Kelly’s Directory 1935

Castle Thorpe 1935

Castle Thorpe is a village and parish separated from Northamptonshire by the river Tove, with a station on the main line of the London and Midland Scottish railway, 54½ miles from London, 7½ miles west-north-west from Newport Pagnell, 4 north from Stony Stratford, 11 from Northampton, and 3½ north from Wolverton in, the Buckingham division of the county, hundred petty sessional division, union, county court district of Newport Pagnell, rural district of Newport Pagnell, county court district of Bletchley and Leighton Buzzard, rural deanery of Wolverton, archdeaconry of Buckingham and diocese of Oxford. The church of SS. Simon and Jude stands within the enceinte of a large earthwork, consisting of a mount and bailey fortress, held in the days of King John by Maudiut, from whom it was captured by Fulk de Bret during the Wars of the Barons: it is an ancient edifice of stone, in the Transitional and later styles, consisting of chancel, nave of three bays and aisles, west porch and a low embattled western tower with pinnacles containing one bell: the font is large and ancient, with two human heads at the two western corners: and there are sedilia and a piscina: in the chancel is a monument to Sir Thomas Tyrrell, knt. a justice of the Common Pleas, who died March,1671 erected by his 3rd wife and widow Dame Bridget (Harrington): there are 180 sittings. The register dates from year 1562. The living is a chapelry, annexed to Hanslope, joint net yearly value £350, including 21 acres of glebe, in the gift of the Bishop of Oxford, and held since 1930 by the Rev. James Percy Taylor, who resides at Hanslope. Near the entrance to the churchyard is an obelisk, erected in 1921, at a cost of about £240, as a memorial to the men connected with the parish, who lost their lives in the Great War, 1914-1918; inscribed on the front are the names of the fallen, and on the other three sides, the names of those who served in that war. An inscription on the monument above mentioned records that Dame Bridget Tyrrell gave £10 yearly to the poor of the place, which has been invested in the purchase of 18 acres of land, producing £36 yearly, and by a scheme of the Charity Commissioners this sum is applied as follows: half for keeping in repair the nave of the church £1 for an annual sermon on March 8th in memory of Sir Thomas Tyrrell, and the remainder in doles for the poor. Here is a Wesleyan chapel restored in 1888.The estate of Castlethorpe, granted by Charles II in 1663 to Sir Thomas Tyrrell, is now held by Mrs. Poore who is lady of the manor. Lord Carrington is the principal landowner. The parish was enclosed in 1793 by Act of Parliament. The soil is mixed; subsoil, stone and gravel. The chief crops are wheat, barley, oats and roots. The area is 1,360 acres of land and 12 of water.

Surname Forename Occupation
PRIVATE RESIDENTS

ANDERSON Alyn Lowder (ret.) Maj. The Old Cottage (Mrs)
FENN Edgar Julius M.A. (curate) Station Road
CANNON John James The Homestead
SYMONDS Benjamin Legge M.A. (ret.) Langton House
COMMERCIAL
Marked thusº farm 150 acres or over


CLARKE & Son florists. TN Hanslope 36
CLARKE William George farmer
COOK George Arthur shopkeeper
COOK Harry Percy fruit grower, Shepperton
COOPER Rd. Arth. L.R.C.P., L.R.C.S. Edin. L.R.F.P.S. Glas. physcn, (attends Tues, thurs & Sat at 10.30 a.m.)
GOBBEY & BATES
coal merchants
GREGORY Annie shopkeeper (Miss)
HINDERLEYº William farmer, Lower Lodge
MARKHAMº Ellen farmer (Mrs)
MARKHAM William David farmer, Glenmore Farm
POWELL Frederick John Carrington Arms P.H.
SMITH William H. small holder
WHITINGº Benjamin S. farmer, Maltings Farm
TN Hanslope 37
WHITINGº Joseph Evans J.P. farmer, Castlethorpe Lodge
TN Hanslope 44
Post, M. O., T. & T. E. D. Office. Letters through Bletchley.
POPULATION. 1931 was 461