You could take a look at thie website forum and see if anyo of it makes any sense to you. You'll have to scroll down a bit to find the more desciptive replies that almost draws a map of where the Park area of Sheffied was
Blakeley in Batley West Yorks Turner in Hanging Heaton West Yorkshire Dann last known area Soothill West Yorks Hirst in Hanging heaton W Yorks Moss in Morley and Leeds Parker in Morley W Yorks Parker in Hull E Yorks Tilburns in Morley W Yorks
Blakeley in Batley West Yorks Turner in Hanging Heaton West Yorkshire Dann last known area Soothill West Yorks Hirst in Hanging heaton W Yorks Moss in Morley and Leeds Parker in Morley W Yorks Parker in Hull E Yorks Tilburns in Morley W Yorks
Ignore the red boundary, which is a proposed Borough of Sheffield. Look instead at the brown boundaries.
You will see that the 'Sheffield Township' consists of the urban centre and also a large part of the southeastern quadrant of the parish. That rural quadrant is Sheffield Park. It is the land which was once the personal property of the Lords of the Manor - a Deer Park - also containing Sheffield Manor.
From the 17th century the Lords of the Manor were generally absentee landlords and by the 19th century the Park was beginning to be divided up and built on. It will be difficult to pinpoint where these people lived without some other record with more a more detailed address. What are these peoples' names?
Hi Wendy, I tihink I must have done something wrong, becasue I replied to you yesterday but my reply is not there. Never mind. Yes it seems likely that the area they lived in was Sheffield Park. I makes sense that it was shortened to just 'Park' on the certficiate.
Hugh, Thanks for the further information. I looked at old maps and compared the area to a map of today and could see the area you spoke about. If I'm correct, Sheffield Park looks to be near a park called Norfolk Park. The 1832 map is just wonderful.
It was just curiosity that led me to ask this question. Names are William Bailey and Hannah Clarke. I have the family in question through the censuses. By 1861 they are back in Ecclesfield with no children yet, which is unusual. I just wonder what they were doing in Sheffiled, though William's job as an iron moulder may have led him there.