Revd R J Barlow c1804-78 |
He would be remembered above all for his devoted service to his parishioners in October 1832 – the time of the cholera.
Hutton Rudby was the largest township of the parish of Rudby-in-Cleveland. His new home lay in the North Riding of Yorkshire, some six miles south of its northern boundary, the River Tees.
Had Mr Barlow cared to look up the North Riding in the recently published Clarke's New Yorkshire Gazetteer (1828), he might have found the description rather uninviting.
The coast is described as "hilly, bleak and cold" and
the interior part of the moorlands is bleak, dreary, and destitute of wood, where the traveller sees nothing but a few small sheep.The writer conceded that "the climate admits of some variety", but generally, he declared, "it may be called severe", with the moorlands "enveloped in fogs and chilled with rain".