Edgbolton
EDGBOLTON, a township, in the parish of Shawbury, union of Wem, Whitchurch division of the hun
dred of North Bradford, N. division of the county of
Salop, 8 miles (N. E. by N.) from Shrewsbury; containing 199 inhabitants.
Edgcot (St. James)
EDGCOT (St. James), a parish, in the union of
Brackley, hundred of Chipping-Warden, S. division
of the county of Northampton, 6¼ miles (N. E. by N.)
from Banbury; containing 83 inhabitants. The parish
comprises 1340 acres, of which about 1060 are pasture,
and 230 arable land; it is bounded on the south-east
by a portion of Oxfordshire. In a vale called Danesmoor, south of the village, a battle was fought between
the Saxons and the Danes; and in the time of Edward IV.
a conflict took place between the houses of York and
Lancaster, when, the former being defeated, the Earl of
Pembroke and his two brothers were made prisoners,
and beheaded at Banbury. In 1642, Charles I., with his
two sons, and a part of his army encamped here previously to the battle of Edge-Hill, and returned the following day: the bed in which the king slept is preserved in the present manor-house, a handsome stone
edifice in a secluded situation. The living is a rectory,
valued in the king's books at £12, and in the patronage
of Miss Carter; net income, £300. The church adjoins
the manor-house, and consists of a nave, south aisle and
porch, and chancel, with a tower entered under a beautiful crocketed ogee arch. This edifice is remarkable for
its Domus inclusa, still in entire preservation, approached
by a door on the north side of the chancel, and containing a room on the ground floor, and a dormitory above:
it is now used as a vestry. In the church are some interesting monuments of the Chauncy family, formerly
lords of the manor. The churchyard is divided from the
lawn of the mansion by an invisible fence.
Edge
EDGE, a township, in the parish of Malpas, union
of Great Boughton, higher division of the hundred of
Broxton, S. division of the county of Chester, 3 miles
(N. by E.) from Malpas; containing 313 inhabitants,
and comprising 1407 acres of land. The tithes have
been commuted for £125 payable to the impropriator,
and £7. 5. 10. to the rector of the parish.
Edge
EDGE, a tything, in the parish of Painswick, union
of Stroud, hundred of Bisley, E. division of the county
of Gloucester; containing 1510 inhabitants.
Edge
EDGE, a township, in the parish of Pontesbury,
union of Atcham, hundred of Ford, S. division of the
county of Salop; containing 68 inhabitants.
Edgecott (St. Michael)
EDGECOTT (St. Michael), a parish, in the union,
hundred, and county of Buckingham, 6 miles (S. W. by
W.) from Winslow; containing 195 inhabitants. It is
situated on a cross road between Buckingham and
Thame, and comprises by measurement 1100 acres, of
which less than a third are arable. Lace is manufactured
to a limited extent. The living is a rectory, valued in
the king's books at £11. 12. 8½., and in the gift of the
Hon. and Rev. Jacob Marsham, D.D.: the tithes were
commuted, on the inclosure of the parish, for about 200
acres of land, valued at rather more than £200 per
annum. The church is an ancient edifice. There is a
place of worship for dissenters.
Edgefield (St. Peter)
EDGEFIELD (St. Peter), a parish, in the union
of Erpingham, hundred of Holt, W. division of Norfolk, 2¾ miles (S.) from Holt; containing 638 inhabitants. The parish comprises 2435a. 1r. 12p., of which
1497 acres are arable, and 895 pasture and wood; the
surface is a good deal undulated, and the scenery,
viewed from the higher grounds, is very beautiful. The
living is a rectory, valued in the king's books at £11. 6. 8.;
net income, £300; patron, John Marcon, Esq. The
church, which is in the decorated and later English
styles, consists of a nave, chancel, and aisles, with an
octagonal tower; there are remains of a handsome
carved screen. The Wesleyan Methodists have a place
of worship.
Edge-Hill
EDGE-HILL, a chapelry, in the district parish of
West Derby, parish of Walton-on-the-Hill, union
and hundred of West Derby, S. division of the county
of Lancaster, 1 mile (S. E.) from Liverpool. The
village is pleasantly situated upon rising ground, on the
road to Wavertree and Childwall. At a short distance
from it, in the vale beneath, is the Liverpool Botanic
Garden, comprising eleven acres, laid out with great
taste, and having an elegant conservatory in the centre.
Here is a station of the Liverpool and Manchester railway, with a depôt and buildings for some of the chief
works connected with that undertaking. The station is
approached by two inclined carriage-roads, and by three
tunnels under different parts of the town, one of which,
from Lime-street, is 2000 yards long, another, passing
from Wapping, 2216 yards in length, and the third, from
Crown-street, 290 yards. It contains two engine-houses
(in each of which is a fixed engine for drawing the trains
through the tunnels), a carriage-shed 420 feet long and
30 feet wide, some tanks, and other apparatus for facilitating the progress of the work. A fourth tunnel will
lead from just above Edge-Hill station to the north end
of Liverpool. The living is a perpetual curacy, in the
patronage of Miss Mason; net income, £170. The
chapel, dedicated to St. Mary, was erected a few years
since, by the late E. Mason, Esq., and is a commodious
structure, with a steeple; the churchyard is surrounded
by a row of fine trees. There is a place of worship for
Baptists; also a Roman Catholic chapel, and a school in
union with the National Society.
Edge-Hill, Stafford.—See Burntwood.
EDGE-HILL, Stafford.—See Burntwood.
Edge-Hill, county Warwick.—See Kington.
EDGE-HILL, county Warwick.—See Kington.
Edgerley
EDGERLEY, a township, in the parish of Alford,
union of Great Boughton, Lower division of the hundred of Broxton, S. division of the county of Chester;
containing 12 inhabitants.
Edgmond (St. Peter)
EDGMOND (St. Peter), a parish, in the union of
Newport, Newport division of the hundred of South
Bradford, N. division of Salop, 1¾ mile (W.) from
Newport; comprising the townships of Adney, Caynton,
Cherrington, Chetwynd-Aston, Edgmond, and part of
Pickstock, with the chapelries of Church-Aston and Tibberton; and containing 2471 inhabitants, of whom 792
are in the township of Edgmond. The parish comprises
by measurement 7650 acres, of which 4979 are in the
township, including 80 acres of waste land or common:
limestone is quarried extensively and burnt into lime,
and there are some quarries of good red sandstone.
Markets for agricultural produce, and for cattle and
pigs, are held every fortnight at Newport, which is
amply supplied from this place. The living is a rectory,
valued in the king's books at £46. 8. 1½.; patron and
incumbent, the Rev. John Dryden Pigott, whose tithes
have been commuted for £2400, and whose glebe comprises 140 acres, with a house. The church is an ancient
structure. There are chapels of ease at Aston and
Tibberton; also two places of worship for dissenters in
the parish. The Rev. Dryden Pigott, in 1734, gave £200
for the education of children; and another school is
supported by the rector.
Edgton (St. Michael)
EDGTON (St. Michael), a parish, in the union of
Clun, hundred of Purslow, S. division of Salop,
5 miles (E. S. E.) from Bishop's-Castle; containing,
with the township of Brunslow with Horderley, 214
inhabitants. The parish comprises by measurement
1626 acres, of which 730 are arable, 655 meadow and
pasture, and 245 woodland. Brunslow is situated on
the south-western declivity of an eminence; and in the
neighbourhood is an ancient fortification, called Burrow
Camps. The living is a perpetual curacy; patron, incumbent, and impropriator, the Rev. H. Sandford, whose
impropriate tithes have been commuted for £235. There
is a place of worship for Primitive Methodists.
Edgware (St. Margaret)
EDGWARE (St. Margaret), a parish, and formerly
a market-town, in the union of Hendon, hundred of
Gore, county of Middlesex, 8 miles (N. W. by W.)
from London; containing 659 inhabitants. This place,
from its situation within an easy distance of the metropolis, and the excellence of the road to it through an
almost uninterrupted succession of elegant villas and
agreeable scenery, has become the residence of numerous
opulent and respectable families. The Roman Watlingstreet, leading to the ancient city of Verulam, passes over
a bridge near the entrance to the village. Of the principal street, the western side is in the parish of Little
Stanmore, where, in the early part of the eighteenth
century, James, Duke of Chandos, at an expense of
£250,000 erected the magnificent palace of Canons.
The walls of this edifice were twelve feet in thickness at
the base, and nine feet thick in the upper part; the
pillars of the hall and the steps of the grand staircase
were of the most beautiful marble, and the locks and
hinges of the doors were silver: the grounds were
adorned with a profusion of statuary. The chapel was
richly embellished with paintings of the Italian school:
the most eminent composers were employed in the
arrangement, and the most eminent masters in the vocal
and instrumental performance, of the musical services.
After the death of the duke, this noble mansion was
taken down and sold piecemeal: the columns formed part
of the portico of Wanstead House; the marble staircase was put up in the Earl of Chesterfield's residence in
May-fair, London; and the equestrian statue of George I.
at present decorates the area of Leicester-square.
The village is supplied with water from a well, dug in
1822, by public subscription. The market, on Thursday,
has been discontinued, but a fair is still held on the first
Wednesday, Thursday, and Friday in August, for cattle
and toys: on the two last days are races, which are in
general well attended. There are courts baron and leet
on the 1st of May; and the petty-sessions for the division are held in that part of the village which is in Little
Stanmore. Blackstone mentions a singular ancient
custom as existing here, for the lord of the manor to
provide a minstrel or piper to play for the amusement of
the tenants, and a small field in Edgware is still called
Piper's Green. The parish comprises by admeasurement
1968 acres, of which 165 are arable, 1758 meadow and
pasture, and about 45 woodland. The living is a perpetual curacy, but having been from time immemorial
endowed with the vicarial tithes, may be considered a
vicarage, not in charge; net income, £493; patron and
impropriator, John Lee, Esq., LL.D. The church, with
the exception of its embattled tower, which is of flint
and stone, was rebuilt of brick in 1763, and the interior
was thoroughly repaired in 1822. The present churchyard was the site of the old vicarage-house and garden,
and upon a new house being erected, the ground was
presented to the parish, and consecrated for burial purposes, with the reservation of a right of road through it to
the vicarage, and of a piece of ground for a school, which
was erected in 1833, at the expense of Charles Day,
Esq. An almshouse for four aged women was founded in
1680, by Samuel Atkinson, who endowed it with land
now producing, with another benefaction, an income of
£32. 10. Charles Day, Esq., in 1828 founded almshouses for eight aged persons, and endowed them with
£100 per annum; the premises, situated at the northern
extremity of the village, cost £2000, and are in the later
English style.
Edgworth (St. Mary)
EDGWORTH (St. Mary), a parish, in the union of
Cirencester, hundred of Bisley, E. division of the
county of Gloucester, 6 miles (N. W. by W.) from
Cirencester; containing 149 inhabitants. This parish,
which is separated from that of Abbot's-Duntsbourn on
the east, and from that of Bisley on the west, by two
small brooks that flow in parallel directions, comprises
1566a. 29p.; the surface is extremely hilly, the soil a
light clay alternated with stone brash, and stone for
building and for the roads is quarried. The living is a
rectory, valued in the king's books at £8, and in the
gift of Charles Greville, Esq.: the tithes have been commuted for £265; the glebe comprises 42 acres. The
church is in the Norman style, with portions of later
date.
Edgworth
EDGWORTH, a township, in the chapelry of
Turton, parish and union of Bolton, hundred of
Salford, S. division of Lancashire, 5¼ miles (N. N. E.)
from Bolton; containing 1697 inhabitants. This place
lies on the north-eastern extremity of the hundred of
Salford, near the junction of the mountainous region of
the Forest of Rossendale and the manor of Tottington;
and, with Entwistle, was anciently common land belonging to the Blackburn and the Entwistle families. It
comprises 2960 acres of pasture and moor; and has
a thin mountain-vein of coal, and some extensive stonequarries, producing large and excellent flagstones. The
road from Bury to Blackburn passes through the village.
The Independents and Wesleyans have places of worship;
and there are two schools, one, erected in 1804, by subscription, and endowed with £7. 10. per annum, and the
other in union with the National Society.
Edial, or Edgehill.—See Burntwood.
EDIAL, or Edgehill.—See Burntwood.
Edinghall, or Edengale (Holy Trinity)
EDINGHALL, or Edengale (Holy Trinity), a
parish, in the union of Tamworth, N. division of the
hundred of Offlow and of the county of Stafford, 6
miles (N. by W.) from Tamworth; containing 197 inhabitants. This place lies in the vale of the Mease, and
comprises 851a. 2r. 24p. of land, exclusively of a portion of Croxall, in Derbyshire, which is intermixed with
the village. The living is a perpetual curacy, with a
net income of £80; patron, the Prebendary of Weeford
in Lichfield Cathedral. At the inclosure of the common
about 55 years ago, the tithes were commuted for an
allotment of 120 acres to the impropriator, and 16½
acres to the incumbent, who has also 27 acres of old
glebe, and an annuity from the tithe-farm. The church
is a small edifice, upon an eminence near the river: the
churchyard is partly situated in Derbyshire. The poor
had the interest of £90, left in 1804 by Francis Cobb,
Esq.; but the bequest has been lost. An ancient raised
way, in the direction of Lullington, in Derbyshire, passes
through the parish.
Edingley (St. Giles)
EDINGLEY (St. Giles), a parish, in the union of
Southwell, Hatfield division of the wapentake of
Thurgarton, S. division of the county of Nottingham, 3 miles (W. N. W.) from Southwell; containing
429 inhabitants. It lies on the road from Southwell
to Mansfield, and comprises about 2000 acres. The
living is a perpetual curacy, valued in the king's books
at £4; net income, £60; patrons, the Chapter of the
Collegiate Church of Southwell; impropriator, C. Machin,
Esq. The tithes were commuted for land in 1777. The
church is a small ancient edifice, with a brick tower; the
body is of stone: the chancel was rebuilt in 1844, and
the interior of the church beautified. A school is
endowed with a few acres of land, partly the gift of
Samuel Wright in 1731, and partly allotted by commissioners for inclosing common lands.
Edingthorpe (All Saints)
EDINGTHORPE (All Saints), a parish, in the
Tunstead and Happing incorporation, hundred of
Tunstead, E. division of Norfolk, 3 miles (N. E. by
E.) from North Walsham; containing 195 inhabitants.
It comprises by admeasurement 710 acres, which, with
the exception of about 15 acres of pasture and plantation, and about 30 of furze, are all arable land. The
living is a discharged rectory, valued in the king's
books at £5. 5. 2½., and in the patronage of the Crown,
in right of the duchy of Lancaster: the tithes have
been commuted for £229. 18., and the glebe comprises
17a. 2r. 34p., with a house. The church is an ancient
structure in the decorated style, with a tower: the nave
is separated from the chancel by a beautiful screen; the
font is handsome.
Edington
EDINGTON, a township, in the parish of Mitford,
union of Morpeth, W. division of Castle ward, S.
division of Northumberland, 4¼ miles (S. W. by W.)
from Morpeth; containing 23 inhabitants. It comprises 631a. 2r. 31p. The village occupies a very commanding situation, having the whole of the parish of
Mitford, with the winding banks of the Font and Wansbeck, within view; besides which are extensive prospects
of hill and sea. To the west is excellent grass and
turnip soil, on a decaying sandstone which is much
esteemed for mixing with lime for mortar and plaster,
and of which considerable quantities have been used in
the new mansion-house of Creswell and in other buildings, of late years. The impropriate tithes have been
commuted for £14. 8. The monks of Newminster had
possessions here.
Edington
EDINGTON, a chapelry, in the parish of Moorlinch, union of Bridgwater, hundred of Whitley,
W. division of Somerset, 6½ miles (E. N. E.) from
Bridgwater; containing 428 inhabitants. The great
tithes have been commuted for £90; and the vicarial for
£110, with a glebe of nearly 25½ acres. The living is a
perpetual curacy, annexed to that of Chilton-upon-Poldon: the chapel, dedicated to St. George, has been
enlarged. Here is a medicinal spring, impregnated with
sulphur and iron, and said to be efficacious in scorbutic
disorders. A tessellated pavement and other Roman
antiquities have been discovered.
Edington (All Saints)
EDINGTON (All Saints), a parish, in the union of
Westbury and Whorwelsdown, hundred of Whorwelsdown, Whorwelsdown and N. divisions of Wilts,
3¾ miles (E. N. E.) from Westbury; containing, with
the tythings of Baynton, West Coulston, and Tinhead,
1136 inhabitants, of whom 475 are in the tything of
Edington. The bishops of Salisbury had a palace here,
which was plundered and destroyed during the rebellion
of Jack Cade, in 1450, when Bishop Ayscough was
dragged from the altar of his chapel, where he was officiating at mass, and stoned to death on a neighbouring
hill. The parish comprises 5698a. 2r. 25p., of which
3354 acres are pasture, 2307 arable, and 37 woodland. The living is a perpetual curacy, net income, £87;
patron and impropriator, George Watson Taylor, Esq.
The church, a handsome cruciform structure with a
tower rising from the intersection, is rich in many portions of its architecture, both within and without, and
contains some beautiful sepulchral erections of an early
date. William de Edington, whose paternal name is
supposed to have been Cheney, a native of this place,
and successively bishop of Winchester, lord high treasurer, and lord high chancellor, in the reign of Edward
III., partly rebuilt the church, in which a strong
similarity appears to the works executed by him at
Winchester cathedral. He also founded a college,
about 1347, in honour of the blessed Virgin Mary, St.
Catherine, and All Saints, consisting of a dean and
twelve ministers, for whom were substituted, at the
desire of the Black Prince, in 1358, a reformed order of
Augustine friars, called Bonhommes, under the government of a rector: its revenue at the suppression was
estimated at £521. 12. 5. A portion of the monastic
buildings is remaining, formerly the residence of the
dukes of Bolton.
Edingworth
EDINGWORTH, a hamlet, in the parish of East
Brent, union of Axbridge, hundred of Brent with
Wrington, county of Somerset, 5½ miles (W. by S.)
from Axbridge; containing 125 inhabitants. At this
place was a priory of Benedictine monks, a cell to the
abbey of St. Sever, in Normandy, and which was granted
in the 7th of Edward IV. to Eton College.
Edith-Weston (St. Mary)
EDITH-WESTON (St. Mary), a parish, in the
union of Oakham, hundred of Martinsley, county of
Rutland, 7 miles (W. S. W.) from Stamford; containing
343 inhabitants. Here was a priory of Benedictine
monks, a cell to the abbey of St. George, at Banguervill,
in Normandy, to which it was given by William de
Tankervill, chamberlain to Henry I.; it was conveyed
to the Carthusians of Coventry in the reign of Richard
II., and, as part of their possessions, was granted, in
the 4th of Edward VI., to William Parr, Marquess of
Northampton. The living is a rectory, valued in the
king's books at £14. 7. 6.; net income, £155; patron,
the Rev. R. Lucas.
Edithmead
EDITHMEAD, a hamlet, in the parish of Burnham,
union of Axbridge, hundred of Bempstone, E. division
of Somerset; containing 61 inhabitants.
Edlaston (St. James)
EDLASTON (St. James), a parish, in the hundred
of Appletree, S. division of the county of Derby, 2½
miles (S.) from Ashbourn, on the left of the road to
Sudbury; containing, with the township of Wyaston,
214 inhabitants. The manor was given to the convent
of Tutbury by Robert, Earl Ferrers, son of the founder.
At the Reformation it was granted by Henry VIII. to
William, Lord Paget, who soon after conveyed it to Sir
Edward Aston, Knt.; and the property has since
belonged to the Eyres, of Hassop, and other families.
The parish comprises upwards of 2330 acres, arable,
meadow, pasture, and woodland; the surface is undulated, the soil a rich earth, gravel, sand, and peat, and
the scenery improved by plantations, which are extensive. The living is a discharged rectory, valued in the
king's books at £3. 18. 4.; net income, £220; patron,
the Bishop of Lichfield; incumbent, the Rev. Henry
Gordon: a certain portion of land, &c., called Callowcroft, is tithe-free. The glebe, in Edlaston township,
consists of 33 acres, with a good glebe-house. The
church is a small ancient structure, comprising a nave,
chancel, and tower, and has lately been repaired: in the
churchyard is a very aged yew-tree. There is a place of
worship for Wesleyans. A common of twenty acres was
inclosed in 1824.
Edlingham (St. John the Baptist)
EDLINGHAM (St. John the Baptist), a parish, in
the union of Alnwick, N. division of Coquetdale
ward and of Northumberland; comprising the townships of Abbewick, Broom-Park, Edlingham, Learchild,
and Lemmington, and the chapelry of Bolton; the
whole containing 659 inhabitants, of whom 138 are in
the township of Edlingham, 6 miles (S. W. by W.) from
Alnwick. The parish is situated on the great road to
Edinburgh, and is watered by the river Aln, which
receives several small streams; it comprises by computation 1200 acres. The surface is varied, rising in some
parts into hills of considerable elevation; the soil in the
lower grounds is rich, and on the uplands inclined to
moor, affording tolerable sheep pasture. There are coalmines, but not in operation, and some quarries of excellent building-stone. The living is a discharged vicarage,
valued in the king's books at £6. 14. 4.; net income,
£483; patrons and appropriators, the Dean and Chapter of Durham. The church is an ancient structure,
with some Norman details still remaining, though it has
undergone various alterations. At Bolton is a chapel of
ease. There are remains of Edlingham Castle, built prior
to the reign of Henry II., and of which Edgar Atheling,
son of Edmund the Outlaw, was owner; he is said to
have lived here in 1167, when he must have been 120
years old, as he came into England with his father while
a boy, in 1057.