610 Notes 



Tisbury Church. Drawings, 1859. 



Place Farm. Drawings, 1858. 



Wanborough Church. MS. notes, 1841. 



Westbury Church. Sketch of interior, 1858. 



Westwood Church. MS. notes, and drawings of woodwork and piscina^ 



1842. 

 Wilton Church. Sketch of exterior, 1859. 

 Wylye Church. MS. notes, 1849. 



Field Names in Wilcot and Pewsey Vale. The Eev. w. 



S. Sykes, of Southampton, formerly Vicar of Wilcot, has compiled and 

 given to the Society's library a MS. list of Field and other Place Names 

 of the Parish of Wilcot, with copious ^annotations on the derivation of 

 the names, the descent of the properties, and other matters connected 

 with the history of the parish, giving the dates and authorities in 

 which the names occur. To these he has added a series of notes on 

 the Anglo-Saxon charters and boundaries of parishes bordering on 

 Wilcot, identifying the various places mentioned, together with a 

 shorter alphabetical list from tithe awards, terriers, and private MSS., 

 of the field and place names of eleven other neighbouring parishes in 

 Pewsey Vale, Alton Barnes, All Cannings, Beechingstoke, Etchilhamp- 

 ton, Huish, Manningford Abbots and Manningford Bruce, North 

 Newnton, Pewsey and Shercott, Stanton St. Bernard, Wilcot and Oare, 

 and Woodborough. These valuable notes have been bound up together 

 in a 4to volume and placed in the library. It is much to be desired 

 that other members of the Society should undertake a like work in 

 their own locality. 



Antiquities recently added to the Museum. 



Mr. and Mrs. B. H. Cunnington have recently (1912) purchased from the 

 representatives of the late Mr. C. May, of Marlborough, many of the 

 objects exhibited by him in the temporary museum formed during the 

 meeting of the Society at Marlborough in 1859 and recorded in Wilts 

 Arch. Mag., vi., 259, 260. These objects they have most generously 

 presented to the society's Museum. They all belonged apparently to 

 J. Stoughton Money, Esq., F.S.A., who afterwards became the Rev. J. 

 Stoughton Money-Kyrle, Rector of Yatesbury. They are as follows : — 

 (1). A flat celt of the type of fig. 2 in Evans' Bronze Implements, 

 quite plain, without flanges, measuring 5in. x 2fin., and weighing 14J 

 ounces. It has every appearance of being of pure copper, and not 

 bronze, and may perhaps be from Ireland. It is simply labelled 

 " Bronze Celt," is not among the objects mentioned in Wilts Arch. Mag. 

 as exhibited at Marlborough, and there is no reason to suppose that 

 it was found in Wiltshire. 



(2). A small triangular thin knife dagger of bronze (described in 

 Wilts Arch. Mag., as "an arrow head," Archceologia, xliii., 457, note b), 

 found in a barrow at Charlton, Donhead St. Mary, which was opened 

 in 1832. A label accompanying it states that it was given to Mr. 

 Stoughton Money by F. Duboulay, (then of Donhead Hall). It 



