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This is the extract for Ercall Magna from the 1905 Kelly's Directory.

HIGH ERCALL (or Ercall Magna) is a large parish comprising the hamlets of Cold Hatton, Cotwall, 1 mile East, Moortown, 1 1/2 miles North-East, Crudgington, 2 East, Sleap, 3 East, Slafford, Ellerdine, 3 North, Haughton, 3 West, Isombridge, Osbaston, 1 North-East, Poynton 2 West, Roden, 1 West, Rowton, Tern, 2 East and Walton 1 North. High Ercall is 7 1/2 miles North-East from Shrewsbury, 5 1/2 North West from Wellington and 2 1/2 West from Crudgington Station (in this parish) on the Wellington and Market Drayton branch of the great Western Railway and 151 from London, in the Northern division of the county. Wellington division of the South Bradford hundred, Wellington petty sessional division, union and county court district, rural deanery of Wrockwardine, archdeaconry of Salop and diocese of Lichfield. Under Local Government Board Orders dated March, 1884, detached parts of this parish were transferred to Kinnersley and Rodington, and a portion to Waters Upton was added to High Ercall. The church of St Michael, erected about 1080 , but was enlarged about two centuries later. Its original dedication was to St Edward the confessor. The building is of stone in the early English style, consisting of chancel with chapel on the north side, nave, south porch and a lofty embattled western tower containing a clock and 8 bells: it was much injured in the Civil War, but was substantially repaired afterwards, and in 1864-5 it was restored under the direction of the late G.E. Street esq. R.A. at a cost of about £1,600, and affords 350 sittings. The register's date from the year 1585. The living is a vicarage, net value £280, including 30 acres of Glebe, with residence, in the gift of Lord Barnard, and held since 1900 by the Rev. William Henry Philpott, Assoc. of Kings College London. A mission church of brick was erected in 1863, at a cost of about £500, for the hamlets of Crudgington, Sleap, and Slafford: it has a western turret containing one bell, and affords 100 sittings. Here is a hospital, founded by Francis, Earl of Bradford, for six aged persons and supported by Lord Barnard: the other charities amount to £26. 16s. 8d. yearly, arising from Thomas's bequest, being the interest on £484. 12s. 3d.: Roddenhurst’s, the interest on £85, and the Poor’s Land of 3a. 3r. 4p. which is let for £8 yearly. A grammar school was founded here in 1663 by Thomas Leeke, but since 1887 the funds have been too low to admit of it is being carried on. Lord Barnard, who is lord of the manor, the Duke of Sutherland, John Tayleur esq. of Buntingsdale, Market Drayton and Co-operative Wholesale Society, limited, Manchester are the landowners. The soil is principally composed of loam and marl, and rests on the new red sandstone. The chief crops are wheat, barley, turnips and artificial grasses. The area of the parish is 11,347 acres of land and 45 of water; rateable value, £16,411; the population in 1901 was 1,506 in the civil and 1,064 in the ecclesiastical. The hamlets of cold Hatton, Ellerdine and Rowton form a distinct district for each ecclesiastical purposes, called Rowton, under which head they will be found.
Parish Clerk, James Lockley.
Post, M. O., & T. O., T. M. O., E. D., P. P., S. B. & A. & I. office-Hugh Parry, sub postmaster. Letters arrive through Wellington at 8 a.m.; box cleared at 5:40 p.m.; no Sunday Post.
Post Office, Crudgington. John Roster, sub-postmaster. Letters arrive from Wellington at 6:40 a.m; despatched at 6:5 p.m. no Sunday post. Postal orders are issued and paid here. Waters Upton is the nearest money order and High Ercall, 3 miles distant, the nearest the nearest telegraph office for delivery, but there is a telegraph office at the railway station for collection only.

Public Elementary Schools.
Board (mixed), Crudgington, built in 1877, for 90 children; average attendance, 50; John Davies, master.
Board (mixed), High Ercall, built 1860, for 120 children: average attendance, 110: Ebenezer Pitchford, master.
Railway station, Crudgington, Saml Harris, stationmaster.

HIGH ERCALL
Philpott, Rev., William Henry, Assoc, K. C. L. (Vicar), Vicarage.
Pascal, Thomas S. The Elms.
Steedman, Miss, The Grove.
Topham, Richard, Ercall Park.
Delves,William, Tayleur Arms P.H. and farmer, Long Waste.
James-Moore, Jas. H. Farmer, The Hall.
Lloyd, John William, Miller (water) & farmer, Ercall Mill.
Parry, Hugh, general dealer & seed merchant, Post Office.
Ridgway, Edward, blacksmith.
Smith, Exon , Cleveland Arms P.H.
Topham, Richard, farmer and insurance agent, Ercall park.

COTWALL
Jones, Thomas, farmer , Cotwall farm.
Owen, Frederick, carpenter & Joiner.

MOORTOWN
Bromley, Thomas, farmer.
Hampton, Robert Colley, farmer.

CRUDGINGTON AND SLEAP
Lea, Thomas, Farmer.
Major, Margaret (Mrs), farmer, Sleap.
Middleton, James, Frmr & blacksmith.
Minshull, George, farmer.
Percival, Herbt. France frmr, Sleap.
Proudley, Edward, carpenter.

HAUGHTON
Everall, John, farmer.

ISOMBRIDGE
Bromley, Samuel & Vincent, farmers.
Sankey, William, farmer.

OSBASTON
Casewell, Thomas K. farmer.
Colley, Sarah (Mrs), farmer.

POYNTON
Breeze, John, surveyor of roads.
Buttery, Richd, boot & shoe maker.
Humphreys, William, horse breaker.
Morgan, John, farmer.
Pratt, William Robert, farmer.

RODEN
Brisbourne, Peter, farmer.
Bullock, Richard, blacksmith.
Gregory, Thomas, farmer, Red house.
Manchester Co-operative Wholesale Society Ltd. (John William Nowell, manager), fruit growers & C.

TERN
Juckes, Thomas George, farmer.

WALTON
Allcock, Morris John, farmer.
Brookes, Margaret and Elizh (Misses), farmer.
Hughes, Robert, Tailor, ladies' riding habit and breeches maker.
Kemp, Joseph Hayward, farmer.

 
   01 Jan 09

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