Village affairs in England were run by the Parish Vestry, a parish meeting that had developed over the centuries largely unregulated by legislation. It took its name from the church ante-room in which it was held.
The Vestry officials, elected or appointed, were unpaid – the constable was responsible for law and order, the overseers for the poor relief, the surveyor of the highways for the upkeep of the highways and bridges in the parish, and the churchwardens for the upkeep of the church and a varied range of duties from the baptism of foundlings to the extermination of vermin. The funds for the churchwardens' duties were provided by the church rate, set by the Vestry.
Each township was responsible for the care of its poor and sick, who were given relief in money or kind from the parish rate, and the Vestry could engage the services of a medical man to attend their poor. Hutton township had adopted the 1819 Sturges Bourne Act, which enabled it to elect a committee, the Select Vestry, to administer its poor relief.
Very few records from the early 19th century have survived, the most significant being the overseers' accounts for Rudby township between 1779 and 1830, and the churchwardens' accounts from 1787 onward.
from Hutton Rudby to Stokesley, Guisborough, Whitby ... and beyond the county ...
Showing posts with label Crathorne RC Church. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Crathorne RC Church. Show all posts
Sunday, 9 December 2012
Thursday, 25 October 2012
The Roman Catholic population of Hutton Rudby, c1780 to 1830
After the Reformation, the mediaeval frescoes in Hutton Rudby parish church were whitewashed over and a wealthy parishioner left money in his Will for a pulpit to be installed, in accordance with the new Protestant emphasis on preaching.
Even so, in the late 16th century, Rudby was still known as one of the local centres of Catholicism and we know of two prominent Catholics in the parish: Sir John Ingilby and the Venerable Mary Ward.
Sir John Ingilby of Lawkland owned the manor of Rudby. He was prosecuted for recusancy in 1604. A labourer from Crathorne destroyed a seat in a close in Rudby which belonged to Sir John “on which the said John, an old man and lame, was wont to rest himself”.
Mary Ward (1585-1645) lived in quietly in Rudby parish near the end of her life, after her many hard years of journeying in Europe and her struggle to found the Institute of the Blessed Virgin Mary. In 1642, during the Civil Wars, she came back to her native Yorkshire and took refuge at Hutton Rudby with her Ingilby relatives. During her time there, Mary prayed at the shrine of Our Lady at Mount Grace.
I think we can assume that she stayed in the old manor house of Rudby, which stood beside the river Leven. (There is nothing of it to be seen today - only a field, across the road from the church). In this obscure corner of the Ingilby estates it seems very unlikely that the family maintained another house that could be suitable for sheltering an elderly and infirm woman and her companions.
Hutton Rudby was, in those days, a very remote place and in early 1643 Mary decided that she must move to Heworth near York, in order to be in communication with friends and supporters. She died there on 30 January 1645. She was the foundress of the Bar Convent, York.
Apart from Sir John and Mary Ward, we know very little of Catholics living in the village - until the baptismal registers for St Mary's in Crathorne provide us with names for the period c1780 to 1830.
Even so, in the late 16th century, Rudby was still known as one of the local centres of Catholicism and we know of two prominent Catholics in the parish: Sir John Ingilby and the Venerable Mary Ward.
Sir John Ingilby of Lawkland owned the manor of Rudby. He was prosecuted for recusancy in 1604. A labourer from Crathorne destroyed a seat in a close in Rudby which belonged to Sir John “on which the said John, an old man and lame, was wont to rest himself”.
Mary Ward (1585-1645) lived in quietly in Rudby parish near the end of her life, after her many hard years of journeying in Europe and her struggle to found the Institute of the Blessed Virgin Mary. In 1642, during the Civil Wars, she came back to her native Yorkshire and took refuge at Hutton Rudby with her Ingilby relatives. During her time there, Mary prayed at the shrine of Our Lady at Mount Grace.
I think we can assume that she stayed in the old manor house of Rudby, which stood beside the river Leven. (There is nothing of it to be seen today - only a field, across the road from the church). In this obscure corner of the Ingilby estates it seems very unlikely that the family maintained another house that could be suitable for sheltering an elderly and infirm woman and her companions.
Hutton Rudby was, in those days, a very remote place and in early 1643 Mary decided that she must move to Heworth near York, in order to be in communication with friends and supporters. She died there on 30 January 1645. She was the foundress of the Bar Convent, York.
Apart from Sir John and Mary Ward, we know very little of Catholics living in the village - until the baptismal registers for St Mary's in Crathorne provide us with names for the period c1780 to 1830.
Wednesday, 24 October 2012
The Baptismal Register of St Mary's Roman Catholic Church, Crathorne 1777 to 1839
I obtained a copy of St Mary's baptismal register while researching my book on Hutton Rudby in the time of the cholera. My transcription follows below - please check against the original before relying on it.
The baptismal register book for St Mary’s, Crathorne is held at the National Archive (Public Record Office) at Kew and covers the period 1777 to 1839.
During this time Parliament restored civil rights to Catholics in a series of Relief Acts beginning in 1778 and culminating in 1829 with the Catholic Emancipation Act.
The register begins with an introduction by Thomas Ferby:
The baptismal register book for St Mary’s, Crathorne is held at the National Archive (Public Record Office) at Kew and covers the period 1777 to 1839.
During this time Parliament restored civil rights to Catholics in a series of Relief Acts beginning in 1778 and culminating in 1829 with the Catholic Emancipation Act.
The register begins with an introduction by Thomas Ferby:
“A Baptismal Book belonging Crathorne [sic] in which an account is kept of the children that have been baptized by me Thos Ferby Eng.h Miss. since Novr 1st 1777”
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