Kelly's Derbyshire Directory 1925
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, on the Great Central section of the London
and North Eastern railway, 9½
from Ashton, 24½
from Barnsley, 87 from Birmingham, 65 from Burton, 47 from
Chesterfield, 55 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 Stalybridge, 11 from Stockport, 53 from Uttoxeter and 72 from
Wolverhampton. It is in the High Peak division of the county, hundred
of High Peak, rural deanery of Glossop, archdeaconry of Chesterfield
and diocese of Southwell. The London and North Eastern railway from
Manchester to Sheffield is carried across Dinting Vale on a lofty
viaduct of sixteen arches, constructed of stone, about 1 mile west
from the Town hall, and there is a branch line from Dinting to
Glossop and Hadfield. A service of electric trams runs to 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 ; Dinting, Holy Trinity, and Chinley with
Bugsworth. The parish church is a modern edifice of stone in the
Early Gothic style, consisting of chancel, nave, aisles, south porch,
vestry, organ chamber and a western tower, with spire, containing a
clock and 8 bells, rehung and a chiming apparatus attached in 1877,
at a cost of £180: the bells were recast in 1923, at a cost of
£528 ; the tower was rebuilt in 1856; in 1902 a carved oak
porch was added at a cost of £120, in memory of John Wagstaffe
: the stained west window is a memorial erected by the congregation
to a former Duke and Duchess of Norfolk, Robert Shepley esq. and John
Wood esq. benefactors to the church : 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 : in 1915 the church received important
alterations; the nave, a flat Georgian building, erected in 1831,
having been pronounced unsafe, was pulled down and the present one of
handsome proportions substituted; it is built of local stone and
consists of five bays with side aisles, and a canopied southern porch
with a Calvary terminal : in 1923 the chancel was rebuilt and a lady
chapel added, Mr. and Mrs. I. Jackson, of Glossop, giving £6,000
for this purpose: a rose window, at the east end, and a carved
reredos were erected in 1924 by the congregation, the former being in
memory of Mr. and Mrs. Jackson : 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 font of white
marble, presented, at a cost of £200, by C. E. Knowles esq. has
been placed in a new baptistery : the old communion plate bears date
1745, but in 1877 a new set was presented by the parishioners : the
churchyard was closed against interments, with modifications, in
1857-8. The registers date from the year 1620. The living is a
vicarage, net yearly value £300, with residence, in the gift of
trustees, and held since 1917 by the Rev. William Dudley Dixon M.A.
of Hatfield Hall, Durham, and surrogate.
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
Roman 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 250 sittings.
Mount
Pleasant Congregational chapel, built in 1858, will seat 600.
There
are United Methodist chapels in Hall street and Simmondley lane and a
Primitive Methodist chapel in Shrewsbury street.
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
and again in 1919. In 1913 new municipal buildings were erected at
the rear of the town hall.
The
Free Library and Public Hall, Fauvel road, erected in 1887 by Herbert
Rhodes esq. and Lord Doverdale D.L., J. P. 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 5,000
volumes, lecture hall and a public hall : over the main entrance a
tower with pinnacles rises to a height of 80 feet.
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, three private baths for males and a like
number for females, and vapour baths : the buildings include a
ventilating tower 100 feet high.
There
are cotton factories here and, in the neighbourhood, calico printing
establishments and paper mills : some of the former, and especially
those of Messrs. John Wood and Bros. (1920) Limited, and Messrs.
Francis Sumner and Co. Limited, are very extensive, employing in
ordinary times about 1,300 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 Mr. E. Potter, and now carried on by Messrs. E.
Potter and Co. Limited (a branch of the Calico Printers’
Association Limited).
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 fact 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 about £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. 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.
The
Convalescent Home, North road, built in 1908 by Sir E. Partington, at
a cost of about £30,000, including endowment, is a structure of
stone, and consists of two wings and one central block ; one wing is
for males and the other for females ; in the central block are the
matron’s and nurses’ apartments ; the home provides for
ten patients.
Howard
Park, North road, formed in 1887, at the joint expense of Lord Howard
of Glossop; Samuel Wood esq. and Mrs. Wood, 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, which has been restored and is in a fair
state of preservation.
Glossop
Hall, the seat of Lord Howard of Glossop 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
enlarged and improved by Henry Charles, 13th Duke of Norfolk, great
grandfather of the present owner.
The
town and hamlets now comprising the manor of Glossop appear 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 by 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 Lord
Howard of Glossop.
The
land is partly moor and pasturage. The area of the civil parish and
urban district is 2,998 acres of land and 54 of water ; rateable
value. £101,501.
The
population of the municipal borough in 1921 was :— All Saints’
ward, 6,184; Hadfield ward, 6,239, and St. James’ ward, 8,108 ;
total, 20,531.
The
population of the ecclesiastical parish of All Saints in 1911 was
4,605.
HOLLY
BANK is a hamlet in the parish.
DINTING,
formed into an ecclesiastical parish, 1875, is partly in Glossop
borough, and has a station on the Great Central section of the London
and North Eastern 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 aisle 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 : there is also a memorial
window inserted by Mr. Edwin Williams, of Melbourne, Australia, in
1906, to his wife : 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 £330, with residence, in the gift
of the Wood family, and held since 1905 by the Rev. Henry Lawrence
M.A. of Queen’s College, Oxford. There is a United Methodist
chapel, built in 1860, with sittings for 300 persons, 100 of which
are free. The population of the ecclesiastical parish in 1911 was
3,293.
BROOKFIELD
is a hamlet, 1 mile north of Dinting station. The Congregational
chapel, erected in 1867, is a building of stone in the Early English
style : all the windows are stained : it has 400 sittings.
GAMESLEY
is a hamlet 1 mile west of Dinting station. In the hamlet of Gamesley
are the remains of a Roman fort, called by the country people from
time immemorial, “Melandra” and “Melandra Castle;”
it stands at the confluence of the Course Brook and the Etherow: it
is rectangular in form, with rounded angles, and had three double
gateways and a single arched entrance on the south: the length is 398
feet, the breadth 368 feet, and the area 3.36 acres approximately,
and in the centre is a square building which contained several
chambers, and has been by analogy called the “Praetorium:”
a good deal of pottery, terra sigillate and Romano-British ware has
been found, as well as glass and floor and roof tiles, Roman coins
from 68 to 388 A.D. and a quantity of trade and coin-weights, both
Roman and Celtic. The miscellaneous objects include bones, flints,
dice, iron, lead and bronze finds; tiles marked with the initials
V.V. (Valeria Victrix) of the 20th Legion, and a centurial stone,
found here in 1771, and inscribed to Valerius Vitalis, centurion of
the 1st cohort of the Frisiavones, which was in Britain, A.D. 105 and
124: it has been concluded that Melandra was occupied as early as 80
A.D. and again after an interval in the 3rd and 4 th centuries: the
summit of this eminence 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 township of Padfield, was formed in 1876 into an
ecclesiastical parish, but was, August 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 section of the London and North Eastern 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 of about £100 : 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 £350,
in the gift of Col. William Sidebottom V.D., J.P. and four other
trustees, and held since 1917 by the Rev. Archibald Campbell
Macalister White L.Th. of Durham University. There is a Mission room
at Woolley Bridge. The Roman Catholic church, dedicated to St.
Charles Borromeo, is an edifice of stone in the Early English style,
erected in 1858 by Lord Howard of Glossop, and consisting of nave,
aisles, sacristy, baptistery and a western tower containing one bell
: there are memorials to Father McDonnell and the Right Rev.
Monsignor Canon H. Sabela : the carved high altar of stone was
erected in memory of 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
Right 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, and
Augusta (Talbot), his wife, d. 3 July, 1862, and others to Miss
Margaret Mary Conlan, Mrs. Dorothea M. Gregory, Miss Sabela and to
Mrs. Esther Mary Couban, and an “ Ecce Homo ” presented
by Monsignor H. Sabela. 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. The
Wesleyan chapel, built in 1878, has 750 sittings; the Primitive
Methodist chapel, built in 1876 has 500 sittings; the United
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. The population of the ecclesiastical parish in
1911 was 6,511.
Post,
M. O., T. & T. E. D. Office, 62 Station road.—Mrs. Mary A.
Wright, sub-postmistress. Letters through Manchester
PADFIELD,
adjoining Hadfield station, 1½
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
WHITFIELD
was formed into an ecclesiastical parish in 1884. On Aug. 10, 1894,
the portion in Glossop borough was added to that parish, and the
remainder amalgamated with the 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, and repaired in 1908 at
a cost of £850: 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 £320, with residence, in the gift of Sir
John Wood bart. D.L., J.P. and Sir Samuel Hill-Wood bart. M.P., D.L.,
J.P. and held since 1904 by the Rev. William Martin Martin-Ellis
M.A., F.R.G.S. of Hatfield Hall, Durham, rural dean and surrogate.
The vicarage house, a stone building near the church, has been
considerably enlarged since 1872. The church of St. Luke, also in
this parish, was built in 1906 by Mrs. S. Wood, of Moorfield, at a
cost of £5,000, and opened by the Bishop of Derby on St. Luke’s
Day in that year ; it is served by the clergy of St. James’.
There are Mission rooms in Chapel street, Kershaw street and Wood
street. The Sumner Memorial Roman Catholic church, Sumner street,
dedicated to St. Mary, founded and endowed by Francis James Sumner
esq. D.C.L. of Park Hall, Hayfield, and erected in 1887 by his heirs
on a site granted by 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 stone screen separates the chancel from the side chapels :
the altar and tabernacle are elaborately carved in alabaster, marble
and Caen stone, and the pulpit is also 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, a former rector, to the memory of John Sumner
esq.: and near the Roman Catholic school, in St. Mark’s road,
is a convent for the Sisters of Charity of St. Paul. In 1908 a
memorial altar and stained window were erected to the Right Rev.
Canon Charles W. Tasker. Littlemoor Congregational chapel, founded in
1811, has 800 sittings. 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. The
Whitfield Free Library, now (1924) containing 600 volumes, and the
adjoining recreation ground were presented to the people of Glossop
by George S. Ollerenshaw esq. J.P. in 1902. Whitfield House, the
residence of Sir John Wood bart. D.L., 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. 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 population of the ecclesiastical parish in 1911 was 9,034.
Charlestown
is a place here.
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.
OFFICIAL
ESTABLISHMENTS, LOCAL INSTITUTIONS &c.
Post,
M. O., T. & T. E. D. Office, Norfolk square.—James
Cockroft, postmaster. Letters should have Derbyshire added
Town
Sub-Post & M. O. Office, Hall street, Old Glossop.—
Frederick W. Adshead, sub-postmaster
Town
Sub-Post & M. O. Office, 196 & 198 High street west.—
Stanley Cooper, sub-postmaster
Town
Sub-Post & M. O. Office, 113 Victoria street, Whitfield.—William
Carnall, sub-postmaster
CORPORATION.
1923-24.
Mayor,
Alderman William Newton J.P.
Deputy
Mayor, Alderman James Malkin J.P.
Aldermen.
Retire
Nov. 1924: Lord Doverdale D.L., J.P., Levi Lee, George Wharmby
Retire
Nov. 1927: Thomas Braddock J.P., James Malkin J.P., William Newton
Councillors.
All
Saints’ Ward.
Returning
Officer for Ward Elections, Alderman J. Malkin
Retire
Nov. 1924: John Hague, Thomas Swire
Retire
Nov. 1925: James Martin Jackson, Arthur Mellor
Retire
Nov. 1926: Saml. Thomas Ashton, Albert Warrington
St.
James’ Ward.
Returning
Officer for Ward Elections, Alderman Wm. Newton.
Retire
Nov. 1924: Walter Dixon, George Edward Russell
Retire
Nov. 1925: Joseph Dempsey Doyle, Richard Sellers
Retire
Nov. 1926: Joseph Edwin Buckley, William Newton
Hadfield
Ward.
Returning
Officer for Ward Elections, Alderman Levi Lee.
Retire
Nov. 1924: Tom Aldous, Percy Sargentson
Retire
Nov. 1925: Samuel Hinchliffe, Joseph Renshaw
Retire
Nov. 1926: William Jackson, John Platt
Elective
Auditors, Percy Knott, (one vacancy).
Officers
of the Corporation.
Town
Clerk, George H. Lea, Municipal buildings
Borough
Treasurer & Superintendent Assistant Overseer, Samuel Fletcher,
Municipal buildings
Medical
Officer of Health to Borough & Rural District Council, Medical
Superintendent of Maternity & Child Welfare Centre & to the
Isolation Hospital, Ernest Henry Marcus Milligan M.D., D.P.H.
Municipal buildings
Public
Analyst, J. White, County offices, St. Mary’s Gate, Derby
Borough
Auditor, John W. Hirst, Alexandra buildings, 28 Queen street,
Manchester Surveyor & Water Works Manager,William Arnold Mitchell
A. M.I.M. & Cy. E.
Veterinary
Surgeon under the Diseases of Animals Acts, George Ellis M.R.C.V.S.
Fauvel road
Water
Inspector, James Byron, 17 Thomas street
Chief
Constable, Inspector under Diseases of Animals Act, Inspector of
Hackney Carriages & Superintendent or Fire Brigade, William R.
Wilkie, Ellison street
Sanitary
& Meat Inspector & Inspector under the Food & Drugs Acts,
Harry Dane, Municipal buildings
Park
Superintendent, P. Rowbottom
Collectors,
General District Rate, No. 1 district, Frank Furniss, Municipal
buildings, Glossop; No. 2 district, James Alston Bridge, Municipal
buildings, Glossop; Water, Thomas Rhodes
BOROUGH
MAGISTRATES.
The
Mayor & Ex Mayor
Bowden
William H. Fauvel road, Glossop
Braddock
Thomas, 25 Lambgates, Hadfield
Dixon
Walter, Pike’s lane, Glossop
Doverdale
Lord D.L. Easton, Glossop
Doyle
Joseph Dempsey, 6 Dinting lane, Dinting
Hankinson
William, Lord street, Glossop
Hill-Wood
Major Sir Samuel H. bart. M.P., D.L. Moorfield house, Glossop
Hunter
Thomas Pearson, jun. Rosebank, Temple street, Hadfield
Hunter
Thomas Pearson, The Poplars, Talbot road, Glossop
Jackson
William, Post street, Padfield, Manchester
Knowles
Charles E. Holmdale, North road, Glossop
Malkin
James, Moorside, Glossop
Partington
Mrs. O.B.E. Talbot house, Glossop
Partington
Hon. Oswald, 10 Ennismore gardens, London SW7
Sidebottom
Col. William V.D. Harewood lodge, Broadbottom, Cheshire
Swire
Thomas, 8 High street west, Glossop
Clerk,
Percy E. Ireland, Market street
The
magistrates meet every alternate monday at the Town hall at 2.30 p.m
COUNTY
MAGISTRATES FOR GLOSSOP PETTY SESSIONAL DIVISION.
Doverdale
Lord D.L. Easton, Glossop (chairman)
Arnfield
Samuel, Rose cottage, Charlesworth
Barr
John, Dinting lodge, Manchester
Braddock
Thomas, Lambgates, Hadfield, Manchester
Heywood
Lt.-Col. George Basil, Caradoc court, Ross, Hereford
Malkin
James, Moorside, Glossop
Moss
Robert, Hague view, Charlesworth, Manchester
Ollerenshaw
George S. Highfield, Talbot road, Glossop
Partington
Mrs. O.B.E. Talbot house, Glossop
Partington
Hon. Oswald, 10 Ennismore gdns. London S W 7
Rowbottom
James Henry, Chisworth, Charlesworth
Sidebottom
Major Ralph B., T.D. Redcourt, Glossop
Sidebottom
Col. William V.D. Harewood lodge, Broadbottom, Cheshire
Sumner
Francis George, Dene house, Kineton, Warwickshire
Wainwright
Col. Charles Richard M.B.E., T.D. Brabyns house, Marple
Wood
Sir John bart. Whitfield house, Glossop
Woodhouse
Sir Percy, Long Mead, Ludworth, Stockport
The
mayor of Glossop & the chairman, for the time being of the
Glossop Dale Rural District Council are ex-officio magistrates
Clerk
to the Magistrates, Percy E. Ireland, 10 Market street, Glossop
Petty
Sessions are held at the Town hall at intervals of three or four
weeks, at 11 a.m. Thursdays. The following places are included in the
division :—Charlesworth, Chisworth, Chunal, Compstall,
Ludworth, Marple Bridge & Simmondley
GLOSSOP
LOCAL PENSION COMMITTEE.
The
Committee, consisting of 24 members, was formed in 1908.
Meetings
are held at the Municipal buildings, monthly, on notice.
Clerk,
Alfred Phillips, 53 Pike’s lane, Glossop
Pension
Officer, Albert James Baker, Norfolk street
GLOSSOP
DALE RURAL DISTRICT COUNCIL.
The
parishes in the District are:—Charlesworth, Chisworth &
Ludworth. The area is 17,891 acres; the population in 1921 was 3,780.
Council
meets at the Board room, Ellison street, on Wednesdays, monthly, at
11 o'clock.
Chairman,
Samuel Gregory, Hague street, Glossop
Officials.
Clerk,
Charles Frederick Vinten Fenton, 14 & 16 Ellison st. Glossop
Treasurer,
Harold W. Sheldon, District Bank Ltd. Norfolk square, Glossop
Medical
Officer of Health, Ernest Henry Marcus Milligan M.D., D.P.H.
Municipal buildings, Glossop
Sanitary
Inspector & Highway Surveyor, Charles Edwin Storey, 10 Salisbury
street, Hadfield
PUBLIC
ESTABLISHMENTS.
Borough
Police Office, Ellison street. William R. Wilkie, chief constable; 1
inspector, 5 sergeants & 26 constables
Borough
Police Station, Albert street, Hadfield, Samuel Wedgewood, sergeant,
& 4 constables
Cemetery,
Cemetery road, Hadfield, George Henry Wilson, clerk ; offices,
Norfolk square
Convalescent
Home, North road, Miss E. M. Morris, matron
County
Court, His Honor Judge William John Lias ; Percy Edward Ireland,
registrar & high bailiff ; office, Market street, open from 10 to
4, on Saturday from 9 till 12. 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, Simmondley, Torside, Whitfield, Woodhead & Woolley
Bridge
For
Bankruptcy purposes this Court is included in that of
Ashton-under-Lyne ; John Grant Gibson, official receiver ; Frederick
Murgatroyd, assistant official receiver, Byrom street, Manchester
Certified
Bailiffs under the Law of Distress Amendment Act, Edwin Collier,
Norfolk street & John T. Goddard, 12 Howard street
Derbyshire
County Council Tuberculosis Dispensary, Surrey street, Patrick
Heffernan M.B., Ch.B. medical officer: Miss H. Millington, matron
Free
Library & Public Hall, Fauvel road, Edward Thompson, librarian
Howard
Park, North road, Peter Rowbottom, supt
Masonic
Hall, Norfolk square, J. E. Buckley, sec
Maternity
& Child Welfare Centre, Municipal buildings, Ernest Henry Marcus
Milligan M.D., D.P.H. medical supt
Ministry
of Labour Employment Exchange, Victoria street, Egerton Doodson,
manager
Public
Baths, The Park, Silvester Whitehead, manager
Town
Hall, High street west, Allen Byrom, caretaker
Whitfield
Free Library (branch of Glossop Free Library), Freetown, James Watts,
caretaker
Whitfield
Parish Hall, Arthur Metcalfe, sec. Kershaw street
Wood’s
Hospital, The Park, Stephen Nockolds M.A., M.B., B.Ch. Thomas M. R.
Waddell L.R.F.P.S.Glas., L.R.C.P, & L.R.C.S.Edin. Joseph Hadfield
M.B., C.M.Aberd. Edward James Allan L.R.C.P. & S.Edin. &
Simon Kelly B.Sc., L.R.C.P.Lond., M.R.C.S.Eng. medical officers;
George H. Lea (town clerk), sec. ; Miss M. C. Sanders, matron
GLOSSOP
UNION.
The
union comprises the following parishes :—Charlesworth,
Chisworth, Glossop & Ludworth. The area of the union is 20,943
acres ; rateable value, £141,226; the population in 1921 was
24,311.
Board
day, every alternate Wednesday, at 2.30 p.m. Chairman of the Board of
Guardians, James Malkin J.P., C.C. Moorside, Glossop
Clerk
to the Guardians & Assessment Committee, Charles F. V. Fenton, 14
& 16 Ellison street, Glossop
Treasurer,
Harold William Sheldon, District Bank Ltd. Norfolk square, Glossop
Relieving
Officer, Levi Robinson James,14 & 16 Ellison street, Glossop
Vaccination
Officer, Levi Robinson James, 14 & 16 Ellison street, Glossop
Medical
Officers, No. 1 district, Joseph Hadfield M.B., C.M.Aberd.
Hollincross lane, Glossop; No. 2 district, R. Wilfred Bollans M.B.,
Ch.B. Station road, Hadfield; No. 3 district, William Cochrane
Cairnie Easton M.B., Ch.B., M.R.C.S., L.R.C.P. Marple Bridge
Public
Vaccinator for the Union, Henry James Burke M.C., L.R.C.P. &
S.Irel. Ivy house. Hadfield road, Hadfield
Poor
Law Institution, to hold 144 inmates, William A. Atkinson, master ;
Henry James Burke M.C., L.R.C.P. & S.Irel. Ivy house, Hadfield
road, Hadfield, medical officer ; Mrs. A. O. Atkinson, matron
Glossop
Registration District.
Superintendent
Registrar, William B. Hadfield, Market street ; deputy, Arthur
France, Market street
Registrar
of Births, Deaths & Marriages, Glossop sub-district, Charles F.
V, Fenton, 14 & 16 Ellison street, Glossop ; deputy, Levi
Robinson James, 14 & 16 Ellison street, Glossop
PUBLIC
OFFICERS.
Assessor
& Collector of Taxes, John W. Darlington, 40 Norfolk street
Assistant
Overseers, Samuel Fletcher (superintendent & treasurer), David
Massey, Frank Furniss & James A. Bridge, Municipal buildings
Clerk
to the Burial Board, George Henry Wilson, Norfolk sq
Coroner
for the Hundred of High Peak, Sydney Taylor, 7 Hall bank, Buxton ;
deputies, Abel John Hy. Oram, Bank chambers, Terrace road &
George Henry Wilson, Norfolk square, Glossop
Customs,
Excise & Old Age Pension Officer, Albert James Baker, Norfolk
street
Market
Inspector, Allen Byrom, Town hall
Stamp
Distributor, James Cockroft, Post Office, Victoria street
Veterinary
Inspector under the Diseases of Animals Acts, George Ellis M.R.C.V.S.
Fauvel road
PLACES
OF WORSHIP.
Parish
Church, Rev. William Dudley Dixon M.A. vicar, & surrogate ; Rev.
William Alfred Loughborough M.A curate
Holy
Trinity, Dinting, Rev. Henry Lawrance M.A. vicar
St.
Andrew, Hadfield, Rev. Archibald Campbell Macalister White L.Th.
vicar ; Rev. William John Jones B.A., curate
St.
James', Whitfield, Rev. William Martin Martin-Ellis M.A., F.R.G.S.
Vicar, rural dean & surrogate; Rev. Frank Whalley, curate
St.
James’ Mission Room, Chapel street
St.
Luke’s, Whitfield
Sumner
Memorial Roman Catholic Church (St. Mary’s), Sumner street,
Rev. William Reginald Winder, parish priest; Rev. Michael Farrell
B.A. assistant priest
All
Saints Roman Catholic, Rev. Frederick D. H. Brown, priest
St.
Charles Borromeo Roman Catholic, Hadfield, Right Rev, Mgr. Canon
William Joseph Baigent, priest; Rev. Edward Ellis D.D. curate
Congregational,
Littlemoor; Rev. John Henry Robinson
Congregational,
St. Mary’s road (Mount Pleasant), Rev. Arthur W. Goodwin
Congregational, Brookfield, (vacant)
Primitive
Methodist, Shrewsbury street & Mission Chapel, Princess street,
Rev. Thomas Banks, supt
United
Methodist, Hall street ; Simmondley lane, Dinting ; Station road,
Hadfield & Whitfield Cross, Rev. Richard Henry Hamer, supt
Unitarian,
Fitzalan street, Rev. Joseph Wilson
Wesleyan
Methodist, High street west, Hadfield, Padfield, Wesley street &
Whitfield, Rev. Thomas George Squire (supt.); Rev, George Russell
James, minister
Wesleyan
Reformers, Howard street, Rev. Ernest Bromage
Gospel
Union Mission Hall, Whitfield, Rev. Richard Howton
Salvation
Army Hall, Edward street
SCHOOLS.
Under
the provisions of the Education Act, 1902, an Education Committee has
been formed, consisting of 36 members. The Committee meets at the
Municipal buildings on the third monday in each month (except August)
at 8 p.m. Chairman, Thomas Braddock
Officers.
Secretary
to the Committee, Jsph. Walkden, Municipal bldgs
Chief
Clerk, Harold Appleton, Municipal buildings
School
Medical Officer, Ernest Henry Marcus Milligan M.D., D.P.H. Norfolk
street
Attendance
Officer, Joseph Hadfield Sidebottom, Municipal buildings
The
Glossop Grammar School, Talbot street, founded in 1900 by Lord Howard
of Glossop, comprises physical & chemical laboratories, art
rooms, a workshop & a dynamo house. The laboratories are well
equipped with modern apparatus & appliances. There are now (1924)
270 students. The school has advanced courses in (1) science &
mathematics, (2) modern studies; pupils pass on to Oxford, Cambridge,
Manchester &c. Universities. The school is controlled by the
Higher Education Committee of the Borough of Glossop; Ralph H.
Dickinson Univ. Lond. head master, with 13 assistants & 5
visiting teachers
PUBLIC
ELEMENTARY SCHOOLS.
Hadfield,
Council (mixed), erected in 1908, for 300 children ; Benjamin
Whiteley, master ; Miss Jessie Hadfield, infants’ mistress
Pike’s
Lane, Council (mixed), erected in 1912, for 450 children ; Walter
Houseman, master
Dinting,
C. E. built in 1875 & enlarged by Mrs Wood in 1887, for 220
children & 60 infants ; Thomas Beardwood, master
Dinting,
United Methodist (mixed), erected in 1889, for 268 children ; Ernest
M. Penney, master
Duke
of Norfolk, C. E. 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 ; Edgar
Ollerhead, master
Hadfield,
C. E. (mixed & infants), erected in 1855, for 336 children ;
Percy John Holloway, master; Miss Sarah Marsden, mistress
Padfield
Council (mixed), erected in 1887, for 255 children; William Lees
Marshall, master ; Mrs. Hannah Shepherd, mistress
Talbot
street, C. E. (girls & infants), built in 1880 & enlarged in
1897, for 320 children; William Hankinson, master; Miss Elsie Wilde,
mistress
Waterside,
Hadfield, C. E. (infants), built in 1872, for 133 children ; Miss
Lillie Wilde, mistress
Whitfield,
C. E. (mixed & infants), for 610 children; F. H. Morris, master ;
Miss Gertrude Bradwell, infants’ mistress
Roman
Catholic, St. Mark’s road, for 302 children ; Sisters of the
Order of St. Paul, teachers
Roman
Catholic, Old Glossop (mixed), for 120 children ; Presentation
Sisters, teachers
Roman
Catholic, Hadfield (mixed), built in 1858 & enlarged in 1904, for
252 children ; Sisters of the Order of St. Paul, teachers
Endowed,
Whitfield (mixed), with master’s residence, founded in 1779 by
Joseph Hague esq. of Park hall, Hayfield, & endowed with £60
yearly, for 70 children ; Walter P. Evason, master
NEWSPAPERS.
Glossop
Advertiser, Glossop Printers Ltd. proprietors & publishers ;
published fri. 6 Howard street
Glossop
Dale Chronicle, Glossop Printers Ltd. proprietors & publishers ;
published fri. 6 Howard street
High
Peak Advertiser, Glossop Printers Ltd. proprietors & publishers ;
published fri. 6 Howard street
High
Peak Chronicle, Glossop Printers Ltd. proprietors & publishers ;
published fri. 6 Howard street
RAILWAY
STATIONS.
Glossop,
William Henry Farr, station master
Dinting,
Harry G. Stratton, station master
Hadfield,
John Bayley, station master
The
Urban Electric Supply Co.’s Cars to Hadfield every 15 minutes
Motor
Omnibuses to & from Hadfield, Chapel-en-le-Frith, Dove Holes,
Peak Forest, Buxton, Dinting, Charlesworth, Chisworth, Compstall &
Marple Bridge
GLOSSOP.
PRIVATE
RESIDENTS.
Allan
Edward Jas. Beech-Lea, North rd
Allen
Edwd. Wagstaffe,120 Charlestown rd
Andrew
Mrs. Holmleigh, North road
Armitage
Mrs. Ivyleigh, Sheffield road
Armitage
William, Spire Hollin
Arrowsmith
William, 118 Charlestown rd
Bailey
Vincent Edgar, Oakleigh, North rd
Banks
Rev. Thomas (Primitive Methodist), Temple mount, Shrewsbury st
Bates
John H. 44 Sheffield road
Bayley
Edwin, Lyndale, Spire Hollin
Beever
George, Rydal mnt. Dinting road
Bolton
Herbert Spencer, Spire Hollin
Booth
John, 28 High street east
Bowden
Miss, 3 Wellgate
Bowden
Mrs. 47 Norfolk street
Bramall
James, Netherdale, Spire Hollin
Bromage
Rev. Ernest (Wesleyan Reformers), 7 Sumner street
Brown
Rev. Frederick (Roman Catholic), Royle house
Brown
George, 11 Norfolk square
Charlesworth
Theodore, Arundel villas, North road
Collier
Edwin, Hollywood, Sheffield road
Cooper
Misses, 43 Primrose lane
Curl
Wm. Christopher, 48 Sheffield road
Cuthbert
John H. 77 Primrose terrace
Cuthbert
Mrs. Spire Hollin
Davis
Mrs. Park dene, Dinting road
Dearnaley
Joseph, 2 Alexander villas, Talbot road
Dearnaley
Mrs. Parkfield house, North rd
Dickinson
Ralph Herbert, Ellerslie, Spire Hollin
Dixon
Rev. William Dudley M.A. (vicar & surrogate), The Vicarage
Doverdale
Lord D.L., J.P. Easton ; & Westwood park, Droitwich; & 10
Ennismore gardens, London SW7
Ellis
George, Fauvel road
Fairclough
Walter P.,Mus.Bac.,F.R.C.O. 92 St. Mary’s road
Farrell
Rev. Michael B.A. (Roman Catholic), Sumner street
Fielding
Hy. Brentwood, Spire Hollin
Firth
Harold D. 77 Norfolk street
Fletcher
Samuel, Chelston, North road
Foote
William A. Beechwood, North road
Francis
William Roberts, Bank house, Charlestown
Garside
John, Castlemere, Spire Hollin
Goodwin
Rev. Arthur W. (Congregational), 17 Sumner street
Greaves
William, Heathfield, Sheffield rd
Hadfield
John, Ashlands, Dinting road
Hadfield
John, jun. Spire Hollin
Hadfield
Joseph M.B., C.M. Hollincross house, Hollin Cross lane
Hall
Fredk. Jas. Sunny bank. North rd
Hamer
Rev. Richard Henry (United Methodist), Sheffield road
Harrison
Walter, Glenbrook, Dinting rd
Harrison
William, Spire Hollin
Haynes
Thomas, Lower Blackshaw
Heywood
Thomas, The Moorlands, Sheffield road
Hill-Wood
Major Sir Samuel bart. M.P. D.L., J.P. Moorfield; & 11 Great
Stanhope street W1; Carlton & Bachelors’ clubs, London
Hilton
Wilfred, Wren nest, Sunlaws street
Hodgett
Hy. Oswald, Redcot, Spire Hollin
Holdgate
Hy. M. The Tower, North road
Hopwood
Mrs. Essenden, Sheffield road
Houseman
Walter, North road
Howard
of Glossop Lord M.B.E. Glossop hall
Howard
of Glossop Hyacinthe, Lady, Glossop hall
Howton
Rev. Richard (Gospel Union), Beth Rapha, Spire Hollin
Hudson
Harry Lindsay, Trevethyn, Spire Hollin
Hunter
Harold W. Ain Garth, Dinting rd
Hunter
Thomas Pearson, The Poplars, Talbot road
Hyde
John T. Heatherlea, Dinting road
Ireland
Percy E. Slatelands road
Jackson
Frank, High lawn, Hobroyd
Jackson
Herbert, Cowbrook, Sheffield rd
Jackson
James Martin, Holly mount, Ellison street
Jackson
Josiah, Primrose house, Primrose lane
Jackson
Samuel, 25 Simmondley lane
Kelly
Simon B.Sc. Loch Maree, North rd
Knowles
Chas. E. Holmdale, North road
Lea
George Harry, 74 Sheffield road
Lee
Craven, Clifton villas, Fauvel road
Leech
Alfred, Cowbrook cot. Sheffield rd
Loughborough
Rev. William Alfred M.A. (curate All Saints), The Vicarage
Lowe
Mrs. Milford house, North road
Mackenzie
Duncan John M.D., C.M. (ret.), Loch Maree, North road
McKinlay
Finlay, Weston, Spire Hollin
Malkin
James J.P. Moorside
Malloch
Peter Edwd. 84 St. Mary’s rd
Martin-Ellis
Rev. William Martin M.A., F.R.G.S. (vicar of St. James’,
surrogate & rural dean). Vicarage, Whitfield
Maxwell
John, 114 Charlestown road
Milligan
Ernest Henry Marcus M.D. 27 Norfolk street
Mitchell
Julien, 45 Norfolk street
Moran
Arthur Edwd. John, Lee mount
Morris
Fredk. H. 8 Hague st. Whitfield
Moseley
Ben, Wrenfield, Spire Hollin
Nelson
Robert M.D. Norfolk street
Newton
William, Spire Hollin
Nield
Miss, Oakfield, North road
Nockolds
Stephen, 93 High street west
Nuttall
John, Greystoke, Dinting road
Oliver
Leonard, Rose villa, North road
Oliver
Walter, Hollybank, Talbot road
Ollerenshaw
George S., J.P. Highfield house, Talbot road
Ollerenshaw
Misses, Clare ho. Talbot st
Ollerenshaw
Robt. Percival, 40 Talbot st
Ollerhead
Edgar, 46 Sheffield road
Partington
Hon. Oswald J.P. Easton
Partington
Mrs. O.B.E., J.P. Talbot house, Talbot road
Robinson
Rev. John Henry (Congregational), 2 Gladstone street
Robinson
Wm. D. Thorncliffe, Sheffield rd
Rowbottom
John, The Hurst
Rowbottom
Mrs. Shepley street
Schofield
John Henry, Spire Hollin
Scholes
John Churn, Spire Hollin
Sharpe
Thos. Walt. 2 Turn Lee road
Shaw
Edwin, Spire Hollin
Sheldon
Harold W. Bank ho. Norfolk sq
Shepley
Mrs. Hillside, North road
Sidebottom
Major Ralph Bennett T.D., J.P. & Hon. Mrs. Redcourt, Hollin Cross
lane Skelton Chas. W. Woodview, Sheffield rd
Smith
Charles Crosland, The Coombs, Dinting road
Smith
James W. 53 Norfolk street
Smith
Mrs. Ryecroft house, Hall street
Smith
Tom, Ingle nook, Dinting road
Squire
Rev. Thomas George (Wesleyan), 1 Alexander villas, Talbot road
Stapley
Henry, Denholm, Sheffield road
Thompson
William, North road
Thorp
Albert Ernest, The Cedars, Sheffield road
Thorpe
Harold, Woodleigh, North road
Waddell
Thomas M. R. 25 Victoria street
Walkden
Joseph, Clavadel, Spire Hollin
Ward
Ernest A. B. The Hurst
Werschy
Mrs. Arundel villas, North road
Whalley
Rev. Frank (curate St. James, Whitfield), 5 York terrace
Whittingham
Thomas Reginald, Riverslea, North road
Wilkie
William R. Clifton villas, Fauvel rd
Wilson
Rev. Joseph (Unitarian), Park croft, Dinting road
Wilson
George Henry, Hurst villa, The Hurst
Wilson
Robert, The Firs, Talbot road
Winder
Rev, W. R, (Roman Catholic), Sumner street
Wood
Sir John bart. D.L., J.P. & Hon. Lady, Whitfield house
Wood
Mrs. John, Spire Hollin
Woodward
Cecil Rogers, The Cot, Dinting road
Wragg
Mrs. Ashfield, Sheffield road
COMMERCIAL.
Early
closing day, Tuesday.
Adshead
Frederick W. stationer & sub-postmaster, Hall st
Ainsworth
Fred, boot repairer, Gladstone street
Alexander
Richard, beer retailer, 24 Arundel street
Allan
Edward James L.R.C.P. & S.Edin., L.R.F.P.S.Glas. physician &
surgeon, & medical officer to the Post Office, Beech-Lea, North
road & 18 High street east. T N 98
Allott
Matthew, farmer, Moorfield
Ancient
Order of Foresters (Court Mersey, lodge No. 2493, John Byrom, sec. :
Court Pride of the Valley, lodge No. 2403, John Gradwell, sec.), 1
Surrey street
Anglo-American
Oil Co. Limited, oil mers. Railway yard
Appleton
Harold, chief clerk to the Education Committee, Education offices
Municipal buildings
Argenta
Meat Co. Limited, butchers, Victoria street
Arnfield
Herbert, Manor inn, 77 High street east
Arrowsmith
Thomas, clog & patten ma. 132 High st. west
Ashton
Fred, boot maker, 44 High street west
Ashton
Frederick Danby, chartered accountant (firm, Hollingbery &
Ashton), Howard chambers, Howard street
Ashton
George William, shopkeeper, 8 Gladstone street
Ayrton
Richard, shopkeeper, 14 George street
Bagshaw
Arthur, cabinet maker, 26 & 28, High street west
Bailey
Edwin, costumier, 51 & 53 High street west
Baker
Albert James, customs & excise & old age pension officer,
Norfolk street
Ballington
Samuel William, butcher, 143 Gladstone street
Barber
Francis & Joseph, taxicab proprietors, Turn Lea road. T N 137
Barber
Edwin Owen, Crown inn, 142 Victoria street
Barber
John, coal dealer, 39 Gladstone street
Barclays
Bank Limited (branch) (Cecil Rogers Woodward, manager), 20 High
street west (T N 139); draw on head office, 54 Lombard street, London
E C 3
Barlow
Herbert, tobacconist, 2 Charlestown road
Barrow
Paper Mills Limited, paper makers, Turn lea
Bates
John H. land steward to Lord Howard of Glossop, Howard estate office,
Spire Hollin
Battey
Ernest, photographer, 8 Norfolk street
Bebbington
William Harry, Hare & Hounds P.H. 27 Hall st
Bennett
Fred, farmer, Ashes
Bennett
George, news agent, 199 High street east
Bennett
James, photographer, 14a, High street east
Bennett
Leah (Miss), art needlework repository, 14 High street east
Bennett
Martha Ellen (Miss), beer retailer, 96 Victoria street
Bennett
Robert, butcher, 84 Victoria street
Benton
Sarah (Miss), shopkeeper, 1 Princess street
Berry
Mary, Hannah & Bessie (Misses), shopkeepers, 76 High street east
Blakeley
Emily (Mrs.), shopkeeper, 57 Whitfield cross
Boardman
Harriett (Miss), confectioner, 2 Jordan street
Boardman
Herbert William & Co. blacksmiths, Manor street
Booth
Ethel (Mrs.), berlin wool repository, 86 High st. west
Boots
Cash Chemists (Lancashire) Ltd. 19 High street west
Borough
of Glossop Education Office (Joseph Walkden, sec.; H. Appleton, chief
clerk), Municipal buildings. T N 18
Bowden
John Thomas, baker, 12 Norfolk street
Bowden
Samuel, farmer, Heath
Bradbury
George & Co. grocers, 385 High street west
Bradbury
Albert, farmer, Whitfield green
Bradbury
Walter, beer retailer, 3 Norfolk street
Bradbury
William, hair dresser, The Arcade
Braddock
Eli & Son, shipping agents, 55 High street east
Bradley
Arthur, beer retailer, 28 Freetown
Bradley
Mary (Mrs.), beer retailer, 1, 3 & 5 Bernard street
Bradley
Ralph, beer retailer, 11 Chapel street
Bratby
Gertrude (Miss), boot & shoe dlr. 10 Gladstone street
Bratherton
Annie Frances (Miss), preparatory school, 40 Victoria street
Bridge
Elizabeth (Miss), shopkeeper, see Lamb & Bridge
Bridge
James Alston, assistant overseer & collector of general district
rate No. 2 district, Municipal buildings
Bridge
Matthew, greengrocer, 2 Wesley street
Brightmore
Eva (Mrs.) C.M.B. midwife, 151 High st. east
Broadbent
Ellis, beer retailer, 277 High street west
Broadbent
William, beer retailer, 25 High street east
Brooks
Walter, beer retailer, 14 Milltown
Brown
George, dentist, 11 Norfolk square
Brown
Richard, confectioner, 6Charlestown
Brownson
George, tailors, 2 High st. east & Victoria st
Buckley
James Henry, pawnbroker, 38 High street east
Buckley
Joseph, tailor, 55 Hollin Cross lane
Buckley
Ruth (Miss), shopkeeper, 191 High street west
Bullous
James & Mary (Mrs.), confectioners, 37 High st. west
Bunting
Joseph, hair dresser, 13 Victoria street
Byrom
Allen, market inspector, Town hall
Byrom
James, water inspector, 17 Thomas street
Byrom
John, insurance agent, 50 Princess street
Byron
Joseph, confectioner, 53 High street east
Callaghan
Charles, fried fish dealer, 36 High street east
Carnall
William, stationer & sub-postmaster 113, & provision dealer
118, Victoria street
Cash
& Co. boot & shoe makers, 1 Victoria street
Cemetery
(Hadfield) (George Henry Wilson, clerk); offices, Norfolk square
Chadwick
Herbert, house furnisher, 91 High street west
Chadwick
John C. clothier, 41 & 43 High street west
Chadwick
Richard, shopkeeper, see Jones & Chadwick
Chapman
Brothers, hair dressers, 14 Norfolk street
Charlesworth
Frederick, butcher, 244 High street west
Charlesworth
Frederick, Junction inn, 379 High street west
Charlesworth
George, butcher, 36 High street west
Child
Welfare Centre (E. H. Marcus Milligan M.D., D.P.H. medical
superintendent), Municipal buildings
Child
Thomas (Mrs.), furniture dealer, 100 High street west
Clarkson
Henry, farmer, Almonds heath
Clover
Charles Edgar, chipped potato dealer, 62 Edward st
Cluskey
George, furniture dealer, 61 High street west
Cockroft
James, postmaster & stamp distributor, Post office, Norfolk
square
Coleman
Alfred John, farmer, Gnat hole
Collier
Edwin, auctioneer & valuer & certified bailiff under the “Law
of Distress Amendment Act,” Norfolk street
Collier
Joe Hill, beer retailer, 19 Charlestown road
Conner
Victor, shopkeeper, 271 High street west
Conservative
& Unionist Association (High Peak division) (Vincent E. Bailey,
registration agent), 26 Norfolk street. T N 65
Convalescent
Home (Miss E. M. Morris, matron), North road. T N 53
Conway
Mary (Miss), news agent, 130 High street west
Cooper
John Reginald, butcher, 66 High street west
Cooper
Stanley, shopkeeper & sub-postmaster, 196 & 198 High street
west
County
Court Office (His Honor William John Lias, judge: P. E. Ireland,
registrar & high bailiff), Market street
Crabtree
Emily (Mrs.), fried fish dealer, 26 Arundel street
Crisp
Brothers, cafe, The Arcade
Crompton
Joseph, beer retailer, 78 High street west
Crossland
Walter W. & Sons, cotton waste dealers, 3 & 3a, Arundel
street & 45 Edward street. T N 30
Crowther
James, teacher of music, 40 Hollin Cross lane
Cumberland
Ernest. Grapes inn. 305 High street west
Cunliffe
Alan R. farmer, Lane Side farm
Customs
& Excise & Old Age Pensions Office (Albert James Baker,
officer), Norfolk street
Cuthbert
John H, estate agent, 77 Primrose terrace
Cuthbert
Mary E. (Mrs.), tobacconist, 80 High street west
Dakin
Lilian (Mrs.), shopkeeper, 6 Hague street
Dale
Frederick, farmer, Cowbrook, Sheffield road
Dale
George, news agent, 90 Victoria street
Dale
Samson, tripe dresser, 166 High street west
Dane
Harry, sanitary & meat inspector, & inspector under the Food
& Drugs Acts to the corporation, Municipal bldgs
Darlington
Jn. W. assessor & collector of taxes, 40 Norfolk st
Davies
William, fried fish dealer, 29 Hague street
Davis
& Son, solicitors, 10 Ellison street. T N 37
Davis
Charles James, solicitor & commissioner for oaths (firm, Davis &
Son), 10 Ellison street
Dean
Thomas, watch repairer, 37 Whitfield cross
Dearnaley
Joseph, grocer, 25 High street west. T N 69
Dearnley
Irvin, painter, 49 High street west. T N 124
Dempsey
Thomas, hair dresser, 242 High street west
Derbyshire
County Council Tuberculosis Dispensary (Patrick Heffernan M.B. Ch.B.
medical officer ; Miss H. Millington, matron), Surrey street
Dewsnap
Walter, baker, 2 Shepley street
Dewsnap
Walter, painter, 90 Edward street
Dickson
Fred, grocer, 16 Princess street
Dinting
Church Club (Thomas Richardson, sec.), High st. west
District
Bank Limited (branch) (Harold W. Sheldon, manager), Norfolk square (T
N 131); draw on London office. 75 Cornhill E C 3
Dixon
Annie (Miss), confectioner, 110 High street west
Dobson
& Robinson, milliners, 69 & 71 High street west
Doyle
& Son, boot makers, 121 High street west
Dryland
Nellie (Mrs.), fried fish dealer, 9 Princess street
Dutton
Jane (Mrs.), hardware dealer, 88 High street west
Dyson
Herbert, boot repairer, 110 Victoria street
Dyson
Joseph, boot & shoe repairer, 149a, High street west
Eastwood
Francis, baker. 8 Hall street
Elliott
William Irving, Station hotel, Norfolk street
Ellis
George M.R.C.V.S.Edin. veterinary surgeon, & veterinary inspector
under the “Diseases of Animals Acts” for the borough &
county, Fauvel road
Ellison
Theo Walter, solicitor & commissioner for oaths, Norfolk
chambers, Henry street. T N 107
Empire
(Irvine Dearnaley, manager), 60 High street west
Entwistle
Nellie (Mrs.), fancy draper, 18 High street west
Etchells
Alice (Mrs.), tobacconist, 20 Norfolk, street
Etchells
James Hollowood, shopkeeper, 28a Talbot street
Fairclough
Walter Peake Mus.Bac., F.R.C.O. professor of music, 92 St. Mary's
road
Farnsworth Thomas, fruiterer, 112 & 114 High street west. T
N 42
Fenton
Charles Frederick Vinten, clerk to Glossop Dale Rural District
Council & clerk to the guardians & assessment committee &
registrar of births, deaths & marriages for Glossop sub-district,
14 & 16 Ellison street. T N 74
Fielding
Enoch & Son, watch & clock makers, 39 High st. west
Fielding
Albert (Mrs.), baker, 40 High street east
Fielding
Edith (Mrs.), draper, 116 Victoria street
Fielding
George R. Royal Oak P.H. Sheffield road
Fielding
Harold, house furnisher, 114 Victoria street
Firth
Harold D., L.D.S.Manc. dental surgeon, 77 Norfolk street. T N 89
Fisher
Charles E. & Son, joiners, Ellison street
Fleet
& Jebb, farmers, Betten hill
Fletcher
Alfred, fried fish dealer, see Hall & Fletcher
Fletcher
Alma (Mrs.), fried fish dealer, 170 High street west
Fletcher
George, shopkeeper, 9 Charlestown
Fletcher
Samuel, borough treasurer & supt. assistant overseer, Municipal
buildings. T N 150
Fletcher
William T. tripe dresser, 4 Charlestown road
Foy
Anthony, fried fish dealer, 1 Kershaw street
Foy
Thomas, fishmonger, 76 High street west & Derby street
France
Arthur, deputy supt. registrar of births, deaths & marriages,
Glossop district, Market street
Free
Library & Public Hall (Edward Thompson, librarian), Fauvel road
Freeman,
Hardy & Willis Ltd. boot makers, 27 High st. west
Fuller
Minnie & Nellie (Misses), milliners, 90 High st. west
Fuller
Edward, saddler & harness maker, 8 Norfolk square
Furniss
Frank, assistant overseer & collector of general district rate
No. 1 district, Municipal buildings
Gadd
George Frederick, motor car garage, Turn Lea road
Garlick
Matthew & Albert, coal merchants, Railway yard
Garside
Joseph, farmer, Lees Hall farm
Gas
Co. (Benjamin Goddard, manager; Walter Townend, sec.), Arundel street
(T N 85); show rooms, 84 High street west
Gibbons
Harry, boot maker, 16a High street east
Glossop
Advertiser (Glossop Printers Limited, proprietors & publishers;
published friday), 6 Howard street.
Glossop
Carriage Co. Limited (J. R. Nield, sec.), funeral furnishers, 16
Howard street. T N 59
Glossop
Carters’ & Motormen’s Social Club (H. Bridge,sec.), 1
Railway street
Glossop
Conservative Club (Timothy F. Savage, sec.), 26 Norfolk street
Glossop
Cricket Club (T. Jacobs, sec.), Norfolk street
Glossop
Dale Chronicle (Glossop Printers Limited, proprietors &
publishers ; published friday), 6 Howard street
Glossop
Dale New Industrial Co-operative Society Ltd. (J. T. Hyde, sec.),
Norfolk square (T N 15); 14, 46 & 48 & 369 High street west;
20 Charlestown road ; Hall street ; Pike’s lane ; Church street
south ; 106 Gladstone street & 47 Surrey street ; registered
office, 2 Railway street
Glossop
Football Club Co. Limited (Arthur Clarke, sec.), North road
Glossop
Glove Co. limited, glove manufacturers, George st
Glossop
Grammar School (Ralph H. Dickinson, head master), Talbot street
Glossop,
Hadfield & District Allotments Association Limited (John H.
Cuthbert, sec.), 77 Primrose terrace
Glossop
Ironworks Co. limited, Surrey street. T N 11
Glossop
Labour Club (W. T. Harrop, sec.), 7 & 9 Railway st
Glossop
Liberal Club (John H. Cuthbert, sec.), Henry street. T N 66
Glossop
Modern Dairies (Ernest Wilson, proprietor), Market street. T N 143
Glossop
Motor Co. Ltd. motor engineers. Arundel st. T N 48
Glossop
Palace (Provincial Cinematograph Theatres Limited, proprietors),
George street T N 114
Glossop
Perpetual Building Society (The) (A. Goldthorpe, sec.), 12 Ellison
street
Glossop
Printers Limited (J. W. I. Worthington, sec.), printers, 6 Howard
street. T N 67
Glossop
Social Club Limited (W. Bramall, sec.), 4& 6 Ellison street
Glossop
Women’s Unionist Association (V. E. Bailey, sec.), Norfolk
street
Goddard
Harry, draper, 42 High street west
Goddard
John T. auctioneer & certified bailiff under the “Law of
Distress Amendment Act,” 12 Howard street
Goddard
Maria Ruth (Mrs.), small ware dlr. Victoria street
Goddard
Mary (Miss), earthenware dealer, 240 High St. west
Goddard
Samuel, builder, Ashes
Goldstone
Hyman, house furnisher, 18 Norfolk street
Goldthorpe
Samuel, beer retailer, 33 Charles street
Grant
Thomas, chip potato dealer, 137 Gladstone street
Green
Frank, confectioner, 36 Hadfield street
Green
Gertrude Mary Hammett (Mrs.), Market hotel, 8 Market street
Greenwood
John, stone merchant, Howard street & quarry owner, Lees Hall &
Mouslow quarries
Gregory
Samuel H. farmer, Jumble farm
Grosvenor
Nellie (Mrs.), shopkeeper, 8 Collier street
Hadfield
Ada & Annie (Misses), shopkeepers, 6 Chapel street
Hadfield
J. & Sons, wood bedstead makers, Derby st. T N 86
Hadfield
Thomas & Sons, drapers, 15 High street west
Hadfield
Cycle Co. cycle makers, 82 High street west
Hadfield
Dairy Co. provision dealers, 45 High street west
Hadfield
Albert, farmer, Cliffe road
Hadfield
Alice (Miss), shopkeeper, 61 Hague street, Whitfield
Hadfield
Ethel (Miss), confectioner, see Thorpe & Hadfield
Hadfield
James Hyde, Surrey Arms P.H. 133 Victoria street
Hadfield
John, beer retailer, 1 Market street & confectioner, 23 High
street west
Hadfield
John, boot maker, 97 High street east
Hadfield
Joseph M.B. & C.M.Aberd. physician & surgeon, & medical
officer No. 1 district, Glossop union, Hollincross house, Hollin
Cross lane T N 79
Hadfield
Joseph, shopkeeper, 60 High street east
Hadfield
Mary Ann (Mrs.), herbalist, 14 Charlestown road
Hadfield
William Bruce, solicitor &: commissioner for oaths (firm, Ireland
& Hadfield), & supt. registrar of births, deaths &
marriages for district of Glossop, Market street
Hadwin
Harry, bleachers’ engineer, Howard street
Hague
Arthur, farmer, Wimberry hill
Hague
Sarah (Mrs.), shopkeeper, 20 Derby street
Haigh
& Shortland, motor car proprs. Union st. T N 112
Haigh
.Alice (Miss), baker, 136 Victoria street
Haigh
James William, costumier, 30 High street west
Hall
Alice (Miss) & Wharmby Walter, bakers, 28 Gladstone st
Hall
& Fletcher, fried fish dealers, 60 Victoria street
Hall
& Sons, tailors, 21 High street west
Hall
Elizabeth (Miss), boot maker, 210 High street east
Hall
Elizabeth (Mrs.), grocer, 146 St. Mary’s road
Hall
John, herbalist, 138 Victoria street
Hallam
Frank, dairyman, 1 Charlestown road
Hallows
Hannah (Miss), shopkeeper, 106 Pike’s lane
Hampson
John & Son, furniture removers, Hague street, Whitfield
Hampson
Edith (Miss), dress maker, see Kinder, Storey & Hampson Misses
Hampson
Tom, farmer, 3 Hague street, Whitfield
Hardcastle
Horace & Oswy, coal merchants, Surrey street
Harding
Eliza (Mrs.), milliner, 4 Norfolk street
Hardman
Gertrude Mary (Miss) & Taylor Edith Alice (Miss), corset agents,
88 St. Mary’s road
Harper
Richard, shopkeeper, 88 Kershaw street
Harris
Ellen (Miss), chipped potato dlr. 363 High street west
Harris
James, tinplate worker, Oldham street
Harrison Abel Limited, coal
merchants, Surrey street (T N 47); & at Broad bottom ; Dinting &
Hadfield railway stations
Harrison
Charles Smith, grocer, 122 High street west
Harrison
Thomas, Howard Arms P.H. 17 High street east
Harrop
Hugh, tailor, 21 Surrey street
Harrop
Joseph, shopkeeper, 26 Gladstone street
Hart
George, fried fish dealer, 119 High street west
Hawley
Harold, stationer, 1 High street west
Hazlewood
Frank, hair dresser, 10 High street west
Heap
Mary H. (Mrs.), milliner, 79 High street west
Heap
William, stationer, 81 High street west
Hepworth
J. & Son Limited, clothiers, 1 High street east
Hesketh
Roger, coal dealer, 61 Charlestown road
Hickman
T. Stanley, secretary agent for the High Peak Division Liberal
Association)., 38 Norfolk street. T N 129
Higginbottom
Mary (Mrs.), milliner, 17 High street west
Higginbottom
Tom, hair dresser, 85 Victoria street
Higginbottom
Tom, laundry, see Waterhouse & Higginbottom
High
Peak Advertiser (Glossop Printers Limited, proprietors &
publishers ; published friday), 6 Howard street
High
Peak Chronicle (Glossop Printers Limited, proprietors &
publishers : published friday), 6 Howard street
High
Peak Division Liberal Association (T. Stanley Hickman, sec. &
agent), 38 Norfolk street. T N 129
High
Peak Land & Building Co. Limited (E. Farrington, sec.), 38
Norfolk street
Hill
John William, news agent, 24 High street east
Hill
Rachel (Mrs.), shopkeeper, 72 High street west
Holdgate
H. M. & Co. Limited, iron & steel & yarn merchants
Holdgate
James, painter, glazier &c. 149 High street west
Holdgate
Robert, grocer, 11 High street east
Hollingbery
& Ashton, chartered accountants, Howard chambers, Howard street
Holt
W. (Burnley) Ltd. billiard rooms, 119 High street east
Hope
Frank, corn chandler, 70 Victoria street
Howard
William & Son, builders, contractors & undertakers ; stone,
timber & builders’ merchants & joiners’
manufacturers, Surrey Street saw mills
Howarth
Edmund, house furnisher, 138 High street west
Hudson
Clarence Wesley, stationer, 55 High street west
Hulmes
Mary Alice (Mrs.), baker, 1 Charlestown road
Hunters
The Teamen Limited, grocers, 4 High street east
Hunter
Thomas Pearson, hosier, 9 & 11 High street west
Hurst
Walter, tailor, 9 High street east
Hyde
Walter, hatter, 32 High street west
Independent
Order of Oddfellows (Manchester Unity) (Prince Regent lodge) (J.
Taylor, sec.), 27 Hall street
Ingham
James W. picture frame maker, 63 High street east
Ireland
& Hadfield, solicitors & commissioners to administer oaths,
Market street. T N 81
Ireland
Percy E. solicitor & commissioner to administer oaths (firm,
Ireland & Hadfield), & registrar to Glossop county court,
clerk to the county & borough magistrates & registrar &
high bailiff, Market street
Jackson
Isaac & Sons Limited, belt fastener manufacturers, Hawkshead
mills. T A “Fastener, Glossop;” T Nos. 91 & 92
Jackson
Levi & Sons, rope & twine mfrs. Hobroyd. T N 68
James
Levi Robinson, relieving & vaccination officer, deputy registrar
of births, deaths k marriages & collector to guardians, 14 &
16 Ellison street
Jebb
Corbet, farmer, see Fleet & Jebb
Jennett
Joe, Rose & Crown P.H. 89 High street west
Jennings
Thomas Henry, shopkeeper, 9 Victoria street
Johnson
Harry, fruiterer, 4 High street west
Jones
& Chadwick, shopkeepers, 35 Princess street
Jones
Ralph, beer retailer, 38 High street west
Joyce
Fred, baker, 112 Victoria street
Keelan
Peter, secondhand clothes dealer, 8 Chapel street
Keevney
Ellen (Miss), shopkeeper, 20 Church street
Kelly
Frank, plumber, 76 Victoria street
Kelly
Simon B.Sc., M.R.C.S.Eng., L.R.C.P.Lond., D.P.H. physician &
surgeon, Loch Maree, North road. T N 75
Kennedy
John Charles, hair dresser, 96 High street west
Kennedy
Margaret (Miss), shopkeeper, 225 High street west
Kennerley
Jessie (Mrs.), confectioner, 54 High street west
Kennington
& Son, tobacconists, Town Hall buildings, High street west
Kershaw
James, clogger, 70a, Charlestown road
Kime
Walter E. head gardener to Lord Howard of Glossop, The Lodge, Hall
street
Kinder,
Storey & Hampson (Misses), dressmakers, Ellison st
Kinder
Joseph, slater, 28 Mount street
Kirk
William, hardware dealer, 165 High street east
Kitchin
Cora Elsie (Mrs.), haberdasher, 51a, High st east
Knight
Thomas, shopkeeper, 42 Arundel street
Knott
John, boot maker, 64 Victoria st. & 33 Princess st
Knott
Walter, tinplate worker, 108 Victoria street
Lamb
& Bridge, shopkeepers, 2 Whitfield cross
Langford
William Henry, baker, 85 High street west (Misprint in original directory, should be High Street East)
Large
Samuel J. milliner, 8 High street east
Lea
George H. town clerk, Municipal buildings. T N 58
Leach
James Arthur, shopkeeper, 21 Freetown
Leatherbarrow
James, herbalist, 136 High street west
Lee
Hannah (Mrs.), shopkeeper, 1 Edward street
Lees
Clarissa (Miss), confectioner, 104 High street west
Lester
Edwin, fruiterer, 140 High street west
Lester
James, greengrocer, 74 High street west
Littler
Evelyn (Mrs.), dairy, 102a, Victoria street
Logan
Peter, boot repairer, 12 Wellgate
Lord
John, baker, 16 High street west
Lowe
William, fried fish dealer, 211 High street east
Lyne
James Henry, herbalist, 26 Princess street
McKinlay
Finlay, chemist, 7 High street west. T N 44
Malkin
J. & E. T. corn millers, Corn street. T N 99
Malloch
Peter Edward L.R.C.P. & S.Edin., L.R.F.P.S.Glas. physician &
surgeon, 84 St. Mary ’s road & 16 High street west. T N 46
Manchester
& County Bank Limited (branch) (W. D. Robinson, manager), Norfolk
sq.(T N 135); draw on National Provincial Bank Limited, 2 Princes
street, London E C 2
Manns
Mary Jane (Mrs.), draper, 104 Pike’s lane
Marriott
James, baker, 20 High street east
Marsden
Edward, farmer, Pike’s farm
Marsden
John Thomas, shopkeeper, 70 Charlestown road
Marsden
Joseph, chipped potato dealer, 140 Victoria street
Marsh
William Hill, haberdasher, 273 High street west
Marshall
Sarah (Mrs.), draper, 94 High street west
Martin
John Thomas, optician, 73 High street west
Masonic
Lodge (Devonshire lodge, No. 625) (J. E. Buckley, sec.), Norfolk
square
Massey
Daniel, ironmonger, 22 High street east
Massey
David, assistant overseer, 62 High street east
Maternity
& Child Welfare Centre (Ernest Henry Marcus Milligan M.D., D.P.H.
medical officer), Municipal buildings. T N 118
May
Thomas & Sons, basket & skip makers, 53 Victoria street
Maypole
Dairy Co. Limited, dairymen, Town Hall buildings, High street west
Melia’s
Limited, grocers, 24 High street west
Mellor
Charles, beer retailer, 40 Pike’s lane
Mellor
James Albert, lodging house, 1 Chapel street
Mellor
Samuel, beer retailer, 5 Arundel street
Middleton
Brothers, builders, Victoria street. T N 78
Middleton
Isaac, chipped potato dealer, 5 Freetown
Middleton
Thomas, boot repairer, 244a, High street west
Milligan
Ernest Henry Marcus M.D., D.P.H. medical officer of health to Borough
& Rural District Council, medical supt. of Maternity & Child
Welfare Centre & to the Isolation Hospital, Municipal buildings.
T N 118
Ministry
of Labour Employment Exchange (Egerton Doodson, manager), Victoria
street. T N 83
Mitchell
Julian, surgeon-dentist, 45 Norfolk street
Mitchell
William Arnold A.M.I.M. & Cy.E. borough surveyor & water
works manager, Municipal buildings. T N 49
Monks
Sarah Ellen (Mrs.), midwife, 75 High street east
Moore
Henry, boot repairer, 11 Victoria street
Moorhouse
Percy, farmer, Ashes & Heath farms
Moorhouse
Rachel (Mrs.), shopkeeper, 124 St. Mary’s road
Morley
Alice (Mrs.), Globe hotel, 144 High street west
Morley
Violet Ann (Miss), grocer, 50 Church street
Morton
Walter, confectioner, Victoria street
Moscrop
Noah, jeweller, The Arcade
Mullin
& Smith, grindery dealers, 92 High street west
Neal
Thomas, farmer, Turn Lee road
Needham
Walter, shopkeeper, 29 Gladstone street
Newton
William & Co. corn merchants, Surrey street
Newton
John, shopkeeper, 130 Pike’s lane
Nicholls
George, Bee Hive inn, 35 Hague street
Nield
John Joseph, ironmonger 125, & cycle agent 165, High street west
& blacksmith, Brook street
Nield
Mary (Mrs.), milliner, see Wrigley & Nield
Nockolds
Stephen M.A., M.B., B.Ch. physician & surgeon, 92 High street
west. T N 94
Norbury John Harry, Wheat Sheaf inn, 16 Wellgate
Northern
(The) Firelighter Co. Limited, “briquette” firelighter
manufacturers & merchants, Whitfield cross
Oldfield
Harvey, Surrey Arms P.H. 67 High street west
Oldham
Street Working Men’s Club (John Hadfield, sec.), Oldham street
Oldham
& Swann, house decorators, Brook street.
Oldham
Edwin, outfitter, 99 High street west
Olive
& Partington Limited, paper makers, Turn Lee & Dover mills. T
A’s “Pino, Glossop” & “Chromo, Glossop;”
T Nos. 101 & 102
Oliver
W. & Sons, ironmongers, 85 & 87 High street west (T N 90) &
34 High street east
O’Neill
Thomas, hardware dealer, 62a, Victoria street & saw mills, Derby
street
Orme
William, plumber, 105 St. Mary’s road
Overand
Thomas, confectioner, 56 High street west
Page
Solomon, hair dresser, 6 Norfolk street
Parkin
Jabez, farmer, Kidd Road farm
Pattison
Ann (Mrs), haberdasher, 20 Wellgate
Pearson
Albert, Albion hotel, 15 Victoria street
Peck
George William, fruiterer, 123 High street west
Peck
Percy, fried fish dealer, 106 Victoria street
Pell
William, boot maker, 52 High street west
Penny
Leonard Percy, shopkeeper, 62 Victoria street
Peplow
Elizabeth (Mrs.), haberdasher, 197 High street west
Phillips
Alfred, clerk to the Glossop Local Pensions Committee, 53 Pike’s
lane
Pickford
John J. Norfolk Arms hotel, Norfolk square
Piper’s
Penny Bazaar, 34 High street west
Plant
John, farmer, Lower Bank
Platt
George, Queen’s Arms P.H. 1 Shepley street
Platt
James, coal merchant, 11 Railway street. T N 128
Platt
Joseph, boarding house, Lees hall
Platt
Mary D. (Mrs.), confectioner, 3 High street west
Podmore
Elizabeth (Mrs.), shopkeeper, 45 Bernard street
Podmore
Thomas Leonard, confectioner, 23 High street east
Porter
Alice (Miss), confectioner, 5 George street
Potts
Clifford, fruiterer, 377 High street west
Potts
Gertrude (Miss), confectioner, 218 High street west
Powell
Frederick, tobacconist, 98 High street west
Pownall
William, boot repairer, 36 & 38 Victoria street
Pownall
William D. fried fish dealer, 63 High street west
Presentation
Convent (Sister Angela, superior) Church street
Price
James William, shopkeeper, 17 Freetown
Proctor
John, shopkeeper, 76 Charlestown road
Public
Baths (Silvester Whitehead, manager), Howard park
Public
Weighbridge (Thomas Parr, weigher), Railway yard
Ralph
Samuel, draper, 16 High street east
Read
Jane (Miss), shopkeeper, 31 Chapel street
Redfern
Ann (Miss), china dealer, 75 High street west
Refuge
Assurance Co. Limited; district office (Charles Astin,
superintendent), Norfolk square
Rhodes
George, shopkeeper, 44 St. Mary’s road
Rideal
Limited, chemists, 102 High street west
Rigg
Edward Gray, farmer, Corn farm
Riley
Stephen, beer retailer, 90 High street east
Riley
William, greengrocer, 70 Freetown
Roberts
Reuben, insurance agent, 73 Primrose terrace
Robinson
Herbert, house decorator, 112 St. Mary’s road
Robinson
Joseph, Bridge inn, 12 Market street
Robinson
Joseph Edward, china & glass dlr. 21 High st. east
Robinson
Kate (Miss), milliner, see Dobson & Robinson
Robinson
William Duty, manager of the Manchester & County Bank Limited,
Norfolk square
Roe
John Samuel, Bull’s Head P.H. 72 Church street
Roe
Thomas, clerk of works to Lord Howard, 14 Wesley st
Rolley
Susan (Mrs.), shopkeeper, 81 High street east
Rowbottom
James Ltd cotton spinners, Hurst mills. T N 8
Rowbottom
S. & Co. Limited cotton spinners, Meadow mills. T N 7
Rowbottom
Joseph, greengrocer, 104 Victoria street
Rowbottom
Peter, park superintendent, North road
Royal
Liver Friendly Society; district office (James W Smith, district
manager), 11 Norfolk street
Royal
London Mutual Insurance Society; district office (Thomas William
Calvert, superintendent), 41 High st. east
Sanderson
Agnes (Mrs.), fried fish dealer, 9 Chapel street
Scholes
George, butcher, 117 High street west
Scowcroft
James, fried fish dealer, 131 High street west
Senior
James Henry, hair dresser, 70 High street west
Shaw
Ethel (Miss), baker, 127 High street west
Shaw
William, farmer, Whitfield barn
Sheldon
Harold W. manager of the District Bank Limited & treasurer to the
Union & Rural District Council, Norfolk sq
Sheldon
Robert, farmer, Brownhill farm
Shepley
Mill Cotton Manufacturing Co. Limited, Shepley mill, Chapel street. T
N 2
Sheppard
Martha (Mrs.) & Son, mineral water manufacturers, Shrewsbury
street
Sherry’s
Dairy Co. Limited, dairymen, 35 High street west
Shorrock
Isaac, confectioner, 142 High street west
Shortland
Robert, motor car proprietor, see Haigh & Shortland
Sidebottom
Albert, pianoforte warehouse, 22 High street we
Sidebottom
Dennis, joiner, Victoria street
Sidebottom
Joseph Hadfield, school attendance officer, Education offices,
Municipal buildings
Sidebottom
Lucy (Mrs.), ladies’ hair dresser, 31 Norfolk st
Sidebottom
William Henry, gas company’s collector, 24 Turn Lee road
Singer
Sewing Machine Co. Limited, sewing machine dealers, 29 High street
west
Sisters
of Charity of St. Paul Convent (Mother Cecilia, superior), St. Mary’s
road
Skelton
James, marine store dealer, 123 Gladstone street
Slater
Frederick, Commercial inn, Charlestown
Slattery
Esther (Miss), shopkeeper, 82 Gladstone street
Smith
J. W. & Co. estate agents, 11 Norfolk street
Smith
Mary (Mrs.), grindery dealer, see Mullin & Smith
Sparrow
Alice Ann (Mrs.), beer retailer, 17 Gladstone street
Stafford
Clara (Mrs.), shopkeeper, 59 Hollin Cross lane
Stagg
& Son, wholesale wine & spirit mers. 10 Norfolk square
Stansfield
Jessie (Miss), news agent, 123 High street west
Stead
Henry, confectioner, 58 High street west
Steels
William Ernest, grocer, 5 High street west
Storey
Edith (Miss), dress maker, see Kinder, Storey & Hampson (Misses)
Sumner
Francis & Co. (1920) Limited, cotton spinners & manufrs. Wren
Nest mills. T A “Remus, Glossop;” T N 10
Swann
Francis, house decorator, see Oldham & Swann
Swann
George, watch & clock maker, 238 High street west
Swire
John & Son, boot & shoe makers, 8 High street west
Swire
Henry, clog & patten maker, 21 Victoria street
Swire
John Oswald, butcher, 83 High street east
Sykes
R. W. & Son, auctioneers, 65 High st. west. T N 133
Tanner
Rebecca (Miss), milliner, 6 High street east
Tatlow
Joseph Tinker, beer retailer, 1 Whitfield cross
Taylor
Albert Buckley & Son, haulage contractors, Charlestown. T N 70
Taylor
Albert Buckley, beer retailer, Charlestown
Taylor
Edith Alice (Miss), corset agent, see Hardman Gertrude Mary (Miss) &
Taylor Edith Alice (Miss)
Taylor
Robert, insurance agent, 39 Pike’s lane
Taylor
Squire, dining rooms, 57 High street west
Taylor
William, butcher, 74 Victoria street
Tero
George, baker, 57 High street east
Thom
James & Sons, coal merchants, 33 Norfolk street & Surrey
street. T N 93
Thompson
Esther (Mrs), baker, 213 High street west
Thompson
William, draper, 3 & 5 High street east
Thornhill
Joseph, farmer, Blackshaw
Thornhill
Thomas, farmer, Hurst
Thorp
Walter & Son, coal merchants, Henry street & Railway yard. T
N 52
Thorpe
& Hadfield, confectioners, 12 High street east
Tilburn
& Son, charabanc proprietors, 11 St, Mary’s road
Timperley
Joseph, shopkeeper, 38 Pike’s lane
Torkington
William, fishmonger, 68 High street west
Town
Hall (Allen Byrom, caretaker), High street west
Townend
Albert, grocer, see Waterhouse & Townend
Towsey
George, gamekeeper to Lord Howard of Glossop, The Lodge, Sheffield
road
Tweedie
Jane (Mrs.), shopkeeper, 164 High street west
Turner
Manasseh & Sons, fruiterers, 26 High street east
United
Irish League (Robert Emmett branch) (Hugh Trayner, sec.), 13 Bernard
street
Urban
Electric Supply Co. Limited (The), electrical engineers, High street
west. T N 34
Vernon
John, farmer, Whitfield green
Waddell
Thomas M. R., L.R.C.P., L.R.C.S.Edin., L.R.F.P.S.Glas. physician &
surgeon, 25 Victoria street. T N 82
Wagstaff
Jemima (Mrs.), certified midwife, 156 High st. west
Wain
& Son, fancy drapers, 59 High street west
Wain
Abel, baker, 27 Sheffield road
Wain
Edward Joseph, monumental mason, Simmondley la
Walkden
Joseph, sec. to the Education Committee, Education offices, Municipal
buildings
Walmsley
James, shopkeeper, 52 Hollin Cross lane
Walton
John (of Glossop) Limited, bleachers, Charlestown works. T N 116
Warner
Leonard, Commercial inn, 137 Hall street
Warren
Herbert, farmer, Derbyshire level
Warrington
Albert, butcher, 19 High street east
Water
Works (William Arnold Mitchell, manager), Municipal buildings
Waterhouse
Fred & Co. motor engineers, 100 & 102 High street east. T N
144
Waterhouse
& Higginbottom, laundry, Ellison st. T N 17
Waterhouse
& Townend, grocers, 25 Norfolk street & 130 High street east
Waterhouse
Maurice, fishmonger, 24 Charlestown road
Waters
Henry Stephen & Son, sign writers, 76 Freetown
Weaver
Alfred, farmer, Hobroyd
Webb
Joseph, shopkeeper, 131 Hall street
Wesleyan
& General Assurance Society; district office (Thomas H. Blackman,
supt.), 1 George street
Wharmby
George, oil & lamp dealer, 127 Hall street
Whitehead
Leonard, shopkeeper, 19 Gladstone street
Whitehead
Reuben, shopkeeper, 41 Duke street
Whiteley
Alice (Mrs.), draper, 197 High street east
Whitfield
Church Institute (Herbert Minshell, caretaker), 18 Chapel street
Whitfield
Church Reading Room (H. Hall, sec.). 18 Charlestown road
Whitfield
Free Library (branch library) (James Watts, caretaker), Freetown
Whitfield
Parish Hall (Arthur Metcalfe, sec.), Kershaw street
Whitfield
Working Men’s Club (J. Berresford, sec.), 86 Wood street
Whittaker
William, baker, 142 St. Mary’s road
Whittingham
Thomas Reginald, solicitor, Riverslea, North rd
Wild
Ralph & Sons, tripe dressers, 1 Collier st. & Victoria st
Wild
Isaac, boot repairer, 7 Whitfield cross
Wilkie
William R. chief constable of borough police, inspector under
Diseases of Animals Act, inspector of hackney carriages & supt.
of fire brigade, Ellison street. T N 57
Wilkinson
Clara (Mrs.), confectioner, 22 Surrey street
Willey
John W. O. & Son, cabinet makers, George street
Wilson
& Bates, aerated water mfrs. Howard St. T N 88
Wilson
Robert Ltd. bakers, 174 High street. T N 20
Wilson
George Henry, solicitor & commissioner for oaths, clerk to
Hollingworth Urban District Council, clerk to the Glossop &
Charlesworth Joint Burial Board & deputy coroner for the High
Peak Hundred division of the county, Norfolk square. T N 43
Winterbottom
Alvin, watch repairer, 128 High street east
Winterbottom
Annie (Mrs.), chipped potato dealer, 185 High street west
Winterbottom
Jessie (Mrs.), confectioner, 267 High st. west
Wood
John & Brothers (1920) Limited, cotton spinners &
manufacturers, Howard Town mills. T N 22
Wood
John, joiner, Railway street
Wood
Zaccheus, farmer, 60 Hague street, Whitfield
Wood’s
Hospital (George H. Lea (town clerk), sec.; for list of medical
staff, see p. 284), Howard park. T N 36
Woodcock
Phoebe (Mrs.), fancy draper, 31 & 33 High st. west
Woodhead
George, butcher, 141 Victoria street. T N 38
Woodhead
James Thomas, shopkeeper, 72 Victoria street
Woodhouse
Abishai, butcher, 36 Church street south
Woodward
Cecil Rogers, manager Barclays Bank Limited, 20 High street west
Woolley
Robert, butcher, 77 High street west
Wrigley
& Nield, milliners, 50 High street west
Wrigley
Mary H. (Mrs.), confectioner, 210 High street west
Wyman
& Sons Limited, news agents, Railway station
BROOKFIELD.
COMMERCIAL.
Birkenhead
Ralph, Royal Oak P.H
Brookfield
Working Men’s Club (Samuel Jones, sec)
Darwent
Lucy (Mrs.), draper
Hanson
John, chipped potato dealer
Moss
Arnold, shopkeeper
Robinson
Margaret C. (Miss), shopkeeper
Robinson
William, farmer
Stockdale
Walter, printer. T N Glossop 104
CHUNAL.
COMMERCIAL.
Coleman
Alfred John, farmer
Green
Thomas, farmer
Pass
Albert Edward, Grouse inn
Shepley
William, farmer
Stevens
Charles, farmer
DINTING.
Birch
Arthur Edwin, 101 Shaw lane
Booth
Edwin, Augustine house, Shaw lane
Fenton
Charles F. V. Viaduct house
Fothergill
James, 107 Shaw lane
Lawrance
Rev. Henry M.A. (vicar), Vicarage
Rawsthorne
Joseph T. 103 Shaw lane
Schofield
Ernest, Dinting lodge
Stockdale
Walter, 99 Shaw lane
Townsend
Alfred A. Dinting lodge
Wild
William Ernest, 105 Shaw lane
COMMERCIAL.
Atkins
William Maundy, shopkeeper
Beard
Amy (Miss), shopkeeper
Bennett
Alfred, farmer
Bickerdike
Richard Henry, shopkeeper
Bradbury
Albert Jordan, fent dealer
Harrison
Abel Limited, coal merchants
Harrison
John, farmer
Harrop
James, farmer, Hill top
Hoyle
Thomas, farmer, Hill top
Johnson
James, Viaduct inn
Knott
John, boot maker
Lackey
John, shopkeeper
Pooler
James, Plough inn
Potter
Edmund & Co. Limited, calico printers. T N Glossop 12
Probert
Henry Edward, farmer
Sidebottom
William, shopkeeper
Skelton
Charles (exors. of), carriers
Stratton
Harry G. station master
GAMESLEY.
Cuthbert
Mrs. Gamesley house
COMMERCIAL.
Beaumont
Edward, coal merchant
Clayton
James R. coal merchant
Crabtree
George, shopkeeper
Fox
James, hawker
Garlick
Albert, Magnet inn
Glossop
Dale New Industrial Co-operative Society Limited (The)
Grimshaw
John, baker
Harrison
Abel Limited, coal merchants, Railway yard
Jackson
Thomas, farmer
Marsden
Albert, farmer
Simpson
Annie (Mrs.), farmer, Gamesley farm
Walton
Jacob, farmer
Walton
Jacob, jun. farmer
West
Annie (Mrs.), shopkpr. Cottage lane
HADFIELD.
PRIVATE
RESIDENTS.
Baigent
Right Rev. Monsignor Canon William Joseph (Roman Catholic), St.
Charles’s rectory
Bollans
R. Wilfred M.B. 89 Station road
Braddock
Thomas J.P. Lambgates
Burke
Henry James M.C. Ivy house, Hadfield road
Ellis
Rev. Edward D.D.(Roman Catholic), St. Charles’s rectory
Hadfield
Wm. Bruce, 305 Hadfield road
Hickman
T. Stanley, Kent villa, Hadfield road
Jackson
Thomas, Chomlea, Hadfield road
James
Rev. George Russell (Wesleyan), 46 Bank street
Jones
Rev. William John B.A. (curate), 42 Bross croft
Platt
John, Queen street
Potts
William, Glengariff, Hadfield road
Sargentson
Arthur, 120 Hadfield road
Sargentson
Percy, 122 Hadfield road
Storrs
George Bertram, The Thoms, Park road
Taylor
George William, Oaklands
Walker
Andrew Paterson, 124 Hadfield rd
White
Rev. Archibald Campbell Macalister L.Th. (vicar), Vicarage, Hadfield
cross
COMMERCIAL.
Early
closing day, Tuesday.
Aldous
Thomas & Son, joiners, Railway street. T N's Glossop 5 &
Mottram 52
Bagshaw
Henry, beer retailer, 41 Station road
Bamforth
W. & Sons, joiners, 110 Station road
Bayley
John, station master
Beard
T. & Son, slaters, plasterers & general contractors
Bedford
Henry, ironmonger, Bank bottom
Bennett
Thos. & Son, general draprs. 98,100 & 102 Station rd
Bennett
Benjamin, smith, see Wilde & Bennett
Bentham
Emma (Miss), toy dealer, 33 Station road
Bentham
Tom, stationer, 47 Station road
Beverley
John T. shopkeeper, 31 Church street
Billinge
Joseph, saddler, 108 Station road
Bollans
Robert Wilfred M.B., Ch.B.Vict. surgeon, & medical officer to No.
2 district, Glossop union, 89 Station road. T N Glossop 28
Booth
Henry, pork butcher, 117 Station road
Bowden
Albert & Co. drapers, 124 Station road
Bowden
Frank, shopkeeper, 36 & 38 Waterside
Braddock
John, chemist, 42 & 44 Station road
Bramald
Ellis, haberdasher, 390 Hadfield road
Breeze
George, boot repairer, 1 Church street
Brookes
Frank, hair dresser, Woolley bridge
Buckley
James, printer, 4 Hadfield road
Buckley
John, shopkeeper, 25 Hadfield road
Burke
Henry James M.C., L.M.I., L.R.C.P. & S.Irel. physician &
surgeon, & public vaccinator Glossop union & medical officer
to Glossop Infirmary, Ivy house, Hadfield road. T N Glossop 95
Bush
William, greengrocer, 31 Station road
Butterworth
William, news agent, 22 Bank street
Chadwick
Harry, confectioner, 238 Woolley Bridge road
Chadwick
Samuel Woodhouse, ironmonger, 9 Station road & tinplate worker,
Woolley bridge
Challioner
Helena (Miss), shopkeeper, see Hurt & Challioner
Chamberlain
Ernest, cycle agent, 91 Station road
Charlesworth
George, Spread Eagle P.H. Woolley bridge
Convent
of Sisters of St. Paul, Woolley Bridge road
Cropper
Walter, fried fish dealer, 142 Station road
Cumberland
Isaac, beer retailer, 421 Hadfield road
Cuthbert
Thomas, Arundel Arms P.H. Cemetery road
Daniel
Albert, blacksmith, Albert street
Dawson
W. & Co. plumbers & painters, 85 Station road. T N Glossop 13
Dewsnap
Elizabeth (Mrs.), shopkeeper, 93 Woolley Bridge rd
Dewsnap
William, butcher, 46 Hadfield road
District
Bank Limited (sub-branch) (open mon. wed. & fri. 10 a.m. to 12.30
p.m.; sat. 9.30 to 11 a.m.), 97 Station road ; draw on London office,
75 Cornhill E C 3
Dodd
Samuel, coal merchant, Railway yard
Edwards
Gwendolyn (Mrs.), milliner, 109 Station road
Ellis
Elizabeth & Mary (Misses), tripe dealers, 37 Station road
Equitable
Co-operative Society Limited (John William Pogson, sec.; Charles
Loxley, manager), 54, 56 58 & 60 Station road (T N Glossop 55);
Woolley Bridge road & Stanyforth street & Padfield &
Tintwistle
Etchells
H. grocer, 95 Station road
Fidler
William, fancy draper, 128 Station road
Firth
Harold D., L.D.S. dentist, 65 Station road
Fish
William, chipped potato dealer, 69 Station road
Forster
Herbert Walter, haberdasher, Woolley bridge
Fountain
Esther A. (Mrs.), baby linen dealer, 68 Station rd
Garlick
Ernest, chipped potato dealer, Woolley Bridge road
Gartside
& Co. (of Manchester) Limited, cotton spinners &
manufacturers, Waterside mills. T N Glossop 115
Gerrard
Hannah (Mrs.), shopkeeper, 85 Woolley Bridge road
Glossop
Free Library & Public Hall, Station road
Glossop
Gas Co. (branch), 55 Station road
Glossop
Printers Limited, printers, 114 Station road
Goddard
Charley, Victoria hotel, 88 Bross croft
Greaves
James, boot repairer, 55 Hadfield road
Greaves
William, baker, 103 Station road
Greenwood
Cookson, shopkeeper, 52 Bross croft
Greenwood
Fred, tripe dresser, Station road
Gregory
Charles, farmer, Woolley bridge
Hadfield
Bleachers’ Association (William Hartley, sec.), Woolley bridge
Hadfield
Bowling Club (John Harrison, sec.), Hadfield road
Hadfield
Central Working Men’s Club (George Ross, sec.), Waterside
Hadfield
Conservative Bowling Club (Joseph Haigh, sec.), Woolley Bridge road
Hadfield
Conservative Club Co. Limited (Levi Lee, sec.), Woolley Bridge road
Hadfield
Dairy Co. provision dealers, 112 Station road
Hadfield
Football Club (F. Wood, sec.), 2 Osborne place
Hadfield
& Hollingworth Coal Association Limited (John A. Cooper, sec.),
coal mers. Station yard. T N Mottram 15
Hadfield
Liberal Club (John Simms, sec.), Bank street
Hadfield
Picturedrome (H. Sergeant, manager), Bank street
Hadfield
Public Hall & Free Library (John Battey, caretaker), Station road
Hadfield
William Bruce, solicitor, 305 Hadfield road. T N Glossop 73
Haigh
Hugh, news agent, 1a, Railway street
Hall
Edwin, hair dresser, 84 Station road
Hall
Thomas, watch repairer, 5 Station road
Hardman
Frank, butcher, 1a, Bank street
Harrison
Abel Limited, coal merchants, Station yard
Harrison
John James, fried fish dealer, 42 Hadfield road
Hill
William, fruiterer, 82 Station road
Hodson
Joseph, herbalist, 118 Station road
Holden
Walter, watch repairer, 76 Station road
Howard
Samuel, Anchor inn, Hadfield road
Hulme
Jessie (Miss), milliner, 45 Station road
Hunters
The Teamen Limited, grocers, 39 Station road
Hurt
& Challioner, shopkeepers, 122 Station road
Hyde
Joseph, shopkeeper, 32 Railway street
Jakeman
Albert, stationer, 126 Station road
James
John Thomas, fried fish dealer, 127 Station road
Kaye
Frank, chipped potato dealer, 1 Station road
Kenyon
William, butcher, 114 Station road
Kershaw
Jonathan, butcher, 3 Station road
Lawson
George, confectioner, 52 Station road
Lee
Elizh. H. & Martha (Misses), milliners, 91 Hadfield road
Lee
Levi & Co. grocers, 89 Hadfield road
Lee
Albert, boot repairer, 131 Station road
Littlewood
George Law, grocer, 12 Queen street
Livesley
James, draper, 72 Station road
Livesley
Squire, draper, 101 Station road
McHale
James, fruiterer, 123 Station road
Manchester
& County Bank Limited (sub-branch) (William Robinson, manager)
(mon. wed. k fri. 10 a.m. to 12.30 p.m.; sat. 9.30 to 11 a.m.), 97
Station road ; draw on National Provincial Bank Limited, 2 Princes
street, London E C 2
Mansell
Lizzie (Mrs.), shopkeeper, 53 Station road
Marsh
Frank, grocer, 102 Waterside
Martin
William A. draper, 11 & 13 Station road
Maycock
James, painter, 29 Station road
Meadow
Dairy Co. Limited, dairymen, 130 Station road
Mettrick
John Woolley, butcher, 86 Station road
Middleton
Rachel (Mrs.), news agent, 134 Woolley Bridge rd
Mitchell
Frank, baker, 87 Hadfield road
Mitchell
Henry, shopkeeper, Waterside
Moore
Sarah (Miss), shopkeeper, 7 Station road
Moscrop
Noah, fancy goods dealer, 119 Station road
Moss
John Robert, greengrocer, 79 Station road
Nelson
Jessie (Miss), baker, 74 Station road
Newton
Harriet (Mrs.), toy dealer, 103a, Station road
Nield
Allan, baker, 90 Station road
Ninnes
Andrew, baker, 116 Station road
North
Sarah E. (Mrs.), Spinners’ Arms P.H. Marsden street
Oldham
Arthur, confectioner, 35 Station road
Oliver
W. & Sons, ironmongers, 51 Station road
Parker
Joseph, tobacconist, 115 Station road
Pass
Arthur, Pear Tree inn, 431 Hadfield road
Patchett
Thomas, butcher, 32 Station road
Platt
Edward Firth, shopkeeper, Woolley bridge
Public
Weighing Machine, Station yard
Ratcliffe
John, draper, 121 Station road
Renshaw
Mary & Hannah (Misses), mllnrs. 68 Woolley bridge
Rhodes
Thomas Limited, cotton spinners & manufacturers, Mersey mills
Rhodes
Matthew, beer retailer, Woolley bridge
Robinson
Tom, baker, 27 Station road
Rogers
Frank, greengrocer, 15 Station road
Rogers
William T. tailor, 77 Station road
Ross
George, assistant insurance supt. 1 Bross croft
Rothwell
Edwin, grocer, 94 Station road
St. Charles’ Hall (T,
Williamson, sec.), Woolley Bridge road
Sanders
Clarence, grocer, 111 Station road
Scholes
Arthur, chipped potato dealer, Woolley Bridge road
Sherwood
Harry, boot repairer, 97 Woolley Bridge road
Sherwood
Robert William, manufacturing chemist, see Wyatt. Sherwood & Co
Sidebottom
William P. temperance hotel, 152 Station road
Smith
Herbert Alfort, dentist, 52 Hadfield road
Smith
James, coal merchant, Station yard
Storey
Charles Edwin, architect & surveyor, & sanitary inspector &
highway surveyor to Glossop Rural District Council & clerk to
Glossop reservoir commissioners, 10 Salisbury street
Sutcliffe
Emily (Mrs.), shopkeeper, 17 Station road
Swift
William, boot maker, Queen street
Swindells
Matilda (Miss), draper, 83a, Hadfield road
Swire
Harry, boot maker, 125 Station road
Swire
John, clogger, Woolley Bridge
Sykes
Emma E. (Mrs.), chipped potato dlr. 19 Bross croft
Sykes
Horace, hair dresser, 25 Station road
Sykes
John, monumental mason, Park road
Sykes
William James, Palatine inn, 133 Station road
Torkington
Samuel, greengrocer, 113 Station road
Trueman
Albert, baker, 129 Station road
Vernon
Thomas A. music seller, 91a, Station road
Wadsworth
Arthur, confectioner, 2 Bank street
Walker
Elliott Morton & Son, drprs. 105 & 107 Station road
Walker
Andrew Paterson L.R.C.P. & L.R.C.S.Edin., L.R.F.P.S.Glas.
Physician & surgn. 124 Hadfield rd. TN 101
Walsh
Henry, grocer, 8 Bank street
Walsh
Herbert, beer retailer, 1 Green lane
Walsh
Patrick, boot repairer, 6 Green lane
Ward
James, Masons’ Arms inn, 78 Station road
Warhurst
Hannah (Miss), milliner, 90 Station road
Watts
Alice (Mrs.), confectioner, 104 Station road
Webb
John W. hair dresser, 134 Station road
Webb
Mary (Mrs.), shopkeeper, 5 Green lane
Wilde
& Bennett, smiths, 73 & 75 Station rd. TN Glossop 119
Wildgoose
James, shopkeeper, 23 Station road
Woodhouse
Samuel, confectioner 97, & butcher 99, Station rd
Woodward
John C. hair dresser, 106 Station road
Woolley
Bridge Palace (Woolley Bridge Palace Co. Limited, lessees), Woolley
Bridge
Woolley
Bridge Working Men’s Club (W. P. Leach, sec.), 29 Woolley
Bridge road
Woolley
Tom, grocer, Woolley Bridge
Worsley
Arthur, joiner, 40 Bross croft
Wrigglesworth
Thomas H. fried fish dealer, 21 Station road
Wright
Edwin, Commercial inn, Bank Bottom
Wyatt,
Sherwood & Co. manufacturing chemists, 28 Bross croft
Wyatt
Annie (Mrs.), baker, 1a, Station road
Youles
Ruth (Mrs.), shopkeeper, 114 Woolley bridge
PADFIELD.
Hunter
Thomas P. Rose bank
COMMERCIAL.
Ashton
George Woodhouse, miscellaneous dealer, 97 Platt street
Biltcliffe
Lister, Peel’s Arms P.H
Bradley
Hector, grocer, 14 Platt street
Brierley
Harry, farmer, Main road
Burdekin
Alfred, shopkeeper, Platt street
Cartwright
Frank, domestic machinery dealer, Station road
Chevens
Brothers, carters
Critchlow
Samuel, farmer, Little Padfield
Greenwood
Fred, tripe dresser, 3Temple st
Greenwood
Joe, farmer
Hadfield
Equitable Co-operative Society Limited (John William Pogson, sec. ;
Charles Loxley, manager), 99 Platt st
Hardman
Frank, butcher, 85 Platt street
Hinchliffe
Frederick, shopkeeper, 61 Platt street
Howbrook
Brothers, joiners, Platt street. T N Glossop 122
Howbrook
Mark, shopkeeper, 1 Post st
Joyce
Ernest Albert, baker, 36 Post st
Padfield
Liberal Club (Saml. Sharp, sec.), Main road
Padfield
Working Men’s Club (Frank Macdonald, sec.), 26 Platt street
Palmer
Violet (Miss), shpkpr.15 Post st
Pickford
Fanny (Miss), haberdasher, 31 Post street
Rhodes
Thomas & Son (Hadfield) Ltd. cotton spinners & manufacturers,
Hadfield mills. T N Glossop 32
Robinson
Caroline (Miss), confectioner, 111 Main road
Rye
Mills Tannery Limited (The), leather dressers. T N Glossop 126
Sargentson
James, cotton waste mer
Sargentson
Walter F. cotton waste dealer, Padfield brook
Shaw
Joseph, Prince of Wales hotel, 119 & 121 Main road
Shepherd
Fred, farmer, Lower Deep clough
Swift
Joseph, boot repairer, 4 Post street
Wood
Henry & Doris (Mrs.), confectioners, 95 Platt street
CHARLESWORTH,
on the borders of Cheshire, is a township and parish, formed as an
ecclesiastical parish in 1849 from that of Glossop, including
Chisworth and Simmondley, in the High Peak division of the county,
hundred of High Peak, petty sessional division, union, county court
district and rural deanery of Glossop, archdeaconry of Chesterfield
and diocese of Southwell. By an Order of the County Council, under
the provisions of the Local Government Act, 1894, Charlesworth was
formed into a civil parish from the rural part of Glossop parish.
Charlesworth is 1½
miles west from Dinting
station on the Great Central section of the London and North Eastern
railway, 2½
south-west from Glossop, 13 from Manchester and 200½
from London. The church
of St. John, erected in 1849 at a cost of £2,700, is a
cruciform building of stone in the Early English style, consisting of
chancel, nave, north porch and a tower on the north side forming a
north transept and containing one bell, dated 1849 : there is a
memorial window to the Rev. Goodwin Purcell M.A. the first vicar of
Charlesworth : there are 480 sittings. The register dates from the
year 1849. The living is a vicarage, net yearly value £300,
with 3 acres of glebe and residence, in the gift of the Crown and
Bishop of Southwell alternately, and held since 1900 by the Rev.
Joseph Ames Martin, of St. Aidan's. There is a Congregational chapel,
founded in 1662, and rebuilt in 1796, with 700 sittings, and a
Particular Baptist chapel, built in 1835. Gamesley Hospital for
Infectious Diseases (Glossop Municipal Borough and Glossop Dale Rural
District) was built in 1888-9 at a cost of £371, and has since
been enlarged. Cotton spinning and rope and cotton band making are
carried on here. Lord Howard of Glossop is lord of the manor and the
principal landowner. The soil is clay ; subsoil, sandstone. The land
is principally in pasture. The area is 15,111 acres of land and 269
of water; rateable value, £29,458; population of the township
in 1921, 1,772, and of the ecclesiastical parish in 1911, 2,327.
Post
& M. O., Telephone Call & Telegraph Office, at which
telegrams are dispatched but not delivered.—Frederick Monks,
sub-postmaster. Letters through Manchester Broadbottom is the nearest
telegraph office for delivery
Schools.
Public
Elementary (mixed), for 262 children ; Mrs. Caroline Wood, mistress
Public
Elementary, Charlesworth, erected in 1823, enlarged in 1894, for 330
children ; Clement Read A.C.P. Master
CHISWORTH
is a civil parish formed from Chisworth and Ludworth by Local
Government Board Order No. 34,064, dated April 1st, 1896 ; it is 4
miles south-west from Glossop and about 1½ miles by field paths from Mottram station. There is a Wesleyan
Methodist chapel, built in 1834, with a small burial ground attached.
There are also cotton mills. The area is 862 acres of land and 2 of
water; rateable value, £1,752 ; population in 1921, 324.
Public
Elementary School (mixed), erected in 1871, for 136 children ;
William Robinson, master
SIMMONDLEY
is partly within the borough of Glossop, from which it is 1 mile
south-west, and near the London and North Eastern railway. There is a
Congregational chapel, erected in 1844, with 150 sittings.
Letters
through Glossop, which is the nearest post, money order &
telegraph office The children of this place attend the day schools at
Charlesworth, Dinting & Whitfield
CHARLESWORTH.
PRIVATE
RESIDENTS.
Arnfield
Samuel J.P. Rose cottage
Booth
James Melville, Rossall
Cooper
Mrs. Moses, Calrows
Martin
Rev. Joseph Ames (vicar), Vicarage
Moss
Mrs. Fern bank
Mounsey
Arthur, Brae garth
Ogden
Edwin, Wellgate cottage
Robinson
Joseph, North lea
Rowbottom
Benjamin H. Beech house
Rowbottom
Cecil, Woodlands, Lee Head
Rowbottom
Mrs. Lee Mount
Smith
John Booth, Marlingford
Teague
Robert H. Annandale
Upton
Rev. Albert D. (Cong.), The Manse
Wormald
Mrs. Rose Lea
COMMERCIAL.
Acock
Philip (Mrs.), farmr. Coombs farm
Booth
John & Son (Charlesworth) Ltd. cotton band manufacturers, Lee
Vale rope works. T N Glossop 136
Booth
Ernest, farmer, Springfield house
Booth
John Wm. farmer, Wellhead farm
Booth
William, grocer, Lee Head
Bowers
Edmund, slater
Brown
James of Chisworth Limited, bleachers. Coombs bleach works. T N
Glossop 80
Burdekin
John, farmer, Woodseats
Charlesworth
& Chisworth Conservative Club Co. Ltd. (John E. Booth, sec)
Charlesworth
& Chisworth Liberal Club Ltd. (John Edward Walker, sec)
Chisworth
Industrial Co-operative Society Ltd. (Arthur L. Hallas, sec)
Clayton
James R. coal merchant & assistant overseer, Lee Vale
Clegg
John Ernest, shopkeeper
Cooper
Ralph B. farmer, Woodseats
Cottrell
John H. (exors. of), farmers, Lower Blackshaw
Dale
William, farmer
Fielding
Sarah (Mrs.), grocer
Foster
Reginald, dairyman, Town lane
Frankland
Fred, baker
Gamesley
Hospital for Infectious Diseases (Glossop Municipal Borough &
Glossop Dale Rural District) (Ernest Henry Marcus Milligan M.D.,
D.P.H. medical officer; H. Dane, inspector ; Mrs. M. E. Hornby,
matron) T N Glossop 35
Garside
Jessie (Mrs.), George & Dragon P.H
Hammersley
John Dawson, joiner
Hardman
Peter, Bull’s Head hotel
Higginbottom
Harry, shopkeeper
Higginbottom
Joseph, coal dealer
Hill
Alice (Mrs.), shopkeeper, Town lane
Hodgson
E. S. Ltd. quarry owners, Hargate hill. T N Glossop 141
Jackson
Levi & Sons, rope & twine mfrs
Kennedy
Nancy (Mrs.), shopkeeper
Lowes
John Henry, printer
Naden
Samuel, farmer, Homestead
Neal
Elizabeth (Mrs.). greengrocer
Neal
Sarah (Mrs.), greengrocer
Patchett
Abram, butcher
Rowbottom
James Limited, cotton spinners, Holehouse mills. T N Glossop 9
Rowbottom
James, farmer
Shaw
Charles W. farmer
Stafford
Arthur, fried fish dealer
Swift
Walter, Horse Shoe inn
Thornhill
Jsph. Wm. farmer, Blackshaw
Timmis
James, farmer, Town Lane farm
Turner
Walter, Waggon & Horses inn
Williams
Herbert, farmer, Hargate hill
Willis
Ernest, boot maker, Marple road
Wood
Ralph & Samuel, wheelwrights
Wood
John Saville, farmer. T N Glossop 148
Yates
Arthur, Grey Mare inn
CHISWORTH.
Rowbottom
Geo. Edmnd. Chisworth ho
Rowbottom
James Henry J.P. Chewwood
COMMERCIAL.
Bell
Robert Stanley, farmer, Sandy lane
Bramhall
Matilda (Mrs.), shopkeeper
Bullimer
John, farmer, Boarfold farm
Chisworth
Industrial Co-operative Society Ltd. (Arthur L. Hallas, sec)
Gould
George, farmer
Green
Fanny (Mrs.), haberdasher
Johnson
Frank, shopkeeper
Ratcliffe
J. H. & Co. (Kinderlee) Ltd. cotton band manfrs. Kinderlee mills.
TA “Kinder, Broadbottom;” T N Mottram 38
Rowbottom
James Ltd. cotton doublers, Chewwood
Shaw
Joseph, farmer, Sandy lane
Smith
Thomas, farmer, Moorside farm
Storer
John, farmer
Warren
Arthur G. farmer, Sandy lane
Wild
James, Commercial inn
SIMMONDLEY.
(Letters
through Glossop.)
Band
Henry R. Coombes house
Bowie
Mrs
COMMERCIAL.
Allsopp
Frank, farmer, Plainstead
Barker
Joseph, farmer, Hall farm
Cranmer
Thos. frmr. Storthbrook farm
Glassford
Alexander, farmer
Hurst
William, smallholder
Robinson
Samuel, smallholder
Robinson
Wilfred, carrier
Smith
Samuel (Mrs.), farmer, Cownedge
Storer
George, farmer
Tinker
John James, beer retailer
Wager
Jasper, farmer
Weaver
William, farmer
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Last updated: 13 August 2020