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by one of the Bishops, and expresses in simple but forcible language the reasons they had for complaint:

"The case between the Bishop of Ely and my Lord Hatton, concerning Hatton Garden.

"By ancient records it doth appear, that there was purchased and dedicated to God's service, and given to the Church, and settled on the see of Ely, by one who was at that time Bishop of Ely, a spacious dwelling-house and manor, with gardens, closes, out-houses, and all conveniences pleasantly situated, standing in a great street, and open behind to the fields, consisting of twenty

acres.

That which the late Bishops of Ely thought they had great reason to complain of, is, that the greatest part of the dwelling-house is pulled down, together with a great gate-house and several out-houses embezzled and gone. The Bishop is confined to less than half. Several cellars are possessed by others, even under those rooms of the house which the Bishop hath now left to dwell in, and they are intermixed with the cellars which he uses, having lights and passages into the cloisters, and the most private parts of the house, even half of the vault, or burying-place under the chapel, is made use of as a publick cellar, or was so very lately, to sell drink in, there having frequently been revellings heard during Divine Service.

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Lastly, the Bishop cannot but be extremely grieved to see a town, in a manner, built upon his own ground, without a church for the inhabitants to repair to, not having any claim to any parish, and those which be nearest to them so very great, as that they cannot hope for room enough among their neighbours, in their churches."

At about the beginning of the last century, there appear to have been serious intentions of pulling down the mansion, and the other portions of the premises. The following document, copied from the original manuscript in a fly-leaf of the Register of Baptisms and Marriages solemnized in the Chapel, will serve to show the number and extent of the buildings. This register-book is in the possession of the Bishop of Ely.

March ye first Ground Rents that may be made of Ely House, 1708.

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CHARLES STOAKES.
JOSEPH FIeld.

It will be seen by an extract from a valuable little work first published in 1714, entitled "Pietas Londinensis," being an "Account of all the Churches and Chapels of Ease in and about London and Westminster, and of the set times of their public prayers, sacraments, and sermons, both ordinary and extraordinary," that the daily services were usually held in Ely House Chapel at that time. "If his Lordship resides here," says the writer, "morning prayers are every day at eight, and on all Sundays, holydays, and public days, again at eleven, and evening prayers at four continually, besides a public sermon every Sunday at eleven for the domestics, but free to all that come; and prayers again at five every Sunday night, where also the sacrament is administered every first Sunday of the month; but if

the family be removed, there is no worship or divine service: all which is performed by Mr. Charles Morgan, his Lordship's Chaplain."

Six of the Bishops of Ely died in the palace. By the Chapel registers, it appears that several baptisms and marriages were solemnized in it, by various clergymen, but principally by the bishops or their chaplains.

The following are extracts from some of the numerous entries in the marriage register

Oct. 9, 1718.-Mr. Charles Fleetwood, of Ely House in Holborn, and Ann Weston, of Mapledurham, in the County of Oxford, marryed in Ely House Chapell, by the Right Rev. William Lord Bishop of Ely.

Vicesimo Primo Die Mensis Januarii, Anno Dom. 1724. In Capella infra Manerium Eporum Elien. in Holbourn, in Com. Middx. Brock Rand Cler. (veniâ prius a Revdo. Patre Thoma Epo. Elien. impetratâ,) Matrimonio conjunxit, Secundum Ritus Eccliæ. Anglicanæ, William Innys de Paroch. Sti. Gregorii, Lond. Bibliopol. et Elizabetham Taylor, de Paroch. St. Andreæ, Holbourn, in Com. Middx. viduam, coram Testibus quamplurimis. (Willus Cant. Licen.)

May 6, 1744.-Charles Ray Clerk, his Lordship's Domestic Chaplain, was married by virtue of a licence from the Archbishop of Canterbury, in Ely House Chapell, by the Right Rev. Robert, Lord Bishop of Ely, to Ann Potter, of the parish of St. Andrew, Holborn, London, spinster, according to the rites of the Church of England, in the presence of many witnesses.

Sir John Reade of Shipton, in the county of Oxford, a Batchelor, and Harriett Barker of Sonning, in the county of Berks, a Spinster, were married at Ely House Chapel on the 18th day of October, 1759.

Among the baptisms are the following:

6 May, 1746.—Mary, daughter of the Right Reverend Robert Butts, D.D., Lord Bishop of Ely, and Ann his wife, baptized in Ely House Chapel, by the Rev. Dr. Phillip Bearcroft, of the Charter House, London.

15 May, 1748.-Lucey, daughter of the Right Reverend Robert, Lord Bishop of Ely, and Ann his wife, baptized in Ely House Chapell, by the Reverend Mr. Charles Ray, his Lordship's Chaplain.

Several other children of the Bishop were baptized in this chapel.

The poet Cowper, in his Task, adverts to a singular circumstance which occurred in the Chapel at about the time of the defeat of the Pretender, the young Chevalier, by the Duke of Cumberland, at Culloden, in 1746:

So in the Chapel of old Ely House,

When wandering Charles*, who meant to be the third,

Had fled from William†, and the news was fresh,
The simple clerk, but loyal, did announce

And eke did rear right merrily two staves,

Sung to the praise and glory of King George!

Task, Book VI.

The premises soon after this fell into ruin and neglect; until, in 1772, in the time of Dr. Edmund Keene, Bishop of Ely, a private Act of Parliament was procured, enabling the See of Ely to transfer the whole property to the crown. Dr. Keene had been consecrated Bishop of Chester in Ely Chapel, twenty years before this alienation was effected; his consecration having taken place on the 22nd of March, 1752, when the Rev. Dr. John Green, Regius Professor of Divinity, and Master of Corpus Christi College, Cambridge, preached the sermon. The Act (12 Geo. III.) recites the names of Edmund, Lord Bishop of Ely, Owen S. Brereton, Esq., and Thomas Hunt, Esq., as trustees, in whose names the amount of compensation was to be paid into the Bank of England; and provides that "Ely House * Prince Charles Edward, son of the Chevalier de St. George. He escaped to France in September, 1746.

+ William Augustus, Duke of Cumberland, third son of King George the Second. He died in 1765, aged 44.

and Chapel, coach-houses, stables, offices, gardens, and yard, thereto belonging, with the right, members, privileges, and appurtenances," (except ingress and egress for reparation, as recited) "shall be vested in the imperial crown of this realm, and shall remain for ever unalienable from the same. And his Majesty, his heirs, &c., in the imperial crown of this realm, shall for ever hold and enjoy the same against the said Bishop of Ely," &c. Thus, after a possession of nearly five hundred years, Ely House, and the reserved grounds, were conveyed to the crown for £6,500, to be laid out, with £3,600, the amount of dilapidations charged on the family of the preceding Bishop, in providing a town residence for the see in another situation. It was at first contemplated to build a house at Knightsbridge; but the site determined upon was that of Clarendon House, Dover-street, Piccadilly. In addition to this, an annuity of £200 was settled, payable to the Bishops of Ely for ever. The site and materials of the old buildings of Ely House, including the Chapel, were, after the transfer, purchased by Mr. Charles Cole, architect and deputy-surveyor for the crown; the property having been duly conveyed to him by the Lords of the Treasury, under the powers of the Act, 15 Geo. III. Finding, however, that he had not sufficient funds to complete the buildings which he had designed, Mr. Cole, in 1778, by indentures of lease and release, granted the fee to certain parties to hold, on the condition of their granting him building leases as he should require them. He, therefore, and his descendants, thus became leaseholders for various long terms. As the proprietor of the estate, he then built the houses in Ely Place; and to these houses the Chapel was intended to serve as a place of worship.

In February, 1781, a trial took place in the Court of King's Bench, before William, Earl of Mansfield, Lord Chief Justice, and a special jury, in which the said Mr. Cole, then an inhabitant of Ely

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