Page:Notes and Queries - Series 10 - Volume 5.djvu/215

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10* S. V. MARCH 3, 1906.] NOTES AND QUERIES.


175


warden expressed after a fashion peculiar to trimself. THOMAS BAYNE.

COLLINGWOOD'S DESCENDANTS (10 tK S. v. 49). In reply to the query of MR. J. C. HODGSON, I may say that the Hon. Mary Patience, younger daughter and coheir of Lord Colling- wood, married in 1817 Anthony Denny, Esq., of Tralee, co. Kerry, and of Barham Wood, Herts, son of the Rev. Maynard Denny, of Churchill House, Provost of Tralee, &c., who was a younger brother of Sir Barry Denny, Bart., of Tralee Castle. (See account of Denny family written by me for the new 'Lodge's Peerage and Baronetage.') The issue of Lord Colling wood's other daughter having become extinct, his sole representa- tives are the branch of the Denny family descended from his second daughter, the Hon. Mrs. Denny. She died 18 Sept., 1823, aged thirty, and was buried in Aldenham Church, Herts, having had issue two sons and two daughters :

I. Anthony Cuthbert Collingwood Denny, Lieut. R.N. B. 1818, d. 1857, having m., 1847, Mary Randall, dau. Lachlan MacGilvray, Esq., who d. 1875, leaving a son and a dau. :

1. Cuthbert Collingwood Denny, Lieut, late 17th Regt. B. 1848. M.A. Trin. Coll. Cam. M. 1st, 1876, Marion, dau. Col. T. Lane Ground water, R.H.A. ; m. 2ndly, 1894, Mary, dau. Rev. G. Fisher. By his first wife he had two sons and two daus. :

(1) Cuthbert Collingwood Denny. B. 1877, m. Violet, dau. Lewis Philip Fielder, Esq., of Orsett House, Hyde Park, and has two daus. : Eileen Collingwood Denny, Joan Collingwood Denny.

(2) Edward Oscar Denny. B. 1880, d. 18-.

(1) Mary Patience Collingwood Denny.

(2) Marion Collingwood Denny.

I. Sarah Mary Denny. M. 1877, Col. Thomas Braddell, Leicestershire Regt., of Coolmelagh, co. Wexford, and has a son and two daus. : Barry Braddell, Lieut. (17th) Leicestershire Regt (b. 1885) ; Eileen Braddell, Ermyntrude Braddell.

II. Arthur Maynard Denny, J.P., of Kilcora Lodge, co. Cork. B. 1823, d. 1900. M. 1850 his first cousin Penelope, only dau. of Rev. Arthur Herbert, of Cahirnane, Killarney (by Jane Denny his wife), who <1. 1884, having had two sons and a dau. :

1. Arthur Collingwood Denny, Major Connaught Rangers. B. 1852, d. s.p. 1891.

2. Henry Cuthbert Denny. B. 1858. Colonel Northamptonshire Regt. C.B. Served in S. African war, 1899-1900 (dis-


patches, medal, C.B.). Commanding North- ants Regimental District since 1904. M. 1904 Maude Leslie, dau. Col. J. Barlow, late Manchester Regt., and has issue.

1. Alice Blackett Denny, m. 189, J. Pin- nock, E^q.

I. Sarah Blackett Denny, d. 1875, having m., 1841, Sir John Stephen Robinson, Bart., C.B., of Rokeby Hall, co. Louth, and had a son and a dau.

1. Sir Gerald William Collingwood Robin- son, 4th Bart. B. 1857, d. unm. 1903.

I. Maud Helena Collingwood Robinson. M. 1890, Richard J. Montgomery, Esq., of Beaulieu, co. Louth, and Killineer House, Drogheda ; now of Rokeby Hall.

II. Mary Patience Denny, d. 1839, aged seventeen, buried in Aldenham Church, Herts. (Rev.) H. L. L. DENNY, M.A.

6, Wilton Terrace, Dublin.

CROSS-LEGGED KNIGHTS (10 th S. v. 130). Mr. G. McN. Rushforth, in * Companion to English History (Middle Ages),' ed. F. P. Barnard, 1902, p. 337, says :

" A peculiarly English motive, introduced about the middle of the thirteenth .century, was the representation of the recumbent warrior with the legs crossed, a natural attitude of repose in life, in which state these figures generally appear, usually with open eyes, and sometimes in the act of sheathing the sword. The practice (which, it may be added, has no connexion with the Crusades) lasted for about a century and gradually dis- appeared with the introduction of plate armour, for which the posture is as unfitted as it is appropriate for the close-fitting and yielding chain-mail."

A. R. BAYLEY.

IVY LANE, STRAND (10 th S. v. 81, 136). Here are two more references to Ivy Lane : "My new howse (called Cecyll howse) by Ivye bridge" (Letter of Sir R. Cecil, 24 Oct., 1602, in ' Letters of Sir Robert Cecil to Sir John Carew,' Camden Soc. Publications, 1864). "At the Rainbow and Dove, by Ivy Bridge, dwelt 'Jari' Verelst, the painter, in 1710" (Daily Telegraph, 8 Oct., 1901, article ' The Vanishing Strand ').

R. J. FYNMORE.

Sandgate.

"DUMPING" (10 th S. v. 127). This is an old term used in connexion with setting or utting things down in a noisy or bustling ashion, and the dialect usage of the word I have known from the time when I was a boy in Derbyshire, and use it now on occasions. A man bringing a load of any kind into a house would be told to "dump it down i' yon newk" (corner), or in the case of a parcel to " dump ; er on th' table" ; and if it was done with force and noise it