No Dates
An unsourced fragment online on the history of Giggleswick states: 'After the 17th century Stainforth Hall never regained the importance it had enjoyed as the residence of Tempests and Watsons. In 1774 it figured in a curious transaction. Its then owner, Christopher Weatherhead of Liverpool, who held mortgages on properties in the West Indies, was made a bankrupt: and, in the list of his assets assigned by the commissioners in bankruptcy to his creditors, this typical old Craven homestead, standing square and grey on its wind swept hillside, appears in the strange company of tropical plantations in Dominica and Tobago, “and also all those negroe Slaves following: that is to say, Venture, Mial, Somersett, Industry, Cato, Derry, Lidia and her child, Exchange, Kenzie, Mary, Ann, Joan, Catherine, Aurelia, Phebe, Hannah, Marge, Tom, Diligence, Jolly, Jenny, Margaret, Belinda, Dina, with the future Increase of the Females of all such Slaves."'
[Ralph M. Robinson], http://www.northcravenhistoricalresearch.co.uk/Outreach/brayshawFINALDEC04.pdf [accessed 03/11/2015].