BARLBY
The village of Barlby, probably an Anglian settlement, lies some 3 miles north-west of Hemingbrough, close to the river Ouse and on the edge of the
higher ground which occupies the northern half of
the township. Southwards more low-lying ground
stretches as far as the Ouse and includes a large
promontory formed by two sudden bends in the
river. This promontory formerly stretched even
further to the west, ending in land known as the
Holmes lying within a meander of the river. It
was perhaps in the early Middle Ages that the Ouse
cut a new course across the neck of the Holmes, and
in 1883 116 a. there were transferred for civil
purposes to Selby (Yorks. W.R.). (fn. 30) In the 20th
century residential and industrial development
alongside the river in Barlby have created a virtual
suburb to the town of Selby. Until 1883 Barlby
township comprised 1,482 a. (fn. 31)
The higher ground in the township reaches little
more than 25 ft. above sea-level. The alluvium of
the lower ground occupies the southern part of the
township, together with a narrow strip beside the
Ouse on the west, widening in the north-west beyond
another sharp bend in the river. The name Turnhead, recorded from the 14th century onwards,
refers to the bend and to the promontory formed by
it on the opposite bank. (fn. 32) Away from the river the
township boundary partly follows drainage dikes on
the lower ground. The small open fields of the
township lay mainly on the higher ground but also
extended to the south of the village; in the north
Barlby common adjoined similar areas in Riccall
and Osgodby. Common meadows and early inclosures occupied the low ground, including the
Angrams near the river beyond Turnhead. The
open fields and meadows were inclosed in 1846 and
the common in 1858.
Flooding of the low ground was a problem from
the Middle Ages onwards. (fn. 33) Several sluices or
cloughs still discharge large quantities of water into
the river, among them Angram clough which was
rebuilt about 1858, when it was said to take water
from 896 a. in Barlby and Riccall. (fn. 34)
Barlby village lies at the junction of roads leading
northwards to Riccall and eventually York, southwards to Selby, and eastwards to Hemingbrough.
From Turnhead another road leads eastwards
towards Market Weighton, and at the inclosure of
the common a road was set out running towards
Skipwith, though this has been closed by the
construction of Riccall airfield. (fn. 35) A ferry over the
Ouse to Selby, belonging to the abbey there, was
mentioned as early as 1260. (fn. 36) It was replaced by a
wooden toll bridge in 1792, and in the following
year the Selby to Market Weighton road was turnpiked. (fn. 37) About ¾ mile of the road approaching the
bridge was realigned when the Selby-Hull railway
line was constructed. (fn. 38) The toll bridge, still of
timber, was rebuilt in 1969. (fn. 39) For a time in the 19th
century there was a ferry for foot passengers about
½ mile east of the toll bridge. (fn. 40) In the 20th century
several alterations have been made in the township
to the trunk roads from Selby to York and Hull,
notably the bypassing of Barlby village by the Hull
road in the late 1920s (fn. 41) and of the Market Weighton
junction on the York road near Turnhead soon
after. (fn. 42) The railway line from Selby to Hull, passing
through Barlby, was opened in 1840 with a lifting
bridge over the Ouse not far from the road bridge;
it was replaced in 1891 by a swing bridge. (fn. 43) The line
to Market Weighton, opened in 1848, branches
from the Hull line in Barlby, and the Selby-York
line, opened in 1871, passes through the township. (fn. 44)
The Market Weighton line was closed in 1965. (fn. 45)
Most of the older houses in Barlby village lie
along the Riccall road but the church stands back
from it and is approached by narrow lanes. There are
a few 18th-century houses, including a farm-house
close to the church and a long brick house further
north where the vicar once lived. (fn. 46) The largest
early-19th-century houses are the manor-house (fn. 47)
and the Grove, the latter a stuccoed villa on the
Riccall road with extensive outbuildings, including a
dovecot. The former pinfold still stands near the
manor-house. Much building has taken place in the
20th century, both before and after the Second
World War, especially to the east and north of the
village. At the north end there are more than 80
council houses. The chief outlying farm-house is
Turnhead Lodge, close beside the Ouse.
The southern part of the township, towards
Selby, was known as Selby Water Houses in the
Middle Ages (fn. 48) and more often as Barlby Bank or
New Barlby in later times. The name Bank Houses
occurs in 1675. (fn. 49) The buildings there included the
still existing Bank Farm; others were added following the construction of the toll bridge and railway
line. By 1841 there were three terraces of cottages
facing the river near the bridges; (fn. 50) they had been
demolished by 1973. More extensive development
began in the late 19th century and continued apace
in the twentieth. For about a mile from the toll
bridge the main road is now lined with houses and
mills. (fn. 51) The first 'village estate' of workers' housing
was built by the Olympia Oil and Cake Co. soon after
1910, and by 1938 there were about 350 houses in
such estates. (fn. 52) Other factories lie beside the river
east of the bridges, together with the isolated Cherry
Orchard Farm. Near the railway line from Selby to
Market Weighton is a former powder magazine,
built by the War Department in 1889. (fn. 53)
There were between one and three licensed alehouses in Barlby in the later 19th century. (fn. 54) In 1823
the inns were known as the Plough and the Bay
Horse, but by 1826 the latter had been replaced by
the Boot and Shoe, (fn. 55) which in turn had been replaced by the New Inn by 1872. (fn. 56) The Plough and
the New Inn still existed in the old village in 1973.
The only inn at Barlby Bank is the Olympia Hotel,
opened by 1921; (fn. 57) it takes its name from the Olympia Mills and its sign shows seed-crushing machinery.
In 1379 there were 96 poll-tax payers at Barlby. (fn. 58)
Fifty-four households were included in the hearthtax return in 1672, twelve of them exempt. Of those
chargeable 17 had only one hearth each, 19 had 2,
4 had 3–5, and 2 had eleven. (fn. 59) The population
fluctuated in the 19th century but increased from
241 in 1801 to a maximum of 561 in 1901. (fn. 60) By
1911 it stood at 792 but during the next decade it
rose sharply to 2,593; it was still only 2,627 in 1931.
Barlby and Osgodby together had 3,329 inhabitants
in 1951, but the number then decreased to 3,022 in
1971. (fn. 61)
MANOR AND OTHER ESTATES.
In 1086 the
bishop of Durham had 2 carucates in Barlby, one of
which was soke of Howden manor. (fn. 62) The bishop's
overlordship was still mentioned in 1580. (fn. 63)
The demesne lord of BARLBY manor in the
mid 12th century was Gilbert of Barlby, holding 2
carucates of the bishop. (fn. 64) He was succeeded by his
son William de Aton. Another William held it in
1284, and the heirs of Gilbert de Aton in 1302; it
subsequently passed to another Gilbert (d. 1324)
and to his son William (d. 1389). (fn. 65) William's heirs
were his daughters Anastasia, who married Edward
St. John, Catherine, who married Ralph Eure, and
Elizabeth, who married first William Place and
secondly Sir John Conyers. (fn. 66) The descent of
Elizabeth's share has not been traced. Anastasia's
daughter Margaret married Thomas Broomfleet,
and their granddaughter married John, Lord
Clifford. (fn. 67) The Cliffords held a share of the manor
until 1553, when Henry Clifford, earl of Cumberland, sold it to Sir William Babthorpe. (fn. 68) In 1602
Ralph Babthorpe secured Catherine Aton's share
from Ralph, Lord Eure, (fn. 69) and the Babthorpes
probably then owned the whole manor.
Barlby was sold by another Sir William Babthorpe
to Richard Bowes in 1621, (fn. 70) and c. 1665 the Bowes
family conveyed it to James Strangeways (d. 1670).
It apparently passed like Hagthorpe from Thomas
Strangeways (d. 1702) to his son Thomas (later
Thomas Robinson), and in 1707 it was sold to John
Burdett. (fn. 71) The manor subsequently descended like
Osgodby to Riley Briggs, who had only 16 a. in
Barlby at his death in 1913. (fn. 72)
The medieval manor-house at Barlby, probably
standing on a moated site later called the Island,
apparently passed to the Lodge family in the early
16th century. In 1672 it had 11 hearths. (fn. 73) It was
held by the Lodges until the death in 1717 of
Ralph Lodge, who was succeeded by his sisters
Eleanor Spofforth and Elizabeth Lacy. (fn. 74) In 1727 the
Spofforths and Lacys conveyed the manor-house to
John Denton, together with the adjoining 'new
house', a garden called the Island, 'encompassed
with a box hedge and a moat', and 100 a. of land. (fn. 75)
The estate was sold by William Denton to Isaac
Nurse in 1766, and by G. W. Nurse to John and
Joseph Blanshard in 1785. (fn. 76) Susanna, Joseph's
daughter, who married Joseph Stringer, is said to
have rebuilt the house c. 1820. (fn. 77) The Stringers kept
the estate until the death of J. B. Stringer in 1919,
and his devisees sold the Hall and 12 a. the following
year to J. W. R. Parker and J. F. Burn-Murdoch.
They promptly conveyed it to the Selby Warehousing and Transport Co. Ltd. (fn. 78) It was sold in 1940 to
the Olympia Oil and Cake Co. Ltd. and in 1959 to
P. B. Flohil. (fn. 79) The early-19th-century red-brick
house has a slated roof and a pediment over the
centre of the entrance front.
The largest of the freehold estates in the township in the early 19th century was probably the
Robinsons'. (fn. 80) After Mary Robinson's death in 1839
it was held in trust by her brother William's daughter Mary Carr (d. 1871). From her the trusteeship passed to her daughters Mary, wife of T. G.
Parker, and Marian, wife of the Revd. J. M. Burn
Murdoch. (fn. 81) The estate still contained 386 a. in
Barlby in 1905 (fn. 82) but subsequently it was gradually
split up and sold.
In 1086 another carucate of land in Barlby was
held by Ralph Paynel, having previously belonged
to Merleswain. (fn. 83) Soon afterwards Paynel gave it to
Holy Trinity priory, York, which he founded as a
cell of Marmoutier abbey (Bas-Rhin). (fn. 84) The gift was
confirmed on several occasions, the last in 1464. (fn. 85)
The subsequent descent of the estate has not been
traced.
Several small grants in Barlby were made by the
Atons and others to Selby abbey. (fn. 86) After the Dissolution, however, grants of former abbey property
in Barlby comprised free rents rather than land.
Thus rents totalling over £5 were granted in
1558. (fn. 87) The rents apparently derived from land at
Barlby Bank, close to Selby, which eventually
passed, like Skipwith manor, (fn. 88) to Banastre Walton
(d. 1784); his widow Jane sold 169 a. at Barlby
Bank to Robert, Lord Petre, in 1785. (fn. 89) Laura M.
Petre sold it, comprising 202 a., to Thomas Ashworth (d. 1870) in 1851. (fn. 90) Ashworth's trustees held
it until 1913, when 177 a. were conveyed to the
Selby Warehousing and Transport Co. Ltd. (fn. 91) In
1940 much of the estate was sold to the Olympia
Oil and Cake Co. Ltd., (fn. 92) and most of it still belonged
to British Oil and Cake Mills Ltd. in 1973.
Most of the rectorial tithes of Barlby descended,
like those of Hemingbrough township, with Hemingbrough manor. (fn. 93) They were worth £55 in 1650 (fn. 94)
and were commuted in 1841 for £367 payable
to Wilson's devisees, Tweedy and Smith. (fn. 95) The
tithes of pigs and poultry, however, descended with
Babthorpe manor. (fn. 96) Together with those of Osgodby
and Cliffe with Lund they were worth £3 in 1650
and those in Barlby were commuted in 1841 for £2
payable to C. T. Heathcote. (fn. 97)
ECONOMIC HISTORY.
In 1086 there was land
for ½ plough at Barlby, then said to be waste,
together with 5 a. of meadow, and pasturable woodland measuring four furlongs by two. (fn. 98) Pasture for
pigs in the wood was mentioned in the 13th century.
At the same period other land was being brought
into cultivation and the lower ground was being
drained. There were references to open-field parcels
in 'utfeld', in Barlby Waterhouses, and on the bank
of the Ouse; an assart was mentioned; and named
dikes included 'Brerflet', 'Rigdik', and Newdike.
Meadow lay in Angram and in the Holmes, and c.
1300 mention was made of 40 a. of marsh and alder
wood. (fn. 99) In the late 13th century rights in reclaimed
land in the township were disputed between the
Atons, as lords of the manor, and Selby abbey. (fn. 1)
By the 17th century open-field land was recorded
as lying in several named 'fields': Bank field, High
field, and the Outfield were all mentioned. (fn. 2) Parts of
those fields were apparently being inclosed, however, about that time. A close in High field was
described as 'lately inclosed' in 1632; closes 'formerly
called Bank field' were mentioned in 1658; and New
close in the Outfield was referred to in 1647. (fn. 3) Other
assarted land was held in severalty, including Pippin
and Wheat Riddings, and various closes in the carrs. (fn. 4)
Part of the carrs had still been used in common in
1523, when bequests were made of horses running
there. (fn. 5) There was meadow in 'Breenfleet', and the
Outfield ings were mentioned. (fn. 6) Little is known of
the tenants and their holdings, but in 1616 land in
the township was conveyed by the Babthorpes, lords
of the manor, to trustees so that the tenants might
buy the freehold of their lands. (fn. 7)
More names of open-field areas may be identified
in the 18th century: Morcar, High, Chapel, and Out
fields, and High North croft, for example. (fn. 8) The
fragmented character of the open fields and meadows
is revealed by the tithe award map of 1841, (fn. 9) and
when they were inclosed in 1846, under the general
Inclosure Act of 1836, (fn. 10) there were a dozen areas to
be dealt with comprising only 216 a. all told. Allotments were made from the An grams, including
'Beenfleet' (totalling 57 a.), High field (50 a.),
Barley Croft field (23 a.), Ing Roods field (16 a.),
Long Moor carr (16 a.), Newland field (14 a.),
Short Moor carr (11 a.), Fadeland field (9 a.), North
Croft field (8 a.), Turnhead field (5 a.), and Scotch
Croft field (3 a.). There were 25 allotments of under
10 a. each, 5 of 10–39 a., and one of over 40 a.
The tithable land in 1841 had consisted of 896 a.
of arable, 240 a. of meadow or pasture, 80 a. of
common, and 20 a. of woodland. (fn. 11) The common,
mainly at the northern end of the township, remained until 1858, when it was inclosed under the
general Inclosure Act of 1845. (fn. 12) A small area of
common south of the village included Carr hill, near
Barlby Bank. Allotments totalling 73 a. were made
in lieu of 43 common rights. Nineteen people received under 10 a. each and the lord of the manor
14 a.
Until the early 20th century there were usually
12–15 farmers in Barlby, (fn. 13) only 5 of them having as
many as 100–200 a. in 1851. (fn. 14) After the First
World War, partly as a result of the increased use of
land for industry, the number of farmers fell to half
a-dozen, together with a few market-gardeners. Two
of the farms were of 150 a. or more in the 1920s and
1930s. (fn. 15) The acreage of arable land in 1905 was 861
and of meadow and pasture 350. (fn. 16) The predominance of arable farming has subsequently increased. (fn. 17)
From the Middle Ages onwards the Ouse at
Barlby supported a fishery, (fn. 18) and there was doubtless
some river traffic from the village. In 1341, for
example, it was reported that wool was put aboard a
ship at Turnhead to be sent to Hull. (fn. 19) A windmill
was recorded in the 17th century (fn. 20) and there was a
brickmaker in 1823, (fn. 21) but more diversified employment followed the development of Barlby Bank.
By the mid 19th century there were several
agricultural and timber merchants, a few mariners,
some railway and toll-bridge employees, and a flax
spinner at Barlby Bank. (fn. 22) It was not until soon after
1900, however, that larger industrial firms became
established there, mostly occupying land on either
side of the Selby-Barlby road with frontages to the
Ouse and the railway. Dent and Co., tar distillers,
moved in c. 1905 and remained until 1957. (fn. 23) W. L.
Kirby Ltd., steam flour millers, arrived in 1905 and
their Imperial Mills were taken over by Joseph
Rank Ltd. in 1967. (fn. 24) The Olympia Oil and Cake Co.
Ltd. acquired sites in 1909–10; their buildings,
which later dominated the road and river frontages,
have been in the ownership of British Oil and Cake
Mills Ltd. since 1952. (fn. 25) Fletcher's Sauce Co. Ltd.
was established at Barlby in 1920 and remained in
1973 as part of Smedley–H.P. Foods Ltd. (fn. 26) The
Yorkshire Sugar Co. Ltd., later part of the British
Sugar Corporation Ltd., bought 69 a., stretching
from the railway to the Ouse, in 1927; its riverside
factory lies well away from the Selby–Barlby road. (fn. 27)
Other 20th-century firms have included a cooper's,
an agricultural marketing and supply company,
and an engineer's.
LOCAL GOVERNMENT.
No manorial records
and no parochial records before 1835 are known.
Barlby joined the Selby poor-law union in 1837, (fn. 28)
and the site of four recently-demolished poorhouses
was sold by the union in 1867. (fn. 29) Barlby became part
of Riccall rural district in 1894, Derwent rural
district in 1935, (fn. 30) and the Selby district of North
Yorkshire in 1974.
CHURCH.
A chapel dependent upon Hemingbrough church had existed at Barlby for some time
before 1482, when the archbishop authorized services to be held there for three years in the customary
way. (fn. 31) It was recommended in 1650 that Barlby,
together with Osgodby, was fit to become a separate
parish. (fn. 32) It eventually acquired parochial functions
in the 18th century and was regarded as a perpetual
curacy (fn. 33) until the late 19th century, when it became
known as a vicarage. (fn. 34) By special arrangement New
Barlby was served by the vicar of Selby after 1912,
and in 1929 it and the Holmes were transferred to
Selby for ecclesiastical purposes. (fn. 35) The advowson
has always belonged to the vicar of Hemingbrough. (fn. 36)
The curate's income in 1716 comprised £4 contributed by the inhabitants and 10s. bequeathed by
John Waud for a sermon; in 1727 it amounted to £16
from the town stock. (fn. 37) The income was augmented
by £200 from Queen Anne's Bounty in 1726 (fn. 38) to
meet a benefaction of that amount given by John
Vickers and Thomas Dalby. (fn. 39) Further augmentations of £200 Bounty money were received in 1759,
1786, and 1809. (fn. 40) The average net income in 1829–
31 was £65. (fn. 41) Barlby was endowed from the Common Fund with £500 in 1863. (fn. 42) The net value of the
living was £131 in 1884 and £197 in 1914. (fn. 43)
In 1736 Bounty money was used to buy 44 a. of
glebe land in Babthorpe (fn. 44) and by 1743 14 a. had been
acquired in Newhay. By 1770 6½ a. had been bought
in Barlby, and in 1810 5 a. were bought in East
Cottingwith. The total amount of glebe was put at
76½ a. in 1865, (fn. 45) and it still belonged to the vicarage
in 1973. (fn. 46) In the late 19th century the vicar lived in
a house on the Riccall road, (fn. 47) but there was no house
belonging to the living until c. 1895, when the
present Vicarage was built to the designs of C. H.
Fowler. (fn. 48)
William Williamson, curate from 1625, was
inhibited from preaching in 1632, (fn. 49) and subsequently Thomas Lecke, curate, was ejected. (fn. 50) In
1716 Thomas Froggott, vicar of Ricall, was curate, (fn. 51)
and two vicars of Hemingbrough, Marmaduke
Teasdale and William Potter the younger, both held
Barlby as well later in the century. Robert Potter,
curate 1761–8, was also vicar of Stillingfleet, and
several 19th-century incumbents also held and
resided upon other livings. (fn. 52) An assistant curate was
employed during the incumbency of Thomas Braim
(1812–25), (fn. 53) again in 1835, (fn. 54) and probably on other
occasions, too.
One service was held each Sunday in 1743 and
1764. (fn. 55) There was still only one weekly service in
1851 (fn. 56) but two by 1865, and thereafter communion
was celebrated about six times a year, with 12–20
communicants. By 1914 there was monthly communion. (fn. 57) There were three services each Sunday in
1973.
The present brick church of ALL SAINTS
(fn. 58)
consists of chancel with north vestry, nave, and
west porch. When rebuilt in 1779–80 to replace the
ruinous earlier chapel it comprised a simple rectangular building with an apsidal east end and a small
octagonal bellcot. (fn. 59) Two small projections containing pews were later added to the north side, one
about 1844 for the use of G. P. Dawson of Osgodby
Hall and the other later for Robert Hubie, (fn. 60) but
these were removed during the restoration of 1895.
The vestry, also on the north side, was rebuilt in
1866. (fn. 61) A gallery across the west end of the church
was built by the Hubie family in 1811. (fn. 62)
The church was enlarged and restored in 1895 (fn. 63) to
the designs of C. H. Fowler. (fn. 64) Besides the removal of
the projections and the bricking up of the arches
leading into them, a chancel, vestry, and west porch
were added, all in a style matching that of the earlier
work. The gallery was removed and the interior
refitted.
There is one bell, dated 1704 and made by Samuel
Smith of York. (fn. 65) The plate comprises silver chalice
and paten, made in 1894, and pewter flagon. (fn. 66) The
first known burial at Barlby was that of John
Vickers in 1727 (fn. 67) but registers of baptisms and
burials do not begin until 1780. (fn. 68) The church was
licensed for marriages in 1853. (fn. 69)
The churchyard was enlarged in 1872, (fn. 70) 1923–4,
and 1943. (fn. 71)
NONCONFORMITY.
A house in Barlby was
registered for worship by Independents in 1772, (fn. 72)
and other houses were registered by dissenters in
1818, 1822, and 1826. (fn. 73) The Wesleyan Methodists
were said in 1851 to meet in a granary in summer
and two houses in winter, (fn. 74) but soon afterwards they
built a chapel, registered in 1857. (fn. 75) The chapel,
standing on the Osgodby road, was replaced by a
new one in 1961 (fn. 76) and the old building was demolished in 1972. (fn. 77) The new chapel, on the same road
midway between Barlby and Osgodby villages, was
still in use in 1973.
EDUCATION.
A grammar-school teacher was
licensed at Barlby in 1585 and 1673. (fn. 78) There were
two schools there in the early 19th century. One of
them had 6 children in 1819 and 20 in 1835, and
was said to have an endowment of 1 a. of land in the
former year and £2 a year in the latter. The second
school, entirely supported by parents' contributions,
had about 40 and 25 pupils respectively in those
years. (fn. 79) The endowment was that of Ralph Lodge,
devised by will proved in 1661 for the education of
poor children in the township. (fn. 80) The first known
school-house was built in 1845, (fn. 81) and in 1871 35
children attended the National school. (fn. 82) It was rebuilt on a new site, east of the church, in 1875 and
the average attendance was 27 the following year,
when its income included 8s. 6d. from the endowment. (fn. 83) The school received an annual government
grant by 1877–8. (fn. 84) There was also a Wesleyan day
school in 1871, with 38 in attendance. (fn. 85) Mary
Robinson (d. 1839) bequeathed £100 for the poor of
Barlby, and her executors used it for the benefit of
the National school; £105 stock was bought with it
in 1877. Mary Hubie, by will dated 1836, gave £100
stock for the school, but the principal expired in
1859. (fn. 86)
A temporary building for infants was put up next
to the school, apparently in 1909, (fn. 87) but in 1913 a
new school was opened on the Selby road, just
south of the village, with accommodation for 268. (fn. 88)
The old school was subsequently used as a church
hall (fn. 89) and still stood in 1973. The income of Lodge's
and Robinson's charities was used for religious
education after 1913. (fn. 90) The new school was enlarged
in 1914, (fn. 91) when the average attendance rose from
about 90 to 158; by 1919 there were 200 in attendance. (fn. 92) Many Barlby children, however, went to
school in Selby: in 1920, for example, 270 attended
the village school and 251 went to Selby. (fn. 93) A new
school was provided for the area adjoining Selby in
1925 and in the same year a new infants' department
was opened at the village school. (fn. 94) Attendance at the
village school remained at over 200 for some years,
falling to 183 in 1938. (fn. 95) Prefabricated buildings were
later added there, (fn. 96) and the number on the roll was
186 in September 1973. (fn. 97)
Barlby Bridge school, for the Selby 'suburb', was
opened in 1925 with accommodation for 290 pupils. (fn. 98)
The attendance was 217 in 1927 and 152 in 1938, (fn. 99)
and the number on the roll was 95 in September
1973. (fn. 1)
A secondary school was opened at Barlby, on the
Riccall road, in 1960 to serve about ten villages
round about. The number on the roll was 458 in
September 1972. (fn. 2)
CHARITIES FOR THE POOR.
Caulem's dole
comprised a garth and common right in South
Duffield, the rent of which amounted to £1 10s. in
1823. Porritt's dole comprised an acre in Barlby
producing £2 8s. rent in 1823; it was sold for
£275 c. 1870 and used to buy 5 a. in Cliffe, producing £10 rent in the 1880s. Walker's dole comprised
a rent-charge of 10s. from r a. in Barlby. (fn. 3) These
three, along with an acre of land given in 1857,
were brought together as the United Charities by a
Scheme of 1912. The income in 1972 was £31 from
£273 stock; nearly £1 each was given to 33 widows. (fn. 4)
Three other small charities have been lost:
3s. 4d. a year from ½ a. of meadow in Barlby, given
by Thomas Nelson by will dated 1633; income from
½ a. of meadow there, given by John Lodge by will
proved in 1663; and 10s. a year from land in Barlby,
given by Thomas Dalby by will dated 1719. (fn. 5)
Mary Robinson (d. 1839) gave £100 to provide for
a weekly distribution of bread in Barlby. It was
invested in £107 stock in 1868. Mary Hubie, by
will proved in 1836, devised £233 stock to repair her
family tomb in Barlby churchyard and to provide for
a weekly distribution of bread worth 2s. 10d. to poor
widows, one of them to be Mary Robinson, attending the church. The income was £7 in the 1880s. (fn. 6)
These two charities were later administered as the
United Bread Charity. The income in 1973 was
£9 from £340 stock, and distribution was no longer
made in bread but in cash. (fn. 7)
Robert Weddall, by will proved in 1841, directed
his executors to pay £10 a year for the poor of
Barlby. After his death £258 was invested for this
purpose. (fn. 8) The income in 1973 was about £13. (fn. 9)
Mary Carr, by will proved in 1871, bequeathed
£300 to provide coal for the poor of Barlby and
South Duffield. It was invested in £323 stock in
1872, and in the 1880s 3/5 of the income was
distributed to Barlby. (fn. 10) In 1972 the income was,£5
but none was distributed. (fn. 11)