PocklingtonHistory.com
News
> Pocklington Heritage Festival (2024)
> The Sothebys
> Pocklington and the Sea
> Historical Horrors
> Allerthorpe Walk
> D-Day talk
> The 2024 AGM & Talk
> 18th Century Pocklington
> Two Short Talks
> Pocklington Heritage Festival (2023)
> Old Shops part 2
Events
> Pocklington Local History Group
  20th Mar 2025 - Early Cinema

Gallery
Market Place Market Place
Note the new building in the photo on the corner.
Regent Street Regent Street
Note the 'Old Red Lion Hotel'
Chapmangate Chapmangate
Note the independent chapel built in 1807 to the left.
Publications
Woldgate History Woldgate History

"A History of Woldgate School"

* 60 pages
* Fully illustrated
* Only £5.00
epp Exploring Pocklington's Past

* Peter Halkon
* Summary of
Pocklington Archaeology
* Only £5.00
Heritage Trail Heritage Trail

"A Pock History & Heritage Trail"

* 2nd edition
* 27 pages
* Old photos
* Only £4.99

People and Places Thumb Old Pock

"People and Places of Old Pocklington"

* 40 pages
* Old photos
* Only £5.99
Adieu WW1 Book

"Adieu to dear old Pock"

  * ww1 diary
  * 53 profiles
  * Local News
  * 299 soldiers
  * 246 pages
Newsletter

PDLHG Newsletters
#1 Oct 2020
#2 Dec 2020
#3 May 2021

Melbourne/Storwood 1777 Enclosure

Mike Silburn and John Nottingham have been working on the joint Melbourne/Storwood 1777 Enclosure map, although enclosure was not enacted until 1782. Unfortunately, the source enclosure map is badly faded and generally difficult to decipher; especially the western portion covering Storwood (previously Storthwaite). The main Melbourne parish and village inset graphics have the 1777 enclosure close (field) boundaries superimposed onto satellite imagery, but much of the accompanying table of close Owners and close acreage information has necessarily been either inferred or left blank. The Storwood data on the 1777 map is so badly degraded that the Storwood parish has been omitted. (Storwood was united with East Cottingwith in 1935.)

The Pocklington Canal post-dated the 1777 enclosure but is shown on the satellite imagery for ease of cross-reference. (The 'Melbourne Arm' of the canal, along with some narrowboats, is evident to the north of the Village close 36.)

The main landowner at 1777 was a John Danser Esq of whom little is known other than 2 references to his being an attorney and of Howden (Melbourne Hall was not constructed until shortly after 1782). However, British History Online has a reference that: "Sarah Stephenson devised the manor [of Melbourne] in 1775 to her cousin Elizabeth Danser, who had succeeded by the following year, and she sold it to John Walker in 1786." So it is conjectured that she was the Elizabeth Hall who married John Danser in 1746 and that, as Elizabeth's inheritance from her cousin pre-dated the Married Women's Property Act of 1882, her holdings then came into John Danser's ownership. The indications are that the manor of Melbourne shortly passed to the Vavasour family of Melbourne Hall.

To view the map at full-scale, please click on the 'View fullscreen' link. Then zoom in and scroll around to see the parish map, the separate village inset, and the table of landowners in more detail.

View fullscreen