MS Hampshire Record Office: Heathcote Family Scrapbooks: 63M84/234/63
My dear Bea,
It must have been the Die and not the seal itself that was hidden in the wall. Lottie Yonge has discovered at the Croft Vertue’s Cromwell seals and medals with Richard’s seal – he is on horseback on one side and in parliament on the other. Also that Timbs in his ‘Abbeys and Castles’ says that ‘Wllm Heathcote Esq found the die and sold it but Sir William Heathcote bought the die.1 This is on the authority of Vertue in 1760, but as he thought it was the die of the seal of the Long Parliament.
I do not much hold to his authority, and if the seal or die was bought back to Hursley, what could have become of it?
I think the actual seal is a flat thing, like a coin (only concave) and the die big and solid more like a weight.
Anna has sent me the rubbing and it is gone to Edmund Morshead. The Frances White who erected the monument to Sir Charles Wyndham must have been the wife of the man with the Crease
I have written to Mr Chamberlayne to ask after Sir Isaac Newton’s sun dial. I think – and so does Alethea that there used to be one at Cranbury on the slope above King’s Lane
Boyatt Lane and High bridge used to belong to Brambridge so I can get in the avenues being pollarded for gun stocks, and Mrs Fitzherbert whom my mother saw there and remembered her eyebrows
Yours affectionately
C M Yonge