132 REPORTS OF MEETINGS FOR 1910 



for the sum of £20,500, and by his will, dated 8th February 

 1792, was bequeathed to his only brother, John Hetherington 

 of Intack, near Brampton, and to their sister, Elizabeth. On 

 the death of the said John Hetherington in 1808, his daughter, 

 Elizabeth, who became wife of Richard Hodgson of Moorhouse- 

 hall, Burgh-by-Sands, and purchased her aunt's interest, disposed 

 of the property in 1825 to Ward Cadogan of Pickerings in the 

 island of Barbados, at that time residing at Clifton near Bristol. 

 On his death in 1833 he devised his estates in trust for his only 

 child Sarah, who had married in 1826 Major William Hodgson, 

 the son, by his first marriage, of Mr Richard Hodgson, from 

 whom Mr Cadogan had purchased the estate. Having assumed 

 the name of Cadogan they were succeeded by their only son, 

 the late Mr Cadogan Hodgson Cadogan, whose eldest son, 

 Mr Arthur Hodgson Cadogan, at his death in 1896 devised 

 Brinkburn to his sister, Mrs Hugh Fenwick, the present 

 owner. 



Of the Pidory Church a minute account by Mr F. R. Wilson, 

 author of The Churches in the Archdeaconry of Lindisfarne, 

 accompanied with a drawing illustrative of its structural con- 

 dition in 1857, occvirs in an early volume of the History of 

 the Club,* and a more recent and detailed description by 

 Mr J. Crawford Hodgson, M.A., may be obtained in Vol. vii. 

 of the new History of Northumberland, to which we own our 

 indebtedness. In consequence, it will be unnecessary to do 

 more than to advert to the leading features of the building, 

 and to the restoration, in 1858, carried out with great 

 care through the liberality of the late Mr C. H. Cadogan 



and his friends. During the course of the 17th 

 Restoration century the roof of the Church fell in, and its 

 of Church. South- West angle, containing a spiral stair-way 



to the triforium, also gave way; but the greater 

 part remained as its first builders had reared it, a beautiful 

 example of the blending of the richest Norman work with 

 the purest Early English. In its original design it comprised 

 a nave with a North aisle, an aisleless choir, ti-ansepts, each 

 with two Eastern chapels, and a central tower. Pointed and 



* Ber. Nat. Club, Vol. iv., pp. 139-145. 



