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Kelly's Directory 1894

WYMINGTON (wimington or winnington) is a parish and small village, on the borders of Northamptonshire, 3 miles south from Irchester station on the main line of the Midland railway, 13 north-west from Bedford, and 5 south­east from Wellingborough, in the Northern division of the county, hundred of Willey, Sharnbrook petty sessional division, county court district and union of Wellingborough, rural deanery cf Felmersham, archdeaconry of Bedford and diocese of Ely. The church of St. Lawrence is an elegant building of stone in the late Decorated style, rebuilt about 1377 by John Curteys, whose tomb is in the church, and consists of chancel, nave, aisles, south porch with parvise and a western embattled tower with clock and crocketed spire, containing 6 bells: the spire is singular and very beautiful, rising from eight arches with open Decorated tracery and pedimental canopies, and the angles are richly crocketed: at the east end of the church are two octagonal turrets, and the whole is embattled to a height of four feet: the chancel retains very rich canopied sedilia and a piscina of similar character: the original octagonal font also remains: in the window sill of the south chapel are remains of a once magnificent altar, with a niche and piscina, and in the vestry, anciently the chapel of St. John the Evangelist, is another piscina: much of the old pavement, squares of polished Purbeck marble, still remains: the church contains some fine brasses, one of which, to Sir Thomas Bromflete, who was cup-bearer to King Henry V, is considered to be the finest brass in existence of a knight in plate armour; the head of the knight rests on a crested helm; on either side of the figure are shields of arms, and overhead a reversed inscription on brass in two columns, with the date 1430: alongside, on a similar slab, is a much smaller brass of his wife Margaret (Seynt Jon) 1407, with an inscription on a brass fillet surrounding the slab and inclosing four shields: on the floor under the chancel arch is a brass 22 inches long, to John Stokys, rector, who died about 1520, clad in eucharistic vestments, and chalice in his hands: under the arch between the chapel and the chancel is a fine altar tomb, in good preservation, to the memory of John and Albreda Curteys, who built the church: the upper slab of Purbeck marble has perfect brass effigies of both, under a crocketed canopy, with a shield above; surrounding the whole is an inscribed brass fillet, with the date of the founder's death, 1391, and that of his wife in 1396: there is another altar tomb in the north aisle, with inscription on brass, to William Bhitsoe, dated 1609; and there are later memorials to Richard Newcome M.A. rector (1655-1698), Richard Newcome M.A. his son, rector (1698-1732), and the families of Scriven, Clark, Kent, Chapman and Kemshead: there are 70 sittings. The register dates from 1602. The living is a rectory with 156 acres of glebe, and residence, income nil, in the gift of Mrs. Butterworth, and held since 1892 by the Rev. Charles Edward Drew M.A. of St. John's College, Cambridge. Here is a Wesleyan chapel. Pillow lace is made here to a small extent. Goosey's charity of £5 yearly, bequeathed in 1844, is for the poor of this parish and of Poddington; the Rev. Joseph Bentham's, of 10s. yearly, was left in 1665. In this parish, remains of ancient weapons have been found. The trustees of the Late Mr. John Goosey, of Kettering, are lords of the manor. The principal landowners are Lord Wantage, the trustees of the late John Goosey, William Clarence Watson esq. of Colworth, Bedford, John Bagot-Scriven esq, and the Ven. Joshua Ingham Brooke m.a, vicar and arch-deacon of Halifax. The soil is clay; subsoil, sand, clay and limestone, The chief crops are wheat, barley and pasturage. The area is 1,710 acres; rateable value, £7,766; the population in 1891 was 336.

Parish Clerk, John Farrow.

Wall Letter Box.—Cleared at 9.20 a.m. & 4.30 p.m. week days only.  
Letters arrive from Rushden R.S.O. at 8.15 a.m. & 12 noon.  
The nearest money order & telegraph office is at Rushden.

Parochial School (mixed), built with house for mistress in 1880, for 80 children; average attendance, 54; Mrs. Mary Ann Woollard, mistress.

Carrier.—Samuel Windsor, to & from Wellingborough every wed. & sat.


Drew Rev. Charles Edward M.A. rectory
Goosey Miss, Fern Nook
Desborough Warren, farmer
Forskett Thomas, New inn
Goosey John Thos. farmer, Manor farm
Goosey Robert, farmer, Brook house
Lewis William, beer retailer & farmer
Lewis William Fisher, shopkeeper
Mackness Charles, shopkeeper
Peet Alfred, farmer, Lower farm
Pendred Charles, shoe maker
Windsor Saml. carrier & rag & bone dlr


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