< | List of Names as written on the Plan |
Various modes of Spelling the same Names |
Authority for those modes of Spelling |
Situation | Descriptive Remarks, or other General Observations which may be considered of Interest |
> |
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Trinity Church | Trinity Church | Edward Lawson Esq. | 62 chains South | A neat stone edifice situated on the | ||
(Chapel of Ease) | Trinity Church | Mr Dixon | East of Hopesley House. | North side of the Turnpike Road about | ||
Trinity Church | Mr Nicholson, Incumbent | 1/2 mile West of Horsley Inn. This Church | ||||
of Byrness | is dedicated to the Holy Trinity & was built | |||||
in 1844 at a cost of £725 of which sum | ||||||
the church building society gave £150, the diocesan society £50, Lord Redesdale gave the site | ||||||
stone and a donation of £100 and the Duke of Northumberland contributed £150, the | ||||||
remainder was obtained by voluntary subscription. It is a Chapel of ease to Elsdon | ||||||
Parish and forms a joint living with Byrness. |
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Rochester | Rochester | Mr Coulson | 12 chains South | A straggling Village situated on the North | ||
Rochester | Mr Amos | West of Hopesley House. | side of the Turnpike Road leading | |||
Rochester | Mr Dodd | from Newcastle to Jedburgh about 8 miles | ||||
Rochester | Whites Directory | West of Elsdon. The Village consists | ||||
Rochester | List of County Voters | of several small cottages in a good | ||||
Rochester | MacLauchlan’s Memoirs of | state of repair with vegetable gardens | ||||
Watling Street Page 33 | attached. The Village extends from the | |||||
Rochester | Hodgson’s History of Northumberland | School House to the Bridge. | ||||
(Duke of Northumberland, Lord of the Manor) | ||||||
J. Doherty Lance Corporal Royal Engineers |
Abbreviations are underlined like this RE and the expansion may be seen by hovering the cursor over the abbreviation.
An entry outlined like this has a note which may be seen by hovering the cursor over it. |
Transcribed by TH
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