotton spinners & manufacturers
(William Hall, sec.), Howard Town mills
Wood
John, grocer & corn dealer, 25 High street west
Wood
Robert, shopkeeper, 12 Chapel st
Wood
Samuel, cotton manufacturer, see Wood John & Brothers, Limited
Wood
Samuel, farmer. Hobroyd,
Wood
Samuel, shopkeeper & wheelwright, 13 Charles street
Wood
Sarah Ann (Miss), shopkeeper, 60 Hague street
Wood
Thomas, rag merchant, Derby st
Wood
Wm. general dealer, Queen st
Woodcock
Annie (Miss),hosier, 8 High street east
Woodcock
Ebenezer, shopkeeper, 152 High street west
Woodcock
Elizabeth (Mrs.), grocer, 51 Victoria street
Woodcock
George, Hare Hounds, 27 Hall street
Woodhead
Stephen & Co. Chinese starch polish manufacturers, 57 High street
west, See advertisement
Woodhead
Daniel, stationer, printer & bookbinder, 57 High street west
Woodhead
Matthew, stone merchant, 13 Hope street & Law quarries. See
advertisement
Woodhouse Jsph. butcher, 36 Church st
Woolley
Edwd. butcher,77 High st. west
Woolley
Thos. grocer, 6 High st. west (Error, should be 61)
Workmen's
Club Co-operative Society Limited (Bernard Dearnley, sec.), Arundel
street
Wright
George, draper, 9 Arundel st
Wright
Joseph, Globe inn, 144 High street west
Wright
Samuel,shopkeeper, 135 Hall st
Wright
Thomas James, grocer & tobacconist, 72 High street west
Wright
Thomas, joiner, 10 George st
Wyatt
Cephas, farmer, Blackshaw
Wyld
James, farmer, Hurst
Yorkshire
Boot Co. (Edward Cooper, manager), 23 High street west
Dinting.
Barlow
Thomas, Simmondley lane
Bennett
Mrs. Simmondley lane
Hollingworth
Henry, Simmondley lane
Humphreys
James Collie
Lawton
Mrs. Simmondley lane
Rowcliffe
John B. Gamesley house
Sheppard
William, Simmondley lane
Commercial.
Booth
Samuel, farmer, Gamesley
Church
Institute (Jas. Entwistle,sec.)
Cooper
George, farmer
Dawson
James, grocer & news agent
Downing
Margaret (Mrs.), shopkeeper
Egerton
James, grocer & hosier
Hague
William (Mrs.), farmer
Hallam
Geo. oat cake baker, Brookfield
Harrison
James, farmer, Gamesley
Horrocks
John, shopkeeper, Brookfield
Jackson
Joseph, farmer, & Magnet inn, Gamesley
Kenyon
Nancy (Mrs.), dress maker, Brookfield
Lyne
George, shopkeeper, Brookfield
McGregor
John, color mixer at Messrs. E. Potter’s print works, Shaw lane
Marsden
Moses, farmer, Gamesley
Moss
Joseph, newsagent & coal dealer, Brookfield .
Nield
John, Plough inn
Nield
Thomas, butcher
Pilkington
William, cashier at Messrs E. Potter’s print works, Shaw lane
Platt
James, farmer
Platt
Thomas, farmer
Potter
Edmund & Co. calico printers; warehouse,10 Charlotte st.
Manchester
Roberts
Hannah (Mrs.), shopkeeper
Rowbottom
& Thornley, builders, contractors & quarry owners, Gamesley;
& at Charlesworth
Rowcliffe
John B. & Co. spring mattress manufacturers
Shephard
Chas. shopkeeper, Brookfield
Shepley
John & William, cotton spinners & manufacturers, Brookfield
mills
Sykes
Jnn. & Thos. Beard, slaters & plasterers, Gamesley; & at
Charlesworth
Turner
James, greengrocer, Gamesley
Wagstaffe
Lavinia (Mrs.), Viaduct inn
Wharmby
John, grocer, Brookfield
Whiteley
James, grocer, Brookfield
Whittaker
William, farmer, Gamesley
Wilson
Mary Ann (Miss), milliner Brookfield
Yarwood
James, shopkeeper, Gamesley
Youll
Joseph, mason, Gamesley.
Chunal.
Band
George, farmer
Bowden
Alice (Mrs.), farmer
Goddard
William, Grouse inn & farmer
Hadfield
John, farmer
Hampson
James, Horseshoe inn & cattle dealer & farmer
Higginbottom
Ann (Mrs.), farmer
Higginbottom
John, farmer & stone dlr
Knott
Samuel, farmer
Nield
Edwin, farmer
Priestnall
Jeremiah, farmer
Robinson
Sarah Ann (Miss), farmer.
Shepley
William, farmer
Wood
John, farmer
Hadfield.
Private
Residents.
Buckley
Henry, Brosscroft
Butterworth
Henshaw, Kent villa
Eastham
James Cook, The Thorns
Hadfield
Rev. Joseph [vicar]
Lawson
Henry Thomas, 12 Hadfield la
Platt
Edward
Platt
Mrs. Bross croft
Rhodes
Thomas J.P. Mersey bank
Rhodes
Wm. Shepley J.P. Mersey bank
Ridgway
James, Green lane
Shaw
John, Kent villa
Swales
Joseph
Walsh
Benjamin, Bank house, Bank st
Commercial.
Aldous
Thomas, window blind manufacturer, 124 Main road & Station road.
See advertisement
Aldous
William, farmer, Main road
Ashton
Abraham, coal mer. Rose villa
Ashton
William, grocer, 58 Main road
Aston
John Henry, coal agent, Station rd
Bain,
Sidebotham & Brightmore, builders & contractors, Church
street. See advertisement
Barber
Isaiah, hair dresser, 24 Bank- bottom
Barker
Wm. grocer & farmer, Main rd
Battey
Daniel, draper, 106 Station rd
Beard
Geo. slater & plasterer, Church street. See advertisement
Beckett
William, cabinet maker, 49 Brosscroft
Belfield
Edward, Anchor inn, Main rd
Bell
James, clogger & draper, 43 & 45 Station road
Bell
Joseph, shopkeeper, 47 Station rd
Bennet
Jas. shopkeeper, Woolley bridge
Bennett
Robert, shopkeeper, Station rd
Bennett
Thomas, draper & furniture dealer, Station road
Bennett
Thomas, Victoria, Bross croft
Bentham
Thos. stationer, 49 Station rd
Blakley
Jas. shopkpr. Woolley bridge
Booth
Ed win, temperance hotel, & bath proprietor, 170 Station road
Booth
Joe, grocer & draper, Waterside
Booth
John, clogger, Woolley bridge
Bradbury
William, grocer,Bankbottom
Braddock
John, coal mer. Church ter
Bradshaw
James, grocer, 109 Main rd
Broadbent
Jn. shopkpr. 10 Bross croft
Brook
Furness, draper, 13 Station road
Butterworth
Henshaw, grcr. Waterside
Challoner
Elizabeth (Mrs.), coal merchant, Bross croft
Collier
Charles, grocer, & agent for W. & A. Gilbey, wine &
spirit merchants, 9 Bank street
Cox
John, draper & photographer, 90 Station road
Crockett
James, fishmonger, Station rd
Dawson
William, plumber & painter, Station road
Daykin
Ezekiel, greengrocer, Station rd
Dewsnap
Jn.& Son, butchers, Station rd
Duckworth
Samuel, blacksmith, 36 Station road
Ellis
Wm. furniture remover, Woolley bridge
Equitable
Co-operative Society Lim. (Thos. Bentham,see. ; Geo Hutchinson,
treasurer), Station road
Eversden
William, grocer, Waterside
Farnsworth
Hannah (Mrs.),shopkeeper, 5 Station road
Fawcett
George, basket & skep maker, Woolley bridge
Foster
Thomas, Arundel Arms, & professional cricketer
Fowden
Thos. shopkpr. 14 Hadfield rd
Gill
Wright, grocer & quarry owner, 67 Station road
Goddard
Abel, shopkeeper, Station rd
Goddard
Elizabeth (Mrs.), milliner, Station road
Hadfield
& Hollingworth Coal Co. (George Hutchinson, sec. ; Joseph
Knowles, treasurer)
Hadfield
Conservative Club Co. Limited (John Phair, sec)
Hadfield
Liberal Club (James Handforth,sec)
Hadfield
John (exors. of), Spread Eagle, Woolley bridge
Hadfield
John, grocer, Station road
Haigh
Wm. boot & shoe ma. 9 Station rd
Hampshire
William, ironmonger, plumber & tinman, 71 Station rd. See advt
Hampson
Thos. pawnbroker, Station rd
Harris
John, tailor & draper, 75 Station rd
Harrison
Wm. shopkeeper, Woolley brdg
Harrop
Joseph, draper, 29 Station rd
Hearnshaw
Abraham, pork butcher, 61 Station road
Hindley
Richard, baker, 103 Station rd
Hirst
James, draper, 46 Bankbottom
Horsfall
Young, joiner, 65 Station road
Howarth
Hy Wright, drpr. 60 Station rd
Hoyland
Benj. hardware dealr. Station rd
Hoyland
Henry, hardware dlr. Station rd
Ingram
Zachriah, umbrella maker, Woolley bridge
Jackson
Isaac, saddler & harness makr, Station road
Johnson
Thos. coal mer. & grocer, Bank st
Jolley
Joseph, Spinners’ Arms, Main rd
Jones
James, chemist, 27 Station road
Lee
Ann (Mrs.), grocer, 15 Lower barn
Lee
John, skewer & bobbin maker, Warhurst fold
Lockwood
Elliot, draper, 92 Station; rd
Marsden
Alfred, shopkeeper, Lower barn
Mellor
Wm. shopkeeper, 7 Station road
Newton
Thomas, farmer, Mouseley farm
Nield
Allen, “Pioneer” coffee tavern, 99 Station road
Nield
Thomas, farmer
Nelson
Samuel, tailor, 92 Station road
Newton
Amos, butcher, 3 Station road
Patchett
Hy. brick maker,32 Station rd
Pettit
Ada( Miss), stationer, 98 Station rd
Platt
Ann (Mrs.), shopkpr. 100 Station rd
Platt
Edward & Sons, cotton manufrs.; & at Padfield
Platt
Jane (Mrs.), shopkpr. Woolley brdg
Platt
Mary (Mrs.), beer rtlr. Woolly. brdg
Rhodes
Thomas & Son, cotton spinners & manufacturers, Hadfield
mills; & 13 Charlotte street, Manchester
Rhodes
Thomas, cotton spinners & manufacturers, Mersey mills; & 14
Charlotte street, Manchester
Roberts
George William, cabinet maker, 132 Main road
Robinson
Alonzo, beer retailer, 59 Station road
Robinson
Joseph, Palatine, Station rd
Rolley
Abel, furniture dealer. Bank st
Roworth
Benjamin, farmer, Cross
Saxon
J. Commercial inn, Bankbottom
Senior
Elijah, greengrocer. Station rd
Senior
Joseph, shopkeeper, Waterside
Shaw
Mary (Mrs.), beer retailer, 2 Hadfield road
Sheppard
Robert, draper, 33 Station rd
Shufflebotham
Joseph, clogger, 1a, Station road
Siddall
Elizabeth (Mrs.), shopkeeper, Padfield lane
Siddall
George, butcher, 73 Station rd
Sidebottom
John, cattle dealer
Sidebottom
T. & W. cotton spinners & manufacturers, Waterside mills; &
22 Pall mall, Manchester
Slater
William, mason & contractor, 38 Station road
Sutton
Thos. shopkeeper & stonemason, 168 Station road
Swales
Joseph, accoucheur. Station road
Swindells
Edwin, draper, Bank terrace
Swire
John, clogger, Woolley bridge
Taylor
Abel,hair dresser & shopkeeper, Station road
Thorniley
James, chemist, Bankbottom
Thornley
Amos, watchma. 97 Station rd
Thornley
Jas. general dir. Woolley brdg
Thornley
Taylor,coal mer. 85 Station rd
Wadsworth
Len, farmer & beer retailer, Station road
Warhurst
Caleb, joiner & builder, 138 Station road
Warhurst
Enoch, joiner, Station road
Warhurst
Samuel, music teacher, 138 Station road
Wheatley
Joseph, shoe mkr. 97 Station rd
Wildgoose
William, grocer, Waterside
Wood
Samuel, grocer, 35 Station road
Woodhead
Joseph, news agent, Bank st
Woolley
Edward, butcher, Woolley bdg
Woolley
Geo. butcher, 102 Station road
Worsley
Henry, shopkeeper & commission agent, 41 Bross croft
Wright
William Symes, ironmonger, iron & tin plate worker, Station road
Wynne
Patrick, tripe seller, 34 Station rd
Padfield.
Platt
Mrs. Padfield brook
Dewsnap
Joseph, Ivy cottage
Commercial.
Bennett
James, Peel’s Arms
Bennett
Joseph, farmer, Little Padfield
Bowden
William, shopkeeper
Collier
Charles, miller
Coote
Joshua, quarry owner
Crossland
John, farmer, Deep Clough
Dearnley
Eli, fishmonger
Dewsnap
Joseph, butcher
Ellis
Samuel, farmer
Fielding
William, grocer
Fox
Thomas, farmer, Torside
Goddard
Joseph & Son, contractors, Little Padfield
Goddard
Joseph, farmer, Little Padfield
Hollingworth
James, shopkeeper
Horsfield
William, shopkeeper
Hyde
William, farmer
Jackson
Peter, farmer
Jackson
Thomas, farmer, Old House
Liggins
Eliza (Miss), milliner
Mapp
Charles, carrier
Oldfield
Sarah (Mrs.), farmer, Deep Clough
Platt
Edward & Sons, cotton manufrs
Platt
Joe, butcher
Sargentson
James, cotton waste dealer, & farmer
Sargentson
James, jun. cotton waste dealer & farmer
Siddall
Mary Ann(Mrs.), beer retailer, shopkeeper & farmer
Siddell
Elizabeth (Mrs.), shopkeeper
Sidebottom
James, shopkeeper
Stears
Martha (Mrs.), frmr. Deep Clough
Whitehead
Firth, farmer
Wild
Walter, grocer
Wood
George, butcher & carrier
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Last updated: 13 August 2020