By the Rev. E. H. Godclard. 159 



Roman Well on North Farm opened by A. D. Paasmore and W. 

 Chandler, 1912, to depth of 40ft. without reaching the bottom. 



Upper Upham House surrounded by enclosures and banks of a large 

 " British Village." Roman buildings here. O.M. 23 NE. 



Snap Farm, just to S.W. of this, also surrounded by marks of " British 

 Village." O.M. 23 SE. 



From Upham, many Roman coins, small bronzes, bracelets, iron spear- 

 heads, &c, in collections of W. Chandler, J. W. Brooke, and Devizes 

 Museum. W.A.M. xxx. 81 ; xxxv. 403, 504. 



ALDERBURY. 



Earthworks. In Alderbury or Standlynch? A mutilated earthwork 



of squarish form, on elevated ground to E. of rd. S. of Alderbury 



village (not in O.M). A. W. I., 230, Station VII. 

 Finds, Eolithic. Flints found by Dr. H. P. Blackmore in Alderbury 



Hill gravel. Salisbury and Devizes Museums. W.A.M. xxxvi. 171. 

 Finds, Neolithic. Three fine celts, one ground all over, one partly ground, 



one chipped only, found together. Blackmore Museum. 

 Finds, Bronze Age. Bronze socketed broad-bladed chisel of late and 



unusual type, and part of socketed sickle found together in a field 



beyond Mr. W. Osmond's house. 1907. Blackmore Museum. W.A.M. 



xxxvii. 139, 140 {figs.). 

 Finds, Roman. Two T-headed bronze brooches, one of them enamelled. 



Salisbury ,Museum. 



ALDERTON. 



Roman. The Fosseway runnning S.W. to N.E. forms the E. boundary of 

 the parish. O.M. 12 NE. & SE. 



ALL CANNINGS. 

 Barrows. 



1, la. Tan Hill (St. Ann's Hill), 2 barrows just S. of Wansdyke. 



N.E. of Rybury Camp. 0. M. 35 NW. 

 lb. Another a little to the S.E. on top of hill. O.M. 35 NW. Smith 

 p. 115, viii. F. viii. c shows only one, the most easterly, probably 

 that opened by Thurnam, containing 2 circular cists in the chalk 

 filled with wood ashes, without burnt bones, with animal bones 

 in the mass of the mound. W.A.M. vi. 325. 





All Cannings Down. [3 Barrows (2 — 4) some distance from each other, 

 all actually on the line of Allington boundary, about | to 1 mile N. 

 of Wansdyke, on W. edge of track to W. Kennett. O.M. 35 NW.] 



2. The northernmost is a very large bowl-shaped barrow with ditch, 

 opened, no record. Smith p. 179. XII. G. vii. b. 



