74 HEROtf. 



In Cumberland, at Gowbay or Gowbarrow Park, near 

 Tills water; and Grey stock, both near Penrith. 



In Hampshire, at Denny Lodge, in the New Forest; and 

 formerly at Heron Court, the seat of the Earl of Malmesbury; 

 as also at Harringworth, on the estate of Thomas Tyon, Esq. 



In Essex, in Wanstead Park. 



In Nottinghamshire, at Colnwick, near Nottingham, the 

 seat of Musters, Esq. 



In Northumberland, at Chillingham Park, the seat of the 

 Earl of Tankerville. 



In Cornwall, at Trenant Wood, the seat of W. Peel, Esq. 



In Shropshire, at the Mere, near Ellesmere. 



In Leicestershire, at Stableford, near Melton Mowbray, on 

 the estate of Lord Harborough; and a pair built about the 

 year 1812 in a wood called Mere Hill, in the Lordship of 

 Prestwold, the seat of Mr. Packe, M.P., but the nest being 

 taken, the birds forsook the place. 



In Somersetshire, at Picton, the property of Lord Carnarvon ; 

 and at Brockley woods, near Bristol. 



In Herefordshire, at the Moor, near Hay, the seat of Mrs. 

 Penoyre. 



In Wales, in Glamorganshire, at Margam Abbey, and 

 Penrice Castle. 



In Anglesea, near Holyhead and the Great Orme's Head. 



In Flintshire, at Bodrydden, near St. Asaph, the seat of 

 William Shipley Conway, Esq. 



In Scotland, on the Island of Islay, in Kincardineshire, at 

 Inglesmaldie, Fettercairn, the Sutors of Cromarty, and in 

 Sutherlandshire, between Aikel and Altnagalcanach ; and on 

 an island in a loch near Louberoy. 



In Ayrshire, at Monkcastle House, and near Eglinton 

 Castle, and Craigie, near Kilmarnock. 



In Edinburghshire, at Dalkeith Palace, the seat of His 

 Grace the Duke of Buccleuch; and in Morayshire by 

 Findhorn. 



In Ireland, in the county of Dublin, at Carton, near 

 Maynooth, the seat of the Duke of Leinster; and in the 

 county of Galway, at Newport House. 



The almost total discontinuance of hawking, and the con- 

 sequent dispersion of the great Heronries of the olden time, 

 carefully then preserved for the purpose, have naturally led 

 to the establishment of smaller settlements in various other 

 places, and even of single pairs from time to time. The 



