[[71]] See [Chapter XX].
[[72]] A descendant of Sir Thomas Warner, who planted the first English colony in Antigua.
[[73]] This strangely-worded inscription is copied verbatim.
[[74]] Slightly altered from Young’s “Night Thoughts.”
[[75]] Young’s “Night Thoughts,” Night 7th.
[[76]] To the organ is attached a choir, composed of the boys and girls from the parochial school.
[[77]] From this John Delap Halliday descends the present Admiral Tollemache—viz.—
Lionel Tollemache, 3rd Earl of Dysert, born June, 1708; married Grace, eldest daughter of John Earl of Granville, by whom he had (among other issue) a daughter, Jane, married, 1770, John Delap Halliday, of the Leasowes, county of Salop, and of Antigua, Esq., by whom she had issue, I. John Halliday, Admiral R.N., and who has assumed the name of Tollemache, and who married Elizabeth, second daughter of John, 3rd Earl of Aldborough, by whom he has, among other children, Elizabeth, the present Countess of Cardigan; and II. Charlotte, married Henry, fourth son of 6th Sir William Wolseley, of Wolseley, county Stafford.
[[78]] The gentleman who presented the pair of silver candlesticks for the communion table. He was an Irishman by birth and education; but after having served in the wars in Flanders, he emigrated to Antigua, and became Speaker of the House of Assembly in that island in 1702.
[[79]] It is said to have been done by lightning.