182 The Society’s MSS. Chiseldon, §c. 
sometime Warden of New College, Oxford, administered to her 
estate 7th January following (Co/. Chester, as above). Her memorial 
inscription, will, it is stated, be found in. Gale’s “ Antiquitates 
Winton.” 
Sir William Calley was succeeded in the representation of the 
family by his brother, Oliver Calley, who married, settlement dated 
23rd September, 1667, Mary, daughter of John Scott, of Bromham, 
co. Wilts (Ped.) In 1611 Sir William Danvers sold land in 
Hilmarton and Calne to John Scott, possibly the same man (Hist. 
Danvers Family, p. 542). Mr. Richard Mullings has left the 
following notes with regard to the lady’s family, which, with the 
accompanying pedigree, compiled from various sources, mostly 
printed, will explain the connection between Oliver Calley and 
Abjohn and Mary Stokes, who took certain reversionary interests 
under his will, proportioned presumably, to the value of the estates 
derived from the Scott family, of which family the representation 
on failure of Mrs. Calley’s issue would have centred in her sister 
and her sister’s heirs. The Danvers legatees were similarly in 
remainder to the testator’s Fiddington estates on failure of his 
mother, Anne Bower’s issue, being his cousins ea parte materna ; 
and it is clear from both bequests that Oliver Calley strongly held 
the view, very lightly regarded nowadays, that money should 
return whence it came :— 
Oliver Calley married Mary one of the two daughters and coheirs of John 
Scott, of Heddington, Wilts, and Abjohn Stokes, of Titherton Lucas, esq., 
married Anne, the other daughter of the said John Scott. These ladies 
became entitled to estates in the parishes of Calstone, CaJne, and Heddington 
which belonged to their father. 
John Scott was son of Thomas Scott, of Heddington, yeoman, whose will 
is dated 30th of December, 1628. He mentions in it Anne his wife, his son 
William, his daughters Anne, Margery, Joan, Susannah Dyer and Elizabeth 
Beare, his sister Katherine Arnold, and John Scott, of Calne. 
It would seem from his will, the text of which is taken from a 
copy kindly lent by Mr. John Mullings, that Oliver Calley never 
took up his abode at Burderop. He pre-deceased both his mother 
and Dame Elizabeth Mompesson, his brother’s widow, and had but 
a reversionary interest, possibly in this, and certainly in other of 
the family estates :— 
a ee eee ee 
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