CLUNBURY HOUSES AND OCCUPIERS 1896 Hall Hall James Percival Morris Harry Jones Harry Jones was the Farm Bailliff Mill House Mill House Mrs Mary Pardoe Hubert Abbott and Dr Danby Browne, as lodger, the village doctor This had ceased to be a Mill before 1840 Hubert Abbott was a retired Gentleman's Servant Later this house became No. 1 Brook House Mrs Mary Pardoe George Arrowsmith The farm which went with this property was in the hands of Thomas Anthony (see below at The Yews). In the first decade of the century the farm was split away from the house and was run from Chapel House, which in 1907 ceased to be a chapel and was sold into private hands. In 1920 Brook House was 2, occupied by George Cranstoun, and the Chapel became 3, occupied and farmed by Thomas Williams - this John Rudd Alice Owens The Rudd family had been in the village since the eighteenth was two Thomas Sankey Wolley century and John Rudd owned land and several properties. He left cottages the village in 1892 and went to live first at Ludlow and then at Bayston Hill. When he returned, about 1900, he lived at what became known as No 1 Ivy s and later as Ivy Villa until he died in 1905. His (second) wife continued to live there until her
death in 1942. Dutch John Rudd Thomas Gittoes A beer house until the death of James Harding in 1879. Thomas Gittoes was a grocer and this was a shop, subsequently to be run by Elizabeth Spray and by Lucreatia Maggie Spray, until the Lane family arrived in the late 1930's. Church House Sarah Wolley Sarah Wolley There were farm buildings and an abattoir attached to this property, which had for many years been in the hands of the related families of Sankey and Wolley. In 1896 Sarah Wolley was living here and her son, Thomas Sankey Wolley, a butcher, was over the road at 1 Ivy s. By 1900 he was in this house. In 1910 it was called Ivydene, and later 5, being occupied by the doctor, Danby Browne, until his death in 1922, soon after which Harry Meredith came to live there. Holland House Richard Powell Edward Mold This house belonged to William Cooper in 1845 and remained in Cooper the possession of the Cooper family after the death of his son Henry in 1876. The family went up in the world because Henry had made a great deal of money from the invention of Cooper's Sheep Dip. Richard Powell Cooper was created a baronet in 1905. The Mold family moved down the village in 1892 after the death of George Mold, and when his son, Edward, died in 1899, Frederick took over as the village blacksmith, buying the property in 1904.
The Vicarage The Old The Revd William William Jellicorse Jellicorse retained ownership of some of the garden and orchard Vicarage Jellicorse close to the vicarage after he left the parish in 1896. White Henry Frederick Walter Fendall Salt Later 7 Meredith Farm Upper House John Rudd John Chester Later 8 Smithy Two Thomas Sankey 1.John Lewis This ceased to be the Smithy when Edward Mold moved down the s unoccupied Wolley 2.Morgan Canty village in 1892. The properties later became known as 7 and 8 cottages The Yews This area The Yews, Thomas Anthony Thomas Anthony at The exact arrangement of the dwellings here is not clear. There was called Jasmine The Post Office were certainly six of them, perhaps three in the buildings which Anthony's, the now comprise The Yews and Jasmine, two in Mark Buildings in new s Unwin's cottage and one, together with farm buildings, where the the 1891 and new cottages are being built. After Thomas Anthony died in 1900, Census Mark Unwin's his daughter Jane took over as Post Mistress. By 1905 Fred Mold cottage was the Post Master and the Post Office was at 6. Henry Barnett In 1913 Henry Barnett was at 6 The Yews William Cadwallader George Owens In 1913 George Owens was at 4 The Yews
George Clee Unoccupied Tansy Park Tansy John Rudd James Meredith Pool House Pool House Philip Matthews John Whitefoot The 1845 Tithe Map does not show a building on this site. School School House The Trustees of William Deacon In 1913 this house was numbered 9 House School In the 1891 Census called The Holly Only Hill was named - as Quarry. The Cherry Hill View Edward Dodd Edward Dodd There were two cottages here, both owned by Edward Dodd. They were later to become 1 and 2 Hill, No. 1 being owned and occupied by Edward William Dodd down to the 1950's. Edward Dodd was a wheelwright and carpenter - his carpenter's pit being at the bottom of the village next to Mill House. Cherry Bryn John Rudd Eliza Chester Eliza Chester was a charwoman and John Williams a rabbit John Williams catcher. By 1910 the cottages were unoccupied. Hill Philip Matthews William Hartshorn William Hartshorn was a butcher and had been in the village since the 1850's Mossy Glen John Whittall John Whittall This was the cottage which was to be occupied by John Whittall's two daughters until the 1960's
Bryn site held two cottages. Mr Cruxon's Earl of Powis Thomas Barrett Kelly's Directory in 1896 records the firm of Barrett and Dodd, Steam Thrashing Machine proprietors. Shelveswell Shelveswell Richard Marston Herbert Teague Herbert Teague was a blacksmith who went subsequently to the Hill End Hill End Earl of Powis Richard Davies Kempton Smithy. 1 Ford James Percival William Griffiths s Morris 2 Ford David Mantle s The Meadows The Meadows Edward Morris Brawn's Bridge 3 Brampton Bridge John Chapman John Chapman John Chapman also owned property at Twitchen.