. The Victoria history of the county of Lancaster;. Natural history. SALFORD HUNDRED MANCHESTER the fortieth (later, the six- teenth) part of a knight's fee and a rent of 6s. 8*/. It passed by marriage to the Langleys of Agecroft,^^ and then descended with Reddish to the Cokes.^° The name Tetlow has long been dis- used, but is preserved in Tet- low Lane. KERSAL was in 1142 given to the priory of Len- ton,^^ and a small cell called. Lenton Priory. Quarterly or and axure a Calvary cross of the first fimbriated sable standing on steps of the last. St. Leonard's was established there.^^* On the su


. The Victoria history of the county of Lancaster;. Natural history. SALFORD HUNDRED MANCHESTER the fortieth (later, the six- teenth) part of a knight's fee and a rent of 6s. 8*/. It passed by marriage to the Langleys of Agecroft,^^ and then descended with Reddish to the Cokes.^° The name Tetlow has long been dis- used, but is preserved in Tet- low Lane. KERSAL was in 1142 given to the priory of Len- ton,^^ and a small cell called. Lenton Priory. Quarterly or and axure a Calvary cross of the first fimbriated sable standing on steps of the last. St. Leonard's was established there.^^* On the sup- pression of monasteries it was in 1540 sold by Henry VIII to Baldwin Willoughby,^^ and some eight years afterwards was sold to Ralph Kenyon, apparently acting for himself and for James Chetham and Richard ; The Kenyon third descended in that family for some ; It included the cell or monastic build- ings. The Siddall third''^ was alienated in 1616 to William Lever of Darcy Lever,^^ and descended to Rawsthorne Lever of Kersal, who died in 1689 without issue,*^ having bequeathed it to the Green- halghs of Brandlesholme in Bury.*^ This part was Tetlow; Lanes. Inq. and Extents^ i, 314. In 1324 Adam de Tetlow held 10 acres in Broughton, formerly held by Jordan de Crompton, by homage and the service of the sixteenth part of a knight's fee ; Dods. MSS. cxxxi, fol. 37^. It thus appears that in Broughton as well as in Cromp- ton Adam succeeded to the inheritance of others. In 1346 Robert de Tetlow was tenant, paying a rent of 6s. Zd. ; Add. MS. 32103, fol. 146^. ^^ Sec the account of Agecroft in Pen- dlebury. Several Tetlow families are met with in the Manchester and Rochdale district. In 1346-55 Richard de Langley and Joan his wife held the fortieth part of a knight*s fee in Crompton and Broughton, formerly held by Adam de Tetlow of the Earl of Ferrers ; Feud, ^ids^ iii, gi. In 1358 Richard son of Richard de Tetlow laid claim to it, alleging that Joan wife of


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