Page:Notes and Queries - Series 12 - Volume 10.djvu/230

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184 NOTES AND QUERIES. [I.S.X.MAK.H. Mary's, Dublin, June 18, 1730, the Rev. William Smyth, M.A., Dean of Ardfert and Archdeacon of Meath, eldest son of the Right Rev. Thomas Smyth, Bishop of Limerick. He died 1732, and she m., secondly, Prerog. marr. lie., 1738, Sheffield Austin. Her will, dated Oct. 23, 1778, was proved as that of Dame Susanna Austin in the Prerogative Court, March 14, 1780, leaving her property to her nephew, John Dillon of Lismullen. There seems to be no record of a baronet or knight named Sheffield Austin. III. Elizabeth Lambert, m. at St. Mary's, Dublin, June 11, 1730, Arthur Dillon, of Lismullen, Co. Meath (son of Sir John Dillon, Knt., M.P., of Lismullen), and had a son, Sir John Dillon, first baronet, of Lis- mullen ; M.P. Wicklow 1771-76, and Bles- sington 1776-83. The son : MONTAGUE LAMBERT of Dublin, Cornet 1st Carabiniers (6th Dragoon Guards),* Feb. 20, 1721-2, commission renewed by George II. 1727, serving in 1730, Lieut., 1st Carabiniers, in 1737, m.t Sarah, dau. of Samuel Waring of Waringstown, Co* Down, High Sheriff Co. Down 1690, M.P. for Hillsborough 1703-15, and died 1740, will dated Feb. 16, 1739-40, proved Prerogative, Apri 9, 1740, having had by her, who m., secondly, the Rev. Francis Hamilton, D.D.,J Treasurer of Armagh and Vicar of Dundalk, and died May 7, 1780, aged 77, buried at Dundalk, one son and four daus. : I. RALPH, of whom presently. I. Grace Lambert. II. Susanna Lambert. III. Sarah Lambert, m., first, -Bayly, The only son : RALPH LAMBERT, Second Examiner in Chancery, ent. T.C.D. Jan. 25, 1753, aged | 17, m. at Lisburn Cathedral, Sept. 22, 1760, ! Harriett, eldest dau. of the Very Rev. ! John Welsh, Dean of Connor and Rector | of Lisburn, by Mary, dau. of Edward Peers, I by Jane, sister of the Rev. Samuel Close, I Rector of Donaghenry, diocese of Armagh, and dau. of Richard Close. Ralph Lambert died Dec., 1761, or Jan., 1762, will dated I April 5, 1761, proved Prerog., Feb. 8, 1762, i and his widow m., secondly, the Very Rev. I Richard Dobbs, M.A., Dean of Connor, I eldest son of the Rev. Richard Dobbs, JD.D., Rector of Lisburn, by Mary, dau. of James Young, of Lismany, Co. Tyrone.* ! She died March 25, 1784, aged 45. H. B. SWANZY. and, secondly, at St. Mary's, Dublin, June 11, 1767, Robert Howard, Capt. 14th Light Dragoons, M.P. for St. Johnstown, 1776- 83, LL.D., honoris causa, T.C.D. , brother of Ralph, first Viscount Wicklow, and youngest son of the Right Rev. Robert Howard, Bishop of Elphin. She was heiress of her brother, and had a son, Robert Howard of Castle Howard, Co. Wicklow. IV. Georgina Lambert, b. Feb. 26, 1737-8, bapt. at St. Peter's, Dublin, March 31, 1738.

  • Dalton's Army Lists, and his son's matricula-

tion entry, where he is called Dux. t Burke's ' Landed Gentry,' under Waring, er- roneously calls him Ralph Lambert. J Burke, as above, erroneously calls him Rev. James Hamilton. GLASS-PAINTERS OF YORK. (Se 12 S. viii. and ix. passim ; x. 45.) CHR'ONOLOGICAL LIST OF YORK GLASS -PAINTERS. 1 1 HAVE extracted this list chiefly from the I Freemen's Roll (Surtees Soc.), with addi- tional names from other available sources. The date, unless shown in brackets, is that of the year in which the freedom was taken up, generally at 21 years of age, excepting during times like that of the Black Death of 1349 or subsequent visitations, such as that of 1362 ; or in the case of a man coming to the city from elsewhere, as, for example, John Thornton of Coventry (vide 12 S. vii. 482). 1313. Walterus le vemrar. 1324. Robertus Ketelbarn, verrour. He was probably " one Robert " who in 1338 contracted to fill the Great West -window of the Minster with stained glass at a cost of sixpence a foot for white (i.e. grisaille) and twelve pence afoot for coloured glass (i.e., figure work) (Torre MS. in York Minster Library, fol. 3, from Reg. L y, fol. 69, now lost). The window was paid for by Archbishop Melton, who the same year gave 100 marks towards the cost of the work. The two windows at the west end of the aisles, contracted for at the same time at a cost of eleven marks each, were probably also Robert Ketelbarn's work. 1329. Johannes de Holtby, verrour. Holtby is the name of a village a few miles from York on the road to Scarborough. The names of the places from which these glass-painters came show that they all. with few exceptions, came from small towns and villages in the- surroxinding district, e.g., Burton Agnes, Bishop Auckland, Selby, Eirkby

  • Burke'* ' Landed Gentry,' under Dobbs, states

that the 'Rev. Richard Dobbs, senior, married Mrs. Lambert, but this is an error.