Walmer (St. Mary)
WALMER (St. Mary), a parish, and a member of
the cinque-port liberty of Sandwich, in the union of
Eastry, locally in the hundred of Cornilo, lathe of St.
Augustine, E. division of Kent, 2 miles (S.) from
Deal; containing 2170 inhabitants. The parish comprises about 885 acres, of which 372 are arable, 272
meadow and pasture, 114 in homesteads and gardens,
and 100 sea-beach. Walmer-street, which is situated
on the road from Deal to Dovor, is interspersed with
genteel houses and marine villas; and, partly on account
of its convenient position as regards those two towns, is
much frequented during the season for sea-bathing. It
is noted for the salubrity of its air, and for the fine prospects in its vicinity, over the Downs and the straits of
Dovor to the French coast; but chiefly for the celebrated
fortress Walmer Castle, erected by Henry VIII. at the
same period with those of Deal and Sandown, for the
defence of the coast, and now appropriated to the lord
warden of the cinque-ports, for whose residence the principal apartments were fitted up some years since, and
the fosse was converted into a garden. Since this appropriation, many handsome marine villas have been
erected in the vicinity, and an esplanade has been
formed; bathing-machines are kept, and a complete
establishment has been opened of hot, vapour, and
shower baths, with reading-rooms and every accommodation for visiters. From the esplanade is a delightful
promenade to Deal Castle (the principal part of which
is in this parish), commanding a splendid view of the sea,
with the shipping in the Downs. In the village is a large
brewery and malting establishment.
The living is a perpetual curacy, endowed with the
vicarial tithes; net income, £154; patron and appropriator, the Archbishop of Canterbury. The church,
which has been repaired, and the nave considerably enlarged, is entered on the west under a highly-enriched
Norman arch; and there is a similar arch between the
nave and chancel: in the burial ground are two remarkably fine yew-trees. Near the church is a deep fosse,
with other vestiges of ancient intrenchments; and in
the churchyard several stone coffins were discovered
about 50 years since, supposed to have belonged to the
Crowl family, of whom Sir Nicholas, in the reign of
Edward I., erected a mansion in the village, of which
there are still some remains. His late Majesty and
the Queen Dowager, when Duke and Duchess of Clarence, resided at Walmer Castle in the summer of 1822;
the Princess Amelia occupied for many years an old
mansion in the village, and Her Majesty, Prince Albert,
and the court, have resided at the castle for a short
period.
Walmersley
WALMERSLEY, a township, in the parish and
union of Bury, hundred of Salford, S. division of
Lancashire, 2¼ miles (N. by E.) from Bury, on the road
to Haslingden and Burnley; containing, with the ecclesiastical parish of Shuttleworth, 4880 inhabitants. This
township is situated on the east side of the river Irwell,
and comprises, with Shuttleworth, 5056 acres, of which
582 are uninclosed; the surface is hilly and undulated,
and the soil chiefly clay. Whittle Pike is in the township, and from its elevated summit may be seen, on a
clear day, the estuary of the Mersey, near Runcorn.
The population is for the most part employed in six
cotton-mills, in some calico-printing works, and in
grinding dye-woods. The Burrs cotton-works here, are
the property of Messrs. Thomas Calrow and Sons, and
are turned by two water-wheels of 40-horse power:
these works were formerly in the possession of the
Peels, and were carried on by them. There are also a
colliery, and four stone-quarries. A district church
dedicated to Christ, in the early English style, with a
tower, was built in 1837, at a cost of £2300. The
living is a perpetual curacy, in the patronage of Trustees; net income, £110, with a house. The tithes of
Walmersley have been commuted for £66, and the
glebe here consists of 51 acres. In the township are
places of worship for Independents and Wesleyans.
William Grant, in 1842, left the interest of £400 towards the support of a national school.—See Shuttleworth.
Walmsgate
WALMSGATE, a parish, in the union of Louth,
hundred of Hill, parts of Lindsey, county of Lincoln, 6½ miles (S. S. E.) from Louth; containing 84 inhabitants. It is situated on the road from Louth to
London, and comprises nearly 900 acres, tithe-free: the
surrounding scenery is pleasing, and the seat of J. Whiting Yorke, Esq., here, commands some finely-varied
prospects. The living is annexed to the vicarage of
Burwell; and the church having fallen into ruins, the
inhabitants attend that of Burwell.
Walmsley, Lancashire.—See Turton.
WALMSLEY, Lancashire.—See Turton.
Walney, Isle Of
WALNEY, ISLE OF, a chapelry, in the parish of
Dalton-in-Furness, union of Ulverston, hundred of
Lonsdale north of the Sands, N. division of the county
of Lancaster, 5 miles (S. W.) from Dalton; containing
921 inhabitants. This district, which is insular only at
high water, is ten miles in length, and about one in
breadth; and has a lighthouse on its southern extremity, a short distance from which is a rocky islet termed
the Pile of Fouldrey, i. e. the island of fowls, where are
the venerable ruins of a strong castle. There are several
other small isles adjacent, the principal of which is Old
Barrow, lying between this and the main land, opposite
the small village and port of Barrow. Walney, which
is stated to have been once covered with wood, is described by West, in his Antiquities of Furness, as lying on
a bed of moss, which is found by digging through a
layer of sand and clay, and in which trees have been
met with. On the western side of the island were lately
discovered a number of guns of various calibre, stone
balls of from eight to twelve pounds' weight, balls of
hammered iron, old swords, and other articles, supposed
to have belonged to a wrecked vessel, of which a tradition has existed for several centuries. One of the guns
measured ten feet in length; all were of wrought or
hammered iron, and were provided with rings to allow
them to be slung with ropes when fired, which shows
that gun-carriages were not in use when they were made.
The relics all lay imbedded in the sand and clay, at a
place only accessible at low water. There are some remarkable intermitting springs of fresh water in the
island. The living is a perpetual curacy; net income,
£94; patron, the Vicar of Dalton.
Walpole (St. Andrew)
WALPOLE (St. Andrew), a parish in the union of
Wisbech, hundred of Freebridge-Marshland, W.
division of Norfolk, 8¾ miles (W. by S.) from Lynn;
containing 565 inhabitants. This place derives its name
from a great wall or embankment raised by the Romans
to prevent the encroachments of the sea, and from an
extensive pool of water formerly in the immediate vicinity: in a garden at the foot of the embankment, many
Roman bricks have been discovered, and also the remains of an aqueduct formed of earthen pipes. The
estuary in the neighbourhood, called Cross Keys Wash,
has been rendered passable to Long Sutton, in the county
of Lincoln, by a high embankment and a bridge, completed at a great expense, within the last few years.
The parish comprises 2364a. 31p., of which 1500 are
arable, 783 meadow and pasture, and the remainder
roads and waste. Walpole St. Andrew and St. Peter
together form one township, though for all ecclesiastical
purposes they are perfectly distinct. The living is a
discharged vicarage, rated in the king's books at £26.
13. 4., and endowed by Lord Coleraine, in 1736, with
the tithes of certain manors in this and the adjoining
parish of St. Peter; it is in the gift of the Rev. C. H.
Townshend. The tithes of the parish have been commuted for £657. 19., of which £399 are payable to the
incumbent of St. Peter's. The church is an ancient
brick structure in the later English style, with a square
embattled tower. Several chapels formerly existed in
the township, dedicated respectively to St. Catherine,
St. Edmund, St. Helen, St. James, St. Mary, and St.
Thomas; but no vestiges of any of them are now remaining. There is a place of worship for Primitive
Methodists. The poor have ten houses, and 85 acres of
land, of which 43 are let in single acres to labourers, at
a nominal rent.
Walpole (St. Peter)
WALPOLE (St. Peter), a parish, in the union of
Wisbech, hundred of Freebridge-Marshland, W.
division of Norfolk, 6 miles (N. E. by N.) from Wisbech; containing 1335 inhabitants. It comprises 6981a.
3r. 16p., of which 4154 acres are arable, 2785 meadow
and pasture, and about 60 salt-marsh; the soil is various,
and the scenery in some parts interesting. The living is
a rectory, endowed with the tithes of certain manors in
this and the adjoining parish of Walpole St. Andrew, by
Lord Coleraine; valued in the king's books at £21;
and in the patronage of the Crown. The tithes of the
parish have been commuted for £2187. 16. 10., of which
£1303. 16. 10. are payable to the incumbent of St.
Andrew's; the glebe comprises 15 acres, with a good
house. The church, which was erected in the reign of
Henry VI., is an extremely elegant structure in the
later English style, with a lofty square embattled tower,
and a south porch of beautiful design; the nave is
lighted by a noble range of thirteen clerestory windows
on each side, and the whole edifice, both externally and
internally, presents highly interesting details. A chapel
of ease has been erected; and there are places of worship for Primitive Methodists and Wesleyans, Anthony
Curton, in 1705, bequeathed a house and 60 acres of
land, now producing a rental of £100, for the instruction of children of this parish, and of St. Andrew's.
Almshouses for four widows were founded in 1630, by
Robert Butler, who endowed them with 36 acres of
land, now worth £83. 16. per annum; and W. Wake,
in 1697, bequeathed to the poor a house and 39 acres of
land, yielding a rent of £60.
Walpole (St. Mary)
WALPOLE (St. Mary), a parish, in the union and
hundred of Blything, E. division of Suffolk, 2 miles
(S. W.) from Halesworth; containing 615 inhabitants,
and comprising 1652 acres. The living is a perpetual
curacy, in the gift of the Church Patronage Society; net
income, £82. The church is an ancient edifice, chiefly
in the early English style, with a tower surmounted by
a spire; on the south is a fine Norman doorway. There
is a place of worship for Independents.
Walridge
WALRIDGE, a township, in the parish of Stamfordham, union of Castle ward, N. E. division of
Tindale ward, S. division of Northumberland, 4½
miles (N. N. W.) from Slamfordham; containing 4 inhabitants, and comprising 147a. 3r. 30p. The tithes
have been commuted for £2. 17.
Walsall (St. Matthew)
WALSALL (St. Matthew), a parish, and the
head of a union, in the S.
division of the hundred of
Offlow and of the county
of Stafford; comprising the
market-town and newly-enfranchised borough of Walsall, 18 miles (S. E. by S.)
from Stafford, and 118 (N.
W.) from London; and containing 20,852 inhabitants,
of whom 7395 are in the
township of the old borough, and 13,457 in that of
Walsall-Foreign, into which numerous streets of the
town extend. This place is supposed to have derived
its name, in various ancient records written Whaleshall
and Walshule, from its situation in or near an extensive
forest, resorted to by the Druids for the celebration of
their religious rites, and in which the Saxons subsequently erected a temple to their god Woden, from
which the appellation of the town of Wednesbury, in the
vicinity, is deduced. In the early part of the 10th
century, Walsall was fortified by Ethelfleda, daughter of
Alfred the Great, and Countess of Mercia, probably
about the same time that she built a castle at Stafford.
At the Conquest, it was retained by William, and continued to be a royal demesne for nearly 20 years, till
given by that king to Robert, son of Asculfus, who had
accompanied him to Britain. In the time of Henry III.
it was held in fee-farm by William Rufus, and subsequently was owned by the Earl of Warwick, the "Kingmaker." Henry VII. and Henry VIII. afterwards possessed it, and the latter granted it to John Dudley,
Duke of Northumberland, on whose execution the manor
was conferred by Mary upon the Wilbrahams, from whom
it descended to the family of the present owner the
Earl of Bradford. Walsall is not connected with any
events of historical interest: Queen Elizabeth, in one of
her tours through the country, visited it, and affixed the
royal seal and signature at Walshale, on the 13th of
July, in the 28th year of her reign, to a deed now preserved in the corporation archives, containing a grant
of certain lands to the town. In 1643, Henrietta Maria,
Queen of Charles I., remained here for a short time previously to joining the king at Edge-Hill; and Charles II.,
on his road from Boscobel to the coast, found an asylum
at Bently Hall, about a mile distant.

Seal and Arms.
The town is situated on the summit and acclivities of
a limestone rock, and is watered by a small brook called
by Erdeswick "Walsal water," which falls into the river
Tame a little below the town. It contains several regular
and spacious streets, in some of which are handsome
houses of modern erection, many of them of a superior
description. The environs are interesting, and contain
some pleasant villas, and much beautiful and varied
scenery. The town is well paved, and lighted with gas
under the superintendence of the corporation, and is
amply supplied with water. A subscription library was
established in 1800; and a handsome edifice containing
reading and news rooms, ornamented with a Doric
colonnade 30 feet high, has been erected. The principal
hotel, a very spacious building, has been beautified at a
considerable expense, and is adorned with a fine portico
formed of pillars that once belonged to Fisherwick, the
noble mansion of Lord Donegal.
The chief articles of trade and manufacture are bridlebits, stirrups, spurs, saddle-trees, and every kind of
saddlers' ironmongery; buckles, snuffers, spoons, and
various other sorts of hardware; coach harness and
furniture, plated ware, locks, chain-curbs, dog-chains,
and other articles, some of which are brought into the
town and sold by factors. Many mercantile houses have
been established here, having an extensive business with
America and other countries; and a considerable hometrade is of course carried on. A manufactory for Herbert's patent progressive corn-mills has been erected
within four miles of the town, where one of these mills
is in operation. There are several brass and iron foundries, of which the iron-foundry at Goscote is the most
important, as well as the oldest, in the district; steamengines of every power, cylinders, and cannon, besides
the various smaller articles of cast-iron, are founded here
upon the most improved principles. A good trade is
carried on in malt: in the vicinity are large limestonequarries; and some extensive mines of coal and ironstone, with both which the neighbourhood abounds,
have lately been opened at the Birchills and near Bloxwich, causing the population to increase rapidly. The
situation of the town, in the north-eastern part of a large
mining and manufacturing district, gives it many advantages. A branch of the Old Birmingham canal, which
comes up to the west end of the town, and the Wyrley
and Essington canal, which passes within a mile north
of it, now united, afford every facility of inland navigation; and about a mile distant, is the Walsall station of
the Liverpool and Birmingham railway. In 1846 an act
was passed for a railway from this station to Lichfield
and Wichnor, 16¾ miles long. The market is on Tuesday and Saturday. Fairs are held on February 24th;
Whit-Tuesday, a pleasure-fair; and the Tuesday before
Michaelmas-day, chiefly for horses, cattle, and cheese.
The inhabitants enjoy several immunities by prescription. Henry I. bestowed upon them exemption from
toll throughout England, and from serving upon juries
out of the limits of the "borough and foreign;" and
the guilds of St. John the Baptist, and of Our Lady,
appear to have been ancient establishments, exercising
various rights and privileges. The earliest existing
charter of incorporation was granted in the 3rd of
Charles I., and confirmed by Charles II. in the 13th of
his reign. The government is now vested in a mayor,
six aldermen, and 18 councillors, under the act 5th and
6th of William IV., cap. 76; the borough is divided into
three wards, and the number of magistrates is nine. By
the act 2nd of William IV., cap. 45, Walsall was constituted a parliamentary borough, with the privilege of
returning one member: the right of election is in the
£ 10 householders of the whole parish, with the exception of a small detached part: the mayor is returning
officer. The recorder holds quarterly courts of session
for all offences not capital; and the lord of the manor
has an annual court leet, at which constables and other
officers are appointed: the powers of the county debtcourt of Walsall, established in 1847, extend over the
registration-district of Walsall. The town-hall is a handsome and rather ancient edifice, well adapted to its purpose. The common gaol, until lately a very small building, has been enlarged. The parish comprises about
7800 acres, of which about two-fifths are arable, and the
remainder meadow and pasture.
The living is a vicarage, valued in the king's books
at £10. 19. 7.; patron, the Earl of Bradford, who, with
Col. Walhouse, is impropriator. The great tithes have
been commuted for £445, and the small for £299: the
vicar has a glebe of 33 acres. The church, an ancient
and spacious cruciform structure, with several chapels
in the aisles, was, with the exception of the tower and
chancel, which latter has undergone several alterations,
taken down and rebuilt in the later English style, in
1821, at an expense of £20,000. It occupies a commanding situation on the summit of the rock on which
the town is built; and the tower, which is in fine proportion, and surmounted by a lofty spire, forms a conspicuous object in the distant view of Walsall. St.
Paul's chapel, a handsome edifice in the Grecian style,
was erected by the governors of the grammar school,
who, having sold some mines under part of the land
belonging to that establishment, in 1797, obtained an
act of parliament for applying part of the purchase
money to the erection of the chapel, which was completed in 1826. The living is a perpetual curacy, in the
patronage of the governors, who appoint the head master
of the school to the office of minister; net income, £50.
St. Peter's district church, erected in 1840, at the end of
Stafford-street, on a site given by Lord Hatherton, is in
the early English style, and contains 1141 sittings, of
which 700 are free; of the cost, £3500, the Earl of
Bradford contributed £1000. The living is a perpetual
curacy, in the patronage of the Vicar of Walsall, and is
endowed with the interest of £2000, with a glebe-house.
There are places of worship for Independents, Wesleyans,
and Unitarians, and two Roman Catholic chapels, one of
which is a handsome Grecian building.
The free grammar school, in Park-street, was established in 1557, by Queen Mary, who endowed it with
land belonging to the guilds and chantries that had
existed here previously to the Dissolution, and placed it
under the control of certain governors, whom she incorporated. The income is about £780 per annum;
and the premises, built a few years since, are substantial
and commodious. Bishop Hough received the rudiments of his education in the establishment. An English
school is maintained from the same funds, in the old
school buildings in the churchyard. The Blue-coat
charity school, which was endowed with £14 a year,
has been incorporated with a national school: a national school attached to St. Peter's Church, erected at
a cost of £600, was opened in 1840; and there is
another at Walsall-Wood, partly supported by an annual
grant of £35 from the governors of the grammar school.
Some almshouses, founded by John Harper in the reign
of James I., and endowed with land producing £40 per
annum, were rebuilt in 1790 by the Rev. Mr. Rutter,
then vicar, for the reception of six aged widows, among
whom £10 per quarter are divided. Almshouses were
erected and endowed in 1825, for eleven aged widows;
to which purpose a dole of one penny, paid by the corporation to every person in the parishes of Walsall and
Rushall, on the eve of the Epiphany, was appropriated.
In the reign of Henry VI., Thomas Mollesley gave the
corporation a manor and estates in the county of Warwick, which now constitute part of their extensive possessions. There are also numerous charitable bequests
for apprenticing children, and for distribution among
the indigent. The poor-law union of Walsall comprises
8 parishes or places, and contains a population of 34,274.
Near the town is a powerful chalybeate spring called
Alum Well, on the site of the ancient manor-house, of
which the moat still remains.
Walsall-Foreign
WALSALL-FOREIGN, a township, in the parish
and union of Walsall, S. division of the hundred of
Offlow and of the county of Stafford, 3½ miles (N.)
from Walsall, on the road to Lichfield; containing 13,457
inhabitants. It comprises the hamlets of Great and
Little Bloxwich, Birchills, Coldmore, Horden, WalsallWood, and the Windmill-Streets, in the manor of Walsall; and Goscote, which is a manor of itself. The
living of Walsall-Wood is a perpetual curacy, in the
patronage of the Vicar of Walsall, and has a net income
of £50, with a glebe-house. The church, dedicated to
St. John, was built in 1837, at a cost of £1000, on a
site given by the Earl of Bradford, who also contributed
£300; the remaining £700 were obtained by grants
from societies. It contains 430 sittings, all of which,
with the exception of 88, are free. At Bloxwich is
another incumbency.
Walsden
WALSDEN, an ecclesiastical parish, in the parochial
chapelry and poor-law union of Todmorden, parish of
Rochdale, hundred of Salford, S. division of Lancashire, 5 miles (N. E.) from Rochdale; containing 3383
inhabitants. It lies on the road from Todmorden to
Rochdale, and comprises 3398 acres, of which the soil is
various, a large part moorland and pasture. The population is chiefly employed in factories, and there are also
coal-mines and stone-quarries. The Rochdale canal and
the Manchester and Leeds railway pass through. Todmorden and Littleborough are about equidistant from
the village, in which it is contemplated to establish a
post-office, owing to the increasing importance of the
place. The district of Walsden was constituted in July
1845, under the act 6th and 7th Victoria, cap. 37; and
in 1848, on the consecration of the church, became a
parish conformably with the provisions of that act. The
edifice is dedicated to St. Peter, and is in the early
English style, having a nave, aisles, and chancel, with a
tower and spire 150 feet in height. A parochial schoolhouse, with a steep pitched roof, was completed in June
1848. Both buildings stand on the Henshaw estate, the
property of John Crossley, of Scaitcliffe, Esq., M.A.,
who kindly presented the sites. The living is a perpetual curacy, in the patronage of the Crown and the
Bishop of Manchester, alternately; income, £150.
Walsham-Le-Willows (St. Mary)
WALSHAM-LE-WILLOWS (St. Mary), a parish,
in the union of Stow, hundred of Blackbourn, W.
division of Suffolk, 4½ miles (E. by N.) from Ixworth;
containing 1265 inhabitants. The village is situated in
a picturesque valley, and in the immediate vicinity are
several handsome villas with grounds tastefully laid out.
The living is a perpetual curacy; net income, £93; patron and impropriator, S. Golding, Esq. The church
is a spacious structure in the decorated English style,
with a square embattled tower; the nave is lighted by
clerestory windows, and the roof is richly groined. Here
are places of worship for Baptists, Independents, and
Wesleyans; and a national school. At the inclosure,
100 acres of land were awarded to the poor, of which
about 80 are let in small lots to them, with 30 more by
Messrs. Wilkinson and Golding; there are also 50 acres
for the repair of the church, and for distributing fuel
and clothing among the poor. Near the church is an
old mansion, formerly a priory subordinate to Ixworth
Abbey, and in which, while under repair, several relics
of antiquity have been found.
Walsham, North (St. Mary)
WALSHAM, NORTH (St. Mary), a market-town
and parish, in the union of Erpingham, hundred of
Tunstead, E. division of Norfolk, 15 miles (N. N. E.)
from Norwich, and 124 (N. E. by N.) from London;
containing 2655 inhabitants. In the year 1600, nearly
the whole of this town was destroyed by a fire, which,
although it continued but three hours, consumed property of the value of £20,000. It is situated on an
eminence, on the road from Cromer to Norwich, and
consists of three streets diverging from a central area,
in which stands the church; the town is paved, and
lighted with gas, and the inhabitants are well supplied
with water. A canal passes through the parish, a short
distance north-east of the town, in its course from
Antingham; and the river Ant, not far distant, is navigable to the sea at Yarmouth. The market, which is
chiefly for corn, is on Thursday: a fair is held on the
day before and on Holy-Thursday, for cattle and horses;
and statute-fairs for hiring servants take place on the
two Thursdays before Old Michaelmas-day. The market-cross, erected by Bishop Thirlby in the reign of
Edward VI., was repaired after the great fire in 1600,
by Bishop Redman. Two courts baron occur annually,
one of the Bishop of Norwich, and the other of Lord
Suffield; and the magistrates hold petty-sessions every
Thursday. The powers of the county debt-court of
North Walsbam, established in 1847, extend over the
registration-district of Tunstead and Happing, and part
of that of Erpingham. The parish comprises 4172a.
37p., of which about 400 acres are pasture and gardenground, 150 woodland and plantations, and the remainder arable, with the exception of 200 acres not yet
brought into cultivation.
The living is a vicarage, with the rectory of Antingham St. Margaret annexed, valued in the king's books at
£8; net income, £336; patron and appropriator, the
Bishop: the glebe comprises 2 acres, with a house. The
church is a spacious and elegant structure, chiefly in
the later English style; on the south side of the chancel
are three sedilia of stone, and a piscina of elegant design.
The tower, which was 147 feet high, fell down in the
year 1724, and is in ruins. In the chancel is a monument to Sir William Paston, Knt., a native of the town,
and founder of the free grammar school; it was erected
during his life, and is surmounted by a recumbent figure
in armour. There are places of worship for Wesleyans,
the Society of Friends, Independents, and Primitive
Methodists. The grammar school was instituted in 1606,
for the education of 40 sons of residents in any of the
hundreds of North and South Erpingham, Happing,
Tunstead, and Flegg; and was endowed by the fotinder
with the rents of certain estates at Horsey and Walcot,
to the amount of £250 per annum. The school contains a good library, bequeathed by the Rev. Richard
Berney, in 1787; and a monthly lecturer receives £12. 12.
per annum out of the school funds. Archbishop Tenison, Bishop Hoadly, and Admiral Lord Nelson received
the rudiments of their education in the establishment.
A national school is supported; and £30 per annum,
the rent of an allotment of waste land, is expended
among the poor. About a mile south of the town is a
stone cross, erected to commemorate a victory obtained
in 1382, by Spencer, Bishop of Norwich, over some
rebels headed by a dyer named Litester.
Walsham, South
WALSHAM, SOUTH, in the union of Blofield,
hundred of Walsham, E. division of Norfolk, 3 miles
(N. W. by W.) from Acle; comprising the parishes of
St. Lawrence and St. Mary, and containing 613 inhabitants, of whom 388 are in St. Mary's. This district is
bounded on the north by the river Bure. It was anciently of more importance than at present, and during
the prosperity of St. Benedict's Abbey on the opposite
side of the river, the town was of tolerable extent; after
the dissolution of that establishment it fell into decay,
and subsequently degenerated into a mere village. The
parish of St. Lawrence comprises 1805a. 29p., and that
of St. Mary 1250a. 32p. The living of St. Lawrence's
parish is a rectory, valued in the king's books at £13.
6. 8., and in the gift of Queen's College, Cambridge.
The tithes have been commuted for £22. 6. payable to
the Bishop of Ely, and £486. 10. to the rector; the
glebe comprises 57½ acres, and the parsonage-house has
been greatly improved by the present rector, the Rev.
J. Toplis, B.D. St. Mary's is a discharged vicarage,
valued in the king's books at £5, and in the patronage
of the Trustees of the Old Men's hospital at Norwich,
who are impropriators. The great tithes have been commuted for £270, and the vicarial for £159. 16.; the
glebe comprises 36 acres, with a small house. The
church of St. Lawrence, in the same churchyard as that
of St. Mary, and which had been repaired at an expense
of £850 in 1811, was destroyed by an accidental fire in
1827; the chancel was repaired and enlarged in 1832,
and opened for divine service, but the tower and nave
are still in ruins. St. Mary's church is a handsome
structure in the decorated and later English styles, with
a square embattled tower. Richard Harrold, in 1718,
bequeathed property now let for about £20 per annum,
for apprenticing children; and £34 a year, the rental
of some waste land awarded under an inclosure act in
the 41st of George III., are expended among the poor.
Walshford.—See Ribston, Great.
WALSHFORD.—See Ribston, Great.
Walsingham, Durham.—See Wolsingham.
WALSINGHAM, Durham.—See Wolsingham.
Walsingham, Great
WALSINGHAM, GREAT, a parish, in the union of
Walsingham, hundred of North Greenhoe, W. division of Norfolk, 1 mile (N. by E.) from Little Walsingham; comprising the ancient parishes of All Saints
and St. Peter, and containing 426 inhabitants. This
place, which is also called Old Walsingham, was formerly of considerable importance. The parish is situated in the valley of the Stiffkey river, on the road from
Fakenham to Wells; and comprises 2407a. 2r. 24p., of
which about 2250 acres are arable, 100 meadow and
pasture, and 50 woodland: the scenery is pleasing. The
living is a perpetual curacy; net income, £100; patron
and impropriator, the Rev. D. H. Lee Warner: the
tithes were commuted for land in 1808. The church
is in the later English style of architecture, with a square
embattled tower at the west end, and is remarkable for
its fine proportions. In the year 1658, from 40 to 50
Roman urns were dug up in a field near the village;
and coins of the same people have been frequently
discovered.
Walsingham, Little (St. Mary)
WALSINGHAM, LITTLE (St. Mary), a parish,
the head of a union, and formerly a market-town, in
the hundred of North Greenhoe, W. division of
Norfolk, 28 miles (N. W.) from Norwich, and 114
(N. N. E.) from London; containing 1155 inhabitants.
This place, sometimes denominated New Walsingham,
was of great celebrity, for many centuries, as possessing
a shrine of the Virgin, or Our Lady of Walsingham,
founded in 1061 by the widow of Ricoldie Faverches,
whose son, Sir Galfridus, confirmed her endowment, and
established a monastery for Augustine canons. The institution became immensely rich, and at the Dissolution
its revenue was £446. 14. 4., exclusively of the valuable
offerings made by the numerous devotees of all nations
who had visited the shrine, and which are said to have
equalled those presented at the shrine of Our Lady of
Loretto, in Italy, and that of St. Thomas à Becket at
Canterbury. Among the illustrious visitants were
several of the kings and queens of England, including
Henry VIII., who, in the second year of his reign,
walked hither barefoot from Barsham, to present a necklace to the image. The venerable remains of this once
noble pile are situated in the midst of a grove of stately
trees, in the pleasure-grounds of the Rev. D. H. Lee
Warner, and contiguous to a fine stream of water, over
which is a handsome bridge. They chiefly consist of
the great western portal, a lofty and magnificent arch,
75 feet high, which formed part of the conventual church;
the spacious refectory, 78 feet by 27, with walls 26½ feet
in height; a portion of the cloisters; and a stone bath
with two wells called St. Mary's, or the Wishing Wells,
near which is a Norman arch with zigzag mouldings,
removed hither from the adjacent mansion as an ornamental object. At Walsingham was also a house of
Grey friars, founded in 1346 by Elizabeth de Burgo,
Countess of Clare. The buildings occupied an area of
about seven acres, and there are considerable remains
of the refectory, cloisters, and other portions of the
conventual edifice, some of the windows being nearly
perfect.
The town is situated in a vale, surrounded by bold
heights; the inhabitants are supplied with water from
wells. A fair is held on the second Friday after WhitMonday, and statute-fairs on the Friday before, and the
Friday after, Michaelmas-day. The general quarter-sessions for the county take place here by adjournment,
and petty-sessions on the first Monday in the month:
the powers of the county debt-court of Little Walsingham, established in 1847, extend over the registrationdistrict of Walsingham, and part of that of Docking.
The Bridewell, or house of correction, which was anciently
an hospital for lepers, founded in 1486, has been considerably enlarged. The parish comprises by measurement
976 acres, and the lands are watered by a small stream
that flows near the town, and falls into the sea within
a few miles. The neighbourhood was formerly noted for
the growth of saffron. The living is a perpetual curacy;
net income, £100, with a glebe of 9 acres, and a handsome house; patron, the Rev. Mr. Warner: the tithes
were commuted for land in 1808. The church is a spacious structure in the later English style, with a square
embattled tower surmounted by a lofty spire: it contains
a very ancient and beautiful font, of octagonal form, resting on a plinth of four ornamented steps, and representing,
in compartments, the Seven Sacraments of the Church of
Rome, and the Crucifixion. There are places of worship
for Independents, Primitive Methodists, and Wesleyans.
The free grammar school was founded in 1639, by
Richard Bond, who endowed it with £1040, which were
vested in the purchase of an estate at Great Snoring,
producing £110 per annum for the maintenance of a
master and usher to teach 30 boys. Richard Brown in
1630 bequeathed £400 to purchase land, and William
Cleave in 1665 gave the rent of 20 acres, together worth
£ 100 per annum, for distribution among the poor. Lady
Townshend left 6 acres, valued at £20 a year, for apprenticing children. The union of Walsingham comprises 50
parishes or places, and contains a population of 20,960.
The place confers the title of Baron on the family of De
Grey.
Walsoken (All Saints)
WALSOKEN (All Saints), a parish, in the union
of Wisbech, hundred of Freebridge-Marshland,
W. division of Norfolk; containing 2562 inhabitants.
It comprises about 4500 acres. The village, which joins
the town of Wisbech by a bridge over a canal, is about
a mile in length; the surrounding scenery is pleasingly
varied, and the walks are much frequented. The living
is a rectory, valued in the king's books at £30. 13. 4.,
and in the gift of the Rev. W. Crockford: the tithes
have been commuted for £1234, and the glebe comprises
30 acres, with a house. The church is chiefly in the
Norman style, with an embattled tower surmounted by
a lofty spire of early English character. The nave is
embellished with well-sculptured figures of David and
Solomon, and an interesting painting representing the
Judgment of the latter; the chancel is divided from the
nave by a finely-pointed arch, and at the extremity of
each aisle is a chapel. The Primitive Methodists have
a place of worship. Land producing £70 per annum
has been bequeathed to the poor. Archbishop Herring
was born here.