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: 
By ¥. M. Willis. 395 
14*, WILLIAM . CHANDLER = The Grocers’ arms. 
IN. BRADFORD . 1663 =w.c. 
(Possibly the William Chandler, salter, of Bradford, mentioned in the Wilts 
Archeological Magazine, vol. xiii., p. 234, as owner of the Iford estate and 
lord of the manor of Rowley in 1700.) 
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16. SAMVELL . DAVISSON = A stag. 3 
OF . BRADFORD . 1669 =s.D. 
19. IACOB . SELBEE . OF = Two pipes crossed. 5 
BRADFORD . 1665 =1.S8. 
Jacob Selby was buried at Bradford, Wilts, on the 1st of June, 1700. 
(Mr. A. Schomberg has kindly supplied the following :—From the register of 
Bradford-on-Avon, ‘‘ Marriage. 1681. Oct. 5. Thomas Dugegdall to Anne 
Silby.” 
From an inscription on a flat stone on the floor of an aisle of Seend Church. 
“ Ann the first wife of Thomas Dugdale of the City of London, sole Daughter 
of Mr. Jacob Selby of Bradford was underneath interred Dec. 5, 1682, zt. 23.’”) 
BRATTON. 
21. IOHN . ALLDREDG = Arms of the Merchant-Tailors, but with a 
ball on the top of the pavilion and no flag. } 
IN. BRATTON.1664—1.25.A. 
(The above has been lately presented to the Society’s Museum by Mr. W. 
Cunnington, and is supposed to be the only specimen at present known. It was 
formerly in the collection of the late Mr. E. Saxty, of Bath.) 
In Bratton churchyard is a tombstone, bearing the following inscription :— 
“And also here lyeth the Remains of Deborah Daughter of John and Mary 
Aldridg who Departed this Life February the 18 in the yeare of our Lord God 
1686.” 
In the matrix of a marginal brass, lost from an altar tomb in the south transept 
of Edington Church, is the inscription RALPH . ALDREG, but it is improbable 
that the tomb was at first erected to him, as it bears the monogram I. B. oft 
repeated. 
CALNE. 
24. STEPHEN . BAYLIE = Mercers’ arms.) 
OF. CAVINE = S.S.B. 
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