In 1718 he was elected a
Fellow of the Society of Antiquaries, and in the following year he began the formation of voluminous manuscript collections for the history of Northamptonshire. He made a circuit of the county, and employed several persons to make drawings, collect information, and transcribe monuments and records. In this manner he expended several thousand pounds. It was his intention to make another personal survey of the county, but before he could carry this design into effect he fell ill and died. Bridges's manuscripts fill thirty folio volumes, with five quarto volumes of descriptions of churches collected for him and four similar volumes in his own handwriting. These went to the
Bodleian Library at Oxford. Left by Bridges as an heirloom to his family, they were placed by his brother William, secretary of the stamp office, in the hands of Gibbons, a stationer and law-bookseller at the Middle Temple Gate, who circulated proposals for their
publication by subscription, and engaged
Samuel Jebb to edit them. Before many numbers had appeared Gibbons became bankrupt, and the manuscripts remaining in the hands of the editor, who had received no compensation for his labours, were at length secured by
William Cartwright, M.P., of
Aynho, for his native county, and a local committee was formed to accomplish the publication of the work. This was entrusted to the Rev.
Peter Whalley, a master at
Christ's Hospital. The first volume appeared in 1762, and the first part of the second in 1769; but delay arose after the death of
Sir Thomas Cave, chairman of the committee, and the entire work was not published till 1791. Whalley's part in the work was slight, and he claimed to have added little of his own, except what he compiled from
Anthony Wood and
William Dugdale.
Robert Nares wrote the preface, and
Samuel Ayscough compiled the index. A copy of the work is preserved among the manuscript collections of the British Library (Add MSS 32118-32122), illustrated with sketches, engravings, and additions in print and manuscript. It was bequeathed by William Dash to the
British Museum, where it was deposited in 1883, and subsequently became part of the
British Library collections. ==References==