[23] John Carteret, afterwards Earl Granville (1690-1763).
[24] Sir Charles Wyndham, afterwards second Earl of Egremont (1710-1763).
[25] Sir William Townshend, second son of Charles, second Viscount Townshend (1702?-1738).
[26] Richard Temple, Viscount Cobham (1669?-1749).
[27] Dukes of Beaufort, Bedford, Argyle, Bridgwater and Roxburghe; Marquis of Carnarvon; and Earls of Derby, Denbigh, Westmoreland, Winchelsea, Thanet, Sandwich, Carlisle, Aylesbury, Litchfield, Scarborough, Coventry, Oxford, Aylesford, Halifax, Macclesfield, Darnley, Barrymore, Inclagreen and Gronard.
[28] Besides Augusta, Frederick by his wife had issue: George III; Edward Augustus, Duke of York and Albany (1739-1767); William Henry, Duke of Gloucester and Edinburgh (1743-1805), Henry Frederick, Duke of Cumberland (1745-1790); Frederick William (1750-1765); Caroline Matilda (1751-1775); who married Christian VII, King of Denmark; and Louisa Anne (1749-1768).
[29] Galt: George III, his Court, and Family.
[30] Justin McCarthy: History of the Four Georges.
[31] Thomas Secker, afterwards Archbishop of Canterbury.
"The Bishop, who had been bred a Presbyterian and man-midwife, which sect and profession he had dropped for a season, while he was president of a very free-thinking club, has been converted by Bishop Talbot, whose relation he married, and had his faith settled in a prebend of Durham."—Horace Walpole.