Career
From the 1960s he wrote articles in the Hampshire Magazine and in the publications of the Hampshire Field Club and Archaeological Society on a variety of local subjects. Of particular value was his analysis of the death of William II where he demonstrated that the traditional location for the King"s death marked by the Rufus Stone near Minstead was the result of little more than a 17th-century story. Lloyd himself argued that William II had been killed somewhere near Beaulieu.
His other works included accounts of the medieval salt-making industry in southwest Hampshire.
From 1988, he was the honorific President of the Lymington and District Historical Society. Mosaics in Station Road, New Milton, were dedicated to his memory in 2009.