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1951 Edwin Sandys married four times:

1st Wife - Margaret Eveleigh - Daughter of John Eveleigh from Devon, Edwin married sometime in the mid-1580s. They had one child - Elizabeth, born about 1585, she later married her own second cousin, Sir Thomas Wilford of Kent, who was executed as a royalist in 1648. Edwin's first wife, died in childbirth in July 1588; Edwin's father died the same month. Margaret's brother, Nicholas Eveleigh, who had been at Corpus Christi College with Richard Hooker and Edwin, became one of Sir Edwin's stewards.

2nd Wife - Anne Southcote - Daughter of Thomas Southcote/Southcott of Devon, a cousin of his first wife, he married sometime during the early 1590s and she died in 1593.

3rd Wife - Elizabeth Nevinson - Daughter of Thomas and Ann Nevinson, a well-established family from Eastry (near to Northbourne) - he married Elizabeth about 1601. The Nevinson family held the Canterbury Chapter manorial estate at Eastry from about 1550 to 1630. There are a number of Nevinson memorials in Eastry Church, including a large brass of Elizabeth's father, Thomas 'Nevynson' who died in July 1590. It seems they were only married for a few years before Elizabeth died. Hasted records they had a daughter - Anne - who married Thomas Engeham from the nearby parish of Goodnestone.

4th Wife - Katherine Bulkeley - born 1583, daughter of Sir Richard and Mary Bulkeley of Anglesey. She married Edwin in 1605 when he was approaching his mid-forties she was about 22; in the next two decades they had twelve children. Their youngest son, Francis was born when Edwin was well into his fifties and a miscarriage occurred in 1620 when Edwin was 58. Although there is an effigy of Lady Sandys in Northbourne church, the later plaque makes no mention of her; she outlived her husband by a number of years and died in 1640.

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Sir Edwin Sandys and Northbourne

The following is an extract is from Professor Theodore K. Rabb's book Jacobean Gentleman Sir Edwin Sandys, 1561-1629 and is reproduced with the permission of Princeton University Press.

'Sandys acquired from the crown in 1611 the "moiety" of the manor of Northbourne, Kent, which became his principal residence. The land had once been owned by the Cranmer family, and was not far away from Sir Edwin's other Kent holdings. The formal grant of the property in March 1614, a month before the new Parliament met, was probably part of the Court's campaign to neutralize influential M.P.s, though it still cost Sandys £850. He may have been at Northbourne as long as five years earlier, but only in 1614 did he began to construct an imposing mansion on the site.

'Since the building was pulled down 1750, one can only guess at its size, but a few relics and a conjectured floor plan suggest that the house had two wings, one approximately eighty feet by sixty feet, the other about fifty feet square linked by a fifty-foot-long colonnade. If the building was on anything like this scale, even a two storey structure would suggest a cost of over £5000, possibly approaching to £10,000, by comparison with some of the better-known houses of the period. And if the floor plan can be trusted, the resultant conversion of an old monastic house created one of the first Italianate villas in England, earlier than the Queen's House that Inigo Jones designed in Greenwich. Inspired by his Italian journey (and perhaps by his friend Wotton), Sandys was making a signal contribution to the great building boom of early Stuart times.

'Like so many participants in that extravagant outburst, however, he undertook a burden of expenditure that he could not discharge. In the absence of information about his finances, we cannot be sure, but it seems likely that the prime cause of Sir Edwin's near impoverishment in his last years was his lavish spending on real estate'.

© 1998 Princeton University Press (http://www.pup.princeton.edu). (Theodore K. Rabb Jacobean Gentleman. Sir Edwin Sandys, 1561-1629, p.50, Princeton University Press 1998).

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Sir Edwin Sandys's expenditure included draining the marshland around Northbourne in 1609-11. He deepened the North Stream where it drained the northern part of the Lydden Valley which was 'much annoyed by abundance of waters'. A channel was made suitable for a boat to pass from the watering place at Northbourne Court to Sandwich and so was able to clear the the stream of weeds.[1] He also spent £100 on paving stones shipped from Amsterdam in 1621.[2] In 1622 there must have been substantial refurbishment being undertaken at Northbourne as in the autumn Edwin writes that 'I come up [to London] in the time of receiving my rents, and before I can get them. I leave a multitude of workmen in all parts of my house, without oversight, account, or direction'.[3]

Note: [1] - Dorothy Gardiner (1954) Historic Haven the Story of Sandwich, 217. Gardiner cites Catchment Board Vol. V (1609). [2] - Theodore K. Rabb Jacobean Gentleman. Sir Edwin Sandys, 1561-1629, p.51, note 44. The drainage work was possibly inspired by his brother, Sir Miles Sandys (1563 - 1644) of Wilberton in Cambridgeshire, who had a keen interest in drainage. [3] - Susan Kingsbury, (1906-35), The Records of the Virginia Company of London, Vol 3, 691. Letter to John Ferrar dated 13 October 1622.

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Sir Edwin Sandys and the Virginia Company

The following paragraphs describe some of the key events in the development of the Virginia colony; they are not intended to give an exhaustive history.

Elizabethan attempts to set up a colony in the New World were unsuccessful; in July 1585 one group of colonists sent by Sir Walter to Roanoke Island, in what is now North Carolina, gave up and returned to England. When the supply ships arrived shortly after, they found only a deserted settlement. Sir Richard Grenville, commander of the supply fleet, left behind 15 men to hold the island and sailed back to England. Not surprisingly the 15 men were never seen again.
1606 - 10th April - James I of England and VI of Scotland issued a Charter for the exploration and settlement of the mid-Atlantic coast, now the eastern seaboard of the United States. The company was initially called the London Company and later the Virginia Company.

1607 - 13th May - A total of 107 male settlers and 36 sailors arrive at a site they name 'James Cittie' and establish the first permanent English settlement in the New World. Shortly afterwards on 26th May Paspahegh Indians attack the colonists, killing two and wounding ten.

1609/1610 - September 1609 to May 1610 - The 'starving time' reduces the population to 60 survivors from the previous autumn's population of 500-600. 1612 - John Rolfe tries a crop of tobacco to help save the Jamestown settlement.

1612 - Brothers Edwin, George and Henry Sandys, were signatories of the Third Charter of Virginia on March 12th 1612. Edwin never actually set foot in the New World colonies, although both his brothers George (see 1621) and Henry did. Henry Sandys (1572 - 1654), married Priscilla Chauncey and was admitted a freeman of Boston in 1640, he died in New England in 1654.

1614 - Edwin became a member of the East India Company. John Rolfe marries Pocahontas and ships his first load of tobacco to England.

1615 - Edwin joined the Bermuda Company as one of the Gentlemen Adventurers who invested to colonize Bermuda. In 1619 he campaigned for the governorship of the Bermuda Company but failed.

Edwin was 56 years old when he began to take a major interest in the colonization of Virginia in the New World.

1619 - Edwin was elected treasurer of the Virginia Company. Governor Francis Yeardley was directed by Sir Edwin Sandys to issue writs for the election of a general assembly, and July 30, 1619, the first house of burgesses, the first representative legislature body ever assembled in America, met in the choir of the church at Jamestown. Its first law requires tobacco to be sold for at least three shillings per pound. The constitution, whereby the people of Virginia should only be governed and taxed with their own consent and should have an Assembly modelled on the House of Commons to regulate the internal affairs of the colony, later served as a model for the Constitution of the United States of America.
Other business of this historic meeting was a tax of 1lb of tobacco levied on every man and manservant above 16 years of age. A Thomas Garnett, servant of Captain William Powell was condemned to stand for four days with his ears nailed to the pillory for extreme neglect of his master's business and impudent abuse.

1620 - May - Edwin's position as treasurer expired but the Company was keen to re-elect him. James I was deeply suspicious of the Virginia Company, as many members were M.P.s, and he demanded the election of one of four candidates he had named. The Company remonstrated and appointed Sandys as temporary treasurer. James replied that Sandys was his 'greatest enemy and that he could hardly think well of whomsoever was his friend' and they could 'Choose the Devil if you like, but not Sir Edwin Sandys'. Sandys withdrew and his friend Henry Wriothesley (3rd Earl of Southampton 1573-1624, better known as the patron of Shakespeare) was elected, although Edwin still retained much influence in the company's affairs.

In January 1620 the City of London had appointed 100 children from their 'superfluous multitude' to be transported to Virginia, to be bound apprentices 'upon beneficial conditions'. A sum of £500 granted for their 'passage and outfit.' Some of these children were reluctant to go and the City was seeking the authority to compel them.

1621 - George Sandys (1578-1644), Edwin's brother, poet and traveller, accompanied the new governor, Sir Francis Wyatt, to Virginia, where he remained until 1631. Incidentally, Sir Francis Wyatt married Edwin and George's niece, Margaret. George Sandys wrote a letter to Samuel Wrote describing the dire state of the colony which unintentionally contributed to the collapse of the Virginia Company. George Sandy's plantation was across the James River from Jamestown. In 1621 he became colonial treasurer of the Virginia Company. While in Virginia, George Sandys produced his most famous work, a translation of Ovid's Metamorphoses, 1626.

1622 - 22nd March - A Powhatan Indian attack, in an attempt to drive off the English for good, killed 347 colonists and destroyed valuable crops and supplies necessary to survive the winter. This was the start of a war that lasted a decade.

1624 - King James annulled the Virginia Company's charter and Virginia became a royal colony.

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Sir Edwin Sandys of Northbourne Court (1561-1629)
Bibliography
Lee, Sidney, (Ed.) 1897, Dictionary Of National Biography Vol L. [Sir Edwin Sandys, 286-290.]
Kingsbury, Susan M., 1906-35, The Records of the Virginia Company of London, 4 vols. (Washington, D.C.)
Northbourne, Lord, 1900, ‘Northbourne Court’, Archaeologia Cantiana, xxiv, 96-107. [History of Northbourne Court by Walter John James, 1869-1932, 3rd Baron. Includes foldout map of Northbourne, detailed account of the life of Sir Edwin Sandys and a drawing of the Sandys memorial in St. Augustine's church.]
Rabb, T. K., 1998, Jacobean Gentleman, Sir Edwin Sandys, 1561-1629. [Biography of Sir Edwin Sandys, including his parliamentary career and early 17th century political events.]
Sandys Edward Seton, 1930, History of the Family of Sandys of Cumberland, afterwards of Furness in North Lancashire, and its branches in other parts of England and in Ireland, etc. (Barrow Printing Co. Barrow-in-Furness)
Secor, Philip B. 1999, Richard Hooker Prophet of Anglicanism. [Richard Hooker was Edwin Sandys's tutor and friend at Corpus Christi College Oxford. The book gives a good insight into college life and Edwin's role in the publication of Richard Hooker's book, Of the Laws of Ecclesiastical Polity.]
Thorneycroft John, 1998, 'The Lost Court at Northbourne', Northbourne Parish Magazine, October 1998. 
SANDYS, Sir Edwin (I10187)
 
1952 Edwin Sandys, senior, was educated at St. Johns College, Cambridge University where he matriculated in 1533.

In 1547 he was master of Catharine Hall. He was named Rector of the University in 1542, Master of St. Catherine's Hall in 1547, and was Vice Chancellor of the Cambridge when Edward VI died in 1553.

Edwin supported the cause of Lady Jane Grey. Mary (a Catholic) was proclaimed Queen, and Sandys was committed to the Tower of London on 25 July 1553. Finally obtaining release, he crossed to the Continent and joined the group of exiles who were to be the forerunners in England of the church puritans. At Zurich, to which he had gone following the death of his first wife and their only child at Strasbourg.

He married his cousin Mary Sandys of Essex, who, with their only child, James, died while he was in exile, 1554-1560.

After Elizabeth's accension in 1558 Edwin returned to England. He was made bishop of Worcester 21 December 1559 and in 1570 he was promoted to bishop of London. Edwin was consecrated the Archbishop of York on 8 March 1576/1577.

He believed that celibacy was not required of the clergy, he opposed vestments and the making of the sign of the cross, he fought against the encroachments of secular government upon church property, and he opposed Queen Elizabeth I on the subject of images.

He founded of the Hawkshead Grammar School in 1585.
The Archbishop died on 10 July 1588 and was buried in Southwell Minister, Nottinghamshire. His widow survived until 5 February 1610 and was buried in Woodham Ferrars, Essex. According to her epitaph, 'She led a most Christian and holy life, carefully educated her children, wisely governed her familye, charitably relieved the poore, and was a true mirror of a Christian matron.' 
SANDYS, Edwin Archbishop of York (I1568)
 
1953 Edwin, a child of Matthew John and Frances Nutt had left Faversham by the time of the 1871 census. He resurfaced in Whitstable in 1881 as a mate/fisherman aboard the 'Star' and by 1891 had married and moved to Outer Wall, Seasalter. He was working as a general labourer and had two stepsons, Harry and George Sandy, ages 17 and 12, respectively. Harry was working as a mariner. Living with Edwin was his widowed sister Frances Driver. It is unknown at this time whether Frances had had any children. There had been three children living Frances Driver and her husabnd in 1881 but it is not possible to determine of those children had been natural children of Frances or if they had been merely step-children.

As of 1901 Edwin was back living in Whitstable at age 56. He had married since 1891 to a woman named Eliza and Edwin was working as a bricklayer's labourer. 
NUTT, Edwin M. (I2918)
 
1954 Eldest daughter of Sir Rodger Manwoode, Knight, Lord Chief Baron of the Exchequer MANWOODE, Margaret (I10221)
 
1955 eldest son of William Colwill.

Found in Protestation 1642 at Week St. Mary; hearth tax 1664 Week St Mary. His Will 27: C1652, 1662, proved 1671 (Week St. Mary) 
COLWILL, John the elder (I14931)
 
1956 Eldest son. DE PERCY, Alan (I1731)
 
1957 Electoral registers 1832-1932 Image
Constituency in full: Parliamentary County of Middlesex, Harrow Division
Constituency: P C of Middlesex, Harrow Division
Year: 1897
Season: -
Register type: Parliamentary County
Polling district or place: Harrow
County: Middlesex
Country: England
Archive: The British Library
Archive reference: SPR.Mic.P.334/BL.H.28
Image number: 418
Record set: England & Wales, Electoral Registers 1832-1932

#378 Dimond, Peter Daniel, 4 Duncombe-road, Hornsey Rise, N., Freehold houses...one-fourth share in five freehold houses, Nos. 96, 128, 130, 132 and 134 Cleveland-street, Fitzroy-square. 
DIMOND, Peter Daniel (I431)
 
1958 Electrical fitter in 1939 SANDERS, George William Thomas (I17664)
 
1959 Electrician wireman 1939, as yet unmarried.

Possible children:
Births Dec 1947 (>99%)
Smith Nigel R N Miles Taunton 7c 256a
Births Dec 1950 (>99%)
Smith Jeremy E N Miles Taunton 7c 247
Births Jun 1952 (>99%)
Smith Martin J Miles Taunton 7c 217
Births Jun 1953 (>99%)
SMITH Bridget E N MILES Taunton 7c 209
Births Sep 1955 (>99%)
SMITH Jeremy E N MILES Taunton 7c 225 
SMITH, Stanley John (I17853)
 
1960 Elisabeth's burial records verifies that she was the daughter of William and Elizabeth Pope. POPE, Elisabeth (I5020)
 
1961 At least one living or private individual is linked to this note - Details withheld. Living (I20651)
 
1962 Elizabeth Baldock
England and Wales Census, 1851
Name Elizabeth Baldock
Event Type Census
Event Date 1851
Event Place Faversham, Kent, England
Registration District Faversham
Residence Note Church Street
Gender Female
Age 45
Marital Status Married
Occupation Annuitant
Relationship to Head of Household Head
Birth Year (Estimated) 1806
Birthplace Westwell, Kent
Page Number 10
Registration Number HO107
Piece/Folio 1626 / 299
Affiliate Record Type Household
Household
Role
Sex
Age
Birthplace
Elizabeth Baldock Head F 45 Westwell, Kent
George Baldock Son M 16 Faversham, Kent
Edward Baldock Son M 14 Faversham, Kent
Harriett Baldock Daughter F 13 Faversham, Kent
Charlotte Baldock Daughter F 11 Faversham, Kent
Elizabeth Baldock Daughter F 4 Faversham, Kent
Citing this Record
"England and Wales Census, 1851," database with images, FamilySearch (https://familysearch.org/ark:/61903/1:1:SGLD-4Q5 : 29 July 2017), Elizabeth Baldock, Faversham, Kent, England; citing Faversham, Kent, England, p. 10, from "1851 England, Scotland and Wales census," database and images, findmypast (http://www.findmypast.com : n.d.); citing PRO HO 107, The National Archives of the UK, Kew, Surrey.


===================================================
tHESE ONES = NO
1798 22 April AUSTEN John Elizabeth Blaskett Brenzett Romney Marsh
SURNAME GIVEN NAME EVT DATE YEAR PARENTS/SPOUSE PLACE SOURCE
AUSTEN James C 11 May 1800 John/Elizabeth Shadoxhurst BT
AUSTEN Lydia C 08 Nov 1801 John/Elizabeth Shadoxhurst BT
AUSTEN Charles C 09 Oct 1803 John/Elizabeth Shadoxhurst BT

==========================================================================================
These ones = YES
SURNAME GIVEN NAME EVT DATE YEAR PARENTS/SPOUSE PLACE SOURCE
AUSTEN John C 27 Jul 1800 John/Elizabeth Westwell BT
AUSTEN Stephen C 19 Sep 1802 John/Elizabeth Westwell BT
AUSTEN Edward C 12 Aug 1804 John/Elizabeth Westwell BT
AUSTEN Thomas C 03 Apr 1808 John/Elizabeth Westwell BT
AUSTEN George C 25 Mar 1810 John/Elizabeth Westwell BT
===================================================
possible uncle:
Name George Austen
Titles and Terms NULL
Event Type Census
Event Date 1841
Event Place Westwell, Kent, England
Residence Note Street
Gender Male
Age 50-54
Age (Original) 50
Occupation Null
Birth Year (Estimated) 1787-1791
Birthplace Kent
Registration District Ashford, West
Parish Westwell
County Kent
Page Number 19
Registration Number HO107
Piece/Folio 476/13
Affiliate Record Type Institution
Household
Role
Sex
Age
Birthplace
George Austen M 50-54 Kent
Ann Austen F 30-34 Kent
Mary Austen F 9 Kent
Sarah Austen F 7 Kent
Rose Austen F 5 Kent
John Austen M 2 Kent
Stephen Austen M 0 Kent
Charles Wraight M 15-19 Kent
Citing this Record
"England and Wales Census, 1841," database with images, FamilySearch (https://familysearch.org/ark:/61903/1:1:MQ2S-5KD : 4 September 2017), George Austen, Westwell, Kent, England; from "1841 England, Scotland and Wales census," database and images, findmypast (http://www.findmypast.com : n.d.); citing PRO HO 107, The National Archives, Kew, Surrey.

----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
England and Wales Census, 1851
Name: George Austen
Event Type: Census
Event Date: 1851
Event Place: Ashford Kent, Kent, England
Registration District: West Ashford
Gender: Male
Age: 64
Marital Status: Married
Occupation: Beer House Keeper
Relationship to Head of Household: Head
Birth Year (Estimated): 1787
Birthplace: Westwell, Kent
Page Number: 15
Registration Number: HO107
Piece/Folio: 1621 / 388
Affiliate Record Type: Household
Household Role Sex Age Birthplace
George Austen Head Male 64 Westwell, Kent bc 1787
Ann F Austen Wife Female 39 Mersham, Kent
Rose A Austen Daughter Female 14 Westwell, Kent
John F Austen Son Male 11 Westwell, Kent
Victoria Austen Daughter Female 7 Westwell, Kent
Thomas Colyer Lodger Male 26 Rochester, Kent
Charles Humphrey Lodger Male 26 , Essex
Thomas Humphrey Lodger Male 20 , Essex
Francis Wilkinson Lodger Male 42 St Georges East, Middlesex
Jeremiah Grace Lodger Male 40 Colchester, Essex
--------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------

SURNAME GIVEN NAME BRIDESUR BRIDE GIV EVT DATE YEAR PARENTS/SPOUSE PLACE SOURCE
AUSTEN John CROSS Mary M 01 Jan 1774 bachelor, spinster, both of this parish - banns Westwell BT


SURNAME GIVEN NAME EVT DATE YEAR PARENTS/SPOUSE PLACE SOURCE

AUSTEN John C 23 Apr 1774 John/Mary Westwell BT
AUSTEN Stephen C 21 Oct 1775 John/Mary Westwell BT
AUSTEN Sarah C 12 Mar 1780 John/Mary Westwell BT
AUSTEN James C 08 Dec 1782 John/Mary Westwell BT
AUSTEN George C 04 Feb 1787 John/Mary Westwell BT
AUSTEN William C 30 May 1790 John/Mary Westwell BT

------------------------------------------------------------------------
9. Mr John AUSTEN only son of John and Mary Austen of Chartham in this county, 15th March 1795 in 70th year. buried at Westwell.
--------------------------------
SURNAME GIVEN NAME BRIDESUR BRIDE GIV EVT DATE YEAR PARENTS/SPOUSE PLACE SOURCE
AUSTIN John BRENCHLEY Elizabeth M 06 Nov 1796 Willesborough AD

SURNAME GIVEN NAME BRIDESUR BRIDE GIV EVT DATE YEAR PARENTS/SPOUSE PLACE SOURCE
AUSTIN John PIERCE Elizabeth M 20 Oct 1794 Appledore AD 
AUSTEN, Elizabeth (I15513)
 
1963 Elizabeth de Bohun (née de Badlesmere), Countess of Northampton (1313 – 8 June 1356) was the wife of two English noblemen, Sir Edmund Mortimer and William de Bohun, 1st Earl of Northampton. She was a co-heiress of her brother Giles de Badlesmere, 2nd Baron Badlesmere.

At the age of eight she was sent to the Tower of London along with her mother, Margaret de Clare, Baroness Badlesmere and her four siblings after the former maltreated Queen consort Isabella by ordering an assault upon her and refusing her admittance to Leeds Castle.


Contents
1 Family
2 Marriages and issue
3 Death
4 Ancestry
5 References
5.1 Further reading
Family
Elizabeth was born at Castle Badlesmere, Kent, England in 1313 to Bartholomew de Badlesmere, 1st Baron Badlesmere and Margaret de Clare. She was the third of four daughters. She had one younger brother, Giles de Badlesmere, 2nd Baron Badlesmere, who married Elizabeth Montagu, but did not have any children.

Her paternal grandparents were Guncelin de Badlesmere and Joan FitzBernard, and her maternal grandparents were Thomas de Clare, Lord of Thomond and Juliana FitzGerald of Offaly.

Elizabeth's father was hanged, drawn and quartered on 14 April 1322 for having participated in the Earl of Lancaster's rebellion against King Edward II of England; and her mother imprisoned in the Tower of London until 3 November 1322. She had been arrested the previous October for ordering an assault upon Queen consort Isabella after refusing her admittance to Leeds Castle, where Baron Badlesmere held the post of governor.[1] Elizabeth and her siblings were also sent to the Tower along with their mother.[2] She was eight years old at the time and had been married for five years to her first husband; although the marriage had not yet been consummated due to her young age.

In 1328, Elizabeth's brother Giles obtained a reversal of his father's attainder, and he succeeded to the barony as the 2nd Baron Badlesmere. Elizabeth, along with her three sisters, was a co-heiress of Giles, who had no children by his wife. Upon his death in 1338, the barony fell into abeyance. The Badlesmere estates were divided among the four sisters, and Elizabeth's share included the manors of Drayton in Sussex, Kingston and Erith in Kent, a portion of Finmere in Oxfordshire as well as property in London.[3]

Marriages and issue
On 27 June 1316, when she was just three years old, Elizabeth married her first husband Sir Edmund Mortimer (died 16 December 1331)[4] eldest son and heir of Roger Mortimer, 1st Earl of March and Joan de Geneville. The marriage contract was made on 9 May 1316, and the particulars of the arrangement between her father and prospective father-in-law are described in Welsh historian R. R. Davies' Lords and Lordship in the British Isles in the late Middle Ages. Lord Badlesmere paid Roger Mortimer the sum of £2000, and in return Mortimer endowed Elizabeth with five rich manors for life and the reversion of other lands.[5] The marriage, which was not consummated until many years afterward, produced two sons:

Roger Mortimer, 2nd Earl of March (11 November 1328 Ludlow Castle- 26 February 1360), married Philippa Montagu, daughter of William Montagu, 1st Earl of Salisbury and Catherine Grandison, by whom he had issue, including Edmund Mortimer, 3rd Earl of March).
John Mortimer (died young)
By the order of King Edward III, Elizabeth's father-in-law, the Earl of Mortimer was hanged in November 1330 for having assumed royal power, along with other crimes. His estates were forfeited to the Crown, therefore Elizabeth's husband did not succeed to the earldom and died a year later. Elizabeth's dower included the estates of Maelienydd and Comot Deuddwr in the Welsh Marches.[6]

In 1335, just over three years after the death of Edmund Mortimer, Elizabeth married secondly William de Bohun, 1st Earl of Northampton (1312–1360), fifth son of Humphrey de Bohun, 4th Earl of Hereford and Elizabeth of Rhuddlan. He was a renowned military commander and diplomat. Their marriage was arranged to end the mutual hostility which had existed between the Bohun and Mortimer families.[7] A papal dispensation was required for their marriage as de Bohun and her first husband, Sir Edmund Mortimer were related in the third and fourth degrees of consanguinity by dint of their common descent from Enguerrand de Fiennes, Seigneur de Fiennes. Elizabeth and de Bohun received some Mortimer estates upon their marriage.[8]

By her second marriage, Elizabeth had two more children:[9]

Humphrey de Bohun, 7th Earl of Hereford 6th Earl of Essex, 2nd Earl of Northampton (24 March 1342 – 16 January 1373), after 9 September 1359, married Joan Fitzalan, Countess of Hereford, by whom he had two daughters, Eleanor de Bohun, Duchess of Gloucester, and Mary de Bohun, wife of Henry of Bolingbroke (who later reigned as King Henry IV).
Elizabeth de Bohun (c.1350- 3 April 1385), on 28 September 1359, married Richard Fitzalan, 11th Earl of Arundel, by whom she had seven children including Thomas Fitzalan, 12th Earl of Arundel, Elizabeth FitzAlan, and Joan FitzAlan, Baroness Bergavenny.
In 1348, the earldom of March was restored to her eldest son Roger who succeeded as the 2nd Earl.

Death
Elizabeth de Badlesmere died on 8 June 1356, aged about forty-three years old. She was buried in Black Friars Priory, London. She left a will dated 31 May 1356, requesting burial at the priory. Mention of Elizabeth's burial is found in the records (written in Latin) of Walden Abbey which confirm that she was buried in Black Friars:

Anno Domini MCCCIxx.obiit Willielmus de Boun, Comes Northamptoniae, cujus corpus sepelitur in paret boreali presbyterii nostri. Et Elizabetha uxor ejus sepelitur Lundoniae in ecclesia fratrum praedictorum ante major altare.[10]

Ancestry
Ancestors of Elizabeth de Bohun, Countess of Northampton
References
Thomas B. Costain, The Three Edwards, pp.193–95
Ireland, William Henry (1829). England's Topographer: or A New and Complete History of the County of Kent. London: G. Virtue, Ivy Lane, Paternoster Row. p.647. Google Books. Retrieved 8-11-10
G. Holmes (1957). Estates of the Higher Nobility in Fourteenth Century England. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press. p.17. Google Books. Retrieved 10 February 2011. ISBN 978-0-521-05315-0
Charles Cawley, Medieval Lands, Earls of March 1328- 1425 (Mortimer)
R. R. Davies, Brendan Smith (2009). Lords and lordship in the British Isles in the late Middle Ages. Oxford: Oxford University Press. p.154. Google Books. Retrieved 29-01-11
Holmes, p.14
Ward, Jennifer C. (2006). Women in England in the Middle Ages. London: Continuum International Publishing Group. p.29 ISBN 1-85285-346-8
Holmes, p.14
thePeerage.com
William Dugdale, Monasticon Anglicanum 4 (1823) 139–141 sub Walden Abbey
Further reading
Thomas B. Costain, The Three Edwards, Published by Doubleday, 1958
Charles Cawley,Medieval Lands, Earls of March 1328–1425 (Mortimer) 
DE BADLESMERE, Elizabeth Countess of Northampton (I15212)
 
1964 Elizabeth de Burgh, Duchess of Clarence, suo jure 4th Countess of Ulster and 5th Baroness of Connaught (6 July 1332 – 10 December 1363) was a Norman-Irish noblewoman who married Lionel of Antwerp, 1st Duke of Clarence.

Family
Elizabeth was born at Carrickfergus Castle near Belfast, Ireland, the only child of William Donn de Burgh, 3rd Earl of Ulster, and Maud of Lancaster, Countess of Ulster. She was the last of the senior legitimate line of the descendants of William de Burgh.[1] Her paternal grandparents were John de Burgh and Elizabeth de Clare, and her maternal grandparents were Henry, 3rd Earl of Lancaster and Maud Chaworth.

Marriage
Upon William's murder on 6 June 1333 she became the sole legal heir to all the de Burgh lands in Ireland. Actually, her kinsmen Sir Edmond de Burgh of Clanwilliam, Sir Edmond Albanach Bourke the Mac William Iochtar, Sir Ulick Burke the Mac William Uachtar became the de facto heads of the family and owners of de Burgh land during the Burke Civil War.[1]

As Countess of Ulster she was raised in England and married Lionel of Antwerp, 1st Duke of Clarence on 15 August 1352 at the Tower of London. He was the second son of Edward III of England and his queen consort, Philippa of Hainault. As a boy, the poet Geoffrey Chaucer served as page to Elizabeth.[2]

The couple had one child, Philippa, born on 16 August 1355. Philippa, who succeeded as Countess of Ulster, married Edmund Mortimer, 3rd Earl of March in 1368. Both their titles passed to their son Roger Mortimer, and eventually through their granddaughter Anne de Mortimer, who married into the House of York. The House of York would base its claim to the English throne on their descent from Lionel of Antwerp.

Elizabeth died in Dublin in 1363 during her husband's term as Governor of Ireland. She is buried in Clare Priory, Suffolk, England.

Curtis 2004, pp. 91–92.
Marion Turner, The Very Different Chaucer Connection in Ireland and England, Irish Times, 3 June 2019
Weir 2008, pp. 96.
Ward 2004.
Works cited
Curtis, Edmund (2004) [1950]. A History of Ireland (6th ed.). New York: Routledge. ISBN 0-415-27949-6.
Weir, Alison (2008). Britain's Royal Families, The Complete Genealogy. Vintage Books. ISBN 978-0-09-953973-5.

https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Elizabeth_de_Burgh,_4th_Countess_of_Ulster 
DE BURGH, Elizabeth 4th Countess of Ulster (I18660)
 
1965 Elizabeth died sine prole CARTER, Elizabeth (I7247)
 
1966 Elizabeth Fitzalan (née de Bohun), Countess of Arundel, Countess of Surrey (c. 1350 – 3 April 1385) was a member of the Anglo-Norman Bohun family, which wielded much power in the Welsh Marches and the English government. She was the first wife of Richard FitzAlan, a powerful English nobleman and military commander in the reigns of Edward III and Richard II. She was the mother of seven of his children, and as the wife of one of the most powerful nobles in the realm, enjoyed much prestige and took precedence over most of the other peers' wives.


Contents
1 Family and lineage
2 Marriage and issue
3 Death
4 Ancestry
5 References
Family and lineage
Lady Elizabeth de Bohun was born around 1350, the daughter of William de Bohun, 1st Earl of Northampton, and Elizabeth de Badlesmere. Her older brother Humphrey de Bohun, 7th Earl of Hereford, married Joan FitzAlan, a sister of the 11th Earl of Arundel, by whom he had two daughters. Elizabeth had a half-brother, Roger Mortimer, 2nd Earl of March, by her mother's first marriage to Sir Edmund Mortimer.

Her paternal grandparents were Humphrey de Bohun, 4th Earl of Hereford, and Elizabeth of Rhuddlan, daughter of King Edward I of England and Eleanor of Castile. Her maternal grandparents were Bartholomew de Badlesmere, 1st Baron Badlesmere, and Margaret de Clare.

Lady Elizabeth's parents both died when she was young, her mother having died in 1356, and her father in 1360.


Arundel Castle, principal residence of Richard Fitzalan and Elizabeth de Bohun
Marriage and issue
On 28 September 1359, by Papal dispensation,[1] Elizabeth married Richard FitzAlan, who succeeded to the earldoms of Arundel and Surrey upon the death of his father, Richard FitzAlan, 3rd Earl of Arundel in 1376. Their marriage was especially advantageous as it united two of the most powerful families in England. The alliance was further strengthened by the marriage of Elizabeth's brother, Humphrey to FitzAlan's sister Joan.

As the Countess of Arundel, Elizabeth was one of the most important women in England, who enjoyed much prestige, and after the Queen, the Duchesses of Lancaster and York, and the Countess of Buckingham, took precedence over the other noble ladies in the realm.

At the coronation of King Richard II, FitzAlan carried the crown. In the same year, 1377, he was made Admiral of the South and West. The following year, 1378, he attacked Harfleur, but was repelled by the French.

FitzAlan allied himself with the King's uncle Thomas of Woodstock, Duke of Gloucester, who was married to FitzAlan's niece Eleanor de Bohun, who was also Elizabeth's niece. The two men eventually became members of the Council of Regency, and formed a strong and virulent opposition to the King. This would later prove fatal to both men.

Richard and Elizabeth had seven children:[1]

Thomas FitzAlan, 5th Earl of Arundel, Earl of Surrey KG (13 October 1381 – 13 October 1415), married 26 November 1405, Beatrice, illegitimate daughter of King John I of Portugal and Inez Perez Esteves.[2] The marriage was childless.
Lady Eleanor FitzAlan (c.1365- 1375), on 28 October 1371, at the age of about six, married Robert de Ufford. Died childless.
Lady Elizabeth FitzAlan (1366- 8 July 1425), married firstly before 1378, Sir William de Montagu, secondly in 1384, Thomas Mowbray, 1st Duke of Norfolk, by whom she had four children, thirdly before 19 August 1401, Sir Robert Goushill, by whom she had two daughters, and fourthly before 1411, Sir Gerard Afflete. The Howard Dukes of Norfolk descend from her daughter Margaret Mowbray who married Sir Robert Howard.
Lady Joan FitzAlan (1375- 14 November 1435), married William de Beauchamp, 1st Baron Bergavenny, by whom she had a son, Richard de Beauchamp, 1st Earl of Worcester and a daughter Joan de Beauchamp, wife of James Butler, 4th Earl of Ormonde.
Lady Alice Fitzalan (1378- before October 1415), married before March 1392, John Cherlton, Lord Cherlton. Had an affair with Cardinal Henry Beaufort, by whom she had an illegitimate daughter, Jane Beaufort.[3]
Lady Margaret FitzAlan (1382- after 1423), married Sir Rowland Lenthall, of Hampton Court, Herefordshire, by whom she had two sons.
Son FitzAlan (his name is given as either Richard or William).
Death
Elizabeth de Bohun died on 3 April 1385 at the age of about thirty-five. She was buried at Lewes in Sussex. Her husband married secondly Philippa Mortimer on 15 August 1390, by whom he had a son: John FitzAlan (1394- after 1397).

Richard FitzAlan was executed by decapitation on 21 September 1397 at Tower Hill Cheapside, London for having committed high treason against King Richard.[4] His titles and estates were attainted until October 1400, when they were restored to his son and heir, Thomas FitzAlan, 5th Earl of Arundel, by the new king, Henry IV, who had ascended to the English throne upon the deposition of King Richard in 1399. 
DE BOHUN, Elizabeth Countess of Arundel, Countess of Surrey (I19766)
 
1967 Elizabeth married Sir Henry Stradling[10][11] (1423–1476), son of Sir Edward Stradling (d. c.1394) and Gwenllian Berkerolles, sister and co-heir of his neighbour, Sir Lawrence Berkerolles. Reversing alliances from the previous generation, Henry and his brothers-in-law were hostile to the Henry VI reign. Henry went on a pilgrimage to the Holy Land in 1476. Henry died on 31 August 1476 on his journey back to England and was buried at Famagusta, Cyprus. Thomas, Elizabeth and Henry's young son, died on 8 September 1480.[13] HERBERT, Elizabeth (I15066)
 
1968 Elizabeth Merbury (c. 1412) was an English noblewoman.

Elizabeth was the daughter of Sir John Merbury, by his first wife, Alice Pembridge. She was married to Walter Devereux (1411–1459) about 1432 in Herefordshire, England. Together, they had several children:[1]

Anne Devereux
Richard Devereux (c. 1426, Chartley, Herefordshire, England)
Thomas Devereux (c. 1428, Chartley, Herefordshire, England)
Walter Devereux, 7th Baron Ferrers of Chartley
John Devereux (c. 1434, Weobley, England)
Katherine (Sibyl) Devereux (c. 1438). Married firstly James Baskerville about 1464
Isabel Devereux (c. 1440, Weobley, England)
References[edit]
Jump up ^ Yap, Brian. "Elizabeth Merbury Heiress Of Weobley". Retrieved 15 September 2013.

2 Burke's Peerage & Baronetage, 106th Edition, Charles Mosley Editor-in-Chief, 1999, 1378.

3 Newsgroup: soc.genealogy.medieval, at groups - google.com, Richard Borthwick, 5 Jul 1999.

4 Complete Peerage of England Scotland Ireland Great Britain and the United Kingdom, by G. E Cokayne, Sutton Publishing Ltd, 2000, V:322.

5 Complete Peerage of England Scotland Ireland Great Britain and the United Kingdom, by G. E Cokayne, Sutton Publishing Ltd, 2000, V:321. 
MERBURY, Elizabeth (I15080)
 
1969 Elizabeth of Lancaster (bf. 21 February 1363[1] – 24 November 1426) was the third child of John of Gaunt, 1st Duke of Lancaster, and his first wife Blanche of Lancaster.

Life
Some sources list her as having been born after 1 January 1363, but prior to 21 February 1363. She was born in Burford, Shropshire.[citation needed] In her childhood, she was raised in her father's royal household under Katherine Swynford, whom she held in high regard. She grew up a headstrong and spirited young woman compared to her more serious elder sister.

Marriages
First marriage
On 24 June 1380, at Kenilworth Castle, she married John Hastings, 3rd Earl of Pembroke. She was seventeen years old and the groom was only eight.[2] She was transferred to another household befitting her new rank as Countess of Pembroke. However, six years later, the marriage between Elizabeth and young Hastings was annulled.

Second marriage
By the age of 23, Elizabeth had tired of her 14-year-old husband. It is said that she had also been seduced by her cousin Richard II of England's half-brother John Holland, a known schemer, and had become pregnant by him.[3] This forced her father to have her marriage annulled, and on 24 June 1386, at Plymouth, she hastily married John Holland, 1st Duke of Exeter. Her father dealt with her leniently and favoured his new son-in-law, such was Holland's charm.

Third marriage
Holland was executed in 1400 for conspiring during the Epiphany Rising against his cousin, Elizabeth's brother Henry IV of England, who had by this time usurped the throne from Richard II. That same year, Elizabeth married Sir John Cornwall, 1st Baron Fanhope and Milbroke. Her marriage to Sir John caused some scandal, since Sir John failed to ask her brother for permission to marry Elizabeth. This resulted in Sir John's arrest. However, the marriage is said to have been a happy and loving one[4] and they went on to have two children together, Constance and John.

Elizabeth died in 1426 and was buried at St Mary's Church, Burford, Shropshire.

Children
With John Holland she had six children:

Richard Holland, 2nd Earl of Huntingdon (d. 3 September 1400), eldest son and heir, who survived his father only 7 months
Constance Holland (1387–1437) who married Thomas Mowbray, 4th Earl of Norfolk and Sir John Grey and had issue.
Elizabeth Holland (c. 1389 – 18 November 1449); who married Sir Roger Fiennes and had issue.
Alice Holland (c. 1392 – c. 1406) who married Richard de Vere, 11th Earl of Oxford; had no issue.
John Holland, 2nd Duke of Exeter (1395–1447); had issue.
Sir Edward Holland (1399–1413); had no issue.
With John Cornwall, 1st Baron Fanhope and Milbroke she had two children:

Constance Cornwall (c. 1401 – c. 1427) who married John Fitzalan, 14th Earl of Arundel, but had no issue.
Sir John Cornwall (c. 1404 – 2 May 1422) was only seventeen when, in his father's presence, his head was blown off by a gun-stone at the Siege of Meaux.[5] He had no issue.
References
Weir, Alison. Britain's Royal Families. London, 2007. pg. 101
Weir, Alison. Katherine Swynford. London, 2008. pg.163
Weir, Katherine Swynford. pg. 200
Barker, Juliet. Agincourt. London, 2005. pg. 152
Barker, pg. 159
Further reading
Oxford Dictionary of National Biography (online resource) 2004-2007. (Print version: Oxford dictionary of national biography : in association with the British Academy : from the earliest times to the year 2000 / edited by H.C.G. Matthew and Brian Harrison.) Article on "Elizabeth of Lancaster" by Anthony Goodman.

https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Elizabeth_of_Lancaster,_Duchess_of_Exeter 
EXETER, Elizabeth of Lancaster, Duchess of (I18666)
 
1970 Elizabeth of Rhuddlan (7 August 1282 – 5 May 1316) was the eighth and youngest daughter of King Edward I and Queen Eleanor of Castile. Of all of her siblings, she was closest to her younger brother King Edward II, as they were only two years apart in age.

Contents [hide]
1 First marriage
2 Second marriage
3 Issue
4 Later life
4.1 Ancestry
5 References
First marriage[edit]
In April 1285 there were negotiations with Floris V for Elizabeth's betrothal to his son John I, Count of Holland. The offer was accepted and John was sent to England to be educated. On 8 January 1297 Elizabeth was married to John at Ipswich. In attendance at the marriage were Elizabeth's sister Margaret, her father, Edward I of England, her brother Edward, and Humphrey de Bohun. After the wedding Elizabeth was expected to go to Holland with her husband, but did not wish to go, leaving her husband to go alone.

After some time travelling England, it was decided Elizabeth should follow her husband. Her father accompanied her, travelling through the Southern Netherlands between Antwerp, Mechelen, Leuven and Brussels, before ending up in Ghent. There they remained for a few months, spending Christmas with her two sisters Eleanor and Margaret. On 10 November 1299, John died of dysentery, though there were rumours of his murder. No children had been born from the marriage.

Second marriage[edit]
On her return trip to England, Elizabeth went through Brabant to see her sister Margaret. When she arrived in England, she met her stepmother Margaret, whom Edward had married while she was in Holland. On 14 November 1302 Elizabeth was married to Humphrey de Bohun, 4th Earl of Hereford, 3rd of Essex, also Constable of England, at Westminster Abbey.[citation needed]

Issue[edit]
The children of Elizabeth and Humphrey de Bohun, 4th Earl of Hereford were:

Hugh de Bohun (September 1303 – 1305)
Lady Eleanor de Bohun (17 October 1304 – 1363)
Humphrey de Bohun (b&d 1305) (buried with Mary or Margaret)
Mary or Margaret de Bohun (b&d 1305) (buried with Humphrey)
John de Bohun, 5th Earl of Hereford (23 November 1306 – 1335)
Humphrey de Bohun, 6th Earl of Hereford (6 December c. 1309 – 1361)
Margaret de Bohun, 2nd Countess of Devon (3 April 1311 – 1391)
William de Bohun, 1st Earl of Northampton (1312–1360).
Edward de Bohun (1312–1334), twin of William
Eneas de Bohun, (1314 - after 1322); he is mentioned in his father's will
Isabel de Bohun (b&d 5 May 1316)
Later life[edit]
During Christmas 1315, Elizabeth, who was pregnant with her eleventh child, was visited by her sister-in-law, Queen Isabella of France. This was a great honour, but the stress of it may have caused unknown health problems that later contributed to Elizabeth's death in childbirth.[citation needed] On 5 May 1316 she went into labour, giving birth to her daughter Isabella. Both Elizabeth and her daughter Isabella died shortly after the birth, and were buried together in Waltham Abbey.

Ancestry[edit]
[show]Ancestors of Elizabeth of Rhuddlan
References[edit]
Weis, Frederick Lewis (2004). Ancestral Roots of Certain American Colonists Who Came to America Before 1700. Genealogical Pub Co. ISBN 0-8063-1752-3. Lines 6-29, 6-30, 7-29, 7-30, 15-29, 15-30, 97-31, 97-32.
Weir, Alison (2002). Britain's Royal Family: A Complete Genealogy. The Bodley Head London, U.K. ISBN 0-7126-4286-2. pages 83–85
Cutter, William Richard. Genealogical and Personal Memoirs Vol. I, Lewis Historical Publishing Co., New York, 1910. (p. 1399) googlebooks Accessed 28 April 2008
Burke, John, Esq. A General and Heraldic Dictionary of the Peerages of England, Ireland, and Scotland, Extinct, Dormant and in Abeyance. London: Henry Colburn and Richard Bentley, 1831. (p. 196) googlebooks Retrieved 4 May 2008
Authority control
BPN: 11402011
Categories: 1282 births1316 deaths13th-century English people14th-century English people13th-century Welsh people14th-century Welsh people13th-century women14th-century womenEnglish countessesEnglish princessesHous 
OF RHUDDLAN, Elizabeth (I15214)
 
1971 Elizabeth of Vermandois, or Elisabeth or Isabel de Vermandois (c. 1085 – c. 1148), was the third daughter of Hugh Magnus and Adelaide of Vermandois and as such represented both the Capetian line of her paternal grandfather Henry I of France, and the Carolingian ancestry of her maternal grandfather Herbert IV of Vermandois,_Count_of_Vermandois. As the wife of two Anglo-Norman magnates, Robert de Beaumont, 1st Earl of Leicester and William de Warenne, 2nd Earl of Surrey, she is the ancestress of hundreds of well-known families down to the present time. DE CREPI, Elizabeth of Vermandois (I8289)
 
1972 Elizabeth Sarah HILLS
GEDmatch Ref: 3095895 : P19

Born: 22 FEB 1886, 2 Padsole Lane Maidstone KENT

Died: ABT 1960, Chatham

Father: Frederick Hills (b. 1856, d. 1 MAR 1897)

Mother: Sarah Anne Bouldon (b. 1858, d. 1886)


Union with: Thomas Allender Barham b. 5 JUL 1886, d. 1933

Children:

+Edward Charles Barham (b. 15 JAN 1917, d. NOV 1985)
+Walter Thomas Barham (b. 25 SEP 1914, d. MAR 1992)
Daisy Dorothy E Barham (b. JUN 1910, d. SEP 1910)
Edward Barham (b. 1890)

----------
Edward Charles BARHAM
GEDmatch Ref: 3095895 : P14

Born: 15 JAN 1917, 166 Union Street Maidstone KENT

Died: NOV 1985, Maidstone KENT

Father: Thomas Allender Barham (b. 5 JUL 1886, d. 1933)

Mother: Elizabeth Sarah Hills (b. 22 FEB 1886, d. ABT 1960)


Union with: Doreen Emma Louisa Collins b. 17 JUN 1924, d. 31 Dec 2014

Children:

+Edward J Barham (b. 1947, d. Dec 2018)
+HIDDEN HIDDEN (b. HIDDEN)
+HIDDEN HIDDEN (b. HIDDEN)

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

HIDDEN HIDDEN
GEDmatch Ref: 3095895 : P3

Born: HIDDEN, HIDDEN


Father: Edward Charles Barham (b. 15 JAN 1917, d. NOV 1985)

Mother: Doreen Emma Louisa Collins (b. 17 JUN 1924, d. 31 Dec 2014)


Union with: HIDDEN HIDDEN b. HIDDEN

Children:

+HIDDEN HIDDEN (b. HIDDEN) DNA - married and has 2 children
+HIDDEN HIDDEN (b. HIDDEN)

--------------------------------------------------
Descendants Outline Chart
1 Francis Hills (b. MAR 1803, Maidstone KENT, d. DEC 1872, Maidstone KENT)
. + Ann Lavender (b. 17th April 1803, Wateringbury, Kent, England, d. 30th Jan 1831, Kent)
. . 2 Walter Hills (b. 1st August 1830, Maidstone KENT, d. 5 Dec 1911, Rose Cottage Padsole Lane Maidstone )
. . . + Mary Ann Humphrey (b. ABT 1832, Gt Stukely, Huntingdon, England, d. 27 July 1906, Maidstone, Kent)
. . . . 3 Frederick Hills (b. 1856, Spitalfields Middx, d. 1 MAR 1897, Faversham KENT)
. . . . . + Sarah Anne Bouldon (b. 1858, Boughton Monchelsea, d. 1886, Maidstone KENT)
. . . . . . 4 Elizabeth Sarah Hills (b. 22 FEB 1886, 2 Padsole Lane Maidstone KENT, d. ABT 1960, Chatham)
. . . . . . . + Thomas Allender Barham (b. 5 JUL 1886, 158 Union Street Maidstone KENT, d. 1933, Halling KENT)
. . . . . . . . 5 Edward Charles Barham (b. 15 JAN 1917, 166 Union Street Maidstone KENT, d. NOV 1985, Maidstone KENT)
. . . . . . . . . + Doreen Emma Louisa Collins (b. 17 JUN 1924, Maidstone KENT, d. 31 Dec 2014, Maidstone KENT)
. . . . . . . . . . 6 Edward J Barham (b. 1947, Maidstone KENT, d. Dec 2018, maidstone kent)
. . . . . . . . . . . + HIDDEN HIDDEN
. . . . . . . . . . . . 7 HIDDEN HIDDEN (b. HIDDEN, HIDDEN)
. . . . . . . . . . . . . + HIDDEN HIDDEN
. . . . . . . . . . . . . . 8 HIDDEN HIDDEN (b. HIDDEN, HIDDEN)
. . . . . . . . . . . . 7 HIDDEN HIDDEN (b. HIDDEN, HIDDEN)
. . . . . . . . . . . . 7 HIDDEN HIDDEN (b. HIDDEN, HIDDEN)
. . . . . . . . . . 6 HIDDEN HIDDEN (b. HIDDEN, HIDDEN)
. . . . . . . . . . . + HIDDEN HIDDEN
. . . . . . . . . . . . 7 HIDDEN HIDDEN (b. HIDDEN, HIDDEN)
. . . . . . . . . . . . 7 HIDDEN HIDDEN (b. HIDDEN, HIDDEN)
. . . . . . . . . . 6 HIDDEN HIDDEN (b. HIDDEN, HIDDEN)
. . . . . . . . . . . + HIDDEN HIDDEN (b. HIDDEN, HIDDEN)
. . . . . . *****DNA. . . . . . 7 (GM5517642)HIDDEN HIDDEN (b. HIDDEN, HIDDEN)
. . . . . . . . . . . . . + HIDDEN HIDDEN (b. HIDDEN, HIDDEN)
. . . . . . . . . . . . . . 8 HIDDEN HIDDEN (b. HIDDEN, HIDDEN)
. . . . . . . . . . . . . . 8 HIDDEN HIDDEN (b. HIDDEN, HIDDEN)
. . . . . . . . . . . . 7 HIDDEN HIDDEN (b. HIDDEN, HIDDEN)
. . . . . . . . . . . . . + HIDDEN HIDDEN
. . . . . . . . . . . . . . 8 HIDDEN HIDDEN
. . . . . . . . 5 Walter Thomas Barham (b. 25 SEP 1914, Maidstone KENT, d. MAR 1992, Swale KENT)
. . . . . . . . . + HIDDEN HIDDEN
. . . . . . . . . . 6 HIDDEN HIDDEN (b. HIDDEN, HIDDEN)
. . . . . . . . . . 6 HIDDEN HIDDEN (b. HIDDEN, HIDDEN)
. . . . . . . . 5 Daisy Dorothy E Barham (b. JUN 1910, Maidstone KENT, d. SEP 1910, Maidstone KENT)
. . . . . . . . 5 Edward Barham (b. 1890, maidstone)
. . . . . . 4 Frederick Hills (b. 1883, Maidstone KENT)
. . . . . . 4 Walter Dennis Hills (b. 1882, Maidstone KENT, d. SEP 1926, Maidstone KENT)
. . . . . . 4 Eleanor Emma Hills (b. 1879, Marylebone, d. 1891, Faversham)
. . . . 3 Julia Hills (b. abt 1870, Maidstone, Kent, England, d. 9 Mar 1912, Woking, Surrey, England)
. . . . . + William George John Stephens (b. 19 FEB 1869, Bristol, England, d. 22 Apr 1944, "Grassmere", 24 Devon Road,Souith Da)
. . . . . . 4 Lily C Stephens (b. abt 1898, Snodland, Kent, England, d. Before 1911)
. . . . . . 4 Ada Nellie Stephens (b. abt 1896, Snodland, Kent, England)
. . . . 3 Julia Hills (b. abt 1870, Maidstone, Kent, England, d. January 1912, Guildford, Surrey)
. . . . 3 Lucy Hills (b. ABT 1865, Maidstone KENT, d. 8 November 1921, Haberfield, NSW, Australia)
. . . . . + Henry H Hubbard (b. 1859, Islington, London, England)
. . . . . . 4 Ernest Frank Hubbard (b. 1887, Plumstead, Kent, England)
. . . . . . 4 Ada D Hubbard (b. 1890, Plumstead, Kent, England)
. . . . 3 Ellen Hills (b. ABT 1867, Maidstone KENT)
. . . . 3 Walter Hills (b. 1860, Maidstone KENT)
. . . . 3 Mary Ann Hills (b. ABT 1858, Middx)
. . . . . + George Merricks (b. 26 Nov 1861, Maidstone KENT, d. 22 Nov 1936, Maidstone KENT)
. . . . . . 4 Georgina Merricks (b. abt 1890, Maidstone, Kent, England)
. . . . . . 4 Ernest John Merricks (b. 8 Dec 1898, Maidstone, Kent, England, d. 23 Apr 1984, Cambridge, Cambridgeshire, England)
. . . . . . 4 Charles Godfrey Merricks (b. 1895, Maidstone, Kent, England, d. 2 Sep 1918, France & Flanders)
. . . . . . 4 Hary Merricks (b. abt 1892, Maidstone, Kent, England)
. . . . . . 4 Frank Merricks (b. 1886, Maidstone, Kent, England, d. 8 Aug 1940, Hollingbourne, Kent, England)
. . . . . . 4 Florence Ada Merricks (b. 01 Oct 1884, Maidstone, Kent, England)
. . . . . + George Merricks (b. 26 Nov 1861, Bodiam, Sussex, d. 22 Nov 1936, Maidstone, Kent, England)
. . . . . . 4 Frank Merricks (b. 1886, Maidstone, Kent, England, d. 8 Aug 1940, Hollingbourne, Kent, England)
. . . . . . 4 Ernest John Merricks (b. 1899, Maidstone, Kent, England, d. Apr 1984, Cambridge, Cambridgeshire, England)
. . . . . . 4 Charles Godfrey Merricks (b. 1895, Maidstone, Kent, England, d. 2 Sep 1918, France & Flanders)
. . . . . . 4 Georgina Merricks (b. abt 1890, Maidstone, Kent, England)
. . . . . . 4 Hary Merricks (b. abt 1892, Maidstone, Kent, England)
. . . . . + George Merricks (b. 26 Nov 1861, Bodiam, Sussex, England, d. 22 Nov 1936, Maidstone, Kent, England)
. . . . . . 4 Charles Merricks (b. abt 1892, Maidstone, Kent, England, d. 2 Sep 1918, France & Flanders)
. . . . . . 4 Frank Merricks (b. abt 1886, Maidstone, Kent, England, d. 8 Aug 1940, Hollingbourne, Kent, England)
. . . . . . 4 Ernest John Merricks (b. 8 Dec 1898, Maidstone, Kent, England, d. Apr 1984, Cambridge, Cambridgeshire, England)
. . . . 3 Emma Hills (b. ABT 1876, Maidstone KENT)
. . . . 3 Ada Hills (b. ABT 1873, Maidstone KENT, d. October 1915, Tonbridge, Kent)
. . . . 3 Francis Hills (b. ABT 1862, Middx, d. about 1932, Rose Cottage, 3 Padsole Lane, Maidst)
. . 2 Lucy Hills (b. 30th May 1828, Maidstone, Kent, England, d. ?)
. . 2 Ann Hills (b. 6th August 1826, Maidstone, Kent, England, d. April 1909, Maidstone, Kent, United Kingdom)

It says no DNA kit found but there is a kit number - perhaps it was removed with the recent change in ownership of Gedmatch
GEDCOM ID#: 3095895 : P4
Donor Name: Harris/Barham
Email: samdeacon36@gmail.com
No Matching DNA found 
HILLS, Elizabeth Sarah (I18143)
 
1973 Elizabeth Tamar Nutt married George Streeter, a carrier born at Harbledown, circa 1828. Elizabeth and George had seven children and numerous grandchildren. Elizabeth died sometime between 1861 and 1871 but George remarried.

In 1861 George, Elizabeth and youngest son, Thomas, were living on the north side of Well Lane, West Street. Both George and Thomas were then employed as carriers. By 1871 George had remarried and continued to live in the family's home on Well Lane. Neither George nor his second wife, Harriet, appear on the 1881 census index for Kent. 
NUTT, Elizabeth Tamar (I3165)
 
1974 Elizabeth Tillesworth1
F, #355392, d. circa October 1606
Last Edited=26 Nov 2009
Elizabeth Tillesworth was the daughter of William Tillesworth.2 She married Francis Bowyer, son of Robert Bowyer and Margaret (?).1 She died circa October 1606.2 She was buried on 30 October 1606.2
Her married name became Bowyer.
Child of Elizabeth Tillesworth and Francis Bowyer
Sir William Bowyer+2 d. Aug 1616 
TILLESWORTH, Elizabeth (I268)
 
1975 Elizabeth was 7 years old at the time of her christening in 1787. WELLS, Elizabeth (I56)
 
1976 Elizabeth was recorded as a spinster and Peter, a batchelor, on their marriage record and both were of the parish of Harbledown. However, no children of this couple were christened at Harbledown . Family (F1720)
 
1977 Elizabeth's burial records her as being an infant. COPPEN, Elizabeth ^ (I4598)
 
1978 Elizabeth's burial was as d/o Valentine and Elizabeth Austin. AUSTIN, Elizabeth ^ (I12128)
 
1979 Elizabeth, daughter of Nicholas Kelley of Ratcliffe, named with her father in the Inq. taken at the death of her husband. It should be noted that Nicholas was called Michael in Visitation pedigree, but Nicholas in Inq p.m. 5 Edw VI, pt 1, No. 16. KELLEY, Elizabeth (I14842)
 
1980 Ellen was working as a domestic servant in 1891. KENNETT, Ellen (I4778)
 
1981 Emigrated to Australia arriving on the Lady Nugent at Botany Bay on 27 Nov 1838, having been engaged by Mr. Stark. In their care was one William Cooper. QUINNELL, James (I11349)
 
1982 Emigrated to Canada
Canadian Passenger Lists, 1865-1935 for Geo Millstael, engine driver, age 43,
arriving Halifax, Nova Scotia 1907 March, on the vessel Vancouver, heading to Sydney, Nova Scotia 
MILSTED, George (I2644)
 
1983 Emigrated to Canada GUYATT, Rose (I649)
 
1984 Emigrated to Canada 1911
Both parents were born in England 
LATOUR, Lewis (I18099)
 
1985 Emigrated to Canada August 1916 aboard the S. S. Athenia, landing at Halifax, Pier One.

Emigrated to Detroit, Michigan February 1924 aged 22 years 9 months. He was a machinist. Last address given was 625 Victor Street, Winnipeg with father, John Nicol. 
NICOL, John A. (I13025)
 
1986 Emigrated to Canada circa 1909.

She was a servant at

11 Widemarsh Street, All Saints, Hereford, Herefordshire (2 doors down from the Black Swan pub)

Charles Anthony, head, mar, 68, Proprietor of Hereford Times, born Hereford, Herefordshire

Maria Anthony, wife, mar, 65, wife of proprietor of Hereford Times, born Milldesex, London

Frances Goode, servant, unm, 27, domestic servant, born Peterchurch, Herefordshire

Sarah Vaughan, servant, unm, 21, domestic servant, born Chelsea, Middlesex

Thomas Pitt, servant, unm, 21, indoor general servant, born Peterchurch, Herefordshire

Family of Charles Brown hotel keeper of the Black Swan had

a son named Charles Edward Brown, aged 16;

a servant named George Clayton aged 27.

Next house at 9 Widemarsh Street was Philip Morris family - general ironmonger and seed merchant. He had 2 sons, William Frank Morris aged 21 and Philip Pudge Morris aged 19

At 14 Widemarsh was the family of William Hall a grocer with a bunch of male assistants:

James Gretton, 26 born Kingstone, Herefordshire

John Alexander Baddaley, 18 born Shiffnal, Salop

then 3 aged 16 and 15

At 4 Widemarsh was another grocer James Davies who had 2 male assistants:

John Price Lewis, 22, born Boughwood, Radnorshire

James Meredith, 19, born Presteign, Radnorshire

at 1 Widemarsh was a clothier Edwin Gilham who had 2 male assistants:

Thomas Hughes 23, claims married but no wife in sight, born Hay Breconshire

Frank Neale, 19, born Trowbridge, Wiltshire 
VAUGHAN, Sarah (I143)
 
1987 Emigrated to Canada in 1906
Both parents born England 
Emma (I18093)
 
1988 Emigrated to Saskatchewan. There in 1906 census

Name: Lizzie Waterer
Gender: Female
Marital status: Single
Age: 16
Birthplace: England
Relation to Head of House: Daughter
Father's name: Albert Waterer
Mother's name: Elizabeth H Waterer
Immigration Year: 1904
Province: Manitoba
District: Selkirk
Sub-District Description: Townships 12, 13, 14 in ranges 1, 2 east
Sub-District: 17
Household Members:
Name Age
Albert Waterer 42
Elizabeth H Waterer 39
Reginald Waterer 21
Leanord Waterer 19
Cecil Waterer 17
Lizzie Waterer 16
William Waterer 20
Fred Waterer 22
Save Cancel
Source Citation
Year: 1906; Census Place: 17, Selkirk, Manitoba; Page: 15; Family No: 104

Source Information
Ancestry.com. 1906 Canada Census of Manitoba, Saskatchewan, and Alberta [database on-line]. Provo, UT, USA: Ancestry.com Operations Inc, 2006.


Name: Leonard A Waterer
Gender: Male
Marital status: Single
Age: 20
Birthplace: England
Relation to Head of House: Brother
Immigration Year: 1906
Province: Manitoba
District: Selkirk
Sub-District Description: Townships 15, 16 in ranges 1, 2 east
Sub-District: 14
Household Members:
Name Age
Frederick Waterer 25
Leonard A Waterer 20
Save Cancel
Source Citation
Year: 1906; Census Place: 14, Selkirk, Manitoba; Page: 35; Family No: 272

Source Information
Ancestry.com. 1906 Canada Census of Manitoba, Saskatchewan, and Alberta [database on-line]. Provo, UT, USA: Ancestry.com Operations Inc, 2006.


1911 Census of Canada results for Waterer
Results 1–50 of 263
View Record Name Birth Date Birth Place Home in 1911 (Sub-District, District, Province) Relatives View Image
To get better results, add more information such as First Name, Birth Info or Death Info—even a guess will help. Edit your search or learn more.

View Record
Alphonse Waterer
Nov 1860 England Battleford, Saskatchewan
View Record
Tillia Waterer
Feb 1889 United States of America Saskatoon, Saskatchewan H C
View Record
Frederick Waterer
Apr 1882 England Battleford, Saskatchewan Alphonse
View Record
H C Waterer
Feb 1884 E?? Saskatoon, Saskatchewan Tillia
View Record
Horold Waterer
Apr 1905 Manitoba Brandon, Manitoba Charter,
Maria
View Record
Edgar A Waterer
Aug 1911 Ontario Kootenay, British Columbia Neville,
Mary
View Record
Herbert Waterer
Dec 1879 England Brantford, Ontario Sarah
View Record
Gordon Waterer
Jun 1907 Manitoba Brandon, Manitoba Charter,
Maria
View Record
Esa John Waterer
Jun 1908 Ontario Kootenay, British Columbia Neville,
Mary
View Record
Muriel Waterer
Dec 1890 Ontario Kent East, Ontario Clara B
View Record
Martha Waterer
Dec 1903 Ontario Brandon, Manitoba Charter,
Maria
View Record
Sarah Waterer
Dec 1874 England Brantford, Ontario Herbert
View Record
Neville Waterer
Nov 1887 England Kootenay, British Columbia Mary
View Record
Mary Waterer
Nov 1885 Ontario Kootenay, British Columbia Neville
View Record
Milley Waterer
Dec 1909 Manitoba Brandon, Manitoba Charter,
Maria
View Record
Clara B Waterer
Sep 1868 Ontario Kent East, Ontario
View Record
Charter Waterer
Feb 1869 Ontario Brandon, Manitoba Maria
View Record
Lloyd Waterer
May 1899 Ontario Waterloo South, Ontario
View Record
Yula Waterer
Sep 1895 Ontario Kent East, Ontario Clara B
View Record
Maria Waterer
Jan 1875 Ontario Brandon, Manitoba Charter
View Record
Belka Waterer
Jun 1901 Ontario Brandon, Manitoba Charter,
Maria
View Record
Lenard Waterer
1884 England Winnipeg City, Manitoba


Find A Grave Index, 1600s-Current results for Waterer
Results 1–50 of 233
View Record Name Birth Date Death Date Burial or Cremation Place
To get better results, add more information such as First Name, Birth Info or Death Info—even a guess will help. Edit your search or learn more.

View Record
Edith Waterer
3 Jun 2000 Saskatoon, Saskatoon Census Division, Saskatchewan , Canada
View Record
Percy Hubert Waterer
3 May 1982 Saskatoon, Saskatoon Census Division, Saskatchewan , Canada
View Record
Leslie Waterer
16 May 1916 Saskatoon, Saskatoon Census Division, Saskatchewan , Canada
View Record
Patricia Josephine Waterer
26 Nov 1969 Saskatoon, Saskatoon Census Division, Saskatchewan , Canada
View Record
Fredrick Waterer
1882 1964 Meota, Lloydminster Census Division, Saskatchewan , Canada
View Record
Charles Waterer
15 Apr 1938 Regina, Regina Census Division, Saskatchewan , Canada
View Record
Georgena Waterer
1882 1966 Meota, Lloydminster Census Division, Saskatchewan , Canada
View Record
Frederick Waterer
10 Sep 1915 Saskatoon, Saskatoon Census Division, Saskatchewan , Canada
View Record
Hubert Constantine Waterer
27 Feb 1884 13 Jul 1943 Saskatoon, Saskatoon Census Division, Saskatchewan , Canada
View Record
Tilda Waterer
22 Feb 1889 28 Apr 1958 Saskatoon, Saskatoon Census Division, Saskatchewan , Canada
View Record
Waterer
25 Jan 1903 Balmoral, South Interlake Census Division, Manitoba, Canada
View Record
John Albert Waterer
11 Feb 1919 14 May 2004 Stonewall, South Interlake Census Division, Manitoba, Canada
View Record
Elizabeth A G Waterer
1931 1998 Stonewall, South Interlake Census Division, Manitoba, Canada
View Record
Albert H. Waterer
1918 1993 Winnipeg, Greater Winnipeg, Manitoba, Canada
View Record
Dorothy Jean Waterer
1910 2009 Nelson, Central Kootenay Regional District, British Columbia, Canada
View Record
Ida Waterer
16 Oct 1993 Nelson, Central Kootenay Regional District, British Columbia, Canada
View Record
C. Dawn Waterer
1921 2002 Winnipeg, Greater Winnipeg, Manitoba, Canada
View Record
Janet Myrtle Waterer
1920 2004 Invermere, East Kootenay Regional District, British Columbia, Canada
View Record
Anna Elizabeth Waterer
1887 1986 Balmoral, South Interlake Census Division, Manitoba, Canada
View Record
Reginald Waterer
15 Jul 1974 Winnipeg, Greater Winnipeg, Manitoba, Canada
View Record
Mary Sofia Waterer
15 Nov 1885 6 Jun 1966 Nelson, Central Kootenay Regional District, British Columbia, Canada
View Record
Mary Ann Waterer
1882 15 Jun 1958 Owen Sound, Grey County, Ontario, Canada
View Record
Donald A Waterer
28 Jan 1923 8 Nov 1931 Balmoral, South Interlake Census Division, Manitoba, Canada
View Record
Elizabeth E Waterer
1858 1943 Balmoral, South Interlake Census Division, Manitoba, Canada
View Record
Leonard A Waterer
1886 1936 Balmoral, South Interlake Census Division, Manitoba, Canada
View Record
Cpt Lloyd Bailey Waterer
8 Aug 1947 10 Jun 1972 Invermere, East Kootenay Regional District, British Columbia, Canada
View Record
Margaret Waterer
18 Dec 1933 Winnipeg, Greater Winnipeg, Manitoba, Canada
View Record
Ralph M J Waterer
11 Oct 1959 Vancouver, Greater Vancouver Regional District, British Columbia, Canada
View Record
Edgar Arthur Waterer
3 Aug 1910 2 Aug 1973 Nelson, Central Kootenay Regional District, British Columbia, Canada
View Record
Neville Waterer
Oct 1887 8 Aug 1952 Nelson, Central Kootenay Regional District, British Columbia, Canada
View Record
Frederick Waterer
1883 7 Nov 1956 Owen Sound, Grey County, Ontario, Canada
View Record
Baby Waterer
Jun 1949 Nelson, Central Kootenay Regional District, British Columbia, Canada
View Record
Floyd N. Waterer
1920 1972 Invermere, East Kootenay Regional District, British Columbia, Canada
View Record
Unnamed Waterer
24 Oct 1913 Winnipeg, Greater Winnipeg, Manitoba, Canada
View Record
Albert Waterer
1864 1942 Balmoral, South Interlake Census Division, Manitoba, Canada


All Saskatchewan, Canada, Residents Index (SRI), 1800-2012 results for Waterer
Results 1–43 of 43
View Record Name Date Place Event Type
To get better results, add more information such as First Name, Birth Info or Death Info—even a guess will help. Edit your search or learn more.

View Record
Waterer
1966 Meota, Saskatchewan , Canada Residence
View Record
Chas. Waterer
1921 Regina, Saskatchewan , Canada Residence
View Record
Frederick Alph. Waterer
1935 Meota, Saskatchewan , Canada Residence
View Record
Percy Herbert Waterer
1982 Saskatoon, Saskatchewan , Canada Death
View Record
Charles Waterer
1938 Regina, Saskatchewan , Canada Death
View Record
Hubert Constanti Waterer
1943 Saskatoon, Saskatchewan , Canada Death
View Record
Leslie Waterer
1916 Saskatoon, Saskatchewan , Canada Death
View Record
Frederick A. Waterer
1964 Meota, Saskatchewan , Canada Death
View Record
Charles Waterer
1938 Regina, Saskatchewan , Canada Death
View Record
Tilda Waterer
1958 Saskatoon, Saskatchewan , Canada Death
View Record
Patricia Josephi Waterer
1969 Saskatoon, Saskatchewan , Canada Death
View Record
Frederick Waterer
1915 Saskatoon, Saskatchewan , Canada Death


All Manitoba, Saskatchewan and Alberta, Canada, Homestead Grant Registers, 1872-1930 results for Waterer
Results 1–19 of 19
View Record Name Application Date Grant Date Province Homestead Location View Images
To get better results, add more information such as First Name, Birth Info or Death Info—even a guess will help. Edit your search or learn more.

View Record
Alphonso Waterer
3 Dec 1902 Saskatchewan SE-36-47-18-W3
View Record
Frederick Alphonso Waterer
27 Jul 1928 Saskatchewan SW-35-48-17-W3
View Record
Frederick Alphonso Waterer
20 Oct 1902 Saskatchewan NW-36-47-18-W3
View Record
Hubert Constantine Waterer
20 Oct 1902 Saskatchewan NE-36-47-18-W3

https://www.ancestry.com/family-tree/person/tree/31012119/person/12348621353/facts?_phsrc=oFF18&_phstart=successSource 
WATERER, Alphonso (I17526)
 
1989 emigrated to the USA

I also have a marriage license for Thomas Phare at the age of 68 which lists his parents as Richard Phare and Grace Vickel. From marriage license of Henry T. Phare, son of Thomas, Thomas' first wife was Mary Short. 
PHARE, Thomas (I14446)
 
1990 Emigrated to Toronto in 1927 AYLETT, William David (I19803)
 
1991 Emigrated to U.S.A. HARTLEY, Robert Henry Mafeking (I618)
 
1992 Emigrated to U.S.A. aboard SS Denmark 1869. GERRARD, William James (I11441)
 
1993 Emigrated to U.S.A. sailing out of England on 26 May 1886, naturalized at Los Angeles, California on 23 December 1896. SMITH, Stephen William (I10451)
 
1994 Emigrated to USA with the LDS on Charles Buck, during January 1855 with his brothers Stephen and John. SPILLETT, Daniel (I4070)
 
1995 Emily Kate Sladden, bc 1860 at Preston-Wingham, was a visitor to this household in 1881, eventually to become wife of Thomas. SMITH, Thomas (I19032)
 
1996 Emily's husband, Henry Jenkins was a farmer. One of their children had a son named John, who circa 1991-1992 was accused, tried and convicted of the murder of an ex-beauty queen in Canterbury. According to George Gregory (the grandson of Thomas Gregory and Emma Austin) this John Jenkins was a quiet, married farmer and he does not believe that John could have committed so dastardly a crime.

Edward Jenkins, Emily's oldest child, drowned about age 19 while he was trying to save a friend during the first World War, circa 1915 or 1916. Ada Jenkins, is reputed to have been a nice woman and married a farmer by the last name of White. Ada had one son and the family may have lived at Stalisfield near Charing. Nothing is known of George and Harry. 
GREGORY, Emily Elizabeth (I2335)
 
1997 Emma Bodeker, although we may never know if it was daughter or mother, was one of the witnesses to a marriage on 20 May 1877 at Faversham Parish Church of Wallace William Whitehead (aged 22, a sawyer, residing at Lime Cottages, father Frank Whitehead also a sawyer) and Eliza Jane Rigden (aged 20, no occupation, residing Lime Cottages, father James Rodgers a labourer). The other witness was a Walter William Whitehead, likely brother to the groom. I have researched both the Whitehead and Rodgers families and can find no overt or obvious connection to the Bodeker family. It would seem likely, then, that Emma had been a friend to one of the parties based on their shared residence of Lime Cottages at that time. It would also seem likely that it was Emma Bodeker, daughter, who was the witness as by 1881 she had moved into London to take a servant's position. Aside from marriages within the family, no other marriages were witnessed at Faversham by any of the Bodeker family members.

As of 9 Sept, 2011, I have made the discovery with the aid of Death Duty Registers and GRO marriage registrations that the Emma Bodeker who died during the June Quarter of 1902 had been the wife of Louis Christian Bodeker, that Emma having been, previous to her Bodeker marriage, Emma Hughes. Louis Christian remarried in 1904 and is found living in Streatham, Surrey (the same place as the death duty index states as residence for Emma Bodeker) in 1905 for the birth of his son Hermann Eric Bodeker. So, I can now remove the death date of 1902 for this Emma Bodeker and go back to work trying to locate her whereabouts and final resting place. 
BODEKER, Emma Sarah (I1878)
 
1998 Emma Bodeker, resigned. Faversham Co-operative Society.—A quarterly meeting of the members of the above Society was held oa Saturday evening.
Source: Saturday 12 October 1878 , p. 3, Whitstable Times and Herne Bay Herald , Kent, England


Bodeker v.Cotton Powder Company
Source: Wednesday 14 July 1880 , p 2, London Daily News , London, England

A boy named Bodeker, through his mother, brought an action against the Cotton Powder Company for damages The boy was employed at the works at Faversham in 1878.
Source: Saturday 17 July 1880 , p. 7, Leicester Chronicle, Leicestershire, England
Source: Thursday 15 July 1880 , pp. 4-5, London Standard, London, England


To Emma Bodeker, of Faversham, for having supported 5 ; children during the last year, and having received 11d.. only, in parochial relief £2.
Source: Tuesday 20 November 1866 , p. 6, Kentish Gazette , Kent, England


To Emma Bodeker, of Faversham, for having brought up 4 children during the last year, and having received £14 15s. 7d. only Parochial Relief £2.
Source: Tuesday 16 November 1869 , p. 3, Kentish Gazette , Kent, England

Age on death registration was 62 years, vizt.
BODEKER, EMMA SARAH 62 Order
GRO Reference: 1889 J Quarter in FAVERSHAM Volume 02A Page 455 
HODGES, Emma (Sarah) (I1872)
 
1999 Emma was the sixth child born of Thomas Milsted and Ann (nee Gregory). She married George Card on 31 January 1864. Although George had come to Faversham to work in the brickfields, he was, in 1871 working as a labourer at the cement works. Emma and George had, in total, four children - two girls and two boys. Neither of the sons, unfortunately, survived beyond their first year of life. At the time of the 1871 census, Emma's brother, Daniel, was also living with them. Despite his young age - 16 - he was already had a work pursuing a career as a mariner.

Although I have not as yet tracked down the burial, it appears that Emma may have died as a result of complications during the birth of her last child in 1871. George Card went on to remarry on 18 November 1871 and have several more children with his new wife.

Emma, daughter of George and Emma, married William Ernest Beacon, a carpenter, on July 7th, 1889, but I have not been able to locate them on the 1891 census. The remaining daughter, Alice Card, may have died between 1871 and 1881, as I have been unable to locate her on the 1881 census. 
MILSTED, Emma (I2620)
 
2000 Emma was the tenth child of Edward and Christian Gregory. She married twice, first to Archibald Duncan on 6 May 1858 at Strood, Kent, and second, to Thomas Alfred Smith on 18 July 1876 at Faversham.

Archibald Duncan, as a child, had been baptised into the Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints but due to his raucous and unbecoming behaviour was banished from the church during the early 1850s. He had apparently been espousing theology contradictory to the doctrines of the Church. Archibald, unlike his brother, never returned to the Church. Family legend has it that Archibald used to be a heavy drinker with a violent temper as well as a womanizer. It was not unusual for him to spend all his earnings at the local tavern. Emma had to resort to hiding the money and locking Archibald out of the house, frequently.

Emma and Archibald did have three daughters and at the time of the 1871 census the famiily lived at St. Mary's Road, Preston. Archibald was recorded as being an unemployed master mariner during that census. If his reputation for incessant imbibing was true, I can well imagine that no ship owner in their right senses would entrust their ship or cargo to Archibald. Archibald died sometime between 1871 and 1876 when Emma remarried.

Emma's second husband was a gardener and a widower. Witnesses to the marriage were her uncle, Henry Smeed, and her cousin, Emily Smeed. Thomas had had a child from his previous marriage - William, born circa 1869. As of 1881 Thomas, Emma, Harriet, Jane, and William were living at 44 Park Road in Faversham. Eliza was working as a cook for Benjamin Atkins, an architect, at that time.

On November 27th, 1881 Eliza married Albert Frank Pay, a labourer and son of Frank Pay, a coal merchant. Witnesses to the marriage were her stepfather and sister, jane. Eliza and Albert had three known children. The family resided in Faversham at the 1891 census. Living with them was William Smith, Eliza's stepbrother, and from that can only conclude that the children were close to William. I also suspect that Eliza had been close to her grandmother Gregory as her third child was named in her honour. 
GREGORY, Emma (I2216)
 

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