. The Victoria history of the county of Lancaster;. Natural history. BLACKBURN HUNDRED WHALLEY to the Nevills, for in 1520 Robert Nevill and Alice his wife held Broad Holden in Haslingden with the manor of ; In 1584 John Hargreaves claimed against John Nevill and John Quipp his ; In the same year a report was made that lands in Haslingden called Clough Houses, Broad Holden and Goodshaw Holden were â concealed' lands, belonging to the Crown.⢠The names of a few other tenants appear in the records.^' Nicholas Duerden was plaintiff about 1555.'" A little later Th


. The Victoria history of the county of Lancaster;. Natural history. BLACKBURN HUNDRED WHALLEY to the Nevills, for in 1520 Robert Nevill and Alice his wife held Broad Holden in Haslingden with the manor of ; In 1584 John Hargreaves claimed against John Nevill and John Quipp his ; In the same year a report was made that lands in Haslingden called Clough Houses, Broad Holden and Goodshaw Holden were â concealed' lands, belonging to the Crown.⢠The names of a few other tenants appear in the records.^' Nicholas Duerden was plaintiff about 1555.'" A little later Thomas Holden was admitted to the water-mill ^ which in 1662 was held by Robert Holden at a free rent of 5^." The landowners named in the Subsidy Roll of i6oo were Robert Holden and Hugh Gartslde"; those in 1626 were Robert Holden, Andrew Holden, the heir of Robert Gregory and Richard Duerden. There were two non-communicants.'^'* The chief houses in 1666 were those of Ralph Holden and Andrew Holden, having nine and seven hearths ; One of the worthies of the township is Oliver Ormerod, a younger son of Oliver Ormerod of Has- lingden ; he was born about 1580, educated at Emmanuel College, Cambridge, and wrote treatises against Puritans and Roman Catholics.*^ He died in 1626. The will of George Ormerod of Hudley (?Hud Hey) was in dispute in 168 I.*' The history of Carter Place, a copyhold estate which probably took its name from its earlier tenants,⢠is of interest because it was the inheritance of Sir Andrew Chadwick," a man who obtained a great fortune by obscure means and was knighted in 171 o," and about whose succession long-continued disputes were ; At his death in 1768 Carter Place went to a cousin Sarah Law," whose son-m-law sold to James Turner in ; Inquiry as to common rights was ordered in 1547" and ; A fair is mentioned in the time of Charles ; There are now seven fairs. The mark


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