By Mrs. M. E. Cunnington. 40 £ 



from Beech's Barn, and nearly south-west of Everley Church." In 

 1894 he visited the neighbourhood again, and tried to find the barrow 

 but failed to do so. It had been much ploughed down even in 1851. 

 He describes it as undoubtedly a true Long Barrow about 118ft. in 

 length and 86ft. wide at the eastern and larger end. At this end^ 

 under a large pile of flints were " a great quantity of human bones, 

 very much broken, and interred in complete confusion." W.A.M. 

 xxviii. 172 ; and MS. letter written in 1851. 



Fittleton. [5a.] On Weather Hill, Map of Everley Station, west of the 

 old Marlborough— Salisbury Koad, between the first and second 

 milestones, south of East Everley. Hoare here shows two Long 

 Barrows lying near each other, but there is now only one to be found. 

 See under Fittleton. 



Imber. [4a.] A. W. I., Map of Heytesbury Station. Near to and S. of 

 Imber Church, shown as unopened. This ground is now under 

 cultivation, and the barrow seems to have been ploughed out. 



Ogbourne St. Andrew. 19. At Temple Bottom,' or Temple Farm, 1 

 is the site of a chambered Long Barrow, now entirely destroyed. 

 The ruined chamber was examined by the Rev. W. C. Lukis, and the 

 Rev. A. C. Smith in 1861. The former writes : — "It is very certain 

 that originally the chamber was en closed in a tumulus of earth and 

 stones, and that near the base of the mound was a circle of upright 

 stones . . . but whether it had a covered passage — or more than 

 one roofing slab cannot now be determined." On the floor of the 

 chamber was found charcoal, burnt human bones, fragments of coarse 

 pottery, and apparently just outside the chamber, some unburnt 

 human bones, and a bone implement described as a chisel (now in 

 Devizes Museum). O.M. 28 NE. (the site is shown) ; A. W. II. 42 ; 

 Proc. Soc. Ant. 2 S. iii., 213 ; Smith p. 195, XIV. K. iii. a. ; Arch. 

 xlii. 203. 



Preshute. At " Old Chapel," on Temple Down, N.E. of " Glory Ann." 

 Stukeley and Hoare mention a Long Barrow now entirely disappeared 

 and the exact site unknown. See List of Antiquities by the Rev. 

 E. H. Goddard, under Preshute, Megalithic. 



Fitton and Farley, [la.] Hoare shows an unopened Long or Oval 

 barrow on the E. side of the knoll that he calls " Crow's Rump," N. 

 of Pitton and close to, and S. of the Roman Road. On the O.M the 

 site is now called " Piccadilly Clump," and no barrow is marked, nor 

 did a visit to the site discover any trace of it. The ground appears 

 to have been under cultivation and is now a thick plantation, and 

 the barrow has no doubt been levelled. O.M. 67, NW. ; A. W. I. Map 

 of Salisbury Station. 

 Hoare also shows two round barrows on the site W. of the Long one, 

 and although not shown on the O.M. traces of these are still 

 discernible in the wood on top of the knoll. 



1 Referred to by Thurnam as " Temple Farm." The remains of the 

 chambered barrow at Rockley are only | of a mile to the south. 



