By Mrs. M. E. Cunnington. 





£ s. 



d. 



Ld. Avebury 



2 2 







E. S: Wills 



2 2 







Capt. W. Godsal 



2 







J. Walmesley 



2 







E. Whitney 



2 







E. C. Beaven 



1 1 







Sir Vincent Caillard 



1 1 







Col. Hornsby Drake 



I 1 







F. P. Goddard 



1 1 







F. H. Goldney 



1 1 







A. Grant-Meek 



1 1 







R. S. Gundry 



1 1 







llev. G. R. Hadow 



1 1 







J. M. Harris 



1 1 







Rev. J. H. Hill 



1 1 







T. Lavington 



1 1 







W. F. Lawrence 



1 1 







H. Leaf 



1 L 







L. L. Morse 



1 1 







Miss Bouverie 



1 







A. M. Dunne 



1 







U. G. Gwatkin 



1 







Rev. the Hon. Sidney 







Meade 



1 







R. W. Merriman 



1 







Capt. Oakeley 



1 







E. Cook 



10 



6 



Mrs. B. H. Cunnington 



10 



6 



Rev. E. H. Goddard 



10 



6 



T. Holloway 



10 



6 



W. H. St. John Hope 



Mrs.W. H. St. John Hope 



H. V. Reade 



C. S. Awdry 



Major H. H. Dowding 



R. F. Fuller 



C. H. St. J. Hornby 



Mrs. E. H. Goddard 



H. E. Medlicott 



E. Pinckney 



Rev. J. F. D. Stephens 



Rev. A. W. Stote 



Rev. W. Symonds 



Dr. H. P. Tayler 



W. B. Treacher 



J. E. Ward 



Col. M. F. Ward 



Rev. J. E. H. Blake 



Col. A. Canning 



Rev. R. W. Hay 



E. H. Thornton Lawes 



Mrs. Story Maskelyne 



Mrs. F. Goddard 



Miss Laing 



Rev. H. G- O. Kendall 



Other small contributions 



Bank interest 



s. 



d. 



10 



6 



10 



6 



10 



6 



10 







10 







10 







10 







10 







10 







10 







10 







10 







10 







10 







10 







10 







10 







5 







5 







5 







5 







5 







2 



6 



2 



6 



2 







8 



6 



9 



£95 9 



EXPENDITURE. £ s. d. 



Messrs Chivers & Sons, for work of re-erection 93 15 10 



Incidental expenses 15 



Postage, &c. 18 2 



£9* 9 



Note.— A very curious difficulty arises as to the stone of the Kennet 

 avenue now set up again : one would suppose that there would be no want 

 of evidence as to the fall of a stone so lately as the eighties of the last 

 century, but as a matter of fact it seems impossible to fix the exact year in 

 which it fell, and there was even some doubt as to which of the stones it 

 was that fell. William Long, in his account of Avebury, in Wilts Arch. Mag., 

 iv., 309 — 363, published 1858, gives on page 329 a plan of this group of 

 eleven stones, and says " Upon the ground plan on the opposite page, the 

 distances between the eleven stones, above mentioned, are laid down. The 

 only stone now standing is 8 feet 9 inches high, 9 feet 9 inches wide, and 

 3 feet thick." This would naturally refer to the stone which has never 

 fallen, No. 2 from the Avebury end of the Western side of the avenue. 

 On page 323, however, he speaks of this group as consisting of " two stones 



