[1] Huish was appointed a prebendary of Wedmore Secunda in Wells Cathedral on 26 October 1627, was given the rectory of Beckington, Somerset, on 21 December 1628, and that of Hornblotton in the same county on 6 February 1638.
[1] He had trouble with his congregation when he implemented ritual changes in line with Laudianism, from 1634–5 when his diocesan bishop William Piers attempted to impose uniformity.
[2][3] When the inhabitants of Beckington petitioned parliament about his innovations in the services, he was arrested as a delinquent in 1640, and was at one time imprisoned at Chalfield, near Bradford, Wiltshire.
[1] At the Restoration of 1660, Huish recovered both his livings, and received in addition, on 12 September 1660, the prebend of Whitelackington in Wells Cathedral.
He also had a poem in the Oxford Verses on the death of Anne of Denmark, and contributed to the Ultima Lima Savilii, 1622.