b'The Sheepwash is shown as a permanentReferences: feature, in a position that coincides with extant1.The 1772 enclosure award is accompanied photographs of its use in the late 1800s (justby two plans (dated 1769) which show downstream of the bridge). [4] the village and the surrounding pre and A section of Bray Gate (by a stand of trees post enclosure field boundaries (including edging the road) is identified as Nevilles Row.1726 enclosure boundaries). The one that [4] shows the top, east end, of the village There is a ground plan of the Manor House plus shows buildings but the one that shows its surrounding pathways. The main accessthe bottom, west end, shows no buildings appears to have been from Worsendale Road,although they must have existed.terminating at the north east corner of the2.1765 survey map produced for some building. There is a footpath from Main Streetpurpose related to Richard Darley.probably leading from the current gap in the3.OS 1927 1:2500 CLXXVI 3.wall, which finishes as stone and recommences4.OS 1892 1:2500 CLIX 14as brick. [4] 5.Parish survey map for 1816 with named 5.A triangular section of woodland is shown that isplots, similar to the 1772 enclosure plans. now part of the Rush Plantation. One side of thisBuildings along Main Street are depicted.forms the eastern half of the Rush boundary that6.OS 1910 1:2500 CLIX 15.fronts onto Hall Cliff (north of the Playing Field).7.OS 1892 1:2500 CLXXVI 2.Perhaps a visual check would confirm that this section is older than the rest of the Plantation? The same section also appears earlier on the 1765 survey map [2].6.Bishop Wilton Beck above the Palace site used tobe referred to as the Agworm, running as it does past Hagworm Wood. 7.Farmers at Westfield House are named in trade directories and census returns for the 1800s but the associated farm cannot be located on any maps.Hospital Contributory SchemeBased on material supplied by Nancy HutchinsonP rior to the advent of the National Health Service in 1948, hospitals had schemes that entitled contributors to treatment as in-patients or out-patients. Nancy Hutchinson has two cards that her mother, Mrs Caroline Newby, used for contributions to the York County and District Hospital Scheme. A contribution of 3d weekly covered husband, wife and children. At the age of 16, children had to have their own cards and pay 2d until they were 21 when they paid the full amount.Contributions were collected in the village. Nancy remembers that Mrs Wilf Cook, who lived at No. 56, was the collector for the 1937 to 1938 period. For the period covered by the other card, 1941 to 1942, the collector is identified on the back as Miss Nora Foster who lived at No. 52. The terms printed inside the contribution card show that entitlement did not extend to treatment provided by the State or by the several Health Authorities (viz., Infectious Diseases, Pulmonary Tuberculosis, Maternity Cases, Tonsil and Adenoid treatment of children attending Elementary Schools, Mental Cases, Incurable Diseases).22 BULLETIN 2'