Recent Wiltshire Books, Pamphlets, and Articles. 335 



UilstOU CllUrcll. Some account of the recent Bestoration and 

 Re-Opening iService, Marcli 22nd, is given in Wilts County Mirror, 

 March 23id; Salisbury Journal, March 24th, 1906. 



The County in 1905. Devizes Gazette, Jan. 4th, 1906, was 

 perhaps the best resume of local events. Others were : — " ClironO- 



logical Record of Local Events," in North wut* 



Herald, Dec. 29th; and LoCal Diary for 1905, in Wilts 

 County Mirror, Dec. 29th, 1905. 



Local Events (in S. Wilts) of 1905. Salisbury Journal, Dec. 

 30th, 1905. 



List of Farm Changes in 1905, given as usual in Dt^vizes 



Gazette, Dec. 27th, 1905. 



George Moberly, D.D., Headmaster of Winchester, 



is one of the " Six Great Schoolmasters, Hawtrey, Moberly, Kennedy, 

 Vaughan, Temple, Bradley. By F. D. How, with thirteen illustrations. 

 Methuen & Co., London. [1804.]" 8vo, pp. xvi. and 276. 



The chapter on Dr. Moberly occupies pages 38 to 88, and has three 

 illustrations ; " Portrait of Dr. Moberly," " Dr. Moberly taking a Division 

 in the big Schoolroom," and a, fac simile of " MS. Translation from 

 Anglo-Saxon into English verse by Dr. Moberly." 



Born at St. Petersburgh, Oct. 10th, 1803, one of the younger sons of 

 Edward Moberly, a Kussian merchant, his mother being a daughter of 

 John Dayley, the British Consul there. He went to a school kept by 

 Mr. Richards in Hyde Street, Winchester, and from thence in 1816 to 

 "Winchester College, and in 1822 to Balliol, where he obtained a first 

 class in Greats, the English prize essa}', and in 1826 a fellowship at 

 Balliol. He was ordained at Oxford in this year. In 1834 he married 

 Mary Anne, d. of Thomas Crokat, and in the same year was appointed 

 Headmaster of Winchester, a post which he resigned in 1866, when he 

 was elected a Fellow of Winchester, and became Rector of Brighstone 

 (I. of Wight). In 1868 he became Canon of Chester, and in 1869 Bishop 

 of Salisbury, until his death, Julj' 6th, 1885. This article of course deals 

 chiefly with his career at Winchester, and aims at setting forth judicially 

 both the strong and the weak points about his headmastership. 



Oeorge Granville Bradley, Headmaster of Marl- 

 borough 1858 — 1870. The article on Dr. Bradley in the 

 abovenamed book fills pp. 226 to 269, and has two illustrations : " Portrait 

 of Dr. Bradley " and " A Page of Dr. Bradley's Farewell Sermon at 

 Marlborough." 



Son of Rev. Charles Bradley, formerly Vicar of Glasbury, but at the 

 time of his birth Vicar of St. James, Clapham. Born Dec, 1821. 

 Educated at a school kept by Charles Pritchard, at Clapham, and at 



