Chapter 38 of 41 · 3998 words · ~20 min read

Part 38

12. Sacred to the memory of William Lewis, who died at Moreland Estate, August 4th, 1838, aged 41 years. Beloved, esteemed and respected by everyone who knew him as an able, kind and honest man, the loss of whom is by no one more sincerely regretted and lamented than by Robert and Edward Sympson of Moneymusk Estate, who have caused this tablet to be erected to his memory.

13. Sacred to the memory of William Collman, Esquire, born 15th May, 1807, died 25th January, 1853, at Caswell Hill Estate, in the Parish of Vere. Also George Munro Collman, born Nov. 29th, 1834, died 29th May, 1853, at Bushy Park Estate in the parish of St. Dorothy, and Elizabeth Caroline Collman, born 28th August, 1846, died 27th July, 1849, at Salt River in the parish of Vere. As a tribute of conjugal and maternal remembrance this tablet has been inscribed by Elizabeth Collman.

14. Sacred to the memory of George Willett Hannaford, youngest son of the late Stephen Hannaford, Esq., of the parish of St. Dorothy, who departed this life on the 23rd day of October, 1875, in the 37th year of his age....

15. In memory of Canute Wilson, many years Clerk of the Peace for this parish, this monument is erected by the many friends who experienced his kindness. He departed this life at Gibbons on the 16th October, 1848, aged 47 years.

16. To the memory of Emma Edwardes, only daughter of Richard Crewe, Esqr., of Raymonds Estate, and wife of John Pusey Edwardes, Esq., of Pusey Hall, at which place she died on the 23rd of November, 1820....

Near this place lies intern’d with her parents, &c., the body of Mrs. Deborah Gibbons, wife to Willm. Gibbons, Esq., and daughter of John Favell, Esq., of ye county of York, who departed this life the 20th of July, 1711, in the 29th year of her age. To summ up her character in brief she was one of the best of women and a most pious Christian. She left only one daughter, who married the Honble. James Lawes, eldest son of Sir N. S. Lawes, Kt., Governor of this island, who in honour to the memory of so good a parent erected this monument to her.

_Arms_—Or a lion rampant sable surmounted by a bend argent charged with three escallops argent: impaling sable a chevron argent between three escallops argent.

17. Sacred to the memory of William Pusey, Esq., representative in Assembly for this parish & Colonel of the Midland Division of horse militia, who died the 11th day of June, 1783, aged 42 years. And of Elizabeth, his wife, who departed this life the 8th day of June, 1780, in her 40th year.

While here a brother’s sorrowing eye Surveys the melancholy stone; Dear Shades! Accept a Muse’s sigh, A Muse that mourns for worth alone.

[This epitaph is said to have been written by Peter Pindar].

18. A tribute to filial and parental affection, this monument is erected by Kean Osborn, Esq., and Elizabeth, his wife, to the memory of her father, the Honble. Samuel Alpress, Esquire, of Caswell Hill, in this parish, and of Margaret Eleanor, her mother. Also to the memory of the two sons of Kean Osborn and Elizabeth his wife, Samuel Alpress Osborn, who departed this life on xxx day of July MDCCCI, on his passage from this island to resume his studies at Trinity Hall, Cambridge; and of Kean Osborn, a Captain in the Vth Dragoon Guards, and a Q.M.G., to Lt. Genl. Sir Thomas Picton’s Division, who fell at the Battle of Salamanca in Spain on the xxii day of July MDCCCXII, after having distinguished himself at the Battle of Vimeira and besieges of Ciudad Rodrigo & Badajos.

[Executed in Rome, 1818.]

19. In memory of Robert Edward Mitchell, who died in the discharge of his duty, April 3, 1899, aged 28.

20. In memory of Robert Charles Gibb, M.R.C.S., Eng., L.S.A., who for over twenty years worked faithfully as a medical man in this parish. Died at Lismore House, St. Andrew, Jany. 27th, 1900, aged 49 years and was interred at Halfway-Tree.

21. Erected by many friends to the glory of God & in memory of the Rev. Charles Townshend Husband, rector of St. Peter’s Vere from 1876 to 1904. Died 28th January, 1904.

ON THE FLOOR OF THE NAVE

22. D.O.M.L. In piam memoriam dni dni Andrer, Knight, Rotulorum Custodis et Supremi Judicis communium placitorum in Provinciis Clarendon et Vere in Jamaica, et turmae pedestris centurionis, qui obiit 42^o aetatis anno, 19^o julii, 1683.

EPITAPHIUM

Dives opum Andreas: famae virtutis et artis ditior; hocque magis dives honoris erat. Plura darent superi, ni fata invicta negarent sternendo humani [_sic_] futile molis onus. Ni superi tamen huic et sors sibi fida deessent urna tenet corpus, mens habet alta polum, dicat, vovet, dedicat. Ja. Barclay.

_Arms_—... on a fess ... between three bulls heads erased ... (each with a ring in its nose ...) a fret between two eagles close....

[In Lawrence-Archer; now in great part covered up.]

It may be thus translated:

To God, the best and greatest, praise.

In affectionate memory of Sir Andrew Knight, Custos Rotulorum: and Chief Judge of the Court of Common Pleas in the Parishes of Clarendon and Vere in Jamaica, Captain of a troop of infantry, who died in the 42nd year of his age, 19th July, 1683.

EPITAPH

Rich in this world’s goods was Andrew: richer in his renown for virtue and learning: and therefore the richer in honours. The Gods above had given him more, had not the fates unconquerable gainsaid it by laying low the worthless burden of human toil. Yet unless the Gods above and his destiny, faithful to itself, proved wanting, a funeral now holds his body, his soul soaring on high is in heaven.

James Barclay, gives vows and dedicates this.

23. Here lyes the body of John Favell, Esqr., who died March the 20th, 1720–21, aged 72 years.

_Arms_—A chevron between 3 escallops.

24. Here lyeth ye body of George Fawcett ... of William Fawcett of ... ewill in ye county of York, who departed this life 13th day of January, 1681.

[Partly covered.]

25. In memory of Cap. John Watt, who departed this life April 20th, in the year of our Lord, 1767, aged 54 years.

26. Here lies the body of John Pusey, Esquire, who died the 24th of January, 1767, aged 75 years.

27. ... yeth interr’d the body of ... grett Read, wife of ... is Read, who departed ... the 29th day of September ...ar of our Lord, 1745, and in ...ty second year of her age.

_Arms_—A griffin rampant. [Partly covered.]

The following are given by Lawrence-Archer but are not now visible:

28. Here lyeth interr’d the body of Coll. Thomas Sutton, who departed this life, the 15th day of November, in the seventy-second year of his age, and in the year of our Lord God, 1710. B.M. Slab.

29. (Ab.) In memory of John Sutton, son of John Sutton, Esq., of this parish ... (Eulogium). Post tam illustre diluculum qualis expectandus esset meridies? Sed nubes—sed tenebrae—sed umbra mortis. He was cut off in the flower of his age by the violence of a fever, 23rd August, anno 1745. W.M. Slab.

IN CHURCHYARD

30. Sacred to the memory of Walter Comrie, eldest son of Walter Sterling Comrie, late of the parish of Westmoreland, obt. 12 October, 1880, aged 46 years.

31. This tomb was erected by Mr. Daniel Callaghan, consignee, and Messrs. Anderson Thomson & Co., owners of the barque _Vere_ of London in memory of their loyal friend and servant Archibald Boyd, who traded regularly to Jamaica in command of the above vessel for many years. He died at Pusey Hall in this parish on the 24th December 1862, in the 52nd year of his age, & was buried thre.

32. Beneath this stone lieth the body of Ann Livingston, the beloved wife of William Livingston Reid, born 11th April, 1880, died on the 12th February, 1861, aged 53 years.

Raines Waite, in the year 1694, left the remainder of his estate to poor children. As several persons of the old parish of Vere (which included a part of the present parish of Manchester) had made several charitable donations, consisting of lands, slaves and money, for the use of the said parish, without giving any particular directions or making any

## particular appointments touching the management or disposal of the

proceeds of these gifts, an act of the Island Legislature was passed in 1740, vesting the funds of the Charity in certain trustees for the purpose of erecting buildings and endowing a free school at the Alley in the then parish of Vere, for the education and maintenance of as many poor children as the trustees might approve of. The present =Free School= at the Alley was founded under the provisions of this Act, which was amended by an act of 1768 and again by 18 Vic. c. 54. When Bridges wrote: “The funds at present amount to £12,000, vested in Island certificates, bearing 6 per cent. interest, with a parcel of land rented to Moneymusk estate, for £383 per annum, and some slaves, leased by the proprietor of Pusey Hall estate for the annual sum of £103. There is besides an excellent house, with five acres of land, and the establishment, which has been lately opened to the adjoining parishes of Manchester and Clarendon, maintains twelve boys.”

In 1908 a secondary school was established.

Of =Hillside= Peter Pindar wrote a ballad entitled “The Fisherman,” published in the “Columbian Magazine” for 1797, commencing:

At Hillside where you’ll meet with most excellent Cheer, Good Burgundy, Claret, Hock, Cyder and Beer, Where the Master and Mistress seem both to Contest, Who shall treat with most kindness and welcome each Guest.

The site of the old parish church of Clarendon, known as the =Church of the White Cross=, as distinguished from that of the Red Cross (the Cathedral) at Spanish Town, was on a rising piece of land about four miles from May Pen and eight from Old Harbour. It is now covered with dense undergrowth, and very few even of the negro squatters in the district know of its whereabouts. The bush was recently so thick that two men were necessary to cut a path through with machettes; and though the old rectory was found, an hour’s search failed to discover the church.

The face of the country has been completely altered since the old days, but it is difficult to understand why such an out-of-the-way situation should have been selected. The only road in the district used when the church was dedicated was the present rough parochial road from May Pen which debouches on to the Free Town road about half a mile from Old Harbour. This latter road was not, it is believed, in existence 150 years ago, so that the old road probably was continued to Old Harbour Bay, whither the sugar from the estates in Upper Clarendon was conveyed. It is about three-quarters of a mile from the church, and now there is no trace of any road connecting them.

[Illustration:

MORGAN’S VALLEY ]

The old church has now completely disappeared, as not so long ago local squatters pulled the walls down to utilise the stones. On the occasion of a visit in 1907 the walls of strong masonry were still standing, undamaged by the recent earthquake, though the roof had fallen in, several of its beams lying rotting in the grass. It was evidently a very small stone building, not more than 40 by 20 ft., though at the west end there was a small room about 12 ft. square, probably a vestry. The walls were not more than 10 ft. high.

The foundations of the rectory are clearly visible, distant about 300 yards in the bush. Local tradition is that it was a large house with good stables. It was evidently built of bricks and must have been of a good size, larger than the church. There was a churchyard immediately joining the house. Besides traces of several other graves, there is a bricked and railed-in space containing several gravestones level with the ground. The slabs have no armorial bearing, but contain a full list of the virtues appertaining to the Hon. Edward Pennant (1736), chief justice and president of the Council, and of his wife Elizabeth (1735), Francis Reading (1738), and, William Dawkins, who died in 14/12/32 (1752), aged 26 years.

Sir Henry Morgan, the buccaneer governor (1675–82), is commemorated in =Morgan’s Valley=, where he for some time is said to have resided.

The =Chapelton Church=, dedicated to St. Paul, was built at the time when the present parish of Clarendon was divided into the parishes of Clarendon and Vere. The “Cross” Church, near May Pen, now in ruins, was then the parish church of Clarendon. The Chapelton Church was built as a chapel of “ease” to the Cross Church, and was the first place of worship of any size erected in Upper Clarendon. It was commonly known as the “Chapel,” and the village around it took the name from the church, being called “Chapel Town,” and in the course of time shortened into its present form, Chapelton. The oldest records go back to the year 1666.

The building when first erected was about one-fourth of its present size. It was then enlarged to half its present size, and finally was increased to its present size. This history of the growth of the church accounts for the fact that the old building had a double roof with a column of pillars down the centre. It appears that after the Cross Church fell into disuse, the daughter church of St. Paul’s, Chapelton, became the Parish Church of Upper Clarendon, and what was then called “Lime Savannah Chapel” (now St. Gabriel’s Church) took the place of the old church at the Cross.

The list of incumbents as far as it has been possible to complete it is as follows:

Rev. Edward Reading. 1765 (about). Rev. Michael Smith. 1769. Rev. Richard Call. 1771. Rev. William Pagett, A.M. 1775. Rev. Thomas Pool. 1779. Rev. Isham Baggs. 1794. Rev. Adam Sibbit. 1804. Rev. Alexander Campbell. 1806. Rev. Hugh Price Hughes. 1808. Rev. Wm. Henry Lynch. 1811. Rev. Lewis Bowerbank. 1814. Rev. Thomas P. Williams. 1820. Rev. G. C. R. Fearon. 1822. Rev. J. W. Austin. 1840. Rev. Sam. Hy. Stewart, LL.D. 1852. Rev. Chas. Hy. Hall. 1877. Rev. Hy. Wase Whitfield. 1897. Rev. C. P. Muirhead. 1913. Rev. R. J. Macpherson.

There are monuments to John Moore (d. 1733), the grandfather of Henry Moore, lieutenant governor of Jamaica and Governor of New York; to Edward Pennant (d. 1736); to Elizabeth his wife (d. 1735), from whom descended the Barons Penrhyn; to Thomas Beach (d. 1774), Attorney-General and Chief Justice, and grandfather to Sir Henry de la Beche, the eminent geologist.

[Illustration:

HALSE HALL ]

The =Halse Hall= Burial-Ground contains a tomb of the Halse family—Major Thomas Halse (d. 1702), who came from Barbados with Penn and Venables, and Thomas Halse (d. 1727); on =Old Plantations= Estate are tombs of Henry Dawkins (d. 1744), a member of the Assembly for Vere, and James Dawkins (d. 1757); at =Sheckle’s= estate is the tomb of John Sheckle (d. 1782), the custos of Clarendon and Vere. =Kemp’s Hill Look-out= is about four miles north of the Alley; on the top of the hill are some old cannon. The look-out commanded a view of Carlisle Bay. At =Harmony Hall= is an Arawâk kitchen-midden; at =Mountain River= (St. John’s) are Arawâk rock-carvings (illustrated in the “Journal of the Institute of Jamaica”); at Jackson’s Bay and Three Sandy Bay are caves with Arawâk remains. The mountain, =Juan de Bolas=, was the haunt of the leader of rebellious negroes of that name who surrendered to the English soldiers soon after the conquest. At =Longville=, named after Samuel Long, who came out with Penn and Venables and settled there, on the Rio Minho, are indications of the places where the Spaniards washed for gold.

According to reports furnished to the Assembly for 1832 and 1833 by the physician, A. Murchison, M.D., there were 112 patients admitted to =Milk River Baths= in the former year and 82 in the latter. In both cases a large proportion suffered from disorders of the stomach and liver, and rheumatism.

Moses Kellet, who represented Clarendon in the Assembly in 1746–51, was the owner of =Kellets= in Clarendon.

INDEX

Names of ships are printed in _italics_

Abercromby, Sir Ralph, 72

Able, Eliz., 244

Accompong, 325, 327, 335, 369

Adelaide street, 123

“Adelgitha,” 356

Adelphi, 342

Admiral’s Mountain, 72, 211

— Pen, 66, 72, 210, 211

Affleck, Rear-Admiral Philip, 210

_Africa_, 332

Agricultural Department, 24, 25

— Society, 28, 99

Agua Alta Bahia, 9

Aguacadiba, 273

Agualta, 11, 217, 308

— Vale, 179, 265

Aikman, A., 103

Akee, 25

Akers, Mrs. 137

Akjampong, 325

Albemarle, Christopher, Duke of, xiii, 16, 114, 172

Albert, Prince, 79

Albion Estate, 252

Aldred, John, 380

_Alexander_, 169

Allen, Grant, 118

Alley, 377, 379, 380

— Church, 382

— Free School, 393

Allman, George, 155

— Thomas, 155

Allwood, Robert, xvii, 103

Almanac, Jamaica, 39, 320, 386

Almond tree, 25

Alpress, Hon. Samuel, 390

— Margaret Eleanor, 390

Alsop, Rev. William, 94

Alta Mela, 9, 11

_Ambuscade_, 75

America, 272

American Hotels Company, 218

Ameyro, 274

Amiens, Peace of, 332

Amity Hall, 389

— — Estate, 377

Anderson, Thomson and Co., 392

Andreiss, Lieut.-Col. Barnard, 353

— Tomb of, 371

Andress, Major, 352

Anglin, Elizabeth, 339, 340

— Philip, 339

Annals of Jamaica, 295

_Anne_, 333

Annotto Bay, 259, 266

Aqueducts, 13, 220

Arawâk beads, 3

— carvings, 270

— caves, 342, 368, 371, 397

— huts, 12

— implements, 182

— Indians, 1, 267

— kitchen-midden, 146, 292, 318, 342, 345, 397

— pottery, 182, 269

— remains, 146, 233, 253, 368, 371, 397

— rock-carvings, 146, 266, 318, 342, 397

Archæology, 6

Archbishop of the West Indies, 162

Archbold, Henry, 197

Archbould, 235

— Henry, 217, 262

— Lieut.-Col. Henry, 216

— Col. Henry, 216

—, James, 217

— Major William, 217

— Sarah Elizabeth, 217

Architecture, 13

_Ardent_, 74

Arms, 182

Arrowroot, 271

Ash, George, 323, 341

Ashmore, Charles, 181

_Asia_, 333, 389

Assembly, House of, 15–17, 47, 69, 92, 98, 101, 111, 119, 124, 127, 132, 149, 156, 174, 175, 177, 179, 185, 191, 209, 210, 214, 219, 226, 235, 240, 261, 265, 293, 300, 309, 319, 332, 337, 374, 377, 387

Assiento, 109, 138, 213

Atherton, Rev. W. B., B.A., 178

Atkins, John, 4, 62

— Rev. Robert, 165

Auchindown, 371

Auracabeza, 9

Austin, Rev. Canon John W., 94, 322, 396

Aylmer, 124

— Colonel Whitgift, 127, 128

Ayscough, John, xiv, xv, xviii, 124

Bacon, John, 12, 120, 123, 167–169, 323

Baggs, Rev. Isham, 396

Baily, E. H., R.A., 191

Balaclava, 370

Balcarres, Alexander Earl of, xiv, 181, 327, 328, 331, 337–38

Balcarres Hill, 258

Ballard, Colonel, 289

— Mary, 360

Bancroft, Dr. E. N., 170, 176

Bang, Aaron, 171, 223

Banks, Sir Joseph, 249, 310, 367

Bannister, Maj.-Gen. James, xv

Banns, 165

Baptism Registers, 24, 93, 126, 166, 199, 206, 322

— of slaves, 166, 206

Baptist Ground, 195

Baptists, 161, 188

Barba, 275, 278

“Barbados Gazette,” 39

Barbican, 304

Barclay, James, 391

_Barfleur_, 73, 75, 122

Barham, 25, 33

Barker, Andrew, 230

Barkly, Sir Henry, xiv, 36, 106

Barne, G. H., xx

Barnes, Joseph, 170

Barnes Gully, 155, 170

Barnett, 342

Baron-Wilson, Mrs. Margaret, 353

Barracks, 19, 146, 193, 302, 303, 333

Barrett, Elizabeth, 318

— Richard, xvii, 33

Barrett street, 123

Barrow, Thomas, xix

Barry, Colonel Samuel, xviii, 199, 206, 234, 235, 287

Barry street, 155

Bath, 247

— Court House, 248

— Garden, 25, 175

Bartholomew, Rev. W., 348

Batty, 382

— FitzHerbert, xx

— Richard, 12

Bayly, Nathaniel, 308

— Zachary, 205, 210, 307, 308

Baynes, Rev. W. W., 348

Bayona, Peter de, 281, 283

Beach, Thomas, xviii, xix, 124, 175, 396

Beads, Indian, 3, 270, 273

Beaumont, Augustus Hardin, 340

— Jamima, 166

Beckford, 124, 267, 360, 382

— Ballard, 174, 360

— Nathaniel, xv

— Colonel Peter, xiii, xv, xvii, 33, 45, 47, 71, 98, 101, 102, 206, 247, 359, 360

— Peter, junr., xvi, xvii

— Richard, xvii, xix, 358, 362

— Robert, 206

— Sir Thomas, xvii, 175, 359, 360

— William, 304, 354, 361–67

Beckford and Smith School, 102, 361

— Lodge, 367

— street, 123, 154, 367

— Town, 358

Beeston, 375, 377

— Edward, 200

— Henry, 200

— Jane, 200

— Sir William, xiii, xvi, xxiii, 45, 48, 60, 150, 158, 199, 200, 201, 206, 213, 247, 352, 373, 375, 377

— Lady, 158

Beeston street, 154

Bell, Maj.-Gen. E. Wells, xiv, 181

Belle Vue, 270

Bellthrapp, Richard, 249

Belmore, Somerset Earl of, xiv

Belvedere, 249

Benbo, Admiral John, xx, 46, 59, 170, 172, 207, 374

Benbow, tomb of, 167

Bendish, 266

Bennett, George, 200

— Rev. Philip, 94

— Thomas, xxii

Berkeley, Maj.-Gen. Sackville, xiv, 181

Bernaldez, 129, 270

Bernard, Peter, xviii

— Samuel, xvi, xviii, 55, 204

Berry, Mr., 228

Berthaville, 228

_Bethania_, 80

Bevil, Sarah, 387

Bickell, Rev. R., 161

Birds, 273

Bishop of Antigua, 162

— of Honduras, 162

— of North Carolina, 162

— of St. Albans, 162

Black Carolina Corps, 227

Blackfield Bay, 352

Blackheath, 38

Blackmore, Francis, 55

_Blackmore_, 287

Black River, 12, 355, 356, 369

Black Rod, 108

Blackwood, 221

Blagrove, 291

— Henry John, 293

— John, 291, 292, 293, 341

— Peter, 295

— Thomas, 293

Blair, John, xvii

Blake, 353

— Anne, 318

— Sir Henry Arthur, xv, 301

— James, 306

— Lady, 338

— William, xvii, 121

Blake road, 155

Bleby, 76

Bleevelt, 349

Blew Fields, 349

Bligh, Captain, 25, 26

— Commodore Richard Rodney, xxi

Blimbling, 26

Block-house, 334

Blome, 13, 40, 348, 349

Blome’s map, 379

Bloody Bay, 367

Bloxburgh Cave, 233

Bluckfield, 353

Bluefield, 39, 74, 348, 349, 352

— Bay, 346

— River, 352

Blue Mountain, 25, 43

Bluff, The, 345

Blundell Hall, 182

Boca d’Agua, 11

Boddington, John, 202

Bogle and Cathcart’s, 196

— Jopp and Co.’s, 196

— Margaret, 221

— Robert, 171, 221

Bog Walk, 11

Bolas, Juan de, 132

Bonnervalle, Parson, 244

Bonneville Pen, 296

Botanic Garden at Bath, 29, 248

— — at Castleton, 30

Botany Bay, 253

Bouchier, Charles, 145

Boundaries, 43

Bounty Hall, 318

Bourden, John, xiii, xv, 55

Bourke, Nicholas, xvii

Bourne, H. Clarence, xv

Bowerbank, Dr., 164, 195

— Rev. Lewis, 94, 396

Bowers, 133

Bowrey road, 155

Boyd, Archibald, 392

Boydell, John, 363

Bradford, William, 158

Bradshaw, Rev. F. S., 94

— James, xvi, 149

Braine, Rev. George Taylor, 207

Brampton, 307

Branch, E. St. John, xx

Branding iron, 15

— slaves, 14

Brandon Hill, 342

Bravo, Alexander, 131

— Alexandre, 107

— Moses, 107

Braybrooke, Lord, 359

Brayne, 206, 239, 284

Breadfruit, 27

Breastwork, 255

Bridge Pen, 228

Bridges, George Wilson, 5, 290, 291, 295, 299, 302, 305, 325, 338, 359, 372, 377, 393

British occupation, 111

Broadleaf, 334

Broadside, 53

Brock, Sir Thomas, 195

Brockenhurst, 383

Brodrick, 124

— Charles, xix

— William, xvii, xix

Brookbank, Joseph Fennell, 166

Brooke-Knight, Captain, 219

Broughton, Dr. A., 26

Brown, Captain Charles, 169

— Rear-Admiral William, xxii, 176

— William S., xxii

Browning, Elizabeth Barrett, 318

— Robert, 318, 342

Brown’s Town Church, 305

Bruce, Lord, 98

— Elizabeth Mary, 98

Brunswick street, 123

Bryan Castle, 307

Bryan and Co., W. B., 196

Brydone, Patrick, 366, 367

Buckingham, Duke of, 229

Bull, John, 179, 180

Bull Bay, 253

— House, 179

Bullock, William, 103

Bunbury, Thomas, 181

Burford-Hancock, Sir Henry James, xix

Burge, William, xx, xxiii, 340

Burial-Grounds, 195, 233, 344, 396

— Registers, 24, 126, 207, 322

Burke, 359

Burnaby, Sir William, xxi, 210

Burnett, Stirling and Co., 196

Burney, Charles, 367

Burnt Savannah, 43