Wilford Hundred
 
Dallinghoo,
a scattered village, on an eminence, 4 1/2 miles N. of Woodbridge, has in its parish 346 souls, and 1495 acres of land, partly in Loes Hundred. Here was a handsome hall, built by Wm. Churchill, and for some time the seat of his son-in-law, Fras. Negus, but it was burnt down in 1729. Here are two manors, of which John Wood and Andrew Archdeckne, Esqrs. are lords, but part of the soil belongs to the Wade, Jarrold, Reeve and other families. The Church (St Mary) is a rectory, valued in K.B. at £13. 6s. 8d., but now having 32 acres of glebe, and a yearly modus of £427. 1s. 11d. The Rev. Ellis Walford is patron and incumbent.

Jacobs Benjamin, shopkeeper

FARMERS

Kent Isaac, schoolmaster and regr.

Rendell Arthur

Blake Arthur

Last John, blacksmith

Buxton Robert

Cole Mary

Leggett Wm. shoemeker

Elliot James

Jarrold John

Motum Jn. Wheelgt. & machine mkr

Reeve Wm.

Runnacles George

Wainright Emma, schoolmistress

Tye Edm. Brook

Tye Wm. Moat

Walford Rev. Ellis, Rectory

Walker Dd. Hall

Woolnough Sl.

Wright Henry, tailor and shopkpr

CARRIER, John Shepherd, to Woodbridge, Wednesday and Sat.

 

Loes Hundred
 
Dallinghoo
is mostly in Wilford Hundred, and is already described on page 144, to which the following account of its charities should have been added. The Church and Poor Lands &c., comprise 12A. 3R. 9P., and seven cottages, partly copyhold of the manors of Dallinghoo and Wickham-cum-Membris. Part of this property was given by Thos. Shawe in 1670, for the church and poor, and some of the cottages were built with £100 received by the parish in 1827, on the dissolution of the Hundred House of Loes and Wilford. One cottage is occupied, rent-free, by the parish clerk, and the rest of the property is let to different tenants, at rents amounting to £30. 15s. a year. This income is applied, as far as necessary, in repairing the church, and the residue is distributed in bread and coals among the poor. New trustees were appointed in 1824. The poor parishioners have also £8. 6s. 7d., yearly from Kersey’s Charity (see Charsfield,) and it is distributed in bread and coals, together with the following yearly doles, viz., 10s. left by one Roe; 20s. from Mill’s Charity (see Framlingham;) and 10s. left by Henry Dade, out of premises at Earl-Soham, called the Stableyard.

Whites Directory of Suffolk 1844