90 THE FAMILY OF GALPIN OF went in for real estate and ranching in British Columbia on an extensive scale. , In the year 1860 he and his wife and children left London and settled at Datchet Lodge, Datchet, near Windsor,¤where they resided until 1870 when they moved to Bristol House, Roehampton. On the 5th February 1897 his wife Emma Amelia Galpin passed away, leaving a family of thirteen children, four sons and nine daughters. She was buried at Putney Vale Cemetery, and a very {ine memorial was erected to her memory in the churchyard at Roehampton, which was designed by her eldest son, William Dixon Galpin, and executed by Mr. George Frampton, A.R.A., afterwards Sir George Frampton, R.A. Shortly after the loss of his wife Thomas Dixon Galpin left Bristol House and moved to 1 Palace Houses, Kensington Gardens, where he remained until his death on the 2 5th April 1910, being buried beside his wife at Putney Vale Cemetery at the age of eighty—one. W.S.G. CHILCOTT of Breedy, Swyre, and Burton-Bradstock in Dorset and Milverton and_Wiveliscombe in Somerset. Chalcote, William. 1 Ric. III (1485). Calendar of Inquisitions Post Mortem for Dorset. William Chilcott of Breedy and Burton—Bradstock (Will dated 164 3, proved 16 50), left sons William and Robert. In 1654 john Chilcott begs as executor of William to com- pound (for sequestrated estate). Committee for Compounding, 20 june 1650 Estate of William Chilcott, late of Milverton, co. Somerset, and Breedy, co. Dorset. Mabella Chilcott of Breedy, widow, said her husband died in 1644 and the estate descended to her son then ten years old.