CHURCHES
Nothing is known of the Saxon
church, ecclesia primitive, of Christchurch beyond the reference (fn. 1) to its
destruction by Flambard, with nine other churches
which stood in the surrounding churchyard, soon after
the 'minster' was granted to him by the king.
Flambard began to build the Romanesque church,
of which much still remains, and its general planning
must be attributed to him. At his banishment in
1100 it was unfinished, and his successor, Gilbert de
Dousgunels, continued and completed the work, including the rest of the conventual buildings.
The church had an eastern arm, probably of three
bays with aisles, ending at the east in an apse, while
the aisles were square-ended externally. There was a
central tower with north and south transepts having
apsidal chapels on the east, and an aisled nave of
eight bays, which may have had towers over the west
bay of each aisle. There were three crypts, one
in the east bay of the eastern arm and one in the
end bay of each transept. Those in the transepts
remain perfect, while that in the eastern arm has lost
its apse, but is otherwise complete, and is of great
value as evidence for the plan of the east end of
Flambard's church.
In the transepts a great deal of the original work
still remains, and there is sufficient evidence to show
that there was an upper floor over the whole of their
area, up to the tower piers, carried on stone vaults.
With the possible exception of the Confessor's church
at Westminster, this seems to be the only English
example of this feature, which is in any case rare and
a mark of early work. There is evidence for it in
France at Jumiéges and probably at Bayeux. The
fashion, however, was soon given up, and it is clear
that the floor was removed early in the history of the
church.
The record of the hallowing of a number of altars,
including the high altar, between 1195 and 1221,
points to some considerable alterations in the east
part of the church, and it is probable that during this
work the transept floors were removed. Their
removal made it impossible to get directly from the
nave triforium to that in the eastern arm, and a wall
was built across the east end of the former in the
north aisle, which can be to some degree dated by
the painting on it, the style of which points to an
early date in the 13th century.
The 13th-century alterations were carried on into
the nave, where a stone vault was prepared for over
the main span, the clearstory rebuilt, the aisles
refaced and revaulted, and the north-west porch
added.
About 1250–60 work was again taken up in the
transepts, the eastern apse of the north transept being
removed and two square-ended chapels with a room
over them put in its place; in the south transept the
apse was retained, but a chapel inserted between it
and the south aisle of the presbytery, in a curiously
cramped position, a great part of the aisle wall
having to be cut away to make room for it. The
nave vault was never completed, and about 1330 a
wooden roof was made over it, which still remains,
though now hidden by a modern vault of plaster.
The story of the central tower is lost; the gable
over its east arch seems to contain late 12th-century
work, so that it may have been altered when the rest
of the eastern part of the church was being dealt with.
It is said to have fallen in the 15th century, and the
rebuilding of the upper parts of the north transept
about 1450 gives some probability to the story. The
west tower seems to have been begun late in the
15th century to replace it.
If, as has been suggested, the eastern arm of the
church was altered, and probably enlarged, at the end
of the 12th century, all traces of such work have
been swept away by later developments. The present
Lady chapel has commonly been identified with the
'new chapel' in Christchurch mentioned in the will
of Sir Thomas West, 1405, as the place where his
mother Alice, ob. 1395, was buried. Two tombs,
north and south of the altar in this chapel, are shown
in evidence of this as being the tombs of Sir Thomas
and his mother, but they bear no heraldry or inscriptions, and are of far later date, neither being earlier
than the first quarter of the 16th century. The
details of the chapel itself are also too advanced for a
date at the end of the 14th century, and if, as seems
likely, the vault is of the same date as the walls, it is
impossible to assign to the chapel any date before the
second half of the 15th century. The eastern parts
of the quire aisles are coeval with it, but there is a
break in the second bay from the east in each aisle
which shows a pause in the work. The rest of the
eastern arm, with its aisles, belongs to this second
instalment of building, which completed the remodelling of the church up to the tower and transepts.
The work is of late Gothic type, and its completion
must be dated well into the first quarter of the 16th
century, the initials of William Eyre, prior, 1502–20,
occurring on the high vault and on the arch at the
west end of the south aisle. A similar vault existed
over part of the south transept, doubtless made after
the completion of the work in the quire, but was
taken down in modern times.
The later history of the church cannot be dealt
with here, but mention must be made of the extensive repairs carried out in the last century under
Mr. Benjamin Ferrey, and during the past few years
further works of repair have been carried on.
The Lady chapel is of three bays, with a five-light
east window and four-light north and south windows
in the eastern bay. In the second bay are similar
windows, which only serve the purpose of wall panelling, their western halves being overlapped by the
east walls of the side chapels, and their eastern halves
now blocked with thin brickwork, though originally
open. The third bay is lighted by the traceried
heads of windows rising above the roofs of the east
chapels of the aisles, to which arches open on either
side. Below the east window are the mutilated
remains of a fine stone reredos, preserving, besides
the panelled pedestals and mutilated canopies of
three tiers of imagery, only six of the smallest
figures. Below is the original Purbeck marble altarstone, set on a plastered brick base. On the side
walls of the two east bays of the chapel, below the
windows, are wall arcades, six cusped arches to a
bay, with crocketed canopies and tall trefoiled
panelling over, ending in a band of quatrefoils;
in the east bay the arcading has been cut away
for canopied altar tombs set in recesses in the wall,
that on the north being attributed to Sir Thomas
West, 1405, and that on the south to his mother,
Lady West, 1395. Both are, however, of 16thcentury date, the former being an excellent specimen
of the late Purbeck marble tomb found all over
the south of England, with a panelled and crested
cornice and a panelled base. The cornice is
carried by a screen of trefoiled arches with moulded
mullions, an unusual treatment due to the fact that
the north side of the tomb, now walled up, opened
to a vestry, of which nothing now remains. The
tomb on the south has a Purbeck marble base and
slab, but a stone canopy with panelled back and sides;
the original cresting has been destroyed. There is,
unfortunately, no heraldry, device or inscription on
either tomb, unless the crosses on the southern tomb
are such. They suggest that the tomb may perhaps
be that of one of the Berkeleys of the Hampshire
branch.
On the altar slab are set several pieces of canopies,
not belonging to the reredos behind, and three
carved panels of the Coronation of our Lady, the
Ascension and the Nativity. The resemblance of
the two latter to contemporary alabaster panels is
very marked.
The chapel is covered with a stone stellar vault
springing from clustered vaulting shafts with foliate
capitals of a peculiar type; the ribs, however, are
brought down, as in the 16th-century vaults of
Henry VII's chapel at Westminster and the quire
of Oxford Cathedral, on to lantern-like pendants
standing out clear of the vaulting shafts. Between the
second and third bays the spacing makes a wide
transverse arch necessary, and the vaulting is here
arranged to spring from pairs of pendants side by
side, the intersection of the ribs which rise from them
being very cleverly managed. Between the wall ribs
of the vault and the window heads is a soffit panelled
with quatrefoiled circles in the two eastern bays, but
in the western bay, where it is considerably wider, it
is treated with large oblong cinquefoiled panels. At
the west the Lady chapel is closed by the back of the
great screen over the high altar, the side doorways of
which, part of the original 14th-century work, open
to a narrow gallery running across the west end of the
chapel, while above them the screen is faced with
blank panelling of 15th-century style, filling the west
arch of the chapel.
Over the Lady chapel is a room known as
St. Michael's Loft, reached by external stairs from
the eastern chapels of the aisles; it was for some time
used as a school, the entrance to the north stair being
altered to admit the children from outside; its
original doorway opening from the north aisle still
exists, and that to the south aisle remains unaltered.
The room is lighted by pairs of mullioned and transomed windows on either side and by a three-light
window on the east, flanked by niches; it has
evidently contained an altar. At its west end is a
low square opening through which the cornice of the
high altar screen can be reached. The roof is of flat
pitch with moulded beams and covered with lead,
and has a stone parapet of pierced quatrefoils with
rectangular embattled pinnacles at the eastern angles,
and large heads carved on the cornice beneath.
The eastern arm of the church is of four bays, two
making the presbytery and two the quire, lighted by
tall four-light windows in each bay, with blank
panelling below them and low four-centred arches
opening to the aisles. The vault is like that of the
Lady chapel, and has carved bosses in the middle of
each bay inscribed with XPC, IHC, HR, and Dns,
while those on the transverse ribs have a W and an E,
perhaps for William Eyre, prior, 1502–20; at the
east end is an angel holding a church and at the west
end another with the quartered arms of Montagu and
Monthermer. These arms, as Mr. Herbert Druitt
points out, suggest a much earlier date than c. 1500
for the vault, but the advanced construction is against
such a conclusion.
The two west bays are occupied by the quire
stalls, and in the next bay to the east are the side
entrances from the aisles and seven steps leading up to
the altar platform in the east bay; under the two east
bays is a crypt, which causes the rise in the floor levels.
The east wall of the presbytery is taken up by the
splendid stone altar screen, which dates from c. 1360.
It has three tiers of canopied niches, now for the
most part empty; but fortunately the principal niche
in the middle of the second tier still contains a group
of the Nativity, while below it is the recumbent
figure of Jesse between seated figures of David and
Solomon. Whether the scheme of a 'Jesse Tree'
was carried in to all the other niches does not appear,
as no traces of the stem are to be seen in them. The
smaller figures, set one above another in the buttresses
which separate the principal niches from each other,
are for the most part still in their places. There are
in the lower part of the screen four of these buttresses,
but from the canopies over the central subject (the
Nativity) two more rise, making six in the upper or
third tier. In each of the four buttresses occupying
the middle and lowest ranges of the screen are five
standing figures, and of these the three lowest in each
buttress form part of the Jesse Tree and hold the
twining stem, which ends in a leafy branch over the
head of the uppermost figure in each set of three.
In the third buttress from the north, however, the
uppermost of the three figures is that of a man in
14th-century civil costume, perhaps a donor of the
screen. The remaining figures appear to be, in the
north buttress, St. Michael and a bearded man
wearing a hood; in the next St. Helen and a king
holding a club; in the third a bearded man holding
a circular object and a bearded man in gown and
hood, probably a second donor, and in the south
buttress a king with a sword held upright and a
woman holding a book. It must be noted that very
clumsy repairs to the heads of some of the figures
make the identification very hazardous; in the central
group of the Nativity the heads of Our Lady and the
Child, and the right hand of St. Joseph, with other
details, are repairs of the most clumsy and disfiguring
kind. The details of the original drapery, which are
largely perfect, show the true excellence of the 14thcentury work.
In the upper tier of the screen the six buttresses,
flanking five empty canopied niches, of which the
central niche is wider and higher than the others,
contain twelve seated figures, two in each buttress,
those on either side of the central niche being larger
and in higher relief than the eight others. These
latter are clearly apostles, and the remaining four may
be so also, in spite of the fact that one now has a
woman's head restored in a barbarous style. The
two principal figures, the uppermost in the two
middle buttresses, retain only fragments of their
emblems, but are probably St. Peter and St. Paul.
The screen is crowned with a crested cornice, probably dating from the time of the rebuilding of the
presbytery, in the middle of which is part of a
mutilated projecting canopy, doubtless that from
which, as in other screens of the kind, the Host in its
pyx was suspended. The top of the cornice forms a
narrow gallery, reached, as already noted, from the
loft over the Lady chapel.
The traces of the mediaeval altar with its marble
slab show clearly on the base of the screen, and on
either side are narrow doorways opening to the
passage which runs at the back of the screen.
On the north side of the altar platform stands
the tomb chapel of Margaret Pole Countess of
Salisbury, beheaded in 1541. It completely fills
the eastern bay of the north arcade of the quire,
and is vaulted in two bays, with traceried and
transomed four-light windows on either side. Above
the windows the chapel rises in two stages on the
quire side, the upper stage treated as a long singlecanopied recess, the lower stage divided into three
recesses in each bay. All these were intended to
be filled with imagery, but none of it is left, nor,
except in one instance, is there any mark that images
were ever set up. The exception is the upper stage
of the east bay, where two pinholes remain. This
was filled by a group of the Ascension, the feet and
skirts of the ascending Christ remaining under the
tall canopy which rises above the centre of the niche.
At the angles of the chapel and between the bays
slender octagonal pilasters, flanked in the lower part
by canopied niches, rise above the canopies of the
uppermost stage and end in octagonal capitals. Towards the aisle the same general arrangement exists,
but the aisle vault comes down to the heads of the
tracery windows and has been very cleverly adapted
to fit the top of the tomb. The aisle floor being
considerably lower than that of the altar platform,
the stage below the chapel window, which is filled
with simple tracery on the south side, is towards the
aisle enriched with a line of twelve canopied niches,
and below them a panelled basement breaking back
into a deep central recess, which is spanned by horizontal lintels carried in the middle of their length by
the pier from which the central buttress rises. At
the south-west angle of the chapel is the stair from
the aisle, set in a rectangular staircase, with the door
on the north and a wide niche on the upper stage on
the north and west. Below the western niche is a
square panel, now filled, like the niche above, with
modern inscribed slabs.
In the interior the upper part of the east wall or
the chapel is filled with three canopied niches with
corbels, below which are shields; on the middle
shield are the Five Wounds, while the two others are
blank, though that on the south is encircled by a
garter. Below is the lower part of the jamb of the
arch which was removed when the chapel was built.
At the west is a wide niche, and between the
windows on north and south are others, now all
empty, and on the fan vault of the roof are three
carved bosses, mutilated by the Royal Commissioners
in 1541. On the middle boss the countess kneels
before the Trinity and the other bosses have defaced
shields of arms, the Pole coat being still recognizable.
The mixture of Italian and English work on this
tomb makes it one of peculiar interest. The construction and architectural details are English Gothic
work, and this extends to the crockets and canopies
of the niches, the crestings, &c.; but the purely
ornamental carving is for the most part Italian and
of the most delicate and beautiful execution. The
only parts of the chapel where the form as well as
the detail is definitely non-Gothic are the two domed
canopies which rise above the recesses on the south
side. In the floor of the recess beneath the tomb
are a number of glazed tiles, many of them of the
time of Prior John Draper II and bearing his initials,
and these also are of Italian detail.
On the south side of the altar platform is the
modern Gothic tomb and effigy of Corisande Emma
Countess of Malmesbury, 1876, and beneath it
towards the aisle the bay is filled with a stone panelled
screen on which is fixed a stone boss formerly in the
south transept. This boss is decorated with an angel
holding a shield charged with an admirably carved
skull in high relief and with the name of one of
the two John Drapers who were priors here. On
the cornice of the screen are bosses with angels
playing musical instruments, and the panels beneath
rise from a wide and low arch now blocked, but
once open to the crypt beneath; traces of a like
arch appear below the Salisbury chapel. The screen
is continued in the second bay of the quire, but is
interrupted in the west part of these bays by the
steps which formed the upper entrances to the quire.

Shield on Screen South of Altar Platform
The quire stalls, occupying the two remaining
bays, are of early 16th-century date, showing the
same mixture of Gothic and Italian feeling. They
are in two ranges, fifteen in the upper range on each
side, eleven in the lower range, and six at the west,
three on either side of the quire door. In the upper
range the stalls have panelled backs separated by
buttressed styles and finished with a carved and crested
cornice, while the stalls on either side of the quire
door and that at the east of the southern range have
traceried half-octagonal canopies over them. It is
clear that the original arrangement has been a good
deal altered, whether at a repair in 1820 or at some
other date; octagonal shafts, connected by open
tracery with the buttresses on the panelling, originally
stood on the arms of the upper tier of stalls; signs
of alterations in the cornice are evident, and much
of the pierced cresting is of lead, dating from 1820.
The heads of the panels are filled with carving of
Italian style in low relief, of early 16th-century date,
though a considerable number are modern copies.
Pairs of animals or of human or monsters' heads form
the general motives, on an unpierced background
with a shaped lower edge, but a few on the south
side are in higher relief with pierced backgrounds.
The stall-arms are supported by crouching monsters
of late Gothic character, among them being represented the well-worn mediaeval jests of the preaching
fox and the man robbed by his dog. The misericordes are in like manner of late Gothic style, only a
very few showing definite Italian detail. There are
now thirty-nine in all, thirty-five of which are of the
date of the stalls, while two are of the 15th and
two of the 13th century. The last two are of course
remarkable for their early date, and support large
hollowed seats; one has a beautiful design of dragons
in foliate scrolls, entirely undercut, and the other
three foliate corbels. The 15th-century seats are
angular, and their carvings are two of the evangelistic
symbols, the angel and the lion, the former between
a pair of quaint two-legged monsters. The 16thcentury seats are segments of circles, and the subjects
of their carvings are of the usual quaint or grotesque
nature—a fool with his bauble, a fish, a dog with a
bone, a man with club and buckler fighting a swan,
a dog and a rabbit, &c. The standards of the stalls
have wide panels of more pronounced Italian type,
but some have Gothic tracery, and all are finished
with pairs of animals in relief, &c.
At the west of the stalls is the stone pulpitum,
which, though so 'restored' as to be almost entirely
new as regards its details, is a 15th-century work,
the panelled base and the shafts of the canopied
buttresses towards the nave being old.
The crypt under the presbytery is of two bays,
the western and narrower being part of Flambard's
work; it has a plain barrel vault, and at the east a
semicircular arch with plain cushion capitals and halfround responds, and a double roll on the soffit of the
arch. The arch stands on the chord of the original
apse, which in the 15th century was destroyed to
make room for the present wide rectangular eastern
bay, which was formerly lighted from three sides
through low arched openings, now blocked. Against
its east wall is the burial-place of the Earls of
Malmesbury. The entrance to the crypt is in the
south wall of the western bay, and the opening
seems original, though there is nothing to show
how the stairs were planned in the first instance.
The north aisle of the eastern arm is of five and
a half bays, with four-light windows in each bay
except that at the west, which opens into the chapels
of the north transept, and in its eastern half-bay are a
four-light east window and a two-light north window,
the eastern half of which was from the first blank,
on account of the stair built outside it, and its western
half is now also blocked. In the east wall are two
image brackets, a very beautiful canopied piscina in
the south wall, with three small brackets for cruets,
and in the north wall a square locker and a corbel.
Here stands a Purbeck marble altar-tomb with
alabaster effigies said to be those of Sir John and
Lady Chidioke, 1455; the floor here is raised one
step above that of the aisle, and there are marks of a
screen on the line of the step. The aisle has a
stellar vault springing from engaged circular shafts
with foliate capitals; their bases rise from the floor
on the south, but on the north from a stone benchtable, except in the eastern half-bay. The alteration
in the vault to fit the Salisbury chapel has already
been noticed. In the first bay from the east is the
blocked door to the stair leading to St. Michael's
Loft, and in the fourth bay is another blocked door—
not, however, an original feature. In this bay on
the south side is a small chantry chapel of stone with
a central door and two tiers of pierced trefoiled
openings on either side; it retains part of its cresting
and cornice, the latter showing remains of a painted
inscription, '. . . eri Margarete que consortis . . . .'
The chapel has a piscina with two cruet brackets,
and retains its flat wooden ceiling, on which are
painted a red and a white rose, and a cornice with
red roses and white carnations. This chapel has been
identified with that built by Sir William Berkeley
about 1486 in memory of his father Sir Maurice
Berkeley. In the west bay of the aisle has been
another chapel, now reduced to a mere fragment,
and this end of the aisle is used for the storage of
architectural fragments, gravestones, &c., from various
parts of the church. The most interesting of these
is a square Purbeck marble font of late 13th-century
date, with three subjects on each face of the bowl.
On one face are three Old Testament subjects—Noah
and the Ark, Samson and the lion, and Moses striking
the rock; on the opposite face to this are the coronation of the Virgin, her burial, and the gift of
tongues at Pentecost. Of the two other faces, one
has three single figures in quatrefoils, probably Christ
between the Virgin and St. John, and the other has
Christ's baptism, resurrection, and ascension.
Part of a 12th-century font, which had a bowl
with four angle shafts, is also preserved here.
In the south wall, between the first and second
bays from the east, is a small arched recess with a
projecting sill, now filled by a modern tablet; it
may have held a cresset originally.
The south aisle is in general arrangement like the
north. The east half-bay is screened off by the
chantry chapel of John Draper II, dated 1529, but
contains its original piscina like that in the north
aisle, and two image brackets under the east window.
John Draper's screen is a beautiful piece of late
Gothic stonework with a frieze of Italian ornament,
which shows also on the transoms of the windows
and the corbels below the niches. The monogram
I D occurs three times on the screen, and over the
central doorway on a shield with a cruciform church
having a spire on its central tower. In the second
and third bays of the aisle are small arched recesses
in the south wall, and image brackets or perhaps
corbels for lights on the piers on the north. The
fourth bay has on the north the chantry chapel of
Robert Harys, 1525, with an inscription on a scroll
on the cornice:—
IHS LORD KYNG OF BLIS
HAVE MERCI ON HIM YT LET MAKE THIS
THE WHYCH WAS M[A]DE FOR ROBA[RT] HARYS.
AND DNI MCCCCCXXV.
The chapel has a stone front with a central doorway, over which is a large canopied niche, and there
are similar niches at either end of the front, the
space between being filled with open tracery. On
the panelled base is the rebus of Robert Harys,
R with a hare and a ribbon S, and a different form
occurs on the spandrels of the doorway. The oak
ceiling of the chapel is in part old.
The last bay of the aisle shows traces of having
been fitted with an altar, and may have contained
another chapel, but if so it has entirely vanished.
From the south side of this bay a door opens to a
vaulted chapel, dating from c. 1260. Wedged in
between the aisle and the apse of the south transept,
it is of very irregular shape, made even more so by
the encroachment on it of the aisle at its 15th-century
rebuilding. The ribbed vault, however, was not
taken down, and remains half buried in the new
wall at the north, and towards the transept on the
west, to which it must have been open before the
projected vaulting of that part of the church, as
the vaulting shaft exactly blocks it on the west. The
chapel is lighted by an east window of two lights
and a south window of three, both with modern
tracery, but original internal jamb shafts and arches;
below the east window is the base of a fine 14thcentury reredos, and in the north wall a very small
opening, 6 ft. from the ground, looking into the
aisle, but commanding a view of nothing but the
Harys chapel; it is part of the late 15th-century
work. On the south side is a stone bench with
three canopied seats, a good deal restored, having
Purbeck marble shafts in the jambs, and in the floor
are considerable remains of a 14th-century tile pavement, many tiles, it is said, having been collected
from other parts of the church.
The north transept preserves some of the best
Romanesque detail in the church. The ground stage
of the walls, both within and without, was ornamented
with arcading, and the external angles had groups of
engaged shafts rising from a large plinth, and running
up, it must be concluded, to the eaves. At the northeast angle is a round stair-turret, enriched with arcades
and a network of rolls above them; it was doubtless
once finished with a conical stone cap, but its present
top belongs to the 15th-century repair which replaced
the 11th-century work in the upper parts of the whole
transept. The original eastern apse of the transept
was destroyed in the 13th century, but the western
arches of the chapels which it contained on the
ground and triforium levels remain, and its plan is
preserved in the crypt beneath. The evidence goes
to show that its walls were of unusual thickness, far
exceeding those of the apse in the south transept;
this may be in part accounted for by the conspicuous
position of the north transept, but in any case the
treatment is remarkable. The tiers of arcading on
the stair turret seem to have been continued round
the apse, but the curved piece of wall marking
the external start of the apse, which is thus ornamented, is set out on too small a curve to form part
of the original work. As already noted, the evidence
of an upper floor at triforium level over the whole
area of the transept is very apparent. It was
carried on a masonry vault, a respond of which
remains on the west wall, and there are shafts
of equal height on the crossing piers. When the
vault was destroyed its lines were preserved on the
west wall of the transept by wall arches of wrought
stone masking the traces of its junction with the wall,
and the arches opening to the upper floor from the
nave triforium, and from the upper chapel of the
apse, were then blocked, and still remain so. The
shafts on the north-west crossing pier give further
evidence, being made up in plaster at the height
where they were formerly interrupted by the front
of the upper floor towards the crossing. The
remodelling of the east wall of the transept about
1260 removed the last traces of the early vault on
this side, and two rectangular vaulted chapels took the
place of the apse; the southern of these opens to the
transept by a beautiful cusped arch, now partly hidden
by a wooden gallery which fills the transept, and both
have richly moulded vault ribs, which are broken and
stepped in a remarkable manner in order to fit them
to the confined spaces which they have to span. This
is particularly so in the heads of the east windows,
which are treated as small vaults. The upper chapel
of the apse was by the 13th-century alterations put to
a most interesting use, that of the chamber of the
master of the works. The east face of the blocking
in the arch formerly opening to the upper floor of the
transept is set out in six rows of 9 in. squares, sixteen
squares to each row; the angles of the squares have
been marked, probably by metal points or studs
fastened to wooden plugs, but the plugs have been
pulled out, leaving only rough holes to show the
arrangement. The wall face is plastered, and on the
plaster is scratched the setting out of a 13th-century
window.
The transept is lighted by a large 15th-century
window on the north, which breaks into the original
clearstory passage; there are no signs of this passage on
the east side of the transept, but on the west it is preserved, though evidently not in its original condition.
It is lighted by small round-headed windows set in
blocked round-headed arches 5 ft. 8 in. wide, and
the windows with the blocking are of 12th-century
masonry, though obviously not so early as the main
walls. The passage continues to the north-west
angle and turns westward to join the main clearstory,
showing that the Romanesque work was completed at
least to this point. Beyond this the clearstory is of
the 13th century.
The crypts under the outer bay of each transept
remain in a very perfect state, with plastered barrel
vaults, divided into two bays by broad transverse arches
springing from shallow pilasters, and having eastern
apses following the plan of the apsidal chapels above.
The turret stairs continue downwards to the crypts,
opening into them close to the springing of the apses.
The south transept retains its apse structurally
perfect, though much restored and having undergone
certain alterations in the 13th century. The internal
arcade below the windows is practically modern, as
are the vaulting shafts and those of the arcade at the
window level, but their capitals are original, as is the
arched head of the east window of the apse. A
moulded and pointed rear arch has, however, been
added to this window c. 1260, and the south bay
has been entirely transformed, a three-light window
being inserted, its rear arch treated as an oblong
vaulted compartment with angle shafts.
At the south-east is a turret stair, as in the north
transept, but much more plainly treated, and
octagonal in plan; it now opens to the south side of
the apse, but originally had a doorway in the east bay
of the south wall. It continues down to the crypt,
like the north transept stair. The south wall of the
transept, against which the conventual buildings
abutted, retains considerable traces of the original
arrangement, as the mark of the respond between the
two spans of the vault which carried the upper story,
and two tiers of wall arcades. Near the south-west
corner was a doorway leading through to the buildings
south of the transept, doubtless into the passage from
the cloister to the cemetery. The upper stage of the
apse remains in good condition, its western arch
not being blocked, but the higher parts of the transept
walls have been rebuilt, probably at the time when
it was decided to vault the transept in stone, in
continuation of the work of the eastern arm, in
the early years of the 16th century. The vaulting shafts of this work still exist, but the south bay
of the vault was taken down about a hundred years
ago.
The crossing piers belong to the 11th-century
work, but the arches seem to be of advanced 12thcentury detail, as if the original tower had been rebuilt from above their capitals. The east wall is
carried up as a gable, and has in it two late 12thcentury windows, but the other three walls do not
rise above plate level, and the nave roof runs on up to
the east wall, the two bays of it which cover the
crossing being, however, modern imitations of the old
work in the nave.
The nave is of eight bays, with north and south
aisles, the western bay of the main span being occupied by a 15th-century west tower; the western
bays of the aisles, flanking the tower, are cut off to
serve as vestries. The nave arcades with the triforium over are, generally speaking, of the same early
Romanesque character as the transepts, and the nave
seems to have ended westward with a plain gabled
front not flanked by towers over the ends of the aisles.
The aisle walls, which are very massive, are also of
early date, though refaced in the 13th century, but
the clearstory is entirely of 13th-century date, and
was prepared for a stone vault which seems never to
have been built. The refacing of the north aisle and
the building of the north porch evidently formed
part of the same scheme to give uniformity to the
external elevation of the nave. The present nave
roof, above the modern plaster vaulting, dates from
c. 1330, and marks the definite abandonment of the
idea of a stone vault, as it was obviously meant to be
seen, being moulded and carved and retaining traces
of painting. The two western bays, however, though
of the same character, are of plainer detail and have
never been painted, and may date from the time
when the west tower was built.
The nave arcades have round-headed arches of two
orders, the outer with a single roll and the inner with
two soffit rolls, with pairs of half-round shafts in the
jambs and a label of zigzag ornament, and between
each pair of bays is a half-round shaft towards the main
span running up to the clearstory, and adapted in the
13th century to take the springing of the intended
vault. The spandrels over the arches are ornamented
with a hatched pattern, and at the base of the triforium
runs a string of zigzag, which is perfect for five bays
in the south arcade, but only in the third bay of the
north arcade. Elsewhere it is plain or has been
pieced with later stonework. The triforium has in
each bay two round arches under a single arch, the
tympanum over the inclosed arches being plain except
in the east bays of both arcades, where it is worked
with a scaled pattern. This doubtless represents the
treatment in the now destroyed eastern arm, and is
additional evidence of the pause in the work at this
point already noted. The capitals of the main
arcades and the triforium are for the most part of a
simple scalloped type, but some have interlaced ornament or volutes at the angles and several have been
recut in later times, as in the third bay on the north.
The shafts of the triforium are in some cases carved
with spiral or trellis pattern. In the aisles the original
vaulting shafts remain in many places, but others have
been altered in the 13th century, and the capitals and
vaults are entirely of the later date. The progress of
this remodelling may be seen in the north aisle, where
in the first four bays from the east the window tracery
is of the same date as its 13th-century jambs, but in
the next two it is clearly a later insertion and of more
elaborate design. A break therefore occurred at this
point in the 13th-century work, and there is a similar
change of detail in the fourth bay of the clearstory
on the north side, while in the south clearstory the
change occurs in the second bay, all westward of this
being of the later character.
The south aisle is lighted in the two eastern bays
by modern three-light windows, and in the next three
bays by two-light windows of the 13th century.
Beneath these windows runs a much restored Romanesque wall arcade with a string over it, and in the
east bay is the eastern procession door to the now
destroyed cloister, of Purbeck marble and dating from
the end of the 12th century. The door in the
seventh bay is modern, the old procession door being
in the sixth bay and now blocked. In the 15th
century a small chamber was built in the angle
between the north transept and the north aisle, and
the blocked four-centred doorways which opened to
it are yet visible.
Above the 13th-century windows in both aisles are
small round-headed lights with a heavy roll running
round them, lighting the triforium. Their external
masonry is of the 13th century, but the windows
clearly belong to the original work. There are two
of them in the east bay of the north aisle and one
in each of the rest. Between each bay of the
triforium was a round-headed arch, of which only
the responds are now left. These must have been
intended to buttress the main arcade walls, as there
is no evidence that the triforium was meant to be
covered with a stone vault.
The eastern arch of the north triforium, once
opening to the first story of the transept, is blocked,
and on its blocking is early 13th-century painted
ornament. It is probable that this bay contained an
altar.
The clearstory has two lancet lights in each bay,
included externally under single arches and having
single openings towards the nave.
The north porch is of unusual size and a fine
piece of 13th-century work. Its vault is, however,
a modern insertion on the lines of what must have
been there originally. The upper story is an addition, and the buttresses have been heightened when
it was built. It is reached by a stair at the southwest, and is lighted by five plain two-light windows.
The walls of the porch are arcaded, and near the
outer arch on the west side is a cinquefoiled recess
of contemporary character which is said to have been
enlarged during restoration.
The door of entrance to the nave is a fine piece
of work, with two cinquefoiled arches contained under
a wide outer arch, having in the spandrel between
them a canopied niche, now empty. The work
belongs to the middle of the 13th century, the arch
mouldings dying on to upright springing stones which
follow the rounded plan of the capitals.
In the west bay of the north aisle is a roundheaded north doorway, which has been much repaired
and is of doubtful date, and the west window is a
15th-century insertion.
The west tower is of three stages with a northeast stair turret, and finished with a low pointed roof
rising from a pierced parapet with crocketed pinnacles.
There are pairs of belfry windows, and the west
window of the lowest stage is of six lights with
transoms at two levels. Below it is a doorway with
the arms of Montagu in the south spandrel and of de
Fortibus in the north, and over the window is a
canopied niche with a figure of Christ.
The modern font, copied from that in the north
aisle of the quire, stands under the tower, and near
it is the monument of Shelley with a group of sculpture in white marble.
In addition to the monuments already noted there
are a good many floor slabs with incised inscriptions,
originally filled in with black composition. The
oldest of these are in Gothic capitals, and there is
such a strong resemblance between a number of them
in treatment and in the peculiar form of the inscription as to make it probable that they belong to one
date, although commemorating persons of different
periods. Several of them belong to priors of the
house, others to lay persons. The best preserved
inscriptions run thus:—
'Tumba Johĩs Dene senioris de holnehurst et Juliane
uxoris ejus, quorum aĩabus propiciari dignet' d[ominus] amē.
qi Iohēs obiit . . . die . . . anno dñi . . .'
'Tumba dni Wilhelmi Eyer vicesimi qũrti prioris
huius ecclesie qui obiit vio die mēsis decembris anno
domini Milleno ccccc . . .o cuius anime propicietur
deus. amen.'
'Tumba Ricardi . . . decimi prioris huius ecclesie.
Tumba Roberti Say . . .
Tumba d[omini] Thome Talbot . . .'
Close to Prior Eyre's gravestone is that of his
mother:—
'Hic jacet Johaña Cokrell mater Will[elm]i Eyer
prioris huius ecclesie cuius anime propicietur deus.
amen.'
There are ten bells, two of which have been added
since 1834. The fifth and sixth are old, and there
are inscriptions on both.
The plate consists of a silver chalice of 1618 given
that year by Thomas Jarman, citizen and dyer of
London; another, remade in 1812, given by John
Hellier and Elizabeth his wife in 1627; a paten of
1628 given that year by William Colgill and
Margaret his wife; another (a secular salver) of 1744
given that year by William Blake; another (also a
secular salver) of 1752, given in 1832 by John
Spicer, Mayor of Christchurch; another (also a
secular salver) of 1812; and a flagon of 1813 given
in that year by the Right Hon. George Rose, M.P.
There are two early books of registers, the first of
which is of paper, and has baptisms from 1584 to
1632, marriages 1578 to 1609 and burials 1641–2.
The second book is of vellum, and has baptisms
1635 to 1643, marriages 1634 to 1643, and burials
1634 to 1640. The first book of the regular
series of registers has baptisms and burials from 1682
to 1804 and marriages 1682 to 1762. The next five
books have marriages from 1754 to 1767, 1767 to
1779, 1779 to 1803, 1797 to 1812 and 1803 to 1812;
the seventh baptisms and burials from 1805 to 1812.
The church of ST. MICHAEL, HINTON
ADMIRAL, consisting of chancel and north vestry,
nave, south porch and western tower, is modern with
the exception of the late 18th-century tower. The
whole building is of red brick with stone dressings.
The tower has been 'Gothicized' by the insertion of
a door and of windows. It contains five bells.
The plate consists of a silver-gilt chalice (a secular
standing cup and cover) of 1595 presented by an
ancestor of Sir George A. E. Tapps-Gervis-Meyrick
of Hinton Admiral; two silver patens of 1747 and
a glass flagon with gilt mounts.
The registers date only from 1817.
The church of ST. LUKE, BURTON, consisting
of a chancel, nave, north organ chamber, south
transept and south porch, was built in 1874 of red
brick with Bath stone dressings. The west gable
contains one bell. In the churchyard is a rough
octagonal bowl of uncertain date. Opposite the
church is a good yew tree.
The plate consists of a plated chalice, paten and
flagon given by the Rev. T. H. Bush, vicar of
Christchurch, on the consecration of the church in
1876. The registers date only from 1876.
The church of ST. MARK, HIGHCLIFF, dates
from 1845. It is cruciform and built of stone in
early 14th-century style.
The plate consists of a silver-gilt chalice and paten
of 1895, two plated chalices and a plain tankardshaped flagon. The registers date from 1843.
MUDEFORD CHAPEL
MUDEFORD CHAPEL in Highcliff (no dedication) consists of a half-octagonal apsidal chancel, a
nave and an open timber porch, and was built in
1871 of brick banded with stone. A bell-gable contains one bell. A larger bell is hung on a frame in
the churchyard.
The vessels are all plated, and consist of a chalice,
paten, flagon and two alms-plates; also two glass
cruets, silver mounted.
The church of ST. MARY THE VIRGIN, Bransgore, is of brick with stone dressings, and consists
of an apsidal chancel with small north and south
recesses forming vestries, and an organ chamber, nave
and western tower, all modern. The early 16thcentury font, which is said to have come from Christchurch, is octagonal, with a monogram J D, perhaps
for 'John Draper,' Prior of Christchurch. The
stem is patched, the base is modern and the whole
has been much scraped. The tower contains one
bell.
The plate consists of a silver chalice and paten of
1897 and 1898.
The registers date from 1822.
ADVOWSONS
Christchurch, which belonged to
the canons of the Holy Trinity
before the Conquest, was comprised
in the grant of the manor made by Henry I to Richard
de Redvers; from him the priory received a regrant
of the church, (fn. 2) and held it until 1539. Part of the
nave was probably the parish church, (fn. 3) and at first was
served by the canons, but later a vicar was appointed. (fn. 4)
In 1540, at the supplication of the townspeople, the
king granted the whole church, thenceforth to be
used as the parish church, to the churchwardens and
inhabitants of the town, (fn. 5) which grant of incorporation was confirmed by James I in 1612. (fn. 6) In 1541
the king granted the advowson to the Dean and
Chapter of Winchester, (fn. 7) by whom presentations were
made (fn. 8) until 1909, when the Bishop of Winchester
presented.
The ecclesiastical parish of Highcliff was formed in
1843 out of those of Christchurch and Milton, (fn. 9) the
church being begun in the same year. The living
is a vicarage in the gift of Brig.-Gen. Hon. E. J.
Montagu-Stuart-Wortley, C.B., D.S.O. There had
been a chapel of ease there since 1834. (fn. 10)
The ecclesiastical parish of Hinton (fn. 11) was formed in
1867 from the civil parish of Christchurch, (fn. 12) the
church of St. Michael and All Angels being consecrated nine years later. There was a chapel here in
the reign of Stephen belonging to the canons of
Christchurch, who still held it in 1419. (fn. 13) Very soon
after, however, it was superseded by a chapel of ease
founded by Sir John Sewer and others, (fn. 14) the invocation of which was to St. Anne. (fn. 15) Sir John was
undoubtedly the John Siward who married the
daughter and heiress of Richard Horn, who died
possessed of Hinton Manor (q.v.) in 1394. (fn. 16) The
reason for its foundation was the danger caused by
the floods in winter to the people of Hinton, where
there were 100 communicants, in walking the three or
four miles to their parish church. It was endowed with
land at Forston, Dorset, worth £2 15s. in the reign
of Henry VIII, (fn. 17) and £3 3s. 4d. in that of
Edward VI (fn. 18) ; this sum the priest received for his
stipend. It was a donative curacy in the gift of the
lord of the manor of Hinton. (fn. 19) The living is now
a vicarage, the lord of the manor still retaining the
patronage.
The ecclesiastical parish of Bransgore (fn. 20) was formed
in 1875 from those of Christchurch and Sopley. (fn. 21)
The church was erected in 1822 as a chapel of ease,
the living being a perpetual curacy in the gift of the
vicar of Christchurch. (fn. 22) It is now a vicarage, the
patrons being trustees.
The ecclesiastical parish of Burton (fn. 23) was formed in
1877 from the civil parish of Christchurch. (fn. 24) The
living is a vicarage in the gift of the Bishop of
Winchester. There had been a chapel of ease here
since 1836.
At the time of the Domesday Survey all the tithes
of Christchurch belonged to the priory. (fn. 25) After the
Dissolution the tithes in Christchurch and Hinton
were leased for twenty-one years to Thomas
Wriothesley, afterwards lord chancellor, and William
Avery, (fn. 26) and in the following year the rectory was
granted to the Dean and Chapter of Winchester. In
the reign of Edward VI the vicar of Christchurch
received the stipend of £26 from the dean, out of
which he had to provide two priests, (fn. 27) one for the
parish church and the other for Holdenhurst chapel.
The rectory continued to belong to the dean and
chapter until early in the 19th century, when it was
sold to the first Earl of Malmesbury. (fn. 28) His descendant,
the present earl, is now impropriator of the tithes,
which, together with those of Holdenhurst, have been
commuted for a fixed rent-charge.
The free chapel of St. Mary Magdalene, East
Parley, was founded before the year 1340. (fn. 29) The
advowson always belonged to the lords of the manor (fn. 30)
(q.v.). The last record of it that has been found
is in 1820, when Charles Prideaux-Brune owned the
manor and the advowson of the church. (fn. 31) The tithes
were in 1561 leased by the Crown to Ludovic
Williams for twenty-one years at the rent of 40s.,
and ten years later the reversion and rent were granted
to Henry Lord Scroope to be held by him at a feefarm rent of the same amount. (fn. 32)
In about 1270 there was a chapel at Winkton, (fn. 33)
which belonged to the priory, having been granted to
it by John de Campeny about thirty years before. (fn. 34)
It still existed in 1517, when an annual sum of 13½d.
was paid towards its support by the lord of the manor
of Fernhills Court in Winkton. (fn. 35)
There was in the time of the Confessor a chapel at
Hurn, which was served by the priory, (fn. 36) and it seems
to have still existed in 1616 (fn. 37) ; no other record of it
has been found.
Upon St. Catherine's Hill there was anciently a
chapel belonging to the priory; it still existed in
1331. (fn. 38)
John Draper, the last prior, had a chapel at Somerford Grange, which was still in existence in 1838 (fn. 39) ;
no traces of it now survive.
In an extent of Christchurch Borough in 1300
'the guardian of the chapel of the Blessed Mary' is
mentioned, (fn. 40) but nothing has been found to show what
chapel that was.
Numerous chantries were founded in the priory
church. William Berkeley, son of Sir Maurice
Berkeley, kt., founded one in 1482. (fn. 41) Another was
founded by the unfortunate Countess of Salisbury. (fn. 42)
In 1319 William of Alreham obtained licence to
endow a chaplain to celebrate daily in the priory
church, (fn. 43) and a few years later similar licences were
granted to Henry Bosse, John of Dibden, William
Quintin and William Segar, (fn. 44) and to John Tirenache
and William Smedemor. (fn. 45)
In 1447 Henry Gobitz and seven others obtained
licence to erect a chantry in the chapel of St. Anne,
Hinton, with a chaplain to pray for their souls, and
to endow it with land to the value of 10 marks. (fn. 46)
In 1672 licences were granted for a Presbyterian
minister to preach in the houses of John Hildesley
and William Marshall at Christchurch. (fn. 47)
The Nonconformists have had a chapel in Christchurch since 1660. The present Congregational
chapel is in Millhams Street, while in Bargates is a
Baptist chapel, and at Purewell a Roman Catholic
church and a Wesleyan chapel. At Bransgore are two
Wesleyan chapels and a Gospel hall for Plymouth
Brethren. At East Parley there is a school chapel of
St. Barnabas and a Baptist chapel, and at Waterditch
a Congregational chapel.
CHARITIES
The Hospital of St. Mary Magdalene, formerly a hospital for lepers,
is endowed with dwelling-houses and
land and £1,870 11s. 5d. consols, with the official
trustees, arising from sales of land and accumulations
of income, producing £165 a year or thereabouts.
In 1905 the almspeople received £144, and £5 was
distributed in money to forty other persons.
In 1667 Thomas Brown of Hinton Admiral by
will devised certain lands lying at Moors and in
Christchurch East, the rents and profits to be applied
in the distribution of clothing and bread among the
poor of Christchurch, also to the poor of Ringwood,
Lymington, Minstead, Sopley, Milton, Holdenhurst
and Lyndhurst in bread and clothes, subject to the
payment of 10s. each to the ministers of the several
parishes for preaching a sermon on 1 January in every
year on the subject mentioned in the testator's will.
The charity was in 1801 the subject of proceedings
in the Court of Chancery, and a scheme for its regulation was embodied in a deed poll bearing date
11 May 1802. The real estate has been sold, and
the present endowment consists of £2,788 1s. 11d.
consols, with the official trustees, producing £69 14s.
a year, which is applied in pursuance of the trusts for
the benefit of the respective parishes. In 1904 £19
was distributed among the poor of Christchurch in
clothes and bread.
In 1714 John Clingan by will, proved in the
P.C.C., gave to Samuel Hookey his residuary estate
for the benefit of the poor of the parish, or for their
use, in such charitable uses as he should think fit.
In 1730 a suit was instituted between the attorneygeneral, at the relation of Robert Legard, against the
said Samuel Hookey, and a scheme established in
1736, whereby the trust, as varied by an order of
the Charity Commissioners on 2 May 1893, is now
regulated.
The trust property consists of a house in the
High Street let at £85 a year, 11 a. 3 r. 39 p. at
Roeshot and Somerford, 29 a. 3 r. 28 p. at Iford,
1 a. or. 30 p. at Pokesdown, let at a gross rental of
£87 10s. a year, and £8,239 5s. 4d. consols, with
the official trustees (producing yearly £205 19s. 8d.),
who also hold £1,361 19s. 2d. consols on an investment account to replace the amount expended in
rebuilding the house in the High Street. The net
income is paid to masters in premiums on apprenticeships.
In 1619 Robert White by will, proved in the
P.C.C., gave £100 to be laid out in land, the rents
to be employed for the relief of the most poor, aged
and impotent persons in the parish. The endowment
consists of an annuity of £8, charged by deed of
30 March 1658, on a farm in Hinton Admiral, now
the property of Sir George A. E. Tapps-GervisMeyrick, bart., applied for the benefit of aged poor,
together with Lyne's charity, next mentioned.
Charity of Thomas Lyne, founded by will 1621
(see under parish of Ringwood). The annual sum of
£2 is paid by Sir Richard Glyn, bart., and applied
together with the annuity of £8 from White's charity
for the benefit of the poor.
In 1653 Ellis Coffin by his will devised certain
real estate in Christchurch, a moiety of the rents and
profits for the use of the poor of the tithing of Bure,
and the other moiety for the poor of the town of
Christchurch. The trust estate has been sold and
proceeds invested in £298 1s. 6d. consols, producing
£7 9s. a year, which is applied in the distribution of
shillings.
In 1677 Edward Elliott by will, proved at Winchester, devised his lands called Colliers, lying without
Bargates in Portfield, and a house and half an acre of
land near thereto, the rents and profits to be applied
in bread at church on the first Sunday in every
month, subject to the payment of 10s. for bread for
the poor of Sopley.
The property known as Colliers was sold and the
proceeds invested in £503 13s. 3d. consols, with the
official trustees, who also hold £98 15s. 3d. local
loans 3 per cent. stock, arising from investment of
surplus income. The remaining property consists of
2 a. 2 r. of land in Portfield Road, producing £4 10s.
a year. The income amounts to £20 a year, together
with an annuity of 5s., issuing out of an allotment
in Burton Meadow, known as Causeway Acre.
In 1778 Gregory Olive by will left £166 13s. 4d.
stock, now consols, with the official trustees; the
dividends, amounting to £4 3s. 4d., are distributable
yearly among four poor widows equally on Christmas
Day.
The Organist Fund.—In 1785 Gustavus Brander
by will, proved in the P.C.C., left £500 for the
building of an organ in the parish church, provided
that the parish raised a fund for the organist's salary.
In 1814 a sum of £510 17s. 11d. consols appears to
have been raised for that purpose, and is now held by
the official trustees. The dividends, amounting to
£12 15s. 4d., are paid to the organist.
Gustavus Brander also bequeathed £200, the
interest to be applied in payment of 10s. to the
clerk, 5s. to the sexton, £2 2s. to the vicar for a
sermon annually on the third Sunday in August as a
memorial of his signal preservation in 1768 under
the circumstances detailed in his will, 10s. as a nestegg for keeping his monument in repair, and the
remainder in shillings to the poor attending the divine
service on that day.
The trust fund now consists of £244 13s., with the
official trustees, who also hold £20 consols accumulating for the repair of monument.
In 1818 Henry Oake by his will, executed in
camp before the fortress of Hattras, India, bequeathed
a sum for the use of the poor of his native town of
Christchurch. The legacy, less duty, is represented
by £480 3s. 7d. consols, with the official trustees.
The income of £12 a year is applied in the distribution of money, petticoats and skirts, subject to
repair of monument.
In 1836 Sally Williams by will, proved in the
P.C.C. 6 May, bequeathed £107 10s. 2d. consols,
now held by the official trustees; the dividends,
amounting to £2 13s. 8d., are distributable amongst
five poor widows and five poor maiden women.
The official trustees also hold a sum of £26 9s. 7d.
consols under the title of Parley Common, purchased
in January 1908 with £22 6s. 4d. representing a sum
of £10 (and accumulations) paid to the churchwardens
for compensation for common rights in respect of
Parley Church and parsonage.
The Congregational Church Charity.
In 1903 Risdon Darracott Sharp by his will, proved
at London 14 January, bequeathed £1,000, the income
to be applied by the deacons to such purposes as they
should in their sole discretion think proper.
The principal sum has been placed out on mortgage
securities, £800 at 4½ per cent. and £200 (with an
additional £200) at 5 per cent., the interest of which
is applied in part to the church account, in part
to the fabric account, day school and missionary
societies.
(ii) In the ecclesiastical district of Burton.
In 1907 Jasper Roberts by will, proved 11 November,
bequeathed £100 for the use and maintenance of the
quire.
The legacy was invested in £102 2s. 6d. consols
with the official trustees.
(iii) In the ecclesiastical parish of Highcliff.
In 1883 William Ross by will and codicil, proved
10 October, bequeathed a legacy, represented by
£294 9s. 6d. consols, the dividends to be applied at
Christmas-time amongst poor of sixty-one years of age
and upwards.
In 1886 Charles Eaton by will and codicil, proved
16 June, bequeathed £99 0s. 8d. consols, the dividends
to be applied for the benefit of the poor.
In 1878 General Charles Stuart by deed gave £250
consols, the dividends to be applied in repair of the
schoolmaster's house at Newtown, or failing that
object in promoting the education of poor children.
The several sums of stock are held by the official
trustees.
(iv) In the hamlet of Mudeford.
In 1876 Mortimer Ricardo by will, proved at
London 23 May, bequeathed £1,000, the interest to
be applied in the maintenance of the chapel erected
by the testator, and for the performance of divine
service therein.
The legacy is represented by £1,027 2s. 7d.
Metropolitan 3½ per cent. consolidated stock, producing £35 19s. a year.