It represented the adjacent small towns of New Alresford and Old Alresford in Hampshire.
He died in June 1842, three days after his 60th birthday, and was buried at Old Alresford, Hampshire.
William I also granted Wlkelin as much timber for the building and its scaffolding from the Forest of Hempage Wood (on the Old Alresford Road in Hampshire) as his carpenters could take in four days and nights.
He became rector of Britwell, Oxfordshire, on 3 May 1586, and of Alresford, Hampshire, in 1590; he also held the offices of chaplain of the Savoy Hospital and chaplain-in-ordinary to the queen.