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THE

Parliamentary Gazetteer

=

OF

ENGLAND AND WALES,

Adapted to the most recent Statistical Arrangements, and

Lines of Railroad and Canal Communication,

WITH A COMPLETE COUNTY-ATLAS OF ENGLAND,

FOUR LARGE MAPS OF WALES,

AND AN APPENDIX,

CONTAINING THE RESULTS, IN DETAIL, OF THE CENSUS OF 1841.

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9.75

Peptinson

THE

Tel. 22. 1856

from Ms. E. C

PARLIAMENTARY GAZETTEER

OF

ENGLAND AND WALES.

EAC

EACHWICK, a township in the parish of Heddon-on-the-Wall, county of Northumberland; 9 miles west-north-west of Newcastle-upon-Tyne, on the river Pont. Here is a daily school. This was anciently a place of considerable importance. Acres 200. Houses 23. A. P. £1,003. Pop., in 1801, 36; in 1831, 113. Poor rates, in 1838, £59 5s.

EAGLE, a parish in the hund. of Boothby-Graffo, parts of Kesteven, union and county of Lincoln; 7 miles west-south-west of Lincoln. Living, a discharged vicarage in the archd. and dio. of Lincoln, returned at £120; gross income £100. Patron, in 1835, Sir W. Ingilby, Bart. The Wesleyans have a chapel here; and there are 3 daily schools, one of which has a small endowment. Acres 2,450. Houses 93. A. P. £1,219. Pop., in 1801, 203; in 1831, 477. Poor rates, in 1838, £38 15s.

EAGLE-HALL, a hamlet in the above parish; 9 miles west-south-west of Lincoln. Pop., in 1801, 21; in 1831, 45. Other returns with the parish.

EAGLE-WOODHOUSE, an extra-parochial liberty in the lower division of Boothby-Graffo. Acres 80. Pop., in 1831, 10.

EAL

Pop., in 1801, 310; in 1831, 411. Poor rates, in 1838, £66 16s.

EAKRING, a parish in the South-clay division of the hund. of Bassetlaw, union of Southwell, county of Nottingham; 4 miles south-south-east of Allerton. Living, a rectory, formerly in the archd. of Nottingham and dio. of York, now in the dio. of Lincoln; rated at £9 16s. 1d.; gross income £544. Patrons, in 1835, Earls Manvers and Scarborough, alternately. Here is a daily school. Acres 2,240. Houses 126. A. P. £3,479. Pop., in 1801, 441; in 1831, 598. Poor rates, in 1838, £60 9s.

EALING, WITH OLD BRENTFORD, a parish in Kensington division, wapentake of Ossulston, union of Brentford, county of Middlesex; 10 miles west of St. Paul's cathedral, and near the Great Western railway. Acres 3,930. Houses 1,325. A. P. £30,187. Pop., in 1801, 5,035; in 1831, 7,783. Living, a vicarage in the archd. of Middlesex and dio. of London; rated at £13 6s. 8d.; gross income £694. Patron, the bishop of London. Here are 17 daily and 8 boarding schools, one of which, the Boy's charity school, is endowed with a fixed income of £150 7s. 6d., and an average annual produce of subscriptions, &c., amounting to £100. A number of the boys are clothed as well as educated at this school: another, the Girl's charity school, is endowed with about £200 per annum: a number of the girls are also clothed at this school. The Industrial School at Ealing Grove, is a highly beneficial institution; the objects of which are to educate children, destined for country pursuits. They are trained into habits of patient industry, by being required to labour for 3 hours a day, partly for the institution, and partly for themselves, in gardens appropriated to each of them. They are paid for the work done on behalf of the institution, according to the labour they are able to perform; the monitor who watches over them reporting the industry of each to the master, who remunerates them accordingly. They pay rents for their gardens, purchase their seeds, and reap the produce. In 1838, one of them cleared EAGLESFIELD, a township in the parish of £1 18s. 10d., from his sixteenth of an acre, after Brigham, county of Cumberland; 23 miles south paying the rent, seeds, manure, &c. Each boy keeps west of Cockermouth. All tithes, moduses, &c., of a little book of receipt and expenditure; and habits the townships of Eaglesfield and Blindbothel, in the of accurate accounting are cultivated, as are likemanor of Five Towns, with Eaglesfield, the property wise habits of order and neatness in the use and arof the lay rector, were commuted in 1812. Here rangement of their tools, plants, &c. These more inare 3 daily schools. This township is now compre- dustrial and manual branches of education are blended hended within the boundaries of Cockermouth. with religious and other instruction of the most Acreage with the parish. Houses 85. A. P. £1,434. | beneficial description. Charities possessed by this

EAGLESCLIFFE, or EGGLESCLIFFE, a parish in the south-west division of Stockton ward, union of Stockton-upon-Tees, co.-palatine of Durham; 1 mile north-north-east of Yarm, comprising the townships of Newsam, Aislaby, and Eaglescliffe; bounded on the east and south by the Tees, which in this place is navigable, and is crossed by a cast-iron bridge of one arch, from which a railway extends to the Stockton and Darlington railway. Living, a vicarage in the archd. and dio. of Durham; rated at £28 17s. 1d.; gross income £1,120. Patron, the bishop of Durbam. Here is a daily school. Charities, in 1830, £6 per annum. Poor rates, in 1838, of the parish, £329 9s.; of the township, £170 18s. Acres of the parish 3,970. Houses 133. A. P. £6,891. Pop., in 1801, 420; in 1831, 625. Acres of the township, 1,580. Houses 99. A. P. £3,325. Pop., in 1801, 270; in 1831, 424.

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