CLIVIGER
Clyvechir, 1258; Clyuacher, 1290.
The township of Cliviger extends south-eastward
from Burnley to the border of Yorkshire, the northeast boundary being marked by the River Brun, while
the Lancashire Calder flows north-west through the
centre. The south-eastern half of the township is
occupied by lofty moorlands; from Stiperden Moor
in the north-east, where 1,573 ft. is attained at the
county boundary, the surface descends to Calder
Head, from which point the Lancashire Calder flows
north-west and the Yorkshire Calder south-east;
then the hills rise again to the west, as Heald Moor
and Deerplay or Dirpley Moor, attaining 1,470 ft. at
Thieveley Pike. On this height there was formerly
a beacon. The highest land is mostly within the
township, there being a downward slope towards
Yorkshire and Todmorden. From the moorlands
the surface descends towards the north-west, being
broken by many cloughs, down which flow brooks to
augment the main streams. On the right bank of
the Calder stands the village of Holme with its
chapel; lower down is Walk Mill, where a modern
hamlet has risen around a factory; and then Barcroft,
with Cliviger Mill adjacent. On the left bank of
the same river are Thieveley, Stonehouse and Dineley,
these last being divided by Easden Clough; Buck
Clough, Grimshaw, and Hole House lie to the north
of Dineley, and Everage Clough marks the northern
limit on this side. On the Worsthorne boundary the
Brun descends through Shedden Clough, having on
its left bank Ormerod, by which is Salterford. Near
Holme is Helly Platt, and between Holme and
Ormerod stand the hamlets of Overtown and Mere
Clough. In the south-west corner of the township
is Red Moss. The area is 6,818 acres, but in 1897
part of the township called Cornholme or Portsmouth, adjoining Todmorden, was added to that
township and taken into Yorkshire, the area of the
reduced township of Cliviger being 6,724 acres,
including 10 of inland water. The population of
this in 1901 was 1,669.
The principal road is that which leads from
Burnley through the Calder Valley to Todmorden,
with branches southward to Bacup and Rawtenstall;
and there is a parallel road on high ground to the
north, in one part called the Long Causeway, from
Burnley by Mere Clough to Hebden Bridge. A
cross road from Walk Mill to Mere Clough continues
by Salterford Bridge into Worsthorne. The Burnley
and Todmorden branch of the Lancashire and Yorkshire railway runs along near the first-named highway, and has stations at Holme in the centre of the
township, and at Portsmouth on the extreme southeast boundary.
There are collieries and quarries in the township,
and cotton-mills at Walk Mill and Cornholme. The
soil is clay, with shale subsoil, and the land is chiefly
used for pasturage. (fn. 1)
There is a parish council.
An earthwork of uncertain age, called the Old
Dyke, crosses Heald Moor from north-west to southeast, and was the traditional limit of Rossendale
Forest. (fn. 2) Flint instruments and other remains of the
prehistoric period have been discovered; and a large
horde of Roman coins was found at Mere Clough in
1695, and other Roman remains more recently. (fn. 3) A
number of mediaeval crosses, or pedestals, remain. (fn. 4)
The most noteworthy persons springing from
Cliviger were Dr. William Whitaker, a famous
Elizabethan divine, and Dr. Thomas Dunham
Whitaker, author of the histories of Whalley, Richmondshire and Craven, who are mentioned below in
the account of Holme.
Manor
The lords of Clitheroe at an early time
granted Cliviger to the Elland family,
and about 1160 a plough-land in Cliviger,
possibly the whole of the township, was granted to
the newly-founded Kirkstall
Abbey. (fn. 5) The grantor was
perhaps Hugh de Elland, for
Robert de Lacy son of the
founder of Kirkstall confirmed
to the house whatever he
held in Cliviger which Hugh
de Elland father of Richard
held of his father, rendering
20s. rent. (fn. 6) Afterwards Richard
de Elland reclaimed Cliviger,
where the monks had made a
grange, and the abbot finding
his claim to be just, though
the reason for it is not given,
surrendered it to Robert de Lacy. (fn. 7) It then seems to
have been granted by Richard to his son Henry de
Elland, (fn. 8) who held it of his brother Hugh, and afterwards gave it to the abbey, desiring his body to
be buried in the abbey church. (fn. 9) This grant was
confirmed by Roger de Lacy, then lord of Clitheroe, (fn. 10)
and the monks held Cliviger till 1287, when they
again surrendered it to the chief lord. Henry de
Lacy promised them a certain rent in lieu of it, (fn. 11)
and in 1294 he obtained the king's charter of free
warren in his demesne lands in Cliviger. (fn. 12) The
accounts of 1296 show receipts of over £15 from
this place. (fn. 13) In 1311 Henry de Lacy held in Cliviger
80 acres demised to tenants at will at the usual rent
of 4d. an acre, and a water-mill worth 20s. a year.
The agistment of beasts on the common pasture was
worth 1s. There were thirty-three free tenants,
paying in all £8 19s. 3½d. (fn. 14) The net sum received
in 1323 was £13 17s. 1½d. (fn. 15)

Kirkstall Abbey. Azure three swords points downwards argent hilted or.
The Abbots of Kirkstall had made grants from time
to time, (fn. 16) and Henry de Lacy ratified or added to
these grants; in 1292 he gave to Gilbert son of
Michael de la Legh the lands lately belonging to
Adam de Hargreaves, (fn. 17) and in 1302 he added other
of Adam's lands and those of Ellis de Brownbirks,
6s. 8d. to be paid yearly. (fn. 18) In 1302 also he gave to
William de Middlemore and Margery his wife the
lands lately held of the Abbot of Kirkstall by Robert
del Holme, at a rent of 5s. 6d. (fn. 19) In 1311 the free
tenants held 598 acres, the largest holding being that
of the above-named Gilbert de Legh, ancestor of the
Towneley family, who had 140 acres and rendered
46s. 11d. yearly. The complete list is (fn. 20) :—
|
| Acres. | Rent. |
| | s. | d. |
| Dyke del Birches | 10 | 3 | 2 |
| Dyke son of Mocock de Brerecroft | 20 | 6 | 0(a) |
| Adam del Bridge | 20 | 1 | 7½ |
| Richard de Colneknoll | 6 | 2 | 0 |
| Henry de Cowhope | 10 | 3 | 4 |
| William de Dinelay | 16 | 5 | 0 |
| Stephen del Grange | 18 | 6 | 6½ |
| Adam de Grimshaw | 12 | 3 | 2 |
| Richard de Grimshaw | 10 | 3 | 1 |
| John de Hargreaves | 10 | 7 | 0½ |
| Henry de Healey | 8 | 1 | 5 |
| Robert del Holme | 8 | 7 | 0 |
| Adam de Legh | 60 | 18 | 1½ |
| Gilbert de Legh | 140 | 46 | 11 |
| John de Legh | 20 | 4 | 7 |
| Jordan de Lichtness | 1½ | 0 | 6 |
| Poke de Lomclough | 13 | 4 | 6 |
| Mocock de Lowe | 10 | 1 | 6½ |
| Mocock del Mereclough | 6 | 1 | 0 |
| William de Middlemore | 60 | 21 | 0 |
| Adam de Ormerod | 8 | 1 | 1½(b) |
| Tille de Ormerod | 20 | 0 | 2 |
| Adam the Smith | 16 | 3 | 8(c) |
| William Topping | 6 | 2 | 0 |
| Margery de Wolpitgreave | 6 | 2 | 0 |
| Dyke del Yate | 16 | 4 | 6 |
| John del Yate | 6 | 0 | 6 |
| John son of Gilbert | 10 | 1 | 6½ |
| Henry son of Hobkin | 17½ | 4 | 6 |
| Geoffrey son of John, 1 messuage | 2 | 1 | 1½ |
| John son of Matthew | 20 | 5 | 4(d) |
| Adam son of Robert | 6 | 2 | 0 |
| William son of Robert | 6 | 2 | 0 |
There does not seem to have been any manor
properly so called, but the Towneley holding, that of
Legh augmented by a number of purchases, (fn. 21) was
known as the manor of CLIVIGER as early as 1381,
when Gilbert de Legh grandson of the tenant of
1311 was found to hold it of the duke in socage,
rendering £4 15s. a year on St. Giles's Day. (fn. 22) His
widow Alice in 1388 held only certain lands in
socage, paying 12s. 8½d. for all services. (fn. 23) The
'manor' continued to be recorded in the Towneley
inquisitions, recoveries (fn. 24) and other deeds down to the
middle of the 18th century, but it does not appear
that courts were held or any rights of lordship exercised.
DINELEY is named soon after 1218, when Henry
son of Richard de Elland gave land there to Robert
son of Siward de Worsthorne. (fn. 25) Later it was held by
a family who had taken a surname from it. (fn. 26) It descended through an heiress or by purchase to the Dutton
branch of the Towneleys, (fn. 27) and was by Richard Townley sold in 1493 to Lawrence Townley of Barnside. (fn. 28)
He fifteen years afterwards sold it to Sir John
Towneley of Towneley, (fn. 29) and from that time it descended with the principal estate or manor. The
estate of a junior family of Legh was also acquired by
the Towneleys, (fn. 30) and that of the Taylor family. (fn. 31)
HOLME (fn. 32) became the property of the Whitaker
family about the 15th century, (fn. 33) and has continued
to descend regularly till the present time. (fn. 34) A settlement of ten messuages, &c.,
was made in 1583. (fn. 35) William
Whitaker died in 1641 holding the capital messuage called
Holme, with 34 acres of land,
and other messuages called
Thieveley, Grimshaw and
Backclough with 42 acres.
The whole was held of the
king as of his castle of Clitheroe in socage by a rent of
23s. 7½d. Thomas Whitaker
son and heir of William was
ten years old. (fn. 36) Two of the
family attained distinction. Dr. William Whitaker,
a younger son of Thomas Whitaker, who died in
1595, was one of the leading Protestant divines in
the time of Elizabeth. Through Lord Burghley's
influence he became Master of St. John's College,
Cambridge, in 1586, having been Regius Professor
in the university since 1580, and was made canon of
Canterbury in 1585, in which year he died. He
published numerous works, including a reply to
Bellarmine, and left others in manuscript; all are of
the extreme Calvinistic school in doctrine, and though
he conformed to the queen's authority in matters of
ceremonial he was favourable to the Puritans. (fn. 37)
Dr. Thomas Dunham Whitaker, the often quoted
author of the History of Whalley, has been noticed in
the accounts of the churches of Blackburn and Whalley, of which he was vicar. He died in 1821, and
was buried in the chapel at Holme. (fn. 38)

Whitaker of Holme. Sable three mascles argent.
The Holme is a picturesque two-story stonebuilt house, with stone-slated roofs, standing amidst
beautiful scenery in the vale of Cliviger, facing
south. The plan follows the usual type of central
hall and projecting end-wings, but in the course
of time and as the result of rebuildings and alterations has lost most of its original features, though
retaining many of the characteristics of the earlier
building. It is said to have been constructed originally of wood, but the middle and east wings appear
to have been rebuilt in stone about the year 1603 or
before, (fn. 39) the west wing, however, which is wider
than the other, remaining of wood till 1717. The
end-wings had originally hipped roofs, but in a later
restoration stone gables were substituted and a
projecting central one-story porch added. The
windows, which are mostly new, are long low
mullioned openings without transoms but with
hood moulds, those in the west wing having ten lights
on each floor and those in the east eight lights each.
There is also an upper window of ten lights in the
middle wing over the hall. Some work appears to
have been done in 1786, which date is on a spouthead on the east wing, and in 1854 a north-east wing
was added at the back. The interior of the house
is almost wholly modernized, but the rooms are low
and picturesque and contain some old furniture
belonging to Dr. Whitaker.
BARCROFT was held by a family of that name. (fn. 40)
William Barcroft died in 1525 holding nine messuages, &c., in Cliviger and Worsthorne of the king as
duke in socage by a rent of 20s. 5d.; he had another
messuage in Cliviger called Hole House. His heir
was a son Robert, aged forty or more. (fn. 41) A later
Robert Barcroft died in 1612 holding various
messuages in Cliviger of the king in socage by a rent
of 23s. 9d. and other estates in Worsthorne,
Hurstwood and Blackburn. (fn. 42) His son William, then
fifty-six years old, died in 1621 holding similarly and
leaving a son Robert, aged twenty-seven. (fn. 43) Robert
Barcroft in 1631 compounded
for having declined knighthood
by a fine of £13 6s. 6s. 8d. (fn. 44)
He was one of the lay members of the Presbyterian Classis
formed in 1646, but died the
following year. (fn. 45) The estate
descended to his brother
Thomas Barcroft, who recorded a pedigree in 1664. (fn. 46)
He died in 1668, leaving
several daughters to inherit.
Susan, daughter by his first
marriage, was wife of Peter
Ormerod of Ormerod; but most of the estate was
devised to the issue of the second marriage—Elizabeth wife of Henry
Bradshaw of Marple;
Sarah wife of Nicholas
Townley of Royle;
Ruth wife of Peter
Leigh of Norbury
Booths; and Anne
wife of John Brockholes of Claughton
near Garstang. A
large part of the estate
became united with
Royle and has descended with it. The
house and demesne
descended through
Bradshaw to Isherwood and was in 1795
sold to Charles Towneley of Towneley. (fn. 47) A
tradition of the district says that one of
the Barcrofts, alleging
that his elder brother
was a lunatic, put him
in confinement, where
he became mad, and
seized the estate himself; but according to
'the Idiot's curse' the lands soon passed away to
strangers. (fn. 48)

Barcroft of Barcroft Argent a lion rampant sable.

Plan of Barcroft Hall
BARCROFT HALL is situated on the outskirts
of Towneley Park near the north-west boundary of
the township and is a massively built two-story house
of gritstone with projecting end-wings and stoneslated roofs. The gables are quite plain without
coping or ornaments, and the original windows in the
principal front, which faces north, are small, giving
an appearance of great solidity to the elevation.
The house consists of the usual arrangement of
central hall with kitchen and offices at the east and the
living rooms in the west wing, but modern alterations have deprived the interior of much of its interest.
The house is now divided into two and an addition has
been made at the east end, which, with the original
kitchen wing, now forms a separate dwelling. The
present kitchen is in the basement of the west wing,
which owing to the fall of the ground and the
raising of the floor is sufficiently lofty, and this end
of the house is otherwise modernized, sash windows
having been inserted in the ground floor rooms, as
also in the east wing, on the north front. The
building is said to be of late 16th-century date and
the east wing is stated to be the older part, but the
evidence of the masonry is inconclusive, and it is likely
enough that the house was erected substantially on
the present lines all at one time. The total length
of the front is about 80 ft., the end wings, which
project 16 ft., being of slightly different width and
36 ft. 9 in. apart, with a central projecting gabled
porch the height of both stories.
The hall is now entered from the porch in the
middle of the north side, but the original entrance,
which is built up, was by the door to the screens
in the north-east corner. Its total length including
the passage is 29 ft. and its width 24 ft. 4 in., but the
fireplace at the west end has an ingle-nook 7 ft. 6 in.
deep and 16 ft. 6 in. wide open to the hall by an
arch 13 ft. wide, which practically increases the length
of the room to 36 ft. From the north-west corner
a mutilated spiral stone staircase leads to the upper
floors, and at the south end of the screens the old
doorway still remains, retaining its original oak nailstudded door. The screen itself, however, and the
front of the gallery were removed about 1901, (fn. 49) though
the old gallery floor remains and modern panelling
and a balustrade have been erected altogether out of
keeping with the rest of the room. The hall, however, retains some of its ancient features. It is lit on
the south side by a long mullioned and transomed
window of ten lights and there is a two-light window
to the ingle-nook and one of four lights high up in
the north-east corner above the gallery. The floor
is flagged, and the roof, which is 12 ft. 8 in. high to
the underside of the beams, is the original flat one of
oak, with two chamfered beams forming three bays
and divided by intermediate pieces into eight panels.
The high table dated 1613 and with the initials
W. B., S. B. formerly stood under the window on the
south side but is now at Towneley Hall. The porch
has on the outside over the square-headed doorway
the name of William Barcroft and the date 1614,
but this inscription appears to belong to an alteration
in the original plan whereby a square bay window
on the north side was altered to its present purpose,
at the time probably when the doorway at the north
end of the passage was built up. The porch doorway, which has classic detail and a moulded string
immediately above the inscription, is manifestly an
insertion in an older wall, the wider hood mould
of the previously existing window being still in position above. On the inside the opening to the bay is
now filled in with a modern glazed screen forming
an inner doorway.
The rooms in the west wing are almost entirely
modernized and of little interest, one of them, however, on the ground floor having a 17th-century
plaster panel with vine ornament in the ceiling. The
roofs are apparently the old ones restored, and have
clay floors in the roof space in the gables. At the
back the wings are flush with the south wall of the
hall and the east gable has been rebuilt, but though
the windows are more numerous than on the front
the elevation is of little interest.
In front of the house is a small grass forecourt
47 ft. by 38 ft. 6 in., inclosed by high stone walls
with moulded copings, and entered in the middle
through a semicircular headed gateway with picturesque stepped gable bearing the date 1636. The
inclosing end walls are set back a few feet from the
inner angles of the wings and project 22 ft. 6 in.
in front of them. The fact of the forecourt being
confined to the middle part of the elevation, leaving
the wings partly outside, adds much to the good
general effect of the front, the ornamental detail
being in this manner more concentrated.
ORMEROD also was held by a family of the same
surname. (fn. 50) John Ormerod died in 1525 holding
of the king as duke four messuages, lands, &c., in
Cliviger in socage by a rent of 2½d. yearly. His son
and heir Peter was twenty-two years of age. (fn. 51) Peter
Ormerod died in 1578 holding similarly and leaving
as heir a son Lawrence, aged fourteen. (fn. 52) Peter
Ormerod of Ormerod and John Ormerod of Cliviger
each paid £10 in 1631 as composition on declining
knighthood. (fn. 53) The estate descended to Lawrence
Ormerod, who died in 1793 (fn. 54) ; his only child,
Charlotte Anne, married John Hargreaves of Goodshaw, and died in 1806, leaving a son, who died in
1826 unmarried, and two daughters, of whom an
account has been given under Bank Hall in Burnley.
Sir John Ormerod Scarlett Thursby, bart., is the
present owner of Ormerod.

Ormerod of Ormerod. Or three bars gules in chief a lion passant of the second.

Thursby, baronet. Argent a cheveron between three lions rampant sable.
Ormerod House is situated at the extreme northwest of the township on the top of a steep declivity
forming the south bank of the River Brun. The
front faces south, and as the ground continues to
slope upwards from the river the building appears
to some disadvantage when approached in the usual
way from higher ground on the south side. The
house is almost entirely modern, but some portions of the original late 16th-century building
remain at the back with their old mullioned
windows, and an inscribed stone is preserved in the
grounds with the date 1595 and the initials of
Lawrence Ormerod, the builder, and Elizabeth
(Barcroft) his wife. The plan of the original building
is now lost, but was probably the usual one of central
and projecting end-wings, and work seems to have
been in progress for some years after the date
mentioned. (fn. 55) An old undated picture preserved at
the house, which is said to represent the building as
it was in 1734, (fn. 56) shows the south front then rebuilt
in a rather plain classic style, with straight parapets,
square-headed sash windows and central porch. This
18th-century elevation now forms the middle part
of the principal elevation, but the house was greatly
added to in the early part of the last century, when
a third gable was added to the front at the east end,
and at the other a considerable extension was made
with two similar gables facing west, the classic style of
the former rebuilding being retained. The house is of
two stories, and is faced with narrow-coursed stones
with chamfered quoins, and the roofs are covered
with stone slates. The entrance is now at the east end
under a porch erected in 1833, and two staircase
towers which form a prominent external feature of
the building belong to the early 19th-century additions. The towers, together with the rest of the
modern work, are architecturally uninteresting, except as they are used to concentrate all the chimneys
of the house, the shafts breaking through the parapets
on each side. (fn. 57) The absence of ordinary chimney
shafts from the rather low-pitched roofs of the
house gives them a very undistinguished appearance.
The interior is almost entirely modern, but there
is a good 17th-century carved oak mantelpiece in
one of the rooms, and there is some furniture of the
same period, including a good four-poster bed. There
is also preserved an old carved oak panel with the
arms of Spenser of Hurstwood, which is said to
have been taken from 'Spenser's House' in Hurstwood village when that building passed to the
Ormerods. (fn. 58)

Ormerod House
Cliviger was used as a surname in the 14th
century, (fn. 59) and other local names occur. (fn. 60) John
Towne of Cliviger in 1631 was among the compounders for having refused knighthood (fn. 61) John
Watson of Cliviger in 1632 was charged £3 a year
in lieu of having two-thirds of his estate sequestered
for recusancy. (fn. 62)
Common rights were in the time of Elizabeth
disputed between the tenants of Cliviger and those
of Accrington (fn. 63) ; also between the freeholders and
copyholders in Cliviger itself. (fn. 64) The coal mines are
mentioned about the same time. (fn. 65) Some parts of
the Crown lands in Cliviger were sold in the time of
James I. (fn. 66)
'By a survey made in 1602 it appears that the
inclosed grounds within Cliviger amounted to 952
acres: in the year 1734 they were increased by
inclosures to 1,324, partly including and partly
excluding 300 acres decreed to be inclosed in 1618;
and, in 1795, a grant was made to the several
freeholders of 300 acres more, all of 8 yards to the
perch; the remainder was granted out for inclosure
in 1809.' (fn. 67)
Thomas Whitaker and John Ormerod were the
landowners who contributed to the subsidy of
1524. (fn. 68) Thomas Whitaker of Holme and the
widow of John Thompson paid in 1543. (fn. 69) John
Towneley, John Holker, Thomas Whitaker and
William Barcroft paid for lands to the subsidy
of 1564 (fn. 70) ; and Thomas Whitaker and Robert
Barcroft to that of 1597. (fn. 71) The same names occur
in the 1626 list, in which Thomas Hurdus and his
wife were entered as convicted recusants. (fn. 72)
In Cliviger freehold in 1666 there were 110
hearths liable to the tax. The largest house was
that of Mr. Thomas Barcroft of Barcroft with six
hearths; two others had five, those of Peter Ormerod
of Ormerod and Thomas Whitaker of Holme. (fn. 73)
Church
The chapel at HOLME (fn. 74) was probably built in the time of Henry VIII,
and at the Reformation fell into disuse,
being considered the property of the Whitaker
family. (fn. 75) What endowment had belonged to it was
confiscated by Edward VI and the chapel remained
without a minister, (fn. 76) except under the Commonwealth, (fn. 77) for nearly 200 years, though about 1717
Bishop Gastrell recorded that the curate of Burnley
preached there once a quarter. (fn. 78) A curate was
licensed in 1742 and by the gifts of various
benefactors, including Dr. Whitaker, the historian,
sometime incumbent of this family chapel, an
endowment was provided, and the net value is now
£263 a year.
The old chapel (fn. 79) which stood near the road at the
lower end of the graveyard was pulled down in 1788,
and the present church of St. John the Divine erected
in the same year on higher ground and consecrated
in 1794. It is a plain stone structure, in plan a
rectangle 62 ft. 6 in. long internally by 28 ft. wide,
built of rough square chiselled stones with dressed
quoins at the angles. At the west end is an
octagonal stone cupola springing from a square base;
and the west elevation has some architectural merit,
the doorway being flanked by Tuscan columns
supporting a pedimented head, the whole under a
lofty semicircular arch. The windows are roundheaded and at the west end in two tiers, the upper
ones lighting a west gallery.
The old east window was of three lights divided
by two columns carrying architrave, frieze and
cornice over the side lights, and with a semicircular
head springing from the level of the cornice over the
central wider light, but this window was removed in
1897, when a new chancel 25 ft. by 19 ft. with
vestry on the north side was added, and the columns
are now at each side of a gate at the west end of
the building.
The original plan comprised a chancel arrangement at the east end formed by two wide piers
placed about 8 ft. from the wall carrying an arcade
of three semicircular arches, the middle recessed space
of which was the sanctuary proper, while north and
south were private pews, that on the south belonging
to the Whitaker family and the other to the
Ormerods. At the west end there is a somewhat
similar arrangement with three semicircular arches
below and above in front of the gallery, the central
space being occupied by the entrance porch, while that
on the north is the baptistery and on the south a stone
staircase leads to the gallery. The floor space, or
nave proper, is therefore reduced to about 44 ft. in
length, and is lit by three lofty semicircular-headed
windows on each side. In the external south-east
corner facing east is a shield with the arms and
initials of the Rev. T. D. Whitaker and the date
1788, while a spout head on the south side has the
initials and date T.W. 1797. The roof is new and
of plain king-post type and the floor is flagged. The
building underwent a restoration when the new
chancel was added, an old three-decker pulpit, a
very fine example of its kind which stood against the
south wall, being removed. At the same time a late
15th or early 16th-century octagonal oak pulpit, said
to have been in the old church at Holme in the
reign of Henry VIII, was removed from the Whitaker
pew, where it had long stood, and erected on the
north side of the old chancel. It has open sides
with Gothic tracery in the heads and an embattled
top. In the old Whitaker pew, which is now
thrown open to the church, is some linen pattern
panelling with carved rails, and there is also some
18th-century square panelling on both the north and
south sides of the old sanctuary. There are also four
of the oak stalls from the old Blackburn Parish
Church pulled down in 1820, two of them having
carved misericordes.
The walls are plastered and there are mural
monuments to William Whitaker (d. 1782), Laurence
Ormerod (d. 1793), the Rev. T. T. Whitaker
(d. 1817) and John Hargreaves (d. 1834), and
there is a bust of the Rev. T. D. Whitaker, the
historian of Whalley.
The cupola contained one bell till 1895, in which
year a ring of eleven hemispherical bells by Mears
& Stainbank was added.
Over the arched gateway on the south side of
the chapel is a foliated cross-head brought by
Dr. Whitaker from Whalley.
General Sir James York Scarlett, who led the
Heavy Brigade at Balaclava, is buried in the
churchyard.
The posts of the stocks still stand near the
churchyard gate at the bottom of the hill.
A district was assigned to the church in 1843. (fn. 80)
Mrs. A. Master-Whitaker is the patron.
The following have been curates and vicars (fn. 81) :—
|
| 1742 | Anthony Weatherhead, M.A. (Christ's Coll., Camb.) |
| 1759–63 | William Halliwell |
| 1797 | Thomas Dunham Whitaker, LL.D. (fn. 82) (St.John's Coll., Camb.) |
| 1822 | William Tindall, M.A. (fn. 83) (University Coll., Oxf.) |
| 1830 | Robert Nowell Whitaker, M.A. (fn. 84) (St. John's Coll., Camb.) |
| 1840 | John Langfield |
| 1860 | Daniel Sutcliffe, M.A. (St. Catharine's Coll., Camb.) |
| 1896 | Alfred Master-Whitaker, M.A. (fn. 85) (Dur.) |
The Wesleyan Methodist chapel at Mere Clough
was built in 1824; the Independent Methodist one
at Walk Mill in 1853 superseded the first building
of 1835. The Congregationalists hold services in
the schools.