
Binstead
Contents
Kelly's Directory 1886 - Binstead
"Binstead is a parish, in the rural deanery of North-east Medina, archdeaconry
of the Isle of Wight and diocese of Winchester, situated about 6 miles
east-north-east from Newport, and a mile west from Ryde on the coast. The
church of the Holy Cross is a building of stone in the Early English style,
with chancel, nave, north aisle, added in 1876, and bell turret with 1 bell.
The register dates from the year 1710. The living is a rectory, gross yearly
income £100, with residence, in the gift of the Bishop of Winchester, and
held since 1881 by the Rev. George Vallis Garland M.A of Trinity College,
Cambridge. The Wesleyans have a chapel here. A cemetery containing about an
acre, with mortuary chapel, was formed in 1856; the land was presented by John
Fleming esq.: it is under the control of a burial board of 9 members. In this
parish are the ruins of Quarr Abbey, founded in 1132 by Baldwin de Redvers,
afterwards Earl of Devonshire: a farm house and outbuildings have been built
out of the remains and on the site of the ancient abbey; at its eastern portion
the ruins of a building exist, presenting a window, three arches and a doorway:
a barn has been made out of what once was the refectory. Quarr Abbey House,
the seat of Lady Cochrane, is a handsome stone building. The trustees of John
Fleming esq. are lords of the manor and chief landowners. The soil is loam and
clay: subsoil, clay and gravel. The chief crops are wheat, beans and oats.
The area is 1,206 acres of land and 236 of water and foreshore; rateable value,
£4,356; the population in 1881 was 813." (From Kelly's Directory of
the Isle of Wight, 1886)
[Last updated: 4th August 2003 - Brian Pears]