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Search the London & Southern England Pub History site and Street directory by historical Pub name, surname or street address, i.e. use the search box below. The Pub history site is a major historical street directory which lists mainly Pubs, beer retailers, taverns and hotels; and street name changes between about 1840 and 1940. All transcriptions and imagery is copyright, and excepting personal usage (which is fine); is NOT available for commercial usage without explicit permission. Many of the Pubs are still open, as I do not differentiate between dead and open Pubs. The site is updated every day, mainly during pub opening hours. Please contact: Kevan with any updates and additional details to the site/s. Thanks.
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ABBERTON directories

The Imperial Gazetteer of England & Wales...., by John Marius Wilson. circa 1866

ABBERTON, a parish in Lexden district, Essex; on the river Roman, 4 miles south of Colchester r. station. It has a post-office under Colchester. Acres 1,067. Real property, £1,574. Pop., 269. Houses, 59. The property is divided among a few. The living is a rectory in the diocese of Rochester. Value, £289. Patron, the Lord Chancellor. The church is plain but good, and there is a Wesleyan chapel.

Transcribed by Noel Clark

   Abberton 1871

ABBERTON is a parish, known in the reign of King Edward the Confessor, and is situated on the Layer Brook, near its confluence with the Roman river; it is in the Eastern Division of the county, Winstree hundred, Lexden and Winstree union, Colchester county court district, Mersey rural deanery, Colchester archdeaconry, and Rochester diocese, on the Mersea road, and about 5½ miles south from Colchester station, and 55 from London. 

The church of St. Andrew is small, and has a nave and chancel, with a brick tower and 1 bell: it has been restored, the old gallery and pews removed, and the church fitted with open seats.  The register dates from the year 1500. 

The living is a rectory, yearly value £295, with residence, in the gift of the Lord Chancellor, and held by the Rev. James John Holroyd, M.A., Christ’s College, Cambridge, who resides at White Hall, St. Gile’s, Colchester. 

Here is a day school for boys and girls, supported by John Bawtree, esq.; also a Sunday school. 

The residence of John Bawtree, esq., j.p., is a substantial brick building, situated in a well laid out grounds.  Thomas Graham George White, esq., who is lord of the manor, and John Bawtree, esq; are the principal landed proprietors. 

The soil is loam; subsoil, loam.  The chief crops are wheat, barley, oats, beans and peas.  The population in 1861 was 289; the area is 1,067 acres; gross estimated rental, £1,882; rateable value, £1,643.

Parish Clerk, James Norfolk

Post Office-Mrs Deborah Harrison, receiver.  Letters through Colchester arrive at 5am dispatched at 8 pm.  The nearest money order office is at Colchester.

Bawtree John, j.p.

Crate Rev. Eustace Henry, Feniton cot

Austin Thomas, grocer & miller

Bare John Halls, farmer, Parsonage frm

Blackwell Richard, cooper

Cooper Thomas, farmer, Badcocks farm

Cuddon Richard, brewer & maltster

Death William, farmer, Abberton hall

Goody Charles, miller

Harrison Deborah (Mrs.), blacksmith & wheelwright

Humphrey Thomas, harness maker

May Henry, farmer

Poulton Peter, farmer Gate farm

Taylor Nathan, veterinary surgeon

Theobald John, boot & shoemaker

Wells James, farmer

Wright Samuel, grocer

 

KELLY'S DIRECTORY OF ESSEX 1933

ABBERTON is a parish on the Layer brook, near its confluence with the Roman river, and on the Mersea road, about miles south from Colchester, 3½ south west from Wivenhoe station on the London and North Eastern railway and from 55 London; it is in the Colchester division of the county, Winstree hundred, Lexden and Winstree petty sessional division and rural district, Colchester, Clacton and Halstead joint county court district, rural deanery and archdeaconry of Colchester and diocese of Chelmsford. The church of St. Andrew is a small building of stone and brick; it consists of a chancel, nave, south porch and a western tower of brick containing one bell: the church was restored in 1884, when the gallery and pews were removed and the latter replaced by open seats, and again in 1917-18: there are 80 sittings. The register dates from about the year 1559. The living is a rectory, net yearly value £320, with residence, in the gift of the Lord Chancellor, and held since 1930 by the Rev, Arthur George King L.Th. of Durham University. Here is a Methodist chapel. Abberton Manor, the residence of Maj. George Carr Richardson D.S.O., M.C. is a mansion, recently enlarged, standing in a well-wooded park of about 60 acres. The farmers are the chief landowners. The soil is loam; subsoil, loam. The chief crops are wheat, barley, oats, beans and peas. The area is 1,068 acres; the population in 1931 was 183.

Post, T. & Tel. Call Office. Letters through Colchester. The nearest M. O. office is at Peldon.

Conveyance.—Omnibuses from Colchester to West Mersea pass through frequently daily

Search the London & Southern England Pub History site and Street directory by historical Pub name, surname or street address. The Pub history site is a major historical street directory which lists mainly Pubs and street name changes between about 1840 and 1940. The site is updated every day. Contact: Kevan with any updates and additions.
site search by freefind

All transcriptions and imagery is copyright, and excepting personal usage (which is fine); it is NOT available for commercial usage without explicit permission.
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And Last updated on: Tuesday, 06-Dec-2011 23:54:07 GMT