Kelloe Durham Family History Guide

Kelloe is an Ancient Parish in the county of Durham.

Other places in the parish include: Coxhoe, Quarrington, and Cassop.

Alternative names:

Parish church: St. Helen

Parish registers begin:

  • Parish registers: 1693
  • Bishop’s Transcripts: 1762

Nonconformists include: Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints, Primitive Methodist, Roman Catholic, and Wesleyan Methodist.

Adjacent Parishes

Parish History

The Imperial Gazetteer of England & Wales 1870

KELLOE, a township in Easington district, and a parish partly also in Durham district, Durhamshire.

The township lies on a branch of the Hartlepool railway, 6½ miles SE of Durham; and has a post-office under Ferryhill. Acres, 1, 592. Real property, £11, 297; of which £9, 047 are in mines. Pop. in 1851, 149; in 1861, 530. Houses, 90. The manor belonged anciently to the Kellaws or Kellows, one of whom, Richard Kellow, became Bishop of Durham in 1311; and it took its name from them.

The parish contains also the townships of Thornley, Wingate, Coxhoe, Quarrington, and Cassop. Acres, 11, 119. Real property, £46, 862; of which £27, 435 are in mines, £20 in quarries, and £399 in railways. Pop. in 1851, 12, 278; in 1861, 12, 867. Houses, 2, 490. The pop. in 1831 was only 663; and the great subsequent increase of it arose from the opening and extending of coal mines. The property is much subdivided. Coxhoe Hall is a chief residence. There are brickfields, limeworks, and corn mills.

The living is a vicarage in the diocese of Durham. Value, £212. Patron, the Bishop of Durham. The church is decorated English, but has a chancel of 1854, with a memorial window to Miss Wood; and it was founded by the Kellaws, as a chantry; and it has a tower.

The chapelries of Thornley, Coxhoe, and Cassop-cum-Quarrington are separate benefices.

There are several Wesleyan and Primitive Methodist chapels, and a partly-endowed girls’ school.

Source: The Imperial Gazetteer of England & Wales [Wilson, John M]. A. Fullarton & Co. N. d. c. [1870-72].

A Topographical Dictionary of England 1848

KELLOE (St. Helen), a parish, partly in the union of Durham, and partly in that of Easington, S. division of Easington ward, N. division of the county of Durham, 7½ miles (S. E. by E.) from Durham; comprising the townships of Cassop, Coxhoe, Kelloe, Quarrington, Thornley, and Wingate; and containing 11,223 inhabitants, of whom 156 are in Kelloe township.

The manor of Kelloe, which is situated near the road from Stockton to Durham, and comprises about 1500 acres, appears to have given name to the family of Kelloe or Kellaw, of whom Richard de Kellaw, a native of the parish, was Bishop of Durham in 1311. It passed from the Kellaw family to that of Forcer, who eventually sold it to John Tempest, Esq., by whom it was devised to his nephew, Sir Henry Vane Tempest, Bart.; the manor is now in the possession of the baronet’s only daughter, and heiress, Lady Frances Vane, Marchioness of Londonderry.

The parish is about 7 miles in length, nearly of equal breadth, and includes an area of 24,000 acres. The soil, generally thin and sterile, rests on a stratum of magnesian limestone, which, in the lands of Raceby, near the southern boundary of the parish, is in a state of purity, entirely free from those qualities which, in many parts, render it unfit for agricultural use; very extensive quarries are in operation.

Coal of excellent quality is found in every part, and since the successful establishment of the Thornley colliery, not less than twelve mines have been opened in the various townships, all of which are in active operation; about 500,000 tons of coal being annually raised, and conveyed by railway to Hartlepool and Stockton, whence they are shipped for the London market.

The village of Kelloe, about half a mile to the east of the church, contains a few neatly-built houses, and is well inhabited; the small hamlet of Church-Kelloe contains only the church, the vicarage-house, and one or two other houses. Since the opening of the coalmines, the population has increased from 663 to more than 11,000 persons; and in the several townships, numerous villages, inhabited by the miners, have arisen, in the immediate vicinities of the works.

The living is a vicarage, valued in the king’s books at £20, and in the patronage of the Bishop of Durham; the impropriation belongs to Sherburn Hospital, to the master and brethren of which the church was given by Bishop Pudsey, in the 12th century. The vicarial tithes have been commuted for about £120, and the glebe comprises 220 acres: several parcels of land intermixed with it, are claimed by the hospital.

The church, situated in a valley, is an ancient structure chiefly in the early English style of architecture, with a square tower; portions of the edifice are in the decorated English style: on the north side is a projection called the Thornley porch, or Pity porch. The vicarage-house, to the north of the churchyard, is a handsome substantial residence.

Churches, to which districts are assigned, have been erected at Thornley and Wingate-Grange.

There are places of worship for Wesleyans.

Source: A Topographical Dictionary of England by Samuel Lewis 1848

Parish Records

FamilySearch

England, Durham, Kelloe – Cemeteries ( 6 )
Kelloe churchyard and cemetery monumental inscriptions

Monumental inscriptions, St. Helen’s Churchyard and Cemetery, Kelloe
Author: Thompson, Heather; Cleveland Family History Society

Quarrington, Co. Durham, monumental inscriptions
Author: McLee, Carol A.; Cleveland, North Yorkshire and South Durham Family History Society

Quarrington, Co. Durham, monumental inscriptions
Author: McLee, Carol A.; Cleveland, North Yorkshire and South Durham Family History Society

St. Paul’s churchyard : Trimdon Station, Colliery (Deaf Hill), Deaf Hill cum Langdale

Wheatley Hill Cemetery register, Wingate, 1941-1969
Author: Wingate (Durhamshire)

England, Durham, Kelloe – Census ( 1 )
Census returns for Kelloe, 1841-1891
Author: Great Britain. Census Office

England, Durham, Kelloe – Census – 1851 – Indexes ( 1 )
1851 census from Kelloe, Thornley, Thornley Colliery : volume no. 124
Author: Cleveland Family History Society

England, Durham, Kelloe – Church records ( 8 )
England, Durham, Kelloe, bishop’s transcripts, 1762-1852
Author: Church of England. Parish Church of Kelloe (Durham); Durham University Library

England, Durham, Thornley, St. Bartholomew’s Church, bishop’s transcripts, 1844
Author: Church of England. Chapelry of Thornley (Durham); Durham University Library

Marriage records, 1693-1837
Author: Church of England. Parish Church of Kelloe (Durham)

Parish chest material for Kelloe, 1839-1889
Author: Church of England. Parish Church of Kelloe (Durham)

Parish registers for Kelloe, 1693-1905
Author: Church of England. Parish Church of Kelloe (Durham)

Parish registers for Wingate, 1841-1902
Author: Church of England. Chapelry of Wingate (Durham)

The parish registers of St. Helen’s Church, Kelloe, County Durham, baptisms and burials, 1693-1837
Author: Worthy, David; Church of England. Parish Church of Kelloe (Durham)

Record of members, 1849-1853
Author: Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints. Kelloe Branch (Durhamshire)

England, Durham, Kelloe – Church records – Indexes ( 4 )
Kelloe baptisms
Author: Church of England. Parish Church of Kelloe (Durham)

Kelloe, Bishop Middleham & Trimdon : baptisms, marriages & burials 1813-1839
Author: Yellowley, Carol; Church of England. Parish Church of Kelloe (Durham); Church of England. Parish Church of Bishop-Middleham (Durham); Church of England. Parish Church of Trimdon (Durham)

Kelloe, St. Helen, marriages index, 1837-1905 : (register indexed: EP/Ke 14-17)
Author: Applegarth, I.

Marriage index for Washington, Usworth, Seaham, Easington, Dalton-le-Dale and Kelloe, 1570-1841
Author: Rounce, W. E.

England, Durham, Kelloe – Land and property ( 1 )
Land tax assessments for the township of Kelloe, 1787-1832
Author: Great Britain. Court of Quarter Sessions of the Peace (Durhamshire)

England, Durham, Kelloe – Public records ( 1 )
Parish chest material for Kelloe, 1839-1889
Author: Church of England. Parish Church of Kelloe (Durham)

England, Durham, Kelloe – Taxation ( 1 )
Land tax assessments for the township of Kelloe, 1787-1832
Author: Great Britain. Court of Quarter Sessions of the Peace (Durhamshire)

Administration

  • County: Durham
  • Civil Registration District: Easington
  • Probate Court: Court of the Bishop of Durham (Episcopal Consistory)
  • Diocese: Durham
  • Rural Deanery: Easington
  • Poor Law Union: Easington
  • Hundred: Durham Ward; Easington Ward
  • Province: York