from Hutton Rudby to Stokesley, Guisborough, Whitby ... and beyond the county ...
Sunday, 1 December 2013
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Friday, 29 November 2013
Items for Sale, 25 January 1877: from the Middlesbrough Weekly Exchange
From The Weekly Exchange
(price One Penny)
Thursday 25 January 1877
(price One Penny)
Thursday 25 January 1877
FOR SALE BY PRIVATE CONTRACT
FOR SALE, Fine-toned Pianoforte, by Henry Ward.
FOR SALE, a very superior carved oak Cabinet and Sideboard to match, with plate-glass back.
FOR SALE, Phaeton, little worse than new; also very useful Whitechapel, Cab, Landau, and Brake.
FOR SALE, Bakery, in central position.
IMESON-TERRACE, Linthorpe-road.- Capital Family Residence, containing drawing-room, dining-room, kitchen, sitting-room, five bedrooms, cellar kitchen, wine cellar, W.C., stable coach-house, and good garden, etc.
GROVE-HILL. - Family Residence, containing ten rooms, stable, coach-house, and large garden.
NEW LINTHORPE. - A very substantially built Residence, with stable and coach-house, etc.
CANNON-STREET. - The best Business Premises in this capital thoroughfare.
WILSON-STREET.- A well-built corner House and Shop, with cellars, etc
NEWPORT-ROAD. - Two very central and well-built Houses and Shops, with plate-glass windows.
BROTTON.- Eight three-roomed Houses, let on 20 years' lease.
Also, over 250 three and four-roomed Houses in Garden, Vaughan, Hatherley, Lime, Calthorpe, and other streets, for particulars, apply W. JEFF, 36, Albert Road.
Friday, 22 November 2013
Properties for sale and to let in Middlesbrough, 1877
from The Weekly Exchange
(Price One Penny)
1 March 1877
(Price One Penny)
1 March 1877
MIDDLESBROUGH ON TEES
TO BE SOLD BY PUBLIC AUCTION at the Globe Hotel, South Street, Middlesbrough, on MONDAY, the 5th day of March, 1877, at three for four o'clock in the afternoon precisely.
MR JOSHUA BROWN, Auctioneer.
Subject to such conditions as shall then and there be read.
ALL that valuable freehold MESSUAGE or DWELLING-HOUSE with Shop situate No 5, South-street, Middlesbrough, and adjoining to the Globe Hotel on the north, containing in the basement, kitchen and other conveniences, on the ground floor shop, yard, and conveniences, on the first floor sitting room and two bedrooms.
This property is in one of the best thoroughfares in Middlesbrough, and within a few yards of the Market place. As an investment it is most desirable.
Further particulars may be obtained of the Auctioneer, or on application at the offices of
Messrs GARBUTT AND FAWCETT,
Solicitors, Yarm, and Stockton-on-Tees
TO LET, Two Ten-roomed HOUSES, fitted with every convenience, large garden, situate in Gunnergate-terrace, Corporation-road. Five capital Eleven-room HOUSES, in Grange-road. Two good DWELLING-HOUSES in Gilkes-street
FOR SALE, Four Houses, and Two Plate-Glass Fronted Shops, being and situate Nos. 10, 12, 14, and 16, Gurney-street, Middlesbrough; close to centre of town, the North-Eastern Railway Station, Post-office, and Cattle market. – For particulars, apply to Mr J BROWN; Offices, 53, Wilson-street, Middlesbrough
TO LET – SEMI-DETACHED VILLA, in Eastbourne-road, Linthorpe Estate, containing eight rooms, including bathroom, with a plentiful supply of hot water; gas fittings and venetian blinds in all the rooms; also a quarter acre garden well stocked with all kinds of fruit trees in full bearing; commodious piggeries and hen-houses. Now occupied by Mr Shaw. Apply, Mr STAINSBY, Goods Manager, Middlesbrough
THREE SITES of LAND for Sale in Sailors' Trod, Middlesbrough, at reasonable rates. – Apply to T CASWELL, 25, Lower East-street, Middlesbrough
Wednesday, 20 November 2013
Sidgwick family in Enterpen in the early C19
This beautifully engrossed indenture dated 18 July 1828 is part of the legal paperwork by which Edward Meynell the younger of Enterpen, weaver, bought property in Enterpen from John Sidgwick of Broughton, yeoman.
John Sidgwick was one of the sons of the late John Sidgwick of Enterpen, linen manufacturer.
He had inherited the property from his father – and he had previously inherited it from his father, also called John Sidgwick, who had bought it from the Flintoff family in 1779.
John Sidgwick of Broughton was selling Edward Meynell two houses in Enterpen with the garden lying behind them. They had been in the occupation of the late John Sidgwick, and were now tenanted by Thomas Hawman and James Meek.
The properties are described as being bordered to the east and north by a house and grounds belonging to John Sidgwick of Broughton – to the west by ground belonging to Sarah Sidgwick – and to the south by the King's Highway leading from Hutton near Rudby to East Rounton.
A comparison with the Tithe Map, in which Edward Meynell is shown as owning a house and garden of 22 ½ perches, indicates that the property lay at the eastern end of Enterpen, to the west of the old Station Hotel.
It is clear from the Tithe Map that the Sidgwick family still dominated that end of Enterpen in the 1830s. John the linen manufacturer and his father John before him had clearly laid down a good inheritance for their successors.
Note: the first John Sidgwick acquired the land by "certain indentures of lease and release bearing date respectively 15th and 16th May 1779 and the release made or expressed to be made between George Flintoff and Ann Flintoff widow (1) John Newsam (2) and the said John Sidgwick the Grandfather (3)"
One of the witnesses was William Weatherill – perhaps an early appearance by William Weatherill, solicitor of Guisborough? Possibly.
John Sidgwick was one of the sons of the late John Sidgwick of Enterpen, linen manufacturer.
John Sidgwick of Broughton was selling Edward Meynell two houses in Enterpen with the garden lying behind them. They had been in the occupation of the late John Sidgwick, and were now tenanted by Thomas Hawman and James Meek.
The properties are described as being bordered to the east and north by a house and grounds belonging to John Sidgwick of Broughton – to the west by ground belonging to Sarah Sidgwick – and to the south by the King's Highway leading from Hutton near Rudby to East Rounton.
A comparison with the Tithe Map, in which Edward Meynell is shown as owning a house and garden of 22 ½ perches, indicates that the property lay at the eastern end of Enterpen, to the west of the old Station Hotel.
It is clear from the Tithe Map that the Sidgwick family still dominated that end of Enterpen in the 1830s. John the linen manufacturer and his father John before him had clearly laid down a good inheritance for their successors.
Note: the first John Sidgwick acquired the land by "certain indentures of lease and release bearing date respectively 15th and 16th May 1779 and the release made or expressed to be made between George Flintoff and Ann Flintoff widow (1) John Newsam (2) and the said John Sidgwick the Grandfather (3)"
One of the witnesses was William Weatherill – perhaps an early appearance by William Weatherill, solicitor of Guisborough? Possibly.
Friday, 15 November 2013
Reckless driving near Stockton in 1877
From The Weekly Exchange
(Price One Penny)
Thursday 1 March 1877
but on the bright side...
(Price One Penny)
Thursday 1 March 1877
RECKLESS DRIVING NEAR STOCKTON
At the County Petty Sessions at Stockton this morning, Frank Clayton, a Stockton cabman of notorious character, was charged with being drunk in charge of a horse and conveyance. Mr Bolsover prosecuted on behalf of Mr J P Jewson, music teacher.
On the evening of the 15th of February, Mr Jewson, who had been at the Titiens’ Concert, was driving, about eleven o’clock, to Hartburn from Stockton. When near to the first bridge in Yarm-road, they saw the defendant driving a conveyance at a furious rate in an opposite direction on the wrong side of the road. Mr Jewson’s driver drew out of the way as much as possible, but was unable to prevent an accident, and the two vehicles collided.
The splashboard of Mr Jewson’s was broken to atoms, a carriage lamp was broken, and other damage was done. The shaft of defendant’s conveyance struck Mr Jewson, jnr., on the arm, and bruised it. Defendant’s late employer was called to state that he had been compelled to discharge the defendant on account of his drunken habits and for having injured a horse and carriage by his carelessness.
The defendant had practically no defence.
The bench fined him £2, including costs, or two months hard labour. They cautioned him as to his future conduct.
but on the bright side...
STOCKTON: THE FREE LIBRARY
The reading-room in connection with the Corporation Free Library was opened on Tuesday. It is situated in the Freemasons old Hall in Wellington-street.
Friday, 8 November 2013
Messrs Blair & Co Marine Engine Works: 1877
Newspaper reports from the Stockton works of George Young Blair of Drumrauch Hall, Hutton Rudby:
From The Weekly Exchange
(price one penny)
Thursday 25 January 1877
Thursday 1 March 1877
From The Weekly Exchange
(price one penny)
Thursday 25 January 1877
THE SERIOUS ACCIDENT AT STOCKTON
The young man William Cockfield, who was seriously injured on Saturday evening at Messrs Blair and Co's Marine Engine Works, at Stockton through the breaking of a crane, died yesterday afternoon at the New Surgical Hospital, Bowesfield-lane, whither he was conveyed immediately after the accident.An inquest was held on the body Mr Coroner Settle at the New Hospital this afternoon. A verdict of "Died from injuries received" was returned.
Thursday 1 March 1877
PRESENTATION
On Monday evening, Mr Robert Graham (who has relinquished his situation as a foreman at Messrs Blair and Co's Marine Engine Works), was presented by the workmen at this establishment with a handsome timepiece, and a valuable gold brooch was at the same time presented through him to his wife. The presentation took place at the Borough Hotel, of which house Mr Graham has become landlord. Mr John Wood, on behalf of the subscribers, presented the articles and referred to the esteem in which Mr Graham was held by the workmen; and Mr Graham suitably acknowledged the kindness which they had shown him.
Tuesday, 5 November 2013
Bonfire Night
For some years now, Guy Fawkes' Night has been marked by organised displays of fireworks. It seems a long time ago that families and villages celebrated with a few fireworks and as big a bonfire as they could manage – and now the expense of insurance and the effects of the recession are curtailing the municipal displays.
This account from Bill Cowley's Cleveland Calendar is for those of you with fond memories of the days when November the Fifth meant, above all, bonfires ...
This account from Bill Cowley's Cleveland Calendar is for those of you with fond memories of the days when November the Fifth meant, above all, bonfires ...
A great pile of hedge-trimmings makes a good start for a bonfire on November 5th. From the vantage point of Potto Hill our children used to look out to see the bonfires starting up across half the Cleveland Plain – an early starter at Ingleby Cross, Swainby a few fields away, a dozen farm bonfires like our own starring the darkness north west to Crathorne, then three miles to the north the sky would be glowing with the great holocaust that Hutton Rudby produces. Seamer, Stokesley, Carlton, Faceby – and all the time rockets would be going up into the great arc of the Cleveland sky, to burst in blue and red and silver, whilst the rapid-fire of crackers and bangers sounded like a minor war. As we stirred the last embers of our own fire, smoke and sparks from a dozen others would still be mounting into the night, punctuating the dark horizon with their repetition of an ancient sacrifice to the dying year. Fingers smelling of woodsmoke and gunpowder we could leave the night to other revellers, satisfied at having played our part in this pagan ritual.
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