LIGHTFOOT, JOSEPH BARBER (son of John Jackson Lightfoot,
accountant, _d._ 1843). _b._ 84 Duke st. Liverpool 13 April
1828; ed. at Birmingham gr. sch. 1844–7; pensioner at Trin.
coll. Camb. Oct. 1847, scholar 1849, fellow 1852–71, tutor
1853–62; 31st wrangler and senior classic 1851; B.A. 1851, M.A.
1854, D.D. 1864; Norrisian prizeman 1853, select preacher 1858,
a founder of the Journal of classical and sacred philology, and
one of the editors March 1854 to Dec. 1859; member of council
of Oxford senate 1860–78 except 2 years; Hulsean professor
of divinity 1861–75; chaplain to Prince Consort, Feb. 1861;
chaplain to the Queen 24 March 1862–79; deputy clerk of the
closet 1875–9; Whitehall preacher 1866–7; select preacher at
Oxf. 1874–5; exam. chaplain to bishop of London 1862–9, to
archbishop of Canterbury 1869–79; Lady Margaret’s professor of
divinity at Cambridge 26 May 1875 to 1879; canon of St. Paul’s
cath. 23 Feb. 1871; an original member of New Testament company
of revisers July 1870 to Nov. 1880; a comr. for Cambridge under
Universities of Oxford and Cambridge act 1877, 1877–81; declined
bishopric of Lichfield 1867; bishop of Durham 15 March 1879 to
death, consecrated in Westminster abbey 25 April, expended all
his episcopal income for purposes within the diocese; trained
about 80 graduates at his seat Auckland Castle free of charge;
endowed univ. of Durham with the Richard de Bury scholarship
1882; presided at church congress at Newcastle 1881 and at
British archæological assoc. at Darlington 1886; the ‘White
Cross’ movement took its rise at Auckland Castle 1883; author of
Commentary on epistle to the Galatians 1865; On a fresh revision
of the English New Testament 1871, 2 ed. 1872; The apostolic
fathers. St. Clement 1 vol. 1877, St. Ignatius and St. Polycarp
2 vols. 1885; The epistles of Paul. Philippians. A revised text
1879; Cambridge sermons 1890; Ordination addresses and counsels
to clergy 1890; Sermons preached in St. Paul’s cathedral 1891;
Sermons preached on special occasions 1891. _d._ the Imperial
hotel, Bournemouth 21 Dec. 1889. _bur._ in chapel of Auckland
Castle 27 Dec., portrait by W. B. Richmond in Auckland Castle,
memorial altar tomb unveiled in Durham cath. 20 Oct. 1892. _C.
Bullock’s The two bishops_ (1890) 33–56, _portrait_; _Biograph_,
_vi_ 579–82 (1881); _I.L.N. lxxiv_ 201 (1879), _portrait_;
_Graphic 28 Dec. 1889 p._ 791, _portrait_.
NOTE.--In 1870 he transferred to Univ. of Camb. £4500 for the
foundation of three scholarships for the encouragement of the study
of ecclesiastical history in itself and in connection with general
history. The Lady Margaret’s professorship being endowed with the
rectory of Terrington St. Clement, Norfolk, he restored the chancel
of that church in 1878–9 at a cost of £2140. By his will he created
a trust called ‘The Lightfoot fund for the diocese of Durham’ for
the erection of buildings for church purposes and for other purposes
at discretion of the trustees, to whom he assigned his works and
copyrights. His library was divided between the univ. of Durham and the
Cambridge divinity school.
LIGHTFOOT, THOMAS. _b._ 1775; ensign 5 foot Aug. 1799; captain
45 foot 15 Dec. 1804, major 7 Oct. 1813 to 25 Dec. 1814 when
placed on h.p.; extra A.D.C. to the Sovereign 6 May 1831 to 23
Nov. 1841; colonel 62 foot 11 April 1851 to death; L.G. 11 Nov.
1851; C.B. 4 June 1815. _d._ Barbourne house, Worcester 15 Nov.
1858.
LIGHTFOOT, THOMAS (son of the preceding). _b._ 27 Dec. 1820;
ensign 84 foot 1 June 1838, lieut.-col. 4 April 1859, placed on
h.p. 5 May 1869; brigade major, Lucknow, Nov. 1857 to Jany.
1858; lieut.-col. brigade depot 1 April 1873; M.G. 1 Aug. 1869,
placed on retired list with hon. rank of L.G. 27 Dec. 1882; C.B.
14 May 1859. _d._ 16 Victoria park, Dover 3 March 1888.
LIGHTON, SIR CHRISTOPHER ROBERT, 6 Baronet. _b._ Earlsgift,
co. Tyrone 28 May 1819; ed. St. John’s coll. Camb., B.A. 1843,
M.A. 1846; succeeded his brother sir John H. Lighton 29 April
1844; V. of Ellastone, Staffs. 1848 to death; author of Does
Rome teach salvation by Christ alone, if not is her teaching
christian? _d._ Ellastone 12 April 1875. _I.L.N. lxvi_ 402
(1875).
LILLEY, JOHN (3 son of a carrier between Spillsby and Boston).
_b._ Lincolnshire 1823; enlisted in 6 regt. Inniskilling
dragoons 25 Jany. 1844, corporal 1848, sergeant 1852, troop
sergeant major 1853, regimental sergeant major 1855; served at
Scutari 1855; went to India 1857; summoned as a witness at the
court martial on Capt. Thomas W. Smales, ordered by lieut.-col.
Thomas Robert Crawley at Mhow, Bombay 1862; accused of speaking
disparagingly of col. Crawley, a charge which he entirely
denied, put under close confinement at Mhow 26 April 1862, where
he _d._ 25 May 1862; Crawley was court martialed and “honorably
acquitted,” but the full facts of the case were never brought
out. _Samuel Lilley’s Military despotism or the Iniskilling
dragoon_ (1863); _Military despotism. Addenda to the case_
(1863).
LILLEY, SAMUEL (eld. son of Samuel Isaac Lilley of Peckham,
Surrey). _b._ 1805; ed. at Jesus coll. Oxf., scholar 1829–32;
B.A. 1827, M.A. 1830; barrister M.T. 12 Nov. 1830; a member of
the bar committee 1883; a revising barrister for Surrey 1885
to death; prosecutor for the treasury at Surrey sessions, _d._
Southsea 22 June 1887. _Law Journal 2 July 1887 pp._ 373, 381.
LILLIE, JOHN. _b._ Kelso, Roxburghshire 16 Dec. 1812; ed.
Edinb. univ., B.A. 1833, D.D. 1855, and at New Brunswick
seminary; pastor of Dutch reformed church, Kingston, New York
1836–41; master of New York gram. sch. 1841–3; editor of the
Jewish Chronicle 1844–8; a translator for the American Bible
union 1851–7; pastor of the presbyterian church, Kingston 1858
to death; author of Lectures on the Epistle of Paul to the
Thessalonians. New York 1860; Lectures on the first and second
Epistles of Peter, New York and London 1869. _d._ Kingston 23
Feb. 1867. _G. Gilfillan’s Remoter Stars_ (1867) 128–30.
LILLIE, SIR JOHN SCOTT (eld. son of Philip Lillie of Drimdoe
castle, Roscommon). _b._ Drimdoe castle 1790; ensign 6 foot 3
March 1807; captain 60 foot 1813, placed on h.p. 25 Dec. 1818;
entered Portuguese army; commanded 7th Cacadores at battles
of the Pyrenees, Nivelle, Orthes and Toulouse; organised and
commanded an expedition to Portugal to support claims of Queen
Donna Maria 1831; captain 46 foot 6 Dec. 1827, placed on h.p.
27 March 1828; knighted 6 March 1816; C.B. 26 Sep. 1831;
lieut.-col. in the army 10 Jany. 1837, retired from the army
1855; author of An historical sketch of the origin and progress
of parliamentary corruption 1832; Observations on parliamentary
corruption and on the consequences of parliamentary reform 1832.
_d._ 1 Norfolk terrace, Bayswater, London 29 June 1868. _I.L.N.
liii_ 47 (1868).
NOTE.--He was severely wounded at the battle of Toulouse 10 April 1814
and left for 48 hours on the field of battle supposed to have been
killed.
LILLY, JOSEPH. _b._ Birmingham 1804; employed by Lackington and
Co. of Finsbury circus, London, booksellers 1820; bookseller
at 3 Museum st. Bloomsbury 1831–5, at 19 King st. Bedford st.
1835–50 and 1851–7, at 7 Pall Mall 1850–3, at 15 Bedford st.
1857–63, and at 17 New st. Covent Garden 1863 to death; bought
and sold more copies of the first folio edition of Shakespeare’s
works than any other bookseller on record; largely concerned
in formation of Henry Huth’s library; the first portion of his
stock was sold at Sotheby’s 15 March 1871 and 9 following days;
published A collection of ballads and broadsides printed between
1559 and 1597, with a preface 1867. _d._ 31 Mornington crescent,
London 29 Oct. 1870. _Bookseller 1 Dec. 1870 p._ 1071.
LILLY, MRS. _b._ 1790; attended Queen Victoria as monthly nurse
at the births of her 9 children 1840–57. _d._ Camberwell 26
April 1882. _bur._ Highgate cemetery 1 May.
LILLYWHITE, FREDERICK (son of the succeeding). _b._ Hove, Sussex
23 July 1829; first played at Lord’s in Sussex _v._ Marylebone
26 June 1848; reporter for Bell’s Life in London; a printer of
scores on cricket grounds; partner with John Wisden at 2 New
Coventry st. Leicester sq. London as a dealer in articles for
cricket to 1858; resided at 15 Kennington Oval from 1858, where
he published F. Lillywhite’s Cricket scores and biographies of
cricketers 3 vols. 1862–3; edited The guide to cricketers 1849,
23 ed. 1866; The public school matches; English cricketers’
trip to Canada 1860, 2 ed. 1861. _d._ Brighton 15 Sep. 1866.
_Lillywhite’s Cricket Scores_, _iii_ 605 (1863); _Illust.
sporting news_, _i_ 33 (1866), _portrait_, _v_ 424 (1866),
_portrait_.
LILLYWHITE, FREDERICK WILLIAM (son of the manager of the duke
of Richmond’s brick fields). _b._ West Hampnett near Goodwood
13 June 1792; a bricklayer, removed to Brighton 12 Dec. 1822;
manager over bricklayers at Hove; played for Sussex against
England in his first cricket match at Lord’s 18–19 June 1827;
the first great round-arm bowler, known as the ‘Nonpareil
Bowler,’ his average was 7 runs per wicket; went in first and
came out last in two matches 1839 and 1845; kept the Royal
Sovereign inn, Preston st. Brighton with cricket ground attached
1837–44; bowler to Marylebone cricket club 1844 to death, had
a benefit in 1853; professional at Winchester school 1851–3;
generally called William Lillywhite; author of Illustrated
handbook of cricket 1844, 3 ed. 184-; kept a cricket shop at 10
Prince’s terrace, Caledonian road, Islington, London, where he
_d._ of cholera 21 Aug. 1854. _bur._ Highgate cemet. where is
monument. _Denison’s Cricket_ (1846) 34–53; _F. Lillywhite’s
Cricket Scores_, _ii_ 9–12(1862); _I.L.N. 22 July 1843 p._ 59,
_portrait_; _Illust. news of the world 22 May 1858 pp._ 252,
254, _view of monument_.
LILLYWHITE, HENRY. _b._ Hawkley, Hampshire 1789; believed to be
a relative of William Lillywhite the Sussex bowler; a player in
Hampshire; played at Lord’s in Marylebone _v._ Hampshire 16 July