By J. Waylen. 373 
Mr. Taylor, of Sarum, formerly paid divers sums to Waller and Hungerford. 
He now adds £10 for his twenty-fifth part. 
8th April. Mr. Philip Poore, of Durrington, suspected of delinquency, pays 
£15 for his twenty-fifth part, and engages to take the Covenant, and do nothing 
in word or deed prejudicial to the Parliament. 
13th April. William Cook is tenant of Dr. Lawrence’s parsonage at Bemerton, 
-at £100 per annum. Among his outgoings he enumerates £1 16s. for mending 
the chancel— £50 paid to Mr. Carpenter, the present minister—and £37 10s. to 
Mr. Pinckney, the most part being laid out in repairing the houses. 
20th April. William Stone, of Salisbury, Esq., is become tenant for the 
Falstone Farm, at £210 till Michaelmas, including the stock of corn, ploughs, 
carts, and oxen. Next year the contract was renewed at fourscore pounds. 
21st April. John Chappel, of Earnham, in Lincolnshire, clerk. Not only had 
a son a captain in the King’s army, but he served personally. His estate in 
Wilts, consisting of the parsonage of West Harnham and Coombe, is let to 
Edward and John Hill, who are to pay £80 per annum besides the prebend’s 
rent of £30. 
[A group of delinquents here find place. Denzil Hollis, a Salisbury physician, 
very forward in the Club business.—George Tattershall, of Stapleford; his 
parsonage and means sequestered, his widow petitioned in London, and obtained 
an order for relief into Wilts.—Lawrence Tattershall, of Odstock, was a recusant, 
but not in arms.—Thomas Gardiner, of Sarum, was a receiver of plate and money 
for the King.— William Hayter, of Little Langford, Edward Fowle, of Stanton.— 
Edmund Brimsden, a bailiff, Roger Bedbury, of Sarum, George Barber, of 
Ashgrove, Nicholas Barry, of East Harnham, John Bath, of Idmiston, William 
Gould, of Alvediston, and Henry Blackman, of Salisbury, were other adherents 
of the King.—No fines recorded. ] 
30th April. Mr. Richard Crouch, of Tytherington, in the parish of Heytesbury, 
came before us; and for that he hath been a man well affected to the Parliament, 
and sent a horse and a man fully armed, with three months’ pay, we were con- 
tented to accept £10 in full of his five and twentieth part. 
1st May.—Ordered.—That out of the fines and compositions of or for the 
estates of Robert Long, Edward Ernlé, and Edward Yerbury, of the County of 
Wilts, Esquires, the sum of £500 be paid to Mr. Robert Jennour, one of the 
members of this House, towards his losses sustained by the enemy in the said 
county. Commons’ Journals. 
8th May. By the Committee for the safety of the Western Associated Counties. 
Ordered—That all the goods of the Lord Henry Pawlet, seized at or near 
‘Salisbury by the Wilts Committee, be re-delivered to him forthwith. Signed by 
Pembroke and Montgomery, Sir John Danvers, Sir Edward Hungerford, Thomas 
Earle, Sir John Evelyn, John Bingham, and Richard Rose. 
