Bij the Rev. E. H. Goddard. 219 



BUTTERMERE 



Earthworks. Ditch runs from Gammons Farm, Collingbourne Kingston, 

 across Shalbourne and Fosbury, and Shalbourne again and into 

 Buttermere at Henley Bottom, O. G. S. Crawford, 1913 ; A.W. I, 

 Station YI. ; not shown on O.M. 43 NE. 



CALNE WITHOUT, including BLACKLAND, CALSTONE, 



and DERRY HILL. 

 Barrows. 



1. Long barrow a little distance W. of monument at Oldbury. O.M. 

 27 SE. See Appendix, Long Barrows. [Not the Long Barrow 

 opened by Ounnington, and referred to by Thurnam as " Old- 

 bury." This was Cherhill [la]. M.E.C.] 



2. Low bowl-shaped barrow on point of hill f-mile W. of monument, 

 opened, no record. O.M. 27 SE. ; Smith p. 50, III. C, V, a. ; not 

 in A.W. - '■,'- 



[2a, 2b.] Two small barrows, the first close on S. side of (2), the 

 other a little SE. of it ; both above the 600ft. contourline on the 

 hill ; not shown on O.M. 27 SE., Smith, or A. W. M.E.U. 



[2c]. Low barrow S. of Oldbury Camp, opened by flint diggers. 

 Skeleton, drinking cup, and a bronze knife dagger 1 (not pre- 

 served), [not in O.M. or Smith's Map]. Devizes Museum 

 Cat. II. x9 ; W.A.M. xxiii. 215 ; xxxvii. 455. [The remains of 

 a barrow, probably this one, still quite distinct close outside 

 the rampart, 1913. M.E.C.] 

 Barrow close to Wansdyke (? in Calstone) opened by Dean Mere- 

 wether, notched vitreous bead. Proc. Arch. Inst., Salisbury, 



"Barrow at Oldbury," 1874. Flint knife -and flakes W.A M. 

 xv. 137. 



larthworks. The S.W. portion of Oldbury Castle Camp is in this 

 parish, the rest in Cherhill, q, v. 



£-mile S.W. of Oldbury Camp, near Banscombe Bottom, "a very small 

 circle or rather oblong with rounded corners, an enclosure with bank 

 and ditch on a projecting spur overhanging a deep combe." Smith 

 p. 57, III. C, VI., d. O.M. 27 SE. shows it as a triangle with rounded 

 corners. [Slight bank with no entrance, ? modern. M.E.C.] 



O.M. shows just S.E. of this last, half of a smaller oval earthwork. 

 inds, Neolithic. Flint arrowhead and part of ground flint celt. Ward's 



: Farm, Blackland, 1902. Devizes Museum, Cat. II. 11, 12 ; W.A.M. 

 xxxii. 275. 



inds, Bronze Age. Near Oldbury Camp, bronze socketed looped celt, 

 gouge, tanged chisel, and awl, found by flint diggers! ' Devizes 

 Museum, Cat II. BIO— B12, B24 ; W.A.M. v. 128; xxiii. 216; 

 xxxvii. 149.; Reliquary^ xvw. 245, figs.S . . , ". 



Q 2 



