370 Notes on Auclley House, Salisbury. 



Since this paper was written, it has been discovered that 

 Humphry Hyde, of Kingston Lisle, married Anne, daughter of Sir 

 Lawrence Hyde and Barbara Caslilian his wife : she was the eldest 

 of their sixteen children and first cousin to Lord Chancellor 

 Clarendon. 1 William, their son, was christened in Salisbury 

 Cathedral 2nd September, 1629. 



The Thistlethwaites came into Wiltshire from Yorkshire, and 

 were seated for a long period, i.e., from 1537 to the middle of the 

 eighteenth century, at West Winterslow ; a pedigree is given in 

 the 1623 Visitation of Wilts; there are several monuments to 

 members of this family in Winterslow Church ; their arms were, 

 Or on a bend azure three pheons of the field. According to the 

 Visitation, Peregrine Thistlethwaite was aged 17, in 1623 ; the last 

 of the family to own West Winterslow was " the Eev. Dr. Thistle- 

 thwaite, who sold West Winterslow to the Hon. Stephen Fox, 

 afterwards the second Lord Holland, before 1757." 2 



Eaulin Hillman, mentioned in the lease of 15th December, 1729, 

 can, perhaps, be identified with the Eaulin Hillman to whom there 

 is a gravestone in the Morning Chapel of the Cathedral; it bears 

 a shield of arms Argent three bendlets azure within a bordure en- 

 grailed gules for Hillman, impaling gules a cross engrailed between 

 twelve crosses crosslet fitchees argent, for Brockhill. Eaulin 

 Hillman died on the 23rd June, 1741, aged 48, and Elizabeth, his 

 wife, only daughter of Wingfield Brockhill, on the 22nd October, 

 1777, aged 60. 



When Audley House was adapted to its present use as a Church 

 House, several persons contributed gifts in kind, consisting of old 

 chimneypieces. Those in the library and hall came from the 

 Dean's House, at Mere, and are fully described in tlie Wilts Arch. 

 Mag., vol. xxx., p. 56 ; the handsome chimneypiece in the board 

 room was originally in the house. The chimneypiece in the dining 

 room of the members of the St. Andrew's Mission Society came from 

 an old house in St. Ann Street, which stood opposite the Museum ; 

 it has three shields : on the middle shield it bears the Arms of 



1 Visitation of Berks. 

 - Hoare's Modern Wilts. 



