page 8 line 22: 1216 should read 1215 - 'as every schoolboy should know' said Geoff Parker - sorry I was confused, 1216 was my pin number
page 11 para 4: Sir William Wallace Rhoderic Onslow was Lord of the Manor in 1913, so could not have sold the Manor to John Collins in 1895. Charles Collins is Lord of the Manor in 1927
page 13 para 5: Walter Hume Long lived in Chitterne at Chitterne Lodge. He also had a house in London
page 14 line 18: Overy should be Orrery - Alwyn Hardy of Dewey Museum spotted this
page 19 line 17: Joseph Brown Morris was curate of Imber, not Chitterne St Mary
page 32 photograph: the little girl in the third row is wrongly named as Ann Cruse - thanks To Anne Danielsson
page 38 para 2 Oram's Grave: It was probably NOT Oram's burial that Elizabeth White witnessed. It may have been the burial of Daniel Harding 1810 - thanks to Steve Hobbs of WSHC for this information. Thanks to David White we now know that James Oram hanged himself 25 July 1768
page 39 line 1: A390 should read A344
page 48 line 15: New information from TF that it may have been conscientious objectors who worked on the Cut in 1943
page 54 line 14: Brook Walk was built to house workers from Manor Farm AND Chitterne Farm. See also page 60 line 9
page 60 line 33: Sportsfield bought by village 1970s not 1950s
page 65 line 20: Razey should read Polden
page 68 line 12: The Manor fireplaces and stairs are not original - I am indebted to Pam Slocombe for this correction
page 69 line 10: The glebe lands had "no mansion or dwelling house" so how could this building be the original Glebe Farmhouse? Oh dear. Its earlier name was Holmcroft
page 76 photo caption: Annie Compton is probably not the person indicated
page 92 photo caption: There should be no "c." after Bert
page 102 line 10: Henry John Smith bought 10 acres of glebe land alongside Bidden Lane in 1919 for £190
page 102 line 28: The Timburys were also tenants of the Flower family - thanks to Jan Walker for this extra information
page 103 para 4: The jury is still out on which barn was which...
page 103 para 5: The church stockyard was on the site of Birch Cottage, not St Mary's Close. Clump Farm was not owned by the church it was part of the Lord of the Manor's estate
page 104 line 31: Don Wallis was unmarried, it was his sister who lived with him
page 104 line 32: Charlie Giles bought Glebe Farm at auction c.1954 - thanks to Mark Lockyer for this
page 105 line 17: William Robinson owned Clump Farm, the family never lived there - thanks to Caroline Faux for this
page 106 line 14: Valley Farm extends to 8000 acres - thanks to Jack Harley for this information
page 115 line 21: Ernie Stancer, not Stanter, error by newspaper not me!
page 115 line 35: Gay Donald arrived in Chitterne with Jim Ford in 1957, after he won the Gold Cup - thanks to Bernard Pike for this info
page 119 line 27: The King's Head was owned by the chain Enterprise Inns - now in private hands
page 126 line 9 of photo caption: Lewis Daniels, not Louis
page 128 line 17: The item thrown down the well was a landmine, not a skid bomb - a correction from the horse's mouth, thanks George Goodenough
page 135 photo: The village gathering celebrated the 1911 Coronation of Edward VII at Collins' Manor Farm