Online Encyclopedia

APPLEBY

Online Encyclopedia
Originally appearing in Volume V02, Page 224 of the 1911 Encyclopedia Britannica.
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APPLEBY  , a

market
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town and municipal borough, and the county town of Westmorland, England, in the Appleby
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parliamentary division, 276 M . N.N.W. from
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London, on the Midland and a branch of the North Eastern
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railways . Pop . (1901) 1764 . It is picturesquely placed in the valley of the Eden, which is richly wooded, and flanked on the north-east by spurs of Milburn
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Forest and Duf ton and other fells, which rise up to 2600 ft . On a hill above the town stands the castle, retaining a
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fine Norman keep and surrounded by a double
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moat, now partly laid out as gardens . The remainder of the castle was rebuilt as a mansion in the 17th century . It was held for the royalists in the
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civil
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wars by
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Sir Philip Musgrave, and was the residence of Anne, countess of Pembroke, the last of the
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family of Clifford, which had
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great estates in this
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part of England . St
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Ann's hospital for thirteen poor
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women (1654) was of her foundation . The grammar school (1453) was refounded by Queen Elizabeth . The
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modern incorporation
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dates from 1885, with a mayor, four aldermen and twelve councillors .
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Area, 1876 acres .

Appleby is not mentioned in any Saxon records, but after the

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Conquest it rose to importance as the head of the
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barony of Appleby which extended over the eastern portion of the
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present county of Westmorland . This barony formed part of the province of Carlisle granted by Henry I. to Ranulf Meschin, who erected the castle at Appleby and made it his place of residence . Appleby is a borough by
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prescription, and the old charter of incorporation, granted in the first
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year of James II., was very shortly abandoned . In 1292 we find the mayor and commonalty claiming the right to elect a
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coroner and to have tolls of markets and fairs . In 1685 the governing
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body comprised a mayor, aldermen, a town clerk, burgesses of the
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common council, a coroner and subordinate
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officers . An undated charter from Henry II. conceding to the burgesses the customs of York, was confirmed in 1 John, 16 Henry III., 14
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Edward I., and 5 Edward III . John granted the borough to the burgesses for a
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fee-
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farm
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rent . The impoverishment caused by the Scottish raids led to its seizure by Edward II. for arrears of payment, but Edward III. restored it on the same terms as before . Henry VIII. reduced the fee-farm rent from 20 marks to 2 marks, after an inquisition which found that Appleby was burnt by the Scots in 1388 and that part of it still
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lay in ruins . The town, however, never seems to have regained its prosperity, and 16th and 17th century writers speak of it as a poor and insignificant
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village . Appleby returned two members to parliament from 1295 until disfranchised by the Reform Act of 1832 . The market and the St Lawrence
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fair are held by prescription .

James I. granted an additional fair on the second

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Thursday in
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April . In the early 18th century Appleby was celebrated for the best corn-market in the country . See Victoria County
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History, Westmorland; W . Hewitson, Appleby Charters (Cumberl. and Westm . Antiq. and Archaeol .
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Soc., Transactions, xi . 279-285; Kendal, 1891) .

End of Article: APPLEBY
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