|
The heart of the village was Sandbury Green, which extended past the present Green almost to the Thrigby Road junction. Here village tradesmen were also doing well including the carpenter, wheelwright and blacksmith shops. The Ferry House and Inn with the lucrative ferry business and Staithe could afford their own large barn and there was money enough in the village to sustain a pork butchers and general shop. There was a dressmaker, shoemakers, bricklayers and a brazier. Flour was produced at the new windmill built in 1827. A grand new Rectory was built in 1840 and a new school in 1876. There was a thriving Methodist congregation as well as a Wesleyan Chapel. There is a memorial plaque in the Church listing the 65 Stokesby men who fought in the Great War, a staggering percentage of the adult male population at that time. Eleven made the ultimate sacrifice and are commemorated on the War Memorial in the churchyard together with the three young men who gave their lives in the Second War.
|