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Kelly's Directory of the North and East Ridings of Yorkshire (11th edition), 1921

TERRINGTON is a parish, township and pleasant village, 4 south from Hovingham station on the Thirsk and Malton branch of the North Eastern railway, 5 from Castle Howard and 6 north from Barton Hill stations on the Scarborough branch of the same railway, 8 west from Malton and 15 north-east from York, in the Thirsk and Malton division of the Riding, Bulmer wapentake, Malton petty sessional division, union and county court district, rural deanery of Easingwold, archdeaconry of Cleveland and diocese of York.

The church of All Saints is an ancient building of stone in the Norman style, with some interesting Saxon remains, and consists of chancel, nave, transept, aisles, south porch and an embattled western tower with crocketed pinnacles containing a clock and 3 bells: in the church are several brasses, including one to Mrs. Sarah Hitch, widow of the Rev. Robert Hitch S.T.P. dean of York, who died in 1681: there is a mural monument in the tower to the Elstob family, 1728-33, and one in the nave to Mrs. Mary Ellis of Wiganthorpe, d.10th March, 1768, and a marble mural tablet to the Rev. John Forth: the stained east window was erected in 1870, as a memorial to Mrs. Garforth, and another memorial window in 1873 to Miss Jane Hardy: the stained glass window in the south aisle was erected in 1910 in memory of the Rev. S. Wimbush M.A. rector 1865-1908 : the church retains its ancient register chest, and was restored in 1870: there are 295 sittings. The register dates from the year 1599. The living is a rectory, net yearly value about £380, including 266 acres of glebe, together with certain fixed money payments in lieu of tithe, with residence, in the gift of the trustees of the Rev. Samuel Wimbush, M.A. and held since 1908 by the Rev. James Sedgwick Wimbush M.A. of Oriel College, Oxford.

Here are Wesleyan and Primitive Methodist chapels. A cemetery of 1 acre was formed in 1905 at a cost of £260, and is controlled by a Joint Burial Authority, comprising Terrington Parish Council and Ganthorpe Parish Meeting. The charities, consisting chiefly of ancient doles, amount to about £13 yearly. In the parish is a stone quarry. The Cliff is the property and residence Sir Alfred George Lascelles B.A., K.C., J.P. Terrington Hall is the property of G. Leonard Thompson esq. of York, and is at present (1920) unoccupied. The Dowager Countess of Carlisle is lady of the manor and chief landowner. The soil is mixed; the subsoil is clayey and sandstone. The chief crops are corn and potatoes. The area of the township, including Wigganthorpe and Mowthorpe, is 3,208 acres of land and 14 of water; rateable value, £3,676; the population in 1911 was 428 in the township and 472 in the parish.

Parish Clerk, George Goodrick.
Sexton, Thomas Tate.

Post, M.O., T. & Telephone Call Office (available for calls to places within a limited distance), Terrington. – Mrs. Mary Green, sub-postmistress. Letters arrive from York

WIGGANTHORPE is a hamlet, 1 mile north. Wigganthorpe Hall, the seat of Lady Mary Wentworth-Fitzwilliam, is a mansion of red brick with stone dressings, standing on rising ground, in a park of 200 acres, surrounded by extensive woods. Hovingham 2½ miles distant, on the York and Pickering branch of the North Eastern railway, is the nearest railway station.

MOWTHORPE is a hamlet of three scattered farm-houses, from 1 to 1½ miles south-east.

GANTHORPE is a small township in the parish of Terrington, on the west side of Castle Howard park, 6½ miles south-west from Malton and 1 mile east from its parish church. The area is 731 acres; rateable value, £626; the population in 1911 was 44.
Wall Letter Box, Ganthorpe

Public Elementary School (mixed), Terrington, erected in 1890, for 120 children; Thomas Kirkbride, master; Miss Mallory, assistant mistress.

Carriers to
Malton—William Lacy, sat
York—William Fletcher & John Wood, sat

Transcribed by Keith Adkins.

©Terrington Arts
This page last updated: 21st December 2021

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