
Arreton
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Mason's Guide 1876 - Arreton
"Arreton is situated in a fertile and highly cultivated district. It is a long
straggling, yet pretty village, and has an additional interest as having been
the home of the"Dairyman's Daughter", to whom the pen of Legh Richmond has
given such celebrity. The place of her abode stands on the south side of the
road. Arreton church, dedicated to St. George, is and old edifice, with a
large embattled tower. In it are several mural tablets: in the aisle is a
flat tomb inlaid with the effigy of a warrior, with his feet on a lion; and on
an adjacent pillar is a wooden tablet, recording in doggeral verse the good
deeds of a benefactor to the parish; here also, in a desk erected for that
purpose, is kept a copy of "Foxe's Acts and Monuments", 9th ed., 1631. In the
churchyard are deposited the remains of Elizabeth Wallbridge, the"Dairyman's
Daughter", whose epitaph is universally known. " (From Mason's
Guide to the Isle of Wight, 1876)
[Last updated: 4th August 2003 - Brian Pears]