PARLIAMENTARY SURVEY OF THEOBALDS 331 
a gravelled walke ... a faire banquetinge house built upon 
stone pillars, in y e fashion of a halfe round (&c.). 
There are growinge to the walles of the Capitall house side 
in the garden 5 Apricocke trees and 14 Muscadine Vines well 
ordered and planted, 4 1 . 15 s . 
51 Ciprus trees, 12 1 . 15 s . 
25 Cherrie trees, 7 1 . io\ 
240 Lyme, Elm, and Sycamore trees, worth £yo. 
12 Black Cherry trees, 3 1 . 
There are also descriptions of eight gravelled walks, two 
Garden houses, two small rooms or seats, Cherrie trees, the 
Thorne hedge, other thorn hedges, Black Cherrie trees, Fruite 
trees, Bay trees, two seats, two stone crosses, 6 stepps, Vine 
trees and Barberrie trees, the White thorne hedge, the Maze 
Garden, the Tripesa (of 8 triangles made of white thorne), Fruite 
trees, a doore leadinge into y e longe greene Mulberrie walke, 
the Fountaine Courte, the Middle Courte, the Diall Courte, the 
Base Courte, the Dovehouse Courte, the Stonie close, in trees 
each side of a walk, the 14 Elms, the Greene Walke, Mulberrie 
trees (72 worth 8 1 . 12 s .), the Orchard, the Dovehouse. 
This survey is signed by Raphe Baldwyn, Ric. Heiwood, 
Rowland Brasbridge, and John Brudenall, and examined by 
William Webb, Surveyor General. 
