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Published online by Cambridge University Press: 09 June 2020
1 Members/Speaker, (1796 edn), 377 n. 1. In Appendix No. 3 to that work, Hatsell composed A List of the Names of the Persons returned to serve in Parliament in the Year 1656. His great-grandfather is the only MP meriting Hatsell's further attention; the footnote he wrote for the 1796 edition of Members/Speaker expands on the Memorabilia Entry 1, pp. 167–168.
2 Foss, Edward, Lives of the Judges, 9 vols (London, 1864), 385–386Google Scholar.
3 See pp. 167–168.
4 He was baptized on 3 January 1734 on Chancery Lane, presumably at the family home. The baptism records of St. Dunstan's-in-the-West include the date of birth. His letter of 1 January 1813, p. 157, states that Hatsell celebrated his birthday on 1 January. The transition from the Julian to the Gregorian calendar in 1752, we suggest, explains his preference in this regard.
5 See Memorabilia Entry 1, p. 168.
6 Battestin, Martin, A Henry Fielding Companion (Westport, CT, 2000), 73–74Google Scholar.
7 Howard, Leonard, Miscellaneous Pieces in Prose and Verse (London, 1765), 307Google Scholar.
8 Privilege of Parliament (1776 edn), vi.
9 Members/Speaker (1781 edn), 176, n. 2.
10 Members/Speaker (1781 edn), ix.
11 Members/Speaker (1781 edn), 67, 155, 156.
12 See p. 150.
13 Members/Speaker (1781 edn), ix–x.
14 Thomas, P.D.G., The House of Commons in the Eighteenth Century (Oxford, 1971), 238–39Google Scholar.
15 Thomas Tyrwhitt, ODNB. Tyrwhitt's decision to retire was not made without regret, however. Shortly after Hatsell's Letters Patent were issued, Tyrwhitt obtained a patent to the office of clerk of the House of Commons in reversion. That is, he would succeed Hatsell if the latter predeceased him. TNA, C.66/3718 f 16, Letters Patent Issued to Thomas Tyrwhitt; 18 June 1768.
16 See Memorabilia Entry 3, p. 170.
17 Members/Speaker (1781 edn), vii–viii.
18 Strateman, Catherine (ed.), The Liverpool Tractate: An Eighteenth Century Manual on the Procedure of the House of Commons (New York, 1937)Google Scholar. Strateman dates the Tractate to 1762 and credits George Grenville with the authorship, xii, xvi. Strateman also concludes that Jenkinson sponsored the Tractate, xi–xii.
19 See p. 168.
20 See pp. 168–169.
21 [Sinclair, John], The Correspondence of the Right Honourable Sir John Sinclair, Bart. with Reminiscences of the Most Distinguished Characters Who Have Appeared in Great Britain […], 2 vols (London, 1831), I, 477–478Google Scholar.
22 See p. 169.
23 See TNA, C.66/3717 f 7, Letters Patent Issued to John Hatsell; 3 June 1768.
24 Williams, O.C., Clerical Organization of the House of Commons 1661–1850 (Oxford, 1954), 114–127Google Scholar; see also Appendix VII, 320–325.
25 See pp. 94–95.
26 McKay, 108, n. 1; Williams, Clerical Organization, 14–15.
27 Sainty, J.C., The Parliament Office in the Seventeenth and Eighteenth Centuries (London, 1977), 6–7, 21Google Scholar; Harling, Philip, The Waning of ‘Old Corruption’: The Politics of Economical Reform in Britain, 1779–1846 (Oxford, 1996), 65CrossRefGoogle Scholar.
28 Crook, J. Mordaunt and Port, M.H., The History of the King's Works: VI, 1782–1851 (London, 1973), 526Google Scholar.
29 See pp. 107–108.
30 CDC, I, 173–174.
31 See pp. 127–128.
32 TNA, PRO 30/9/35, f. 138; 14 April 1812.
33 39 & 40 Geo. 3 c. 92 House of Commons Offices Act (1800); 52 Geo. 3 c. 11 House of Commons Offices Act (1812).
34 TNA, Prob 11/1635.
35 See pp. 134–135.
36 Memorabilia Entry 45, pp. 205–206.
37 According to his farm account books, Hatsell leased estates at Bradbourne, near Sevenoaks, and Marden Park from 1792 to 1799 and from 1799 until his death in 1820, respectively. (Taking all of his extant writings into account, Hatsell's spellings for these estates include ‘Bradburne’ and ‘Morden’.) Parliamentary Archives; collection titled PA_HAT.
38 Parliamentary Archives; collection titled PA_HAT.
39 Members/Speaker (1781 edn), viii.
40 Privilege of Parliament (1776 edn), v.
41 Members/Speaker (1781 edn), 138.
42 [Hatsell, John], A Collection of Rules and Standing Orders of the House of Commons; Relative to the Applying for and Passing Bills, for Inclosing and Draining of Lands, Making Turnpike Roads, Navigations, and Other Purposes (London, 1774), 1Google Scholar.
43 See pp. 29–30.
44 Privilege of Parliament (1818 edn), v–vi.
45 See pp. 77–78.
46 Members/Speaker (1796), 176 n.1.
47 Bentham, Jeremy, An Essay on Political Tactics (Edinburgh, 1843), II, 327Google Scholar.
48 Called to the Bar (1757).
49 John Barton was vicar of Sonning, Berkshire, and was later appointed Chaplain to the Speaker, p. 92 and note. On Newton Barton's appointment as Private Secretary, p. 82 and note.
50 PH, XVI, 762–780; Marshall, P.J., The Impeachment of Warren Hastings (Oxford, 1965), 39–56Google Scholar.
51 See p. 71.
52 C.J., xlii, p. 586; 27 March 1787. See also Marshall, Impeachment, 56–63.
53 See p. 112.
54 Letter to Anne Grant; 26 April 1806. See p. 134.
55 See p. 130.
56 Memorabilia Entry 19. See p. 193.
57 See pp. 212–213.
58 See pp. 195–196.
59 See p. 46.
60 Langford, P., A Polite and Commercial People: England 1727–1783 (Oxford, 1989), 557–558Google Scholar.
61 See p. 193.
62 See p. 81.
63 Members/Speaker (1781 edn), xi. Internal quote marks omitted. See p. 193.
64 Memorabilia Entry 61. See p. 217.
65 Lords/Supply (1796 edn), 179.
66 See p. 97.
67 Members/Speaker (1781 edn), 157.
68 Select Poems (London? ‘Printed in 1795’).
69 The volume was listed for sale in 1989, but the list price of £150 did not tempt any buyers, and Bloomsbury Book Auctions sold the record book holding the Memorabilia entries to the Huntington Library in 1989. The British Library holds a virtually unreadable copy, RP 4177/3.