He bequeathed Margaret "an immediate legacy of £500 and his household effects and consumable stores".
[4] In 1915, she established Ribchester Roman Museum after becoming concerned that many historic artefacts were being taken oit of the village, into the hands of private collectors.
[5] She had earlier purchased a row of houses on Church Street in Ribchester, near the River Ribble, and had the land excavated prior to building a new property, today's Churchgates.
[6] In 1928, an R. Greenall, the honorary secretary of the Ribchester Museum Trust, was living there.
[8] After her death, Greenall had dedicated to her The Roman Fort at Ribchester, a 1928 book by John Henry Hopkinson and Donald Atkinson.