336 The Wiltshire Compowndere. 
in Wilts, being parcel of the prebend there, demised by the said 
prebend to hold under the rent of £32 3s.4d. Yearly annual value 
before the troubles, £167 16s. 8d. Out of which he presents a 
claim of £40 a year paid to a curate. Fine, £100, because he 
came in before the issue of the Propositions. Dated 6th July, 
1649. Mr. Chappel not only had a son a captain in the Royal 
army, but he had himself served in a military capacity. 
Henry Crarxe, of Enford, Esq., second son of Sir Henry Clarke, 
Knight. Having admitted in his petition that he was in arms 
against the Parliament, he goes on to observe that he had never 
been sequestered nor judicially impeached, but doubting that he 
might be considered liable for something said or done by him in 
relation to the second war (that of 1646), he desires to compound. 
His petition is dated 4th May, 1649. 
Upon his marriage with Isabella Warwick, and upon the securing 
of a thousand pounds by Philip Warwick, esq., to be afterwards 
paid by the compounder to his father, and which was subsequently 
secured by himself as soon as he came of age, 6th September, 1642, 
his father, by deed dated 7th June, 1639, settled the lands here- 
after mentioned, in manner following :—one moiety to the use of 
himself, the said Sir Henry Clarke, for his life, remainder to the 
compounder and his right heirs by his wife Isabella, remainder to 
the heirs of Edward, third son of Henry; and the other moiety 
upou the said Sir Henry Clarke during the joint lives of himself 
and the compounder, for the use, after their lives, of Isabella herself 
and the heirs of her body. The estate in question consisted of the 
manor of Enford, with messuages, lands, and tenements there, worth 
in demesnes, £177 a year, and in old rents, £6 15s. a year. The 
only personal property he acknowledged, was a gelding and wearing 
apparel to the value of £20. The fine was declared at £98 10s., 
but he appears in the following year to have paid £80 more. 
Siz Henry Compton, of Brambletye, in Sussex, Knight of the 
Bath, was reported as a recusant (Romanist) not in arms, though 
he declares in his petition that he took the Covenant before the war 
broke out. He is seised in Wilts of and in the manors of Plaitford, 
