JONATHAN STOKES AND HIS COMMENTARIES 319 



to a sitting room upstairs in which there was a constant fire. 

 [Eev. Hugh Davies (1739?-1821), F.L.S. 1790, M.A. Oxon. 1763, 

 Eector of Aber, 1787, was also the friend of Hudson.] 



Donn by Lindl. Hortus cantabrigiensis, ed. 11th, 1826. 12mo. 

 The editor informs us that after the 4th or 5th edit, the author 

 enlarged it by adding the names of all the ornamental plants 

 known to be cultivated in the British gardens. The 5th edit, 

 given me by Davies of Trin. coll. incapable of countenancing a 

 fraud, I regard as the catalogue of the Cambridge garden. [James 

 Donn (1758-1813) was under Alton at Kew and became Curator 

 at Cambridge in 1796, the first edition of his Hortus being pub- 

 lished in the same year.] 



[Dickenson. See Blymhill garden.] 



Edinhurgh garden on basalt, cultivated by Hope. Wright 

 sent me a large collection of grasses gatherd in the garden since 

 the death of Hope. The names are not in Wrights handwriting. 



Eivell grange garden near Bromsgrove in Worcestershire, on 

 red ground, cultivated by the late Earl of Plymouth. 



Foth. cat. A catalogue of the collection of hot house and 

 green-house plants late the property of J. Fothergill M.D. which 

 will be sold by auction 20 Aug. 1781. 8vo. This collection was 

 thrown into lots by Lee the numbers corresponding to those of 

 the manuscript catalogue of Fothergills garden in my possession 

 drawn up by me at the request of Fothergills executors. See 

 Letts, upt. [See also Upton garden.] 



Gateshead nursery in the county of Durham, on coal measures? 

 cultivated by Mr. Fala and son. 



Gisborne Mr. T. of Yoxal lodge in Staffordshire, prebendary 

 of Durham and author of treatises on morals. [Eev. Thomas 

 Gisborne (1758-1846), uncle of Charles Cardale Babington.] 



[Gordon. See Mile-end nursery.] 



Hall [Isaac] of Newton Cartmell near Ulverston. See Bot. 

 arr. [ed. 2] i. p. xi. I consulted his herbarium in the possession 

 of his widow in Kendal. 



Halifax garden on gritstone cultivated by Mr. Eawson. 



Handsivorth nursery E. of Sheffield on gritstone, cultivated by 

 Littlewood and now by Messrs. Holmes and Fisher. 



Hammersmith nursery in the valley of the Thames cultivated 

 by James Lee author of the introduction to botany and by Messrs. 

 Lee and Kennedy. 



Has land garden near Chesterfield cultivated by Mr. Claughton 

 and sons. 



Heringhay garden in Middlesex cultivated by Mr. Grey, 

 contains many very rare plants. 



Highfield garden on gritstone, cultivated by Mr. Eyre and 

 afterwards by Mrs. Thomas who removed thither plants cultivated 

 in Chesterfield. 



Hollefear. See Bot. arr. [ed. 2] i. p. xi. Collected the plants of 

 Worcestershire to which his name is subjoined, at Severn Stoke 

 and Crome, when curate. The cultivator of Crome garden 

 appointed him to the vicarage of Wolvey in Leicestershire, 



