FARMING AND FAMILIES

Of all the Stainton Farms, Lambcote is unique not only because of its position, nearer to Braithwell than Stainton, but also because of its origins. The first mention of it by name is in 1186 when Pope Urban confirmed the acceptance of Roche Abbey and its possessions, which included Lambcote (also written as Lambcourt, Lambthwaite and Lambthwayte) as part of the donation of Richard de Busli, Lord of Maltby, one of the founders of the Abbey in about 1147.

As the name suggests, Lambcote was a sheep farm and a very important part of the Abbey's lands because wool production was an important activity, especially in Yorkshire at that time.

The monks worked the farm for over 350 years until the Abbey was dissolved in the reign of Henry VIII. It is recorded that possession passed to John Broxholme of Conisborough.

The Bellamys

In 1570 however, a Robert Bellamy of Lambcote married Mudwan Latham of East Markham in the parish church at Stainton and in 1573 a son of that marriage, Leonard was baptized. Nothing more is recorded in the registers of any of this branch of the family, either because the registers are incomplete or because they moved or died elsewhere. In 1606, however, we find the baptism of Original Bellamy, son of Original Bellamy of Lambcote. There is no evidence as to the relationship of this group to the other unless Original (senior) was the son of Robert by a former marriage. Hunter suggests that Robert was married twice but he does not mention the birth of Leonard.

Original Bellamy (junior) died at the age of 5, but his parents went on to have another 13 children of whom at least 4 died in infancy or childhood.

The register also shows that a Barbara Bellamie of Steinton (sic) was married in 1584 to Gefrey Flitcroft of Blyth. It is very difficult to reconcile these entries without postulating that there was more than one branch of the Bellamy family resident in Stainton towards the end of the 16th century. Mary the wife of Original Bellamy was buried on 23rd February 1630.

The Bellamy family made their contribution to the life of the community. In 1572 Robert Bellamy was one of the wardens called to task at the Archbishop's visitation because of the state of the chancel and in the view of its satisfactory state in 1573 he obviously took his duties seriously.

Evidence that Lambcote was an establishment of some importance is shown by the other names in the register giving Lambcote as their house. Thus in 1597 Richard Hill and Barbara Roos were married, both of Lambcote and two years later Richard Baret and Mark Padley, again both of Lambcote.

In 1592 two others, Francis Clark and Alice Walton had been married, suggesting that within 5 years, six servants of the Bellamy family had paired off!

The last entry relating to the Bellamy family in the parish registers recorded that in 1645 William Bellamy (b. 1622) was buried in Maltby by license of the vicar of Stainton.

The Pursloves

The next family to occupy Lambcote were the Pursloves. Since the registers from 1652 to 1721 are incomplete it is impossible to verify their arrival date, but we read that in 1741 William Webster of Stavely married Anne Purslove. The family had, however, been in residence since 1686.

The first Purslove to farm Lambcote was Matthew, and he built a barn which still stands, bearing his initials and the date 1693 on the gable end. He also built stables in 1695 and left his initials on them too. In 1728 he signed his name to an inventory of the goods of George Pashley at Hall Farm and he was ultimately buried at Braithwell.

He was succeeded by his son George, who in 1747 extended the house. There was an original building of a square formation with an upper room which antedated the 1747 structure by many years. This had to be demolished in 1934 because it was extremely dilapidated. It is likely that the present house, largely of 1747, was built in more than one stage and that at one time the entrance was on the western side facing the present orchard.

George Purslove died in 1783, but his wife Mary survived until 1800. The ownership of the farm then passed through the female line by marriage to a member of the Wasteney family of Edlington, and their oldest son was christened George Purslove Wasteney. Mary Wasteney in turn married


Lambcote Grange, mostly built in 1747.

Tillage spreading in the Foxholes, Lambcote Grange.

Thomas Toone of Moat Hall, Braithwell and the ownership passed to them. Mary Toone married William Dixon, a surgeon of Tickhill in 1834, a year after her mother's death at the age of 53. Her father survived until 1857 and died at the age of 80.

In 1886 the farm was occupied by a tenant named Fawcett, the owner having mortgaged the freehold to Sir G. Stephenson of Sheffield, and another, for £8,000. The owner then appears to have disappeared and the tenant, desiring to leave the farm, was unable to give notice. He therefore gave it to the mortgagees, but they declined to foreclose and the farm lay deserted and derelict for two years. Finally in 1888 the mortgagees did foreclose, but Mr. Fawcett sued them for tenant right. He lost his case with costs, as the law stood at that time, but it has apparently been amended following that claim.

The farm was then sold to a Mr. Garside of Worksop for £10,500. He let it to various people over the next 45 years, including a man named Spencer who bred Hackney horses and sold them from Lambcote. His last tenant was a James Walker whose daughter Ethel married Mr. James Batty of the Yewlands, Firbeck.

In 1936 Lambcote was tenanted by J. B. Humphrey from whose personally recorded notes this small history of the farm has been compiled. In 1939 Mr. Humphrey purchased the freehold.

John Bowser Humphrey was the son of John Bowser Humphrey of Gattison Grange, Rossington and formerly of Over Dunsdale near Darlington. His mother was Mary Jane (nee Garbutt) of Thornaby on Tees.


Mr. J. Humpfrey (left) and Canon Cook (right)

After leaving the Guards Machine Gun Regiment upon demobilization in 1919, Mr. Humphrey farmed Mendale Farm and East Farm in Old Edlington prior to coming to Lambcote. He had been a churchwarden at Edlington and soon held the same position in Stainton, as well as being a member of the local War Agricultural Committee for eight years, a member of Stainton Parish Council from its inception, an elected representative on the Doncaster Rural District Council and a Justice of the Peace. He was, in addition, for 6 years, a member of the executive committee, of the Leeds Branch of the National Farmers' Union. His wife, Marion, was the daughter of Harry and Lucy Yeardley of Bullatree Farm, Maltby.

When Mr. Humphrey took possession of Lambcote in 1936 it was in a run-down condition and the buildings were in a bad state of disrepair. The square building which appeared to be the oldest had to be demolished, but the floor was left intact. Some time later, when planting a hedge near the house, another floor relating to an older building was found.

A range of hackney boxes also had to be demolished to make way for a new cow house, and the fold-yard was re-roofed.

In the following year the turnip house was rebuilt and some boxes built and in the year after that, the Dutch barn was taken down and re-erected. New drains were laid and a new water supply installed.

In about 1960 Mr. Humphrey reduced his commitment by selling a considerable acreage to Holme Hall Quarries and soon after that he changed the farm to a completely arable cycle of wheat, barley and peas, having sold the cattle herd. From some of the proceeds of this sale he established the Lambcote Trust to provide funds when required for the repair of the fabric of the church, except for the chancel which was already provided for.

Mr. Humphrey made an outstanding contribution to the life of the village, supported always by his wife and two daughters, the elder of whom continued to farm Lambcote after his death in 1972. Mrs. Humphrey died in 1980.

Stainton Hall Farm

The present farm house was not built until about 1680, but in 1636 George Pashley of Maltby had bought some land for £360 from Sir Edward Stanhope, the Lord of the manor. This land had previously been occupied by John Saunderson the younger and it was considerably extended by further purchases made by George Pashley himself and by his widow Elizabeth, a member of the Cooke family of Campsall.

The total landholding was inherited in 1663 by the second George Pashley who lived until 1727, and it was presumably he who built the present house. There were, in all, five generations of Pashleys living in Stainton and the inheritance eventually passed through two co-heiresses (Mary and Elizabeth) into the Burbeary family of Sheffield.

In Stainton Church there is magnificent memorial dominating the south wall of the nave. Written in florid Latin (translated in the appendix) it extols mainly the virtues of William Pashley, brother of the second George, who led a distinguished career at Jesus College Cambridge. In this he was following in the footsteps of his maternal uncles, six of whom had been scholars at Cambridge, four at Jesus College, two of whom were later admitted as Fellows, and one at


Hall Farm, built around 1680.

St. John's College where he also became a Fellow, and one, Marmaduke who was at Clare College and later became a Doctor of Divinity and vicar of Leeds and Prebendary of York, having been a Master first at Doncaster Grammar School. His Younger brother John was under 14 when he went to Cambridge! In 1655-6 he was admonished for drunkenness and fined 2d. He later went on to be Marmaduke's curate and later still, a Master at the Free School, Gainsborough.

Against this background of previous scholarship, William Pashley went up to Jesus College in 1679, became a scholar in 1683 and a Fellow in 1684. He studied Civil Law under his uncle William Cooke and in 1696 he was appointed as University Commissary.

This official was responsible for supervising the franchises for the supply of goods and services to the University, and for that purpose he had a court at which suits were heard relating to poor quality, short measure etc. The memorial in the church records his achievements and goes on to say that "in his own court he was a very fair judge and in that title he fulfilled that most distinguished office for more or less 12 years".

Joseph Hunter sets out the family tree of the Pashleys and shows that Elizabeth Pashley, wife of the first George, died on the same day as her husband, 11 January, 1663. According to the memorial in the church, however, he died on 11th January 1663 and she was buried on 27th October 1680. One does not wish to read too much into the change of phraseology, but if hunter is correct concerning the date of her death, there is some mystery concerning the whereabouts of Elizabeth's body between 1663 and 1680. It is tempting to conjecture that there was some ill-feeling between the Cooke family of which she was a member, and the incumbent at Stainton during this period, William Fretwell, because of an entry in one of the parish registers referring to the vicar of Leeds, Marmaduke Cooke, as having brought dissenters into the village of Stainton (see later). Whether this may have been a factor in the delayed burial is pure conjecture, rendered somewhat unlikely by the fact that William Fretwell was still Vicar, albeit somewhat old and failing in 1680.

The Pashley family left several memorials behind them of various kinds. In addition to that on the south wall there are two others inserted into the church fabric commemorating various members of the family. One is above the organ facing down the nave and another is on the north wall of the nave. I addition, in 1773, George Pashley (i.e. the third of that name), presented to the church one of its three bells, and in his will dated 17th July, 1727 he changed his trustees and executor with the task of raising 6s 8d from the rent of named properties left in trust. The proceeds were to be distributed amongst the most needy parishioners of Stainton every Good Friday in perpetuity.

This and the other charitable bequests or 'doles' were all amalgamated in 1980 by the Charity Commission. The investment, which had been made with the ultimate proceeds of the sale of the properties, had so far diminished in the income produced that it ceased to be on its own of sufficient value to fulfill its purposes. The wording of the deed is reproduced in the appendix.

Hall Farm passed through various hands after the Pashley family finally relinquished it. As with so many families, the ultimate survivors were daughters and the estate was divided between them. One of the daughters of William Pashley (who died in 1789) was Elizabeth and she married Benjamin Burbeary, a solicitor of Sheffield. This name is recorded upon a memorial in the church. A notable family in more recent times who farmed at Hall Farm with the Burdens. Mrs. G. Burden was secretary of the Parochial Church Council for 16 years from 1941-57. They had followed Thomas Belk, brother of Alwyn Belk of Rock House, in 1935, and were succeeded by the present owner, T. Watkins & Co.

The Watkins family have taken advantage of mechanization and modern farming methods to create a thriving and industrious agricultural contracting company based on Hall Farm.

Carr House Farm

Otherwise written in the early records as 'Carrhouse', this farmstead shared with Lambcote and Wilsic the distinction of being located outside the village but within the parish and was therefore used as a topographical adjunct to certain names. We have information, therefore, from the beginning of the records concerning those who lived at these farms in various capacities but, in the case of Carr House, we know very little about these individuals.

In 1556 the tenant was a farmer named Roger Justice and in that year, his wife gave birth to their son Thomas. Two years later Michael, the son of Nicholas Justice, was baptised and then we read nothing of the family until 1606 when Thomas, the son of Thomas Justice, was baptized. He was followed between 1606 and 1621 by William Christopher, Marie and Suzan. Then in 1640, Elizabeth, the daughter of Thomas and Elizabeth Justice of Carhouse, was baptized. This is presumably the third generation from Roger. The gap in the baptismal record means that we lose sight of the Justices, because the first reference to Carhouse after 1721 (when the records had been resumed), was in 1739 when Thomas Pearson of that farm married Susan Haywood. The names which follow are Ben Lockwood (1814), Charles Anley (1822), Thomas Thompson, labourer (1834), Henry Hill, farmer (1868 when his daughter was baptized), Edwin Bywater (1906), Charles Edward Bywater (1935 & 1938) and Ralph Sydney Clayton (1952) the father of Mr. R. M. Clayton, the current Church Warden and Parish Councillor. After Mr. R. S. Clayton died, the land associated with Carr House Farm was absorbed into Woolthwaite Farm and the house was demolished.

Rock House Farm

As observed earlier, it could well be that Rock House was the original 'Villa de Rupe' which gave Stainton its name. The last farmhouse, before the land was sold in 1967, was built in the middle of the seventeenth century in a hollow in the rock and presumably replaced earlier and less substantial dwellings.

Because Rock House is situated in the centre of the village, there are no references to it in the parish registers and, therefore, no indication of the identity of the occupants before those known from living memory.

The last owner of Rock House as a farm was a butcher from Doncaster, Stanley King. After his death, the remainder of the farm and the house were bought by Holme Hall Quarries, who let the land and demolished the house in what was considered by most of the villagers as tragic error.

Within a few days, the house and farm buildings had been replaced by a mound of rubble so that what had previously been a hollow in the rock became a hillock.

Upon this the firm built a new house in store for Mr. A. Butler using new stone-cutting equipment to produce blocks of manageable size.

The last resident farmer at Rock House was Mr. Alwyn Belk who moved there in about 1919. During the same period his brother Thomas farmed at Hall Farm. And both of them were church wardens and played a lively part in the life of the village. Alwyn moved to Holme Hall in 1936.


Rock House Farm. A 17th century house, demolished 1967.

Holme Hall Farm

A great deal of mystery surrounds the origins of Holme Hall Farm, not least its association with the 14th century chantry chapel annexed to the original church and named after the farm. No records survive of any bequest made by an owner of Holme Hall to maintain the chapel and it is impossible to understand why it was so called.

Records in the possession of the Watkins family of Hall Farm show that in the seventeenth century, Holme Hall belonged to the Pashley family. We know that George Pashley at that time extended his estate considerably by buying land in the surrounding area, and at one period he has a holding as far away as Dadsley Wells. Hunter says that he was aided in this by Elizabeth (nee Cooke) his wife, who seems to have brought considerable resources to the marriage.

It is clear, however, that his offspring tended to follow the example of their mother's family and within a few generations, were fully occupied in the church and the law.

This may explain why in 1703 Holme Hall was sold to a Robert Ward of London who bought it for his son-in-law, Joshua Pearson of Edlington, clerk in Holy Orders. In 1722 Joshua Pearson died and left his interest in the farm to his wife Anne for life with the remainder to his daughters, Frances and Margaret.


Holme Hall Farm, about 1905.

During this period the farm was leased to one Stephen Barmby. In 1772 it had come into the possession of the daughters and they leased it to George and Thomas Dyson for 30 years, but there is no record of either of the Dysons living in the village. The probably sublet the holding but there is no record of who actually worked the land until 1776 when they bought the freehold and leased it to a farmer named Steele. In 1796 John Steele married Hannah Beck. In 1813 the lease was assigned to a Mr. L. Spilsbury and in 1853 the Steeles conveyed the farm to Thomas Berry. At some stage they clearly bought the freehold from the Dysons but there is no documentary evidence of this. In 1861 Holme Hall Farm was conveyed to John Thompson of Braithwell.

By the nineteen twenties, Holme Hall was in the possession of the Greensmith family and they began to develop the quarry. In the first place they granted a concession to E. Butler and Sons of Maltby who were haulage contractors and wanted some continuous work for their workforce when not otherwise engaged. Eventually they sold the farm and quarry to Butlers who let the farm to Alwyn Belk in 1936 when he moved from Rock House. After a few years the tenancy passed to James Middleton, the brother of John Thomas Middleton who was by that time farming Stainton Manor. Holme Hall farm has continued to be farmed by members of the Middleton family, although in 1980 the ownership of the quarry passed to Tarmac Ltd.

The Bosvile Family

Some family names occur in the history of Stainton without there being any evidence of where in the village the family lived. Such is the case with the Bosvile family, which spread its tentacles from Doncaster throughout the district.

The first of the line was Thomas Bosvile of Doncaster, in the second half of the fifteenth century, brother of Richard Bosvile of Conisborough during the same period. This Thomas Bosvile had a grandson Thomas, who died in 1552, having acquired a property in Stainton; His fourth son, Jasper continued to live in Stainton whilst his older brother continued the family line at Warmsworth.

Jasper's brother Hugh also lived in Stainton and in 1571 married a Margaret Anderton by whom he had one daughter Joan (or Johan). In 1575 Johan was married to George French of Tickhill who later took up residence in Stainton and 13 years later, when Joan was 17 years old, they had their first child Robert. She proceeded to give birth to fourteen children in twenty eight years, and (not surprisingly), died in 1616 at the age of forty four.

Jasper's oldest son was Thomas who was baptized before the inception of parish registers, the first recorded baptism in the family being that of William in 1556. Thomas was the first of five generations, in which the oldest son was named Thomas, and he was buried at Braithwell in 1631. The daughter of the last of this line was Briget, and she married a first cousin named Thomas Bosvile of Braithwell. She died in 1793 and was buried at Stainton with a memorial erected there by her two sons, one of whom, Thomas Bosvile of Ravenfield, founded the charity trust in the family name in 1818. Thus at least one branch of this great Yorkshire family retained an interest in Stainton for more than 300 years.

In 1611 the second Thomas, Jasper's grandson, married Alice Fretwell of Hellaby, another important family, and their descendants thus had a dual connection with the parish.

The Fretwell Family

The family estate at Hellaby came to John Fretwell by marriage at some time during the reign of Henry VIII. It then passed through five male generations to be divided upon the death of the last, Ralph (who had moved to Barbados) between his two daughters who survived him. One, according to Hunter, married into a family called Pyott and they had a daughter who in due course married Peter Johnson, the Recorder of York. The other daughter Mabel, married Samuel Swynfen M.D. of Lichfield, the godfather of Dr. Samuel Johnson and he left Mabel in a very poor state (according to Boswell), with a family to bring up.

There were, however, other branches of the Fretwell family and the name occurs not infrequently in the parish registers between 1562 and 1670. Unfortunately, not all the family events were celebrated in Stainton and it is difficult to establish continuity between the marriages, births and deaths. There were, between 1562 and 1574, several births to both Robert and John Fretwell. There is then a gap of thirty six years after a which a series of children were born to Ralph, clearly of the next generation, and in 1629 we find William Fretwell being inducted as vicar of Stainton with Hellaby, presented by Alexander French grandson of Hugh Bosvile.

How William was descended from the original John is impossible to deduce from the available registers. There was a William baptized in 1564, but none recorded at a date consistent with the induction in 1629.

William Fretwell was vicar for some 42 years beginning in the reign of Charles I, spanning the years of the Commonwealth and the Protectorate to terminate in the period of Charles II. Bearing in mind the religious persecution of the era and the momentous events of the execution of Charles I and the Civil War, it is quite remarkable that nothing of this is transmitted through the parish registers. Other incumbents had on occasion noted events such as accessions, and indeed William Fretwell was not slow to record events concerning himself and the parish, but of the momentous events in the realm there is not one word!

In 1640 he married Elizabeth Hirst, who may well have been a local girl since there was a family in Stainton of that name. In 1644 their first daughter Elizabeth was born and in 1647 her sister Anne. In 1651 they had a son, Roger.

Throughout the incumbency, William Fretwell wrote occasional comments in the parish registers, usually related to excommunication by the Archdeacon's court either for non-conformity or failure to pay tithes. He did, however, record in 1662 the first baptism carried out according to the rite set out in the then new Book of Common Prayer. One very touching entry related to the death of his daughter Elizabeth in 1666. He wrote: 'Elizabeth Fretwell, being of the age of 22 years and 5 weeks died on the 24th June, being Sunday. I being at evening prayers, she asked "Where is my Father?" but I came after she had yielded up her spirit into the hands of the Redeemer Jesus Christ. Elizabeth Fretwell, daughter of William Fretwell, vicar of Stainton, begain to be sick in February and she continued to the 24th June. She was very patient in her sickness, in her life time obedient and loving to her parents always. She was praying and calling upon God and Jesus Christ and said often that Jesus Christ had provided a place for her. I told her I grew old, and that I should come to her, ever it was long, to be with her forever'. After this entry, in another hand is written: 'And now I hope he is with her for ever - Dorothy Fretwell'. There is no record of another daughter and we can only presume that the writer was a niece or other relative of one of the other branches of the family.

Ralph Fretwell has a daughter Dorothy born 1610.

William Fretwell himself was buried on January 18th 1683. During his later years, his writing became very difficult to read and he was clearly suffering from some degree of blindness or from a condition (such as Parkinson's disease) which gave him a tremor.

Although the registers are missing from these years, he continued with the help of his church wardens, to send a copy of all the entries to York each year, and it from these that one can see the gradual deterioration in his signature.

One somewhat amusing and legible entry in 1670 is as follows:

'Anno Domini 1670'

'Memo. Whereas there were never known to be any Quakers in the parish of Stainton until the Vicar of Leeds brought them in, now there are four denounced excommunicate this fourth of April videlicit George Boxe, John Sharpe, Mary Boxe and Jane Mayhew is also now denounced tempore divinorum by me Gulielm Fretwell, vicar Staintoniensum.'

'Afterwards this year two Quakers denounced excommunicate by virtue, of a mandamus forth of the Archdeacon's Court of Yorke, Elizabeth Boxe and Thomas Bondeman.'

'Memorand that the said Thomas Bondeman being Mr. Hunt's servant is willing to come to the church and forsake ye Quakers.'

The reference to the Vicar of Leeds is to Marmaduke Cooke, brother of Mrs. George Pashley. Clearly there was some hostility between the Vicar and the Pashley family, who were highly educated and cultured and may, on that score, have been something of a thorn in his flesh because William Fretwell's command of Latin fell short of that exhibited on the Pashley memorial. With the death of the Vicar, the Fretwells seem to disappear from the Stainton scene. He was succeeded by Samuel Cheswick who has left nothing from which one can form any idea of his ministry!

The Vicarage

Although not a farm, nor occupied for long by any single family, the Vicarage is on of the older village residences.

Unfortunately, in neither the church records nor in the Sandbeck archives is the building of a vicarage house recorded and we, therefore, lack a precise date. Architecturally, it appears to fall into two periods. The main part of the house is clearly eighteenth century, with the paneled doors and sash windows typical of that period, but at the southern end there is a similar appendage consisting of a tack room with a room above, presumably provided for a groom or other servant. The ceiling of the tack room is supported by open beams and the floor above it is of lime ash construction, a method favoured in the sixteenth and seventeenth centuries. Similarly, the back of the house seems to be in the nature of a lean-to addition and the first floor level at the rear is about fifteen or eighteen inches lower than that of the main part of the house. Presumably, there was a sixteenth or seventeenth century house which was partially demolished in the eighteenth century, when the main part was added.


The Old Vicarage, a largely 18th century house.

A "Terrier of Glebe Lands with which the Vicarage of Stainton is endowed" dated 1684 includes a "Vicarage House with a little barn, Foldstead, Orchard and Garden containing about one acre and a half" and this demonstrates that there was a residence of some kind in the seventeenth century.

Because the Vicarage was built on glebe land there was never and need for a deed of conveyance either to purchase its site, nor to convey it from one occupant to the next until it ceased to be a vicarage in 1952. In that year the Church Commissioners sold the house and outbuildings and three acres of land for about £2000, much to the annoyance of the P.C.C. who felt it was worth far more.

The last resident vicar was the Rev. George Hollowood who left in 1933 to be succeeded by Archdeacon Folliott G. Sandford. The Archdeacon already had a residence conveniently situated for his duties and, therefore, did not require the vicarage. To ensure that it did not deteriorate, he arranged for his Church Warden, Mr. J. Grindle and his family to live in the Vicarage as caretakers, reserving one room for his own use if required. Members of the Grindle family had lived in Stainton since the middle of the Nineteenth century and had always played a very active part in the life of the village.

After Archdeacon Sandford's resignation due to ill health in 1939, the Vicar of Tickhill, the Rev. G. T. S. Cooke was asked to take Stainton with Hellaby under his wing for the duration of the war, thus leaving the Vicarage still without a vicar. At that time, it was not obvious what the situation would be after the war, and no doubt there was a confident expectation that Stainton might ultimately have a vicar of its own once more. The Grindles, therefore, continued to look after the Vicarage and to live there.

After the war had finished, the Rev. G. T. S. Cooke was firmly established as Vicar or Stainton - in fact if not in law - and the decision was made to link the two parishes of Tickhill and Stainton permanently, but to sever Hellaby, which could more conveniently be linked to Bramley. The Vicarage thus came onto the market as a secular dwelling with the stipulation that it must no longer be called the Vicarage. It was renamed "Brook House" but those who throughout their lives had known it as the vicarage continued to use that name. Eventually it became known as "The Old Vicarage" without any objections being raised by the Church Commissioners.

The first family to occupy the house after the Grindles vacated were called Foster-Smith. They played no part in village life and did not leave any recognizable mark of their sojourn. They were succeeded by a family called Burn who did enter into village life. Mrs. Burn was a member of the P.C.C. and before they left, presented the village with a row of weeping willow saplings which have now grown into the small copse on the bank of the stream opposite the bottom of Raw Lane.

At some time during this era, part of the land belonging to The Old Vicarage, with a frontage onto the Holme Hall Lane, was sold for the construction of three bungalows, and somewhat later, a further plot was sold to a civil engineer, Mr. John Barnes, who built "Penny Hill".

The Burns were followed at "The Old Vicarage" by Mr. & Mrs. John Barford. By this time, the house was in need of some structural attention and modernization. The Barfords re-roofed it, re-wired it, put in a damp-proof course and re-arranged the inside so that what had been a large kitchen became a spacious entrance hall and the former entrance hall became part of the lounge. They also installed central heating, but the eighteenth century doors were not used to the dry air and showed their discomfort in the form of cracked panels.

In 1964 the Barfords sold the house to Dr. and Mrs. H. H. Pilling. Dr. Pilling had recently been appointed as H.M. Coroner to the City of Sheffield and to the Rotherham District and the West Riding of Yorkshire. This jurisdiction included Maltby and Maltby Colliery and terminated as Scotch Springs. Dr. and Mrs. Pilling entered into village life immediately and within two years Mrs. Pilling was Honorary Secretary to the P.C.C. At that time the congregation of the church on most Sundays was reduced to fewer than ten persons including the Pilling family of five.

In 1974 Dr. & Mrs. Pilling decided that, since they no longer needed any grazing, they would apply for outline planning permission for part of the orchard and the paddock above it to be used for the construction of three bungalows. On appeal, the permission was granted. In this way "The Orchard" came into being.

The glebe barn by this time was calling out for repair and in 1976 was refurbished by converting two of the ground floor bays into garages, although sadly this required the removal of the outside stone steps to the barn above. The floor of the barn was raised by about fifteen inches and completely renewed and the new stairway to the upper floor was constructed from the stable which had been left in its original form.

The parish records show that the barn had twice previously been extensively repaired or indeed rebuilt. It apparently fell down in July 1739 and was rebuilt for a total cost of £7-18s-9d, this included labour and materials, but there is no timber listed in that latter, so one presumes that the old timbers were used of new ones taken from the local woods. Appended to this note is the later comment:- "The above mentioned barn fell down and was rebuilt by the Rev. Beaumont Broadbent wholly in the year one thousand eight hundred and ten - and came to upward of £50."

The present timbers are of different ages, but include two roof trusses of rough hewn timber, strengthened by sawn timber bolted to the old, and five or six purlins are rough hewn with pegged tenons where they are butted into the blades of the rough trusses. It seems probable that these belong to the 1739 rebuilding if they are no even older than that.

In 1979 Dr. & Mrs. Pilling decided to move to a smaller house and sold The Old Vicarage to Mr. & Mrs. W. P. Ward.

The Ward family also entered into village and church life, Peter Ward became the P.C.C. treasurer and later a Parish Councillor and Mrs. Ward became a church warden in 1986. The Old Vicarage remained basically the same except for re-wiring and general maintenance. In 1988 Mr. & Mrs. Ward moved into a new house, built in the grounds of The Old Vicarage, so that they could continue to live in Stainton, The Old Vicarage being sold to Mr. & Mrs. N. Baglow. Although moving from Lancashire, both Mr. and Mrs. Baglow have family connections in this area.

Subsequent vicars have almost all left some mark upon the village as the history of the church has indicated, and memorials to a few may be found in the church. Written histories, however, can only be as complete as their sources permit and thus, although all the vicars of Stainton are known by name, only William Fretwell was sufficiently communicative to permit me to deduce something of his life.

However, of those within living memory, anecdotes abound. We are told, for example, that Claude Tickell was very jealous of his privacy and had a little shuttered spy-hole in the door of the vicarage so that he could view his visitors before admitting them!

Again, it is said of Archdeacon Sandford that his sermons never exceeded ten minutes and that he accompanies the hymns himself upon the organ, usually being one bar ahead of the congregation!

Guy Cooke was also his own organist. He could not read a note of music but had a very good ear! His repertoire was relatively limited and his favourite hymn seemed to be "New every morning". He was a very saintly man whose topical sermons were also short and to the point. He seemed to see his preaching role as interpreting the application of the Christian message to current problems, and in this he was much appreciated. His successor Owen Jones, brought a more down-to-earth approach to the parish problems - which was much needed at that time. During his tenure of office various improvements were introduced in relation to the up keep of the fabric, the heating of the church, the care of the churchyard, and, not least, the congregation grew considerably.

A short obituary to the Rev. George Hollowood, the last resident vicar of Stainton, is contained in the Stainton Memorial Book which is on view in the church. This book was provided for the purpose of recording short obituaries for those who had any direct or indirect link with the village, by the Stainton Memorial Trust whose main objective is to establish an Endowment Fund which can help to finance the costs of the church should the need arise in the future. The Trust was set up in 1985, the past trustees being Mr. John Jack, the vicar the Rev. J. A. Bowering ex-officio, Miss D'A V. Hogg, Mr. P. Ward and Dr. H. H. Pilling.


So ends this short history. It is clearly incomplete, not only as regards the distant past but also regarding more recent times. This is desirable because those of us who are part of the current scene cannot view it objectively and it is far better that the history of this period should be compiled after the current actors have left the stage. The important thing is for us to leave them those essential records from which it can be complied.