[2] Stackhouse died at Beenham on 11 October 1752, and was buried in the parish church, with a large interior monument.
[3][4] The major work of Stackhouse was his New History of the Holy Bible from the Beginning of the World to the Establishment of Christianity.
The genesis of the work was with two booksellers, John Wilford and Thomas Edlin; Stackhouse wrote a pamphlet about them.
A second edition came out in numbers in 1742–4, and was also published in two folio volumes, with a dedication to his patron, Bishop Edmund Gibson.
In 1722, as "A Clergyman of the Church of England", addressed a printed letter to Bishop John Robinson, on the "miseries and great hardships of the inferiour clergy in and about London".
(1706–1784), the younger son by his first wife, married Hester Nash (d. 1794) in 1767, and died at Lisson Grove, London, in 1784.