1620 - 1681 (~ 60 years)
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Name |
Smith, Henry |
Christened |
11 Feb 1620 |
St Mary Aldermanbury, London, England |
Gender |
Male |
Buried |
9 Jan 1681 |
St Mary Aldermanbury, London, England |
Person ID |
I04495 |
My Genealogy |
Last Modified |
15 Jun 2015 |
Father |
Smith, Thomas, c. 17 Jan 1574, St Margaret Moyses, London, England , bur. 8 Jun 1666, Aldermanbury, London, England (Age ~ 92 years) |
Mother |
Robinson, Jane, c. 12 Sept 1585, St Mary Le Bow, London, England , d. 1626-1666, Of London, England (Age ~ 80 years) |
Married |
01 Nov 1608 |
St Olave Hart Street, London, England |
Family ID |
F01048 |
Group Sheet | Family Chart |
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Notes |
- Mentioned in will of Archdale Palmer
Possibility??
Will of Henry Smith, Merchant of London 07 February 1682 PROB 11/369
Never married, mentions sister Jane Gore, brother Thomas and John Smith, father Thomas Smith, cousins Mary Peacock, Martha Watson and Jane Herringe. Estate in Harborne Tarrant. (Birmington?)
? Will of Mary Peacock St Martin in the Fields, Middlesex 22 May 1716 November 1717
Boyds has a James Peacock of St Helens, citizen and skinner, will dated 1641 who married a Mary Smith widow of Thomas Skin of St Ann Aldergate by licence 1612? Could this be the sister of Thomas born 1575. Leaves will dated 1642.
Will of James Peacock or Peacocke, Skinner of Saint Ann and Saint Agnes Aldersgate, City of London 10 September 1641 PROB 11/187
Will of Mary Peacocke or Peacock, Widow of Saint Helen Bishopsgate, City of London 28 March 1642 PROB 11/188
?
At the Skinners Company: The Peacock Cup. A silver peahen with two peachicks ; one other is lost. It forms a "loving cup " on the head being removed ; it is 16 j inches high, and weighs 62 oz. 10 dwts. On the foot of the cup is a coat of arms, In a lozenge, a chevron ermine between three esquires' helmets. The ground of the foot is embossed with figures of reptiles, turtles, snails, and tree-roots. On the base is inscribed, " The gifte of Mary, ye davghter of Richard Robinson, and wife to Thomas Smith and James Peacock, Skinn*", 1642." There is no plate-mark.
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