134 LEE, . [ K~Ll..Y 7 S Phipps M.A. of Exeter Oollege, Oxford, ban. canon of of the parish of , comprising LEE Christ Church, Oxford, and chaplain of Aylesbury COMMON and HUNTS GREEN, containing about sao union. The old church, a small building of hard acres, and that part of the parish of , com­ chalk, of Early English date, !itands in its disused prising KING'S ASH, KINGSWOOD and SW AN graveyard a little west of the present church; on the BO'l"l'O'M, containing 1,I72 acres, was added to thi1 erection of which it ceased to be used: it has now parish. no architectural features except a three-light east LEE COMMOu.~ is a hamlet r mile south-east. In window, which has been filled with stained glass by I914 by an Order in Council this hamlet was trans­ Sir .A. L. Liberty as a memorial to John llampden, and some 14th century glass ilas been preserved: it ferred from the ecclesiastical parish of Great Missen. is now used as a Sunday school. Here is a den to the ecclesiastical parish of Lee. Here is a Baptist chapel, with ISO sittings, and a village club Primitive Methodist chapel, erected in r83g. house, used for entertainments and the meetings SWAN BOTTOM is -a hamlet about 1 mile distant, of the Parish Council. Day's charity, "for the benefit and is now in the civil and ecclesiastical parish of Lee. of five poor and impotent single women and widows, Here is a mission room called Emanuel Hall, with so· not under 6o years of age, resident for ro years within sittings. a radius of 2 miles from the Parish church, who are Parish Clerk, George Stone. communicants," produces £I2I 7s. yearly; Watson's Post, M. 0. & 'I'. & Telephonic Express Delivery Office, charity, providing for gifts of ·food and coals to the .-Miss Charlotte Stone, sub-postmistress. poor at Christmas, produces £5 yearly; .Almond's Letters through Great Missenden, Bucks, arrive at charity, for the poor of the parish, produces ros. 7-45 a.m. & I & 7 p.m. ; dispatched at 7.40 a.m. &I yearly. In Bray's Wood, one mile east, are the remains I & 5. IS p .m. ; sunday, no mail or dispatch; tele­ ()f a British or Roman camp; of Grim's Dyke, which graph office open 8.30 to IO a.m ooriginally formed the boundary of the parish on the Post Office, Lee Common.--George Lewington, !Ub­ west, about 200 yards still remain; in a wood, called postmaster. Letters are received through Great .Cindery Bottom, a mile and a half north-east, are Missenden, Bucks, & are delivered at 8.10 a. m. &; -mound·s formed of the refuse of an ancient foundry. 12.15 p.m. & are dispatched at 8.5 a.m. & I2.IO & · The soil is loamy; subsoil, brick earth and chalk. 5· 15 p.m. week days only. Lee, I mile distant, iJ The chief crops are wheat, oats and barley. The area the nearest telegraph & money order office is 2,201 acres; rateable value, £3,009 ; the population Wall Letter Box, Swan Bottom, cleared at 4·45 p.m. weei in rgrr was 775 in the civil and 431 in the ecclesiastical days only parish. Public Elementary School (mixed & infants'), la By a Local G-overnment Board Order dated 14th Common, erected about IB')o, for 250 children; March, I9II, and cited as the County of Buckingham Ern est John Cosier Young, master . (Lee Extension) Confirmation Order, 19rr, that part Police Constable, Frederick Wicks, Lee Common LEE. • Gray James, head gamekeeper to Wixon John Thomas, blacksmith. r ,...(Marked thus* receive letters through Sir .Arthur Lasenby Liberty D.L., Hunt'~ Green St. Leonards, Tring.) J.P. Concord farm, King's Ash LEE COMMON. Hedges Frederick, The Gate P.H PRIVATE RESIDENTS. Higginbotham Percy, Cock & Rabbit (Posta-l address. Great Mi!;senden.) Ballard Mrs. Prestwick P.H PR1VATB :RESIDENTS. Halse .Alfred E. Rushmere Holland William. farm bailiff to Sir Batchd'or Ernest Thorn, Laharnums Harris Jas. Gibson, The Old vicarage . ' .Arthur Lasenby Liber·ty D.L., J.P 1 Copla'lef Harry, :Rosmead Jacobs Henry, The Old cottage Holland William, jun. head gardener Larncr Miss, Berrymead Liberty Sir Aithur Lasenby D.L., to Sir Arthnr Lasenby Liberly Lloyd Mrs. The Larches .T .P. The Manor house ; & Devon­ D.L., .T.P Marcus Miss, Furze cottage shire club, London S W J aco bs Harry, estate agent to Sir Phil1ips Stanley, Oaklands 'Phipps Rev. Canon Constantine Os- Arthtir Lasenby Liberty D.L., J.P COMMERClAL. borne M.A. (vicar), The Vicarage Piddington Wm. frmr. Strawberry hl! Bro"'n Harry, burbder Smith Chas .Hodg kinson,Kingswood ha Price .Albert George, Old Swan P_H. Collins John & Sons,frmrs.& jubmstrs Stewart-Liberty Ivor, Pipers croft Kingswood Cook John Liberty, frmr. Clump farm Wood James, Zion cottage *Pnddephatt George Alfred, farmer, Hance Waiter, C!)Wkeeper •• Bruns grange Holloway Frank, bakeT & beer retailer COMMERCIAL. Rose William & Son, farmers, Great Humpbreys Jose-ph, boot maker Austin Ezra, blacksmith,Swan Bottom King's .Ash · fa1'm Judge Wm. farme-r, Bassibtmes farm Brown William, farmer, Hunt's Green Sa unders Alfred J ames, Red · Lion Lewington Geo-rge, grocer, Post office ·Chapman & Harris, farmers, Haw- P H. Swan Bottom I Pearce James, baker thorn farm Tomlin Joseph, farmer, King's A.sb Pearce Jas. market gardnr. Laurel vil · Clark Harry, farmer, Church farm Witney Elizabeth (Mrs.), shopkeeper, Pearc:e Sophia (Mrs.), beer retailer Gomm William, shopkeeper Kingswood ! Talmer Benjamin, wagonette proprietr • LILLINGSTONE DAYRELL is a parish. 4! mile~ Cambridge. The rectory is an ancient mansion of ' north from Buckingham station on the Oxford and stone roverpd with ivy and surrounded by a pleasant Bletchley branch of the London and North Western rail­ lawn. The Rev. John Langham Dayrell's charity, the way, in the Northern division of the county, hundred, interest of £3oo in Co.nsols, is for clothing; there is ,.. petty sessional division, uniun and county court district of also another charity, the interest of £63 Consols, for Buckingham, rural deanery of Buckingham, Buckingham coal. Lillingstone House, the property of A. J. Robarts . portion, archdpaconry of Buckingham and diocese of esq. and now the residence of· the Hon. Mrs . .A.rchibald ' Oxford. The church of St. Nicholas is an ancient Douglas-Pennant, is· a quadrangular mansion with 1 · edifice of stone, chiefly in the Early English ·style, portico Qf four pillars ; it is pleasantly situated and ·consisting of cha\llcel, nave of three bays, aisles, south surrounded by a park of about 20 acres, a feeder of th6 ~porch and a plain western tower containing- 3 bells, river Ouse forming a part, of its boundary. Tile House, L"epaired in rBq_:; at a cost of £42: in I868 it wa~ thl3 seat of Abraham John Robarts esq. D.L., J.P. the