328 Wilts OUtnanj. 



Articles in the Wilts Archceological Magazine : — 

 " On the White Horses of Wiltshire and its Neighbourhood," illust. 

 XIV., 12—30. 



" On some Curiosities and Statistics of Parish Registers." XVI., 301 

 —336. 



" On some Un-noted Wiltshire Phrases." XXII., 107—114. 



" Cherhill Gleanings," illust. XXIV., 257—270. 



" White Horse Jottings," illust. XXV., 57—68. 



Rev. Frederick Meyrick, died Nov., 1905. Son of Edward 



Graves Meyrick, D.D., Vicar of Ramsbury. Scholar and Fellow and 

 Tutor of Trin. Coll., Oxon. B.A., 1847; M.A., 1850. President of 

 Oxford Union Society, 1849. H.M. Inspector of Schools, 1859—1869. 

 Rector of Blickling and Erpingham, 1868 — 1905. Non-Residentiary 

 Canon of Lincoln, 1869 — 1905. Principal of Codrington College, 

 Barbados, 1886—7. Secretary of Anglo-Continental Society, 1853—98. 



Lt.-Col. George Wilbraham Northey, J.P., D.Ii., 



of Ashley Manor, Box, Lord of the Manor of Ashley and Ditteridge and 

 joint lord with his elder brother (the Rev. E. W. Northey, of Woodcote 

 House, Epsom), of the Manor of Box, died March 12th, 1906. Buried 

 at Box. Born January, 1836, s. of Edward N. Northey, of Woodcote 

 House, Epsom, and Box, his mother being a daughter of Gen. Sir George 

 Anson, G.C.B. Educated at Sandhurst, he served in the Cameronians, 

 retiring in 1881, with the rank of Lt.-Col. He married, 1859, the eldest 

 daughter of Mr. A. J. S. Burrow, and leaves eleven surviving children, 

 out of thirteen. Three of his sons served in the South African War, and 

 a fourth — Capt. Frank Northey — died at Cairo in 1898. Col. Northey 

 was a strong Conservative and an enthusiastic supporter of cricket. 

 Obit, notice, Devizes Gazette, March 15th, 1906. 



John Harding. Died at Salisbury, February 26th, 1906, aged 88. 

 Born at Mere, March 2nd, 1817, son of William Harding, educated at 

 Mere under Rev. William Barnes, the poet, and at the Salisbury 

 Choristers' School. A Cathedral chorister until 1882, and a lay vicar 

 from 1839 — 1845. An architect and surveyor, he held the post of 

 Diocesan Surveyor from 1874 to 1894. 



Obit, notices, Wiltshire County Mirror, March 2nd; Salisbury 

 Journal, March 3rd, 1906. 



Lady WallingtOn, of Keevil. obituary notice, Wiltshire Times, 

 November 4th, 1905. 



Henry Brown. DiedFeb. 24th, 1906, aged 88. Buried at Blacklands. 

 Son of George Brown, of Wood Green, Hailey, Oxon. Married, 1842, 

 Anne, d. of John Collier Hitchcock, of All Cannings, who died 1883. 



