OWW Records – H

HACKET, SIR ANDREW, eldest son of John Hacket (elected to Camb.1608, qv), and his first wife ; b.       ; adm.      ; KS 1642 ; elected to Trinity Coll.Cambridge 1645, adm.pens. 30 Jun 1645, scholar 1645, matr.Easter 1646 ; 9th in “ordo” 1648/9 ; BA 1648/9 ; MA 1652 ; adm. Gray’s Inn 24 Jan 1652/3, called to bar 11 Nov 1659 ; a Master in Chancery 10 Dec 1670 – 28 Jun 1680 ; knighted 16 Jan 1670/1 ; MP Tamworth Oct 1679 – Jan 1681 ; of Moxhull Hall, Warwickshire ; High Sheriff, Warwickshire 1684-5 ; m. 1st, Mary, dau. of Right Rev.Joseph Henshaw DD, Bishop of Peterborough ; m.2nd, 19 Apr 1664 (IGI) Mary, eldest dau. of John Lisle, Moxhull, Warwicks. ; d. 19 Mar 1709/10.

HACKET, JOHN, only son of Andrew Hacket, Westminster, tailor, “a senior burgess of Westminster, and afterwards belonging to the robes of Prince Henry” ; b. 1 Sep 1590 [or 1592 ?] ; adm.     ; KS       ; elected head to Trinity Coll.Cambridge 1608, adm.scholar 1609, matr.Easter 1609 ; 6th in “ordo” 1612/3 ; BA 1612/3 ; MA 1616 (incorp. Oxford 9 Jul 1616) ; BD 1623 ; DD 1628 ; Fellow, Trinity Coll. 1614 – c.1621 ; ordained deacon and priest 20 Dec 1618 (London) ; Chaplain to Right Rev.John Williams DD, Bishop of Lincoln 1621 ; Chaplain in Ordinary to James I and to Charles I  1623 – still 1641 ; Rector of Kirkby Underwood, Lincs., 23 Feb 1623 ; Rector of Stoke Hammond, Lincs., 24 Nov 1623 – Mar 1624/5 ; Prebendary of Lincoln 10 Dec 1623 – Jan 1661/2 ; Rector of Cheam, Surrey 7 Oct 1624-62 ; Rector of St.Andrew’s, Holborn, London 31 Dec 1624 – sequestered Oct 1643, restored at Restoration, successor Jan 1662/3 ; Archdeacon of Bedford 4 Oct 1631 – Apr 1662 ; President, Sion Coll. 1633 ; attempted to moderate Laud’s zeal ; member of Committee for Religion, appointed by House of Lords, and as such pleaded for the retention of Deans and Chapters before House of Commons 1641 ; Prebendary of St.Paul’s 28 Mar 1642-61 ; refused to join the parliamentary side, and retired to Cheam during the rebellion and Commonwealth ; consecrated Bishop of Coventry and Lichfield 22 Dec 1661 ; restored Lichfield Cathedral ; gave in his lifetime £1200 to Trinity Coll.Cambridge and bequeathed the choice of all his books to Cambridge Univ.Library ; he and Ben Jonson (qv) translated Bacon’s Essays into Latin ; author of Loyola, a Latin comedy acted twice before James I, first published 1648, and Scrinia Reserata, a Memorial offered to great Deservings of John Williams DD, 1693 ; m. 1st 14 Sep 1625 Elizabeth, dau. of William Stebbing, Earl Soham, Suffolk ; lic. to m.2nd, 13 Dec 1641 Frances, widow of Rev.Dove Bridgeman DD, Prebendary of Chester, and dau. of William Bennet, Yeoman of the Pastry to Queen Elizabeth I ; d. 28 Oct 1670. ODNB.

HACKET (or HACKETT), JOHN, son of John Hacket, London ; b.      ; adm. (aged 11) Sep 1745 ; KS 1748 ; Balliol Coll.Oxford, matr. 7 Mar 1752 ; acted Othello at the Haymarket Theatre in September 1755 ; went to West Indies ; author, Select and Remarkable Epitaphs, 2 vols, 1757 ; “drowned about the beginning of 1761”.

HACKET, ROBERT, son of Andrew Hacket, Stroxton, Lincs., and his first wife Dorcas, only dau. of Robert Fullwood, Whittington, Warwickshire ; grandson of Sir Andrew Hacket (KS 1642, qv) ; bapt.Stroxton, Lincs., 20 Dec 1702 ; adm. (aged 12) Apr 1716 ; in under school list 1718 ; Lincoln Coll.Oxford, matr. 9 May 1722 ; migr. to Magd.Coll., demy 1723-9 ; BA 15 Feb 1725/6 ; MA 1729 (incorp.Cambridge 1729) ; ordained deacon 29 Jun 1729, priest 5 Jul 1729 (both Lincoln, lit.dim. from Canterbury ?) ; Rector of Beckingham, Lincs., from 14 Jul 1729 ; d. 19 Dec 1733.

HACKLUIT, see also HAKLUYT.

HACKLUIT, JEREMIAH, eldest son of Rev.Henry Hackluit, Stretham, Cambs., and Susanna Towers ; b.      ; at school under Busby for seven years (Foley, Records of the English Province of the Society of Jesus, v, 524) ; claimed that he had taken MA degree at Cambridge Univ. and that he had served as a naval officer in the first Dutch war ; applied for admission to English College, Rome 8 Jul 1666, aged 24.

HADDEN, JAMES, brother of William Frederick Hadden (qv) ; b.      ; in school lists May and Oct 1803 ; left Christmas 1805 ; Ensign, 80th Foot 2 May 1804 ; Lieut., 4th Garrison Battalion 4 Dec 1806 ; 40thFoot, half-pay 23 Dec 1806 ; 3rd Dragoon Guards, 22 Apr 1813 ;  Capt., 23 May 1822 ; Maj., 8 Feb 1831 ; retd. 2 Mar 1833 ; d. unm. 12 Feb 1846, aged 56.

HADDEN, WILLIAM FREDERICK, eldest son of Maj.-Gen.James Murray Hadden, Royal Artillery, Harpenden Lodge, Herts., Surveyor-Gen. of the Ordnance, and Harriet Farrer, eldest dau. of Dennis Farrer Hillersdon, Elstow, Beds. ; b.      ; in school lists May  and Oct 1803 ; Cornet, 6th Dragoons 6 Jul 1804 ; Lieut., 14 Nov 1805 ; Capt., Maj-Gen.Ramsay’s Regt., 14 Jan 1808 ; 6th Dragoons 28 Jan 1808 ; 20th Light Dragoons, half-pay 11 Jan 1821 ; served at battle of Waterloo ; m. 17 Oct 1810 Elizabeth Hall, Finchley, Middlesex ; d. 1 Jun 1821, aged 32.

HADDON, —  ; b.       ; in school list 1734.

HADDON, HENRY ; b.       ; adm. (aged 14) Jan 1730/1 ; left 1731. [Perhaps bapt.St.Faith’s, London, 26 Jan 1716, son of William Haddon, and Mary — (IGI)].

HADEN, ARTHUR CHARLES, brother of Francis Seymour Haden (qv) ; b. 24 Aug 1852 ; adm. 4  Oct 1864 ; QS 1867 ; left May 1868 ; a violinist and teacher of music ; resident at Broughty Ferry, Dundee, Scotland ; m. Annie Eliza, soprano singer, dau. of John Francis, Dover Place, Clifton, Bristol, butcher (marriage registered Bristol third quarter 1879) ; d. 28 Jun 1910.

HADEN, FRANCIS SEYMOUR, eldest son of Sir Francis Seymour Haden FRCS, Hertford Street, Mayfair, London, surgeon and President, Royal Society of Painter Etchers, and Dasha Delano, dau. of Maj.George Washington Whistler, US Army, and half-sister of James Abbott McNeill Whistler, artist ; b. 7 Mar 1850 ; adm. 23 Jan 1862 (G) ; QS (Capt.) 1865 ; Capt. of the School 1868 ; elected to Christ Church, Oxford 1869, matr. 19 May 1869 ; BA 1873 ; Assistant Private Secretary to Sir Henry Bulwer, Lieut.-Gov.Natal 1876-7, Private Secretary 1877-80 ; Chief Clerk, Colonial Secretary’s Office, Natal 1880-1, Assistant Colonial Secretary 1881-7, Colonial Secretary 1887-93, retiring on adoption by Natal of responsible government ; member, Executive and Legislative Councils, Natal 1885-93 ; chairman, Natal Trade Commission 1885-6 ; Deputy Governor of Natal and Zululand on several occasions ; CMG 21 May 1890 ; m. 27 Jan 1885 Ethel, second dau. of Lieut.-Col.Benjamin Aylett Branfill, Upminster Hall, Essex, 10th Hussars ; d. 21 Mar 1918.

HADEN, HARRY LEE, brother of Francis Seymour Haden (qv) ; b. 10 Jan 1855 ; adm. 27 Sep 1866 ; left Christmas 1870 ; “going to try sheepfarming in Queensland” (letter from Mrs Whistler, 8 Sep 1876, Glasgow University Library, MS Whistler W553) ; d. at Brisbane, Queensland, Australia 18 Jan 1877.

HADFELDE, JOHN, see HULFIELD, JOHN.

HAGGARD, ANDREW CHARLES PARKER, fifth son of William Meybohm Rider Haggard, West Bradenham Hall, Norfolk, barrister and landowner, and Ella, elder dau. of Bazett Doveton, EICS Bombay ; b. 7 Feb 1854 ; adm. 26 Jan 1866 (G) ; Lieut., King’s Own Scottish Borderers 12 Nov 1873 ; Capt. 31 Jan 1883 ; with Egyptian Army 1 Feb 1883 – 13 Jul 1886, latterly as Lieut.-Col. ; served at battle of Tamai, investment of Suakin, reconnaissance to Hasheen and battle of Giniss ; despatches LG 27 Mar 1884 and twice afterwards ; DSO 25 Nov 1886 ; Orders of Medjidie, 3rd class, 1886, and Osmanieh, 4thclass, 1885 ; emigrated to Vancouver Island, British Columbia, Canada ; author, Sidelights on the Court of France, 1903, and other works ; m. 1st, 16 Oct 1880 Mary Janet Dixon ; m.2nd, at Cairo, Egypt, 3 May 1883 Emily Isabella (divorced 1902), dau. of Peter Chirnside, Newham, Belford, Northumberland, farmer  ; m.3rd, at Boston, Mass., USA, 23 Jan 1906 Jeanette Ethel, widow of Edward Fowler, and dau. of Frederick A.Jones ; d. 13 May 1923.

HAGGARD, GEORGE, youngest son of William Henry Haggard (qv) ; b. 2 Oct 1800 ; adm. 12 Sep 1809 ; left Mar 1816 ; d.unm. at St.Petersburg, Russia 15 Jun 1817.

HAGGARD, JOHN, third son of William Henry Haggard (qv) ; b. 2 Jan 1794 ; adm.1802 ; left 1810 ; Trinity Hall, Cambridge, adm.pens. 9 Jun 1807, scholar, matr.Mich.1810 ; LLB 1813 ; LLD 1818 ; Fellow, Trinity Hall 1 Dec 1815-20 ; adm.Lincoln’s Inn 2 Nov 1814 ; adm.advocate, Doctors’ Commons 3 Nov 1818 ; Chancellor, Diocese of Lincoln from 1836, Diocese of Winchester from 1845, and Diocese of Manchester from 1847 ; Commissary for Surrey from 1847 ; author, Reports of Cases argued in the Consistory Court of London, containing the judgments of Sir W.Scott, 1822, and other reports ; m. 20 Jul 1820 Caroline, dau. of Mark Hodgson, Bromley by Bow, Middlesex, brewer ; d. 31 Oct 1856. ODNB.

HAGGARD, JOHN, third son of John Haggard (qv) ; b. 11 Oct 1823 ; adm. from St.Paul’s Sch. 29 Mar 1837 ; QS 1838 ; left 1840 ; at Haileybury Coll. 1841-2 ; Witer, EICS Madras 1843 ; Assistant Magistrate and Collector, Nellore 1845 ; d. unm. at Tranquebar, Madras 30 Jun 1849.

HAGGARD, MARK, fourth son of John Haggard (qv) ; b. 30 Jan 1825 ; adm. 30 Jun 1835 ; QS 1839 ; rowed against Eton 26 Jul 1842 ; elected to Christ Church, Oxford 1843, matr. 9 Jun 1843, Westminster Student from 23 Dec 1843 ; won University Pairs with William Henry Milman (qv) 1843-5 ; rowed against Cambridge 1845 and in Oxford Eight at Henley 1847, 1848 ; BA 1847 ; MA 1850 ; ordained priest 22 Dec 1850 (Gloucester and Bristol) ; Curate of St.Paul’s, Bedminster, Somerset ; d.unm. at sea on way home from Madeira 10 Apr 1854.

HAGGARD, THOMAS, second son of William Henry Haggard (qv) ; b. 7 Jul 1788 ; at school under Vincent (name up School 1800) ; 6th Mate, EI Maritime Service 1804 ; 3rd Mate 1807 ; 1st Mate 1814 ; m. 7 Feb 1826 Maria, dau. of William Tickell, Bath [apothecary and surgeon ?] ; d. 26 Dec 1858.

HAGGARD, WILLIAM HENRY, only son of William Henry Haggard, Norwich, and Susan Rebecca, dau. of James Barnham, St.John’s, Maddermarket, Norwich ; b. 4 Dec 1757 ; adm. 14 Jan 1772 ; KS 1772 ; Emmanuel Coll.Cambridge, adm.pens. 12 Jan 1776, matr.Mich.1776 ; BA 1780 ; adm.Lincoln’s Inn 2 Aug 1776, called to bar 16 Nov 1781 ; of Bradenham Hall, Norfolk ; m. 16 Jul 1781 Frances, only dau. of Thomas Amyand (qv) ; d. 13 Feb 1837.

HAGGAT (or HAGGATE), PAUL ; b.       ; adm.       ; Min.Can. 1641, 1642 ; KS in 1644. [perhaps Paul Haggatt, Levant merchant, occurs 1651]

HAGGITT, D’ARCY, only son of Rev.D’Arcy Haggitt, Curate St.John the Evangelist, Westminster, and subsequently Vicar of Pershore, Worcs., and Mary Martin ; b. 28 Oct 1805 ; adm. 5 Jun 1817 ; went to Bury St Edmunds GS ; articled to solicitor ; emigrated to Hobart, Tasmania ; adm.solicitor there 1841 ; member, Tasmanian Legislative Assembly, for Hobart Town 1862 – Apr 1864 ; established law firm of Haggitt & Haggitt, Dunedin, New Zealand 1866 ; m. 29 Dec 1833 Mary Anne Walters (IGI) ; d. at Dunedin, New Zealand 9 Jul 1869.

HAHN, DANIEL, son of Daniel Hahn, St Giles in the Fields, London, surgeon, “Cupper to the Royal Family” and “Master of the Bagnio in Belton Street” (now Endell Street), and Hannah — , subsequently wife of Matthew Combe (qv) ; bapt. 25 May [which year ?]         ; adm. (aged 10) Apr 1723 (as Hayn) ; in school lists 1727, 1728 (as Hahn or Hayne) ; Min.Can. (aged 14) 1728 ; Assistant, Corporation of Cursitors (Royal Kalendar 1769, 1778, but not in Chamberlayne 1748) ; member, Corporation of Cursitors from Jun 1766 ; m. 28 May 1763 “Miss Sykes” ; d. 8 Mar 1779, living at death in Tuke’s Court, Chancery Lane.

HAINES, WILLOUGHBY CHARLES, fourth son of Frederick Lyndhurst Haines, Westbourne Park, London, Clerk, Court of Bankruptcy, and Matilda, only surviving dau. of William Strickland, Brompton Crescent, London, “Controller of the Customs Fund” ; b. 24 Jul 1858 ; at Charterhouse Sch. 1868-72 ; adm. 6 Jun 1872 ; QS 30 Sep 1873 ; left Dec 1875 ; London Univ. 1879 ; AKC 1882 ; ordained deacon 1882, priest 1883 (both London) ; Curate, Holy Trinity, Westminster 1882-4, Theddlethorpe All Saints, Lincs. 1884-7 ; Chaplain to the Forces 5 Nov 1887 – 1917, retd. ; served in Ashanti expedition 1885-6 and South African War 1899-1900, invalided home ; Rector of Wyck Rissington, Gloucs., 1917-34, resigned ; m. 23 May 1883 Eleanor Marion, dau. of Tom Tilleard, Pembroke Road, Kensington, solicitor ; d. 7 Dec 1934.

HAISTWELL, —-  ; b.       ; in under school lists 1715, 1716 ; left 1716. [doubtless kin to Edward Haistwell, son of Edward Haistwell, London, merchant, adm.Middle Temple 1 Mar 1711/2, called to bar 23 May 1718, will proved PCC 26 Jan 1744, as of Middle Temple]

HAKLUYT, see also HACKLUIT.

HAKLUYT, EDMUND, son of Richard Hakluyt (qv) ; b.       ; adm.      ; KS       ; elected head to Trinity Coll.Cambridge 1611, adm.scholar 1612 ; BA 1615/6 ; MA 1619 ; Fellow, Trin.Coll. 1618 –c.1621 ; ordained deacon 24 Jun 1626, priest 25 Jun 1626 (both Peterborough).

HAKLUYT, OLIVER, brother of Thomas Hakluyt (qv) ; b.      ; adm.      ; QS       ; elected head to Christ Church, Oxford 8 Jul 1573, Westminster Student to Jun 1582, Faculty Student 2 Jun 1582-8 ; BA 1577 ; MA 1580 ; MB 11 Jul 1588 ; “being graduated in physic had a happy hand in the practice of it” (Wood, Athenae Oxonienses, ii, 187) ; of Eaton, Leominster, Herefs. ;  m.      ; d.1623 (will PCC 5 Sep 1623, as of Eyton, Herefordshire, surname spelled Hackluyt)

HAKLUYT, RICHARD, brother of Thomas Hakluyt (qv) ; b.1553 ; adm.     ; QS in 1564 ; elected to Christ Church, Oxford 1570, Westminster Student to Oct 1586 ; BA 19 Feb 1573/4 ; MA 27 Jan 1577/8 ; ordained deacon and priest in or before 1583 (both Salisbury) ; Chaplain to Sir Edward Stafford, Ambassador to Paris 1583-8 ; Prebendary of Bristol from 1586 (by 24 Jun) ; Rector of Wetheringsett with Brockford, Suffolk, from  20 Apr 1590 ; Prebendary of Westminster from 4 May 1602, Archdeacon from 1603 ; Chaplain of the Savoy (by Mar 1604) ; Rector of Gedney, Lincs., from 24 Jul 1612 ; one of the chief Adventurers in the South Virginia Co. ; took a keen interest from his boyhood in geography and discovery ; lectured on the construction and use of maps, spheres and nautical instruments ; his book, The Principall NavigationsVoiages and Discoveries of the English Nation, 1589 (issued in an expanded three-volume edition in 1598-1600), has been described as “the prose epic of the modern English nation” ; left a large collection of unpublished MSS, several of which were printed in an abridged form by Purchas in his Pilgrimes ; the Hakluyt Society, named in his honour,  was founded 15 Dec 1846 for the printing of narratives of voyages and travels, and related records ;  bequeathed £5 towards repairing the north windows of Westminster Abbey and 10 shillings each to Richard Ireland (adm.1582, qv) and John Wilson (elected 1602, qv) ; m. 1st, c.1594, Douglasse Cavendish, Trimley St.Mary, Suffolk  ; lic.to m. 2nd, 30 Mar 1604 Frances, widow of William Smithe, St.Botolph’s, Bishopsgate, London ; d. 23 Nov 1616. Buried Westminster Abbey. ODNB.

HAKLUYT, THOMAS, son of Richard Hakluyt, London, skinner, and Margery — ; b.     ; adm.     ; QS       ; elected to Trinity Coll.Cambridge 1567, adm. scholar 1570, matr.Easter 1570 ; BA 1571/2 ; MA 1575 (incorp.Oxford 5 Jun 1576) ; d. before 20 Jun 1591. Buried Oxford (so stated in will of brother Edmund Hakluyt).

HALDENE, JAMES ; b.         ; adm. (aged 10) Apr 1737 ; in school list 1739 (as Haldane). [perhaps “Haldane”, a friend of Henry Duncombe (qv), referred to in a letter of 6 May 1747 from Duncombe to James Murphy French (qv), and evidently a mutual acquaintance, printed J.Foote, The Life of Arthur Murphy, 1811, 84-5 (the respective dates of their entry to the School make it clear that they would have been contemporaries there) ; identified there in a footnote as “a midshipman in the Navy” ; if so, probably James Haldane, only son of Lieut.-Col.James Haldane, Royal Horse Guards, also diplomat, and Margaret Pye ; b.1728 ; Lieut., Royal Navy ; East India Maritime Service ; 4th Mate, Prince Edward 1752-3, Capt., Prince Edward 1756-7, 1759-60, Capt., Duke of Albany 1763-4, 1765-6 ; inherited Airthrey estate, Stirlingshire, from uncle in Jan 1768 ; m. 15 Dec 1762 his first cousin Katherine, dau. of Alexander Duncan, Lundie, Angus ; d. 30 Jun 1768]

HALES, ALEXANDER, brother of James Hales (qv) ; b.       ; adm. (aged 10) Jan 1719/20, having previously been at Douai (there in 1716) ; in under school list 1722 ; d. 20 Mar 1746/7 (will proved PCC 9 Apr 1747, as of Canterbury, Kent).

HALES, CHARLES, son of Thomas Hales, Howletts, Bekesbourne, Kent, and Mary, dau. of Richard Wood, Abbots Langley, Herts. ; bapt. Bekesbourne, Kent 17 Sep 1667 ; adm.      ; KS 1683 ; elected to Trinity Coll.Cambridge 1686, adm.pens. 16 Jun 1686, aged 18, matr.1686 ; adm.Inner Temple 18 Aug 1686 ; of New Windsor, Berks. ; m.      ; d. at Flushing, Netherlands 5 Aug 1747.

HALES, GEORGE ; b.       ; adm. 2 Apr 1777 ; left 1778 (“Hale” in school accounts).

HALES, JAMES, eldest son of Sir John Hales, Bart., Hackington, Kent, and his second wife Helen, dau. of Dudley Bagenal MP (I), Newry, Ireland ; bapt.St.Martin in the Fields, London 31 Mar 1704 (IGI) ; adm. (aged 14) Jan 1719/20, having previously been at Douai (there in 1716), and having been sent back to England with his brothers when his father joined the Church of England in 1718 ; “killed in Italy 1735, being an officer in the Emperor’s service” (Collins, Baronetage, 1741, i, 225, but note that Ingamells, p.443, has no entry for a James Hales but records a Mr Hales, brought up at the court of the Grand Duke of Tuscany, who, having been at Florence c.1726, had left for Vienna and was reported to have been killed in a duel before c.May 1728).

HALES, JOHN, fourth son of Sir Thomas Hales, Bart., MP, Bishopsbourne, Kent, Clerk of the Green Cloth, and Mary, dau. of Sir Robert Marsham, Bart., MP ; great-nephew of Charles Hales (qv) ; bapt.Bishopsbourne, Kent 14 Jun 1732 ; adm. Oct 1743 ; KS (aged 14) 1747 ; still at school 1750.

HALES, PHILIP, brother of James Hales (qv) ; b.      ; adm. (aged 9) Jan 1719/20, having previously been at Douai (there in 1716) ; in under school list 1722 ; St.John’s Coll.Oxford, matr. 16 Nov 1726, aged 15 ; adm.Inner Temple 22 Apr 1726 ; living Mar 1727/8. [will of Philip Hales, St.Martin’s, Westminster, proved PCC 27 Sep 1746]

HALFORD, SIR HENRY, BART., only son of Sir Henry Halford (formerly Vaughan), Bart., GCH MD FRCP, President Royal College of Physicians, and Hon.Elizabeth Barbara St.John, dau. of John St.John, 11th Baron St.John of Bletso ; b.22 Apr 1797 ; adm. 26 May 1807 ; left 1808 ; Christ Church, Oxford, matr.9 May 1815 ; assumed surname of Halford in lieu of Vaughan 1815 ; Ensign, 43rdFoot 5 Mar 1818 ; Lieut., 33rd Foot  20 Sep 1821 ; half-pay, 60th Foot 8 Aug 1822 ; retired Jun 1833 ; MP (Cons) South Leicestershire 1832-57 ; succ.father as 2nd baronet 9 Mar 1844 ; DL JP Leicestershire ; m. 31 Jul 1824 his cousin Barbara, dau. of Right Hon.Sir John Vaughan PC, Judge of Court of Common Pleas ; d. 22 May 1868.

HALHED, ROBERT SPENCER, only child of Robert Halhed, Abingdon Street, Westminster, formerly of St.Andrew’s parish, Surrey Co., Jamaica, and Elizabeth —  ; b. 8 Sep 1764 ; adm. 24 Jan 1774 ; d. 29 Mar 1778. Buried East Cloister, Westminster Abbey.

HALIFAX, CHARLES, 1ST EARL OF, see MONTAGU, CHARLES, 1ST EARL OF HALIFAX.

HALL, —- ; b.      ; adm.       ; QS 1567-70 (Chapter Muniments 54014-8, 54020).

HALL, —- ; b.       ; in school list 1754.

HALL, — ; b.        ; in school list Dec 1788.

HALL, —- (in school list 1797), see HALL, WILLIAM HENRY.

HALL, —  ; b.       ; adm.Midsummer 1809 ; left 1810.

HALL, ARTHUR, son of Charles Henry Hall (qv) ; b. 25 Nov 1809 ; adm. 19 Oct 1822 ; Clerk, Board of Control ; Cadet, EICS Bengal 1827 ; Cornet, unattached 10 Jan 1829 ; 5th Bengal Light Cavalry 17 May 1829 ; Lieut., 1 Mar 1836 ; Capt., 14 Jan 1842 ; Maj., 1 Apr 1854 ; Lieut.-Col., 5 May 1856 ; 3rdBengal Light Cavalry 1860 ; retd.as Maj.-Gen., 31 Dec 1861 ; m. at Ghazipur, India 3 Oct 1842 Anne, second dau. of Col.John Mackenzie, EICS Bengal ; d. 13 Nov 1879.

HALL, BENJAMIN, son of Rev.Benjamin Hall DD, Chancellor of Llandaff, and Elizabeth, dau. of Rev.John Grant, Nolton, Pembrokeshire ; b. 29 Sep 1778 ; adm.      ; KS 1790 ; elected to Christ Church, Oxford 1794, matr. 11 Jun 1794, Westminster Student 24 Dec 1794 – void by marriage 23 Dec 1801 ; BA 1798 ; MA 1801 ; adm.Lincoln’s Inn 1 May 1798, called to bar 4 May 1801 ; Oxford circuit ; MP Totnes 1806-12, Westbury 1812 – Nov 1814, Glamorgan from 28 Nov 1814 ; of Hensol Castle, Glamorgan ; m. 16 Dec 1801 Charlotte, only dau. of Richard Crawshay, Cyfarthfa, Glamorgan, ironmaster ; d. 31 Jul 1817.

HALL, BENJAMIN, 1ST BARON LLANOVER, eldest son of Benjamin Hall (qv) ; b. 8 Nov 1802 ; adm. Jan.1814 ; in school list Feb 1816 ;  Christ Church, Oxford, matr. 24 May 1820 ; MP (Whig/Liberal) Monmouth May – Jul 1831, 1832-7, Marylebone 1837 – 27 Jul 1859 ; created baronet 16 Aug 1838 ; President, Board of Health 14 Oct 1854 – Jul 1855 ; Privy Councillor 14 Nov 1854 ; First Commissioner of Works and Public Buildings 21 Jul 1855 – Feb 1858 ; created Baron Llanover 27 Jul 1859 ; Lord Lieut.Monmouthshire from 9 Nov 1861 ; carried the bill for creating the Metropolitan Board of Works through the House of Commons in 1855 ; the great bell in the clock tower of the new Houses of Parliament was named “Big Ben” after him 1856 ; m. 4 Dec 1823 Augusta, dau. of Benjamin Waddington, Llanover Court, Monmouthshire ; d. 27 Apr 1867. ODNB.

HALL, CHARLES, son of John Hall, Scorborough, Yorks., land agent to Lord Hotham,  and Margaret, dau. of William Middleton, Beverley, Yorks., architect ; bapt.Scorborough, Yorks., 5 Aug 1797 ; adm.Christmas 1811 ; in school list 1813 ; Trinity Coll.Cambridge, adm.pens. 4 Jul 1815, aged 19, matr. Mich.1816 ; BA 1820 ; MA 1823 ; ordained deacon 29 Jul 1821, priest 14 Jul 1822 (both York) ; Curate, Scorborough, Yorks., 1822 ; Rector of Terrington, Yorks., from 3 Oct 1823 ; Rector of Routh, Yorks., from 9 Feb 1827 ; m.  26 Jan 1830 Mary, second dau. of Richard Terrick Stainforth, Hutton Lodge, Hutton, Yorks. ; d. 12 Dec 1864.

HALL, CHARLES HENRY, son of Rev.Charles Hall DD, Dean of Bocking, Essex, and Chaplain to Most Rev.Thomas Secker DD, Archbishop of Canterbury, and Elizabeth, dau. of Robert Carsan, Vauxhall Place, Lambeth, Surrey, surgeon ; b.       ; adm. 22 Sep 1773 ; KS (Capt., aged 12) 1775 ; elected head to Christ Church, Oxford 1779, matr. 3 Jun 1779, Westminster Student 24 Dec 1779 – void 17 Oct 1795 (expiry year of grace as V.Broughton from 16 Aug 1794), Tutor 1785-94, Junior Censor 1792-3 ; Chancellor’s Prize for Latin Verse 1781, for English Essay 1784 ; BA 1783 ; MA 1786 ; BD 1794 ; DD 1800 ; Proctor 1793 ; Bampton Lecturer 1798 ; ordained deacon 5 Nov 1786 (Oxford), priest 14 Dec 1788 (Chester for Oxford) ; Domestic Chaplain to Bishop of Bristol 30 May 1794 ; Vicar of Broughton, Yorks., 2 Aug 1794 – Dec 1824 ; Prebendary of Exeter 21 Mar 1798 ; Rector of Kirkbramwith, Yorks., 28 Feb 1799 – Jul 1804 ; Canon of Christ Church 30 Nov 1799 – Oct 1809, Sub-Dean 1805-9 ; Vicar of Luton, Beds., from 9 Apr 1804 ; Regius Professor of Divinity, Oxford Univ., 14 Feb 1807- Oct 1809 ; Rector of Ewelme, Oxfordshire Feb 1807 – Oct 1809 ; Dean of Christ Church, Oxford 31 Oct 1809 – Feb 1824 ; Prolocutor, Lower House of Convocation 1812 ; Dean of Durham from 26 Feb 1824 ; tutor to the future Lord Liverpool when an undergraduate at Christ Church ; m. 3 Sep 1794 Hon.Anna Maria Bridget Byng, dau. of John Byng, 5th Viscount Torrington (qv) ; d. 16 Mar 1827. ODNB.

HALL, CHARLES RANKEN, fifth son of Benjamin Hall (KS 1790, qv) ; b. 29 May 1812 ; adm. 26 Apr 1827 (G) ; Christ Church, Oxford, matr.7 Jun 1832 ; BA 1836 ; MA 1839 ; ordained deacon 16 Oct 1836, priest 1838 (both Bath & Wells) ; Rector of Shire Newton, Monmouthshire 1856-84 ; m. 27 Apr 1837 Harriet, second dau. of John Baker, Aldwick Court, Somerset, solicitor ; d. 5 Jun 1890.

HALL, EDMUND, son of Edmund Hall, Bedwyn, Wilts. ; b.      ; adm.     ; KS 1695 ; elected head to Trinity Coll.Cambridge 1701, adm.pens. 18 Jun 1701, aged 18, scholar 17 Apr 1702, matr.1702 ; buried St.Michael’s, Cambridge 3 Oct 1704. [Perhaps Edmund Hall, son of Edmund Hall and Mary — (?Rowell), bapt.St.Martin in the Fields 15 Mar 1684 (IGI)].

HALL, FRANK, see STANDISH, FRANK HALL

HALL, HENRY GRANT, fourth son of Benjamin Hall (KS 1790, qv) ; b. 30 Jan 1810 ; adm. 19 Jan 1821 ; d. 14 Jul 1822.

HALL, HENRY WILLIAM, son of Cresswell Hall, partner in firm Medwin & Hall, Blackfriars Road, Surrey, engineers and boilermakers, and Mary, eldest dau. of Henry Richard Cresswell, Clapham, Surrey, fishmonger ; b. (New Cross, Kent)  8 Dec 1854 ; adm. 22 Jan 1869 ; left Dec 1870 ; Clare Coll.Cambridge, adm.pens. 8 Oct 1873, matr.Mich.1873, but did not graduate ; a preparatory schoolmaster ; proprietor, Clare House School, Cliftonville, Margate, Kent ; m. 11 Sep 1876 Fannie, dau. of Robert Elwood ; d. 2 Apr 1901.

HALL, ISAAC ; b.       ; adm.      ; BB 1651-2.

HALL, JOHN ROBERT, brother of Charles Henry Hall (qv) ; b.      ; adm. 31 Jan 1775 ; KS (aged 14) 1779 ; elected to Christ Church, Oxford 1783, matr. 26 Jun 1783, Westminster Student 24 Dec 1783 – void 20 Mar 1808 (expiry year of grace as R.Batsford), Tutor 1788-91 ; BA 1787 ; MA 1790 ; ordained deacon 14 Dec 1788, priest 20 Dec 1789 (both Chester for Oxford) ; Prebendary of Exeter from 10 Jul 1802 ; Perpetual Curate of Hawkhurst, Kent 31 May 1803 – Mar 1807 ; Rector of Batsford, Gloucs., from 14 Mar 1807 ; m. 9 Apr 1807 Frances, sister of Charles Thomas Longley (qv) ; d. 18 Oct 1841.

HALL, JOHN ROBERT, eldest son of John Robert Hall (qv) ; b. 4 Jan 1809 ; adm. 19 Sep 1820 (G) ; KS 1822 ; elected to Christ Church, Oxford 1826, matr.13 May 1826, Westminster Student ; BA 1830 ; MA 1832 ; ordained deacon 23 Dec 1832 (Rochester), priest 2 Jun 1833 (Oxford) ; Vicar of St.Mary Magdalen, Oxford 26 Jul 1838-44 ; Vicar of Frodsham, Cheshire 1844-57 ; Rector of Boldon, co.Durham 1857-63 ; Prebendary of York 1860-3 ; Rector of Coulsdon, Surrey 1863-5 ; Rector of Hunton, Kent, from 1865 ; Hon.Canon of Canterbury from 1866 ; m.1st, 20 Apr 1844 Grace Jane, dau. of John Campbell, Warriston, Midlothian ; 2nd, 26 May 1859 Louisa Frances Catherine, dau. of Thomas Eden, The Bryn, Swansea, Glamorgan, Secretary to Government of Ceylon ; d. 22 Sep 1892.

HALL, JONATHAN ; b.      ; adm. (aged 9) Jun 1718 ; left 1718 ; see undated letter from Rev.Thomas Wagstaffe to Thomas Brett, nonjuring bishop, in which Wagstaffe “puts a proposal for a yearly allowance towards Jonathen Hall’s education at Westminster, so relieving Mr Bedford, who has been at the charge of his board and clothes” (Bodleian Library, Oxford, MSEng.th.c.27, ff 67-8).

HALL, MOSES ; b.     ; adm. (aged 11) Jan 1740/1 ; left 1742.

HALL, PERCY FRANCIS, son of Charles Henry Hall (qv) ; b. 20 Mar 1801 ; adm. 7 Oct 1811 ; left 1813 ; entered Royal Navy ; Lieut. 16 Oct 1821 ; Cdr., 30 Apr 1827 ; removed 25 Aug 1841 ; one of those involved in the early stages of the formation of the religious sect subsequently known as the Plymouth Brethren ; m. Sep 1827 Amelia, dau. of Capt.George Wolfe CB, Royal Navy ; d. 11 Oct 1884.

HALL, RICHARD CRAWSHAY, second son of Benjamin Hall (KS 1790, qv) ; b. 28 Mar 1804 ; adm. 12 Jun 1816 ; Christ Church, Oxford, matr. 21 Jun 1822 ; of Freshford House, Freshford, Somerset ; m. 1st, 8 Nov 1828 Mary, dau. of John Wade, Mortimer’s Cross, Herefs. ; m.2nd, 11 May 1859 Frances Eleanor, dau. of John Miles, Watford, Herts. ; d. 14 Dec 1884.

HALL, THOMAS ; b.      ; adm. 16 Jan 1775 ; at school 1778. [Probably Thomas Hall, brother of Charles Henry Hall (qv) ;  b. 8 Jun 1764 ; entered Royal Navy ; d. abroad. If so, presumably Thomas Hall, Lieut., Royal Navy 3 Nov 1790 ; d. 1812].

HALL, WILLIAM ; b.      ; adm.     ; KS       ; elected to Christ Church, Oxford 1643, Westminster Student  Christmas 1643 ; still in Dean’s Book Mar 1648/9.

HALL, WILLIAM ; b.        ; adm. (aged 7) Sep 1733 ; left 1733.

HALL, WILLIAM HENRY ; b.         ; adm. 8 Jul 1796 ; in school list 1797. [Perhaps William Henry Hall, fourth son of Edward Hall MD, Greville House, Paddington, Middlesex, and Monckton Manor, Devon, Secretary of the Whig Club, and Elizabeth, dau. of Benjamin Crompton, Greville House, Paddington ; b. 21 Aug 1783 ; Ensign, 83rd Foot 12 Feb 1801 ; Lieut., 21 Oct 1802 ; Capt., 95th Foot  6 Jun 1805 ; 70th Foot, 1 May 1806 ; 14th Foot, 29 Jul 1807 ; retd. 5 Jul 1810 ; of Reading, Berks. ; m. 21 Jun 1806 Tabitha Blainey, Reading, Berks. ; d. 17 Jan 1841].

HALL, WILLIAM HENRY, brother of Charles Hall (qv) ; bapt.Scorborough, Yorks., 25 Aug 1799 ; adm. 21 Jan 1811 ; KS (aged 13) 1813 ; left Christmas 1816 ; Trinity Coll.Cambridge, adm.pens. 22 Nov 1817, matr. Mich.1818 ; BA 1822 ; ordained deacon 22 Dec 1822 (York) ; Curate, Thwing, Yorks., 1822 ; d. 8 Aug 1824.

HALL, WILLIAM THOMAS, youngest son of Benjamin Hall (KS 1790, qv) ; b. 23 Mar 1818 ; adm. 4 Oct 1830 (G) ; Ensign, 6thFoot  28 Apr 1837 ; Lieut., 15 Nov 1839 ; retd. Feb 1842 ; of Jacob’s Court, Binfield, Berks. ; m. 23 Sep 1840 Louisa Astley, youngest dau. of John Alliston, Russell Square, London ; d. 28 Jan 1876.

HALLAM, GEORGE, brother of John Hallam (qv) ; b.       ; adm. 30 May 1769 ; left Aug 1770 ; Ensign, 60th Foot 29 Nov 1771 ; Lieut., 28 Sep 1775 ; Capt., 27 Dec 1778 ; 102nd Foot  24 Oct 1781 ; stationed in Madras Presidency, India, in 1783 (Hickey, Memoirs, iii, 89, 91, 94) ; 36th Foot 10 May 1789 ; Lieut.-Col., 17th Foot 15 Jan 1794 ; of White Barns, Furneaux Pelham, Herts. ; m. 13 Dec 1781 (IGI) Ann, fifth dau. of Benjamin Sullivan, Dromeragh, co.Cork, Clerk of the Crown for cos.Cork and Waterford ; d. 15 Oct 1842, aged 87.

HALLAM, GEORGE, only son of George Walsh Hallam (qv) ; b. 17 Jun 1833 ; adm. 4 Feb 1848 (G) ; Ensign, 52nd Foot 12 Dec 1851 ; Lieut., 27 May 1853 ; d. at Jalandhar, Punjab, India 6 Sep 1857.

HALLAM, GEORGE WALSH, only son of George Hallam (adm.1769, qv) ; b.      ; adm. Midsummer 1811 ; left 1814 ; Trinity Hall, Cambridge, adm.pens. 30 Nov 1814, scholar 1815, matr. Lent 1815 ; 1stcl.Civil Law 1818-9 ; LLB 1821 ; Fellow, Trinity Hall 28 Dec 1821-4 ; adm.Lincoln’s Inn 30 Aug 1815, called to bar 1 Jul 1824 ; of Brent Pelham Hall, Herts. ; m. 18 Mar 1831 Louisa, dau. of Capt. James Prevost, Royal Navy ; d. 8 Apr 1859, aged 62.

HALLAM, JOHN, son of John Hallam, London ; b. 29 Sep 1753 ; adm. 14 Jan 1767 ; KS 1767 ; Trinity Coll.Cambridge, adm.pens. 21 May 1771, aged 17, scholar 7 May 1773, matr. Mich.1771 ; BA 1775 ; MA 1778 ; ordained deacon 8 Apr 1776 (Chester, lit.dim. from Norwich), priest 2 Aug 1778 (Norwich) ; Curate, Holton and Chediston, Suffolk 1776, Wroxham and Salhouse, Norfolk 1778 ; Chaplain, Royal Navy 1778 ; Perpetual Curate of Oakwood, Surrey, from 1811 ; d. 20 Jan 1824.

HALLETT, —- ; b.       ; in school lists 1785, 1786. [perhaps = John Hallett (adm.1781), if later re-admittted]

HALLETT, BERTIE, second son of James Alfred Hallett (qv) ; b. 17 Jul 1853 ; adm. 26 Jan 1865 ; left Whitsun 1866 ; adm.solicitor Apr 1876 ; m. 12 Aug 1879 Alice Hilda Nellie, dau. of Edwin Chapple, Westminster, police inspector ; d. 16 Feb 1925.

HALLETT, CHARLES WILLIAM, brother of John Hallett (qv) ; b.1790 ; adm.     ; left 1807 ; banker and navy agent, firm J. and T.Maude and C.W.Hallett, Great George Street, Westminster ; Treasurer of the “Old Westminster Cricket Club”, established in 1828 ; m. 7 Oct 1815 Susan Elizabeth, dau. of Peter Amyot, Norwich, watchmaker and clockmaker ; d. 24 Dec 1860.

HALLETT, CYRIL, sixth son of James Alfred Hallett (qv) ; b. 1 May 1864 ; adm. 22 Jan 1874 ; left Nov 1875 ; went to Abingdon Sch. ; Oriel Coll.Oxford, matr. 27 Oct 1883 ; BA 1886 ; MA 1890 ; Cuddesdon Theol.Coll.1886 ; ordained deacon 1887, priest 1888 (both Chester) ; held various curacies 1887-1902 ; Vicar of St.Barnabas, Oxford 1902-11 ; Canon of Zanzibar 1911-30 ; Archdeacon of Rovuma 1911-22, of Zanzibar 1922-30, Sub-Dean of Zanzibar 1924-30 ; Warden, House of Mercy, Highgate 1931-40 ; Chaplain, St.Helena’s Home, Ealing, Middlesex, 1940 ; Chaplain to Sisters of Bethany, Lloyd Square, London, from 1941 ; d. 30 Oct 1942.

HALLETT, FRANCIS AMYOT, youngest son of Charles William Hallett (qv) ; b. 5 Aug 1829 ; adm. 2 Apr 1845 ; left Christmas 1847 ; Cadet, EICS Bombay 1848 ; Ensign, 20 Dec 1848 ; 2nd Bombay European Regt. 13 Dec 1849 ; Lieut., 22 May 1854 ; m. 7 Dec 1850 Elizabeth Smith, dau. of Lieut.-Col.William Pickering, EICS Madras [check] ; d. 27 Dec 1856.

HALLETT, SIR FREDERIC GREVILLE, fifth son of James Alfred Hallett (qv) ; b. 25 May 1860 ; adm. 30 Sep 1873 ; left Dec 1874 ; clerk to Royal College of Surgeons 1877, Assistant Secretary 1882 ; Secretary, Conjoint Examining Board of Royal College of Physicians and Royal Coll. of Surgeons 1886-1927 ; Director of Examinations, Royal Coll. of Surgeons ; Secretary, Imperial Cancer Research Fund, from 1902 ; OBE 3 Jun 1918 ; knighted 1928 ; m. 9 Aug 1884 Margaret Elizabeth, only dau. of James Robert Lane FRCS, Norfolk Square, Hyde Park, London, Senior Surgeon to St.Mary’s Hospital ; d. 5 Feb 1933.

HALLETT, JAMES, brother of John Hallett (qv) ; b. 2 Dec 1774 ; adm. 15 Jan 1788 ; Writer, EICS Bombay 1793 ; officiating Judge Advocate of the Marine, Bombay 1795 ; Factor and Second Assistant, Public Department, Secretary’s Office, Bombay 1800 ; assistant to Register of Sudder Adawlut, Bombay 1803 ; Secretary to Military Board 1806 ; Senior Merchant 1807 ; Judge and Magistrate, Salsetta 1809 ; retd. 1819 ; m. 15 Jan 1803 Charlotte, dau. of Rev.James Evans, Kensington Square, London ; d. 27 Sep 1836.

HALLETT, JAMES ALFRED, eldest son of Charles William Hallett (qv) ; b. 15 Mar 1818 ; adm. 13 Jan 1829 ; navy agent and banker, firm Hallett & Ommanney, afterwards Hallett & Co. (firm bankrupt 1894) ; JP Middlesex ; m. 19 Mar 1846 Martha Annie David, youngest dau. of William Broackes MD MRCS, Cork Street, Burlington Gardens, London ; d. 1 Feb 1908.

HALLETT, JOHN, son of John Hallett, Little Scotland Yard, Westminster, and Hannah Cox ; b. 9 Sep 1769 ; adm. 15 Jan 1781 ; left Aug 1781  ; entered Royal Navy ; joined HMS Bounty as midshipman 7 Sep 1787, under command of Lieut.William Bligh ; serving on board at date of mutiny 28 Apr 1789 ; one of the seventeen members of the crew who along with Bligh were cast adrift by the mutineers in an open boat, reaching Timor 14 Jun 1789 ; courtmartialed with his commander on their return to England, but acquitted 22 Oct 1790 ; Lieut., Royal Navy 22 Nov 1790 ; d.unm. 1 Dec 1794, from the effects of his voyage in the open boat after the mutiny.

HALLETT, JOHN DOUGLAS RICHARDSON, son of James Hallett (qv) ; b. 1 Oct 1805 ; adm. 31 Jan 1816 (G) ; Cadet, EICS Bombay 1821 ; Ensign, 3rd Bombay Native Infantry 29 May 1822 ; Lieut., 8 Sep 1826 ; Capt., 29 Nov 1833 ; Lieut.-Col., 27 May 1849 ; served in Sikh War 1848 ; CB 16 Aug 1850 ; assumed additional name of Richardson before date of his marriage ; m. 23 Apr 1833 Diana Augusta, dau. of John Bolton, Leicester ; d. at Mologaum, India 25 Dec 1854.

HALLETT, MARMADUKE WILLIAM, second son of Charles William Hallett (qv) ; b. 5 Jul 1825 ; adm. 5 Apr 1837 ; left Dec 1841 ; a wine merchant in Pall Mall, firm Mackenzie & Hallett ; m. 4 Mar 1852 Sophia, youngest dau. of Stanley Stokes, proctor, Doctors’ Commons, London ; d. 22 Aug 1882.

HALLETT, MILFORD, third son of James Alfred Hallett (qv) ; b. 12 Apr 1855 ; adm. 26 Jan 1869 ; left Christmas 1871 ; navy agent, firm Hallett & Co.  (firm bankrupt 1894) ; d. 15 Feb 1938.

HALLETT, THOMAS ROBERT, brother of John Hallett (qv) ; b. 9 Mar 1782 ; at school in 1794 ; in school list 1795 ; EI Maritime Service ; Midshipman, ships Good Hope 1795-6 and Osterley 1797-8 (Osterley taken by French, and retaken by English 1797) ; 5thMate, True Briton 1800-1 ; 3rd Mate, Huddart 1802 ; 2nd Mate, Lord Keith 1803-4, Lord Melville 1805-6 ; free mariner, India 1807. [Farrington records him as Robert Thomas Hallett]

HALLETT, WELLESLEY GORE, fourth son of James Alfred Hallett (qv) ; b. 11 Dec 1856 ; adm. 26 Jan 1869 ; Min.Can.1871 ; left 1871 ; d. 10 Apr 1877.

HALLETT, WILLIAM CHARLES, eldest son of James Alfred Hallett (qv) ; b. 11 Mar 1850 ; adm. 26 Jan 1865 ; left Christmas 1865 ; navy agent, firm Hallett & Co. (firm bankrupt 1894) ; m. 26 Oct 1880 Maud Sandys, youngest dau. of Sir Prescott Gardner Hewett, Bart., FRS FRCS, President, Royal College of Surgeons,  and Serjeant-Surgeon to HM Queen Victoria ; d. 29 Mar 1943.

HALLIDAY, EDWARD ; b.      ; adm. (aged 10) Jul 1732 ; left 1735.

HALLIDAY, WILBRAHAM SPENCER, see TOLLEMACHE, WILBRAHAM SPENCER.

HALLOWES, SAMUEL, son of Nathaniel Hallowes MP, Dethick, Derbs., supporter of Parliament during English Civil War, and Ellinor, dau. of Robert Sherwin, Nottingham, tanner ; b.        ; at school under Busby (J.Peile, Biog.Reg. of Christ’s Coll., I, 550) ; Christ’s Coll.Cambridge, adm.pens. 16 Feb 1652/3, aged 18, matr. 9 Jul 1653 ; of Norton, Derbs. ; High Sheriff, Derbyshire 1673-4 ; later lived at Nottingham ; m.1st, 27 May 1658 Elizabeth, dau. of Rev.Nathaniel Jackson, Vicar of Barwick in Elmet, Yorks. (ejected at Restoration) ; m.2nd, Ann, dau. of William Danvers, Swithland, Leics. ; d. 1715 (buried St.Mary’s, Nottingham).

HALPEN, NICHOLAS ; b.        ; adm. (aged 12) Jul 1740 ; left 1740.

HALSE, WILLIAM, son of John Halse, St.James’s Palace, Westminster, Page of the Presence and State Page to George IV, William IV and Queen Victoria, and Clarissa, dau. of William Fenwick, St.Luke, Chelsea ; b. 25 May 1817 ; adm. 27 Feb 1827 ; BB ; emigrated to New Zealand in 1841 ; resident agent for New Zealand Co., New Plymouth 1848 ; Commissioner of Crown Lands, New Zealand 1851-63 ; practised as a solicitor at New Plymouth, New Zealand ; m. 18 Sep 1856 Harriet, dau. of Richard Wood, Wellington, New Zealand ; d. at New Plymouth, New Zealand 13 Apr 1882.

HALSEY, LEWKENOR, son of Rev.Richard Halsey, Rector of East Dean, Sussex ; b.       ; adm.      ; KS 1672 ; failed to obtain election to either Univ. 1676 ; d. 28 Aug 1676, aged 19. Buried Cloisters, Westminster Abbey.

HALTON, —  ; b.      ; at school under Carey ; played cricket for TBB against QSS 1806 (match ledger formerly in the possession of Henry Partington (qv) ). [But was this George William Finch-Hatton, 10thEarl of Winchilsea and 5th Earl of Nottingham (qv), who would only have been G.W.Finch-Hatton at that date ?]

HAMDEN, CHARLES ; b.       ; adm.       ; KS        ; elected to Christ Church, Oxford 1620, but never adm.

HAMDEN, GEORGE, brother of John Hamden (qv) ; b.       ; adm.      ; QS       ; elected to Christ Church, Oxford 1598, matr. 24 Nov 1598, aged 18, Westminster Student to 1611 ; BA 1602 ; MA 1605 ; BD and DD 1617 ; ordained deacon 1608, priest 1608 (both London) ; Vicar of Homersfield, Suffolk ; Rector of Coulsdon, Surrey, from  6 Aug 1610 ; Chaplain to Earl of Nottingham (at Nov 1610) ; Rector of Chelsea, Middlesex, from 2 Dec 1615 ; Chaplain in Ordinary to Charles I (at 17 Jun 1628) ; m. (by 1618) Barbara —  ; d. 1632 (dead by 29 Aug 1632, when successor instituted at Coulsdon).

HAMDEN, JOHN, son of John Hamden, Croydon, Surrey ; bapt.Croydon, Surrey 11 Aug 1577 (as Hamdon) (IGI) ; adm.        ; QS       ; elected head to Christ Church, Oxford 1595, matr. 27 Dec 1595, aged 18, Westminster Student to 1614 ;  BA 1599 ; MA 1602 ; BD 1609 ; DD 1616 ; Proctor 1608 ; ordained deacon 15 Jun 1606, priest 21 Sep 1606 (both Gloucester) ; Rector of Chipstead, Surrey, from 18 Dec 1611 ; Rector of Little Bookham, Surrey 2 Nov 1613 – Jul 1631, resigned (a reference in the Winchester episcopal register to his institution in 1613 to the Rectory of Sutton, Surrey, appears to be an error) ; m. Elizabeth — ;  d. 26 Jan 1631/2.

HAMERSLEY, ARTHUR, third son of Hugh Hamersley, Pyrton Manor, Oxfordshire, and his first wife Philippa Mary Anne, dau. of John Shaw Philipps, Culham House, Oxfordshire ; b. 21 Mar 1841 ; adm. 6 Oct 1853 (G) ; left 1859 ; Exeter Coll.Oxford, matr. 9 Feb 1860 ; BA 1864 ; ordained deacon 18 Dec 1864 (Oxford) ; Rector of Nuffield, Oxfordshire, from May 1867 ; m. 14 Feb 1865 Jane, dau. of Rev.William Toovey Hopkins, Rector of Nuffield, Oxfordshire ; d. 21 Nov 1872.

HAMES, GEORGE HAYTER, son of John Hames, Croydon, Surrey, and his second wife Grace, dau. of George Hayter, St.Pancras Lane, London, banker, and niece of Right Rev.Thomas Hayter DD, Bishop of London ; b. 1791 ; adm.      ; evidently “G.Hannes 1805” and “G.H.Hannes 1808” (names inscribed up School) ; left 1809 ; Oriel Coll.Oxford, matr. 24 May 1809, aged 18 ; BA 1813 ; MA 1817 ; ordained deacon 25 Sep 1814 (Exeter) ; Rector of Chagford, Devon, from 13 Jan 1819 ; d. unm. 28 Nov 1820.

HAMES, WILLIAM, brother of George Hayter Hames (qv) ; b. 1792 ; adm.      ; left 1810 ; Emmanuel Coll.Cambridge, adm.pens. 6 Apr 1810, matr. Mich.1810 ; BA 1814 ; ordained deacon 22 Dec 1816 (Salisbury), priest 18 Sep 1818 ; Rector of Chagford, Devon 11 Jan 1821-52 ; Rector of Ham, Kent, from 10 Aug 1827 ; JP Devon ; m. 10 Aug 1824 Jemima Belinda, dau. of Rev.John David Perkins DD, Rector of St.Lawrence, Exeter, and Mamhead, and Vicar of Dawlish, Devon ; d. 5 Aug 1859.

HAMILTON, — ; b.      ; in under school list 1717.

HAMILTON, — ; b.       ; in school list 1729. [in sixth form : same individual as Hon.James Hamilton ?]

HAMILTON, — ; b.       ; in school lists 1740-6.

HAMILTON, ALEXANDER, eldest son of George Hamilton MP (I), Baron of the Exchequer (I), Hampton Hall, co.Dublin, and his cousin Elizabeth, dau. of George Hamilton, Tyrella, co.Down ; b.       ; adm. 11 Mar 1778 ; Trinity Coll.Dublin, adm.fellow commoner 12 Nov 1778, aged 14 ; BA 1783 ; LLD 1789 ; adm.Middle Temple 11 Oct 1780 ; called to Irish bar 1786 ; KC (I) 1796 ; Cursitor of the Exchequer (I) Aug 1791-1800 ; MP (I) Ratoath 1789-90, Carrickfergus 1790-7, Belfast 1798-1800 ; resigned seat and office rather than vote for Act of Union ; of Hampton Hall, co.Dublin ; High Sheriff, co.Dublin 1809 ; m. 13 Feb 1796 Catherine, dau. of Robert Burgh, Comptroller-General Inland Revenue (I) ; d. Mar 1809.

HAMILTON, ARCHIBALD, second son of Richard Hamilton, Coleraine, co.Antrim ; b.       ; at school under Freind two years (J.Venn, Biog.Hist. of Gonville and Caius Coll.Cambridge, ii, 11) ; Gonville and Caius Coll.Cambridge, adm.pens. 10 Mar 1718/9, aged 17, matr.1718/9 ; adm.Middle Temple 11 Oct 1718 ; called to Irish bar 1733 ; Recorder of Coleraine ; of Stranocum, co.Antrim, and of Carrigans, co.Donegal ; m. Jan 1751/2 Elizabeth, dau. of John Corry MP (I), Castle Coole, co.Fermanagh ; d. c. Dec 1753.

HAMILTON, ARCHIBALD, second son of Lord Archibald Hamilton MP, Capt. Royal Navy, Governor of Jamaica, and his third wife Lady Jane Hamilton, Mistress of the Robes to Augusta, Princess of Wales, sister of Hon.Charles Hamilton (qv) ; b. 11 Sep 1727 ; adm. Oct 1737 ; drowned while boating on the Thames 30 May 1744. Buried North Transept, Westminster Abbey.

HAMILTON, ARCHIBALD, see HAMILTON-ROWAN, ARCHIBALD.

HAMILTON, HON.CHARLES, youngest son of James Hamilton, 6th Earl of Abercorn (qv) ; bapt. 13 Nov 1704 ; adm. (aged 14) Jan 1718/9 ; Christ Church, Oxford, matr. 4 Nov 1720 ; BA 1723 ; Grand Tour (Italy) 1725-7, again in Italy 1732-5 ; MP (I) Strabane 1727-60 ; Clerk of Household to Frederick, Prince of Wales 22 Apr 1738- Feb 1747 ; MP Truro 1741-7 ; Commissioner for examining Public Accounts 26 May 1742 ; Receiver-Gen. and Collector of Revenues, Minorca Dec 1743-57 ; Deputy to Paymaster-General 1757-66 ; of Painshill, Surrey, where he created a notable landscaped garden between 1738 and 1773 ; FRS 26 Mar 1747 ; m.1st, —  ; m.2nd, 3 Dec 1763 Agnes, dau. of David Cockburn MD, Ayr ; m.3rd, 7 Aug 1774 Frances, dau. of Peter Calvert, St.George’s, Hanover Square ; d. 11 Sep 1786. ODNB.

HAMILTON, CHARLES POWELL, second son of Lord Anne Hamilton, and Anne Charlotte Maria, only surviving child of Charles Powell, Pen-y-Bank, Carmarthenshire ; b. 26 Dec 1747 ; at school under Markham (Hickey, Memoirs, ii, 384) ; entered Royal Navy ; Lieut., 12 Dec 1769 ; Master and Commander, 11 Jun 1778 ; Capt., 18 May 1779 ; commanded HMS Apollo towards end of American War, HMS Canada 1793 and subsequently HMS Prince ; Rear-Adm., 20 Feb 1797 ; Vice-Adm., 1 Jan 1801 ; Adm., 28 Apr 1808 ; m. May 1777 Lucretia, dau. of George Augustus Prosser, Hampstead, Middlesex [attorney ?] ; d. 12 Mar 1825.

HAMILTON, CHEYNE, son of James Hamilton, Jamaica ; b.       ; adm. (aged 12) Jul 1745 ; Clerk of Supreme Court, Jamaica ; Deputy Clerk of the Crown, Jamaica (at death) ; of Spanish Town, Jamaica ; perhaps m.Mary — (IGI) ; d. in Jamaica 1 Apr 1769 (will proved PCC 3 May 1771, as Cheney Hamilton).

HAMILTON, FREDERICK, brother of Archibald Hamilton (adm.1737, qv) ; b.      ; adm. (aged 11) Jan 1739/40 ; left 1746 ; Clare Hall, Cambridge, adm.pens. 29 May 1746, fellow commoner 20 Oct 1748 ; MA 1749 ; ordained deacon 24 May 1752 (London), priest 14 Jan 1753 (Peterborough) ; Vicar of Wellingborough, Northants., 20 Jan 1753-6 ; Archdeacon of Raphoe 17 Jan 1757 – Mar 1772 ; Rector of Taughboyne, co.Donegal, to Jun 1791 ; Chaplain in Ordinary to George III 12 Dec 1760 – c.1765 ; Rector of Stanton, Suffolk, from 8 Mar 1790 ; m. St.Mary, Dublin (IGI), 11 Jun 1757 Rachael Daniel [probably dau. of Rev.Thomas Daniell (sic), Londonderry, Ireland] ; d. 19 Feb 1811.

HAMILTON, GEORGE BURTON, third son of Col.Sir Ralph Hamilton, Kt., 71st Foot, Groom of the Bedchamber to Frederick, Duke of Gloucester, and — Green, James Street, London ; b. 14 Oct 1804 ; adm. 22 May 1815 ; Min.Can.1818 ; Corpus Christi Coll.Oxford, matr. 7 Jun 1823, exhibitioner 1823-7 ; BA 1827 ; MA 1830 ; ordained deacon 1 Jun 1828, priest  20 Dec 1829 (both London) ; Chaplain, Chelmsford Gaol, Essex 1842-77 ; m. 1832 Sarah Catherine, youngest dau. of John T. Deal, Shaftesbury, Dorset, brewer ; d. 6 Jan 1886.

HAMILTON, GUSTAVUS, 2ND VISCOUNT BOYNE (I), only surviving son of Hon.Frederick Hamilton MP (I), Stackallan, co.Meath, Ireland, and Sophia, dau. of James Hamilton, Tollymore, co.Down, and sister of James Hamilton, 1st Earl of Clanbrassil (I) PC (I) MP ; bapt.St.Maurice’s, Winchester, Hants., 26 Nov 1709 (IGI) ; adm. (aged 10) Jun 1719 ; succ.grandfather as 2nd Viscount Boyne (I) 16 Sep 1723 ; in under school list 1724 ; Grand Tour (Italy) 1730-1 ; MP Newport (IOW) 17 Feb 1736-41 ; Privy Councillor (I) 9 Aug 1736 ; a Commissioner of the Revenue, Ireland, from Jun 1737 ; member, Society of Dilettanti 1736 ;  d. unm. 18 Apr 1746.

HAMILTON, JAMES, 6TH EARL OF ABERCORN (S), son of Col.James Hamilton, Groom of the Bedchamber to Charles II, and Elizabeth, sister of Francis Culpepper (qv) ; b.        ; at school under Busby ; his son, Hon.Charles Hamilton (qv), informed Horace Walpole in a letter dated 31 Jan 1784 that Charles II made Hamilton a Groom of the Bedchamber “though but 17 years old, just come from Westminster School” on the death of his father, who had been mortally wounded at the battle of Southwold Bay on 28 May 1673, but Hamilton was not 17 until c.1678 and the actual dates of Hamilton’s tenure of this post were 18 Apr 1680 – 6 Feb 1685 ; commanded a regt. of horse under James II, but sided with William III ; went to Ireland Feb 1688/9 to take part in defence of Londonderry ; MP (I) Co.Tyrone 1692-3, 1695-9 ; succ. cousin as 6th Earl of Abercorn (S) Jun 1701 [check]  ; inherited family estates in Co.Tyrone and Co.Donegal ; created Viscount Strabane (I) 2 Sep 1703 ; Privy Councillor (I) (by 1701?) ; lic. to m. 24 Jan 1683/4 Elizabeth, only child of Sir Robert Reading, Bart. (qv) ; d. 28 Nov 1734, aged 73. Buried in Duke of Ormonde’s vault, Westminster Abbey. ODNB.

HAMILTON, HON.JAMES, brother of Gustavus Hamilton, 2nd Viscount Boyne (I) (qv) ; b.        ; adm. (aged 7) Jan 1721/2 ;  in school list 1729 ; entered Royal Navy ; Lieut., 3 Sep 1741 ; d. on board ship in the Mediterranean Nov 1744.

HAMILTON, JAMES, son of Samuel Hamilton, Brabant ; b.     ; adm.     ; Min.Can. (aged 14) 1760.

HAMILTON, JOHN, second son of Hon.George Hamilton MP, and Bridget, dau. of Col.William Coward, Wells, Somerset, Virginia merchant ; nephew of Hon.Charles Hamilton (qv) ; b.      ; adm. (aged 15) Jan 1741/2 ; left 1743 ; Univ.Coll.Oxford, matr. 17 Mar 1743/4 ; BA 1747 ; MA 1751 ; ordained deacon 23 Oct 1748, priest 10 Jun 1750 (both Bath & Wells) ; Prebendary of Wells 13 Jun 1750 – Jan 1754 ; Archdeacon of Raphoe from 26 Feb 1754 ; “Ireland was a stage on which his learning and principles, his active zeal, his polite manners, and great abilities, were much wanted “ (W.Jones, The Works of the Right Reverend George Horne, 1818, i, 44) ; d.unm. 12 Aug 1756.

HAMILTON, JOHN LEVESON, eldest son of Vice-Adm.Thomas Hamilton, Royal Navy, Much Hadham, Herts., and Sally, dau. of John Keeble, Organist, St.George’s, Hanover Square, London ; b. 30 Jun 1788 ; adm. 16 Jan 1798 (Clapham) ; in school list 1801 ; KS (Capt.) 1803 ; elected to Trinity Coll.Cambridge 1807, but went to Christ Church, Oxford, matr. 13 May 1807 ; 1st cl. Maths 1810 ; BA 1811 ; adm.Lincoln’s Inn 7 Nov 1810 ; ordained deacon 22 Dec 1811, priest 21 Jun 1812 (both Norwich) ; Curate, St.Peter, Wallingford, Berks., 1818 ; Rector of Ellesborough, Bucks., from 14 May 1823 ; m. 14 Aug 1819 Susan, eldest dau. of Rev. Richard Woodward DD, Prebendary of Cloyne ; d. 5 Apr 1825.

HAMILTON, JOHN RANDOLPH, son of Capt.John Randolph Hamilton, Chester, South Carolina, Confederate States Navy , and Mary Louisa, dau. of William Smith Whaley, Charleston, South Carolina ; b. 21 Mar 1860 ; adm. 21 Jan 1875 (G) ; left Dec 1877 ; entered tobacco trade ; with Rover Company Ltd, Coventry, from 1886 ; living at Little Berkhampsted, Herts., in 1901 (1901 Census) ; m. at NewYork, USA, 31 Dec 1883 Ethel Mary, dau. of John Herriot, Tweed Hill, Berwickshire, tea and cotton merchant.

HAMILTON, LEVESON RUSSELL, eldest son of John Leveson Hamilton (qv) ; b. 12 Jul 1822 ; adm. 4 Jun 1834 ; Christ Church, Oxford, matr. 26 May 1841 ; BA 1845 ; MA 1850 ; ordained deacon 1846, priest 1847 (both Bath & Wells) ; Curate, Lovington, Somerset ; author, The Lives of the Sovereigns of England, 1868, and other works ; m.1st, 1849, Marianne, second dau. of Rev.Richard John Meade, Vicar of Castle Cary, Somerset, and Canon Residentiary of Wells ; m. 2nd, 17 Jul 1866 Wilhelmina, youngest dau. of William Thomas Dilkes (qv) ; d. 14 Oct 1869.

[HAMILTON, HON.WILLIAM, brother of James Hamilton, 6th Earl of Abercorn (S) ; b.c.1668 ; adm. Middle Temple [check] ; of Chilston Park, Kent ; DL JP Kent ; m. (licence dated 24 Nov 1691) his cousin Margaret, dau. of Sir Thomas Colepeper, Hollingbourne, Kent ; buried Lenham, Kent 20 Jul 1737. Whitmore “see new slip”, no evidence cited]

HAMILTON, SIR WILLIAM, brother of Archibald Hamilton (adm.1737, qv) ; b. 13 Dec 1730 ; adm. Jan 1739/40 ; left 1746 ; Page of Honour to Prince of Wales 31 Mar 1739 – Jun 1742 ; Ensign, 3rd Foot Guards 27 Jan 1747 ; Lieut. and Capt., 8 Jun 1753 ; retd. 1757 ; Equerry to George III 1760 – 7 Nov 1782 ; MP Midhurst Mar 1761 – Aug 1764 ; Envoy Extraordinary at Naples 1764-7, Minister Plenipotentiary there 1767- Apr 1800 ; KB 15 Jan 1772 ; Privy Councillor 8 Jun 1791 ;  sold a collection of Greek vases and antiquities to British Museum 1772, and another collection to Thomas Hope of Deepdene 1801 ; purchased the Warwick Vase from Gavin Hamilton and the Portland Vase from James Byres ; entertained Nelson at Naples after the Battle of the Nile 1798 ; accompanied the Neapolitan Court to Palermo Dec 1798 ; FRS 6 Nov 1766, Copley Medal 1770 ; FSA 6 Feb 1772 ; Society of Dilettanti 1777 ; FRS (Ed) 24 Jan 1785 ; DCL Oxford 30 Jul 1802 ; Trustee, British Museum, from 1783 ; author, Campi Phlegraei, 1776 ; m.1st, 25 Jan 1758 Catherine, eldest dau. of Hugh Barlow MP, Lawrenny Hall, Pembrokeshire ; m.2nd, 6 Sep 1791 Emma Hart (DNB), dau. of Henry Lyon, Neston, Cheshire, blacksmith ; d. 6 Apr 1803. ODNB.

HAMILTON, WILLIAM AUGUSTUS, brother of John Leveson Hamilton (qv) ; b. 9 Feb 1790 (IGI) ; adm. Jan 1798 ; in school lists 1801, May 1803, Oct 1803 ; partner, Hamilton, Crowder & Co, Liverpool ; m. 31 Aug 1824 Emma, third dau. of J. Clegg, Liverpool ; d. at Liverpool 28 Nov 1825.

HAMILTON-ROWAN, ARCHIBALD, only son of Gawen Hamilton, Killyleagh Castle, co.Down, and Jane, widow of Tichborne Aston MP (I), Beaulieu, near Drogheda, co.Louth, and only dau. of William Rowan, Rathbone Place, London, barrister ; b. 12 May 1751 ; in school lists 1764, 1765, 1767 ; assumed additional surname of Rowan on grandfather’s death in 1767 ; Queens’ Coll.Cambridge, adm.pens. 22 Jun 1768, matr. Mich.1768, scholar 1769 ; expelled from Queens’ for loose living, and migr. to Jesus Coll. 22 May 1770, but did not graduate ; one of the four “mohawks” who scandalised London society in 1771-4 (Hickey, Memoirs, i, 273-8, 309-10) ; went to live in Ireland 1784 ; a delegate for Co.Down to Volunteer Convention at Dublin ; joined Society of United Irishmen 1791, becoming Secretary of their Dublin Committee ; arrested on charge of distributing a seditious newspaper and found guilty in Court of Kings Bench, Dublin, Jan 1794 ; sentenced to fine of £500, two years’ imprisonment and to find security for good behaviour for seven years ; escaped to France from the Dublin Newgate prison, and after living in Paris for more than a year went to the USA, where he became a calico printer ; returned to Europe 1800, and to England 1803 ; on reversal of his outlawry returned to Killyleagh ; m. 6 Oct 1781 Sarah Anne, dau. of William Dawson, Lisanisk, near Carrickmacross, co.Monaghan ; d. 1 Nov 1834. ODNB.

HAMLYN, JAMES, see HAMLYN-WILLIAMS, SIR JAMES, BART.

HAMLYN, L.   ; b.     ; in school lists 1801 and May 1803 ; left 1803. [perhaps Hamlyn, C., and therefore Charles Hamlyn-Williams, second son of Sir James Hamlyn-Williams, Bart. (qv) ; b.  1792 ; entered Royal Navy Aug 1803 ; Lieut., 24 Apr 1811 ; Cdr., 27 Aug 1814 ; Capt., 4 Jul 1832 ; Rear-Adm. (on retired list) 19 May 1856 ; High Sheriff, Carmarthenshire 1852 ; m. 15 Aug 1833 Harriet, youngest dau. of Sir Nelson Rycroft, Bart. ; d. 26 Jan 1858].

HAMLYN-WILLIAMS, SIR JAMES, BART., eldest son of Sir James Hamlyn (formerly Hammett), Bart., MP, and Arabella, dau. of Thomas Williams, Edwinsford, Carmarthenshire ; b. 25 Oct 1765 ; adm. 21 Apr 1773 (as James Hamlyn) ; in school lists 1781 ; had a “mill” with Frederick Reynolds (qv), with whom he had quarrelled while playing football in the Cloisters (Life and Times of Frederick Reynolds, 1826, i, 137) ; Emmanuel Coll.Cambridge, adm.fellow commoner 11 Nov 1782, matr. Mich.1785, but did not graduate ; assumed additional surname of Williams 6 Mar 1798 on succeeding to mother’s estates ; MP Carmarthenshire 1802-6 ; succ.father as 2nd baronet 28 May 1811 ; High Sheriff, Carmarthenshire 1811-2 ; m. 22 Jul 1789 Diana Anne, second dau. of Abraham Whittaker, Lyston House, Herefordshire, and Stratford, Essex, merchant ; d. 3 Dec 1829, aged 64.

HAMLYN-WILLIAMS, ORLANDO, youngest son of Sir James Hamlyn-Williams, Bart. (qv) ; b.         ; adm. 6 Apr 1812 ; left 14 May 1819 ; Balliol Coll.Oxford, matr. 20 Mar 1820 ; BA 1824 ; MA 1827 ; ordained deacon 29 Oct 1826 (Exeter) ; Rector of Clovelly, Devon, from 21 Nov 1826 ; m. 9 Mar 1831 Mary Anne Elizabeth, dau. of Rev.Charles Pyne Coffin, Rector of East Down, Devon ; d. 30 Nov 1831, aged 30.

HAMMANS, ARTHUR WILLIAM, son of James Hammans, Chaldwick Farm, Abingdon, Berks., and Jane, second dau. of William Spencer, De La Bere Farm, Parrybourn, Berks. ; stepson of Thomas Howard Fellows, Judge of the Supreme Court, Victoria, Australia, previously member Legislative Council, Victoria ; b. (Marcham, Berks.) 31 Aug 1846 ; adm. 28 Sep 1860 (R) ; left Aug 1864 ; Ensign, 32nd Foot  18 Dec 1866 ; Lieut., 25 Sep 1869 ; Capt., 32nd (Duke of Cornwall’s) Light Infantry 29 Jun 1881 ; Maj., 14 Dec 1887 ; retd. 31 Aug 1894 ; served Burma 1892-3 ; re-employed as Recruiting Officer, Bletchley District, in First World War ; m. 23 Oct 1889 Mary Josephine, eldest dau. of John Wagner, Stormont, St.Kilda, Melbourne, Australia, coach line proprietor ; d. 13 Jun 1916, from effects of overwork as Recruiting Officer.

HAMMICK, ST.VINCENT LAWRENCE ALMERIC, son of James Thomas Hammick (formerly Hammack), Lincoln’s Inn, barrister, Secretary, Registrar General’s Office, and Sybella Eliza, dau. of James Soame Jenyns ; b. 24 Nov 1858 ; at University College School 1866-9 ; adm. 1 Feb 1869 (as St.Vincent Almrick Hammick) ; left Christmas 1872 ; latterly of Butte Silver, Bow County, Montana, USA, farmer ; d. at Butte, Montana, USA 2 Jan 1900.

HAMMILL, DENZIL, eldest son of John Hammill, Metropolitan Police Magistrate, Sussex Gardens, Paddington, Middlesex, and Ann Elizabeth, youngest dau. of Richard Preston, Liverpool ; b. 11 Jul 1840 ; adm. Jun 1854 (G) ; Ensign, 75th Foot 16 Jan 1858 ; Lieut., 18 Oct 1859 ; Capt., 18 Jan 1867 ; Maj., 21 Jan 1875 ; Lieut.-Col., Gordon Highlanders 18 Dec 1880 ; Col. in the Army 21 May 1884 ; retd. with hon.rank Maj-Gen., 10 Oct 1885 ; served Egypt 1882-4, Sudan expedition 1884 and Nile expedition 1884-5 ; CB 18 Nov 1882 ; Order of Medjidie, 3rd class ; Vice-Consul, Bonny, West Africa ; m. 15 Sep 1870 Maud Mary Florence, second dau. of Sir Henry Samuel Piers, Bart. ; d. at Bonny 2 Dec 1891.

HAMMOND, —  ; b.       ; in under school lists 1715-8. [one of these perhaps Luke Fielder Hammond, a younger brother of Henry Hammond (KS 1717, qv), b. 18 Oct 1703, bapt.St.Dunstan in the East 21 Oct 1703 (IGI), Christ Church, Oxford, matr. 14 Nov 1720, Canoneer Student 20 Dec 1720 – void 7 Jul 1746, expiry year of grace as V.Floore ; BA 1724 ; MA 1727 ; ordained deacon 24 May 1730, priest 9 Jun 1734 (both Oxford) (as Feilder Hammond) ; Vicar of Floore, Northants 1745 – d. Apr 1776 (will proved PCC 9 May 1776)]

HAMMOND, —  ; b.       ; in under school lists 1715-8.

HAMMOND, AMBROSE, only son of Francis Hammond, Hawstead, Suffolk, and Honor, eldest dau. of Ambrose Asty, Northaw, Middlesex ; bapt.St.Lawrence Jewry, London 31 May 1709 ; adm. (aged 11) Oct 1720 ; in under school list 1724 ; a drysalter in Thames Street, London ; of Potters Bar, Middlesex ; m. Sarah, dau. of Henry Wright, Thornton, Yorks. ; d. 1 Jul 1769.

HAMMOND, HENRY ; b.       ; adm.      ; QS      ; elected to Trinity Coll.Cambridge 1595, adm.scholar 1596 ; BA 1599/1600 ; MA 1603 ; BD 1610 ; ordained ; Vicar of Rainham, Essex 29 Oct 1605, res by 17 Oct 1608 ; Rector of St.John Zachary, London 17 Nov 1608, res. 1623 ; Vicar of Mucking, Essex 6 Dec 1610, res by 5 Mar 1615/6 ; Rector of St.Peter le Poer, London, 16 Nov 1615 – res.1623. [will 1659 ?]

HAMMOND, HENRY, son of Thomas Hammond, St.Dunstan’s in the East, London, and Elizabeth — ; bapt.St.Dunstan in the East, London 3 Oct 1701 ; in under school list 1715 ; KS (aged 14) 1717 ; Christ Church, Oxford, matr. 16 Nov 1719, Canoneer Student 23 Dec 1719 – void by marriage 3 Jul 1738 ; BA 1723 ; MA 1726 ; ordained deacon 20 May 1725 (Oxford) ; m.     ; living 1738. [maybe Rev.Henry Hammond, dead by 1769, owner of an estate at Perdiswell, Claines, Worcs., inherited by him from Thomas Hammond, owner of same estate in 1736]

HAMMOND, HENRY SEPTIMUS, youngest son of Charles Hammond, Denmark Hill, Camberwell, Surrey, stockbroker, and Maria — (born Woolwich, 1881 Census, married by 1851) ; b. 21 Apr 1865 ; adm. 27 Sep 1877 (R) ; left Dec 1883 ; Trinity Hall, Cambridge, matr.Mich.1884 ; RMC Sandhurst ; 2ndLieut., Dorsetshire Regt., 14 Sep 1887 ; Lieut., 18 Sep 1889 ; Capt., 28 Mar 1894 ; Maj., 19 Feb 1906 ; retd. 5 Jun 1907 ; re-employed 19 Sep 1914 ; served Tirah expedition 1897-8, Waziristan expedition 1901-2, Somaliland 1903-4 ; d. 20 Dec 1938.

HAMMOND, JAMES, brother of Thomas Hammond (at school under Freind, qv) ; b. 22 May 1710 ; adm. Jun 1722 ; in under school list 1724 ; adm.Middle Temple 14 Jan 1723/4 ; attached to Earl of Chesterfield’s mission to The Hague c.1728 – c.1732 ; Equerry to Frederick, Prince of Wales, from 22 Apr 1738 ; MP Truro from 1741 ;  author, Love Elegies, 1743 ; d. unm. 7 Jun 1742. ODNB.

HAMMOND, JOHN, son of Rev.Timothy Hammond, Rector of Pontesbury, Shropshire (first portion), and Vicar of Holy Cross, Shrewsbury ; b.     ; adm.      ; at school by Jun 1654, aged 13 (WAM 43112) ; KS      ; gave evidence before the Governors in the Busby-Bagshaw dispute 1657 ; elected head to Christ Church, Oxford 1658, matr. Dec 1658, Westminster Student  ; BA 22 Mar 1661/2 ; MA 1664 ; BD 1679 ; DD 1680 ; ordained deacon 22 Dec 1666 (Oxford), priest 18 Jan 1667/8 (Oxford, lit.dim. from Canterbury) ; Prebendary of Lincoln  from 2 Sep 1671 ; Archdeacon of Huntingdon 23 Sep 1673 – 14 May 1701 ; Canon of Christ Church, Oxford, from 4 Jul 1679 ; Rector of Chalfont St.Giles, Bucks., from 14 May 1701 ; a benefactor to Christ Church ; m. Jul 1681 Eleanor, younger dau. of Arthur Jones, Chastleton, Oxfordshire ; d. 25 May 1723. Buried Christ Church Cathedral.

HAMMOND, JOHN ; b.       ;  adm. (aged 10) May 1738 ; left 1743.

HAMMOND, THOMAS, of Wiltshire ; b.      ; adm.      ; QS        ; elected to Christ Church, Oxford 1583, matr. 12 Jun 1584, aged 18, Westminster Student to c.1598 ; BA 1587 ; MA 1590 (incorp.Cambridge 1597) ; ordained ; Vicar of Dilwyn, Herefordshire, from 16 Apr 1597 ; d. 2 Jun 1617 (will proved PCC 22 Aug 1617, surname spelled Hamond).

HAMMOND, THOMAS, elder son of Anthony Hammond MP, Somersham Place, Huntingdonshire, a Commissioner of the Navy, and Jane, sister of Gould Clarges (qv) ; b.      ; at school under Freind four years (R.F.Scott, ed., Admissions to St.John’sColl.Cambridge, pt iii, 11) ; in under school list 1715 ; St.John’s Coll.Cambridge, adm.fellow commoner 24 Jun 1717, aged 16, matr. 1717 ; of Somersham Place, Hunts. ; m. 1742 Elizabeth Adams, Somersham, Huntingdonshire ; d. 1748 [check : will dated 25 December 1746, proved PCC 20 May 1748, no wife mentioned in it].

HAMMOND, THOMAS ; b.       ; at school under Markham (Bentham, Works, x, 30) ; a school contemporary of Jeremy Bentham (qv), who describes him as a “dull boy” and says that he afterwards “became a member of the College of Cursitors” ; one of the Cursitors for Somerset, Lincolnshire and city of Lincoln, from 17 Jun 1769, having previously been a clerk in the Cursitors’ Office ; Assistant, Corporation of Cursitors (London Calendar 1793) ; living in 1798 at Francis Street, Bedford Square, London ; m.          ; d. by Jul 1799 (will proved PCC 9 Jul 1799, of Cursitors’ Office).

HAMMOND, WILLIAM ; b.     ; adm. 12 Jun 1781 ; left 1783.

HAMOND, D. F.  ; b.       ; name up School 1807.

HAMOND, HENRY CARR WILLIAM, elder son of Rev.Henry Hamond, Rector of Widford, Herts., and Sophia, fourth dau. of Rev.Charles Lucas Edridge DD, Rector of Shipdam, Norfolk, and Minister of Oxford Chapel, Vere Street, London ; b. 18 Jun 1834 ; adm. 29 Jan 1847 (G) ; had his nose broken with “a fair-showing book” in a scrimmage up Grant’s (Markham, Recollections of a Town Boy, 75) ; Ensign, 46th Foot 20 Jan 1854 ; Lieut., 8 Dec 1854 ; Capt., 6 Jun 1859 ; served Crimean War ; d. 4 Aug 1870.

HAMPDEN, see also HAMDEN.

HAMPDEN, GEORGE ROBERT, 5TH EARL OF BUCKINGHAMSHIRE, eldest son of Hon.George Vere Hobart, Governor of Grenada [see under Hobart, George (qv)], and his first wife Jane, dau. of Horace Cataneo, Leeds, Yorks., merchant ; b. 1 May 1789 ; in school lists May and Oct 1803 ; left 1807 ; Christ Church, Oxford, matr. 26 Oct 1809 ; adm.Lincoln’s Inn 19 Jan 1810 ; MP Mitchell 1812 – Feb 1813 ; succ.uncle as 5th Earl of Buckinghamshire 4 Feb 1816 ; assumed surname of Hampden in lieu of Hobart 5 Oct 1824, on inheriting the Buckinghamshire estates of John Hampden-Trevor, 3rd Viscount Hampden (qv), under the terms of the will of their common relative John Hampden (d.1754) ; m. 3 May 1819 Anne Glover, Keppel Street, London, illegitimate dau. of Sir Arthur Pigott, Kt., MP, Attorney-General ; d. 1 Feb 1849.

HAMPDEN, THOMAS, 2ND VISCOUNT HAMPDEN, eldest son of Robert Hampden-Trevor, 1stViscount Hampden FRS FSA, politician and diplomat, and Constantia, dau. of Pieter Antoni de Huybert, Heer van Kruiningen, Netherlands ; b. 11 Sep 1746 ; at school under Markham (Steward, Anniversary Dinner 1770, as “Hon.Mr.Hampden” ; cf. also obituary notice, GM Sep 1824, 274, confirmed by his presence at the Westminster School anniversary dinner in 1817, as reported in the Morning Post, 12 May 1817) ; Christ Church, Oxford, matr. 23 Apr 1763 (as Thomas Trevor) ; DCL 1773 ; travelling in Italy 1770-2, 1785, 1788 ; assumed surname of Hampden ; MP Lewes 1768-74 ; succ.father as 2nd Viscount Trevor 22 Aug 1783 ; GCH 1 Apr 1816 ; inherited father’s estates in Bedfordshire and Buckinghamshire, and the Sussex estates of the Trevors of Glynde ; DL Bedfordshire 1803 ; m.1st, 13 Jun 1768 Catherine, dau. of Gen.David Graeme MP, Braco, Perthshire, Secretary to Queen Charlotte and Comptroller, Queen Charlotte’s Household ; m.2nd, 11 Jun 1805 Jane Maria, dau. of George Brown, Ellistoun, Roxburghshire, Commissioner for Excise (S) ; d. 20 Aug 1824.

HAMPDEN-TREVOR, JOHN, 3RD VISCOUNT HAMPDEN, brother of Thomas Hampden, 2ndViscount Hampden (qv) ; b. 24 Feb 1748/9 ; in school list 1764 ; Christ Church, Oxford, matr.28 Jan 1767, Canoneer Student 23 Jun 1767 – void by marriage 9 Aug 1773 ; BA 1770 ; MA 1773 ; Grand Tour (Italy) 1773, with John Eckersall (qv)  ; Minister Plenipotentiary to Elector Palatine at Munich 8 Apr 1780-3 ; Minister to Sardinian Court at Turin 1783-9, Minister Plenipotentiary 16 Jun 1789-98 ; Privy Councillor 27 Sep 1797 ; succ.brother as 3rd Viscount Hampden 20 Aug 1824 ; edited his father’s Poemata Hampdeniana, 1792 ; DL Sussex 1778, Bedfordshire 1803 ; member, Society of Dilettanti 1800 ; m. 9 Aug 1773 Harriot, only child of Rev.Daniel Burton DD, Canon of Christ Church, Oxford, and Rector of Slapton, Bucks. ; d. 9 Sep 1824. ODNB.

[HAMPDEN-TREVOR, ROBERT, 1ST VISCOUNT HAMPDEN, eldest son of Thomas Trevor, 1stBaron Trevor PC, Lord Chief Justice of the Common Pleas, subsequently Lord Privy Seal and Lord President of the Council, and his second wife Anne, widow of Sir Robert Bernard, Bart., and dau. of Col.Robert Weldon ; b. 17 Feb 1705/6 ; identified by Russell Barker and Stenning as Steward, Anniversary Dinner 1770, but the Steward for 1770 was  “Hon. Mr.Hampden”, i.e. Thomas Hampden, 2ndViscount Hampden (qv) ; Queen’s Coll.Oxford, matr. 21 Feb 1722/3 ; BA 1725 ; Fellow, All Souls Coll. 20 Nov 1725 ; a clerk, Secretary of State’s Office Nov 1729 – c.1733 ; Secretary to Legation, The Hague 1734-9, Envoy Extraordinary there 1739, Minister Plenipotentiary 24 Jun 1741 – Nov 1746 ; contested Oxford University at by-election Feb 1736/7 ; a Commissioner of the Revenue (I) 1750 ; assumed additional surname of Hampden 22 Feb 1754, on inheriting estates of his distant kinsman John Hampden, Great Hampden, Buckinghamshire ; joint Postmaster-General 2 Jun 1759 – 19 Jul 1765 ; succ. half-brother as 4th Baron Trevor 27 Sep 1764 ; created Viscount  Hampden 8 Jun 1776 ; FRS 13 Dec 1764 ; FSA 29 Feb 1776 ; a good scholar and a collector of drawings and prints ; author Poemata Hampdeniana, published posthumously 1792 ; m. 6 Feb 1743 Constantia, dau. of Pieter Antoni de Huybert, Heer van Kruiningen, Netherlands ; d. 22 Aug 1783. ODNB.]

HANBURY, NATHANIEL, son of Philip Hanbury, London ; b.       ; adm.      ; KS 1673 ; elected head to Trinity Coll.Cambridge 1677, adm.pens. 20 Jun 1677, aged 18, scholar 1678, matr.1680 ; BA 1680/1 ; MA 1684 ; BD 1703 ; Fellow, Trinity Coll., from 1683, Junior Dean 1706-8, Senior Dean 1712-4 ; signed the petition against Bentley 1709 ; ordained deacon 27 Feb 1680/1, priest 30 May 1686 (both Lincoln) ;  Curate, St.Michael’s, Cambridge (occurs 1692) ; author Horologia Scioterica, 1683, and Supplementum analyticum ad Aequationes Cartesianos, 1691 ; buried unm. Trinity Coll.Chapel 10 Nov 1715.

HANBURY, THOMAS, eldest son of John Hanbury, Kelmarsh, Northants, and Mary, second dau. of Thomas Waller, Serjeant at Law ; b. 17 May 1669 ; at school under Busby (J.E.B.Mayor, ed, Admissions to St.John’s Coll.Camb., pt ii, 105) ; St.John’s Coll.Cambridge, adm.pens. 24 Feb 1685/6, aged 17, matr.1686 ; adm.Middle Temple 6 Feb 1685/6, called to bar 26 May 1693 ; Serjeant-at-Law 1718 ; m. Elizabeth, dau. of George Clerke, Watford, Northants ; d. 30 Jan 1721/2.

HANCHETT, — ; b.       ; adm.1788 ; in school lists Dec 1788,1795,1797.

HANCOCK, GEORGE ; b.       ; adm.      ; QS       ; a contributor to the collection of congratulatory verses to Queen Elizabeth written by the QSS in 1597 (British Museum, Royal MSS) ; St.John’s Coll.Cambridge, sizar, matr.1598 ; BA 1601/2 ; ordained deacon 22 Sep 1605, priest 22 Dec 1605, aged 25 (both Norwich) ; Vicar of Shotesham, Norfolk (occurs 1615, 1628) ; already a schoolmaster there in 1604 ; m.

HANCOCK, WILLIAM ; b.      ; adm.      ; QS       ; a contributor to the collection of verses written by the QSS on the death of Lady Elizabeth Cecil in 1597 (Salisbury MSS, Hatfield House) ; St.John’s Coll.Cambridge, pensioner, matr.c.1597 ; BA 1602/3 ; MA 1606 (incorp.Oxford 14 Jul 1607) ; Fellow of Pembroke Hall, Cambridge 25 May 1605 (still 1608) ; ordained deacon 18 Dec 1608 (Ely), priest 24 Sep 1609 (Peterborough).

HANCOCKE, HUMPHREY ; b.       ; adm.       ; GS 1540 ; KS 1540-4 (Chapter Muniments).

HANCOCKE, MORER, son of Edward Hancocke, St.Bride’s, London, and Mary, dau. of Thomas Morer (qv) ; bapt.St.Bride’s, Fleet Street, London 23 Jul 1710 (IGI) ; adm. (aged 8) Apr 1719 ; in under school list 1725 ; Balliol Coll.Oxford, matr. 19 Oct 1727 ; of Twining, Gloucs. ; d. 1733 (will proved PCC 12 Apr 1733).

HANCOCKE, PETER, brother of Morer Hancocke (qv) ; b.      ; adm. (aged 10) Oct 1727 ; left 1733 ; Balliol Coll.Oxford, matr.1 Apr 1734 ; of Twining, Gloucs. ; m. 10 Feb 1741 [or 1741/2 ?] Anne Hunt  (IGI) ; d. c. May 1776.

HANDGEORGE WATSON, son of Rev.Watson Hand, Church of England clergyman, and Elizabeth Vaughan, illegitimate dau. of John Vaughan, 2nd  Viscount Lisburne (I), and subsequently wife of Thomas Newton (adm.1717) ; bapt.Mavesyn Ridgware, Staffs., 29 Mar 1749 (IGI)) ; in school lists 1764, 1765, 1767 (as Hand, Christian name not stated) ; Christ Church, Oxford, matr. 6 Mar 1767, Canoneer Student 1 Jul 1771 – void 11 Dec 1775 (expiry year of grace as V.St.Giles, Cripplegate) ; BA 1771 ; MA 1775 ; ordained deacon 6 Jun 1773, priest 19 Dec 1773 (both Oxford) ; Chaplain to his stepfather Thomas Newton (qv) as Bishop of Bristol, 22 May 1779 ; Vicar of St.Giles, Cripplegate, from 7 Dec 1774 ; Prebendary of London from 3 Mar 1775 ; Rector of St.Botolph, Bishopsgate, from 30 Jul 1779 ; Prebendary of Salisbury from 17 Jan 1775 ; Archdeacon of Dorset 11 Nov 1780 – res Apr 1801 ; m. 1777 Ann Martha, dau. of Joseph Dickenson, Golden Lane, London, brewer ; d. 3 Feb 1802. [The identification is circumstantial, for no Christian name is assigned to him in school lists, but is plausible, as his stepfather Thomas Newton was a distinguished OW and was beneficed in London while Hand was of school age].

HAND, —  (in school list 1795, sixth form list 1796), see NEWTON, NEWTON DICKENSON HAND.

HANDASYDE, ROGER, eldest son of Maj.-Gen.Thomas Handasyde, Lieut.-Gov.Jamaica, and his first wife ; b.      ; at school under Busby and Knipe (Steward, Anniversary Dinner 1759) ; Ensign, Col.John Gibson’s Foot (afterwards 28th Foot) 24 Dec 1696 ; Capt., 1703 ; Lieut.-Col., 16th Foot 1709 ; Col., 22ndFoot 3 Apr 1712 – Jul 1730, 16th Foot from 9 Jul 1730 ; Brig.-Gen., 28 Nov 1735 ; Maj.-Gen., 2 Jul 1739 ; Lieut.-Gen., 29 Mar 1743 ; Gen., 6 Mar 1761 ; Lieut.-Governor, Fort Philip, Minorca Jun 1733, reappointed May 1738 (still 1742) ; Commander-in-Chief, Scotland Oct – Dec 1745 ; MP Huntingdon 1722-41, Scarborough 1747-54 ; of Gaines Hall, Great Stoughton, Hunts. ; lic.to m. 21 Jan 1709/10 Elizabeth, dau. of Sir John Thornycroft, Bart., Milcombe, Oxfordshire ; d. 4 Jan 1763, aged 78.

HANDLY, THOMAS ; b.       ; adm. (aged 10) Jul 1742 ; left 1745.

HANE, JAMES ; b.      ; adm.      ; KS        ; elected to Trinity Coll.Cambridge 1665, adm.pens. 29 Jun 1665, scholar 1666, matr.1668 ; BA 1668/9 ; ordained deacon 31 Jan 1670/1, priest 1 Feb 1670/1 (both Lincoln).

HANFORD, HENRY ; b.        ; adm. (aged 12) Apr 1721 ; left 1722.

HANMER, —  ; b.        ; in school list 1754.

HANMER, JOHN, son of William Hanmer, Inner Temple, London, barrister, and Euphemia Maria, only dau. of John Forbes, Bodnod Hall, Denbighshire ; b. 22 Jul 1827 ; adm. 27 Sep 1837 ; left Aug 1840 ; entered Royal Navy ; Lieut., 8 Apr 1848 ; d. unm. at Hong Kong 10 Jan 1862.

HANMER, KENYON JAMES, brother of John Hanmer (qv) ; b. 5 Aug 1829 ; adm. 27 May 1842 ; QS 1844 ; left 1848 ; Jesus Coll.Cambridge, adm.pens. 28 Sep 1848, matr. Lent 1849 ; LLB 1855 ; d. at Drumkean, co.Cork, Ireland 7 Sep 1858.

HANMER, LAMBERT ALFRED GRAHAM, elder son of Rear-Adm.John Graham Job Hanmer, Royal Navy, Bury St.Edmunds, Suffolk, and Mary Caroline, dau. of Rev.John Cobbold Aldrich, Perpetual Curate of St.Lawrence, Ipswich, Suffolk ; b. 21 Oct 1868 ; adm. 4 Apr 1882 (G) ; left Dec 1885 ; RMA Sandhurst Dec 1887 ; 2nd Lieut., West Riding Regt., 23 Mar 1889 ; Lieut., Indian Staff Corps 29 Oct 1890 ; Squadron Officer and Adjutant, 1st Punjab Cavalry 29 Oct 1894 ; Capt., 23 Mar 1900 ; ADC to Lieut.-Gov., Punjab 5 Jan 1900 – 16 Oct 1901 ; Squadron-Commander, 21st Prince Albert Victor’s Own Cavalry 6 Apr 1905 ; Maj., 23 Mar 1907 ; Lieut.-Col., 23 Mar 1915 ; DSO 7 Feb 1918 ; served in Waziristan expedition 1894-5, on North-West Frontier 1897-8 and in First World War ; m. 17 Dec 1901 Ethel Elizabeth, youngest dau. of Col.Thomas Heaton Lovett, 98th Foot, Belmont, Shropshire ; d. 29 Apr 1918, of wounds received in action.

HANMER, SIR THOMAS, BART., only surviving son of William Hanmer, Bettisfield, Flintshire, and Peregrina, dau. of Sir Henry North, Bart., MP, Mildenhall, Suffolk ; b. 24 Sep 1677 ; at school under Busby (Sir H.E.Bunbury, Bart, ed., The Correspondence of Sir Thomas Hanmer, Bart., 1838, 5) ; Christ Church, Oxford, matr. 17 Oct 1693 ; LLD Cambridge 16 Apr 1705 ; succ.uncle as 4th baronet c.Aug 1701 ; MP Thetford 19 Mar 1700/1-2, Flintshire 1702-5, Thetford 1705-8, Suffolk 1708-27 ; Chairman of the Committee which drew up the “Representation” 1712 ; travelling in Italy 1713 ; Speaker, House of Commons 16 Feb 1713/4 – 5 Jan 1714/5 ; of Bettisfield, Flintshire, and Mildenhall, Suffolk ; editor of an edition of Shakespeare’s plays, 6 vols, 1743-4 ; m. 1st, Oct 1698 Isabella, Duchess of Grafton, widow of Henry Fitzroy, 1st Duke of Grafton KG, and dau. of Henry Bennet, 1st Earl of Arlington (qv) ; m. 2nd, (by Mar) 1724/5 Elizabeth, only dau. of Thomas Folkes, Barton, Suffolk ; d. 7 May 1746. ODNB.

HANMER, THOMAS, eldest son of William Hanmer, Fenns Hall, Flintshire, and Esther, dau. of John Jennens, Birmingham, Warwickshire ; bapt. 12 Nov 1702 ; in under school lists 1715,1716 ; St.Catherine’s Coll.Cambridge, adm.fellow commoner 25 Apr 1720, matr.1720 ; BA 1723/4 ; MA 1729 (incorp.Oxford 26 Jun 1731) ;  Grand Tour (Italy) 1726-8 ; MP Castle Rising from 1734 ; m. 9 Apr 1733 Lady Catherine Perceval, dau. of John Perceval, 1st Earl of Egmont (I) (qv) ; d. 1 Apr 1737.

HANNAGAN, —  ; b.      ; BB 1796-7 (Chapter Muniments) ; in school list 1797 (as Henagan).

HANNAM, RICHARD ; b.         ; adm. 11 Jul 1774 ; left 1775 (?). [maybe Richard Hannam, East Retford, Notts., solicitor, resident at East Retford for 33 years at 3 Mar 1828 ;  d. 16 Jan 1838, aged 77 ; he m. 9 Jun 1784 Ann Richardson] [if so, perhaps son of Richard Hannam, and Elizabeth — ; b. 2 Feb 1760 (bapt. St.James, Piccadilly 24 Feb 1760)]

HANNAY, DAVID MCDOWALL, eldest son of James Hannay, HBM Consul Barcelona, Spain, novelist, and his first wife Margaret, dau. of Joseph Thompson, Oriental Bank Corporation ; b. 25 Dec 1853 ; adm. 10 Apr 1865 ; left Aug 1868 ; HBM Vice-Consul, Barcelona 30 Dec 1876 –15 Sep 1877 ; journalist ; author, The Life of Admiral Blake, and other works ; an authority on naval history, and one of the founders of the Navy Records Society ;  m.1st, 19 Apr 1887 Eleanor Wild, fifth dau. of Ayerst Hooker, Erith, Kent, solicitor ; m.2nd, 19 Oct 1907 his first wife’s sister, Edith Mary Hooker ; d. 29 May 1934.

HANNES, SIR EDWARD, son of Edward Hannes, Devizes, Wilts. ; b.      ; adm.      ; KS 1678 ; elected to Christ Church, Oxford 1682, matr. Dec 1682, aged 18, Westminster Student 18 Dec 1682 – Dec 1693, Faculty Student 23 Dec 1693 – c. 16 Mar 1699 ; BA 1686 ; MA 1689 ; MB 23 Jan 1691/2 ; MD 1695 ; Reader in Chemistry 1690 ; attended William, Duke of Gloucester 1700 ; Physician to Queen Anne 9 Jul 1702 – Nov 1709 ; knighted 29 Jul 1705 ; a collection of school exercises by him is in Cambridge Univ.Library ; donor of the silver “poculum” for the use of the KSS ; bequeathed £1000 towards the erection of the new Dormitory, and £1000 towards the completion of Peckwater Quadrangle, Christ Church ; m. 1st, 1 Oct 1698 Anne, dau. of John Packer, Shellingford, Berks. ; m.2nd, 15 Jun 1701 Anne, widow of Henry Bull, of Oxford and of Shapwick, Somerset, and dau. of John Luffe DM, Regius Professor of Medicine, Oxford ; d. 22 Jul 1710. ODNB.

HANNES, G., and HANNES, G.H., see HAMES, GEORGE HAYTER.

HANNING, JOHN, brother of William Hanning (qv) ; bapt. Dowlish Wake, Somerset 24 Oct 1775 (IGI) ; adm. 12 Jun 1786.

HANNING, JOHN LEE, see LEE, JOHN LEE.

HANNING, WILLIAM, son of John Hanning, Dillington, Somerset, and Susan, dau. of Thomas Harvard, Barrington Court, Somerset ; b.        ; adm. 22 Feb 1785 ; Queen’s Coll.Oxford, matr.18 Nov 1788, aged 18 ; MA 1793 ; adm.Inner Temple 13 Nov 1789 ; of Dillington, Somerset ; High Sheriff, Somerset 1821 ; JP Somerset ;  m. 1800 Harriett, dau. of Edward Lee, Pinhoe, Devon ; d. 15 Apr 1834, aged 66.

HANSARD, VICTOR HANSARD, eldest son of Sydney William Yockney MICE, Queen Anne’s Gate, Westminster, civil engineer, and Florence, dau. of George Hansard, Bushey Heath, Herts., barrister ; b. 21 Jul 1868 ; adm. 27 May 1880 ; left Aug 1884 ; AMICE 3 Dec 1895 (no longer in ICE list 1918) ; assumed surname of Hansard in lieu of Yockney 8 Jul 1898 ; surveyor with HM Land Registry (1901 Census) ; m. 23 Nov 1897 (divorced 1916) Amabel Mary, eldest dau. of Rev. Francis Monkhouse Sparks, Recor of Aston Rowant, Berks. ; death registered Glanford Brigg first quarter 1933, aged 64.

HANSLEY, JOHN, son of John Hansley, Westminster ; b.      ; adm.      ; Min.Can. (aged 15) 1660 (Chapter Muniments 43104).

HANSON, NEWTON BYRON, youngest son of John Hanson, Gilstead Hall, South Weald, Essex, and Bloomsbury Square, London, Solicitor to Stamp Office, and Elizabeth, dau. of Charles Browne, Storrington, Sussex, solicitor ;  b. 17 Oct 1800 ; adm. 22 Apr 1812 ; his reminiscences of Lord Byron, for whom his father acted as solicitor, survive in the John Murray archive ; when in Venice in 1818 he witnessed a codicil to Lord Byron’s will ; MRCS 1827 ; MD Edinburgh 1828 ; physician to English residents at St.Omer, France (in 1839) ; living at Ferring, Sussex, in 1851, described as surgeon ; m.1st, by 1838, Isabella — ; m. 2nd, 27 Apr 1848 Sarah Frances, fourth dau. of Sir John Geers Cotterell, Bart., MP ; d. 1 Sep 1876.

HANWAY, JOHN, son of William Hanway, Westminster, and Mary, dau. of Sir Jonas Moore, Kt, FRS, Surveyor-Gen. of the Ordnance ; bapt.St.John the Evangelist, Dublin 25 Oct 1670 (IGI) (?) ; adm.     ; KS 1686 ; elected to Trinity Coll.Cambridge 1690, adm.pens.28 Jun 1690, aged 18, scholar 24 May 1691 ; BA 1693/4 ; “was for more than thirty years in the army” (MS note in copy of Welch), attaining rank of Maj. in Royal Engineers 1 Aug 1719 and Maj. in Royal Artillery 1727 ; Chief Engineer, Gibraltar 1716-8 ; served under Duke of Marlborough in Flanders, and under Earl of Peterborough in Spain ; author, Psalmi Davidis quinquaginta priores versibus elegiacis latine redditi, 1723, and Translations of several Odes, Satyrs and Epistles of Horace, 1730 ; m. 31 Jul 1699 Rebecca Bickerton, East Acton, Middlesex, widow ; d. 26 Nov 1736.

HANWAY, JOHN, son of John Hanway (qv) ; bapt.St.James’s, Piccadilly 11 Apr 1708 (IGI) ; adm. (aged 13) Jan 1721/2. [John Hanway, St.Marylebone, will proved PCC 6 Nov 1744]

HARBERTON, JOHN, 5TH VISCOUNT, see POMEROY, JOHN JAMES, 5TH VISCOUNT HARBERTON.

HARBORNE, SYMON ; b.       ; probably at school under Camden (Hilton Kelliher, “British Post-Mediaeval Verse in the Cotton Collection”, in C.J.Wright, ed., Sir Robert Cotton as Collector, 1997, citing British Library, MS Cotton Julius F.xi, f.219). [note Symon Harborne, St.Clement Danes, Middlesex, gentleman, will proved PCC 17 Oct 1642 ; doubtless Simon Harburne whose son Simon was bapt.St.Clement Danes 3 Jan 1615 (IGI)] [note Simon Harborne, late of New Inn, son of Simon Harborne, Buckingham, adm. Middle Temple 1 Aug 1598]

HARCOURT, — ; b.       ; in under school list 1715 ; left 1715.

HARCOURT, — ; b.       ; in school list Oct 1801.

HARCOURT, — ; b.       ; in school list Oct 1801.

HARCOURT, CHARLES GEORGE VENABLES VERNON, ninth son of Hon.Edward Harcourt (qv) ; b. 14 Nov 1798 ; adm. Mich.1809 ; KS 1811 ; Capt. of the School 1815 ; elected head to Christ Church, Oxford 1816, matr. 25 May 1816, Westminster Student ; BA 1820 ; MA 1822 ; ordained deacon 18 Oct 1822, priest 17 Nov 1822 (both York) ; Rector of Rothbury, Northumberland, from 7 Dec 1822 ; Rector of Headon, Notts., 18 Jun 1830 – res Jun 1838 ; Prebendary of Southwell from 4 Jun 1830 and of Carlisle from 13 Nov 1837 ; assumed surname of Harcourt in lieu of Venables-Vernon 15 Jan 1831, but continued to be known as Charles George Venables-Vernon Harcourt ; d. unm. 10 Dec 1870.

HARCOURT, HON.EDWARD, brother of Henry Venables-Vernon, 3rd Baron Vernon (qv) ; b. 10 Oct 1757 ; adm. 5 Apr 1769 (Jones) ; Christ Church, Oxford, matr.2 Jul 1774, Canoneer Student  2 Jul 1774 – void 20 Nov 1778 (election as Fellow All Souls) ; Fellow of All Souls Coll., Oxford 1778 ; BCL 1780 ; DCL 1786 ; ordained deacon 8 Jul 1781 (Oxford), priest 14 Oct 1781 (Peterborough) ; Chaplain in Ordinary to George III 12 Dec 1781 – 1791 ; Rector of Sudbury, Derbs., 24 Apr 1782 – Apr 1803 ; Canon of Christ Church, Oxford 13 Oct 1785 – Jan 1808 ; Prebendary of Gloucester 10 Nov 1785 – Nov 1791 ; consecrated Bishop of Carlisle 6 Nov 1791 ; Archbishop of York from 19 Jan 1808 ; Privy Councillor 20 Jan 1808 ; Lord High Almoner from 23 Jan 1808 ; assumed surname of Harcourt in lieu of Venables-Vernon 15 Jan 1831, on inheriting estates of his cousin William, 3rd Earl Harcourt ; m. 5 Feb 1784 Lady Anne Leveson Gower, dau. of Granville Leveson Gower, 1st Marquis of Stafford (qv) ; d. 5 Nov 1847. ODNB.

HARCOURT, EGERTON, eleventh son of Hon.Edward Harcourt (qv) ; b. 12 May 1803 ; adm. 30 Mar 1815 ; KS (Capt.) 1816 ; Capt. of the School 1820 ; elected to Christ Church, Oxford 1821, matr. 2 Jun 1821, Westminster Student (still 1829) ; 1st cl.Classics and 1st cl.Mathematics 1824 ; BA 1825 ; MA 1828 ; adm. Inner Temple 8 Jun 1826, called to bar 25 Jun 1830 ; assumed surname of Harcourt in lieu of Venables-Vernon ; Principal Registrar, Province and Dioces of York, from 1842 ; of Whitwell Hall, Yorks. ; Busby Trustee 2 May 1857 ; m. 8 Dec 1859 Laura Emma, youngest dau. of Sir William Mordaunt Sturt Milner, Bart., Nun Appleton, Yorks. ; d. 19 Oct 1883.

HARCOURT, GEORGE GRANVILLE, eldest son of Hon.Edward Harcourt (qv) ; b. 6 Aug 1785 ; adm. 14 Mar 1796 (Clapham) ; KS (Capt.) 1798 ; Capt. of the School 1802 ; elected head to Christ Church, Oxford 1803, matr. 23 May 1803, Westminster Student ; BA 1808 ; MA 1810 ; MP Lichfield 1806-31, Oxfordshire from 1831 ; “Father” of House of Commons ; assumed surname of Harcourt in lieu of Venables-Vernon 15 Jan 1831 ; of Stanton Harcourt and Nuneham Courtenay, Oxfordshire ; DL JP Oxfordshire ; m.1st, 27 Mar 1815 Lady Elizabeth Bingham, eldest dau. of Richard Bingham, 2nd Earl of Lucan (qv) ; m.2nd, 30 Sep 1847 Frances Elizabeth, Countess Waldegrave, widow of John James Waldegrave, Navestock, Essex, and of George Edward Waldegrave, 7th Earl Waldegrave, dau. of John Braham, tenor singer ; d. 19 Dec 1861.

HARCOURT, GEORGE SIMON, 2ND EARL HARCOURT, elder son of Simon Harcourt, 1st Earl Harcourt (qv) ; b. 1 Aug 1736 ; adm. May 1746 ; left 1748 ; styled Viscount Nuneham 1749-77 ; Grand Tour (Germany, Italy) 1754-6 ; MP St.Albans 1761-8 ; Page of Honour to George III at his coronation 22 Sep 1761 ; succ.father as 2nd Earl Harcourt 16 Sep 1777 ; DCL Oxford Univ. 31 Aug 1786 ; Master of the Horse to Queen Charlotte from 9 Mar 1790 ; FSA 27 Feb 1766 ; DL Oxfordshire 1762 ; m. 26 Sep 1765 his first cousin Hon.Elizabeth Venables-Vernon, Lady of Bedchamber to Queen Charlotte, sister of George Venables-Vernon, 2nd Baron Vernon (qv) ; d. 20 Apr 1809.

HARCOURT, HENRY, sixth son of Hon.Edward Harcourt (qv) ; b.1791 ; adm. 8 Dec 1801 (Clapham, subsequently Best) ; shared a room up Best’s in 1804 with William Blamire (qv) and Henry Somerset, 7thDuke of Beaufort (qv) (Harcourt Papers, xii, 304) ; left 1807 ; Ensign, 1st Foot Guards 17 Mar 1808 ; Lieut. and Capt., 21 Jan 1813 ; Capt. and Lieut.-Col., unattached 2 Apr 1825 ; Capt. and Lieut-Col., 1stFoot Guards 14 Apr 1825 ; retd. 31 Dec 1830 ; assumed surname of Harcourt in lieu of Venables-Vernon 15 Jan 1831 ; m. 20 Apr 1835 Lady Frances Harley, dau. of Edward Harley, 5th Earl of Oxford (qv) ; d. 25 Feb 1853.

HARCOURT, JOHN, third son of Philip Harcourt, Wigsell, Salehurst, Sussex, and Rlizabeth, d. of Timothy Woodruffe MD, Lawton Hope, Herefs. ; bapt. 20 Jan 1708/9 ; adm. (aged 10) Jun 1719 ; in under school list 1725 ; Worcester Coll.Oxford, matr. 26 Oct 1726 ; BA 1730 ; MA 1737 ; of Ankerwycke, Bucks. ; m.1st, Anne Parker, Brentwood, Essex ; m.2nd, 7 Aug 1771 Margaret Irene, dau. of John Sarney, Somerset House, London [Register to Commissioners of Hackney Coaches ?] ; d. 30 Sep 1785.

HARCOURT, JOHN, son of Rev.James Harcourt DD, Prebendary of Bristol and Vicar of All Saints, Bristol, Somerset, and Sarah, dau. of John Price ; bapt. Bristol Cathedral 13 May 1717 ; adm. Mar 1727/8 ; KS (aged 14) 1731 ; elected to Christ Church, Oxford 1736, matr. 25 Jun 1736, Westminster Student 24 Dec 1736 – res 10 Apr 1740 ; adm. Inner Temple 29 Oct 1734 ; succeeded under will of uncle Charles Harcourt to Dan-y-Parc estate, Llangattock, Breconshire 1748 ; High Sheriff, Breconshire 1756 ; m. 5 Jul 1759 Letitia Sarah Maria, dau. of George Milborne, Wonastow, Monmouthshire ; d. 2 Oct 1781 (M.I.Cheltenham, Gloucs.).

HARCOURT, LEVESON VERNON, third son of Hon.Edward Harcourt (qv) ; bapt. 9 Jun 1788 ; adm. 11 Sep 1798 (Clapham) ; KS (aged 12) 1801 ; Capt. of the School 1805 ; elected head to Christ Church, Oxford 1806, matr. 17 May 1806 ; BA 1810 ; MA 1812 (incorp.Cambridge 1854) ; ordained deacon 8 Mar 1812, priest 2 Aug 1812 (both York) ; Vicar of Sutton in the Forest, Yorks., 7 Aug 1812 – Apr 1813 ; Rector of Rothbury, Northumberland 9 Apr 1813 – Dec 1822 ; Rector of Kirkby with Broughton, Yorks., 30 Oct 1819 – Feb 1823 ; Rector of Stokesley, Yorks., 21 Nov 1822 – Jun 1835 ; Chancellor of York from 30 May 1827 ; Rector of Beckenham, Kent 29 May 1835 –8 ; assumed surname of Harcourt in lieu of Venables-Vernon 15 Jan 1831, but continued to be known as Leveson Vernon Harcourt ; latterly of West Dean House, Chichester, Sussex ; author, The Doctrine of the Deluge, 1838, and other works ; m. 19 Aug 1815 Hon.Caroline Mary Peachey, eldest dau. of John Peachey, 2nd Baron Selsey ; d. 26 Jul 1860. ODNB (s.v.father)

HARCOURT, RICHARD, son of Richard Harcourt, St.Clement’s parish, London, Master of the Crown Office, and Elizabeth, dau. of Sir Philip Harcourt, Kt MP ; bapt.St.Andrew, Holborn 9 Apr 1714 (IGI) ; adm. (aged 7) Nov 1721 ; Min.Can.1727 ; left 1729 ; Brasenose Coll.Oxford, adm.gent.commoner 2 Jun 1729 ; BA 1732 ; adm.Inner Temple 17 May 1729, called to bar 25 Jun 1737, tenant chambers there from 1744 ; MP Sussex 9 Dec 1768-74 ; of Great Wigsell, Salehurst, Sussex ; m. 30 Jun 1733 Phoebe, dau. of Charles Palmer, Dorney Court, Bucks. ; d. 2 May 1777.

HARCOURT, SIMON, 1ST EARL HARCOURT, only son of Hon.Simon Harcourt MP,  Inner Temple, London, barrister, and Elizabeth, dau. of John Evelyn, Deptford, Kent, and sister of Sir John Evelyn, Bart., MP, Commissioner of Customs ; b.      ; adm. (aged 7) Oct 1721 ; in school list 1729 ; succ.grandfather as 2nd Viscount Harcourt 29 Jul 1727 ; Grand Tour (France, Italy, Germany) 1730-4 ; Lord of the Bedchamber to George II 9 May 1735 – 18 May 1751 ; attended King at battle of Dettingen 1743 ; Col.76th Foot, raised by him in Oxfordshire, from 4 Oct 1745 ; created Earl Harcourt 1 Dec 1749 ; Governor to George III when Prince of Wales Apr 1751 – Dec 1752 ; Privy Councillor 17 Apr 1751 ; Maj.-Gen., 8 Mar 1755 ; Lieut-Gen., 9 Feb 1759 ; Gen., 26 May 1772 ; Master of the Horse to Queen Charlotte Sep 1761- Apr 1763 ; Lord Chamberlain to Queen Charlotte Apr 1763 – Nov 1768 ; Ambassador at Paris 1768-72 ; Lord Lieut.Ireland 9 Oct 1772 – 25 Jan 1777 ; member, Society of Dilettanti 1736 ; FRS 15 Mar 1753 ; DL Oxfordshire 1763 ; m. 16 Oct 1735 Rebecca, only dau. of Charles Samborne Le Bas, Pipewell Abbey, Northants ; drowned 16 Sep 1777, in attempt to extricate his dog from a well at Nuneham, Oxfordshire. ODNB.

HARCOURT-VERNON, EDWARD LEVESON, third son of Granville Harcourt-Vernon (qv) ; b. 8 Apr 1824 ; adm. 17 Jan 1838 (G) ; QS 1838 ; d. at Lausanne, Switzerland 16 Oct 1840.

HARCOURT-VERNON, EVELYN HARDOLPH, second son of Granville Harcourt-Vernon (qv) ; b. 30 Aug 1821 ; adm. 21 Jan 1835 ; KS 1835 ; left 1839 ; University Coll.Oxford, matr.30 May 1839 ; BCL 1843 ; ordained deacon 16 Feb 1845 (Ripon, lit.dim. from York), priest 1846 (Lincoln) ; Rector of Headon, Notts., 17 Jul 1846 – Apr 1883 ; Vicar of Grove, Notts., 17 Jul 1846 – Sep 1859 ; Rector of Cotgrave, Notts., 1859-73 ; Vicar of Grove, Notts., 6 Nov 1873 – Jan 1883 ; Prebendary of Lincoln from 1866 ; of Grove Park, Notts. ; m. 19 Apr 1849 Jane Catherine, youngest dau. of Capt.Edward St.John Mildmay, 22nd Light Dragoons ; d. at Toronto, Canada 26 Jan 1890.

HARCOURT-VERNON, GRANVILLE, seventh son of Hon.Edward Harcourt (qv) ; b. 26 Jul 1792 ; adm. Bartholomewtide 1804 ; KS (Capt.) 1805 ; Capt. of the School 1809 ; spoke the prologue to the Phormio in 1809, when the new scenes given by William Carey (qv) were first used ; elected head to Christ Church, Oxford 1810, matr. 8 Jun 1810, Westminster Student ; 1st cl.Classics and 1stcl.Mathematics 1813 ; BA 1814 ; MA 1816 ; adm.Lincoln’s Inn 5 Dec 1811, called to bar 12 May 1817 ; Chancellor, Diocese of York 26 Jul 1818-68 ; MP Aldborough 4 May 1815-20, East Retford (Conservative) 1831-47 ; assumed surname of Harcourt-Vernon in lieu of Venables-Vernon ; of Grove Park, Notts. ; m. 1st, 22 Feb 1814 Frances Julia, dau. of Anthony Hardolph Eyre MP, Grove Park, Notts. ; m.2nd, 22 Nov 1845 Hon.Pyne Jesse Brand, widow of John Henry Cotterell, and dau. of Henry Otway Brand, 22nd Baron Dacre CB, Lieut.-Gen. in Army, Col. 31st Foot ; d. 8 Dec 1879.

HARCOURT-VERNON, GRANVILLE EDWARD, eldest son of Granville Harcourt-Vernon (qv) , and his first wife ; b. 23 Nov 1816 ; adm. 16 Sep 1829 ; KS 1830 ; Capt. of the School 1834 ; elected head to Christ Church, Oxford 1835, matr. 4 Jun 1835, Westminster Student ; BA 1839 ; MA 1842 ; Private Secretary to Edward Granville Eliot, 3rd Earl of St Germans (qv), when Chief Secretary for Ireland, and to Earl of Lincoln MP, when Chief Commissioner of Woods and Forests and Chief Secretary for Ireland ; MP (Peelite) Newark 1852-7 ; m. 23 Nov 1854 Lady Selina Catherine Meade, only dau. of Richard Meade, 3rd Earl of Clanwilliam PC GCH, Ambassador at Berlin ; d. 1 Feb 1861.

HARDEPENYE, EDWARD ; b.      ; adm.      ; KS 1540 (PRO, Exc.Aug.Office, Misc.Books, 24).

HARDEPENYE, JOHN ; b.       ; adm.      ; KS 1540 (PRO, Exc.Aug.Office, Misc.Books, 24).

HARDEPENYE, ROBERT ; b.       ; GS 1540 (British Library, Additional MSS, 40061).

HARDEY, see also HARDY.

[HARDEY, WILLIAM ; b.       ; in school list Dec 1736]. [perhaps error for Robert Hardy]

HARDING, — ;  b.        ; in school list 1797.

HARDING, EDWARD, son of Henry Harding, Dorset ; b.      ; adm.      ; Min.Can. (aged 14) 1661.

HARDING, JAMES ; b. Woodstock, Oxfordshire 31 Mar 1838 [or 1837 ?] ; adm. 3 Oct 1850 (G) ; Cornet, 17th Lancers 3 Oct 1857 ; Lieut., 24 Dec 1858 ; retd. 24 Jun 1862 ; living Winchester, Hampshire, in 1871 (1871 Census) ; m. 4 Nov 1862 Henrietta Letitia, second dau. of Maj.Frederick Augustus Griffiths, Royal Artillery, Putney, Surrey ; d. 20 Nov 1871.

HARDING, JOHN, only son of John Harding, Clynderwen, Pembrokeshire, and Sarah, sister of Barne Barne (qv) ; b.      ; adm.Christmas 1801 ; left 1805 ; Trinity Hall, Cambridge, adm.pens. 13 Apr 1803, scholar 1807, matr. Mich.1806 ; LLB 1809 ; m. 1st, 19 Dec 1822 Frances, widow of William Herbert Russell, Powick Court, Worcs., and younger dau. of George Thornhill, Diddington, Hunts. ; m.2nd, 3 Aug 1829 Elizabeth, youngest dau. of Harry Taylor, EICS Madras ; d. 28 Nov 1861, aged 72.

HARDING, JOHN, third son of William Harding, St.Margaret’s, Westminster, Chief Clerk, Transport Office, and Mary Harrison, only dau. of John Ackland, Camberwell, Surrey ; b. 7 Jan 1805 ; adm. 12 Jan 1818 ; left 1821 ; Worcester Coll. Oxford, matr. 14 Jan 1823 ; BA 1826 ; MA 1829 ; DD 1851 ; ordained deacon 1 Jun 1828, priest 14 Jun 1829 (both Ely) ; Curate, Wendy, Cambs. 1829 ; Minister of Park Chapel, Chelsea 1834 ; Rector of St.Andrew by the Wardrobe, with St.Anne, Blackfriars, London 12 Feb 1836-51 ; Hon.Secretary, Church Pastoral Aid Society ; consecrated Bishop of Bombay 10 Aug 1851 ; resigned Apr 1868 ; author, Texts and Thoughts for Christian Ministers, 1874, and other works ; m. 11 Jun 1839 Mary, third dau. of William Tebbs, Proctor, Court of Arches ; d. 18 Jun 1874. ODNB.

HARDING, JOHN COKE, son of John Harding, Argyle Street, London ; [presumably John Cook Harding (sic), bapt.St.Thomas, Portsmouth, Hampshire 15 Jul 1781, son of John Harding, and Ann — (IGI)] ; adm.      ; in school list 1795 ; KS (aged 14) 1796 ; played cricket v.Eton at Lord’s 8 Aug 1799, 31 Jul 1800 ; Capt. of the School 1800 ; elected head to Trinity Coll.Cambridge 1801, adm.pens. 14 May 1801, scholar 30 Apr 1802, matr. Mich.1804, but did not graduate ; adm.Lincoln’s Inn 8 Jun 1805 ; living at Trelawne, Cornwall, in 1841 (1841 Census) ; Roman Catholic convert ; latterly living at Brussels, Belgium ; m. 4 Jun 1806 (IGI) Mary, younger dau. of Sir Harry Trelawny, Bart. (qv) ; d. 10 Sep 1868.

HARDING (or HARDINGE), SAMUEL, of Westminster . b.        ; at school under Ireland ; St.John’s Coll.Cambridge, matr.sizar Easter 1607 ; BA 1610-1 ; MA 1614 (incorp.Oxford 1615) ; in a letter to Dr.Clayton, Master of St.John’s College, Cambridge, printed The Eagle, 1915, 13-5, Richard Neile (qv) states that “there is with you in St.John’s one Sir Hardinge, whom I sent out of Westminster Schoole to St.John’s, he was borne in this towne, himself and his freindes here doe conceave that he may be eligible for a ffellowship at your next eleccion” (although Harding did not in the event obtain a fellowship)  ; ordained deacon 25 Feb 1615/6, priest 31 May 1618 (aged 28) (both London) ; Curate, Tenterden, Kent 1616, Petworth, Sussex 1618 ; Rector of Christon, Somerset, from 26 Feb 1618/9 ; d. 1639 (by 4 May).

HARDING, SAMUEL ; b.      ; adm. (aged 10) Jan 1731/2 ; left 1737.

HARDING, THOMAS, twin brother of John Harding (adm.1818, qv) ; b. 7 Jan 1805 ; adm. 12 Jan 1818 ; left 1821 ; Worcester Coll.Oxford, matr. 14 Jan 1823 ; BA 1826 ; MA 1829 ; ordained deacon 1 Jun 1828, priest 14 Jun 1829 (both London) ; Vicar of Bexley, Kent, from 9 Oct 1833 ; d.unm. 12 Nov 1874.

HARDING, WILLIAM SEXTUS (originally registered as WILLIAM QUINTUS), son of William Harding, Westminster, afterwards of Copeley Lodge, Erdington, Warwickshire, and Rebecca, dau. of Samuel Pemberton, Edgbaston, Birmingham ; b. 27 Jun 1806 ; adm.Mich.1814 ; left 1821 ; articled to John Wilkes Unett, Birmingham, solicitor ; adm. attorney  Easter 1828 ; practised at Birmingham for many years ; m. 1 Sep 1835 his cousin Anne, eldest dau. of Charles Harding, Bolehall, Tamworth, Staffs. ; d. 6 Mar 1896.

HARDINGE, WILLIAM MONEY, only son of Henry Hardinge MD MRCP MRCS, Grafton Street, Piccadilly, London, and Jane, elder dau. of William Money, Hanover Street, Hanover Square, London ; b. 27 May 1854 ; adm. 31 May 1866 ; left Dec 1869 ; went to Clifton Coll. [check] ; Balliol Coll.Oxford, matr. 1 Feb 1873 ; Newdigate Prize for English Verse 1876 ; BA 1914 ; adm.Lincoln’s Inn 22 Jan 1876 ; living London in 1901 (1901 Census) ; author, Clifford Gray, a Romance of Modern Life, 1881, and other novels ; d. 17 Nov 1916.

HARDRES, JOHN, son of John Hardres MP, Canterbury, Kent, Capt. of Sandown Castle, and Anne Thomlinson ; b.      ; adm. (aged 14) Jan 1728/9 ; Corpus Christi Coll.Oxford, matr. 7 May 1729 ; BA 12 Mar 1732/3 ; MA 1735 ; adm.Middle Temple 9 May 1732 ; migrated to Inner Temple 27 May 1737, called to bar 25 Jun 1737 ; tenant chambers Inner Temple from 1737 ; d. 1 Mar 1741/2.

HARDRES, THORESBY, son of Sir Richard Hardres, Bart., Upper Hardres, Kent, and Anne, dau. of Thomas Godfrey, Lydd, Kent ; b.     ; adm.     ; KS (aged 16) 1660 (Chapter Muniments 43104) ; Queen’s Coll.Oxford, adm.pens.23 Nov 1659, matr.1660 ; MA 1663 ; adm.Gray’s Inn 23 Jan 1662/3, called to bar 11 Feb 1669/70, ancient 29 Jan 1685/6 ; buried Canterbury Cathedral 16 Mar 1685/6.

HARDWICK, WILLIAM, son of William Hardwick, Westminster, and Ann — (IGI) ; bapt.St.Ann, Soho 2 Mar 1726 (IGI) ; adm. (aged 10) Jan 1737/8 ; Min.Can.1742 ; left 1742.

HARDY, see also HARDEY.

[HARDY, EDWARD ; b.        ; in school list Dec 1736. Christian name probably an error]

[HARDY, JOHN ; b        ; in school list Dec 1736]. [perhaps an error fot Thomas Hardy]

HARDY, ROBERT ; b.         ; adm. (aged 8) May 1733 ; left 1736 (or 1737 ?). [Presumably brother or close kin to Thomas Hardy, adm.same month].

HARDY, THOMAS ; b.       ; adm. (aged 10) May 1733 ; left 1737. [Presumably brother or close kin to Robert Hardy, adm.same month].

HARDY, THOMAS ; b.       ; adm. (aged 11) Jun 1737 ; left 1739.

HARE, CHARLES ; b.       ; adm. (aged 11) Jul 1733 ; left 1738. [Presumably brother or close kin to James Hare and Thomas Hare, adm. same month]. [perhaps Charles Hare, son of George Hare, and Grizzel —, bapt.St.James, Clerkenwell 27 Jun 1723 (IGI)]

HARE, EVAN HERRING, eldest son of Evan Hare, Putney, Surrey, solicitor, and Charlotte, dau. of Thomas Chapman, Wandsworth, Surrey ; b. 12 Aug 1851 ; adm. 26 Jan 1865 (G) ; left Dec 1865 ; St.John’s Coll.Oxford, matr.16 Jan 1869 ; BA 1872 ; MA 1876 ; St.Thomas’s Hospital ; MRCS 1876 ; FRCS 1887 ; LSA 1878 ; Surgeon, National Aid Society, in Servian War, and Civil Surgeon, Army Medical Department, Zulu War ; in practice at Hornsey, Middlesex ; translated Prof.Puschmann’s History of Medical Education, 1891 ; m. 23 Apr 1885 Emily Lucy, dau. of Richard Norris Cummins, Mortlake, Surrey, corn and coal merchant ; d. 25 Apr 1932.

HARE, JAMES ; b.       ; adm. (aged 8) Jul 1733 ; left 1739. [Presumably brother or close kin to Charles Hare and Thomas Hare, adm.same month].

HARE, ST.JOHN, eldest son of John Hare, Abbotsley, Hunts. ; b.       ; adm.      ; KS      ; elected to Christ Church, Oxford 1648, Westminster Student (still in Dean’s Book 1650/1), but did not matr. ; adm.Middle Temple 17 Jun 1647, called to bar 11 Feb 1658/9 ; a manuscript possibly of his, titled Trigonometria, had passed into the possession of Sir Isaac Newton by 1684 ; m.1st, —  ; lic. to m. 2nd, 31 Oct 1681 Mary, dau. of Erasmus Gainsford, Crowhurst, Surrey ; dead by 22 Aug 1688.

HARE, THOMAS ; b.      ; adm. (aged 12) Jul 1733 ; left 1739. [Presumably brother or close kin to Charles Hare and James Hare, adm. same month]. [perhaps Thomas Hare, son of George Hare, and Grissell —, bapt.St.James, Clerkenwell, Middlesex 11 Apr 1721 (IGI)]

HARE, THOMAS, son of Thomas Hare, Boston, Massachusetts, North America ; b.      ; adm.     ; Min.Can. (aged 14) 1738 ; KS 1739 ; elected to Trinity Coll.Cambridge 1743, adm.pens. 2 Jun 1743, did not matr. ; ordained deacon 25 Jul 1746 (Rochester, lit.dim.from Canterbury) ; presumably Rev.Thomas Hare, Curate of Egerton, Kent, 1746, noted as dead 1747/8.

HARENC, BENJAMIN, only son of Roger Harenc, Henrietta Street, London, merchant, and Susanna, dau. of Daniel Hays, Wimbledon, Surrey ; b.       ; adm. (aged 14) Jun 1748 ; in school list 1752 ; of Foots Cray Place, Kent (purchased 1772) ; High Sheriff, Kent 1777 ; m.1771 Sarah, dau. of Salusbury Cade (QS 1709, qv) ; d. 15 Apr 1812.

HARGRAVE, —  ; b.      ; in school lists Feb 1727/8 (third form), 1729.

HARGRAVES, THOMAS, son of Very Rev.James Hargraves, Dean of Chichester and Prebendary of Westminster, and Mary, dau. of Ven.James Williamson, Rector of Ripe, Sussex, and Archdeacon of Lewes ; b.     ; adm. (aged 14) Sep 1740 ; left 1742 ; Christ Church, Oxford, matr. 20 Dec 1742, Canoneer Student 23 Dec 1742 – res 18 Dec 1744.

HARINGTON, ALEXANDER STUART, younger son of Robert Harington, Kilbride, Lanarkshire, Capt.12th Lancers, and Charlotte, younger dau. of Andrew Stuart, Torrance, Lanarkshire ; b. 6 May 1839 ; adm. 19 Jun 1851 (G) ; QS 1854 ; elected to Trinity Coll.Cambridge 1858, but was never adm. ; Ensign, Rifle Brigade 15 Jun 1859 ; Lieut., 22 Mar 1864 ; Instructor of Musketry 27 Nov 1866 – 11 May 1870 ; retd. 13 Jul 1870 ; m. 11 Dec 1875 Elinor, widow of Thomas Waller, Eastwood, Notts., and dau. of Richard Carmichael Bourne LRCS (I) LSA LM, Assistant Surgeon, 3rd Dragoon Guards ; d. 2 Sep 1878.

HARINGTON, EDWARD, third son of Sir Richard Harington, Bart., County Court Judge, Chairman Herefordshire Quarter Sessions, and Frances Agneta, dau. of Robert Biscoe (qv) ; b. 25 Oct 1863 ; adm. 21 Jan 1875 ; QS 1878 ; left May 1882 ; Christ Church, Oxford, matr. 13 Oct 1882 ; BA 1887 ; adm.Inner Temple 24 Jan 1885, called to bar 3 Jul 1889 ; County Court Judge, Worcester district, Nov 1905-35 ; JP Herefordshire 1907 ; m. 20 Oct 1906 Louisa Muriel, only dau. of Herbert Charles Erskine Vernon, Curridge, Chieveley, Berks., Indian Civil Service ; d. 19 Jan 1937.

HARINGTON, SIR JAMES, BART., son of Richard Harington, Iver, Bucks., and Margaret, dau. of William Lane, Cowley, Middlesex ; b.      ; succ. great-uncle as 6th baronet 27 Mar 1716 ; adm. (aged 12) May 1719 ; in under school list 1721 ; Balliol Coll.Oxford, matr.15 Jun 1724 ; of Merton, Oxfordshire ; a Jacobite supporter who left England in 1747 and did not return until after the accession of George III ; the Merton estate was sold in 1749 ; m.1st, c. Sep 1725 Katherine, dau. of William Boucher, Middle Temple, barrister ; m.2nd, 15 Feb 1776, Elizabeth, widow of William Moore, Newton, Somerset ; m.3rd, Elizabeth, dau. of William Wright, Little Ilford, Essex ; d. 24 Jan 1782.

HARINGTON, SIR JAMES, BART., elder son of Sir James Harington, Bart. (qv), and his first wife ; b. 6 Aug 1726 ; adm. Jan 1739/40 ; left 1746 ; Sub-Lieut., 2nd Troop, Horse Guards Oct 1750 ; Lieut. and Capt., Oct 1755 ; Maj. in Army ; sold out 16 Jul 1768 ; succ.father as 7th baronet 24 Jan 1782 ; m. 1749 Anna, dau. of James Ashenhurst, Park Hall, Staffs. ; d. 17 Jan 1793.

HARINGTON, RICHARD, second son of Sir James Harington, Bart. (adm.1719, qv), and his first wife ; b. 11 Apr 1729 ; adm. May 1744 ; left 1745 ; Merton Coll.Oxford, matr, 22 Mar 1745/6 ; migrated to Queen’s Coll.Oxford ; BA 1749 ; MA 1759 ; ordained deacon 5 Jun 1757, priest 21 Aug 1757 (both Oxford) ; Rector of Albury, Oxfordshire 30 Aug 1757-9 ; Rector of Powderham, Devon 5 May 1759-84 ; Rector of Whitstone, Devon, from 29 Apr 1784 ; m.1st, Jane, dau. of Arthur Champernowne (qv) ; m.2nd, 1 Jun 1773 (IGI) Hannah, dau. of John Hussey, Truro, Cornwall, attorney, and sister of Richard Hussey MP ; m.3rd, 31 Dec 1791 Elizabeth, widow of William Hallett, Cannons, Middlesex, and dau. of Abraham Chambers, New Bond Street, London, and Totteridge, Herts., banker ; d. 21 Apr 1813.

HARINGTON, ROBERT, brother of Edward Harington (qv) ; b. 26 Apr 1868 ; adm. 23 Sep 1880 (D, afterwards R) ; left Aug 1884 ; Clare Coll.Cambridge, adm.17 Jan 1887, matr. Lent 1887 ; BA 1891 ; MA 1896 ; Wells Theol.Coll. 1891 ; ordained deacon 1893 (Hereford), priest 1894 (Gloucester) ; Curate, Bewdley, Worcs., 1893, Ross, Herefs., 1893-7 ; Rector of Peterstow, Herefs., 5 Sep 1897-1912 ; Rector of Whitbourne, Herefs., from 1912 ; d.unm. 28 Dec 1933.

HARKNESS, WILLIAM, only son of James Harkness, St.Ives, Hunts. ; b.     ; adm. (aged 14) Jun 1747 ; left 1747 ; adm.Lincoln’s Inn 23 Jan 1746/7 ; Trinity Hall, Cambridge, matr. Dec 1750, scholar 1752 ; of New Barns, near Ely, Cambs. ; Capt. , Cambridgeshire Militia, in 1759, subsequently Maj. ; d. 18 Jul 1775.

HARLAND, WILLIAM ; b.      ; adm. (aged 9) Jan 1717/8 ; left 1718.

[HARLEY, EDWARD, second son of Sir Edward Harley KB MP, Brampton Bryan, Herefordshire, and his second wife Abigail, dau. of Nathaniel Stephens MP, Eastington, Gloucs. ; b. 7 Jun 1664 ; at school under Busby (Steward, Anniversary Dinner 1728/9) ; adm.Middle Temple 18 Mar 1681/2, called to bar 25 May 1688 ; took active part in revolution of 1688 ; Recorder of Leominster 1692-1732 ; MP Droitwich 1695-8, Leominster 1698-1700, 8 Apr 1701-22 ; Auditor of the Imprest from 1702 ; author, The Harmony of the Four Gospels, 1733, and other works ; m. Sarah, third dau. of Thomas Foley MP, Witley Court, Worcs. ; d. 30 Aug 1735. ODNB.] [Thus Russell Barker & Stenning, but he was at school in Oxfordshire to c.1681, and it seems much more likely that the Steward of the Anniversary Dinner in 1728/9 was his son, Edward Harley, 3rd Earl of Oxford (at school under Freind, qv), although the 3rd Earl was also Steward in 1754]

HARLEY, EDWARD, 2ND EARL OF OXFORD, only son of Robert Harley, 1st Earl of Oxford PC KG, Chancellor of the Exchequer and Lord High Treasurer, and his first wife Elizabeth, dau. of Thomas Foley MP, Witley Court, Worcs. ; b. 2 Jun 1689 ; at school by 1704, still 1707 (Beresford) ; Christ Church, Oxford, matr. 30 Oct 1707 ; MA 2 Jan 1711/2 ; DCL 4 Jun 1730 ; MP New Radnor 16 Jul 1711-5, Cambridgeshire 1722 – 21 May 1724 ; succ.father as 2nd Earl of Oxford 21 May 1724 ; FRS 23 Nov 1727 ; High Steward of Cambridge from 1728 ; friend of Pope, Swift and Matthew Prior (qv), and patron of George Vertue and Oldys ; added very considerably to his father’s collection of books and manuscripts ; also collected pictures, prints and coins ; his Wimpole, Cambridgeshire, estate was sold in 1740 to Lord Hardwicke to pay off his debts ; his miscellaneous curiosities, coins, medals and portraits were sold by auction in March 1741/2 ; the books, pamphlets and prints were purchased the same year by the bookseller Thomas Osborne ; the manuscripts were sold to the nation in 1753 and are now the Harleian MSS in the British Library ; Busby Trustee 18 Feb 1725/6 ; the letters to him from his Oxford tutor William Stratford (qv), which make frequent allusions to the School, are calendared HMC Portland MSS, vol.vii ; m. 31 Oct 1713 Lady Henrietta Cavendish Holles, only dau. of John Holles, 4th Earl of Clare (afterwards 1st Duke of Newcastle) ; d. 16 Jun 1741. Buried Duke of Newcastle’s vault, Westminster Abbey. ODNB.

HARLEY, EDWARD, 3RD EARL OF OXFORD, son of Edward Harley MP, Middle Temple, London, barrister, Auditor of the Imprest, and Sarah, third dau. of Thomas Foley MP, Witley Court, Worcs. ; b.       ; at school under Freind (Beresford) ; references to Harley at school will be found in HMC Portland MSSiv, 459, 492,533, from which it appears that he was a boarder at Mrs Beresford’s and that he was suddenly sent home during the Sacheverell riots, when the mob “threatened to tear her house down and broke the windows” ; Christ Church, Oxford, matr. 21 Feb 1716/7, aged 17 ; MA 2 May 1721 ; DCL 17 May 1737 ; MP Herefordshire 1727 – 16 Jun 1741 ; succ. cousin as 3rd Earl of Oxford 16 Jun 1741 ; High Steward of Hereford from 1746 ; Harley family Trustee, British Museum, from 1753 ; Busby Trustee 30 Mar 1743 ; gave £100 for the building of the new College Dormitory ; m. 16 Mar 1724/5 Martha, dau. of John Morgan MP, Tredegar, Monmouthshire ; d. 11 Apr 1755. ODNB.

HARLEY, EDWARD, 4TH EARL OF OXFORD, eldest son of Edward Harley, 3rd Earl of Oxford (qv) ; b. 2 Sep 1726 ; adm. May 1735 ; left 1744 ; Christ Church, Oxford, matr. 3 Nov 1744 ; MA 1747 ; DCL 12 Apr 1749 ; MP Herefordshire 1747 – 11 Apr 1755 ; succ.father as 4th Earl of Oxford 11 Apr 1755 ; Harley family Trustee, British Museum, from 1755 ; High Steward of Hereford from 1755 ; a Lord of the Bedchamber to George III from 9 Dec 1760 ; Lord Lieut., Radnorshire, from 12 Jul 1766 ; DL Herefordshire 1757 ; m. 11 Jul 1751 Susannah, eldest dau. of William Archer (formerly Eyre) MP, Welford, Berkshire ; d. 8 Oct 1790.

HARLEY, EDWARD, 5TH EARL OF OXFORD, elder son of Hon.John Harley (adm.1736, qv) ; b. 20 Feb 1773 ; adm. 14 Feb 1785 ; Christ Church, Oxford, matr.21 Jan 1791 ; MA 1792 ; DCL 1793 ; succ.uncle as 5th Earl of Oxford 8 Oct 1790 ; supported Whig party in House of Lords ; DL Radnorshire 1831 ; m. 3 Mar 1794 Jane Elizabeth, dau. of Rev.James Scott, Rector of St.Laurence with St.John, Southampton ; d. 28 Dec 1848.

HARLEY, HON.JOHN, third son of Edward Harley, 3rd Earl of Oxford (qv) ; b. 29 Sep 1728 ; adm. Apr 1736 ; left 1746 ; Christ Church, Oxford, matr. 27 Jan 1746/7 ; BA 1749 ; MA 1752 ; BD and DD 1778 ; ordained ; Rector of Presteigne, Radnorshire, 20 Nov 1752 – Dec 1787 ; Prebendary of Hereford 1 Jul 1756-Feb 1760, Archdeacon of Shropshire 11 Feb 1760- Jan 1769, Archdeacon of Hereford 19 Jan 1769 – Dec 1787 ; Perpetual Curate of Marylebone, Middlesex 9 Mar 1765 (still 1772) ; Rector of Great Haseley, Oxfordshire, from 18 Feb 1779 ; Dean of Windsor (and Wolverhampton) from 12 Jan 1778 ; consecrated Bishop of Hereford 9 Dec 1787 ; m. 22 Mar 1770 Roach, dau. of Gwyn Vaughan, Trebarried, Breconshire, Commissioner of Customs ; d. 9 Jan 1788.

HARLEY, JOHN, son of John Harley, London ; b.      ; adm. 12 Jun 1770 ; KS (aged 16) 1773 ; elected to Trinity Coll.Cambridge 1777, adm.pens. 28 May 1777, scholar 15 May 1778, matr. Easter 1778 ; buried St.Michael’s, Cambridge 7 Jan 1781. [perhaps son of John Harley, and Elizabeth —, b.9 Jan 1757, bapt.St.Marylebone PC 31 Jan 1757 (IGI)]

HARLEY, ROBERT, brother of Edward Harley, 3rd Earl of Oxford (qv) ; b.      ; in under school lists 1715-9 ; Christ Church, Oxford, matr.5 Mar 1722/3, aged 16 ; adm.Lincoln’s Inn 23 Apr 1724, called to bar 2 Jun 1738, refused to become Bencher 23 Jan 1751 ; Recorder of Leominster from 1732, also Recorder of Tewkesbury from 1764 (?) ; MP Leominster 1734-41, 25 Mar 1742-7, Droitwich from 1754 ; d.unm. 14 Mar 1774.

HARLEY, HON.ROBERT, second son of Edward Harley, 3rd Earl of Oxford (qv) ; b. 10 Sep 1727 ; adm. May 1735 ; left 1743 ; Christ Church, Oxford, matr. 3 Nov 1744 ; MA 28 Jun 1748 ; adm.Lincoln’s Inn 25 Feb 1746/7, called to bar 21 Nov 1751 ; Recorder of Tewkesbury from 1756 (?) ; d. unm. 12 Jan 1760.

HARLEY, ROBERT WILLIAM DAKER, eldest son of John Harley, Ross Hall, Shropshire, and Anna Maria Platt, dau. of Robert Smith, Pontypool, Monmouthshire ; b. 3 Apr 1846 ; adm. 28 Sep 1860 ; rowed v.Eton 28 Jul 1864 ; left Aug 1865 ; Magdalene Coll.Cambridge, adm.pens. 20 Oct 1865, matr.Mich.1865 ; succeeded to estates of Earls of Oxford in 1871 under the will of Jane, Lady Langdale, daughter of Edward Harley, 5th Earl of Oxford (qv) ; of Brampton Bryan, Herefordshire ; DL JP Herefordshire, High Sheriff 1883 ; JP Shropshire 1880, also JP Radnorshire ; m. 17 Dec 1878 Hon.Patience Annie Rodney, only dau. of Robert Dennett Rodney, 6th Baron Rodney ; d. 13 Nov 1907.

HARLEY, HON.THOMAS, fourth son of Edward Harley, 3rd Earl of Oxford (qv) ; b. 24 Aug 1730 ; adm. Apr 1738 ; left 1748 ; apprenticed to Edmund Bockin, Size Lane, London, merchant 1749 ; soon after marriage set up in business as a wine merchant in Aldersgate Street ; banker, firm Raymond, Harley, Webber & Co., George Street, Mansion House, London (afterwards Thomas Harley, Cameron & Sons), 1778-97 ; MP City of London 1761-74, Herefordshire 22 May 1776-1802 ; Alderman, Portsoken Ward, City of London 5 May 1761 – May 1785, Bridge Without Ward (and “Father of the City”) from 31 May 1785, Sheriff 1763-4, Lord Mayor 1767-8 ; Prime Warden, Goldsmiths’ Co. 1762-3 ; as Sheriff caused No.45 of the North Briton to be burnt at the Royal Exchange 3 Dec 1763 ; Privy Councillor 27 May 1768, in recognition of his services during the Wilkesite riots, being the first Lord Mayor admitted to the Privy Council in modern times ; a prominent supporter of the Court party in the City ; President, St.Bartholomew’s Hospital, from 1770 ; member, Committee of the Privy Council for India and Foreign Plantations 5 Mar 1784 – 23 Aug 1786 ; of Berrington Hall, Leominster, Herefs. ; Lord Lieut., Radnorshire, from 8 Apr 1791 ; m. 16 Mar 1754 Anne, dau. of Edward Bangham MP, Deputy Auditor of the Imprest ; d. 1 Dec 1804. ODNB.

HARLEY, HON.WILLIAM, fifth son of Edward Harley, 3rd Earl of Oxford (qv) ; b. 30 May 1733 ; adm. Apr 1743 ; left 1749 ; Christ Church, Oxford, matr.23 Dec 1749, Canoneer Student 22 Dec 1749 – void 20 Jun 1758, expiry year of grace as R.Everley ; BA 1753 ; MA 1756 ; ordained deacon 13 Jun 1756 (Oxford), priest 24 Jun 1757 (Salisbury) ; Rector of Everley, Wiltshire, from 24 Jun 1757 ; Vicar of Uffington, Berks., 29 Oct 1763- Jan 1769 ; Vicar of Old Sodbury, Gloucs., from Jan 1769 ; Prebendary of York from 10 Feb 1762 and of Worcester from 15 Dec 1764 ; d. 8 Jul 1769.

HARLEY-RODNEY, THOMAS JAMES, 4th BARON RODNEY, second son of George Rodney, 2ndBaron Rodney, and Anne, second dau. of Hon.Thomas Harley (qv) ; b. 12 Apr 1784 ; adm. 24 Oct 1796 (Clapham) ; in school list 1797 ; left Midsummer 1801 ; assumed additional surname and arms of Harley by royal licence 4 Nov 1805, on inheriting the Berrington Hall estate of his grandfather, Hon.Thomas Harley (qv) ; succ. brother as 4th Baron Rodney 21 Jun 1842 ; d. unm. 30 Oct 1843.

HARLING, WILLIAM, only son of Christopher Harling, Kirkby Lonsdale, Westmorland, and Westminster, haberdasher, and Mary — ; b.      ; in school list 1731 ; KS (aged 14) 1733 ; elected head to Trinity Coll.Cambridge 1738, adm.pens. 2 Jun 1738, scholar 14 May 1739 ; BA 1741/2 ; MA 1745 ; Minor Fellow, Trinity Coll. 2 Oct 1744, Major Fellow 5 Apr 1745 ; Clerk, Secretary of State’s Office, Jun 1742-8 ; ordained deacon 18 Mar 1748/9, priest 2 Apr 1749 (both St Asaph) ; Domestic Chaplain to John Carteret, 2nd Earl Granville (qv), 3 Apr 1749 ; Rector of Kilkhampton, Cornwall, from 21 Sep 1749 ; buried unm. Kilkhampton, Cornwall 28 Aug 1763.

HARLOW, GEORGE HENRY, son of George Harlow, “China merchant” [EICS Canton ?], and Elizabeth — (IGI) ; b. 10 Jun 1787 (IGI) ; at school under Vincent, “for a short time” (Cunningham, British Painters, ii, 312) ; studied under Henry De Cort, landscape painter, and Samuel Drummond, portrait painter ; in Sir Thomas Lawrence’s studio for about eighteen months ; exhibited at Royal Academy 1804 onwards ; painter of portraits and historical pictures ; his picture, Trial of Queen Katharine, containing portraits of Mrs Siddons and the Kembles, subsequently engraved by George Clint, was exhibited in 1817 ; visited Italy to study Old Master paintings there 1818, being elected a member of the Accademia di S.Luca in Rome and painting his own portrait for the Uffizi Gallery in Florence ; returned to London Jan 1819 ; d. unm. 4 Feb 1819. ODNB.

HARLOWE, THOMAS, son of John Harlowe, City of London ; b.      ; adm.     ; QS      ; failed to obtain election to either University 1599 ; Christ Church, Oxford, matr.8 Feb 1599/1600, aged 17, Canoneer Student 1599 – c.1611 ; BA 1603 ; MA 1606 ; adm.Middle Temple 28 Nov 1606. [perhaps Thomas Harlow bapt.St.Michael Bassishaw, London 24 Aug 1581, son of John Harlow (IGI)]

HARMAN, — ; b.       ; in school list 1754.

HARMAN, — ; b.       ; adm.after Oct 1803 ; left 1806.

HARMAN, SAMUEL, son of Samuel Harman, Jermyn Street, Westminster, and Hadley, Middlesex, attorney, and Ann Hardinge ; b. 22 Feb 1787 ; adm. 19 Jan 1796 ; in school lists 1797, 1801 ; left before May 1803 ; articled to Thomas Crowther Newby, solicitor, 1808 ; m. 15 Mar 1825 Lavinia, dau. of William Innes, Kingston, Jamaica ; death registered Kensington first quarter 1874.

[HARMAN, SAMUEL, only son of Samuel Harman, Antigua, Chief Commissioner of Army Accounts, West Indies, and Mary Anne, dau. of James Athill, London ; b. Antigua 5 Aug 1788 ; at school under Vincent ; at Winchester Coll.1804-8 ; Deputy Comptroller of Customs, Martinique ; returned to Antigua 1820 ; Registrar, Antigua ; plantation owner on Antigua ; m. St.Michael, Barbados, 28 Nov 1816 Dorothy Bruce, dau. of William Murray, HM Customs, Barbados ; d. at Philadelphia, USA 8 Mar 1841.  Regarded as a OW by Russell Barker and Stenning, but this is likely to be a confusion with Samuel Harman (adm.1796, qv)]

HARMAN, WILLIAM, brother of Samuel Harman (adm.1796, qv) ; b. 31 May 1788 ; adm. 19 Jan 1796 (Clapham) ; in school list 1797 ; at school 1799 ; entered Royal Navy 30 Mar 1800 ; Lieut., 24 Mar 1807 ; killed in action with French frigate Gloire off The Lizard 18 Dec 1812.

HARMSWORTH, BRIAN ; b.       ; adm.      ; BB in 1702 (Chapter Muniments 33734) ; evidently Brian Harmsworth, son of Robert Harmsworth, and Elizabeth —- ; b. 28 Aug 1690, who was adm. as foundation scholar, Charterhouse Sch. 8 Oct 1703, and d. “at his father’s house” Jul 1707.

HARPER, see also HARPUR.

HARPER, ARTHUR, son of Robert John Harper (qv) ; b. 7 Jan 1810 ; adm. 16 Apr 1823 ; left Bartholomewtide 1826 ; Ensign, 9thFoot 17 Jan 1828 ; Lieut., 22 Oct 1830 ; Capt., 17 Oct 1837 ; retd. 28 Aug 1838 ; of New Lodge, Needwood, Staffs. ; d. 1 Sep 1838.

HARPER, HENRY ; b.       ; adm. 21 Jan 1771 ; left Christmas 1775 (in school lists as Harpur). [Maybe Sir Henry Harpur-Crewe, Bart., son of Sir Henry Harpur, Bart. (qv) ; b. 13 May 1763 ; Christ Church, Oxford, matr. 23 Jun 1781, aged 17 ; Grand Tour (Italy, Switzerland, France) ; succ.father as 7th baronet 10 Feb 1789 ; of Calke Abbey, Derbs. ; JP Derbyshire, High Sheriff 1794 ; assumed additional surname and arms of Crewe by royal licence 1808 ; m. 4 Feb 1792 Anne, lady’s maid, dau. of Isaac Hawkins ; killed by a fall from his coach-box 6 Feb 1819] [Note however Henry Harpur (1758-1809), Cannon Row, Westminster, attorney, son of Rev.Henry Harpur, Vicar of Tonbridge, Kent,  and Sarah, dau. of William Marshall, bapt. Tunbridge 27 Dec 1758] [maybe father of Henry Harpur (in school lists 1801, qv)]

HARPER, JOHN, eldest son of Miles Harper, St.James’s Market, Westminster, Grocer to Royal Household, and Elizabeth Hudson, widow ; b.     ; adm.     ; QS (aged 15) 1714 ; elected head to Trinity Coll.Cambridge 1718, adm.pens. 11 Jun 1718, scholar  11 Jul 1719 ; 6th in “ordo” 1721/2 ; BA 1721/2 ; adm.Middle Temple 21 Sep 1724, called to bar 24 Nov 1727 ; FSA 6 Nov 1728 ; his papers relating to the case of Trinity College, Cambridge, and the Bishop of Ely, against Dr Richard Bentley, 1728-32, in which he acted as counsel for the Bishop of Ely, are preserved in the Bodleian Library, Oxford ; d. at Cambridge 27 Sep 1732 (London Evening Post 28 Sep 1732)..

HARPER, ROBERT JOHN, brother of Samuel Harper (qv) ; b. 4 Dec 1764 ; adm. 13 Jan 1772 (no entrance fee) ; left 1779 ; adm.Lincoln’s Inn 11 May 1781 ; articled to Francis Russell, attorney, Deputy Clerk of Council and Duchy Solicitor, Duchy of Lancaster 1781 ; Duchy Solicitor, Duchy of Lancaster 1786-1826, also Deputy Clerk of Council 1795-1826 ; Surveyor of Woods, North Part, Duchy of Lancaster, from 1825 ; of New Lodge, Needwood, Staffs. ; m. 7 Sep 1802 Catherine, eldest dau. of Thomas Hinckley, Lichfield, Staffs., attorney ; d. 8 Mar 1846.

HARPER, SAMUEL, eldest son of Rev.Samuel Harper FRS, Keeper of Printed Books, British Museum, and Chaplain to the Foundling Hospital, and Jane Lawes ; b. 1760  ; adm. 6 Jun 1768 (no entrance fee) ; still at the School Oct 1775 ; adm.Lincoln’s Inn 23 Apr 1778 ; a law stationer ; living 1829 ; author, Practical Hints for abstracting Title Deeds, 1817 (third edition, 1829).

HARPER, WILLIAM ; b.       ; adm. (aged 9) Jan 1743/4 ; left 1745 (Harpur in school lists).

HARPOLE, — ; b.      ; in school list 1754.

HARPUR, —  ; b.       ; in school list 1744.

HARPUR, CHARLES, brother of Sir Henry Harpur, Bart. (qv) ; b.       ; adm. (aged 10) Jun 1751 ; in school list 1754 ; Christ Church, Oxford, matr. 21 Jun 1759 ; Maj., 38th Foot 19 Dec 1764 (still in Army List 1769) ; d. unm. 9 Jul 1770.

HARPUR, FRANCIS, son of Francis Harpur, Stockport, Cheshire, mercer, and Dorothy, dau. of Rev.Isaac Allen, Rector of Prestwich, Lancs. ; b.     ; adm.      ; KS 1666 ; “a young man of learning, but void of morals”, according to his contemporary William Taswell (qv) ; elected to Trinity Coll.Cambridge 1670, adm.pens. 29 Jun 1670, scholar 1671, matr.1671 ; Head Master of King’s School, Chester, licensed to teach there 3 Nov 1674, still there as Head Master 1706 ; perhaps previously Headmaster, Upholland GS (occurs as such 1677) ; buried Chester Cathedral 26 Nov 1713, described as “of the Abbey Court, Schoolmaster”.  [This identification depends on the as yet unproven assumption that Francis Harpur (KS 1666) was the same Francis Harpur who was subsequently a schoolmaster in Chester]

HARPUR, SIR HENRY, BART., son of Sir Henry Harpur, Bart. MP, Calke Abbey, Derbs., and Lady Caroline Manners, dau. of John Manners, 2nd Duke of Rutland KG ; b.      ; succ. his father as 6th baronet 7 Jun 1748 ; adm. (aged 10) Jul 1749 ; in school list 1754 ; Grand Tour (at Turin in 1758) ; of Calke Abbey, Derbs. ; MP Derbyshire 1761-8 ; High Sheriff, Derbyshire 1774 ; m. 17 Jul 1762 Lady Frances Elizabeth Greville, dau. of Francis Greville, 1st Earl of Warwick ; d. 10 Feb 1789.

HARPUR, HENRY ; b.        ; in school lists 1801, May and Oct 1803 ; at school 1804. [maybe Henry Harpur, Kennington Cross, Surrey, b. c.1792, solicitor (to 1850), one of the executors of the estate of his cousin Joseph Mallord William Turner RA, painter, d. 24 Feb 1877, aged 84] [son of Henry Harpur, solicitor, Cannon Row, Westminster, see under Harper, Henry (adm.1771, qv)]

HARRIES, see also HARRIS.

HARRIES, JOHN HARDING, eldest son of Samuel Harries, Trevaccoon, Pembrokeshire, and Mary, eldest dau. of Thomas Williams, Pope Hill, Freystrop, Pembrokeshire ; bapt. 14 Sep 1788 ; at school under Vincent (Walford, County Families, 1865 edition) ; of Trevaccoon , Pembrokeshire ; DL JP Pembrokeshire, High Sheriff 1846 ; m. 7 Jan 1817 Martha, dau. of William Williams, St.David’s, Pembrokeshire ; d. 23 Aug 1869.

HARRIES, JOSEPH, son of Hector Harries, Carmarthen, Carmarthenshire, Collector of Kilkenny, and Mary, dau. of Joseph Cuffe MP (I), Castle Inch, co.Kilkenny ; b.      ; at school under Knipe (British Library, Additional MSS 28893, f.86) ; Oriel Coll.Oxford, matr. 14 May 1705, aged 20 ; m. 1707 [check] Anne, dau. of Arthur Bushe MP (I), Dangan, co.Kilkenny, Secretary to Commissioners of Revenue (I).

HARRINGTON, see also HARINGTON.

HARRINGTON, — ; b.       ; adm. 22 Jan 1770 ; left Aug 1771.

HARRINGTON, HENRY, third son of John Harrington, Honington, Warwicks. ; b.      ; adm. 17 Jun 1655 (Busby’s Account Book) ; a boarder ; left Nov 1656 ; went to Oakham Sch. ; Sidney Sussex Coll.Cambridge, adm.pens.29 Sep 1658, aged 15, matr.1658. [Perhaps Henry Harrington, son of John Harrington, bapt.St.Olave’s, Southwark, Surrey, 24 Apr 1642 (IGI)] [maybe son of John Harrington, Boothby Pagnell, Lincs., and Esther, dau. of Sir Henry Gibbs, Kt, Honington, Warwicks.]

HARRINGTON, JAMES, son of James Harrington, Waltham Abbey, Essex ; b.     ; adm.     ; KS 1679 ; elected head to Christ Church, Oxford 1683, matr.17 Dec 1683, aged 19, Westminster Student from 17 Dec 1683 ; BA 1687 ; MA 1690 ; adm.Inner Temple 4 Dec 1683, called to bar 2 Jun 1690 ; quickly acquired a reputation for his “wonderful and pregnant knowledge of the common law” ; wrote the preface and introduction to the first edition of Wood’s Athenae Oxonienses ; edited Bishop Stradling’s Sermons, 1692 ; author of a Latin hexameter poem and several pamphlets ; m. 23 Jul 1691 Anne Stradling, niece of Very Rev.George Stradling DD, Dean of Chichester ; d. 23 Nov 1693. Buried Christ Church Cathedral, Oxford. ODNB. [Perhaps James Harrington, son of James Harrington, and Anne —, bapt.St.Andrew’s, Holborn 24 Apr 1664 (IGI)]

HARRINGTON, VILLIERS ; b.      ; adm.      ; KS (Capt.) 1637 ; Clare Coll.Cambridge, adm.10 Apr 1638, matr.1638 ; evidently Villiers Harington whose Greek poem Exastikon is prefaced to the published edition of Richard Lovelace’s Lucasta, 1649-50.

HARRIOTT, THOMAS GEORGE, son of Maj. Thomas Harriott, EICS Bengal, and Diana, miniature painter, widow of Haydock Hill, St Peter le Poer, London, timber merchant, and dau. of George Dietz ; b. 1795 ; in school lists May and Oct 1803 ; left Mar 1805 ; commissioned in Army as Ensign 28 May 1807 ; Lieut., Royal Staff Corps 11 Oct 1811 ; Capt., 13 Mar 1823 ; Maj., 19 Apr 1831 ; half-pay 19 Apr 1831 ; Lieut.-Col. ; served in Peninsular War ; of Grove House, Twickenham, Middlesex ; m. 1st, 13 Aug 1836 Frances Elizabeth, dau. of William Henry Ashhurst MP, Waterstock, Oxfordshire ; m.2nd, 7 Sep 1852 Anne, widow of John Poulett Thomson, Roehampton, Surrey, Russia merchant, and previously widow of — Jackson ; m.3rd, Jun 1856 Mary Ann, widow of Rev.Frederick Ford, Rector of St.Peter’s, Chester, Cheshire, and only dau. of John Neale, Hewshot, Hampshire ; d. in Germany 18 Jul 1857 (will proved PCC 3 Aug 1857).

HARRIOTT, WILLIAM, eldest son of John Harriott, St.Elizabeth parish, Jamaica, West Indies ; b.       ; adm. 12 Jan 1784 ; left Dec 1785 ; Trinity Hall, Cambridge, adm.pens. 12 Jan 1786, but did not matr. ; migr. to Exeter Coll.Oxford, gent.commoner 4 Nov 1788 – 15 Jun 1789, matr. 3 Nov 1788, aged 20 ; adm. Lincoln’s Inn 13 May 1785 ; lived at Metz, France, and subsequently at South Stoneham, Hampshire  ; owner of plantations in Jamaica ; m.  5 Jul 1789 Ann Pither [or Pitter ?], Strand, Westminster  ; d. c. Aug. 1821 (will proved PCC 16 Apr 1822).

HARRIOTT, WILLIAM, eldest son of William Harriott (qv) ; b.       ; adm.     ; in school lists May and Oct 1803 ; left 1806 ; Exeter Coll.Oxford, gent.commoner 18 Dec 1807 – 7 Jun 1815, matr.18 Nov 1807, aged 17 ; BA 1811 ; MA 1814 ; ordained deacon 13 Jun 1813, priest 12 Jun 1814 (both Bath & Wells) ; Vicar of Odiham, Hampshire, from 25 Aug 1824 ; m. 10 Sep 1818 Caroline Lucy, dau. of Rev Charles Warre, Rector of Hillmorton, Warwicks. ; d. 11 Jun 1847.

HARRIS, see also HARRIES.

HARRIS, — ; b.        ; adm.     ; left 1656 (School Lists 1656, first three quarters).

HARRIS, — ; b.        ; adm.        ; in school list Michaelmas quarter 1656.

HARRIS, ARCHDALE (or ARCHDALL) ; b.       ; adm. (aged 10) Mar 1734 ; left 1738 (?) ; a surgeon, practising in New Palace Yard, Westminster ; member, Court of Assistants, Surgeons’ Company, from 1772 ; m.  Susannah —      ; d. 8 Jun 1791, aged 67. [maybe son of Archdall Harris, Charles Street, Westminster, Surgeon, 1st Foot Guards]

HARRIS, ARCHDALE (or ARCHDALL), son of Archdale Harris (qv) ; b.       ; adm. 16 Jul 1781 ; a surgeon, New Palace Yard, Westminster ; d. 8 Apr 1799, aged 28.

HARRIS, GEORGE, son of Right Rev.John Harris DD, Bishop of Llandaff, successively Dean of Hereford and of Wells, and Ann Duckett (“her father was said to have been a surveyor”) ; bapt.St.Martin’s in the Fields 5 Sep 1721 ; adm. (aged 7) Jun 1729 ; Oriel Coll.Oxford, matr.23 Jun 1738 ; BCL 1745 ; DCL 1750 ; adm.advocate, Doctors’ Commons 23 Oct 1750 ; Chancellor, Dioceses of Bangor 6 Mar 1766 (still 1780), Durham from 20 Nov 1779, Hereford (by 1769, still at death), Llandaff (“Vicar General” 7 Feb 1756, Chancellor by 1760, still at death), and Winchester (by 1769 [not later ?]), also Commissary of Essex (by 1780, still at death, Hertfordshire (by 1780, still at death) and Surrey (by 1760, still at death) ; Admiralty Advocate 14 Jun 1764 – 21 May 1782 ; editor, Justinian’s Institutes, withEnglish translation and notes, 1756 ; m. 28 Feb 1756/7 Hannah Price, St.Benet’s, Paul’s Wharf, London ; d. 16 Apr 1796. ODNB.

HARRIS, GEORGE, 1ST BARON HARRIS, son of Rev.George Harris, Curate, Brasted, Kent, and Sarah, dau. of George Twentyman, Braintree, Cumberland ; b. 18 Mar 1746 ; at school under Markham (Steward, Anniversary Dinner 1802, 1817) ; Cadet, RMA Woolwich 1 Jan 1759 ; Lieut.-Fireworker, Royal Artillery 21 Dec 1760 ; Ensign, 5th Foot 30 Jul 1762 ; Lieut., 2 Jan 1765 ; Adjutant 2 Sep 1767 – 14 Mar 1772 ; Capt., 25 Jul 1771 ; served in America 1774-8, wounded at Bunker’s Hill and at Toon Hill ; Maj., 7 Oct 1777 ; commanded provisional battalion of grenadiers at capture of St.Lucia 1778 ; second in command at defence of La Vigie ; while returning home in 1779 he was captured by a French privateer, but was subsequently released on parole ; Lieut.-Col., 5th Foot 29 Nov 1780, exchanged to 76th Foot 12 Oct 1787 ; accompanied Major-Gen. William Medows to India as Aide-de-Camp and Secretary ; Col. in the Army 18 Nov 1790 ; served against Tippoo Sahib 1790-2 ; Maj.-Gen., 3 Oct 1794 ; commanded troops in Madras Presidency  Mar 1797 – Aug 1798 ; Governor of Madras Feb – Aug 1798 ; conducted operations against Tippoo Sahib, captured Seringapatam and conquered Mysore 1799 ; Col., 73rd Foot, from  14 Feb 1800 ; Lieut.-Gen., 1 Jan 1801 ; Gen., 1 Jan 1812 ; created Baron Harris 11 Aug 1815 ; GCB 20 May 1820 ; m. 9 Dec 1779 Anne Carteret, youngest dau. of Charles Dixon, Bath ; d. 19 May 1829. ODNB.

HARRIS, HENRY, son of William Harris, Middlesex ; b.      ; adm.      ; KS (aged 12) 1629 (Bodleian Library, Oxford, Tanner MSS lxix, f.224).

HARRIS, HENRY, son of Henry Harris, Worcs. ; b.      ; adm.     ; Min.Can.(aged 16) 1661 (Chapter Muniments 43105-6).

HARRIS, HENRY LUCAS, son of Henry Harris, EICS Madras, surgeon, and his first wife Jane Charles ; bapt. Fort St.George, Madras 21 Mar 1789 ; adm.     ; left 1807 ; Cadet, EICS Madras 1807 ; Ensign, 24th Madras Native Infantry 7 Apr 1809 ; Lieut., 5 Nov 1814 ; d. at Bolaram, Hyderabad 1 Dec 1819.

HARRIS, JOHN, of Middlesex ; b.      ; adm.      ; KS      ; elected to Christ Church, Oxford 1617, Westminster Student to 1624, matr.6 Dec 1621, aged 20 ; BA 6 Dec 1621.

HARRIS, JOHN ; b.       ; adm.      ; KS       ; elected head to Trinity Coll.Cambridge 1630, adm.scholar 1631, matr.Easter 1631 ; BA 1634/5.

HARRIS, JOHN ; b.       ; adm. (aged 10) Apr 1733 ; perhaps Harris in school list Aug 1733 (third form).

HARRIS, JOHN, youngest son of Archdale Harris (adm.1734, qv) ; b.       ; adm. 8 Jun 1784 ; of Great Smith Street, Westminster ; d. 3 Oct 1849, aged 75.

HARRIS, JOSEPH ; b.      ; adm. (aged 9) Jun 1719. [Perhaps same individual as next].

HARRIS, JOSEPH, son of Thomas Harris, London ; b.      ; adm.      ; in under school list 1723 ; Min.Can.(aged 13) 1725 ; KS 1726 ; elected to Trinity Coll.Cambridge 1730, adm.pens.4 Jun 1730, scholar 7 May 1731, matr.1731 ; MA 1736 ; occasional Tutor 1745 [check].

HARRIS, HON.MUSGRAVE ALURED HENRY, youngest son of George Harris, 1st Baron Harris (qv) ; b. 5 Sep 1801 ; adm. 10 Jan 1814 ; left 31 Jul 1818 ; at Haileybury Coll.1820-1 ; EICS Bombay 1822-34 ; Register and Assistant to Criminal Judge of Court of Adawlut, Northern Concan 19 May 1826 ; Senior Merchant 15 Aug 1833 (sic) ; Christ’s Coll.Cambridge, adm.fellow commoner 9 Apr 1828, matr.Mich.1828 ; migr. to Corpus Christi Coll. 11 Dec 1832 ; MA 1832 ; ordained deacon (Rochester) 3 Feb 1833 ; Perpetual Curate of Southborough, Kent, 10 Sep 1833 – Jan 1836, when he resigned owing to ill-health ; m. 16 Jun 1835 Georgina, dau. of William Fosbery, Limerick ; d. 16 Aug 1836.

HARRIS, ROBERT, son of Archdale Harris (adm.1734, qv) ; b.       ; adm. 16 Jul 1781.

HARRIS, ROBERT THORNHILL, younger son of William James Harris MP, Halwill Manor, Beaworthy, Devon, and Catherine Ann, dau. of Robert Salter Thornhill, London, flour factor ; b. 17 Nov 1865 ; adm. 12 Jun 1879 (D) ; left Nov 1882 ; Gonville and Caius Coll.Cambridge, adm.pens. 18 Oct 1883, matr. Mich.1883, resided five terms but did not graduate ; adm.Middle Temple 29 Jan 1885 ; served 1914-18 war ; 2nd Lieut., Royal North Devon Yeomanry (TF)  5 Oct 1914, Lieut., 1 Jun 1916 ; of Halwill Manor, Beaworthy, Devon ; JP Devon 1893 ; m. 4 Jun 1889 Margaret Kate, youngest dau. of William Herbert Gossage, Melbourne, Victoria, soap manufacturer ; d. 2 Dec 1934.

HARRIS, THOMAS ; b.      ; adm. (aged 12) Jan 1715/6 ; in under school list 1716.

[HARRIS, THOMAS ; b.       ; in school list Dec 1736 (“Harris major”). Christian name probably an error]

HARRISON, — ; b.       ; in school lists 1656.

HARRISON, — ; b.       ; adm.1656 (school lists 1656, last two quarters).

HARRISON, —  ; b.       ; adm.1656 (school lists 1656, last two quarters) ; KS    ; d. at school 1661.

HARRISON, — ; b.      ; in under school list 1715.

HARRISON, — ; b.       ; in school lists 1750, 1751.

HARRISON, — ; b.       ; adm. 30 Jun 1766 ; left 1771 (“senior”).

HARRISON, — ; b.        ; adm. 1 Jun 1768 ; left 1769 (“junior”).

HARRISON, ABRAHAM ; b.       ; adm. (aged 13) Apr 1731 ; left 1733.

HARRISON, ALBAN HENRY, son of Henry Harrison (adm.1826, qv) ; b. 4 Mar 1843 ; adm. from Lancing Coll. 5 Feb 1856 ; QS 1857 ; left 1861 ; Trinity Coll.Cambridge, adm.pens.8 Oct 1861, matr. Lent 1862 ; ran in hundred yards and quarter mile v. Oxford 1864 ; BA 1865 ; MA 1869 ; Chichester Theol.Coll.1866 ; ordained deacon 1866, priest 1867 (both Chichester) ; Curate, Rotherfield, Sussex 1866-8, Hartfield, Sussex 1868-9 ; Curate in charge, Bredfield, Sussex 1869-73 ; Chaplain, Maidstone Gaol 1874-82 ; Vicar of Cranbrook, Kent 1882-98 ; Rector of Great Chart, Kent, from 1898 ; m. 29 Oct 1868 Bessie, youngest dau. of Hugh Croft, The Down House, Lamberhurst, Kent ; d. 5 Apr 1919.

HARRISON, ALBAN HUGH, eldest son of Alban Henry Harrison (qv) ; b. 30 Nov 1869 ; adm. 6 Feb 1883 (R) ; left Dec 1887 ; Trinity Coll.Cambridge, adm.pens. 21 May 1888, matr.Mich.1888 ; BA 1891 ; played Association Football v.Oxford 1889, 1891, for England v.Scotland and v.Ireland 1893 ; civil servant, Cape Colony, South Africa ; m. 1st, 11 Apr 1901 Helen Macgregor, third dau. of William Magee Grier MICE, Chief Inspector of Public Works, Cape Colony ; m. 2nd, 27 Jan 1927 Mary Charlotte, widow of (Richard) Heathfield Dodgson, and dau. of Sir William Smith-Marriott, Bart., barrister ; d. 15 Aug 1943.

HARRISON, ALFRED RICHARD, brother of William Bassett Harrison (qv) ; bapt.St.James, Piccadilly 12 Jan 1815 (IGI) (second Christian name given as Richards) ; adm. 19 Feb 1824 (Stelfox) ; severely injured by a stone thrown by one of his schoolfellows, which hit him on the back of his head (The Times 23, 28, 30 April, 7 May 1829) ; pawnbroker, Wardour Street (occurs 1843) ; d. 4 Oct 1845, as a result of a fall from a horse.

HARRISON, BENJAMIN JOHN, third son of Matthew Harrison (qv) ; b. 10 Mar 1803 ; adm. 16 Sep 1816 (G) ; Christ Church, Oxford, matr. 19 Jun 1821, Canoneer Student 1822-34 ; BA 1825 ; MA 1828 ; ordained deacon 21 May 1826, priest 10 Jun 1827 (both Oxford) ; Rector of Beaumont, with Moze, Essex, from 16 Aug 1833 ; m. 25 Apr 1835 Emily, second dau. of Richard Hall, Portland Place, London, and Copped Hall, Totteridge, Herts. ; d. 7 Dec 1838.

HARRISON, CHARLES, son of Charles Harrison, Lewes, Sussex, attorney, and Katherine, second dau. of William Faulconer, Chalvington, Sussex ; b.      ; at school under Freind (Alum.Dub.) ; Trinity Coll.Dublin, adm.pens. 16 Nov 1715, aged 17 ; [presumably Charles Harrison, second son of Charles Harrison, Strutton Ground, Westminster, adm. Middle Temple 2 Jul 1718] ; of Sutton, Seaford, Sussex ; m. 6 Aug 1733 Jane, only dau. of Elizabeth Beeching, Rye, Sussex, widow ; buried Seaford, Sussex 14 Jul 1759. [father described in TCD admissions as “clericus”]

HARRISON, FRANCIS LAW, son of Henry Harrison (adm.1826, qv) ; b. 22 Nov 1846 ; adm. 20 Jan 1860 (R) ; QS (Capt.) 1861 ; elected to Trinity Coll.Cambridge 1865, adm.pens. 31 Jul 1865 ; BA 1870 ; MA 1874 ; adm.solicitor 1 Dec 1875 ; practised in London, firm Newbon, Harrison & Co ; m. 8 Jun 1876 Josephine Constance, dau. of Harrison Blair, Bolton, Lancs., industrialist ; d. 5 Dec 1907.

HARRISON, GEORGE MARSH, brother of William Bassett Harrison (qv) ; b. 4 Jan 1809 ; adm. 11 Jan 1819 ; adm.solicitor Mich.1829 ; of firm Harrison & Dobree, Hart Street, Bloomsbury Square ; m. 1st, 22 Oct 1835 Sarah Ann, dau. of George Dobree, London, solicitor ; m.2nd, 16 Nov 1859 Robina Roberts, widow of Patric Park, sculptor, and dau. of Robert Carruthers LLD, editor Inverness Courier ; d. 9 Aug 1862

HARRISON, HENRY, second but eldest surviving son of Benjamin Harrison, Treasurer Guy’s Hospital, and Elizabeth, dau. of John Pelly, Upton, Essex, Capt., East India Maritime Service ; b. 20 Sep 1765 ; adm. 12 Jan 1780 ; Christ Church, Oxford, matr. 13 Dec 1782, Canoneer Student from 23 Dec 1783 ; BA 1788 ; MA 1789 ; adm.Lincoln’s Inn 8 Feb 1787, called to bar 12 Jun 1790 ; d. 29 Mar 1792. Buried Christ Church Cathedral, Oxford.

HARRISON, HENRY, son of Rev.William Bagshaw Harrison, Vicar of Goudhurst, Kent, and Charlotte, youngest dau. of Capt. Thomas Tonkin, Royal Navy ; b. 27 Mar 1813 ; adm. 17 Jan 1826 ; KS 1827 ; rowed v.Eton 1831 ; Trinity Coll.Cambridge, adm.pens. 6 Jul 1831, matr.Mich.1831 ; BA 1835 ; MA 1838 ; ordained deacon 5 Jun 1836, priest 8 Oct 1837 (both Canterbury) ; Curate, Goudhurst, Kent 1836-40 ; Vicar of Kilndown, Goudhurst, Kent, from 1840 ; Chaplain to Ticehurst Union 1853 ; m. 9 Sep 1840 Emily, dau. of Richard Springett, Finchcox Park, Goudhurst, Kent ; d. 28 Sep 1892.

HARRISON, HENRY, second son of Henry Harrison, Holywood House, Holywood, co.Down, and Letitia, dau. of Robert James Tennent MP, Rush Park, Belfast ; stepson of Hartley Withers (qv) ; b. 17 Dec 1867 ; adm. 9 May 1881 (R), exhibitioner ; QS 8 Jun 1882 ; left Jul 1886 ; Balliol Coll.Oxford, matr. 20 Jan 1887 ; MP (Irish Nationalist) Mid Tipperary 15 May 1890 – 1892 ; known in House of Commons as “Parnell’s stripling” ; served 1914-18 war ; 2nd Lieut., 3rd batt., Royal Irish Regt. ; Lieut., 9 Aug 1916 ; MC 11 Dec 1916, bar 18 Feb 1918 ; OBE 8 Jan 1919 ; Secretary, Irish Dominion League 1920-1 ; Dublin correspondent, The Economist 1922-7 ; editor, Irish Truth (weekly) 1924-7 ; author, Parnell Vindicated : the Lifting of the Veil, 1931, Parnell, Joseph Chamberlain and Mr Garvin, 1938, Parnell, Joseph Chamberlain and The Times 1953 ; hon.LLD Dublin 1953 ; m. 21 Jan 1895 Maie, only dau. of John Crane Byrne, New York, USA ; d. 20 Feb 1954. ODNB.

HARRISON, HENRY BAGSHAW, son of Rev.Henry Bagshaw Harrison DD, Rector of Bugbrooke, Northants, and of Warmington, Warwicks., and Sarah, second dau. of Rev.James Harwood, Vicar of Dartford, Kent ; bapt.Bugbrooke, Northants 25 Nov 1797 ; adm. Christmas 1811 ; KS (aged 13) 1811 ; elected to Christ Church, Oxford 1815, matr. 8 May 1815, Westminster Student (at death) ; 1stcl.Mathematics and 2nd cl.Classics 1818 ; BA 1819 ; d. unm. 1 Apr 1822.

HARRISON, SIR HENRY LELAND, second son of Rev.James Harwood Harrison, Rector of Bugbrooke, Northants, and Gertrude Maria, dau. of Capt.Hickman Leland Rose, 3rd Dragoons, Dover, Kent ; nephew of Henry Bagshaw Harrison (qv) ; b. 5 Feb 1837 ; adm. 1 Jul 1850 (G), from Uppingham Sch. ; QS 1851 ; elected to Trinity Coll.Cambridge 1855, adm.pens. 11 Jun 1855, but did not matr. or reside ; went to Christ Church, Oxford, matr.15 May 1856, exhibitioner 1856, Canoneer Student 1858, lecturer in mathematics ; 1st cl.Mathematics and 2nd cl.Classics (Mods) 1858, 4th cl.Mathematics 1859 ; BA 1859 ; adm.Lincoln’s Inn 24 Jan 1859, called to bar 17 Nov 1870 ; entered Bengal Civil Service 1860 ; Junior Secretary, Bengal Government 1867 ; Magistrate and Collector, Midnapore 1871 ; Secretary to Revenue Board 1878, member Rent Commission 1879 ; Chairman, Calcutta Corporation, and Commissioner Calcutta Police 1881-90 ; knighted 14 Feb 1887 ; member, Bengal Board of Revenue 1890 ; Roman Catholic convert 1866 ; m. 24 Sep 1860 Fanny Matilda, dau. of Gilbert Abbott à Beckett (qv) ; d. at Chittagong, Bengal  5 May 1892.

HARRISON, HERBERT BAYLEY, brother of Sir Henry Leland Harrison (qv) ; b. 5 Oct 1842 ; adm. 4 Jun 1856 (G) ; QS 1857 ; Capt. of the School 1860 ; received into Roman Catholic Church while “out” for a “Sat.-Sun.”, and left Apr 1861 ; entered novitiate at Brompton Oratory ; ordained deacon (RC) 1866 ; d. unm. 17 Jun 1867.

HARRISON, JAMES ; b.       ; adm. 12 Jun 1775 ; left 1779.

HARRISON, JOHN (adm.1735), see NEWPORT, JOHN.

HARRISON, JOHN, eldest son of Benjamin Harrison, Mile End Green, Stepney, Middlesex, afterwards of Hornchurch, Essex, surgeon and apothecary, and Sarah, dau. of John Deane, Poplar, Middlesex, grazier ; bapt.St.Dunstan’s, Stepney 2 May 1721 (IGI) ; adm. (aged 16) Jul 1737 ; left 1737 ; adm.Lincoln’s Inn 23 Jan 1737/8 ; Trinity Hall, Cambridge, adm.pens. 8 Apr 1738, scholar 31 Jan 1739/40, matr. 7 Jan 1739/40 ;  a merchant and ironmaster, firm Andrew Harrison & Company ; director, East India Company 1758-61, 1763-6, 1773-7, 1779-82 ; director, Sun Fire Office, from 1761, Chairman 1781 ; director, Bank of England, from 1788 ; a Lieut., City of London (occurs 1769-81) ; m. 28 Jul 1747 Charlotte, second dau. of Champion Branfill, Upminster Hall, Essex ; d. 5 Aug 1794.

HARRISON, JOHN, only son of John Harrison, Bridges Street, Covent Garden, London ; b.      ; adm. 31 Jan 1771 ; KS (aged 13) 1774 ; elected to Christ Church, Oxford 1777, matr. 30 May 1777, Westminster Student 24 Dec 1777 – void 13 May 1785 ; BA 1781 ; MA 1801 ; adm.Middle Temple 2 Jul 1781.

HARRISON, JOHN, brother of William Bassett Harrison (qv) ; b. 5 May 1807 ; adm. 11 Jan 1819 ; presumably “John Harrison, Esq.”, who signed Play Protest 1847 ; m. 15 Sep 1863 Ann, dau. of Thomas Bryant.

HARRISON, MATTHEW, brother of Henry Harrison (adm.1780, qv) ; b. 11 Jul 1773 ; adm. 28 May 1782 ; Chairman, Albion Life Insurance Co. ; Governor, Guy’s Hospital and South Sea House ; one of HM Lieutenants for City of London ;  JP Surrey ; m. 23 Dec 1795 Maria, dau. of Col.James [or Alexander ?] Patterson, Montreal, Canada ; d. 5 Dec 1850.

HARRISON, MATTHEW BEACHCROFT, only son of Rev.Matthew Harrison, Rector of Church Oakley, Hampshire, and Margaret, only surviving dau. of Samuel Beachcroft, EICS Bengal ; b. 27 Jan 1835 ; adm. 10 Jun 1847 ; King’s Coll.Sch. 1851-3 ; Trinity Coll.Oxford, matr.23 May 1853 ; Ensign, 62nd Foot 11 May 1855 ; Lieut., 26 Feb 1856 ; retd. 4 Jun 1861 ; m. 7 Apr 1859 Louise, dau. of Charles Brown, Queen’s Square, St.John’s, New Brunswick, Canada ; d. 15 Nov 1866.

HARRISON, OCTAVIAN BAXTER CAMERON, brother of William Bassett Harrison (qv) ; b. 22 Feb 1819 ; adm. 22 May 1826 ; KS 1833 ; elected to Trinity Coll.Cambridge 1837, adm.pens. 16 May 1837, scholar 1838, matr. Mich.1838 ; BA 1841 ; MA 1844 ; adm. Inner Temple 26 Jan 1844, called to bar 3 Jun 1851 ; special pleader ; Home Circuit, later South-Eastern Circuit ; Revising Barrister, Essex 1878 ; joint author (with Henry Rutherford), Reports of Cases argued and determined in the Court of Common Pleas, 1868, and also author of other legal publications ; m. 25 Oct 1864 Anne Cole ; d. 30 Dec 1894.

HARRISON, ROBERT ; b.       ; adm. (aged 13) Jul 1747 ; left 1747.

HARRISON, ROBERT WILLIAM FREDERICK, son of Robert Harrison, Librarian London Library, St.James’s Square, London, and Elizabeth, dau. of William Gossling, Cobham, Surrey ; b. 17 Feb 1858 ; adm. 26 Jan 1871 ; left Dec 1873 ; adm.Inner Temple 14 May 1881, called to bar 17 Nov 1885 ; equity draughtsman and conveyancer ; Assistant Secretary and Librarian, Royal Society 16 Jan 1896 – Dec 1919 ; m. 30 Jul 1887 Bertha, dau. of Maurice Young, Milford, Surrey, nursery gardener ; d. 15 Jul 1945.

HARRISON, SAMUEL WILLIAM BAGSHAW, son of William Harrison (adm.1813, qv) ; b. 22 Feb 1833 ; adm. 1 Oct 1846 (G) ; QS 1847 ; d. of typhoid fever contracted at school 28 May 1848.

HARRISON, THOMAS ; b.       ; adm. (aged 7) Jun 1724 ; left 1727.

HARRISON, THOMAS, brother of William Bassett Harrison (qv) ; b. 13 Feb 1816 ; adm. 8 Apr 1829.

HARRISON, WILLIAM, son of John Harrison, London, and Anne — ; b. 18 Feb 1534 {or 1534/5 ?], in “Cordwainer streete, otherwise called Bowe lane, in the parish of St.Thomas the Apostle” ; at school under Nowell, having previously been at St.Paul’s Sch. ; in his “Historical Description of England” he describes himself as “sometime an unprofitable grammarian under the reverend father, Master Nowell” ;  Christ Church, Oxford ; BA 1556 ; MA 1560 ; BD (Cambridge) 1569 ; Fellow of Merton Coll. Jul 1557 –8 ; ordained Apr 1558 ; Rector of Radwinter, Essex, from 16 Feb 1558/9 ; Rector of St.Olave’s, Silver Street, London 28 Mar 1567 – 1570/1 ; Vicar of Wimbish, Essex, 28 Jan 1570/1-81 ; Vicar of St.Thomas the Apostle, London, 26 Oct 1583-7 ; Canon of Windsor from 24 Apr 1586 ; author of the “Historical Description of England” prefaced to Holinshed’s Chronicle, 1577, and of other works ; m. Marion, dau. of William Isebrande, Anderne, near Guisnes, Picardy ; d. 9 Nov 1593. ODNB.

HARRISON, WILLIAM, eldest son of William Harrison, Brent Bridge, Hendon, Middlesex, and Tufton Street, Westminster, and Sarah, only dau. of John Wale, St.Giles in the Fields, London ; b. 9 May 1732 ; adm. (aged 9) May 1741 ; left 1749 ; apprenticed to John Nicoll, St.Andrew’s Holborn, attorney, 9 Nov 1749 ; adm.Middle Temple 14 Mar 1749/50 ; practised in Bream’s Buildings, Chancery Lane, and Great College Street ; m. 23 Nov 1754 Mary, only child of Samuel Cowley, Millbank, Westminster, distiller ; d. 13 Dec 1781.

HARRISON, WILLIAM ; b.       ; adm. (aged 10) Jan 1750/1 ; in school list 1754.

HARRISON, WILLIAM, brother of Henry Bagshaw Harrison (qv) ; b. 17 Jan 1800 ; at Rugby Sch.1808 ; adm.Christmas 1813 ; KS 1814 ; elected to Christ Church, Oxford 1818, matr. 5 May 1818, aged 18, Westminster Student (still 1829) ; BA 1821 ; MA 1825 ; Usher at the School 15 Apr 1822 ; ordained deacon 25 May 1823, priest 28 May 1826 (both Oxford) ; Rector of Warmington, Warwicks., from 7 Jan 1831 ; m. 9 Feb 1831 his cousin Anne, sister of Henry Harrison (adm.1826, qv) ; d. 30 Oct 1877.

HARRISON, WILLIAM BASSETT, eldest son of John Orton Harrison, Wardour Street, London, pawnbroker, and Harriet — (IGI) ; b. 14 Jan 1804 ; adm. 27 Jan 1817 ; left Christmas 1817 ; d. Sep 1827.

HARRISON, WILLIAM FREDERICK, only son of Thomas Harrison FRS, Streatham Park, Surrey, barrister, and his cousin Lydia, widow of Richard Shepley, Carshalton, Surrey, oil presser, and dau. of George Harrison, London, merchant and banker ; half-brother of George Shepley (qv) ; b. 28 Sep 1814 ; adm. 25 Jun 1827 ; Trinity Coll.Cambridge, adm.pens. 18 Oct 1832, matr. Mich.1833, but did not graduate ; adm.Lincoln’s Inn 27 Apr 1837 ; adm.solicitor [check date] ; partner, firm Wilson, Harrison and Bristow, London, to 1853 ; JP Surrey ; Deputy Chairman, Surrey County Sessions ; d. 22 Nov 1879.

HARRYE, —  ; b.      ; at school in 1569, chorister (Chapter Muniments 54019) ; a pensioner at Widow Perryn’s.

HARSLETT, THOMAS, see ARSLETT, THOMAS.

HARSNETT, PETER, see HERSENT, PETER.

HART, —  ; in school list Jun 1764.

HART, BRANDON, son of Robert Hart, Surgeon to Garrison at Portsmouth, and Anne Brandon (IGI) ; bapt.St.Thomas, Portsmouth, Hampshire 19 Mar 1709 (IGI) ; adm. (aged 14) Jun 1724 ; Surgeon to Garrison at Portsmouth 2 Oct 1731.

HART, EDWARD HART, second son of Charles Augustus Tulk (qv) ; b. 21 Nov 1811 ; adm. 28 Mar 1822 ; assumed surname of Hart in lieu of Tulk 19 Nov 1832, under will of maternal grandfather ; death registered Kensington fourth quarter 1853 (will proved PCC 14 Dec 1853, as of 10 Waterford Road, Fulham, Middlesex).

HART, HARRY CARTWRIGHT, only son of Henry Hart, Strawberry Hill Road, Twickenham, Middlesex, wine merchant, and Mary Ann Cartwright (IGI) ; b. 18 Feb 1863 ; adm. 27 Sep 1877 (G) ; left Dec 1880 ; articled to James Curtis, London, solicitor ; a solicitor ; m. 15 Sep 1888 Caroline, only dau. of Nathaniel Alfred Clifford, The Grange, Twickenham, Middlesex ; death registered Christchurch fourth quarter 1891, aged 28.

HART, NICHOLAS (alias STANGUISH), son of Henry Hart, Kennington, Kent, and Mary — ; b.      ; at school under Grant four or five years, having been sent to the School at the age of 9 (Foley, Records of the English Province of the Society of Jesus, i, 166-73, vi, 212) ; Broadgates Hall, Oxford, matr. 9 Feb 1593/4, aged 14 ; Inns of Court ; Louvain Univ. ;  adm.English College, Rome 1 Nov 1599 ; ordained Roman Catholic priest 28 Dec 1603 ; sent to England 8 May 1604 ; entered Society of Jesus 1605, professed 1622 ; arrested in England under pseudonym of Hammond and banished 1607 ; returned to England and again banished 1612 ; returned to England once more ; d. 27 Jul 1650.

HART, ROGER, see OWEN, ROBERT.

HARTCUP, — ; b.        ; at school 1790. [Rev.Hartcup, Fellow of Clare Hall, subscriber to Smedley, Erin, 1810. If he was the OW, as seems quite likely, the entry should read : Hartcup, Thomas, elder son of Gen.Thomas Hartcup, Royal Engineers, and Ann Monyns, dau. of William Monroe ; b. 23 Jun 1772 ; Clare Coll.Cambridge, adm.pens. 8 Jun 1791, matr. Easter 1794 ; BA 1795 ; MA 1798 ; Fellow, Clare Coll., 1797 ; ordained deacon 20 Sep 1795 (Norwich), priest 19 Mar 1802 (Winchester, lit.dim. from Ely) ; Curate, Belstead Parva, Suffolk, 7 Jun 1813, Rushmere, Suffolk 1818 ; m. 8 May 1810 Jane, dau. of John Parker ; d. 21 Jan 1829.]

HARTLEY, —  ; b.       ; in school list 1750.

HARTLEY, JOHN ; b.      ; adm. (aged 9) Jan 1719/20 ; left 1720.

HARTLEY, THOMAS, son of — Hartley, Great George Street, Westminster ; b.        ; in school list 1801 ; left 1806 ; 2nd Lieut., 23rdFoot 12 May 1807 ; Lieut., 3 Dec 1807 ; 7th Foot 3 Aug 1809 ; retd. 1814 ; served in Peninsular War ; severely wounded at siege of Badajoz 25 Mar 1812 ; afterwards with London Police Force ; lived in Bow Street, London ; m. — Parke ; d. c.1845. [So identified by Whitmore, his source or sources not indicated : perhaps Thomas Hartley, son of Thomas Hartley, Great Queen Street, London, and Frances Hesilrige, dau. of Reuben Parke, Melton Mowbray, Leics., attorney, Clerk of the Peace, Leicestershire ; b. 8 Oct 1788]

HARTOPP, WILLIAM EVANS, only son of Edward Samuel Evans Hartopp, Clipsham Hall, Rutland, and his first wife Mary, dau. of Henry Goode, Claremount, King’s Co., Ireland ; b. 12 Jun 1855 ; adm. 27 May 1869 (G) ; left Whitsun 1872 ; King’s Coll., London, AKC 1875 ; adm.Middle Temple 10 May 1876, called to bar 7 May 1879 ; Midland Circuit ; Secretary to London Fencing Club from 1892 ; m. 12 Oct 1886 Janet Georgina, youngest dau. of George Bogle, Rosemount, Ayrshire ; d. 11 Dec 1930.

HARTSHORNE, ALBERT, son of Rev.Charles Henry Hartshorne FSA, Rector of Holdenby, Northants, writer on antiquarian topics, and Frances Margaretta, youngest dau. of Rev.Thomas Kerrich FSA, Denton, Norfolk, Librarian, Cambridge Univ.; b. 15 Nov 1839 ; adm. Jan 1854 ; afterwards ed. in France ; Heidelberg Univ. ; landowner (1881 Census) ; Secretary, Archaeological Institute 1876-83, 1886-94 ; editor, Archaeological Journal 1878-92 ; FSA 8 Jun 1882 ; author, Old English Glasses, 1897, and numerous other publications ; m. 15 Oct 1872 Constance Amelia, youngest dau. of Rev.Francis Michael MacCarthy, Vicar of Thornes, Yorks. ; d. 8 Dec 1910. ODNB.

HARVEST, TASH, second son of William Harvest, Kingston upon Thames, Surrey, brewer, and his first wife Elizabeth, dau. of Hatton Tash, Iver, Bucks. ; bapt.Kingston 14 Oct 1717 (IGI) ; adm. (aged 9) Jun 1727 ; in under school list 1729. [maybe “Jesse [sic] Harvest, Esq., son of William Harvest, Esq.”, who d. at Kingston upon Thames, Surrey 6 Jan 1733/4 (Penny London Post 9 Jan 1734)]

HARVEST, WILLIAM, brother of Tash Harvest (qv) ; b.      ; adm. (aged 8) Jun 1727 ; in under school list 1729 ; left 1729.

HARVEY, see also HARVIE, HARVY, HARVYE and HERVEY.

HARVEY, EDWARD, brother of Eliab Harvey (adm. Jan 1723/4, qv) ; b. 1 Aug 1718 ; adm. (aged 8) Jan 1726/7 ; left 1735 ; adm. Lincoln’s Inn 24 May 1736 ; Cornet, 10th Dragoons 19 Mar 1740/1 ; Lieut., 31 Aug 1744 ; Capt., 7th Dragoons 6 Feb 1747 ; Maj., 8 Mar 1751 ; Lieut.-Col., 6th Dragoons 25 May 1754 ; Equerry to George III 1760 ; Col. in the Army 2 Dec 1760 ; Maj.-Gen., 10 Jul 1762 ; Adjutant-General, Army, from Dec 1763 ; Col., 12th Dragoons 17 Mar 1763 – Sep 1764, Carabineers 28 Sep 1764 – Oct 1775, 6thDragoons from 18 Oct 1775 ; Lieut.-Gen. 25 May 1772 ; Governor of Portsmouth from Jul 1773 ; served with distinction in Seven Years War ; wounded at Wetter and Kloster Kampen ; MP Gatton 5 Dec 1761-8, Harwich from 1768 ; described by Horace Walpole as “the King’s confidential tool for the Army” (Journal of the Reign of George III 1771-83, ed.Doran, i, 179) ; m.      ; d. 27 Mar 1778.

HARVEY, ELIAB, second son of William Harvey MP, Chigwell, Essex, and Mary, dau. of Ralph Williamson, Berwick upon Tweed, Northumberland ; b. 23 May 1716 ; adm. Jan 1723/4 ; Min.Can.1729 ; KS 1730 ; elected to Trinity Coll.Cambridge 1734, adm.pens.17 Jun 1734, scholar 2 May 1735 ; 4th in “ordo” 1737/8 ; BA 1737/8 ; MA 1741 ; Minor Fellow, Trin.Coll. 2 Oct 1740, Major Fellow 9 Jul 1741 ; adm. Inner Temple 5 May 1733, called to bar 12 Jun 1741, Bencher 1758, Treasurer 1767 ; tenant chambers, Inner Temple, from 1741 ; KC 29 Mar 1758 ; MP Dunwich 1761-8 ; FRS 29 Mar 1764 ; m. 20 Nov 1756 Mary, dau. of Richard Benyon, Gildea Hall, Essex, Governor of Bengal ; d. 23 Oct 1769.

HARVEY, SIR ELIAB, fourth son of William Harvey MP, Rolls Park, near Chigwell, Essex, and Emma, sister of Stephen Skynner (qv) ; nephew of Eliab Harvey (qv) ; b. 5 Dec 1758 ; adm. 19 Jan 1768 ; at Harrow School 1770-5 ; entered Royal Navy ; nominally entered on board William and Mary yacht 1771 ; Lieut., 26 Feb 1779 ; Commander 21 Mar 1781 ; Capt., 20 Jan 1783 ; served under Sir John Jervis at reduction of Martinique and Guadeloupe 1794 ; commanded HMS Temeraire at blockade of Brest and at battle of Trafalgar 21 Oct 1805 ; Rear-Adm., 9 Nov 1805 ; serving under Gambier in Basque Roads 1809 ; dismissed the service 23 May 1809 for declaring publicly on board his flagship, HMS Tonnant, his disapproval of Lord Cochrane’s appointment to a special command ; reinstated 21 Mar 1810, “in consideration of his long and meritorious services”, but not again employed ; Vice-Adm., 31 Jul 1810 ; Adm., 12 Aug 1819 ; succeeded elder brother in family estates 1779 ; MP Maldon 27 May 1780-4, Essex 1802-12 and from 1820 ; KCB 2 Jan 1815 ; GCB 11 Jan 1825 ; m. 15 May 1784 Lady Louisa Nugent, younger dau. of Robert Nugent, 1st Earl Nugent (I) PC MP ; d. 20 Feb 1830. ODNB.

HARVEY, JAMES MITCHELL ALEXANDER, son of Thomas Harvey, St Dunstan’s in the West, London, and Elizabeth —- ;  b. 13 Apr 1787 ; in school list 1797. [Possibly I (sic, for J. ?).M.A.Hervey (sic), Midshipman, Royal Navy, who d. a French prisoner at Metz (M.Lewis, Napoleon and his British captives, 1962, 280)].

HARVEY, JOHN, only son of John Harvey FSI, Prendergast, Haverfordwest, Pembrokeshire, land agent and Clerk of Lieutenancy for Pembrokeshire, and Ellen —- (born Haverfordwest) ; b. 25 Feb 1856 ; adm. 12 Jun 1868 ; d. 20 Nov 1872 (“from the effects of an accident at Westminster School”).

HARVEY, SAMUEL, son of Samuel Harvey, London ; b.       ; adm. 15 Jun 1766 ; BB  ; KS (aged 14) 1769 ; elected to Trinity Coll.Cambridge (with Titley gratuity) 1773, adm.pens. 9 Jun 1773, scholar 22 Apr 1774, but did not matr. ; d. c.1783. [Presumably Samuel Harvey, son of Samuel Harvey, and Jane —, bapt.St.John’s, Smith Square 24 Nov 1754 (IGI) : father perhaps statuary (will proved PCC 1 Feb 1786)]

HARVEY, T.    ; b.       ; in school list 1797.

HARVIE, —  ; b.       ; adm.      ; a pensioner in 1596 (tutors, Mr Heather and Mr Roger Edward).

HARVY, — ; b.       ; at school c.1660 (Busby’s Account Book).

HARVYE, GEORGE ; b.       ; adm.      ; GS 1540 ; KS 1540-4 (Chapter Muniments).

HARWARD, JOHN NETHERTON, eldest son of Rev.John Harward, Hartlebury, Worcs., Rector of Icomb, Gloucs., and Susanna, dau. of Thomas Sansom, St.Margaret’s, Westminster, King’s Messenger ; bapt. Oct 1797 (IGI) ; adm.Midsummer 1809 ; Min.Can.1811 ; left 1811 ; Worcester Coll.Oxford, matr. 22 Jun 1814, scholar ; BA 1818 ; MA 1820 ; ordained deacon 23 Dec 1820 (Oxford), priest 1821 ; Curate, Bromsgrove, Worcs., 1821 ; Vicar of Kemsing cum Seal, Kent, 26 Sep 1838-46 ; Domestic Chaplain to Bishop of Rochester 1840 ; Vicar of East Grinstead, Sussex, from 1848 ; m. 2 Jul 1823 Harriet, dau. of Richard Butler, West Hall, Cheltenham, Gloucs. ; d. 24 Nov 1863, aged 66.

HARWELL (or HAREWELL), GILES ; b.      ; adm.     ; KS        ; elected to Christ Church 1629, Westminster Student to 1641, matr. 13 Dec 1633, aged 18 ; BA 1633 ; MA 1636 ; ordained deacon 4 Jun 1637 (Oxford) ; Rector of Flyford Flavell, Worcs., from 13 May 1640 ; m.        ; will proved 1655.

HARWOOD, RICHARD ; b.       ; adm.       ; KS 1682.

HASELAR, ALEXANDER ; b.      ; adm. 11 Sep 1783. [Perhaps a son of Robert Haselar (qv), and probably  = Alexander Francis Haselar recorded as living in 1814, who had m. by 1803 Sarah — (IGI)] [Alexander Francis Haselar, gentleman, will PCC 7 Jan 1834, Little Amwell, Herts. ] [perhaps apothecary, Ware, Herts.]

HASELAR, ROBERT, second but only surviving son of Alexander Haselar, St.Margaret, Westminster, scrivener, and his second wife Elizabeth, dau. of William Tufnell, Westminster, builder and bricklayer ; b.        ; adm. (aged 10) Apr 1745 (as Hasler) ; left 1751 (Haselar in school lists) ; Ensign, 1st Foot Guards 16 Jan 1752 ; Lieut. and Capt., 16 Jul 1757 ; Capt.-Lieut., 9 Aug 1771 ; Capt. and Lieut.-Col., 9 Aug 1771 ; retd. 4 Mar 1776 ; m.1st, 31 Jul 1766 Anna Margareta, dau. of John Dornbusch, Tavistock Street, London ; m.2nd, Sarah — ; d. 17 Dec 1787.

HASLAM, CHRISTOPHER, son of William Haslam, Newark, Notts., apothecary ; bapt.Newark, Notts. 17 Nov 1692 (IGI) ; adm.      ; QS (aged 15) 1708 ; elected to Christ Church, Oxford 1712, matr. 4 Jul 1712, Westminster Student 24 Dec 1712 – void 1726, Tutor 1720-6, Junior Censor 1724 ; BA 1716 ; MA 12 Mar 1718/9 ; ordained deacon 26 Nov 1721, priest 22 Dec 1723 (both Oxford) ; Rector of Nettlecombe, Somerset, from 19 Mar 1724/5 ; Rector of Kentisbeare, Devon, from 28 Jun 1742 ; Prebendary of Wells from 22 Nov 1754 ; m. 27 Jan 1741/2 Ann Trevelyan, Nettlecombe, Somerset ; d. 1 Jul 1755.

HASLER, ROBERT, see HASELAR, ROBERT.

HASLEWOOD, ROBERT, eldest son of Rev.Thomas Haslewood DD, Rector of Covingham, Essex, and Jane, eldest dau. of Thomas Pepys, King’s Lynn, Norfolk ; b.      ; in under school list 1715 ; Min.Can. (aged 12) 1717 ; an attorney, in practice at Holt, Norfolk ; d. unm. 25 Jul 1735, aged 31, of smallpox (for his intended MI, mentioning fact of his education at Westminster School, see Daily Gazetteer 9 Aug 1735). [Perhaps Robert Haslewood adm.Staple Inn 24 Jun 1729].

HASLEWOOD, THOMAS, son of John Haslewood, Oxford, apothecary, and Mary, dau. of Rev.Richard Imings, Stratford [Toney ?], Wiltshire ; bapt. 13 Sep 1657 ; adm.     ; KS 1671 ; elected head to Christ Church, Oxford 1675, matr. 18 Jun 1675, aged 17, Westminster Student from 29 Dec 1675 ; BA 1679 (College Act Book) ; d. 14 Jun 1680. Buried Christ Church Cathedral, Oxford.

HASSALL, WILLIAM, son of Charles Hassall, Eastwood, Narberth, Pembrokeshire, land surveyor, and Dorothy Bullfinch ; bapt. 10 Mar 1788 ; in school lists 1801, May 1803 ; Min.Can.1802 ;  left 1803 ; Brasenose Coll.Oxford, matr. 30 May 1805, Hulme Exhibitioner 1809 ; BA 1809 ; MA 1811 ; ordained deacon 5 Jul 1812, priest 11 Jul 1812 (both St Davids) ; Rector of Llyswen, Breconshire 19 Jul 1812 – Sep 1834 ; Curate, Penally, Pembrokeshire ; Perpetual Curate of Much Birch, Herefs., and Vicar of Much Dewchurch, Herefs., from 7 Mar 1834 ; d. unm. 20 Dec 1849.

HASSELL, HENRY ; b.      ; adm. (aged 11) Sep 1721 ; left 1721. [Presumably brother or close kin of William Hassell (qv), adm.same month].

HASSELL, JOHN ; b.       ; adm. (aged 15) Jul 1719 ; in under school list 1720.

HASSELL, WILLIAM ; b.       ; adm. (aged 13) Sep 1721 ; in under school list 1724. [Presumably brother or close kin of Henry Hassell (qv), adm. same month].

HASTINGS, —  ; b.       ; in school list 1741.

HASTINGS, HON.FERDINANDO, brother of Francis Hastings, 10th Earl of Huntingdon (qv) ; b. 23 Jan 1732/3 ; adm. Oct 1741 (Preston) ; d. at Mrs Preston’s boarding house, Dean’s Yard, 21 Apr 1743. Buried North Transept, Westminster Abbey.

HASTINGS, FRANCIS, 10TH EARL OF HUNTINGDON, eldest son of Theophilus Hastings, 9th Earl of Huntingdon, and Lady Selina Shirley, second dau. of Washington Shirley, 2nd Earl Ferrers ; b. 13 Mar 1728/9 ; adm. Apr 1737 (Morel in Jan 1741/2, subsequently Preston) ; styled Lord Hastings to 1746 ; succ.father as 10th Earl of Huntingdon 13 Oct 1746 ; Head Town Boy 1746 ; left 1747 ; Christ Church, Oxford, matr. 22 Jun 1747 ; Grand Tour (France, Spain, Italy) c.1750-6, again travelling in Italy 1771-4 ; Master of the Horse to George III when Prince of Wales Oct 1756-60 ; Master of the Horse 18 Nov 1760 – 3 Apr 1761 ; Privy Councillor 2 Dec 1760 ; Groom of the Stole and First Lord of the Bedchamber 3 Apr 1761 – 10 Jan 1770 ; bearer of Third Sword of State at coronation of George III 22 Sep 1761 ; DL Yorkshire West Riding 1757, Lord Lieut. 25 Feb 1763 – 12 Sep 1765 ; FRS 2 Mar 1758 ; FSA 10 Nov 1768 ; one of the leaders of fashionable society ; Busby Trustee 17 Apr 1780 ; d.unm. 2 Oct 1789.

HASTINGS, HON.GEORGE, brother of Francis Hastings, 10th Earl of Huntingdon (qv) ; b. 29 Mar 1730 ; adm. Jun 1740 ; d. 20 Dec 1743. Buried North Transept, Westminster Abbey.

HASTINGS, HON.HENRY, brother of Francis Hastings, 10th Earl of Huntingdon (qv) ; b. 12 Dec 1739 ; in school list 1754 ; a boarder in 1757 (Burgess) ; d.unm. 13 Sep 1758.

HASTINGS, 22ND BARON, JACOB, see ASTLEY, JACOB, 22ND BARON HASTINGS.

HASTINGS, WARREN, second son of Rev.Penyston Hastings, Vicar of Bledington, Gloucs., and Hester, dau. of Thomas Warren, Stubhill, near Twining, Gloucs. ; b. 6 Dec 1732 ; adm. May 1743 ; KS (Capt.) 1747 ; left 1749 ; Writer, EICS Bengal 1749 ; landed at Calcutta 8 Oct 1750 ; Resident, Murshidabad 1757-60 ; member of council, Calcutta 1761-4 ; returned to England 1764 ; gave evidence on India to a committee of the House of Commons 1766 ; Second on Council, Madras 1769-72 ; Governor of Bengal 13 Apr 1772 – Oct 1774, Governor-Gen. of Bengal 20 Oct 1774 – Feb 1785 ; reorganised financial and judicial system in Bengal, Bihar and Orissa ; assisted Nawab of Oudh against the Rohillas ; took measures against dacoits ; named as first Governor-General of Bengal in Act of 1773 ; opposed by majority on new Council ; charged with corruption by Nuncomar, who was subsequently arrested on a charge of forgery in a private suit instigated by an Indian, and hanged ; took measures to improve the EI Company’s finances ; supported by Supreme Court, Calcutta, which ignored the acceptance by the Company’s directors of his provisional resignation ; fought a duel with Sir Philip Francis, who had persistently opposed him in Council, 17 Aug 1780 ; drove Haidar Ali out of the Carnatic ; deposed Chait Singh, Zemindar of Benares, and seized his treasure 1781 ; suspected of conniving at the imprisonment of the Begums of Oudh and the seizure of their property ; concluded treaty with Tippoo Sultan in 1783 which laid foundation for British supremacy in India ; founded Asiatic Society of Bengal and the Calcutta Madrisa ; left India Feb 1785 ; returned to England 13 Jun 1785 ; his impeachment on ground of corruption and cruelty in his administration of Bengal voted by a large majority in the House of Commons 3 Apr 1787 ; his trial in Westminster Hall occupied 145 days between 13 Feb 1788 and 23 Apr 1795, but resulted in an acquittal ; retired to estate at Daylesford, Worcs., purchased by him in 1788 ; Privy Councillor 6 May 1814 ; FRS 25 Jun 1801 ; DCL Oxford 30 Jun 1813 ; one of donors of Warren Hastings Cup ; m. 1st, 1757 Mary, widow of Capt.John Buchanan, Craigievern, Stirlingshire, EICS Bengal, and dau. of — Elliott ; m.2nd, 8 Aug 1777 Anna Maria Apollonia, mother of Sir Charles Imhoff (qv), formerly wife of Baron Christopher Adam Carl von Imhoff, officer in army of Duke of Württemberg, and miniature painter, and dau. of Baron Johann Jakob von Chapuset ; d. 22 Aug 1818. ODNB. Monument in North Transept, Westminster Abbey.

HATCH, HYDE, son of James Hatch, Marsham Street, Westminster, and Sandon, Herts., and Mary Taylor, St.Martin in the Fields, widow ; b.      ; adm. (aged 7) Jun 1721 ; Min.Can.1727 ; KS 1728 ; apprenticed to Thomas Parnell, Register of Court of Chancery 1731 ; of St.Dunstan’s in the West parish, London, on first marriage ; m. 1st (?) 2 Feb 1734 [or 1734/5 ?]  Ann Stock ; m.2nd (?) 21 Jul 1740 Sarah Delaney ; m.3rd (?) 21 Aug 1750 Mary Cherrington.

HATCH, JOHN ; b.       ; adm. (aged 11) Mar 1724/5 ; left 1725.

HATFEILD, — ; b.       ; in school lists 1764, 1765 ; left Christmas 1765. [Note John Hatfeild, Trinity Hall, Cambridge, adm. fellow commoner 11 Mar 1766, matr. Mich.1766] [perhaps John Hatfeild, only surviving son of Aurengzebe Hatfeild, Laughton, Yorks., and Susanna, dau. of John Hatfeild  ; b. 29 Apr 1748 ; of Laughton, Yorks. ; d.unm. 11 Jan 1791]

HATFIELD, ALEXANDER, son of Alexander Hatfeild, Wakefield, Yorks., mercer, and Barbara, dau. of Joseph Sill, Wakefield, Yorks. ; b. 22 Oct 1755 (IGI)  ; adm. 1 Feb 1768 ; Trinity Coll.Cambridge, adm.pens. 9 Mar 1773, aged 17, matr.Mich.1773 ; BA 1777 ; adm.Inner Temple 28 Dec 1775 ; Cornet, 15th Light Dragoons 19 Apr 1778 ; Lieut., 8 Jul 1780 ; Capt., 29 Sep 1781 ; retd. 23 Feb 1791 ; m. 14 Jun 1788 Mary, dau. of Sir Richard Perryn (qv) ; d. 28 Jan 1832.

HATFIELD, LEONARD, eldest son of Ridgely Hatfield MP (I), Killinure, co.Westmeath, Lord Mayor and Alderman of Dublin, and Abigail Ballard ; b.       ; in school lists 1656 ;  ? Christ Church, Oxford, matr. 11 Dec 1658 ; Trinity Coll.Dublin, adm.fellow commoner 8 Jun 1659 ; of Killinure, co.Westmeath, Ireland ; a bigamous marriage c. 1714 between him and his daughter’s companion, Jane Porter, whose husband Richard Porter, was then living, was the subject of litigation after his death ;  m. 23 Dec 1680 Elizabeth Brookes ; d. c.1719 (will dated 15 Nov 1718, with codicil dated 24 Dec 1718, proved 15 Mar 1718/9]

HATFIELD, WILLIAM ; b.       ; adm. (aged 14) Jul 1715.

HATHAWAY, FREDERICK, eldest son of William Silas Hathaway, London, and Longley Grove, Colnbrook, Bucks., merchant, and Eliza, dau. of Richard Till, Clerk to Commissioners of Land Tax, City of London, and Agent for Proprietors of London Bridge Water Works ; b. 3 Oct 1814 ; adm. 7 Nov 1825 ; left Whitsun 1826 ; went to Sherborne Sch. ; Trinity Coll.Cambridge, adm.pens. 14 Dec 1831, sizar 21 Jan 1833, matr. Mich.1832 ; migrated to Worcester Coll.Oxford, matr. 8 May 1835, scholar 1835-9 ; BA 1836 ; MA 1839 ; Fellow, Worcester Coll. 1839-51, Dean 1842, Bursar 1843 ; ordained deacon 18 Dec 1842, priest 17 Dec 1843 (both Oxford) ; Curate, St.Mary Magdalen, Oxford ; Vicar of Shadwell, near Leeds, Yorks., 1848-50 ; became a Roman Catholic 1851 ; ordained priest (RC) 21 Jun 1857 ; a Jesuit priest in Jamaica, West Indies ; d. unm. 6 Nov 1891.

HATSELL, HENRY, only son of James Hatsell, Spring Gardens, London, and Marden Park, Godstone, Surrey, “a tradesman in the Strand” (draper), and Elizabeth, eldest dau. of William Arnold, St.Clement, Eastcheap, London ; b. 14 Mar 1790 ; adm.      ; in school list 1801 ; KS 1802 ; Capt. of the School 1806 ; elected head to Trinity Coll.Cambridge 1807, but went to Christ Church, Oxford, matr. 13 May 1807, Canoneer Student 1807-14 ; BA 1811 ; MA 1814 ; adm.Middle Temple 29 Apr 1811 ; of Shillingthorpe, Lincs. ; m. 22 Aug 1814 Mary, dau. of John Matthews MP, Belmont, Herefordshire ; d. 7 Jan 1831.

HAUGHTON, CHARLES ; b.      ; adm.        ; KS 1674. [note Charles Haughton, son of Joseph Haughton, bapt.St.John’s, Dublin 12 Jun 1663 (IGI)]

HAULSY, —  ; b.       ; at school c.1660 (Busby’s Account Book).

HAVERS, GILBERT, second son of Gilbert Havers, Tuddenham St.Martin, Suffolk, and Jane, dau. of Sir Hugh Hammersley, Kt, Lord Mayor of London, merchant, Governor of the Muscovy Company ; b.     ; adm.     ; KS (Capt.)        ; elected to Trinity Coll.Cambridge 1649, adm.pens.20 Jun 1649, scholar 1650 ; BA 1652/3 ; MA 1658 ; adm.Gray’s Inn 6 Jun 1659 ; a student of physic ; subsequently studying at Montpellier, and living in Paris in 1665-6 ; travelling tutor in France to Christopher Wandesford and John Lowther in 1672-3 ; assisted his friend John Mapletoft (qv) in translating into Latin Sydenham’s Observationes Medicae, 1676. [perhaps Gilbert Havers, Suffolk, will proved PCC 22 Jun 1695]

HAVET, —  (in school lists 1738, 1739), see HOET, VANHAM

HAVILAND-BURKE, THOMAS WILLIAM ASTON, son of Maj.Thomas Haviland, 45th Foot, and Mary, only child of Patrick French, Loughrea, co.Galway ; first cousin of Richard Burke (qv) ; b. Aug 1795 ; adm.Michaelmas 1808 ; left 1812 ; adm.Lincoln’s Inn 3 Jun 1812, called to bar 17 Nov 1819 ; conveyancer and equity draughtsman ; assumed additional surname of Burke 6 Apr 1818 ; a collector of prints, pictures and autographs ; m. 1 Oct 1827 Harriet Elizabeth, dau. of William Minshull, Kentish Town, Middlesex ; d. 3 Apr 1852.

HAWARD, E.     ; b.      ; adm.      ; KS       ; a contributor to the congratulatory verses written by the KSS to Charles I on his return from Scotland 1633 (British Library, Royal MSS, xii, 58).

HAWES, ARTHUR BRISCOE, youngest son of Sir Benjamin Hawes KCB, Permanent Under Secretary of State for War, and Sophia Macnamara, dau. of Sir Marc Isambard Brunel, Kt, MICE FRS, civil engineer ; b. 29 Oct 1832 ; adm. 1 Oct 1846 ; his exploit of blcking up with the contents of a coal cart the door from which Liddell used to come out to go up School is recounted in F.Markham, Recollections of a Town Boy, 205-6 ; left Whitsun 1849 ; Cadet, EICS Bengal 1849 ; Ensign, unattached, 12 Dec 1849 ; 38thNative Infantry 25 May 1850 ; Lieut., 6 Jan 1852 ; Capt., 16 May 1858 ; retd. 22 Oct 1858 ; member, Committee for the Valuation of Military Equipments, Store Department, India Office ; living Weybridge, Surrey, in 1881 ; m. 1852 Susan, dau. of George Cattell, EICS Bengal ; d. 15 May 1897.

HAWES, EDWARD, son of Rev.Christopher Hawes, Vicar of Rowston, Lincs. ; b.      ; at school under Ireland two years ; St.John’s Coll.Cambridge, adm. 23 Jun 1606 ; migrated to Gonville and Caius Coll., scholar 9 Jun 1607, aged 17 (scholar to Michaelmas) ; author Trayterous Percyes and Catesbyes Prosopopeia, written by Edward Hawes scholler at Westminster a youth of sixteene yeers old, London, 1606, 4to, a poem of eighty stanzas in Spenserian metre, of which the only two copies in institutional libraries are those in the Folger Shakespeare Library, Washington DC, USA,  and in the Huntington Library, San Marino, California, USA. ODNB.

HAWES, HENRY, son of John Hawes, Stanwell, Middlesex ; b.      ; adm.      ; KS 1692 ; elected to Trinity Coll.Cambridge 1695, adm.pens. 28 May 1695, aged 18, scholar 24 Apr 1696 ; BA 1698/9 ; MA 1702 ; Minor Fellow, Trin.Coll., 2 Oct 1701, Major Fellow 17 Apr 1702 ; ordained deacon 12 Apr 1702 (Lincoln), priest Apr 1702 (Norwich). [maybe Rector of Stoke Damerel, Devon 20 May 1707 – d. Mar 1727/8]

HAWES, THOMAS, son of Rev.Thomas Hawes, Rector of Ramsbury and of Chilton Foliat, Wilts., and Prebendary of Salisbury, and Anne Baynes, St.Margaret, Westminster ; bapt.Ramsbury 4 Jul 1686 (IGI)  ; adm.      ; KS 1701 ; elected to Christ Church, Oxford 1705, matr. 21 Jun 1705, aged 19, Westminster Student 24 Dec 1705 – void 1717 (on death ?) ; BA 1709 ; MA 1712 ; ordained deacon 25 Sep 1709, priest 29 Dec 1712 (both Oxford) ; d. Oct 1717.

HAWKES, —  ; b.      ; adm.      ; KS 21 Nov 1553 (Acts of Chapter, two entries, surname in first entry read by Knighton as Hawkys).

HAWKES, JEREMIAH, eldest son of Jeremiah Hawkes, Cecil Street, Strand, London, coal merchant, and Sarah, youngest dau. of Philip Walter, Moreton Hampstead, Devon ; b. 30 Sep 1758 ; adm. 14 Jan 1771 ; Cadet, EICS Bombay 1776 ; Lieut.-Fireworker, Bombay Artillery 26 Nov 1777 ; 2nd Lieut., Feb 1778 ; Lieut., 1 Aug 1779 ; Capt., 16 May 1787 ; Brevet Maj., 5 May 1795 ; Brevet Lieut.-Col., 1 Jan 1800 ; served Mysore war 1783, 1790-2 ; Director of the Laboratory, Bombay 1792 ; Commissary-General of the Ordnance, Bombay, from 1794 ; m.1st, — ; m.2nd, 13 May 1784  Elizabeth, widow of Capt.John Stone, EICS Bengal, Bengal Artillery, and third dau. of Capt.Thomas Ringrose, EICS Bombay ; drowned while crossing an arm of the sea near Bombay in a palanquin, 12 Mar 1800.

HAWKES, JOHN, brother of Jeremiah Hawkes (qv) ; bapt. St.Paul, Covent Garden 17 Mar 1766 ; adm. 15 Sep 1775 ; left before 1788.

HAWKES, JOSEPH, brother of Jeremiah Hawkes (qv) ; b. 27 Nov 1764 ; adm. 13 Jan 1772 ; succeeded to his father’s business as a coal merchant in Whitefriars ; d.unm. 27 Sep 1807.

HAWKES, WALTER, brother of Jeremiah Hawkes (qv) ; b. 23 Oct 1761 ; adm. 14 Jan 1771 ; KS 1776 ; elected to Trinity Coll.Cambridge 1780, adm.pens. 24 May 1780, scholar 5 May 1781, matr. Mich.1780, but did not graduate ; Cadet, EICS Bengal 1780 ; Ensign, 2nd Bengal Native Infantry 1781 ; Lieut., 13 Aug 1782 ; Capt., 31 Jul 1799 ; Maj., 11 Sep 1804 ; Deputy Judge Advocate-General, Dinajpur and Chunar ; one of donors of Warren Hastings Cup ; m. at Chunar, India 28 Apr 1797 Sarah, widow of Capt.John Rotton, EICS Bengal, Commandant of Bencoolen, mother by him of John Stuart Rotton (qv), and dau. of John Harriott, Great Stambridge, Essex, Magistrate of Thames Police Court ; drowned with his wife on their voyage home from India in ship Experiment, foundered in Bay of Bengal 20 Nov 1808. Monument in Dark Cloister, Westminster Abbey, erected by his friend William Francklin (qv).

HAWKINS, — ; b.      ; in school list 1748.

HAWKINS, CAESAR, elder son of Charles Hawkins (KS 1762, qv), and his first wife ;  bapt.St.James, Piccadilly 25 Jul 1774 (IGI) ; adm. 20 Jan 1784 ; Christ Church, Oxford, matr. 27 Apr 1792, aged 17 ; Cornet, 3rd Dragoon Guards 30 Jul 1794 ; Lieut., 8 Aug 1794 ; Capt., 8th Light Dragoons 3 May 1799 ; retd. 1805 ; d. in India 18 Sep 1806.

HAWKINS, CHARLES, brother of George Hawkins (qv) ; b.       ; adm.      ; KS (aged 13) 1762 ; Surgeon to Westminster Hospital from 1773 ; Surgeon to St.George’s Hospital Jul 1774 ; Surgeon to Royal Household 6 Oct 1783 – Feb 1786 ; Sergeant-Surgeon to George III from 14 Feb 1786 ; member Court of Assistants, Surgeons’ Co., 1787-1800, Master 1790, 1799 ; FRCS 1800 (and its first Master 1800) ; m. 1st, 8 Sep 1773 Elizabeth Harwood, Pall Mall, Westminster ; m.2nd, 25 Sep 1788 Harriet, dau. of John Truesdale, New Bond Street, Westminster, and Uxbridge, Middlesex, Apothecary in Ordinary to George III ; d. 5 Mar 1817. [A further marriage to Elizabeth Adair, Norfolk, is not substantiated]

HAWKINS, CHARLES, younger son of Charles Hawkins (KS 1762, qv), and his first wife ; b.      ; adm. 6 Nov 1786 ; KS (Capt., aged 13) 1792 ; Trinity Coll.Cambridge, adm.pens. 24 Oct 1798, matr. Mich.1800 ; LLB 1805 ; ordained deacon 27 Nov 1802 (Bath & Wells), priest 2 Mar 1806 (Exeter) ; Curate, Hillingdon, Middlesex ; Rector of Kelston, Somerset 3 Mar 1806 – Dec 1831 ; Vicar of Coaley, Gloucs., 20 Aug 1814 – Jul 1832 ; Prebendary of York from 27 Apr 1824, Residentiary Canon from 1830 ; Perpetual Curate of Fangfoss, Yorks., 1831 ; Vicar of Topcliffe, Yorks., 25 Jul 1834-8 ; Vicar of Stillingfleet, Yorks., from 24 Apr 1838 ; m. 7 Aug 1807 Anna Augusta, youngest dau. of Sir James Cockburn, Bart. MP ; d. 11 Apr 1857.

HAWKINS, CHARLES JAMES, eldest son of Charles Hawkins (adm.1786, qv) ; b. 12 Jan 1809 ; adm. 17 Jan 1822 ; Trinity Coll.Cambridge, adm.pens. 31 May 1827, matr. Mich.1827 ; migr. to St.John’s Coll., 28 Mar 1828 ; BA 1831 ; MA 1836 ; ordained deacon 2 Feb 1832, priest 1833 (both York) ; Vicar of Crambe and Perpetual Curate of Huttons Ambo, Yorks., 25 Aug 1837-9 ; Rector of Nunburnholme, Yorks., 4 May 1839-45 ; Vicar of Sutton on the Forest, Yorks., 1845-54 ; Vicar of Haxey, Lincs., 1854-61 ; Rector of Overton, Hampshire, from 1861 ; m. 15 Sep 1831 Anne Mason, dau. of James Dixon, Brandesburton, Yorks. ; d. 14 Jun 1864.

HAWKINS, EDGAR GOODMAN, eldest son of Frederick James Hawkins, Birkdale, Lancs., solicitor, and Jane Tolson, dau. of John Howard Hetherington, Whitehaven, Cumberland, brewer ; b. 26 Sep 1862 ; adm. 6 Feb 1878 (H) ; left Dec 1880 ; Merton Coll.Oxford, matr. 17 Jan 1883 ; BA 1886 ; MA 1889 ; Edinburgh Univ., MA 1891 ; MB CM 1892 ; [DPH Edinburgh ?] [MD Oxford ?] ; medical practitioner, Handsworth, Staffs. (1901 Census) ; author, Medical Climatology of England and Wales, 1923 ; d. 15 Oct 1936.

HAWKINS, EDWARD, brother of George Hawkins (qv) ; b.        ; in school lists 1764-71 ; Trinity Coll.Cambridge, adm.pens. 23 May 1771, aged 18, scholar 7 May 1773, matr. Mich.1771 ; BA 1775 ; MA 1778 ; ordained deacon 31 Dec 1775, priest 20 Sep 1778 (both Ely) ; Prebendary of Wells from 5 Oct 1778 ; Vicar of Bisley, Gloucs., from 16 Jul 1782 ; Domestic Chaplain to Noel, Baron Berwick 31 May 1784 ; Rector of Kelston, Somerset, from 16 May 1798 ; m. 1787 Margaret, dau. of Rev.Thomas Howes, Rector of Morning Thorpe, Norfolk ; d. 5 Jan 1806.

HAWKINS, FREDERICK THOMAS CHALMERS, brother of Edgar Goodman Hawkins (qv) ; b. 28 Oct 1865 ; adm. 6 Feb 1878 (H, afterwards G) ; left Nov 1881 ; death registered Bournemouth second quarter 1937, aged 71.

HAWKINS, GEORGE, eldest son of Sir Caesar Hawkins, Bart., Kelston, Somerset, Sergeant-Surgeon to George II and George III, and Sarah, only dau. of John Coxe, London ; b.      ; adm.      ; KS (aged 12) 1759 ; d. 9 Feb 1767.

HAWKINS, HENRY FORSHAW, brother of Edgar Goodman Hawkins (qv) ; b. 16 Jun 1864 ; adm. 6 Feb 1878 (H) ; QS  5 Apr 1880 ; left Dec 1882 ; Exeter Coll.Oxford, matr. 18 Oct 1883 ; BA 1887 ; MA and BCL 1890 ; adm.solicitor Dec 1890 ; practised at Liverpool ; m. 22 Apr 1896 Agnes, eldest dau. of Edward Pershouse, Waterloo, Liverpool, manager chemical works ; d. 3 Nov 1933.

HAWKINS, ISAAC, see BROWNE, ISAAC HAWKINS.

HAWKINS, RICHARD, son of Rev.Richard Hawkins, Rector of Begbroke, Oxfordshire, and Elizabeth — ; bapt. 15 May 1754 ; adm. 13 Jan 1769 ; Merton Coll.Oxford, matr. 27 Jun 1772, aged 18 ; buried Begbroke, Oxfordshire 12 Apr 1776.

HAWKINS, SAMUEL ; b.       ; adm. 7 Oct 1771. [apparently son of William Hawkins,  The Sanctuary, Westminster, apothecary, and Susannah, dau. of Thomas Grant, College Butler and Clerk of Works, Westminster Abbey [sister of Thomas Grant (in school list 1738) ?] ; b. 3 Dec 1758 ; a solicitor, in practice in Pall Mall, Westminster ; in financial difficulties after 1815 and settled in Tours, France ; m. at Lille, France, 24 Dec 1787 (remarried in England 28 Jan 1788) Sarah, sister of Charles Calland (qv) ; d. 2 Jan 1839].

HAWKSHAW, HENRY PAUL, brother of John Clarke Hawkshaw (qv) ; b. 17 Jan 1843 ; adm. 20 Jan 1853 (G) ; left Whitsun 1861 ; Trinity Coll.Cambridge, adm.pens. 9 Dec 1863, matr. Mich.1864 ; BA 1868 ; MA 1872 ; adm. Lincoln’s Inn 18 Jan 1868, called to bar 6 Jun 1871 ; FSA 27 May 1869 ; [unm. in 1881] ; d. 6 Apr 1922.

HAWKSHAW, JOHN CLARKE, eldest son of Sir John Hawkshaw, Kt, FRS, Hollycombe, Sussex, Pres.Institute of Civil Engineers, and Ann, dau. of Rev.James Jackson, Green Hammerton, Yorks., Congregational minister ; b. 17 Aug 1841 ; adm. 23 Jan 1851 (G) ; left (with Triplett) Whitsun 1860 ; took part in ten “greases” for the pancake, winning it in 1859 and 1860 (The Spectator, 15 Mar 1919, 325) ; rowed v.Eton 3 Aug 1860 ; Trinity Coll.Cambridge, adm.pens. 5 May 1860, matr.Mich.1860 ; won Univ.Sculls 1861 ; rowed v.Eton 1863, 1864 ; Pres. Cambridge Univ. Boat Club 1864 ; BA 1864 ; MA 1867 ; contested (Liberal) Lyme Regis 1865 ; a civil engineer to retirement in 1915 ;  AMICE 5 Feb 1867, MICE 10 Mar 1874, Pres. ICE 1902-3 ; JP Sussex 1912 ; m. 12 Oct 1865 Cicely Mary, dau. of Francis Wedgwood, Barlaston, Staffs., pottery manufacturer ; d. 12 Feb 1921.

HAWKSHAW, OLIVER, brother of John Clarke Hawkshaw (qv) ; b. 25 Feb 1846 ; adm. 28 Sep 1855 ; d. 15 Sep 1856.

HAWKSWORTH, WALTER, son of Thomas Hawksworth (formerly Ramsden), Crowstone, Yorks., and Frances, eldest dau. of Sir Walter Hawksworth, Bart., Hawksworth Hall, Guisely, Yorks. ; b.       ; adm. (aged 13) Sep 1737 ; left 1742 ; University Coll.Oxford, matr. 21 Oct 1742 ; of Hawksworth Hall, Guisely, Yorks. ; m. 1745 Frances Elizabeth, dau. of Joseph Hall, Skelton Castle, Yorks. ; d. 12 Oct 1760.

HAWKSWORTH, WALTER RAMSDEN, see FAWKES, WALTER RAMSDEN.

HAWKSWORTH, WALTER RAMSDEN BEAUMONT, see FAWKES, WALTER RAMSDEN BEAUMONT.

HAWLEY, — ; b.        ; adm.1656 (School lists 1656, last two quarters).

HAWLEY, —  ; b.       ; adm.1656 (School lists 1656, last quarter).

HAWLEY, —  (in school list 1754), see HAWLEY, SIR HENRY, BART.

HAWLEY, SIR HENRY, BART., son of James Hawley MD FRS, Leybourne Grange, Kent, and Elizabeth, sister of William Banks (qv) ; b. 12 Nov 1746 ; in school list 1754 (see trial of John Ward Feb 1754, Old Bailey Records, at which date he was up Grant’s, also shown to have been at the school by his acting as Steward, Anniversary Dinner 1782) ; Oriel Coll.Oxford, matr. 17 Mar 1763 ; BA 1766 ; adm.Inner Temple 13 Apr 1751, called to bar 10 Feb 1769, chambers there from Apr 1751 ; a Commissioner of Bankrupts (occurs in annual lists 1770-5) ; High Sheriff, Kent 1783-4 ; created baronet 14 May 1795 ; m. 1st, 10 Aug 1770 Dorothy, only dau. of John Ashwood, Madeley, Staffs. ; m.2nd, 5 Sep 1785 Anne, eldest dau. of William Humffreys, Llwyn, Montgomeryshire ; d. 20 Jan 1826.

HAWLEY, JAMES, son of Sir Henry Hawley, Bart. (qv), and his second wife ; bapt.Leybourne, Kent 26 Aug 1790 ; adm.       ; in school lists 1801, May and Oct 1803 (G) ; left 1805 ; Oriel Coll.Oxford, matr. 27 May 1808, aged 17 ; Trinity Hall, Cambridge, adm.pens. 1 May 1810, matr. Mich.1810 ; LLB 1814 ; ordained deacon 25 Jul 1813 (Rochester), priest 25 Sep 1814 (London) ; Rector of Burham, Kent  8 Sep 1819- Mar 1828 ; Rector of Norton, Kent, from 1840 ; m. 13 Oct 1831 Henrietta Margaretta, eldest dau. of Peter Pegus, Greenwich, Kent ; d. 20 Jan 1870.

HAWLEY, WILLIAM ; b.       ; adm. (aged 13) Sep 1718 ; in under school list 1720.

HAWORTH, FREDERICK, third son of Thomas Haworth, Elstree, Herts., and Euphrasia, dau. of Edward Cartwright, Leyton House, Essex ; b. 22 Jul 1813 ; adm. 19 Sep 1825 ; left Mar 1828 ; Merton Coll.Oxford, matr.27 Oct 1831 ; BA 1835 ; “owner of land and other property” (1881 Census) ; m. 30 May 1850 Louisa Anne, youngest dau. of Thomas Stevens, Cross, Devon ; d. 1 Jan 1893.

HAWTAYNE, WILLIAM, son of Rev.William Hawtayne, Rector of Elstree, Herts., and Ann Colbeck (IGI) ; b. 4 Jun 1716 ; adm. (aged 8) Apr 1724 ; left 1724. [“see new slip”] [Note William Hawtayne, Ross Hall, Shropshire, will dated 4 Dec 1754, proved PCC 12 Jun 1756 , who m. 13 Dec 1749 Elizabeth Windham (IGI), of the Windham family, Felbrigg, Norfolk] [perhaps William Hawtayne, Minuting Clerk to Master-Gen. of Ordnance, Chamberlayne 1741, 1748]

HAWTHORN, WILLIAM, son of Robert Hawthorn, London and Jamaica, West India merchant, and Agatha Wells Bridger, dau. of George Shedden, Paulerspury Park, Northants ; b. 31 Jul 1835 ; adm. 3 Feb 1848 ; QS 1850 ; elected to Trinity Coll.Cambridge 1854, adm.pens. 29 May 1854, scholar 1855, matr. Mich.1854 ; BA 1858 ; a West India merchant, firm Hawthorn Shedden & Co. (to 1892)  ; m. (by 1865 ?) Elizabeth — ; d. 26 Nov 1914.

HAY, — ; b.       ; in under school lists 1720,1721.

HAY, — ; b.        ; in school list 1741.

HAY, —  (in school lists 1765, 1767,1769-71), see HAY, EDWARD (adm.1765, qv).

HAY, —  (in school lists 1769-71), see HAY, THOMAS (adm.1767, qv).

HAY, — ; b.        ; in school lists 1795, 1797, 1801.

HAY, — ; b.         ; in school list  May 1803 ; left 1803. [Whitmore supposed this to be HAY-DRUMMOND, HON.FRANCIS JOHN (below)]

HAY, HON.EDWARD, brother of Thomas Hay, 9th Earl of Kinnoull (qv) ; bapt.St.Martin’s in the Fields 14 Jun 1722 (IGI) ; adm. (aged 8) Oct 1730 ; left 1735 ; HBM Consul, Cadiz Jun 1752 ; HBM Consul-General, Lisbon 18 May 1754 ; Envoy Extraordinary, Lisbon 19 Jul 1757-62, Minister Plenipotentiary 1762 – Aug 1767 ; Governor of Barbados from 6 Nov 1772 ; m.1st, c. Sep 1752 Mary, eldest dau. of Peter Flower, Alderman, City of London, merchant ; m.2nd, in Barbados, 24 Jan 1779 Mary Harbourne Barnwell [presumably dau. of Harbourne Barnwell, Barbados] ; d. in Barbados 21 Oct 1779.

HAY, EDWARD, eldest son of Hon.Edward Hay (qv), and his first wife ; b. 19 May 1757 ; adm. 30 Sep 1765 ; Christ Church, Oxford, matr. 24 Nov 1774 ; Writer, EICS Bengal 1775 ; arrived in India 6 Oct 1775 ; Assistant, Secretary’s Office, Secret Department 1777 ; Factor and Sub-Secretary, General Department, and Agent for the Manufacture of Powder 1782 ; Secretary, Secret Department 1783 ; present at OW dinner at Calcutta c.Jul – Oct 1784 (Hickey, Memoirs, iii, 245-6) ; Senior Merchant and Secretary to Government, Bengal 1788 ; one of donors of Warren Hastings Cup ; m. 22 Feb 1782 Elizabeth, dau. of William Wagstaffe, Manchester, apothecary ; d. 24 Sep 1798.

HAY, HENRY, brother of Thomas Hay (adm.1747, qv) ; b. 27 Jun 1736 ; adm.Jun 1750 ; left 1751 ; d. 24 Oct 1754.

HAY, JOHN ; b.       ; adm. (aged 11) Jun 1720 ; left 1720.

HAY, HON.JOHN, brother of Thomas Hay, 9th Earl of Kinnoull (qv) ; b.      ; adm. (aged 7) Mar 1726 ; KS 1731 ; Capt. of the School 1736 ; elected head to Christ Church, Oxford 1737, matr. 13 Jun 1737, Westminster Student 24 Dec 1737 – void 24 Mar 1747, expiry year of grace as R.Epworth from 15 Apr 1746 ; BA 12 Mar 1742/3 ; MA 1744 ; ordained deacon 20 May 1744 (as of Christ Church), priest 8 Jun 1745 (as of Wadham Coll., sic) (both Oxford) ; Rector of Epworth, Lincs., from 28 Mar 1746/7 ; Rector of Cwm, Flintshire 10 Aug 1750 – Apr 1751 ; Rector of Hope, Flintshire, from 29 Apr 1751 ; d. unm. 23 Jun 1751. Buried South Cloister, Westminster Abbey.

HAY, HON.ROBERT, see HAY-DRUMMOND, HON.ROBERT.

HAY, THOMAS, 9TH EARL OF KINNOULL (S), elder son of George Hay, 8th Earl of Kinnoull, and Lady Abigail Harley, sister of Edward Harley, 2nd Earl of Oxford (qv) ; b. 4 Jul 1710 ; adm. Mar 1717/8 ; styled Lord Dupplin 1719-58 ; spoke Prior’s prologue and took part of Cordelio in Otway’s Orphan, which was acted by “some of the Westminster scholars” at Hickford’s Dancing Rooms, Panton Street, near Leicester Fields, 2 Feb 1719/20 (HMC Portland MSS V, 593) ; Christ Church, Oxford, matr. 13 Jun 1726 ; MA Cambridge 1749 ; MP Scarborough 26 Jan 1735/6 – 21 Apr 1736, Cambridge 1741 – 29 Jul 1758 ; in politics a loyal follower and confidant of Henry Pelham (qv) and of Thomas Pelham-Holles, 1stDuke of Newcastle (qv) ; a Commissioner of the Revenue (I) Apr 1741-6 ; member, Board of Trade and Foreign Plantations, Nov 1746 – Apr 1754 ; a Lord of the Treasury Apr 1754 – Dec 1755 ; Joint Paymaster-Gen. of the Forces 16 Dec 1755 – Jul 1757 ; Chancellor, Duchy of Lancaster Jan 1758 – Dec 1762 ; Privy Councillor 27 Jan 1758 ; succeeded father as 9th Earl of Kinnoull (S) 29 Jul 1758 ; Ambassador Extraordinary to Portugal (on special mission) Mar – Nov 1760 ; Recorder of Cambridge from 10 Jan 1758 ; Chancellor, University of St.Andrews, from 22 Nov 1765 ; m. 12 Jun 1741 Constantia, only dau. of John Kyrle Ernle, Whetham, Calne, Wilts. ; d. 28 Dec 1787. ODNB.

HAY, THOMAS, eldest son of William Hay MP, Glyndebourne, Sussex, and Elizabeth, second dau. of Thomas Pelham MP, Catsfield Place, Sussex ; b. 3 Jul 1734 ; adm. Jun 1747 ; left 1751 ;  Göttingen Univ ; Grand Tour (France) ; Cornet, 9th Dragoons 19 Jun 1751 ; Lieut., 7th Dragoons 25 Dec 1755 ; Capt., 14 Mar 1757 ; Maj., 14 Oct 1761 ; Lieut.-Col., 14 Jun 1765 ; Brevet Col., 21 May 1762 ; unattached list 27 Feb 1771 ; Deputy Adjutant-Gen. in Germany ; MP Lewes 1768-80 ; d. 9 Feb 1786.

HAY, THOMAS, second son of Hon.Edward Hay (qv), and his first wife ; b. 14 Apr 1759 ; adm. 27 Apr 1767 ; KS 1772 ; elected to Christ Church, Oxford 1776, matr. 5 Jun 1776, Westminster Student 20 Dec 1776 – 21 Nov 1785, expiry year of grace as R.Belton from 12 Nov 1784  ; BA 1780 ; MA 1783 ; BD and DD 1795 ; ordained deacon 22 Sep 1782 (Bristol), priest 25 Jul 1783 (Norwich) ; Rector of Belton, Suffolk 15 Nov 1784 – Feb 1790 ; Rector of North Walsham, Norfolk 11 Oct 1785 – May 1813 ; Rector of Ringsale, Norfolk 18 Dec 1789 – Feb 1790 ; Chaplain to Speaker of House of Commons 1790-5 ; Canon of Christ Church, Oxford, from 6 Jun 1795 ; Rector of North Repps, Norfolk, from 27 Apr 1813 ; m. 1 May 1786 Anne, dau. of Charles Bragge, Cleeve Hill, Gloucs. ; d. 29 Jan 1830.

HAY, WILLIAM ROBERT, third son of Hon.Edward Hay (qv), and his first wife ; b. 3 Dec 1761 ; adm. 26 Sep 1769 ; got out of his boarding house clandestinely with two schoolfellows to witness Garrick’s last appearance on the stage at Drury Lane Theatre 10 Jun 1776 ; Christ Church, Oxford, matr. 14 Dec 1776, Canoneer Student 26 Jun 1778 – Jan 1788, Faculty Student 18 Jan 1788 – Jan 1793, void on marriage ; BA 1780 ; MA 1783 ; adm.Inner Temple 2 May 1781, called to bar 1 Feb 1788 ; Northern circuit ; ordained deacon 31 Dec 1797 (Winchester, lit.dim. from Chester) ; Rector of Ackworth, Yorks., from 15 Jul 1802 ; Prebendary of York from 7 Nov 1806 ; Vicar of Rochdale, Lancs., from 3 Jan 1820 ; Chairman, Salford Hundred Quarter Sessions Jul 1802 – 31 Jan 1823 ; took a prominent part as a magistrate in proceedings at Peterloo 16 Aug 1819, and the subject of Bamford’s Ode to a Plotting Parson ; m. 28 Jan 1793 Mary, widow of John Astley, Dukinfield, Cheshire, and dau. of William Wagstaffe, Manchester, surgeon ; d. 10 Dec 1839.

HAY-DRUMMOND, EDWARD AURIOL, fifth son of Hon.Robert Hay-Drummond (qv) ; b. 10 Apr 1758 ; adm. 15 Sep 1766 (as Edward Drummond) ; probably Drummond, christian name not stated, in school lists 1767-74  and certainly at school in 1773-4 (Correspondence of Mrs Delany, 2nd series, i, 576, where she refers in a letter of 1 Jan 1774 to the Archbishop of York’s “two youngest sons, very fine youths at Westmr. School”) ; Christ Church, Oxford, matr. 7 May 1774, Canoneer Student 2 Jul 1774 – void 30 Jul 1783, expiry year of grace as V.Flitton from 19 Nov 1782 ; BA 1778 ; MA 1780 ; BD and DD 1794 ; ordained deacon 5 Aug 1781 (Winchester), priest 7 Jul 1782 (York) ; Domestic Chaplain to Bishop of Bristol 1782, to Thomas, Earl of Kinnoull 10 Mar 1783 ; Vicar of Flitton, Beds., 30 Jul 1782 – May 1784 ; Rector of Rothbury, Northumberland 28 Jan 1784 – Feb 1796 ; Prebendary of York from 15 Jul 1784 ; Rector of Hadleigh, Suffolk, and Dean of Bocking, Essex, from 1796 ; Chaplain in Ordinary to George III and IV  from c.1805 ; Prebendary of Southwell from Nov 1806 ; Rector of Dalham, Suffolk, from 7 May 1823 ; m. 1st, 12 Dec 1782 Elizabeth, dau. of Guillaume, Comte de Vismes ; m. 2nd, 24 May 1791 Amelia, dau. of James Auriol, Southampton, Hampshire, merchant ; d. 30 Dec 1829.

[HAY-DRUMMOND, HON.FRANCIS JOHN, younger son of Robert Auriol Hay-Drummond, 10thEarl of Kinnoull (S) (qv), and his second wife ; b.1786 ; adm.     ; Christ Church, Oxford, matr. 21 Oct 1803, aged 17 ; Ensign, 2nd Foot Guards 22 Dec 1804 ; Lieut. and Capt., 21 Jun 1810 ; drowned in Scotland 28 Oct 1810.] [entry by Whitmore, who supposed him to be Hay, Christian name not stated, in school list  May 1803, left 1803].

HAY-DRUMMOND, GEORGE WILLIAM AURIOL, sixth son of Hon.Robert Hay-Drummond (qv) ; b. 13 Mar 1761 ; adm. 4 May 1770 ; Christ Church, Oxford, matr. 7 Jun 1776, Canoneer Student 2 Jul 1776 – void 29 Apr 1786, expiry year of grace as V.Doncaster from 8 Apr 1785 ; BA 1780 ; MA 1783 ; ordained deacon 6 Jun 1784 (Norwich), priest 13 Mar 1785 (Chester, lit.dim. from York) ; Vicar of Doncaster, Yorks., 5 Jun 1785 – Apr 1790 ; Prebendary of York from 14 Mar 1785 ; Perpetual Curate, Badsey with Wickhamford, Worcs., from 30 Aug 1785 ; Vicar of Brodsworth, Yorks., from 25 Sep 1790 ; Vicar of Braithwell, Yorks., from 6 Jun 1792 ; Rector of Tankersley, Yorks., 7 Aug 1795 – Nov 1799 ; Rector of Rawmarsh, Yorks., 9 Apr 1796 ; author, Verses Social andDomestic, 1802 ; m. 1st, 12 Apr 1785 Elizabeth Margaret, dau. of Capt.Sir Samuel Marshall, Royal Navy ; m. 2nd, 18 Oct 1800 Maria, dau. of John Burbank, Long Bredy, Dorset ; drowned off Bideford, Devon, while on his passage to Greenock 7 Dec 1807.

HAY-DRUMMOND, JOHN AURIOL, fourth son of Hon.Robert Hay-Drummond (qv) ; b. 4 Jul 1756 ; adm. 19 Apr 1765 ; entered Royal Navy ; Lieut., 21 Jun 1774 ; Cdr., 25 Aug 1777 ; lost in prize ship Beazer, wrecked in hurricane off St Lucia 11 Oct 1780.

[HAYDRUMMOND, PETER AURIOL, third son of Hon.Robert Hay-Drummond (qv) ; b. 21 Jan 1754  ; adm. [not in Record but Whitmore notes “see new slip”] ; Lieut., 61st Foot ; Queen’s Light Dragoons 20 Sep 1773 ; of Bawtry Hall, Yorks. ; Lieut.-Col., 5thWest Yorkshire Militia, from 27 Feb 1797 ; m. 28 Dec 1775  Mary Bridget, only child of Pemberton Milnes, Bawtry Hall, Wakefield, Yorks. ; d. 21 Mar 1799, in an accident at home caused by “the library steps falling on him”].

HAY-DRUMMOND, HON.ROBERT, brother of Thomas Hay, 9th Earl of Kinnoull (qv) ; b. 10 Nov 1711 ; adm. Mar 1717/8 ; while taking the part of Brutus in a performance of Julius Caesar acted by boys from the school before King George II and Queen Caroline “at the theatre over against the Opera House” 20 Jan 1727/8, the plume of ostrich feathers which he wore caught fire ; perfectly unembarrassed, he pulled the cap off his head, and went on with his speech as if nothing had happened (memoir prefixed to his Sermons on Public Occasions, 1803, xii, note, and Life and Correspondence of Mrs Delaney, i, 158) ; Christ Church, Oxford, matr. 12 Apr 1728 (HMC Portland vii, 459), Canoneer Student 16 Jul 1728 – void 19 Aug 1737, expiry year of grace as R.Bothal from 11 Sep 1736 ; BA 1731 ; MA 1735 ; DD 1745 ; assumed additional surname of Drummond 1739 [check date], according to deed of entail of his great-grandfather Viscount Strathallan ; Grand Tour (Italy) 1734, with Thomas Osborne, 4th Duke of Leeds (qv) ; member, Society of Dilettanti 1736 ; ordained deacon 19 Jun 1736, priest 27 Jun 1736 (both Oxford) ; Rector of Bothal and Shipwash, Northumberland, 5 Aug 1736 – Jul 1761 ; Chaplain in Ordinary to George II 18 Jun 1737- May 1748 ; Deputy Clerk of the Closet c.1741 – c.1748 ; attended George II during German campaign of 1743 ; preached thanksgiving sermon for battle of Dettingen at Hanau ; Prebendary of Westminster 29 Apr 1743 – Apr 1748 ; consecrated Bishop of St.Asaph 24 Apr 1748 ; on 22 Feb 1753/4 he eloquently defended in House of Lords his former schoolfellows Andrew Stone (qv), William Murray (qv) and James Johnson (qv), who were charged with having drunk the health of the Pretender ; translated to Salisbury 11 Jun 1761 ; preached Coronation sermon in Westminster Abbey 22 Sep 1761 ; translated to Archbishopric of York 23 Oct 1761 ; Privy Councillor 7 Nov 1761 ; Lord High Almoner from 17 Nov 1761 ; Busby Trustee 11 Apr 1764 ; six of his sermons, together with his Letter on Theological Studyand a short memoir, were published by his youngest son in 1803 ; m. 31 Jan 1748/9 Henrietta, dau. of Peter Auriol, London, merchant ; d. 10 Dec 1776. ODNB.  [perhaps Vicar of Ulting, Essex 22 Mar 1743/4 – Jan 1744/5]

HAY-DRUMMOND, ROBERT AURIOL, 10TH EARL OF KINNOULL (S), eldest son of Hon.Robert Hay-Drummond (qv) ; b. 18 Mar 1751 ; in school list 1764 ; Christ Church, Oxford, matr.15 Mar 1768, Canoneer Student 7 Jul 1768 – void by marriage 22 Apr 1779 ; BA 1773 ; MA 1774 ; DCL 4 Jul 1793 ; adm.Lincoln’s Inn 14 Jan 1775 ; succeeded uncle as 10th Earl of Kinnoull (S) 28 Dec 1787 ; Privy Councillor 19 Apr 1796 ; appointed Lord Lyon King of Arms from 30 Sep 1796, jointly with eldest son ; LLD St Andrews 23 Oct 1789 ; Busby Trustee 8 May 1800 ; m. 1st, 19 Apr 1779 Julia, only dau. of Anthony Eyre, Grove, Notts. ; m.2nd, 17 Jul 1781 Sarah, dau. of Right Hon.Thomas Harley (qv) ; d. 12 Apr 1804.

HAY-DRUMMOND, THOMAS AURIOL, second son of Hon.Robert Hay-Drummond (qv) ; b. 7 Aug 1752 ; in school lists 1764, 1765 ; KS 1765 ; elected to Christ Church, Oxford 1769, matr. 24 May 1769, Westminster Student from 23 Dec 1769 ; d.unm. 7 Apr 1773. Buried South Cloister, Westminster Abbey.

HAY-DRUMMOND, THOMAS ROBERT, 11TH EARL OF KINNOULL (S), elder son of Robert Auriol Hay-Drummond, 10thEarl of Kinnoull (qv), and his second wife ; b. 5 Apr 1785 ; styled Lord Dupplin 1787-1804 ; adm. 20 Jan 1794 (Clapham) ; in school lists 1795, 1797, 1801 ; succ.father as 10thEarl of Kinnoull (S) 12 Apr 1804 ; Lord Lyon King of Arms from 12 Apr 1804 ; Col., Royal Perth Militia, from 8 Jun 1809 ; Lord Lieut., Perthshire, from 18 Oct 1830 ; took Conservative whip, House of Lords ; m. 17 Aug 1824 Louisa Burton, dau. of Adm.Sir Charles Rowley, Bart., GCB ; d. 18 Feb 1866.

HAYES, — ; b.       ; adm.      ; QS in 1570 (Chapter Muniments).

HAYES, CHARLES ; b.      ; adm. (aged 11) Oct 1720 ; in under school list 1723.

HAYES, CHARLES ; b.      ; adm. 16 Jan 1787 ; still at school 1788. [probably son of Samuel Hayes (qv) ; living 1816]. [Of Samuel Hayes’s two sons, Charles and Richard, one in 1815 was “in the Navy, who is since dead”, the other “living with his uncle Mr [John ?] Triphook” (Nichols, Literary Anecdotes, 1815, 59 (check reference)]

HAYES, FRANCIS ; b.       ; adm. (aged 13) Jan 1728/9 ; left 1729.

HAYES, HENRY, only son of Henry Hayes, Lorne Villa, Whitby, Yorks., wine merchant, and Dorothy, dau. of James Baker, Whitby, Yorks. ; b. 26 Jan 1859 ; adm. 22 Sep 1871 (G) ; left Aug 1875 ; Non-Coll., Oxford, matr. 23 Nov 1876 ; migrated to Exeter Coll., Oxford ; adm.Middle Temple 9 Nov 1878 (still bar student in 1881 Census) ; m. 18 Jan 1882 Emma, second dau. of David Gullon Pinkney, Sunderland, co.Durham, shipowner ; d. 8 Sep 1899.

HAYES, RICHARD ; b.      ; adm. 20 May 1788. [probably son of Samuel Hayes (qv)] [“Richard Hayes, Esq., R.N.” a subscriber to Smedley’s Erin] [perhaps Richard Hayes, Purser, Royal Navy ; m. 1 Dec 1811 Rebecca, dau. of George Graham, Norwich, Norfolk ; d. 11 Jul 1812]

HAYES, SAMUEL, son of Edmund Hayes, London ; b.      ; adm.       ; KS (aged 14) 1763 ; elected to Trinity Coll.Cambridge 1767, adm.pens. 24 Jun 1767, scholar 29 Apr 1768, matr. Mich.1767 ; BA 1771 ; MA 1774 ; Minor Fellow Trinity Coll., 10 Sep 1772, Major Fellow 4 Jul 1774 ; Seatonian Prize, Cambridge Univ. 1775-8, 1783-5 ; Usher at the School 1770-88 (latterly Senior Usher) ; ordained deacon 6 Oct 1771 (Peterborough), priest 28 Oct 1772 (Norwich) ; known as “Botch” Hayes, “for the manner in which he mended his pupils’ verses” ; such a slack disciplinarian that the boys in his form used “to stick his wig full of paper darts in school” (Southey, Life and Correspondence, i, 135-6) ; kept a succession of small boarding houses from 1776, latterly one on the Terrace, amalgamated with Farren’s on his second marriage ; left the School in Sep 1788 after having been passed over for the post of Under Master ; Morning Preacher, St.Margaret’s, Westminster ; joint author with Robert Carr (possible OW, qv) of tragedy Eugenia, 1766 ; author, poems and sermons ; his edition of the Sermons on different Subjects by Dr Samuel Johnson’s friend, Rev.John Taylor, published in 1788, included the text of the undelivered sermon which Dr Johnson had himself composed for the funeral of his wife ; a volume of his own Sermons on different Occasions was published posthumously in 1797 (“for the benefit of the children of the author”) ; m. 1st, —  ; m.2nd, 1 May 1788 Elizabeth Farren, widow, who kept the boarding house in the centre of the Terrace, Dean’s Yard ; buried Hammersmith 19 Dec 1795, aged 48 (sic). [father perhaps of Archer Street, Westminster, corn chandler]

HAYNE, DANIEL ; b.       ; adm.      ; BB 1700-1 (Chapter Muniments 33732-3).

HAYNE, DANIEL, see HAHN, DANIEL

HAYTER, — ; b.        ; in school lists Jan 1732/3 (fifth form), Aug 1733, 1734 ; left 1734. [Maybe Joshua Hayter (qv)]

HAYTER, FRANCIS THOMAS, see EGERTON, FRANCIS THOMAS.

HAYTER, JOSHUA, fourth son of Rev.George Hayter, Rector of Chagford, Devon, and Grace — ; brother of Right Rev.Thomas Hayter DD, Bishop of London ; b.      ; adm. (aged 14) Feb 1732/3 ; KS 1734 ; elected to Christ Church, Oxford 1738, matr. 6 Jun 1738, Westminster Student 23 Dec 1738 – 21 Oct 1743, expiry year of grace as R.Chagford ; BA 1742 ; MA 1747 ; ordained deacon 13 Jun 1742, priest 19 Sep 1742 (both Oxford) ; Rector of Chagford, Devon, from 29 Sep 1742 ; Domestic Chaplain to his elder brother Thomas Hayter, as Bishop of Norwich, 22 Jan 1749/50 ;  m. (by 1746) Frances Hawkins (IGI) ; buried Chagford, Devon 19 Apr 1771.

HAYWARD, see also HAWARD, HAYWOOD and HEYWOOD.

HAYWARD, — ; b.        ; at school 1792 (“junior”).

HAYWARD, WILLIAM, third son of Francis Hayward DM, medical practitioner, Hackney, Middlesex, and Anne, dau. of Nathaniel Green, Bank of England ; bapt.St.John, Hackney, Middlesex 26 Oct 1777 (IGI) ; adm.       ; Min.Can.1793 ; KS (aged 16) 1794 ; adm.Middle Temple 12 Nov 1798 ; Deputy Assistant Commissary-General, Army 2 Mar 1812 ; Assistant Commissary-General 22 Oct 1816 ; Deputy Commissary-General 20 Jan 1837 ; serving in Accounts Department, Cape of Good Hope, in 1815-20, subsequently in New South Wales (there in 1833) and in Tasmania (still listed there Army List 1850) ; on half-pay by 1852 ; m.   ; d. 7 Dec 1858.

HAYWOOD, GILES, son of Francis Haywood, London ; b.      ; adm.      ; KS 1630 (Bodleian Library, Tanner MSS lxix, f.137) ; Magdalen Coll.Oxford, matr. 8 May 1635, aged 18 : BA 1635/6 ; migrated to Trinity Coll.Cambridge, adm.pens. 20 Jul 1639 ; MA 1641. [Presumably Giles Haywood, son of Francis Haywood, bapt.All Hallows, London Wall 12 May 1615].

HAZZARD, ROBERT ; b.       ; adm.      ; KS (Capt.) ; elected to Trinity Coll.Cambridge 1623, adm. scholar 1624, matr.Mich.1623.

HEAD, DAWES, only son of John Head, London, merchant, and Ann, dau. of John Dawes, Putney, Surrey ; grandson of Sir Richard Head, Bart. MP ; b. 16 Apr 1682 ; at school under Knipe (GEC Complete Baronetage iv, 77, note, recording that Head “ran away from Westminster School at the age of 16 and married Jane Taylor”) ; of Ravenstonedale, Westmorland ; m. Jane Taylor ; buried at Ravenstonedale 19 May 1705, aged 23.

HEAD, SIR JOHN, BART., fourth son of Sir Francis Head, Bart., Hermitage, Higham, Kent, and Margaret, dau. of James Smithsbye ; b.       ; adm. (aged 16) Jan 1717/8 ; Christ Church, Oxford, matr. 17 Oct 1719, Canoneer Student 29 Jul 1721 – void by marriage 19 Mar 1730 ; BA 1723 ; MA 1726 ; ordained deacon 28 May 1727, priest 16 Jun 1728 (both Oxford) ; Domestic Chaplain to Henry, Bishop of Hereford ; Vicar of Woodnesbrough, Kent 1729/30- 36 ; Rector of St.George’s, Canterbury 3 Jan 1729/30-60 ; Rector of Pluckley, Kent  29 Dec 1735-60 ; Prebendary of Hereford from 23 Mar 1737/8 ; Deputy Clerk of the Closet to George II c.1745 – c.1760 ; Archdeacon of Canterbury from 9 Apr 1748 ; DD Lambeth 1749 ; Prebendary of Canterbury from 14 Jul 1759 ; Rector of Ickham, Kent, from 1760 ; succeeded brother as 5th baronet 27 Nov 1768 ; m.1st, Jane, dau. of Rev.Peter Leigh, Rector of Whitchurch, Shropshire ; m.2nd, 21 Apr 1751 Jane, dau. of Alexander Geekie, London, surgeon ; d. 4 Dec 1769.

HEAD, PIERCY ; b.       ; adm. (aged 11) Feb 1731/2 ; left 1736.

HEADLEY, 5th BARON (I), see ALLANSON-WINN, ROWLAND GEORGE ALLANSON, 5thBARON HEADLEY (I).

HEAGERS, —  ; b.      ; adm.       ; QS in 1556 (Chapter Muniments 37713).

HEALE, — ; b.      ; at school 1659-62 (Busby’s Account Book).

HEALE, HENRY NEWTON, brother of James Newton Heale (qv) ; b. 29 Mar 1843 ; adm. Jun 1854 ; d. 17 Jun 1859.

HEALE, JAMES NEWTON, son of James Newton Heale MD FRCS LRCP, Winchester, Hampshire, and Agnes, dau. of Rev. Joseph Benson DD, Perpetual Curate of Hounslow, Middlesex ; b. 22 Jun 1837 ; adm. 30 May 1850 ; QS 1852 ; elected to Trinity Coll.Cambridge 1856, adm.pens. 5 May 1856, scholar 1857, matr. Mich.1856 ; BA 1860 ; MA 1863 ; ordained deacon 1861, priest 1862 (both Lichfield) ; Curate, Wombourne, Staffs., 1861-3, Woodbury Salterton, Devon, 1866-9, Sible Hedingham, Essex 1869 ; Vicar of Swindon, Staffs., 1869 ; Rector of Addington, Kent 1869-83 ; Vicar of Orpington, Kent 1883-92 ; Rector of Harbledown, Kent 1892-9 ; Vicar of St.Thomas’s, Bethnal Green, London 1899-1908 ; m. 14 Jan 1868 Isabella Margaret, eldest dau. of John Wingfield-Stratford, Addington Place, Maidstone, Kent ; d. 26 Dec 1921.

HEALE (or HELE), WILLIAM, of South Hele, Devon, “pleb.” ; b.      ; at school under Camden and Ireland (thus Record, but no source quoted other than DNB) ; Exeter Coll.Oxford, adm.commoner 14 Mar 1599/1600, aged 18 ; BA 1603 ; MA (from Broadgates Hall) 1606 ; Chaplain Fellow, Exeter Coll., 22 Aug 1608 – expelled for absence 7 May 1610 ; ordained deacon 15 Jun 1606 (Exeter) (as Hele) ; Vicar of Bishopsteignton, Devon, from 1 Dec 1610 [succeeding Narcissus Hele, presumably a relative] ; Vicar of Rattery, Devon, from 8 Jun 1620 ; author, An Apologie for Women, or an Opposition to Mr.Doctor G. his assertion, who held in the Act at Oxford anno 1608, that it was lawfull for husbands to beat their wives, 1609 (“Mr.Doctor G.” was William Gager (qv)) ; m. 30 Sep 1613 Katherine, dau. of Richard Whidbourne, Exmouth, Devon ; d. early in 1628. ODNB.

HEALEY, HENRY TAYLOR, son of Edward Healey, Great Howarth, Rochdale, Lancs., and Ellen, eldest dau. of John Lord, Calliards, Littleborough, Lancs., flannel manufacturer ; b. (Rochdale) 16 Apr 1865 ; adm. 22 Jan 1880 (G) ; left Aug 1882 ; assistant master at a preparatory school ; Lieut., 3rd batt. (militia), Lancashire Fusiliers 6 Jan 1883 ; enlisted Royal Irish Regt. 15 Jan 1889 ; Lance Corporal 1 Mar 1889, Corporal 7 Jan 1890, Lance Sergeant 1 Aug 1890, Sergeant 20 Apr 1892 ; served in South African War Dec 1899 – Jul 1900 ; d. of enteric fever at Greenpoint Hospital, South Africa 29 Jul 1900.

HEANSWORTH, — ; b.       ; adm.       ; QS 1570 (Chapter Muniments).

HEARLE, FRANCIS, only son of John Hearle, Penryn and St.Gluvias, Cornwall, Vice Warden of the Stannaries, and Mary, dau. of Francis Paynter, Trelissick, St Erth, Cornwall ; bapt.St.Gluvias, Cornwall 21 Aug 1731 (IGI) ; adm. (aged 14) Sep 1745 ; Min.Can.1746 ; left 1748 ; Christ Church, Oxford, matr. 26 May 1749 ; dead by 1763.

HEATH, — ; b.        ; adm.       ; at school c.1660 (Busby’s Account Book).

HEATH, ALAN JASPER, brother of Christopher Reginald Walter Heath (qv) ; b. 25 Aug 1865 ; adm. 31 May 1877 (G) ; left Aug 1882 ; Univ.Coll.Hospital ; LRCP MRCS 1889 ; MB London 1889 ; Surgeon-Capt., Bombay establishment, Indian Army 31 Mar 1890 ; attached 7th Bombay Native Infantry ; d.unm. 15 Feb 1900.

HEATH, CHRISTOPHER REGINALD WALTER, elder son of Christopher Heath FRCS, Cavendish Square, London, Pres.Royal Coll. of Surgeons, and his first wife Sarah, third dau. of Rev.Jasper Peck, Church of England clergyman ; b. 16 Apr 1864 ; adm. 27 May 1875 (R) ; left Aug 1880 ; at Epsom Coll. 1880-1 ; articled to G.F.King, solicitor ; 1st cl. in Law Society’s final examination, and Law Society prizewinner, Jan 1890 ; adm.solicitor May 1890 ; practised in London ; m. 6 Dec 1909 Frances Annie, second dau. of Richard John King-Church, Cheyne Gardens, Chelsea ; d. 3 Jul 1947.

HEATH, DUNBAR ISIDORE, brother of John Moore Heath (qv) ; b. 3 Mar 1816 ; adm. 10 Mar 1826 (G) ; afterwards at Greenwich Sch. (Dr.Burney) ; Trinity Coll.Cambridge, adm.pens. 23 Mar 1833, scholar 1836, matr. Mich.1834 ; 5th Wrangler 1838 ; BA 1838 ; MA 1841 ; Minor Fellow, Trinity Coll. 1840, Major Fellow 1841 ; ordained deacon 3 Dec 1843 (Ely), priest 1844 ; Vicar of Brading, Isle of Wight 1846-62 ; sentenced to deprivation of benefice by Court of Arches 2 Nov 1861, for expressions in his Sermons on Important Subjects which were held to be derogatory of the Thirty-Nine Articles (the first enforcement of the Act of 13 Elizabeth for three centuries) ; sentence confirmed by Judicial Committee of Privy Council 6 Jun 1862 ; editor, Journal of Anthropology, and author, The Future Human Kingdom of Christ, 1852-3, and other works ; m. 22 Feb 1848 Emily Mary, youngest dau. of James Harrison, Audley House, Sandown, Isle of Wight, previously of Manchester, cotton spinner ; d. 27 May 1888. ODNB.

HEATH, FRANCIS ; b.      ; adm.     ; KS      ; elected to Trinity Coll.Cambridge 1624, adm.scholar 1625, matr.Mich.1626 ; BA 1628/9 ; MA 1632 ; BD (from Corpus Christi Coll. Cambridge) 1640 (and therefore ordained) ; probably Francis Heath MA, Rector of Tangmere, Sussex 18 Nov 1635, still 1642. [Other career details provided by Russell Barker and Stenning relate to Francis Heath, a son of Sir Robert Heath, Kt, Brasted, Kent, Lord Chief Justice, King’s Bench, and Margaret, dau. of John Miller, Tonbridge, Kent, but this Francis Heath appears to have been bapt. St.Martin, Ludgate 14 Nov 1622, son of Robert Heath, and Margaret — (and to have been his parents’ fifth son) ; it does however seem probable that Rev.Francis Heath, Rector of Tangmere, was a relative of Sir Robert Heath, for he was presented to Tangmere by Sir William Morley, Kt, Sir Robert Heath’s son-in-law] [Francis Heath MA, ordained deacon and priest 24 Dec 1632  (Lincoln) ; Vicar of Sutton on the Forest, Yorkshire 24 Dec 1632 – Oct 1635] [Francis Heath, son of Sir Robert Heath, was adm.Inner Temple 6 Feb 1641/2 (special admission) ; Fellow, Trinity Hall, Cambridge 1644-7 and 1662-79 (readm. 11 Jan 1661/2) : LLD Cambridge 1662 ; Receiver, Eagle Honour and Sussex, Duchy of Lancaster 5 Dec 1662 – Mar 1675 ; buried Brasted, Kent 20 Dec 1683] [b. 29 Oct 1610 ?]

HEATH, GEORGE, elder son of John Moore Heath (qv) ; b. 27 Mar 1847 ; adm. 16 Apr 1858 (G) ; QS 1861 ; elected head to Trinity Coll.Cambridge (with Triplett) 1865, adm.pens. 3 Jun 1865, matr.Mich. 1865 ; BA 1869 ; MA 1873 ; a mining engineer 1869-94 ; member, Lloyds’, from 1893 ; resident Cobham, Surrey ; author, Records of the Carrick Moore Family, 1912, Records of the Heath Family, 2 vols, 1913, 1920 ; m. 14 Dec 1886 Martha Charlotte, second dau. of Johann Friedrich Schmidt, Krefeld, Germany, and Rockhampton, Queensland, Australia, tin and galvanised iron manufacturer ; d. 6 Nov 1923.

HEATH, SIR (HENRY) FRANK, eldest son of Henry Charles Heath, Grove End Road, St.John’s Wood, Middlesex, Miniature Painter to Queen Victoria, and Georgina, dau. of William Woodcock, Brixton, Surrey ; b. 11 Dec 1863 ; adm. 15 Jun 1876 (H) ; left May 1881 ; University Coll.London 1884-8, Fellow from 1896 ; BA 1886 ; Strasbourg Univ. 1888-90, Ph.D. ; Professor of English, Bedford Coll., London 1890-5 ; Lecturer in English Language and Literature, King’s Coll.London 1891-5 ; Assistant Registrar and Librarian, Univ.London 1895-1901, Academic Registrar and acting Treasurer 1901-3 ; Director of Special Inquiries and Reports, Board of Education 1903-16 ; joint secretary, Royal Commission on University Education in London 1909-13 ; Principal Assistant Secretary, Universities Branch, Board of Education 1910-17 ; CB 19 Jun 1911 ; KCB 4 Jan 1917 ; Permanent Secretary, Department of Scientific and Industrial Research 1917-27 ; GBE 3 Jun 1927 ; member Governing Body, Imperial Coll., Univ.London, from 1931 ; editor, Modern Language Quarterly 1898-1903 ; contributed chapters to Social England, and joint editor, The Globe Shakespeare ; m.1st, 1892 Antonia Johanna Sophie Theresa, dau. of Friedrich Gottlieb Eckenstein, Canonbury, Middlesex, merchant ; m. 2nd, 26 Mar 1898 Frances Elaine, dau. of James Hawkins Sayer, High Barnet, Herts., and Hastings, Sussex, linen draper ; d. 5 Oct 1946. ODNB.

HEATH, JAMES, son of Robert Heath, The Strand, London, the King’s Cutler, and Dorothy — (IGI); bapt. St Clement Danes 6 Jan 1629 (IGI) ; adm.     ; KS in 1644 ; elected to Christ Church, Oxford 1646, matr. 16 Dec 1646, Westminster Student to 13 Oct 1648, when ejected by Parliamentary Visitors (Burrows, ed., 1881, 196) ; at The Hague in 1649 ; adhered to exiled court of Charles II ; returned to England and wrote and corrected for publishers and printers in order to support his family ; sometimes known as “Carrion” Heath ; author, A Brief Chronicle of the late Intestine War, 1661, Flagellum, or the Life and Death of O.Cromwell, the late Usurper, 1663, and other works ; m.      ; d. 16 Aug 1664. ODNB.

HEATH, JOHN, youngest son of Robert Heath, Inner Temple, and Sanderstead, Surrey, barrister, and his second wife Anne, dau. of Nicholas Posyer, St.Stephen’s, Coleman Street, London ; younger brother of Sir Robert Heath, Kt, Lord Chief Justice of the King’s Bench ; b. 18 Jan 1590/1 ; adm.       ; KS       ; elected to Christ Church, Oxford 1607, Westminster Student to 1615, matr. 16 Jun 1610, aged 18 ; BA 1611 ; MA 1614 ; subscribed for ordination as deacon or priest 24 Oct 1614 (Oxford). [presumably John Heath, MA Oxford, Vicar of Clanfield, Hampshire 22 Jun 1616 – sequestered Sep 1646 ; m. Elizabeth — ; d. 25 Nov 1656].

HEATH, JOHN, son of Francis Heath, Greenford, Middlesex, and Anne, dau. of Ven.Thomas Cooke DD, Rector of Hadleigh, Suffolk, and Archdeacon of Middlesex ; b.      ; adm.      ; Min.Can. (aged 14) 1713 ; Queen’s Coll.Oxford, matr. 1 Dec 1714 ; adm.Middle Temple 5 Jan 1715/6.

HEATH, JOHN, son of Thomas Heath, Alderman of Exeter, merchant and fuller, and his first wife Ann, dau. of Philip Pyne, Exeter ; b.        ; adm. (aged 12) Jul 1748 ; KS 1749 ; elected head to Christ Church, Oxford 1754, matr. 18 Jun 1754, Westminster Student 24 Dec 1754 – Nov 1764, Faculty Student 2 Nov 1764 – 12 Jul 1781 ; BA 1758 ; MA 1762 ; adm.Inner Temple 3 May 1759, called to bar 25 Jun 1762 ; Town Clerk of Exeter Oct 1766 – May 1775 ; Serjeant at Law 17 May 1775 ; Recorder of Exeter 25 Sep 1779 – Jul 1780 ; a Judge of the Common Pleas from 19 Jul 1780 ; refused knighthood, preferring to remain “plain John Heath” ; d.unm. 16 Jan 1816. ODNB.

HEATH, JOHN MOORE, eldest son of George Heath, Kitlands, Dorking, Surrey, Serjeant at Law, and Anne Raymond, dau. of William Dunbar, Finch Lane, London, notary public ; b. 27 Dec 1808 ; adm. 16 Apr 1818 (G) ; KS 1822 ; elected to Trinity Coll.Cambridge 1826, adm.pens. 9 Jun 1826, scholar 1827, matr. Mich.1826 ; 27th Wrangler and 7th in 2nd cl.Classical Tripos 1830 ; BA 1830 ; MA 1833 ; Minor Fellow, Trin.Coll. 1831, Major Fellow 1833, Assistant Tutor 1833-9, Tutor 1839-44 ; adm. Inner Temple 24 Jan 1825, called to bar 12 Feb 1830 ; ordained deacon 7 Feb 1836 (Rochester), priest 27 May 1838 (Ely) ; Vicar of Enfield, Middlesex 1844-70 ; m. 31 Dec 1845 Marianne, only dau. of Edward Harman, Clay Hill, Enfield, Russia merchant ; d. 2 Feb 1882.

HEATH, RICHARD, second son of Sir Richard Heath, Kt, Baron of the Exchequer, and his second wife Lettice, dau. of Sir George Woodroffe, Kt MP, Poyle, Surrey ; b.      ; adm.     ; QS 1703 ; elected to Trinity Coll.Cambridge 1707, adm.pens. 12 Jun 1707, aged 18, scholar 19 Apr 1708 ; BA 1710/1 ; MA 1714 ; ordained deacon 17 Mar 1716, priest 24 Mar 1716 (both Winchester) ; Rector of East Clandon, Surrey, from 25 Mar 1717 ; d. 29 Apr 1729.

HEATH, RICHARD, eldest son of Sir Thomas Heath Kt MP, Hatchlands, East Clandon, Surrey, barrister, Inner Temple, and Dorothy, dau. of — Hubert, Boys Court, Kent ; nephew of Richard Heath (qv) ; b.      ; adm. (aged 12) Apr 1718 ; in under school list 1720 ; Magdalen Coll.Oxford, matr. 1 Nov 1722 ; MP Bossinney from 1747 ; of New Hall, Sussex ; m. 1734 Bridget, only child of John Nicholas, West Horsley, Surrey ; d. 4 Feb 1752.

HEATH, THOMAS, brother of Richard Heath (adm.1718, qv) ; b.      ; adm. (aged 11) Apr 1718 ; left 1718 ; adm.Middle Temple 19 May 1729 ; Magdalen Coll.Oxford, matr. 6 Jun 1739, aged 26 (sic) ; ordained ; Perpetual Curate of Oakwood, Surrey, from 8 Jul 1743 ; Vicar of Farnham, Surrey 21 Mar 1743/4  – Dec 1752 ; Rector of East Lavant, Sussex, from 1752 ; Prebendary of Chichester from 5 Jul 1753 ; m. (by 1762) Elizabeth — ;  dead by 27 Oct 1786, aged 79 (will proved PCC 23 Feb 1787).  [Note however that Thomas Heath, Vicar of Farnham, was apparently aged only 26 (sic) when he had a lic. to m. Catharine Thomas, Guildford, Surrey, on 25 Apr 1750 ; there may be some confusion here]

HEATH, WALTER, younger son of John Moore Heath (qv) ; b. 11 May 1855 ; adm. 24 Jan 1868 ; QS 1869 ; elected head to Trinity Coll.Cambridge (with Triplett) 1873, adm.pens. 19 Jan 1874, scholar 1877, matr. Mich.1874 ; 23rd Wrangler 1878 ; BA 1878 ; MA 1882 ; Assistant Master, Tonbridge Sch. 1879 ; articled to solicitors, London 1880 ; adm.solicitor ; went out to Queensland, Australia ; managing clerk to Hart and Flower, Brisbane, for some twelve years ; returned to England in 1899 and lived at Cobham, Surrey ; a well-known amateur astronomer ; Secretary, British Astronomical Association 1916-8 ; m. at Brisbane 15 Aug 1892 Ellen Augusta, third dau. of Ferdinand Antonio Echalaz, Wimbledon, Surrey, stockbroker ; d. 6 May 1932.

HEATHCOTE, GILBERT JOHN, 1ST BARON AVELAND, eldest son of Sir Gilbert Heathcote, Bart. MP, and his first wife Lady Katherine Sophia Manners, second dau. of John Manners (qv) and Louisa, Countess of Dysart ; b. 16 Jan 1795 ; adm.Christmas 1808 ; left 1812 ; Trinity Coll.Cambridge, adm.pens. 13 Jun 1814, fellow commoner 4 Jul 1814, matr. Mich.1814 ; MP (Whig) Boston 1820-30, 1831-2, South Lincolnshire 1832-41, Rutland 1841 – 26 Feb 1856 ; succ.father as 5th baronet 26 Mar 1851 ; created Baron Aveland 26 Feb 1856 ; took Whig/Liberal whip, House of Lords ; Lord Lieut., Lincolnshire, from 21 Feb 1862 ; Joint Lord Great Chamberlain of England in right of his wife ; FSA 7 Dec 1854 ; m. 8 Oct 1827 Hon.Clementina Elizabeth Willoughby Drummond Burrell (afterwards Baroness Willoughby d’Eresby), eldest dau. of Peter Drummond Burrell, 20th Baron Willoughby d’Eresby PC, Lord Great Chamberlain ; d. 6 Sep 1867.

HEATHCOTE, JOHN EDENSOR, eldest son of Richard Edensor Heathcote (qv), and his first wife ; b. 14 Sep 1810 ; adm. 25 Sep 1824 ; KS 1825 ; elected to Trinity Coll.Cambridge 1829, adm.pens. 6 Jul 1829, scholar 1830, matr. Mich.1829 ; BA 1833 ; MA 1836 ; adm.Lincoln’s Inn 14 Jan 1835, called to bar 22 Nov 1841 ; Home Circuit ; special pleader ; m. 31 Oct 1837 Mary Anna, only surviving dau. of Rev.Thomas Sandford, Sandford, Shropshire ; d. 10 Dec 1869.

HEATHCOTE, RICHARD EDENSOR, eldest son of Sir John Edensor Heathcote, Kt, Longton Hall, Staffordshire, and Anne, eldest dau. of Sir Nigel Gresley, Bart. ; b. 25 Oct 1780 ; adm.       ; KS 1796 ; Christ Church, Oxford, matr. 8 May 1799, Canoneer Student 24 Dec 1802 – void by marriage 11 Nov 1808 ; BA 1803 ; MA 1805 ; adm.Lincoln’s Inn 12 May 1802 ; of Longton Hall and Apedale Hall, Staffs. ; MP Coventry 1826-30, Stoke upon Trent 1835 – Feb 1836 ; m. 1st, 15 Sep 1808 his cousin Emma Sophia, dau. of Sir Nigel Bowyer Gresley, Bart. ; m.2nd, 13 Dec 1815 Lady Elizabeth Keith Lindsay, younger dau. of Alexander Lindsay, 6th Earl of Balcarres (S), Gen. in Army ; m.3rd, 19 Jun 1838 Susan, dau. of John Cooper ; d. at Geneva, Switzerland 10 Dec 1850.

HEATHCOTE, WILLIAM HENRY, brother of Gilbert John Heathcote, 1st Baron Aveland (qv) ; b. 29 May 1797 ; adm. 17 Jan 1810 ; left 1814 ; Trinity Coll.Cambridge, adm.pens. 17 Jun 1815, matr. Mich.1815 ; of North Luffenham Hall, Rutland ; m. 17 Dec 1833 Sophia Matilda, only dau. of Thomas Wright, Upton Hall, Notts. ; d. 17 Oct 1880.

HEATHFIELD, JOHN, eldest son of John Heathfield, Croydon, Surrey, brewer, and Mary, dau. of Thomas White, Horsham, Sussex ; b. 13 Mar 1733 ; adm. (aged 15) Oct 1749 ; in school list 1752 ; Clare Coll.Cambridge, adm.fellow commoner 1 Jul 1752, matr. Easter 1754 ; BA 1756 ; MA 1759 ; adm.Middle Temple 3 May 1755 ; ordained deacon 23 Sep 1759 (Winchester), to curacy of Chipstead, Surrey, priest 21 Dec 1760 (Chester) ; Perpetual Curate of Northaw, Herts., from 1769 ; Rector of Stanmer, Sussex 6 Mar 1770-1 ; Vicar of South Mimms, Middlesex 25 May 1773 – Apr 1790 ; d. 6 Feb 1810, aged 75.

HEATON, see also HETON.

HEATON, — ; b.       ; adm.      ; left 1656 (School List 1656, first quarter).

HEBBES, THOMAS, son of John Hebbes, London, and Sarah — (IGI) ; bapt. St.Clement Danes, London 18 Apr 1731 (IGI, sic) ; in school list 1743 ; Min.Can. (aged 14) 1747 ; KS 1748 ; elected head to Trinity Coll.Cambridge 1752, adm.pens. 27 May 1752, scholar 18 May 1753, matr. Easter 1753 ; BA 1756 ; MA 1759 ; ordained deacon 14 Mar 1756, priest 6 Mar 1757 (both Lincoln) ; Chaplain, Trinity Coll. 1758-60 ; Vicar of Herne Hill, Kent, from 26 Apr 1760 ; author, Sermons, 1802 (posthumously published) ; m. 17 May 1760 Eleanor Elizabeth Diotiguardi, “of St.James’s” [maybe dau. of Alberto Diotiguardi, “a domestic in the Royal Family” (“Tabledecker” to Princesses Amelia and Caroline, 1750)] ; d. 30 Dec 1766.

HEBER, RICHARD, eldest son of Thomas Heber, Marton, Yorks., and Elizabeth, dau. of John Atherton, Atherton, Lancs. ; b.     ; adm. (aged 16) Jul 1744 ; left 1746 ; Brasenose Coll.Oxford, matr. 3 Jul 1746 ; succeeded to Marton estate on death of father 1752 and to Hodnet estate, Shropshire, on death of mother 1753 ; m. 25 Nov 1756 Elizabeth, dau. of Arthur Barnardiston, Brightwell, Suffolk ; d. 22 Jul 1766.

HEBERDEN, CHARLES, brother of William Heberden (adm.1810, qv) ; b. 6 Apr 1799 ; adm.Michaelmas 1811 ; KS 1813 ; left Christmas 1816 ; St.John’s Coll.Cambridge, adm.pens. 28 Oct 1815, matr.Mich.1816 ; BA 1820 ; MA 1823 ; adm.Lincoln’s Inn 31 Jan 1820, called to bar 17 Jun 1823 ; equity draftsman ; d. unm. at The Close, Winchester 8 Dec 1882.

HEBERDEN, GEORGE, brother of William Heberden (adm.1810, qv) ; b. 27 Jul 1800 ; adm.Michaelmas 1813 ; left 31 Jul 1818 ; St.John’s Coll.Cambridge, adm.pens. 3 Nov 1817, matr.Mich.1818 ; BA 1822 ; MA 1825 ; ordained deacon 7 Sep 1823, priest 1 Aug 1824 (both Salisbury) ; Vicar of Dartford, Kent, from 30 Dec 1825 ; m. 21 Aug 1828 Elizabeth, dau. of Henry James Barchard, East Hill, Wandsworth, Surrey, dyer ; d. 22 Apr 1829.

HEBERDEN, HENRY, brother of William Heberden (adm.1810, qv) ; b. 9 Jul 1802 ; adm.Mich.1814 ; in school list Dec 1820 ; St.John’s Coll.Cambridge, adm.pens. 8 Jul 1819, matr. Mich.1820 ; migr. to Downing Coll., 14 Jun 1821 ; BA 1824 ; MB 1826 ; medical student, St.George’s Hospital ; d.unm. 22 Apr 1828, as a result of rubbing his hand at a post-mortem.

HEBERDEN, WILLIAM, eldest son of William Heberden MD FRS FRCP, Upper Brook Street, London, Physician in Ordinary to George III, and Elizabeth Catherine, only dau. of Charles Miller, Shopwyke, Oving, Sussex ; b. 8 Jan 1797 ; adm. Christmas 1810 ; KS 1811 ; left 1814 ; St.John’s Coll.Cambridge, adm.pens. 18 Nov 1813, matr.Mich.1814 ; BA 1819 ; MA 1822 ; ordained deacon 28 May 1820 (Chester), priest 18 Mar 1821 (Salisbury) ; Curate, All Hallows, Bread Street, London 1820 ; Vicar of Great Bookham, Surrey, from 21 Apr 1821 ; m. 3 Feb 1824 Elvina Rainier, sister of Frederick Forbes Underwood (qv) ; d. 16 Dec 1879.

HEBERDEN, WILLIAM, fourth son of Rev.Thomas Heberden, Rector of Whimple, Devon, and Canon of Exeter, and his second wife Mary, sister of Joseph Martin (qv) ; b. 16 Jan 1804 ; adm. 10 Oct 1817 ; Head Town Boy in Jul 1821 ; Oriel Coll.Oxford, matr. 23 May 1821 ; BA 1825 ; MA 1828 ; ordained deacon (Bath & Wells) 24 Feb 1827, priest 20 Jan 1828 (Exeter) ; Chaplain, Exeter Coll.Oxford 17 Jun 1828 – 7 Jan 1830 ; Vicar of Broadhembury, Devon, 7 Jan 1829-74 ; m. 1 Jul 1835 Susannah Katherine, youngest dau. of James Wentworth Buller MP, Downes, Crediton, Devon ; d. 17 Aug 1890.

HECKFORD, SAMUEL, son of Samuel Heckford, Clement’s Inn, London, attorney ; b.       ; adm. (aged 15) Oct 1733 ; left 1734 ; adm.Middle Temple 9 May 1737, called to bar 10 Jun 1743 ; m. 9 Jun 1753 Elizabeth Helincke, St.James’s, Westminster. [note Samuel Heckford, Clements Inn, gentleman, d. Feb 1764, will proved PCC 19 Mar 1764]

HEDGE, CHRISTOPHER ; b.       ; adm.     ; QS       ; elected to Trin.Coll.Camb. 1568, but was never adm.

HEDGE, WILLIAM ; b.      ; adm.      ; QS in 1565 ; elected to Trin.Coll.Camb.1570, adm.scholar 1571, matr. Easter 1571.

HEDGEMAN, — ; b.       ; adm.      ; Min.Can.1636.

HEDGES, WILLIAM, son of Robert Hedges, Ireland ; b.      ; adm.      ; Min.Can. (aged 15) 1650 (Chapter Muniments 43057).

HEIGHTON, — ; b.        ; in school list 1734.

HELM, THOMAS, second son of Richard Helm, Kensington, Middlesex ; b.       ; adm. 3 Jul 1786 ; Christ Church, Oxford, matr. 20 Oct 1788, aged 16 ; adm.Lincoln’s Inn 21 Apr 1788. [probably Thomas Helm, b. 1 Jan 1772, son of Richard Helm, and Rebecca — (IGI), d. 27 Apr 1836 (will proved PCC 17 May 1836, as of St.Clement Danes, gentleman)]

HELSHAM, E.      ; b.       ; adm. 13 Sep 1808 ; left 1809. [maybe Edward Helsham, son of John Helsham, Legget’s Rath, co.Kilkenny, Ireland, and Mary, dau. of John Blunt, Arches Grove, co.Kilkenny ; inherited Norfolk estates of his great-uncle Edward Candler Brown, and assumed additional surname of Brown 18 Jul 1826 ; d. at Lyon, France 7 May 1857]

HELY-HUTCHINSON, GEORGE HENRY, eldest illegitimate son of Hon.Christopher Hely-Hutchinson MP, Acton, Middlesex, and Anne (subsequently his second wife), widow of John Brydges Woodcock, and dau. of Very Rev.Maurice Crosbie, Dean of Limerick ; b.1799 ; adm.Lady Day 1811 ; left 1814 ; Gonville and Caius Coll.Cambridge, adm.pens.27 Jun 1817, matr. Mich.1817 ; BA 1822 ; MA 1825 ; adm.Lincoln’s Inn 4 Nov 1824, called to bar 21 Nov 1827 ; ordained deacon 27 Sep 1829 (Norwich), priest 8 Nov 1829 (Ely) ; Vicar of Westport St.Mary with Charlton and Brokenborough, Wilts., 1837-76 ; wrote under pseudonym of “Sixty-one” ; author, Twenty Years Reminiscences of the Lews, 1871, and A Trip to Norway in 1873 ; m. 1 Jun 1830 Alice Margaret, dau. of Rev.Robert Morritt, Creagh, co.Cork,  Prebendary of Ross ; d. 22 Jan 1883.

HELYARWILLIAM, eldest son of William Helyar, Coker Court, Somerset, and Sedgehill, Wilts., and Elizabeth, second dau. of William Hawker, Luppitt, Devonshire ;  b. 14 May 1778 ; adm. 26 Jan 1792 (Clapham) ; in school lists 1795, 1797 ; Christ Church, Oxford, matr. 26 Oct 1797, aged 19 ; BA 1801 ; of Coker Court, Somerset, and Sedgehill, Wilts. ; JP Somerset, High Sheriff 1829 ; JP Wiltshire, Devon ; m. Nov 1811 Harriet, dau. of Thomas Grove, Fern House, Wilts. ; d. 10 Dec 1841.

HEMERY, JAMES, son of Clement Hemery, St.Helier, Jersey, merchant, and Ann Susan, dau. of Elias Durell ; b. 30 Apr 1814 ; adm. 15 Jan 1827 (G) ; KS 1828 ; rowed v.Eton 12 May 1831 ; elected to Trinity Coll.Cambridge 1833, adm.pens. 4 Jun 1833, scholar 1834, matr. Mich.1833 ; 7th Wrangler 1837 ; BA 1837 ; MA 1840 ; Minor Fellow, Trinity Coll. 1839, Major Fellow 1840, Assistant Tutor 1839-44 ; ordained deacon 23 May 1841, priest 27 Nov 1842 (both Ely) ; Dean of Jersey and Rector of St.Helier’s from 1844 ; m. 15 May 1845 Ellen Charlotte, youngest dau. of Thomas Newcourt ; d. 22 Nov 1849.

HEMINGTON, GEORGE, brother of Henry Hemington (qv) ;  b.      ; adm. (aged 8) Oct 1724 ; left 1730 ; living 1793. [perhaps m. 10 Jun 1755 Sarah Banks (IGI)] [note George Hemington, Overseer of HM Works at Tilbury Fort and Gravesend, will proved PCC 7 Aug 1793]

HEMINGTON, HENRY ; b.       ; adm. (aged 10) Jun 1724 ; in school list 1729.  [Maybe ordained deacon 23 Sep 1739 (Lincoln) to curacy of Dean, Beds., priest 21 Sep 1746 (Chichester)] [presumably brother of Robert Hemington (qv) (see below) ; perhaps Vicar of Tonbridge, Kent 21 Apr 1748 – Jun 1756 ; Vicar of Seamer, Yorks., 2 Jun 1757 – Nov 1773 ; Rector of Hamsey, Sussex, from 29 Oct 1773 ; m.1745 Mary, sister of George Lewis (qv) ; buried Westerham, Kent 10 May 1784] [presumably Chaplain, Royal Navy 1739, note date of ordination as deacon] [a Rev.Henry Hemington who was Perpetual Curate, St.Cuthbert, Darlington, appointed c.Mar 1772 (successor 1784)] [the Vicar of Tonbridge identified as “son to Col.Hemington”, London Evening Post 21 Apr 1748]

HEMINGTON, NICHOLAS ; b.       ; adm.      ; KS     ; elected to Trinity Coll.Cambridge 1619, but was never adm.

HEMINGTON, ROBERT, son of Lieut.-Col.Robert Hemington, 1st Foot Guards, Chiswick, Middlesex, Groom of Privy Chamber to Queen Anne, George I and George II, subsequently Gentleman Usher of Privy Chamber to George II, of Chiswick, Middlesex, and Sage Ashworth, All Hallows Barking, London ; b. 1 Feb 1711/2 ; adm. (aged 9) Jun 1720 ; KS 1725 ; elected to Christ Church, Oxford 1730, matr. 16 Jun 1730, Westminster Student 22 Dec 1730 – deprived 10 Dec 1734 (absence) ; BA 1745 ; MA 1746 ; an Usher at the School c.1740 ; tutor to Earl of Huntingdon ; ordained ; Rector of East Leake and West Leake, Notts., from 1770 (on presentation Earl of Huntingdon) ; m.       ; d. 30 Dec 1774, aged 65. [connected with Countess of Huntingdon as agent or steward (occurs as such 1754-5)]

HEMINGTON, WILLIAM, son of John Hemington, Puddletown, Dorset ; b.       ; adm. (aged 7) Jul 1721 ; Min.Can.1727 ; KS 1728 ; elected to Christ Church, Oxford 1733, matr. 25 May 1733, Westminster Student 24 Dec 1733 – void 18 Jul 1748, expiry year of grace as V.Inkberrow ; BA 1737 ; MA 1741 ; BD and DD 1777 ; ordained deacon 17 Jun 1739, priest 24 May 1741 (both Oxford) ; Chaplain, Royal Navy 1739 ; Curate of Drayton, Oxfordshire, 1743, Binsey, Oxfordshire 1746 ; an Usher at the School 1743-8 ; Vicar of Inkberrow, Worcs., from 13 Jul 1747 ; Domestic Chaplain to George, Baron Abergavenny 17 Feb 1747/8 ; Rector of Ravensthorpe, Northants 12 Mar 1747/8 – Feb 1789  ; Chaplain to Garrison, Hull, from Jul 1763 ; Canon of Christ Church, Oxford, from 1 Feb 1777 ; d. 8 Jun 1792. [mother Mary, sister of Henry Bloome, Hexham, Northumberland ?]

HEMINGWAY, SAMUEL ; b.       ; adm. 1 Aug 1770.

HEMMINGE, WILLIAM, ninth child of John Hemminge, St.Mary’s, Aldermanbury, actor, and Rebecca, widow of William Knell, same parish, and dau. of — Edwards ; bapt. St.Mary Aldermanbury  3 Oct 1602 ; at Merchant Taylors’ Sch. in 1616 ; adm.      ; KS in 1619 ; elected to Christ Church, Oxford 1621, Westminster Student to 1629, matr. 24 Jul 1624, aged 19 ; BA 1625 ; MA 1628 ; inherited father’s shares in Blackfriars and Globe theatres, but sold these in 1633 and 1634 ; author, The Fatal Contract, 1653, and other plays ; m. Rebecca — ; ; dead by 1653. ODNB (as William Heming).

HEMSLEY, ALFRED MACARTNEY, brother of Henry Morley Hemsley (qv) ; b. 20 Jul 1860 ; adm. 4 Jun 1874 (G), having previously been at Marlborough Coll. ; left Aug 1878 ; St.John’s Coll.Oxford, matr. 28 Jan 1880 ; BA 1882 ; went out to Australia  ; adm.solicitor 5 Feb 1886 ; in practice at Sydney, New South Wales, from 1888 ; member, New South Wales Legislative Council, 1927-37 ; m. Annie L.Campbell ; d. 12 Jul 1937.

HEMSLEY, HENRY MORLEY, son of Alexander Hemsley, Ealing, Middlesex, solicitor, and his second wife Catherine, youngest dau. of John Blackett, Stamford Hill, Middlesex ; b. 19 Feb 1859 ; adm. from Marlborough Coll. 24 Sep 1874 (G) ; left Dec 1875 ; adm.solicitor Apr 1883 ; practised in London and Ealing ; m. 1905 Evelyn Mary, dau. of John Henderson Petrie (marriage registered Brentford third quarter 1905) ; d. 26 Apr 1926.

HEN, HENRY ; b.       ; adm.       ; Min.Can.1641.

HENCHMAN, CHARLES, brother of Humphrey Henchman (KS 1684, qv) ; b.      ; adm.     ; KS 1685 ; elected to Christ Church, Oxford 1688, matr. 29 Jun 1688, aged 17, Westminster Student 24 Dec 1688 – void 1701, expiry year of grace as V.Great Budworth ; BA 1692 ; MA 1695 ; ordained deacon 4 Mar 1693/4 (Oxford), priest 23 Dec 1694 (Salisbury) ; Vicar of Great Budworth, Cheshire from 13 Mar 1699/1700 ; Vicar of Horton, Northants 22 Aug 1700-1 ; Master of the King’s School, Chester, from c.1712 (having been Assistant to Head Master from 1707) ; Domestic Chaplain to Francis Gastrell (qv), Bishop of Chester (occurs as such 1714) ; Rector of Alderley, Cheshire, from 16 May 1713 ; Prebendary of Chester from 20 Jan 1717/8 ; m. Margaret, dau. of Hamlet Woods ; d. 6 Feb 1740/1. [perhaps Charles Henchman MA, Domestic Chaplain to Francis Atterbury (qv), Bishop of Rochester 4 Mar 1713/4]

HENCHMAN, HUMPHREY, third son of Thomas Henchman, citizen and skinner, London, and Anne, dau. of Robert Griffiths, Caernarvonshire ; bapt.Barton Seagrove, Northants  22 Dec 1592 ; adm.    ; KS 16 Jan 1608/9 (Chapter Lease Book 1605-10, f.219 b) ; Christ’s Coll.Cambridge, matr. 18 Dec 1609 ; BA 1612/3 ; MA 1616 ; BD 1623 ; DD 1628 ; Fellow, Clare Hall 1616 – 1622/3 (on Freeman foundation, as founder’s kin) ; ordained ; Precentor and Canon Residentiary of Salisbury 20 Jan 1622/3 – Oct 1660 ; Prebendary of Salisbury 26 Feb 1622/3 – Oct 1660 ; Rector of Rushton, Northants 4 May 1624-38/9 ; Rector of Westbury, Wilts., 20 Jan 1622/3 (no longer 1624) ; Rector of Wyke Regis, Dorset 11 Jan 1638/9, and of Isle of Portland, Dorset, from 28 Oct 1639 ; deprived of preferments 1643, “having gone to the Army against the Parliament” ; largely instrumental in arranging escape of Charles II after battle of Worcester ; consecrated Bishop of Salisbury 28 Oct 1660 ; Lord High Almoner from 5 May 1662 ; Bishop of London from 15 Sep 1663 ; set an example to his clergy by remaining in London during the Great Plague of 1665 ; a close friend of George Herbert (qv) ; Izaak Walton recorded that “no one mentioned him without some veneration for his life and excellent learning” ; m. 1630 Ellen, sister of Robert Townson (qv) ; d. 7 Oct 1675. ODNB.

HENCHMAN, HUMPHREY, son of Thomas Henchman, Fulham, Middlesex, and Mary, dau. of Thomas Howe, Abbots Langley, Herts. ; grandson of Humphrey Henchman (KS 1608/9, qv) ; b.       ; adm.      ; KS 1684 ; elected head to Christ Church, Oxford 1687, matr. 15 Jul 1687, aged 18, Westminster Student 19 Dec 1687 – void 1704 ; BA 1691 ; MA 1694 ; BCL and DCL 1702 ; adm.advocate, Doctors’ Commons 23 Oct 1703 ; one of the counsel for Dr.Sacheverell 1710 ; an intimate friend of Francis Atterbury (KS 1674, qv) ; Judge, Admiralty Court 22 Jun – 1 Dec 1714 ; Chancellor, Dioceses of Rochester, from 1714 and of Diocese of London from Jul 1715 ; Commissary of Essex and Hertfordshire ; m. 22 Sep 1713 Anne, fourth dau. of Thomas Wood, Littleton, Middlesex ; d. 15 Aug 1739. ODNB.

HENCHMAN, HUMPHREY, elder son of Humphrey Henchman (KS 1684, qv) ; b. 28 May 1715 ; adm. Jan 1725/6 ; in school list 1729 ; Christ Church, Oxford, subs. 30 May 1730, Canoneer Student 16 Jul 1730 – void 1733 ; migrated to All Souls’ Coll., Oxford, Fellow 1733-46 ; BA 1735 ; MA 1739 ; BD 1759 ; adm.Inner Temple 9 Jun 1733, left 1745 ; ordained deacon 20 May 1744, priest 3 Jan 1744/5 (Oxford) ; Rector of Littleton, Middlesex, from 23 Apr 1745 ; m. 17 Jul 1745 Anne Keywood, Woodstock, Oxfordshire ; d. 23 Mar 1765.

HENCHMAN, JOHN, younger son of Humphrey Henchman (KS 1684, qv) ; b. 24 Nov 1717 ; adm. Jan 1725/6 ; left 1734 ; Christ Church, Oxford, matr. 30 May 1734 ; BA 1738 ; MA (from Lincoln Coll.) 1740 ; Fellow, All Souls Coll. Oxford 1740-53 ; ordained deacon 21 Dec 1745, priest 22 Dec 1745 (both Winchester), to curacy Basingstoke, Hampshire ; Vicar of Deddington, Oxfordshire, from 22 Jan 1752 ; lic. to m. 1 Aug 1752 Ann, eldest dau. of William Russell, Basing, Hampshire ; d. 13 May 1790.

HENDERSON, CHARLES ROBERT, son of Thomas Henderson (qv) ; b. 9 Jun 1841 ; at Felsted Sch. 1853-4 ; adm. Jan 1855 ; QS 1856 ; left 1859 ; Worcester Coll.Oxford, matr. 13 Dec 1859 ; d. at Port Perry, Ontario, Canada 22 Sep 1866.

HENDERSON, GEORGE BY, sixth son of Charles Cooper Henderson, Lower Halliford, Middlesex, artist, and Charlotte, second dau. of Charles William By ; b. 22 Oct 1845 ; adm. 21 Jan 1858 (R) ; left Christmas 1862 ; “a great lover and supporter of Burns literature and a famous Victorian clubman” ; bequeathed £100 to Elizabethan Club ; d. 19 Mar 1909.

HENDERSON, HENRY COOPER, brother of George By Henderson (qv) ; b. 17 Apr 1848 ; adm. 21 Jan 1858 ; left Aug 1858 ; no occupation (1881 Census) ; presented silver-gilt cup to School in memory of his brother George By Henderson (qv), and £200 to provide an annual prize for winner of cup ; d.unm. 18 May 1913.

HENDERSON, JOHN, son of Andrew Henderson, Westminster, bookseller and miscellaneous writer, and Sarah, dau. of Thomas Radford ; b. 1759 ; adm. 4 Jul 1770 ; left Dec 1770 ; entered Royal Navy 1776 ; acting Purser, HMS Nautilus,  27 Apr 1779, confirmed 19 Oct 1780 ; served on board HMS Alfred in West Indies 1780-2 ; Secretary to Adm.Sir Alexander Hood (Lord Bridport) ; present at battle off Ushant 1 Jun 1794 ; Paymaster of Ordnance, Woolwich, 15 Jul 1803-21 ; m.1784 Elizabeth, dau. of George Ludewig, Surveyor of Customs, Deal, Kent ; d. 17 Apr 1849.

HENDERSON, ROBERT ; b.       ; in third form lists 1798-1800.

HENDERSON, THOMAS, third son of Francis Henderson, Larkhall Lane, Clapham, Surrey, and Elizabeth Child ; nephew of John Henderson (qv) ; b.       ; adm. 24 Sep 1811 ; KS (aged 14) 1815 ; elected to Christ Church, Oxford 1820, matr. 12 May 1820, Westminster Student (still 1829) ; ordained deacon 13 Jun 1824, priest 28 May 1826 (both Oxford) ; Vicar of Messing, Essex, from 4 Jan 1828 ; Rector of Colne Wake, Essex 11 Mar 1831-46 ; Prebendary of St.Paul’s from 25 Nov 1842 ; m. 19 Jul 1832 Frances, eldest dau. of Rev.Charles Dalton, Vicar of Kelvedon, Essex ; d. 4 Aug 1861.

HENDERSON, WALTER GRIMSTON, elsest son of Thomas Henderson (qv) ; b. 14 May 1833 ; adm. 29 Jan 1847 ; QS 1847 ; left 1851 ; emigrated to Australia ; d.unm. at Mount Arden, Quorn, South Australia 17 Mar 1883.

HENEGAN, see HANNAGAN.

HENLEY, — ; b.       ; at school in 1569, chorister (Chapter Muniments 54019) ; a pensioner (Widow Perryn).

HENLEY, ROBERT, 1ST EARL OF NORTHINGTON, second son of Anthony Henley MP, The Grange, Hampshire, and Mary, dau. of Capt. Hon.Peregrine Bertie MP, Royal Horse Guards ; b.      ; adm. (aged 12) Mar 1719/20 ; in under school list 1721 ; St.John’s Coll.Oxford, matr. 19 Nov 1724 ; BA 10 Mar 1728/9 ; MA 1733 ; Fellow, All Souls Coll.Oxford 8 Nov 1727-40, Bursar 1739 ; adm.Inner Temple 1 Feb 1728/9, called to bar 23 Jun 1732, tenant chambers there from 1729, Bencher 1751, Treasurer 1757 ; inherited family estates in Hampshire and Dorset from brother 1745 ; MP Bath 1747 – 30 Jun 1757 ; Recorder of Bath Jan 1748/9-58 ; KC 12 Jul 1751 ; Solicitor-Gen. to George III when Prince of Wales Jul 1751-4, Attorney-Gen. to Prince of Wales 1754-6 ; Attorney-Gen., 6 Nov 1756 – Jun 1757 ; knighted 6 Nov 1756 ; Lord Keeper of Great Seal 30 Jun 1757 – Jan 1761 ; Speaker of the House of Lords Jun 1757 – Jul 1766, although not a peer until Mar 1760 ; Privy Counsellor 30 Jun 1757 ; created Baron Henley 27 Mar 1760 ; Lord Chancellor 16 Jan 1761 – Jul 1766 ; created Earl of Northington 19 May 1764 ; presided as Lord High Steward at trials of Laurence Shirley, 4th Earl Ferrers (qv), Apr 1760, and of William Byron, 5th Baron Byron (qv), May 1765 ; procured dismissal of Rockingham administration 1766 ; Lord President of the Council 30 Jul 1766 – 23 Dec 1767 ; DL Dorset 1757 ; Lord Lieut., Hampshire 20 Aug 1764 – 6 Feb 1771 ; m. 19 Nov 1743 Jane, dau. of Sir John Huband, Bart., Ipsley, Warwicks. ; d. 14 Jan 1772. ODNB.

HENLEY, ROBERT, 2ND EARL OF NORTHINGTON, second and only surviving son of Robert Henley, 1st Earl of Northington (qv) ; b. 3 Jan 1746/7 ; at school under Markham (Steward, Anniversary Dinner 1770) ; Christ Church, Oxford, matr. 24 Oct 1763 ; MA 1766 ; played for OWW against Old Etonians in a cricket match on Moulsey Hurst Aug 1768 (Hickey, Memoirs, i, 100) ; adm.Inner Temple 8 Feb 1754 ; a Teller of the Exchequer from 8 Apr 1763 ; Clerk of the Hanaper from 28 Nov 1771 ; MP Hampshire 1768 – 14 Jan 1772 ; Grand Tour (Italy) 1771-2 ; succ.father as 2nd Earl of Northington 14 Jan 1772 ; KT 18 Aug 1773 ; Lord Lieut., Ireland 30 Apr 1783 – 26 Feb 1784 ; Privy Councillor 30 Apr 1783 ; LLD Cambridge 3 Jul 1769, Trinity Coll.Dublin 21 Jun 1783 ; FSA 6 Mar 1777 ; travelling in Italy for health 1785-6 ; d.unm. at Paris 5 Jul 1786. ODNB.

HENLEY-ONGLEY, ROBERT, 2ND BARON ONGLEY (I), elder son of Robert Henley-Ongley, 1stBaron Ongley (I) MP, and Frances, dau. of Richard Gosfright, Langton Hall, Essex ; b. 3 Oct 1771 ; adm. 10 May 1784 ; succ.father as 2nd Baron Ongley (I) 23 Oct 1785 ; Trinity Coll.Cambridge, adm.nob. 29 Jun 1788 ; MA 1790 ; m. 11 Jul 1801 Frances, dau. of Maj.-Gen.Sir John Burgoyne, Bart. ; d. 20 Aug 1814.

HENNE, FRANCIS ; b.      ; adm.      ; KS       ; elected to Christ Church, Oxford 1643, Westminster Student Dec 1643 – void 7 May 1647.

HENRY, PHILIP, son of John Henry, Keeper of the Orchard, Whitehall, and a Page of the Back Stairs to James, Duke of York, and Magdalen, dau. of Henry Rochdale ; b. 24 Aug 1631 ; adm.1643 ; KS (Capt.) 1644 (?) ; a favourite of Richard Busby (qv) ; elected to Christ Church, Oxford 1647, but he had been detained at school “through the exigence of warre” and was granted seniority at Christ Church as of 1 May 1646 (Burrows, ed., 1881, 268), Westminster Student 24 Mar 1647/8 ; although Henry returned an ambiguous answer to the Parliamentary Visitors and his name appears in the list of those Students expelled 15 May 1648 (Burrows, op.cit., 93), he was allowed to keep his Studentship through the intercession of his godfather, the Earl of Pembroke ; BA 7 Feb 1650/1 ; MA 1652 ; tutor to Mr.Justice Puleston’s sons at Emral, Flintshire ; ordained minister at Prees, Shropshire 16 Sep 1657 ; officiated at Worthenbury Chapel, Flintshire 1657-61 ; refused to be reordained 1660 ; imprisoned on suspicion of conspiracy Oct 1663 ; a nonconformist preacher 1672-81 ; fined for keeping conventicles 1681 ; imprisoned Chester Castle 1685 ; Nonconformist minister at Broad Oak, Iscoed, Flintshire, after passing of Toleration Act ; his Remains were published in 1848, and his Diaries and Letters in 1882, the latter containing an interesting account of the only occasion on which he “felt the weight” of Busby’s hand (p.10) and a letter to his son Matthew, written in 1686, in which he makes a noteworthy reference to the custom of “Electio” (p.353) ; m. 26 Apr 1660 Katherine, only child of Daniel Matthews, Broad Oak, Iscoed, Flintshire ; d. 24 Jun 1696. ODNB.

HENSCH, WILLIAM ; b.      ; adm. (aged 12) Jan 1748/9 ; left 1749.

HENSHAW, JOHN, second son of John Henshaw, Middle Temple, London, and Lewes, Sussex, and Mary Philipps ; bapt. Lewes 15 Sep 1633 (IGI, but mother given as Martha) ; adm.      ; KS (aged 14) 1648 ; elected to Trinity Coll.Cambridge 1651, adm.pens. 9 May 1651, scholar 1651 ; BA 1654/5 ; adm.Middle Temple 23 Nov 1654, called to bar 25 Apr 1662.

HENSHAW, THOMAS ; b.       ; adm.       ; QS in 1567 ; elected to Christ Church, Oxford 1569, Westminster Student to 1583 ; BA 1573 ; MA 1577 ; ordained deacon 6 Oct 1577 (London), aged 27, as Henshawe ; Rector of Maidwell St.Peter, Northants, 19 Dec 1580 ; Vicar of Ravensthorpe, Northants, from 20 Jan 1584/5 ; m. Katharine — ; buried Ravensthorpe, Northants 4 Sep 1603.

HENSLEY, WALTER EUSTACE, younger son of Charles Isaac Hensley, London, stockbroker, and Marianne Elizabeth, dau. of William Swabey (KS 1803, qv) ; b. 23 Sep 1853 ; adm. 25 Apr 1868 ; member, London Stock Exchange ; d. 7 Nov 1905.

HENSMAN, see HENCHMAN.

HENTY, FREDERICK, brother of George Alfred Henty (qv) ; b. 25 Jan 1835 ; adm. 24 Sep 1847 ; BB 14 Mar 1849 ; volunteered with brother for active service on outbreak of Crimean War ; entered Hospital Commissariat Service, Army, and went out to Crimea spring 1855 ; d. unm. of cholera at Scutari Jun 1855.

HENTY, GEORGE ALFRED, son of James Henty, Godmanchester, Hunts., stockbroker, and Mary Bovill, dau. of Dr. — Edwards, Wandsworth, Surrey [James Edwards MD, Putney ?] ; b. 8 Dec 1832 ; adm. 24 Sep 1847 ; Gonville and Caius Coll.Cambridge, adm.pens. 4 Apr 1851, matr. Mich.1851, resided three terms, but did not graduate ; volunteered on outbreak of Crimean War and entered Hospital Commissariat Service, Army,  serving in Crimea in 1855, later invalided home ; Purveyor of the Forces 1 Oct 1855 – c.1857 ; sent to Italy in 1859 to organise hospitals of Italian Legion during Austro-Italian war ; later in charge of Belfast and Portsmouth districts, Commissariat Department ; became a journalist in 1865 ; special war correspondent, The Standard 1866, reporting on Austro-Italian war of 1866, Franco-German and Turco-Servian wars, and accompanying Abyssinian and Ashanti expeditions ; editor, The Union Jack, 1880-3 ; author, The March to Magdala, 1868, a number of novels, and some eighty books for boys, including Capt.Bayley’s Heir, in which there is an interesting account of the School in Liddell’s time ; m.1st, 1 Jul 1857 Elizabeth, dau. of Joseph Finucane MD MRCS LSA (I), Dublin, Ireland ; m.2nd, 21 Dec 1889 Elizabeth (his housekeeper), dau. of John Keylock, farmer ; d. on board his yacht Egeria in Weymouth harbour, 16 Nov 1902. ODNB.

HENTY, J. ; b.       ; adm.      ; name up School, with date 1807.

HENTY, WALTER, son of George Henty, Chichester, Sussex, brewer, and Maria, dau. of Cornthwaite John Hector, Stodham, Hampshire, banker ; b. 16 May 1840 ; adm. 3 Oct 1850 (R) ; QS 1854 ; elected head to Trinity Coll.Cambridge (with Dean Thomas) 1858, adm.pens.9 Jun 1858, matr. Mich.1858 ; BA 1862 ; MA 1866 ; adm.Inner Temple 5 Nov 1862 ; dir.George Henty and Sons, brewers, Chichester ; of Beddington Place, near Croydon, Surrey ; m. 3 Mar 1874 Edith Mary, youngest dau. of Thomas Hankey, Chester Square, London, banker ; d. 7 Apr 1914.

HEPPEL, ADAM MONTAGUE, son of John Mortimer Heppel MICE, London, civil engineer, and Elizabeth Mary, dau. of Montague Gosset FRCS, Broad Street Buildings, London, surgeon ; b. 29 May 1856 ; adm. 27 May 1869 ; QS 2 Feb 1872 ; left Mar 1873 ; clerk in insurance office (1881 Census) ; d. 14 Oct 1885.

HERBERT, —  ; b.        ; in school lists 1732-6 (“left Midsummer, pays”).

HERBERT, ALEXANDER, third son of Sir Thomas Herbert, Bart., Tintern, Monmouthshire, Groom of the Bedchamber to Charles I, and his first wife Lucia, dau. of Sir William Alexander, Kt, Gentleman Usher to Charles I ; bapt. St.Margaret, Westminster 13 Dec 1641 ; at school under Busby ; Trinity Coll.Dublin, adm.fellow commoner 21 Jun 1659, aged about 20 (Busby’s name is not mentioned in the TCD admission register, which records that he was educated by “Mr.Gregory, Westminster, and Hill, Dublin”, “Mr.Gregory” evidently referring to Francis Gregory (qv), an Usher in the early 1650s) ; buried St.Crux, Fossgate, York 29 Jan 1668/9.

HERBERT, EDWARD ; b.       ; adm. (aged 10) Jul 1717 ; in under school list 1720.

HERBERT, GEORGE, fourth son of Sir Richard Herbert, Kt MP, Montgomery Castle, Montgomeryshire, and Magdalen, dau. of Sir Richard Newport, Kt MP, High Ercall, Shropshire ; b. 3 Apr 1593 ; adm. in twelfth year ; KS        ; elected to Trinity Coll.Cambridge 1608, adm.scholar 1609, matr. 18 Dec 1609 ; 2nd in “ordo” 1612/3 ; BA 1612/3 ; MA 1616 ; Minor Fellow, Trinity Coll. 3 Oct 1614, Major Fellow 15 Mar 1615/6 – c.1621 [check] ; Praelector in Rhetoric and Deputy Public Orator 1618, Public Orator 1619-27 ; MP Montgomery Boroughs 1624, 1625 ; ordained deacon by Jul 1626, priest 19 Sep 1630 (Salisbury, date is that of subscription) ; Prebendary of Lincoln from 8 Jul 1626 ; Herbert had earlier aspired to preferment in service of the State, but after forming an intimate friendship with Nicholas Ferrar (of Little Gidding), he decided to eschew the “painted pleasures of the Court” ; Rector of Fugglestone with Bemerton, Wilts., from 26 Apr 1629 (sic, apparently, although his institution would have preceded his ordination as a priest) ; repaired Bemerton Church and rebuilt the parsonage, where he wrote his famous sacred poems, edited by Ferrar and published posthumously under the title The Temple, Sacred Poems and Private Ejaculations, 1633 ; m. 5 Mar 1628/9 Jane, dau. of Charles Danvers MP, Middle Temple, London, and Baynton, Wilts., barrister ; d. 3 Mar 1632/3. Memorial window in baptistery, Westminster Abbey. ODNB.

HERBERT, HENRY, 2ND BARON HERBERT OF CHERBURY, only child of Henry Herbert, 1stBaron Herbert of Cherbury, and Anne, dau. of John Ramsey, Alderman, City of London, dyer ; b.       ; at school under Knipe ; his “unsufferable negligence” and “childishness” were complained of by Knipe in a letter to Herbert’s father of 19 Sep 1696 (Warner, Epistolary Curiosities, 1818, 163-5) ; subsequently educated by a private tutor ; MP Bewdley 1708 –  22 Jan 1708/9 ; succeeded father as 2nd Baron Herbert of Cherbury 22 Jan 1708/9 ; an ardent Whig politician, who spent more than he could afford on electoral contests ; m. 12 Dec 1709 Mary, dau. of John Wallop, Farleigh Wallop, Hampshire, and sister of John Wallop, 1st Earl of Portsmouth ; d. 19 Apr 1738. ODNB (s.v.father).

HERBERT, HENRY ; b.       ; adm. (aged 16) Feb 1717/8.

HERBERT, JOHN, son of Nathaniel Herbert, London ; b.       ; adm.     ; KS 1684 ; elected to Trinity Coll.Cambridge 1688, adm.pens. 25 Jun 1688, aged 18, scholar 12 Apr 1689 ; BA 1691/2 ; MA 1695 ; ordained deacon 18 Dec 1698, priest 25 Feb 1699/1700 (both London) ; Vicar of Ridge, Herts., from 19 July 1718 ; d. 1720 (by 13 Aug).

HERBERT, JOHN, son of Edward Herbert, Westminster, and Susanna (Glanfeild ?) ; bapt. St.Margaret, Westminster 28 Jul 1685 ; adm.      ; KS 1700 ; elected to Christ Church, Oxford 1704, matr. 23 Jun 1704, aged 18, Westminster Student 22 Dec 1704 – void 1713, Tutor 1710 ; BA 1708 ; MA 15 Mar 1710/1 ; BD and DD 1723 ; ordained deacon 17 Dec 1710, priest 23 Sep 1711 (both Oxford) ; Vicar of Staverton, Gloucs., 17 Mar 1714/5 – Jul 1723 ; Rector of Bideford, Devon, 18 May 1723 – Jul 1727 ; Rector of Dolton, Devon 18 May 1723 – Apr 1727 ; Prebendary of Westminster from 14 Jun 1723 ; Rector of Beddington, Surrey, from 27 Mar 1727 ; m. 22 Apr 1712 (IGI) Mary, widow of Sir Thomas Bromsall, Bart., Biggleswade, Beds., and dau. of Thomas Cullum, London ; d. 25 Oct 1729. Buried at entrance North Transept, Westminster Abbey.

HERBERT, PHILIP, 5TH EARL OF PEMBROKE AND 2ND EARL OF MONTGOMERY, fourth son of Philip Herbert, 4thEarl of Pembroke and 1st Earl of Montgomery PC KG KB, Lord Chamberlain of the Household, and his first wife Lady Susan De Vere, youngest dau. of Edward De Vere, 17th Earl of Oxford, courtier and poet ; bapt. 20 Feb 1620/1 ; at school under Osbaldeston ; Exeter Coll.Oxford, commoner 25 Feb 1631/2 – 7 Apr 1635, matr. 20 Apr 1632 ; Grand Tour (France, Italy) 1635-7 ; styled Lord Herbert 1636-50 ; MP Wiltshire Mar – May 1640, Glamorgan Nov 1640 – Apr 1653 ; joint Lord Lieut., Somerset 1640-2 ; Lord Lieut., Monmouthshire, Breconshire and Glamorgan ; he and his father adhered to Parliament after outbreak of English Civil War ; succ.father as 5th Earl of Pembroke and 2ndEarl of Montgomery  23 Jan 1649/50 ; member, Council of State 1 Dec 1651, President of Council Jun – Jul 1652 ; a Lord of Trade 7 Nov 1660 ; Cupbearer and Bearer of Golden Spurs at Coronation of Charles II 23 Apr 1661 ; sold the majority of the pictures and books at Wilton collected by his ancestors ; m. 1st, 28 Mar 1639 Penelope, widow of Paul Bayning, 1st Viscount Bayning, and dau. of Right Hon. Sir Robert Naunton, Kt PC MP, Secretary of State and Master of Court of Wards ; m.2nd, in or before 1649 Catharine, youngest dau. of Sir William Villiers, Bart. ; d. 11 Dec 1669, aged 48. ODNB (s.v.father).

HERBERT, ROBERT ; b.      ; adm. (aged 13) Jan 1747/8 ; left 1749.

HERBERT, HON.WILLIAM, brother of Philip Herbert, 5th Earl of Pembroke and 2nd Earl of Montgomery (qv) ; bapt.St.Andrew, Enfield, Middlesex 28 May 1622 (IGI) ; at school under Osbaldeston ; a contributor to the congratulatory verses written by the KSS in 1633 for Charles I on his return from Scotland and on the birth of the Duke of York (British Library, Royal MSS) ; Exeter Coll.Oxford, matr. 29 Jul 1635, aged 13 ; MA 1636 ; MP Monmouthshire Oct 1640 – 16 Sep 1642 (also elected for Downton and Woodstock, but chose to sit for Monmouthshire) ; d.unm.  [“disabled February 5, 1643 [1642/3 ?], for deserting the service of the House, being in the King’s Quarters, and adhering to that party”]

HEREFORD, EDWARD, 12TH VISCOUNT, see DEVEREUX, EDWARD, 12TH VISCOUNT HEREFORD.

HERING, JULINES, son of Nicholas Hering, Jamaica and Canterbury, Kent, and Ann — ; b.      ; adm. (aged 11) Oct 1720 ; in under school list 1723 ; St.Catherine’s Hall, Cambridge, adm.pens. 15 Oct 1725, matr.1725 ; buried Canterbury Cathedral 2 Jun 1726. [Supplement notes him as m. Frances Moore, which seems unlikely in view of his youth at death].

HERMAN, REYNER, of family from Nijmegen, Netherlands ; nephew of John Jordan, Under Master ; at school under Osbaldeston (Bishop Kidder’s Autobiography, in Cassan, Lives of the Bishops of Bath and Wells, 1829, 103, recording that Herman was “bred up in Westminster School”) ; Clare Hall, Cambridge, adm.sizar 19 Oct 1633, aged 17 ; migr. to Pembroke Coll., matr. Mich.1633 ; BA 1637/8 ; MA 1641 ; ordained deacon 18 Dec 1641, priest 17 Aug 1662 (both Peterborough) ; kept a school at East Grinstead, Sussex, where Richard Kidder, later Bishop of Bath and Wells, was one of his pupils ; Warden of Sackville Coll., East Grinstead, Sussex 7 Jul 1646-56 ; Head Master, Stamford GS 1657-62 ; Confrater of Browne’s Hospital, Stamford, Lincs., from 1662 ; Rector of Tinwell, Rutland, from 22 Jul 1662 ; m.      ; buried Tinwell 18 Oct 1668.

HERMITAGE, VISCOUNT, FRANCIS, see SCOTT, FRANCIS, 2nd EARL OF DELORAINE.

HERNE, — ; b.       ; adm. Apr 1663 ; a boarder ; at school 1663-5 (Busby’s Account Book).

HERON, JOHN, eldest son of Robert Heron, Recorder of Newark, Notts., and Elizabeth, d. of Thomas Brecknock, Thorney Abbey, Cambs. ; b.      ; adm. (aged 14) Jun 1732 ; left 1735 ; Trinity Coll.Cambridge, adm.pens. 21 Jun 1735, matr.1735 ; adm.Middle Temple 4 Aug 1732, called to bar 20 Jun 1740 ; Recorder of Newark Feb 1748/9 -52 ; lic. to m. 24 Feb 1744/5 Margaret, dau. of John Green, Sutton cum Lound, Notts. ; d. at Villeneuve St.George, near Paris, France 8 Sep 1753.

HERON, SAMUEL, son of John Heron, Lincoln, and — Cokaine, Derbyshire ; b.      ; adm.      ; QS in 1570 ; elected head to Trinity Coll.Cambridge 1574, adm.scholar 1575, matr. Easter 1575 ; 7th in “ordo” 1578/9 ; BA 1578/9 ; MA 1582 ; BD 1589 ; DD 1595 (incorp.Oxford 11 Jul 1598) ; Minor Fellow, Trinity Coll. 1581, Major Fellow from 30 Mar 1582, Junior Dean 1593-4, Senior Dean 1597-1602, Senior Bursar 1605-7, again Senior Dean 1609-14 ; ordained ; University Preacher 1588 ; Vicar of Trumpington, Cambs., 14 Jan 1588/9 – Jan 1589/90 ; Vicar of Kendal, Westmorland 30 Oct 1591 – Jul 1592 ; Vicar of Normanton, Yorks., 1594 ; Vicar of Chesterton, Cambs., 24 Nov 1596 – May 1599 ; Vicar of Enfield, Middlesex 10 Oct 1598-1601 ; Rector of Cheadle, Staffs., 25 Jan 1601/2 – Jul 1609 ; Vicar of Tockenham, Wilts., from 1610 [but check] ; Vicar of Fakenham, Norfolk, from 1610 ; d. unm. 1616 (will proved PCC 4 Jun 1616).

HERRIES, EDWARD FRANCIS, youngest son of Herbert Crompton Herries, barrister, and Leonora Emma, only dau. of Henry Lewis Wickham (qv) ; b. 8 Dec 1866 ; adm. 22 Jan 1880 (R) ; left May 1881 ; living London 1901, independent means (1901 Census) ; d. 3 Aug 1944.

HERRING, see also HERYNG.

HERRING, CHARLES, only son of Charles Herring, artist, and Emma, dau. of Charles Gale, Old Bailey ; nephew of John Frederick Herring, senior, animal painter ; b. 19 Aug 1825 ; adm. 16 Oct 1838, chorister ; sang in Westminster Abbey at Coronations of Queen Victoria and Edward VII ; for many years a Deputy Vicar-Choral, Saint Paul’s Cathedral ; for 67 years in signwriter’s office, Barclay Perkins & Co., brewers ; m. 5 Aug 1851 Louisa Hughes ; d. 26 Oct 1908.

HERRING, THOMAS, son of Very Rev.William Herring DD, Dean of St.Asaph, and Elizabeth, dau. of Humphrey Cotton, Organist, Norwich Cathedral ; nephew of Most Rev.Thomas Herring DD, Archbishop of Canterbury ; b.       ; adm.      ; KS (aged 13) 1764 ; elected head to Trinity Coll.Cambridge 1770, adm.pens. 14 Jun 1770, scholar 24 Apr 1771, matr. Mich.1770 ; BA 1774 ; MA 1777 ; Minor Fellow, Trinity Coll., 2 Oct 1775, Major Fellow 22 Jul 1777 ; ordained deacon 11 Jun 1775, priest 16 Jun 1776 (both Peterborough) ; Vicar of North Elmham, Norfolk, from 29 Dec 1777 ; Vicar of Bungay Trinity, Suffolk May 1795 ; Rector of Ringstead, Norfolk, 30 Sep 1803 ; m.     ; d. 10 May 1828.

HERRINGMAN, —  ; b.       ; adm.      ; KS 1640 (Chapter Muniments 32460).

HERRINGMAN, JAMES ; b.       ; adm. (aged 10) Jan 1725/6 ; in school list 1731. [Probably James Herringman, bapt.Carshalton, Surrey 24 Jul 1715, son of John Herringman and Jane — (IGI)] [perhaps James Herringman, Ramsden Heath [near Billericay, Essex], d. 2 Aug 1742, “a young gentleman whose loss may very justly be said to be a publick one” (Daily Post 7 Aug 1742)]

HERRINGMAN, JOHN ; b.      ; adm. (aged 7) Jan 1728/9 ; left 1733. [Note John Paul Herringman, Newport, Shropshire, will proved PCC 14 Jun 1763] [John Herringman m. 14 Feb 1743 “Miss Norris, an Heiress, with a great Fortune, and a relation to Sir John Norris” (London Evening Post 15 Feb 1743)] [living Amersham, Bucks., May 1744] HERSENT (or HARSNETT), PETER ; b.      ; adm.      ; KS       ; elected head to Trinity Coll.Cambridge 1616, adm.scholar 2 May 1617 ; BA 1620/1 ; MA 1624 (incorp.Oxford 5 Jun 1628) ; while an undergraduate a somewhat turbulent person, judging from an apology signed by him among the Trinity Coll. admonitions 22 Feb 1621 ; Librarian, Trinity Coll. 24 Sep 1625-31.

HERTSLET, HENRY CHARLES, brother of Lewis Cooke Hertslet (qv) ; b. 27 Dec 1817 ; adm. 24 May 1826 ; at King’s Coll.Sch. in 1832 ; clerk in Public Record Office ; emigrated to New Zealand 1840 ; farmer and mining agent, Oamaru and Naseby, New Zealand ; m. 25 Mar 1853 Fanny, third dau. of John Orbell, Waikouaiti, New Zealand, farmer ; d. at Naseby, Mount Ida, Otago, New Zealand 16 Nov 1902.

HERTSLET, LEWIS COOKE, son of Lewis Hertslet, Great College Street, Westminster, Librarian and Keeper of Papers, Foreign Office, and his first wife Hannah Harriet Jemima, dau. of George Cooke, Westminster ; b. 2 Nov 1812 ; adm. 26 May 1823 ; Chief Clerk to Commissioner of Sewers for Westminster ; m. 19 Dec 1837 Mary Anne, eldest sister of George Tupman Fincham (qv) ; d. 2 May 1875.

HERTSLET, WILLIAM JAMES, brother of Lewis Cooke Hertslet (qv) ; b. 29 Feb 1816 ; adm. 8 Apr 1825 ; HBM Vice-Consul at Memel, Prussia 18 Sep 1835 ; HBM Consul at Königsberg, Prussia, from 7 Jun 1856 ; m. 29 Jan 1839 Emma Wilhelmina, dau. of Daniel Holzendorf, Memel ; d. at Königsberg, Prussia 12 Jan 1885.

HERVEY, — ; b.      ; in under school list 1715. [perhaps = Hon.Henry Hervey Aston (qv)]

HERVEY, — ; b.       ; in under school lists 1715-9 (“major”).

HERVEY, —  ; b.        ; in under school lists 1715-9 (“minor”).

HERVEY, AUGUSTUS JOHN, 3RD EARL OF BRISTOL, second son of John Hervey, 1st Baron Hervey of Ickworth (qv) ; b. 19 May 1724 ; adm. Jan 1732/3 ; in school list 1734 ; entered Royal Navy as midshipman 1736 ; Lieut., 31 Oct 1740 ; Commander 16 Sep 1746 ; Post Capt., 15 Jan 1746/7 ; served under Byng in Mediterranean 1756, under Hawke in the English Channel 1759 and under Keppel at Belleisle 1760 ; took part in capture of Martinique, Sta. Lucia and Havana 1762 ; Commander-in-Chief, Mediterranean 1763 ; Rear-Admiral 31 Mar 1775 ; Vice-Admiral 29 Jan 1778 ; a Colonel of Marines 1762-5 ; MP Bury St.Edmunds 16 May 1757 – Feb 1763, Saltash 1 Dec 1763-8, Bury St.Edmunds 1768 – 18 Mar 1775 ;  Groom of the Bedchamber 5 Nov 1763 – Mar 1775 ; Chief Secretary for Ireland Oct 1766 – Jul 1767 (his brother being then Lord Lieutenant) ; Privy Councillor (I) 14 Oct 1766 ; a Lord of the Admiralty Feb 1771 – Apr 1775 ; succ.brother as 3rd Earl of Bristol 18 Mar 1775 ; member, Society of Dilettanti 1760 ; m. 4 Aug 1744 (divorced 11 Feb 1769) Elizabeth, dau. of Col.Thomas Chudleigh, Lieut.-Governor of Chelsea Hospital ; d. 23 Dec 1779. ODNB.

HERVEY, FREDERICK AUGUSTUS, 4th EARL OF BRISTOL, third son of John Hervey, 1st Baron Hervey of Ickworth (qv) ; b. 1 Aug 1730 ; adm. Jan 1741/2 ; left 1747 ; Corpus Christi Coll.Cambridge, adm. 10 Nov 1747 ; MA 1754 ; adm.Lincoln’s Inn 24 Feb 1747/8 ; a Clerk of the Privy Seal 1753, Principal Clerk 1761-7 ; ordained deacon 24 Aug 1754, priest 26 Jan 1755 (both Ely) ; Chaplain in Ordinary to George III c.1763 – c.1767 ; travelled in Italy 1765-6 ; Chaplain to his elder brother when Lord Lieut.Ireland in 1766-7 ; consecrated Bishop of Cloyne 31 May 1767 ; Privy Councillor (I) 9 Oct 1767 ; Bencher, King’s Inns, Dublin 1767 ; DD Trinity Coll.Dublin 16 Feb 1768 ; translated to Derry 18 Feb 1768 ; DD Oxford (from Brasenose Coll.) 6 Apr 1770 ; again in Italy 1770-2 and 1777-9 ; succeeded his brother as 4th Earl of Bristol 23 Dec 1779 ; FRS 28 Feb 1782 ; advocated relaxation of penal laws against Roman Catholics and the abolition of tithes ; Chaplain-General to Irish Volunteers 1782, attending Volunteer convention in Dublin Nov 1783 as delegate from Co.Londonderry ; again in Italy 1785-6 and 1789-90 ; left Britain for last time in Sep 1792, and spent rest of his life in European travel, principally in Italy ; imprisoned by French in Milan 1798-9 ; succ.relative as 5th Baron Howard de Walden 18 Nov 1799 ; of liberal opinions and eccentric personal conduct, and a capricious patron of architects and artists ; m. 10 Aug 1752 Elizabeth, sister of Sir Robert Davers, Bart. (qv) ; d. on his way between Albano and Rome 8 Jul 1803. ODNB.

HERVEY, GEORGE WILLIAM, 2ND EARL OF BRISTOL, eldest son of John Hervey, 1st Baron Hervey of Ickworth (qv) ; b. 3 Aug 1721 ; adm. 1731 (Bourne) ; left Midsummer 1738 ; Cornet, 1stDragoon Guards 11 Mar 1726/7 (sic) ; Lieut., 21 Dec 1738 ; Ensign, 38th Foot  2 Jun 1739 ; 1st Foot Guards 11 May 1740 ; Capt., 48th Foot 27 Jan 1741 ; retd. Aug 1742 ; Grand Tour (Italy) 1741 ; succ.father as 2nd Baron Hervey of Ickworth 5 Aug 1743, and grandfather as 2nd Earl of Bristol 20 Jan 1750/1 ; Envoy Extraordinary, Turin 5 Apr 1755 – Aug 1758 ; Ambassador at Madrid Sep 1758 – Dec 1761 ; Lord Lieutenant, Ireland Sep 1766 – Jul 1767, but did not go over ; Privy Councillor 26 Sep 1766 ; Lord Privy Seal 2 Nov 1768 – Jan 1770 ; Groom of the Stole and First Lord of the Bedchamber from 19 Jan 1770 ; d.unm. 18 Mar 1775. ODNB.

HERVEY, HON.HENRY, see ASTON, HON.HENRY HERVEY.

HERVEY, JOHN, 1ST BARON HERVEY OF ICKWORTH, eldest son of John Hervey, 1St Earl of Bristol, and his second wife Elizabeth, only dau. of Sir Thomas Felton, Bart. MP ; b. 15 Oct 1696 ; adm. 28 Jan 1711/2 (Beresford) ; left Jul 1713 ; Clare Hall, Cambridge, adm. 20 Nov 1713, matr.1714 ; MA 1715 ; styled Lord Hervey from 1723 ; MP Bury St.Edmunds 2 Apr 1725 – 11 Jun 1733 ; travelling in Italy for health in 1728-9 ; Vice-Chamberlain of the Household 7 May 1730 – Apr 1740 ; Privy Councillor 8 May 1730 ; having initially been a follower in politics of Frederick, Prince of Wales, he subsequently became a supporter of Sir Robert Walpole and a trusted confidant of Queen Caroline ; fought a duel with William Pulteney (qv) in the “Upper St.James’s Park” 25 Jan 1730/1 ; created Baron Hervey of Ickworth 11 Jun 1733 ; Lord Privy Seal 1 May 1740 – Jul 1742 ; one of the Lord Justices of the Realm May 1741 ; author, Memoirs of the Reign of George II, first published from his manuscript in 1848, and of other political pamphlets ; the expenses of his “schooling” at Westminster, and of that of his three brothers, are recorded in the Diary of John Hervey, First Earl of Bristol, 1894 ; m. 21 Apr 1720 Mary, Maid of Honour to Caroline, Princess of Wales, dau. of Brig.-Gen.Nicholas Lepell, Groom of the Bedchamber to George, Prince of Denmark ; d. 5 Aug 1743. ODNB.

HERVEY, HON.THOMAS, brother of John Hervey, 1st Baron Hervey of Ickworth (qv) ; b. 20 Jan 1698/9 ; adm. 17 Jan 1711/2 (Beresford) ; left 25 Mar 1717 (S.H.A.Hervey, ed., The Diary of John Hervey, First Earl of Bristol, 1894, 56, providing admission dates, not all on same day, for Hervey and his brothers) ; Christ Church, Oxford, matr. 10 May 1717 ; adm.Lincoln’s Inn 16 Feb 1719/20 ; MP Bury St.Edmunds 29 Jun 1733-47 ; Equerry to Queen Caroline 6 Nov 1727 – Jul 1736 ; Superintendent of the King’s Gardens 23 May 1738-60 ; eloped about 1730 with the second wife of Sir Thomas Hanmer, Bart. (qv) ; author of several eccentric pamphlets mainly about his own grievances ; m. Aug 1745 Anne, dau. of Francis Coghlan, Dublin, barrister (I) ; d. 16 Jan 1775. ODNB.

HERVEY, THOMAS ; b.       ; adm. (aged 9) May 1731 ; in school lists 1732 (as Harvey) ; left 1738.

HERVEY, WALTER ; b.       ; adm. (aged 10) Aug 1719 ; left 1722. [Perhaps Walter Harvey (sic), bapt.St.Mary, Whitechapel 27 May 1707, son of Walter Harvey, and Mercy —].

HERVEY, HON.WILLIAM, brother of John Hervey, 1st Baron Hervey of Ickworth (qv) ; b. 25 Dec 1699 ; adm. 17 Jan 1711/2 (Beresford) ; left 25 Jan 1715/6 (name appears in list of noblemen attached to alphabetical admissions under Nicoll, Chapter Muniments) ; entered Royal Navy Jun 1716 ; Lieut., 31 Dec 1718 ; Cdr. 1 Feb 1726 ; Post Capt., 2 Jun 1727 ; dismissed the service for undue rigour towards his officers and crew when in command HMS Superb in West Indies, 19 Aug 1742 ; m. 1st, 27 Nov 1729 Elizabeth, only dau. of Thomas Ridge MP, Portsmouth, Hampshire ; m. 2nd, 7 Jan 1775 Elizabeth Colins [kin to, or dau., of Charles Henry Colins, Tower Major, Tower of London ?] ; d. 8 Jan 1776.

HERVEY, WILLIAM ; b.         ; adm. (aged 10) Sep 1721 ; left 1724.

HERVEY, HON.WILLIAM, youngest son of John Hervey, 1st Baron Hervey of Ickworth (qv) ; b. 13 May 1732 ; adm. Jan 1744/5 ; left 1747 ; Corpus Christi Coll.Cambridge, adm.pens. 8 Feb 1750/1, matr.Lent 1750/1 ; MA 1753 ; Ensign, 44th Foot 1755 ; Lieut., 4 Jul 1755 ; Capt. 27 Dec 1756 ; served for some years in North America, returning to England 1763 ; Capt.-Lieut. and Lieut.-Col., 1st Foot Guards 6 Aug 1766 – 13 Jun 1774 ; Brevet Col., 29 Aug 1777 ; Major-Gen., 20 Nov 1782 ; Lieut.-Gen., 12 Oct 1793 ; Gen., 1 Jan 1798 ; MP Bury St Edmunds 24 Feb 1763-8 ; amiable and benevolent, described by Arthur Young as “one of the most charitable men living” ; a great traveller ; in Italy 1766, 1772-3 and 1788-90 ; his Journals in North America and Europe from 1755 to 1814 form vol.xiv of the Suffolk Green Books, 1906 ; d.unm. 15 Jan 1815.

HERYNG, ANDREW ; b.       ; adm.       ; KS 1540-3 (Chapter Muniments).

HESILRIGGE, — ; b.        ; in school lists 1656.

HESILRIGGE, SIR ARTHUR, BART., eldest son of Sir Thomas Hesilrigge, Bart., MP, Noseley, Leics., and Frances, dau. of Sir William Gorges, Kt, Alderton, Northants ; b.      ; at school under Osbaldeston (Wood, Athenae Oxonienses, iii, 578) ; Magdalene Coll.Cambridge, fellow commoner, matr. Easter 1617 ; adm.Gray’s Inn 29 Jan 1622/3 ; succ.father as 2nd baronet 11 Jan 1629 ; MP Leicestershire 1640-53 [check], Leicester 1654-60 ; a staunch Puritan and opponent of Laud ; introduced bill of attainder against Strafford ; promoted the “Root and Branch” bill, and proposed the Militia bill ; one of the five members impeached by the King 3 Jan 1641/2 ; raised a troop of horse for Parliament ; fought at battle of Edgehill 1642, wounded at battles of Lansdowne and Roundway Down 1643 ; did good service at battle of Cheriton ; a leader of the Independents in House of Commons after the passing of the self-denying ordinance 1645 ; Governor of Newcastle upon Tyne 30 Dec 1647 ; recaptured Tynemouth 11 Aug 1648 ; refused to act as one of the King’s judges 1649 ; accompanied Cromwell to Scotland and supported him with reserves after battle of Dunbar ; member of Council of State during Commonwealth, but opposed to Cromwell’s government after dissolution of Long Parliament ; refused to pay taxes not levied by Parliament, or to become a member of the Upper House 1657 ; opposed succession of Richard Cromwell, and intrigued with the Army against him ; at his instigation Lambert was cashiered and the Rump Parliament restored ; one of the five Commissioners for the Government of the Army 11 Feb 1659/60 ; accused of intriguing against Monk ; arrested at the Restoration, and excepted by the Bill of Indemnity for pains and penalties not extending to life ; m. 1st, 24 May 1624 Frances, dau. of Thomas Elmes, Lilford, Northants ; m.2nd, 26 Jun 1634 Dorothy, dau. of Fulke Greville, Thorpe Latimer, Lincs., and sister of Robert Greville, 2nd Baron Brooke, General in Parliamentary army ; d. a prisoner in the Tower of London 7 Jan 1660/1. ODNB.

HESILRIGGE, SIR ROBERT, BART., eldest son of Sir Arthur Hesilrigge, Bart., Noseley Hall, Leics., and Hannah, dau. of Robert Sturges, Northampton ; b. 27 Aug 1727 ; adm. (aged 15) Feb 1742/3 ; left 1744 ; adm.Middle Temple 9 Feb 1738/9 ; went to live in North America ; succ.father as 8th baronet 23 Apr 1763 ; disinherited by his father’s will, but seems to have returned to England by 1764, abandoning his wife in North America ; probably still living in 1797 ; m. at Braintree, Massachusetts, North America 21 Dec 1754 Sarah, dau. of Rev.Nathaniel Walter, Minister of Second Church, Roxbury, Massachusetts, North America.

HESKETH, SIR ROBERT, BART., see JUXON, SIR ROBERT, BART.

HESKETH, SIR THOMAS, BART., son of Thomas Hesketh MP, Rufford, Lancs., and Martha, only dau. of James St.Amand, St.Paul’s, Covent Garden, apothecary ; b. 21 Jan 1726/7 ; adm. Jan 1739/40 ; left 1743 ; Christ Church, Oxford, matr. 29 Oct 1743 ; created baronet 5 May 1761 ; travelling in Italy 1769-72 ; his wife was the first cousin and favourite correspondent of William Cowper (adm.1742, qv) ; m. 5 Sep 1751 Harriet, dau. of Ashley Cowper, Clerk of the Parliaments ; d. 4 Mar 1778.

HESKETH, WILLIAM, son of William Hesketh, Liverpool, merchant, and Margaret Pemberton, Warrington, Lancs. ; bapt.St.Nicholas, Liverpool 25 Apr 1791 (IGI) ; adm. 1804 ; left 1809 ; Brasenose Coll.Oxford, matr. 26 Oct 1808, aged 17, Hulme Exhibitioner 1813 ; BA 1812 ; MA 1815 ; ordained deacon 14 Apr 1816, priest 5 Apr 1817 (both Chester) ; Curate, Huyton, Lancs., 1816, St.Michael’s Toxteth Park, Lancs. 13 Mar 1818 ; Perpetual Curate of St.Michael’s, Toxteth Park, Lancs., 19 Oct 1822-57 ; m. 9 Apr 1822 Lucy Hannah, dau. of Thomas Satterthwaite, Manchester, Lancs. ; d. 11 Oct 1858. [father Mayor of Liverpool ?]

HESKIN, WILLIAM ; b.      ; adm. (aged 16) Apr 1744 ; left 1745.

HETHERINGTON, JOHN, son of John Hetherington, London ; b.      ; adm. 19 Sep 1785 ; Trinity Coll.Cambridge, adm.pens. 23 Jun 1788, aged 17, matr. Mich.1790 ; BA 1792 ; MA 1796. [Perhaps John Hetherington, son of John Hetherington and Elizabeth —, bapt.St.Martin’s in the Fields 4 Feb 1771 (IGI)] [father perhaps haberdasher and army clothier, Buckingham Street, Strand, Westminster ; if so, previously at St.Pauls Sch., where adm. (aged 10) 29 Jun 1781] [perhaps tea dealer, firm Hetherington and Maskew, Nicholas Lane, City of London, at 2 Mar 1814 (partnership dissolved 8 Nov 1828)]

HETHERINGTON, WILSON ASHHURST, son of Wilson Hetherington, Lincoln’s Inn, barrister, and Georgiana Maria, eldest dau. of John Gifford, Penge, Surrey ; b. 13 Oct 1842 ; adm. 24  Jan 1856 (G) ; QS 1857 ; succeeded Herbery Bayley Harrison (qv) as Capt. of the School 1861 ; elected head to Christ Church, Oxford 1861, matr, 23 May 1861 ; BA 1865 ; Clerk, Secretary’s Office, General Post Office Aug 1866, Assistant Surveyor Jun 1877 ; Postmaster at Brighton 1892-6, at Birmingham from Dec 1896 ; m. 8 Jan 1880 Ethel Longland, youngest dau. of Rev.Charles Brereton, Vicar of St.Mary’s, Bedford ; d. 28 Apr 1904. [great-nephew of John Hetherington (qv) ?]

HETHERLEY, GEORGE ; b.      ; adm.     ; QS 23 Jul 1553 (Acts of Chapter).

HETON, MARTIN, son of George Heton, Chamberlain of City of London, and merchant taylor, and Joanna, widow of — Roocke, and dau. of Sir Martin Bowes, Kt MP, Master Worker of the Mint, Lord Mayor of London, goldsmith ; bapt.St.Dionis Backchurch 10 Mar 1554 ; adm.     ; QS in 1567 ; a copy of congratulatory verses to Queen Elizabeth, written by him in 1569, is printed in The Trifler7 May 1817 (but he is assigned there the incorrect Christian name Matthew) ; elected to Christ Church, Oxford 1571, Westminster Student ; BA 1574 ; MA 1578 (incorp.Cambridge 1581) ; BD 1583 ; DD 1585 ; ordained by 1579 (as “Matheus Eaton”) ; Canon of Christ Church Dec 1582 – res by 19 Dec 1589 ; Vice-Chancellor, Oxford Univ. 1585 ; Vicar of Brize Norton, Oxfordshire 4 Jul 1584 (as “Mauritius Eaton”) – Oct 1589 ; Dean of Winchester 20 Mar 1588/9 – Feb 1599/1600 ; Rector of Houghton, Hampshire 23 Sep 1590 – Feb 1599/1600 ; Rector of Abbots Ann, Hampshire  3 Jul 1595 – Feb 1599/1600  ; consecrated Bishop of Ely 3 Feb 1599/1600, having accepted the post on condition of alienating to the Crown the richest manors of the see ; his able and learned sermons won the praise of James I, who declared that while “fat men were wont to make lean sermons, his were not lean, but larded with much good learning” ; m. Alice, dau. of James Weston MP, Lichfield, Staffs. ; d. 14 Jul 1609. ODNB.

HEWES, see also HEWS, HUES and HUGHES.

HEWES, —  ; b.       ; adm.      ; a pensioner in 1565 (tutor, Mr Allett) (Chapter Muniments 54006).

HEWES, —  ; b.       ; adm.      ; a pensioner in 1568 (tutor, Prebendary Norley) (Chapter Muniments 54017-8).

HEWES, —   ; b.       ; adm.      ; QS 1568-70 (Chapter Muniments 54017-8, 54021).

HEWET, see also HEWETTHEWITT and HUET..

HEWET, BENJAMIN ; b.      ; adm.      ; KS      ; elected to Trinity Coll.Cambridge 1626, adm.scholar 1627 ; BA 1630/1.

HEWET (or HEWETT), GILBERT ; b.      ; adm.      ; KS 1672 ; elected to Trinity Coll.Cambridge 1675, adm.pens. 5 Jul 1675, scholar 1676, matr.1676 ; BA 1678/9 ; MA 1682 ; ordained deacon 4 Mar 1682, priest 23 Sep 1683 (both Winchester) ; Curate of West Molesey, Surrey 1682 ; Rector of Swarraton, Hampshire 8 Jan 1685/6 (still 1708, no longer 1717) ; Perpetual Curate of Northington, Hampshire, by 1686 – still 1708 (no longer 1717) ; m.

HEWETT, PETER SELWOOD, son of William Nathan Wright Hewett, EICS Bengal, Bilham Hall, Yorks., and his first wife Martha Tuting ; grandson of Selwood Hewett (qv) ; b. 27 Nov 1792 ; in school list May 1803 ; left 1806 ; went to Dr.Burney’s school, Greenwich ; Cadet, EICS Bengal 1811 ; resigned in India 12 Jul 1813 ; entered service of Nizam of Hyderabad, becoming Lieut, 7thRegt. of Nizam’s Regular Infantry ; m. at Calcutta 30 Nov 1816 Sarah Bush  ; d. at Conor, Madras 9 Jul 1834.

HEWETT, SELWOOD, son of Thomas Hewett, St.James’s, Westminster, and Mary Sellwood, St Martins in the Fields, Westminster ; b.       ; adm. (aged 7) Jun 1735 ; left 1744 ; Balliol Coll.Oxford, matr. 19 Oct 1744 ; adm.Lincoln’s Inn 13 Apr 1744, Grays Inn 22 Dec 1749 ; a Gentleman of the Privy Chamber to George II and George III (occurs 1760-83) ; of Bilham House, Yorks. ; Maj., West Riding Militia 1 Feb 1772-9 ; m. 4 Feb 1750 (IGI) Anne, dau. of William Wrighte, Recorder of Leicester  ; d. 20 Dec 1789.

HEWITT, see also HEWETHEWETT and HUET.

HEWITT, —  ; b.        ; in school list 1754.

HEWITT, HON. —  , son of James Hewitt, 1st Viscount Lifford (I), Lord Chancellor of Ireland, and his first wife Mary, only dau. of Ven.Rice Williams DD, Archdeacon of Carmarthen and Prebendary of Worcester ; b.       ; at school under Markham (list of noblemen appended to alphabetical admissions under Nicoll, Chapter Muniments) ; evidently one of the elder brothers of Hon.Joseph Hewitt (qv). [see next entry]

HEWITT, — ; b.         ; in school lists 1764,1765,1767,1769 ; left 1769. [probably James Hewitt, 2ndViscount Lifford (I), elder brother of Hon.Joseph Hewitt (qv), b. 27 Oct 1750, Christ Church, Oxford, matr. 12 Jun 1769, aged 18, BA 1772 ; Trinity Coll.Dublin, BA 1776, MA and LLD 1778 ; ordained deacon 11 Jun 1775 (Oxford) ; succ.father as 2nd Viscount Lifford (I) 28 Apr 1789 ; Dean of Armagh from Feb 1796 ; m.1st, 25 Jul 1776 Hon.Henrietta Judith Pomeroy, dau. of Arthur Pomeroy, 1st Viscount Harberton (I) ; m.2nd, 23 Dec 1781 Alicia, eldest dau. of Ven.John Oliver DD, Archdeacon of Ardagh ; d. 15 Apr 1830] [or else Hon.William Williams Hewitt ; officer in Army ; banker in Cork ; m. 16 Dec 1774 Anne, dau. of Thomas Strettell, Cork, merchant ; d. Apr 1798]

HEWITT, EDMUND ; b.      ; adm. (aged 12) Apr 1727 ; in under school list 1729 ; probably left 1729.

HEWITT, JAMES FRANCIS KATHERINUS, second son of Hon.and Rev.John Pratt Hewitt, Rector of Moneymore, co.Londonderry, and his second wife Elizabeth, dau. of Rev.Francis Gervais, Cecil, co.Tyrone ; b. 21 Jun 1835 ; adm. 22 Sep 1848 (G) ; QS 1850 ; suceeded William Turner Roe (qv) as Capt. of the School 1854 ; elected to Christ Church, Oxford 1854, matr. 8 Jun 1854, Westminster Student 1854-60 ; BA 1858 ; Indian Civil Service, Bengal 1859 ; Officiating Secretary, Board of Revenue 1874 ; Magistrate and Collector 1878 ; Commissioner, Chota Nagpur 1879 ; retd. 1885 ; author, The Ruling Races of Prehistoric Times in India ; m. 10 Mar 1870 Constance, youngest dau. of Edward Stanley, Ponsonby Hall, Cumberland ; d. 14 Mar 1908.

HEWITT, HON.JOSEPH, brother of Hon. — Hewitt (qv) ; b.     ; adm. 4 Apr 1766 ; left Whitsun 1770 ; University Coll.Oxford, matr. 17 May 1770, aged 16 ; adm.Middle Temple 20 Jul 1768, called to bar 16 Jun 1777 ; adm.King’s Inns, Dublin 1776 ; practised at Irish bar ; MP (I) Belfast 1784- Jul 1791 ; Third Serjeant (I) 1787, Second Serjeant (I) 1789 ; a Judge of King’s Bench, Ireland, from 27 Jul 1791 ; also Cursitor, Chancery (I) 13 Aug 1792 ; d.unm. 1 Apr 1794.

HEWITT, WILLIAM, son of William Hewitt, London ; b.       ; in school list 1752 ; KS (aged 14) 1758. [Presumably William Hewitt, son of William Hewitt and Jane —, bapt.St.Martin’s in the Fields 15 Dec 1743 (IGI) ; his parents were doubtless William Hewitt, Cavendish Square, London, surgeon, and Jane, sister of Wright Morrice (qv)] HEWITT, WILLIAM GRAILY, son of William Morse Graily Hewitt MD FRCP, Berkeley Square, London, consultant obstetric physician, and Elizabeth Bolton, dau. of William Hollis, Brunswick Place, Northampton, shoe manufacturer ; b. 20 Jul 1864 ; adm. from Wellington Coll 22 Jan 1880 (R) ; elected to Trinity Coll.Cambridge (with Triplett) 1883, adm. pens. 4 Oct 1883, matr. Mich.1883 ; BA and LLB 1886 ; adm.Lincoln’s Inn 15 May 1884, called to bar 28 Jan 1889 ; equity draftsman and conveyancer ; adopted craft of handwriting and illuminating, teaching subject at LCC School of Arts and Crafts from 1902 ; member, Art Workers Guild 1903 ; m. 28 Jul 1908 Lilian Maud, dau. of Robert Davie Peebles, The Park, Royston, Herts., managing director, London and San Francisco Bank Ltd ; d. 22 Dec 1952.

HEWS, CHARLES ; b.       ; adm. (aged 15) Feb 1738/9 ; in school lists 1739 (as Hughes) ; left 1739.

HEYDOCK, ANTHONY, son of James Heydock, Greywell, Hampshire, and Margaret, dau. of Thomas Bill, Ashwell, Herts., and niece of Very Rev.William Bill DD, Dean of Westminster ; b.       ; at school (aged 14) 2 Jul 1582 (Chapter Muniments 43050) ; Magdalen Hall, Oxford ; BA 1587 ; MA 1590 ; ordained ; Curate, Breamore, Hampshire 1603. [note Anthony Haydock, Vicar of Lazonby, Cumberland, from 8 Oct 1614 ; buried Lazonby 19 Jan 1638]

HEYDON, —  ; b.     ; in school lists 1656 ; a boarder.

HEYDON, CHRISTOPHER, son of Sir John Heydon, Kt, Baconsthorpe, Norfolk. Lieut.-Gen. of the Ordnance, and his second wife Mary Phillips [check]  ; b.       ; at school under Busby ; buried St.Margaret’s, Westminster 30 Mar 1655 (G.H.Dashwood (and others), ed., The Visitation of Norfolk inthe year 1563, 1878, ii, 191).

HEYGATE, see HAGGATE, HAGGITT and HIGGATE.

HEYGATE, —  ; b.      ; adm.      ; KS 1640 (Chapter Muniments 43114).

HEYLIN, RICHARD ; b.      ; adm.     ; KS      ; elected to Christ Church, Oxford 1644, but was never adm.

HEYLIN, THOMAS, son of Rev.Peter Heylin DD, Prebendary and Sub-Dean of Westminster, and Laetitia, third dau. of Thomas Heygate, Hayes, Middlesex ; b.     ; adm.       ; KS (aged 12) 1661 ; elected to Christ Church, Oxford 1662, matr. 19 Jul 1662, Westminster Student 22 Dec 1662 – void 1697 ; BA 1666 ; MA 1669 ; ordained deacon 20 Sep 1674, priest 24 Dec 1676 (both Oxford, as Heylyn) ; “went a parson to Nevis”, but had returned to England by 1678 ; living Oxford 1683.

HEYLYN, JOHN, eldest son of John Heylyn, London, citizen and saddler, and Susanna, sister of Thomas Sherman, St.Andrew’s, Holborn ; bapt. St.Martin’s in the Fields 2 Aug 1685 (IGI) ; adm.     ; KS 1700 ; elected head to Trinity Coll.Cambridge 1705, adm.pens. 7 Jun 1705, aged 19, scholar 12 Apr 1706, matr.1706 ; BA 1708/9 ; MA 1714 ; DD 1728 ; ordained deacon 29 Jun 1709, priest 18 Dec 1709 (both London) ; Vicar of Haslingfield, Cambs., 10 Apr 1714 – Sep 1719 ; Rector of St.Mary Le Strand, London, from 1 Jan 1723/4 ; Prebendary of St.Paul’s from 11 Oct 1736 ; Prebendary of Westminster from 21 Mar 1742/3 ; Vicar of Sunbury, Middlesex 10 Feb 1741/2 – Oct 1747 ; Chaplain in Ordinary to George II 16 Nov 1733 – Mar 1749 ; known as the “Mystic Doctor” ; author, Theological Lectures to the King’s Scholars at Westminster Abbey, 1749 ; valediction in Harl.MS.9576, British Library ; m.1st, 27 Sep 1711 Elizabeth, dau. of Herbert Master MD, Cirencester, Gloucs. ; m.2nd,  16 Apr 1719 Elizabeth, dau. of —  Ebbutt, St.Margaret’s, Westminster, wine merchant ; d. 11 Aug 1759. Buried South Transept, Westminster Abbey. ODNB.

HEYMAN, — : b.        ; adm.       ; Min.Can.1636.

HEYMAN, PETER ; b.        ; adm.      ; Min.Can.1641.

HEYRICK (or HEYRICKE), ROGER, son of Sir William Heyrick (or Heyricke), Kt , MP, Beaumanor Park, Leics., Alderman of London, goldsmith, and Joan, dau. of Richard May, Mayfield Place, Sussex, merchant taylor ; cousin of Robert Herrick, poet ; bapt. 14 May 1608 ; at Merchant Taylors’ Sch. 1614/5-7 ; adm.    ; KS        ; elected to Christ Church, Oxford 1624, matr.16 Nov 1624, Westminster Student to 1627 ; BA 1627 ; Fellow, All Souls Coll., Oxford 1628 ; a letter written by him when at Oxford to his father refers to Lambert Osbaldeston as “a man who loves to hear of the progresse of them whom he educated” (Nichols, History ofLeicestershire, iii.166) ; living 1630.

HEYWOOD, JAMES, son of Thomas Heywood, Westminster, Page of the Bedchamber to James, Duke of York, and Frances, dau. of Rev.Thomas Soame DD, Canon of Windsor ; bapt. St.Margaret, Westminster 17 Dec 1663 ; adm.      ; KS 1679 ; elected to Christ Church, Oxford 1683, matr. 17 Dec 1683, aged 19, Westminster Student 17 Dec 1683 – void 1692 ; BA 1687 ; MA 1690 (incorp.Cambridge 1697) ; ordained deacon 29 Dec 1689 (Bristol for Oxford), priest 21 Dec 1690 (Sodor & Man for Oxford) ; Vicar of Godmanchester, Hunts., from 4 Jul 1691 ; m.  —., dau. of Dr. — Walters, Oxfordshire ; d. 16 Aug 1729.

HEYWOOD, WILMOT, son of James Heywood (qv) ; b.     ; in under school list 1715 ; Min.Can. (aged 13) 1718 ; Christ’s Coll.Cambridge, adm.1719, scholar 28 Jan 1719/20, matr. Mich.1720 ; BA 1722/3 ; MA 1726 ; ordained deacon 20 Sep 1724, priest 18 Dec 1726 (both Lincoln) ; Curate, Godmanchester, Hunts. ; Rector of Ladbrooke, Warwicks., Feb 1733/4 – Jun 1745 ; Vicar of Great Paxton, Hunts., from 4 Jun 1745 ; d. Sep 1765.

HEYWOODE, R.     ; b.       ; at school under Nowell (Brasenose Coll.Oxford, MSS, 31, f.31b).

HIBBINS, THOMAS ; b.        ; adm. 16 May 1778 (perhaps — Hibbins who had been at Eton Coll. 1775-7). [If so, he was b. 1761 or 1762, Deputy Judge Advocate, Norfolk Ireland, Australia 12 Jul 1794 – Dec 1806 ; living in Tasmania from 1808 ; m.1st, 10 Jun 1787 Elizabeth Busby ; m.2nd, 9 Oct 1803 Ann, dau. of Zachariah Clark, Deputy Commissary, Norfolk Ireland ; d. Hobart, Tasmania 10 Nov 1816, aged 55. See Dictionary of Australian Biography] [said to have been born 1761 at Chisledon, Kent (IGI)]

HICKES, see also HICKS.

HICKES, — ; b.       ; adm.      ; a pensioner 1565-6 (tutor, The Head Master) (Chapter Muniments 54006-12).

HICKES, —  ; b.       ; adm.      ; a pensioner 1565-7 (tutor, The Head Master) (Chapter Muniments).

HICKES, HENRY ; b.     ; adm.      ; QS       ; a pensioner in 1565 (tutor, Mr.Yonge) ; elected to Trinity Coll.Cambridge 1566, adm.scholar 1567, matr. Easter 1567 ; BA 1570/1.

HICKES, HENRY, only son of Sir Henry Hickes, Bart., and his first wife Elizabeth, dau. of Admiral of the Fleet Sir John Holmes MP, Royal Navy ; bapt. 21 Apr 1705 ; adm. (aged 14) Jan 1718/9 ; buried Low Leyton, Essex 7 Aug 1719.

HICKES, JOHN, of London ; b.      ; adm.    ; QS      ; elected to Christ Church, Oxford 1582, matr. 25 Jan 1582/3, aged 18, Westminster Student to 1595 ; BA 1586 ; MA 1589 ; BD 1596 (incorp.Oxford 1608) ; ordained ; Vicar of Kildwick, Yorks., 25 May 1594 – 11 Nov 1599 ; Rector of Whitburn, co.Durham from 11 Jul 1599 ; Prebendary of York from 18 Nov 1615 ; m. 20 Feb 1603/4 Alice, dau. of George Blakiston, Hedley Hall, co.Durham ; buried Whitburn 31 Dec 1630.

HICKES, MICHAEL, brother of Sir Robert Hickes, Bart. (qv) ; bapt. 29 Sep 1719 ; adm. (aged 12) Jul 1735 ; left 1737 ; inherited from his father in 1755 the family estates at Beverstone, Gloucs., and Chigwell, Essex ; d.unm. 23 Mar 1764.

HICKES, SIR ROBERT, BART., eldest son of Sir Henry Hickes, Bart., and his second wife Barbara, dau. of Joseph Johnson, Waltham, Essex ; half-brother of Henry Hickes (qv) ; bapt. 4 Feb 1711/2 ; adm. (aged 7) Jan 1718/9 ; in school list 1727/8 ; disinherited by father, but he and his sisters inherited a life interest in the family estates on the death of his brother Michael Hickes (qv) ; succeeded father as 4thbaronet 28 Oct 1755 ; blind for some years before death ; d. 31 Mar 1768.

HICKES, WILLIAM, second son of Rev.William Hickes, Prebendary of Chichester and of Salisbury, Rector of Bishopstoke, Hampshire (see Antiquaries Journal 80, 2000, p.304) ; b. 1621 ; adm.      ; KS      ; elected to Trinity Coll.Cambridge 1637, adm.pens. 15 May 1637, scholar 1638 ; BA 1641/2 ; MA 1645 ; ordained ; Head Master, Oundle Sch. 1646-9, when “drove out by the Presbyterians … for keeping his schollars to the prayers of the Church” ; subsequently Head Master, Gresham’s Sch., Holt, Norfolk, to c.1659 ; d. 1677. [note Rev.William Hickes, Rector of Little Downham, Cambs., from 7 Aug 1676, dead by 16 Jan 1676/7, will proved PCC 10 Feb 1677]

HICKEY, HENRY WEMS, brother of Joseph Hickey (qv) ; bapt.St.James, Piccadilly 31 May 1746 (IGI) ; at Harrow Sch. c.1755-6 ; adm. Jan 1757 (A.Spencer, ed., Memoirs of William Hickey, i, 13) ; left 1761 ; for about five years in a merchant’s office, Dublin ; became a Clerk, Victualling Office ; Cadet, EICS Madras 1773 ; arrived in India 1775 ; Lieut., EICS Madras ; buried unm. Fort St.George, Madras 30 Sep 1775.

HICKEY, JOSEPH, eldest son of Joseph Hickey, St.Alban’s Street, Pall Mall, London, attorney, and Sarah, dau. of William Boulton, Yorkshire ; b. Apr 1745 ; at Harrow Sch. c.1755-6 ; adm. Jan 1757 (Hickey, Memoirs, i, 13) ; left 1761 ; articled to father 1761 ; adm. attorney ; partner in father’s firm 1765 ; a Commissioner of Bankrupts (occurs in annual lists 1799 to death) ; no longer in Law List 1822 as attorney ; of Sion Row, Twickenham, Middlesex ; m. Susan —  ; d. 3 Apr 1827.

HICKEY, WILLIAM, brother of Joseph Hickey (qv) ; b. 30 Jun 1749 ; adm. Jan 1757 (Hickey, Memoirs, i,13) ; left Dec 1763 ; played cricket for OWW against Old Etonians on Moulsey Heath Aug 1768, “being regarded as a famous stop behind the wickets” (Memoirs, i, 99,100,105-6) ; spent two years in father’s office ; Cadet, EICS Madras 1768; arrived in India May 1768 ; Ensign, EICS Madras ; did not take up military duties and left Madras Jul 1768 ;  visited Canton before returning to England in Apr 1770 ; re-entered father’s office ; adm.attorney Jul 1775 ; returned to Calcutta, where entered on roll of attorneys 13 Nov 1777 and practised with some success until his retirement in 1808 ; returned to England ; his Memoirs were edited by Alfred Spencer in four volumes, 1913-25 ; buried unm. St.John, Smith Square 10 Feb 1827. ODNB.

HICKMAN, —  ; b.      ; adm.      ; a pensioner in 1568 (tutor, the Sub-Dean).

HICKMAN, CHARLES, third son of William Hickman, Barnack, Northants, and Abigail, youngest dau. of William Pargiter, Greatworth, Northants ; b.       ; adm.May 1663 ; a boarder ; KS 1665 ; elected to Christ Church, Oxford 1667, matr. 13 Jul 1667, aged 18, Westminster Student 14 Sep 1668 – void 1689, Tutor 1675-80, Catechist 1684 ; BA 1671 ; MA 1674 ; BD 1684 ; DD 6 Feb 1684/5 ; ordained deacon 21 May 1676, priest 10 Jun 1677 (both Oxford) ; Chaplain to James Brydges, 8th Baron Chandos, Ambassador at Constantinople 1680 ; Rector of Norton juxta Twycross, Leics., Jan – Apr 1688 ; Rector of Farnham Royal, Bucks., 3 Apr 1688 – Jun 1703 ; Rector of Taplow, Bucks., 15 Mar 1698/9 – Jun 1703 ; Chaplain to William III and Mary, and to Queen Anne, by Oct 1690 – Oct 1702 ; Lecturer, St.James’s, Westminster 1692 ; Chaplain to Laurence Hyde, Earl of Rochester, Lord Lieut.Ireland 1701 ; Bishop of Derry from 11 Jun 1703 ; lived chiefly in England ; m. 15 Apr 1703 Anne, younger dau. of Sir Roger Burgoyne, Bart. ; d. 28 Nov 1713. Buried South Aisle, Westminster Abbey. ODNB.

HICKMAN, FRANCIS, fourth son of Sir William Hickman, Bart., MP, Gainsborough, Lincs., and Elizabeth, dau. of John Nevile, Mattersey, Notts. ; bapt.Gainsborough, Lincs. 5 Aug 1663 (IGI) ; adm.       ; KS 1676 ; elected head to Christ Church, Oxford 1681, matr. 18 Dec 1681, aged 18, Westminster Student 19 Dec 1681 – void 1705 ; BA 1685 ; MA 1688 ; a non-juror, but did not lose his Studentship at Christ Church ; contributor to Musae Anglicanae and assisted Francis Atterbury (KS 1674, qv) in the Latin translation of Dryden’s Absalom and Achitophel, 1682. ODNB.

HICKMAN, HENRY RICHARD BELCHER, son of William Hickman MB MRCS, Harley Street, London, and Emmeline, dau. of Thomas Lea, Leyton, Essex ; b. 11 Apr 1866 ; adm. 12 Jun 1879 (R) ; left Dec 1883 ; Christ Church, Oxford, matr.Mich.1884 ; BA 1888 ; MA MB BCh 1894 ; St.George’s Hospital ; MRCS LRCP 1894 ; an ophthalmic surgeon ; Lecturer in Physiology, Bristol Univ., 1919 ; m. 16 Jul 1895 Margaret Kate, dau. of James Hetherington Thompson, Brampton, near Carlisle, Cumberland, colliery manager ; d. 8 Jul 1948.

HICKMAN, SIR NEVILE GEORGE, BART., only surviving son of Sir Nevile Hickman, Bart., and Frances, dau. of Edward Hall ; bapt.Gainsborough, Lincs. 8 Oct 1725 (IGI)  ; succ.father as 5th baronet 11 Jun 1733 ; adm. (aged 14) Jan 1739/40 ; left 1742 ; a Gentleman of the Privy Chamber from 1774 ; of Thornock Grove, Gainsborough, Lincs. ; m. 13 Sep 1746 Frances Elizabeth, dau. of Christopher Tower MP, Huntsmore Park, Bucks. ; d. Mar 1781.

HICKMAN, THOMAS, son of Thomas Hickman, Ireland ; b.      ; at school under Busby (J.E.B.Mayor, ed., Admissions to St.John’s Coll.Camb., ii, 40) ; St.John’s Coll.Cambridge, adm.fellow commoner 7 May 1672, aged 17, matr.1672.

HICKMAN, WALTER, son of Richard Hickman, Stourbridge, Worcs.. and Dorothy, dau. of Walter Moseley, Enville, Staffs. ; b. 24 Jan 1708/9 ; adm. (aged 14) Aug 1722 ; Christ Church, Oxford, matr. 10 Mar 1724/5 ; BCL 1732 ; ordained ; first incumbent, St.Thomas’s, Stourbridge, Worcs., from 20 Oct 1736 ; buried unm. Old Swinford, Worcs. 24 Sep 1741.

HICKMOTE, — ; b.       ; at school 1661-3 (Busby’s Account Book). [Perhaps Charles Hickmote, son of John Hickmote, Clifford’s Inn, London, and Aylesford, Kent, Filazer, Court of Common Pleas, and Jane, dau. of Rev.Charles Sunnibanke DD, Canon of Windsor ; Wadham Coll.Oxford, matr. 26 May 1663, aged 16 ; adm.Middle Temple 20 Mar 1665/6 ; d. at Oxford 17 Apr 1667].

HICKS, see also HICKES.

HICKS, —  ; b.       ; at school c.1680 ; George Stepney (qv) recommended him to Charles Montagu, 4thEarl (afterwards 1st Duke) of Manchester, Ambassador to Vienna, in a letter dated 28 Mar 1707 (Duke of Manchester, Court and Society from Elizabeth toAnne, 1864, ii, 212-3), “for the sake of old acquaintance at Westminster” ; the wording of the letter suggests that Hicks was, or had been, a merchant trading with Germany, but Stepney writes that “at present he is reduced, I fear, pretty low”.

HICKS, —  ; b.       ; adm.      ; left 1805.

HICKS, GEORGE ARTHUR, eldest son of Robert Hicks MD MRCS LSA, Baldock, Herts., and Frances, only dau. of Henry John Penn, Ealing, Middlesex ; b. 3 Sep 1857 ; adm. 21 Jan 1875 (G) ; left Aug 1876 ; Keble Coll.Oxford, matr. 16 Oct 1876 ; BA 1884 ; schoolmaster, Scarborough, Yorks. (1881 Census) ; Cuddesdon Theol.College 1895 ; ordained deacon 1895 (Winchester) ; Curate, Burghclere, Hampshire 1895-7, Holy Innocents, Hornsey, Middlesex 1897-1902 ; Vicar of Fingringhoe, Essex, from 1902 ; m. Mary Doherty (marriage registered Lexden, Essex first quarter 1903) ; d. 16 Oct 1914.

HICKS, JOHN WILKINSON, eldest son of John Hicks, Bradenham Manor, Bucks, and Susanna Jemima, dau. of Isaac Webb Horlock (IGI), Box, Wilts. ; bapt. 8 Dec 1788 ; adm.     ; in school list 1801 ; KS 1802 ; elected to Trinity Coll.Cambridge 1806, but went to Brasenose Coll.Oxford, matr. 17 May 1806 ; adm. Lincoln’s Inn 13 Jan 1809 ; d. 21 Jan 1810.

HICKS (or HICKES), THOMAS, son of Rev.William Hicks (or Hickes), Rector of Cardinham, Cornwall [and Loveday, dau. of Thomas Opie ?] ; b.     ; adm.      ; KS 1695 ; elected to Christ Church, Oxford 1699, matr. 21 Jun 1699, aged 18, Westminster Student 4 Apr 1700 – void 1711 ; BA 1703 ; MA 1706 ; ordained deacon 30 Nov 1707 (Oxford), priest  4 Dec 1707 (Winchester) ; d. of fever 1711, when chaplain on an expedition to Canada (adm.Chancellor’s Court, Oxford 12 Jun 1713).

HICKS, WILLIAM, son of Francis Hicks, Watton, Norfolk, grocer, and Jane — ; bapt. Watton, Norfolk 8 Apr 1742 ; at school under Markham three years (Venn, Biographical History of Gonville and Caius Coll.Camb., ii, 76) ; Gonville and Caius Coll.Cambridge, adm.sizar 1 Jan 1759, aged 15, pensioner 1 Jan 1760, scholar Mich.1759 – Christmas 1764, matr. Mich.1759 ; BA 1763 ; MA 1766 ; Junior Fellow, Gonville and Caius Coll., Christmas 1764 – Midsummer 1777 ; ordained deacon 23 Sep 1764, priest 17 Aug 1766 (both Norwich) ; Curate, Cockley Cley, Norfolk 1764 ; Vicar of Breckles, Norfolk, from 15 Jun 1770 ; Vicar of Hinckley, Leics., 17 May 1776 – Apr 1778 ; Rector of Honington, Suffolk, from 5 May 1778 ; Vicar of Watton, Norfolk, from 22 Jan 1779 ; d. 26 Oct 1784.

HICKS, WILLIAM, son of Francis Edward Hicks FRCS, Henrietta Street, Cavendish Square, London, surgeon, and Caroline Mary Anne, dau. of John Joseph Webbe Weston, Sutton Place, Surrey ; b. 21 Apr 1852 ; adm. 15 Jun 1865 ; left Dec 1868 ; adm.solicitor Mich.1874 ; living unm. in London 1881 (1881 Census) ; d. 1 Feb 1913.

HICKSON, ROBERT, son of John Hickson, The Grove, Dingle, co.Kerry, landowner, and Barbara, eldest dau. of John Mahony, Dromore Castle, co.Kerry, landowner ; b. 13 Dec 1814 ; adm.12 Feb 1827 ; KS 1829 ; elected to Christ Church, Oxford 1833, matr.23 May 1833, Westminster Student ; adm.Lincoln’s Inn 9 Jun 1836, King’s Inns, Dublin 1840 ;  of Ballintaggart, co.Kerry ; JP ; m. 3 Jun 1843 Julia Sophia, second dau. of William Sadleir Bruere, Berwick, Northumberland ; d. 18 Aug 1851.

HIDE, see also HYDE.

HIDE, —  ; b.      ; in under school lists 1715-8 (surname spelled Hyde in three of these lists).

HIGDEN, see also HIGDON.

[HIGDEN, HENRY, second son of John Higden, St.Clement Danes, London, and Joan Durden, St Martin’s in the Fields, Westminster ; bapt.St.Mary, Putney 28 Aug 1645 ; at school under Busby (ODNB) ; adm.Middle Temple 27 Apr 1665, called to bar 14 May 1686 ; the “ingenious friend” and probable school contemporary of John Dryden (qv) ; author, A Modern Essay on the Thirteenth  Satire of Juvenal, 1686, a similar essay on the Tenth Satire of Juvenal, 1687, and  a play, The Wary Widdow, 1693 ; living 1693. ODNB.].

HIGDON, —  ; b.       ; in school lists 1656. [one of these presumably John Higden, eldest son of John Higden, St.Clement Danes, adm.Middle Temple 5 Nov 1658, called to bar 25 May 1666 ; elder brother of Henry Higden (above)]

HIGDON, —  ; b.       ; in school lists 1656.

HIGGATE, JOHN, son of Rev.John Higgate, Priest of Chapel Royal and Confessor to Royal Household, and Martha, sister of Jeffrey Glasier (qv) ; b. 17 Jun 1737 ; adm. (aged 10) Jun 1747 ; KS 1751 ; elected to Christ Church, Oxford 1756, matr.16 Jun 1756, Westminster Student 5 Jan 1757 – void 14 Oct 1776, expiry year of grace as R.Slapton ; BA 1760 ; MA 1763 ; ordained deacon 17 May 1761 (Chester), priest 17 Jun 1764 (Winchester) ; Rector of Slapton, Bucks., from 11 Oct 1775 ; m. 17 Jun 1778 Susannah Lee (IGI) ; d. 1788.

HIGGINS, JAMES, son of James Higgins, Westminster ; b.     ; adm. (aged 11) Jun 1726 ; in under school list 1730 ; apprenticed to Daniel Peters, citizen and apothecary, 3 Nov 1730 ; Apothecary to Westminster Infirmary from 29 Jun 1752 (Covent Garden Journal 30 Jun 1752 ; d. Sep 1758 (Lloyd’s Evening Post 8 Sep 1758). [note will James Higgins, St.Margaret’s, Westminster, tobacconist, proved PCC 7 Dec 1722]

HIGGINS-BERNARD, FRANCIS TYRINGHAM, eldest son of Joseph Napier Higgins QC, barrister, Bencher Lincoln’s Inn, and Sophia Elizabeth, youngest dau. of Sir Thomas Tyringham Bernard, Bart. (qv) ; b. 22 Jul 1864 ; adm. 24 Jan 1878 (R) ; elected to Christ Church, Oxford 1883, matr.12 Oct 1883 ; played Association Football v.Cambridge 1887 ; BA 1887 ; MA 1890 ; adm.Lincoln’s Inn 24 May 1886, called to bar 3 Jul 1889 ; assumed additional surname of Bernard 26 Mar 1897 ; of Nether Winchendon House, Bucks. ; winner, Bar Point to Point 1900, 1906, and Officers’ Sabre Competition, Military Tournament 1904 ; Master, Skinners’ Co. 1903-4, 1928-9 ; contested (Cons) St.Austell Jan 1910, North Buckinghamshire Dec 1910 ; Lieut.-Col., 3rd batt. Oxford and Bucks Light Infantry 15 May 1917 ; served on Western Front May 1917 – Mar 1919, wounded Jun 1917 ; DL JP Buckinghamshire, High Sheriff 1924 ; m. 27 Apr 1897 Evelyn Georgiana, eldest dau. of Philip James Digby Wykeham, Tythrop House, Oxfordshire ; d. 16 Jul 1935.

HIGGINSON, ALEXANDER, eldest son of Alexander Higginson, Harley Street, Cavendish Square, London, Judge of Supreme Court, Bengal, previously EICS Bengal, and Martha Isaacs, miniature painter ; b.       ; adm. 3 Oct 1792 ; in school lists 1795, 1797 ; Christ Church, Oxford, matr. 20 Oct 1800, aged 18 ; adm.Lincoln’s Inn 16 Jun 1801 ; Ensign, 1st Foot Guards 26 Jan 1804 ; Lieut. and Capt., 14 Sep 1809 ; Capt. and Lieut.-Col., 1 Jul 1815 ; Col. in the Army 10 Jan 1837 ; Maj., 28 Jun 1838 ; retd. 15 May 1840 ; served Sicily in 1806-7, with Sir John Moore in Spain 1808-9, in Walcheren expedition 1809 and in Peninsular War 1812-4 ; d.unm. 3 Aug 1855.

HIGGINSON, CHARLES HARWOOD, brother of Alexander Higginson (qv) ; b. 17 Feb 1784 ; adm. 3 Nov 1796 ; in school list 1797 ; Writer, EICS Madras 1799 ; Head Assistant to Secretary, General and Commercial Dept., 1803 ; Deputy Revenue Accountant 1804 ; Register to Provincial Court, North Division 1807, South Division 1811 ; Judge and Magistrate, Zillah of Trichinopoly ; Third Judge, Provincial Court, South Division 1821, First Judge 1824 ; m. 17 Apr 1806 Frances, dau. of George Westcott, EICS Madras ; d. at Trichinopoly 18 Jul 1824.

HIGGINSON, GEORGE POWELL, brother of Alexander Higginson (qv) ; bapt.St.Mary’s, St.Marylebone Road 10 Apr 1788 (IGI) ; adm. 25 May 1799 ; in school lists 1801 and May 1803 ; left 1803 ; Ensign, 1st Foot Guards 6 Nov 1805 ; Lieut. and Capt., 3 Apr 1811 ; Capt. and Lieut.-Col., 26 Oct 1820 ; ADC to Lord Hill, Commander-in-Chief 1830-42 ; half-pay 11 Apr 1834 ; Col. in the Army 10 Jan 1837 ; Maj.-Gen., 9 Nov 1846 ; Lieut.-Gen., 20 Jun 1854 ; Col., 94th Foot, from 29 Jan 1855 ; Gen., 9 Nov 1862 ; with Brigade of Guards in Sicily 1806 ; while returning from an excursion to Malta, was captured by a French privateer, and kept as prisoner at Tunis until an exchange was arranged ; served in Spain under Sir John Moore 1808-9, in Walcheren expedition 1809, and in Peninsular War 1812-4 ; m. 16 Jun 1825 Lady Frances Elizabeth Needham, third dau. of Francis Needham, 1st Earl of Kilmorey (I), Gen. in Army, Col.86th Regt. ; d. at Cannes, France 19 Apr 1866.

HIGGINSON, HENRY, youngest brother of Alexander Higginson (qv) ; b. 1 Mar 1790 ; in school lists 1801, 1803 ; left 1806 ; Brasenose Coll.Oxford, matr. 10 Dec 1806, aged 16 ; BA 1810 ; MA 1813 ; adm.Lincoln’s Inn 22 Jun 1809 ; ordained deacon Mar 1815 (London, lit.dim. from Winchester), priest 3 Dec 1815 (Hereford, lit.dim. from Winchester) ; Curate, Newdigate, Surrey 1815 ; Minister, East India Company Chapel, Poplar, for more than twenty years ; m.  22 Mar 1826 Harriet, dau. of James Henry Casamajor, Manchester Square, London, formerly EICS Madras ; d. 5 Feb 1848.

HIGGS, FRANCIS, son of John Higgs, and Ann (Pickering ?) (IGI) ; bapt.St.Andrew’s, Holborn 10 Jul 1725 (IGI) ; adm. (aged 11) Jan 1736/7 ; left 1741 ; articled to father, solicitor, Common Pleas 1741. [father of Inner Temple, attorney, Treasurer and Receiver for county of Middlesex ?] [perhaps Francis Higgs, “of the Temple” who m. “Miss [Anne ?] Meredith” 4 Jun 1751 (General Advertiser, 5 Jun 1751)] [perhaps will proved PCC 12 Jul 1784]

HIGGS, JOHN, brother of Francis Higgs (qv) ; bapt.St.Andrew’s, Holborn 3 Jul 1728 (IGI) ; adm. (aged 8) Jan 1736/7 ; KS 1743 ; elected head to Trinity Coll.Cambridge 1747, adm.pens. 17 Jun 1747, scholar 6 May 1748 ; BA 1750/1 ; MA 1754 ; BD 1768 ; Minor Fellow, Trinity Coll. 2 Oct 1753, Major Fellow 3 Jul 1754, Senior Fellow from 1781 ; ordained deacon 23 Feb 1755, priest 21 Sep 1755 (both Ely) ; Rector of Over, Cambs., 3 Jul 1772 – Oct 1777 ; Vicar of Marsworth, Bucks., 10 May 1777 – Sep 1780 ; Rector of Grundisburgh, Suffolk, from 24 Apr 1780 ; JP Suffolk ; a friend of Richard Cumberland (qv) ; d. unm. 6 Oct 1816.

HIGHAM, JOHN, son of William Higham, Middlesex ; b.      ; adm.     ; in school lists 1656 ; KS (aged 16) 1658 (Chapter Muniments 43060) ; d. at school 1661. [Probably son of William Higham, Under Cook, College Hall, Westminster]

HIGHAM, VISCOUNT, see WATSON-WENTWORTH, CHARLES, 2ND MARQUIS OF ROCKINGHAM, and WATSON-WENTWORTH, WILLIAMVISCOUNT HIGHAM.

HILDYARD, see also HILLIARD.

HILDYARD, —  ; b.       ; in school lists 1656.

HILDYARD, —  ; b.      ; in school lists 1656.

HILDYARD, —  ; b.       ; in school lists May and Oct 1803 ; left 1805.

HILDYARD, JOHN, son of Christopher Hildyard, Ottringham, Yorks., and his first wife Mary, younger dau. of Sir Francis Cobb, Kt, Burnham, Norfolk, Esquire of the Body to James I and Charles I ;  b.       ; adm.      ; at school by Jun 1654, aged 16 (WAM 43112) ; KS (Capt.)       ; elected to Trinity Coll.Cambridge 1656, adm.pens. 14 May 1656, scholar 1656, matr. Easter 1659 ; migrated to Trinity Hall, Cambridge  ; LLB 1663/4 ; LLD 1669 ; ordained deacon and priest 23 Dec 1660 (Lincoln) ; Rector of Swannington, Norfolk, from 5 Mar 1662/3 ; Vicar of Wood Dalling, Norfolk, from 2 Mar 1662/3 ; Rector of Cawston, Norfolk, from 30 Sep 1667 ; Prebendary of Norwich from 12 Sep 1683 ; m. 1 May 1660 Elizabeth, dau. of Rev.Edmund Duncon, Rector of Swannington, Norfolk ; d. 1703.

HILDYARD, ROBERT HENRY, only son of Robert Charles Hildyard QC MP, Bencher, Inner Temple, and Dinah, dau. of George Ficklin ; b. 3 Aug 1836 ; at King’s Coll.Sch. 1846-7 ; adm. 7 Oct 1852 ; University Coll.Oxford, matr. 30 May 1855 ; attaché, Diplomatic Service 5 Feb 1859 ; attaché, St.Petersburg 16 Jul 1859 ; 3rd Secretary, Paris 28 Sep 1863 ; 2nd Secretary, Teheran 22 Feb 1868 ; 2ndSecretary, Paris 20 Mar 1876 ; d. unm. 6 Sep 1876.

HILL, see also HILLE and HYLLE.

HILL, — ; b.       ; adm.1656 (School Lists 1656, last two quarters) ; a witness in the Busby and Bagshaw dispute before the Governors of the School 1657.

[HILL, —  ; b.       ; in school list Jan 1732/3 (sixth form). Presumably John Hill (qv) or Joshua Hill (qv)]

HILL, —  ; b.       ; in school list Jun 1764 ; left 10 Jul 1764.

HILL, —  ; b.       ; in school list 1797.

HILL, AARON, eldest son of George Hill, Malmesbury, Wilts., attorney, and Frances Gregory ; b. 10 Feb 1684/5 ; at school under Knipe (Cibber, Lives of the Poets, 1753, v, 253), having previously been at Barnstaple GS ; earned additional pocket money by performing “the tasks of many who had not his capacity” (Cibber, op.cit.) ; left at age 14 ; travelled in Near East 1700-3 ; travelling tutor with Sir William Wentworth, Bart., in Italy c.1709 ; Master of the Stage, Drury Lane Theatre 1709 ; Manager of The Opera, Haymarket 1710 ; produced Rinaldo, the first of Handel’s operas to be performed in England, 1711 ; obtained patent for extracting oil from beechmast 1713, but this speculation failed ; engaged in long controversy with Alexander Pope, and corresponded with Samuel Richardson ; author of plays, operas, poems and pamphlets ; his Works were published in four volumes, 1753, and his Dramatic Worksin two volumes, 1760 ; m. 1710 Margaret, only dau. of Edmund Morris, Stratford Langthorne, Essex, grocer ; d. 8 Feb 1749/50. Buried West Cloister, Westminster Abbey. ODNB.

HILL, ARTHUR CHARLES, son of Thomas Humphrey Lowe (qv) ; b. 30 Aug 1796 ; adm. 13 Jan 1808 ; left 1813 ; Cornet, 18thLight Dragoons 20 Apr 1815 ; Lieut., 10 Aug 1815, half-pay 1 May 1817 ; 6th Dragoons 18 Feb 1819, half-pay Nov 1821 ; 16th Lancers 26 May 1822 ; Capt., half-pay, unattached 3 Apr 1827 ; 16th Lancers 8 Jun 1830 ; Maj., 21 Aug 1839, half-pay, unattached 6 May 1842 ; 11th Foot 7 Sep 1848 [check] ; Brevet Lieut.-Col. (ante-dated) 11 Nov 1851 ; Brevet Col., 15 Mar 1858 ; retd. 7 Sep 1858 ; served at siege of Bhurtpore 1825-6 ; assumed surname of Hill in lieu of Lowe 1865 ; m.1st, 17 Feb 1841 Mary, only dau. of Benjamin Flounders, Culmington, Shropshire, businessman ; m. 2nd, 8 Sep 1846 Caroline Elizabeth, dau. of Thomas Baker, Ashurst Lodge, Tunbridge Wells, Kent ; m. 3rd, 19 Nov 1867 Emma, widow of Rev.Thomas James Longworth, Vicar of Bromfield, Shropshire, and dau. of Thomas Charles Bridges, The Lodge, Ludlow, Shropshire ; d. 13 Jan 1877.

HILL, ARTHUR GEORGE, eldest son of Thomas Hill, Belsize Avenue, Hampstead, Middlesex, organ builder, and Mary Sophia, youngest dau. of Rev.Charles Thorold, Rector of Ludborough, Lincs. ; b. 12 Nov 1857 ; adm. 21 Jan 1870 (G) ; Sidney Sussex Coll.Cambridge, adm.pens. 11 Oct 1876, matr. Mich.1876 ; migrated to Jesus Coll.Cambridge, 1 Oct 1878 ; BA 1880 ; MA 1883 ; DLitt (Lille) 1913 ; head of firm William Hill & Sons, organ builders ; FSA 2 Mar 1882 ; an authority on the history of organs and on the architecture of Spain ; author, The Organ Cases and Organs of the Middle Ages and Renaissance, 1883-91, and other works ; m. 2 Mar 1886 Amy Sarah, dau. of Rev.John Mack Williams, Rector of Burnby, Yorks. ; d. 16 Jun 1923.

HILL, ARTHUR PHILIP, brother of George Murray Hill (qv) ; b. 4 Dec 1858 ; adm. 24 Jun 1871 ; QS  21 Jan 1874 ; left Dec 1875 ; Royal Indian Engineering Coll., Coopers Hill ; Assistant Superintendent, India Telegraph Department 26 Sep 1880 ; Superintendent, Mar 1897 ; m. at Dalhousie, Bengal, India 20 May 1889 Amy Mabel, dau. of Andrew Higgins ; d. 13 Dec 1905.

HILL, ARTHUR PRICE, son of Rev.Arthur Hill, Vicar of Preston, Dorset, previously Chaplain HM Prison, Portland, Dorset, and Caroline (Harris ?) ; b. Canada 26 Mar 1854 ; adm. 31 Mar 1869 (G), from Sherborne Sch. ; elected to Trinity Coll.Cambridge 1873, adm.pens.11 Aug 1873, matr. Mich.1873 ; BA 1877 ; ordained deacon 1878, priest 1879 (both Salisbury) ; Curate, Downton, Wilts. 1878-80 ; Chaplain, Royal Navy 14 Dec 1880-1910 ; present at bombardment of Alexandria 1882 ; Chaplain, British Embassy, Vienna 1910-4 and from 1920 ; d. at Vienna, Austria  28 Nov 1924.

HILL, CHARLES LYALL, brother of Arthur George Hill (qv) ; b. 12 Nov 1862 ; adm. 27 May 1875 (G) ; left Aug 1879 ; adm.solicitor 2 Jul 1886 ; practised in London ; m. 1st, 19 Apr 1893 Winifred Augusta Lloyd, sister of Lancelot Lloyd Allen (qv) ; m.2nd. 1915 Mary, dau. of Geoffrey Bodkin LFPS, Arran Isles, co.Galway, Ireland, medical practitioner (marriage registered fourth quarter 1915) ; d. 9 Nov 1933.

HILL, CHRISTOPHER GIBSON, eldest son of Nicholas Isaac Hill (qv) ; b. 22 Jun 1791 (IGI) ; adm.      ; adm.1803 (Glover) ; in school lists May and Oct 1803. [perhaps death registered Newton Abbot second quarter 1857]

HILL, DANIEL, son of Daniel Hill, Salisbury, Wilts. ; b.       ; adm.      ; KS        ; elected to Christ Church, Oxford 1666, matr.13 Jul 1666, aged 19, Westminster Student 17 Jan 1667 – void 1679, Tutor 1675-9, Junior Censor 1678 ; BA 1670 ; MA 1673 (incorp.Cambridge 1702) ; DD Lambeth 18 Mar 1719/20 ; ordained deacon 21 Dec 1673 (London) ; Rector of Southfleet, Kent, from 19 Jun 1679 ; Prebendary of Rochester from 15 Jan 1684/5 ; Vicar of St.Margaret’s, Rochester, from 30 Mar 1691 ; m.1st, c.1680 Frances, sister of James Heywood (qv) ; m.2nd, 28 May 1713 Hester, widow of Rev.Charles Wilbraham, Rector of Fobbing, Essex, and dau. of Sir William Swan, Bart. ; d. 25 Jun 1729.

HILL, E.  ;  b.      ; adm.       ; name up School, with date 1802.

HILL, EDMUND, second son of Nicholas Isaac Hill (qv) ; b. 9 Aug 1798 ; adm. 9 Jan 1809 ; Min.Can. (aged 14) 1813 ; in school list Oct 1814 ; went to Durham Sch. ; Christ’s Coll.Cambridge, adm.pens. 13 Feb 1817, matr. Mich.1817 ; BA 1824 ; MA 1827 ; ordained deacon 5 Oct 1823, priest 18 Jun 1826 (Norwich) ; Vicar of Kirtling, Cambs., from 13 Oct 1831 ; d. 6 Feb 1854.

HILL, EDWARD, eldest son of Rev.Herbert Hill, Rector of Staunton on Wye, Herefs., and Chancellor of Hereford Cathedral, and Catherine, dau. of Lovelace Bigg-Wither, Chilton Foliat, Wilts. ; b. 17 Aug 1809 ; adm. 15 Jan 1821 ; KS 1823 ; elected to Christ Church, Oxford 1827, matr. 30 May 1827, Westminster Student 1827-50, Mathematical Tutor  ; 1st cl.Mathematics 1830 ; BA 1831 ; MA 1833 (incorp.Dublin 1835, Cambridge 1840) ; Mathematical Examiner, Oxford Univ., 1836-7, 1856-7 ; ordained deacon 10 Dec 1836, priest 1837 (both Oxford) ; Perpetual Curate of Stratton Audley, Oxfordshire 1836 ; Perpetual Curate of Christ Church, Hougham, Kent 1844 ; Rector of Sheering, Essex, from 26 Jun 1849 ; Hon.Canon, St.Albans from 1872 ; [unm. in 1881] ; d. 9 Mar 1900.

HILL, GEORGE MURRAY, second son of George Hill, Cheshunt, Herts., Russia merchant, and Georgina Marian, dau. of Ven.George Wilkins DD, Archdeacon of Nottingham and Rector of Southwell, Notts. ; b. 20 Jan 1857 ; adm. 27 Jul 1870 ; QS Jul 1871 ; elected to Trinity Coll.Cambridge (with Triplett) 1875, adm.pens. 27 May 1875, matr. Mich.1875 ; BA 1879 ; adm.solicitor Mar 1891 ; practised in London ; assisted in forming and organizing Old Boys Volunteer Training Corps Sep 1914 ; m. 1st, 17 Dec 1891 Elinor, youngest dau. of Charles Rivers Freeling, Cambridge Square, London, and Inner Temple, barrister ; m.2nd, 20 Jun 1907 Ida, dau. of Rev.John Stogdon, Assistant Master, Harrow School ; d. 17 Dec 1941.

HILL, GILBERT, brother of Aaron Hill (qv) ; b.       ; adm.       ; BB 1703 (Chapter Muniments 33733) ; Clare Coll.Cambridge, adm.sizar 24 Dec 1705 ; possibly m.    ; d. 16 Dec 1758, “at his lodgings in the Strand … brother to the late Aaron Hill, Esq.”.

HILL, JOHN ; b.       ; adm. (aged 14) Jun 1722 ; in under school list 1724. school lists 1729,1731.

HILL, JOSEPH ; b.        ; adm.      ; KS 1663.

HILL, JOSHUA, son of Pierce Hill, St.Margaret’s, Westminster ; b.       ; adm. (aged 9) Jun 1728 ; KS 1733 ; Capt. of the School 1737 ; elected head to Christ Church, Oxford 1738, matr. 6 Jun 1738, Westminster Student 23 Dec 1738 – void 2 Oct 1760, expiry year of grace as R.Odcombe ; BA 1742 ; MA 1745 ; ordained deacon 5 Sep 1743 (Oxford), priuest 19 Feb 1743/4 (London) ; Domestic Chaplain to Earl of Essex Sep 1754 ; Rector of Odcombe, Somerset 27 Sep 1759 – Jan 1760 ; Vicar of Watford, Herts., from 19 Dec 1759 ; d. Apr 1762 (will proved PCC 13 May 1762). [Mother perhaps Elizabeth Mattson (IGI)]

HILL, LANGLEY, brother of Thomas Hill (adm.1715, qv) ; bapt.All Hallows, Bread Street 9 Dec 1714 (IGI) ; adm. (aged 7) Sep 1722 ; in under school list 1727, school list Feb 1727/8 ; apprenticed to father 29 Jul 1730 ; adm. Lincoln’s Inn 8 Dec 1742 ; an attorney ; Clerk to Grocers’ Company Oct 1740 – Nov 1757 ; of Isleworth, Middlesex ; m. 12 Dec 1745 Constantia Melmoth, Windsor, Berks. ; d. 17 Mar 1793.

HILL, MARTIN, son of William Hill, London ; b.      ; adm.1653 ; at school by Jun 1654, aged 14 (WAM 43112) ; KS       ; left 1656 (school list 1656, first quarter only) ; St.John’s Coll. Cambridge, adm.sizar 31 May 1656, aged 16 ; BA 1659/60 ; MA 1663 (incorp.Oxford 12 Jul 1664) ; BD 1682 ; DD 1703 ; ordained deacon 2 May 1661, priest 4 May 1661 (both Lincoln) ; Vicar of Penn, Bucks., 4 May 1661-3 ; Vicar of Swaffham Prior St.Cyriac, Norfolk, from 2 Dec 1664 ; Vicar of Swaffham Prior St.Mary, Norfolk, from 1667 ; m.       ; d. 26 Jan 1712/3, aged 73.

HILL, NICHOLAS ISAAC, fifth son of Haydock Hill, Craven Street, Strand, London, merchant, and Elizabeth, dau. of Nicholas Bosquet ; b. 31 Oct 1760 ; adm.13 Sep 1773 ; KS 1775 ; adm.Lincoln’s Inn 8 Nov 1776 ; charged with five other Westminster boys at Middlesex QS 21 May 1779 for a gross assault on a man in Dean’s Yard, but acquitted for want of evidence (Annual Register 1779, 213) ; elected to Christ Church, Oxford 1779, matr. 3 Jun 1779, Westminster Student 24 Dec 1779 – void by marriage 23 Apr 1790 ; BA 1783 ; MA 1786 ; ordained deacon 15 Jun 1783 (Oxford) ; Rector of Snailwell, Cambs., from 15 Apr 1796 ; m. 16 Mar 1790 Frances, dau. of Rev. Edmund Gibson, Rector of Bishops Stortford, Herts. ; d. 29 Oct 1854.

HILL, PASCOE GRENFELL, son of Rev.Pascoe Grenfell Hill, Rector of St.Edmund the Martyr, London, and Ellen Annetta, fourth dau. of Henry Daveny, Malines, Belgium ; b. 15 May 1847 ; adm. 24 Sep 1857 ; left Aug 1858 ; death registered Loddon, Norfolk, third quarter 1858.

HILL, RICHARD, son of John Hill, London ; b.        ; adm.      ; Min.Can. (aged 14) 1580.

HILL, RICHARD, son of Nicholas Hill, Oxford ; b.       ; adm.      ; Min.Can.1637 ; KS       ; elected to Christ Church, Oxford 1640, matr. 3 Jul 1640, aged 17, Westminster Student ; BA 1644 ; MA 1646 ; ejected from Studentship by Parliamentary Visitors 7 Jul 1648 (Burrows, ed., 1881, 144), reinstated 1660 ; tutored sons of gentlemen during Commonwealth period ; ordained ; Rector of East Knoyle, Wilts., from 10 Dec 1662 ; Prebendary of Salisbury from 25 Sep 1666, also Canon Residentiary from 6 Dec 1671 ; he owed his appointment as a Canon Residentiary to “the satisfaction which the King and Duke of York had anciently in his service near their persons” ; Proctor in Convocation for diocese of Salisbury 1679 ; he and Bishop Fell purchased in 1685 certain fee farm rents, conveyed on trust to pay £20 p.a. to a Reader of Prayers in some parish church in Oxford and the residue to the Westminster Students of Christ Church ; d. 20 Mar 1694/5.

HILL, RICHARD, of Kent ; b.       ; adm.      ; KS      ; elected to Trinity Coll.Cambridge 1654, adm.pens. 9 May 1654, scholar 1654, matr.Mich.1657 ; BA 1657/8 ; MA 1661 ; Fellow, Trinity Coll. 1659 – c.1669, Taxor 1665 ; ordained deacon 20 Sep 1662, priest 20 Dec 1662 (both Ely, dates are those of subscriptions) ; Curate, St.Michael’s, Cambridge 1663 (still 1665) ; Prebendary of York from 2 Aug 1671 ; Rector of Blyborough, Lincs., from 26 Jan 1691/2 ; buried Blyborough, Lincs., 2 Dec 1704.

HILL, RICHARD ; b.      ; adm. (aged 8) Apr 1732 ; left 1733 (“pays higher fees than normal”).

HILL, SIR RICHARD, BART., eldest son of Sir Rowland Hill, Bart., MP, and his first wife Jane, dau. of Sir Brian Broughton, Bart., MP ; b. 6 Jun 1732 ; adm.Shrewsbury Sch.1742 ; adm.Jun 1744 ; left 1750 ; Magdalen Coll.Oxford, matr. 8 Dec 1750 ; MA 2 Jul 1754 ; Grand Tour (Italy) 1756-7 ; a champion of George Whitefield and the Calvinistic Methodists 1757 ; attacked Oxford Univ. for expelling Methodist undergraduates 1768 ; defended Calvinism against criticisms by John Wesley and Fletcher of Madeley 1770 ; MP Shropshire 1780-1806 ; succ.father as 2nd baronet 7 Aug 1783 ; of Hawkstone, Shropshire ; engaged in controversy with Archdeacon Daubeny 1798-9 and with Bishop Tomline of Lincoln 1803 ; author, religious pamphlets ; d.unm. 25 Nov 1808. ODNB.

HILL, THOMAS, son of Thomas Hill, Dublin ; b.      ; adm.      ; Min.Can. (aged 15) 1648 ; KS 1650 ; elected to Trinity Coll.Cambridge 1652, adm.pens. 18 Jun 1652, scholar 1652 ; 6th in “ordo” 1655/6 ; BA 1655/6 ; MA 1659 (incorp.Oxford 14 Jul 1663) ; DD 1670 ; Fellow, Trinity Coll. 1658 – c.1668, Tutor 1661-5 ; signed for deacon’s and priest’s orders 24 Sep 1664 (London) ; Chaplain to Duke of Ormonde ; Rector of Callan, co.Kilkenny, from 1666 ; Prebendary of St.Patrick’s, Dublin, from 7 Jan 1667/8 ; Dean of Ossory from 18 Mar 1670/1 ; lic. to m.1st, 1 Feb 1668 Elizabeth Atkinson, Dublin Castle ; m.2nd, Jane — ; d. 1 Nov 1673.

HILL, THOMAS, son of Daniel Hill (qv), and his first wife ; b.       ; adm.       ; KS 1697 ; elected to Trinity Coll.Cambridge 1701, adm.pens. 18 Jun 1701, aged 18, scholar 17 Apr 1702, matr.1705 [check] ; BA 1704/5 ; MA 1708 ; Minor Fellow, Trinity Coll. 2 Oct 1707, Major Fellow 19 Apr 1708, occasional Tutor 1710 ; subscribed the 54 Articles of Accusation against Bentley 1710 ; tutor to Charles Lennox, 2ndDuke of Richmond, 1711, with whom he subsequently resided ; Chief Clerk and Clerk of the Papers, Mint, from 1718 ; Secretary, Board of Trade, from 19 Oct 1737 ; FRS 15 Apr 1725 ; author, Nundinae Sturbridgienses, 1709 ; m. Catharine — ; d. 20 Sep 1758. ODNB.

HILL, THOMAS, son of Langley Hill, Bread Street, London, attorney, Clerk of Grocers’ Company, and Katherine — [or Jane ?] ; b.        ; adm. (aged 9) Oct 1715 ; KS 1720 ; elected to Trinity Coll.Cambridge 1724, but went to Christ Church, Oxford, matr. 18 May 1724, Canoneer Student 4 Aug 1727 – void by marriage 26 Apr 1730 ; BA 1727 ; adm. Lincoln’s Inn 15 Feb 1721/2, called to bar 21 May 1728 ; m.       ; d. 19 Feb 1790, aged 82 [sic].

HILL, THOMAS ; b.        ; adm. (aged 10) Feb 1719/20 ; left 1721.

HILL, THOMAS ; b.       ; in school list 1727/8 [but this seems to be an error ?]

HILL, THOMAS, son of Thomas Hill, London ; b.      ; adm.       ; KS (aged 14) 1760.

HILL, THOMAS, only son of William Hill, The Grange, Tadcaster, Yorks. ; b.         ; at school under Markham (Autobiography of Mrs Fletcher of Edinburgh, 1874, 9) ; adm. Gray’s Inn 24 May 1764 ; of The Grange, Tadcaster, Yorks. ; “sacrificed professional eminence and domestic respectability by his passion for hunting and his indulgence in licentious dissipation” (Autobiography of Mrs Fletcher, loc.cit.) ; d. 27 Feb 1799, aged 52.

HILLARY, — ; b.       ; adm.       ; KS 2 Aug 1549 (Acts of Chapter).

HILLE, JOHN ; b.        ; adm.      ; KS        ; left by Aug 1549 (Acts of Chapter).

HILLER, ROBERT ; b.       ; in school list Feb 1727/8 (second form). [Perhaps “Mr.Robert Hiller”, St.John the Evangelist, Westminster, gent., who d. 8 Dec 1760, aged 44. Buried Dark Cloister, Westminster Abbey. Maybe chorister ?]

HILLES, —  ; b.       ; adm.      ; KS in 1626 (Chapter Muniments 33256).

HILLIARD, —  ; b.       ; in school list 1729.

HILLING, —  ; b.        ; in school list 1731.

HILLS, —  ; b.        ; adm.        ; left Christmas 1803.

HILTON, JOHN (KS 1542), see HYLTON, JOHN.

HILTON, JOHN, son of John Hilton, London ; b.       ; adm.      ; KS 1681 ; elected to Trinity Coll.Cambridge 1685, adm.pens. 18 Jun 1685, aged 18, scholar 26 Apr 1686, matr.1685 ; BA 1688/9 ; MA 1692 ; Minor Fellow, Trinity Coll. 2 Oct 1691, Major Fellow from 14 Jul 1692, Tutor from 1698 ; ordained deacon and priest 3 Oct 1692 (Rochester), then going as chaplain in merchant ship to Leghorn ; buried Trinity Coll.Chapel, Cambridge 25 Sep 1700.

HILTON, THOMAS ; b.       ; in school list 1727/8 (sixth form).

HILY, WILLIAM, eldest son of Haviland Hil(e)y, Poole, Dorset ; b.       ; adm.      ; KS        ; elected to Christ Church, Oxford 1651, matr. 7 Jun 1651, Westminster Student ; adm.Middle Temple 3 May 1656, called to bar 27 Nov 1663.

HINCHLIFFE, EDWARD, son of John Hinchliffe (adm.1741, qv) ; bapt.All Saints, Cambridge 19 Oct 1772 (IGI) ; adm. 1 Feb 1780 ; left 1786 ; Trinity Coll.Cambridge, adm.pens. 28 Nov 1787, aged 15, scholar 23 Apr 1790, matr. Lent 1790 ; BA 1792 ; MA 1795 ; ordained deacon 1 Nov 1795, priest 23 Oct 1796 (both Carlisle) ; Rector of Barthomley, Cheshire, from 30 Dec 1796 ; Vicar of Acton, Cheshire, from 3 Mar 1798 ; m. 18 Feb 1796 (IGI) Anne, youngest dau. of Capt.John Bover, Royal Navy, Warrington, Lancs. ; d. 18 Aug 1819.

HINCHLIFFE, EDWARD, eldest son of Edward Hinchliffe (qv) ; b.  29 Nov 1800 ; adm.Christmas 1814 ; left Christmas 1816 ; Worcester Coll.Oxford, matr. 2 Apr 1819, aged 18 ; BA 1823 ; MA 1826 ; ordained deacon 21 Dec 1823, priest 17 Jul 1825 (both Chester) ; Rector of Barthomley, Cheshire 18 Mar 1836-50 ; Rector of Mucklestone, Staffs., from 1850 ; JP Cheshire, Staffordshire ; author, Barthomley : in letters from a former Rector to his eldest son, 1856 ; m.1838 Mary, dau. of Thomas Thornhill, Crewe, Cheshire ; d. 22 Dec 1878.

HINCHLIFFE, HENRY JOHN, eldest son of John Hinchliffe (adm.1741, qv) ; b.       ; adm. 21 Jan 1777 ; Trinity Coll.Cambridge, adm.pens. 25 Jun 1783, aged 15, scholar 5 May 1786, matr. Mich.1784 ; 16th Wrangler and Chancellor’s Senior Classical Medal 1788 ; BA 1788 ; MA 1791 ; Minor Fellow, Trin.Coll. 2 Oct 1789, Major Fellow 6 Jul 1791 ; Leiden Univ., adm. 14 Jun 1784 ; Grand Tour (Italy) 1788-9 ; adm.Middle Temple 21 Jan 1790, called to bar 8 Feb 1793 ; Judge of Admiralty Court, Jamaica 1804-12, 1814-8 ; FSA 17 Jun 1790 ; edited his father’s Sermons, 1796 ; [m. ?] ; d. 21 Feb 1848.

HINCHLIFFE, JOHN, son of Joseph Hinchliffe, Swallow Street, Westminster, livery stable keeper, and Elizabeth Mantle ; b.      ; adm. (aged 9) Jul 1741 ; KS 1746 ; elected to Trinity Coll.Cambridge 1750, adm.pens. 14 Jun 1750, scholar 26 Apr 1751, matr.1750/1 ; BA 1754 ; MA 1757 ; DD 1764 ; Minor Fellow, Trinity Coll. 2 Oct 1755, Major Fellow 6 Jul 1757 ; ordained deacon 28 Dec 1756, priest 19 May 1757 (both Ely) ; Usher at the School by 1755, apparently holding appointment for seven years ; travelling tutor to his future brother-in-law John Crewe, 1st Baron Crewe (qv), on Grand Tour in Germany, Italy and Switzerland 1761-3 ; Domestic Chaplain to Spencer, Earl of Northampton 22 Nov 1763 – 1 Dec 1773 ; Head Master, Westminster School 8 Mar – Jun 1764, resigning on grounds of health ; tutor to William Cavendish, 5th Duke of Devonshire 1764-6 ; he had made the friendship of Augustus Fitzroy, 3rdDuke of Grafton, the future Prime Minister, when in Italy in 1762, and he owed his principal subsequent preferments to him ; Vicar of Greenwich, Kent 26 May 1766- Jan 1770 ; Master of Trinity Coll.Cambridge 16 Feb 1768 – Jun 1789 ; Vice-Chancellor, Cambridge Univ. 1768-9 ; Chaplain in Ordinary to George III Feb 1768 – Dec 1769 ; Domestic Chaplain to Frederick Cornwallis, Archbishop of Canterbury 22 Nov 1768 – 17 Dec 1769 ; consecrated Bishop of Peterborough 17 Dec 1769 ; offended the Government by his liberal speeches in the House of Lords, and while retaining his bishopric, was required to resign the Mastership of Trinity, in exchange for being appointed Dean of Durham  ; Dean of Durham from 16 Oct 1788 ; FSA 23 Nov 1769 ; m. 16 May 1767 Elizabeth, sister of John Crewe, 1stBaron Crewe (qv) ; d. 11 Jan 1794. ODNB.

HINCHLIFFE, JOHN, son of John Hinchliffe, London ; b.       ; adm. 25 Jun 1770 ; KS (aged 14) 1775. [Perhaps clerk, Foreign Office 16 Jul 1782 – retired 5 Jan 1789]. [note John Hinchliffe, resident Kennington Green 1 Jan 1786 ; and John Hinchliffe, St.Mary, Lambeth, Surrey, will proved PCC 12 Sep 1801]

HIND, see also HINDE and HYNDE.

HIND (or HINDE), BENJAMIN ; a cousin of Abraham Cowley (qv), who in his will dated 28 Sep 1665 bequeathed him £50 “towards his education in learning” ; b.       ; adm.      ; KS 1666 ; failed to obtain election to either University 1668 and again 1669 ; Trinity Coll.Cambridge, adm.pens. 22 May 1669, matr.1669 ; of Cheshunt, Herts. ; lic. to m. 8 Feb 1674/5 Frances, dau. of William Langhorne, Inner Temple, London, and Stevenage, Herts., barrister.

HIND (or HINDE), GEORGE ; b.      ; adm.      ; KS in 1644 ; elected to Christ Church, Oxford 1646, but he had been detained at school “through the exigence of warre” and was granted seniority at Christ Church as of 1 May 1645 (Burrows, ed., 1881, 268), matr. (check date), Westminster Student ; initially refused to submit to Parliamentary Visitors (Burrows, op.cit., 69, but seems afterwards to have submitted ; BA 1649 ; MA 1651 ; ordained ; Rector of Milton, Berks., from 18 May 1655 (but re-instituted 15 Aug 1660) ; m.1st ; lic. to m.2nd, 5 Dec 1668 Dinah Munday, St.Dunstan in the West ; buried Milton, Berks. 12 Oct 1672.

HIND, JOHN, brother of Thomas Hind (qv) ; b.       ; adm. 20 Jan 1773 ; Christ Church, Oxford, matr.14 Jul 1773, aged 15 ; migrated to Magdalen Coll.Oxford, demy 1773-84 ; BA 1780 ; MA 1780 ; BD 1789 ; DD 1797 ; Fellow, Magdalen Coll. 1784-1808, Bursar 1790, 1795,1802,1805, Vice-Pres.1797 ; ordained deacon 21 May 1780 (Oxford), priest 21 Oct 1781 (Chester) ; Vicar of Findon, Sussex, from 29 Jul 1807 ; m. 18 Mar 1808 Penelope, widow of Rev.William Benwell, Rector of Chilton Foliat, Wilts., and dau. of John Loveday, Caversham, Berks. ; d. 29 Oct 1832.

HIND, RICHARD, brother of Thomas Hind (qv) ; b.      ; adm. 14 Nov 1769.

HIND, THOMAS, son of Rev.Richard Hind DD, Vicar of Rochdale, Lancs., and of Skipton, Yorks., and Prebendary of St.Paul’s,  and Martha Treacher, Shabbington, Bucks. ; b.       ; adm. 10 Jul 1767 ; KS (aged 12) 1768 ; elected to Christ Church, Oxford 1772, matr. 17 Jun 1772, Westminster Student 24 Dec 1772 –void 18 Oct 1787, expiry year of grace as R.Westwell, Tutor 1777-81 ; punished for flagrant act of lewdness and immorality in college 7 May 1774, but punishment remitted for exemplary conduct 11 Dec 1775 ; BA 1776 ; MA 1779 ; adm.Inner Temple 12 May 1772 ; ordained deacon 10 Jun 1781, priest 27 Oct 1782 (both Oxford) ; Domestic Chaplain to George, 3rd Duke of Marlborough ; Rector of Ardley, Oxfordshire, from 11 Oct 1786 ; Vicar of Westwell, Oxfordshire, from 11 Oct 1786 ; Vicar of Culworth, Northants, from 22 Apr 1805 ;  m.1st, 24 Apr 1788 Susanna, dau. of Samuel Hamer, Hamer, Rochdale, Lancs.  ; m.2nd, 1 Sep 1792 Ann, widow of Richard Lane, Mill End, Hambleden, Bucks., and dau. of Richard Andrews (afterwards Woodward) ; d. 10 Jan 1815, aged 57.

HINDE, — ; b.      ; adm.      ; in school list 1801 ; left Christmas 1802.

HINDE, CHARLES ; b.       ; adm. 13 Mar 1782 (“not placed”).

HINDLE, JOHN, son of Benjamin Hindle, Westminster [or son of Bartholomew Hindle, and Mary —] ; b.       ; adm. 26 Feb 1770, chorister ; left Whitsun 1774 ; Lay Vicar, Westminster Abbey, from 1785 ; Deputy to Gentleman of the Chapel Royal 10 Nov 1788 ; Magdalen Coll.Oxford, matr. 16 Nov 1791, aged 30 ; Mus.Bac. 1791 ; a counter tenor ; sang at Worcester Music Festival 1788 and at London Vocal Concerts 1791-2 ; composer, “Queen of the Silver Bow”, and of other glees and songs ; d. unm. 1796. ODNB.

HINDMANJOSIAH WOOD, son of Capt.Josiah Wood Hindman, St.Leonard’s, Shoreditch, and Greenwich, Kent, East India Maritime Service, and Sarah, widow of Chevalier D’Or, Upton, Essex, and dau. of — Wood ; bapt. Greenwich 13 May 1744 ; at school under Markham (Bentham, Works, x, 30, as Hindman, forenames not stated) ; a contemporary of Jeremy Bentham (qv), who records that Hindman was “remarkable for his strength” and that “he could hold a heavy kitchen poker at arm’s length for half an hour” ; Christ Church, Oxford, matr. 22 Nov 1763, aged 18 ; adm. Lincoln’s Inn 24 Nov 1763 ; subsequently “a tenant at Browning Hill [Baughurst, Hampshire], but was so thoughtless and extravagant that he could not pay the rent ; he left the farm and returned to it once as a beggar” (Bentham, loc.cit.) ;  a prisoner in King’s Bench Prison in 1778, “formerly of Brownhill in the county of Hants, late of Lewisham in the county of Kent, gentleman” ; m. 16 Nov 1770 Sarah Bella Elizabeth, dau. of William James, Ightham Court, Kent ; d. 1784.

HINTON, WILLIAM CECIL, son of William Hinton, Quinta do Til, Funchal, Madeira, wine merchant, and Mary, dau. of Robert Wallas, Funchal, Madeira, merchant ; b. 30 Jun 1843 ; adm. 12 Jun 1857 ; QS Oct 1858 ; left 1859 ; Ensign, 91st Foot 22 Oct 1861 ; Lieut., 16 Aug 1864 ; 25th Foot, 21 Aug 1869 ; retd. 8 Dec 1869 ; d. Kimberley, South Africa 1900 [check].

HIPPISLEY, WILLIAM, eldest son of Thomas Hippisley, Exton, Rutland, and Marston, Somerset, and Mary, dau. of Robert Horton, Wolverton, Somerset ; b.      ; adm.     ; KS      ; elected to Christ Church, Oxford 1625, matr. 3 Feb 1625/6, aged 20, Westminster Student to 1642 (?) ; BA 1629 ; MA 1632 ; tutor to George Villiers, 2nd Duke of Buckingham ; of Truleigh, Edburton, Sussex ; m. Katherine, dau. of John Pellatt, Bolney, Sussex ; d. 4 Nov 1657, aged 51 (MI Edburton, Sussex).

HIR, EDWARD ; b.       ; adm.      ; at school (aged 15) 2 Jul 1582 (Chapter Muniments 43050).

HISLOP, HENRY ; b. 26 Jan 1825 ; adm. 11 Jul 1836.

HITCH, HENRY, son of Robert Hitch MP, Leathley, Yorks., and Alice, dau. of Richard Aldburgh ; b.       ; adm. (aged 14) Jun 1717 ; in under school list 1719 ; Trinity Coll.Cambridge, adm.pens. 19 Mar 1721/2, scholar 3 May 1723, matr.1722 ; adm.Inner Temple 27 Nov 1721 ; of Leathley, Yorks. ; Receiver-Gen. of Taxes, West Riding of Yorkshire, from Oct 1751 ; Registrar of Deeds, West Riding of Yorkshire, from 3 Nov 1749 ; d. 2 Mar 1765.

HITCH, ROBERT, brother of Henry Hitch (qv) ; b.      ; adm. (aged 12) Jun 1717 ; Trinity Coll.Cambridge, adm.pens. 23 Dec 1722, scholar 23 Apr 1724, matr.1723 ; BA 1726/7 ; MA 1730 ; ordained deacon 1730 (lit.dim. from York), priest Nov 1730 (lit.dim. from York) ; Rector of Adel, Yorks., 1733 – Jul 1737 ; Prebendary of York from 30 Jul 1734 ; Chaplain to Frederick, Prince of Wales 7 Jul 1732 ; Rector of Bossall, Yorks., from 1740 ; Curate, Bramhope Chapel, Yorks. ; d. 26 Dec 1741.

HITCH, WILLIAM, see FITCH, WILLIAM.

HITCHMAN, JOHN ; b.       ; adm. 26 Nov 1787 ; in school list Dec 1788.

HIXON (or HICKSON), THOMAS ; b.       ; adm.      ; QS       ; elected to Christ Church, Oxford 1565, Westminster Student 11 Jan 1565/6 – 1578 ; BA 17 Feb 1568/9 ; MA 1572 ; involved in brawls in city of Oxford in 1575 ; recipient of an exhibition of twenty nobles a year for three years under the will dated 23 May 1577 of Ven.Thomas Watts DD, Archdeacon of Middlesex and Prebendary of Westminster.

HIXON, WILLIAM JAMES ; b. 14 Jan 1801 ; adm. 4 Oct 1815 ; left Christmas 1816 ; artist, specialising in paintings of animals ; of Hatcham, Surrey (on marriage) ; m. 2 Jan 1845 Jemima Smith, dau. of Robert Browning, Principal of Stock Office, Bank of England (grandfather of the poet) ; d. 17 Sep 1870. [perhaps son of Robert Joseph Hixon, and Maria —  ; father perhaps engraver, Strand, London]

HOARE, see also HORE.

HOARE, CHARLES, second son of Sir Richard Hoare, Bart. (adm.1747/8, qv), and his second wife ; b. 25 Aug 1767 ; adm. 6 May 1775 ; KS 1781 ; a partner in Hoare’s Bank from 1789 ; of Luscombe Castle, Devon ; FSA 14 Jan 1790 ; FRS 21 Dec 1809 ; m. 7 May 1790 Frances Dorothea, sister of William Villiers Robinson (qv) ; d. 16 Nov 1851.

HOARE, CHARLES GEORGE, fourth son of Peter Richard Hoare (adm.1781, qv) ; b. 30 Mar 1809 ; adm. 16 Jan 1824 ; Trinity Coll.Cambridge, adm.pens. 29 May 1827, matr. Mich.1827, but did not graduate ; d.unm. 27 Feb 1829.

HOARE, HENRY, elder son of Henry Hoare, Stourhead, Wilts., and of Fleet Street, London, goldsmith and banker, and his cousin Jane, dau. of Sir William Benson, Kt, Bromley, Middlesex, iron merchant ; b. 7 Jul 1705 ; in under school list 1715 ; a partner in Hoare’s Bank, Fleet Street, London, from 1726 ; MP Salisbury 1734-41 ; Grand Tour (Italy) 1738-41 ; created the garden at Stourhead, Wilts. ; m. 1st, 11 Apr 1726 Hon.Anne Masham, sister of Samuel Masham, 2nd Baron Masham (qv) ; m.2nd, 5 Jul 1728 Susanna, only dau. of Stephen Colt, Clapham, Surrey, EICS Bombay and President of Surat ; d. 8 Sep 1785. ODNB.

HOARE, HENRY, son of Sir Richard Hoare, Kt (adm.1718, qv), and his second wife ; b. 3 Jun 1744 ; adm.Jun 1752 ; in school list 1754 ; a partner in Hoare’s Bank from 1772 ; m. 25 Jun 1765 Mary, dau. of William Hoare RA, Bath, portrait painter ; d. 20 Feb 1785.

HOARE, HENRY MERRIK, third son of Sir Richard Hoare, Bart. (adm.1747/8, qv), and his third wife ; b. 20 Jul 1770 ; adm. 26 Jun 1780 ; Min.Can.1786 ; a partner in Hoare’s Bank from 1794 ; m. 13 Aug 1807 Sophia, third dau. of Henry Thrale MP, Streatham, Surrey, brewer ; d. 22 Jun 1856.

HOARE, PETER RICHARD, fourth son of Sir Richard Hoare, Bart. (adm.1747/8, qv), and his second wife ; b. 13 Oct 1772 ; adm. 20 Jun 1781 ; Min.Can.1787 ; KS 1788 ; Trinity Coll.Cambridge, adm.pens. 1 Jul 1791, matr. Mich.1791 ; adm.Inner Temple 21 Oct 1793, called to bar 17 May 1805, tenant chambers there 22 Nov 1793 ; adm.Lincoln’s Inn 21 Jun 1806 ; a partner in Hoare’s Bank ; author, works on banking and currency, and of a concordance to the Prayer Book ; m. 23 Sep 1799 Arabella Penelope Eliza, second dau. of James Greene MP, Turton Manor Tower and Clayton Hall, Lancs. ; d. 10 Sep 1849.

HOARE, PETER RICHARD, eldest son of Peter Richard Hoare (qv) ; b. 8 May 1803 ; adm. 17 Sep 1817 ; left Nov 1820 ; a partner in Hoare’s Bank from 1842 ; JP Devon, High Sheriff 1860 ; m. 17 Apr 1837 Lady Sophia Marsham, eldest dau. of Charles Marsham, 2ndEarl of Romney ; d. 30 May 1877.

HOARE, SIR RICHARD, brother of Henry Hoare (b.1705, qv) ; b. 2 Mar 1709 ; adm.1718 ; in under school list 1722 ; a partner in Hoare’s Bank from 1731 ; Alderman, City of London, Farringdon Ward Without, from 23 Apr 1740, Sheriff 1740-1, Lord Mayor 1745-6 ; knighted 31 Oct 1745 ; member Goldsmiths’ Co., Prime Warden 1740/1 ; his account of his shrievalty was privately printed by his grandson, Sir Richard Colt Hoare, Bart., in 1815 ; Treasurer, Society for the Propagation of Christian Knowledge, from 1750 ; m.1st, 24 Apr 1732 Sarah, dau. of James Tully, Charterhouse Square, London ; m.2nd, 30 Jun 1737 Elizabeth, sister of John Rust (qv) ; d. 12 Oct 1754. ODNB (s.v.grandfather).

HOARE, SIR RICHARD, BART., son of Sir Richard Hoare (qv), and his first wife ; b. 7 Mar 1734/5 ; adm. Jan.1747/8 ; left 1749 ; a partner in Hoare’s Bank from 1755 ; FSA 11 May 1775 ; created baronet 27 Jun 1786 ; m. 1st, 20 Mar 1756 his cousin Ann, dau. of Henry Hoare (b.1705, qv) ; m. 2nd, 7 May 1761 Frances Ann, dau. of Richard Acland, London, merchant ; d. 11 Oct 1787.

HOARE, RICHARD, fourth son of Sir Henry Hugh Hoare, Bart., and Maria Palmer, dau. of Arthur Acland, Fairfield, Somerset ; grandson of Sir Richard Hoare, Bart. (adm.1747/8, qv) ; b. 1 Sep 1793 ; in school lists May and Oct 1803 ; left Mar 1805 ; entered Royal Navy as 1st.cl.Volunteer, HMS Tribune 5 Jul 1805 ; Lieut., 13 Nov 1813 ; Commander 19 Jul 1822 ; Capt., 7 Jul 1827 ; retd. Jul 1847 ; served on Copenhagen expedition 1807 ; captured by the French off St.Jean de Luz ; took part in American War 1812-5 ; m. 1st, 15 Mar 1823 Matilda Ottley, dau. of Vice Adm.Sir William Charles Fahie KCB ; m.2nd, 27 Mar 1834 Elizabeth, eldest dau. of William Praed MP, Tyringham, Bucks. ; d. 5 Dec 1850.

HOARE, RICHARD PETER, third son of Peter Richard Hoare (adm.1781, qv) ; b. 25 Dec 1807 ; adm. 7 Apr 1823 ; Trinity Coll.Cambridge, adm.pens. 12 Jun 1826, matr. Mich.1826 ; BA 1830 ; MA 1833 ; ordained deacon 27 Mar 1831, priest 5 Apr 1832 (both Salisbury) ; Rector of Stourton, Wilts., from 24 Apr 1832 ; d.unm. 3 Apr 1846.

HOARE, SAMUEL WILLIAMS, son of Samuel Hoare, London ; b.     ; adm. 12 Jan 1778, BB ; KS 1780 (aged 14) ; m. 19 Apr 1806 Amelia Taylor (IGI).

HOBART, AUGUSTUS EDWARD, see HOBART-HAMPDEN, AUGUSTUS EDWARD, 6TH EARL OF BUCKINGHAMSHIRE.

HOBART, CHARLES ROBERT, younger son of Rev.Henry Charles Hobart, Prebendary of Hereford and Rector of Bere Ferris, Devon, and Mary, eldest dau. of Sir Thomas Beauchamp Proctor, Bart. , Langley Park, Norfolk ; grandson of Hon.Henry Hobart (qv) ; b. 4 Mar 1808 ; adm. 19 Sep 1820 (G) ; Cadet, EICS Madras 1827 ; Ensign, 12th Madras Native Infantry 20 Oct 1828, 16th Native Infantry 21 Dec 1829 ; Lieut., 21 Nov 1837 ; Brevet Capt., 21 Jan 1843 ; Capt., 16th Native Infantry 1 Mar 1845 ; Brevet Maj., 20 Jun 1854 ; retd. 3 Mar 1855 ; Lieut.-Col. on retired list 17 Oct 1856 ; m. 11 Feb 1840 Maria, dau. of Lieut.-Col. Charles Robert George Hodson, EICS St Helena ; d. 30 Jan 1886.

HOBART, GEORGE, 3RD EARL OF BUCKINGHAMSHIRE, elder son of John Hobart, 1st Earl of Buckinghamshire (qv), and his second wife ; b. 8 Sep 1731 ; adm.Mar 1738/9 ; KS (Capt.) 1746 ; left 1750 ; MP St.Ives 1754-61, Beeralston 1761-80 ; Secretary to his elder brother John Hobart, 2nd Earl of Buckinghamshire (qv), when Ambassador at St.Petersburg Aug 1762 – Jan 1765 ; manager of the Italian Opera in London ; travelling in Italy 1768 ; succ. brother as 3rd Earl of Buckinghamshire 3 Aug 1793 ; member, Society of Dilettanti 1769 ; m. 22 May 1757 Albinia (ODNB), eldest dau. of Lord Vere Bertie MP ; d. 14 Oct 1804. ODNB.

HOBART, GEORGE ; b.      ; adm. 23 Jan 1778 ; in school list 1781. [Presumably Hon.George Vere Hobart, son of George Hobart, 3rd Earl of Buckinghamshire (qv), bapt. Leadenham, Lincs. 14 Sep 1764 (IGI) ; Lieut., 7th Foot 1 Oct 1789 ; Cornet, 8th Dragoons 31 Oct 1793-6 ; [not in Army List 1802] ; Lieut.-Governor, Grenada, from 14 May 1802 ; m.1st , 16 Jul 1787 (IGI), Jane, dau. of Horace Cataneo, Leeds, Yorks., merchant ; m.2nd, 26 Apr 1802 Janet, dau. of Lieut.-Col.Alexander Maclean, Coll, Breadalbane Fencible Regt. ; d. of yellow fever 5 Dec 1802. Identification presumably not made by editors of Record on their supposition that he was born in 1761, as stated in peerages : when was he born ?]. [Whitmore thought he was an OW but provides no additional evidence]

HOBART, GEORGE ROBERT, see HAMPDEN, GEORGE ROBERT, 5TH EARL OF BUCKINGHAMSHIRE.

HOBART, HON.HENRY, younger son of John Hobart, 1st Earl of Buckinghamshire (qv), and his second wife ; b. 23 Oct 1738 ; adm. (aged 8) Jun 1747 ; left 1747 ; Christ Church, Oxford, matr. 10 Jul 1756, Canoneer Student 9 Jul 1756 – resigned 16 Mar 1757 ; adm.Lincoln’s Inn 4 Mar 1757 ; MP Norwich 16 Sep 1786 – 9 Mar 1787, and from 28 Mar 1787 ; Chairman, Committee of Ways and Means, House of Commons, from Apr 1791 ; m. 22 Jul 1761 Ann Margaret, dau. of John Bristow MP, Quiddenham Hall, Norfolk ; d. 10 May 1799.

HOBART, HON.HENRY LEWIS, fifth son of George Hobart, 3rd Earl of Buckinghamshire (qv) ; bapt. Nocton, Lincs. 9 Feb 1774 ; at school under Vincent (Steward, Anniversary Dinner 1807, 1818) ; his copy of the Grammatica Busbeiana carries his ownership inscription dated 19 September 1789, suggesting that he was at the school by then ; Christ’s Coll.Cambridge, adm.pens. 31 May 1793, aged 19, scholar 19 Dec 1793, matr.Mich.1793 ; MA 1797 ; DD 1816 ; ordained deacon 11 Jun 1797, priest 4 Feb 1798 (both Winchester) ; Rector of Chipping Warden, Northants 19 Feb 1798 – 1815 ; Rector of Edgcote, Northants, 7 Mar 1801-15 ; Prebendary of Canterbury 31 Jan 1804 – Apr 1816 ; Vicar of Nocton, Lincs., from 8 Apr 1815 ; Rector of St.Dionis, Backchurch, London 27 Sep 1815 – 1828 ; Dean of Windsor (and Wolverhampton), and Registrar of Order of the Garter, from 4 Apr 1816 ; Rector of Great Haseley, Oxfordshire 2 May 1816 ; Vicar of Fulmer, Bucks., Nov 1823-42 ; Vicar of Wantage, Berks., from 18 Jun 1828 ; m. 5 Oct 1824 Charlotte Selina, dau. of Richard Moore, Hampton Court Palace ; d. 8 May 1846.

HOBART, JOHN, 1ST EARL OF BUCKINGHAMSHIRE, son of Sir Henry Hobart, Bart., MP, and Elizabeth, eldest dau. of Joseph Maynard, Clifton Reynes, Bucks. ; b. 11 Oct 1693 ; succ.father as 5thbaronet 21 Aug 1698 ; at school under Knipe (Steward, Anniversary Dinner 1751) ; Clare Hall, Cambridge, adm.nob. 20 May 1710, matr.1710 ; MP St.Ives 1715-27, Norfolk 1727 – 28 May 1728 ; a Commissioner of Trade and Foreign Plantations 4 Oct 1721 – Aug 1727 ; KB 27 May 1725 ; Treasurer of the Chamber, Royal Household 23 Sep 1727 – Dec 1744 ; Assay Master, Duchy of Cornwall 1727-38 ; created Baron Hobart 28 May 1728 ; Lord Lieut., Norfolk, from 13 Dec 1739 ; Captain of the Gentlemen Pensioners from 24 Dec 1744 ; Privy Councillor 3 Jan 1744/5 ; created Earl of Buckinghamshire 5 Sep 1746 ; m.1st, 8 Nov 1717 Judith, dau. of Robert Britiffe MP, Baconsthorpe, Norfolk, Recorder of Norwich ; m.2nd, 10 Feb 1727/8 Elizabeth, dau. of Robert Bristow MP ; d. 22 Sep 1756. ODNB.

HOBART, JOHN, 2ND EARL OF BUCKINGHAMSHIRE, elder son of John Hobart, 1st Earl of Buckinghamshire (qv), and his first wife ; b. 17 Aug 1723 ; adm.Apr 1732 ; left 1739 ; Christ’s Coll.Cambridge, adm.nob. 30 Oct 1739, residing Jan 1739/40 – Mich.1743, matr.1740 ; Grand Tour 1745-7 (including Italy) ; MP Norwich 1747 – 22 Sep 1756 ; Comptroller of the Household Dec 1755 – Nov 1756 ; Privy Councillor 27 Jan 1756 ; succ.father as 2nd Earl of Buckinghamshire 22 Sep 1756 ; a Lord of the Bedchamber 15 Nov 1756 – 5 Nov 1767 ; Ambassador to Russia Aug 1762 – Jan 1765 ; Lord Lieut. of Ireland 18 Dec 1776 – Dec 1780 ; during his Viceroyalty free trade was granted to Ireland, measures for the relief of Roman Catholics and dissenters were passed, and the Volunteer movement rapidly spread ; member, Society of Dilettanti 1746 ; FSA 1 Apr 1784 ; FRS 3 Feb 1785 ; DL Norfolk 1745 ; described by Horace Walpole as “fat, fair, sweet and seen through in a moment” ; m.1st, 14 Jul 1761 Mary Ann, dau. of Lieut.-Gen.Sir Thomas Drury, Bart., MP ; m.2nd, 24 Sep 1770 Caroline, sister of Thomas Conolly (qv) ; d. 3 Aug 1793. ODNB.

HOBART, HON.ROBERT, younger son of John Hobart, 1st Earl of Buckinghamshire (qv) , and his first wife ; b.       ; adm. (aged 6) Jun 1732 ; d. 22 May 1733.

HOBART, ROBERT, 4TH EARL OF BUCKINGHAMSHIRE, second son of George Hobart, 3rd Earl of Buckinghamshire (qv) ; b. 6 May 1760 ; adm. 13 Jun 1770 (Jones) ; left 1776 ; Lieut., 7th Foot 23 Jul 1778 ; Capt., 30th Foot 25 Jul 1778 ; 5th Dragoons 17 Nov 1780 ; Maj., 18th Dragoons 15 Aug 1783 ; retd. 2 Nov 1784 [but still in Army List 1802] ; served in American war ; ADC to Duke of Rutland, Lord Lieut.Ireland, 1784-7, and to Marquis of Buckingham, Lord Lieut.Ireland, 1787-9 ; MP (I) Portarlington 1784-90, Armagh 1790-7 ; MP Bramber 15 Dec 1788-90, Lincoln 1790-6 ; Chief Secretary for Ireland Apr 1789 – Dec 1793 ; Privy Councillor (I) 21 Apr 1789 ; Privy Councillor (GB) 1 May 1793 ; Governor of Madras Oct 1793- Aug 1798, arriving in India summer 1794 ; summoned to House of Lords in father’s barony as Lord Hobart 30 Nov 1798 ; Secretary of State for War and the Colonies Mar 1801- Jan 1805 ; succeeded father as 4th Earl of Buckinghamshire 14 Oct 1804 ; Chancellor, Duchy of Lancaster Jan –Jul 1805 ; Joint Postmaster General  Feb 1806- May 1807 ; President, Board of Control, from 4 Apr 1812 (also Chancellor, Duchy of Lancaster, May – Jun 1812) ; m.1st, 4 Jan 1792 Margaretta, widow of Thomas Adderley MP, Innishannon, co. Cork (and mother of Edward Hale Adderley, qv), and dau. of Edmund Bourke, Corry, co.Mayo ; m. 2nd, 1 Jun 1799 Hon.Eleanor Agnes Eden, dau. of William Eden, 1st Baron Auckland PC, politician and diplomat ; d. from effects of a fall in St.James’s Park 4 Feb 1816. ODNB.

HOBART, THOMAS, son of Thomas Hobart, St.Martin’s in the Fields, Westminster, and Anne Gifford, St.Martin’s in the Fields ; b.     ; adm.     ; KS 1684 ; elected to Trinity Coll.Cambridge 1687, adm.pens. 5 Jun 1687, aged 18, scholar 2 May 1688 ; 10th in “ordo” 1690/1 ; BA 1690/1 ; MA 1694 ; adm.Leiden Univ. 30 Aug 1691 ; Minor Fellow, Trinity Coll. 2 Oct 1693, Major Fellow 26 Jun 1694 – c.1699 ; migr. to Christ’s Coll., Fellow from 1699 ; MD 1700 ; travelling tutor with Edward Hyde, Viscount Cornbury in Italy 1710-11, and with Thomas Coke (afterwards 1st Earl of Leicester) in Italy and other European countries 1712-8 ; by his will he left mourning rings to John Colbatch (qv), Sir Robert Cotton, Bart. (qv), Stephen Phillips (qv), and William Wade (qv), and “the MSS I bought at Lyons [Lyon]” to Sir Thomas Mostyn, Bart. (qv) ; d. at Clermont, France, before end Apr 1727 (will proved PCC 27 Apr 1727)

HOBART-HAMPDEN, AUGUSTUS EDWARD, 6TH EARL OF BUCKINGHAMSHIRE, brother of George Robert Hampden, 5th Earl of Buckinghamshire (qv) ; b. 1 Nov 1793 ; adm.      ; left 1812 ; Brasenose Coll.Oxford, matr. 13 May 1812 ; BA 1815 ; MA 1818 ; ordained deacon 23 Mar 1817, priest 14 Dec 1817 (both Lincoln); Rector of Benington, Lincs. 14 Dec 1817- Jul 1820 ; Rector of Welbourn, Lincs., 20 May 1818 – May 1820 ; Rector of Waltham on the Wolds, Leics., 5 Jul 1820-47 ; Rector and Prebendary of Wolverhampton, Staffs., 1844-7 ; succ.brother as 6th Earl of Buckinghamshire 1 Feb 1849 ; assumed additional surname and arms of Hampden 5 Aug 1878 ; m.1st, 12 Sep 1816 Mary, sister of Charles Williams (left 1811, qv) ; m.2nd, 15 Aug 1826 his cousin Mary Isabella, eldest dau. of Rev.Godfrey Egremont, Vicar of Crowle, Lincs. ; d. 29 Oct 1885.

HOBBES, ROBERT ; b.       ; adm.       ; QS        ; elected to Trinity Coll.Cambridge 1597, adm.scholar 1598, matr.1598 ; BA 1601/2 ; MA 1605 ; ordained deacon and priest 25 Jul 1605 (Peterborough) ; Rector of Wainfleet All Saints, Lincs., 1 Feb 1604/5-15 ; Vicar of Warnham, Sussex, 2 Aug 1615-26 ; Vicar of Madehurst, Sussex, from 3 May 1626 ; m.      ; d. Jul or Aug 1629.

HOBBYE, RICHARD ; b.       ; adm.     ; QS      ; elected to Trinity Coll.Cambridge 1576, adm.scholar 1577, matr.Easter 1577 ; BA 1580/1 ; MA 1584 (incorp.Oxford 14 Jul 1584).

HOBHOUSE, JOHN BYRON, eldest son of Henry William Hobhouse, Bath, banker, previously EICS Bengal, and Mary Anne, dau. of John Palmer, Calcutta, merchant ; nephew of John Cam Hobhouse, 1stBaron Broughton (qv) ; b. 24 Mar 1817 ; adm. 11 Jan 1830 (G) ; left Christmas 1832 ; Ensign, 66th Foot 27 Jun 1834 ; Lieut., 78th Foot 22 Nov 1836 ; 13th Foot 4 Aug 1838 ; killed in action at Jugdullock, Afghanistan, during retreat from Kabul, 12 Jan 1842.

HOBHOUSE, JOHN CAM, 1ST BARON BROUGHTON, eldest son of Sir Benjamin Hobhouse, Bart., MP, and his first wife Charlotte, dau. of Samuel Cam, Chantry House, near Bradford, Wilts. ; b. 27 Jun 1786 ; adm.27 Jan 1802 (Clapham) ; in school list May 1803 ; left 1803 ; Trinity Coll.Cambridge, adm.pens. 18 Oct 1803, matr. Easter 1806 ; Hulsean Prize 1808 ; BA 1808 ; MA 1811 ; founded the Cambridge Whig Club ; when at Cambridge became an intimate friend of Lord Byron, with whom he travelled in Greece and the Mediterranean in 1809-10 ; adm.Middle Temple 4 Feb 1806 ; a partner in firm Whitbread & Co., brewers ; contested Westminster as Radical candidate at 1819 by-election ; imprisoned in Newgate Prison for breach of privilege 14 Dec 1819 – 19 Jan 1820 ; MP (Radical, subsequently Whig) Westminster 1820 – 1 May 1833, Nottingham 23 Jul 1834-47, Harwich 1 Apr 1848 – Feb 1851 ; active member of Greek Committee in London 1823 ; succeeded father as 2nd baronet 15 Aug 1831 ; Secretary at War 1 Feb 1832 – Apr 1833 ; Privy Councillor 23 Feb 1832 ; Chief Secretary for Ireland 28 Mar – 17 May 1833 ; Chief Commissioner of Woods and Forests 19 Jul – 31 Dec 1834 ; President, Board of Control 29 Apr 1835 – Sep 1841, Jul 1846 – Feb 1852 ; created Baron Broughton 26 Feb 1851 ; GCB 23 Feb 1852 ; as Byron’s executor, advised the destruction of Byron’s Memoirs 1824, and as Byron’s best man drew up a reply to Lady Byron’s Remarks 1830 ; FRS 19 May 1814 ; member, Society of Dilettanti 1839 ; one of founders of Geographical Society 1830 ; is said to have invented the phrase “His Majesty’s Opposition” ; his Commonplace Book when at the School, containing the themes set, extracts from books, and occasional translations, is in the British Library, Additional MSS ; author, Recollections of a Long Life, 1865, and other works ; m. 26 Feb 1828 Lady Julia Hay, youngest dau. of George Hay, 7thMarquis of Tweeddale (S) ; d. 3 Jun 1869. ODNB.

HOBMAN, FRANCIS, son of Thomas Hobman, St.Andrew’s, Holborn, London ; bapt.St.Andrew’s, Holborn 14 Dec 1593 (IGI) ; at school under Ireland two years ; KS in 1609 (Chapter Muniments 41289) ; Gonville and Caius Coll.Cambridge, adm.pens. 27 Nov 1609, aged 16, scholar Mich.1609 – Mich.1617 ; BA 1613/4 ; MA 1617 ; BD 1628 ; Junior Fellow, Gonville and Caius Coll. Lady Day 1609 – Mich.1628 ; ordained deacon 1 Mar 1617/8 (Lincoln), priest 12 Mar 1619/20 (Peterborough) ; Curate, Barnwell, Cambs., 3 Jul 1619 (still 1625) ; Rector of Greenford Parva, Middlesex 4 Apr 1621-49 ; Rector of St,Michael Coslany, Norwich 1625 ; Rector of Foulden, Norfolk 1627 – May 1648, res. ; Rector of All Saints, Weeting, Norfolk, from 23 Jun 1637 and of St.Mary’s, Weeting, Norfolk, from 17 Jul 1651 ; buried St.Mary’s, Weeting, Norfolk 23 Nov 1669.

HOBSON, —  ; b.       ; in school list 1744.

HOBSON, EDWARD ; b.        ; adm. (aged 14) Apr 1716. [Presumably elder brother of, or close kin to, Ralph Hobson (qv), adm.same month].

HOBSON, RALPH, son of Ralph Hobson, Butler of Christ Church, Oxford, and Philadelphia, dau. of Richard Playdell, Oxford, surgeon ; b.       ; adm. (aged 10) Apr 1716 ; in under school list 1718 ; Christ Church, Oxford, matr. 12 Dec 1722.

HOCHENSON, see also HUTCHINSON.

HOCHENSON, ROBERT ; b.       ; adm.      ; GS 1540 (British Museum, Add MSS 40061).

HOCKETT, JOHN, son of John Hockett, Gaddesden, Herts. ; b.       ; adm.       ; at school by Jun 1654, aged 12 (WAM 43112) ; KS in 1656 ; elected to Trinity Coll.Cambridge 1659, adm.pens. 10 May 1659, scholar 1659, matr.1660 ; BA 1662/3 ; MA 1666 ; Fellow, Trin.Coll. 1664 – c.1670 ; ordained deacon 26 Jul 1663, priest  20 Dec 1663 (both Lichfield), then a schoolmaster in Lichfield ; Rector of Mottisfont, Hampshire from 20 0ct 1668 ; lic. to m. 7 Mar [year ?] Mary Page, Bighton, Hampshire ; d.1701 (will proved PCC 16 Apr 1701). [mother perhaps Jane Cotton (IGI)]

HODDER, —  ; b.       ; adm.      ; Min.Can.1642 ; KS in 1644 (Chapter Muniments 43114).

HODDESDON (or HODGESON, HODSDON or HUDSON), JOHN ; bapt.1594 ; adm.      ; KS       ; elected to Christ Church, Oxford 1610, Westminster Student to 1625, subscribed 27 May 1614 ; BA 1614 ; MA 1617 ; of St.Helen’s, Bishopsgate, on marriage ; m. 2 Jan 1628 (IGI) Isabel, dau. of Anthony Rymell, “Dedding”, Oxfordshire.

[HODDESDON, JOHN, son of John Hoddesdon (qv) ; b.         ; ODNB concludes that it may “reasonably be inferred” from the fact that in commendatory verses written by John Dryden (qv) for Hoddesdon’s Sion and Parnassus, Dryden describes Hoddesdon as his friend, that Hoddesdon was educated at Westminster School ; factor for EI Company in Persia 1658, subsequently in Surat ; author, Sion and Parnassus, 1650, Tho.Mori vita & exitus, or, the History of Sir Thomas More, 1652, and TheHoly Lives of God’s Prophets, 1654 ; d. at Surat, India 28 Jan 1658/9. ODNB.]

HODGE, JOHN BARWICK, third son of William Barwick Hodge, Clifton Gardens, Maida Hill, London, actuary, and Penelope Sarah, dau. of Henry Porter Smith FSA, East Sheen, Surrey, actuary ; b. 5 Sep 1863 ; adm. 26 Sep 1876 (G), exhibitioner 1877, Mure Scholar 1880 ; elected head to Christ Church, Oxford 1882, matr. 13 Oct 1882 ; 1st cl.Classics (Mods) 1884, 1st cl.Lit.Hum.1886, 1stcl.Modern History 1887 ; BA 1886 ; Assistant, Department of Printed Books, British Museum Oct 1891 – Jul 1896 ; Master, Pewterers’ Co. 1925-6 ; d. 20 Dec 1938.

HODGES, —  ; b.       ; at school c.1660 (Busby’s Account Book).

HODGES, — ; b.       ; at school under Freind ; saved his schoolfellow Richard Wood (in under  school lists 1716,1717) from drowning in 1717, when Wood “slipt off a long logg in the Thames” (note by Richard Wood in his Commonplace Book).

HODGES, GEORGE, son of George Hodges, Shrewsbury, Shropshire, and Elizabeth (Juson ?) (IGI) ; bapt.Shrewsbury 7 Oct 1718 (IGI) ; adm. (aged 13) Feb 1732/3 ; KS 1734 ; Capt. of the School 1738 ; elected head to Christ Church, Oxford 1739, matr. 22 Jun 1739, Westminster Student 24 Dec 1739 – void 4 Jun 1748 ; BA 1743 ; ordained deacon 18 Dec 1743, priest 19 Feb 1743/4 (both London) ; Rector of Wentnor, Shropshire, from 11 Feb 1747/8 ; Rector of Woolstaston, Shropshire, from 11 Jan 1770 ; m.      ; buried Condover, Shropshire 5 May 1780.

HODGES, H.        ; b.        ; in school lists 1795,1797 ; left Bartholomewtide 1797.

HODGES, HENRY, son of Henry Hodges, Ripon, Yorkshire ; b.        ; adm. (aged 16) Apr 1726 ; in school list 1727/8 ; Brasenose Coll.Oxford, adm.gent.commoner 14 Jun 1729, matr. 2 Sep 1729. [perhaps “Mr.Hodges, son of Henry Hodges, Esq. of Copgrove [Yorks.], a young gentleman of great abilities, of great hopes, and once my friend, who died in the expedition to Carthagena, under Admiral Vernon, in 1741” (Eugene Aram)]

HODGES, NATHANIEL, son of Very Rev.Thomas Hodges DD, Dean of Hereford, previously Vicar of Kensington, Middlesex, and his first wife ; b. 13 Sep 1629 ; adm.     ; KS      ; elected to Trinity Coll.Cambridge 1646, but went to Christ Church, Oxford, matr. 27 Feb 1650/1, Canoneer Student 1648-60, Faculty Student 1660-1 ; BA 13 Feb 1651/2 ; MA 1654 ; BM and DM 1659 ; took a house in Walbrook, London, and commenced medical practice there ; MRCP 30 Sep 1659, FRCP 2 Apr 1672, Censor 1682, Harveian Orator 1683 ; conspicuous for his services to the sick during the plague of 1665 ; author, Loimologia 1672 ; m.     ; d. 10 Jun 1688, while confined to Ludgate Prison for debt. ODNB.

HODGES, RICHARD, son of Thomas Hodges, Hertfordshire ; b.       ; adm.      ; Min.Can. (aged 13) 1648 ; KS 1650 ; elected to Trinity Coll.Cambridge 1651, adm.pens. 13 May 1651, scholar 1651 ; BA 1654/5 ; MB 1657.

HODGES, W.         ; b.        ; at school 1793 ; in school lists 1795,1797.

HODGES, WILLIAM ; b.       ; adm.        ; Min.Can.1641.

HODGESON, see also HODDESDON and HODGSON

HODGESON, RICHARD ; b.       ; adm.       ; QS 28 Jun 1554 (Acts of Chapter).

HODGKIN, CHARLES, son of Joseph Hodgkin, London ; b.      ; adm.      ; KS (aged 15) 1766 ; elected to Trinity Coll.Cambridge 1770, adm.pens.14 Jun 1770, scholar 26 Apr 1771, matr. Lent 1774 ; BA 1775 ; MA 1780 ; ordained deacon 3 May 1772 (Lincoln), priest 25 Sep 1774 (Salisbury) ; Vicar of Caterham, Surrey from 1 Feb 1776 ; Minister of St.Thomas’s, Southwark 1783-1826 ; m. 16 Mar 1776 Rebecca, dau. of Rev.James Pitcairn, Rector of Compton Bassett, Wilts., and Prebendary of Exeter ; d. by 20 Jul 1831 (will proved PCC 23 Jul 1831]. [Note that IGI has an entry for Charles Hodgkins (sic), son of Joseph Hodgkins, and Mary — ; bapt.St.Giles, Cripplegate 28 Mar 1749, who would have been just about old enough to have been ordained in 1772] [father, if so, was Joseph Hodgkin, Whitecross Street, St.Giles’s, Cripplegate, distiller, later of Garston Hall, Coulsdon, Surrey]

HODGKIN, JOSEPH, son of Joseph Hodgkin, Beddington, Surrey, and Mary — ; bapt. Beddington, Surrey 28 Sep 1737 ; adm. (aged 9) Feb 1746/7 ; KS (Capt.) 1752 ; elected to Christ Church, Oxford 1756, matr. 16 Jun 1756, Westminster Student 5 Jan 1757 – res 8 Jan 1763 ; BA 1760 ; ordained deacon 27 Feb 1763 (Winchester), priest 1 Jun 1763 (Oxford) ; Curate of Hambledon, Surrey 1763 ; Rector of Elmswell, Suffolk, from 5 Feb 1767 ; m. Jane, dau. of Rev.Edward Eliot, Rector of Dunsfold, Surrey ; d. 3 Oct 1809. [but apparently ordained deacon 1 Jun 1760 (Oxford)] [presumably an elder brother of Charles Hodgkin (qv)]

HODGKINSON (in school lists 1732-6), see BANKS, WILLIAM.

HODGKINSON, WILLIAM BRENT, see BRENT, WILLIAM BRENT.

HODGSON, see also HODGESON.

HODGSON, ARTHUR, son of Arthur Hodgson, Greville Road, Kilburn, London, stockbroker, and Susanna Elizabeth, dau. of Charles Frederick Esse, Carlton Hill, London ; b. 22 Sep 1866 ; adm. 26 Jan 1881 (G) ; left Aug 1882 ; member, London Stock Exchange, adm.1888, firm Hodgson Brothers ; d. 8 Mar 1945.

HODGSON, BERNARD, son of Mark Hodgson, Dukes Court, St.Martin’s in the Fields, Westminster, peruke maker, and Eleanor — (IGI) ; bapt.St.Martin’s in the Fields 5 Nov 1743 (IGI) ; in school list 1754 ; KS (Capt., aged 14) 1759 ; Capt. of the School 1763 ; elected head to Christ Church, Oxford 1764, matr. 20 Jun 1764, Westminster Student 24 Dec 1764 – void 31 Oct 1776 (expiry year of grace as Principal of Hertford Coll.), Tutor 1772-5, Junior Censor 1773-4 ; BA 1768 ; MA 1771 ; ordained deacon 24 Dec 1769 (Oxford), priest 15 Mar 1772 (London) ; Principal of Hertford Coll., Oxford from  30 Oct 1775 ; DCL 1776 ; Vicar of Tolpuddle, Dorset, from 2 Dec 1775 ; author of translations from the Hebrew of Solomon’s SongProverbs and Ecclesiastes, 1785-91 ; m. 1 May 1783 Harriet Sainsbury, Chippenham, Wilts. [perhaps dau. of Richard Sainsbury, Chippenham, Wiltshire, clothier] ; d. 28 May 1805. ODNB.

HODGSON, CHARLES, only son of Bernard Hodgson (qv) ; b. 19 Nov 1786 ; adm. Apr 1797 ; KS 1800 ; elected to Christ Church, Oxford 1804, matr. 16 May 1804, Westminster Student (still 1814) ; BA 1808 ; MA 1810 ; ordained deacon 25 Mar 1810 (York), priest 23 Dec 1810 (Oxford) ; Curate of Drayton, Oxfordshire ; Vicar of Great Torrington, Devon 24 Dec 1810-16 ; Perpetual Curate of Hawkhurst, Kent Jan – Oct 1817 ; Rector of St.Tudy, Cornwall, from 23 Jul 1817 ; JP Cornwall ; d. unm. 17 May 1846.

HODGSON, DOUGLAS RICE, eldest son of Thomas Douglas Hodgson (qv), and his first wife ; b. 11 Feb 1829 ; adm. 27 May 1842 (G) ; Clare Coll.Cambridge, adm.pens. 22 May 1847, matr. Mich.1847 ; BA 1851 ; ordained deacon 6 Jun 1852, priest 18 Dec 1853 (both Gloucester) ; Curate St.John the Evangelist, Clifton, Gloucs., 1852-3, East Woodhay, Hampshire 1854-60, Aston, Herts., from 1861 ; d. 2 Jul 1866.

HODGSON, HENRY WILLIAM, brother of John Fisher Hodgson (qv) ; b. 22 Jan 1821 ; adm. 1 Feb 1837 ; left Apr 1840 ; Balliol Coll.Oxford, matr. 3 Jun 1840 ; rowed v.Cambridge 1841 ; BA 1844 ; MA 1847 ; ordained deacon 1844, priest 1845 (both Canterbury) ; Curate, Deal, Kent 1844, subsequently Wrotham, Kent to 1849, All Saints, Maidstone, Kent 1850-1 ; Vicar of Ashwell, Herts., Apr 1851 – Nov 1857, Rector  same parish Nov 1857-92 ; m. 13 Feb 1849 Anne Elizabeth, fourth dau. of William Atkins Bowyer, Braywick Grove, Berkshire ; d. 23 Apr 1898.

HODGSON, HUGH, son of John Hodgson, Buckden, Hunts., Secretary to Bishop of Lincoln, and Sarah, widow of John Douglas, and dau. of John St.Barbe, Ridgeway, Hampshire ; b. 20 Apr 1795 ; adm. Christmas 1810 ; left 1812 ; Catharine Hall, Cambridge, adm.pens. 7 Jan 1813, matr. Mich.1813 ; BA 1818 ; MA 1821 ; Trinity Coll.Cambridge, adm. 1 Jul 1825 ; Usher at the School 26 Oct 1821-46 ; house usher up Grant’s ; ordained deacon 27 Sep 1818, priest 19 Sep 1819 (both Lincoln) ; Vicar of Idmiston, Wilts., from 2 Nov 1820 ; Perpetual Curate of Otham, Kent, from 1850 ; m. 7 Aug 1826 Harriet, sister of Charles William Knyvett (qv) ; d. 27 Feb 1862.

HODGSON, JOHN FISHER, eldest son of Christopher Hodgson, Dean’s Yard, Westminster, solicitor, Secretary and Treasurer Queen Anne’s Bounty Office, and his first wife Caroline Matilda, dau. of James Dalbiac, Addlestone, Surrey ; b. 3 Jul 1812 ; at Charterhouse Sch. 1820-1 ; adm. 16 Jan 1822 ; Christ Church, Oxford, matr. 10 Nov 1831 ; BA 1835 ; MA 1838 ; ordained deacon 4 Oct 1835, priest 30 Oct 1836 (both Canterbury) ; Curate, Croydon, Surrey 1835-40 ; Vicar of Horsham, Sussex 27 Mar 1840-83 ; Prebendary of Chichester from 2 Jan 1860 ; m.1st, 2 Nov 1848 Eliza Maria, dau. of Thomas Hayes, Derby House, Sunbury, Middlesex ; m.2nd, 31 Oct 1860 Hannah Ann, widow of Noah Robert Young, Hertford, brewer, and dau. of William Johnstone, Bishop’s Stortford, Herts. ; d. 21 Jan 1892.

HODGSON, JOHN GEORGE, son of Rev.John Hodgson, Vicar of St.Peter’s, Isle of Thanet, Kent, and his first wife Hon.Sarah Harris, second dau. of George Harris, 1st Baron Harris (qv) ; b. 10 May 1812 ; adm. 13 Jun 1825 ; KS 1826 ; Trinity Coll.Cambridge, adm.pens.11 Jul 1829, matr. Mich.1831 ; BA 1835 ; MA 1838 ; ordained deacon 4 Oct 1835, priest 30 Oct 1836 (both Canterbury) ; Curate St.Peter’s, Isle of Thanet 1835 ; Vicar of Croydon, Surrey 1846-79 ; Hon.Canon of Canterbury from 1869 ; Rector of Saltwood, Kent, from 1879 ; m. 1 Feb 1838 Matilda Georgiana, dau. of Capt.Matthew Isacke, EI Maritime Service ; d. 24 May 1888.

HODGSON, THOMAS DOUGLAS, brother of Hugh Hodgson (qv) ; b. 31 Aug 1796 ; adm.Christmas 1810 ; left 1814 ; Trinity Coll.Cambridge, adm.pens.11 Mar 1814, scholar 1818, matr. Mich.1814 ; 19thWrangler  1819 ; BA 1819 ; MA 1822 ; ordained deacon 26 Mar 1820 (Ely, lit.dim. from Salisbury), priest 8 Oct 1820 (Salisbury) ; Rector of East Woodhay, with Ashmansworth, Hampshire, from 2 Apr 1825 ; JP Hampshire ; m.1st, 18 Mar 1828 Sarah, elder dau. of Rev.Henry Rice, Rector of Great Holland, Essex ; m.2nd, 15 Jul 1845 Mary Sophia, eldest dau. of John Carbonell, Haling Park, Surrey ; d. 8 Feb 1884.

HODGSON, WILLIAM, third son of John Hodgson, Cottingley Hall, Yorkshire, and Mary, dau. of Robert Haworth, Haworth, Lancs. ; b.      ; adm.       ; KS 1685 ; elected to Christ Church, Oxford 1689, matr. 17 Jun 1689, aged 18, Westminster Student 30 Dec 1689 – void 1710 (expiry year of grace as R.Wood Norton from 29 Apr 1709) ; BA 1693 ; MA 1696 ; ordained deacon 7 Jun 1696, priest 19 Sep 1697 (both Oxford) ; Rector of Wood Norton with Swanton Newars, Norfolk, from 29 Jan 1708/9 ; d. by  24 Apr 1736.

HODGSON, WILLIAM ; b.        ; adm. 28 Jan 1771 ; left Christmas 1771.

HODSOLL, WILLIAM, second son of William Hodsoll, South Ash, Kent, and The Savoy, Westminster, goldsmith, and Henrietta, dau. of Edward Bussey, Little Bookham, Surrey ; b.      ; adm. (aged 13) Apr 1729 ; left 1729 ; apprenticed to Edward Bussey, London, 15 Apr 1730.

HODSOLL, WILLIAM, only son of Edward Hodsoll, St.Mary Cray, Kent, banker, and Matilda, dau. of Josephus Ashe, Langley Burrell, Wilts. ; nephew of William Hodsoll (qv) ; b. 26 Aug 1756 ; adm. 14 Jun 1769 ; left Whitsun 1773 ; a banker ; of St.Catherine Street, Strand, Middlesex ; d.unm. 11 Nov 1794.

HODSON (or HUDSON), DANIEL, second son of Right Rev.John Hodson DD, Bishop of Elphin ; b.      ; adm.       ; Min.Can.1658, 1660 (aged 12) (Chapter Muniments 43104) ; Trinity Coll.Dublin, adm.pens. 20 May 1661, aged 18 ; BA 1665 ; adm.Middle Temple 9 Jun 1670 ; a Col. in the Army ; m. Alice, dau. of Capt.Owen Lloyd, Craghan and Bawdeswell, co.Roscommon. [Mother perhaps Abigail, dau. of John Madden, Donore, co.Dublin, Treland]

HODSON, JOSEPH, son of Robert Hodson, London ; b.      ; adm. (aged 12) Jan 1724/5 ; Min.Can.1726.

HODYLSTON, ROBERT ; b.       ; adm.      ; GS 1540 (British Library, Add MSS 40061).

HOET, VANHAM, son of Jeremiah Hoet, St.Margaret, Westminster, and Abigail Hickman ; b. 24 Feb 1723 ; adm. (aged 13) Feb 1738/9 (surname incorrectly read as Holt by Russell Barker and Stenning, surname given in school lists as Howet).

HOGG, ROBERT ALEXANDER MILLIGAN, only son of Robert Hogg LLD, London, and Heathfield, Sussex, horticulturist and pomologist, and Caroline Amelia, dau. of Charles Milligan, Worth, Sussex, corn factor ; b. 20 Sep 1850 ; adm. 29 Jul 1864 ; Min.Can.1865 ; St Andrews Univ 1867 ; Edinburgh Univ. 1868 ; Emmanuel Coll.Cambridge, adm.pens. Oct 1868, matr.Mich. 1868 ; migr. to St.John’s Coll.Cambridge, adm.pens. 3 Feb 1870 ; BA 1872 ; adm.Inner Temple 22 May 1873, called to bar 26 Jan 1877 ; practised successively at Kimberley, South Africa (Law List, 1880) and at San Francisco, USA (Law List 1885) ; subsequently resident in New Zealand ; returned to England ; took over management of the Journal of Horticulture on his father’s death in 1897 ; m. Emily Jane Taylor (marriage registered London fourth quarter 1905) ; d. 14 Aug 1913.

HOLBECH (E), MATTHEW, son of Matthew Holbech(e), Meriden Hall, Warwicks., barrister, Bencher, Inner Temple ; b.      ; adm.      ; KS (aged 16) 1661 ; elected to Trinity Coll.Cambridge 1663, adm.pens. 4 Jul 1663, scholar 1664, matr.1663 ; adm.Inner Temple 10 Jul 1660, called to bar 27 Nov 1670 ; of Meriden Hall, Warwicks. ; m. 2 Dec 1673 (IGI) Elizabeth, dau. of John Anthony, London, merchant. [died 1713 ?] [mother Anne ?]

HOLBROOK, EDMUND ROBERT ST.GEORGE, only son of Lieut.Edmund Robert St.George Holbrook, Royal Artillery, Gibraltar, Spain, and Kate Caroline Jane, dau. of Col.Charles Holden, 52ndFoot ; b. 19 Jul 1867 ; adm. 28 Jan 1879 (H) ; QS 22 Mar 1883 ; left Jul 1884 ; Lieut., Gloucestershire Regt. 25 Aug 1886 ; Capt., 16 Jun 1894 ; Adjutant 19 Oct 1894 – 4 May 1897 ; Capt., West Yorkshire Regt. 25 Aug 1897 ; DAAG Western Command, Bombay Presidency 21 Apr 1902 ; m. Gertrude Watkins Thomas (marriage registered St.Giles third quarter 1897) ; d. at Poona, Bombay 17 Sep 1905.

HOLBROOK, GEORGE, third son of Lieut.Bernard Holbrook, 97th Foot, Lambeth, Surrey, and Mary, only dau. of Thomas Jemmett, Lambeth ; b. 22 Dec 1779 ; in school lists 1795, 1797 ; Trinity Coll.Cambridge, adm.pens. 19 Oct 1797, scholar 12 Apr 1799, matr. Mich.1797 ; BA 1802 ; MA 1805 ; ordained deacon 13 Jun 1802 (Winchester), priest 23 Feb 1804 (Chester) ; Curate, Chipstead, Surrey 1802, afterwards of Stoke, Lincs. ; d. 10 Apr 1813.

HOLBROOKJOHN, son of Rev.Anthony Holbrook, Rector of Little Waltham, Essex, and his first wife Dorothy, dau. of Rev.John Ouseley, Rector of Little Waltham, Essex ; b.       ; adm. (aged 12) Jul 1723 ; KS 1724 ; elected to Trinity Coll.Cambridge 1728, adm.pens. 26 Jun 1728, scholar 2 May 1729 ; BA 1731/2 ; MA 1735 ; Minor Fellow, Trinity Coll. 2 Oct 1734, Major Fellow 3 Jul 1735 ; ordained deacon 5 Mar 1732/3 (Lincoln). [note Rev.John Holbrook, Rector of Didbrook with Pinnock & Hay, Gloucs., from 20 Feb 1745/6 (MA on appointment) to death 1764, will proved PCC 15 Nov 1764]

HOLCOMBE, JOHN, second son of William Holcombe, Mounton, Pembrokeshire, and — Meyrick, Bush, Pembrokeshire ; b.      ; adm. (aged 13) Apr 1719 ; Min.Can.1720 ; at school two years ; St.John’s Coll.Cambridge, adm.pens. 24 Oct 1720 ; BA 1724/5 ; MA 1728 ; ordained deacon 25 Sep 1726, priest 24 Dec 1727 (both Lincoln) ; Curate, Ampthill, Beds. 1726, Woodchurch, Kent 21 May 1729 ; Rector of Gumfreston, Pembrokeshire, from 16 Feb 1729/30 ; Rector of St.Mary’s, Tenby, Pembrokeshire, from 2 Mar 1729/30 ; Domestic Chaplain to Right Rev.John Harris, Bishop of Llandaff ; Prebendary of St.David’s (Third Cursal Prebend) 5 Sep 1737 – res Feb 1770 ; Prebendary of Brecon from 20 Mar 1741/2 ; d. 23 Jul 1770.

HOLCOMBE, WILLIAM, only son of Rear-Adm.Essex Holcombe, Royal Navy, and —, dau. of Thomas Corbet, Nash, Pembrokeshire ; nephew of John Holcombe (qv) ; b. 19 May 1736 ; adm.May 1751 ; in school list 1752 ; Christ’s Coll.Cambridge, adm.pens.16 Apr 1754, scholar 26 Nov 1754, matr. Mich.1754 ; 4th Wrangler 1758 ; BA 1758 ; MA 1761 ; Fellow, Christ’s Coll. 10 Mar 1761 – 20 Nov 1762 and 1768 ;  ordained deacon 23 Sep 1759, priest 1 Jun 1760 (both Canterbury) ; Domestic Chaplain to John Warren, Bishop of St.David’s, 28 Jan 1780 ; ; Rector of Cosheston, Pembrokeshire 14 Jun 1760 – Apr 1789 ; Vicar of St.Trinnells, Pembrokeshire, from 16 May 1764 ; Rector of Lawrenny, Pembrokeshire 8 Jan 1768 – Jun 1777 ; Prebendary of St.David’s (Third Cursal Prebend) from 13 Feb 1770 ; Vicar of Llangadog, Carmarthenshire, from Jun 1777 ; Prebendary of Brecon from 9 Aug 1780 ; Vicar of Mathry with Granston and St.Nicholas, Pembrokeshire, from 13 Dec 1780 ; Rector of Manordivy, Pembrokeshire, from 5 Mar 1788 ; Vicar of Llanfihangel Penbryn, Cardiganshire, from 19 Mar 1789 ; FSA 26 May 1791 ; m.1st, Nov 1762  — , dau. of [William ?] Ford, Stonehall, Pembrokeshire ; m.2nd, 19 Sep 1769 Mary, second dau. of Abel Aldridge, New Lodge, St.Leonard’s Forest, Sussex ; d. at sea 1 Aug 1796.

HOLDEN, WILLIAM ; b.       ; adm.     ; KS 1608/9 ; elected to Christ Church, Oxford 1612, subscribed 16 Dec 1614, Westminster Student to 1624 ; BA 1616 (incorp. Cambridge 1616) ; MA 1619 ; ordained deacon 24 Dec 1620 (as “Willimus Holding”), priest 19 Sep 1629 (both Oxford).

HOLDER, —  ; b.       ; in school list 1737.

HOLDER, WILLIAM, son of John Holder, Barbados, and Mary Ainsworth (IGI) ; bapt.St.Philip, Barbados 12 Jun 1721 (IGI) ; adm. (aged 11) Apr 1733 ; left 1738 ; of Barbados ; m. 1743 Elizabeth, dau. of Isaac Thorpe, Barbados, plantation owner  ; d. at Barbados 14 Aug 1752.

HOLDERNESS, EARL OF, see D’ARCY, ROBERT, 4TH EARL OF HOLDERNESS.

HOLDSWORTH, JOSHUA ; b.       ; adm.      ; BB Lady Day 1734 – Lady Day 1740 (Chapter Muniments 33766). [perhaps Joshua Holdsworth, Queen Street, Westminster, apothecary, living at 29 May 1773 ; m. 14 Dec 1751 —, dau. of — Williams, King Street, Westminster, goldsmith]

HOLDSWORTH, WILLIAM ; b.       ; adm. (aged 9) Jan 1732/3 ; left 1740 (“does not pay”).

HOLE, BENJAMIN, son of Joseph Hole, Barbados, merchant ; b.      ; adm. (aged 14) Jan 1717/8 ; in under school 1719 ; d. 22 May 1719.

HOLFORD, PETER, eldest son of Robert Holford, Master in Chancery, Bencher Lincoln’s Inn, and Sarah, sister of Peter Vandeput (qv) ; nephew of Samuel Holford (qv) ; b.      ; adm. (aged 12) Jan 1731/2 ; left 1736 ; St.John’s Coll.Cambridge, adm.pens. 3 May 1736 ; adm.Lincoln’s Inn 25 Jul 1735, called to bar 20 Nov 1740, Bencher 28 Jun 1758, Treasurer 1777 ; a Commissioner of Bankrupts Feb 1742/3 (still occurs in annual list 1748) ; Master in Chancery from Aug 1750 ; of Westonbirt, Gloucs. ; FRS 12 Feb 1746/7 ; FSA 9 Jul 1778 ; m. May 1752 Anne, only dau. of William Nutt, Buxted, Sussex ; d. 14 Jul 1804.

HOLFORD, ROBERT, eldest son of Peter Holford (qv) ; bapt.St.Andrew’s, Holborn 10 Aug 1758 (IGI) ; adm. 20 Sep 1770 ; St.John’s Coll.Cambridge, adm.fellow commoner 4 Nov 1775, aged 17, matr. Mich.1775 ; BA 1780 ; adm.Lincoln’s Inn 16 Jul 1774, called to bar 26 Nov 1779 ; Grand Tour (including Switzerland) ; of Westonbirt, Gloucs. ; FRS 28 Mar 1805 ; an enthusiastic yachtsman ; d.unm. 14 Mar 1838.

HOLFORD, SAMUEL, third son of Sir Richard Holford, Kt, Master in Chancery, Bencher Lincoln’s Inn, and his third wife Susanna, dau. of Samuel Trotman, Inner Temple, and Bucknell, Oxfordshire, barrister ; b.     ; adm.     ; QS (aged 15) 1708 ; elected to Trinity Coll.Cambridge 1712, but went to Magdalen Hall, Oxford, matr. 8 Jul 1712 ; adm.Lincoln’s Inn 9 Jun 1712, called to bar 28 Apr 1719 ; living 1723.

HOLFORD, THOMAS ; b.       ; adm. 2 Nov 1787 ; in school list 1788. [perhaps Thomas Holford, only son of Thomas Holford, The Friars, Winchelsea, Sussex, surgeon, and Jane, widow of Thomas Frewen, Rye, Sussex, and dau. of — Beaver ; bapt.Rye, Sussex 5 Mar 1775 ; adm. Inner Temple 27 Apr 1792 ; Lieut.21st Foot ; d. abroad 3 Sep 1795, aged 20]

HOLGATE, GEORGE, brother of Thomas Holgate (qv) ; bapt.St.Botolph without Aldgate, London 11 Jan 1740 [or 1740/1 ?] (IGI) ; adm. (aged 11) Jun 1752 ; in school list 1754 ; BB Mich.1752 – Mich.1758 ; St.John’s Coll.Cambridge, adm.pens. 23 Oct 1758, matr. Easter 1759 ; LLB 1765 ; ordained deacon 3 Mar 1765, priest 8 Jun 1766 (both Norwich) ; Curate, Carleton St.Peter with Ashby, and Claxton, Norfolk 1765 ; Rector of Stowting, Kent, from 28 May 1771 ; travelling tutor in Italy 1779-80 ; Perpetual Curate of Theydon Bois, Essex, from 24 Nov 1791 ; m. 21 Jun 1781 Ann, only surviving child of Rev.William Salisbury, Rector of Moreton, Essex, and Prebendary of Lincoln ; d. 17 Apr 1803.

HOLGATE, THOMAS, son of George Holgate, London, banker, and Sarah — (IGI) ; bapt.St.Botolph without Aldgate, London 16 Jul 1738 (IGI) ; adm. (aged 10) May 1749 ; KS 1752 ; still at school 1754. [presumably Thomas Holgate, son of George Holgate, London, citizen and salter, and Sarah — ; d. 28 Dec 1776, aged 35 (sic)]

HOLGHTON, THOMAS ; b.      ; adm. (aged 8) May 1744, chorister (Houghton in school lists) ; left 1746.

HOLLAND, — ; b.       ; adm.       ; a pensioner 1564-6 (tutor, Prebendary Norley).

HOLLAND, CHRISTOPHER, son of James Holland, St.Paul’s Churchyard, London, stationer and bookseller, and Mary, dau. of Christopher Sparke, London ; b.     ; adm. (aged 11) Jun 1720 ; Min.Can.1721 ; KS 1722 ; elected to Christ Church, Oxford 1726, matr. 13 Jun 1726, Westminster Student 5 Apr 1729 – void 28 Jun 1739, expiry year of grace as V.Chippenham from 10 May 1738 ; BA 1730 ; MA 1733 ; ordained deacon 13 Jun 1731, priest 5 Mar 1731/2 (both Oxford) ; Vicar of Chippenham, Wiltshire, from 28 Apr 1738 ; m. 9 May 1738 Elizabeth Trevanion ; d. 8 May 1760.

HOLLAND, ERSKINE WILLIAM, brother of Thomas Agar Holland (qv) ; b. 18 Apr 1804 ; adm. 9 Jun 1817 (G) ; Min.Can.1818 ; left Christmas 1818 ; Cadet, EICS Madras 1821 ; Ensign, 9th Madras Native Infantry 27 Apr 1822 ; Lieut., 20 Nov 1823 ; served in Burmese War 1824-6 ; res. in England 14 Mar 1827 ; Worcester Coll.Oxford, matr. 23 Mar 1827 ; BA 1830 ; MA 1834 ; ordained deacon 1831 (Rochester ?), priest 24 Jul 1831 (Chichester) ; Curate, Arlington, Sussex 1831-2 ; Rector of Warehorne, Kent 25 May 1832-8 ; Vicar of Arlington, Sussex 12 Feb 1834-8 ; Rector of Dunsfold, Surrey, from 12 Jun 1838 ; m. 29 Sep 1836 Caroline Bennett, dau. of W.Gray (but described on marriage as dau. of “Mrs Oliphant, Grove House, Henley on Thames”, who was Charlotte Button, widow of Campbell Oliphant, Henley, Oxfordshire) ; d. 20 May 1888.

HOLLAND (alias ROBERTS), HUGH, son of Robert Holland, Denbigh, Denbighshire, and — Pain, Denbigh ; b.        ; adm.      ; QS       ; his contribution to the congratulatory verses from Westminster scholars to Queen Elizabeth of c.1587, preserved in the Chapter Library, is signed “Hugo Roberts” ; elected to Trinity Coll.Cambridge 1589, adm.scholar 1590 ; BA 1593/4 ; MA 1597 ; became a Roman Catholic ; travelled abroad (in Germany and Holland in 1603, subsequently in Italy and Palestine) ; when at Constantinople in 1606-7 he was rebuked by Sir Thomas Glover, the English Ambassador there, for “the former freedom of his tongue” about Queen Elizabeth ; resided in Oxford for some years, lodging in Balliol Coll. ; patronised by Duke of Buckingham ; a member, Mermaid Club ; a sonnet of his was prefixed to the first folio edition of Shakespeare ; author, A Cypres Garland for the Sacred Forehead of our late Soveraigne King James, 1625, and other verses ; m. Ursula, widow of Robert Woodard, Burnham, Bucks. ; buried near door of St.Bennet’s Chapel, Westminster Abbey 23 Jul 1633. ODNB.

HOLLAND, JAMES, son of James Holland, Canterbury Row, Newington, Surrey, and Mary — ;  b. 11 Sep 1805 ; adm. 5 Jun 1817 ; Cadet, EICS Bombay 1822 ; Ensign, 21st Bombay Native Infantry 4 Jan 1823 ; Lieut., 8 Sep 1826 ; 22nd Native Infantry 21 Jan 1829 ; Capt., 19 Aug 1843 ; 28th Native Infantry 21 Jan 1846 ; Maj., 24 Mar 1856 ; Brevet Lieut.-Col., 4 Jul 1856 ; ret. 14 Feb 1857 ; Quartermaster General, Bombay Army 1851-7 ; according to The Electricians Directory, with Handbook, 1888, 215, Holland had then been Chairman, Reuters Telegram Co., for 22 years, West Indian Peninsular Railway for 15 years, Indian Midland Railway Co. for 8 years, and Indo-European Co. for 2 years ; of Southside, The Park, Upper Norwood, Surrey ; m.11 Jul 1833 Jane Glegg, dau. of James Burnes, Montrose, Forfarshire, and sister of Lieut.-Col.Sir Alexander Burnes, Kt CB FRS, EICS Bombay ; d. 16 Apr 1889.

HOLLAND, JOHN ; b.      ; adm.      ; KS 1540-4 (Chapter Muniments).

HOLLAND, THOMAS ; b.       ; adm. (aged 13) Jan 1719/20.

HOLLAND, THOMAS AGAR, elder son of Rev.Samuel Holland MD, Precentor of Chichester and Rector of Poynings, Sussex, and Hon.Frances Erskine, eldest dau. of Thomas Erskine, 1st Baron Erskine PC, Lord Chancellor ; b. 16 Jan 1803 ; adm. 13 Jun 1816 ; Min.Can.1817 ; left Christmas 1818 ; Worcester Coll.Oxford, matr. 15 Jun 1821 ; BA 1825 ; MA 1828 ; ordained deacon 19 Feb 1826 (Lincoln), priest 25 Jan 1827 (Chichester) ; Vicar of Oving, Sussex 26 Jan 1827-38 ; Rector of Greatham, Hampshire 17 Oct 1838-46 ; Rector of Poynings, Hampshire, from 8 May 1846 ; author, Dryburgh Abbey and other poems, 1826 ; m. 31 Aug 1831 Magdalena, dau. of Maj.Philip Stewart, 3rd Foot ; d. 18 Oct 1888. ODNB.

HOLLE (or HOLLES), —   ; b.       ; at school under Nowell (Brasenose Coll.Oxford, MSS 31, f.45b).

HOLLE (or HOLLES), —  ; b.       ; at school under Nowell (Brasenose Coll.Oxford, MSS 31, f.45b).

HOLLEY, GEORGE HUNT, third son of James Hunt Holley, Oaklands, Okehampton, Devon, and Horatia, third dau. of Vice-Adm.William Windham (previously Lukin), Felbrigg, Norfolk ; b. 5 Jun 1841 ; adm. Jun 1854 ; QS Jun 1856 ; left 1857 ; Cadet, EICS Bengal 1858 ; Ensign, 12 Jun 1858 ; 30th Bengal Light Infantry  24 Aug 1858 ; 1st Bengal European Fusiliers 18 Mar 1859 ; Lieut., 101stFoot 10 Oct 1860 ; Capt., 15 Sep 1869 ; ret. as Hon.Maj., 17 Apr 1880 ; Hon.Lieut.-Col., 1 Jul 1881 ; served in Oudh campaign 1858 ; m. 7 May 1874 Annie Mary, dau. of Bryan Purcell, Kilrush, Co.Clare, Ireland, solicitor ; d. 29 Apr 1882.

HOLLINGBERY, —  ; b.      ; in school list 1797 (G).

HOLLINGBERY, CHARLES, son of John Hollingbery, Winchelsea and Northiam, Sussex, Capt. Sussex Militia, and Charlotte, sister of Philip Charlton (qv) ; b. 29 May 1813 ; adm. 25 Sep 1826 (G) ; of Broadwater, Sussex ; “fund holder”, living London 1861 ; m. 9 Oct 1844 Anne, only dau. of — Tuck, The Strand, Westminster ; d. 24 Oct 1867.

HOLLINGS, GEORGE ; b.       ; adm. 19 Jul 1780. [perhaps George Hollings, Mount Street, Berkeley Square, who m. 20 Apr 1803 Maria, dau. of Richard Barker, Surgeon, 2nd Life Guards] [maybe house surgeon, St.George’s Hospital, in 1789 ; assistant to — Gunning, Mount Street, Westminster, surgeon, in Mar 1793 ; Surgeon to Forces on Continent Jan – Oct 1794 ; later in practice in Green Street, Grosvenor Square, Westminster ; m.       ; d. 11 Dec 1837, aged 68 (sic) (Morning Post  13 Dec 1837)] [maybe son of William Hollings, and Mary — ; bapt.St.James, Piccadilly 27 Jun 1765] [William Hollings was of Mount Street, apothecary, died 1794]

HOLLINGWORTH, FREDERICK, son of Capt.William Hollingworth, 3rd Troop, Horse Guards ; b.       ; adm. (aged 9) Jan 1744/5 ; left 1751 ; Ensign, 13th Foot  21 Mar 1752 ; Lieut., 31 Dec 1755 ; Capt., 104th Company of Marines 8 Mar 1757 ; Lieut. and Capt., 3rdFoot Guards 2 Sep 1757 ; Capt.-Lieut. and Lieut.-Col., 3 Jul 1767 ; Capt. and Lieut.-Col., 9 May 1768 ; ret. 4 Feb 1776 ; d. 30 Apr 1776.

HOLLINGWORTH, JOHN, brother of Frederick Hollingworth (qv) ; b.      ; adm. (aged 8) Jan 1746/7 ; left 1750 ; living Feb 1765. [perhaps John Arnold Hollingworth, Ensign, 10th Foot 27 Nov 1752 ; Lieut., 27 Apr 1756 ; stationed in Ireland 1760 ; not in Army List 1761 ?] [note John Hollingworth, Page to Duke of Dorset, Lord Lieut.Ireland, Feb 1751] [William Hollingworth (elder brother ?), who died Jan 1774, had been Secretary to Duke of Dorset when Lord Lieut. Ireland]

HOLLIS, HENRY PARK, son of Henry Hollis, Camden Road, London, and Louisa Sarah, dau. of Thomas Park ; b. 9 Jan 1858 ; adm. 23 Jan 1873 (H); left (with Triplett) Whitsun 1876 ; Jesus Coll.Cambridge, adm.pens. 1 Oct 1876, scholar 1876, matr. Mich.1876 ; BA 1880 ; Assistant, Royal Observatory, Greenwich Nov 1881 – Jan 1920, Superintendent Astrographic Department 1896-1920 ; Fellow, Royal Astronomical Society 1884, member of its Council 1909-12 ; editor, The Observatory Magazine 1893-1912 ; author, Chats on Astronomy ; m. 14 Nov 1882 Clara Susanna, dau. of Edward Clark, Camberwell, Surrey, architect ; d. 7 Aug 1939.

HOLLOCOMBE, WILLIAM ; b.       ; adm. 21 Jan 1782, chorister. [probably William Hollocombe ; “from his earliest youth he had been connected with Westminster Abbey” ; Deputy Verger, Westminster Abbey (in 1801) ; Sacrist, Westminster Abbey (by 1841, many years in post) ; d. 31 Dec 1845, aged 74]

HOLLOWAY, BENJAMIN, son of Joseph Holloway, Stony Stratford, Bucks., maltster ; b.       ; at school under Knipe (J.E.B.Mayor, ed., Admissions to St.John’s Coll.Camb., ii, 187) ; BB ; St.John’s Coll.Cambridge, adm.pens. 4 Feb 1707/8, aged 17, Wood Scholar 8 Nov 1708, matr.1708 ; LLB 1713 ; ordained deacon 5 Jul 1713, priest 19 Jul 1713 (both Lincoln) ; Rector of Middleton Stoney, Oxfordshire, from 4 Dec 1724 ; Rector of Waddesdon, Bucks. (second portion), 17 Mar 1726/7 -36 ; Rector of Bladon, Oxfordshire 26 Mar 1736 – Dec 1739 ; Domestic Chaplain to Earl of Sunderland ; Domestic Chaplain to Charles, Duke of Marlborough 25 May 1750 ; FRS 30 Nov 1723 ; translated Woodward’s Naturalis Historiae Telluris, 1726 ; author, Originals Physical and Theological, Sacred and Profane, 1751, and other works ; m. 1712 Frances Plaistowe ; d. 10 Apr 1759. ODNB.

HOLLOWELL, — ; b.      ; adm.      ; a pensioner 1566-8 (tutor, Prebendary Alvey) (Chapter Muniments 54010-8).

HOLLYMAN, —  ; b.       ; in school lists 1656.

HOLME, HENRY JAMES, eldest son of Rev.Henry Torre, Rector of Ryse, Yorks., and his first wife Elizabeth, dau. of Rev.John Cox, Vice-Principal, St.Mary Hall, Oxford,  and Rector of West Buckland, Dorset ; b. 11 Sep 1793 ; adm.     ; KS 1808 ; elected to Trinity Coll.Cambridge 1812, adm.pens. 9 May 1812, scholar 1813, matr.1813 ; BA 1816 ; ordained deacon 3 Aug 1817, priest 21 Jun 1818 (both York) ; assumed name and arms of Holme in lieu of Torre 31 Jan 1834,  on succeeding to the estates of his uncle Rev.Nicholas Holme (formerly Torre) ; of Paull Holme, Hedon, Yorks. ; m. 20 Nov 1817 Margaret, only dau. of George Mangles (qv) ; d. 28 Dec 1850.

HOLMES, CHARLES EDWARD MOLLOY, eldest son of Rev.Edward Molloy Holmes, Rector of Marsh Gibbon, Bucks., and Emily Georgina, dau. of Rev.Thomas Vincent Fosbery, Vicar of St.Giles, Reading, Berks. ; b. 7 Jul 1858 ; adm. 30 May 1872 (G) ; left Christmas 1872 ; at Cheltenham Coll. Jan 1873 – Easter 1876 ; architect (1881 Census) ; subsequently a rancher in North America ; d. Apr 1893.

HOLMES, CHARLES WILLIAM SCOTT DALKEITH, only son of Capt.John Holmes, New Park, Rathgoggan, co.Cork, and Margaret Dickson ; bapt.St.Martin’s in the Fields 11 Nov 1797 (IGI) ; adm. 20 Apr 1808 ; left 1811 ; Cornet, 3rd Dragoons 21 Apr 1814 ; Lieut., 7 Sep 1815 ; half-pay 13 Apr 1817 ; adm. Grays Inn 26 Nov 1821 ; went to live in France in 1820s ; father of the French musical composer Augusta Holmes ; m. at British Embassy, Paris 22 Mar 1832 (IGI) Augusta Tryphena Ann Constance (Mrs Dalkeith Holmes, writer), youngest dau. of Alexander Shearer, Swanmore House, Hampshire ; d. at Versailles, France 19 Dec 1869.

HOLMES, WALTER ; b.      ; adm.       ; KS in 1609 ; elected to Trinity Coll.Cambridge 1612, adm.scholar 1613 ; BA 1616/7 ; MA 1622 ; ordained priest  23 Dec 1621 (London), aged 25 ; schoolmaster, St.Olave’s, Silver Street, London ; Vicar of Frindsbury, Kent 5 Jun 1626 – sequestered by 27 May 1645 (“cession” reported Mar 1661) ; Vicar of Southchurch, Essex 20 Jan 1624/5 – sequestered 1644 ; in 1646 he was said to be “distempered by lunacy for twenty years and of late wholly disabled to serve a cure” ; m. 16 Feb 1628 [1627/8 or 1628/9 ?]  Mildmay, dau. of Sir George Fulwood Kt, Mildmay Hall, Derbs., and Grays Inn, London, barrister. [Perhaps bapt. St.Andrew’s, Holborn 28 Oct 1595, son of John Holmes].

HOLMES, WILLIAM ; b.       ; adm.      ; Min.Can.1576. [maybe William Holmes, Yorkshire, Queens Coll.Cambridge, matr.pens. Mich.1580 ; if so, probably second son of John Holmes, Hampole, Yorks., adm. Lincoln’s Inn 26 Oct 1584, from Furnival’s Inn]

HOLT, — ; b.       ; adm.1656 (School Lists 1656, last three quarters).

HOLT, EDWARD, son of Rev.William Holt, The Barbican, London ; bapt. St.Giles, Criiplegate, London 28 Apr 1611 (IGI) ; adm.      ; KS       ; elected to Christ Church, Oxford 1632, matr. 2 Nov 1632, aged 21, Westminster Student to 1636 ; BA 1636 ; MA (from Pembroke Coll.) 19 Feb 1638/9 ; ordained deacon 24 May 1635, priest 20 Dec 1635 (both Oxford) ; Rector of Alfold, Surrey, from 28 May 1635 ; m.       ; d. 1679 (will proved PCC 12 Jul 1679, he of Alfold, Surrey ; successor apparently not appointed until 15 Apr 1681).

HOLT, FRANCIS LUDLOW, brother of Thomas Lyttleton Holt (qv) ; b.       ; adm.      ; KS (aged 14) 1794 ; elected to Trinity Coll.Cambridge 1798, but went to Christ Church, Oxford, matr. 19 May 1798 ; Trinity Hall, Cambridge, adm.fellow commoner 31 Oct 1807, matr. Mich.1807 ; adm.Middle Temple 11 Dec 1801, called to bar 27 Jan 1809 ; Northern Circuit ; an Exchequer Bill Loan Commissioner ; South Auditor, Duchy of Lancaster 1819-26 ; Vice-Chancellor, County Palatine of Lancaster, from 1826 ; migrated to Inner Temple 11 Feb 1829, Bencher 1831, Treasurer 1840 ; KC 1831 ; for many years editor, Bell’s Weekly Messenger ; author, The Law of Libel, 1812, the comedy The Land we live in, 1804, and of other legal and dramatic works ; m. 31 Oct 1809 Jane Bell, Southampton Street, Strand, London, niece of John Bell, publisher and proprietor, The Weekly Messenger ; d. 29 Sep 1844. ODNB.

HOLT, H.     ; b.       ; in school lists 1795,1797. [maybe Henry Frederic Holt, father of next : he d. 26 Mar 1850, aged 66 ; possibly a brother of Thomas Glover Holt (qv) ]

HOLT, HENRY FREDERIC, son of Henry Frederic Holt, Great College Street, Westminster, obstetric surgeon, and Sarah Ann, dau. of Thomas Wight, Harpenden, Herts. ; elder brother of Barnard Wight Holt FRCS, Savile Row, Berkeley Square, London, Surgeon to Westminster Hospital and medical attendant to Westminster School ; b. 18 Jan 1813 ; adm. 15 Jan 1820 ; adm.solicitor Hilary 1835 ; practised in City of London ; briefly in the public eye for his erroneous theory that Albrecht Durer was responsible for the designs of the late mediaeval stained glass windows in Fairford church, Gloucestershire ; m. at Boulogne, France 27 Oct 1836 Isabella Elizabeth, second dau. of William Hopkins, Boulogne ; d. 15 Apr 1871.

HOLT, HERBERT SCHACHT, youngest son of William Holt, Hampstead, Middlesex, tailor,  and Frances Anne, dau. of Charles Franz Schacht (IGI) ; b. 18 Jun 1862 ; adm. 27 Jan 1876 (R) ; left May 1881 ; Clare Coll.Cambridge, adm. 7 Oct 1881, matr. Mich.1881 ; BA 1885 ; MA 1889 ; ordained deacon 1896, priest 1897 (both Manchester) ; Curate, Newchurch in Rossendale, Lancs. 1896-8 ; Vicar of Molash, Kent Dec 1898-1903 ; Curate, Edinburgh Cathedral, and Priest-in-Charge, Dalry mission 1903-6 ; Curate, Holy Trinity with St.Mary’s, Guildford, Surrey 1907-8 ; Vicar of St.Peter’s, Bournemouth, Hampshire 1908-14 ; Vicar of St.Peter’s, Parkstone, Dorset 1915-20 ; m. Bertha Wilson (marriage registered Kensington fourth quarter 1896) ; d. 19 Nov 1921.

HOLT, JOHN ; b.      ; at school in 1662 ; KS 2 May 1665 ; elected to Trinity Coll.Cambridge 1668, adm.pens. 12 Jun 1668, scholar 1669.

HOLT, JOHN ; b.       ; adm. (aged 11) Jun 1749 ; left 1750.

HOLT, ROBERT, only son of Richard Holt, Camberwell, Surrey, Deputy Secretary, East India Co. ; b.       ; adm. 27 Jun 1776 ; Writer, EICS Bengal 23 Dec 1778 ; arrived in India 12 Nov 1779 ; Assistant, Lucknow 1782 ; Senior Merchant, and Paymaster to Artillery and Garrisons ; dismissed the service for embezzlement 4 Jan 1795 ; one of donors of Warren Hastings Cup ; m. 1st, in India, 13 Aug 1789 Margaret Donaldson (her sister Mary was wife of Capt.Hon.David Anstruther, EICS Bengal) [wife’s family from Allachie, Aberdeenshire] ; m.2nd, in India, May 1791 Henrietta Nesham ; living in England at 12 Dec 1798 (Hickey thought that he “lost his life in the Queen Charlotte”, i.e. in wreck of HMS Queen Charlotte, off Leghorn, Italy, on 17 March 1800, in which case he was  the Robert Holt on board that ship as “schoolmaster”). [second wife perhaps dau. of Capt.Christopher Nesham, 63rd Foot, Houghton le Spring, co.Durham]

HOLT, THOMAS GLOVER ; b.       ; in school lists 1795,1797, May 1803 ; of Smith’s Cottage, Hardwick Lane, Chertsey, Surrey, formerly of Essex House, Lower Edmonton, Middlesex ; [presumably m. 20 Jul 1809 Elizabeth Aston] ; d. 6 Dec 1864, aged 76. [probably son of Thomas Glover Holt MRCS, Abingdon Street, Westminster, and Lower Belmont Place, Wandsworth Road, Surrey, surgeon, and therefore uncle of Henry Frederic Holt (qv) ?]

HOLT, THOMAS LYTTLETON, eldest son of Rev.Ludlow Sneyd Holt LLD, Rector of North Repps, Norfolk, and Jane, dau. of Frank Jones, Bermuda ; b.       ; in school list 1795 ; Merton Coll.Oxford, matr. 14 Jul 1796, aged 19  ; adm.Grays Inn 1 Feb 1820 ; Trinity Hall, Cambridge, adm.fellow commoner 27 Jun 1823, matr. Mich.1823 ; dramatic critic, Bell’s Weekly Messenger ; proprietor, Morning Starnewspaper ; a member OWW Cricket Club in 1828 ; of Edmondstown, co.Louth ;  m.1802 Zillah Hughes, Birmingham ; d. 25 Aug 1851.

HOLT, VANHAM, see HOET, VANHAM.

HOLTE, — ; b.       ; adm.      ; QS 1567-9 (Chapter Muniments 54016-8, 54020).

HOLTHOUSE, EDWIN HERMUS, son of Carsten Holthouse FRCS LSA, Storey’s Gate, Westminster, surgeon, and Agnes Cowcher, dau. of Samuel Kent, Upton on Severn, Worcs., wine and spirit merchant ; b. 18 Nov 1855 ; adm. 24 Jan 1868 ; QS 1870 ; elected head to Trinity Coll.Cambridge (with Triplett) 1874, adm.pens. 7 Oct 1874, matr. Mich.1874, exhibitioner 1874 ; BA 1878 ; MA 1882 ; MB 1883 ; MRCS 1881 ; FRCS 1884 ; Consulting Surgeon, Western Ophthalmic Hospital, from 1921 ; practised in London ; m. 17 Jul 1884 Harriet Emily, elder dau. of Robert Hesketh FRIBA, Wimpole Street, London, architect ; d. 2 Jan 1949.

HOLYOAKE, FRANCIS, only son of Thomas Holyoake, Morton Bagot, Warwicks., and Elizabeth, dau. of James Pettipher, Great Alne, Warwicks. ; b. 4 Mar 1766 ; adm. 26 Jan 1776 ; still at school 1778 ; perhaps Francis Holyoack, articled to John Fowler, solicitor 1783 ; an attorney and banker in Wolverhampton, Staffs. ; m. 17 Apr 1795 Dorothy Elizabeth, only dau. of Robert Lyttelton, Alcester, Warwicks., and niece of Philip Lyttelton, Studley Castle, Warwicks. ; d. 21 Feb 1835.

HOLYOAKE, HENRY, son of John Holyoake, Henley in Arden, Warwicks. ; b.      ; adm. 26 Jan 1776 ; University Coll.Oxford, matr. 16 Feb 1781, aged 16 ; BA 1784 ; MA 1787 ; ordained deacon 30 Oct 1785, priest 5 Nov 1786 (both Oxford) ; Vicar of Salford Priors, Warwicks., and of Bidford, Warwicks., from 22 Dec 1786 ; Rector of Preston Capes, Northants, from 21 Aug 1787 ; m.  4 Jul 1786 Susanna, eldest dau. of Rev. Charles Willes, Rector of Whichford, Warwicks.  ;  d. 10 May 1828.

HOLYWELL, — ; b.       ; in under school list 1715.

HOME, ARTHUR, see HORNE, ARTHUR

HOME, SIR EVERARD, BART., son of Robert Boyne Home, Greenlaw Castle, Berwickshire, Surgeon, 16th Light Dragoons, and Mary, dau. of Charles Hutchinson EICS St Helena, Lieut.-Governor of St Helena ; b. 6 May 1756 ; adm. 17 Jan 1770 ; KS 1770 ; elected to Trinity Coll.Cambridge 1773, but was never adm. ; pupil to his brother-in-law, the surgeon John Hunter, at St.George’s Hospital ; qualified at Surgeons’ Hall 1778 ; Assistant Surgeon, Naval Hospital, Plymouth ; Surgeon to 1st battn., 60th Foot 2 Dec 1782 ; Apothecary and Storekeeper, Jamaica 25 Dec 1782 ; half-pay 6 Oct 1784 ; Staff Surgeon, Great Britain 14 Jun 1793 ; retd. Sep 1794 ; after his return from Jamaica in 1784 Home acted as John Hunter’s assistant for some years ; Lecturer on Anatomy, St.George’s Hospital 1792, Surgeon to St.George’s Hospital 1793-1827 ; FRCS [check date] ; Professor of Anatomy and Surgery, College of Surgeons 1804-13, 1821, Hunterian Orator 1814, 1822, President 1821 ; Serjeant-Surgeon to Kings George III and George IV from 9 Mar 1809 ; created baronet 27 Jun 1813 ; Surgeon to Chelsea Hospital from 1821 ; FRS 15 February 1787, Copley Medal 1807, Vice-President ; FSA ; his inexcusable destruction of Hunter’s MSS after using them in the preparation of his own papers for the Royal Society is much to be regretted ; an enthusiastic OW who for many years came down to the School on 17 November in full dress to ask for an Early Play for the anniversary of Queen Elizabeth’s accession ; edited Hunter’s treatise On the Blood, Inflammation and Gunshot Wounds, 1794 ; author, Lectures on Comparative Anatomy, 1814-28, and other works ; m. 4 Nov 1792 Jane, widow of Stephen Thompson, Surgeon-General to Army, and dau. of Rev.James Tunstall DD, Vicar of Rochdale, Lancs. ; d. 31 Aug 1832. ODNB.

HOME, SIR JAMES EVERARD, BART., elder son of Sir Everard Home, Bart. (qv) ; b. 25 Oct 1798 ; adm. 13 Jan 1806 ; left Lady Day 1810 ; entered Royal Navy as 1st class Volunteer, HMS Euryalus 10 Apr 1810 ; Lieut., 14 Jul 1814 ; Commander 28 Jan 1822 ; Capt., 5 Dec 1837 ; served in Chinese War 1841-2 and in New Zealand 1845 ; CB 24 Dec 1842 ; succ.father as 2nd baronet 31 Aug 1832 ; FRS 21 Apr 1825 ; FSA ; d. at Sydney, New South Wales, Australia 2 Nov 1853, while in command of HMS Calliope.

HOME, WILLIAM ARCHIBALD, younger son of Sir Everard Home, Bart. (qv) ; b. 17 Nov 1800 ; adm. 11 Jan 1808 ; KS (aged 14) 1815 ; elected to Christ Church, Oxford 1819, matr. 21 May 1819, Westminster Student (still 1829) ; BA 1822 ; MA 1825 ; ordained deacon 19 Dec 1824 (Oxford) ; Curate, Begbroke, Oxfordshire 1827 ; Rector of Hertingfordbury, Herts., 30 Jan – May 1835 ; a Roman Catholic convert ; ordained as RC priest ; d. unm. at Palermo, Sicily 2 Feb 1848.

HOOK, JAMES, eldest son of James Hook, organist and composer at Vauxhall Gardens, and his first wife Elizabeth Jane Madden, artist and writer, “daughter of an officer in the British service” ; bapt. St.Giles in the Fields 18 Jun 1771 ; adm. 16 Jan 1786 ; KS (aged 15) 1788 ; said on one occasion to have dressed up as an old woman, and to have begged half a crown from Dr Vincent in Dean’s Yard (Forshall, Westminster School, 575) ; editor, The Trifler ; etched the caricature “representing Justice as weighing the Microcosm[Etonian magazine] against the Trifler, and the former with its authors, and the King as a make-weight on their side, was made to kick the beam” (Southey, Life and Correspondence, i, 146) ; was not allowed to present himself for Election to the Universities in 1792 on account of this act of misbehaviour ; St.Mary Hall, Oxford, matr. 8 Jun 1792 ; BA and MA 1799 ; BCL 1804 ; DCL 1806 ; ordained deacon 1796 (Sodor & Man ?), priest 7 May 1797 (Winchester) ; Rector of Sadington, Leics., 11 May 1797 – 1802 ; Rector of Epworth, Lincs., 9 Sep 1802 – Dec 1804 ; Rector of Hertingfordbury, Herts., 1 Oct 1804 – Jun 1817 ;  Rector of St.Andrew with St.Nicholas, Hertford 28 Mar 1805 – Jul 1817 ; Prebendary of Winchester 18 Oct 1807 – Aug 1825 ; Archdeacon of Huntingdon from 5 Jul 1814 ; Rector of Whippingham, Isle of Wight 21 Jun 1817- Sep 1826 ; Vicar of Preston Candover, Hampshire 12 Jul 1817 – Oct 1826 ; Chaplain in Ordinary to George IV as Prince Regent and King 4 Feb 1819 – Sep 1825 ; Dean of Worcester from 12 Aug 1825, also Vicar of Bromsgrove, Worcs., from 1 Jun 1826, and Vicar of Stone, Worcs., from 12 Jun 1826 ; Master of St.Oswald’s Hospital, Worcester, from 25 Aug 1825 ; FRS 29 Feb 1816 ; author, Anguis in Herba, 1802, two novels and other works ; m. 1 Jun 1797 Anne, sister of Sir Thomas Harvie Farquhar, Bart. (qv) ; d. 5 Feb 1828. ODNB. [mother perhaps dau. of Edmund Madden]

HOOK, JAMES, brother of William Hook (qv) ; bapt. 11 Dec 1782 ; adm.      ; at school 1793 ; Min.Can. (aged 14) 1797.

HOOK, WILLIAM, son of William Hook, Lambeth, Surrey, and Esther — ; b.       ; adm.      ;  at school 1791 ; KS (aged 15) 1795 ; Capt. of the School 1799 ; elected head to Trinity Coll.Cambridge 1800, but went to Brasenose Coll.Oxford, matr. 12 Jun 1800 ; Ensign, Bedfordshire Militia,  Sep 1803.

HOOKE, JAMES, brother of Thomas Hooke (qv) ; b.      ; adm.      ; Min.Can. (aged 15) 1650 (Chapter Muniments 43057).

HOOKE, JOSEPH ; b.        ; adm. (aged 11) Feb 1750/1 ; in school list 1752.

HOOKE, ROBERT, younger son of Rev.John Hooke, Curate, Freshwater, Isle of Wight, and his second wife Cecily, dau. of Robert Gyles, Brading, Isle of Wight, merchant ; b. 18 Jul 1635 ; a pupil of Sir Peter Lely, the painter ; subsequently adm. to the School, boarding with the Head Master (Busby) ; at school by Jun 1654, aged 16 (sic) (WAM 43112) ; astonished his teachers by mastering the six books of Euclid in one week ; while at school learned “to play twenty lessons on the organ” and “invented thirty several ways of flying” (Wood, Athenae Oxonienses, iv, 628) ; Christ Church, Oxford, adm. as chorister or servitor, matr. 31 Jul 1658 ; MA 28 Sep 1663 ; MD (Lambeth) 7 Dec 1691 ; assisted Thomas Willis in his chemistry and Robert Boyle with his air-pump ; Curator of Experiments, Royal Society, from 12 Nov 1662 ; FRS 20 May 1663, being one of original Fellows under second charter ; Secretary, Royal Society 30 Nov 1677 – 30 Nov 1679 ; Professor of Geometry, Gresham College, from  20 Mar 1665 ; the first to apply a spiral spring to regulate the balance of a watch 1658, and the first to infer the rotation of Jupiter 1664 ; discovered the fifth star in Orion 1664 ; proposed to measure the force of gravity by the swinging of a pendulum 1666 ; constructed the first Gregorian telescope 1674 ; expounded the true theory of the elasticity and the kinetic hypothesis of gases 1678 ; described a practical system of telegraphy 1684 ; invented a marine barometer and other instruments ; laid before the Common Council of the City of London in Sep 1666 his plan for rebuilding the City of London after the fire, and in Oct 1666 was appointed one of the City’s three surveyors ; also one of the Surveyors for rebuilding the City churches, collaborating with his cousin Sir Christopher Wren (qv) ; buildings designed by him included Bethlehem Hospital, Montagu House and the Royal College of Physicians ; Surveyor to the Dean and Chapter of Westminster Jan 1690/1 – Jan 1696/7 ; author, Micrographia 1665 ; his Posthumous Works were edited by Richard Waller, 1705 ; his diaries for the years 1672-80 were published as The Diary of Robert Hooke, 1935, and those for 1688-90, 1692-3 were published in R.T.Gunther (ed), Early Science in Oxford, 1935, 69-265 ; d. unm. 3 Mar 1702/3. ODNB.

HOOKE, THOMAS, son of Thomas Hooke, Dublin ; b.      ; adm.      ; Min.Can. (aged 15) 1648 ((Chapter Muniments 43054).

HOOKER, JOHN ; b.       ; adm.       ; KS 16 Jan 1608/9 (see also Chapter Muniments 41289).

HOOKES, JOHN, brother of Nicholas Hookes (elected 1649, qv) ; bap 17 Nov 1640 ; adm.      ; BB 1650-5 ; left “to be bound to some trade” 1655 (Chapter Muniments 43089) ; not mentioned in father’s will dated 1671.

HOOKES, NICHOLAS, son of Nicholas Hookes, Conway, Caernarvonshire, and his second wife Elizabeth, dau. of Edmund Williams, and sister of Most Rev.John Williams DD, Archbishop of York and Dean of Westminster ; bapt. 16 Dec 1615 ; at school under Osbaldeston (J.Peile, Biog.Reg. of Christ’s Coll., i, 432) ; Christ’s Coll.Cambridge, adm.sizar 29 Apr 1634, aged 17 (as Folkes), matr. 1633 [sic, check] ; BA 1637 ; MA 1641.

HOOKES, NICHOLAS, eldest son of Thomas Hookes, St.Margaret’s, Westminster, and Stockwell, Surrey, Yeoman of the Woodyard, Royal Household, and a member of the household of Charles II as Prince of Wales, and Elizabeth, sister of William Chudleigh, Odiham, Hampshire ; nephew of Nicholas Hookes (at school under Osbaldeston, qv) ; b.       ; adm.      ; KS       ; elected head to Trinity Coll.Cambridge 1649, adm.pens. 26 May 1649, aged 17, scholar 1650, matr. Easter 1649 ; BA 1652/3 ; adm.Middle Temple 23 Jun 1654, called to bar 1 May 1668 ; employed in Subpoena Office of High Court of Chancery for about forty years by 1702 (CSP Dom, 2 Aug 1702, p.209, Anne I, 66) ; author, Amanda, 1653 (poems), and Miscellanea Poetica, 1653 ; m. Elizabeth, dau. of Thomas Swayne, Stert, Wilts. ; d. 7 Nov 1712 (will proved PCC 14 Mar 1712/3, as of Stockwell, Surrey). ODNB.

HOOPER, — ; b.       ; adm.      ; KS in 1609 (Chapter Muniments 41289).

HOOPER, — ; b.        ; adm.       ; left 1656 (School List 1656, first quarter).

HOOPER, CHRISTIAN, son of Nicholas Hooper, Brownlow Street, Holborn, and Anne, dau. of Christian Levie, Holborn, weaver ; bapt.St.Andrew’s, Holborn 19 Dec 1729 ; adm. (aged 12) Jan 1741/2 ; left 1743 ; apprenticed to Thomas Perkins, St.James’s, Westminster, surgeon, 16 Feb 1744 ; Surgeon’s Mate, HMS Ferret (sloop of war) ; will proved PCC 2 Aug 1748.

HOOPER, DANIEL ; b.       ; in under school lists 1716,1718. [Brother of next : Whitmore]

HOOPER, EDWARD ; b.        ; in under school list 1716. [“Russell Barker’s copy of the Under School list gives Ell not Edward ; his brother is Dan.” (Whitmore), so perhaps Christian name was Ell(is) or Ell(iot)]

HOOPER, GEORGE, son of George Hooper, Grimley, Worcs., and Joan, dau. of Edmund Giles, White Ladies Aston, Worcs. ; b. 18 Nov 1640 ; adm. from St.Paul’s Sch. ; at school by Jun 1654, aged 15 (WAM 43112) ; KS      ; Richard Busby said of him that “he was the best scholar, the finest gentleman, and will make the completest bishop that ever was educated at Westminster School” ; elected to Christ Church, Oxford 1657, matr. 29 Oct 1657, Westminster Student, Tutor 1664-72 ; BA 16 Jan 1660/1 ; MA 1663 ; BD 1673 ; DD 1677 ; subscribed for ordination as deacon 23 Dec 1666, priest 18 Jan 1667/8 (both Oxford, latter lit.dim. from Canterbury) ; Rector of Havant, Hampshire 26 Jan 1671 [1670/1 or 1671/2 ?] – Nov 1672 ; Chaplain to George Morley (qv), Bishop of Winchester 1672 ; Rector of East Woodhay, Hampshire 8 Nov 1672 – still 1691 ; Chaplain to Gilbert Sheldon, Archbishop of Canterbury 1673 ; Rector of Lambeth, Surrey 5 Oct 1675 – Oct 1703 ; Precentor and Prebendary of Exeter 16 Oct 1677 – Mar 1703/4 ; Almoner to Princess Mary of Orange at The Hague 1677-9 ; Chaplain in Ordinary to Charles II, James II, William III and Mary II, and Anne 25 Nov 1681 – 1703 ; Dean of Canterbury 11 Jul 1691 – Mar 1703/4 ; Proctor in Convocation for diocese of Exeter 1679, Winchester and Exeter 1685, 1689, 1690 ; Prolocutor, Lower House of Convocation Feb 1700/1 ; consecrated Bishop of St.Asaph 31 Oct 1703 ; translated to Bath and Wells 14 Mar 1703/4 ; one of the original Busby Trustees named in Dr.Busby’s will ; author, A Calculation of the Credibility of Human Testimony, and other works ; m.2 May 1679 Abigail, dau. of Richard Guilford, Lambeth, brewer ; d. 6 Sep 1727. ODNB.

HOOPER, GEORGE, son of George Hooper, Cleobury, Shropshire, and Joyce, dau. of James Greene, Cleobury Mortimer, Shropshire, scythesmith ; b.      ; adm. (aged 13) 10 Jan 1714/5 ; Wadham Coll.Oxford, adm.servitor 5 Mar 1717/8, clerk 1719 ; BA 1721 ; MA 1725 ; ordained priest 25 Mar 1725/6 (Bangor) ; Vicar of Streatley, Berks., from 26 Mar 1725/6, to death by 7 Oct 1758 (but will proved PCC 19 Aug 1767, sic)]

HOOPER, JOHN, son of John Hooper, Enfield, Middlesex, citizen and merchant taylor, and Ann, dau. of Nicholas Cooke, Old Manor, Greenwich, Kent ; b.      ; adm. (aged 12) Mar 1714/5 ; in under school list 1718 ; petitioned in 1722 that some portion of his father’s estate be paid him  to enable him “to go to the East Indies or other place beyond the Seas” to seek his fortune ; living 1735.

HOOPER, WILLIAM ; b.        ; adm. 14 Jun 1785 ; in school list Dec 1788 ; actor in Town Boy play King John Dec 1789.

HOOPER, WILLIAM ERNEST ANDERSON, eldest son of William Wills Hooper, Mayor of Exeter, partner in firm of builders, and Helen, dau. of William Anderson ; b. 19 Jun 1842 ; adm. 27 Jan 1858 ; left Aug 1858 ; Ensign, 15th Foot, 18 Dec 1860 – Jan 1862 ; living in Guernsey, Channel Islands, in 1871 ; m. at Avoca, Victoria, Australia 5 Nov 1863 Louisa, third dau. of M.Woolley, Melbourne, Victoria, Australia [father perhaps Alfred Woolley, Melbourne, Australia, merchant ?] ; d. Guernsey 4 Apr 1876.

HOPE, —  ; b.        ; in school lists 1745, 1746.

HOPE, ADRIAN, brother of Henry Hope (qv) ; b.  1788 ; in school lists 1797, 1801 ; m. at British Embassy, Paris, 22 Sep 1818 Amélie Fannie Jarreton ; d. near Paris, France 29 Dec 1818.

HOPE, EDWARD, son of George Hope, St.Albans, Herts. ; b.        ; in school lists 1656 ; a boarder ; KS (aged 16) 1658 ; elected to Christ Church, Oxford 1661, matr. 22 Aug 1661, Westminster Student 10 Mar 1662 – 30 Mar 1663, when expelled for drunkenness.

HOPE, HENRY, eldest son of John Williams Hope (formerly Williams), Amsterdam, Netherlands, and London, banker, and Ann, eldest dau. of John Goddard, Woodford Hall, Essex ; b. 1785 ; at school 1796 ; in school lists 1797, 1801 ; d. 26 Apr 1821, aged 35 (will proved PCC 1 Jun 1821, as of Bloomsbury, Middlesex).

HOPE, JOHN ; b.       ; adm.      ; a pensioner in 1613 (tutor, Mr.Dawson) (Chapter Muniments 33667, 33670) ; KS in 1615.

HOPE, JOHN, son of Robert Hope, St.Margaret’s, Westminster ; b.       ; at school (aged 14) in 1657 ; in an undated petition to the Governors (Chapter Muniments 43090), Robert Hope states that “being of late brought into povertye” he is unable to maintain his son any longer at the School, and begs for a scholarship for him on Dr.Williams’s foundation ; there is an accompanying testimonial dated 29 May 1657 from Edward Bagshaw (qv), Second Master.

HOPEGOOD, ANDREW, eldest son of Andrew Hopegood, Monken Hadley, Middlesex, Italian merchant, and Sarah, dau. of Sir Peter Floyer, Kt, Alderman of London, goldsmith and refiner ; bapt.St.Andrew’s, Holborn 2 Feb 1713 (IGI) ; adm. (aged 8) May 1722 ; in school list 1729 ; of Monken Hadley, Middlesex ; member, Court of Assistants, Royal African Company (Chamberlayne 1748) ; m. 18 Feb 1769 Elizabeth Homer, “niece to Charles Vere, Esq.” (Gazetteer and New Daily Advertiser 20 Feb 1769)         ; d. 16 Aug 1781.

HOPEGOOD, EDWARD, brother of Andrew Hopegood (qv) ; bapt.St.Andrew, Holborn  22 Jun 1720 ; adm. (aged 8) Jan 1728/9 ; left 1736 ; of Monken Hadley, Middlesex ; d. Jan 1793.

HOPEGOOD, FRANCIS, brother of Andrew Hopegood (qv) ; bapt. St.Andrew, Holborn 29 Jan 1717/8 ; adm. (aged 9) Jun 1727 ; left 1734 ; member, Court of Assistants, Royal African Company (Chamberlayne 1748) ; d.unm. 3 Jun 1753.

HOPKINS, —  ; b.       ; adm. 22 May 1767 ; left 1769.

HOPPERTON, GEORGE ; b.       ; adm.      ; KS 1540-4 (Chapter Muniments).

HOPPS, JOHN, son of Rev.Sampson Hopps, Vicar of East Winch, Norfolk ; b.      ; at school (aged 14) 2 Jul 1582 (Chapter Muniments 43050).

HOPTON, —  ; b.        ; in school list 1727/8 (third form).

HOPTON, —  ; b.       ; in school list 1754.

HOPTON, EDWARD COPE, eldest son of Richard Hopton MP, Canons Frome, Herefs., and Elizabeth, widow of William Gregory, Howe Caple, Herefs., and dau. of Thomas Geers MP, Bridge Solers, Herefs., Serjeant at Law ; bapt. Canons Frome, Herefs. 9 Feb 1707 [or 1707/8 ?] ; adm. (aged 14) May 1722 (as Edward Hopton, surname misread as Horton by Russell Barker and Stenning) ; Christ Church, Oxford, matr. 14 Oct 1725 ; of Worcester, Worcestershire ; MP Hereford 1741-7 ; m. 20 Feb 1732 Mary, only child of Timothy Briggenshaw, Earls Court, St.John, Bredwardine, Worcs. ; d. 24 Apr 1754.

HOPTON, GEORGE, see HOPPERTON, GEORGE.

HOPTON, RALPH COPE, brother of Edward Cope Hopton (qv) ; b.      ; adm. (aged 14) Jan 1739/40 ; left 1742 ; Oriel Coll.Oxford, matr. 6 Nov 1742 ; BA 1746 ; migrated to All Souls Coll.Oxford ; BCL 1751 ; ordained ; Vicar of Bishop’s Frome, Herefs., from 7 Aug 1750 ; Prebendary of Hereford from 25 May 1762 ; Rector of Moccas, Herefs., from 8 Jan 1770 ; m.1st,  Anna Maria, only dau. of George Huxley, Brindley, Cheshire ; m.2nd,  3 Jul 1794 Mary, widow of Rev.Benjamin Biddulph, Burghill, Herefs., and dau. of Edward Poole (qv) ; d. 13 Jun 1797.

HOPTON, RICHARD COPE, brother of Edward Cope Hopton (qv) ; b. 22 Dec 1712 ; adm. (aged 11) Jun 1724 ; KS 1728 ; elected to Christ Church, Oxford 1732, matr. 15 Jun 1732, Westminster Student 31 May 1733 – void 13 Jan 1737 ; adm.Lincoln’s Inn 26 Oct 1731, called to bar 24 Oct 1737 ; Attorney-General for Glamorgan 1752 and for Breconshire 1761 ; m. 19 May 1772 Elizabeth, widow of Rev.George Secker DD, Prebendary of Canterbury and of St.Paul’s, and dau. of John Bird, Coventry, Warwickshire ; d. 17 Nov 1786.

HOPTON, WILLIAM COPE, brother of Edward Cope Hopton (qv) ; bapt.Canons Frome, Herefs.  21 Mar 1718 [or 1718/9 ?] ; adm. (aged 16) Apr 1735 ; left 1737 ; Oriel Coll.Oxford, matr. 19 Oct 1737 ; BA 1741 ; MA 1744 ; ordained deacon 13 Jun 1742, priest 29 May 1743 (both Oxford) ; Rector of Stretton Grandison with Ashperton, Herefs., 6 Apr 1744 – res.Mar 1790 ; Vicar of Canon Frome, Herefs., from 7 Sep 1744 ; m.1st, 23 Jan 1749/50 Anne, dau. of William Andrews, Barnes Hall, Worcs., attorney ; m.2nd, Judith, widow of William Skinner, Callow Hill, Munsley, Herefs., and dau. of John Morton, Callow Hill ; d. 9 Apr 1801.

HOPWOOD, — ; b.        ; in under school list 1715.

HORDEN, — ; b.       ; adm.     ; a pensioner 1565-6 (tutor, Prebendary Latymer) (Chapter Muniments 54009-11).

HORDEN, JOHN, of Kent ; b.     ; adm.      ; QS       ; elected head to Christ Church, Oxford (aged 17) 1564, Westminster Student to c.1579 ; BA 17 Feb 1568/9 ; MA 1572 ; ordained ; applied for licence to preach 29 Jan 1577/8 ; Rector of Niton, Isle of Wight 22 Jan 1578/9 (still 1603) ; m.      ; d. by 30 Sep 1628.

HORDEN, JOHN, son of John Horden, Westminster, Hosier to the King, and Mary, dau. of Richard Batten, Westminster ; b.       ; adm.     ; at school by Jun 1654, aged 12 (WAM 43112) ; KS in 1656 ; elected to Trinity Coll.Cambridge 1658, adm.pens. 25 May 1658, scholar 1659, matr.1660 ; BA 1661/2 ; MA 1665 ; BD 1682 ; Fellow, Trin.Coll. 1664 – c.1673 ; subscribed for deacon’s orders 19 May 1665, for priest’s 2 Jun 1665 (both London) ; Rector of St.Michael’s, Queenhithe, London, from 5 May 1671 ; Chaplain in Ordinary to Charles II, James II, and William III and Mary, from 14 Jan 1677/8 ; Vicar of Isleworth, Middlesex, from 16 May 1681 ; m. 14 Jul 1685 Ann, dau. of Thomas Morice MP ; d. 1690.

HORDEN, RICHARD ; b.       ; adm.      ; BB 1696-1701 (Chapter Muniments 33729-33). [Probably Richard Horden, son of John Horden (KS 1656, qv] ; EICS Madras ; arrived in India 1702 ; 5th of Council, Madras, and Sea Customer  in 1714, Second of Council and Accountant by 1721 ; Mayor of Madras 1718-20 ; dismissed 1721 ; sent back to England, but returned to Madras as free merchant  ; Sheriff of Madras 1730 ; m. 1713 Cornelia, widow of Charles Bugden, EICS Madras, and dau. of John Heathfield, Surgeon, EICS Madras ; d.1730]

HORE, see also HOARE.

[HORE, CHARLES ; b.      ; in school list Dec 1736. It is possible that an individual of this name was at the school, for his name appears in this school list as a member of the third form, otherwise reliably listed, but in view of this list’s general unreliability as regards forenames, some confirmatory evidence is necessary]

HORMAN-FISHER, ROBERT BLAKE HORMAN, brother of Samuel Sharp Horman Horman-Fisher (qv) ; b. 31 May 1826 ; adm. 21 Jan 1839 ; adm.solicitor Mich.1848 ; still in Law List 1861 ; practised in London ; m. Matilda Tenney (marriage registered Lambeth first quarter 1863) ; death registered Edmonton third quarter 1893, aged 64 (sic).

HORMAN-FISHER, SAMUEL SHARP HORMAN, second son of Roger Staples Horman-Fisher (previously Fisher), Bentworth Hall, Hampshire, attorney, and Elizabeth, only dau. of John Horman, Finchley, Middlesex ; b. 2 Dec 1823 ; adm. 21 Jan 1839 ; Corpus Christi Coll.Cambridge, adm.pens. 11 Mar 1842, but did not matr. ; adm.Middle Temple 22 Jan 1842, called to bar 20 Nov 1846 ; of Llwyn Derw, Swansea, Glamorgan ; JP Glamorgan 1868 ; m.1st, 17 Jul 1849 Margaret, third dau. of Robert Eaton, Bryn-y-Mawr, Glamorgan, banker ; m.2nd, 17 Sep 1896 Eliza Farrant, second dau. of William Fry, Portfield, Somerset ; d. 1 Dec 1904.

HORN, ARTHUR FREDERICK, second son of Richard Horn, Berkeley Street, London, and Wanstead, Essex, solicitor, and Mary Lambton Green, Durham ; b. 18 Mar 1852 ; adm. 4 Jun 1866 ; left Aug 1867 ; Emmanuel Coll.Cambridge, adm.pens. 30 Mar 1869 ; migrated to Jesus Coll.Cambridge 1 Jan 1870, matr. Lent 1870 ; adm.solicitor Aug 1877 ; practised in Berkeley Street, Piccadilly, London, firm Horn & Murray ; d. 19 May 1892.

HORNDON, ANTHONY LUCAS, son of David Horndon, Chicketts Hall, Callington, Cornwall, and Hannah, dau. of Shickley Lucas, Baronsdown, Devon ; bapt. 18 Mar 1772 ; adm. 19 Jun 1786 ; Min.Can. (aged 14) 1787 ; buried Callington, Cornwall 6 Sep 1788.

HORNE, see also HORN.

HORNE, ALDERSON BURRELL, brother of Sir William Edgar Horne, Bart. (qv) ; b. 22 Nov 1863 ; adm. 27 Jan 1876 (R) ; left May 1880 ; Pembroke Coll.Oxford, matr. 30 Jan 1884 ; adm.solicitor Dec 1887 ; practised in London ; served with YMCA at Etaples, France Nov 1916 – Mar 1918 ; Master, Clothworkers’ Co 1927 ; also playwright and actor manager, under name Anmer Hall ; at one time acted under name Waldo Wright ; m. 22 Dec 1887 Maud, youngest dau. of Frederick William Porter FRIBA, Moyle Tower, Hythe, Kent, architect and district surveyor ; d. 23 Dec 1952.

HORNE, ARTHUR, brother of William Horne (qv) ; b. 10 Feb 1807 ; adm. 16 Jan 1821 (Russell Barker and Stenning record surname as Home, but lithographed admissions give surname as Horne) ; Ensign, 34th Foot 19 Nov 1825 ; Lieut., 27 Nov 1828 ; Capt., 21 Feb 1834 ; Brevet Maj., 9 Nov 1846 ; Maj., 12thFoot 30 Mar 1849 ; Brevet Lieut.-Col., 28 May 1853 ; Col. in Army 28 Nov 1854 ; Lieut.-Col., 13th Foot 8 Jan 1858 ; served in Kaffir War in South Africa ; m. 1 Feb 1859 Emma Jane Dicker, dau. of Lieut.-Col. Samuel Cleveland, EICS Madras ; d. while on service in Mauritius 3 Jan 1865.

HORNE, CHARLES ; b.       ; adm.      ; QS in 1566 ; elected to Trinity Coll.Cambridge 1568, adm.scholar 1570, matr. Easter 1569 ; BA 1572/3 ; migrated to Peterhouse, Cambridge 31 Mar 1576 ; MA 1577 ; BD 1585 ; Fellow of Peterhouse 1576, Scrutator 1587, still Fellow in Feb 1595/6 ; ordained ; Rector of Sturry, Kent, from 17 Mar 1596/7 ; Vicar of Chislet, Kent, from 27 Mar 1601 ; author, Greek and Latin poems ; d. 1618 (by 22 Feb 1618/9, so possibly in 1619).

HORNE, EDWARD ADOLPH, son of George Horne, Cavendish Road, St.John’s Wood, London, corn factor, and Caroline Rosalie — (IGI) ; b. 4 Nov 1857 ; adm. 30 May 1872 (R) ; left Aug 1875 ; a corn factor in City of London ; m. 24 Oct 1882 Alice Charlotte, second dau. of William Hogg, Shanghai, China, and Lancaster Gate, London, merchant ; d. 16 May 1936. [Mother born Erlangen, Bavaria, 1881 Census]

HORNE, FREDERICK EDWARD, son of William Horne (qv) ; b. 27 Jun 1836 ; adm. 6 Jun 1849 (R) ; Trinity Coll.Cambridge, adm.pens. 1 Feb 1854, matr. Mich.1854 ; BA 1858 ; MA 1862 ; ordained deacon 1861, priest 1862 (both Rochester) ; Curate, Hitchin, Herts., 1861-5 ; Rector of Drinkstone, Suffolk, from 1865 ; m. 25 Apr 1865 Augusta Fanny, dau. of Sir Astley Paston Cooper, Bart. ; d. 11 Feb 1913.

HORNE, JOHN, see TOOKE, JOHN HORNE.

HORNE, ROBERT WINTLE, son of Thomas Horne (adm.1784, qv) ; b. 7 Aug 1810 ; adm. 12 Jan 1824 (G) ; Cadet, EICS Bombay 1827 ; Ensign, 8th Bombay Native Infantry 3 Jan 1828 ; Lieut., 25 Jun 1832 ; Brevet Capt., 3 Jan 1843 ; ret. 24 Jan 1843 ; went to live in South Africa and latterly in Australia ; Assistant Commissioner of Crown Lands for the Gold Diggings, Victoria, 12 Nov 1851, subsequently police magistrate and Warden of the Goldfields ; m. 21 Aug 1840 Maria, second dau. of Rev.Roger Bickerstaff, Vicar of St.Martin’s, Shropshire ; d. at Kew, Victoria, Australia 1881 (death reported Australasian Sketcher 23 Apr 1881).

HORNE, THOMAS, son of Rev.Thomas Horne, Clapham, Surrey ; b.       ; adm. (aged 14) Jun 1721 ; Christ Church, Oxford, matr. 11 Mar 1724/5, Canoneer Student 23 Dec 1725 – void by marriage 13 Jan 1737 ; BA 1728 ; MA 1731 ; ordained deacon 14 May 1732, priest 9 Jun 1734 (both Oxford) ; Curate, St.Thomas, Oxford 1735 ; Vicar of Spelsbury, Oxfordshire, from 15 Jun 1736 (but year of grace from 19 Jan 1736/7) ; Rector of Whichford, Warwicks., from 11 Jan 1753 ; m. by 1737 Susannah — ; buried 3 Sep 1768. [father perhaps Rev.Thomas Horne, Chaplain of St.Saviour’s, Southwark]

HORNE, THOMAS, eldest son of Thomas Horne (adm. 1721, qv) ; bapt. Spelsbury, Oxfordshire 5 Sep 1737 ; adm. (aged 8) Jun 1744 ; went to Eton Coll., KS 1750-5 ; Christ Church, Oxford, matr. 30 Oct 1755, aged 18 ; migrated to Trinity Coll.Oxford ; BA 1759 ; MA 1762 (incorp.Cambridge 1769) ; BD and DD 1788 ; Fellow, Trinity Coll. ; ordained deacon 13 Dec 1762 (Lincoln), priest  22 Jun 1766 (Oxford) ; living in parish of St.Owen, Hereford, in 1770s ; Master of the Manor House School, Chiswick, Middlesex, from c.1786 [or earlier ?] ; Vicar of Withington, Herefs., 9 May 1778 – Jan 1797 ; m. 7 Feb 1771 Frances Ann, dau. of Rev.Morgan Price, Vicar of Weobley, Herefs. ; d. 27 Jan 1824.

HORNE, THOMAS, eldest son of Thomas Horne (adm. 1744, qv) ; b.      ; adm. 17 Sep 1784 ; KS 1786 ; elected to Christ Church, Oxford 1790, matr. 9 Jun 1790, Westminster Student 24 Dec 1790 – void by marriage 29 Jun 1799 ; BA 1794 ; MA 1797 ; BD 1805 ; Select Preacher 1815, Bampton Lecturer 1828 ; ordained deacon 19 May 1799 (Chester for Oxford), priest 22 Dec 1799 (Oxford) ; Vicar of Wooburn, Bucks., 26 Dec 1801 – Oct 1802 ; Rector of St.Catherine Coleman, London, from 9 Jan 1812 ; carried on his father’s school at Chiswick 1824-35 ; author, The Religious Necessity of the Reformation asserted, 1828 ; m. 27 Jun 1799 Cecilia Clementina Eliza, second dau. of John Zoffany RA, Chiswick, painter ; d. 19 Jan 1847, aged 74.

HORNE, THOMAS, son of Thomas Horne (adm.1784, qv) ; b. 8 Jun 1800 ; adm.Midsummer 1812 ; absent 1814-5 ; left 18 Mar 1818 ; Christ Church, Oxford, matr. 6 May 1818, aged 17, Canoneer Student 1819-27 ; BA 1822 ; MA 1825 ; adm.Lincoln’s Inn 9 Jan 1818, called to bar 6 Feb 1827 ; emigrated to Tasmania, arriving at Hobart 31 Jan 1830 ; practised law there ; Solicitor-Gen., Tasmania Jan 1841 – Mar 1844, Attorney-Gen. Mar 1844 – Jan 1848 ; Puisne Judge, Tasmania Jan 1848 – Sep 1860 ; member Legislative Council, Tasmania, 1856-9, House of Assembly 1861-6 ; m. 5 Apr 1827 Maria Hyriott ;  d. 23 Sep 1870.

HORNE, WILLIAM, son of Sir William Horne KC MP, Upper Harley Street, London, Attorney-General, afterwards Master in Chancery, and Anne, eldest dau. of James Hesse, Flitwick, Bedfordshire ; grandson of Thomas Horne (adm.1744, qv) ; b. 27 Jul 1801 ; adm. 19 Apr 1816 ; left 7 Apr 1819 ; Christ Church, Oxford, matr. 22 Apr 1819 ; BA 1822 ; MA 1825 ; ordained deacon 24 Sep 1824 (Lincoln), priest 1825 ; Rector of Humber, Herefs., 2 Mar 1830 – Dec 1844 ; Rector of Hotham, Yorks., 13 Apr 1831-44 ; Rector of Great Limber, Lincs., 1844-9 ; Rector of Barming, Kent, from 1849 ; m. 4 Jul 1831 Elizabeth, eldest dau. of Jacob Hans Busk, Ponsbourne Park, Herts. ; d. 4 Nov 1865.

HORNE, SIR (WILLIAM) EDGAR, BART., eldest son of Edgar Horne, Russell Square, London, auctioneer and surveyor, chairman, Prudential Assurance Co.,  and his first wife Maria, widow of Thomas Eversfield, Westminster, and dau. of William Burrell, Flitcham, Norfolk ; b. 21 Jan 1856 ; adm. 23 Sep 1869 ; left Whitsun 1872 ; entered father’s office and on father’s retirement became head of firm ; FSI 1882, President 1911 ; Chairman, United Parishes of St.Margaret and St.John, Westminster, in last year of their existence ; member, Westminster City Council, Mayor 1923-4, Alderman from 1925 ; MP (Cons) Guildford Jan 1910-22 ; chairman, Prudential Assurance Co., from 1928 ; created baronet 25 Mar 1929 ; DL Sutherlandshire ; a Governor of the School from 1913 ; a Busby Trustee from 1925 ; m. 7 Oct 1886 Margery, dau. of George Anderson May, Elford, Staffs., farmer ; d. 26 Sep 1941.

HORNE, WILLIAM HENRY, eldest son of William Horne (qv) ; b. 9 Sep 1832 ; adm. 1 Oct 1846 ; QS 1847 ; left 1851 ; Cornet, 15th Light Dragoons (Hussars) 27 Aug 1852 ; Lieut., 14 Sep 1855 ; Capt., 31 Aug 1858 ; 2nd Dragoon Guards 29 Apr 1859 ; ret. 2 Dec 1862 ; of Bath House, Drinkstone, Suffolk (listed there in 1881 Census) ; JP West Suffolk ; living in Willesden, Middlesex, in 1901 (1901 Census) ; m. 9 Jun 1863 Agnes Mary, dau. of Rev. Henry Walter Seawell, Rector of Little Berkhampstead, Herts. ; death registered Hendon, Middlesex fourth quarter 1905.

HORNECK, CHARLES, only surviving son of Capt.Kane William Horneck, Plymouth, Devon, engineer in Office of Ordnance, and Hannah Mangles [or Triggs ?], Plymouth ; b.       ; in school lists 1764, 1765 ; Ensign, 3rd Foot Guards 25 Mar 1768 ; Lieut. and Capt., 7 Jun 1773 ; Capt. and Lieut.-Col., 25 Mar 1782 ; Lieut.-Col., 62nd Foot  5 Jun 1789 ; Col., Northampton Fencible Infantry 12 Oct 1793 ; Maj.-Gen., 26 Feb 1795 ; Lieut.-Gen., 29 Apr 1802 ; Col., 5th Royal Garrison Battn., 25 Dec 1802 ; Goldsmith’s “Captain in Lace”, and the brother of “Little Comedy” and the “Jessamy Bride” ; for the circumstances of the breakdown of his marriage and of his wife’s flight to the continent with John Scawen (qv), whom she subsequently married, see Hickey, Memoirs, i, 303-8 ; m. 31 May 1773 Sarah, natural dau. of George Keppel, 3rd Earl of Albemarle (qv) ; d. 8 Apr 1804.

HORNER, WILLIAM ; b.      ; adm. (aged 9) Sep 1718 ; in under school list 1724 ; of  parish St.Margaret’s, Westminster ; m. 5 Mar 1734/5 Anne Ewens, St.Margaret, Westminster. [will of William Horner, St.Margaret, Westminster, upholder, proved PCC 14 May 1754]

HORNSBY, THOMAS, son of Rev.Thomas Hornsby DD FRS, Savilian Professor of Astronomy, Oxford Univ., and Ann Cherrill ; b.      ; adm. 22 Feb 1781 ; Min.Can. (aged 15) 1781 ; Christ Church, Oxford, matr. 9 Jun 1784, aged 18, Canoneer Student 22 Dec 1786 – void 17 Dec 1798, expiry year of grace as V.Ravensthorpe ; reprimanded for riotous and intemperate behaviour at dinner given by MPs for Oxford 26 Jun 1790 ; BA 1788 ; MA 1791 ; ordained deacon 31 May 1790, priest 19 Jun 1791 (both Oxford) ; Curate, Upper Heyford, Oxfordshire 4 Feb 1791 ; Curate, Drayton St.Leonard, Oxfordshire 16 Feb 1793 (still 1796) ; Chaplain to Duke of Dorset ; Vicar of Ravensthorpe, Northants, from 7 Dec 1797 ; Rector of Waddesdon, Bucks. (second portion) 7 Dec 1799 – Dec 1830 ; m. 26 Aug 1800 Anna, eldest dau. of Charles Fyshe Palmer (qv) ; d. at St.Helier, Jersey  4 Feb 1832.

HORRY, CHARLES LUCAS PINCKNEY, elder son of Col.Daniel Horry, Hampton, Santee River, South Carolina, and his second wife Harriott, sister of Charles Cotesworth Pinckney (qv) ; b.1769 ; adm. 10 Sep 1781 (as Horry, Daniel) ; left 1786 ; Trinity Coll.Cambridge, adm.fellow commoner 15 Dec 1786, matr. Mich.1787, but did not graduate ; adm.Middle Temple 25 Oct 1781 (as Horry, Daniel) ; settled in France, where he dropped his baptismal Christian name Daniel and became known as Charles Lucas Pinckney Horry ; painted by Romney in 1789 in his college gown, stepping from the gateway of Trinity Coll. ; a writer in GM 1823, i, 494, states that Horry was the author of the well-known epigram on Benjamin Jowett of Trinity Hall and his little garden, generally attributed to Francis Wrangham (see DNB) ; m. Eléonore Marie Florimond de Fay, dau. of Marie Charles César Florimond de Fay, Comte de la Tour Maubourg, Lieutenant General in French Army, and niece of Gilbert du Motier, Marquis de Lafayette, General in the French Army and friend of George Washington ; d. in France 1828.

HORRY, DANIEL, see HORRY, CHARLES LUCAS PINCKNEY.

HORSEY, GEORGE, son of Jasper Horsey, Digswell, Herts. ; b.      ; adm.       ; KS       ; elected to Trinity Coll.Cambridge 1619, adm.scholar 1620 ; BA 1623/4 ; MA 1627 (incorp.Oxford 10 Jul 1627) ; Fellow, Trinity Coll. 1624 – c.1637 ; ordained ; Dean of Ross from 19 Nov 1637 ; m. Anne, dau. of George Byrdmore, Staffs. ;  d. 30 Jul 1639.

HORSFORD, —  ; b.        ; in school list 1795.

HORSLEY, HENEAGE, only son of Right Rev.Samuel Horsley LLD, successively Bishop of St.Davids, Rochester and St.Asaph, and his first wife Mary, dau. of Rev.John Botham, Rector of Albury, Surrey ; b. 23 Feb 1776 ; adm. 30 Jun 1788 ; Min.Can.1790 ; actor in Town Boy play Tamerlane Dec 1791 [sic] ; KS 1791 ; played cricket for the School v. Charterhouse 1794 ; elected to Christ Church, Oxford 1795, matr. 3 Jun 1795, Westminster Student 24 Dec 1795 – void 11 May 1802, expiry year of grace as R.Woolwich ; BA 1799 ; MA 1802 ; ordained deacon 22 Dec 1799 (Oxford), priest 27 Apr 1800 (London, lit.dim. from Rochester) ; Rector of Woolwich, Kent 6 May 1801 – Dec 1803 ; Vicar of Chirk, Denbighshire 14 Apr 1803 – Jun 1804 ; Prebendary of St.Asaph from 18 Apr 1803 ; Vicar of Gresford, Denbighshire, from 13 Oct 1803 ; Vicar of Castle Caereinion, Montgomeryshire, from 22 Jun 1804 ; in financial difficulties in 1805 ; moved to Scotland to avoid his creditors ; Minister of Episcopal Church, Dundee, from May 1809 ; Dean of Brechin from 1810 ; m. 25 Jun 1801 Frances Emma, sister of Sir Richard Bourke (qv) ; d. 6 Oct 1847.

HORSLEY, SAMUEL, only son of Heneage Horsley (qv) ; b. 16 Aug 1810 ; adm. 22 Feb 1822 (G) ; left Christmas 1824 ; Balliol Coll.Oxford, matr. 31 Mar 1829 ; BA 1833 ; MA 1837 ; an Inspector under Irish Poor Law Board 1847 (to early 1880s) ; d. 21 May 1889.

HORT, FENTON, brother of Sir Josiah William Hort, Bart. (qv) ; b. 3 Aug 1794 ; adm.    ; left 1810 ; Trinity Coll.Cambridge, adm.pens. 13 May 1811, scholar 1813, matr. Mich.1811 ; BA 1815 ; MA 1821 ; adm. Inner Temple 2 Feb 1815 ; of Leopardstown, co.Dublin ; High Sheriff, co.Dublin 1834 ; subsequently resident at St.John’s Mount, Brecon, and Cheltenham, Gloucs. ; member governing body, Cheltenham Coll. ; m. 25 Apr 1826 Anne, eldest dau. of Rev.Anthony Collett, Kelsale Hall, Suffolk ; d. 18 Mar 1873.

HORT, SIR JOSIAH WILLIAM, BART., eldest son of Sir John Hort, Bart., Consul-General at Lisbon, and Margaret, dau. of Sir Fitzgerald Aylmer, Bart., MP (I), Donadea, co.Kildare, Ireland ; b. 6 Jul 1791 ; adm. 14 Jan 1805 ; left 1807 ; succ. as 2nd baronet 23 Oct 1807 ; Trinity Coll.Cambridge, adm.fellow commoner 5 Jul 1809, matr. Lent 1810 ; MA 1812 ; of Hortland, co.Kildare ; DL JP co.Kildare, High Sheriff 1817 ; MP Co.Kildare 1831-2 ; m. 31 Mar 1823 Louisa Georgiana, second dau. of Sir John Caldwell, Bart., Castle Caldwell, co.Fermanagh, Ireland ; d. 24 Aug 1876.

HORTH, HUMPHREY, see HOWORTH, HUMPHREY MAINWARING.

HORTON, —  ; b.       ; in school list 1745.

HORTON, CHRISTOPHER, brother of Walter Buswell Horton (qv) ; bapt.Croxall, Derbs. 28 Jul 1741 (IGI) ; adm. (aged 9) Sep 1750 ; in school list 1754 ; of Catton Hall, Derbs. ;  m. 4 Aug 1765 Lady Anne Luttrell (who subsequently m. HRH Prince Henry Frederick, Duke of Cumberland) , sister of Henry Lawes Luttrell, 2nd Earl of Carhampton (I) (qv) ; buried Croxall, Derbs. 13 Aug 1769.

HORTON, EDWARD, see HOPTON, EDWARD COPE.

HORTON, THOMAS ; b.       ; adm. (aged 12) Feb 1717/8.

HORTON, WALTER BUSWELL, son of Christopher Horton, Catton, Derbs., and Frances, dau. of Sir Eusebius Buswell, Bart., Clipston, Northants ; bapt. 30 Apr 1734 ; adm. (aged 8) Oct 1742 ; in school list 1752 ; Emmanuel Coll.Cambridge, adm.fellow commoner 27 Jan 1753, matr. Easter 1753, but did not graduate ; adm.Inner Temple 30 Jun 1753 ; buried unm. 10 Oct 1753.

HOSE, JOHN CHRISTIAN, eldest son of Rev.John Christian Hose, Curate, St.Saviour’s, South Hampstead, London, and Emily Louisa, dau. of James Kirton ; nephew of Henry Judge Hose, Assistant Master ; b. 23 Jul 1867 ; adm. 26 Sep 1878 (H) ; left Aug 1882 ; an insurance official ; d. 26 Jun 1946.

HOSKINS, — ; b.       ; adm. Jan 1663/4 ; a boarder ; left 1664 (Busby’s Account Book).

HOSKINS, HORATIO FRANCIS ALEXANDER, brother of Thomas Hoskins (adm.1875, qv) ; b. 29 Jun 1866 ; adm. 23 Sep 1880 (R) ; left May 1883 ; adm.solicitor Nov 1889 ; practised as solicitor and parliamentary agent in Westminster to Oct 1896 ; employed Solicitor’s Department, Great Western Railway, as chief parliamentary assistant from 1896, parliamentary agent  from 1910 ; m. 26 Jul 1890 Amy Kate, dau. of Frederick Barry MICE, Great George Street, Westminster, civil engineer ; d. 23 Feb 1940.

HOSKINS, THOMAS ; b.       ; adm.      ; KS        ; elected head to Christ Church, Oxford 1637, Westminster Student to 1641, but did not matr. [check]

HOSKINS, THOMAS, son of Thomas Hoskins, Belgrave Road, Pimlico, London, solicitor and parliamentary agent, and Louisa Florence, dau. of Horatio Compigné, Gosport, Hampshire, solicitor ; b. 7 Jan 1863 ; adm. 23 Sep 1875 (R) ; left Dec 1879 ; adm.solicitor Nov 1887 ; practised in London ; d.unm. 29 Jul 1903.

HOSKYNS, JOHN, third son of John Hoskyns, Monnington-on-Wye, Llanwarne, Herefs., and Margery, dau. of Thomas Jones, Llanwarne, Herefs. ; b. 1566 ; at school under Grant one year (Aubrey, Brief Lives, ed.Bennett, 2015, I, 413, on basis of statement made to Aubrey by his son) ; went to Winchester Coll., adm.scholar 1579, founder’s kin ; New Coll.Oxford, matr. 22 Jan 1584/5, scholar 22 Jul 1584, Fellow 22 Jun 1586 ; BA 1588 ; MA 26 Feb 1591/2, when he served as “terrae filius” with such bitterness that he was forced to resign his fellowship and retired to Ilchester, Somerset, where he supported himself by teaching ; adm.Middle Temple 13 Mar 1592/3, called to bar 22 May 1600, Bencher 1620 ; MP Hereford Mar 1603/4 – Feb 1610/1, 1614, and Feb 1627/8 – Mar 1628/9 ; committed to Tower of London for making reflections on James I’s Scottish favourites 7 Jul 1614, but released after a year’s imprisonment ; Second Justice of Carmarthen from 3 Jul 1621 ; Serjeant-at-Law 26 Jun 1623 ; poet and wit ;  author of verses, epigrams and epitaphs ; said to have revised Raleigh’s History of the World and the poems of Ben Jonson (qv) ; m. 1st, 1 Aug 1601 Benedicta, widow of Francis Bourne, Sutton St.Cleve, Somerset, and dau. of Robert Moyle, Buckwell, Kent ; m.2nd, 10 Dec 1627 Isabel, widow of Thomas Heath, Shelsewll, Oxfordshire, and of Devereux Barrett, Tenby, Pembrokeshire, and dau. of William Riseley MP, Chetwode, Bucks. ; d. 27 Aug 1638. ODNB.

HOSKYNS, SIR JOHN, BART., eldest son of Sir John Bennet Hoskyns, Bart. MP, barrister, Bencher Middle Temple, and his first wife Anne, dau. of Sir John Bingley, Kt MP, Writer of the Tallies, Exchequer ; grandson of John Hoskyns (qv) ; b. 23 Jul 1634 ; at school under Busby (British Library, Sloane MSS 4222, f.208) ; Christ Church, Oxford, matr. 9 Dec 1650 ; adm.Middle Temple 7 Jul 1647, called to bar 25 Nov 1653, Bencher 10 Nov 1671 ; knighted 24 Jan 1675/6 ; a Master in Chancery from 1676 ; succ.father as 2ndbaronet 10 Feb 1679/80 ; MP Herefordshire Mar 1684/5 – Jul 1687 ; FRS 20 May 1663 (an original Fellow), President 30 Nov 1682 – 30 Nov 1683 ; a friend of the antiquary John Aubrey, Lord Keeper Guilford and Sir Christopher Wren (qv) ; m. 29 Aug 1671 Jane, dau. of Sir Gabriel Lowe, Kt, Newark Park, Ozleworth, Gloucs. ; d. 12 Sep 1705. ODNB.

HOTCHKIN, THOMAS HENRY STAFFORD, eldest son of Thomas Hotchkin, Woodhall Lodge, near Horncastle, Lincs., and South Luffenham, Rutland, and Mary Anne, eldest dau. of Henry O’Brien, Blatherwycke Park, near Wansford, Northants ; b.     ; adm. 17 Jan 1814 ; left Bartholomewtide 1816 ; Cornet, Royal Horse Guards 26 Mar 1818 ; Lieut., 28 Mar 1822 ; ret. 7 Apr 1825 ; of Woodhall Lodge, Lincs. ; m. 1838 Caroline, dau. of John Allen (marriage registered London first quarter 1838) ; d. 24 Oct 1848.

HOTHAM, —  ; b.        ; in under school list 1717.

HOTHAM, AUGUSTUS, eldest son of Sir William Hotham (adm.1782, qv) , and his first wife ; b. 1 Mar 1805 ; adm. 7 Oct 1816 (G) ; left 8 Jul 1818 ; readm. 13 Jan 1820 ; Ensign, 40th Foot 20 Dec 1821 ; Lieut., 83rd Foot 19 May 1825 ; Capt., half-pay, unattached 19 Dec 1826 ; 76th Foot 24 May 1827 ; half-pay, unattached 28 Dec 1832 ; Brevet Maj., 23 Nov 1841 ; Brevet Lieut.-Col., 11 Nov 1851 ; ret. 10 Jul 1863 ; m. 4 Dec 1851 Matilda, fifth dau. of John Warrington ; d. 22 Oct 1863.

HOTHAM, BEAUMONT, 2ND BARON HOTHAM (I), brother of Sir Charles Hotham, Bart. (adm.1741, qv) ; b. 5 Aug 1737 ; adm. Apr 1745 ; became Head Town Boy before he was sixteen ; an interesting interview which he had in that capacity with the Head Master is recorded in The Hothams, 1918, ii, 331-2 ; in school list 1752 ; Trinity Hall, Cambridge, adm.pens. 1 Feb 1753, matr. Easter 1754, but did not graduate ; adm.Middle Temple 20 Jan 1753, called to bar 26 May 1758 ; practised in Chancery ; a Commissioner of Bankrupts (occurs in annual lists 1767-9) ; Auditor to estates of Duke of Devonshire and Duke of Portland ; MP Wigan 1768 – May 1775 ; declined lucrative official appointments in India 1773, 1774 ; a Baron of the Exchequer  10 May 1775 – Hilary term 1805 ; knighted and made Serjeant-at-Law 17 May 1775 ; a Commissioner of the Great Seal 9 Apr – 23 Dec 1783 ; succeeded his brother William by special remainder as 2nd Baron Hotham (I) 2 May 1813 ; m. 6 Jun 1767 Susannah, widow of James Norman, Broad Street, London, and East Molesey, Surrey, merchant, and second dau. of Sir Thomas Hankey, Kt, Alderman of London, banker ; d. 3 Mar 1814. ODNB.

HOTHAM, BEAUMONT, eldest son of Beaumont Hotham, 2nd Baron Hotham (qv) ; b. 30 Aug 1768 ; adm. 22 Jan 1777 ; Ensign, 2nd Foot Guards 18 Aug 1784 ; Lieut. and Capt., 20 Oct 1790 ; Capt. and Lieut.-Col., 23 Jun 1795 ; ret. 4 Sep 1799 [sic : check] ; m. 20 May 1790 Philadelphia, dau. of Sir John Dixon Dyke, Bart. (qv) ; d. Aug 1799.

HOTHAM, BEAUMONT, 3RD BARON HOTHAM (I), eldest son of Beaumont Hotham (adm.1777, qv) ; b. 9 Aug 1794 ; adm. 28 Jun 1806 (Glover) ; left 1808 ; RMC Sandhurst ; Ensign, 2nd Foot Guards 27 Jun 1810 ; Lieut. and Capt., 13 Jan 1814 ; Brevet Maj., 21 Jan 1819 ; half-pay 14 Oct 1819 ; restored to active list 10 Nov 1825 ; Lieut.-Col., half-pay, unattached 24 Dec 1825 ; Col., 28 Jun 1838 ; Maj.-Gen., 11 Nov 1851 ; Lieut.-Gen., 26 Aug 1858 ; Gen., 12 Jan 1865 ; served in Peninsular War ; wounded at Salamanca ; present at Waterloo ; succeeded grandfather as 3rd Baron Hotham (I) 4 Mar 1814 ; MP (Tory/Conservative) Leominster 1820-31, 22 Dec 1831-41, Yorkshire East Riding 1841-68 ; d. unm. 12 Dec 1870. ODNB.

HOTHAM, CHARLES, third son of Sir John Hotham, Bart., MP, Governor of Hull, and his second wife Anne, dau. of Ralph Rokeby, Deputy Secretary, Council of the North ; b. 12 May 1615 ; adm.      ; KS 1629 (Bodleian Library, Oxford, Tanner MSS lxix, f.224) ; Peterhouse, Cambridge, adm.pens. 22 Nov 1631, matr.1631 ; migrated to Christ’s Coll., adm.pens. 7 May 1632 ; BA 1635/6 ; MA 1639 ; ordained ; Vicar of Hollym with Withernsea, Yorks., 5 Nov 1640 – Oct 1641 ; returned to Cambridge ; Fellow of Peterhouse 11 Jun 1644-51, Bursar 1646-8 ; University Preacher and Proctor 1646 ; preached against the Engagement Dec 1650 ; quarrelled with the Master of his college and petitioned against his “usurpations” ; his publication of a pamphlet entitled Corporations Vindicated led to his expulsion from his fellowship in 1651 ; Rector of Nunburnholme, Yorks., 22 Jul 1652 ; Rector of Wigan, Lancs., 1653-62, when he was ejected for nonconformity after a prolonged resistance ; emigrated to West Indies, where he became one of the ministers in the Somers Islands (Bermuda), so appointed 28 Feb 1668/9 ; a man of some scientific attainments, particularly interested in chemistry and astronomy ; FRS 9 Jan 1667/8 ; translated Boehme, Consolatory Treatise of the Four Complexions, 1654 ; author, Ad Philosophiam Teutonicam Manuductio, 1648 ; m. 15 Sep 1656 Elizabeth, dau. of Stephen Thompson, Hambleton, Yorks. ; d. in Somers Islands  3 Mar 1671/2. ODNB.

HOTHAM, SIR CHARLES, BART., eldest son of Sir Beaumont Hotham, Bart., Commissioner of Customs, and his cousin Frances, eldest dau. of Rev.Stephen Thompson, Vicar of Welton, Yorks. ; first cousin of Sir Charles Hotham, Bart. (adm.1743, qv) ; b. 18 Jun 1729 ; adm. Oct 1741 (Morel) ; left 1745 ; adm.Middle Temple 22 Dec 1742 ; Ensign, 1st Foot Guards 24 Sep 1746 ; Lieut. and Capt., 6 Feb 1750 ; Capt. and Lieut.-Col., 5 May 1758 ; Col. in the Army 19 Feb 1762 ; Lieut.-Col., 63rd Foot 10 Jul 1765 ; Col., 63rd Foot, 13 Sep 1765 – Sep 1768, 15th Foot from 21 Sep 1768 ; Maj.-Gen., 25 May 1772 ; Lieut.-Gen., 29 Aug 1777 ; Gen., 12 Oct 1793 ; served in Flanders towards end of War of Austrian Succession, on expedition to St.Malo 1758, and in Germany during Seven years War ; MP St.Ives 1761-8 ; a Groom of the Bedchamber to George III 5 May 1763 – 20 Jan 1788 ; a favourite at Court ; succ. father as 8thbaronet 29 Aug 1771 ; assumed surname of Thompson in lieu of Hotham 25 Dec 1772, on succeeding to the Thompson family’s estates at Hambleton and Ebberston, Yorks., but resumed surname of Hotham 2 Jul 1787, after these estates had been resettled ;  some interesting particulars of his school life and school fellows are given in The Hothams, 1918, ii, 1-18 ; m. 21 Oct 1752 Lady Dorothy Hobart, only dau. of John Hobart, 1st Earl of Buckinghamshire (qv), and his first wife ; d. 25 Jan 1794.

HOTHAM, SIR CHARLES, BART., only son of Col.Sir Charles Hotham, Bart. MP, Groom of the Bedchamber to George II, and Lady Gertrude Stanhope, eldest  dau. of Philip Stanhope, 3rd Earl of Chesterfield (qv) ; b. Sep 1735 ; succ. father as 6th baronet  15 Jan 1737/8 ; adm. Oct 1745 ; left 1751 ; Grand Tour (France, Italy, Germany, Russia, Scandinavia) 1751-7 ; gave himself up to melancholy and to Methodism ; in poor health from 1759 ; m. 31 Oct 1757 Caroline Anne, only surviving dau. of Thomas Clutterbuck (qv) ; d. at Stavelot, near Spa 13 Oct 1767, from the effects of a fall from his horse.

HOTHAM, SIR CHARLES, BART., only son of Sir John Hotham, Bart. (qv) ; b. 24 May 1766 ; adm. 15 Jun 1778 ; Ensign, 2nd Foot Guards 13 Jul 1785 ; Lieut. and Capt., 30 Nov 1790 ; retd. 20 Feb 1794 ; succ.father as 10th baronet 3 Nov 1795 ; his diary of ‘Fighting in Flanders 1793-4’ was published in The Nineteenth Century and After, May and Nov 1916 ; m. 16 Nov 1804 Elizabeth, fourth dau. of Owen Meyrick-Meyrick, Carmarthenshire ; d. 18 Jul 1811.

HOTHAM, CHARLES, third son of George Hotham (adm.1782, qv), and his first wife ; b.       ; adm. 13 Mar 1809 ; left 2 Aug 1817 ; University Coll.Oxford, matr.27 Oct 1817, aged 18, scholar 1817 ; BA 1821 ; MA 1825 (incorp.Cambridge 1833) ; Fellow, Univ.Coll., 1825 ; ordained deacon 14 Jul 1822, priest 3 Aug 1823 (both York) ; Chaplain and Librarian, Lincoln’s Inn (occurs 1829) ; Rector of Roos, Yorks., from 1841 ; Prebendary of York from 15 Sep 1842 ; m. 5 Jan 1837 Lucy Elizabeth, widow of Hon. and Rev.Henry Duncombe, Rector of Kirby Misperton, Yorks., and eldest dau. of Rev.Christopher Sykes, Rector of Roos, Yorks. ; d. 11 Feb 1866.

HOTHAM, SIR CHARLES, eldest son of Hon.Frederick Hotham (qv) ; b. 14 Jan 1806 ; adm. 13 Apr 1814 ; left 30 Mar 1818 ; entered Royal Navy 6 Nov 1818 ; Capt., 28 Jun 1833 ; Commander-in-Chief, West Coast of Africa 1845-6 ; on special mission to Argentine Confederation, Paraguay-Uruguay, 17 Apr 1852 ; Lieut.-Governor, Victoria 6 Dec 1853, Governor from 1 Feb 1855 ; KCB 9 Mar 1846 ; m. 10 Dec 1853 Hon.Sarah Jane Hood, widow of Hugh Holbech, Farnborough, Warwicks., and dau. of Samuel Hood, 2ndBaron Bridport (I) ; d. at Toorak, Melbourne, Victoria, Australia 31 Dec 1855. ODNB.

HOTHAM, DURAND, brother of Charles Hotham (b.1615, qv) ; b. 15 Sep 1619 ; at school under Osbaldeston (J.Peile, Biog.Reg. of Christ’s Coll.Cambridge, i, 424) ; Christ’s Coll.Cambridge, adm.pens. 9 Nov 1632 ; BA 1636/7 ; MA 1640 ; adm.Middle Temple 25 Jan 1640/1 ; involved in his father’s disgrace in 1643, but discharged after being examined by Parliament ; assisted his father at his trial in the Guildhall in Nov and Dec 1644 ; retired to Lockington, Yorks., where he occupied himself in scientific pursuits ; JP Yorkshire East Riding ; translated his brother Charles’s Ad Philosophiam Teutonicam Manuductio, 1650, and wrote a Life of Jacob Boehme, 1654 ; m. 23 Aug 1645 Frances, dau. of Richard Remington, Lund, Yorks. ; d. 1691. ODNB.

HOTHAM, EDWIN, second son of Sir William Hotham (adm.1782, qv), and his first wife ; b. 13 Dec 1807 ; adm. 13 Jan 1820 (G) ; left Whitsun 1822 ; New Coll.Oxford, matr. 15 Nov 1826 ; BA 1830 ; MA 1833 ; ordained deacon 1831, priest 1 Nov 1832 (both Rochester) ; Vicar of South Cave, Yorks., 1834 ; Rector of South Dalton, Yorks. 1844-54 ; Rector of Crowcombe, Somerset, from 1853 ; m. 13 Sep 1838 Harriet, youngest dau. of Sir John Geers Cotterell, Bart. MP ; d. 8 Mar 1875.

HOTHAM, HON.FREDERICK, second son of Beaumont Hotham, 2nd Baron Hotham (qv) ; b. 16 Jan 1774 ; adm. 4 Apr 1782 ; Christ Church, Oxford, matr. 29 Jan 1791, Canoneer Student 23 Dec 1791 – void 17 Nov 1794, on election as Fellow All Souls’ ; BA 1794 ; MA 1798 ; Fellow of All Souls Coll., Oxford 1794 (still 1800) ; ordained deacon 11 Jun 1797, priest 3 Jun 1798 (both Oxford) ; Vicar of St.Werburgh, Derby 23 Feb 1799 – 1809 ; Rector of Burnham Sutton, Norfolk, from 15 Oct 1802 ; Prebendary of Rochester from 26 Nov 1807 ; Rector of Dennington, Suffolk, from 1 Feb 1808 ; Proctor in Convocation ; compiled a manuscript history of the Hotham family ; m. 23 Nov 1802 Anne Elizabeth, dau. of Thomas Hallett Hodges, Hemstead Place, Kent ; d. 10 Oct 1854.

HOTHAM, FREDERICK EARLE, fourth son of Sir William Hotham (adm.1782, qv), and his first wife ; b. 20 Mar 1812 ; adm. 16 Jan 1827 (G) ; Writer, EICS Bengal 1830 ; d. on his passage out to India on board the Moira 27 Sep 1831.

HOTHAM, GEORGE, brother of Sir Charles Hotham, Bart. (adm.1741, qv) ; b. 7 Jan 1741 ; adm. Mar 1748 ; in school list 1754 ; Ensign, 1st Foot Guards 14 May 1759 ; Lieut. and Capt., 10 Jul 1765 ; Capt. and Lieut.-Col., 8 Aug 1775 ; retd. 13 Jun 1776 ; Brevet Col. and ADC to King George III 13 Feb 1782 – Nov 1789 ; Col., 14th Foot, 18 Nov 1789 – Feb 1803 ; Maj.-Gen., 28 Apr 1790 ; Lieut.-Gen., 26 Jan 1797 ; Gen., 29 Apr 1802 ; ADC to Lieut.-Gen. (afterwards Field Marshal) Conway during last three years of war in Germany 1761-3, and to Earl of Hertford as Lord Lieut.Ireland Nov 1765 ; tutor and Sub-Governor to Prince of Wales and his younger brothers Jun 1776-80 ; Treasurer and Secretary to Prince of Wales 1780 – 5 Jan 1787, when dismissed from Prince’s service ;  continued at George III’s request to manage the pecuniary affairs of the younger princes ; Treasurer to Duke of York 8 Aug 1787 ; m. 16 Dec 1769 Diana, youngest dau. of Sir Warton Pennyman Warton, Bart. (qv) ; d. 7 Feb 1806.

HOTHAM, GEORGE, eldest son of George Hotham (adm.1748, qv) ; b. 18 Oct 1770 ; adm. 4 Apr 1782 ; Page of Honour to Queen Charlotte c.1779-87 ; Ensign, 3rd Foot Guards 17 Oct 1787 ; Lieut. and Capt., 30 Nov 1792 ; retd. 10 Dec 1794 ; m. 1st, 1 Mar 1792 Caroline, dau. of Roger Gee, Burton Bishop, Yorks. ; m.2nd, 29 Jun 1813 Rosamond, only dau. of Rev.Francis Best, Rector of South Dalton, Yorks. ; d. 24 Apr 1823.

HOTHAM, HON. SIR HENRY, third son of Beaumont Hotham, 2nd Baron Hotham (qv) ; b. 19 Feb 1777 ; adm. 3 Apr 1785 ; Royal Naval Academy, Portsmouth 1788 ; entered Royal Navy on board HMS Princess Royal 1790 ; served in Mediterranean 1793-8 ; Lieut., 6 Jun 1794 ; Cdr. ; Post Capt., 13 Jun 1795 ; commanded HMS Immortalité in Bay of Biscay 1799-1801 ; with Sir Richard Strachan 1805 ; in command of HMS Defiance when he drove three French frigates aground on Les Sables d’Olonne 1809, and of HMS Northumberland when he destroyed two frigates off L’Orient 1812 ; Rear Adm., 4 Jun 1814 ; while commanding squadron in Bay of Biscay prevented Napoleon’s escape to America Jul 1815 ; a Lord of the Admiralty 2 Apr 1818 – 23 Mar 1822, 19 Sep 1828 – 25 Nov 1830 ; Vice-Adm., 27 May 1825 ; Commander-in-Chief, Mediterranean, from Jan 1831 ; KCB 2 Jan 1815 ; GCMG 4 Jul 1831 ; m. 6 Jul 1816 Lady Frances Anne Juliana Rous, dau. of John Rous, 1st Earl of Stradbroke (qv) ; d. at Malta 19 Apr 1833. ODNB.

HOTHAM, SIR JOHN, BART., brother of Sir Charles Hotham, Bart. (adm.1741, qv) ; b. 16 Mar 1734/5 ; adm. Jun 1744 ; left 1752 ; Trinity Coll.Cambridge, adm.pens. 27 Jan 1752, scholar 24 Apr 1753, matr. Easter 1753 ; BA 1756 ; MA 1760 ; ordained deacon 19 Feb 1758, priest 1 Apr 1759 (both Rochester) ; Domestic Chaplain to Earl of Chesterfield 3 Mar 1758 ; Vicar of Aston Abbotts, Bucks., 4 Apr 1759 – Dec 1767 ; Chaplain to British Staff in Germany for a few months, but returned to England with Lord George Germain (qv) after battle of Minden ; Chaplain in Ordinary to George III 12 Dec 1760 – 1779 ; Prebendary of St.Paul’s 25 May 1763 – Feb 1780, also Archdeacon of Middlesex 1 May 1764 – Jan 1780 ; Vicar of Northolt, Middlesex 14 Dec 1763 – Oct 1779 ; Vicar of St.Leonard’s, Shoreditch 14 Oct 1767 – Oct 1779 ; Chaplain to John Hobart, 2nd Earl of Buckinghamshire (qv), when Lord Lieut.Ireland 1776-9 ; DD Trinity Coll.Dublin 1777 ; consecrated Bishop of Ossory 14 Nov 1779 ; translated to Clogher 17 May 1782 ; succeeded brother as 9th baronet 25 Jan 1794 ; m. 11 Apr 1765 Susannah, dau. of Herbert Mackworth (b.1687, qv) ; d. 3 Nov 1795.

HOTHAM, JOHN WILLIAM, third son of Sir William Hotham, Bart. (adm.1782, qv), and his first wife ; b. 30 Mar 1809 ; adm. 16 Jan 1822 (G) ; left Whitsun 1822 ; passed examination for Royal Navy 1830 ; Lieut., 13 Mar 1832 ; Cdr. on retired list 16 Apr 1878 [check] ; m.1st, 29 Apr 1838 Sarah Eliza, eldest dau. of William Hawksley, The Circus, Bath ; m.2nd, 21 Nov 1874 Matilda Anne, eldest dau. of Dennis Hollingworth, Hollingworth Hall, Cheshire ; d. 31 Aug 1879.

HOTHAM, MONTAGUE, third son of George Hotham (adm.1748, qv) ; b. 20 Mar 1779 ; adm. 9 Feb 1790 ; left 1794 ; Ensign, 14thFoot 19 Feb 1794 ; Lieut., [check] ; Capt., 11 Jun 1796 ; Maj., 20 Aug 1804 ; m. 22 Jan 1804 Ann, eldest dau. of Thomas Bird, Norton Lodge, Worcs. ; d. 4 Mar 1805.

HOTHAM, WILLIAM, 1ST BARON HOTHAM (I), brother of Sir Charles Hotham, Bart. (adm.1741, qv) ; b. 8 Apr 1736 ; adm.Apr 1745 ; left 1747 ; Royal Naval Academy, Portsmouth 31 May 1748 ; entered Royal Navy on board HMS Gosport 1751 ; Lieut., 28 Jan 1755 ; Cdr., 19 Nov 1756 ; Post Capt., 17 Aug 1757 ; served at Belleisle 1761 ; Commodore, North American station 1776 ; took part in action off St.Lucia 1778, and in encounters with French fleet Apr – May 1780 ; Colonel of Marines 1779-87 ; served under Howe at relief of Gibraltar 1782 ; Rear-Adm., 24 Sep 1787 ; Vice-Adm., 21 Sep 1790 ; second in command under Lord Hood in Mediterranean 1793-4, in chief command 1794-5 ; Adm., 16 Apr 1795 ; created Baron Hotham (I) 7 Mar 1797 ; succeeded nephew as 11th baronet 18 Jul 1811 ; d.unm. 2 May 1813. ODNB.

HOTHAM, SIR WILLIAM, second son of George Hotham (adm.1748, qv) ; b. 12 Feb 1772 ; adm. 4 Apr 1782 (in same boarding house as Sir Francis Burdett, Bart. (qv), and Burdett’s brothers) ; left 1785 ; entered Royal Navy as 1st cl.Volunteer, HMS Grampus 1786 ; Lieut., 27 Oct 1790 ; served as volunteer with brigade of seamen employed under Nelson at siege of Bastia May 1794 ; Cdr., 12 Aug 1794 ; Post Capt., 4 Oct 1794 ; commanded HMS Adamant at battle of Camperdown 11 Oct 1797, and at blockade of Mauritius 1799 ; Rear-Adm. 4 Dec 1813 ; Vice-Adm., 19 Jul 1821 ; Adm., 10 Jan 1837 ; KCB 2 Jan 1815 ; GCB 4 Jul 1840 ; “for several years a Gentleman in Waiting” (DNB) [but not in Sainty/Bucholz] ; his diaries and written recollections formed the basis of A,M.W.Stirling, Pages and Portraits of the Past, 1919 ; m. 1st, 7 Jun 1804 Anne, dau. of Sir Edward Jeynes, Kt, Gloucester, banker ; m.2nd, 25 Jun 1835 Jane Seymour, widow of Roger Pettiward, Great Finborough Hall, Suffolk, and dau. of Francis Colman, Hillersdown, Devon ; d. 31 May 1848. ODNB.

HOTHAM, WILLIAM FRANCIS, youngest son of Hon.Frederick Hotham (qv) ; b. 28 Mar 1819 ; adm. 21 Jan 1833 ; KS 1833 ; elected to Christ Church, Oxford 1837, matr. 5 May 1837, Westminster Student ; BA 1841 ; MA 1843 ; Fellow, All Souls’ Coll.Oxford 1843-55 ; ordained deacon 1841, priest 1842 (both Oxford) ; Rector of Buckland, Surrey, from 1853 ; m. 31 Jan 1855 Emma, fifth dau. of John Carbonell, Horkesley Hall, Essex ; d. 10 Sep 1883.

HOUGHTON, PHILIP ; b.      ; adm. (aged 11) Jun 1743 ; left 1748.

HOUGHTON, THOMAS, see HOLGHTON, THOMAS.

HOUGHTON, WILLIAM ; b.      ; adm. 15 Feb 1811.

HOW, —   ; b.       ; in under school lists 1715-7.

HOWARD, —  ; b.      ; at school 1660-1 (Busby’s Account Book).

HOWARD, —  ; b.       ; at school 1660-1 (Busby’s Account Book).

HOWARD, —  ; b.       ; in school lists 1743-6.

HOWARD, CECIL ARTHUR, brother of Cosmo Gordon Howard (qv) ; b. 7 Sep 1855 ; adm. 26 Sep 1867 ; left Aug 1869 ; Gentleman Cadet, Royal Artillery 14 Nov 1873 ; Lieut., 19 Aug 1875 ; Capt., 13 Jun 1884 ; Maj., 25 May 1892 ; m. 3 Sep 1885 Kate, dau. of Capt. Brooke Samuel Bridges Parlby, Bengal Staff Corps ; d. 5 Jun 1910.

HOWARD, COSMO GORDON, eldest son of Cosmo Richard Howard, Gloucester Place, Portman Square, London, and Meliora Louise, dau. of Bury Hutchinson, Russell Square, London, solicitor ; b. 25 Oct 1851 ; adm. 26 Jan 1865 ; QS 31 Jan 1867 ; left Apr 1869 ; Trinity Hall, Cambridge, adm.pens. 29 Apr 1869, matr.Mich.1869, but did not graduate ; an electrical engineer ; “obtained a situation in the Telegraphic Engineering Department” (Forshall, p.384) ; AMIEE 1877 ; m. 24 Jul 1873 Sophia Raby, dau. of Rev James Gillman, Rector of Barfreston, Kent ; d. 4 Jan 1930.

HOWARD, CYRUS COSMO, brother of Cosmo Gordon Howard (qv) ; b. 24 Mar 1854 ; adm. 26 Jan 1865 ; QS 1869 ; left Jul 1871 ; Gentleman Cadet, Royal Artillery 15 Nov 1872 ; Lieut., 12 Feb 1874 ; Capt., 12 May 1883 ; retd. 24 Mar 1886 ; marriage registered Brighton fourth quarter 1895 ; d. 15 Jan 1903.

HOWARD, FRANCIS ; b.       ; adm. (aged 9) Jul 1735 ; left 1737. [Probably Francis Howard, brother of Sir George Howard (qv), d. 18 Dec 1737 (IGI)].

HOWARD, HON.FULKE GREVILLE, second son of Clotworthy Upton, 1st Baron Templetown (I), and Elizabeth, dau. of Shuckburgh Boughton, Poston Court, Herefs. ; b. 3 Apr 1773 ; adm. 13 Jun 1786 ; KS 1787 ; elected to Trinity Coll.Cambridge 1791, but went to Christ Church, Oxford, matr. 7 Jun 1791 ; Ensign, 1st Foot Guards 28 Apr 1793 ; Lieut. and Capt., 15 Oct 1794 ; Capt. and Lieut.-Col., 16 Apr 1804 ; Lieut.-Col., 7th West India Regt. 21 May 1807 ; 9th Garrison Battn., half-pay 16 Jul 1807 ; Brevet Col., 4 Jun 1813 ; retd. 1825 ; served in Netherlands ; ADC to Duke of York ; MP Castle Rising 29 Jan 1808-32 ; assumed surname of Howard in lieu of Upton 6 Aug 1807 ; his marriage eventually brought him the estates of his father-in-law Richard Howard (qv) ; m. 7 Jul 1807 Mary, only surviving child of Richard Howard (qv) ; d. 4 Mar 1846.

HOWARD, SIR GEORGE, son of Lieut.-Gen.Thomas Howard, and Mary, sister of Richard Moreton (qv) ; bapt. 20 Jun 1718 ; adm. (aged 10) Jan 1728/9 ; Min.Can.1732 ; left 1735 ; Christ Church, Oxford, matr. 23 Jun 1735 ; DCL 7 Jul 1773 ; Ensign, 24th Foot 28 Feb 1725/6 ; Lieut., 28 Jan 1736 ; Capt., 3rdFoot 1 Sep 1739 ; Lieut.-Col., 2 Apr 1744 ; Col. in the Army 21 Aug 1749 ; Col., 3rd Foot  21 Aug 1749 – May 1763 ; commanded his regiment at Fontenoy, Falkirk, Culloden, the battle of the Val, and on expedition to Rochefort ; Maj.-Gen., 16 Jan 1758 ; Lieut.-Gen., 22 Feb 1760 ; commanded a brigade under Lord Granby in Germany 1760-2 ; signed Convention of Brucker Muhl with the French general Guerchy Sep 1762 ; Col., 7th Dragoons 13 May 1763 – Apr 1779 ; Governor of Minorca 1766-8 ; Governor of Chelsea Hospital from 13 Feb 1768 ; Gen., 6 Sep 1777 ; Col., 1st Dragoon Guards, from 1 Apr 1779 ; Governor of Jersey 1790 ; Field Marshal from 12 Oct 1793 ; MP Lostwithiel 1761 – Mar 1766, Stamford from 1768 ; KB 3 Aug 1774 ; Privy Councillor 29 Jul 1795 ; m.1st, 16 Feb 1747 Lady Lucy Wentworth, dau. of Thomas Wentworth, 1st Earl of Strafford ; m.2nd, 21 May 1776 Elizabeth, widow of Thomas Howard, 2nd Earl of Effingham, and sister of William Beckford (adm.1718/9, qv) ; d. 16 Jul 1796. ODNB.

HOWARD, GERARD BOTTOMLEY, son of Gerard Howard, Newport Street, St.Anne, Soho, and Hampstead, Middlesex, Joiner of the Privy Chamber, and his first wife Mary Honeywood ; bapt.St.Anne, Soho 4 Mar 1730 (IGI) (as Gerard Bottomley Howard) ; adm. (aged 12) Oct 1743 (as Gerard Howard) ; apprenticed to John Swale, attorney, Staple Inn 13 May 1748  ; of Frognal Hall, Hampstead, Middlesex ; DL JP Middlesex ; m.1st, — ; m. 2nd, 13 Dec 1762 Ann, sister of Parravicini Mawhood (qv) ; d. 12 Feb 1781 (will dated 5 Feb 1781, proved PCC 1 Mar 1781).

HOWARD, HENRY ; b.      ; adm. May 1747 ; in school list 1752 (“pays above normal”). [Perhaps Cornet, 1st Dragoon Guards 30 Mar 1755 ; Lieut., 1 Dec 1758 ; Capt., 15 Apr 1762 – Mar 1773, sold out] [Note “Master Howard”, Page of Honour to Duke of Cumberland and Princess Caroline, Chamberlayne 1748] [probably Henry Howard, brother of Sir George Howard (qv) ; b. 14 Jan 1736 ; of Tower House, Arundel, Sussex ; m. 1st, Catherine, dau. of Rev. John Carleton DD, Rector of St Mary at Walls, Colchester, Essex ; m.2nd, 6 Nov 1766 Hon.Maria Mackenzie, dau. of Kenneth Mackenzie, Viscount Fortrose MP ; d. 10 Sep 1811] [Henry Howard (b.1736) was certainly Capt. in Army]

[HOWARD, JOHN ; b.       ; in school list Dec 1736. Probably an error for Francis Howard (qv)]

HOWARD, RICHARD, brother of William Bagot, 1st Baron Bagot (qv) ; b. 13 Nov 1733 ; adm. Jun 1740 ; Brasenose Coll.Oxford, matr. 24 Oct 1750 ; migrated to All Souls Coll., Oxford ; Fellow, All Souls Coll. 1753-83 ; BCL 1757 ; DCL 1764 ; adm. Lincoln’s Inn 13 Jun 1751, called to bar 30 May 1758 ; Secretary to Embassy, Venice May 1761 – Jun 1763 ; a Commissioner of Excise Dec 1764-74 ; Receiver-General of Land Tax, Middlesex, from 1764 ; assumed surname of Howard in lieu of Bagot 29 Apr 1783 ; obtained by his marriage the Howard family estates at Ashtead, Surrey, Elford, Staffs., and Levens Hall, Westmorland ; m. 20 Mar 1783 Hon.Frances Howard, only dau. of William Howard, Viscount Andover MP, and sister of Henry Bowes Howard, 12th Earl of Suffolk and 5th Earl of Berkshire ; d. 12 Nov 1818.

HOWARD, RICHARD HENRY, elder son of Rev.Richard Coytmore Howard DD, Prebendary of Bangor and Vicar of Llanrhaiadr-in-Kinmerch, Denbighshire, and Dorothea Katherine, eldest dau. of Rev.Thomas Clough, Rector of Denbigh, Denbighshire ; b. 23 Dec 1813 ; adm. 14 Jan 1828 (G) ; Christ Church, Oxford, matr. 7 Jun 1832 ; BA 1836 ; MA 1839 ; ordained deacon 1838 (Lichfield), priest 20 Oct 1839 (Peterborough) ; Vicar of St.Matthew’s, City Road, London, 22 Feb 1848-53 ; Vicar of Dalston, Cumberland 1853-65 ; JP Flintshire 1869, Denbighshire 1875 ; m. 3 Oct 1852 Julia Elizabeth, eldest dau. of Capt.William Ripley, 52nd Foot ; d. 31 May 1890.

HOWARD, ROBERT MANNERS, brother of Richard Henry Howard (qv) ; b. 20 Sep 1818 ; adm. 15 Jan 1830 (G) ; KS (Capt.) 1833 ; rowed against Eton 12 May 1836, 4 May 1837 ; elected head to Trinity Coll.Cambridge 1837, but went to Oriel Coll.Oxford, matr.1 Jun 1837 ; killed by a fall from a gig near Beaumaris, Anglesey 23 Oct 1839.

HOWARD, THOMAS, 2ND EARL OF ARUNDEL, only son of Philip Howard, 1st Earl of Arundel (attainted 1589), and Hon.Anne Dacre, dau. of Thomas Dacre, 5th Baron Dacre of Gillesland ; b. 7 July 1586 ; at school under Camden (Lloyd, Memoirs, 1677, 284, where he is described as having been “bred (when his father was under a cloud) at Westminster near London”) ; said to have gone to Trinity Coll.Cambridge, but there is no record of his admission ; restored to father’s titles of Earl of Arundel and Surrey 6 Jul 1603, and restored in blood 18 Apr 1604 ; introduced at court 1605 ; Lord Lieutenant, Sussex 1608 ; travelled on European continent 1609-10, acquiring an appreciation of art ; installed KG 13 May 1611 ; Lord Lieutenant, Norfolk 18 Apr 1615-42 ; conformed to Church of England 25 Dec 1615, having previously been a Roman Catholic ; Privy Councillor 16 Jul 1616 ; presided over committee of House of Lords in Bacon’s case Apr 1621 ; one of joint Commissioners of Great Seal 3 May – 10 Jul 1621 ; Earl Marshal of England from 29 Aug 1621 ; owing to his son’s clandestine marriage with Lady Elizabeth Stuart and his undisguised hostility to Duke of Buckingham, Arundel incurred displeasure of Charles I and was twice placed under restraint ; restored to Privy Council in 1628 after reconciliation with King ; Justice in Eyre, North of Trent, from 25 Feb 1634 ; sent on unsuccessful mission to Emperor  Apr-Sep 1636 to urge the return of the Palatinate to the King’s nephew ; General in command of army against Scots 1638 ; Lord Lieutenant, Cumberland 1639 ; Lord Steward of Household 12 Apr 1640 – Aug 1641, resigned ; presided as Lord High Steward in trial of Earl of Strafford spring 1641 ; left England Feb 1642 and went abroad, settling in Padua, Italy ; while abroad said to have contributed no less than £54,000 to Royalist cause ; his personal estate was sequestrated by Parliament ; created Earl of Norfolk 6 Jun 1644 ; the first Englishman to form a large collection of works of art and was described by Horace Walpole as “the father of vertu in England” ; the bulk of his collection of classical sculpture (the “Arundel Marbles”) was presented by his grandson to Oxford University in 1667 ; m. Sep 1606 Lady Aletheia Talbot, third dau. of Gilbert Talbot, 7th Earl of Shrewsbury ; d. at Padua 24 Sep 1646. ODNB.

HOWARD, THOMAS, eldest son of Thomas Howard MP, Ashtead, Surrey, Teller of the Exchequer, and Lady Diana Newport, sister of Hon.Francis Newport (qv) ; bapt. 26 Aug 1688 ; at school under Knipe (F.E.Paget, Some records of the Ashtead estate and its Howard possessors, 1873, folding pedigree at end) ; d. at school 27 Feb 1702, aged 14.

HOWARD-GIBBON, HENRY FREDERICK HOWARD, son of Edward Howard Howard-Gibbon, Norroy King of Arms, and Amelia, second dau. of Stephen Cooper Dendy, Horsham, Sussex, surgeon ; b. 9 Oct 1835 ; adm. 3 Jun 1847 ; Min.Can. 1850 ; emigrated to Toronto, Canada 1858 ; LLB Toronto 1865 ; barrister [Canada ?] ; “of Hamilton” ; m. (by 1863) Mary Moore ; d. at London, Ontario, Canada 18 Mar 1867.

HOWARTH, see HOWORTH and HOWTH.

HOWE, see also HOW.

HOWE, —  ; b.       ; in under school list 1716.

HOWE, GEORGE ; b.      ; adm. (aged 7) Mar 1727/8 ; left 1733.

HOWE, GEORGE AUGUSTUS, 3RD VISCOUNT HOWE (I), second son of Emanuel Howe, 2ndViscount Howe (I) MP, and Mary Sophia Charlotte, Lady of Bedchamber to Augusta, Princess of Wales, dau. of John Adolph, Freiherr von Kielmansegge, and Sophia Charlotte, Countess of Darlington (mistresss of King George I) ; b.      ; aged (8) Nov 1732 ; left 1735 (but said to have been at Eton Coll. c.1734) ; succeeded father as 3rd Viscount Howe (I) 29 Mar 1735 ; Ensign, 1st Foot  Guards 9 Mar 1745 ; Lieut. and Capt., 9 May 1746 ; served in Flanders as ADC to Duke of Cumberland 1747 ; Capt. and Lieut.-Col., 1 May 1749 ; Col.commandant 60th Foot (Royal American Regt.) 25 Feb 1757 – Sep 1757, 55th Foot  from 28 Sep 1757 ; Brig.-Gen. in North America 29 Dec 1757 ; second in command of Abercromby’s ill-fated expedition 1758 ; MP Nottingham from 1747 ; killed in skirmish with French at Trout Brook, near Ticonderoga, unm. 6 Jul 1758. Monument in North-West Tower, Westminster Abbey. ODNB.

HOWE, HENRY FREDERICK, 3RD BARON CHEDWORTH, brother of John Thynne Howe, 2ndBaron Chedworth (qv) ; b. 17 Feb 1714/5 ; adm. (aged 11) Jul 1726 ; in school list 1729 ; Pembroke Coll.Oxford, matr. 25 Nov 1731 ; adm. Lincoln’s Inn 1 Aug 1732, called to bar 25 May 1739 ; succeeded brother as 3rd Baron Chedworth 9 May 1762 ; d. unm. 7 Oct 1781.

HOWE, JOHN THYNNE, 2ND BARON CHEDWORTH, son of John Howe, 1st Baron Chedworth, Stowell, Gloucs., and Dorothy, dau. of Henry Frederick Thynne, Old Windsor, Berks., and Sunbury, Middlesex, Clerk, Privy Council ; b. 18 Feb 1713/4  ; adm. (aged 12) Jul 1726 ; in school list 1729 ; Pembroke Coll.Oxford, matr. 25 Nov 1731 ; Grand Tour (Italy) 1733-4 ; succeeded father as 2nd Baron Chedworth 3 Apr 1742 ; Lord Lieut., Gloucestershire, from 15 Nov 1758 ; m. 23 Sep 1751 Martha, dau. of Sir Philip Parker-a-Morley- Long (formerly Parker), Bart. ; d. 9 May 1762.

HOWE, RICHARD, son of Rev.Thomas Howe, Rector of Grendon Underwood, Bucks. ; bapt.Grendon Underwood 17 Jul 1615 (IGI) ; adm.       ; KS       ; elected to Christ Church, Oxford 1631, matr. 28 Nov 1634, aged 19, Westminster Student to 29 Jun 1648, when expelled by Parliamentary Visitors (Burrows, ed., 1881, 137), reinstated 1660 ; BA 1635 ; MA 1638 ; BD 1660 ; ordained deacon 22 Dec 1644, priest 7 Jan 1660/1 (both Oxford) ; Rector of Thruxton, Hampshire 10 Mar 1645/6 [no longer 1652 ?] ; d. 9 May 1674. Buried Christ Church Cathedral, Oxford (described in register as “Bach.of Divinity and Prebendary (sic) of Christchurch”).

HOWE, RICHARD, 1ST EARL HOWE, brother of George Augustus Howe, 3rd Viscount Howe (I) (qv) ; b. 8 Mar 1725/6 ; adm.Nov 1732 ; left 1733 ; went to Eton Coll. ; went to sea on merchant ship 1735 ; entered Royal Navy on board HMS Pearl 16 Jul 1739 ; sailed in HMS Severn as far as Cape Horn with Anson 1740 ; present at attack on La Guayra 18 Feb 1742/3 ; Lieut., 8 Aug 1745 ; severely wounded in action with French frigates off west coast of Scotland 1 May 1746 ; Post Capt., 10 Apr 1746 ; his capture of the French ship Alcide off the mouth of the St.Lawrence river on 8 Jun 1755 was the beginning of the Seven Years’ War with France ; commanded attack on Cherbourg 5 May 1759 ; distinguished himself at battle of Quiberon Bay 20 Nov 1759 ; Rear Adm., 18 Nov 1770 ; Vice-Adm., 7 Dec 1775 ; Commander-in-Chief, North American Station Feb 1776 ; co-operated with his brother Sir William Howe against the American colonists, but resigned command Sep 1778 and remained out of employment until fall of North ministry in early 1782 ; Commander-in-Chief, Channel Fleet  2 Apr 1782 ; Adm., 8 Apr 1782 ; relieved Gibraltar against French and Spanish fleets Oct 1782 ; again in command Channel Fleet Jun – Dec 1790, Feb 1793 – May 1797 (although he did not go to sea after Feb 1795) ; Vice-Admiral of England May 1792 – Mar 1796 ; won brilliant victory of 1 Jun 1794 in command Channel Fleet, capturing seven French ships ; Admiral of the Fleet and General of the Marines 12 Mar 1796 ; presided over court martial of Vice-Adm.Cornwallis Apr 1796 ; pacified mutineers at Portsmouth May 1797 ; MP Dartmouth 23 May 1757 – 20 Apr 1782 ; succeeded brother as 4th Viscount Howe (I) 6 Jul 1758 ; a Lord of the Admiralty Apr 1763 – Aug 1765 ; Privy Councillor 26 Jul 1765 ; Treasurer of the Navy 9 Aug 1765 – May 1766, Aug 1766 – Mar 1770 ; created Viscount Howe (GB) 20 Apr 1782 ; First Lord of Admiralty Jan – Apr 1783, Dec 1783 – Jul 1788 ; attacked in parliament and in print for his reductions and reforms ; created Earl Howe 19 Aug 1788 ; received freedom of City of London 6 May 1796 ; KG 2 Jun 1797 ; the signalling code was perfected and refined by him ; DL Nottinghamshire 1762, Derbyshire 1763 ; m. 10 Mar 1758 Mary, dau. of Chiverton Hartop, Welby, Leics. ; d. 5 Aug 1799. Monument by Flaxman in St.Paul’s Cathedral. ODNB.

HOWE, THOMAS, son of Thomas Howe, Abbots Langley, Herts., and Henrietta, dau. of John Gape, St.Albans, Herts. ; bapt.Abbots Langley 25 Nov 1718 (IGI) ; adm. (aged 10) Jul 1729 ; left 1735 ; Merton Coll.Oxford, matr. 15 Jul 1738 ; MA 11 Jul 1741. [note Thomas Howe, Abbots Langley, Herts., will proved PCC 22 Jul 1747]

HOWELL, JAMES, eldest son of Rev.Joshua Howell, Rector of Lanreath, Cornwall, and Duretta, dau. of David Haweis, Treworgey, Cornwall ; bapt. 30 Apr 1748 ; adm.      ; KS (aged 14) 1762 ; elected to Christ Church, Oxford 1766, matr. 18 Jun 1766, Westminster Student from 27 Feb 1767 ; BA 1773 ; ordained deacon 19 Dec 1773, priest 29 May 1774 (both Oxford) ; Vicar of Ardington, Berks., from 22 Jul 1778 ; latterly insane, but retained incumbency and Westminster Studentship at Christ Church to death ; d. unm. 8 Nov 1838. [perhaps Rector of Honiley, Warwickshire 20 Jun 1778 – res Oct 1783]

HOWELL, JOHN FRANCIS, brother of James Howell (qv) ; b. 4 Apr 1755 ; adm. 17 Sep 1770 ; Christ Church, Oxford, matr. 8 May 1771, aged 16 ; BA 1775 ; MA 1777 ; ordained deacon 21 Dec 1777 (Llandaff), priest 6 Apr 1779 (Winchester) ; Curate, Wonston, Hants., 1779 (still 1788) ; afterwards Curate, Penryn, Cornwall ; Chaplain, 24th Foot 14 Mar 1780 – [still in Army list 1790] ; Prebendary of Exeter from 21 Jan 1794 ; Vicar of St.Gluvias and of St.Goran, Cornwall, from 4 Nov 1796 ; m. 22 Dec 1794 Anne, dau. of Henry Kitson, Exeter, grocer, Alderman and Mayor of Exeter ; d. 4 Jul 1824.

HOWELL, THOMAS JONES, only son of Thomas Bayly Howell FRS, Prinknash Park, Gloucs., barrister, and Lucy Anne, youngest dau. of Robert Long, Chichester, Sussex ; b. 24 Dec 1793 ; adm. 21 Mar 1806 ; left 1811 ; probably Christ’s Coll.Cambridge, adm.pens. 23 Apr 1814, matr. Easter 1814, but did not graduate ; adm.Lincoln’s Inn 9 Nov 1814, called to bar 17 May 1822 ; Deputy Judge Advocate and Judge of Vice-Admiralty Court, Gibraltar 6 May 1822 ; Secretary, Commission of Colonial Inquiry 1830 ; a Commissioner for Relief of West Indian Islands 1832 ; an Inspector of Factories from 1833 ; DL JP Gloucestershire ; edited vols xxii and xxxiii of his father’s Complete Collection of State Trials, 1815-26 ; m. 1st, 4 Sep 1817 Susanna Maria, sister of Alexander Norman Macleod (qv) ; m.2nd, 6 Aug 1851 Ellen, youngest dau. of Thomas Ffooks, Sherborne, Dorset, solicitor ; d. 4 Jun 1858. ODNB (s.v.father).

HOWLE, —  ; b.      ; adm. 12 Jun 1769 ; left Easter 1770 (“no entrance fee”).

HOWLETT, JOHN, son of John Howlett, London ; b.      ; adm.      ; KS 1692 ; elected head to Trinity Coll.Cambridge 1697, adm.pens. 9 Jun 1697, aged 18, scholar 6 May 1698, matr.1700 ; BA 1700/1 ; migrated to Trinity Hall, Cambridge ; MA 1704 ; adm.Inner Temple 11 May 1698. [perhaps ordained deacon 28 May 1704, priest 11 Jun 1704 (as John Howlett, BA, both Rochester) ; Rector of Isleham, Cambs., 11 Jun 1704, vacant  25 Apr 1707]

HOWORTH, —  ; b.       ; adm.      ; BB 1806-8.

HOWORTH, HENRY, son of Rev. Henry Probert Howorth, Rector of Gladestry, Radnorshire, and Anna Maria, dau. of Matthew Davies, Presteigne, Radnorshire ; b. Mar 1746 ; in school list Jun 1764 ; left Dec 1764 ; adm.Lincoln’s Inn 23 Nov 1764, called to bar 27 May 1769 ; adm.Inner Temple 8 Nov 1777, tenant chambers there 14 Nov 1777 onwards ; KC 1780 ; one of the counsel for the Crown in the trial of Lord George Gordon for high treason Feb 1781 ; MP Abingdon from 21 Dec 1782 ; figures as “the Admirable Advocate” in the “Histories of the Tête à Tête” in The Town and Country Magazine, xii, 121 ; a member of the sailing club founded about 1771 which had a weekly dinner at The Swan, Chelsea ; m. Mary — ; drowned while sailing on the Thames near Mortlake, 11 May 1783.

HOWORTH, HUMPHREY MAINWARING, only son of Sir Humphrey Howorth, Kt, MP, Maesllwch, Radnorshire, Governor of Barbados, and his first wife Sibel, dau. of Roger Mainwaring ; b.      ; adm. (aged 10) Jan 1724/5 ; in school list Feb 1727/8, also 1733 [sic, correctly ?] ; adm.Inner Temple 19 Feb 1728/9 ; Clerk, Treasury, c. Aug 1732 ; m. 31 Jan 1742/3 Sarah, widow of Henry Ordway, London, vintner, “who formerly kept the Five Bell Tavern in the Strand” ; d. 29 Dec 1748.

HOWSON, —  ; b.       ; adm.      ; KS in 1609 (Chapter Muniments 41289).

HOWSON, JAMES, son of James Howson, The Strand, Westminster ; b.      ; at school under Osbaldeston (Al.Cant.) ; Sidney Sussex Coll.Cambridge, adm.pens. 28 Nov 1622, aged 17, matr.1622 ; BA 1626/7 ; MA 1631 (incorp.Oxford 9 May 1633).

HOWTH, A.       ; b.        ; at school under Carey (name up School 1813).

HOYLE, JOHN, second son of Rev.Joseph Hoyle, Rector of Newick, Sussex, and Jane, widow of Robert Wright, Newick, Sussex ; bapt. 10 Jul 1701 ; adm. (aged 15) Feb 1717/8 ; Balliol Coll.Oxford, matr. 10 Oct 1719 ; BA 1723 ; ordained deacon 30 May 1724 (Winchester), priest 17 Mar 1727/8 (Peterborough) ; Perpetual Curate of Basing, Hampshire 1 Jun 1724 (still 1736) ; Usher, Basingstoke Free School Dec 1724 – Oct 1738 ; Rector of Tunworth, Hampshire, from 1 Apr 1738 ; d. by Dec 1738.

HUBBARD, FRANCIS, see HUBERT, FRANCIS.

HUBERT, FRANCIS, son of Edward Hubert, Essex ; b.      ; at school under Busby (Calamy, Nonconformist’s Memorial, iii, 357, as Francis Hubbard) ; Balliol Coll.Oxford, matr. 9 Nov 1650 ; BA 1653 ; MA 1655/6 ; Vicar of Willoughby, Warwicks., 23 Feb 1654/5 ; Vicar of Winterbourne Monkton, with Berwick Bassett, Wilts. ; ejected 1662 ; imprisoned in Bocardo prison, Oxford, for preaching ; licensed as Presbyterian preacher at his house in Witney, Oxfordshire, 10 Aug 1672 ; m.    ; d. 20 Oct 1676, aged 48.

HUCK, RICHARD, described as son of Samuel Huck, St.Anne’s, Soho, Westminster, but probably an illegitimate son of Richard Huck Saunders MD FRS FRCP (died 1785), Physician to St,Thomas’s Hospital, London, and owner of the manors and advowson of Gunton, Suffolk, and Fishley, Norfolk, who made provision in his will for “Richard Huck, an infant now at school at Hacbury” ; b.      ; adm. 23 Jan 1786 ; KS (aged 14) 1790 ; Capt. of the School 1794 ; elected head to Christ Church, Oxford 1795, matr. 3 Jun 1795, Westminster Student 24 Dec 1795 – void 25 Sep 1802, expiry year of grace as R.Gunton from 22 Sep 1801 ; BA 1799 ; MA 1802 ; ordained deacon 31 Dec 1800 (Oxford), priest 5 Jul 1801 (York) ; Rector of Gunton, Suffolk, Rector of Fishley, Norfolk, and Vicar of Corton, Suffolk, all from 4 Sep 1801 ; a jury found in 1830 that he had been insane from 12 Nov 1807 onwards (The Times 1 Apr 1830) ;  buried St.Leonard, Shoreditch, London 28 Jan 1837.

HUDDLE, JOHN ; b.       ; adm. (aged 14) Feb 1737/8 ; left 1738. [Perhaps bapt.St.Anne, Soho 13 Jan 1722, son of William Huddle, and Mary — (IGI)]

HUDDLESTON, see HODYLSTON

HUDSON, —  ; b.      ; in school lists 1656.

HUDSON, —-  ; b.       ; in school lists 1741-8 (“pays”).

HUDSON (in school list Oct 1771), see HODGSON, WILLIAM.

HUDSON, ARTHUR LANCELOT, brother of Julian A’Becket Savi Hudson (qv) ; b.12 May 1854 ; adm. 4 Oct 1864 (G) ; left Nov 1868 ; clerk and commission agent in 1881 (1881 Census) ; m. Julia Farrant (marriage registered Fulham second quarter 1880) ; death registered St.George Hanover Square second quarter 1898, aged 43.

HUDSON, DANIEL, see HODSON, DANIEL.

HUDSON, GEORGE FREDERICK HARRINGTON, eldest son of Harrington Hudson (qv) ; b. 1798 ; adm. Christmas 1811 ; left 1814 ; Ensign, 1st Foot Guards 19 Jul 1815 ; half-pay 25 Dec 1818 ; active list 6 Jul 1820 ; Lieut. and Capt., 15 Apr 1824 ; retd. 27 Apr 1825 ; of Bessingby Hall, Yorks. ; m. Charlotte, third dau. of Richard Watt, Bishop Burton and Speke, Yorks., racehorse owner ; d. 6 Nov 1848.

HUDSON, HARRINGTON, only son of John Hudson, Bessingby Hall, Yorks., and Susanna, second dau. of Sir George Trevelyan, Bart., Nettlecombe, Somerset ; b. 11 Apr 1772 ; adm. 21 Jan 1783 (Clapham) ; played cricket for Town Boys v KSS 28 Jul 1789 ; St.John’s Coll.Cambridge, adm.pens.16 Sep 1789, fellow commoner 12 Oct 1789, matr.Mich.1789, but did not graduate ; MP Helston 1818-26 ; of Bessingby Hall, Yorks. ; m. 26 Oct 1795 Lady Anne Townshend, eldest dau. of George Townshend, 1stMarquess Townshend PC, Field-Marshal in the Army, and his second wife ; d. 30 Nov 1826.

HUDSON, SIR JAMES, son of Harrington Hudson (qv) ; b. 2 Jan 1810 ; adm. 20 Sep 1825, having previously been at Rugby School ; Assistant Private Secretary to King William IV Jul 1830- Jun 1837 ; Resident Gentleman Usher (afterwards Gentleman Usher Quarterly Waiter and Gentleman Usher Daily Waiter) to Queen Adelaide Nov 1831-49 ; sent to Rome to fetch back Sir Robert Peel 1834 ; known as a result as “Hurry Hudson” ; Secretary of Legation, Washington 1838, The Hague 1843, Rio de Janeiro 1845 ; Envoy Extraordinary to Emperor of Brazil 14 May 1850 ; appointed Envoy to Grand Duke of Tuscany 29 Aug 1851, but never went to Florence ; Envoy Extraordinary to King of Sardinia 19 Jan 1852 – 20 Oct 1863 ; employed in successful negotiations 1855 to despatch a Sardinian contingent to the Crimea ; sympathetic to cause of Italian unity ; declined Embassy at Constantinople 1863 ; lived principally in Italy after retirement ; CB 1 Mar 1851 ; KCB 2 May 1855 ; GCB 11 Aug 1863 ; m. 14 Sep 1885 Eugenia (a “signora Milanese” and his long-term partner), widow of — Vanotti ; d. at Strasbourg 20 Sep 1885. ODNB.

HUDSON, JOSEPH HENRY, youngest son of Harrington Hudson (qv) ; b. 18 Jun 1814 ; adm. 20 Jun 1825 ; Page of Honour to George IV 30 May 1825-30 ; Ensign and Lieut., 1st Foot Guards 6 Jul 1830 ; Lieut. and Capt., 29 Nov 1833 ; Capt. and Lieut.-Col., 16 May 1845 ; retd. 18 Jul 1848 ; Superintendent, Royal Army Clothing Department to 1882 ; DL JP Yorkshire North Riding ; m. 28 Jun 1842 Frances, sister of James Loftus Elrington (qv) ; d. 18 Apr 1885.

HUDSON, JULIAN A’BECKET SAVI, son of George Edward Hudson, Beaufort Gardens, Brompton, Middlesex, general manager, United Service Company Bank Ltd, and Eulalie Henrietta, dau. of John Henry Savi, Chandernagore, India ; b. 28 May 1851 ; adm. 4 Oct 1864 (G) ; Min.Can.1866 ; left 1867 ; clerk (1881 Census) ; living Fulham, Middlesex, in 1901 (1901 Census) and Westminster in 1911 (1911 Census) ; m. 8 Nov 1873 Phoebe, dau. of Henry Brake, Chelsea, Middlesex ; death registered Risbridge second quarter 1927, aged 76.

HUE, CLEMENT BERKELEY, eldest son of Clement Hue MD FRCP, Guilford Street, London, Physician to St.Bartholomew’s Hospital, and Lucy, eldest dau. of Rev.Rowland Berkeley LLD, Vicar of Writtle, Essex ; nephew of Very Rev.Corbet Hue, Dean of Jersey ; b. 2 Oct 1812 ; adm. 2 Jun 1826 (G) ; KS 1827 ; rowed against Eton 12 May 1831 ; elected head to Trinity Coll.Cambridge 1831, adm.pens. 26 May 1831, scholar 1832, matr. Mich.1831 ; Chancellor’s Medal for English Verse 1833 ; BA 1835 ; MA 1839 ; adm.Lincoln’s Inn 30 Apr 1835 ; ordained deacon 11 Dec 1836, priest 7 Jul 1839 (both Winchester) ; [query, clerical career ?, in St.Helier by c.1837] ; living in Hampshire 1881 (1881 Census), previously resident in St.Helier, Jersey, Channel Islands ; m. 23 Nov 1835 Elizabeth, dau. of Edward Curtis ; d. 6 Feb 1893.

HUE, CORBET, brother of Clement Berkeley Hue (qv) ; b. 10 May 1817 ; adm. 17 Jan 1831 (G) ; KS 1831 ; Gonville and Caius Coll.Cambridge, adm.pens. 9 May 1836, scholar 1837-9, matr. Mich.1836 ; 9thWrangler 1840 ; BA 1840 ; MA 1843 ; Junior Fellow, Gonville and Caius Coll. 1842-53, Senior Fellow 1853-9 ; adm.Lincoln’s Inn 19 Apr 1838, migr. to Inner Temple 24 Apr 1843, called to bar 5 May 1843 ; of Pinehurst, Mickleham, Surrey ; m. (by 1863) Charlotte Walters ; d. 7 Sep 1904.

HUE, JOHN BERKELEY, son of Clement Berkeley Hue (qv) ; b. 8 Apr 1851 ; adm. 3 Apr 1866 (G) ; left Aug 1867 ; Trinity Coll.Cambridge, adm.pens. 24 Feb 1870, matr. Mich.1870 ; BA 1874 ; law student (1881 Census) ; living Ventnor, Isle of Wight, own means (1901 Census) ; m. 2 Apr 1887 Marie Louise Eva, dau. of Charles Louis Maréchal, Westbourne Terrace, London ; d. 13 Jul 1927.

HUES, see also HEWES, HEWS and HUGHES.

HUES, THOMAS ; b.       ; adm. (aged 12) Sep 1724 ; in under school list 1725.

HUES, TUFFNELL ; b.       ; adm. (aged 11) Feb 1721/2 ; in under school list 1723. [Presumably Tufnell Hues who m. at St.Mary, Lewisham 30 Jun 1731 Christian Blagden (IGI)] [Tufnell Hues, St.Mary, Rotherhithe, surgeon, will proved PCC 4 Jul 1735]

HUET, THOMAS, son of John Huet, London ; b.        ; adm.      ; Min.Can. (aged 13) 1580.

HUFFAM, JOHN, son of John Huffam, Surrey ; b.       ; in school lists 1656 ; KS (aged 15) 1658 ; elected to Trinity Coll.Cambridge 1661, adm.pens. 22 May 1661, scholar 1662 ; BA 1664/5 ; ordained deacon 20 Dec 1668 (Ely), priest 19 Dec 1669 (Winchester) ; Rector of St.Paul’s, Charlestown, Nevis, West Indies 1676-1707 (successor presented 13 Dec 1707).

HUGESTON, JOSIAS, son of Josias Hugeston, Dover, Kent ; b.      ; at school three years under Osbaldeston (J.Peile, Biog.Reg. of Christ’s Coll.Camb., i, 436) ; Christ’s Coll.Cambridge, adm.pens. 13 May 1635, aged 17, matr.Easter 1635 ; of Linsted, Kent ; m. [Whitmore : “? if not a cousin”]

HUGGINS, CHARLES, son of John Huggins, solicitor, High Bailiff of Westminster and Warden of the Fleet Prison ; bapt.St.Mildred Poultry, London 27 Oct 1699 (IGI) ; adm.      ; Min.Can. (aged 15) 1715 ; Magdalen Hall, Oxford, matr. 2 Jul 1717 ; BCL 21 Feb 1727/8 ; adm.Inner Temple 29 Nov 1717 ; ordained deacon 13 Sep 1724, priest 20 Sep 1724 (both Salisbury) ; Rector of Little Wittenham, Berks., from 20 Sep 1724 ; Rector of Chinnor, Oxfordshire, from 20 Mar 1727/8 ; inherited the library of Sir Isaac Newton, which his father had purchased after Newton’s death ; d. unm. 1750 (dead by 19 Dec).

HUGGINS, CHARLES PELHAM, only son of Hastings Charles Huggins DCL, Middle Temple, barrister, Attorney-Gen., British Honduras, and Catherine Emily, dau. of James Alexander Hora MRCS, London ; b. 18 Dec 1861 ; adm. 24 Sep 1874 ; left Aug 1879 ; adm.Inner Temple 4 Nov 1879, called to bar 21 Jun 1882 ; practised in Jamaica, West Indies ; Stipendiary Magistrate, Trinidad 1912 ; latterly living in Paris, France ; d. at Paris, France 12 Mar 1929.

HUGHES, —  ; b.      ; adm.      ; left 1656 (school lists 1656, first three quarters).

HUGHES (in school list 1739), see HEWS, CHARLES.

HUGHES, —  ; b.       ; in school list Jun 1764 ; left Sep 1764.

HUGHES, — ; b.       ; in school lists 1795, 1797.

HUGHES, AUGUSTUS, son of Seneca Hughes, Bedford Street, Covent Garden, London, solicitor, and Mary Elizabeth, dau. of Richard Gill, Wakerley, Northants ; b. 28 Sep 1841 ; adm. 31 Mar 1854 ; QS Jun 1856 ; elected to Christ Church, Oxford 1860, matr. 28 May 1860 ; BA 1865 ; MA 1867 ; ordained deacon 1865, priest 1866 (both Oxford) ; Curate, St.Giles’s, Oxford 1865-7 ; held many other curacies, including that of St.Michael’s, Wakefield, Yorks., 1894-9 ; m. 5 Jul 1870 Isabel Clara, youngest dau. of Richard Hodson, Bahia, Brazil ; d. 30 Dec 1929.

HUGHES, EVAN, son of Rev. Evan Owen Hughes, Rector of Llanddeiniolen, Carnarvonshire, and Charlotte Reynolds, Chester ; b. 10 Sep 1833 ; adm. 21 Mar 1848, BB ; lived in Australia for many years ; on return to Britain, entered St.Bees Theol.Coll.1871 ; ordained deacon 1873, priest 1874 (both Durham) ; Curate, Rothbury, Northumberland 1873-81, Ponteland, Northumberland 1881-2, North Sunderland, Northumberland 1882-6 ; Vicar of North Sunderland, Northumberland, from 1886 ; d. unm. 27 Oct 1890.

HUGHES, FRANCIS ; b.      ; adm.    ; KS      ; elected to Trinity Coll.Cambridge 1615, adm.scholar 18 Mar 1615/6 ; BA 1619/20 ; MA 1623 ; Auditor, Trinity Coll. 1628-68 ; Esquire Bedell, Cambridge Univ., from 1629 ; said to have compiled a MS notebook of University proceedings ; m.  (by 1629)       ; d. 30 Oct 1669.

HUGHES, GEORGE, brother of William Hughes (qv) ; b. 22 Nov 1765 ; adm. 12 Feb 1773 ; KS 1778 ; plantation manager, Grenada, West Indies ; d.unm. in Grenada c.1794.

HUGHES, HENRY, son of William Hastings Hughes, London, sherry importer, later settler in USA, and his first wife Emily, dau. of Ven.George Clarke, Archdeacon of St.Davids ; grandson of John Hughes (left 1808, qv) ; b. 27 Mar 1862 ; adm. 8 Apr 1874 (G) ; QS 1877 ; left Dec 1878 ; emigrated to Boerne, Texas, USA ; drowned in wreck of ship Drummond Castle off Ushant 16 Jun 1896.

HUGHES, HERBERT, brother of Augustus Hughes (qv) ; b. 17 Aug 1856 ; adm. 24 Sep 1868 ; d. 11 Aug 1870.

[HUGHES, HUMPHREY ; b.       ; at school under Busby ; one of the original officers in Monck’s Coldstream Regiment (subsequently 2nd Foot Guards) 1651 ; Capt., May 1654 ; agent to Sir Francis Radclyffe, Bart., Middleton Hall and Spindleston, Northumberland 1683-91 ; m. 22 Nov 1662 Mary Thirlwall ; accepted as OW in Supplement on basis of Burke, LG, 8th edn., 1894, 1009, but further evidence seems necessary]

HUGHES, JOHN ; b.        ; in third form list 1799 and  school list 1801 ; left before May 1803.

HUGHES, JOHN, only child of Rev.Thomas Hughes DD, Canon Residentiary of St.Paul’s, Vicar of Uffington, Berks., and Deputy Clerk of the Closet to George III and George IV, and Mary Ann, dau. of Rev.George Watts, Vicar of Uffington, Berks. ; b. 2 Jan 1790 ; adm.     ; left 1808 ; Oriel Coll.Oxford, matr. 12 May 1808 ; Robinson exhibitioner 1813 [check] ; Chancellor’s Prize for Latin Verse 1811 ; BA 1812 ; MA 1815 ; of Donnington Priory, Berkshire ; DL JP Berkshire ; author, An Itinerary of Provence and the Rhone made during the year 1819, 1822, and other works ; m.1st, 11 Apr 1818 Elizabeth, dau. of Thomas Valentine Cooke, Hertford Street, Mayfair, and Stratford, Essex, malt distiller ; m. 2nd, 14 Dec 1820 Margaret Elizabeth, second dau. of Thomas Wilkinson, Stokesley Hall, Yorks. ; d. 13 Dec 1857. ODNB.

HUGHES, JOHN CUMBERLAND, brother of William Hughes (qv) ; b. 31 Mar 1767 ; adm. 27 Mar 1775 ; left 1779 ; entered Royal Navy as powder monkey on board HMS Victory 7 Jun 1779 ; when serving on HMS Rover was captured by a French frigade and taken into Grenada Sep 1780, but exchanged at Martinique three months later ; Midshipman 14 Feb 1781 ; ADC to Capt.Lord Cranstoun on HMS Formidable during action against French on 12 Apr 1782 ; retd. from Navy 1783 ; plantation management in Grenada with his elder brother George Hughes (qv) from 1785 ; m. May 1805 Elizabeth, elder dau. of George Edward Stanley, Ponsonby Hall, Cumberland ; d. at Bath 5 Feb 1833.

HUGHES, JOHN THOMAS, second son of Adm.Sir Richard Hughes, Bart., and Jane, dau. of William Sloane, South Stoneham, Hampshire ; b.     ; adm. 4 Feb 1788 ; St.John’s Coll.Cambridge, adm.pens. 8 Jan 1793, Ashton scholar 5 Nov 1793, matr. Lent 1793 ; kept three terms only ; adm.Lincoln’s Inn 22 Jan 1795, called to bar 29 Jan 1801 ; Professor of Civil Law, Jamaica 1801 ; d. at Montego Bay, Jamaica 21 Dec 1802, aged 27.

HUGHES, RICHARD JONES, fourth son of John Williams Gwynne Hughes, Tregib, Carmarthenshire, and Margaretta Juliana, youngest dau. of Morgan Pryse Lloyd, Glansevin, Carmarthenshire ; b. 25 Jan 1824 ; adm. 26 Jun 1837 (G) ; BB 1838 ; Magdalen Hall, Oxford, matr. 30 Oct 1845 ; BA 1850 ; MA 1852 ; ordained deacon Sep 1851 (Worcester) ; Curate, Ilchester, Somerset ; m. 24 Mar 1845 (IGI) Mary Anne, dau. of George Lloyd, Brunant, Carmarthenshire ; d. 25 Oct 1861.

HUGHES, WILLIAM, eldest son of William Hughes, Abingdon Buildings, Westminster, and Lower Field, Kilmersdon, Somerset, and Elizabeth Bentley, dau. of Denison Cumberland (adm.1720, qv) ; b. 9 May 1764 ; adm. 11 Feb 1772 ; KS 1776 ; in school list Jul 1779 ; “became a clerk in the Excise Office” (but  probably the William Hughes who was Clerk, Board of Trade 7 Oct 1779 – 2 May 1782 (office abolished), since his uncle Richard Cumberland (adm.1745/6) was then Secretary, Board of Trade) ; ordained deacon 25 May 1788, priest 11 Jun 1788 (Winchester, lit.dim. from York) ; Rector of Killinick, co.Wexford, from 1811 ; JP co.Wexford ; m. 11 Aug 1800 Elizabeth Shaw ; d. 14 May 1831.

HULFIELD (or HADFELDE), JOHN, son of Leonard Hulfield (or Hadfelde), Hertfordshire ; b.      ; at school (aged 12) 2 Jul 1582 (Chapter Muniments 43050).

HULL, HENRY WILLIAM, second son of William Thomas Hull, Marpool Hall, Withycombe Raleigh, Devon, a Gentleman of the Privy Chamber, and Harriot Nowlan, Walthamstow, Essex ; b. 6 Apr 1804 ; adm. 16 Jan 1817 (G) ; Min.Can.1818 ; Oriel Coll.Oxford, matr. 28 Jun 1821 ; BA 1825 ; MA 1828 ; ordained deacon 15 Jul 1827, priest 22 Jun 1828 (both Exeter) ; Curate, Lympston, Devon ; joined the Plymouth Brethren ; “no profession” (1881 Census, then living at Eastbourne, Sussex) ; m. 1832 Maria Charlotte, dau. of Thomas Phillipps (formerly Winsloe), Sidmouth, Devon ; d. 22 Apr 1890.

HULLETT (in school list 1795), see HALLETT, THOMAS ROBERT.

HULME, —  ; b.       ; in school list 1795.

HULTON, WILLIAM, eldest son of William Hulton, Hulton Park, Bolton-le-Moors, Lancs., and Anne, dau. of John Hall, Droylsden, Lancs. ; b. 28 May 1762 ; adm. 19 Apr 1774 ; of Hulton Park, Lancs. ; High Sheriff, Lancashire 1789 ; m. 23 Aug 1785 Jane, third dau. of Peter Brooke, Mere, Cheshire ; d. 24 Jun 1800.

HULTON, WILLIAM, son of William Hulton (adm.1774, qv) ; b. 23 Oct 1787 ; adm. 21 Feb 1802 (Clapham) ; left before May 1803 ; Brasenose Coll.Oxford, matr. 6 Nov 1804 ; MA 10 Jun 1807 ; of Hulton Park, Lancs. ; DL JP Lancashire, High Sheriff 1809 ; Constable of Lancaster Castle 29 May 1828 – Jun 1860 ; m. 25 Oct 1808 Maria, youngest dau. of Randall Ford, Wexham, Bucks. ; d. 31 Mar 1864.

HUMBERSTON, PHILIP STAPLETON, only son of Philip Stapleton Humberston, Chester, and Catherine, dau. of George Cotton (qv) ; b. 17 Aug 1814 ; adm. 18 Jan 1827 (G) ; Mayor, Chester 1858 ; MP (Conservative) Chester 1859-65 ; DL Cheshire, JP Cheshire 1859, High Sheriff 1878 ; DL Denbighshire, JP Denbighshire 1869 ; member council, Royal Agricultural Society ; m. 29 Oct 1840 Elizabeth Henrietta, dau. of Henry Robert Hughes, Kinmel Park, Denbighshire ; d. 16 Jan 1891.

HUMBERSTON-CAWLEY-FLOYER, CHARLES, second son of William Humberston-Cawley-Floyer (qv) ; b. 11 Nov 1801 ; adm. 20 Sep 1815 ; left 1819 ; Head Town Boy at 26 Jul 1819 ; Christ Church, Oxford, matr. 30 May 1820 ; migr. to Trinity Coll.Oxford 3 Jan 1821 ; BA 1824 ; MA 1828 ; ordained deacon (by 1824), priest 1 Jan 1826 (Lichfield & Coventry) (as Charles Floyer) ; Curate, Whittington, Staffs., 1824 ; Chaplain to Lord Sudeley ; d. 29 Jan 1871.

HUMBERSTON-CAWLEY-FLOYER, JOHN, eldest son of William Humberston-Cawley-Floyer (qv) ; b. 1799 ; adm.Mich.1809 ; left 1813 ; RMC Sandhurst ; Cornet, 3rd Dragoons 14 Oct 1819 ; Lieut., 5 May 1825 ; retd. 4 Apr 1826 ; of Hints Hall, Staffs. ; d. unm. 1 Jan 1877.

HUMBERSTON-CAWLEY-FLOYER, WILLIAM, son of John Humberston (afterwards Humberston-Cawley), Gwersylt Park, Denbighshire, and Mary, third dau. of Charles Floyer, Hints Hall, Staffs. ; b. 17 Jul 1766 ; adm. 11 Mar 1776 ; left Christmas 1777 ; Oriel Coll.Oxford, matr. 3 Nov 1783 ; assumed additional surname of Floyer 14 Dec 1793 ; of Hints Hall, Staffordshire ; m. 1794 his cousin Catherine, sister of Theophilus Levett (adm.1775, qv) ; d. 3 Aug 1853.

HUME, ALEXANDER, eldest son of Alexander Macleod, Harris, Inverness-shire, Capt. EIC Maritime Service, and Susanna, dau. of Robert Hume, Charleston, South Carolina ; b.      ;  adm. 4 Jun 1768 (as Alexander Macleod) ; in school lists 1775 ; Writer, EICS Madras 1777 ; Assistant to Military Secretary 1777 ; Factor 1782 ; “a remarkably clever and accomplished young man” (Hickey, Memoirs, iii, 243-4) ; Senior Merchant and one of Collectors of Jaghire Revenue 1790 ; Collector, Madura and Nellore, and Peichcash of the Marwars 1792 ; Collector, Dindigul 1795 ; Resident, Negapatam, and Revenue Assistant under the Resident at Nagore 1800-3 ; assumed by royal licence 28 Nov 1801 the surname of Hume instead of Macleod, in accordance with the will of his uncle Alexander Hume ; dismissed from EICS 6 Apr 1803 ; of Harris, Inverness-shire ; one of donors of Warren Hastings Cup ; m. 6 Aug 1786 Sophia, dau. of William Wrangham, EICS St.Helena ; d. at Lympstone, Devon 8 May 1812.

HUME, DONALD MACLEOD CASTANOS ABRAHAM, see MACLEOD, DONALD HUME.

HUME, FRANCIS HERBERT, son of John Hume, Gosport, Hampshire, and Eleanor — ; bapt. Gosport, Hampshire 26 Jul 1739 ; adm. (aged 11) Jun 1751 ; KS 1753 ; elected to Trinity Coll.Cambridge 1758, adm.pens. 24 May 1758, scholar 11 May 1759, but did not matr. ; ordained deacon Jun 1762 (Winchester) ; Curate, Weybridge, Surrey 1762 ; an Usher at the School 1763 (still 1774, when “senior usher”), known there as “Dapper Hume” ; St.Alban Hall, Oxford, matr. 17 May 1765 ; BA and MA 1776 ; Vicar of Castleton, Derbs., 9 Nov 1775 – Feb 1780 ; Chaplain, Royal Navy 1776 ; Rector of Carlton in Lindrick, Notts., from 6 Oct 1779 ; Prebendary of Southwell from 21 Jan 1785 ; Vicar of Warsop, Notts., from 3 Jun 1795 ; m. 13 Aug 1774 Elizabeth Tinker ; d. 17 Feb 1806. [parentage given as in Gosport baptism register, other sources give father’s Christian name as James]

HUME, HENRY, third son of James John Hume (qv), and his second wife ; b. 20 Jan 1816 ; adm. 10 Jan 1825 ; Ensign, 95th Foot 9 May 1835 ; Lieut., 1 Dec 1837 ; Capt., 19 Jan 1844 ; Maj., 24 Dec 1852 ; Lieut.-Col., 12 Dec 1854 ; Capt. and Lieut.-Col., 1st Foot Guards 30 Apr 1858 ; Brevet Col., 5 May 1860 ; retd. 23 Jul 1861 ; served in Crimean War, wounded at the Alma and Inkerman ; one of Corps of Gentlemen-at-Arms 1 Dec 1862 – Nov 1873 ; Exon, Yeomen of the Guard 22 Nov 1873 – Mar 1889, Ensign from 13 Mar 1889 ; CB 5 Jul 1855 ; m. 19 Mar 1857 Emma, younger dau. of Joseph Sykes, Raywell House, Yorkshire, landowner ; d. 19 Aug 1892.

HUME, JAMES DEACON, younger son of James Hume, Secretary of the Customs, and Elizabeth Capps ; nephew of Nathaniel Hume (qv) ; b. 28 Apr 1774 ; adm. 13 Jan 1783 (originally boarding at home, subsequently head of a boarding house) ; was victorious in a “mill’ with Sir Watkin Williams-Wynn, Bart. (adm.1784, qv), “who, though the bigger boy of the two, was not so good a gladiator” (Badham, Life of J.D.Hume, 1859, 9) ; left 1791 ; Indoor clerk, Custom House 1791 ; rose to position Comptroller of the Customs Inwards and Outwards, Port of London ; drafted Consolidated Customs Acts which received royal assent Jul 1825 ; Joint Secretary, Board of Trade 15 Jul 1829 – 4 Jan 1840 ; one of founders of Political Economy Club ; a founder and Deputy Chairman, Atlas Assurance Company ; a convinced Free Trader ; author, Thoughts on the Corn Laws, 1815, and other works ; see C.Badham, The Life of James Deacon Hume, 1859 ; m. 4 Jun 1799 Frances Elizabeth, widow of Charles Ashwell, Grenada, West Indies, plantation owner, and dau. of Edward Whitehouse, Surveyor of Coast Waiters, Port of London, and Gentleman Usher Quarterly Waiter to George III ; d. 12 Jan 1842. ODNB.

HUME, JAMES JOHN, son of Nathaniel Hume (qv) ; b. 12 Oct 1776 ; adm. 28 Jan 1786 ; KS (aged 14) 1791 ; elected to Christ Church, Oxford 1795, matr. 3 Jun 1795, Westminster Student 24 Dec 1795 – void by marriage 17 Sep 1800 ; BA 1799 ; MA 1816 ; ordained deacon 1 Feb 1801, priest 2 Feb 1801 (both Salisbury) ; Vicar of West Kington, Wilts., from 2 Feb 1801 ; Vicar of Hanney, Berks., from 19 Jul 1816 ; m. 1st, 1800 Catherine, eldest dau. of Rev.Hubert Randolph DD, Rector of Letcombe Basset, Berks. ; m.2nd, 1 Feb 1807 Lydia, youngest dau. of Thomas Lane, Grittleton House, Wilts. ; d. 30 Oct 1816 (M.I.West Kington, Wilts.).

HUME, JOHN, brother of Nathaniel Hume (qv) ; b.      ; in school list 1754 ; KS (aged 14) 1757 ; elected to Christ Church, Oxford 1761, matr.21 May 1761, Westminster Student 24 Dec 1761 – void 4 Dec 1769 (expiry year of grace as V.Potterne from 1 Dec 1768) ; punished for irregularities and contempt of discipline 17 Dec 1762, admonished for irregularities 1 Jul 1763 ; BA 1765 ; MA 1769 ; ordained deacon 21 Dec 1766, priest 13 Dec 1767 (both Salisbury) ; Vicar of Potterne, Wilts., 17 Sep 1768- c. Jun 1770 ; Domestic Chaplain to uncle as Bishop of Salisbury 30 Dec 1769 ; Rector of Bishops Lavington, Wilts. 17 Jan 1770- Dec 1782 ; Vicar of Gillingham, Dorset 19 Jun 1770 – Dec 1782 ; Prebendary of Salisbury 27 Feb 1779 – Dec 1782 ; Master of Hospital of St.Nicholas, East Harnham, near Salisbury, Wilts., 9 Jun 1774 – Dec 1782 ; Dean of Derry from 29 Mar 1783, having exchanged his preferments with Edward Emily (qv) ; m. Jane, dau. of Capt.James Murray, Glenalla, co.Donegal, Army officer ; d. 14 Jan 1818.

HUME, JOHN LLOYD, second son of James John Hume (qv), and his second wife ; b. 6 Feb 1809 ; adm. 27 Jun 1817 ; Midshipman, Royal Navy ; d. of yellow fever, Jamaica 28 Jun 1822.

HUME, NATHANIEL, son of James Hume MD, Oxford, and Elizabeth, younger dau. of Nathaniel Rokeby, Hatton Garden, London, apothecary ; nephew of Right Rev.John Hume DD, Bishop of Salisbury ; b.      ; adm. (aged 10) Mar 1742/3 ; KS 1747 ; succeeded Elijah Impey (qv) as Capt. of the School 1752 ; elected head to Christ Church, Oxford 1752, matr. 4 Jun 1752, Westminster Student 23 Dec 1752 – void 12 Mar 1761, expiry year of grace as V.Sunbury ; BA 1756 ; MA 1759 ; adm.Inner Temple 28 Nov 1753 ; ordained deacon 23 Sep 1759, priest 2 Mar 1760 (both Oxford) ; Vicar of Sunbury, Middlesex 12 Mar 1760–80 ; Domestic Chaplain to uncle as Bishop of Oxford (occurs 1762) ; Vicar of St.Lawrence Jewry, London 29 Jan 1762-80 ; Prebendary of St.Paul’s from 7 May 1764 ; Master, Hospital of St.Nicholas, East Farnham, near Salisbury, Wilts., 12 Jan 1770 – Jun 1774 ; Prebendary of Salisbury from 10 Apr 1770, Canon Residentiary 12 Oct 1772 – res Nov 1799, Precentor from 9 Jun 1774 ; Rector of West Kington, Wilts., 29 May 1780 – Dec 1799 ; Rector of Compton Bassett, Wilts., 29 May 1780 – Mar 1782 ; Vicar of Bremhill, Wilts., from 2 Mar 1782 ; Rector of Brixton Deverell, Wilts., from 11 Nov 1799 ; m. 9 May 1769 Mary Bearsley, St.Olave, Hart Street, London ; d. 28 Apr 1804 (M.I.Bremhill, Wilts.).

HUME, PETER BEARSLEY, son of Nathaniel Hume (qv) ; b. 31 Jul 1778 ; adm.     ; at school 1791 ; KS 1792 ; elected to Trinity Coll.Cambridge 1796, adm.pens. 25 May 1796, but did not matr. ; Cadet, EICS Bengal 1796 ; Ensign, 16th Bengal Native Infantry 7 Oct 1797 ; Lieut., 10 Sep 1798 ; retd. 25 Dec 1809 ; m. at Sandila, Oudh, India 22 Feb 1802 Mary, dau. of Lieut.-Gen.St.George Ashe, EICS Bengal ; d. 2 Jan 1823.

HUME, RICHARD JAMES, only son of James John Hume (qv), and his first wife ; b.       ; adm. 21 Jun 1813 ; in school list Apr 1815 ; d. May 1815, aged 14 (M.I.West Kington, Wilts.).

HUME, WILLIAM EDWARD, eldest son of James John Hume (qv), and his second wife ; b. 4 Nov 1807 ; adm. 27 Jun 1817 ; Christ Church, Oxford, matr. 11 Dec 1826 ; BA 1831 ; ordained deacon 18 Dec 1831, priest 23 Dec 1832 (both London) ; Perpetual Curate of White Colne, Essex, from 29 Mar 1833 (although confined in a lunatic asylum from 1852) ; d. 6 Jul 1867.

HUMES, — ; b.      ; in school lists 1656.

HUMES, PETER, son of Thomas Humes, Charlton, Kent ; b.       ; in school lists 1656 ; KS       ; elected to Trinity Coll.Cambridge (aged 18) 1659, adm.pens.10 May 1659, scholar 1659, matr.Easter 1659.

HUMFFRIES (or HUMFRAYS), WILLIAM ; b.        ; adm. 23 Sep 1771 ; left c. Christmas 1777 (name mostly spelled Humfrays).

HUMFRAYS, SAMUEL, son of John Humfrays, St.George’s parish, London ; b.      ; adm.     ; in school list Mar 1765, chorister ; KS (aged 14) 1769 ; elected to Christ Church, Oxford 1773 (with Titley gratuity), matr.11 Jun 1773, Westminster Student 24 Dec 1773 – void 19 Nov 1794 ; BA 1777 ; MA 1780 ; BD 1791 ; ordained deacon 22 Dec 1776, priest 20 Dec 1778 (both Oxford) ; Curate and Lecturer, Carshalton, Surrey, in 1788 ; Perpetual Curate of Daventry, Northants, from 1789 ; author, Observations on the Illegality of Sunday Feasts, 1790 ; d. 23 Feb 1795.

HUMPHREYS, JOHN ; b.      ; adm.      ; a pensioner in 1613 (tutor, Mr.Law) (Chapter Muniments 33667, 33670).

HUMPHRY, JOHN, son of John Humphry, Berkshire ; b.      ; at school by Jun 1654, aged 15 (WAM 43112). [perhaps bapt.Blewbury, Berks., 29 Jan 1637/8 (IGI)]

HUNGEL, — ; b.        ; adm.        ; Min.Can.1642.

HUNLOCKE, CHRISTOPHER, son of Christopher Hunlocke, Derbyshire ; b.      ; adm.     ; at school by Jun 1654, aged 14 (WAM 43112) ; KS        ; left 1656 ; d.unm. on board ship Mary Rose on voyage to Bombay (will made at Broach, Bombay 3 Jul 1662, proved England 3 Sep 1663).

HUNT, CHARLES ; b.      ; adm.      ; KS 1684 ; left 1685.

HUNT, CHARLES BROOKE, second son of Thomas Hunt, Nottingham, and Jane, youngest dau. of William Steer, Northampton, surgeon ; b.1794 ; adm. Sep 1806 ; left 1809 ; Junior Clerk, Barrack Dept. Dec 1810 ; transferred to Ordnance Office 1822 ; retd. 1841 ; of Peers Court, Stinchcombe, Dursley, Gloucs. ; DL Gloucestershire 1852, also JP Gloucestershire ; m.1st, 3 Aug 1820 Margaret, dau. of Edward Knowles, Paddington, Middlesex, and The Spring, Trelawney, Jamaica ; m.2nd, 30 Jun 1840 Louisa, dau. of Joseph Newcomb, Upton, Bucks. ; d. 19 Sep 1888, aged 94.

HUNT, FRANCIS HOLDSWORTH, brother of William Claude Holdsworth Hunt (qv) ; b. 10 Dec 1846 ; adm. 24 Jan 1861 (G) ; left Aug 1864 ; Trinity Coll.Cambridge, adm.pens. 1 May 1866, matr.Mich.1866 ; BA 1870 ; MA 1873 ; adm.Inner Temple 20 Jan 1870, called to bar 18 Nov 1872 ; practised as a conveyancer ; subsequently member London Stock Exchange, firm Hunt Cox & Co ; m. 1st, 19 Jun 1877 Ada Rose Wilhelmina, youngest dau. of John Christian Frederick Engelhardt, Pembridge Square, London, sugar merchant ; m.2nd, 21 Sep 1880 Agnes Elizabeth, eldest dau. of Frederick Halsey Janson, Chislehurst, Kent, solicitor ; d. 5 Jan 1905.

HUNT, SIR FREDERICK SEAGER, BART., eldest son of James Edward Hunt, Clapham Common, Surrey, railway contractor, and Eliza, sister of Thomas Whittaker Seager (qv) ; b. 27 Apr 1838 ; adm. 22 Sep 1848 (G) ; left 1853 ; went out to India, where he remained until 1859 ; succeeded to business of Seager Evans & Co, distillers, Millbank, on death of grandfather ; chairman, Earle’s Shipbuilding Co. ; contested (Cons) Marylebone 1880 ; MP (Cons) Marylebone West 1885-95, Maidstone 1895 – Mar 1898 ; created baronet 13 Oct 1892 ; DL co.London ; insolvent Mar 1898, and held to be incapable of managing his affairs owing to mental infirmity May 1898 onwards ; m. 29 Oct 1867 his cousin Alice Harriet, dau. of Alfred Hunt, Hannover, Germany ; d. 21 Jan 1904.

HUNT, HENRY ARTHUR, second son of Sir Henry Arthur Hunt, Kt CB FSI, Consulting Surveyor to HM Office of Works and Public Buildings, and Eliza Susannah, dau. of Joseph Bennett ;  b. 20 Jul 1836 ; adm. 24 Jan 1849 (R) ; architect and surveyor, firm Hunt and Seward, Parliament Street, Westminster ; Surveyor to Dean and Chapter of Westminster ; FSI  11 May 1874 ; m.1st, 29 Jul 1862 Alice Eliza, only sister of Frank Pownall (qv) ; m.2nd, 19 Feb 1895 Alice Mary, dau. of Ernest Elliott MD MRCS LSA, Southsea, Hampshire ; d. 26 Sep 1904.

HUNT, HENRY WARWICK, only son of Henry Hunt MD FRCP, Brook Street, Hanover Square, London, and his first wife Maria, eldest  dau. of Arthur Hunt, Redlap, Devon ; b. 20 Feb 1835 ; adm. 22 Jan 1846 (G) ; readm. 18 Jan 1849 ; Trinity Coll.Cambridge, adm.pens.16 Mar 1854, matr.Mich.1854 ; BA 1858 ; MA 1861 ; ordained deacon 19 Jun 1859, priest 3 Jun 1860 (both London) ; Curate, St.John’s, Westminster 1860-5, St.Anne’s, Soho 1866-9 ; Rector of Steppingley, Beds., Dec 1869 – Jan 1872 ; Rector of Shermanbury, Sussex, from  10 Jan 1872 ; m. 10 Feb 1870 Adele de Havilland, seventh dau. of Francis Rivaz, Cowley Street, Westminster, insurance agent ; d. 7 Mar 1911.

HUNT, JOHN ; b.      ; adm.     ; QS      ; elected to Trinity Coll.Cambridge 1591, adm.scholar 1592 ; BA 1595/6 ; MA 1599 ; Fellow, Trinity Coll. 1597 – c.1615, Junior Dean 1609-11.

HUNT, LEWIS GEORGE, brother of Henry Arthur Hunt (qv) ; b. 13 May 1849 ; adm. 23 Jan 1862 ; left Dec 1864 ; entered merchant navy ; subsequently an artist ; [unm. in 1881] ;  d. 20 Aug 1908.

HUNT, R.     ; b.        ; in school lists 1801,1803 (when in sixth form) ; left 1805 [but it seems more likely that the leaver in 1805 was Thomas Hunt (Min.Can.1801, qv)]. [maybe Rowland Hunt, eldest brother of Thomas Hunt (qv) ; b. 13 Jan 1784 ; Brasenose Coll.Oxford, matr. 2 Feb 1804, aged 20 ; of Boreatton, Shropshire ; High Sheriff, Shropshire 1830 ; m. 8 Apr 1823 Mary, eldest dau. of Thomas Lloyd, Shrewsbury, Shropshire, and Glangwnna, Caernarvonshire ; d. Feb 1835]

HUNT, RICHARD ; b.      ; adm.     ; QS       ; elected to Trinity Coll.Cambridge 1604, adm.scholar 1605 ; buried St.Michael’s, Cambridge 31 Aug 1605.

HUNT, STEPHEN, son of Ven.William Hunt DD, Archdeacon of Bath, and his first wife Elizabeth — ; b.      ; adm. (aged 11) Jan 1716/7 ; Balliol Coll.Oxford, matr.1 Apr 1721 ; BA 1725 ; migrated to Emmanuel Coll.Cambridge ; MA 1732 ; ordained deacon 13 Jun 1731 (Norwich) ; Vicar of North Curry, Somerset, from 5 May 1732 ; d. 1739 (dead by 4 Dec).

HUNT, THOMAS ; b.      ; GS 1540 ; KS 1542-4 ; left 1544 (Chapter Muniments).

HUNT, THOMAS, of London ; b.     ; at school under Busby (T.A.Walker, ed., Admissions to Peterhouse, Cambridge, 158) ; Peterhouse, Cambridge, adm.pens.22 Nov 1676, Blythe Scholar 5 May 1677, Parke Scholar 31 May 1679, matr.1677 ; BA 1680/1 ; MA 1684. [maybe Rector of Tickencote, Rutland, Mar 1687, res. by Aug 1692] [maybe d. 1700, m. Martha —]

HUNT, THOMAS, third son of Rowland Hunt, Boreatton Hall, Baschurch, Shropshire, and Susannah Ann, dau. of Mark Cornish, London ; b. 12 Dec 1786 ; adm.      ; Min.Can.1801 ; Christ Church, Oxford, matr.29 Apr 1805, Canoneer Student (still 1814) ; BA 1809 ; MA 1812 (incorp.Cambridge 1836) ; ordained deacon 17 Jun 1810 (Durham), priest 8 Jun 1811 (Oxford) ; Rector of Wentnor, Shropshire, from 19 Dec 1816 ; Rector of West Felton, Shropshire, from 24 Feb 1817 ; m. 23 Oct 1822 Jane, dau. of William Harding, Baraset, Warwicks., Gentleman of the Privy Chamber, previously EICS Bengal ; d. 15 Sep 1860.

HUNT, VESEY ; b.     ; adm.     ; KS 1676 ; d. when at school.

HUNT, WILLIAM CLAUDE HOLDSWORTH, eldest son of Holdsworth Hunt, Park Crescent, Portland Place, London, barrister, Bencher Inner Temple, and Ellen, youngest dau. of Joseph Barber, Clapham, Surrey, wharfinger ; b. 1 Sep 1844 ; adm. 3 Jun 1858 (G) ; rowed against Eton 1862 ; left Christmas 1862 ; Exeter Coll.Oxford, matr. 26 May 1863 ; managing partner, Joseph Barber & Co, wharfingers and factors, Brewers’ Quay, Tower Hill, London ; m. 15 Apr 1869 Emma, eldest dau. of John Christian Frederick Engelhardt, Pembridge Square, London, sugar merchant ; d. 14 Jan 1920.

HUNT, WILLIAM CORNISH, younger son of Thomas Hunt (Min.Can.1801, qv) ; b. 12 Oct 1835 ; adm. 4 Oct 1848 ; Christ Church, Oxford, matr. 8 Jun 1854 ; BA 1858 ; MA 1865 ; ordained deacon 1860 (Salisbury), priest 1860 (Lichfield) ; Curate, West Felton, Shropshire 1860-2, Uffington, Lincs., 1862-3 ; Rector of Odell, Beds., from 1863 ; m. 7 Jan 1869 Jane Elizabeth, eldest dau. of Francis Leslie Pym, The Hasells, Beds. ; d. 11 Feb 1891.

HUNT, WILLIAM THORLEY GIGNAC, eldest son of William Hunt, Bath, Somerset, Mayor of Bath, and Elizabeth, only dau. of Nathaniel Thorley, Bath ; b. 3 Dec 1837 ; adm. 22 Sep 1848 ; QS 1852 ; elected to Christ Church, Oxford 1856, matr. 15 May 1856, Westminster Student 1856-62 ; BA 1859 ; MA 1863 ; adm.Lincoln’s Inn 22 Dec 1858 ; ordained deacon 1861, priest 1862 (both Oxford) ; Curate, Lacey Green, Bucks., 1861-3, Dinton, Bucks., 1863-6  ; Vicar of Prestwood, Staffs., 1866-71 ; Curate, Bathwick, Somerset 1871-4, River, Kent 1877-83, St.Michael’s, Folkestone, Kent 1883-5, Holy Trinity, Folkestone, Kent 1885-9, Hawkinge, Kent 1889-92, Curzon Chapel, Mayfair 1893-7, St.Mark’s, Notting Hill, Bayswater 1898-1906 ; Assistant Priest, Church of the Annunciation, Marylebone 1912-24 ; m. 3 Dec 1862 Mary Eliza, eldest dau. of Rev.William Johnstone Burgess, Vicar of Lacey Green, Bucks. ; d. 15 Oct 1928.

HUNTER, CLEMENT HARRIS, brother of Howard Havard Hunter (qv) ; b. 15 Nov 1869 ; adm. 22 Sep 1881 (H) ; left Apr 1887 ; London Univ., matr. Jun 1887 ; Guy’s Hospital ; MRCS LRCP 1896 ; medical practitioner in Swansea, later in London ; death registered Pancras second quarter 1955, aged 85. [evidently Clement H.Hunter, marriage to Eleanor E. Rees registered Gower third quarter 1929]

HUNTER, HOWARD HAVARD, son of William Havard Hunter FSI AMICE, Queen Anne’s Gate, London, and Briton Ferry, Glamorgan, land agent, and Jemima, dau. of John Harris, Rhyddings, Neath, Glamorgan ; b. 14 Nov 1867 ; adm. 22 Sep 1881 (H) ; left Aug 1883 ; a land agent ; d.unm. 27 May 1932.

HUNTER, JOHN ; b.       ; adm. 24 Apr 1783.

HUNTER, JOHN, second son of John Hunter MD FRS FRCP, London, Physician Extraordinary to Prince of Wales, and Elizabeth, dau. of Robert Le Grand, Ash, Kent, merchant ; b. 3 Feb 1794 ; adm. 11 Sep 1804 ; KS (aged 12) 1807 ; left 1809 ; Cornet, 2nd Dragoon Guards 27 Jan 1810 ; Lieut., 3 Jun 1811 ; Capt., 24 May 1816 ; half-pay 25 May 1816 ; Capt., 71st Foot 11 Mar 1836 ; retd. 18 Mar 1836 ; d. 26 May 1869.

HUNTER-BLAIR, SIR JOHN, BART., eldest son of Sir James Hunter-Blair, Bart., MP, King’s Printer and Stationer for Scotland, Lord Provost of Edinburgh, partner in banking business, and Jane, dau. of John Blair, Dunskey, Port Patrick, Wigtownshire ; b. 19 Feb 1773 ; adm. 12 Sep 1785 ; left Aug 1786 ; succ.father as 2nd baronet 1 Jul 1787 ; partner in late father’s Edinburgh banking businesss 1788-99, although not active in business after 1792 ; latterly a lunatic ; d.unm. 24 May 1800.

HUNTINGDON, FRANCIS, 10TH EARL OF, see HASTINGS, FRANCIS, 10TH EARL OF HUNTINGDON.

HUNTINGTOWER, LORDS, see TOLLEMACHE, LIONEL, 4TH  EARL OF DYSART, and TOLLEMACHE, LIONEL, 5TH EARL OF DYSART.

HUNTLEY, JOHN ; b.     ; adm.     ; KS 1635 ; elected to Trinity Coll.Cambridge 1638, adm.pens. 26 May 1638, scholar 1639 ; BA 1642/3.

HUNTLEY, WILLIAM, son of William Huntley, Yeoman of the King’s Buttery, and Sarah — ; b.       ; at school under Busby (PRO, Delegates Examinations IV, Huntley v.Huntley) ; described in a deposition taken after his death as “a youth of small understanding” ; m. 1649  —, dau. of John Allen, former High Sheriff, Berkshire ; d.1649.

HUNTMAN, JOHN ; b.       ; adm. (aged 10) Jul 1717 ; in under school list 1721.

HUNTMAN, THOMAS, youngest son of Joseph Huntman, Hatfield, Herts.,  and London, citizen and tallow chandler ; b. (London)     ; adm.      ; Min.Can. (aged 15) 1709, (aged 16) 1710 ; Trinity Coll.Cambridge, adm.pens. 29 Jun 1711, aged 18, scholar 1 May 1713 ; BA 1714/5 ; MA 1718 ; a Deputy Esquire Bedell, Cambridge University 1724 – Jan 1726/7, Esquire Bedell from 13 Jan 1726/7 ; d. 10 Dec 1727. [Perhaps bapt.St.Botolph, Bishopsgate 31 Jun 1692, son of Joseph Huntman, and Mary — (IGI), but date of baptism seems too early].

HURST, — ; b.       ; adm. 1656 (school lists 1656, last two quarters).

HURST, ARTHUR REGINALD, second son of Robert Henry Hurst (adm.1831, qv) ; b. 20 Jun 1867 ; adm. 23 Sep 1880 (R) ; left Mar 1886 ; Christ Church, Oxford, matr. 18 Jan 1889 ; BA 1892 ; adm.Middle Temple 15 Nov 1889 ; of Little Barrington, Burford, Oxfordshire, and Horsham Park, Horsham, Sussex ; JP Oxfordshire 1896 ; Capt., 9th bn., Royal Sussex Regt. 22 Sep 1914 ; Maj., 13thbn., Essex Regt. 18 Mar 1915 ; transferred to RFA 2 Nov 1915 ; Lieut.-Col., 5 May 1916 ; DSO 1 Jan 1918 ; OBE 3 Jun 1919 ; m. 7 Feb 1907 Esther Winifred Mary, elder dau. of Rev.Edward Oldridge De la Hey (formerly Hayes), Rector of Batheaston, Somerset ; d. 28 Mar 1948.

HURST, BERTRAM PRESTON, son of Rev.Francis Thomas Hurst, Vicar of Ridgewell, Essex, and Ruth, elder dau. of Robert Preston, Bridlington Quay, Yorks. ; b. 4 Apr 1868 ; adm. 22 Jun 1882 (G), exhibitioner ; QS 1883 ; left Jul 1886 ; Trinity Coll.Cambridge, adm.pens. 30 May 1887, matr.Mich.1887 ; BA 1890 ; MA 1897 ; Ridley Hall, Cambridge 1892 ; ordained deacon 1893 (Norwich), priest 1895 (Ely) ; held a number of curacies ; Vicar of St.Mary, Bungay, Suffolk 1902-11 ; licensed preacher, various dioceses, from 1911 ; m. 11 Oct 1898 Florence Margaret, dau. of William Grafton Healing, Tewkesbury, Gloucs., miller and corn merchant ; d. 13 Mar 1928.

HURST, SIR CECIL JAMES BARRINGTON, third son of Robert Henry Hurst (adm.1831, qv) ; b. 28 Oct 1870 ; adm. 26 Jan 1883 (R) ; left  Jul 1888 ; Trinity Coll.Cambridge (with Triplett), adm.pens. 21 May 1888, matr.Mich.1888 ; 2nd cl.Law Tripos pt.i, 1891, 1st cl.Law Tripos pt.ii, 1892 ; LLB 1892 ; LLM 1896 ; hon.LLD 1928 ; adm.Middle Temple 9 Oct 1890, called to bar 17 Nov 1893, KC 1913, Bencher 1922, Treasurer 1940  ; South-Eastern Circuit ; Junior Counsel to Post Office on S.E.Circuit 1901-2 ; Assistant Legal Adviser, Foreign Office 1 Apr 1902-18, Legal Adviser Aug 1918-29 ; Legal Secretary to British Plenipotentiaries at Second Peace Conference, The Hague 1 May 1907 ; largely responsible for the general drafting of the Peace Treaty of 1919 ; member, Permanent Court of International Justice, The Hague 1929-46, President 1934-7 ; President, United Nations War Crimes Commission 1943-5 ; CB 9 Nov 1907 ; KCB 5 Jun 1920 ; KCMG 7 Nov 1924 ; GCMG 1 Jan 1926 ; hon LLD Edinburgh ; editor, British Yearbook of International Law, 1919-28 ; president, Grotius Society 1940-7 ; his Collected Paperswere published in 1950 ; Busby Trustee 19 May 1925 ; of Rusper Nunnery, Horsham, Sussex ; JP Sussex 1931 ; m. 21 Dec 1901 Sibyl Gabriel Lumley, elder dau. of His Hon. Sir Lumley Smith KC, Cadogan Square, Chelsea, Judge of City of London Court ; d. 27 Mar 1963. ODNB.

HURST, JOHN, brother of Robert Henry Hurst (b.1788, qv) ; b. 7 Feb 1797 ; adm.Christmas 1812 ; Trinity Coll.Cambridge, adm.pens. 7 Jul 1814, matr.Mich.1814 ; ordained deacon 15 Oct 1820 (Norwich), priest 15 Apr 1821 (Chester) ; Curate, Oakwood Chapel, Surrey 1820-2 ; Rector of Thakeham, Sussex, from 21 Feb 1834 ; m. 6 Mar 1823 Catherine, second dau. of Rev.William Probyn, Vicar of Pershore, Worcs., and Chancellor of St.David’s ; d. 26 Jul 1881.

HURST, ROBERT FREDERICK BREYNTON GREENAWAY, eldest son of Robert Henry Hurst (adm.1831, qv) ; b. 20 Mar 1865 ; adm. 12 Jun 1879 (R) ; left Aug 1881 ; Trinity Coll.Cambridge, adm.pens. 2 Oct 1884, matr. Mich.1884 ; went abroad winter 1886 on account of ill-health ; d. 6 Sep 1888.

HURST, ROBERT HENRY, eldest son of Robert Hurst MP, Horsham Park, Sussex, barrister, Bencher Middle Temple, and Maria, dau. of Adam Smith, Horsham, Sussex [presumably sister of William Smith (adm. 1777, qv)] ; b. 4 Apr 1788 ; in school lists 1801, 1803 ; Ensign, 1st Foot Guards 4 Jan 1804 ; retd. 2 Mar 1809 ; served in Peninsular War and took part in retreat to Corunna 1809 ; MP (Whig) Horsham 1832-41, May 1844-7 ; of Horsham Park, Sussex ; m. 22 Nov 1814 Dorothea, dau. of John Breynton, Haunch Hall, Staffs. ; d. 16 Feb 1857.

HURST, ROBERT HENRY, only son of Robert Henry Hurst (b.1788, qv) ; b. 1 Jun 1817 ; adm. 8 Apr 1831 (G) ; Trinity Coll.Cambridge, adm.pens. 26 May 1836, matr.Mich.1836 ; 25th Wrangler 1840 ; BA 1840 ; MA 1843 ; adm.Middle Temple 29 May 1835, called to bar 25 Nov 1842 ; South-Eastern Circuit ; Recorder of Hastings and Rye from 8 Feb 1863 ; MP (Liberal) Horsham 1865-8, May 1869-74, Dec 1875 – Feb 1876 (unseated on petition) ; Chairman, West Sussex Quarter Sessions, to 1904 ; of Horsham Park, Sussex, and Barrington Grove, Burford, Oxfordshire ; DL JP Sussex, JP Oxfordshire ; m. 28 Apr 1859 Matilda Jane, eldest dau. of James Scott, Rusper, Sussex ; d. 12 Feb 1905.

HURST, WILLIAM ; b.      ; adm. (aged 10) Jan 1739/40 ; left 1742.

HUSBANDS, — ; b.       ; in school list 1751.

HUSBANDS, SAMUEL, eldest son of Hon.Samuel Husbands, Barbados, member of Council for Barbados, and Susannah, dau. of Joseph Dottin, Barbados ; b.    Sep 1739 ; adm. (aged 10) Sep 1750 ; KS 1754 ; expelled 1755 ; Trinity Coll.Cambridge, adm.fellow commoner 28 Jan 1758, matr. Lent 1758, but did not graduate ; adm.Middle Temple 25 Oct 1758. [presumably member, Barbados House of Assembly, living Jun 1781]

HUSSEY, EDWARD, eldest son of Thomas Hussey, Burwash, Sussex, and Ashford, Kent, and Ann, only child of Maurice Berkley, St.Saviour’s, Southwark, and Nevis, West Indies, surgeon ; bapt. 3 Nov 1749 ; in school lists 1764, 1765 ; left Dec 1765 ; adm.Middle Temple 10 Feb 1769 ; a well-known sportsman, archer and rider ; played cricket for Kent 1773-97, and celebrated in the old cricket song as “Hussey of Ashford town” ; of Scotney Castle, Kent ; JP Sussex, Kent ; m. 14 Jun 1776 Elizabeth Sarah, only dau. of Robert Bridge, Bocking, Essex ; committted suicide 4 Jul 1816, aged 68.

HUSSEY, JOHN ; b.      ; adm. (aged 11) Apr 1722 ; left 1722.

HUSSEY, ROBERT, fourth son of Rev.William Hussey, Rector of Sandhurst, Kent, and Charlotte, dau. of William Twopenny, Rochester, Kent, attorney ; nephew of Edward Hussey (qv) ; b. 7 Oct 1801 ; adm.Mich.1814, from Rochester GS ; KS 1816 ; elected to Christ Church, Oxford 1821, matr. 2 Jun 1821, Westminster Student, Tutor and Censor ; 1st cl.Classics and 1st cl.Mathematics 1824 ; BA 1825 ; MA 1827 (incorp.Cambridge 1835) ; BD 1837 ; Select Preacher, Oxford Univ. 1831, 1846 ; Proctor 1836 ; Public Examiner 1838-9 ; Regius Professor of Ecclesiastical History, Oxford Univ., from 23 Apr 1842 ; ordained deacon 18 Dec 1825, priest 24 Dec 1826 (both Oxford) ; Perpetual Curate of Binsey, Oxfordshire, from 1845 ; edited Socrates, Evagrius, Bede and Sozomen ; established as against Cureton the accepted view on the Epistles of St.Ignatius ; author, The Rise of the Papal Power, 1851, and other works ; m. 22 Oct 1845 Elizabeth, sister of Jacob Ley (qv) ; d. 2 Dec 1856. ODNB.

HUSSEY, WILLIAM, son of William Law Hussey (qv) ; b. 13 Mar 1855 ; adm. 2 Jun 1869 ; QS 1870 ; left 10 Apr 1873 ; a solicitor (1881 Census, living London, unm.) ; d. 16 Nov 1885.

HUSSEY, WILLIAM LAW, eldest son of William Hussey, Rochester, Kent, solicitor, and Mary Anne, dau. of Charles  Law, EICS Bengal ; nephew of Robert Hussey (qv) ; b. 9 Sep 1813 ; adm. 4 Apr 1826 (G) ; KS 1827 ; rowed against Eton 27 Jul 1829 ; elected to Christ Church, Oxford 1831, matr. 21 May 1831, Westminster Student 1831-53 ; Treasurer, Union Society 1835 ; BA 1835 ; MA 1837 ; ordained deacon 18 Dec 1836, priest 17 Dec 1837 (both Oxford) ; Curate, Witham, Essex 1845-8 ; Assistant Minister, Curzon Chapel, Mayfair 1850-2 ; Vicar of Kirkham, Lancs., 1852-62 ; Hon.Canon Manchester 1856 ; Rector of Great Ringstead, Norfolk 1862-88 ; m. 9 Sep 1852 Elizabeth, third dau. of Thomas Arthur Stone (qv) ; d. 13 May 1893.

HUTCHINGS, JOHN, elder son of Charles Hutchings, Yeovil, Somerset and Sandford Orcas, Dorset, and Sarah, dau. of John Cook, Sherborne, Dorset ; bapt. 14 Apr 1772 ; adm. 20 Jan 1783 ; KS (aged 14) 1786 ; elected head to Trinity Coll.Cambridge 1791, adm.pens. 21 Jun 1791, scholar 20 Apr 1792, matr. Mich.1791 ; BA 1795 ; adm.Inner Temple 14 May 1800 ; of Sandford Orcas, Dorset ; m. 14 Mar 1806 Elizabeth Clark, dau. of John Savery, Bristol, banker ; d. 21 Sep 1846.

HUTCHINSON, see also HOCHENSON.

HUTCHINSON, — ; b.       ; adm.     ; a pensioner in 1568 (tutor, Mr.Burton) (Chapter Muniments 54017).

HUTCHINSON, — ; b.         ; at school Christmas 1793.

HUTCHINSON, BENJAMIN WILLIAM, son of Benjamin Hutchinson, St.Kitts, West Indies, and Anne, dau. of William Pym Burt, Chief Justice of St.Kitts, West Indies ; b.     ; in school list 1754 ; Trinity Coll.Cambridge, adm.pens. 5 Nov 1755, aged 16, scholar 1756, matr. Mich.1755, but did not graduate ; Leiden Univ., adm. 12 Jun 1758 ; ordained deacon 11 Jun 1768, priest 24 Jun 1768 (both London) ; licensed to Plantations (Caribees) by Bishop of London 24 Jun 1768 ; m. 5 Mar 1761 Mary Verchild, St.Kitts ; buried St.Kitts 17 Mar 1777.

HUTCHINSON, CYRIL GEORGE, son of Rev.George Hutchinson, Vicar of St.Mary’s, Nottingham, and Prebendary of Southwell, and Elizabeth, sister of Cyril Jackson (qv) ; bapt.Manchester Cathedral 26 Feb 1800 (IGI) ; adm. 27 Jan 1809 ; KS 1814 ; elected to Christ Church, Oxford 1818, matr. 5 May 1818, Westminster Student ; BA 1822 ; MA 1824 ; ordained deacon 24 Dec 1826, priest 1 Jun 1828 (both Oxford) ; Perpetual Curate of Hawkhurst, Kent 1 Sep 1832-9 ; Rector of Batsford, Gloucs., 1842-86 ; Hon.Canon, Gloucester 1852 ; m. 19 Aug 1874 Ellen Frances, dau. of Capt.James Agnew Stevens, Royal Navy ; d. 2 Nov 1887, aged 87.

HUTCHINSON, EDWARD HERVEY, son of Richard Hutchinson, London ; b.      ; adm. 15 Feb 1785 ; Trinity Coll.Cambridge, adm.sizar 10 Jul 1790, aged 16, matr. Mich.1791 ; BA 1795 ; Cornet, 25th(afterwards 22nd) Light Dragoons 3 Nov 1797 ; Lieut., 24 Jan 1801 ; Paymaster from 14 Feb 1805 ; d. at Arcot, Madras 13 Jul 1811. [descendant (grandson ?) of Edward Hutchinson, Long Acre, London, coachmaker]

HUTCHINSON, HENRY ; b. 3 May 1807 ; adm. 15 Sep 1819.

HUTCHINSON, JAMES ; b.      ; adm. (aged 9) Jan 1734/5 ; in school list 1738.

HUTCHINSON, RALPH ; b.       ; adm.      ; QS       ; a pensioner 1566-8 (tutor, Mr.Burton) (Chapter Muniments 25122, 54012-7).

HUTCHINSON, WILLIAM ; b.       ; adm.      ; KS 1639. [possibly Queen’s Coll.Oxford, matr.pens. Easter 1641, of Devon]

HUTT, RICHARD ; b.      ; adm. (aged 9) Jan 1721/2 ; left 1727.

HUTTEN, LEONARD ; b.      ; adm.      ; QS in 1570 ; elected to Christ Church, Oxford 7 Jul 1574, but not at first adm. a student (CSP Dom., Addit., 1566-79, 487) ; Westminster Student to 1587 ; BA 1578 ; MA 3 Mar 1581/2 ; BD 1591 ; DD 1600 ; ordained ; Vicar of Long Preston, Yorks., 30 Jan 1587/8 – Dec 1588 ; Rector of Scorborough, Yorks., Feb 1587/8 – Jan 1589 ;  Rector of Rampisham, Dorset 19 Apr 1596 -1601 ; Canon of Christ Church, Oxford, from 19 Dec 1599, becoming Sub-Dean ; Chaplain to Richard Bancroft, Archbishop of Canterbury ; Vicar of Flore, Northants, from 6 Jun 1601 ; Vicar of Weedon Beck, Northants, 24 Sep 1602-4 ; Prebendary of St.Paul’s from 1 Oct 1609 ; Rector of Westwell, Oxfordshire, from 19 May 1615 ; one of the translators of the Authorised Version of the Bible 1604 ; a writer of Latin verse and antiquary ; his MS, Liber Successi Dec:Canon:Alumn:, is preserved in Christ Church’s archives, and his dissertation on The Antiquities of Oxford, first published 1720, is reprinted in C.Plummer, ed., Elizabethan Oxford (Oxford Hist.Soc.Pub. no.viii) ; m. 19 Feb 1600/1 Anne, sister of John Hamden (qv) ; d. 17 May 1632, aged 75. Buried Christ Church Cathedral, Oxford. ODNB.

HUTTON, — ; b.       ; in under school lists 1716-8.

HUTTON, CHARLES, son of Rev.Charles Hutton, Rector of Uplyme, Devon (nonjuror) ; b.       ; adm. (aged 10) Jan 1719/20 (Bedford) ; in under school list 1722 ; Balliol Coll.Oxford, matr.14 Jul 1727. [maybe deacon 24 Jun 1733, priest 9 Jun 1734 (both Exeter), Rector of Nymet St George, Devon 30 Sep 1735, living 1744, m.]

HUTTON, JAMES, brother of John Hutton (KS 1720, qv) ; b. 3 Sep 1715 ; in school lists 1727/8 (fifth form), 1729 ; apprenticed to William Innys, stationer and bookseller, St.Paul’s Churchyard 6 Apr 1731 ; opened own bookshop, west of Temple Bar ; became connected with the Methodists ; publisher of Whitefield’s Journal, 1738-9 ; visited Moravian congregations in Germany 1739 and began a correspondence with Zinzendorf ; broke with Wesley in 1740 and became the founder of the Moravian Church in England ; m. 3 Jul 1740 Louise Brandt, Marrenborn, Switzerland ; d. 3 May 1795. ODNB.

HUTTON, JOHN, son of Rev.John Hutton, successively Curate, Stoke by Nayland, Suffolk, and Vicar of Stanford in the Vale, Berks., subsequently non-juring clergyman, who from 1716 onwards kept a boarding house for Westminster boys in College Street, and Elizabeth Ayscough, Caythorpe, Lincs. ; bapt. 12 Sep 1707 ; in under school list 1716 ; KS (aged 12) 1720 ; d.1724.

HUTTON, JOHN ; b.       ; adm. (aged 12) Jul 1727 ; in under school list 1729.

HUTTON, JOHN, son of John Hutton, Marske, Yorks., and his second wife Hon.Elizabeth D’Arcy, dau. of James D’Arcy, 1st Baron D’Arcy of Navan (I) ; nephew of Most Rev.Matthew Hutton DD, Archbishop of Canterbury ; b. 14 Oct 1730 ; adm.May 1745 ; left 1747 ; Christ’s Coll.Cambridge, adm.fellow commoner 7 Nov 1747, matr.1747 ; resided to Mich.1749, when his family was requested to remove him from the college ; for his attempts in 1750-3 to revenge himself on George Henry Rooke (qv), the Master of Christ’s, see D.A.Winstanley,  The University of Cambridge in the Eighteenth Century, 1922, 20-3 ; of Marske, Yorks. ; m. 31 Aug 1779 Anne, dau. of Richard Linge, Appleby, Westmorland ; d. 26 Sep 1782.

HUXLEY, GEORGE, eldest son of George Huxley MP, Muster Master General, previously Commissioner for Victualling Navy, and Henrietta Maria, dau. of Sir John Heron, Bart., Chipchase, Northumberland ; bapt.St.Andrew, Holborn 6 Oct 1717 (IGI) ; adm. (aged 12) Jan 1729/30 ; left 1735 ; m. 10 Oct 1742 Joanna, widow of … Boughton, Cowley Street, Westminster. [Probably George Huxley who was Clerk, Secretary of State’s Office c.1736 – c.1745 ; perhaps George Huxley, Esq., buried Bath Abbey 7 Sep 1776 (will proved PCC 17 Oct 1776)].

HUXLEY, HENRY THOMAS, second son of Thomas Huxley, Pump Court, Temple, solicitor, and Mary, dau. of Henry West, Long Crendon, Bucks. ; b. 21 Jan 1808 ; adm. 15 Jan 1821 ; left 1823 ; adm.Middle Temple 21 Jun 1825, called to bar 10 Jun 1831 ; practised at London, Middlesex and Westminster Sessions ; d. at Brussels 10 Feb 1860.

HUXLEY, RICHARD, son of William Huxley, St.Sepulchre’s, London ; b.       ; adm.    ; KS in 1607 (Chapter Muniments 33661) ; Gonville and Caius Coll.Cambridge, adm.sizar 21 Feb 1607/8, aged 15, scholar Lady Day 1608 – Mich.1613 ; BA 1611/2 ; ordained priest 19 Jun 1614 (Rochester) ; Rector of Ashill, Norfolk, from 1621 ; m. ; d. 1658 (will proved PCC 26 Nov 1658).

HYCKSON, see HIXON.

HYDE, see also HIDE.

HYDE, — ; b.       ; adm.1656 (school lists 1656, last two quarters).

HYDE, EDWARD, fifth son of Sir Lawrence Hyde, Kt., MP, Salisbury, Wilts., barrister, Attorney-General to Queen Anne of Denmark (wife of James VI and I), and Barbara, fifth dau. of John Baptist Castillion, Benham Valence, Speen, Berks., Gentleman of the Privy Chamber to Queen Elizabeth I ; bapt. 10 May 1607 ; adm.      ; KS       ; elected to Trinity Coll.Cambridge 1625, adm.scholar 1626 ; BA 1629/30 ; MA 1633 ; BD 1640 ; DD Oxford 16 Jan 1642/3 ; Fellow, Trinity Coll. 1632 – c.1644, Tutor 1636 ; ordained deacon 20 May 1638, priest 23 Sep 1638 (both Salisbury) ; Rector of Milston, Wilts., 3 Apr 1641 ; Rector of Brightwell, Berks., 29 Mar 1643/4-7, when living sequestered ; resided at Hart Hall, Oxford, after his expulsion from his living, preaching in Holywell and studying in Bodley’s Library ; subsequently retired to Salisbury ; nominated Dean of Windsor Jul 1658, but never installed ; author, A Christian Legacy, 1657, and other works ; m.1st (?) Anne, dau. of Thomas Lambert ; m.2nd (?) 1643 Anne, dau. of Stephen Hurst, Whiteparish, Wilts. ; d. 16 Aug 1659. ODNB.

[HYDE, EDWARD ; b.     ; in school list Dec 1736]. [perhaps an error for Frederick Hyde]

HYDE, FREDERICK ; b.      ; adm. (aged 9) Jul 1736 ; left 1738. [Perhaps Frederick Hyde, son of Col. John Hyde, Kingston Lisle, Berks., Foot Guards, and Hon.Jane Calvert, dau. of Benedict Leonard Calvert, 4th Baron Baltimore (I) ; Lieut.Royal Navy 3 Feb 1744, Cdr. 5 Mar 1746, Capt. 11 Nov 1746, d. 21 May 1764].

HYDE, JOHN ; b.       ; adm. (aged 12) Jun 1735 ; left 1737. [Perhaps John Hyde, an older brother of Capt.Frederick Hyde, Royal Navy (above) ; living 1749 ?]

HYDE, LAURENCE, son of Edward Hyde, Clerk of the Crown at Lancaster ; b.      ; adm.     ; QS (aged 15) 1708 ; left 1708/9. [mother probably Katherine, dau. of Alexander Rigby, Leighton] [father perhaps Governor of North Carolina ; the Governor’s wife’s Christian name was certainly Catherine] [IGI notes Lawrence Hyde, son of Edward Hyde and Katherine Rigby, as born Stockport, Cheshire 23 May 1700 (sic), died 1711]

HYETT, BENJAMIN, son of Nicholas Hyett (qv) ; bapt.St.Clement Danes, London 28 Sep 1741 (IGI) ; in school list 1754 ; Brasenose Coll.Oxford, gent.commoner, matr. 6 Nov 1758, aged 17 ; MA (as Nicholas Hyett) 30 Jun 1762 ; adm.Lincoln’s Inn 12 May 1759 ; Grand Tour (Italy) 1766 ; of Painswick House, Gloucs. ; m.1st, Catherine Gorges, eldest dau. of Robert Dobyns Yate, Bromsberrow Place, Gloucs. ; m.2nd, 10 Jul 1788 Sarah, only child of Ven.William Adams DD, Archdeacon of Llandaff and Master of Pembroke Coll.Oxford ; d. 21 Jun 1810.

HYETT, NICHOLAS, second son of Charles Hyett MP, Painswick, Gloucs., Constable of Gloucester Castle, and Anna, dau. of Nicholas Webb, Alderman, Gloucester ; b. 6 Dec 1709 ; adm. Apr 1718 ; in under school list 1722 ; Pembroke Coll.Oxford, matr.4 May 1725 ; adm.Inner Temple 27 Jan1724/5, called to bar 3 Jul 1731, chambers there 6 Feb 1728/9 – May 1750 ; contested Gloucester 1734 ; Recorder of Tewkesbury from Jul 1760 ; Constable of Gloucester Castle from 1765 ; Chairman, Gloucestershire Quarter Sessions ; m. 1 May 1735 (IGI) Henrietta Maria, widow of John Holker, Gravesend, Kent, brewer, and dau. of — James [probably Thomas James, Lydney, Gloucs. (IGI)] ; d. 4 Mar 1777.

HYETT, WILLIAM HENRY, eldest son of Rev.Henry Cay Adams, Vicar of Meole Brace and of Stottesdon, Shropshire, and Frances, dau. of Richard Marston, Willenhall, Staffs. ; b. 2 Sep 1795 ; adm.1805 ; left 1811 ; assumed surname of Hyett in lieu of Adams 5 Aug 1813, in pursuance of will of Benjamin Hyett (qv) ; Christ Church, Oxford, matr. 21 Oct 1813 ; while on his travels in 1819 Hyett swam across the Hellespont from Sestos to Abydos in one hour and twenty minutes ; of Painswick House, Gloucs. ; DL JP Gloucestershire ; MP (Whig) Stroud 1832-4 ; FRS 29 Feb 1844 ; made experiments on growth of trees by watering them with chemical solutions ; issued privately his printed translations of Goethe, Victor Hugo, Filicaja and others ; author, Flowers from the South, 1869 ; m. 25 Oct 1821 Anne Jane, second dau. of Joseph Seymour Biscoe, Hempsted Court, Gloucs. ; d. 10 Mar 1877.

HYLLE, see also HILL and HILLE.

HYLLE, —  ; b.     ; adm.      ; a pensioner, Midsummer quarter 1567 (tutor, Prebendary Hutton) (Chapter Muniments).

HYLTON, JOHN, see HILTON, JOHN.

HYNDE, — ; b.       ; adm.      ; QS 1553-6 (Chapter Muniments 37713).