MR. A. BENNETT ON EAST ANGLIAN PLANTS. 
441 
still be in a very wild part of the Fen, towards Barrawy 
Washes. 
Senecio paldstris, D.C. 
In Paget’s Nat. History of Yarmouth, 1834, it is recorded — 
“ Used to grow several years ago in the greatest abundance 
in a marsh at Caistor and elsewhere. It is now very rarely 
and uncertainly seen at Belton (Suffolk), or by Ludham, and 
Heigham Bridges.” 
In the British Museum Herbarium there is a specimen 
from “ Near Oakley-bridge, betiveen Norwich and Yarmouth, 
August, 1725. Rev. J. Hemstea.” This was gathered by 
Joseph Andrews, an Apothecary, a friend of Dale and 
Ray, and lived at Sudbury, Suffolk. I have failed to find 
this on any Norfolk map, and no one seems to know of such 
a place in the county. 
I can only suggest it may have been “ Oakley, two miles 
from Diss,” in Suffolk. In that neighbourhood Liparis 
Loevelii and other Fen plants occur, and there is a bridge 
there over the river. 
Suffolk, E. Co., 25. 
“At the first after you come into Lovingland, 1724.” J. 
Sherard, in Dill., Ed. of Ray’s Synopsis. The part of Suffolk 
bordering on Great Yarmouth, as “ a tongue of land,” was 
called Lothingland, and Somerleyton Hall stands on the site 
of the old seat of the “ Lords of the Island of Lothingland.”* 
The name is still in part extant in Lake Lothing. Last 
record, Babington, 1834. In Transactions, 1899, delete 
“ Herb. Forster ” and substitute “ Mr. F. R. Eagle.” 
Suffolk, W. Co., 26. 
In Transactions, 1899, p. 461, delete line 11 and read 
‘Brandon, Eagle (1800), fide Bloomfield.” Wangford, 1800, 
J. Dalton. Lackford, 1 774, Sir J G. Cullum. 
* Dutt. “ The Norfolk Broads ” (1903), 118. 
