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m Wordsworth of Grasmere in Westmoreland, Gentleman, _and_ Mary Hutchinson _of_ Gallow Hill in the Parish of Brompton _were married in this_ Church _by_ Licence _this_ fourth _Day of_ October _in the year one thousand_ eight _Hundred and_ two _by me_ John Ellis officiating min^r. This marriage was solemnized between us." [Illustration: Facsimile of the Signatures in the Register.] "In the presence of THOMAS HUTCHINSON. JOANNA HUTCHINSON. JOHN HUTCHINSON." The same day Wordsworth with his wife and sister drove to Thirsk and two days afterwards reached Grasmere, where they soon settled down to an uneventful life at Dove Cottage. Dorothy Wordsworth could not "describe what she felt," but we are told that she accepted her sister-in-law without a trace of jealousy. There is still preserved in Pickering one of the parchments on which were enrolled the names of all those who were liable for service in the militia. It is headed "Militia Enrollment 1807-8" and begins:-- "An enrollment of the names of the several persons who have been chosen by ballot to serve in the Militia for five years for the west part of the sub-division of Pickering Lyth in the North Riding of the County of York and also of the several substitutes who have been produced and approved to serve for the like term and for such further term as the Militia shall remain embodied, if within the space of five years His Majesty shall order the Militia to be drawn out and embodied and are enrolled in the place of such principals whose names are set opposite thereto in pursuance of an act of the 47th of King George III., Cap. 71, entitled an act for the speedily completing the Militia of Great Britain and increasing the same under certain delimitations and restrictions (14th Aug. 1807)." The thirty-six men were taken as follows:-- 8 from Middleton. 5 " Kirby Misperton. 16 " Pickering. 1 " Ellerburne. 1 " Levisham. 3 " Sinnington. 1 " Thornton. Jonathan Goodall, a farmer of Middleton, induced Geo. Thompson of Pickering, a farmer's servant, 30 years old, to stand for him, paying him L42. Wm. Newton, a farmer of Middleton, had to pay Geo. Allen, a linen draper of Richmond, L47, 5s. as substitute. The smallest amount paid was L20, and the largest sum was L47, 5s. Substitutes seem to have been hard to find in the neighbourhood of Pickering, and those few whose names appear had to be heavily paid. George Barnfather
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