Francis Hare-Naylor

The raconteur Augustus John Cuthbert Hare attributes the loss of his kinswoman to: His father took as his second wife another heiress, Henrietta Henckell.

[2] Bishop Shipley invited Hare-Naylor to Twyford, but the following day he was arrested for debt while driving in the episcopal coach with Georgiana and her parents.

The Hare-Naylors set off for England, leaving three of their children in the care of Prof. Clotilda Tambroni and a Spanish priest, and appointing Polyglot Giuseppe Caspar Mezzofanti tutor of their precocious eldest son.

From 1799, when the Hare-Naylors fetched home their children, life became a financial struggle, requiring support from the now-widowed Lady Jones.

[2] In 1803 Georgiana Hare-Naylor completing pictures recording Herstmonceaux Castle as it appeared before the demolitions, but then lost her sight.

[2] On Easter Sunday, 1806, Georgiana Hare-Naylor died at Lausanne, leaving her children to the care of Lady Jones (her eldest sister).

In 1816 Hare-Naylor's best-known work, a Civil and Military History of Germany, from the landing of Gustavus to the Treaty of Westphalia,' was published.

A memorial to his wife on her deathbed, entrusting the care of their daughter to Lady Jones