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Thomas and Anne, born in Bristol, 1710) married Anne Shippen. One of their daughters married Sir Walter Stirling; and a {351} great-granddaughter (Miss Bingham) married Mr. Baring, afterwards Lord Ashburton. I should be obliged for information as follows: 1. Through what descent was Anne Harrison a descendant of the Regicide? 2. Is anything known of the Lowle family? Their arms were, "Sa., a hand grasping three darts argent." T. BALCH. Philadelphia. _"Chair" or "Char."_--I am desirous of ascertaining the meaning of this term, as occurring frequently in the Cambridgeshire Fens. It is variously spelt, _chair_, _chaire_, _chare_, or _char_. In the Cambridgeshire dialect it may be remarked, _air_ or _are_ is pronounced as "ar." Thus, _upstairs_, _bare_, are "upstars," "bar." There is a Char Fen at Stretham, laid down in Sir Jonah Moore's Map (1663). There is also a Chare Fen at Cottenham; and at Littleport is a place called Littleport Chair. This last had the name at least as early as Edward II.'s reign; as in a description of a neighbouring fen, not later than that date, one boundary is "A le _chaire_ per Himmingslode usque Gualslode End." A friend who has searched the documents in the Fen Office at Ely on this subject for me, has been unable to discover the least clue to the meaning of the term. At Newcastle-on-Tyne, a narrow street or passage between houses is called a _chare_; but there is nothing narrow about Char Fen, which was part of an open common. The course of the rivers at Littleport may be imagined to form a rude outline of a chair or seat; but this does not apply to the other instances in which the name occurs. There are numerous local names in the fens, of which the history may be traced for some centuries, deserving investigation. E. G. R. _Aches._--I am aware that there is abundant proof of "aches" being a dissyllable when Shakspeare wrote, and long after; but I wish to know whether there is any _rhyme_ earlier than that in Butler, which fixes the pronunciation as _artches_. S. S. _Leeming Hall._--There was formerly a mansion somewhere between Liverpool and Preston, called Leeming Hall. Can any of the correspondents of "N. & Q." inform me if it still exists, and what is the name of the present owner? I should also be glad to have some information respecting the genealogy of the family of Leemings, who formerly lived there, or to learn the name and residence of some member of the f
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