116 HISTORY OF KIRKBY-HOORSIDB. 



There is entombed in the same vault, Mr. Robert 

 Harrison, Brother to Mrs. Marsden, and Father to 

 the above Miss Harrison. 



There is here a chapel belonging to the Society 

 of Friends, displaying that neatness, and conducted 

 with that order, which are peculiar to that people. 

 ^Likewise a neat chapel belonging to the society of 

 Methodists. 



The Toll- Booth, which was built in the begin- 

 ning of the eighteenth century, is an object that 

 generally strikes the eye of a stranger. It is a noble 

 double roofed stone edifice; but from being neglect- 

 ed and out of repair, has the appearance of great- 

 er antiquity than belongs* to it ; but it is likely in a 

 short time to undergo that repair it has so long 

 needed. It was principally built with materials 

 from the ruins of Neville Castle, and was originally 

 intended for such general purposes as it now answers. 

 It is large and lofty, and from the top commands a 

 beautiful and distant prospect. At the north end 

 it has a flight of broad stone steps which lead into a 

 spacious and principal chamber, in which are sever- 

 al massive stone pillars, in a line through the middle, 

 tosupport the floor of the room above. This room is 

 occasionally used for the accommodation of public 

 assemblies. The other part of the building consists 

 tif a row of steps in the front, wifh cellars under 

 them ; one of which constitutes a temporary prison 

 The back part forms one side of the Shambles, and 

 b'as a row of butcher's shops in it. The remaining 

 chambers are occupied as ware-houses, granaries^ 

 cabhiet-makers' work shops, &c. The building 



