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 Peldon 1914 Kelly's Directory of Essex



Peldon (or Peltington) is a parish on the road from Colchester to Mersea Island, 5 miles south-west from Wivenhoe station on the Tendring Hundred branch of the Great Eastern Railway, 7½ south from Colchester, and 56 from London, in the North Eastern division of the county, Winstree hundred, Lexden and Winstree union and petty sessional ...
Cat1 Books-->Mersea Guides-->Kelly's  Cat2 Places-->Peldon-->Shops and Businesses Cat3 Places-->Peldon-->People

Peldon 1914 Kelly's Directory of Essex

Peldon (or Peltington) is a parish on the road from Colchester to Mersea Island, 5 miles south-west from Wivenhoe station on the Tendring Hundred branch of the Great Eastern Railway, 7½ south from Colchester, and 56 from London, in the North Eastern division of the county, Winstree hundred, Lexden and Winstree union and petty sessional division, Colchester, Clacton and Harwich joint county court district, rural deanery of Mersea, archdeaconry of Colchester and Chelmsford diocese. The church of St. Mary the Virgin, erected in the 15th century, stands on a hill and occupies the site of an ancient church recorded in Domesday Book: it is a building of stone in the Perpendicular style, consisting of chancel, nave, south porch and an embattled western tower, with pinnacles, containing 2 bells: the church was thorough restored in 1859 by subscriptions at a cost of about £908, in the course of which several remains of an Early Norman church were discovered: there are 150 sittings. The register of baptism dates from 1725; burials, 1728; marriages, 1776. The living is a rectory, net yearly value £315, with 24 acres of glebe and residence, in the gift of Mrs. David Lindsay Johnson and held since 1911 by the Rev. Edgar George Bowring M.A. of Hertford College, Oxford. Mr John Whitton Wilkinson is lord of the manor of Peldon Hall, and the rector order of the rectorial manor, and the trustees of the late Mrs Gibson, Messrs. Robert Store, William G. Fairhead and Mr John Whitton Wilkinson are the principal landowners. The soil is heavy loam; subsoil, loam. The chief crops are wheat, barley, oats and beans. The area is 2, 243 acres of land, 9 of inland and 2 of tidal water and 31 of foreshore; rateable value, £1,670; the population in 1911 was 409.

Parish Clerk, James Talbot.

Post, M. O. & T Office - George Smallwood, Sub-postmaster.

Letters arrive through Colchester at 4:45 a.m. & 1 p.m.; dispatched at 11:30 a.m. & 7:40 p.m.

Public Elementary (Non provided) School (mixed), built in 1833 & enlarged in 1881, for 196 children; average, 65; Mrs. Emma Green, mistress.

Carriers to Colchester - William Frederick Christmas & Edgar Nicholas, to the 'Plough', Mon, Wed. Fri & Sat.


Bowring Rev. Edgar George M.A. (rector), Rectory.
Goddard Mrs. Mill House
Going James Allertone, Honour villa
Procter Richard, Haxell's House
Store Robert, Peldon Lodge

Commercial
Christmas Edith (Mrs) dress maker, Rose Cottage
Christmas Arthur William, cycle agent
Clarke Frank, farmer, Tye Farm
Fairhead Percy, farmer, Brick House Farm
Fairhead William Golden, farmer, Brick House Farm
Frost Jane (Mrs) shopkeeper
Green John, shopkeeper
Hall Benjamin M.B. Lond. Surgeon (Monday and Friday)
Harrison Henry, blacksmith
Hyham Clement, shopkeeper
King Felix Thomas, nurseryman
Mason George, farmer, assistant overseer for Peldon, Great Wigborough & Abberton & clerk to Parish Council
Mead Horace Charles, farmer
Nice Amelia (Mrs) Plough P.H.
Nicholas Edgar, carrier
Nicholas Herbert, baker
Proctor Joseph, Hy. Farmer. Haxell's farm


Date: 1914      

Photo: Mary Downes
Image ID KEL_1914_PEL
Category 1 Books-->Mersea Guides-->Kelly's
Category 2 Places-->Peldon-->Shops and Businesses
Category 3 Places-->Peldon-->People


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This image is part of the Mersea Museum Collection.