Notes and Queries, Number 53, November 2, 1850 by Various
page 29 of 64 (45%)
page 29 of 64 (45%)
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_Judge Cradock, afterwards Newton._--MR ELLACOMBE (Vol. ii., p. 249.), in his notice of a monument in Yatton Church to "Judge Newton, _alias_ Cradock," says, "the arms of Cradock are _Arg._ on chevron _az._ three garbs _or_." Richard Cradock, he adds, "was the first of his family who took the name of Newton." Does MR. ELLACOMBE mean that the above arms were those of the _Cradock family_, or that this Richard Cradock assumed the coat as well as the name of _Newton_? The above was the bearing of the family of Newton, of East Newton, in the North Riding of York. The eldest daughter and coheir of John Newton of East Newton was married to William Thornton, which family thus became possessed of the estate of East Newton, and quartered the coat assigned by MR. ELLACOMBE to Cradock. I should be glad to know the occasion on which Richard Cradock assumed the name and arms of Newton, as well as the connexion between these Newtons and those settled at East Newton. S.A.Y. _Totness Church._--In Totness Church, the N. angle of the chancel is cut off in the lower part of the building, in order to allow an arched passage from one side of the church to the other outside. The upper part of the building is supported by a very strong buttress or pier, leaving the diagonal passage between it and the internal wall. Can any one tell whether this was done merely to afford a gangway for want of room outside? The graveyard has been recently enlarged in that direction, for all the |
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