By the Rev. J. E. Jackson. 



317 



(1650) gives us no help in finding out where William of 

 Westbury's chapel was, for he never mentions William of 

 Westbury's name. Yet this chapel of the C.J's. is really the 

 only one which we are quite certain was built on the north 

 side. 



4. South Side. The chapel south of the chancel bears the tra- 

 ditional name of the " Brook." or " Willoughby Chapel :" 

 and may be admitted to be correctly named : because there 

 was in Aubrey's time in the windows of it, the rudder, the 

 device of the Willoughbys of Brook House. This device 

 was still remaining within the memory of persons still living : 

 and it is much to be regretted that, in modern church restora- 

 tions, such useful relics of local history are so frequently 

 removed and lost. 



5. The other chapel on the south side, forming the end of the 

 south transept contains the large monument of James Ley, 

 Earl of Marlborough. He was owner of Heywood in this 

 parish. This may therefore have been the Heywood chantry 

 which was confiscated 6 Edw. VI. [Sir R. C. Hoare, West- 

 bury, p. 19. See also Wilts Collections, p. 404. J It contains 

 also the monument of William Phipps, Governor of Bombay, 

 who died in 1748 at Heywood House, which belonged to him 

 and was sold by his son in 1789. 



West Dean. (Alderbury Hundred.) There was a very ancient 

 chantry in the Church of Dean, dedicated to the Virgin 

 Mary, and apparently founded by Robert de Burbach, as it is 

 called " Cantaria Robert de Bourbach," in the register of an 

 Institution in 1342. It was probably founded in 1323. R. de 

 Burbach presented in 1333 : subsequently the Bishop. There 

 are Institutions from 1333 to 1417. [Modern Wilts, Aider- 

 bury, p. 25.] 



Whaddon, in the parish of Alderbury, on the road to Southampton. 

 There was once a church and Rector. In 1318 the patron 

 was Sir Alan Plugenet, Kt. : in 1326, Robert Bluntesdon, in 

 1334, the Prior of Ivy Church Monastery. 



Whelpley, in Whiteparish. " The chapel of St. Leonard ; of very 



y 2 



