St Chad's Poulton-le-Fylde
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St James Stalmine
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St Marys Hambleton
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Holy Trinity
Freckleton
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St Michael's
Kirkham
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St John Out Rawcliffe
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MATTHEW LEWTAS OF HAMBLETON
Matthew was the blacksmith in Hambleton and would have been in important
figure in the community. As the heir of his father George he inherited
the tools of the blacksmithing trade and in his will dated 1719 -
he died the following year - he left these to his eldest son George and
made financial provision for his younger children, John, William,
Thomas and Ester, who were minors. His wife was Alice -
it appears he must have married twice, Ann Fox being his first wife
married 1697. He left property in Stalmine and in Out Rawcliffe and
a house with outbuildings in Hambleton.
His grandson, another Matthew, was baptised
at Hambleton on September 12th 1736 the son of Thomas and Grace Cowell.
This Matthew moved to Liverpool where married Mary West at St
Nicholas on June 19th 1766. Matthew moved
from Over Wyre to live in Poulton sometime between 1788 and his death in
1797
Matthew Lewtas was elected as churchwarden for Poulton
in 1788 and again in 1792 and in the jurors’ lists for Amounderness in 1792
he is recorded as living in Poulton with his estate in Hambleton.
When he died in 1797 Matthew was
described in his will as ‘of Poulton' As
was the fashion at the time Matthew left his goods to a wide variety of
family members and others in Liverpool and the Fylde including
Thomas Duxbury of Bispham who was left £5.
(Thomas was the son of John Duxbury and Mary Lewtas of Poulton the
daughter of Thomas Lewtas who owned the Lane Ends Hotel in Blackpool).
Mathew's wife Mary inherited her husband's share in the
partnership in the sugar house in Liverpool - Slater Richardson & Co., etc on the
north side of Coopers Row extending to King Street; his house etc on the
south side of Bridgewater Street and pew number 7 in St James church Stalmine.
He had also owned the property in Hambleton known as Boggery Gate,
unfortunately destroyed by fire in the 1980s. Matthew also
left money for the school master at Hambleton
As he requested both Matthew and later his wife Mary
were buried 'within the chapel or chapel yard' of Hambleton.
MATTHEW'S DESCENDANTS IN HAMBLETON
Martthew's descendants can be followed through the census returns.
The 1871 census records Matthew's descendant James Lewtas born 1819
in Rawcliffe, a timber merchant and farmer of 81 acres living at Boggery
Gate with Elisa Sophia his wife nee Robinson born 1839 in Pilling.
In the same census Benjamin Lewtas is recorded as living in Watson Lane,
unmarried, aged 40, also a timber merchant born in Out Rawcliffe.
By 1881 Matthew & Eliza Sophia had two sons Matthew aged 7 and Robert
aged 6 both born in Hambleton.