... from my working notes ... accuracy not guaranteed ... for explanatory note, see post of 14 Feb 2013
Wailes
1840 Whites: East Rounton: the Grange is the seat and property of John Wailes Esq
1851 Census: Linden Grove: Forbes MacBean 60 Lt Col Artillery full pay b Annapolis Nova Scotia British subj, wife Eliza 65 b St Petersburg British subj, daughters Elizabeth 25, Margaret Murray 20 & Marianne Georgina 18, all b Woolwich; wife’s sister Miss Marianne Scougall 45 indep also b St Petersburg; servants: groom Joseph Dawson 21 b Baysdale, housemaid Elizabeth Trenham 35 b Stokesley, cook Mary Wailes 23 b HR and boy groom William Ramshaw 13 b HR
Wake
FQ 434: 14 & 15 Apr 1829: James Wake occupied land belonging to Elizabeth Sleigh
Thomas Wake was witness at the wedding of Richard Peacock of Rudby and Jane Scott of Stockton on 13 Sep 1832
1841 Census: John Wake 17 joiner’s apprentice in the household of James Meek, Enterpen
‘The Cleveland Repertory’ 1 Aug 1843:
“Police Intelligence. July 22nd, - Present Robt Hildyard and Wm Mauleverer, Esqrs. Upon hearing the complaint of Jno Wake, an apprentice to Jas Meek, of Hutton Rudby, against the said James Meek, for having on the 12th ult, illtreated him, the said Jno Wake – ordered that he be forthwith discharged from his apprenticeship, and that the said James Meek, pay the costs.”
1851 Census: Carpenters Arms: Elizabeth Wake widow 56 victualler’s wife b Whorlton, and children John Wake 38 house carpenter journeyman, b Stokesley, Jane Wake 21 dressmaker b Carlton, and Mary Wake 17 house servant b Carlton, and grandson Robert Kitching 5 b Pickering
This may be the family of Charles Wake, who left for America in 1855 with the Mormons:
Charles Wake was one of the Faceby tailors. He was 24 years old at the time of the 1851 Census when he and his young family were living next door to James Stanger junior. He gave his place of birth as Stokesley, and his wife Elizabeth, aged 25, was born in Potto. They had a ten month old son James, who had been born in Faceby, and Charles’ fifteen year old brother Thomas was living with them as a tailor’s apprentice – he had been born in Hutton Rudby. The register for 7 Aug 1836 records that Thomas’s parents were James Wake, gamekeeper, of Rudby and his wife Ann.
According to ancestral files on the IGI, Charles Wake was born in Stokesley in 1826, the son of James Wake and Elizabeth Wrightson, and married Elizabeth Thompson, the daughter of Robert and Jane Thompson of Potto, in Whorlton in 1849. Robert Thompson was a cartwright in Potto at the 1851 Census. Charles’ and Elizabeth’s oldest child is said to have been baptised in Stokesley in 1850, and the younger two children in Faceby. The third child does not appear on the passenger list, but details of her life are given in the IGI.
Walker
George Walker was a tenant of the Tweddle property at the east end of North Side before 1815
1841 Census: Thomas Walker 16 servant at Rudby Carr House (Barugh)
Jane Souter bap 6 Oct 1820, married Thomas Walker
Wallis
Jun 1866: A friend, J Wallis, gave 10/- to the subscription for Thomas Garbutt
Walters
1823 Baines: Hutton: Joseph Walters, farmer
Walton/Whorlton
Jane Walton was buried Tues 16 Oct a59 [PRs] - her age is given as 57 in the list “Sepultorum nomina”
Yorkshire Poll Book 1807: Hutton Rudby: Joseph Walton weaver
EH 212 & EG 295: 1818: relate to the same ppty: a house which had been divided into two tenements and in 1818 was “lately occupied in four different tenements or dwellinghouses”: tenants were previously Jane Whorlton & her tenants William Easby, Oliver Jackson & William Honeyman; tenants were in 1818 William Honeyman, Thomas Graham, Robert Walton and Robert Codling: bounded to E by Christopher Flintoff decd, to S & W by townstreet, to N by David Simpson decd
1841 Census: Middleton, Hall: George Walton 40 servant with Bart Goldsborough
‘Stokesley News & Cleveland Reporter’ 1 May 1844:
Marriages:
On Monday, April 8th, at Hutton Rudby, Mr George Wharton [sic], of Middleton-on-Leven, to Miss Elizabeth Tones, Dress-maker of the former place
1851 Census: Middleton, farm: Robert Walton 59 farmer 220a bKirklevington, Mary 50 bAycorn Northumberland and son John S 26 bKirklevington
George Walton is shown living in the Lincoln House area, on the Tree Planting map
1881 Census: George Walton 78 horsebreaker, wife Elizabeth 75 and niece Ann Lincoln 46 dressmaker
Ward
FU 494: 14 & 15 May 1832: messuage with garden garth & close in Hutton, previously occ by Thomas Ward and now by Richard Raney: various persons of Welbury & West Rounton to Richard Raney of Hutton blacksmith
Robert, son of Robert Ward, collier, and his wife Jane was baptised by Mr Barlow on 23 Sep 1832
Francis Ward is in a List of Girls – Middleton Book
1841 Census: Robert Ward 35 weaver and family, South Side
1841 Census: Thomas Ward 60 dealer in coal, Elizabeth 60, Isabella 15 servant, Fanny 15 servant, and William 1, with George Lowther 25 ag lab and Elizabeth Sanderson 15, North End
1841 Census: Thomas Ward 20 linen weaver, Elizabeth 15 and George 1, North End
1841 Census: Jane Ward 15 servant at Rudby Carr House (Barugh)
1851 Census: South Side: Robert Ward 50 ag lab, Jane 56, son John Ward 23 ag lab, granddaughter Jane Flounders 5 , all b Hutton
1851 Census: North End: Mary Ward single 38 charwoman and son William 12, both b Hutton; with sailcloth weavers lodging: Thomas Dennison widower 44 b Clouse Derbyshire, Edward Houseton 47 married b Newark, Notts, and Richard 36 married b Harneth, Lancs
Watson
Jun 1866: Robinson Watson Esq, Stainton gave £5 to the subscription for Thomas Garbutt
Wayne
ET 293: 21 Mar 1823: sale of ppty of Samuel Hebbron late of Hutton nr Rudby butcher dealer & chapman now or late a prisoner in the gaol of the Castle of York: being the Shoulder of Mutton public house [predecessor of King’s Head], occ by Samuel Hebbron, then by David Hebbron & now by Robert Moss: bounded by Thomas Whorlton and Thomas Jackson, Thomas Cust, B D Sugget and Thomas Wayne to W and N, by street to S, by Thomas Jackson to E; also the stable; a close of 5a 2p bounded by William Wood to N, by William Dawson to E, W & S, and occupied by William Dawson; also land in Potto
EB 102: 11 & 13 May 1816: Hutton manor & mill: assignmt to Barker
EX 146: 26 & 27 Nov 1823: Hutton manor, mill and [Manor House] farm
FQ 560: 2 & 3 Nov 1829: ppty bought by Jane Willans widow in Enterpen: garth of 1r 3p bounded by Thomas Wayne to N, E & W, and by street called Enterpen to S
Webster
1851 Census: Tile Sheds: Richard Webster 33 tile maker b Rockliffe, Yorks and wife Martha 27 b Knaresborough with children Thomas 8 b Rockliffe, Jane 6 b Maunby, Richard 3 and Nancy 1 b Hutton Rudby; and nephew Young Loftus 13 ag lab b Rockliffe; and ag lab George Calvert 58 b Ainderby, Yorks
1871 Census: Middleton farm house 200a: Webster
1872 Post Office Directory: Middleton: Thomas Webster, farmer, Hill house
Weighell
ET 257: 2 & 3 Jan 1823: garth, orchard & houses, probably North End: John Weighell was an occupier
1841 Census: Jane Wieal 20 servant at Rudby Carr House (Barugh)
1851 Census: Enterpen: Joseph Weall 58 ag lab b Worsall, Yks and wife Margaret 60 b Elton, Durham
1871 Census: Burnt House: Weighell
1871 Census: Doddle Hill: Weighell
1872 Post Office Directory: Hutton Rudby: John & William Weighell, farmers, Burnt House
1872 Post Office Directory: Hutton Rudby: Stephen Weighell, farmer, Doddle hill
William Weighell of Obergreen was the class leader who revived the Wesleyan society and sold them the land for the new chapel in 1878
We(a)therill
Yorkshire Poll Book 1807: Hutton Rudby: William Weatherall farmer
DY 88 & ET 601: William Weatherill was a tenant of Philip Gowland in the Bay Horse area pre- 1816
1840 Whites: Hutton Rudby: the co-heiresses of the late Geo Weatherill Esq are impropriators of the great tithes
1841 Census: Ann Wetherell 75 independent, John Morris 40 blacksmith, South Side
Mary Weatherill, daughter of William Weatherill farmer of Stokesley and his wife Mary, was a friend of the Garbutts and Wilsons of Hutton Rudby. She married Frederick Dale. [‘Letters to a Miller’s Daughter’]
Wetherill
Wetherill cut Mr Barlow’s hedge, in turnips and “William Wetherell son of my < > friend George Wetherell” cut the hedge in 1854 – Barlow’s Notebook
Charlotte Wetherill of Knaresborough spinster was owner of 1/7 of the Hutton tithes; Isabella Wetherill of Knaresborough spinster was owner of 1/7 of the Hutton tithes [Tithe Agmt 12 Jun 1838]
IGI: George Wetherill & Anne Scaife had Mary (bap 13?4/91); George Wetherilll & Jane Collingson had Charlotte (bap 25/3/01), Isabella (bap 28/8/06), and Jane (bap 24/4/95) all at Topcliffe. Jane Wetherill married William Dixon at Brafferton, 26/5/1819.
Wharton
‘Stokesley News & Cleveland Reporter’ 1 May 1844:
Marriages:
On Monday, April 8th, at Hutton Rudby, Mr George Wharton, of Middleton-on-Leven, to Miss Elizabeth Tones, Dress-maker of the former place
Whorlton see also Walton
Jane Walton [Whorlton?] was buried Tues 16 Oct a59 [PRs]; her age is given as 57 in the list “Sepultorum nomina”
The Whorlton family appears in the registers in the early C18, and cannot be disentangled. The brothers Thomas, Joseph and William, sons of Thomas, cannot be identified in the registers. There were two Jane Whorltons buried in the 1830s: one aged 48 and the other 57 or 59. One was perhaps the Jane Lawson who married Robert in 1808; he died in 1827. The other may have been Jane, the wife of William, whose children were born between 1798 and 1818.
28 Sep 1770: Pbte of Christopher Wayne: Jacob Whorlton occupied a house & croft owned by Wayne
Yorkshire Poll Book 1807: Hutton Rudby: Joseph Walton weaver
Yorkshire Poll Book 1807: Hutton Rudby: Isaac Worlton weaver
Thomas Whorlton, weaver, left three sons: Thomas, Joseph & William (deed re North Side dated 1817)
The Whorlton brothers owned a house in “Little London” (as it was called in 1847), next to the Wheatsheaf, which bounded it to the south. In 1808 the property was houses, garths and yards with six tenants
The Whorlton brothers owned a house on North Side and a weaver’s shop behind (no 86 TM), which was transferred to William Whorlton. In 1817 it was occupied by Major Shout, previously by Oliver Jackson. They also owned the house next door and a garden behind.
23 Nov 1808: Joseph, Thomas & William Whorlton, weavers & brothers, bought houses, garths & yards from Francis Flintoff [East Side deeds]
14 May 1810: house & garth and garth: Tipping & Wardell exors of Thos Wayne to Thomas Eland: house & garth 1a 2r 28p occupied by Eland, bounded by street to S, river Leven to N, Francis Tweddle & Francis Stainthorpe to E, and Christopher Sleigh to W; garth 1r 28p on north side of Hutton, formerly occ by Hannah Kay widow, now by Thomas Eland, bounded by B D Suggitt to S, Thomas Jackson to E, street to W and Isaac Whorlton to N
EB 412: 21 & 22 Mar 1817: ppty on North Side: Thos & Jos Whorlton (1) Wm Whorlton (2)
EH 212 & EG 295: 1818: relate to the same ppty: a house which had been divided into two tenements and in 1818 was “lately occupied in four different tenements or dwellinghouses”: tenants were previously Jane Whorlton & her tenants William Easby, Oliver Jackson & William Honeyman; tenants were in 1818 William Honeyman, Thomas Graham, Robert Walton and Robert Codling: bounded to E by Christopher Flintoff decd, to S & W by townstreet, to N by David Simpson decd
EP 148: 3 Feb 1821: mortgage to Wm Whorlton by John Shout: house previously occupied by Oliver Jackson and now by Major Shout, land and weaver’s shop: bounded by house bel to Thos & Jos Whorlton to E
1823 Baines: Hutton: Isaac Whorlton, and Joseph Whorlton, linen manufacturers
ET 293: 21 Mar 1823: sale of ppty of Samuel Hebbron late of Hutton nr Rudby butcher dealer & chapman now or late a prisoner in the gaol of the Castle of York: being the Shoulder of Mutton public house [predecessor of King’s Head], occ by Samuel Hebbron, then by David Hebbron & now by Robert Moss: bounded by Thomas Whorlton and Thomas Jackson, Thomas Cust, B D Sugget and Thomas Wayne to W and N, by street to S, by Thomas Jackson to E; also the stable; a close of 5a 2p bounded by William Wood to N, by William Dawson to E, W & S, and occupied by William Dawson; also land in Potto
FQ 435: 26 & 27 Mar 1830: house on East Side: Baillieur to Lowther: formerly occ by Thomas Sanderson, then by Thomas Shaw and now by Robert Tweddle: bounded by Joseph Whorlton to N, by Thomas Passman to S, by street to W
FT 109: 21 Aug 1830: Jaques Barn glebe lands: Michael Sidgwick late of Hutton now of Broughton weaver & John Sidgwick late of Hutton weaver now of Deighton farmer to Rev Richard Shepherd with the QAB money: two pieces of ground called Jaques Barn each about 1a, part of a close of 7a: bounded by Jonathan Sanders to N & W, land of George & Mary Bowes contracted to be conveyed to Isaac Whorlton & others to E, Rounton road to S: previously occ by James Kendrew and now by John & Michael Sidgwick
FT 294: 26 & 27 Dec 1830: Jakebarn: Michael Sidgwick of Hutton yeoman & John Sidgwick jnr of Hutton farmer to William Jackson of Hutton tailor: a fenced off close of 1a called Jakebarn: previously occ by Richard Shepherd & now by his widow Ann: bounded by Isaac, Joseph & William Whorlton’s land to E, by land recently bought by QAB from vendors to W & N, by road to S
Jane Wholton is in a list of names in the Middleton Book
Margaret Wholton is in a list of names in the Middleton Book
Margt Whorlton is in a List of Girls – Middleton Book
Jane Whorlton is in a List of Girls – Middleton Book
Wm Walton was in A List of Boys – Middleton Book
Tithe Map: Isaac Whorlton owned Jacques Barn field, which Robert Garbutt occupied
Tithe Map: William Whorlton owned North End Garth, occupied by William Sidgwick, and Jacques Barn Field, which he occupied himself
1841 Census: William Whorlton 67 ag lab, Ann 43 and Mary Atkinson 5, East Side/Barkers Row
1841 Census: Isaac Whorlton 80 linen weaver, North End
1841 Census: Joseph Whorlton 70 linen weaver, William 65, North Side
1841 Census: John Whorlton 40 linen weaver and family, Enterpen
1841 Census: Jane Whorlton 20 servant in household of John Howe, Enterpen
28 Dec 1847: Joseph Whorlton now decd, William as his heir-at-law and devisee of Thomas, sold houses, garths & yards to Isaac Benson [East Side deeds]
1851 Census: East Side, Benson’s Archway: John Whorlton 50 farm lab and wife Margaret 54, William 21 ag lab, Thomas 23 ag lab, Isabella 16 servant, Mary 12 and Joseph 7, with son-in-law John Charlton W 31 handloom weaver linen, and his children William 2 and Jane 11 mths: all born Hutton
1851 Census: Barkers Row: William Whorlton 41 ag lab, b Hutton, and Ann 37 bWesterdale, with Richard 3 and Jane 1, both b Hutton
1851 Census: Barkers Row: William Whorlton 76 weaver & pauper b Hutton, and Ann 58 b Northallerton
1851 Census: North End: Isaac Whorlton widower 94 retired weaver, with servant Eliza Douglas 18 and lodger Jane Douglas 10 weaver’s daughter; all b Hutton
The 1881 Census CD-Rom finds only a few Whorltons born in Hutton Rudby in Yorkshire and the Northern Borders:
North End: William 59 drainer, Hannah 54, Elizabeth 29, grandchildren Mary 10, Sarah 9, Margaret 5 mths
Enterpen: Thomas 56 labourer, Mary 47
Bank Top: Sarah 52 U, David her son ag lab 29, Margaret her niece 26 dressmaker, Ann niece 22 dom serv, John Walker nephew 22 farm servant
They are the children of John Whorlton & Margaret Howe, and so may be:
California, Gt Ayton: Joseph 36 whinstone miner & family
In Long Newton, there are a brother and sister, children of David Whorlton & Elizabeth Busby: Nicholas 74 retd butcher, his son 43 b Long Newton, and his sister Martha 70 U
In the 1881 Census CD-Rom, there are no “Whorltons” outside Yorkshire and Durham, but many thousands of “Waltons”.
Wigham
ET 258: 7 & 8 Jan 1823: southern part of land occ by Mundell and bought by him from Simon Kelsey: parties: George Mundell of Hutton gardener, John Thompson of Faceby yeoman, William Jackson of Hutton tailor, Robert Brigham of Rudby gent and William Wood of Hutton gent: bounded by land bought by John & Thomas Sidgwick from Sir Wm Hy Pennyman to E, by Mr Sanders and Mr Wigham to W, by northern part of land bel to Thomas & William Jackson to N, by Simon Kelsey to S
Wild
John Wild is a tenant of Barkers Row in 1829
FQ 249: 13 & 14 Mar 1829: exors of Wayne to Barker: the Carpenters Arms with the cartwrights shop and stable on the west end thereof, the garden and the privy on the south & backside of the premises, bounded by road to East Rounton to E, by Mrs Elizabeth Hildreth to W & S, by road to East Rounton, John Robinson and Mr Farnaby to N – occ by Edward Meynell; the garth occ by Edward Meynell, bounded by Elizabeth Hildreth to E, by John Burdon to W, by Thomas Passman, Elizabeth Hildreth, Mr Kendall & William Spence to N, by road to East Rounton to S; the site where buildings lately occupied by John & Hannah Kay & taken down by Mark Barker stood; the garth now used as garden ground to the E & backside of the sd site; the new houses built by Mark Barker on the site and part of the garth: some of the houses and the garden ground “at present unoccupied”, the others occupied by Robert Hall, William Souter, George Sanderson, John Kay, Mary Lamb, Jackson Richardson, John Wild and Thomas Shaw: bounded by house & lands bel to Rev Richard Shepherd to E & S, by Arthur Douglas and townstreet to N & W
1841 Census: Thomas Wilds 62 linen weaver, Ann 63 and Margaret 12, Enterpen
Wiles
FA 299: 5 & 6 Nov 1824: 2 houses with garden, orchard, shop & stable in Hutton, occ previously by John Horner & Thomasin Burton, then by Thomas Edmund & Thomas Dalkin, then by David Hebbron & John Wiles: parties: David Hebbron of Hutton butcher & Michael Hebdon of Stokesley weaver, James Eden of Hutton grocer, Simon Kelsey, Robert Longstaff of Broughton yeoman, William Driver of Yarm gent
late July 1830: Anthony Wiles lived then in Hutton Rudby next door to his half-sister, who kept a shop, where Huntley used to get half-crowns for small change. He saw Goldsbrough, Grundy, Patterson and Sanderson at Scotson’s public house. [Yorkshire Gazette 12 Mar 1842]
The half-sister who kept a shop may have been Margaret Richardson, wife of Robert, bricklayer, on East Side [1841C]: Anthony Wiles was the son of Joseph Wiles, bap 1789; Joseph & Margaret had an older son John, bap 1786. In Feb 1795 Joseph married Ann Fenney, and had Margaret bap Aug 1795 and Cuthbert bap 1798. Margaret Wiles married Robert Richardson on 8 Oct 1822; a Margaret Wiles daughter of John & Jane was bap in 1808 and it is presumably this Margaret who married Robert Armstrong in 1826
27 & 28 Jun 1831: Lease: parties: Thomas Eland of Grange Road Bermondsey leather dresser and wife Mary, Richard Eland of Newport Pagnell Bucks gent and Langley & Reece: to convey from Thomas to Richard and to secure an annuity to Thomas and his wife: garth 1a 2r 28p, bounded by John De Putron & - Richardson to W, Flounders & De Putron to E, river to N and street to S: and 3 houses (formerly one house) barn, cowhouse & carpenter’s shop: occ by John Eland, John Sherwood & Thomas Wiles
1841 Census: John Wyles 55 ag lab, Jane 55, John 25 linen weaver and Joseph 30 linen weaver, South Side
Mar 1842: Anthony Wiles was an ostler at Stockton at the time of Goldsbrough’s trial
1851 Census: South Side: John Wyles 37 handloom weaver linen and Jane 35, with James 12 tailor apprentice, George 3 and Mary 1, all b Hutton, and mother-in-law Mary Flounders widow 68 pauper b Potto
1851 Census: South Side: Janet Wyles widow 66, labourer’s widow, pauper, b Elwick, and daughter Elizabeth Wyles 26 ag lab and grandaughter Jane Wyles 5, both b Hutton, and granddaughter Jane Ann Wyles 2 b Mbro
1851 Census: North End: Thomas Wyles 71 hand loom weaver linen and Ann 72
Anthony Wiles of Hutton was in the field when Mr Barlow cut his hedge in Jun 1858 – Barlow’s Notebook
Anthony Wiles died 1871 a85, Thomas in 1869 a92, Jane in 1854 a70, John in 1848 a62
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