. England's oldest hunt : being chapters of the history of the Bilsdale, Farndale and Sinnington Hunts, collected during several years. ) Sir William Worsley 1858 1860 Mr. T. M. Kendall (Pickering) 1860 1875 Mr. Robert Ellerby 1875 1879 Mr. Thomas Parrington 1879 1884 Mr. Robert Lesley 1884 1891 Mr. R. C. Swan (pack kennelled) 1891 1894 Mr. Penn C. Sherbrooke 1894 1904 Viscount Helmsley 1904 — Unfortunately, family tradition has not preserved manydetails of the Kendalls connection with the 1745, we find Mr. John Kendall, then 37 years of age,at the head of affairs for his first s
. England's oldest hunt : being chapters of the history of the Bilsdale, Farndale and Sinnington Hunts, collected during several years. ) Sir William Worsley 1858 1860 Mr. T. M. Kendall (Pickering) 1860 1875 Mr. Robert Ellerby 1875 1879 Mr. Thomas Parrington 1879 1884 Mr. Robert Lesley 1884 1891 Mr. R. C. Swan (pack kennelled) 1891 1894 Mr. Penn C. Sherbrooke 1894 1904 Viscount Helmsley 1904 — Unfortunately, family tradition has not preserved manydetails of the Kendalls connection with the 1745, we find Mr. John Kendall, then 37 years of age,at the head of affairs for his first season. He remained in THE KENDALL FAMILY. 183 that position for twenty years, for these were the days of longmasterships. He seems to have devoted his life—as did manyof the squires of that period—to sport, and when the huntingseason was at an end in the Shire of broad acres, he hurriedacross the Channel to France, there to hunt the bear at Char-leroi. In 1765, he resigned the mastership of the Sinnington,and a year later died. On his death, his son, another JohnKendall, took the pack, and for five years showed sport. After. MR. T. M. KENDALL, SENR., MASTER OF THE SINNINGTON 1830-1838 his era some uncertainty occurs as to the successors. Mr. JohnKendall, Junr., was followed by a Mr. Wells, who held officein the early portion of the nineteenth century. He residedat Pickering, but either he had no descendants, or none canbe discovered to give any account of his term of office,which is shrouded in obscurity. His house, however, hasbeen shown to me in Pickering, just below the bridge as onecrosses the railway. Either in or about 1830, Mr. T. M. Kendall, of EastNess and Pickering, took hounds for a while, and thoughit is uncertain just how long he had them, it was not for , before 1840, his younger brother, Mr. William 184 Englands oldest hunt. Kendall, alao of East Ness, had become master, and fromhis epoch we come to something approaching certaintyand authentic
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Keywords: ., bookcentury1900, bookdecade1900, booksubjecthorses, bookyear1907