Kelly’s Directory 1880 – Winterbourne Stoke

Kelly’s Directory 1880 – Winterbourne Stoke

Winterbourne Stoke is a township, parish and village, in the Southern division of the county, union of Amesbury, hundred of Branch and Dole, Salisbury county court district, rural deanery of Wylye first portion, Salisbury archdeaconry and diocese, 4 miles from Wishford station on the Great Western railway, 5 miles west from Amesbury, and 9 north from Salisbury. The church of St. Peter is an ancient structure, in the Early English style: it consists of nave, chancel, south transept, and square central tower and 4 bells: there are two fine Norman doorways to the nave: the arch into the south transept is of pure Early English detail: in the chancel is a good piscina and credence, of Early Decorated character. The register dates from 1558. The living is a vicarage, value £280, with residence, in the gift of Lord Ashburton, and held by the Rev. Joseph Henry Maclean. Lord Ashburton is lord of the manor and the chief landowner. The soil is light loam and chalk. The chief crops are wheat, barley and oats. The area is 3,419 acres; rateable value, £2,865; in 1871 the population was 293. The Conegarth (or Coneygore) is three quarters of a mile north. There are many barrows and earthworks, among which is Long Barrow.

Parish Clerk, Robert Eyears.

Post Office – Harry Dyer, receiver. Letters arrive from Salisbury at 9.15 a.m. and from the West of England at 9.15 a.m.; dispatched at 5 p.m. The nearest money order office is at Amesbury.

Here is a National school, under Government superintendence; Miss A.M. Legge, mistress.

Rev. Joseph Henry Maclean (Vicar).

Frederick Boyce, farmer, Manor House.

Henry Dyer, blacksmith, grocer and post office.

Frank Grant, carrier and farmer.

Henry John Smith, farmer, Hill Farm.

Thomas Tucker, farmer.

Kelly’s Directory 1875 – Winterbourne Stoke

Kelly’s Directory 1875 – Winterbourne Stoke

Winterbourne Stoke is a township, parish and village, in the Southern division of the county, union of Amesbury, hundred of Branch and Dole, Salisbury county court district, diocese and archdeaconry of Salisbury, and rural deanery of Wylye, 5 miles west from Amesbury, and 9 north from Salisbury. The church of St. Peter is an ancient structure, in the Early English style: it consists of nave, chancel, south transept, and square central tower and 4 bells: there are two fine Norman doorways to the nave: the arch into the south transept is of pure Early English detail: in the chancel is a good piscina and credence, of Early Decorated character. The register dates from 1558. The living is a vicarage, value £220, with residence, in the gift of Lord Ashburton, and held by the Rev. Charles Lawford, M.A., of Trinity College, Cambridge. Here is a National school, under Government superintendence. The soil is light loam and chalk. Lord Ashburton is lord of the manor and the chief landowner. The chief crops are wheat, barley and oats. The area is 3,419 acres; rateable value, £2,802; in 1871 the population was 293. The Conegarth (or Coneygore) is three quarters of a mile north. There are many barrows and earthworks, among which is Long Barrow.

Parish Clerk, Jacob Grant.

Post Office – William Furmage, receiver. Letters arrive from Salisbury at 9 a.m. & and from the West of England at 10 a.m.; dispatched at 5 p.m. The nearest money order office is at Amesbury.

National School, Miss Kate Dyer, mistress.

Frederick Boyce, Manor House.

Rev. Charles Lawford, M.A., Vicarage.

Frederick Boyce, farmer, Manor House.

Thomas Chivers, Bell.

Harry Dyer, blacksmith, grocer and post office.

William Polden, cattle dealer and farmer.

Henry John Smith, farmer, Hill Farm.

Thomas Tucker, farmer.

Kelly’s Directory 1867 – Winterbourne Stoke

Kelly’s Directory 1867 – Winterbourne Stoke

Winterbourne Stoke is a township, parish and village, in the Southern division of the county, union of Amesbury, hundred of Branch and Dole, Salisbury county court district, diocese and archdeaconry of Salisbury, and rural deanery of Wylye, 5 miles west from Amesbury, and 9 north from Salisbury. The church of St. Peter is an ancient structure, in the Early English style, with square central tower and 4 bells: it consists of nave, chancel, south transept, and contains several features of considerable archaeological interest: there are two fine Norman doorways to the nave: the arch into the south transept is of pure Early English detail: in the chancel is a good piscina and credence, of Early Decorative character. The register dates from 1558. The living is a vicarage, value £220, with residence, in the gift of Lord Ashburton, and held by the Rev. Charles Lawford, M.A., of Trinity College, Cambridge. Here is a National school, under Government superintendence.

Lord Ashburton is lord of the manor and the chief landowner. The chief crops are wheat, barley and oats. In 1861 the population was 383; the area is 3,419 acres. The Conegarth (or Coneygore) is three quarters of a mile north. There are many barrows and earthworks, among which is Long Barrow.

Parish Clerk, Jacob Grant.

Post Office – Harry Dyer, receiver. Letters arrive from Salisbury at 9. a.m. & and from the West of England at 10 a.m; dispatched at 5 p.m. The nearest money order office is at Amesbury.

National School, Miss Kate Rebecca Osborne, mistress.

William Brown, Esq., Manor House.

Rev. Charles Lawford, M.A., Vicarage.

William Brown, farmer, Manor House.

Thomas Chivers, Bell.

Harry Dyer, blacksmith.

George Kellow Loader, farmer, Hill Farm.

William Polden, cattle dealer and farmer.

Thomas Tucker, farmer.

Winterbourne Stoke Burials 1815-1819

Burials at Winterbourne Stoke, 1815 – 1819

Arranged alphabetically by surname:

CHRISTIAN ADLAM, burnt to death 2 a.m., 18 March, in bed, aged 72 years, 19 March 1819.

ELIZA ADLAM, burnt to death 2 a.m., 18 March, in bed, aged 3 years, 19 March 1819.

MARY ADLAM, burnt to death 2 a.m., 18 March, in bed, aged 36 years, 19 March 1819.

WILLIAM KILFORD BROWN, aged 1 week, 13 April 1817.

ROBERT COLLIER, aged 62 years, 7 February 1818.

ANN DAVIES, burnt to death 2 a.m., 18 March, in bed, aged 25 years, 19 March 1819.

JANE DAVIES, burnt to death 2 a.m., 18 March, in bed, aged 10 months, 19 March 1819.

THOMAS DAVIES, aged 3 years, 24 March 1819.

MARY DOWNTON, aged 85 years, 1 February 1817.

HENRY DYER, aged 23 years, 9 May 1819.

ANN EYRES, aged 2 days, 7 February 1818.

ANNE EYRES, aged 3 months, 27 October 1819.

CHARLES HIBBERD, aged 64 years, 16 October 1817.

PRISCILLA HOLMES, aged 83 years, 22 February 1818.

RICHARD HOLMS, aged 80 years, 8 May 1816.

GRACE KELLOW, of Berwick St. James, aged 80 years, 26 December 1819.

WILLIAM LIGHT, aged 70 years, 6 April 1817.

ELIZABETH LODGE, aged 70 years, 28 March 1817.

JOHN PEARCE, aged 78 years, 7 April 1818.

MARY PENNY, aged 74 years, 13 August 1815.

MARY READ, aged 55 years, 6 November 1819.

JANE TARGET, burnt to death 2 a.m., 18 March, in bed, aged 61 years, 19 March 1819.

BETTY TUBB, aged 78 years, 16 April 1818.

SUSANNA WALLACE, aged 75 years, 16 August 1819.

JANE WEBB, of Stony Stratford, aged 67 years, 10 December 1816.

JOHN WEBB, aged 70 years, 21 April 1815.

HANNAH WHEELER, aged 5 weeks, 25 January 1818.

CHARLES WILKENS, aged 7 months, 11 February 1816.

ELIZABETH WILKINS, burnt to death 2 a.m., 18 March, in bed, aged 16 years, 19 March 1819.

HANNAH WITT, aged 35 years, 28 July 1818.