292
NOTES AND QUERIES. 1 12 s.vi. JUKE 12,1920,
The following additional names of officers are given on the interleaf, in MS. :
Bank.
Lieut.-Colonel Major
Captains
Capt. Lieut. First Lieutenants
Second Lieutenants
Name.
Henry Delaune (1) Lord Ossulstone (2)
fCharleton Leighton
! B. Chamier
IB. Shaftoe John Bolton
f Wm. Wooley . .
( J. Simes
I Hector Vaughan i Lewis Debure . .
Alexander Irons
John Gilhagie . .
James Maxwell
Mich. Aldridge
J. Joyce
B. Clarke
Benjamin Lee
B. Frazier
J. Hawkins
W. Dolaune
James Gates
Thomas Palmer
Henry Monro . .
Bichard Weston
Gilbert Mirrie . .
J. Cope
Edmund Keene George Gordon J. -Grainger W. Hunter J. Graham
Date of commissions.
. . 14 May 1741
. . 30 April
. . 13 Dec. 1739
6 May 1741 . . . 1 June 1742
ditto
7 ditto 3 ditto
. . 10 May 1740 . . 29 Dec. do.
3 Jan. 1741 . . 16 Mar. do. . . 27 ditto . . 25 April do.
9 May do. 11 June do. . . 25 ditto . . 25 Oct. do. . . 26 ditto . . 27 ditto . . . 29 ditto
2 ditto
3 ditto
4 ditto
5 Oct. 1741
6 ditto
22 Nov. 1739
t Dates of first commission*
Ensign,
do.
do.
do.
1st Lt., From Half Pay. 2 Lt., 27 Jan. 1740- Ensign, 29 ditto.
1 Dec. 1705.
30 Oct. 1743.
26 Aug. 1737.
30 Mar. 1725.
9 Dec. 1739.
Chaplain
Adjt.
Qr. Mr. . . . . J. Grainger . . . . . . 1 May 1741
Surgeon . . . . W. Hunter . . . . . . 12 ditto
Mate . . J. Graham . . . . 25 April 1742
(1) Delaune. Captain in Colonel Henry Harrison's Begiment of Foot, Dec. 26, 1726. Retired; in 1746, and died in that year.
(2) Charles, elder son of the 2nd Earl of Tankerville. He succeeded his father as 3rd Earl in< March, 1753, and died on Oct. 27, 1767.
J. H. LESLIE, Lieut. -Col., R.A. (Retired List). (To be continued.)
CENTENARY or THE BURLINGTON ARCADE.
The following, as quoted by The Observer
from its issue of May 21, 1820, should be
worthy of record in the pages of ' N. & Q.' :
" BURLINGTON ARCADE, PICCADILLY. The attention of the nobility and gentry is now much attracted to this novel and beautiful building. In the range of shops scarcely an article either for ornament or use but is exhibited in its most engag- ing form. The complete protection from the heat aa well as the inclemency of the weather, the brilliant display of fashionable company promenad- ing during the principle part of the day, and the great attention paid by the inhabitants to keep out improper visitors, render this place more inviting than any other in the metropolis or in any part of the world."
It cannot in truth be written that the laudable attempt to exclude " improper visitors " from the gallery was subse- quently altogether realized.
CECIL CLARKE*.
IMRAPEN : BADEN IN SWITZERLAND. In
his ' Travels ' (vol. i. pp. 339-40), under
the date Aug. 13, 1705, De Blainville has ai}-
account of " the famous Baths of Imrapen,
a large village, or, if you will, a little Borough,
about a quarter of a league from Baden."
Imrapen does not occur in modern maps or
guide-books, and would appear to have been
absorbed in the Baden of to-day. De-
Blainville carefully distinguishes Imrapen:
from Baden. Concerning the former ae
writes :
" In the middle of this Borough is a large Squan- surrounded with Houses, which have each a Bath belonging to it, for the Use of those who lodge in. it, which is no small Convenience. The Waters of these Baths are full of Sulphur and Alum. There are two in the middle of the great Square which, are called Fry- Baden i.e. Public Baths. These are for the Use of those who are not able to hire Baths for themselves. There one sees Men and Women, Girls and Boys, quite naked confusedly mingled.