ERCALL MAGNA A brief journey through time |
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The Place The People External Sites |
This is the extract for Ercall Magna from the 1922 Kelly's Directory. (Rowton Chapelry click here) 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, 3 miles East, Sleap, 3 East, Slafford, Ellerdine, 3 North,
Haughton, 3 West, Isombridge, 3 South, 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 Wrekin 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. The church of St Michael's dates from 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 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 yearly value £405,
with 30 acres of Glebe and residence, in the gift of Lord Barnard M.C.,
and
held since 1911 by the Rev. Arthur Norman Spencer Scott M.A. of Pembroke
College, Cambridge. 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. There is also a Wesleyan chapel at Crudgington, built in 1902,
and seating about 100. There is a hospital, founded in 1694 by Francis,
Earl of Bradford, for six aged persons and supported by Lord Barnard
M.C.: the other charities amount to £26. 16s. 8d. yearly, arising
from Thomas's bequest, being the interest on £484. 12s. 3d.: Rhodenhurst’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
its being carried on, and they are used to provide scholarships. Lord
Barnard M.C. who is lord of the manor, and the Manchester Co-operative
Wholesale Society
Limited are the principal landowners: the latter has a large
fruit farm at Roden and a convalescent home adjoining. 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 11,746 acres of land and 45 of water; rateable value, £19,595;
the population in 1911 was 1,672 in the civil, and 1,241 in the ecclesiastical
Parish (which comprises parts of High Ercall and Rodington civil parishes). Private residents. COTWALL MOORTOWN CRUDGINGTON AND SLEAP HAUGHTON ISOMBRIDGE OSBASTON POYNTON RODEN TERN WALTON |
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27 Jun 09 |