WOOTON, a parish in the liberty of EAST-MEDINA, Isle of Wight division of the county of SOUTHAMPTON, 4 miles (N. E.) from Newport, containing 56 inhabitants. The living is a rectory, in the archdeaconry and diocese of Winchester, rated in the king's books at £7. 16. Of. The Rev. R. W. White was patron in 1808. The church is dedicated to St. Edmund. There is a place of worship for Wesleyan Methodists. The parish is bounded on the north by the Motherbank, and on the east by an inlet of the sea, across which there is a narrow causeway, called Wooton bridge, upwards of nine hundred feet in length, and on the high road to Newport. On an eminence south of the bridge is jfern Hill, the seat of Charles Chute, Esq., a curious. edifice with a lofty handsome tower, having somewhat the ap-i pearance of a church; it was erected by the late Lord. ' Bolton, and commands a noble prospect of Spithead and the adjacent parts of Hampshire. At Wooton farm is an ancient oak of remarkably large dimensions, being forty-seven feet in girth.