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documents, are highly prized, and consequently carefully preserved by the ancient and noble family to whom they have descended. [404] See Life of Lord Derwentwater, vol. i. [405] Ibid. 14. [406] Secret History of the Rebels in Newgate, 3rd edition, London, 1716. [407] Ibid. p. 8. [408] Secret History. [409] State Trials. [410] For this anecdote, and also for a considerable portion of the materials of this Memoir, I am indebted to the great kindness and intelligence of the Hon. Mrs. Douglas, daughter of the present Lord Petre. [411] Wood's Peerage. [412] MS. Letter. [413] I must again refer to the information supplied by the Hon. Mrs. Douglas. [414] Life of Charles Radcliffe, p. 25. [415] Letter to G. Montagu, p. 18. [416] State Trials; quoted from the Impartial History of the late Charles Radcliffe, written at the time. [417] Letter to Sir H. Mann, vol. ii. p. 140. [418] A review of the reign of Geo. II. London. 1762. [419] Douglas's Peerage, Edit. by Wood. [420] Brown's Hist. Highlands, (Stuart Papers, Appendix) page 491. [421] In my first volume, I have stated that the Earl of Newburgh was the direct representative of James Earl of Derwentwater. (See p. 280, vol. i.) Into this error I was betrayed by an obscure passage in Burke's Extinct Peerage. I am indebted to the Hon. Mrs. Douglass, to whom I have before expressed my obligations, for a correction of this mistake, and also for the copy of the pedigree in the Appendix. This lady has also explained the reason why so many accounts have stated that the body of James Earl of Derwentwater was interred in St. Giles's Church-yard. His body was privately removed to Dagenham Park, in Essex, a house his Countess had hired in order to be near London. A report, meanwhile, was circulated by his friends that he had been buried in St. Giles's; and, when no further danger of tumult was to be apprehended, the remains of the Earl were deposited with his ancestors in the vaults of the chapel at Dilstone. The mother of the present Mr. Howard, of Corby Castle, and sister of Sir Thomas Neave, Bart., has often related to her young relations, that when she and her sisters were children, they were afraid to pass at night along the gallery at Dagenham, it being popularly supposed that Lord Derwentwater still walked there, carrying his head under his arm. This must have been, at least, seventy years after his death. [422] See Appendix, No. 2,
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