on an )it> ffyousc at 

 Jatdp taken 



By THE HON. EDITOR. 



(Read Gth Dec., 1910.) 



T is desirable, for the benefit of future gener- 

 ations, that a permanent record should be 

 kept of all historical landmarks that are 

 likely to disappear ; and it is a special 

 duty of our Club to collect such materials 

 as may further this end. 



The old house at Piddletown (the stones 

 of which are being used in the erection of the 

 new chancel at the Parish Church) stood in the centre of the 

 rectangular area enclosed by four roads, at a distance of 

 some 220 yards N.W. of the Church. The building consisted 

 of two portions of different dates a cottage with one upper 

 story and a tall house (nearly square in plan) which had 

 first and second floors. In this larger building the ground 

 floor and first story had each a 4-light window ; the 

 second story had one window of two lights in the western 

 gable all the windows having stone mullions of the usual 



