found: Wikipedia, April 14, 2017(Herbert Haines (archaeologist); Herbert Haines (1 September 1826--18 September 1872) was an English archaeologist; he was educated at the College School, Gloucester, and went to Exeter College, Oxford in 1844, where he proceeded B.A., 1849, M.A. 1851; in September 1849, Haines was licensed to the curacy of Delamere, Cheshire; on 22 June 1850, he was appointed by the dean and chapter of Gloucester Cathedral to the second Mastership of his old school, the College School, Gloucester; this post he retained till his death, and on two occasions during vacancies in 1853-1854 and in 1871 acted for some time as headmaster; in 1854 he was appointed chaplain to the Gloucester County Lunatic Asylum, and in 1859 became also chaplain of the newly opened Barnwood House Asylum near Gloucester; Haines died, after a short illness, on 18 September 1872, and was buried in the Gloucester cemetery; a memorial brass bearing his effigy was placed in Gloucester Cathedral by friends and old pupils; it was later in the south ambulatory of the choir; besides some elementary classical school books, Haines wrote: A Manual for the Study of Monumental Brasses, published under the sanction of the Oxford Architectural Society, Oxford, 1848; 2nd edit., 2 vols. Oxford, 1861; St. Paul a Witness to the Resurrection; a Sermon preached before the Oxford University, Oxford and London, 1867; A Guide to the Cathedral Church in Gloucester, Gloucester and London, 1867; 2nd edit., revised and corrected by F. S. Waller, cathedral architect, 1880; 3rd edit. 1885)