[3] He continue to employ his father's steward and composer George Jeffreys to care for his family's Kirby Hall estate.
Many of Jeffreys's letters are preserved in the Hatton-Finch correspondence; they cover a period of nearly forty years.
[6] In 1684 he had William Mason create monuments to his two wives and deceased children at Gretton.
[7] In August 1685 he married as his third wife Elizabeth (d. 1733), the daughter and heiress of Sir William Haslewood of Maidwell, Northamptonshire.
[11] Both his sons inherited the title Viscount Hatton in turn: William on his father's death in 1706, and Henry Charles for two years (1760–1762).