394 Wiltshire Trade Tokens of the Seventeenth Century. 
ele 
3. IOHN . ADEE . OF . ALBORN —=1I.A. 
I. CLARK . BISHOPSTON — I. C 
(This token, which is in the Society’s Museum, may have been issued by 
partners, or may be merely the result of an error on the part of the maker, as 
its reverse side corresponds exactly with the obverse of the Bishopstone piece 
[Boyne No. 4], while the obverse sides both of this and of the farthing last 
described are precisely similar to one another.) 
nie 
5. FRANCIS . STRONE = HIS . HALFE. PENY. 
OF . AWBORNE . 1660 = AtreeandF.S. 
(Claimed also by Lincolnshire.) 
ah 
6. EDWARD . WITTS = A shuttle. 
IN. AWBORNE . L666 =8E.Ww. 
(This is claimed by Lincolnshire also, but belongs almost certainly to Wilts ; 
as the name Witts is still to be found in Aldbourne, but does not appear in the 
Aubourn registers.) 
AMESBURY. 
f. ROBERT . HARRISON = A garb. 
OF . AMSBVRY . 1653 =R.M.H. 
ele 
ASHTON KEYNES. 
9. RICHARD . MARSH . OF = A nag’s head. 3 
ASHTON . KEYNES = R.A.M. 
BARFORD. 
10. The halfpenny token issued by Mary Brine and described by Boyne and 
Williamson is generally allowed to belong to Warwickshire. 
BRADFORD. 
13, WILLIAM . BAILY . MERC = The Mercers’ arms. 2 
IN . BRADFORD . 1667 = A nag’s head couped. 
(The monument erected by William Baily in the Parish Church, Bradford-on- 
Avon, bears not only the Mercers’ arms, but also the Bailey crest, a nag’s head, 
which proves conclusively that this token does not belong to Yorkshire. For 
information about the Bailey family see Wilts Archeological Magazine, vols, 
v., p. 51; xxill., p. 312; xxiv., pp. 54 and 287.). 
