HTTP/1.1 -1 Read error in cache disk data: SuccessContent-Type: text/csv; charset="utf-8" Last-Modified: Sat, 22 Jan 2022 04:46:12 GMT Content-length: 2364 Connection: Close Proxy-Connection: Close X-Cache: HIT from web1.osuosl.org Server: ProxyTrack 0.5 (HTTrack 3.49.2) id,summary,reporter,owner,description,type,status,priority,milestone,component,version,severity,resolution,keywords,cc,lang,patch,platform 5896,Congratulations! You can get a $50 Verizon gift card!,"""Congrats!"" ",,"{{{ Congratulations! You can get a $50 Verizon gift card! http://alphast.biz/GG7Pvg7deth2pqJFomhw9_jW51ZHmeiU22aAWUL2HwalMGo6Sw http://alphast.biz/_9s5-Sl_SS1Pkj2xNwSmY11c1hJ4IDGYyCKRtE-EYdvv1dFhJw ches the dimensions of a building foundation recorded on the summit by William Hayley Mason in 1839. Allcroft assumed that this was the foundations of the 14th-century chapel, but Oswald regards it as unsettled, though agreeing that ""whichever of the two buildings is not the chapel is likely to be the later windmill"". Allcroft also records that a masonic lodge that included the Duke of Richmond, the Duke of Montagu, and Lord Baltimore met at the top of the hill between 1717 and 1757; Oswald assumes the lodge met in one of the two buildings, but Allcroft says ""it was, it seems, an open-air Lodge"". There was at one time a gibbet on the Trundle; it appears on an OS map in 1813, but had been removed by 1825. Oswald describes two marl pits at the top of the hill that cut into the prehistoric earthworks. Two radio stations, each with four wooden masts, were built during World War II; only one mast was still present in 1995, along with a concrete foundation between the two stations. Oswald' s survey found that multiple trenches and foxholes had been dug into the Iron Age banks. Antiquarian and archaeological investigations 1839 drawing showing a circular bank at the top of St Roche's hill T. King's 1839 drawing of the hillfort A 1723 etching of the hillfort is included in William Stukeley's Itinerarium Curiosum (1776), and it is mentioned in Alexander Hay's 1804 History of Chichester: ""... saint Roche's hill, commonly called Rook's hill; on the top of which are the remains of a small camp, in a circular form, supposed to have been raised by the Danes, when they invaded and plundered this country"". An 1835 history of Sussex discusses the hillfort, giving reasons for doubting that it was Roman or Danish, and concluding that the builders could not be certainly determined. Mason includ }}} [attachment:""untitled-part.html""] ",,new,normal,2.11,none,3.8.0,medium,,,,,, href="/parrot/repor