PARLIAMENTARY SURVEY OF WIMBLEDON 327 
cherries, boone critians, and divers other kinds of fruits, both 
curious for taste and variety, and very profitable for use ; the 
trees, being very well planted and ordered, we estimate to be 
worth, one tree with another, in the whole, at £84. 13s. 4d. 
There are also forty six Sicamore trees, growing along the Sicamore 
fourth wall of the said Vineyard Garden in a regular form ; which trees - 
wall standing to the highway or lane, the said trees are a great 
ornament to that part of the Vineyard Garden ; which we value 
to be worth £y. 13s. 4d. 
There also are seven Dutch Elms growing in some of the Dutch 
borders of the said eight triangles in a regular form, which we Elms < 
value to be worth £1. 15s. 
There are in the said Vineyard Garden, divers neat and hand- [Coran 
some borders of coran trees, respasses, strawberry beds, roots, trees * 
flowers, and herbs, all very well ordered, which we value to be 
worth £5. 
There are also in the said Vineyard Garden, two little garden, Garden 
summer, or shadow houses, covered with blue slate, ceiled and Houses * 
benched and floored with brick ; the one standing in the wall at 
the end of the walk that leads in a line diametrically opposite to 
the hall door of the said Manor or Mansion House, and very much 
graces that walk ; the other, standing in the East wall of the 
said Vineyard garden, at the end of the walk or alley that 
leads up the middle of the Vineyard, from East to West; the 
materials of which two garden houses we value to be worth 
£14- 
There are in and belonging to the said Vineyard Garden, two Rollers, 
rollers of stone with very large and handsome frames of Iron ; and 
also there are belonging to that said Oringe and Upper Garden 
6 rollers of stone, fitted as aforesaid, worth in all £16. 
And also of one other garden called the Kitchen Garden, lying The 
and being between the said Vineyard Garden and the highway or Kitchen 
lane leading from the town of Wymbledon unto the Iron Plate Gar en * 
Mills, and fenced with a pale upon the North west and South 
west side thereof, and with the South west wall of the said 
Vineyard garden on the North east side thereof, containing upon 
admeasurement two roods and twenty six perches of ground, 
worth per annum £1. 10s. 
Memorandum, that in the said Kitchen Garden there are forty 
trees of very good growth, and pleasant wall fruits, well planted 
and ordered, which we value (one tree with another) in the whole 
at £10. 
There are also ten Laurel trees, well planted and ordered, which [Laurels.] 
we estimate to be wellworth in the gross £1. 10s. 
There is also one fair tree, called the Irish Arbutis, standing Arbutis 
tree. 
