Fitz, Shropshire Family History Guide

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Fitz is an Ancient Parish in the county of Shropshire.

Other places included in the parish: Grafton, Mytton

Parish church:

Parish registers begin: 1559

Nonconformists include:

Adjacent Parishes

Parish History

Fitz

The Imperial Gazetteer of England & Wales 1870

FITZ, a parish in Atcham district, Salop; on the rivers Perry and Severn, and on the Shrewsbury and Oswestry railway, 4 miles NW of Shrewsbury. Post town, Bicton Heath, under Shrewsbury. Acres, 1,512. Real property, £3,077. Pop., 323. Houses, 53. The property is divided among a few. The living is a rectory in the diocese of Lichfield. Value, £272. Patron, the Lord Chancellor. The church is good.
Source: The Imperial Gazetteer of England & Wales [Wilson, John M]. A. Fullarton & Co. N. d. c. [1870-72].

Gregory Shropshire Gazetteer 1824

Fitz. A parish in the Baschurch division of the hundred of Pimhill, a rectory discharged, in the diocese of Coventry and Lichfield, the deanery of Salop, and archdeaconry of Salop. 5 miles north-west of Shrewsbury.
Source: The Shropshire Gazetteer, with an Appendix, including a Survey of the County and Valuable Miscellaneous Information, with Plates. Printed and Published by T. Gregory, Wem, 1824

Grafton

Imperial Gazetteer of England and Wales Circa 1870

Grafton, a hamlet in Fitz parish, Salop; on the river Perry, 5 ½ miles NW of Shrewsbury.
Source: The Imperial Gazetteer of England & Wales [Wilson, John M]. A. Fullarton & Co. N. d. c. [1870-72].

Gregory Shropshire Gazetteer 1824

Grafton. A township in the parish of Fitz, and in the Baschurch division of the hundred of Pimhill. 5 ½ miles north-west of Shrewsbury.
Source: The Shropshire Gazetteer, with an Appendix, including a Survey of the County and Valuable Miscellaneous Information, with Plates. Printed and Published by T. Gregory, Wem, 1824

Parish Registers

Fitz Parish Registers 1559-1812

Parish Records

FamilySearch

England, Shropshire, Fitz – Cemeteries ( 2 )
Monumental inscriptions of Fitz, Shropshire, 1691-1981
Author: Hulme, Michael J.; Hulme, Thelma; Hulme, Susan

Monumental inscriptions of Holy Trinity Church, Leaton (near Bomere Heath), Shropshire, 1843-1981
Author: Hulme, Michael J.; Hulme, Thelma; Hulme, Susan

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

England, Shropshire, Fitz – Church records ( 3 )
Bishop’s transcripts for Fitz, 1630-1868
Author: Church of England. Parish Church of Fitz (Shropshire)

Parish registers for Leaton, 1859-1975
Author: Church of England. Chapelry of Leaton (Shropshire)

Shropshire parish registers of the parishes of Fitz, Frodesley, Uppington, Tong and Addersley
Author: Church of England. Diocese of Lichfield; Phillimore, W. P. W. (William Phillimore Watts), 1853-1913; Church of England. Parish Church of Fitz (Shropshire); Church of England. Parish Church of Frodesley (Shropshire); Church of England. Parish Church of Uppington (Shropshire)

England, Shropshire, Fitz – Church records – Indexes ( 2 )
Computer printout of Fitz, Shrops., Eng

Computer printout of Leaton by Shresbury, Shrops., Eng

England, Shropshire, Fitz – Probate records ( 1 )
P.C.C. wills, 1630-1700 : for the parishes of Fitz, Montford, Shrawardine, Great Ness, Little Ness, Baschurch, in the county of Shropshire
Author: Speake, J. D.

Shropshire Historical Directories

Directory Transcriptions

Fitz Cassey Shropshire Directory 1871

Fitz, with the townships of Grafton and Mytton, is a village and parish, 5 ½ miles from Shrewsbury, in the Southern division of the county, Albrighton division of Brimstree hundred, Atcham union, and diocese of Lichfield. The church of St. Paul is a plain brick building, erected in the year 1722. The living is a rectory, yearly value £266, with residence and about 32 acres of glebe land, in the gift of the Lord Chancellor. There is a small Primitive Methodist chapel here. The principal landowners are Lieut.-Col. Kenyon-Slaney, John Bather, Esq., and Richard Middleton, Esq. The soil is varied, from strong to light loam; subsoil, chiefly clay. The area is 1,512 acres, and the population in 1861 was 323; gross estimated rental, £2,984; rateable value, £2,820.

Grafton is a township, in the parish of Fitz, containing 550 acres. Lieut.-Col. Kenyon-Slaney is principal landowner.

Mytton is also a township in this parish; it is the birth place of Edward Waring, M.D., whose mathematical publications prove the extent and profundity of his knowledge. He was born in 1734.

Letters arrive from Bomere Heath at 8 a.m.; dispatched at 6 30 p.m.

Fitz
Bearcroft Rev. Thomas, M.A.
Middleton Richard, esq. Fitz manor
Davies Edward, farmer, Manor farm
Davies William, farmer
Vaughan William, Fitz mill

Mytton
Carew Rev. Gerald, M.A. Mytton hall
Hamer Mrs. Mytton house
Blake Edward, miller Mytton mill
Croft Richard, wheelwright
Vaughan Thomas, farmer
Winn Thomas, farmer

Grafton
Kenyon Mrs. Grafton lodge
Bowen Charles, blacksmith
Davies Edward, farmer
Davis William, farmer, Mock hall
Howells Edward, farmer, Grafton farm
Price Richard, farmer

Source: Edward Cassey & Co’s, History, Gazetteer, and Directory of Shropshire 1871

Bagshaw History, Gazetteer, and Directory of Shropshire 1851

FITZ is a parish and village delightfully situated on a gentle eminence 5¾ miles N.W. from Shrewsbury; the country around is fertile, and pleasingly diversified with graceful undulations; the scenery is very beautiful, and includes the picturesque windings of the river Severn. The parish contains 1512a. 1r. 32p. of land; in 1801 there were 236 inhabitants; in 1831, 211, and in 1841 fifty houses and a population of 246 souls. Rateable value, £2,774. 6s. The river Perry intersects the township, and has its confluence with the Severn a little below Mytton. The soil is rich, producing good wheat and barley, and there is some rich pasture land. The Shrewsbury and Chester railway passes this township over Leaton Heath, where there is a station, about a mile and a half from Fitz.

The Church, dedicated to St. Paul, is situated on an eminence, and consists of nave and chancel, with a lofty square tower, in which is one bell. It is a birch fabric with stone finishings, and contains a fine toned organ; the pews are of oak, and there are some interesting monuments within its sacred walls to the families of Wood, Powell, Lloyd, Jones, Denstons, Hopkins, Pytons and others; it is also beautified with two finely executed stained glass windows. Twenty-two free sittings were added in 1842, at the expense of the Rev. William Hopkins, then rector of this parish. The living is a rectory valued in the king’s books at £5. 5s. 8d., now returned at £272 in the patronage of the Lord Chancellor, and incumbency of the Rev. Daniel Nihill, M.A., who resides at the rectory, a pleasantly situated mansion near the church. There are 34a. 2r. 1p. of glebe land, and the tithes were commuted in 1839 for £266. There is a neat school in the village, built in 1850, at the cost of near £100, which was raised by subscriptions, and a collection in the church; 45 children are instructed. A residence has been provided for the master near the school.

The Hall, a handsome stuccoed mansion, pleasantly situated and beautified with pleasure grounds, is the residence and property of Richard Middleton, Esq. Among the land owners in the parish are John A. Lloyd, Esq.; Robert A. Slaney, Esq., M.P.; Richard Middleton, Esq.; Mr. Joseph Hignett, Mrs. Morris, Mr. Richard Vaughan, Rev. Edward H. Dymock, Mr. Richard Lloyd, James Payne, Esq., Mr. James Davies, Devisees of late Sir John Betton, and others. The Duke of Cleveland is the lord of the manor.

MYTTON is a scattered village in the parish of Fitz, salubriously situated, containing some good residences, and surrounded with picturesque scenery. Mytton is celebrated as the birth place of Edward Waring, M.D., whose mathematical publications prove the extent and profundity of his knowledge. He was born in the year 1734, and after being educated at Shrewsbury free school, was sent on one of Millington’s exhibitions to Magdalen College, Cambridge, where he applied himself with such assiduity to the study of Mathematics, that when he left the university he carried with him the credit of being one of the most able mathematicians that ever filled the professor’s chair. In 1776 he entered into a matrimonial connection with Miss Oswell, and not many years after retired from the university, first to a house in Shrewsbury, and at length to his own estate at Plealey, near Pontesbury, where he died on the 15th of August, 1798, in the 64th year of his age.—Grafton is another small village in the parish of Fitz. Here are several good farms, and Grafton Lodge, a good house pleasantly situated, the residence of John Henry Denston, Esq.

Fitz Directory.—John Bather, Esq., Richard Middleton, Esq., The hall; Rev. Daniel Nihill, M.A., The Rectory; Farmers, Joshua Burroughs, Leaton Heath; Richard Middleton, Samuel Onions, Leaton Heath; Thomas Vaughan, corn miller; John Walmsley, Leaton Heath; Alban Davies, fisherman; Maria Davies, schoolmistress; William France, farm bailiff; John Vaughan, butcher.

Grafton Directory: Mrs. Ann Denston, John Henry Denston, Esq.; Edward Davies, farmer; John Davies shopkeeper; Richard Davies, blacksmith; Richard Lloyd, wheelwright; John Pugh, farmer; and Thomas Vaughan, farmer.

Mytton Directory: William Davies, farmer; John Evans, farm bailiff; Mrs. Jemima Hopkins; John Litttlehales, basket maker; Mrs. Elizabeth Morris, farmer; William Rowland, farmer and corn miller; Richard Wildig, farmer.

Source: History, Gazetteer, and Directory of Shropshire by Samuel Bagshaw 1851

Administration

  • County: Shropshire
  • Civil Registration District: Atcham
  • Probate Court: Court of the Bishop of Lichfield (Episcopal Consistory)
  • Diocese: Lichfield
  • Rural Deanery: Shrewsbury
  • Poor Law Union: Atcham
  • Hundred: Albrighton Division
  • Province: Canterbury