Location via proxy:   [ UP ]  
[Report a bug]   [Manage cookies]                
Jump to content

Church of St Thomas, Thurstonland

Coordinates: 53°35′35″N 1°45′02″W / 53.59316°N 1.75056°W / 53.59316; -1.75056
From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Church of St Thomas, Thurstonland
Victorian Gothic Revival church with spire among trees
St Thomas in 2008
Location of Church of St Thomas in West Yorkshire
Location of Church of St Thomas in West Yorkshire
Church of St Thomas, Thurstonland
Location in West Yorkshire
53°35′35″N 1°45′02″W / 53.59316°N 1.75056°W / 53.59316; -1.75056
OS grid referenceSE 166108
LocationMarsh Hall Lane, Thurstonland, West Yorkshire, HD4 6XD
CountryEngland
DenominationAnglican
WebsiteA Church Near You: St Thomas Thurstonland
History
Consecrated3 October 1870
Architecture
Heritage designationGrade II listed, #1135375
Architect(s)Mallinson and Barber
Architectural typeParish church
StyleGothic Revival, Arts and Crafts
Groundbreaking1869
Completed1870
Construction cost£3,000
Specifications
Capacitydesigned for 385
Administration
DioceseAnglican Diocese of Leeds
ArchdeaconryHalifax 401
DeaneryKirkburton 40107
ParishSt Thomas Thurstonland
Clergy
Vicar(s)Revd Canon J. Sean Robertshaw

The Church of St Thomas, Thurstonland, West Yorkshire, England, is an Anglican church. It is an Arts and Crafts building in Gothic Revival style, designed by James Mallinson and William Swinden Barber, and completed in 1870. The building was funded by William Legge, 5th Earl of Dartmouth, and it was consecrated by Robert Bickersteth, Bishop of Ripon. The total height of the tower and spire is 109 feet (33 m), and the nave contains an arch-braced hammerbeam roof.[1]

The first incumbent of the parish to use this building was Rev. Robert Boyle Thompson, an evangelical missionary who had already done "great work" in the slums of Seven Dials when he was granted the living of Thurstonland at the age of 28 years.[2]

Architects and artisans

[edit]

The building was designed between 1867 and 1870 by Mallinson & Barber, however it was Barber who closely supervised the building work, so it can be understood that Barber was largely responsible for the plans.[3][4] The ground plan dated March 1867 and an undated sketch by the architects of William Butterfield's St John the Evangelist, Birkby, are held at West Yorkshire Archive Service.[4][5][6] It is possible that Butterfield's 1853 Birkby church may have partially inspired or informed this design.[7]

The clerk of the works in 1869 was Leonard North of Kirkburton, followed by Thomas Elliott of Bradford in 1870. George Pollard of Huddersfield was the mason, Joah Swallow of Hepworth was joiner, and the plumber was Lockwood of Honley. The slaters were Goodwin & Sons of Huddersfield, the plasterer was Alfred Jessop of Shepley, and the painter was Brighouse of Huddersfield. The heating apparatus was installed by Thornton of Huddersfield.[3][8][9][10]

History

[edit]

By 1869 three new churches had already been built in the Kirkburton parish due to the efforts of its vicar Rev. Richard Collins (1794–1882), but there was still just an inadequate chapel-room in Thurstonland. This was originally a dissenters' chapel built in 1810 and used as a chapel of ease for Kirkburton from 1834 to 1870. Around 1850 there was an unsuccessful local attempt to raise funds for a new church; a second attempt in 1867–1868 came to fruition.

The scattered population of this village, which was soon to become a parish in its own right, consisted of about 1,200 persons of "limited means", engaged in agricultural and manufacturing trades, so the congregation could not fund a new church. The Church of England therefore appealed to its richer members, so that Mr J.F. Winterbottom (1800–1868) of Eastwood Hey, Berkshire, bequeathed the one-acre site.[11] The building was funded by William Legge, Earl of Dartmouth, C.H. Bill, Colonel Brooke of Honley, J. Hirst JP, Colonel Bradbury and others, including ladies who organised a bazaar.[3][8][12] Colonel Brooke was treasurer. Local people had raised £100 and, being unable to assist further with funding, had offered voluntary manual labour; they levelled the ground by hand. At the consecration it was mentioned by Rev. Richard Collins that funds were being raised for a new vicarage at Thurstonland.[3]

Foundation stone ceremony

[edit]

The foundation stone was laid at 1.30 pm on Monday 26 July 1869. A large crowd gathered at the site, so that the area reserved for the ceremony had to be roped off. Countess Augusta of Dartmouth and Rev. Richard Collins, vicar of Kirkburton, led the procession, followed by the Earl of Dartmouth and the Rev. R.B. Thompson who was to be the first incumbent of Thurstonland Church. Then came more than 20 clergymen, churchwardens and a dozen or more VIPs who all crowded into the enclosure. Among the VIPs were Lieutenant-Colonel Bradbury JP, William Brooke JP, Captain Legge, Adjutant Legge, Major Brooke, George Wood Jenkinson (1838–1898) the Thurstonland churchwarden, and W.S. Barber the architect.[13][14] In the newspaper reports, James Mallinson is not mentioned as being present. The choir, the band, the Sunday School children and the spectators arranged themselves outside the ropes.[8][9]

William Legge, 5th Earl of Dartmouth who laid the foundation stone

The audience sang a hymn, This stone to Thee in faith we lay, while an inscribed silver trowel was presented to the Earl of Dartmouth. The earl spread the mortar for the cornerstone. This cornerstone contained a cavity, and inside was a bottle containing "various documents related to the laying of the stone." The hole was sealed with an inscribed brass plate,[8][9] which said:

Glory be to God, the Son and the Holy Ghost, the foundation of this church in Thurstonland in the parish of Kirkburton, to be dedicated to His service by the name of St Thomas, was laid by Wm. Walter, Earl of Dartmouth, on the 26th July, 1869. Richard Collins, vicar of Kirkburton; Robert Boyle Thompson, curate of Thurstonland; George W. Jenkinson, churchwarden of Thurston-land, James Mallinson and Wm Swindon Barber, architects.[8][9]

The stone was lowered into place, struck by the Countess with a mallet, and declared laid. Thompson ended the service and the choir sang God Save the Queen. The ceremony was not over, however, until the Earl had been formally thanked by Collins and had replied with a long speech which mentioned donations, touched on evangelism and dwelt on his newborn grandson. There was benediction from Collins, the procession left and the audience dispersed.[8][9][15]

Three hundred persons then enjoyed luncheon served in a marquee in the next-door field, alongside the road. There were many speeches, including a long one from the Earl: this time discussing church and laity, flattering the clergy and mentioning the Irish Church Bill. A number of toasts were given, drunk and responded to at length. A toast was made to the architects and Barber responded, concluding the speeches with a toast to the ladies.[8][9]

Consecration

[edit]
Robert Bickersteth, Bishop of Ripon, who consecrated the church

The church and graveyard were consecrated at 11 am on 3 October 1870 by Robert Bickersteth, Bishop of Ripon, although part of the graveyard had already been consecrated by 1862, and the spire was not completed.[3][16] The pews were filled to overflowing when the bishop processed into the church, followed by over thirty local clergymen, all repeating Psalm 24. The bishop read the sentence of consecration, followed by morning prayers. The choir sang, and the almost-completed organ was played for the first time by Samuel Pontefract (1815–1896) of South Crosland.[17] The bishop's sermon was based on Psalm 122, verse 1. He alluded to the recent building work, the need for support from the laity in spirit and funding, and the pressing need for the final £400 required to pay off building costs. The collection amounted to £313 7s 1d. The bishop then processed outside with the clergy, to consecrate the burial ground.[3]

The marquee had appeared again in the neighbouring field, and a luncheon was enjoyed this time by only 100 persons, including the Bishop of Ripon, Rev. Collins of Kirkburton, Archdeacon Musgrave, the Earl and Countess of Dartmouth and other VIPs. The bishop and archdeacon ate and left, then a long series of toasts and speeches began. As chairman of the proceedings, the Vicar of Kirkburton stated that W.S. Barber the architect was unable to attend due to illness, but that he "had worked very hard in connection with the church; he had paid them a great many visits, and his superintendence had been untiring." In his speech, Rev. Thompson referred obliquely to the free seating in the new church, saying that rich and poor could worship together, and exhorting his privileged audience to take full part in public services regularly. The evening service raised £50, making the total collection for the day £363 7s 1d towards paying off the final £400 owing for building costs.[3]

Resources

[edit]

There are historical leaflets available at the church.[18] The parish records for St Thomas', along with church magazines from Thurstonland, are held at West Yorkshire Archive Services.[19][20]

Structure

[edit]

It is a Grade II listed building situated in Marsh Hall Lane, Thurstonland, Huddersfield, West Yorkshire.[1] It is set in a Conservation Area.[18]

Original design

[edit]
East view of church

As originally designed in the "geometric decorated style of architecture" to accommodate 385 adults and children, the nave was 69 feet (21 m) by 28 feet (8.5 m), and 47 feet (14 m) high to the roof-ridge. The tower was 17.5 feet (5.3 m) square with a height of 57 feet (17 m). The stone spire was originally designed to be 40 feet (12 m) but was ultimately raised to 52 feet (16 m). The organ chamber measured 14 feet (4.3 m) and the vestry was 12 feet (3.7 m). The ground floor of the tower doubled as the church porch, and its first floor held a children's gallery – directly beneath the single bronze bell. The nave roof was open-timbered, but the chancel roof was arched and boarded. The pews and choir stalls, designed by Mallinson and Barber, were of stained deal. These were to be for free use, with no rented box pews. Made to the architect's original design and commission, the oak pulpit stood on a stone base and the carved stone font was placed by the south west door.[3][21]

Exterior

[edit]

When the foundation stone was laid in 1869, this Gothic Revival Anglican church was said to have been designed "in the geometric decorated style."[8] It is built of hammer-dressed stone with ashlar dressing. The stone gutter of the slate roof is on moulded brackets. The tower is at the east end of the nave, and it has a stair turret to the second floor on its west side and a splay-footed stone spire with four lucarnes. Over the south door is a canopied niche with a "moulded arched head and figure" beneath.[1]

Interior

[edit]

Tower

[edit]
View inside spire

The tower has four floors, of which the ground floor doubles as the church's porch.[22] The first floor is the children's gallery; this has a stepped floor to accommodate the pews, leaving a large, wedge-shaped cavity between the ground floor ceiling and the surface for the seating. The children's gallery is well-lit by large windows, and is open to the nave, forming a balcony overlooking the pulpit. The opening to the nave was closed off around 1984 with a screen and door. The gallery is accessed separately from the nave via the tower's staircase, allowing the Sunday School children to be brought into the gallery and taken away to lessons without disturbing the service. This gallery is long disused and the steps beside the pews have become rotten and unsafe.[23] The second floor is the clock chamber, containing an 1889 turret clock mechanism by Potts of Leeds, who as of 2014 continue to maintain it. The clock chamber has no windows and is completely dark.[24] The bell chamber is on the third floor and contains the single bronze bell and clapper for the clock.[25]

Above the bell frame there is a hole in the bell chamber ceiling, and through that opening can be seen the inside of the spire. It is a hollow cone of stone blocks, unsupported by any interior frame, and is full of light because it has four lucarnes at the bottom, and eight more large openings higher up.

[edit]
Oak pulpit

Inside there is an arch-braced hammerbeam roof.[1] This is seen to full effect because of the contrasting dark-stained wood against very pale ceiling paint, and the large amount of light from clear-glazed windows.[26] Until at least 1984 there was an 1870 carved, square, marble font standing on four marble colonnettes, designed by Mallinson and Barber and funded by Mrs Bensted, wife of the vicar of Lockwood.[1][18] The font was replaced in the 1980s, when the church room was installed inside the back of the nave, and the whereabouts of the original is unknown. Because an artisan painter is credited, there may originally have been wall paintings.[3]

The entrance area and aisle are paved with coloured, plain encaustic tiles whose layout pattern was designed by Mallinson and Barber; the floor under the pews retains its original floor boards.[27] The organ was made by F.W. Jardine for Kirtland and Jardine in 1870, and was fully restored in 1990. It fits into the organ arch, which was designed for its dimensions.[3][18][28][29] The original 1870 carved oak pulpit on its carved stone plinth stands in its original position in front of the north side of the chancel arch.[30] Many of the original pews designed by Mallinson and Barber still exist in situ, but the ones at the back of the nave were removed along with the marble font in the 1980s when the church room was constructed there.[31]

Chancel

[edit]
Roundel in east window

The east window by William Wailes represents the Parable of the Good Samaritan; it cost £100 and was funded in 1870 by the local inhabitants in memory of Thomas Brooke, father of the 1869–1870 fund-raising treasurer Colonel Brooke. Rev. Richard Collins stated at the 1870 consecration that the theme of Good Samaritan and the word "just" in the window's dedication referred to Thomas Brooke's good deeds.[3] The reredos was installed in the 1920s, and on its bottom right hand skirting board there is a wooden plaque commemorating its presentation.[32] The sanctuary has decorative encaustic floor tiles whose arrangement was designed by Mallinson and Barber. These tiles were funded by D. Sharman who was master of Thurstonland Endowed School. The choir stalls and the altar rail are decoratively carved, and were designed and commissioned by Mallinson and Barber.[33]

Interior views

[edit]

Graveyard

[edit]

Although the church itself was not consecrated until 1870, part of the graveyard was available for burials by 5 March 1862. The extant 1880 plan of the main area does not conform to the present layout – for example the paths are missing – and there are no sexton's records of individual burial sites; however there is a burial register transcript. It is an Anglican graveyard, although nonconformist and Catholic burials are recorded here.[16]

Storthes Hall section

[edit]
Undulating surface of unmarked Storthes Hall graves

The churchyard contains around 2,000 graves of patients who died at Kirkburton in Storthes Hall Hospital (1904–1991). Most of these graves are unmarked, in a separate field behind the church which was added by Rev. Arnold Escombe Jerram before he left in 1910.[16][34] By 1913 there was fear in the village that the pauper burials were causing epidemics, because the sexton was saving money by leaving graves open to rain and weather, and not filling them with earth until they each contained their full complement of four coffins. The authorities claimed that Storthes Hall's use of the graveyard benefited Thurstonland by the payment of rates and that only fifty paupers per year, who were unclaimed by relatives, were buried there. Rev. P.S. Brown, at that time vicar of Thurstonland and chaplain to Storthes Hall, claimed that the burials were no danger to health, even though the sexton had to ladle out water from open graves before subsequent funerals.[34]

Clergy

[edit]

George Lloyd 1861–1865

[edit]
Dissenters' Chapel, Thurstonland

Reverend George Lloyd, (1820–1885) was Curate in Charge of Thurstonland under R. Collins, Vicar of Kirkburton, from 1861 to 1865, using the old dissenters' chapel room before the present building existed.[35][36] From 1865 until at least the end of the 1870s he was curate of Trimdon in County Durham, Church Gresley in South Derbyshire and Cramlington in Northumberland.[35] He was an outspoken man who once received an assassination threat.[37] He was the leading founding member of the Huddersfield Archaeological and Topographical Association, which was later to become the Yorkshire Archaeological Society. The society was founded in 1863 for the purpose of funding and organising excavations at Slack Roman fort. These excavations were initially supervised and documented by Lloyd himself.[38] His excavations were partially funded and supported by the Earl of Dartmouth who later funded the building of St Thomas' Church.[38]

Robert Boyle Thompson 1868–1877

[edit]

Robert Boyle Thompson (1840–1906) was of Irish ancestry. His father was Robert Thompson of The Diamond, Coleraine, Northern Ireland.[39] Thompson was the brother of Bennett Thompson (died 1896), a solicitor of Granite Hall, Dún Laoghaire, Ireland, and he attended the big funeral there.[40] On 24 April 1867 at St John's Church, Upperthong, Thompson married Hannah Thewlis, eldest daughter of N. Thewlis of Lane House, Holmfirth.[41][42]

The Diamond, Coleraine, where his father came from

Thompson was educated at Queen's College, Birmingham, graduating in 1863.[35] On 29 June 1865 he was ordained deacon by the Bishop of Ripon in the chapel of the Episcopal Palace at Ripon.[43] He was ordained priest on Sunday 22 September 1867 by the Bishop in the same chapel.[44] From 1865 to 1868 he was curate of Longwood, West Yorkshire.[35] In 1868 the vicar of Kirkburton, Rev. Richard Collins (1794–1882),[45] appointed him curate of the chapel of ease at Thurstonland, in anticipation of his incumbency of the new parish of Thurstonland and its projected Church of St Thomas, which was to be completed in 1870. In June 1868 the Bishop of Ripon licensed him to the stipendiary curacy of Kirkburton, to officiate in Thurstonland.[46][47] Thus Thompson was the first curate of Thurstonland to use the new church building.[3] He was formally granted the vicarage of St Thomas in May 1871 where he served until 1877.[35][48]

19th century slums of Seven Dials where he did "great work"

In July 1877 until 1878 he was given the perpetual curacy of St Paul, Shepley, West Yorkshire.[49][50] In March 1878 the Bishop of London, John Jackson, instituted him to the curacy of St James-the-Less, Bethnal Green where he served until 1882.[35][51] While there he did "great work in the mission district of Seven Dials, London, under the rector of St Giles in the Fields. He [was] believed to be a thoroughly earnest man, a good visitor and preacher, and he [held] evangelical views."[2] He was a London Diocesan Home Missionary from 1880 to 1882.[35] From 1882 to 1894 he was vicar of St Lawrence and St Paul's Church, Pudsey.[2][52][53] In Pudsey he was involved in politics, being one of the assentors to the nomination of Conservative candidate Surr William Duncan for local elections, although Briggs Priestley won for the Liberals.[54] In 1894 Brooke Foss Westcott, Bishop of Durham, presented him to the living of Rainton near Fencehouses, Durham.[55] Rev. Thompson died on 10 August 1906 at Rainton rectory in his 67th year, and was interred at St Mary's Church, Rainton on 13 August.[56][57][58]

David Harrison 1877–1882

[edit]

David Harrison (1845–1882) was born in Colne, Lancashire. He married Matilda (b. Trawden, 1842) and they had a son Hartley (b. Colne, 1866).[59]

Christ Church, Linthwaite, where he "endeared" himself to the parishioners

He graduated from St Aidan's Theological College, Birkenhead, in 1871. He was made deacon in 1873, and priest in 1875 by the Bishop of Ripon.[35] From 1873 to 1877, Harrison was curate of Christ Church, Linthwaite, and was in sole charge of the parish for much of the time as the vicar had a long-term illness.[35][60][61] On Thursday 12 July 1877 there was a parishioners' meeting at the national school at Linthwaite for a farewell presentation to Harrison and his wife. The Huddersfield Chronicle said, "During his stay here his pulpit powers, his genial bearing towards all classes, and his assiduous labours, have endeared him to the whole (sic) parishioners. Mrs Harrison, by her kindness towards all, and her unostentatious works of love, has also caused her name to be revered as a household word." Harrison and his wife were presented with an illuminated address expressing the "kind feelings of the congregation towards them." Harrison was given a clock, and his wife received a silver teapot and a photograph of her Sunday school class. Harrison responded that they had been happy there, and the parishioners gave them three cheers.[62]

In August 1877, he was appointed vicar of St Thomas.[63] The living was worth £205 per year, and the parish population was then 1001.[35] On 19 April 1882, Harrison chaired the routine Easter vestry meeting at St Thomas to appoint new churchwardens. The outgoing wardens were Robert Hallas and Jonathan W. Senior; the new churchwardens were John Foster Johnson and William H. Walker.[64]

Christ Church, Colne, where he is buried, having died at age 37 years

He died in June 1882, aged 37. The funeral began at 8.30 am on 1 July with a procession following the coffin to the funeral service at St Thomas. This service was attended by seven clergymen: W.H. Girling of Lockwood, John Collins of Holmfirth, Richard Collins of Kirkburton, Thomas Lewthwaite of Newsome, H. Edwards of Linthwaite, John Prowde of Netherthong and H. Johnson of Linthwaite. Revs Richard and John Collins took part of the Burial Service (from the Book of Common Prayer) and the choir and congregation sang hymns. The funeral cortège proceeded on foot 1.5 miles (2.4 km) to Stocksmoor railway station. First came the seven clergy, followed by the coffin on a carriage or barrow, then the family mourners. Then came the churchwardens and a large number of parishioners from Thurstonland and Linthwaite, "to show their sympathy towards the family of one who had laboured so faithfully among them as curate." A number of the parishioners accompanied the coffin by train to Colne via Huddersfield, "to witness the interment of one who had laboured zealously in their midst for a period of five years, and who had succeeded in winning the respect and esteem of his parishioners, and of all with whom he came into contact." He was buried on the same day at Christ Church, Colne.[65][66] On 19 July his effects, including household furniture, were sold by auction at Thurstonland Vicarage, by the executors of his will.[67]

John Leech 1882–1906

[edit]
St John's Hall, Highbury, formerly the London College of Divinity

John Leech's father was Isaac Leech, the rich owner of Cleator Mills.[68][69] John Leech (1856–1932) was born in Cumberland,[70] and his wife Emma Maude Preston (1855–1920) was born in Manchester. She was the second daughter of Major Francis Preston who in 1882 lived at Netherfield House, Kirkburton. They were married by Rev. Richard Collins at Huddersfield Parish Church on 14 August 1882.[71][72] They had two sons (of whom one died) and two daughters, all born in Thurstonland.[73] Living with them at the vicarage in 1891 were his brother and two servants.[74] One of the daughters married a later vicar of Thurstonland, M. Gerber.[73] They were still at the vicarage in 1901, by which time they had only one servant.[75] By the time of the 1911 Census, Emma Maude and her daughter Florence were visiting at Southport alone.[76] John Leech's brother was Joseph Leech, Conservative MP for Newcastle upon Tyne West.[73]

Leech was vicar of Golcar for 25 years

Leech attended London College of Divinity until 1878. He was a graduate of Durham University in 1888 and gained a BA in 1891.[35] He was made deacon in 1880, and ordained priest in 1881 by Bishop Ryan for Ripon. He was curate of Kirkburton from 1880 to 1882.[35][73] On Tuesday 25 July 1882 the Bishop of Ripon instituted Rev. John Leech to the vicarage of Thurstonland, and he stayed until 1906.[35][77] His living was worth £180 and a house, with a parish population of 997.[35] In October 1886, along with the whole of the clergy in the rural deanery, all in vestments, Leech attended a dedication festival at the jubilee of the restoration of St Peter's, Huddersfield Parish Church.[78] On Wednesday 10 August 1887 he preached a sermon promoting evangelicalism at St Andrew's Church, Huddersfield, as part of the celebrations on the 17th anniversary of the consecration of the church.[79][80] In June 1889 he preached the evening sermon at the Meltham Church Sunday School Anniversary, that is, sermons to raise collections on behalf of the Sunday schools. There was choral music, a crowded church and a collection of £42 14s 10d.[81] On the evening of Monday 20 January 1890, John Leech chaired a debate in which "good temper and kindly feeling prevailed" at the National School, New Mill, on the question, "Is the union between Church and State beneficial?" There was much discussion, but the result was affirmative.[82] In July 1906 Leech was appointed vicar of the Church of St John the Evangelist, Golcar, Huddersfield, with a living of £300 per year and a house; he remained in this position until 1931.[68][73] During his time in Golcar, the value of the living rose from £300 to £400, while the parish population rose from 9,261 to 10,360.[35] He was chaplain to the 7th (Colne Valley) Battalion West Riding Territorial Regiment, and was a founder member of both the Golcar Old Age Pension Committee, and of the Golcar District Association Committee. He retired in April 1931 due to poor health, and died aged 76 years on 3 November 1932 at The Ridings, Thongsbridge.[73][83]

Arnold Escombe Jerram 1906–1910

[edit]
Trinity College, Cambridge, where Jerram was educated

Arnold Escombe Jerram (1868–1934) was born in Clapham, Surrey.[84] He was the youngest son of Edward Jenner Jerram (1811–1885), a merchant working between Cape of Good Hope and Brazil, and his wife Priscilla (1829–1909).[85][86][87][88] The family must have been mobile in the early days, as his eldest sister was born in the Cape of Good Hope, although their mother was born in St Ann's, Soho and their father in St Matthew's, London.[86] In 1861 Edward Jerram and his wife Priscilla were living at 35 Alfred Place West, Kensington, with their eldest daughter, a niece and three servants including a coachman.[89]

In 1881 at age 13 he was living with his family and five servants at 4 Atherton Terrace, Kensington.[90] By 1891 at age 23 he was living with his siblings and widowed mother at Palace Road, Kingston upon Thames. He was living on his own means, as was his mother, although his brother Herbert was a stocks and shares dealer.[86] On 21 February 1895 at Christ Church, Surbiton Hill, Kingston he married Anna Christina Ravenhill (1871–1965) second daughter of W.W. Ravenhill of the Inner Temple.[91][92][93] They had seven children, of whom one died at the Vicarage, Bradley, on 26 November 1895.[94][95] Three days later on 29 November, Jerram had his overcoat stolen from a chapel during a choral rehearsal.[96] By 1911 they were living at the Vicarage, Langford, Lechlade, Gloucestershire, in the Langford Berkshire parish. They had four of their children living with them, alongside a governess and two domestic servants.[97] On 22 September 1914 he lost his son, Midshipman Harry E.R. Jerram, RN, aged 17, when HMS Hogue was torpedoed.[98]

Chapel of St Oswald's Hospital, where he was chaplain at the end of his life

He was educated at Trinity College, Cambridge and received a third class B.A. degree in theology in 1891, and an MA in 1895.[35][99] He trained at Leeds Clergy School, graduating in 1891. He was ordained deacon to St John the Evangelist, Wortley, Leeds; his first curacy,[100] on Sunday 12 June 1892 at Ripon Cathedral by William Boyd Carpenter, Bishop of Ripon.[101][102] On 17 September 1893 he was ordained priest, again by Carpenter.[103] His MA degree was conferred at Cambridge on 17 January 1895.[104] He was a Canon from 1929.[35] He was curate of Wortley, Leeds, from 1892 to 1894, and of Coley, West Yorkshire from 1894 to 1895.[35] From 29 June 1895 until 1906 he was perpetual curate of the Church of St Thomas, Bradley, West Yorkshire.[35][105][106][107] He then became curate of St John the Baptist Church, Coley near Halifax, West Yorkshire.[100][108] By 1901 at age 33 he was curate or vicar in the parish of St. Thomas's Church, Huddersfield.[109][110][111] In July 1906 Arnold Escombe Jerram M.A. was instituted as vicar of Thurstonland, and he stayed until 1910.[112] The Thurstonland living was worth £250 and a house, with a parish population of 867.[35] While at Thurstonland he served on Thurstonland District Council; he was chairman of the Kirkburton section of the Huddersfield Board of Guardians, and was a member of the Wakefield Society of Mission Preachers.[113] From 1910 to 1914 he was vicar of St Matthew's Church, Langford.[97][114]

In Birmingham in April 1914 he gave up his Langford living to become the organising secretary of the Society for the Propagation of the Gospel, in the dioceses of Worcester, Birmingham and Lichfield, continuing until 1918.[35][98][113][114] He was Secretary of the Diocesan Board of Finance 1918–1930.[35] From 1930 until 1934 he was chaplain of St Oswald's Hospital, Worcester, and from 1927 to 1934 Honorary Canon of Worcester Cathedral, and honorary chaplain to the Bishop of Worcester, Arthur Perowne from 1930 to 1934. At the same time he was chaplain of St Oswald's Hospital, an almshouse residential post.[85][100][115] He was Surrogate from 1932.[35] He died on 6 June 1934 in his 67th year at St Oswald's Hospital, Worcester.[116] He left £2,888 (net £2,830).[115][117]

Philip Sydney Brown 1910–1923

[edit]
Brown was chaplain of Storthes Hall psychiatric Hospital

Philip Sydney Brown (1865–1938) was born at Aston in Birmingham.[118][119] He married Beatrice Emily Lowrance (born 1876) at Barnsley in 1898 and had one daughter.[120][121][122][123]

He graduated from Queen's College, Birmingham in 1886. He became deacon in 1888 and was ordained priest in 1889 by the bishop of Wakefield.[35] He was curate of St John's Church, Dewsbury Moor from 1888 to 1896. From 1896 to 1910 he was vicar of Wrenthorpe, Wakefield; the living was worth £170 per year and a house, with a parish population of 2269.[35] From 1910 to 1923 he was vicar of Thurstonland, and while there he was also chaplain at Storthes Hall Psychiatric Hospital. For some years he served on Thurstonland and Farnley Tyas Urban Council. From 1923 until his retirement in 1935 he was vicar of Birchencliffe, Huddersfield. Birchencliffe had a living of £402 per annum and a house, with a parish population which rose from 2471 to 2551 while he was there.[35] From 1935 until he died he had permission to officiate within the diocese of York.[35] He died at Scarborough in his 74th year on Sunday 23 October 1938.[124][125]

Maurice Gerber 1923–1939

[edit]
Gerber ministered at Thurstonland for 16 years

Maurice Gerber (1878–1967) had no England-Wales birth certificate and does not appear in any UK Census, so may have changed his name or was born abroad or at sea. In 1927 at Huddersfield he married Clara Winifred Maude Leech (2 April 1889 – 1971), eldest daughter of John Leech who was a previous vicar of Thurstonland.[73][126][127][128]

In 1911 Gerber graduated from Durham University, gaining a Licentiate in Theology. In the same year he attended the London College of Divinity and was ordained deacon. He was ordained priest in 1912 by the Bishop of Carlisle. He was curate of Cleator Moor from 1911 to 1914, and between 1914 and 1921 he was curate of Rashcliffe, Huddersfield. He was curate of Almondbury from 1921 to 1924. He received a preferment to the vicarage of Thurstonland in December 1923 and remained in the post until 1939.[129] At Thurstonland he received £345 and a house, raised to £350 later. The parish population rose from 1132 in 1934 to 3458 in his time there. He was chaplain of Storthes Hall psychiatric hospital and in charge of pensions there between 1924 and 1939. Between 1939 and 1948 he was vicar of Thurgoland, Sheffield, the living being worth £424 and a house, with a parish population of 1516. He was licensed to officiate in two local dioceses from 1950, while living at Betws-y-Coed. He died in 1967 in Conwy, Wales, aged 89 years.[130]

Arthur Dilworth 1939–1943

[edit]
St Augustine's, Moulmein, where Dilworth was a missionary

Arthur Dilworth (22 July 1899 – 1989) was a scholar of Worcester College, Oxford, gaining a 2nd class classics and moderns qualification in 1921 with a BA in 1922, a 2nd class literature and humanities degree in 1923, and an MA in 1933. He was also at Wycliffe Hall, Oxford in 1923.[35][131]

He was ordained deacon in 1924, and ordained priest in 1925 by Rodney Eden, Bishop of Wakefield.[35] He was curate of Birstall 1924–1927.[35] He was missionary at St Augustine's Mission at Moulmein, Burma 1927–1929. He was principal of the Divinity School at Kokine, Pegu, Burma 1930–1933. He had a furlough between 1933 and 1934, then he was Superintendent at St Michael's Delta Mission from 1934 to 1939. He was then chaplain of Bassein and examining chaplain to the Bishop of Rangoon from 1934 to 1939 when the diocese was overrun by the Imperial Japanese Army. This is why he suddenly returned to England to become vicar of the rural parish of Thurstonland and chaplain of Storthes Hall 1939–1943, with an income of £375 and house, and a parish population of 3458. He subsequently became chaplain of the then-expanding parish of St Mary Magdalen, Knighton 1943–1945. He was chaplain of St Barnabas, Hove, Sussex from 1945 to 1947. He was vicar of Stone Cross 1947–1951, and vicar of Airedale with Fryston 1951 to 1953. He was rector of Hoggeston with Dunton 1953–1956, and vicar of Whaddon with Tattenhoe 1956–1962. He was rector of Great Horwood 1962 to 1964 and the same time rural dean of Mursley 1962–1964. He had permission to officiate in the same diocese 1960–1962, in the diocese of Salisbury 1964–1967, the diocese of Oxford from 1967 and the diocese of Wakefield from 1974.[35] He died aged 90 years in 1989 in Scarborough.[132]

Norman Gearey Hounsfield 1943–1949

[edit]
High Hoyland Church where Hounsfield was rector for 16 years

His father was John George Hounsfield (born 1844), a steel agent born in Tinsley,[133] and his mother was Catherine Phoebe Harrison (born 1851).[134][135] Norman Gearey Hounsfield (1883–1955) was born in Rotherham.[136] By the age of 7 in 1891 he was living with his aunt Eleanor Geary at Watford, and by age 17 in 1901 he was still living in Watford, with his brother Francis Hounsfield.[137][138] By age 27 in 1911 he was a clerk in holy orders, still living in Watford, but now with his widowed mother Catherine Hounsfield (born 1851).[139] He married Edith Margaret Denholm (1888–1952) in Durham in 1913.[140] She was born in Duns, Berwickshire, the eldest daughter of Scottish medical practitioner James Denholm (1859–1910.[141] Before marriage she was a classical mistress in a secondary school.[142] She died in Durham, leaving £8041 net.[143][144] Their son Lieutenant Kenneth Denholm Hounsfield, aged 23 years, was killed in action in September 1944 during World War II.[145]

He attended Guildhall Middle School at Bury St Edmunds, and in 1899 received a prize for French: a book on astronomy, Story of the Heavens by Robert Stawell Ball, 1886[146] He gained a Licentiate in Theology at Durham University in 1911, was ordained deacon in 1912, and ordained priest in 1913 by Brooke Foss Westcott, Bishop of Durham. He was curate of St Hilda, South Shields 1912–1915, and of Kelvedon 1915–1919. He was curate of Wanstead 1919–1920, then vicar of Walker 1920–1927. He was rector of High Hoyland with Clayton West 1927–1943, and was assistant rural dean of Huddersfield 1942–1949. He was vicar of Thurstonland 1943–1949. In 1943 the living was £375 (£400 by 1949) and house, with a parish population of 4132.[35][147] From 1949 to 1955 he was licensed to officiate in the diocese of Durham. He died aged 71 years at Durham in 1955.[148]

Ernest Parry 1950–1953

[edit]
Kudat where Parry was a missionary to the Chinese

Ernest Parry graduated from St Aidan's College of the University of Durham in 1913. At Durham he obtained his Bachelor of Divinity in 1930. At the University of Leeds he gained another Bachelor of Divinity in 1940, and a Master of Arts in 1943. He was ordained deacon in 1914 by the Bishop of Richmond for Ripon, and was ordained priest in 1915 by the Bishop of Knaresborough for Ripon. He was curate of St Alban the Martyr, Leeds, 1914–1917, and of St Chad's Church, Far Headingley, 1917–1921.[35]

He arrived in Kuching, Malaysia in May 1921 and volunteered to work with Chinese people. For this purpose he went to Kudat, Borneo, in November of the same year. There he immediately started to build a divinity school called the Holy Way or Shin Tau Yen, which was opened in January 1923. While supervising the construction work, he was also learning the local and Chinese languages. The building had a verandah, chapel, dining room, common-room and office on the ground floor, with ten more rooms above. Five Chinese people were prepared at the school for ordination, and by April 1927 there were three ordained Chinese priests and two Chinese deacons. Parry was principal of this school from 1921 to 1928, although he went on leave in 1925. He was rector of Kudat from 1926 to 1930, while at the same time replacing the now-dilapidated first Holy Way school with a second one. He left Kudat in 1930 for health reasons.[35][149]

Back in the UK he was curate of Bramley, Leeds, including the curacy of Holy Trinity Hough End, 1930–1931.[150] He was vicar of St Augustine's, Halifax, West Yorkshire, and chaplain for Halifax Poor Law Institute 1931–1938. He was vicar of Coley, West Yorkshire, 1938–1947, and of Marton 1947–1950. He was vicar of Thurstonland 1950–1953. In 1950 the Thurstonland living was £450 and a house, with a parish population of 4132.[35] He returned on the evening of 21 October 1951 to St Chad's in Headingley as a visiting preacher; he had last preached there 30 years previously.[151] He died in harness on Wednesday 26 August 1953. His funeral on 28 August at Thurstonland Church was attended by the Bishop of Pontefract who paid tribute to his life and ministry, the vicar of Farnley Tyas, the rector of Kirkheaton, Rev. A.T. Dangerfield of Holmfirth, Rev. A.T. Wellesley Greeves of Hepworth, Rev. H.E.S. Meanley of Cawthorne and Rev. C.T.D. Ellam of Lepton, besides his two married daughters.[16][35][152][153]

Parry was the author of several books: How to Read the New Testament (1925); From Jerusalem to the Far East (1925); Borneo Essays (1925); Sermon Psychology (1930); Brief Sermons (1938). He was also editor of the following books: A Historical Survey of Christian Missions (1927); Holy Union (1930).[35]

Philip Frederick Wainwright Frost 1953–1969

[edit]
Allithwaite Church, Frost's last ministry

Philip Frederick Wainwright Frost (18 November 1920 – 1993) was born in Leeds.[154] He married Ida M. Latimer in Ilkeston, Derbyshire in 1951.[155]

He graduated from Keble College, Oxford with a 3rd class theology degree in 1942. At Oxford he received his BA in 1943, and his MA in 1946. He graduated from Queen's College, Birmingham in 1946. He was ordained deacon in 1948, and priest in 1949 by the Bishop of Derby. He was curate of Ilkeston 1948–1951, and curate of Holmfirth 1951–1953. He then became vicar of New Mill, West Yorkshire in 1953, and became concurrently vicar of Thurstonland in 1953. He stayed until 1969, living at New Mill Vicarage, Huddersfield. Following this he was vicar of Ainstable with Armathwaite in Cumbria 1969 to 1974. From 1974 to 1979 he was vicar of Flimby, then vicar of Allithwaite 1979–1985. He retired to Morecambe in 1985 and died in Lancaster in 1993 in his 73rd year.[35][156]

Edward Harold Forshaw 1969–1973

[edit]
Forshaw was vicar of St Peter's, Stanley, demolished in 2014

Edward Harold Forshaw (1908–1980) was born at Birkenhead.[35][157] He was the third child of barge waterman James Forshaw (born 1872 Butts Bridge; died 1909 Liverpool) and his wife Emma Forshaw nee Caffrey (born 1875).[158][159][160][161][162] He married Doris Lowe at Kidderminster in 1945.[163]

He graduated from Worcester Ordinary College in 1955. He was made deacon in 1956, and ordained priest in 1957 by the Bishop of Worcester. He was curate of St George, Redditch, 1956–1960, and of St Andrew's, Netherton, West Midlands from 1960 to 1963. He was vicar of Stanley, West Yorkshire, 1963–1969. He was vicar of New Mill including Thurstonland from 1969 to 1973.[35] He died in 1980 at Wakefield in his 72nd year.[164]

Raymond Laycock Wainwright 1974–1989

[edit]
Members of the Community of the Resurrection, Mirfield

Raymond Laycock Wainwright (born 1925) was born in Wakefield.[165] He married Kathleen A. Tye in Loughborough in 1967.[166] He later married Ann Marsh.[167]

He joined the Community of the Resurrection in Mirfield in 1955. He was ordained deacon in 1956 and priest in 1957. He was curate of the Church of All Saints, Bingley, from 1956 to 1958. Then, while studying for his degree, he was curate of Almondbury 1958–1960. He gained his Bachelor of Divinity at the University of London in 1960. He was vicar of St Mary's, Gawthorpe and Chickenley Heath, near Dewsbury and Ossett, 1960–1974. He then became joint vicar of Christ Church, New Mill and Thurstonland 1974–1989. Between 1989 and 1991 he was team vicar for the same parishes. He retired in 1991 with permission to officiate in the Wakefield diocese from that date.[35] He died on 25 April 2008 aged 83 at Huddersfield Royal Infirmary.[167]

John Sean Robertshaw, from 1996

[edit]
Robertshaw is Honorary Canon of Wakefield Cathedral

Rev. Canon John Sean Robertshaw was born in Huddersfield in 1966.[35]

He graduated from Cranmer Hall, St John's College, Durham in 1990. He was ordained deacon in 1993, and ordained priest in 1994. He was curate of St Peter's parish church, Morley with Churwell, Wakefield, from 1993 to 1996. He then became team vicar for Upper Holme Valley, including Thurstonland, from 1996 to 2001. He was appointed Chaplain to the Forces for the Territorial Army in 1998. He was team rector for Upper Holme Valley 2001–2013.[18][35] He was made Honorary Canon of Wakefield Cathedral on 8 September 2011.[168] On 26 June 2012 he was appointed a director of Wakefield Diocesan Board of Education.[169] In November 2012 he gained a postgraduate degree in theology and ministry at York St John University.[170]

Services and parochial activity

[edit]
1980s Church Room in nave

This ministry serves Thurstonland and Stocksmoor, and works with the local community, including Thurstonland Endowed (VC) First School, the two village associations, and the local pub and cricket club. The following services occur regularly: all-age worship, holy communion and family communion. There is a regular sung eucharist, and also a children's church service twice a month. Lay people are involved in church services, in practical contribution such as flowers and refreshments, and in those local events such as music concerts and Harvest Festival which take place at St Thomas' church and in the Church Room at the back of the nave. The magazine Parish News, listing services and events, is distributed from the church building.[18][171] The church is involved in charity work, and organises occasional family Sunday Fundays. It hosts Rainbows, Mothers' Union, a knitting group, a weekly coffee morning and a Sunday school. There is wheelchair access, toilets and disabled parking.[18]

The arch-braced hammerbeam roof lit by clear-glazed windows since 1870

References

[edit]
  1. ^ a b c d e Historic England. "Church of St Thomas (1135375)". National Heritage List for England. Retrieved 27 February 2014.
  2. ^ a b c Yorkshire Post and Leeds Intelligencer 3 July 1882: Pudsey, induction of a new vicar
  3. ^ a b c d e f g h i j k l Huddersfield Chronicle, 8 October 1870: Consecration of St Thomas' Church, Thurstonland
  4. ^ a b Church Plans Online: William Swinden Barber Archived 7 April 2014 at the Wayback Machine Retrieved 29 January 2014
  5. ^ West Yorkshire Archive Service: CC01278 – Calderdale architects, plans and drawings (MISC:703), ground plan of Thurstonland Church, MISC:703/7 Retrieved 1 May 2014
  6. ^ West Yorkshire Archive Services: CC01278 – Calderdale architects, plans and drawings (MISC:703), sketch of new church at Thurstonland, MISC:703/8 Retrieved 1 May 2014
  7. ^ See image of Butterfield's St John the Evangelist, Birkby File:St John the Evangelist, Birkby.jpg
  8. ^ a b c d e f g h Huddersfield Chronicle 31 July 1869: New church for Thurstonland
  9. ^ a b c d e f Leeds Mercury 27 July 1869: Laying the foundation stone of a new church at Thurstonland
  10. ^ Note: painting in Barber churches could mean stencilling and spirit frescos.
  11. ^ Death cert: December 1868, Winterbottom John Frederick, 68 Westminster St Margaret, 1a/299
  12. ^ United Kingdom Census 1861: estimated population of Thurstonland 1,116, spread across 2,050 acres
  13. ^ Birth cert: September 1838, Jenkinson George Wood, Huddersfield, 22/342
  14. ^ Death cert: June 1898, Jenkinson George Wood, 59, Huddersfield, 9a/233
  15. ^ Note: the Leeds Messenger 27 July 1869 article states that the foundation stone was laid in a cavity, and under the stone was deposited a bottle containing newspapers etc.
  16. ^ a b c d Thurstonland Graveyard Project: officiating ministers Archived 28 May 2014 at the Wayback Machine Retrieved 18 May 2014. Note: Parry is recorded on this page as officiating minister "EP" from 1950 to 1953.
  17. ^ Death cert: September 1896, Pontefract Samuel, 81, Fylde, 8e/408
  18. ^ a b c d e f g C of E: A church near you, St Thomas, Thurstonland Retrieved 27 February 2014
  19. ^ West Yorkshire Archive Services: D000144 – Thurstonland St Thomas, parish records WDP144 Retrieved 1 May 2014
  20. ^ West Yorkshire Archive Services: WYAS1194 – Kirklees local studies collection of parish and nonconformist church magazines (WYW1467), WYW1467 Archived 1 May 2014 at archive.today Retrieved 1 May 2014
  21. ^ Yorkshire Indexers: Thurstonland St Thomas Church Retrieved 15 May 2014
  22. ^ See image of door to nave at File:St Thomas Thurstonland interior 081.jpg
  23. ^ See image of children's gallery: File:St Thomas Thurstonland interior 003.jpg
  24. ^ See image of clock at: File:St Thomas Thurstonland interior 084m.JPG
  25. ^ See image of bell at File:St Thomas Thurstonland interior 012.jpg
  26. ^ See image of nave ceiling: File:St Thomas Thurstonland interior 024.jpg
  27. ^ See image of tiled floor of nave at: File:St Thomas Thurstonland interior 040.jpg
  28. ^ Information from wall plaque next to organ in nave
  29. ^ Jardine Church Organs: history Retrieved 11 May 2014
  30. ^ See image of pulpit at: File:St Thomas Thurstonland interior 050.jpg
  31. ^ See image of pews at: File:St Thomas Thurstonland interior 063.jpg
  32. ^ See image of reredos at: File:St Thomas Thurstonland interior 036.jpg
  33. ^ See image of choir stalls at File:St Thomas Thurstonland interior 046.jpg and altar rail at: File:St Thomas Thurstonland interior 043.jpg
  34. ^ a b Yorkshire Evening Post 2 June 1913: Rattle his bones over the stones, condition of Yorkshire paupers' graves, villagers and epidemics
  35. ^ a b c d e f g h i j k l m n o p q r s t u v w x y z aa ab ac ad ae af ag ah ai aj ak al am an ao ap aq Crockford's Clerical Directory, vols 1865–1979
  36. ^ Death cert: March 1885, Lloyd George, 65, Tynemouth, 10b/152
  37. ^ Manchester Courier and Lancashire General Advertiser 15 October 1866: The strike in the iron trade
  38. ^ a b Huddersfield Chronicle 9 December 1865: "The site of Cambodunum"
  39. ^ The Kirkpatrick family archives: Robert Thompson of The Diamond, Colerane Retrieved 12 May 2014
  40. ^ Belfast News-letter 18 June 1896: Dublin day by day
  41. ^ Huddersfield Chronicle 27 April 1867: Marriages
  42. ^ Marriage cert: June 1867, Thewlis Hannah, Huddersfield, 9a/452
  43. ^ Manchester Courier and Manchester General Advertiser 3 July 1865: Ordinations at Ripon
  44. ^ York Herald 28 September 1867: Ordinations
  45. ^ From Crockford Clerical Directory 1865: Collins was Vicar of Kirkburton from 1843. In 1865 he received a tithe of £20 12s 8d, £310 per annum and a house, but Kirkburton's scattered parish population was 9728.
  46. ^ Yorkshire Post and Leeds Intelligencer 6 June 1868: Ecclesiastical news: Diocese of Ripon
  47. ^ Huddersfield Chronicle 11 March 1882: Death of the Rev. Richard Collins MA, vicar of Kirkburton
  48. ^ Hampshire Advertiser 6 May 1871: Ecclesiastical intelligence, preferments and appointments
  49. ^ Manchester Courier and Lancashire General Advertiser: 27 July 1877: Ecclesiastical intelligence, preferments and appointments
  50. ^ Shepley St Paul Archived 22 December 2015 at the Wayback Machine Retrieved 12 May 2014
  51. ^ Hampshire Advertiser 30 March 1878: Ecclesiastical intelligence
  52. ^ Pudsey Parish Church: Vicars of St Lawrence, Pudsey Archived 25 June 2013 at the Wayback Machine Retrieved 12 May 2014
  53. ^ Leeds Mercury 3 July 1882: The new vicar of Pudsey
  54. ^ Yorkshire Post 30 November 1885: Pudsey division of the West Riding
  55. ^ Family Search: Rainton, Durham Retrieved 12 May 2014. The parish church is St Mary the Virgin, West Rainton; Thompson could also have been responsible for the curacy of St Cuthbert's Church East Rainton.
  56. ^ Cheltenham Chronicle 18 August 1906, p.7
  57. ^ Death cert: September 1906, Thompson Robert Boyle, 66, Houghton, 10a/314
  58. ^ London Standard 13 August 1906: Deaths Retrieved 12 May 2014
  59. ^ United Kingdom Census 1881, RG11/4373/p.1. The family was living in Thurstonland Vicarage in 1881
  60. ^ Christ Church Linthwaite: Our history Archived 28 May 2014 at the Wayback Machine Retrieved 14 May 2014
  61. ^ Church of England: Christ Church Linthwaite Retrieved 14 May 2014
  62. ^ Huddersfield Chronicle 16 July 1877: Presentation at Linthwaite
  63. ^ Birmingham Daily Gazette 23 August 1877: Ecclesiastical intelligence, preferments and appointments
  64. ^ Huddersfield Chronicle 12 April 1882: Easter vestry meetings, St Thomas's Church Thurstonland
  65. ^ Huddersfield Chronicle 3 and 8 July 1882: Funeral of the late vicar of Thurstonland
  66. ^ A Church Near You: Christ Church, Colne Retrieved 13 May 2014
  67. ^ Huddersfield Chronicle 15 July 1872: Sale of effects
  68. ^ a b Manchester Courier and Lancashire General Advertiser 5 and 20 July 1906: The Church, preferments and appointments
  69. ^ Note: This was Cleator Flax Mill which became the Kangol factory in 1938. It became redundant in 2009, was used as a warehouse and is now derelict.
  70. ^ Birth cert: June 1856, Leech John, Whitehaven, 10b/500 OR Birth cert: December 1856, Leech John, Whitehaven, 10b/480
  71. ^ Manchester Times 19 August 1882: Marriages
  72. ^ Marriage cert: March 1882, Emma Maude Preston and John Leech, Huddersfield, 9A/461
  73. ^ a b c d e f g Yorkshire Post and Leeds Intelligencer 4 November 1932
  74. ^ United Kingdom Census 1891: RG12/3560/p.11
  75. ^ United Kingdom Census 1901: RG13/4098/piece 5/p.1
  76. ^ United Kingdom Census 1911
  77. ^ Huddersfield Chronicle 29 July 1882, p.8: District intelligence, Thurstonland
  78. ^ Huddersfield Chronicle 29 October 1886: Dedication festival at the Parish Church
  79. ^ Huddersfield Chronicle 13 August 1887: St Andrew's Church
  80. ^ St Andrew's Church, Leeds Road, Huddersfield, was made redundant and was for sale in 2012 for development as a restaurant
  81. ^ Huddersfield Chronicle 15 June 1889: District intelligence, Meltham
  82. ^ Huddersfield Chronicle 22 January 1890: Debate on Church and State
  83. ^ Death cert: December 1932, Leech John, 76, Huddersfield, 9a/343
  84. ^ Birth cert: September 1867, Jerram Arnold Escombe, Wandsworth, 1d/461
  85. ^ a b Yorkshire Post and Leeds Intelligencer 14 June 1934: Deaths
  86. ^ a b c United Kingdom Census 1891 RG12/611/p.11
  87. ^ Death cert: June 1885, Jerram Edward Jenner, 74, Kingston, 2a/207
  88. ^ Death cert: March 1909, Jerram Priscilla, 80, Kingston, 2a/344
  89. ^ United Kingdom Census 1861 RG9/21/p.38
  90. ^ United Kingdom Census 1881 RG11/51/p.45
  91. ^ Death cert: March 1965, Jerram Anna C, 94, Worcester, 9D/348
  92. ^ Marriage cert: March 1895, Jerram Arnold Escombe and Anna Christine Ravenhill, Kingston, 2a/421
  93. ^ London Standard 25 February 1895: Marriages
  94. ^ Leeds Times 30 November 1895: Deaths
  95. ^ Birth cert: June 1870, Ravenhill Anna Christina, Pancras, 1b/27
  96. ^ Huddersfield Chronicle 7 December 1895: Second Court, theft from a schoolroom and church and chapel vestries
  97. ^ a b United Kingdom Census 1911: RG14/6438
  98. ^ a b Birmingham Daily Mail 17 October 1914: Birmingham clergyman's loss
  99. ^ Cambridge Independent Press 18 December 1891: Class lists
  100. ^ a b c Yorkshire Post 8 June 1934: Bishop's chaplain
  101. ^ Yorkshire Herald 13 June 1892: Ordinations
  102. ^ Cambridge Independent Press: Ripon, deacons
  103. ^ York Herald 18 December 1893: Advent ordinations
  104. ^ London Standard 18 January 1895
  105. ^ The churches of Britain and Ireland: Huddersfield West Yorkshire, Bradley 14 May 2014
  106. ^ Supplement to the Manchester Courier 9 November 1895: Ecclesiastical Intelligence, preferments and appointments
  107. ^ Morning Post (London) 18 November 1899: Marriages
  108. ^ The Church of England: St John the Baptist, Coley Archived 14 May 2014 at archive.today Retrieved 14 May 2014
  109. ^ United Kingdom Census 1901 RG13/4108/136/p.9
  110. ^ The Church of England: St Thomas Huddersfield Retrieved 14 May 2014
  111. ^ St Thomas Huddersfield: history Archived 19 January 2014 at the Wayback Machine Retrieved 14 May 2014
  112. ^ Bath Chronicle and Weekly Gazette 2 August 1906, p.6: Preferments and appointments
  113. ^ a b Birmingham Daily Post 13 April 1914: SPG organising secretary
  114. ^ a b Birmingham Daily Post 4 July 1914: New missionary office
  115. ^ a b Yorkshire Evening Post 22 August 1934: Today's Yorkshire Wills
  116. ^ Death cert: June 1934, Jerram Arnold E., 66, Worcester, 6c/166
  117. ^ Yorkshire Post and Leeds Intelligencer 23 August 1934: Other Wills
  118. ^ Birth cert: June 1865, Brown Philip Sydney, Aston, 6d/295
  119. ^ Death cert: Dec 1938, Brown Philip S., 73, Scarborough, 9d/332
  120. ^ Birth cert: September 1876, Lowrance Beatrice Emily, Barnsley, 9c/197
  121. ^ Marriage cert: March 1898 Brown Philip Sydney and Beatrice Emily Lowrance, Barnsley, 9c/201
  122. ^ United Kingdom Census 1901 RG13/4283/50/p.9
  123. ^ United Kingdom Census 1911, Schedule 124, Thurstonland Vicarage
  124. ^ Death cert: December 1938, Brown Philip S., 73, Scarborough, 9d/332
  125. ^ Yorkshire Post and Leeds Intelligencer 25 October 1938: The Rev. P.S. Brown
  126. ^ Marriage cert: March 1927 Gerber Maurice and Leech Clara W.M., Huddersfield, 9a/463
  127. ^ Birth cert: June 1889, Leech Clara Winifred M, Huddersfield, 9a/300
  128. ^ Death cert: December 1971, Gerbner Clara Winifred M., birthdate 2 Apr 1889, Coalville, 3A/1132
  129. ^ Yorkshire Post and Leeds Intelligencer 20 December 1923: Ecclesiastical news
  130. ^ Death cert: December 1967, Gerber Maurice, 89, Conwy, 8A/170
  131. ^ Possible marriage: June 1924, Dilworth Arthur and Ada Chadwick, Holbeck, 9b/1357
  132. ^ Death cert: December 1989, Dilworth Arthur, b.22 July 1899, Scarborough, 2/2824
  133. ^ United Kingdom Census 1871, RG10/4704/p.10
  134. ^ Birth cert: September 1843, Hounsfield John George, Rotherham, XXII/467
  135. ^ Marriage cert: September 1875, Hounsfield, John George and Harrison Catherine Phoebe, Bedford, 3b/532
  136. ^ Birth cert: September 1883, Hounsfield Norman Geary, Rotherham, 9c/570
  137. ^ United Kingdom Census 1891 RG12/1122/p.38
  138. ^ United Kingdom Census 1901 RG13/1318/12/p.15
  139. ^ United Kingdom Census 1911 Schedule 154 Watford
  140. ^ Marriage cert: September 1913, Hounsfield, Norman G. and Edith M. Denholm, Durham, 10a/768
  141. ^ Death cert: December 1910, Denholm James, 71, Haverfordwest, 11a/709
  142. ^ United Kingdom Census 1911 Schedule 227 Newcastle on Tyne
  143. ^ Death cert: March 1952, Hounsfield, Edith M., 64, Durham Western, 1a/773
  144. ^ Yorkshire Evening Post 20 June 1952: Yorkshire Wills
  145. ^ Yorkshire Post and Leeds Intelligencer 21 September 1944: Northern casualties
  146. ^ Bury and Norwich Post 19 December 1899: Guildhall Middle School, Bury St Edmunds, speech day and prize distribution
  147. ^ Yorkshire Post and Leeds Intelligencer 4 March 1943: Ecclesiastical appointments
  148. ^ Death cert: March 1955, Hounsfield, Norman G., 71, Durham Central, 1a/377
  149. ^ Diocese of Sabah silver jubilee 1962–1987 Archived 11 October 2013 at the Wayback Machine Retrieved 19 May 2014
  150. ^ Holy National Archives: Trinity in Pudsey Road, Hough End, Bramley was a mission church built 1866. Its parish registers end in 1957, so it may have been deconsecrated or demolished. Retrieved 19 May 2014
  151. ^ Yorkshire Evening Post 20 October 1951: Works services
  152. ^ Yorkshire Post and Leeds Intelligencer 29 August 1953: The Rev E. Parry
  153. ^ Note: Parry is not listed in Crockford's Clerical Directory after 1950, but the burial register records that he officiated in Thurstonland burials 1950–1953.
  154. ^ Birth cert: December 1920, Frost Philip F.W., mother Williams, Leeds, 9b/668
  155. ^ Marriage cert: June 1951, Frost Philip F.W. and Ida M. Latimer, Ilkeston, 3a/597
  156. ^ Death cert: March 1993, Frost Frederick Wainwright, b.18 November 1920, Lancaster, 5871a/173
  157. ^ Birth cert: June 1908, Forshaw Edward Harold, Birkenhead, 8a/462
  158. ^ Marriage cert: June 1902, Caffrey Emma and James Forshaw, Birkenhead, 8a/875
  159. ^ United Kingdom Census 1911: Schedule 121 Merton Place Birkenhead
  160. ^ United Kingdom Census 1901: RG13/3334/p.6
  161. ^ Death cert: September 1909, Forshaw James, 38, Liverpool, 8b/68
  162. ^ Birth cert: March 1875, Caffrey, Emma, Birkenhead, 8a/501
  163. ^ Marriage cert: September 1945, Forshaw Edward H. and Doris Lowe, Kidderminster, 6c/352
  164. ^ Death cert: June 1980, Forshaw Edward Harold, 71, Wakefield, 5.1383/99
  165. ^ Birth cert: March 1925, Wainwright Raymond, mother Laycock, Wakefield, 9c/4
  166. ^ Marriage cert: December 1967, Wainwright Raymond L. and Kathleen A. Tye, Loughborough, 3A/1711
  167. ^ a b Yorkshire Post 1 May 2008: deaths Retrieved 18 May 2014
  168. ^ English Churchman no.7828, p.9, 23 and 30 September 2011: Clergy appointments Retrieved 18 May 2014
  169. ^ Bizzy: Reverend Canon John Sean Robertshaw Retrieved 18 May 2012
  170. ^ York Press 15 November 2012: "York St John University students celebrate degree success", by Haydn Lewis Archived 21 September 2014 at the Wayback Machine Retrieved 18 May 2012
  171. ^ Holme Valley Anglican Churches: St Thomas, Thurstonland Retrieved 1 May 2014
[edit]