erected in Market place, Boston 1862. _C. Mackay’s Forty years
recollections_, _ii_ 64–75 (1877); _M. Jackson’s Pictorial
Press_ (1885) 284–311, _portrait_; _J. Hatton’s Journalistic
London_ (1882) 24, 222, _portrait_.
INGRAM, REV. JAMES (son of a farmer who lived to be 100). _b._
Logie Coldston, Aberdeenshire 3 April 1776; ed. at King’s
coll. Aberdeen 1791; assist. minister at Fetlar and North Yell
1800–3 and minister 1803; minister of Unst 1821–43; joined the
Free ch. 1843 and was minister of Unst Free ch. 1843 to death;
learnt Hebrew and German after he was 60; D.D. of Glasgow univ.;
presented with his portrait and a silver tea service 1872. d.
Unst 3 March 1879. _Wylie’s Disruption Worthies_ (1881); _Times
3 April 1876 p._ 6.
INGRAM, ROBERT HUGH WILSON, _b._ 1792 or 1793; barrister M.T.
20 June 1817, bencher 25 Jany. 1869; presented to Society of
Middle Temple, marble busts of the Prince of Wales and of Edmund
Plowden placed in Middle Temple hall 1868. _d._ Slough, Bucks.
29 Jany. 1869.
INGRAM, WALTER (youngest son of Herbert Ingram 1811–60). _b._
1855; officer in Middlesex yeomanry cavalry; travelled in
Zululand; went up the Nile in his steam launch and joined Sir H.
Stewart’s brigade in its march across Bayuda desert; attached to
lord C. Beresford’s naval corps and was in battles of Abu Klea
and Metammeh 1885; went up the Nile to within sight of Khartoum,
Feb. 1885, rewarded with a medal; _killed_ by an elephant which
he had wounded near Berbera east coast of Africa 6 April 1888.
_Times 11 April 1888 p._ 5, _col._ 5.
INGS, EDWARD. Barrister I.T. 1 May 1835; a legal coach at 40
Great James st. Bedford row, London many years; author of The
act for the abolition of arrest on mesne process in civil
actions, with rules, orders and cases and an appendix of forms