78 
wide, with an oak roof in good preservation. It is lighted on the 
north by two 2-light windows, on the south by another, and on 
the west by a third, which is, however, shortened by a gable 
which cuts into its sill, The principal entrance was on the north 
side, where the door remains (but blocked) with a gable over it. 
On the west is a smallerdoor. The east wall has been destroyed 
to accommodate carts, pigs, &c. Against the south wall are the 
remains of 2 newel stair which led to some building now 
destroyed. 
Inside, the north door is more plainly visible, and in the south 
wall near the west end is a door, some distance from the ground, 
which perhaps conducted to a gallery running across the western 
end of the “ Hall.” This door is covered by masonry on the outside. 
At the north-west angle are the remains of a door with con- 
siderable traces of a projecting wal] above it. With this door 
corresponds a similar door at the south end of the east cloister 
wall. 
All this goes to show that not only was this so-called “ Hall” 
an important building, but that the once existing buildings of the 
Priory must have been very extensive and probably covered the 
entire space now occupied by the orchard, and also the two fields 
south and west of the “ Hall.” 
The Barn is to the north-west of the Priory Church, and is a 
large building of the fifteenth century, with a projecting entrance 
on the south side, 
The Scale on the accompanying plan is only to be considered 
as approximate, the plan being more especially drawn so as to 
clearly show the relative positions of the remaining buildings. 
