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    Notes


    Matches 3,501 to 3,550 of 3,963

          «Prev «1 ... 67 68 69 70 71 72 73 74 75 ... 80» Next»

     #   Notes   Linked to 
    3501 THOMAS HULBERT of Easton who married April 22 nd, 1679, CATHERINE, eldest daughter of THOMAS LONG, of Monkton and Rowden, Wilts., and had issue 4 children ELIZABETH, ROBERT, JOHN and THOMAS. THOMAS HULBERT of Easton and Wooton Bassett was born in 1680, and married CATHERINE GALLIMORE, and died Jan. 16, 1743. Longe, Catherine (I07159)
     
    3502 THOMAS HUTCHINSON (1588 - 1643) was Member of Parliament for Nottingham and was knighted. He was granted arms after the Herald's visitation of Nottingham in 1614 and this was confirmed on a later visitation in 1664. Thomas married Margaret BYRON, with whom he had two children: John and George, who married Barbara APSLEY, with whom he had two children, only one of whom, Allan, survived.
    Thomas was married a second time to Katherine STANHOPE with whom he had three, one of whom, Charles (1637-1695) married Isabella BOTELER, with whom he had three children.


    Aug. 18 Andrew Orgill, of Bromley, co. Midx., Merchant, Wid, ab* 39, &
    Barbara Hutchinson, of Owthrough, co. Notts, Sp'', abt 23; consent of her mother, of same, Widow; alleged by Richard Horsley, of St Martin's in Fields, Haberdasher; at St Clement Danes, St Maiy, Savoy, or St Martin's in Fields. in 1668 Chapel of Westminster.
     
    Apsley, Barbara (I05055)
     
    3503 Thomas Lovett who married Ann Danvers, fourth daughter of Sir John Danvers, belonged to the ancient family of Lovett, or Loueth, one of whom settled at Astwell in Northampton. Thomas Lovett died in July of the year 1523 ; and his inquisition states that his son and heir, Thomas, was at the time six years of age. He left two other sons' and three daughters; neither of the sons left heirs male, and the Astwell estate passed to John Shirley, of Eakedale, Leicester who married Jane, daughter of Thomas Lovett and Ann Danvers.

    Baker, in his ' History of Northamptonshire,' states that Ann died before her husband, Thomas Lovett; but this seems to be a mistake, as she was alive when her mother, Dame Ann, made her will in the year 1539, and was then married to . . . Wykes, no doubt one of the ancient Devonshire family of that name, of North wyke....

    Possibly John as one is witness to the will of his mother in law Ann Danvers will of 1530.


    The following extracts have been taken from "Illustrated Letters of the Paston Family", edited by Roger Virgoe (Macmillan 1989). The Pastons of Norfolk were a powerful familly in England in the 15th century.
    In a letter from Clement Paston to John Paston on 25 August 1461, he writes:
    ...Also he is acquainted with nobody but Wykes (John Wykes, 'Usshere of the King's Chambre'), and Wykes had told him that he would bring him to the King, but he has not yet done so.
    Describing the Royal Household of Edward IV, the editor states that
    Court members included the King's Secretary, Confessor and Almoner and usually one or more lords, but men of quite low status, such as the Pastons' friend John Wykes, Usher of the Chamber, could acquire great influence through their intimacy with the King.
    This John Wykes had an estate at Lavenham in Suffolk. He was in Castle Rising in Norfolk in one of the letters, a Royal castle, where the court must have been at the time.

    CP 25/1/91/119, number 40. Link: Image of document at AALT County: Hertfordshire. Place: Westminster. Date: Two weeks from Easter, 15 Edward IV [9 April 1475]. Parties: Thomas Edward' and Alice, his wife, William Louet and Christopher Belle, querents, and John Wykes of London', gentleman, and Margaret, his wife, who was the wife of Thomas Croxton', gentleman, deforciants. Property: 2 messuages and 13 acres of land in Aldenham. Action: Plea of covenant. Agreement: John and Margaret have acknowledged the tenements to be the right of Thomas, and have remised and quitclaimed them from themselves and the heirs of Margaret to Thomas and Alice, William and Christopher and the heirs of Thomas for ever. Warranty: Warranty against William, abbot of the monastery of the Blessed Peter, Gloucester, and his successors. For this: Thomas and Alice, William and Christopher have given them 20 pounds sterling.
    Standardised forms of names. (These are tentative suggestions, intended only as a finding aid.) Persons: Thomas Edward, Alice Edward, William Lovett, Christopher Bell, John Wykes, Margaret Croxton, Thomas Croxton Places: London, Aldenham
     
    Danvers, Ann (I08592)
     
    3504 THOMAS MARSH, only son and apparently only child; born about 1625; admitted to Gray's Inn, 7 July 1644 as "son and heir of Thomas Marsh, Esq., of Hackney, Middx".
    Married, about 1646, Dorothy, da. and heir of James Horsey, of Huningham, co. Warwick.
    He died at Hackney, before his father, 23 July 1649, aged 25.
    M.I. at South Mims. Admon. 23 July 1649 to his widow. They had a son, Thomas.

    Marriage Licence:
    1665 May 19 Sir Thomas Marsh, Knight, of Hackney, Middx., Bach', about 17, & Anne Brent, of St Andrew's, Holborn, Spinster, 16, her parents dead; with
    consent of his guardian George Tresham, of Newton, co. Northampton, Esq., & of her guardian William Clagett, of St Andrew's, Holborn; at St Mary Colechurch, London.
     
    Marsh, Thomas (I08490)
     
    3505 Thomas Nalder, of Great Bedwin, & Mary South, of Ogbom St. Andrew, 3 July 1735.

    Possibly died 1756 See Victoria History of Berwick Bassett.

    Memorial Inscription Thomas Nalder aged 59 years 21.04.1757. Same day a Thomas Nalder aged 9 21.04.1757. Double entry or son?

    Probably the Thomas Nalder who is the witness for the marriage of Thomas Neate and Mary Halles in 1733

    FILE [no title] - ref. 488/7 - date: 1750-1785
    [from Scope and Content] With (i) copy will, Caleb Baily of Berwick Bassett, 1749; extract, will of Thomas Nalder of Winterbourne Monkton, 1756, proved 1757, (ii) bond, 1782, (iii) case, 1782, (iv) account of arable in the common fields of Winterbourne Bassett, undated; measurement, post 1828.
    [from Scope and Content] Parties: Mace, Nalder, Aland, Prior, Giles, Bedford, Lanfear, Lewis, Fitzpatrick, Fox [Charles James], Holland, Ponting, Barrett, Brown.

    Wiltshire Memorial Inscriptions:
    First name(s): Thomas Last name: NALDER Date of burial: 26 Apr 1757 Age at death: Calculated year of birth: Not known Place of burial: Winterbourne Monkton Dedication: St Mary Magdalene County: Wiltshire

    Day: 21 Month: Apr Year: 1757 Age: 9 Forenames: Thomas Surname: NALDER Place: Winterbourne Monkton County: Wiltshire Country: England Reference: 82224 (Should this be 59??)

    Day: 21 Month: Apr Year: 1757 Age: 59 Forenames: Thomas Surname: NALDER Place: Winterbourne Monkton County: Wiltshire Country: England Reference: 82228

    Thomas Nalder Winterbourn Monckton
    In the name of god Amen the thirty first day of July in the year of our Lord one thousand seven hundred and fifty six I Thomas Nalder of Winterbourn Monkton in the county of Wilts Gent ... First I give and devise unto my brother Robert Nalder ...to my nephew John Nalder oldest son of my brother John Nalder his heirs and assigns for ever. Also I give and devise unto my said brother John Nalder all that my undivided fourth part of the manor of Berwick ... Also I give and bequeath unto John, Thomas, Anne, Mathew, Mary, George Rachel Stephen Joanna and Sarah (sons and daughters of Thomas Brown of the parish of Wroughton in the said county of Wilts) the sum of ten pounds apiece of lawful money of Great Britain. Also I give and bequeath unto Miriam Browne another daughter of the said Thomas Browne the sum of sixty pounds of like lawful money. Also I give and bequeath unto Anne Browne(wife of the said Thomas Browne) ... Also I give and bequeath unto Robert, Edward, Anne, Mathew, Thomas and John sons and daughters of Edward Vasey of Clatford .... I give bequeath and devise to my said brothers Robert and John Nalder ...


    [no title] 873/301 1741-1791 Contents: Deeds of a messuage and land in Broad Hinton 1741, 1764 and associated papers of the Nalder family including copy will of Caleb Bailey, Berwick Bassett 1749, survey of land of late Caleb Bailey now of Thomas Nalder in Broad Town and Thornehill 1752; administration bond of Martha Nalder decd., 1744 and probate of the will of Thomas Nalder, 1757 both of Winterbourne Monkton; note by Thomas Nalder about the distraint of the goods of James Ponting on land in Broad Town 1753.
     
    Nalder, Thomas (I03738)
     
    3506 Thomas Neate, Yeoman of Wroughton, Will proved 27th July, 1799. PRO 11/1327

    Name Thomas NEATE Date of death 13 Apr 1799 Age 33 Notes ? RefNum 82774 Place Wroughton, WIL

    Did they also have a daughter Frances who was burined in Wroughton in 1808 aged 18?

    Mentioned in the will of Bryan Rumboll yeoman of Wroughton, 1792

    Sarum Marriage Licence Bonds:
    Day: 30 Month: Jan Year: 1787 Groom Forenames: Thomas Groom Surname: NEATE Groom's parish: Wroughton Groom's county: Wiltshire,England Groom's condition: bac Groom's occupation: Groom's age: 21 Groom's notes:
    Bride Forenames: Elizabeth Bride Surname: HUGHES Bride's parish: Broad Hinton Bride's county: Wiltshire,England Bride's condition: sp Bride's age: 21 Bride's notes: Place of Marriage: Bondsman 1: BATHE Anthony, Wroughton Bondsman 2: Jurisdiction: The Bishop of Salisbury in Wiltshire and Berkshire

    Wiltshire Memroial Inscriptions
    Age: 34 Forenames: Thomas Surname: NEATE Place: Wroughton County: Wiltshire Country: England Reference: 82773 Notes: d 13 Apr 17-- husb of Elizabeth

    Any connection??
    Forenames: Thomas Surname: NEATE Place: Lydiard Tregoze County: Wiltshire Country: England Reference: 82740 Notes: late of Salthrop
     
    Neate, Thomas (I00303)
     
    3507 Thomas RUMBLE buried Clavering 10 October 1835 aged 78.

    Could parents be Matthew Rumbald and Elizabeth Lacy who married in Clavering in 1740?
     
    Rumboll, Thomas (I05328)
     
    3508 Thomas Tooke (the sixth and youngest son of Walter) possessed the other moiety of the manor, called Wormley Bury, and held it during his life. He succeeded bis brother John as Auditor of the Court of Wards and Liveries; and married Elizabeth daughter of Sir Richard Atkins, of Clapham, Bart.
    By his will, dated 1670, he charged his estate in Wormley, Cheshunt, and Broxborn...

    Father?
    Will of Thomas Tooke Wormley 1660. Mentions Thomas Atkins, Edward Atkins and mentions great grandson son Thomas Tooke. Son Thomas Tooke. Will of Thomas Tooke of Nettleden, Hertfordshire 16 March 1671 PROB 11/335

    ?
    Tooke versus L. Chief Baron Atkins.
    Upon reading the Petition of Thomas Tooke Esquire; shewing, "That he hath an Appeal depending in this House, to which the Lord Chief Baron of Their Majesties Court of Exchequer is Respondent; praying, That the Lord Chief Baron do produce, at the Hearing of the Cause, all the Writings which were produced at the Hearing in the Exchequer; and that, in the mean Time, the Petitioner may have a Copy of the Articles, at his own Charge; and that he may give a Third Person to be Security to make good his Appeal:"
    It is ORDERED, by the Lords Spiritual and Temporal in Parliament assembled, That the Lord Chief Baron Atkins shall produce at the said Hearing the said Writings, and do give a Copy of the Articles, as desired; and that the said Thomas Tooke may have a Third Person to enter into Security for him.

    From: 'House of Lords Journal Volume 15: 22 January 1692', Journal of the House of Lords: volume 15: 1691-1696 (1767-1830), pp. 43-45. URL: http://www.british-history.ac.uk/report.aspx?compid=11800 Date accessed: 31 March 2011.

    Tooke versus L. Chief Baron Atkins.
    Then the House went on with the Consideration and Debate of the Cause of Thomas Took Appellant, and the Lord Chief Baron Atkins Respondent.
    Whereupon the Order following was made:
    "After hearing Counsel upon the Petition and Appeal of Thomas Tooke Esquire, against Sir Robert Atkins Knight of the Bath, ...
    From: 'House of Lords Journal Volume 15: 24 February 1692', Journal of the House of Lords: volume 15: 1691-1696 (1767-1830), pp. 91-94. URL: http://www.british-history.ac.uk/report.aspx?compid=11828 Date accessed: 31 March 2011.


    Text: 27 Aug 1699 Thomas Tooke Book: Burials Collection: London: St. Dunstan in the East - Parish Registers, 1692-1766
     
    Tooke, Thomas (I04984)
     
    3509 Thomas was born around 1560 and his wife, Frances Martin had four sons including Martin who was called heir of Fiddleford in the 1631 will of his brother Henry.
    Martin, born around 1580 to be of age when he was admitted to the Middle Temple on 14 November 1598 as "son and heir-apparent of Thomas White of
    Fiddleford"; Bartholomew White and George White. No probate was found for Bartholomew.
     
    White, Thomas (I09665)
     
    3510 Thomas Watson of Iden and Susnnah Ridley 7th May, 1827. Peasmarsh."

    Listed on the 1841, 1851 census at Iden. First as a farm labourer and then as a farmer. Listed with Thomas Watson on the 1841 census-son or nephew??

    184 Census Iden Street, Iden
    Watson Thomas 45 - Farmer Yes HO107/1106/~F4 CD3 HO_1106.pdf p.80 Watson Susannah 35 - Yes HO107/1106/~F4 CD3 HO_1106.pdf p.80 Watson Thomas 15 - Yes HO107/1106/~F4 CD3 HO_1106.pdf p.80 Watson Mary 12 - Yes HO107/1106/~F4 CD3 HO_1106.pdf p.80 Watson Elizabeth 10 - Yes HO107/1106/~F4 CD3 HO_1106.pdf p.80 Watson Ellen 8 - Yes HO107/1106/~F4 CD3 HO_1106.pdf p.80 Watson Emily 6 - Yes HO107/1106/~F4 CD3 HO_1106.pdf p.80 Watson William 1 - Yes HO107/1106/~F4 CD3 HO_1106.pdf p.80

    Same Person??
    Division within WO Records of the Royal Chelsea and Kilmainham Hospitals
    WO 97 Royal Hospital Chelsea: Soldiers Service Documents
    Subseries within WO 97 1760-1854: discharge papers arranged by regiment, but each described at item level. (WO 97/1-1271)
    WO 97/628 48th Foot: Smi - You

    THOMAS WATSON
    Born IDEN, Sussex
    Served in 48th Foot Regiment
    Discharged aged 37
    Covering dates 1826-1838
     
    Watson, Thomas (I03496)
     
    3511 Thomas Willis married Linton, Cambridgeshire, 1752 .Father? Christeneing of a Thomas Willis at Linton in 1757 son of William and Francis?

    A Thomas Willis born West Wickham, Cambridgeshire,1756? son John and Mary? Another christened 1755 at Stapleford son of Thomas and Francis

    1. THOMAS WILLIS - International Genealogical Index
    Gender: Male Christening: 27 JUL 1755 Stapleford, Cambridge, England

    2. THOMAS WILLIS - International Genealogical Index
    Gender: Male Christening: 13 SEP 1756 West Wickham, Cambridge, England

    3. THOMAS WILLIS - International Genealogical Index
    Gender: Male Christening: 28 OCT 1757 Linton, Cambridge, England

    1841 Census:
    HO107 Piece:
    76 Book/Folio:
    11 Page:
    17 Registration District:
    Linton Sub District:
    Duxford EnumerationDistrict:
    Ecclesiastical Parish:
    Civil Parish:
    Duxford Municipal Borough:
    Address:
    The Green, Duxford County:
    Cambridgeshire

    Possibiity: Duxford St John, Cambridgeshire:
    Thomas Willis 80 years carpenter. Born in county

    Possible death Linton, 1845.

    Cambridge Archives:
    K296 Rowley Son and Royce and predecessors a. Notebooks containing valuations and inventories of real property
    b. Notebooks containing valuations and inventories of real property, farming stock and implements, and household and personal effects for dilapidations, and estimates for building work and repairs. Plans of buildings are sometimes included, the books are numbered unless otherwise stated.
    J. Phillips, esq., to Thomas Willis for work at the Plough, Duxford (pp.48-54) 19 December 1844 Henry Drury to Thomas Willis for work done at his house at Duxford (p.55)
     
    Willis, Thomas (I02005)
     
    3512 Thomas's father Robert acted as an executor of Richard Blount's will.  Woodford, Thomas (I08542)
     
    3513 Thorp Market, Norfolk.
    On a gravestone on the floor of the Nave, on a brass plate:
    "Here lyeth buried Edmond Gresham Esquyre the sonne of Sir John Gresham, knight, who deceased the last of August, 1586."

    Edmund Gresham, Esq. [Chancery Inquis. p.m. 29 Eliz., Ist Pt., No. 47]. Inquisition taken at Norwich in *Le Sherehowse ' 7 June 29 Eliz. (1587) upon the death of Edmund Gresham late of Thorpmarket, co. Norf., Esq. deceased. ... That the said Edmund Gresham died on the last day of August last past and that Richard Gresham was his son and heir and of the age of twenty-one years and one month.
     
    Gresham, Edmond (I07127)
     
    3514 Three possibiltes in Leith, Mid Lothian between 1747-1749

    Johanna Robertson born 22.05.1747 daughter of William Robertson and Martha Watt.
    Johanna Robertson christened 27th March 1747 daughter of John Robertson and Bertha Red.
    Joanna Robertson baptised 29th May 1749 
    Robertson, Johanna (I01372)
     
    3515 Tipperary Free Press. 9th March, 1878

    On Sunday evening last Sir Leopold Cust died of a combination of diseases, and, strange to say, immediately after his death became known, the Tipperary Brass Band turned out and paraded the streets, playing airs of rejoiceful character. The hills around blazed with bonfires, and there was quite a demonstration of an extraordinary character because of the event. It is understood that the deceased was very unpopular in the capacity of agent to
    A.H. Smith-Barry, esq., which was the cause of this demonstration. The Tipperary Board of Guardians, today, refused to adjourn, as proposed by Captain G.M. Dawson, D.L. Very severe comments were made on the deceased gentleman's character as a land agent.

    Illustrated London News 1878.
    Sir Leopold Cust Second Baronet of Leasowe Castle in the County of Chester died at Cordangan Castle Co. Tipperary.
     
    Cust, Leopold (I03275)
     
    3516 Title: Papers and Proceedings of the Hampshire Field Club.
    Page: 1898, Vol. 3, p. 1-29
    Note: B.W. Greenfield, "Old Stoke Charity, Monumental Brasses, Heraldry, &c., in the Parish Church, and the descent of the Manor," at p. 9, citing 5 E. VI., 1551: Escheats. 07.09.1551

    ....Thus the manor came into the possession of Joan, the youngest of the four, and wife of John Waller. He survived her and became lord of Stoke Charity, or rather Oldstoke, as it was still called, in her right. He died in 1525-6, leavingas heir his grandson Richard, the eldest son of his only son Richard. (fn. 20) In his will he desired to be buried in Oldstoke church 'before the altar of St. Thomas,' and his monument still stands in its original site against the north wall of the Hampton chapel. Richard Waller, his grandson, came of age in 1536 and held the manor of 'Old Stoke Charity' until his death,7 September, 1551, (fn. 21) according to his inquisition, although the parish register states that he was buried 4 September, 1552, possibly following the date given on his mutilated brass in Stoke Charity church. William Waller his eldest son succeeded his father when a minor only fourteen years old. ..... William's co-heirswere his daughters, Charity the wife of Thomas Phelipps and Susan wife of Sir Richard Tichborne.
    From: 'Parishes: Stoke Charity', A History of the County of Hampshire: Volume 3 (1908), pp. 447-451. URL: http://www.british-history.ac.uk/report.aspx?compid=42025 Date accessed: 03 April 2012.


    34 Henry VIII. Exemplification under the Royal seal of a plea of trespass committed by Richard Waller, Peter Sone, yeoman, and Richard Drelker, all late of Oldstoke, on Richard Pexsall's land at Oldstoke, called Brocas mede.
     
    Waller, Richard (I10104)
     
    3517 Tobias Allein was born about 1590. He was descended from the Alleins of Suffolk, and lived in Devizes, Wiltshire, England. He was a tradesman who was engaged by the corporation to take toll of everything sold in the public market, Devizes being the great center of the wool traffic. He was a prominent citizen, his name often appearing in the town records.
    He was a "capital Burgess" of the common council, and was also a devout Puritan. He married, October 11, 1617, Elizabeth, daughter of Edward Northie, who was four times mayor of Devizes. Children:
    1. Edward Allein, a clergyman, who died in his twenty-seventh year, said to be a "young minister of rare promise."
    2. Joseph Allein, born 1633, at Devizes; he entered Oxford at the age of sixteen; was very studious, became in 1653 a tutor in the colloge of Corpus Christi, where he also acted as chaplain; he was assistant minister at Taunton, Magdalen, Somersetshire, from 1655 to 1662, when he was deprived for non-conformity; but was so broken down by imprisonment that he died in 1668; he was author of "An Alarm to the L'nconverted" and numerous books of a like nature; he died in 1668; he married, about 1655, Theodoshia Allein, a distant relative, who was the daughter of Richard Allein, rector of Dichet, Somersetshire, for nearly fifty years
    John W. (John Woolf) Jordan Genealogical and personal history of the Allegheny Valley, Pennsylvania; (Volume 1)
     
    Allen, Toby (I06842)
     
    3518 Too old?
    ?
    Essex Record Office Level: Category Estate and Family records Level: Fonds CRANMER-BYNG FAMILY
    Level:
    Item Reference Code D/DYv/253 Dates of Creation 18 October 1737 Scope and Content Admission of Mary CHIPPERFIELD, upon death of her grandfather William Salmon.

    [Property as in D/DYv 238.]
    Date From 1737 Date To 1737
     
    Salmon, William (I05974)
     
    3519 Too young ??
    JOHN ROBSON Pedigree
    Birth:
    Christening: 04 MAR 1767 Mertoun, Berwick, Scotland
    Parents:
    Father: THOMAS ROBSON
     
    Robson, John (I01834)
     
    3520 Took a vow of chastity about a month after her husband's death, taking the commission to veil on 20.09.1485.

    Left money in the will of her sister in law Ann Harling in 1498. 
    Scrope, Agnes (I09858)
     
    3521 Town Clerk and Coroner of Reading?. Appointed 1792. Perhaps died about 1816 when William jnr. appointed Coroner and Town Clerk.

    Possibly the marriage of William Andrews and Arabella Deane at Reading Berkshire in 1783.

    In some way related to John Goldwyer Andrews:

    July 28. 1849 Aged 67, John Goldwyer Andrews, esq. of St. Helen's-pl. Bishops, Gate-St. and Glanbrydan, Carmarthen. senior Surgeon of the London Hospital, and a Member of the Court of Examiners of the Royal College of Surgeons, of which institution he had been twice elected President. The deceased was a great patron of the fine arts; his collection of paintings at his country seat, Glanbrydan, Carmarthenshire, being variously estimated of the value of from £15,000. to 20,000.
     
    Andrews, William (I07593)
     
    3522 Transcript copyright ©2010 Nina Green All Rights Reserved
    http://www.oxford-shakespeare.com/
    SUMMARY: The document below is the will, dated 4 April 1485 and proved 28 June 1485, of Richard Scrope (d.1485), ...The testator was the second son of Henry Scrope (1418-1458/9), 4th Baron Scrope of Bolton, and his wife, Elizabeth Scrope (d. in or after 1498), the daughter of John Scrope, 4th Baron Scrope of Masham, and his wife, Elizabeth, the daughter of Sir Thomas Chaworth of Wiverton, Nottinghamshire. ... By licence dated 25 November 1447, the testator married Eleanor Washbourne (d.1505/6), the daughter of Norman Washbourne (1433-1482) and Elizabeth Kniveton or Kynaston. She is said to have been from Worcestershire. After the testator’s death, his widow, Eleanor (d.1505/6), married Sir John Wyndham (d.1502), ... By Sir John Wyndham (d.1502), Eleanor (d.1505/6) had an only daughter, Frances, who married Sir John Seyntclere. For her will, see TNA PROB 11/15.

    The testator and his wife, Eleanor (d.1505/6), had a son, Stephen, and a daughter, Dorothy (d.1491), who died young, and seven daughters who lived to adulthood:

    In Dei nomine, Amen. I, Richard Scrope, being in full mind and whole wit and in charity with all the world, the 4th day of April the year of Our Lord God 1485 make my will and testament in this wise:
    ...Item, I will my wife have, if she live sole, all my lands and goods, movable and unmovable, ....Item, if this child that my wife is with be a son, I will that it be married by the discretion of mine executors, and if it be a daughter, and my wife happen to be married, then I will that Bentley be sold unto the behalf of my children if mine executors think it to be done; I will that if it happen John Scrope to have a son, my wife having none, that then the said John Scrope’s son to have one of my daughters and the lordship of Weighton after my wife’s decease, ...my Lady, my mother; Item, to my Lord, my brother, my hoop of gold; Item, to my brother, Mr Ralph, my porteous, and Powes, my horse; Item, to my brother, Robert, my short velvet ... to my nephew, Harry Scrope, .. I will my mother-in-law ... 
    Scrope, Richard (I04745)
     
    3523 Transcript copyright ©2010 Nina Green All Rights Reserved http://www.oxford-shakespeare.com

    SUMMARY: The document below is the will, dated 10 November 1634 and proved 6 May 1635, of Oxford’s first cousin, Horace [Horatio] Vere (1565-1635), Baron of Tilbury. The testator was the youngest son of Oxford’s uncle, Geoffrey de Vere (d.1572) ...
    The testator had a distinguished military career in the Low Countries. In November 1607 he married Mary Tracy (1581-1671), widow of William Hoby of Hailes, Gloucestershire, the youngest daughter of Sir John Tracy (d.1591) of Toddington, by whom he had five daughters, Elizabeth, Mary, Catherine, Anne and Dorothy. ... According to The Complete Peerage, he lived during his latter years at Clapton in Middlesex. ... The testator died on 2 May 1635 and was buried in Westminster Abbey near the tomb of his brother, Sir Francis Vere (1560/61-1609).

    LM:LM: Testamentum honorandi viri Horatij Domini Vere Baronis de Tilbury
    In the name of God, Amen. The tenth day of November in the tenth year of the reign of our most gracious Sovereign Lord Charles, by the grace of God of England, Scotland, France and Ireland King, Defender of the Faith etc., Anno Domini one thousand six hundred thirty-four, I, Horace, Lord Vere, Baron of Tilbury, do make and ordain this my last will and testament in manner and form following: ...Dame Mary, my most loving wife .... And I do hereby make, ordain and appoint her, my said wife, full and sole executrix of
    this my last will and testament...

    [=The above-written testament was proved at London ... on the sixth day of the month of May in the year of the Lord a thousand six hundred thirty-five by the oath of the honourable Lady Mary Vere, relict and executrix of the said deceased named in the same testament, ... 
    Vere, Horatio (I03604)
     
    3524 Transfer of property. [Feoffment] (copy). (1) Sir George Trenchard of Charminster, knight and Sir Thomas Trenchard, knight his son and heir apparent. (2) Edmund Dashwood of Dorchester, merchant. Messuage on South side of High West Street and premises on West side of High South Street (D.1/JC/17) file 18 Jan 1617


    Will of Sir George Trenchard of Wolveton, Dorset 01 February 1631 PROB 11/159


    http://www.abbotsbury-heritage.org.uk/results/pale/pale.htm
    The story of Abbotsbury church begins, like a biography, at the font...The ceiling is evidently from the same hand as that in the room above the Breakfast Room in the Strangways family seat at Melbury, ... To the left of each shield are the Strangways arms ~ two lions, which should be striped in silver and red ~ and to the right those of a succession of wives, for each shield comemmorates a match with some daughter of the gentry. Sir Giles, the first to be lord of the manor, is here with his wife Joan Mordaunt. Their son Henry appears with Margaret Rutland, whom he married in 1526; Henry never came to possess Abbotsbury, for he died in the siege of Boulogne, a victim of Henry VIII's foreign policy. Sir Giles the younger married Joan Wadham in 1547, and they are both here, as is their son John and his wife Dorothy Thynne of the Longleat family. Their son Sir John appears with Grace Trenchard and the inscription 1638, which may date the ceiling, the marriage, or both. Finally comes the heir apparent, Giles ~ later to be made Colonel Giles in the Civil War, and his wife Susanna Edwards. The six smaller shields set above the chancel arch carry the story further back in time, for amongst these are the arms of Strangways and Arundell to commemorate the first marriage of Henry, father of Sir Giles the elder, while those of Strangways and Stafford are there to remind us of the marriage of Thomas in 1460 with Alianor, grand-daughter of Humphrey Stafford of Hooke, ... The house was afterwards re-occupied by a Royalist garrison under Colonel James Strangways ~ the younger son of Sir John, who was himself engaged in the defence of Sherborne Castle ... And so, according to the letter that Sir Anthony later sent to Parliament, 'immediately we drew out a party of musketeers, with which Major Baintum in person stormed the church, into which they had put thirteen men because it flanked the house. This, after a hot bickering, we carried, and took all the men prisoners'. ..

    Charminster Marriages:
    Mr George TRENCHARD & Ann SPEAK married 30th Aug 1573
    John BROWNE Son of Sir John Browne Knight of Frampton & Elizabeth TRENCHARD d.of the Right Worshipful Sir George Trenchard married 18th Nov 1607
    (In the 1623 Dorset Visitations, p. 94, a John Browne, is listed, son and heir of John Brown of Frampton, who married, Elizabeth Trenchard, dau. of Sir George Trenchard of Wolueton, Dorset and Elizabeth Speake, dau. of George Speake. The Charminster, Dorset, IGI record says John Browne, son of Sir John Browne, knight of Frampton and Elizabeth Trenchard, daughter of the Right Worshipfull Sir George Trenchard, m. 18 Nov. 1607, Charminster. This John Browne may be the above. This George Trenchard was probably the one who John Hennynge referred to as a special, good friend when he wrote his will, proved in 1611.)

    Mr John WILLIAMS Esq & Mrs Jane Trenchard d. of the Right Worshipful Sir George Trenchard married 25th Oct 1613
    Christover ROBERTS & Betteresse PAULMER servants unto the Right Worshipful Sir Thomas Trenchard of Wolveton married 28th April 1617
    Henry CHAMPERNOWNE of Dorting co. Devon esq et Dorothie TRENCHARD d.of Sir George Trenchard of Olveton knight married 6th Jan 1628
    William sonn unto Sir John Powle KNIGHT baronett of Collinton the one party & Grace d. unto Sir Thomas TRENCHARD of Wolveton and the Lady Elizabeth married 30th Sept 1633
    Thomas CHAFFIN of Fooke gent. & Elizabeth TRENCHARD of Wolveton d.to ye Right Wll Sir Thomas Trenchard of Wolveton & Elizabeth his wife married 24th Aug 1635
    John DORRINTON esq. of [Brammell?] co. South & Mrs Ann TRENCHARD d.unto Sir Thomas Trenchard and the Ladie Elizabeth married 28th June 1637

    Will of John Browne of Frampton, Dorset May 1659 PROB 11/291
    Will of Sir John Browne of Frampton, Dorset 24 November 1627 PROB 11/152
     
    Trenchard, Grace (I06547)
     
    3525 Travelled and died in Italy according to "The Baronetage of England Containing a Geneological and History"

    STANFORD CHURCH contains several monuments erected to the memory of the CAVE family. Under a canopy of white marble, against the north wall of the chancel, is the effigy of a man also a Latin inscription, commemorative of Richard CAVE, eldest son of Sir Thomas and Lady Eleanor CAVE, who died on the Continent, in the nineteenth year of his age, July 26. 1606. 
    Cave, Richard (I04555)
     
    3526 Two burial entries for Martha Vesey. One in 1733 in Market Lavington and one in 1746 in Preshute.

    First name(s): Martha Last name: VEZEY Date of burial: 30 Nov 1746 Age at death: Calculated year of birth: Not known Place of burial: Preshute Dedication: St George County: Wiltshire

    No mention of Martha Nalder in her husbands will of 1763.
    There is a Martha Vesey buried Preshute 30.11.1746. No age given.
    Of Winterborne Monkton at time of marriage in 1729. Memorial at Winterborne Monkton but no ages or dates given.

    With (i) wills of Caleb Baily of Berwick Bassett, 1747, 1749; copy will, Martha Nalder, of Monkton, 1733. (ii) agreements, 1713/14, (iii) deposition in a Chancery action, Baily v. Baily

    There is a Martha Nalder born 1689-seems to early??
    Day: 18 Month: Dec Year: 1689 Forenames: Martha Surname: NALDER Fathers forenames: John Occupation: Mothers forenames: Joane Birth day: Birth month: Birth year: Abode: Place: Preshute Description: County: Wiltshire Country: England

    The revenues of Preshute RECTORY, arising from tithes, land, and oblations, belonged to the warden and choristers of Salisbury cathedral from 1329. (fn. 215) Parliamentary commissioners sold them to William Hitchcock in 1651 but they were afterwards restored. (fn. 216) From 1330 to the later 15th century the vicar of Preshute collected them, paid £20 to the appropriators, and kept the residue. (fn. 217) From the later 15th century the revenues were leased to lay tenants, including members of the Hitchcock family from 1495 or earlier until 1711. (fn. 218) After 1711 the estate was let in portions. The tithes of Elcot, including Barton farm, were let as one holding. (fn. 219) Leases of the small glebe farm which surrounded the church, reckoned at 60 a. in 1649 and 45 a. in 1926, and of the Manton tithes were held from 1714 to 1735 by the Nalder family, tenants of Barton farm,

    From: 'Parishes: Preshute', A History of the County of Wiltshire: Volume 12: Ramsbury and Selkley hundreds; the borough of Marlborough (1983), pp. 160-184. URL: http://www.british-history.ac.uk/report.aspx?compid=66525. Date accessed: 24 August 2008.

    Sarum Marriage Licence Bonds:
    Day: 27 Month: Nov Year: 1729 Groom Forenames: Edward Groom Surname: VAISEY Groom's parish: Preshute Groom's county: Wiltshire,England Groom's condition: Groom's occupation: Groom's age: Groom's notes:
    Bride Forenames: Martha Bride Surname: NALDER Bride's parish: Winterbourne Monkton Bride's county: Wiltshire,England Bride's condition: Bride's age: Bride's notes: Place of Marriage: Winterbourne Monkton Bondsman 1: NALDER John, Winterbourne Monkton Bondsman 2: Jurisdiction: The Bishop of Salisbury in Wiltshire and Berkshire

    Possibility??
    Forenames: Martha Surname: VAISEY Place: Winterbourne Monkton County: Wiltshire Country: England Reference: 169247 Notes:
     
    Nalder, Martha (I03759)
     
    3527 Two burials:
    Stephen Burgess at Clavering in 1786
    Stephen Burgess at Clavering in 1797 
    Burgess, Stephen (I01291)
     
    3528 Two John Gentle's buried in Ashwell, one in 1842 aged 45 years and one in 1850 aged 80 years-father and son?
    Two John Gentle born in Ashwell one in 1795 to James and Mary and one in 1798 to Thomas and Mary

    1841, Ashwell, Hertfordshire, England:
    High Street, Ashwell, Hertfordshire:
    John Gentle 60 ag lab born in county
    Rebecca Gentle 35 "
    George 25
    John 15
    Samuel 12
    Frederick 10
    Alfred 9
    Frances 7 (All born in county)

    Near by:
    1841 Census Ashwell, Hertfordshire, Engalnd
    William Gentle 38 years Ag Lab Born in county
    Edith Gentle 35
    George 11 "
    Elizabeth 7
    William 9
    James 5
    Emmanuel 2 " 
    Gentle, John (I01054)
     
    3529 Two marriage in 1729 for Mary Axford. One in Devizes to James Bernard of Chippenham?? Axford, Mary (I01942)
     
    3530 Two Mary Stephana Neate-one died 1915. Which one??

    1871 Census Kingsclere, Hampshire, England:
    Anna C Neate 23 Cricklade, Wiltshire, England Daughter Kingsclere Hampshire
    Mary S Neate 28 Cricklade, Wiltshire, England Daughter Kingsclere Hampshire
    Ellen Hutchins 18 Kingsclere, Hampshire, England Servant Kingsclere Hampshire


    1891 Hungerford, Berkshire, England:
    Neate, Mary S 48 Cricklade, Wiltshire Head Hungerford Berkshire
    Neate, Hungerford, Berkshire Son Hungerford Berkshire
    Mackinlay, Dudley E N 20 Wakefield, Yorkshire Visitor Hungerford Berkshire
    Neate, Fanny A 49 Lanark,Gloucestershire Cousin Hungerford Berkshire



    Listed in the 1881 census living with her mother at Swan Street, Kingsclere, Hampshire. Occupation: School Teacher

    1901 Census Fulhsm, London, England:
    Anna M Heanly 53 Cricklade, Wiltshire, England Wife Fulham London
    Frank G J Heanly 54 Henfield,Sussex, England Head Fulham London
    Mildred M Heanly 23 Kingsclere, Hampshire, England Daughter Fulham London
    Mary S Neate 58 Cricklade, Wiltshire, England Sister-in-law Fulham London

    Kingsclere
    June 18th 78
    My dear Charley & Eva
    I was very pleased to have your second letter to give us a better account of Eva. You must have had great anxiety. I am glad to hear your bonny boy is progressing nicely. We are again looking for a letter. We have had many losses in our family the last few years still the name of Neate bids ...... to continue here and to be transported into other quarters of the globe. We are expecting soon to have news from China. I hope theirs will be a son. I send you the marriage of SY Neate he seems determined to have a Dudley. Martha & Mary first intimation was the paper. They do not approve of divorcee people but feel some family will keep him happy and a good wife. She had more influence over him than any one else. He left off whisky after his last illness and they hope and pray this is the turning point in his life.
    Now I must tell you that Mr Meek has appointed Mr & Mrs Johnson to take charge of Aunt Frank & said certainly not take another house in Reading so they have decided on one at Keynesham 4 1/2 miles from Bristol. They have taken it on their own responsibility in the village low windows small garden & little greenhouse we invited aunt to come and see us but on Saturday I had a letter from her saying she could not come so I went up to Reading with Anna & baby to see her. When we got there Arthur and his wife had come up. Mr Meeks could not find the inventory Arthur made so Mr J wished him to make another so they were very busy. Today Mr J and Mary Benjamin take her by train in a first class carriage to stay a few days at Devizes at Mr B?s. The plate is to go as her luggage. Mr J returns this evening to help Martha pack and the furniture goes in two vans on Friday. ?Kill or cure I think?. Mr W Bavant & Arthur are to manage her money and of course Mr & Mrs Johnson are only delighted to get a home & furniture. Martha told me I was the only one that objected to their arrangement. She asked me to go to see them & I said I did not know. I feel it is a cruel thing to break up her home and for her to be under them at her age. I should not be surprised what may happen to her, she still threatens destruction.
    Now I must tell you how very much surprised I was to have a letter from Frank from Ceylon in May saying Emily Toms left for England by the Sultan on the 25th of April. I am sure you will be surprised and I hope glad to hear that I am engaged to her. I intend coming home for her in about four months time to be married?. Of course Mr & Mrs Toms are delighted, I am glad he has chosen a favourite of mine tho? he might have done better. The deesteres have not behaved well to either of them they say. I have heard from Aunt Toms they are in Birmgham at present but are moving. Emily says Mrs Dean is to decide on a house - I suppose suitable for the event to take place. Dear Franks visit to us will be very short I fear. Emily will come here I expect at the same time.
    I am glad to give a good account of Frank & Anna & the children, Mildred Mary is a fat dear little child, very lively, sleeps for three hours at a time, a great pet with us all. In April old Dr Humble died at Ramsgate, now this house comes to the first Mrs Humbles nieces. Mr Barnes of Winchester married one of the Miss Bishops, he has written to me today. He intends coming to see the property, I have not had much done, since I have been here 10 years - I have very heavy expenses.
    The weather is thundery with heavy rain & the farmers complain sadly about the hay & corn being injured by so much wet it will make every thing dearer.
    I saw old Collins last evening he is tolerable. I never see him but he asks for you, and he always says give my respects to him. Arthur got me a mowing machine it cost £6 but I got it for 5 shillings Wallace has repaired it & it makes the grass look very nice when mown it requires two to use it. I have had a man to do up the garden very few gooseberries the marrows will not be like they were when you attended to them. I expect your garden is perfection I hope business goes on satisfactorily & that you enjoy good health and getting rich.
    Only a few changes in Kingsclere. The house Mr Taplin lives in is to be sold it is doubtful about their remaining. Mr Carter Holding is come to live at the Grove he is chosen church warden with Mr Edwards. Mr H wants to leavel the graves. Mr Barnes does not approve of it. William Holding the nephew is a magistrel (sic) they cut quite a dash
    Frank Heanly came upstairs while I was writing to ask if he may write a few lines to you so I was obliged to take half a sheet to finish my letter. The new organ is an impressive one. Mary has to go to the church to practice & school rooms twice a week so she has her time fully taken up, 22 pupils also to teach at home. The racehorses here have been fortunate. Mr Porter has been so kind as to give flowers & ...... to the church decorations Frank & Anna do the crosses, with a few more to help - he made a dove with white pinks and white stocks it was much admired, a nice idea. We are in a bustle having two woman (sic) to clean the house. F & A and children are gone for a walk. The Edwards are well also the Barne?s the Drakes are coming to pay Edward a visit next week the (sic) live at Winchester. Charlotte is well I am sure I must name her kindly to you. She still has her school & lives in the same house.
    With our united kind love to you both & hoping to hear soon, Believe me

    Ever your affectate
    Mother

    This half page is written across the last page of the last letter

    My dear Charlie
    Only time to add our love to your wife & yourself; I am (& so is Anna) very glad you chose an uncommon name for your boy one not already in the family; it is so much more sensible in my opinion to have different names - I am very sorry to say I have not yet got any employment if you hear of anything suitable let me know & we will struggle to come out to you. I have answered advts till I am sick. Anna would write but is engaged with Mildred. She is such a pet, the boys grow very fast & are sometimes rather mischevious. We are going to take them out for a run so I must wind up - believe me
    very truely yours
    Frank E J Heanly

    since you appreciated our poor little presents you shall have some more the next opportunity

    --------------------------------------------------------------------------------

    Letter to Mabel (Mabel Neate, daughter of CJH Neate) dated 1915 from Mary Stephan Neate

    Mildred is Mildred Heanly, she was an artist as an adult.
    Richmond Phelps is Aubery Richmond Phelps, son of Emma Benjamin (daughter of Mary Benjamin nee Neate)
    George Neate of Newbury is George Whistler Neate, son of Arthur Webb Neate and Ellen Whistler
    Uncle Frank is Francis William Neate and (?) his second wife Ada
    Addie is Adeline Jaques

    Boscobel
    Wooben Green
    Bucks
    27th May 1915

    My dear Mabel

    I am so very sorry I have been so long answering your last letter, written 11 months ago, but you know what it is if one begins putting off things, & when it came I was so very glad to hear you had gone to live with your aunt & uncle that I meant to write at once, & say so for I think it such a nice arrangement & hope you continue all round to like it, I think it is quite the next best thing to having a house of your own. Mildred did not get home till March 8th. We were very anxious while she was on the sea, & very thankful she reached here safely, they had a few excitements, but no mishaps, life belts were served out all round at Malta, & port holes kept darkened at night from there, & cruisers escorted them up the Channel & to the mouth of the Thames, & now so many boats have been torpedoed we feel we cannot be thankful enough. Mildred brought home such a number of paintings she did of some of the grand views in the Himalayas, they were I think about 7000 feet high at Lebong, where they were for over a year, till Mr Spooner, brother of the friend M went with, was moved to Darjeeling, quite near but considerably higher & then down to Dinapore (now Dinajpur) on a branch of the Ganges, he being the Army Chaplain got moved when the Regiment came home to go to the Front, where so many of the officers they knew so well have been killed or wounded. M also did a number of Pastel Portraits amongst others the Maharajah of Cooch Behar & his wife (who was Baroda & educated in England & a very pretty & charming woman) his brother Prince Victor, & a cousin; she also painted a lot of scenery for they (sic) plays they got up at the club, & helped act in 1 or 2, so she did not have an idle time, & earned some money. I was not so well as usual last winter, had a tiresome cough, & shortness of breath, but was not really bad till a few days after M got home, them I had to give up & have breakfast in bed, & be very lazy, & between 2 & 3 weeks ago I woke early one morning feeling I could not breathe, M put mustard on front & back, & after coughing & gasping for some time I was able to relieve my chest, & felt better, but it was very exhausting, the Dr says it was not Bronchitis, but pressure on the bronchial nerve, I still get little reminders sometimes but hot cloths on the throat loosen the cough & give relief, I have been under a London Dr?s treatment for 2 or 3 years, & dont much expect ever to be really well & strong again at my age 72 last September, I am so thankful I did not break down till after M?s return, now she is doing everything she possibly can for me, my appetite is bad, but I am taking a strong tonic & hope soon to be some what better, & to be able to write and tell you so. I do not remember the name of Mr George at Kingsclere, what was he there? I am sure we never knew anybody of that name, to visit I mean. I am very sorry your eyes were troubling you, but hope you had an occulists opinion about them & that glasses have given you relief. Is not the war truly dreadful, Percy Heanly has joined for ?Home Defence?, Wilfreds elder boy is a sailor helping in coaling the Navy, Richmond Phelps is on the ?Ajax? somewhere in the North Sea & several other relatives & friends have joined. George Neate of Newbury I believe went from Canada to Melbourne & thought of joining the Army Medical Corps, if he did go to M. he probably went to the Whistlers relatives of his mother living there, meant to tell you before. I hope all your belongings are as well as when you wrote also the Jaques, thank you for the nice illustrated paper you kindly sent me for Xmas. I did not send to anybody this last Xmas. Very glad you liked M?s tiny likenesses. She joins me in love to you & your aunt & please tell her I had a letter from Mrs Dicksee not long ago, asking me to go to see her this summer, but I fear I shall not be well enough to pay many visits, your Uncle Frank & his wife want me to go to them near Bournemouth, but I cannot arrange any visits just yet.
    Hoping to hear from you soon your loving Auntie Mary.
    I am so sorry your Aunt Addie & I have not written to each other for so long, trust they are both well.


    Possibly died Wycombe, 1915.
     
    Neate, Mary Stephana (I00404)
     
    3531 Two possibilities on IGI. One born 1696 Great Bedwyn, the other 1701 Downton.
    Day: 18 Month: Mar Year: 1729 Groom Forenames: Francis Groom Surname: BAYLY Groom's parish: Devizes St John Groom's county: Wiltshire,England Groom's condition: Groom's occupation: gent Groom's age: 35 Groom's notes:
    Bride Forenames: Elizabeth Bride Surname: AXFORD Bride's parish: Devizes St John Bride's county: Wiltshire,England Bride's condition: Bride's age: 27 Bride's notes: Place of Marriage: St John Devizes Bondsman 1: NICHOLAS Edward,gent,St John Devizes Bondsman 2: Jurisdiction: The Bishop of Salisbury in Wiltshire and Berkshire
     
    Bayley, Francis (I02486)
     
    3532 Two possibilities on the IGI:
    One born 4.10.1693 St Pauls Covent Gardens, London to Bartholomew Evans and Eliz
    Other born 20.03.1709 Potton, Bedford to William Evans and Mary . See also a Thomas Squires born there in 1680??

    Buried:
    Bartholomew Evans 3rd Aug 1761

    Marriage Index
    Wm Edwards Ann Evans Ashwell 9 Jun 1768
    Wm Rangel Mary Evans Ashwell Banns 1 Mar 1758
    Bart Evans Anne Squire Ashwell 19 Apr 1732
    Chas Harradine Mary Evans Ashwell 25 Jul 1759 
    Evans, Bartholomew (I01572)
     
    3533 Two possiblities:
    Martha Vaisey of Monkton married Richard Walter of Yeatesbury in 1793. Bondsaman was Thomas Vaisey of Monkton.

    Day: 4 Month: Feb Year: 1793 Groom Forenames: Richard Groom Surname: WALTER Groom's parish: Yatesbury Groom's county: Wiltshire,England Groom's condition: Groom's occupation: Groom's age: Groom's notes:
    Bride Forenames: Martha Bride Surname: VAISEY Bride's parish: Monkton Bride's county: Wiltshire,England Bride's condition: Bride's age: Bride's notes: Place of Marriage: Bondsman 1: VAISEY Thomas, Monkton Bondsman 2: Jurisdiction: The Bishop of Salisbury in Wiltshire and Berkshire
    Wiltshire Memorial Inscription Index
    Forenames: Martha Surname: WALTER Place: Winterbourne Monkton County: Wiltshire Country: England Reference: 171491 Notes: wife of Richard

    Probably this one?
    Martha Vaisey of Preshute marrried Rich Cook of Preshute in 1797.
    Day: 4 Month: Apr Year: 1797 Groom Forenames: Richard Groom Surname: COOK Groom's parish: Preshute Groom's county: Wiltshire,England Groom's condition: Groom's occupation: Groom's age: Groom's notes:
    Bride Forenames: Martha Bride Surname: VAISEY Bride's parish: Preshute Bride's county: Wiltshire,England Bride's condition: Bride's age: Bride's notes: Place of Marriage: Bondsman 1: COOK John, Preshute Bondsman 2: Jurisdiction: The Bishop of Salisbury in Wiltshire and Berkshire
     
    Vaisey, Martha (I03932)
     
    3534 Two Samuel Harridines born within 3 years of each other-one to Samuel Harridine(labourer) Susan Willis and the other to William Harridine(Shepherd) and Bathseba Bryant.

    1841 Census High Street, Ashwell
    William Harradine 48 Ag Lab Born in county
    Bathsheba Harradine 45 Born in county
    George 24
    Peter 20
    Mary 17
    Charles 15
    William 9
    Caroline 3
    Samuel 9 months

    1861 Census: High Street, Ashwell, living next door to Bathsheba Harradine.
    William Harridine 47 Ag Lab Ashwell
    Mary or May 30 Wife Ashwell
    Samuel 5 son Ashwell
    Isabell 3 Daughter Ashwell
    Martha 1Daughter AShwell

    1861 Census High Street, Ashwell, Hertfordshire
    Bathsheba Harradine abt 1796 Ashwell, Hertfordshire, England Head Widow laundress Ashwell Hertfordshire
    George Harradine abt 1813 Ashwell, Hertfordshire, England Son Ashwell Hertfordshire
    Saml Harradine abt 1842 Ashwell, Hertfordshire, England Grandson(bastard croseed out) Ashwell Hertfordshire

    Trees Name: Samuel Harradine
    Birth: 27 Nov 1818 - Ashwell, Hertfordshire
    Marriage: 1 Apr 1838 - Ashwell, Hertfordshire
    Parents: William Harradine, Bathsheba Bryant
    Spouse: Anne Pickett

    1841 Census:
    RG number:
    HO107 Piece:
    446 Book/Folio:
    1/7 Page:
    9 Registration District:
    Royston & Buntingford Sub District:
    Royston EnumerationDistrict:
    Ecclesiastical Parish:
    Civil Parish:
    Ashwell Municipal Borough:
    Address:
    High Street, Ashwell County:
    Hertfordshire
    HARIDINE, Samuel M 22 1819 Hertfordshire
    HARIDINE, Ann F 23 1818 Hertfordshire
    HARIDINE, Emily F 2 1839 Hertfordshire

    1851 Census: Back Street
    Ann Harradine abt 1818 Ashwell, Hertfordshire, England Wife Ashwell Hertfordshire
    Ann Harradine abt 1843 Ashwell, Hertfordshire, England Daughter Ashwell Hertfordshire
    Emily Harradine abt 1839 Ashwell, Hertfordshire, England Daughter Ashwell Hertfordshire
    Samuel Harradine abt 1819 Ashwell, Hertfordshire, England Head Shepherd Ashwell Hertfordshire
    Sarah A Harradine abt 1845 Ashwell, Hertfordshire, England Daughter Ashwell Hertfordshire

    1861 Census:
    Sameul Harradine, shepherd, 40 years, widow
    Sarah Anne Harradine, daughter 16 years

    1871 Census:
    Back Street, Ashwell
    Samuel Harradine aged 52 married Shepherd/ag lab Ashwell, hertfordshire
    Martha Harradine aged 29 married Cambridge, Littlington

    1881 Census:
    Remarriage?
    Martha Harradine abt 1842 Littlington, Cambridgeshire, England Wife Back Street, Ashwell, Hertfordshire, England
    Samuel Harradine abt 1819 Ashwell, Hertfordshire, England Head Shepherd Back Street, Ashwell, Hertfordshire, England
    Samuel Harradine abt 1876 Ashwell, Hertfordshire, England Son Back Street, Ashwell, Hertfordshire, England
    William Harradine abt 1880 Ashwell, Hertfordshire, England Son Back Street, Ashwell, Hertfordshire, England

    1891 Census
    RG number:
    RG12 Piece:
    1101 Folio:
    13 Page:
    19 Registration District:
    Royston Sub District:
    Royston EnumerationDistrict:
    1 Ecclesiastical Parish:
    Ashwell Civil Parish:
    Ashwell Municipal Borough:
    Address:
    Back Street, Ashwell County:
    Hertfordshire
    HARRIDINE, Samuel Head Married M 72 1819 Shepherd
    Ashwell Hertfordshire
    HARRIDINE, Martha Wife Married F 49 1842 Litlington Cambridgeshire
    HARRIDINE, Samuel Son Single M 15 1876 Afflicted Ashwell Hertfordshire
    HARRIDINE, William Son M 10 1881 Scholar Ashwell Hertfordshire
    Possible death 1897 aged 78 years Royston District

    Other Samuel? Or Mine

    RG number:
    HO107 Piece:
    446 Book/Folio:
    1/5 Page:
    5 Registration District:
    Royston & Buntingford Sub District:
    Royston EnumerationDistrict:
    Ecclesiastical Parish:
    Civil Parish:
    Ashwell Municipal Borough:
    Address:
    Back Of Street, Ashwell County:
    Hertfordshire
    HARIDINE, Samuel M 25 1816 Hertfordshire
    HARIDINE, Esther F 22 1819 Hertfordshire
    HARIDINE, Priscilla F 4 1837 Hertfordshire
    HARIDINE, Emily F 2 1839 Hertfordshire
    HARIDINE, Samuel M 0 (6 months) 1841 Hertfordshire

    1861 Census:
    Ann Harradine abt 1843 Ashwell, Hertfordshire, England Daughter Buckland Surrey
    Emma Harradine abt 1849 Reigate, Surrey, England Daughter Buckland Surrey
    Esther Harradine abt 1818 Ashwell, Hertfordshire, England Wife Buckland Surrey
    Fanny Harradine abt 1851 Reigate, Surrey, England Daughter Buckland Surrey
    Saml Harradine abt 1816 Ashwell, Hertfordshire, England Head Malt Maker Buckland Surrey
    Saml Harradine abt 1841 Ashwell, Hertfordshire, England Son Labourer Buckland Surrey
    Thomas Harradine abt 1845 Ashwell, Hertfordshire, England Son Labourer Buckland Surrey

    1871 Census:Priory Road
    Esther Harradine abt 1818 Ashwell, Hertfordshire, England Wife Reigate Foreign Surrey
    Fanny Harradine abt 1851 Reigate, Surrey, England Daughter Domestic Servant Reigate Foreign Surrey
    Samuel Harradine abt 1816 Ashwell, Hertfordshire, England Head Shopman to Corn Merchant Reigate Foreign Surrey
    Samuel Harradine abt 1841 Ashwell, Hertfordshire, England Son Bricklayer Reigate Foreign Surrey
    Thomas Harradine abt 1846 Ashwell, Hertfordshire, England Son Bricklayer Reigate Foreign Surrey

    1881Census: Priory Road
    Augustus Harradine abt 1869 Reigate, Surrey, England Grandson Priory Road, Reigate Foreign, Surrey, England
    Esther Harradine abt 1818 Ashwell, Hertfordshire, England Wife Priory Road, Reigate Foreign, Surrey, England
    Samuel Harradine abt 1816 Ashwell, Hertfordshire, England Head Labourer Priory Road, Reigate Foreign, Surrey, England
    Samuel Harradine abt 1841 Ashwell, Hertfordshire, England Son Unmarried Bricklayer Priory Road, Reigate Foreign, Surrey, England
    Archybald Shore abt 1878 Reigate, Surrey, England Grandson Priory Road, Reigate Foreign, Surrey, England
    Henry Shore abt 1857 Reigate, Surrey, England Son in Law Widower Priory Road, Reigate Foreign, Surrey,
    .
    Other Samuel buried Hampstead 1889 aged 74 years.

    1881 - connection?

    Samuel HARRADINE Head M Male 62 Ashwell, Hertford, England Sheppard (Herd)
    Martha HARRADINE Wife M Female 39 Littlington, Cambridge, England
    Samuel HARRADINE Son Male 5 Ashwell, Hertford, England (Scholar)
    William HARRADINE Son Male 11 m Ashwell, Hertford, England

    --------------------------------------------------------------------------------
    Source Information:
    Dwelling Back Street
    Census Place Ashwell, Hertford, England
    Family History Library Film 1341343
    Public Records Office Reference RG11
    Piece / Folio 1411 / 12
    Page Number 18
     
    Harradine, Samuel (I01026)
     
    3535 Two Walter Goodlets chirstened in Uphall. One in 1720 son of John Goodlet and Marget Frood. The other in 1727 the son of George Goodlet and Janet Thompson.

    There is a marriage of a Walter Goodlet to a Helen Meek at Linlithgow in 1781. Second marraige or marriage of a son named Walter?? 
    Goodlet, Walter (I03394)
     
    3536 Two William Henry Browns on Wiltshire Memorial Index
    One died 15th Sept 1883, age 52, of Marlborough, buried Fisherton Anger, Wiltshire Ref #117978
    Also one 13 Jul 1900, age 69 years, husband of Alice, Market Lavington, Wiltshire Ref # 116929

    ?
    1881 Census: West Cholderton, Wiltshire, England:
    William D Brown, aged 55 years, farmer of 929 acres, born Hornington, Wiltshire,
    Ellen A Brown Bath, Somerset wife
    Children Ellen, Catherine and William H. Brown?

    Could Wife be Ellen not Louisa Brewer? 
    Brown, William Henry (I00438)
     
    3537 Two wills listed at PRO?
    Will of Sir Edmund Wright, Lord Mayor of London of Saint Olave Jewry, City of London 16 July 1647 PROB 11/201
    Written 1640 mentions himself Edmond Wright, knight and lord mayor of the city of London,
    Will of Sir Edmund Wright, Lord Major of City of London 22 August 1643 PROB 11/191

    Grocer and Lord Mayor of London on 1641.

    Possibility:??
    EDMUND WRYGHT Pedigree
    Christening: 24 NOV 1573 Nantwich, Cheshire, England
    Parents:
    Father: RONDULL WRYGHT

    London: - Marriage Licences, 1611-1828
    Burials.
    Marriage Licences Granted by the Bishop of London.
    1633.
    County: London
    Country: England
    05 Jun 1633 Edmund Wright, Citizen & Alderman of London, of St Olave's, Old Jury, Widower, 56, & Joane Bennett, 34, widow of John Bennett, of London, Esq.; at St Clement's Danes.

    Creator(s):
    Worshipful Company of Salters, c 1394-
    Salters' Company, c 1394-
    FILE - An Original Bundle - ref. H1/2/1 - date: 1376-1599
    item: [no title] - ref. H1/2/1/14 - date: 11th February 1632 -3
    [from Scope and Content] Award by Ralphe Whitefield, Grayes, Middlesex, Esq. John Herne Lincolnes Inne Middlesex, Esq. in a dispute between Edmund Wright Alderman and the Salers Company
    [from Scope and Content] Edmund Wright is to deliver to the Salters Company before 25th March next (1633) the counterpart of a lease 3rd December 42 Elizabeth I(see H1/2/1/13) and before then also quitclaim to the Salters all title to the said cellar etc. The Salters are to pay him £80 on his doing this

    London Metropolitan Archives
    PERSONAL PAPERS
    Catalogue Ref. PP
    Various Individuals: Catalogue O/280 - ref. O/280
    FILE - Agreement - ref. O/280/002 - date: 1629
    from Scope and Content] 1. Edmund Wright, cit. and Alderman of London

    House of Lords: Journal Office: Main Papers 1509-1700
    FILE - Main Papers - ref. HL/PO/JO/10/1/307 - date: 8 Jul 1661 - 26 Nov 1661
    [from Scope and Content] 3 Proviso saving certain lands, the inheritance of Sir Edmund Wright, and by him settled upon Lady Harrington.

    Name: Edmond Wright Sir Burial Date: 2 Aug 1643 Parish: St Lawrence Jewry COUNTY: London Borough: City of London Record Type: Burial
     
    Wright, Edmund (I02986)
     
    3538 Usual residence; Hill Green, via Clavering, Essex, England Burgess, Mary (I01105)
     
    3539 Very long will written in 1751. Proved 1769. Mentions deceased wife and her long illness. Herbert, Robert Sawyer (I08778)
     
    3540 Vicar General Marriage Licence:
    License Date : 14 Nov 1772 License Year: 1772 Bride Surname: HOPKINS Dual Date : 14 Nov 1772 Groom Surname: HEWITT

    ?
    Will of Margaret Hewitt, Widow of Walworth , Surrey 01 March 1832 PROB 11/1797
     
    Hopkins, Margaret (I06671)
     
    3541 Virginia Gleanings in England: Abstracts of 17th and 18th-century English
    : ".....Abstract of the nucaptive will of William West of Dedisham in the parish of Slinfold county Sussex 1610 ..taking a voyage to Virginia he did declare all his goods whatsover unto MARY BLUNT, the wife of RICHARD BLUNT, of Dedsham, Esq. and did then appoint the said Mary executrix. Proved June 21st 1616 by the said executrix. (In the fall of 1610 the Indians killed near the Falls of James River, Captain William West, nephew of Lord Delaware, presumably the testator)

    niece? daughter? of Lord Delaware.

    ...the new company-appointed governor, Thomas West, twelfth baron De La Warr,

    See "The Virginia Adventure, Roanoke to James Towne" by Ivor Noel Hume.
    Lord De La Warr's family name was Thomas West. He is mentioned quite a bit in the book, and on page 294 it speaks of him as spending the winter of 1610 in his fort at the James River falls, following John Smith's lead toward shifting the colony's administration inland to modern Richmond. The book goes on to say that his stay was not an unqualified success due to being constantly on the defensive against the Indians. "He had lost several men, including his nephew Captain William West, while others were taken prisoner or had narrow escapes."
     
    West, Mary (I10142)
     
    3542 Visitation of London 1568
    BARNES PEDIGREE.* Bartholomew Baron or Barnes of London, Mercer. Held Aldborough Hatch and^= other estates in the parish of Barking, Co. Essex : died in August 1548.
    Thomas Barnes of Aldborough Hatch, : and of London Gent, 28 years old in 1548 : had arms and crest granted January li) 1572, as Thomas Baron als. Barne the elder of Aldborough Hatch. (C 15-88 College of Arms.) Died in London June 2y 1573 ; buried at Barking July 7 following.

    Text: Inquisition taken at the Guildhall, 14 Jul [1549] , 3 Edward 6th, before Henry Amcottes, knight, Mayor and escheator, after the death of Bartholomew Barne, citizen and mercer of London, by the oath of Christopher Jackson, Thomas Jurdon, Robert Moldynge, William Wytte, John Baynton, John Layland, Thomas Dexyll, Thomas Pecooke, John Morrysse, John Sampson, John Trull and William Luddyngton, who say that Bartholomew Barne died 26 Aug [1548] , 2 Edward 6th; Thomas Barne is his son and next heir, and is now aged 28 years and more. Book: Burials. Collection: London: - Abstracts of Inquisitiones Post Mortem, City of London, 1485-1561
    Text: The said Bartholomew was also seised jointly with Joan Barne, his wife, of 18 messuages, cottages or tenements in London, to wit, 4 messuages in the parish of the Blessed Mary at Axe, 2 tenements in the parish of St. Martin in the Vyntrye, 1 messuage and 3 cottages thereto belonging in the parish of the Blessed Mary of Abchurch, 5 messuages in Candylwykestreet in the said parish of the Blessed Mary of Abchurch, and 3 messuages lying in St. Laurance Pounteney. Book: Burials. Collection: London: - Abstracts of Inquisitiones Post Mortem, City of London, 1485-1561
    Text: Bartholomew Barne was seised of 2 messuages, lying in the parish of St. Mildred the virgin in Bredstreete, London; 2 tenements lying in Westcheepe, in the parish of the Blessed Mary-le-Bow; 1 messuage with the shops, cellars, solars, etc., thereto belonging in the parish of St. Lawrence in Old Jewry, London; and 2 messuages in the parish of St. Bartholomew the Less in Bredstreet, London. Book: Burials. Collection: London: - Abstracts of Inquisitiones Post Mortem, City of London, 1485-1561

    Is it a brother or son who is involved in the following??
    The rectory.
    Grant to All Souls College.
    The rectory of Barking, which had been leased to Mary Blackenhall for 10l. per annum, in 1541, and consisted of all such tithes as had not been previously leased or granted to other persons (fn. 174) , was sold by the crown, (together with the advowson of the vicarage,) for the sum of 214l. 13s. 4d. to Robert Thomas, and Andrew Salter: this grant bears date the 1st of March 1550: the grantees, a few days afterwards, sold it to Thomas Baron, or Barnes. In the year 1557, Sir William Petre, William Cook, and Edward Napper, executors of the will of William Pownsett of Loxford, (who had been steward to the last abbess of Barking,) being desirous of bestowing the residue of his fortune (after discharging debts and legacies) on charitable uses, purchased of Thomas Barnes the said rectory and advowson; and by an indenture, bearing date that year, granted them to the warden and fellows of All Souls College in Oxford, on the following conditions: That they should suffer the vicar, and his successors, (presented by them,) to enjoy all the profits of the rectory and vicarage; the vicars to pray every Sunday for the soul of William Pownsett, his parents and benefactors, and all Christian souls; to keep a yearly obit on the 8th of March, when they were to pray as above mentioned, and for the souls of Pown sett's executors, distributing 6s. 8d. among the poor; and to pay the sum of 61. 13s. 4d. yearly to the warden and fellows, (5l. 8s. 8d. part of the said sum, being for the better support of two poor scholars, who should say masses for the souls of the persons above mentioned). All these conditions were confirmed by Bishop Bonner (fn. 176) .

    From: 'County of Essex: Barking', The Environs of London: volume 4: Counties of Herts, Essex & Kent (1796), pp. 55-110. URL: http://www.british-history.ac.uk/report.aspx?compid=45467 Date accessed: 28 February 2009.

    IPM 1549.

    St. Mary Colechurch 105/2
    Sixteenth and seventeenth centuries
    William Ettys lived in 2 in 1540, when the tenement was viewed to settle a dispute between the rector and churchwardens of St. Christopher, and Bartholomew Barnes, mercer, tenant of 145/39, which with 105/1A now belonged to the church of St. Mary le Bow. The viewers found that the little shop towards the street (1B) measured 8 ft. 1 in. (2.46 m.) E.-W. by 12 ft. 9 in. (3.89 m.) N.-S., and was 9 ft. high (2.74 m.); all above the shop belonged to Barnes. Behind the shop, the tenement (2) measured 42 ft. 2 in. (12.85 m.) N.-S. by 21 ft. 9 in. (6.63 m. E.-W.) at either end, between Barnes' land (145/39) and the lane. The rector, churchwardens, and parishioners then leased the tenement and shop, giving the measurements as before, to Barnes for 99 years at £3 rent. Barnes, who was also about to rebuild 145/39, was to pull down the tenement and rebuild it before Christmas 1542 with oak timbers of the same scantlings, and with as many storeys, as he was bound to rebuild the adjoining tenement. Thereafter he was to repair. William Ettys was to continue to live there after the rebuilding at the same rent or fine that anyone else was prepared to pay. The churchwardens could enter to view and distrain for arrears, and acquitted Barnes of all charges except the rent. Barnes was bound in £100 to perform these convenants. A view taken of 145/39 in 1542, when that had been rebuilt and 105/1A, the part of 105/1 associated with it, was 'now in taking down', gave slightly but not substantially different dimensions (8 ft. 4 in. by 12 ft. by 10 ft.; 2.54 m. by 3.66 m. by 3.05 m.) for 1B, the shop belonging to 105/2. (fn. 4)
    In 1543-4 and 1546-7 the churchwardens of St. Christopher's owed 10s. rent to the Crown, formerly due to Kilburn Priory, for a tenement in the parish of St. Mary Colechurch. This quit-rent was extinguished when the property itself passed to the Crown in 1548. The endowment of John Whatele's chantry was then worth £10. 13s. 4d., less chantry, obit, and quit-rent charges, including £1 to 'Lady Nerford's priest.' The property, probably incorporating 1B as well, was granted in September 1548 to William Gunter and William Hobson, together with 145/39 and 105/1A, and other properties, at 18 years purchase. 105/1B and 2 were valued at £3, according to the lease to Barnes, less £1 quit-rent to Lady Nerforde (sic). Gunter and Hobson, who bought many properties in London at this date and disposed of most of them very rapidly, probably sold 1B-2 to Bartholomew Baron (d. 1548) or his son John Baron, citizen and mercer. In 1551 John Baron, with his wife Elizabeth, granted and quitclaimed in the tenement with shops, cellar(s), solar(s), etc., representing 2 and probably 1B, lately occupied by his father and now by himself, to Robert Browne, citizen and goldsmith. In 1555 Robert Browne and his wife Margaret granted the same tenement back to John Baron, who still occupied it. (fn. 5)
    John Barnes (probably identical with John Baron) occupied a house worth £6. 13s. 4d. p.a. in this part of the parish (the last house listed in the tithe assessment) in 1558. Robert Mathewe occupied this house in 1571. Possibly 1B-2 was the messuage and curtilage in the parish of St. Mary Colechurch which Thomas Cranfield, mercer, and Edward Ockelshawe, haberdasher, recovered from William Leonard, mercer, in 1573; Leonard called Bartholomew Barnes, mercer, to warrant. In 1574 the communicants in Robert Mathewe's household consisted of himself, his wife, and 4 servants. Mr. Draper held the last house in the parish list in 1602, and Edward Draper in 1612 and 1619- 22. Mr. Abel, holding a house valued at £24, is the most probable tenant or occupant in 1638. (fn. 6)

    From: 'St. Mary Colechurch 105/2', Historical gazetteer of London before the Great Fire: Cheapside; parishes of All Hallows Honey Lane, St Martin Pomary, St Mary le Bow, St Mary Colechurch and St Pancras Soper Lane (1987), pp. 418-420. URL: http://www.british-history.ac.uk/report.aspx?compid=5791. Date accessed: 10 November 2008.

    St Mary Le Bow
    During the early 16th century several parts of the property were vacant and the property brought in very much less rent than it had done (cf. table at end). It is not possible to identify the company's expenditure on maintenance, but the buildings had probably fallen into a poor state of repair. In 1524 Bartholomew Baron, mercer, obtained a lease from the company of the tenement and seld called the Crown for a term of 50 years from 1525 at £6 rent. Baron was to be responsible for repairs and within 3 years was to pay £100 towards the cost of new tenements, shops, and warehouses there; he was only to let or grant parts of the property to freemen of the Mercers' Company. His rent was said to have been reduced from £7. 14s., which had been the annual total received from tenants between 1517 and 1519, and probably amounted to the total rent which could be received if all parts of the property were let. In 1529 this lease was assigned to John Hare, mercer, who was probably living there in 1541 and 1544. In May 1550, when the company wished to raise money with which to buy back from the king certain properties which had been held as endowments for chantries, 33 was sold to John Hare and John Blundell, mercers, and their heirs and assigns for £120, a sum which was presumably calculated as 20 years' purchase, since it was probably known that the total of £3. 3s. 8d. quit-rent due was shortly to be eliminated. At the time of this grant John Hare occupied the property. He continued to live there until his death in 1565,

    From: 'St. Mary le Bow 104/33', Historical gazetteer of London before the Great Fire: Cheapside; parishes of All Hallows Honey Lane, St Martin Pomary, St Mary le Bow, St Mary Colechurch and St Pancras Soper Lane (1987), pp. 351-363. URL: http://www.british-history.ac.uk/report.aspx?compid=2997. Date accessed: 10 November 2008.Mercer.

    The Environs of London.... Daniel Lysons. 1811
    Newberry Farm:
    ...The Manor Farm of Newberrry lying between the /london road and Aldborough hatch was at the dissolution of Barking Abbey (to whom it had belonged) on lease to Lawerence Grey at the rent of 6l per annum. It was granted by Henry V111 to Sir Richard Gresham. Bartholomew Baron or Barnes died seised of it in 1548. Thomas Barnes his son sold it in 1566 to Thomas Yale and Joan his wife..."

    Did he also have a son Bartholomew alsias Barnes. One has a will dated 1602 in which he gives the company of mercers 300l.

    Widford
    ...In 1589 his son and heir Henry Adams conveyed it together with forty messuages, a water-mill, free warren, free fishery and view of frankpledge to Bartholomew Barnes, sen., and Bartholomew Barnes, jun. (fn. 29) A Bartholomew Barnes, probably the younger, citizen and mercer of London, settled it in 1608 on Elizabeth, one of his three daughters, the wife of Roland Backhouse, (fn. 30) also citizen and mercer of London. Their grandson, William Backhouse (son of Nicholas, a younger son of Roland), created a baronet in 1660, sold it with the water-mill, warren, fishery, and frankpledge to William Bird (fn. 31) of Martocks in Ware. Thomas Bird, according to Chauncy, was lord of the manor in 1700. (fn. 32)

    From: 'Parishes: Widford', A History of the County of Hertford: volume 3 (1912), pp. 402-406. URL: http://www.british-history.ac.uk/report.aspx?compid=43632 Date accessed: 25 February 2009.

    London viewers and their certificates, 1508-1558. Bristish History Online
    146. [B.141] 30 July 1540.
    Parish of St. Pancras. Variance between the parson and churchwardens of the parish of St. Christopher and Bartholomew Barnes, mercer, concerning a certain stone wall standing on the E side of the ground of Barnes adjoining against the tenement belonging to the parson and churchwardens. The view is with assent and consent of the parties. The viewers say that the ground of Barnes, with the thickness of the stone wall also belonging to him, is 30 ft. 7 in. in breadth at the N end between the W side of the tenement of the parson and churchwardens stretching westward to the little lane there called Pupkyrtell Lane. And stretching [southward] from the [NW] corner post of the said tenement of St. Christopher's 45 ft. to the SW corner post of the tenement, Barnes' ground and wall is 26 ft. 4 in. in breadth stretching westward to the little lane. All which premises aforerehearsed the viewers affirm to be true. Without etc.
    147. [B.142] (fn. 2) Parish of St. Pancras. Variance between the parson and churchwardens of St. Christopher and Bartholomew Barnes, mercer, concerning a certain tenement with a shop. The view is with assent and consent of both parties. The viewers say that the shop is 8 ft. 1 in. in breadth against the street E and W and in length from the street southward 12 ft. 10 in. There it is 8 ft. 10 in. in breadth and it is 9 ft. in height. The shop is line right and plumb and belongs to the parson and churchwardens in length, breadth, and heighth. All over the shop at . . . belongs to Barnes. The tenement at the S end of the shop is 42 ft. 2 in. in length from the same . . . And it is 21 ft. 9 in. in breadth at both ends between the ground of Barnes [on the W] and the little alley there on the E. By all the length . . . thereof line right and plumb it belongs to the parson and churchwardens. 'All which premises in manner and form aforerehearsed the said iiii viewers affirm to be true'. Without etc.

    From: 'File of Viewers' Reports 1509-46 [B]: 1540-46 (nos 143-205', London viewers and their certificates, 1508-1558: Certificates of the sworn viewers of the City of London (1989), pp. 58-84. URL: https://www.british-history.ac.uk/report.aspx?compid=36058 Date accessed: 25 February 2009.

    163. [B. 158] 4 March 1542.
    Parish of Our Blessed Lady of Bow. [No variance stated]. The viewers have been charged to view at the request and desire of the parson and churchwardens of the parish church and by the assent and consent of the parson and churchwardens of St. Christopher, for the purpose of viewing and measuring all the ground belonging to the parson and churchwardens of Bow and new and old buildings set in the parishes of Our Lady of Colechurch and St. Pancras. The viewers say that the great new house lately built by Bartholomew Barnes, mercer, who holds the ground in lease from the parson and churchwardens of Bow, is 28 ft. 8 in. in breadth from the NW corner principal post of the house stretching eastward by the king's highway of Westcheap to the NE corner principal post. And the house with its appurtenances is 116 ft. 10 in. in length on the W side from the said NW corner post stretching southward along by Tupkyrtell Lane (fn. 6) to St. Pancras church. And it is 110 ft. in length on the E side from the NE principal corner post stretching southward to the church of St. Pancras. And the ground with the old house of the parson and churchwardens of Bow, now being taken down, is 16 ft. 4½ in. in length from the said NE corner post of the new house stretching eastward, and there the ground and old housing is [?10] ft. 8 in. in breadth from Westcheap stretching southward to the ground there of the parson and churchwardens of St. Christopher's. Stretching 8 ft. 4 in. more eastward [from the 16 ft. 4½ in.] by the street side to a lane called Byrd Alley, (fn. 7) that measure of 8 ft. 4 in. E and W belongs to the parson and churchwardens of St. Christopher's. And the ground is 12 ft. in depth from the NE corner post of an old house on the same ground stretching southward by the lane. And the first storey of the old house is 10 ft. in height from the ground and pavement of the street to the upper part of the joists of the first floor, which first storey by all the 10 ft. in height, 8 ft. 4 in. E and W, and 12 ft. N and S, line right and plumb, belongs wholly to the parson and churchwardens of St. Christopher's. And from the first storey and floor above the said 10 ft. height by all the measure of 8 ft. 4 in. E and W and 12 ft. N and S, upright line right and plumb, belongs wholly to the parson and churchwardens of Bow. All which premises the iiii viewers affirm to be true. Without etc.
    Both this view and the one immediately preceding it were apparently taken for the purpose of ascertaining the dimensions of premises Barnes was about to lease from the parson and churchwardens. The lease, dated 9 August 1540, recites the fact of the view and the dimensions given in this certificate. See Wills, Leases and Memoranda in the Book of Records, Parish of St. Christopher le Stocks, ed. Edwin Freshfield (1895), p. 13. See reference to the lease in 163 below.

    From: 'File of Viewers' Reports 1509-46 [B]: 1540-46 (nos 143-205', London viewers and their certificates, 1508-1558: Certificates of the sworn viewers of the City of London (1989), pp. 58-84. URL: https://www.british-history.ac.uk/report.aspx?compid=36058 Date accessed: 25 February 2009.

    From: 'File of Viewers' Reports 1509-46 [B]: 1540-46 (nos 143-205', London viewers and their certificates, 1508-1558: Certificates of the sworn viewers of the City of London (1989), pp. 58-84. URL: https://www.british-history.ac.uk/report.aspx?compid=36058 Date accessed: 25 February 2009.

    Barnes (Baron), Bartholomew (fl. 1524, d. 1548), mercer, f. of Thomas & John. St. Mary le Bow 33 (s), 43, St. Mary Colechurch 1-2, 3; St. Olave Old Jewry 1 or 2 (r); St. Pancras Soper Lane 39 (r)

    From: 'Index of Persons - B', Historical gazetteer of London before the Great Fire: Cheapside; parishes of All Hallows Honey Lane, St Martin Pomary, St Mary le Bow, St Mary Colechurch and St Pancras Soper Lane (1987). URL: http://www.british-history.ac.uk/report.aspx?compid=22622 Date accessed: 25 February 2009.

    Will of Roberte Barnes or Bernes, Mercer of London 02 December 1562 PROB 11/45
    Sentence of Edward Baron 02 December 1573 PROB 11/55
    Will of William Baron, Mercer of London 14 June 1570 PROB 11/52
     
    Barnes, Bartholomew Baron alias (I05431)
     
    3543 Visitation of London says husband is John Worsopp.

    Name: John Worshopp Burial Date: 14 Apr 1570 Parish: St Botolph, Bishopsgate County: London Borough: City of London Record Type: Burial Register Type: Parish Register

    Boyd's Inhabitants has Edward Worsop dying 1594, Clapham, Surrey??
    1576 WARSOP THO CLAPHAM SURREY
    1584 WORSOP BARTH CLAPHAM SURREY
    1586 WORSOP THO CLAPHAM SURREY
    1594 WORSOP EDW CLAPHAM SURREY 1595 WORSOP JN CLAPHAM SURREY

    Edward Worsop buried 1582 Christ Church, Newgate Street, London
    Edward Worsop buried 1597 at St Peter Cornhill, London.
    John Worsop buried 1570 St Boltoph Without Bishopgate

    Will of Edward Worsopp or Worsop, Mercer of London 07 May 1563 PROB 11/46

    There was a John Worsop scrivner or court hand writer in London at this time?? Any relative, father??
    Will of John Worsopp, Scrivener of London 07 November 1538 PROB 11/27

    Edward Worsop's A Discoverie of Sundrie Errours and Faults Daily Committed by Landemeaters ... published in 1582 contains some amusing anecdotes about estate surveying and surveyors as well as some necessary geometry.

    Father??
    Will of Edward Worsopp or Worsop, Mercer of London 07 May 1563 PROB 11/46

    Mother?
    Text: 1563 Worsopp, Elizabeth, wyef of Edward Worsop, cittezen and mercer of London 18 Chayre Book: 1558 to 1583. Collection: England: Canterbury - Wills Proved in The Prerogative Court of Canterbury, 1558-1583 (A-Z)

    Worsopps of Clapham-any relationship??
    Text: 1595 Worsopp, John, gent., Clapham, Surrey 22 Scott Book: 1584 to 1604. Collection: England: Canterbury - Wills Proved in The Prerogative Court of Canterbury 1584-1604
    Text: 1538 Worsopp, John, St. Vedaste, etc., London; Clapham, Surrey F. 22 Dyngeley Book: 1383 to 1558. Collection: England: Canterbury - Wills Proved in The Prerogative Court of Canterbury, 1383-1558 (K-Z)
    Text: Anthony Gamage was seised in his demesne as of fee of 1 messuage situate in Fryday strete in the parish of St. Matthew in Frydaystreet in the Ward of Bredstreete, London, now or late in the occupation of Richard Wright; 1 capital messuage situate in the parish of St. Pancras in Westchepe, London, in the tenure of the said Anthony Gamage at the time of his death, and now in the occupation of Alice Gamage his relict; and 1 messuage situate in Dystaffe Lane in the parish of St. Margaret Moyses, London, now or late in the occupation of John Warsop. Book: Jnder to Wills Proved and Administrations Granted in the Commissary Court of the manor of Evington, 1581-1800. Collection: London: - Inquisitiones Post Mortem, City of London, 1577-1603
    Text: Before the death of Thomas Pierson one Richard Bowland, gent., was seised of 1 messuage with shops, cellars, &c. lying in the parish of St. Pancras within the city of London sometime in the tenure of John Worsoppe; and 3 shops, cellars, warehouses and buildings situate within the said parish, and being so seised he on 10 Apr [1569] 11 Eliz. enfeoffed thereof the said Thomas Pierson and Joan his wife: to hold to them and to the heirs of the said Thomas for ever. Book: Burials. (Burial) Collection: England: London - Inquisitiones Post Mortem For The City of London, 1561-1577

    Son??
    Will of John Worsopp, Mercer of London 22 May 1630 PROB 11/157

    ?
    Name: Bathelomew Worsopp Baptism Date: 18 Jun 1584 Parish: Holy Trinity, Clapham County: Surrey Borough: Lambeth Parent(s): John Worsopp Record Type: Baptism Register Type: Parish Register
     
    Worsopp, John (I05516)
     
    3544 Visitation of Wiltshire, 1623
    ...Rob. Nicholas of Allcanings=|=Elizb. da. of Phill. Sheldon of in com. Wilts. Liveinge 1623. Spatchlcy in com. Worcest. PhilL Sonne & hey. setat. 6 weekes 1623,
    [no title] 212B/230 1609 Sept. 20
    Contents: (1) Robert Nicholas, gent., of Coate. Thomas Nicholas, gent., of Coate. Daniel Elson, gent., of Coate.
    (2) John Weston, yeoman, of Coate.
    Enfeoffment of one messuage, 24 acres called Collcattes, a tenement called Joppers and 72 acres of arable land in Coate, par. Bishops Canning
    Wiltshire notes and Queries: The Robert Nicholas, minor, of the All- cannings register, baptized 22nd Nov. 1597, was apparently a son of Edward, of Allcannings, by his wife Katharine, daughter of Richard Francklyn. In 1623 the year of his father's burial the son Robert was himself married to Elizabeth, daughter of Philip Sheldon, of Spatchley, co. Worcester, and had a son Philip six weeks old. See Harl. MS. No. 1165, fol. 38.
     
    Nicholas, Robert (I04406)
     
    3545 Vol 8 of Sussex Arch. Journals are quite clear on the wives of Goddard and Thomas and in the footnotes for proofs they say that Visitation is wrong.
    The marriage of Elizabeth Echyngham, daughter of Thomas to Goddard Oxenbridge as his first wife and Anne Fiennes was his second wife. Thomas was son of Elizabeth and Goddard and he passed the land on down to his daughter who married Robert Trywhit. The Vol 8 as noted by Tim Powey=Libby is very clear and helpful on this family.

    Descendants of Goddard Oxenbridge

    1 Goddard Oxenbridge - 1530/31
    . +Elizabeth Echyngham 1460 -
    ........ 2 Thomas Oxenbridge 1501 - 1540
    ............ +Elizabeth Putenham - 1529
    ................... 3 Elizabeth Oxenbridge 1529 - 1589
    ....................... +Robert Tyrwhit 1510 - 1581
    .............................. 4 Robert Tyrwhit
    .................................. +Bridget Manners
    .............................. 4 Ursula Tyrwhit
    .................................. +Edmund Sheffield
    .............................. 4 Elizabeth Tyrwhit
    .............................. 4 Anne Tyrwhit
    .................................. +Thomas Dalton
    .............................. 4 Francis Tyrwhit
    .............................. 4 Margaret Tyrwhit
    .............................. 4 William Tyrwhit
    .............................. 4 Katherne Tyrwhit
    .................................. +Henry Darcy
    ........ *2nd Wife of Thomas Oxenbridge:
    ............ +Faith Devenish
    ................... 3 son Oxenbridge
    ................... 3 daughter Oxenbridge
    *2nd Wife of Goddard Oxenbridge:
    . +Anne Fiennes 1474 - 1531
    ........ 2 Margaret Oxenbridge
    ............ +John Thatcher
    ........ 2 Mary Catherine Oxenbridge
    ............ +James Barnham
    ........ 2 Elizabeth Oxenbridge
    ........ 2 William Oxenbridge
    ........ 2 Robert Oxenbridge
     
    Fiennes, Anne (I09942)
     
    3546 Was Henry a tailor?

    ?
    Name: Henry Liscombe Baptism Date: 5 Oct 1638 Parish: St Dunstan and All Saints County: Middlesex Borough: Tower Hamlets Parent(s): Thomas Liscombe, Ellen Liscombe Record Type: Christening. Of Ratcliffe. Mariner?

    "John the son of Henry Lipscombe by Anne his wife was baptised the first of March 1667, St John at Hackney"

    "Henry Lipscomb was buried the 11th April, 1679, St John at Hackney"

    1688 Lipscomb Henry, son of Henry, Hackney, Middlesex, tailor, to Thomas Roberts, 20 Jul 1688, Armourers' and Braziers' Company 1694 Lipscombe Benjamin, son of Henry, Hackney, Middlesex, tailor (deceased), to Samuel Hatton, 29 Jun 1694, Plumbers' Company

     
    Lipscombe, Henry (I06884)
     
    3547 Was Reginald married 3 times:

    1. Name: Reginald Crook Mount
    Date of Registration: Apr-May-Jun 1872
    Registration district: St Giles
    Inferred County: London
    Volume Number: 1b
    Page Number: 854


    2. Name: Reginald Crook Mount
    Estimated Birth Year: abt 1851
    Age: 28
    Spouse Name: Agnes Annie Clark
    Spouse Age: 21
    Record Type: Marriage
    Event Date: 24 Apr 1879
    Parish: Bloomsbury St George
    Borough: Camden
    Father Name: Henry Constantine Mount
    Spouse Father Name: Joseph Henry Clark
    Register Type: Parish Register (listed as bachelor)

    3.Name: Reginald C Mount
    Spouse Surname: Witherington
    Date of Registration: Jul-Aug-Sep 1920
    Registration district: Reading
    Inferred County: Berkshire
    Volume Number: 2c
    Page Number: 1122
    Name: Marion A Witherington
    Spouse Surname: Mount
    Date of Registration: Jul-Aug-Sep 1920
    Registration district: Reading
    Inferred County: Berkshire
    Volume Number: 2c
    Page Number: 1122


    1881 Census: Reading, Berkshire, England
    Name: Reginald C Mount Age: 40 Estimated Birth Year: abt 1851 Relation: Head Spouse's Name: Agnes A Mount Gender: Male Where born: Hagcup, Worcestershire, England Civil parish: St Giles Ecclesiastical parish: St Peter Town: Reading County/Island: Berkshire Country: England
    Reginald C Mount 40 Agnes A Mount 32 Sydney C Mount 7 Escar P Mount 4 Wilfred R Mount 2 Dorothy F Mount 1 Agnes C Rowland 35 Ellen Tyrrell 22 Martha Burt 31 Gertrude E Manners 22 Sarah Agnes Manners 5

    1911 Census:Reading, Berkshire, England
    Name: Reginald Crook Mount Age in 1911: 60 Estimated Birth Year: abt 1851 Relation to Head: Head Gender: Female Birth Place: Hagley, Worcestershire, England Civil parish: Reading County/Island: Berkshire Country: England Street Address: 7 Broadway Bdgs, Station Rd, Reading Marital Status: Married Occupation: None Registration district: Reading Registration District Number: 121 Sub-registration district: St Giles ED, institution, or vessel: 31 Household schedule number: 239 Piece: 6610


    ?
    Name: Reginald C Mount Birth Date: abt 1850 Date of Registration: Oct-Nov-Dec 1934 Age at Death: 84 Registration district: Hatfield Inferred County: Hertfordshire Volume: 3a Page: 957

     
    Mount, Reginald Crook (I10484)
     
    3548 WATSON-WALKER - June 19, at St. Mary's Church, Balmain, by the Rev. Canon O'Reily, William George Watson, M.A., M B., M.R.C.S., L., &c., eldest son of William Watson, Esq., of Balmain, to Emily Jane, eldest daughter of Captain David Walker, of Balmain.(Sydney Morning Herald 12.07.1873 )

    Australian Dictionary of Bibliography
    WATSON, WILLIAM WALKER RUSSELL (1875-1924), soldier, dentist and company director, was born on 19 May 1875 at Balmain, Sydney, son of native-born parents William George Watson, surgeon, and his wife Emily Jane, née Walker. Educated at Sydney Boys' High School (where he was a cadet bugler) and the University of Sydney, Watson entered the dental profession. He joined the New South Wales Scottish Rifles and in 1896 was commissioned second lieutenant in the 4th Infantry Regiment.
    He served as a lieutenant, New South Wales Mounted Rifles, in the South African War. As a staff officer in the 2nd Imperial Mounted Infantry Corps, he was dispatched to demand the surrender of Pretoria; under heavy fire at Dainsfontein, he risked his life to rescue a wounded man. For his service in the Orange Free State, Cape Colony and the Transvaal, he was mentioned in dispatches and promoted captain. In 1902 he commanded the New South Wales detachment of the Australian Coronation Corps at the crowning of King Edward VII. Watson was promoted major in 1905 and lieutenant-colonel in 1912. On 9 November 1904, at St Mark's Church, Darling Point, Sydney, he had married Minnie Sarah, daughter of Samuel Hordern and sister of (Sir) Samuel Hordern they were to remain childless.
    Watson was appointed commanding officer of the infantry battalion of the Australian Naval and Military Expeditionary Force raised in August 1914 to seize German Pacific territories. Virtually unopposed, by December his troops had secured New Britain, New Guinea, New Ireland, Nauru, and the Admiralty and Solomon Islands. In January 1915 he returned to Australia with Colonel William Holmes both gave evidence before a court of inquiry into looting by the A.N. & M.E.F.
    On 16 March Watson took command of the 24th Battalion, Australian Imperial Force, and reached Gallipoli on 5 September. As his brigade commander Colonel Richard Linton had died at sea after a troopship had been torpedoed, Watson temporarily commanded the 6th Brigade for its landing. On the night of 10-11 September the 24th took over positions at Lone Pine. In addition to hardship caused by the onset of cold weather, they suffered casualties from suffocation in the shallow tunnels and dug-outs when the Turks bombarded them in November. During the evacuation of Gallipoli, Watson successfully commanded the 6th Brigade rear parties; for his service on the peninsula he was appointed C.B. and again mentioned in dispatches.
    In March 1916 the 24th Battalion sailed for France and in April moved into the line at Fleurbaix. Near Albert, on the night of 7-8 August a shell burst in an old gun-pit occupied by battalion headquarters. Watson was the sole survivor. Admitted to hospital with shell-shock, he resumed command on 12 October. He took charge of the 2nd Division Training School in November. In May 1917 he resumed command of the 24th Battalion, but in July returned to England where he had charge of the 17th Brigade; in September he was appointed commandant of the Overseas Training Depot near Warminster. He immediately convened a court martial to deal with outstanding cases, re-wrote standing orders and introduced more effective training programmes. He was promoted colonel on 1 June 1918. Desertion by Australian troops on leave in England had increased. On one occasion, when a draft paraded before returning to France, a soldier protested that he would not go unless he were carried. Watson had him tied to an ambulance and dragged with the draft until he begged to be released. In December Watson was appointed C.M.G.; in January 1919 he became commander of the A.I.F. depot at Sutton Veny.
    From April until July Watson took special leave to participate in the A.I.F. non-military employment scheme and was involved in the manufacture of cardboard at Anthony Hordern & Sons in London. He embarked for Australia in September and was awarded the Légion d'honneur in December. After demobilization he became chairman of directors of Cumberland Paper Board Mills Ltd, a member of the New South Wales Club and the National Club, and an adherent of the National Party.
    Allegedly as the result of a chill caught at the funeral of Brigadier General Henry Finn, Watson died in Sydney of septicaemia on 30 June 1924 and was buried with Anglican rites in South Head cemetery. He was survived by his wife. Typical of the better A.I.F. commanders, he was respected by his troops; he was intensely loyal to them, but would not tolerate those who sought to evade their responsibilities.
     
    Watson, William Walker Russell (I00823)
     
    3549 Web site has Elizabeth??

    Parents ?
    Name: Richard Rose, bachelor of St Andrews Holborn Marriage Date: 15 Aug 1724 Parish: St George The Martyr, Queen Square County: Middlesex Borough: Camden Spouse: Elizabeth Philipps of St Andrews Holborn, widow Record Type: Marriage
    ?
    Name: Tho Rose Marriage Date: 1 Jan 1726 Parish: St Andrew, Holborn County: London Borough: Camden Spouse: Mary James Record Type: Marriage Register Type: Parish Register
    ?
    Children:
    Name: Mary Rose Baptism Date: 12 Oct 1729 Parish: St Andrew Holborn County: London Borough: City of London Parent(s): Richard Rose, Eliz Rose Record Type: Baptism of Ballowin Gardens.
    Name: Thomas Rose Baptism Date: 29 Apr 1733 Parish: St Andrew Holborn County: London Borough: City of London Parent(s): Richard Rose, Elizabeth Rose Record Type: Christening of Saffron Hill
    Name: Martha Rose Baptism Date: 12 Feb 1734/1735 Parish: St Andrew Holborn County: London Borough: City of London Parent(s): Richard Rose, Eliz Rose Record Type: Christening of Blew Court
    Name: Sarah Rose Baptism Date: 31 Mar 1737 Parish: St Sepulchre, Holborn County: London Borough: City of London Parent(s): Richard Rose, Elizabeth Rose of St Johns StreetRecord Type: Baptism Register Type: Parish Register
    Name: Elizabeth Rose Baptism Date: 18 Nov 1740 Parish: St Andrew, Holborn County: London Borough: Camden Parent(s): Richard Rose, Elizabeth Rose of Saffron Hill Record Type: Christening Register Type: Parish Register

    Name: Richd Rose of Saffon Hill Burial Date: 10 Apr 1739 Parish: St Andrew, Holborn County: London Borough: Camden Record Type: Burial Register Type: Parish Register

    ?
    Name: Alexander Rose Baptism Date: 27 Feb 1687 Parish: St Andrew, Holborn County: London Borough: Camden Parent(s): Jeremiah Rose, Ann Rose Record Type: Christening Register Type: Parish Register
     
    Rose (I05511)
     
    3550 Went to Canada Cameron, Jean (I04060)
     

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