| Skegby Village prior to 1897 | Frontispiece. |
| Photograph by the Sherwood Photographic Co., Mansfield. | |
| The tall house on the extreme left of the picture is standing to-day. It was the property of the Society of Friends until 1800, when it was sold, with the adjoining Burial Ground, now a garden, the proceeds going towards the re-building of the Meeting House at Mansfield. The house is considered by some to have been the home of Elizabeth Hooton. It is probably of seventeenth century construction. | |
| Letter from Elizabeth Hooton to George Fox, 1653 [?] | 12 |
| Photograph by Henry G. Summerhayes. | |
| This is probably an autograph letter. It is endorsed by Fox: “e houton to gff 1655.” | |
| Beckingham Church | 14 |
| Photograph by Rachel L. Manners. | |
| The village of Beckingham is about five miles south of Newark-on-Trent. The church has a fine Norman porch and the churchyard is remarkable, being the shape of a coffin. | |
| Heading of the Tract “False Teachers,” etc. | 17 |
| Photograph by Humphrey L. Penney from the original. See p. 11. | |
| Signature of John Endicott | 34 |
| Photograph by Walter J. Hutchins from a facsimile in Annals of Salem. | |
| Endorsement by George Fox | 52 |
| Photograph by W. J. Hutchins from an early copy of a letter from Elizabeth Hooton to Oliver Cromwell. See p. 10. | |
| A Portion of a Page of the Earliest Minute Book of Nottinghamshire Quarterly Meeting | 75 |
| Photograph by Sherwood Photographic Co., Mansfield, from the original. See p. 81. | |
| Lincoln Castle Gateway | 78 |
| Original drawing by Ethel Barringer. | |
| This, with some fragments of the old wall, and a small, strongly-built structure, supposed to have been a dungeon and known as Cobb’s Hall, is all that remains of the old Castle. The area of the fortress is now occupied by the County Hall and a building now disused, which was the County Gaol. |