BOLTON-LE-SANDS
Bolton-Le-Sands; Slyne-With-Hest; Nether Kellet; Over Kellet
The parish is pleasantly situated on the eastern side
of Morecambe Bay. The surface is level near the
shore, varied by a number of little knolls or holmes,
but rises in a succession of hills on going inland.
The area is 8,015½ acres, and in 1901 there was a
population of 2,037.
The history of the place is destitute of any very
noteworthy event. There is a record of the transfer
of the township of Carnforth from this parish, to
which it belongs physically as the Keer is the natural
boundary, to the parish of Warton. The change took
place before the interdict of 1208. (fn. 1) The northern
insurgents in the Pilgrimage of Grace in 1536
assembled on Kellet Moor, and the Jacobite army in
1745 passed through the parish. The physical condition of the bay and its shore has undergone many
transformations, which still continue, from natural or
artificial causes. One violent change took place in
1677, as is narrated below, and recent alterations
though gradual make great differences in the course
of time.
The crossing of the sands from Hest Bank to
Kent's Bank on the north shore, (fn. 2) which was once the
usual thoroughfare for traffic, has now almost ceased,
though guides are still appointed. Probably there
were other crossings from Bolton and from Silverdale,
for 'chantries' are said to have existed at these places
as well as at Hest Bank. (fn. 3) They may have been little
wayside oratories where travellers might pray or
return thanks before or after the dangerous journey
'over sands.'
The following account of the crossing was written
when the tour of the Lakes was a novelty. After
directing the traveller from Lancaster to set out with
the Ulverston carriers or else take a guide, the writer
says:—
On a fine day there is not a more pleasant seaside ride in the
kingdom. On the right, a bold shore, deeply indented in some
places and opening into bays in others; valleys that stretch far
into the country, bounded on each side by hanging grounds, cut
into inclosures, interspersed with groves and woods, adorned with
sequestered cots, farms, villages, churches and castles; mountains
behind mountains, and others again just seen over them, close
the fore scene. . . . At entering on the sands, to the left Heysham point rises abruptly, and the village hangs on its side in a
beautiful manner. Over a vast extent of sands Piel Castle, the
ancient bulwark of the bay, rears its venerable head above the
tide. In front appears a fine sweep of country sloping to the
south. To the right Warton Crag presents itself in a bold
style. . . . Grounds bearing from the eye for many a mile,
variegated in every pleasing form by woods and rocks, are
terminated by cloud-topped Ingleborough.
A little further, on the same hand, another vale opens to the
sands and shows a broken ridge of rocks, and beyond them
groups of mountains towering to the sky. Castlesteads, a pyramidal hill that rises above the station at Kendal, is now in sight.
At the bottom of the bay stands
Arnside Tower, once a mansion of
the Stanleys. The Cartmel coast,
now as you advance, becomes more
pleasing. Betwixt that and Silverdale
Nab, a mountain of naked grey
rock, is a great break in the coast,
and through the opening the River
Kent rolls its waters to join the
tide. In the mouth of the estuary
are two beautiful conical isles,
clothed with wood and sweet verdure. As you advance toward them
they seem to change their position,
and hence often vary their appearance.
At the same time a grand view
opens of the Westmorland mountains, tumbled about in a most surprising manner. At the head of
the estuary, under a beautiful green
hill, Heversham village and church
appear in fine perspective. To the
north Whitbarrow Scar, a huge
arched and banded cliff, of an immense height, shows its storm-beaten
front. The intermediate space is a
mixture of rocks and woods and
cultivated patches, that form a
romantic view. At the side of the
Eau [eea] or river of the sands, a
guide on horseback, called the
carter, is in waiting to conduct
passengers over the ford. The
priory of Cartmel was charged with
this important office and had
synodals and Peter pence allowed
towards its maintenance. Since the
dissolution of the priory it is held by patent of the Duchy of
Lancaster, and the salary, £20 per annum, is paid by the
Receiver-General. (fn. 4)
A full account of the present conditions is given in
the Endowed Charities Report for Ulverston issued in
1901. The average number crossing the Kent Sands
in the latter half of 1899 was two persons daily.
The parish contributed as follows to the county
lay of 1624, which was based on the old' fifteenth':
Bolton, £3 14s. 9¾d.; Slyne-with Hest, £1 4s. 8¼d.;
Nether Kellet, 11s. 3¼d.; Over Kellet, £1 11s. 6½d.;
making a total of £7 2s. 3¾d. towards each £100
required from Lonsdale. (fn. 5)
The bounds of the parish were perambulated in
1819, beginning at Meresbeck on the border of
Carnforth. (fn. 6)
The following is the present distribution of the
agricultural land of the parish (fn. 6a) :—
|
| Arable land ac. | Permanent grass ac. | Woods and plantations ac. |
| Bolton | 189 | 1,067 | 12 |
| Nether Kellet | 261 | 1,592½ | 71 |
| Over Kellet | 320 | 1,892 | 508 |
| Slyne-with-Hest | 235½ | 1,616 | 26½ |
| 1,005½ | 6,167½ | 617½ |
Church
The church of ST. MICHAEL (fn. 7) or
HOLY TRINITY stands at the south
end of the village and consists of a
chancel 22 ft. 6 in. by 21 ft. with north aisle 9 ft. 6 in.
wide, nave 72 ft. 9 in. by 21 ft., with north aisle 15 ft.
wide, south porch, and west tower 12 ft. 6 in. by
13 ft., all these measurements being internal. There
is also a vestry to the north of the chancel aisle.
The nave arcade and the west tower are practically
all of the old church now left, and are of late 15thcentury date; the extent of the church remains
much the same as at that period with the exception
that the north aisle has been widened and the chancel
probably lengthened about 8 ft. The original arrangement of the chancel and nave seems to have been
altered, the wide pier now between the first and
second bays of the nave from the east having apparently originally marked the beginning of the chancel,
which would then consist of two bays of equal width.
When the chancel was lengthened the size of the
building was not increased, its western bay being
thrown into the nave, giving it its present rather
disproportionate length. (fn. 8) The church, however,
has undergone so much rebuilding and restoration
in the 19th century that it is somewhat difficult to
state exactly what the 15th-century building was
like, nearly everything in the structure except the
parts already mentioned being modern. In 1813
the nave was rebuilt, (fn. 9) and in 1827 a wide transept was erected on the north side, the third pier
of the nave from the west being removed for
the purpose and two arches thrown into one. In
1836 the door of the south porch was walled up
and the tower door made the main entrance,
and in 1846 the east wall was taken down and
a new chancel built. The nave roof was opened
out in the following year, a flat ceiling being
removed and the building otherwise much improved.
Another restoration was carried out in 1880, when
the north aisle was widened, the transept pulled
down, the gallery removed, (fn. 10) the destroyed pier of the
arcade replaced and the two former arches rebuilt, the
vestry and a new south porch erected, and pointed
windows chiefly of four lights with perpendicular
tracery inserted in the south wall of the nave in place
of the original square-headed lights. The present
south wall is that built in 1813, and covered with
roughcast, and the building has slated roofs with
overhanging eaves, the roof of the chancel being
lower, but of steeper pitch, than that of the nave.
The porch is of oak on a stone base. (fn. 11)

BOLTON LE SANDS. HALTON.
The chancel has a three-light modern east window
with two pointed windows each of two lights on the
south side. On the north it is open to the aisle by
two arches of two chamfered orders, of unequal width,
the easternmost one being only 6 ft. 6 in. wide,
springing from a modern pier and moulded corbel on
the east. The walls throughout the church are
plastered, and the chancel arch and all the fittings are
modern. The reredos is of alabaster, erected in 1898
in memory of the Rev. J. D. Grimke. The east end
of the aisle is used as a clergy vestry, and the west
end is occupied by the organ. The aisle is divided
from that of the nave by a stone arch.
The nave is of five bays with a north arcade of
pointed arches of two chamfered orders springing
from octagonal piers with moulded capitals and bases
and from a similar respond at the west end, two of
the arches and one of the piers, as already mentioned,
having been rebuilt in 1880. The aisle is lit by
square-headed windows of two, three and four lights,
and has a plaster barrel-vaulted ceiling under a
separate gabled roof. The roof of the nave is a
modern one of open timber divided into nine bays. (fn. 12)
The tower, which is 61 ft. high and appears very
lofty in proportion to the height of the building,
is built of large dressed sandstone blocks with moulded
plinth, and has a projecting vice in the south-east
corner, and diagonal angle buttresses on the west side
of seven stages going the full height to the embattled
parapet. The west doorway has a four-centred arch
with double hollow-chamfered jambs and head and
external hood mould, and the west window is of three
lights and similar in detail. Above the window and
on the other three sides the wall is quite plain up to
the belfry windows, and the internal stages are
unmarked by any string course or other moulding.
There is a clock dial on each side, and on the north
and south small square-headed openings to the ringing
chamber. (fn. 13) The belfry windows are of three lights
similar in detail to the west window of the tower, and
have stone louvres. The tower arch is of two
chamfered orders dying into the wall at the springing,
the lower stage of the tower, which is used as a
baptistery, and the walls of which show the bare rubble
masonry, being open to the church. The floor of
the baptistery is 15 in. below that of the nave, and the
font is modern.
On the north side of the chancel, under the
easternmost arch, is a large stone slab to the memory
of Robert Cole (d. 1642), with his arms and crest in
the dexter top corner, and an inscription in good
17th-century round lettering which records that 'it
is supposed that he lived above 100 yeares.' On the
north wall of the chancel aisle, behind the organ, and
now difficult to see, is a brass to Thomas Cole of
Beaumont Cote, who died in 1691, with a long
inscription recording his virtues and attainments:
'he was a Person of comely presence & Deportment
& of so great Endowmts of mind yt 3 successive
Kings thought him worthy of ye trust and authority
of a Magistrate. . . .' (fn. 14)
There are three bells, the oldest of which is
inscribed in black-letter characters, 'Haec Campana
sacra fiat Trinitate Beatamacr;,' and bears the founders'
mark of Our Lord Crucified and a growing lily.
It is probably of 15th-century date. The treble is a
recasting by Samuel Smith of York in 1724 and is
inscribed 'Gloria in Altissimis Deo'; and the
middle one was recast at Wigan in 1694, probably
from a pre-Reformation bell, and bears the inscription, 'In Dulcedine vocis cantabo tuo nomine.'
The silver plate consists of a chalice of 1725
inscribed 'Bolton-le-Sands in Com. Lanc. 1725' (fn. 15) ;
a chalice of 1851 of similar pattern and with the
same inscription given by Robert Green Bradley
of Slyne House; and a breadholder of Newcastle
make, without inscription. There is also a plated
flagon and paten. (fn. 16)
The registers begin in 1653. Terriers (fn. 17) of 1728
and 1778 are preserved at the church; they give
details of the vicarage-house, glebe lands, small tithes,
mortuaries and other dues. The tithe map is kept
at the church.
On the south side of the churchyard is part of a
cross shaft 3 ft. 3 in. high, on two square steps, now
used as the pedestal of a sundial.
Advowson
The church existed in 1094.,
having an endowment of half a
plough-land, and was then given to
St. Martin's Abbey at Sées by Count Roger of
Poitou. (fn. 18) The half plough-land was the rectorial
manor. Disputes afterwards arose between the
monks and the Archdeacon of Richmond as to this
and other churches in his archdeaconry, and in 1246
a compromise was made by which they surrendered
all their right in Bolton Church—including the
patronage and a pension of 3 marks from it—in return
for the archdeacon's consent to their appropriation
of a mediety of the church of Poulton-le-Fylde. (fn. 19)
Bolton was then (1250) ordered to be annexed to
the archdeaconry. (fn. 20) This arrangement was not
carried out at once, but in 1336 a vicarage was
ordained there. (fn. 21) On the creation of the diocese
of Chester by Henry VIII the rectory and advowson of Bolton, as appropriated to the archdeaconry, became part of the possessions of the
new see. (fn. 22) Since the division of Chester diocese
in 1847 the Bishop of Manchester collates to the
vicarage. (fn. 23)
The benefice was not taxed in 1291 because of the
appropriation, but in 1341 the ninth of sheaves,
&c., was returned as worth £10 6s. (fn. 24) This was for
the rectory. In 1527 the rectory was considered to
be worth £30 a year and the vicarage £10 (fn. 25) ; but
in 1535 the value of the latter was estimated at
£4. 15s. (fn. 26) The rectory and manor were usually let
on lease. In 1650 Sir Henry Compton, a Royalist,
had held them, but they had been sequestered and let
out to farm at £310 a year; the vicar's income was
about £20 a year, including the vicarage-house and
17 acres of glebe, but it had been augmented by
£100 a year out of Sir Henry's sequestrated estate. (fn. 27)
The value of the vicarage had by 1717 increased to
£28 3s. 4d., this including a pension of £6 13s. 4d.
out of the rectory. (fn. 28) This pension was changed to
a tithe-rent charge of £94 17s. 8d. in 1881. (fn. 29) The
net value is now given as £220. (fn. 30)
The following have been rectors and vicars:—
|
| Rectors |
| Instituted | Name | Patron | Cause of Vacancy |
| — | Simon (fn. 31) | — | — |
| c. 1216 | Henry (fn. 32) | — | — |
| c. 1226 | Roger de Derby (fn. 33) | — | — |
| oc. 1250 | John de Mortonteri (fn. 34) | — | — |
| c. 1254 | John le Romeyn (fn. 35) | — | — |
| 30 Apr. 1286 | Thomas de Castroforti (fn. 36) | Abp. of York | prom. J. le Romeyn |
| — | John Roud (fn. 37) | — | — |
| ? 1328. | Thomas de Woodhouse (fn. 38) | — | — |
| Vicars |
| 19 July 1336 | Hugh de Tunstall (fn. 39) | Archdeacon of Richmond | — |
| oc. 1349 | John Rylyng (fn. 40) | — | — |
| oc. 1366–77 | Adam de Kirkham (fn. 41) | — | — |
| — | Thomas de Catterick (fn. 42) | — | — |
| 12 July 1398 | Roger de Catterick | Archdeacon of Richmond | res. T. de Catterick |
| 12 Jan. 1399–1400 | Thomas Toller (fn. 43) | " | res. R. de Catterick |
| 14 Aug. 1414 | William Eslake | " | res. T. Toller |
| 29 Oct. 1424 | John Gressingham | " | res. W. Eslake |
| 31 Oct. 1427 | Richard Gressingham (fn. 44) | " | res. J. Gressingham |
| 9 July 1440 | Edmund Southworth (fn. 45) | " | d. R. Gressingham |
| oc. 1474 | Richard Garth (fn. 46) | — | — |
| oc. 1535 | Roger Otway (fn. 47) | — | — |
| 1561 | Richard Godsalfe (fn. 48) | Christopher Bland | d. R. Otway |
| Richard Johnson |
| 15 July 1566 | James Baines (fn. 49) | James Otway | d. R. Godsalfe |
| John Hebblethwaite | |
| 7 Apr. 1587 | George Chichley (fn. 50) | Bp. of Chester | — |
| 27 Feb. 1587–8 | John Ashworth (fn. 51) | " | — |
| 1591 | William Owborne, M.A. (fn. 52) | " | — |
| 16 Apr. 1613 | Talbot Porter, M.A. (fn. 53) | " | d. W. Owborne |
| 4 May 1618 | Miles Dawson, M.A. (fn. 54) | " | d. Tobias (sic) Porter |
| oc. 1639 | Charles Knott (fn. 55) | — | — |
| 23 Mar. 1640–1 | Richard Collingwood (fn. 56) | — | [d. C. Knott] |
| ? 1644 | John Jacques (fn. 57) | — | — |
| 28 Nov. 1660 | William Ainsworth (fn. 58) | Bp. of Chester | d. last incumbent |
| 7 Nov. 1664 | Martin Briggs, M.A. (fn. 59) | " | — |
| 1 Aug. 1688 | Thomas Garforth, B.A. (fn. 60) | Bp. of Chester | — |
| 18 Nov. 1690 | John Sparke, B.A. (fn. 61) | " | — |
| 27 Aug. 1703 | William Barton, B.A. (fn. 62) | " | res. J. Sparke |
| 11 Apr. 1706 | Francis Bryer, B.A. (fn. 63) | " | res. W. Barton |
| 11 Jan. 1732–3 | Richard Thompson | " | d. F. Bryer |
| 16 Dec. 1740 | Felix O'Neill (fn. 64) | " | d. R. Thompson |
| 26 June 1769 | James Thomas, B.A. (fn. 65) | " | d. F. O'Neill |
| 11 Mar. 1824 | Robert Gibson, M.A. (fn. 66) | " | d. J. Thomas |
| 10 Nov. 1826 |
| 1874 | Alfred Birley, M.A. (fn. 67) | Bp. of Manchester | d. R. Gibson |
| 1890 | St. Vincent Beechey, M.A. (fn. 68) | " | res. A. Birley |
| 1 Oct. 1899 | Arthur Roger Tomlinson, M.A. (fn. 69) | " | res. St. V. Beechey |
The vicar of Bolton and the curate of Kellet seem
to have been the only clergy in the parish before the
Reformation as well as later, for, though chantries of
Bolton and Hest are mentioned, (fn. 70) nothing seems to
be known of them beyond a statement in 1564 that
lands with a rent of 14s. 10d. had been formerly
given to the use of ' Our Lady's Priest ... to say
Our Lady's mass' at the parish church. (fn. 71)
A free school was founded at Bolton in 1619. (fn. 72)
Charities
Official inquiries were made into
the charities of the parish in 1826
and 1899; the report of the latter
includes a reprint of the old one. In addition to the
school the benefactions for the poor are numerous
and valuable; some are applied to apprenticing
children, some are given in money gifts, but most in
food, fuel or clothing. (fn. 73)
For the whole parish Thomas Greene in 1809
bequeathed £100 for a Sunday distribution of bread
to poor persons attending the parish church, preference
to be given to those living in Slyne-with-Hest. The
capital is invested in consols, and the income of
£5 10s. a year is used as intended, twenty-eight
loaves being given every Sunday morning to about
four recipients. Members of the Chambers family
of Halton are stated to have given small annual sums
for the poor, but these had been lost by 1826. John
Sparling in 1796 left £150 for a Christmastide
distribution; the capital was invested in consols and
produces £6 8s. 8d. a year, given in sums of 2s. 6d.
to 6s.; the township of Over Kellet has never participated in this charity. Thomas Sandham of Rugby
in 1882 left £100 railway stock, the interest of
which was to be divided equally each half-year
between four needy men over sixty years of age and
not earning more than 16s. a week; this is carried
out accordingly.
For the township of Bolton there is an ancient
rent-charge of 20s. on a field at Thwaite Brow, called
Poor Thwaite, given to the poor in sums of 2s. each
on St. Andrew's Day. Robert Mayor in 1705 left
a rent-charge of 20s. on lands in Quernmore for
apprenticing poor boys or for the poor; the charge
was in 1878 redeemed and is now represented by
£33 consols, producing 18s. 4d. a year. As there
are now no candidates for apprenticeship the income
is given in doles. Richard Sparling Berry in 1837
left money to reward 'such poor honest and industrious persons ... as should without parochial relief
or assistance meritoriously educate their children
and train them in the path of piety and honesty.'
The endowment is represented by £383 consols,
yielding £10 10s. 4d. a year; this is given in sums
of 2s. 6d. to 10s. 9d. to parents of children attending
the school. Thomas Sandford of Liverpool, a native
of Bolton, left £1,500 for food and clothing for the
poor residing ' in or near' Bolton-le-Sands. The
capital is invested in railway debentures and yields
£61 8s. a year; distributions of coal and clothing
worth 15s. to 30s. are made in February and October
yearly. Edmund Jackson in 1877 left Ivy Bank
House to secure a Christmas distribution of £10
worth of coal to the poor; the remainder of the rent,
after providing a reserve fund and repairs, was to be
given in bedding or clothing. (fn. 74)
Elizabeth Bradley in 1838, in fulfilment of the
desire of her mother Margaret Bradley, gave £300
consols to provide coal or fuel for poor householders
of Slyne-with-Hest; and by her will of 1869 left
£600 consols for blankets and winter clothing.
These funds now produce £8 5s. 4d. and £16 10s. 8d.
respectively, used according to the donor's intention.
A sum of 2s. 6d. a year is paid from the Scargill
estate at Halton to the oldest deserving poor widow
of Slyne; the origin of this payment is unknown.
The township owns two cottages, the rents of which
go to general purposes; the origin of the ownership
is unknown in this case also.
In Nether Kellet John Rippon in 1713 left a rentcharge of 10s. from the rent of a piece of land called
Shaw Lanes Head for the poorest families. In 1826
it was found that the owner, Thomas Butler Cole,
had refused to pay, and the gift was lost. One
Lodge (fn. 75) left £20 for clothing for the poor; this
with other sums (fn. 76) was used to buy a piece of land,
known as the Poor Field, which now yields a rent
of £6. Clothing is distributed every two years.
Elizabeth Bateson in 1886 left a sum of money
yielding £4 8s. 10d. a year to supply the children
attending the Congregational Sunday School with
Bibles, &c.
The charities of Over Kellet are recorded in the
account of that chapelry.