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Ancestry Solutions'
Ancestral Collectives
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Matches 1,151 to 1,200 of 4,853
| # |
Notes |
Linked to |
| 1151 |
Both widowed. Her father Thomas Barrett, labourer, deceased. Witnesses George Aylett and Harriett Allen. | Family (F3945)
|
| 1152 |
BOULDINGElizabeth Boulding of Ashford, widow PRC17 - 82/48328 June 1716to sister in law of dec'd husband Eliz. wife of Wm Story, husb - 20shsister in law Rebecca Sutton, [implies that Rebecca's mother as a Hills, married a man surnamed Boulding] wife of Daniel Sutton of Hinxhill to have residue.Exor :Rebecca SuttonWitness: Wm & Mary GorhamProbate: 2 Nov 1717 to Rebecca Sutton [bur 16 Oct 1717]Inventory PRC 11 - 73/111
SURNAME GIVEN NAME RESIDENCE YEAR WILL TYPE VOLUME FOLIO FHL FILM #
BOULDING Elizabeth Ashford 1716-1717 AD 17 RW 82 483 0188983 | HILLS, Rebecca (I11855)
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| 1153 |
BOYTON, a parish, in the union of Launceston, partly in the hundred of Black Torrington, N. division of the county of Devon, but chiefly in that of Stratton, E. division of Cornwall, 5 miles (N. by W.) from Launceston; containing, with the hamlet of Northcott, in Devon, 600 inhabitants. It comprises between 4000 and 5000 acres: the soil is clay, and in general very shallow, the surface rather hilly; there is a considerable quantity of coppice. The Bude and Launceston, or Tamar, canal intersects the parish. A fair is held on August 5th. The living is a perpetual curacy, net income, £123; patron, the Rev. G. Prideaux; impropriator, H. Thompson, Esq. Between this place and North Tamerton is an ancient thatched building, called Hornacott Chapel, now occupied by a labourer.
[Source: "Boxworth - Brackley." A Topographical Dictionary of England. Ed. Samuel Lewis. London: S Lewis, 1848. 323-326. British History Online. Web. 7 May 2017. http://www.british-history.ac.uk/topographical-dict/england/pp323-326.]
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Boyton, Boietone, or Boyyeton. The parish of Boyton (Cornish: Trevoya) lies in the Hundred of Stratton and the Deanery of Trigg-Major; it is about five miles north of Launceston. The parishes of Week St Mary and North Tamerton join it on the Cornish side, otherwise it abuts, and is nearly surrounded by, the former Devon parishes of North Petherwin, Werrington, St Giles-in-the-Heath, and the Devon parish of Luffincot and a Devon village called Northcott Hamlet which crosses the River Tamar. The road to Boyton from Launceston crosses through more than two miles of Devon.
The parish is named after Boia's Farm. It is mentioned in the Domesday Book of 1086 as Boitone. Boyton sits almost on the border between Devon and Cornwall, the surrounding country gives pleasant views over wooded hills and valleys with Dartmoor prominent in the distance. The Bude canal passes through this parish on the east side, and there was a wharf at Boyton Bridge.
"BOYTON, a village and parish, 5 miles N.W. of Launceston, has 600 souls, and about 4200 acres of land, all in Cornwall, except NORTHCOTT hamlet, which has 100 inhabitants, and 740 acres of land, in the valley of the river Tamar, occupied by the following farmers :- Digory Downing, John Downing, John Martin, Thos. Stapleton, and Wm. Walters. Northcott supports its highways with Werrington. The Rev. Edw. Rudall, M.A., is the vicar." [From White's Devonshire Directory (1850)]
Most parish and church description(s) on these pages are from Lake's Parochial History of the County of Cornwall by J Polsue (Truro, 1867 - 1873) | NOBELL, William (I14949)
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| 1154 |
Bradford on Tone deed. 1697
Repository
Somerset Heritage Centre
Reference number
DD/BR/py/18
Description
Lease for a year of lately erected cottage by Edward Stacey, senior and junior, of Bradford, sergemakers, to Henry Bindon of Bishops Hull, yeoman, and Robert West of Ash Priors, yeoman.
Date
1697
Extent
1
Format
document
Access status
Open
Level
Item
Serge is a type of twill fabric that has diagonal lines or ridges on both sides, made with a two-up, two-down weave. The worsted variety is used in making military uniforms, suits, great-coats and trench coats. Its counterpart, silk serge, is used for linings. French serge is a softer, finer variety. The word is also used for a high quality woolen woven.
Denim is a cotton fabric with a similar weave. The original name was "serge de Nîmes". Gradually, these last two names were shortened and adapted to the word we know as denim, although now denim is made all over the world and not just in Nîmes.
The woolcombers and the weavers who made serges were mostly poor people working in their own homes, spinning and weaving, financed by more important people (usually described as “sergemakers”) who provided the financial backing for the later stages of finishing and marketing the cloth. | STACEY, Edward (I16281)
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| 1155 |
At least one living or private individual is linked to this note - Details withheld. | Living (I17613)
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| 1156 |
BREDMER, usually called Broadmead, is another manor, near the western bounds of this parish, adjoining to Cheriton, in which it is partly situated. It was most probably, in early times, in the possession of a family of its own name; for in the antient deeds and courtrolls of Valoigns, who were owners of Cheriton in king Edward II. and III.'s reign, there is frequent mention of several of this name, who held lands of the Valoigns family; but before the latter end of king Edward III.'s reign, it was come into the possession of William de Brockhull, of Saltwood, whose second son Thomas Brockhull leaving an only daughter and heir Elizabeth, she carried it in marriage to Richard Selling, in whose descendants it remained till Henry VIII.'s reign, when it was passed away to Edmund Inmith, a retainer to Thomas, lord Clinton, and he gave it to his second son Edmund Inmith, who leaving two daughters and coheirs, one of whom married Rayner, and the other Baker, the latter of them, in right of his wife, shared this manor as part of her inheritance, and in king James I.'s reign alienated it to Beane, in which name it continued some length of time, and till it was sold to Worger, and thence again to Bayley, in which name it remained till Mrs. Elizabeth Bailey and other conveyed it to William Bouverie, earl of Radnor, whose son the right hon. Jacob, earl of Radnor, is the present owner of it. A court baron is held for this manor.
Folkstone's ROCKHILL School
By Sandy Hargrove, p. 51
"Mr. Griffin was operating a dairy farm on the grounds of the old Broadmead or Bredmar Manor which dated back to the Norman Conquest and was owned by Lord Radnor. ...Broadmead Manor and dairy farm was "about one mile from Folkestone on the road to the Cherry Gardens." [Mackie, Samuel Jopseh, A Handbook for Folkestone Visitors. Folkestone: J. English, 1856. page 98]
*Broadmead Manor was first known as Bredmer Manor. Its name probably originated with the family that built it during the reign of King Edward II (Plantagenet king who reigned from 1307-1327). The manor remained with descendants of the family through several generations until it was "conveyed" to William Bouverie, Earl of Radnor. [Hasted, Edward. The History and Topographical Survey of the County of Kent. Canterbury: W. Bristow, 1797-1801, p. 166] | INMITH, Alice (I16065)
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| 1157 |
At least one living or private individual is linked to this note - Details withheld. | Living (I331)
|
| 1158 |
Brian Vaughn was is the twin of Brent Vaughn. He was employed by St. Catharines Hydro for many years. | VAUGHN, Brian Frank (I332)
|
| 1159 |
Bricklayer | ROOK, William (I19836)
|
| 1160 |
Bricklayer | RUCK, William James Hill (I7101)
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| 1161 |
Bricklayer | RUCK, Benjamin Ralph (I7104)
|
| 1162 |
Bricklayer's labourer in 1891 | RUCK, Frederick (I7107)
|
| 1163 |
Bricklayer.
There are two different dates of birth supplied for Henry both on the 24th and both in 1833 but on the baptismal register it is written as July and in the vicar's notebook it is written as March. | TUFFIELD, Henry (I13901)
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| 1164 |
Bride residing Brook Street, Coleraine, father John Carson, labourer. | Family (F5452)
|
| 1165 |
Bride's surname was not recorded in the register. | Family (F4327)
|
| 1166 |
British Chancery Records, 1386-1558
Name: Godleve Carter
Place: Kent
Date: 1486-1493, 1504-1515
Volume: 3
Page: 151
Bundle: 126
Name: Richard Carter
Place: Kent
Date: 1486-1493, 1504-1515
Volume: 3
Page: 151
Bundle: 126
Name: Godleyf Carter
Place: Kent
Date: 1486-1493
Volume: 3
Page: 33
Bundle: 83
Name: Agnes Carter
Place: Kent
Date: 1486-1493
Volume: 3
Page: 33
Bundle: 83
Name: Johanne Carter
Place: Kent
Date: 1486-1493
Volume: 3
Page: 33
Bundle: 83
Name: William Carter
Place: Kent
Date: 1486-1493
Volume: 3
Page: 33
Bundle: 83
Name: John Carter
Place: Kent
Date: 1518-1529
Volume: 5
Page: 279
Bundle: 486
Name: Richard Carter
Place: Kent
Date: 1518-1529
Volume: 5
Page: 279
Bundle: 486
Name: William Carter
Place: Kent
Date: 1518-1529
Volume: 5
Page: 279
Bundle: 486 | CARTER, Godfrey (I9493)
|
| 1167 |
British Chancery Records, 1386-1558
Name: George Carter
Place: Kent
Date: 1556-1558
Volume: 10
Page: 154
Bundle: 1420
Name: William Carter
Place: Kent
Date: 1404-1426, 1456-1460
Volume: 1
Page: 246
Bundle: 26
Name: William Carter
Place: Kent
Date: 1404-1426, 1456-1460
Volume: 1
Page: 250
Bundle: 26
Name: Richard Carter
Place: Kent
Date: 1433-1443, 1467-1472
Volume: 2
Page: 33
Bundle: 40
Name: Richard Carter
Place: Kent
Date: 1433-1443, 1467-1472
Volume: 2
Page: 46
Bundle: 41
Name: Richard Carter
Place: Kent
Date: 1465-1471, 1480-1483
Volume: 1
Page: 365
Bundle: 33
Name: Richard Carter
Place: Kent
Date: 1475-1480, 1483-1485
Volume: 2
Page: 173
Bundle: 50
Name: Richard Carter
Place: Kent
Date: 1475-1480, 1483-1485
Volume: 2
Page: 238
Bundle: 56
Name: Agnes Carter
Place: Kent
Date: 1486-1493
Volume: 3
Page: 33
Bundle: 83
Name: Godleve Carter
Place: Kent
Date: 1486-1493, 1504-1515
Volume: 3
Page: 151
Bundle: 126
Name: Godleyf Carter
Place: Kent
Date: 1486-1493
Volume: 3
Page: 33
Bundle: 83
Name: Johanne Carter
Place: Kent
Date: 1486-1493
Volume: 3
Page: 33
Bundle: 83
Name: John Carter
Place: Kent
Date: 1486-1493, 1504-1515
Volume: 3
Page: 140
Bundle: 123
Name: Richard Carter
Place: Kent
Date: 1486-1493, 1504-1515
Volume: 3
Page: 151
Bundle: 126
Name: William Carter
Place: Kent
Date: 1486-1493, 1504-1515
Volume: 3
Page: 140
Bundle: 123
Name: William Carter
Place: Kent
Date: 1486-1493
Volume: 3
Page: 33
Bundle: 83
Name: Edmund Carter
Place: Kent, London
Date: 1504-1515
Volume: 4
Page: 445
Bundle: 373
Name: John Carter
Place: Kent
Date: 1504-1515
Volume: 4
Page: 165
Bundle: 292
Name: Richard Carter
Place: Kent, Sussex
Date: 1504-1515
Volume: 4
Page: 111
Bundle: 275
Name: William Carter
Place: Kent
Date: 1504-1515
Volume: 4
Page: 390
Bundle: 358
Name: Alice Carter
Place: Kent
Date: 1515-1518
Volume: 5
Page: 34
Bundle: 391
Name: John Carter
Place: Kent
Date: 1515-1518
Volume: 5
Page: 82
Bundle: 410
Name: Thomas Carter
Place: Kent
Date: 1515-1518
Volume: 5
Page: 34
Bundle: 391
Name: John Carter
Place: Kent
Date: 1518-1529
Volume: 5
Page: 279
Bundle: 486
Name: Richard Carter
Place: Kent
Date: 1518-1529
Volume: 5
Page: 279
Bundle: 486
Name: William Carter
Place: Kent
Date: 1518-1529
Volume: 5
Page: 279
Bundle: 486
Name: Thomas Carter
Place: London, Kent
Date: 1529-1532
Volume: 6
Page: 1
Bundle: 601
Name: Agnes Carter
Place: Kent
Date: 1538-1544
Volume: 8
Page: 2
Bundle: 936
Name: Jervis Carter
Place: Kent
Date: 1538-1544
Volume: 8
Page: 2
Bundle: 936
Name: George Carter
Place: Kent
Date: 1556-1558
Volume: 10
Page: 154
Bundle: 1420 | CARTER, George (I3448)
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| 1168 |
British Royal Navy & Royal Marines service and pension records, 1704-1919 Image
7th Aug 1835 Henry James on probation, age 67, 5' 5" height, ship last served on Royal Escape, in pensioner, wife Anne, 4 children under the age of 12, where born Faversham | JAMES, Henry (I4582)
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| 1169 |
BROADBRIDGE George WYBORNE Alice 06 Nov 1592 tailor of Godmersham & she, spinster, of Chilham Canterbury ML COWPER, J. M. | Family (F4395)
|
| 1170 |
Brother of Archbishop Warham | WARHAM, Sir Hugh Kt. (I1638)
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| 1171 |
Brother of Art Neff husband of Louise Neff, Unity teacher in St. Catharines took over from Betty Aitken.
Donald NEFF
NEFF, Donald Stewart _ At the St. Catharines General Hospital on Monday, March 17, 2003, Donald S. Neff, formerly of Scarborough and Ottawa, aged 85 years. Husband of Muriel and dear father of Gilbert Dolores Neff, Grace Daigle, Donna Wayne Wink Neff. Loved grandfather of Travis, Gabrielle, Lorelei, Christopher, Ernest and loved great grandfather of Jodi, Tyler and Nicholas. Brother of Douglas Chris Neff, Mary John deceased Lewis, Sylvia Ed Summers Williams, Robert Gail Neff. Predeceased by Arthur Louise Neff. The family will receive friends at the VINELAND CHAPEL of the TALLMAN FUNERAL HOMES, 3277 King St. on Thursday 7-9 p.m. Funeral service will be held in the Chapel on Friday, March 21st at 11 a.m. Cremation will follow.0363470
Art Neff:
Arthur Ernest Neff
1920–1995
BIRTH 01 MAY 1920 • Simcoe, Norfolk, Ontario, Canada
DEATH 29 JAN 1995 • Niagara Falls, Regional Municipality of Niagara, Ontario, Canada
Father:
Ernest Franklin Neff
1889–1952
BIRTH 05 SEP 1889 • Barton Township, Wentworth, Ontario, Canada
DEATH 22 NOV 1952 • Hamilton, Wentworth, Ontario, Canada
Mother:
Margaret Ellen Stewart
1892–1975
BIRTH 03 JUL 1892 • Saltfleet Township, Wentworth, Ontario, Canada
DEATH 1975 • Saint Catharines, Lincoln, Ontario, Canada
Grandfather:
Charles William Neff
1856–1923
BIRTH 25 DEC 1856 • Barton Township, Wentworth, Ontario, Canada
DEATH 14 JAN 1923 • Hamilton, Wentworth, Ontario, Canada
Grandmother:
Phoebe Jane Burkholder
1858–1945
BIRTH 22 SEP 1858 • Beverley Township, Wentworth, Ontario, Canada
DEATH 28 FEB 1945 • Saint Catharines, Lincoln, Ontario, Canada
great-grandfather:
John Abraham Neff
1830–1896
BIRTH 14 AUG 1830 • Barton Township, Wentworth, Ontario, Canada
DEATH 30 JUN 1896 • Hamilton, Wentworth, Ontario, Canada
great-grandmother
Elizabeth Catherine Almas
1826–1906
BIRTH 05 JUL 1826 • Barton Township, Wentworth, Ontario, Canada
DEATH 28 SEP 1906 • Glanford Township, Wentworth, Ontario, Canada
great-great-grandfather
Abraham Neff
1800–1886
BIRTH 06 AUG 1800 • Barton Township, Wentworth, Ontario, Canada
DEATH 9 JUL 1886 • Welland, Lincoln , Ontario, Canada
great-great-grandmother
Mary Snider
1808–1890
BIRTH 18 JAN 1808 • Barton Township, Wentworth County, Ontario
DEATH 07 AUG 1890 • Barton Township, Wentworth County, Ontario | NEFF, Peter (I17907)
|
| 1172 |
Brother of Balderic, Bishop of Utrecht who died 977. Also brother ofFrederick, Prince, Archbishop of Mainz who died 954. | Count of Hainault, Reginar II (I1793)
|
| 1173 |
Brother of Duncan I, King of Scotland who was murdered by MacBeth. | Lord of Allerdale, Maldred (I1686)
|
| 1174 |
Brother of Lothair, King of France | Duke of Lorrain, Charles (I1789)
|
| 1175 |
Brother of Patience HOOKEY who married Thomas VERGE.
This is to certify that SAMUEL HOOKEY, widower, of this parish, and ELIZABETH KELSEN spinster, of this parish, were married in this church with consent of friends this sixteenth day of June in the year one thousand eight hundred and thirty-two, by me William Bullock, Epis. Miss. This marriage was solemnized between us Samuel (X) Hookey and Elizabeth (X) Kelsen, (X) being their marks, in the presence of Moses Spurrell Trinity and John Spurrell, Bonaventure. | HOOKEY, Samuel (I366)
|
| 1176 |
Brother of Queen Adela, second wife of King Henry I of England. | DE LOUVAIN, Josceline (I1726)
|
| 1177 |
Brother of Richwin, Bishop of Strasbours who died 933. | Count of Hainault (Lorraine), Reginar I (I1796)
|
| 1178 |
Brother of Walter Fitz Richard, County-Palatine, Earl Pembroke 1138. | RICHARD, ? Fitz (I1847)
|
| 1179 |
Bruce CHAMBERLAIN
CHAMBERLAIN, Bruce Alan _ July 28, 1938 - May 24, 2005 Alan passed away peacefully in Grande Prairie, Alberta with son Mark and wife Eileen at his side, following a courageous battle with cancer. He was predeceased by his first wife Sonja in 1989. Alan is survived by his wife Eileen and their families. Cremation has taken place. A memorial service for friends and family will be announced at a later date.
Alan's ashes are buried on Chamberlain Mountain, British Columbia, Canada. | CHAMBERLAIN, Bruce Alan (I16)
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| 1180 |
Built castle at la Tanniere circa 1128
Collectanea topographica et genealogica
By Collectanea topographica et genealogica, Chapter XVII. pp 182-
[https://books.google.ca/books?id=YScAAAAAQAAJ&pg=PA182&lpg=PA182&dq=on+the+descent+of+the+manor+of+gorham&source=bl&ots=MK3WuEBGiz&sig=IHH0D7lGsLbRMegoUPOOmtq-jn4&hl=en&sa=X&ved=0ahUKEwi1yqqAs5PQAhULwYMKHZjvBLkQ6AEIHTAA#v=onepage&q=on%20the%20descent%20of%20the%20manor%20of%20gorham&f=false]
On the descent of the manor of Gorhambury in Hertfordshire, and of the Anglo-Breton family from whom that estate derived its name.
The manor of which it is proposed to give an account in the course of the following pages, was known by the name of Westwick from the earliest record till Century xiv, by that of Westwick-Gorham during Century xv, and by that of Gorhambury from about the period of the dissolution of monasteries to the present day. The family from whom its existing name was derived, became its possessors about the close of the reign of Henry I.; they came into England, from Britanny, shortly before that period, being descended from distinguished ancestors settled in the province of Maine, France.
De Gorram, of la Tanniere, in the Maine
The de Gorrams can be traced, in Britanny, to the beginning of Century xii. Their castle was situated on a small rivulet called the Futaye, at la Tanniere, seven miles west from the town of Gorram[5] (from which place doubtless the family name originated) and twenty miles n.w. from Mayenne. The name is variously spelt Gorram (the most ancient mode), Goram, Gorran, Goran, Gorren and Goron; its English orthography has, almost without exception, been Gorham from the earliest records. Many original grants by the de Gorrams of la Tanniere to the neighbouring Abbey of the Holy Trinity at Savigny still exist, and were examined by the writer of this article, on a tour in Normandy, in the autumn of 1836; of these, and of other ancient records (which will be referred to in tracing the descent and personal history of this family), a short abstract is given in the note below. [I have abstracted only those relating to William de Gorram]
William de Gorram is the first of this name who occurs in Britanny. His castle at la Tanniere, being on the frontiers of Normandy, appears to have been destroyed, or at least to have been greatly dilapidated, in the early part of the 12th Century, by the ravages attendant on the contests between Henry I and Fulk County of Anjou, during the successful attempt of the English monarch to wrest that Duchy from his nephew William Fitz-Robert. Peace having been restored, a new castle was built at la Tanniere, the chapel of which was given by William de Gorram, in 1128, to the monastery of Mount St. Michael near Avranches; together with a plot of ground for the cells of the monks, an adjoining orchard, the tithe of the men of his castle, the tithe of his market, of his mills, of his ovens, and of his fish. This grant, which is preserved in the College Library at Avranches in the beautifulcartulary of Mont St. Michael, is subjoined (A):
"Ego Guido, scae Caenomanensis Ecclesiae Episcopus, notum facio tam presentibus quem futuris, quod Ecclesia beati Archangeli Michaelis de Normannia sita in Periculo Maris, tempore nostro et praefatae ecclesiae Ricardi Abbatis, recuperavit in diocesi nostra ecclesiam beati Bertivini, in pago Erneiae videlicet. quae tempore longo deserta fuerat per desolationem malorum ipsius patriae, cum cemeterio, et demimis ipsius parochiae, et aliis beneficiis ad ipsum pertinentibus. Capellam quoque cujusdam Castri novi quod Taonaria vacatur, in praefatae ecclesiae parochia, a Gulielmo de Gorram instaurati, (jam dicto Gulielmo coram me apud Coenobium Savigniense annuente et donante, cum terra ad faciendas domus Monachorum, et cum viridario...
[5] The castle of Gorram (now called Goron) was granted in 1135 by Geoffrey Plantagenet to Juhel II. Lord of Mayenne, on condition that he would assist him in obtaining possession of the dower of his wife Matilda (Robert de Monte, Append. in Sigebert. Chronic. in Op. Guiberti Abbatis, p. 758. Parish 1651); Gorren Castle was regranted to Juhel III. de Mayenne in 1199 by Arthur, Duke of Britanny. (Menage, Hist. de Sable, p. 186). The earliest notice of it in English Records is in 1202, when King John issued a writ for seizing the castle of Gorham (Pat. Rolls, 3 John. m. 9). We may observe here the variations in the spelling of this name.
pedigree attached to the chapter
William de Gorram built a castle at la Tanniere about 1128, wife named Matilda
had a brother Henry living 1128
had a presumed brother Geoffrey abbot of St. Albans 1120, died 1146 | DE GORRAM, William (I14556)
|
| 1181 |
Bundle of deeds for Husseys and Glasses, 59 and 61 High Street, Wellington. 20 Jul 1813-30 Jul 1912
Repository
Somerset Heritage Centre
Reference number
A/CWR/1
Description
On 20-21 Jul 1813 Thomas Martin of Wellington, gent conveyed (by lease and release) to Thomas Alward of the same place, inn keeper, a messuage with garden in East Street, Wellington. On 17-18 Jan 1814 Thomas Alward and William Lock of Wellington, woolcomber reconveyed (by way of mortgage) the property back to Thomas Martin. With the will of Henry Bull the elder of Wellington, woolcomber (dated 11 Nov 1820) a small cottage and garden on East Street, Wellington was bequeathed to his wife Frances. On 21 Dec 1822 Thomas Martin now of Exeter, gent leased the property to William Lock of Wellington, woolcomber. On 8 Jan 1823 William Lock assigned the property by way of mortgage to Samuel Bodgen of Heathfield, thatcher. On 1 Jan 1823 Thomas Martin reconveyed the property to William Lock. On 18-19 May 1826 Ann Cumberland of London, widow conveyed (by lease and release) to William Lock, of a cottage and garden in East Street, Wellington. With the will of William Lock (dated 11 Nov 1843) he appointed his sons James and John Lock of Wellington as executors and bid them sell his five messuages and gardens on High Street, Wellington, commonly known as Husseys and Glasses. On 9 Jul 1852 James Lock of Hemyock, Devon, farmer, John Lock of Wellington, butcher, Sarah Lock of Wellington, spinster and Samuel Shapton of London and Maria his wife conveyed to John Lock two messuages on High Street, Wellington. On 27 Aug 1880 John Lock of Bradford, retired butcher conveyed to Frederick Graves of Wellington, saddler, three cottages and lands on High Street, Wellington.
Date
20 Jul 1813-30 Jul 1912
Extent
28
Format
documents
Access status
Open
Level
Item | LOCK, John (I12462)
|
| 1182 |
Bunting George Willis Mary Ann m 23 Jan 1881 he 21, bachelor, labourer of Luddenham, father Frederick Bunting, labourer, she 20, spinster, no occupation, of Luddenham, father William Willis, labourer, wit: John Thomas Willis, Elizabeth Ann Willis Luddenham PR
Mar Qtr 1881 Faversham District, Kent, England (vol. 2a, p. 975) | Family (F1212)
|
| 1183 |
BUNTING, GEORGE WILLIAM WILLIS, Born Oare 1890, Quartermaster Serjeant, #317043 343 Siege Bty Royal Garrison Artillery, Son of George Wallace Bunting and Mary Ann Bunting, of 15, Abbey St., Faversham. Death Registered Faversham 27/02/1919 | BUNTING, George William Wallace (I2977)
|
| 1184 |
BURGESS WALTER ALEXANDER 76 RUSSELL ST,SON OF WALTER AND ELIZA, DIED 1882 JUN 5TH AGED 1YR
on colin penney's website | BURGESS, Walter (I11269)
|
| 1185 |
BURGESS, BEATRICE VIOLET SMITH Order
GRO Reference: 1908 S Quarter in GLOUCESTER Volume 06A Page 316 Order | BURGESS, Beatrice Violet (I16524)
|
| 1186 |
BURGESS, FLORENCE IRENE SMITH Order
GRO Reference: 1904 M Quarter in BRIDGWATER Volume 05C Page 308 | BURGESS, Florence Irene (I16522)
|
| 1187 |
BURGESS, GLADYS VIOLET SMITH Order
GRO Reference: 1898 M Quarter in TAUNTON Volume 05C Page 301
R. Gaddis of Nebraska, USA has a DNA connection to Gladys Violet BURGESS | BURGESS, Gladys Violet (I11103)
|
| 1188 |
BURGESS, IVY DORIS SMITH Order
GRO Reference: 1906 M Quarter in GLOUCESTER Volume 06A Page 338 | BURGESS, Ivy Doris (I16523)
|
| 1189 |
BURGESS, PHYLLIS MAY SMITH Order
GRO Reference: 1910 S Quarter in GLOUCESTER Volume 06A Page 303 | BURGESS, Phyllis May (I16525)
|
| 1190 |
BURGESS, ROBERT JOHN SMITH Order
GRO Reference: 1900 M Quarter in TAUNTON Volume 05C Page 304 Order | BURGESS, Robert John (I11104)
|
| 1191 |
Burial at Bradford on Tone
Elizabeth Baker 4 5 1735 A child | BAKER, Elizabeth (I13816)
|
| 1192 |
Burial entry give age as 17 years. | WHITFIELD, Eliza (I5118)
|
| 1193 |
Burial entry gives age as 10 months. | WHITFIELD, Edward (I5121)
|
| 1194 |
Burial entry gives age as 16 years. | WHITFIELD, Ellen (I5119)
|
| 1195 |
Burial entry gives age as 24 years. | WHITFIELD, Caroline (I5116)
|
| 1196 |
Burial entry gives age as 68 years. | WHITFIELD, William (I5104)
|
| 1197 |
Burial entry gives age as 73 years. | WHITFELD, Francis (I5105)
|
| 1198 |
Burial entry gives age as 9 years. | WHITFIELD, Edwin (I5113)
|
| 1199 |
Burial entry gives Martha's age as being 51 years. | CREED, Martha (I5107)
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| 1200 |
Burial entry in PR states: "widow, the elder" but fails to record her name. Also, Thomasine is clearly a second wife of Matthew but the marriage date, other than being before 25 May 1631, has not been found as she is referred to in Matthew's Will as being his "now wife". Without that marriage date it is impossible to know if any of Matthew's children were by Thomasine or by another wife. The first marriage would have been sometime before 5 May 1588 as that is the baptism date of the presumed first born son, Richard. Unfortunately, none of the children's baptisms have a mother's name recorded. | Thomasine (I9961)
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