[545]. The Hawkins property seems to have descended to Sir William Dawes, Archbishop of York, whose mother was Jane Hawkins. By a deed of 1726 (Middlesex Registry Memorials, 1726, IV., 389) Jane Lewis sold the remainder of a lease granted by Sir William, and comprising inter alia a house which by reference to the ratebooks can be shown to be the second westwards from Lamb Alley.
[546]. Close Roll, 7 Chas. I. (2895).
[547]. Close Roll, 1655 (3866).
[548]. On 3rd December, 1603, William Barber, of St. Giles, gardener, was convicted, with others, of throwing filth and dung near the highway in a certain close called “Blumsberrie fieldes.” (Middlesex County Records, Sessions Rolls, II., p. 4).
[549]. Middlesex Feet of Fines, 32 Eliz., Easter.
[550]. Hospital and Parish of St. Giles, p. 319.
[551]. Sale by Arthur Blythe to William Wigg and Thomas Whitfield, in trust for John Smallbone, dated 1680, and quoted by Parton (op. cit.) p. 126.
[553]. Hospital and Parish of St. Giles, p. 125.
[554]. Hospital and Parish of St. Giles, p. 113. Newlands was actually in the parish of St. Marylebone (see p. [125]).