![]() Parish register transcripts of Inkberrow, 1637-1777 Parish chest records for Inkberrow, 1695-1894 Parish Church of Inkberrow (Worcestershire) View Photographs Parish Records FamilySearchĮngland, Worcestershire, Inkberrow – Census ( 1 )Įngland, Worcestershire, Inkberrow – Church records ( 4 )īishop’s transcripts for Inkberrow, 1598-1875Īuthor: Church of England. Bensley, Crane Court, Fleet Street, London, 1822. In the County with the distances and bearings from their respective market towns, &c. Source: Worcestershire Delineated: Being a Topographical Description of Each Parish, Chapelry, Hamlet, &c. William Heath, incumbent instituted 1792 patron, Earl of Abergavenny. from Alcester, and 107 from London containing 352 inhabited houses. Inkberrow – a parish in the hundred of Oswaldslow, middle division, 4 miles N.W. II London Chapman and Hall, 186, Strand 1833. ![]() Source: A Topographical Dictionary of Great Britain and Ireland by John Gorton. Here are the ruins of the abbey of Cokehill, founded in 1260 by Isabella, Countess of Warwick, who also took the veil here. Worcester.Ī parish in the middle division of the hundred of Oswaldslow living, a vicarage in the archdeaconry and diocese of Worcester valued in K. ![]() A Topographical Dictionary of Great Britain and Ireland 1833 Source: The Imperial Gazetteer of England & Wales. There are chapels for Baptists and Methodists, a national school, and church and poors lands yielding £80 a year. The church is decorated and later English was repaired in 1841 has a tower and contains a canopied effigies of John Savage, Esq., of 1 631. Value, £850.* Patron, the Earl of Abergavenny. The living is a vicarage in the diocese of Worcester. but is said, by others, to have been founded, in 1260, by Isabella, Countess of Warwick, who became one of its nuns. A nunnery anciently stood at Cokehill is said, by some authorities, to have been founded by Gervase of Canterbury, in the time of Richard I. The manor belongs to the Earl of Abergavenny. Real property, £14, 313 of which £100 are in quarries. The parish contains also a place called Cokehill. The village stands near the boundary with Warwick, 5½ miles W of Alcester railway station, and 7 SSW of Redditch and has a post office under Bromsgrove. Inkberrow, a village and a parish in the district of Alcester and county of Worcester. The Imperial Gazetteer of England & Wales 1870
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