Page:Notes and Queries - Series 12 - Volume 2.djvu/344

 338

NOTES AND QUERIES. [12 s. ii. OCT. 21,

in the church, and ^2) tending flowers in her garden. The portraits of several well- known parishioners are also introduced in the backgrounds of the pictures.

JOHN T. PAGE.

TORE OF NOTTS (12 S. ii. 250). This family is mentioned by Thoroton under the variant names of Touc, Touk, Toke, Tolka, Tuke, Tuc, and Thucke, chiefly in the Kelham section of his History. A Touk was en- feoff ed before 1163 by Robert Ferrers, and another was fined by Richard I. for being out with John in the rebellion of 1194. In 1218 Henry de Tuc (of Leake ?) witnesses a Staythorpe deed of gift to Rufford Abbey (p. 105). The chief references to this family will be found in vol. iii. of Throsby's edition, but various members of the family are also noted on pp. 45 and 46 of vol. i.

EDITOR ' LOCAL NOTES AND QUERIES,'

' NOTTS WEEKLY EXPRESS.'

MRS. ANNE BUTTON (12 S. ii. 147, 197, 215, 275). The following books and tracts written by Sirs. Anne Dutton were sold by George Keith in Gracechurch Street. They are taken from a printed list. The items marked by an asterisk are included in the ' James Knight " Collection :


 * 1. Poems, containing a Narration of the Wonders

of Grace, in Six Parts. 1735.
 * 2. A Discourse on Walking with God, and

Joseph's Blessing. Pp. 170. 1*. 6d. 1735. 4 A Discourse on Justification. 1741. 5. A Discourse concerning the New Birth, with
 * 3. A Discourse on God's Act of Adoption. 1735.

LXIV. Hymns. 1740.
 * 6. Occasional Letters on Spiritual Subjects.

14 vols. Various dates.
 * 7. Letters to an Honoxirahle Gentleman, for the

Encouragement of Faith, under Various

Trials. 3 vols.

8. A Sight of Christ by Faith, absolutely neces-

sary to Faithful Ministers and True Chris- tians. 1743.

9. Thoughts on Faith in Christ. 1743.

10. Meditation on the Song of Solomon. 1743.

11. Hints on God's Fatherly Chastisements. 1743. 12. The Hurt that Sin doth to Believers.

2 editions. 1733 and 1749.
 * I3- An Account of God's Gracious Dealings with

the Author. 3 parts. 1743. 14. Hints concerning the Glory of Christ. Pp. 100.

9L 1748.

15. Thoughts on the Lord's Supper. 1748.
 * 16. Thoughts on Sandeman's Letters on Hervey's

Theron and Aspasio. Pp. 54. 1761.
 * 17. Letters against Sandemaneanism, with a Letter

on Reconciliation.
 * 18. A Letter on the General Duty of Love amongst

Christians. 1741.

19. A Letter to Mr. Wesley, in Vindication of the

Doctrines of Grace. 1743.

20. Letters to Mr. Wesley, against Perfection.

1743.

21. A Letter to the Converted Negroes in America 1742.

Pp. 12. \d. 1743.
 * 22. A Letter of Apology on a Woman's Printing.

23. A Letter to the Lovers of Christ in Phila- delphia. 1743.


 * 24. A Letter to Christians at the Tabernacle

25. Letters on the Ordinance of Baptism. 1746.

26. A Letter to Mr. Cudworth. 1747-

27. A Letter on Perseverance, against Mr. Wesley _

28. A Letter on Justification.

Scriptures.
 * 29. A Letter on the Application of the Holy

30. Five Letters of Advice to Parents and Chil-

dren, the Young and Aged, &c.

31. A Letter on the Saviour's Willingness to

Receive and Save all who Come to Him.

32. A Letter on the Dominion of Sin and Grace.

33. Letters on the Divine Eternal iSonahip of Jesus

Christ, and on the Assurance of Faith.

34. Letters on the Chambers of Security for God's-

People, and on the Duty of Prayer.
 * 35. Five Letters to a New- Married Pair. 1759.

36. Three Letters on the Marks of a Child of God.

37. A Letter against Sabellianism.

and Friends. Prepared for the press by the Author before her death. To which are prefixed, Memoirs of God's Dealings with her in her last illness. In 8 vols., now publishing. (Only 2 vols. printed.)
 * 38. Letters on Spiritual Subjects, sent to Relations-

I have several of the foregoing, and most of them have at one time or another passed through my hand. Part III. of her * Life ' and the Appendix consist mostly of an account of her publications, with dates of issue up to 1750. Her connexion with The Spiritual Magazine is quite new to me.

R. H.

HENCHMAN, HINCHMAN, OR HITCHMAN (3 S. iii. 150 ; 12 S. ii. 270). The Hinxman family is not yet extinct in the male line in England. Mr. James Hinxman of this city has two sons and several grandsons living. The fate of another grandson, Lieut. Alfred Hinxman of the Wilts Regiment, is unknown,, as he was reported " missing " at Gallipoli in 1915.

Mr. Hinxman informs me that many males bearing the name, but more distantly related to him, live at Winchester, Amesburv, ^aterham, &c. ; also that still others, with whom he claims no connexion, ha,ve their lomes in Hants, Devon, and the neighbour- hood of London. CHARLES GILLMAX.

Church Fields, Salisbury.

CLOTH INDUSTRY AT AYR IN THE SEVEN- TEENTH CENTURY (12 S. ii. 227). My grand- father, Mr. William Dunn, of Barterholm, in Renfrewshire (who was born in 1770), told me, when I was a boy, that the " hodden sjrey " worn by the Scottish peasantry was .voven at Ayr, and had been so for many generations. He said that the manufacture

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