By the Rev. J. E. Jackson. 283 
thus to the Rev. William Coxe, 1796 :— 
“Sir, Last night I called on Dame Coombs, who is near 80 
years of age. She perfectly remembers service being per- 
formed at Fuggleston Chapel: was also present when John 
and Betty Smith were married by the Rev. Mr. Barford who 
was Rector of Wilton, says there has been no service there for 
60 years. John Wicker also remembers, when a boy, going to 
chapel: the pews were all very regular, a desk and pulpit : 
both agree as to the time it was shut up: he was at the opening 
of a well, and saw eleven skulls taken out. The hospital was 
endowed by Adelicia, Queen to Henry II. (read 1.), and she 
lived in the house where farmer Waters now resides. There 
were two estates near Warminster settled for its support, which 
Mr. Frost and the Rev. Mr. Barford sold. Frost’s family all 
came to want, and he was found drowned in a river, not a foot 
deep, near Harnham.! JoszpH Gipss.” 
i 
Adeliza, second wife and relict of King Hen. I., was daughter 
of Godfrey, Duke of Lorraine. She had the Castle of Arundel 
in dower from the King, and on her re-marrying William de 
Albini, he became, in her right, Earl of Arundel. 
Gorr Cuaren. About two miles south of West Lavington, near, 
or probably at, a point where the road from that place is crossed 
by the old ridgeway, at Gore cross, stood the Chapel of Gore, 
dedicated to St. John. In A.D. 1847, Robert de Heghtred- 
bury was instituted by the Bishop to the chantry of Gore, on 
the presentation of the Dean and Chapter of Sarum. The 
“Chapel of Gore” is named in the chartulary of Edingdon _ 
Priory, in the British Museum, in a deed dated 1359, being a 
Composition between the Vicar of Market (or Staple) Laving- 
ton, and the monastery of Edingdon. It is named once in the 
Sarum Episcopal Registers. Standing at cross roads, (if it did 
stand here) it may have served for the occasional devotion of 
DE ee eee ee 
1 Joseph Gibbs seems to imply that Mr. Frost’s death was a judgement upon 
him for selling ‘the two estates near Warminster.” But St. Giles’s Hospital 
“never had any there. It was St. John’s Hospital, Wilton, that had and still 
has, lands at Corsley and Whitborne near Warminster. See Corsley, supra. 
VOL. X.—NO. XXX. U 

