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 priest; left Aug. 6, 1839; at Derby, 1839-41; Wolverhampton, 1841-2; Uttoxeter, 1842-4; Swynnerton Park, 1844-57; Sutton Coldfield, 1857 till death, Sept. 3, 1882.

HARNAGE, Henry, born in Oxfordshire, March, 1650, son of Edward Harnage, Esq., of Belswardine, co. Salop, by Mary, dau. of Mynne, of Somerton, co. Oxon, Esq.; admitted Jan. 3, 1667; ord. priest; appointed procurator, April 10, 1677; sent to England, May 12, 1678, and was stationed in Shropshire. For many years lived at Madeley Court, seat of the Brooke family, with the Rev. Wm. Pegge, the one as house-chaplain, and the other as missioner to the Catholics of the neighbourhood, till Mr. Pegge's removal to St. Thomas Priory, in 1700, when Mr. Harnage remained in sole charge; elected by the Chapter archdeacon of Shropshire and Herefordshire, Jan. 9, 1699-1700; died at Madeley, after a holy and devout life, Jan. 7, 1736-7, aged 86. He left considerable benefactions to the clergy. His younger brother, Thomas, ord. priest at Douay, was serving in Middlesex in 1702, and died in 1719, leaving his name commemorated in Dodd's &quot;Flores Cleri Anglicani.&quot;

HARRIES, Joseph, vide Harvey.

HARRINGTON, Henry, was with Mark Harrington (q.v.) at the opening of the College. On account of his health he left July 8, and died in England, Nov. 1635.

HARRINGTON, Mark, alias or vere Drury, born 1591; ord. priest at Douay College, Dec. 7, 1616, thence to Paris, Apr. 16, 1619, and, having completed his degree of B.D. at the Sorbonne, returned to Douay where successively taught philosophy and divinity. In 1624 he is said to have been sent to the mission, but apparently returned till Aug. 25, 1628, when he was sent to Lisbon to teach divinity in the new establishment. Arrived in Nov., and on Apr. 28, 1629, formally appointed vespertine lecturer; left for England, Nov. 1, 1633, and was stationed in Wiltshire. Bp. Smith made him one of his vicars-general, conjointly with Dr. Geo. Leyburne; at general assembly of the Chapter in 1649, Harrington was appointed subclean, being then vicar in solidum and archdeacon, with power to act in the absence of the dean, Peter Biddulph, alias Fytton, in Italy. In that position he died in July, 1657, aged 66.