Place:Hoddlesden, Lancashire, England

Watchers
NameHoddlesden
Alt namesBlacksnapesource: hamlet within Hoddlesden area
TypeChapelry
Coordinates53.7°N 2.433°W
Located inLancashire, England
See alsoBlackburn Hundred, Lancashire, Englandhundred in which it was located
Blackburn, Lancashire, Englandancient parish in which it was located
Over Darwen, Lancashire, Englandcivil parish of which it was part 1866-1895
Darwen, Lancashire, Englandcivil parish 1895-1974
Blackburn with Darwen, Lancashire, Englanddistrict municipality covering the area since 1974

The following description of Hoddlesden is from John Marius Wilson's Imperial Gazetteer of England and Wales of 1870-72 is provided by the website A Vision of Britain Through Time (University of Portsmouth Department of Geography).

"HODDLESDEN, a hamlet and a chapelry in Over Darwen township, Blackburn parish, Lancashire. The hamlet lies 1¾ mile E of Over Darwen town and [railway] station; and has an inn, a large cotton mill, a colliery, and a brick work. The chapelry includes the township of Yate and Pickup Bank, and a portion of the township of Eccleshill; and was constituted in 1862. Post town: Over Darwen, under Blackburn. Population: 2,250.
"The living is a vicarage in the diocese of Manchester. Value: about £200. Patrons: the Vicar of Blackburn and W. B. Ranken, Esq. The church was built in 1863, at a cost of about £4,000; is in the geometrical English style; comprises nave, chancel, and N aisle, with W tower; and contains about 600 sittings. There are an Independent chapel at Pickup Bank, and national schools at Pickup Bank and Hoddlesden."
Image:Blackburn Rural with Titles 2.png
the text in this section is based on an article in Wikipedia

Hoddlesden is a village in the borough of Blackburn with Darwen, in Lancashire, England. The village population at the 2011 UK census was 1,239. It is in the borough's East Rural ward, and is situated east of Darwen. To the north there are the parishes of Eccleshill and Yate and Pickup Bank, to the east there is Haslingden Grane, part of the West Pennine Moors, and to the southwest there is Blacksnape, a small hamlet.

The village is now a residential area, with its residents commuting to places such as the nearby towns of Blackburn and Darwen: in the 19th and early 20th century, local industries included weaving and coal mining.

Governance

Until 1895 Hoddlesden was in the parish of Over Darwen which was a chapelry in the ancient parish of Darwen and became a civil parish in 1866. Over Darwen was absorbed into the newly formed civil parish of Darwen in 1895 where it remained until the merger of Darwen with Blackburn in 1974.

Research Tips

  • See the Wikipedia articles on parishes and civil parishes for descriptions of this lowest rung of local administration. The original parishes (known as ancient parishes) were ecclesiastical, under the jurisdiction of the local priest. A parish covered a specific geographical area and was sometimes equivalent to that of a manor. Sometimes, in the case of very large rural parishes, there were chapelries where a "chapel of ease" allowed parishioners to worship closer to their homes. In the 19th century the term civil parish was adopted to define parishes with a secular form of local government. In WeRelate both civil and ecclesiastical parishes are included in the type of place called a "parish". Smaller places within parishes, such as chapelries and hamlets, have been redirected into the parish in which they are located. The names of these smaller places are italicized within the text.
  • Rural districts were groups of geographically close civil parishes in existence between 1894 and 1974. They were formed as a middle layer of administration between the county and the civil parish. Inspecting the archives of a rural district will not be of much help to the genealogist or family historian, unless there is need to study land records in depth.
  • Civil registration or vital statistics and census records will be found within registration districts. To ascertain the registration district to which a parish belongs, see Registration Districts in Lancashire, part of the UK_BMD website.
  • Lancashire Online Parish Clerks provide free online information from the various parishes, along with other data of value to family and local historians conducting research in the County of Lancashire.
  • FamilySearch Lancashire Research Wiki provides a good overview of the county and also articles on most of the individual parishes (very small or short-lived ones may have been missed).
  • Ancestry (international subscription necessary) has a number of county-wide collections of Church of England baptisms, marriages and burials, some from the 1500s, and some providing microfilm copies of the manuscript entries. There are specific collections for Liverpool (including Catholic baptisms and marriages) and for Manchester. Their databases now include electoral registers 1832-1935. Another pay site is FindMyPast.
  • A map of Lancashire circa 1888 supplied by A Vision of Britain through Time includes the boundaries between the parishes and shows the hamlets within them.
  • A map of Lancashire circa 1954 supplied by A Vision of Britain through Time is a similar map for a later timeframe.
  • GENUKI provides a website covering many sources of genealogical information for Lancashire. The organization is gradually updating the website and the volunteer organizers may not have yet picked up all the changes that have come with improving technology.
  • The Victoria County History for Lancashire, provided by British History Online, covers the whole of the county in six volumes (the seventh available volume [numbered Vol 2] covers religious institutions). The county is separated into its original hundreds and the volumes were first published between 1907 and 1914. Most parishes within each hundred are covered in detail. Maps within the text can contain historical information not available elsewhere.
  • This map from the National Library of Scotland shows how large an area Hoddlesden covered.
  • A description of the township of Over Darwen from British History Online (Victoria County Histories), published 1911
This page uses content from the English Wikipedia. The original content was at Hoddlesden. The list of authors can be seen in the page history. As with WeRelate, the content of Wikipedia is available under the Creative Commons Attribution/Share-Alike License.