THE MONUMENTS AND REGISTERS OF LOCAL CHURCHES. 269 
now thoroughly renovated and restored, and a marble slab with 
the following inscription records the fact : 
Consecratum 
Anno Salutis 
1259 
In Honorem 
Deo Optimi Maximi 
Restauratum 
1885 
In the course of the restoration one of the original beams had 
to be cut, and a portion of it is now in the Museum of this 
Society. 
We will now turn our attention to the memorials on the floor ; 
for this church is, for its size and situation, rather rich in armorial 
ledger-stones, These, with one exception, are in memory of a 
Plymouth family, from whom 
one of the streets derives its 
name. The largest of these 
ledger-stones has five shields 
of arms on it; but until re- 
cently one half was covered 
by the high and unsightly 
pews, thanks, no doubt, to the 
restoration of 1848. Round 
the edge is this inscription: 
“Here Lyeth the body of 
M* Stephen Trevill of Ply- 
mouth merchant who De- 
parted this Life the XXII 
Day of May Anno Domini 
1647.” In the centre are the arms of Trevill impaling Pollexfen ; 
viz., (Or) a cross eng. (sa.), surmounted by a bendlet (gu.), in 
chief a mullet for the difference of a third son: imp. Quarterly 
(arg. and az.), in the first and fourth a lion ramp. (gu). At each 
corner a shield, each charged with the coat of Trevill alone. 
A smaller stone is in memory of Stephen Trevill, of this parish, 
who died 2nd October, 1625, and has the coat of Trevill alone— 
A cross eng., surmounted by a bendlet. 
Another ledger-stone is for Mr. John Trevill, of this parish, 
gentleman, who died lst November, 1648. Arms—A cross eng., 
surmounted by a bendlet. 

