For the benefit of his students, Hussey edited the histories of
Socrates of Constantinople (1844),
Evagrius Scholasticus (1844),
Bede (1846), and
Sozomen (3 vols. finished after his death, 1860). In a volume of
Sermons, mostly Academical (Oxford, 1849), he published a
Preface containing a Refutation of the Theory founded upon the Syriac Fragments of three of the Epistles of St. Ignatius, then recently discovered and published by
William Cureton. His conclusion, later generally adopted, was that these fragments of the
Ignatian Epistles contain only certain extracts from the Epistles, and not the whole text. In 1851, at the time of
Universalis Ecclesiae he published a manual on
The Rise of the Papal Power traced in Three Lectures (reissued, with additions, in 1863). Hussey was opposed to the
Oxford Movement but was not partisan. He issued a pamphlet in February 1845 containing
Reasons for Voting upon the Third Question to be proposed in Convocation on the 13th inst., in which he argued the unreasonableness of the proposal to condemn
Tract 90 a second time, four years after its first appearance. He wrote also
An Essay on the Ancient Weights and Money and the Roman and Greek Liquid Measures; with an Appendix on the Roman and Greek Foot, Oxford, 1836, based on examination of ancient coins. ==Family==